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A85853 Funerals made cordials: in a sermon prepared and (in part) preached at the solemn interment of the corps of the Right Honorable Robert Rich, heire apparent to the Earldom of Warwick. (Who aged 23. died Febr. 16. at Whitehall, and was honorably buried March 5. 1657. at Felsted in Essex.) By John Gauden, D.D. of Bocking in Essex. Gauden, John, 1605-1662. 1658 (1658) Wing G356; Thomason E946_1; ESTC R202275 99,437 136

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unreasonable irreligious and divelish A carrionly carkass of a man is aromatick a very perfume in comparison of a dead and rotting soul The body becomes dead and so dissolves by the souls parting from it but the soul by Gods being separated from it first out of its own choise next by Gods penal deserting of it The soul is the salt the light and life of the body so is God of the soul Anima animae the very soul of our souls I mean his grace love and spiritual communion separation from this is the souls death here and hereafter For from the power wrath and vengeance of God the damned are not separated who are dead not to their being but to their well being or happiness to the union at and fruition of God in love The soul apart from God in grace or glory is not only an orphan or a widow condemned to eternal sorrow and desolation for nothing can maintain or entertain wooe wed or indow the soul to the least degree of happines or to any allay of misery when once God hath quite forsaken it But it is emortua conclamata in heaven earth and hell proclaimed as starke dead in Law and Gospel Matth. 13.42 to justice and mercy so represented in Scripture as the horridest expression or the blackest colour to set forth its misery and horror its regret and torpor its weeping and wailing its gnashing and despair Doth then such a thick cloud of horror hang over the face and state of a dead body which is senseless of its own death and deformity of its noysome grave and dark dungeon Sapiens ignis subtilis vermis carpit nutrit urit reficit Chrysol O what a world of horror must lie upon a dead soul when deservedly cast out of God's blessed presence when it feels its death and lives only to die when it feels it is plunged in a dead Sea which is boundless and bottomlesse where the worm dies not and the fire goeth not out because it is as Crysologus calls it a subtil fire and ingenious worm which burns but consumes not devours but destroyes not Who can dwell with everlasting burnings saith the Prophet in an extasie of holy horrour Isa 33.14 Who can live in everlasting dyings Who can abide his own everlasting rottings Is it a gradual and lingring death to want food raiment light liberty fit company Is it a total death to the body to want the little spark of the soul which is the breath and spirit of life to the body What is it then to the soul to want that God who is the breather of that breath of life and Inspirer of that spirit We want a word beyond death to expresse that state Lay it then to heart Phil. 3.11 and consider what cause we have to be humble to tremble and fear exceedingly to escape most solicitously and diligently that second and eternal death if by any means we may attain the resurrection of the dead to life eternal 3. Lay to heart upon the sight of a dead body and the meditation of a dead soul whence it is that these fears and faintings sicknesses and sorrows deaths and darknesses sordidnesse and desolation corruption and condemnation have thus mightily prevailed over the highest mountains as the flood over the most noble beautiful and excellent of all Gods works under heaven even over mankind good and bad great and small Eccles 2.16 wise and foolish upon which nature the great and only God had set such characters of special glory enduing it with a diviner spirit so making man as Moses saith a living spirit or a spirit of life And this after counsel and deliberation Faciamus hominem Sanctius his animal mentis● capa●ius ali●e Gen. 2.7 As in re magni momenti a matter of greater concern and weight then heaven and earth and all the host of them They were made ex tempore as it were Nudo verbo Let there be and there was But man was made ex consilio after Gods own Image full of beauty health honour riches wisedome the Spirit of the living God given him in an extraordinary beam Whence is this lapse to earth to dust to a sad and wretched a decaying and dying condition both temporal and eternal Sure not from the impotencie or envy of the blessed Creator whose omnipotent goodnesse is inconsistent with such infirmities nor yet from the frailty and inconsistency of the subject matter which he raised to so goodly a fabrick little lower then the Angels Psal 49.12 as man was made who should have been as long immortal as Angels had he continued a man that is Rom. 6.23 rational and religious enjoying the Image of God on him which forbids and excludes as all shadow of sin and defection so of all death or mutation to worse No. The Psalmist tells us after the history of Genesis Man being in honour did not so abide but is become like to the beasts that perish by the frailty of his will which fell from adherence to God as the durable and supreme Good Sin hath levelled us to beasts to death to devils to hell This death in all sizes and degrees from the least ache and dolour to the compleatnesse of damnation is the wages of fin So the Apostle oft tells us Rom. 5.17 by one mans offence death entred and reigned over all The soul that sins that shall die Ezek. 18. Sin is the source of all our sorrows the lethalis arundo poysoned arrow whose infection drinks up the spirits and eats up the health flesh bodies and soules of mankind No wonder we die since we sin at such a rate the wonder is that we live any one of us one moment How much more is the miracle of Gods love and mercy that hath by Christs death and merits brought forth to light eternal life and offered it to all penitent and believing sinners as purchased and prepared for them Because sin once lived in us we must once die and till sin be dead or mortified in us we cannot hope for life eternal Through death then thou wilt best see the face of thy sin What Poet what Painter what Orator whose colours are most lively can expresse the amazement horrour and astonishment that seized on the looks and hearts of Adam and Eve Rom. 27. 2 Tim. 1.10 when they had the dreadful prospect of their first great sin and curse written with the blood and pourtrayed on the face of their dead son Abel who in that primitive paucity of mankind was barbarously slain by his brother Cain Who can expresse or conceive the woful lamentation they made over their dead son in whom they first beheld the beauties of life swallowed up by the deformities of death Is death then so dreadful so dismal so deformed so putid O think what that sin is which thou so embracest and huggest The fountain of bitternesse is more bitter then the stream Our madness and misery is
he died of that scrophulous humor abounding in him which we call the Struma or Kings evil full of little and great knots or kernels in his lungs and entrails some as big as pullets eggs some larger and adherent to the backbone on both sides his lungs so full of that caseous or cheese-like substance that they were swelled and inflamed to a quantity too big for his brest and breathing so that he died on the suddain presently after he had spoken and removed himself with much seeming strength and earnestness the heart being suddenly suffocated and wasted on one side or Auricle for want of due refreshing and however the lungs began in some folds to be putrified yet neither my self nor any other perceived either while he lived though I spake very neer him any thing offensive in his breath or unsavoury from his pectorals or vitals This was the disease and languor of which this poor Gentleman died and I know by most assured experience it hath befaln such as have been both for unspotted virtue and exquisite handsomeness inferiour to no persons living in their times In a word the means which providence permitted to put an end to this noble Gentlemans days was such as might well deserve the pity of all but not the reproach of any good Christian who being at last thus truly and fully informed will in all respects carry themselves as becometh humanity and Christianity modesty and veracity A more solicitous confutation of any vulgar surmises and false reports were to give them too much reputation credulity not duly informed is venial though applied to calumnies but clearly convinced it becomes venomous and mortal because malicious How miserable a people are we whose civil and religious fewds are such that men are made to live and die to be saved and damned not as the mercy and justice of God wills but as human adherencies or antipathies list to censure No party no passion here sways with me I abhor to flatter or calumniate any man in Court or Country I follow no dictates but those of experience impartiality certainty upon which ground I presume no ingenuous man or woman can envy or deny me to apply even to the now dead body of this noble Gentleman these sweet persumes and honest spices made up of nothing but evident truth comely civility just honour and upright conscience which last office I perform not so much a friend and servant to him as to truth and the God of truth to whose merciful dispose we leave his soul for ever His Corps or bodily remains are brought you see to be deposited with you his kind friends his loving neighbours his honest tenants in reversion and his worthy Country-men to be laid up with the mortal reliques of his excellent Mother and other his noble Ancestors to whom he is gone before his Father or Grandfather by a preproperous fate inverting the usual and by most parents desired methods of mortality I need not tell your ingenuity to my worthy Country-men and you of this place what causes you have more then other men to lay this death to heart and to stand still at this dead Corps as the men of Judah and Israel did that came to the place where Asahel fell down and died as of a person eminently related as to many other 2 Sam. 2.23 so to a principal noble Family in this County the experience of whose piety hospitality charity and love of learning poor and rich have had long experience and some constant living monuments among you in this village besides that to which they have committed their urns and bones their dust and ashes as it were to your safe custody How far you are injured or detrimented by this noble persons death depends much on the piety vertue and honour of their minds and actions who now enjoy or may after succeed to those honours and revenews to which he was Heir apparent which he now neither wants nor envies nor desires How far you are or may be bettered by his death and these endeavours for your good depends much upon your care and conscience to lay to heart those many instances of improving a Funeral which I have told you wherein Gods grace upon your humble prayers and honest endeavours will enable you to live as becomes those that remember dayly they must die and appear before God For which last agony and great appearance the Lord in mercy fit us all for his sake who died for us Jesus Christ the righteous To whom with the Father and holy Spirit be everlasting glory for ever Amen Phil. 1.21 To me to live is Christ and to die is gain Id agamus ut vita sit jucunda morbus non injucundus mors verò jucundissima A PRAYER in order to prepare for DEATH O Lord the everlasting God the only giver and preserver of all life natural spiritual temporal and eternal who hast breathed into these our vile bodies of dust the breath of life even pretious and immortal souls by which we are capable to know to love to live with and enjoy Thee for ever as the only Supream Good who only art an object adequate to the vast capacities and sufficient to satisfie those infinite desires of living happily to eternity which thou hast planted in us Thou hast justly passed upon all mankind for our sinful falling from thee which is the present death of our souls as to an holy and happy life the irrevocable decree of once dying and after that appearing before thy judgement both which will certainly ere long overtake us all Blessed Lord the terrors of death and of judgement of our present mortality and our deserved misery are infinite upon us very fearful we are because very sinful and loth because unfit to die a natural death but we are wholly confounded and even swallowed up with the thoughts and dread of that black Abyssus an eternal death If the death of our bodies by the soules separation be so horrid and grievous to us O what must the death of our souls be which consists in an utter separation from thy love and favour shutting us up in the chains of eternal darkness and under the pains of everlasting burnings We confess how just cause we have to be ashamed to live and yet afraid to die having no hope of the least degree of life or happiness in our death as from our selves where our own consciences have already passed a sentence of death and an expectation of thy just vengeance to destroy us In which sad state of dying and despairing we should have both lived and died if thou hadst not made us who were dead in sins and trespasses to hear thy voice in Jesus Christ that we might live As thou hast been a God of great goodness and long-suffering to us not willing we should die in our sins but repent of them and live so as a most merciful Father thou hast made a new and living way to the throne of thy grace
higher form of life are scarce among Solomons living who lay things to heart that is Altâ mente reponunt they deeply and devoutly seriously and solemnly rationally and religiously consider resolve and ponder in intimis animi recessibus the inward recesses of their soules or consciences the whole purport of such occasions what they mean in all their aspects They make as it were a speculative Anatomy and intellectual dissection of the dead yea and of death it self in all its forms and fashions in its causes and effects its antecedents concomitants and consequences They look upon the face of it which is neer at hand and the long train or extent of it which reacheth to Eternity This is the Lecture that the living read upon the dead and many lessons they learn from them because they are men that have an heart which is wise and understanding duely weighing in the scale of true reason and divine wisdom every occurrence and event of providence which hath any remark or signal character upon it as the death of any man or woman young or old infant or decrepit hath to such as have an heart able to apply it notwithstanding this frequency of such spectacles which with many men and women takes away the sense and regard of them though such persons need every day a memento mori some spectacle or remembrancer as King Philip had daily to put them in mind that they are but men Philippe memento te esse mortalem How necessary is it for them to remember their latter end to consider in what a vain shadow they live or rather die in their life because they are without an heart as silly birds not aware of the snares of sin the pits of death and hell over which they carelesly and confidently passe every moment Frequencie of Funerals doth not lessen the right use and influence of them to such living as know how to lay them to heart They doe not as women and children or country clowns only start amain when some sudden and unexpected death befals any as if it were the discharging of a great cannon near them which they never dreamed of but as valiant Commanders who finding that an hot battery and frequent shot slayes men round about them wisely consider that they may be the next mark whom death will hit which thought is so far from discouraging or appalling a man of a good heart that is pious and generous that it onely summons him to muster up all the fortitude and strength of his soul that whether he live or die he may do neither like a fool or a coward or a beast but like a valiant man and a good Christian who being engaged in a good Canse having a good God and a good conscience doubts not to make a good end when God shall call him out of this life to a better The Living that is the wise and considerable sort of mankind are the only persons who have hearts to consider all things as they ought to reflect upon their own hearts to commune with them to try and examine their state and tempers their defects and disorders their extravagancies and necessities The Living are they that duely consider the true interests and eternal concernments of their hearts and spirits their soules and consciences far beyond those of their bodies senses or fortunes The Living doe upon such occasions of mortality in se descendere make sober retreats home looking to themselves and searching into the penetralia animae their hearts above all Which they know to be as the rudder or steerage of the soule and of the whole man of all thoughts words and actions the card or compass by which our momentary and eternal course is shaped They know the infinite importance of a well or ill constituted and managed heart They find that verified which our Saviour tells us That out of the heart of man proceed evil thoughts murders Matth. 15.18 adulteries fornications thefts false witness blasphemies c. That God chiefly requires and regards this as the Gemme of the man most precious in it self most proper and proportionate for God That all beauty strength wit estate honour offered to God without the Heart is but the sacrifice nay the sacriledge and affront of fools and hypocrites Therefore it is frequently inculcated from Heaven and in the Scripture Prov. 23.26 to all sorts of men under all dispensations of Religion to Jew and Gentile Give me thy heart an honest and good heart Psal 51. a pure and peaceable heart an humble and contrite heart God will not despise yea in this he delights all things else are loss and dung in comparison Nothing else in man is worthy of God and yet nothing less worthy of him that is Gen. 6.5 naturally less fit and prepared for him What God complained long ago is verified in every mans experience That every imagination of the thoughts of mans heart was evil and that continually The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 distempers diseases yea and deaths of the heart of man are as many as dangerous and as desperate as those of the body yea infinitely more For the bodies diseases doe but kill us as to mans society and to a moments life on earth but the diseases of the heart kill us as to the life of God and an eternal happiness of conservation in Heaven The living God who delights not in the death of a sinner nor yet in a dead heart which is the first death of a sinner as a gracious Father and compassionate Physitian hath discovered to us the many plagues which are in our hearts the sicknesses to which they are subject by the surfets they take of the world and their senses Sometimes the Heart swels with the tumor of intolerable pride sometimes it burns withcholerick inflammations sometimes it is scorched with passionate calentures of inordinate lusts sometimes it is almost drowned like hydropick and overgrown bodies with its sensual luxuries and fulness even to abominable fedities sometimes it hath such a gout as it is in great pain at any the least motion for God or any good motion from him sometime it pines away in a Consumption amidst all its sensible pleasures plenty and honours not finding any satisfactory solid and durable good in them all Sometimes the heart is shaken with paralytick tremblings and terrors like Earthquakes which seem to arise from the dark and pestilent vapors in it self sometimes it hath not only fits of the stone refractory tempers but a petrified habitude of a hard and stony heart which nothing doth soften neither mercy nor judgment love nor wrath bounty nor patience of God Sometimes the heart falls into Lethargick and Apoplectick stupors like Nabals and Achitophels it growes remorseless benummed stupid senselesse dull and dead within men past fear or feeling of any thing either sharp and pungent in the Law or spiritful and reviving in the Gospel Solomon who was a great King of hearts and had a
very large soveraign knowledge of them Eccl. 8.11 beyond any meer man tells us that the hearts of the sons of men are not onely full of folly 1 Kings 8.38 Eccl. 9.3 and set upon evill and sick of several sorts of plagues but frenzy fury and madness are in their hearts while they live which is a distemper not easily if ever perfectly cured But if any thing as to humane applications be likely to work any good upon the worst mens hearts Job 41.7 if any dart or weapon can reach and pierce these Leviathans whose natural proneness and customary habits in sin are so closely fixed and hardened to all manner of sin without any remorse it is such as Death brings with it not as it is pictured to scare children but as it is really it self and perceived among all sorts of men good or bad sparing none surprising any one even in the pride hardness deadness and damnableness of his heart Nothing in life is a more consummated fear then that which death carries with it It is called the King of terrors Job 18.14 Isa 14.9 11 12. Ezek. 32.27 Rex longimanus whose Scepter or sword reacheth all even Kings themselves such as were most impatient not to have all men living stoop down to their Scepter and Empire even these mighty Cedars and Colosses of Monarchs hath death subdued in a short time with a little labour and brought them down to the pit and bound them in chaines of darkness in the prison and dungeon of the grave triumphing over these Triumphers with an ironick Epinicion as the Prophet expresseth How art thou faln Art thou also become weak as we who wert a terror in the land of the living with thy sword lying in vain under thy head while thine iniquities are upon thy bones This representation of death to the living should be laid to Heart by all men and will be so by all such as truly live and not only breath There is a great difference between vixit and fuit being and living he lives that liveth wisely and worthily As bene valere is vivere health is the life of life so much more bene vivere est vita vitalis to live well is the welfare of life For as every disease of the body is a partial death to such a degree of health and life as is wanting so every sinful distemper of the rational heart of man is so far a deadness as it is a disorder upon it Which God seeks to cure and conquer by setting before us frequent spectacles of mortality which not to lay to heart and to entertain meerly with a specious formality with a childish historick or histrionick indifferency is the way firmare morbum corroborare mortem to increase the diseases and confirm that death which is upon mens hearts who are yet living in a vain shadow or shew of life only which is to these filly inconsiderate and sinful fooles not only mortalis and moriens but mortua yea mortifera vita a mortal and dayly dying but a dead yea a deadly and killing life while they live onely to beasts to men to their bodies and to a moment but are dead to soules to their own hearts to Gods Spirit and to Eternity as to their present impenitent state and posture of heart God by the Prophet complaines That the righteous perish and no man laid it to heart Yea when he sent many messengers and promiscuous executioners of death among the Jewes Isa 57.1 Aezek 14.21 his four sore judgments yet they laid not those terrors to heart nor considered their latter end that they might fear before God and live no more presumptuously Our blessed Lord at once reproacheth and threatneth those that had not so laid to heart the death of those on whom the tower of Siloa fell and whose blood Pilate mingled with their sacrifices Luke 13.4 that except they repent they should likewise perish Deaths must be so laid to heart that by the sadness of the countenance the heart may be made better Eccl. 7.3 as Solomon speaks The house of laughter may afford the heart of a fool more seeming pleasure for a season but the house of mourning affords a wise mans heart more solid and durable profit Luke 17.37 who like the Eagle will chuse to be there where the body not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea the dead corps is as our Saviour speaks in an higher sense where the Eagle-eye of a believer quick and clear seeing afar off eagerly hastens firmly seizeth pertinaciously holdeth and greedily feedeth upon Christs blessed body and blood which is given to die for us as the only food of our soules in its infinite merits As we must not take the name of God in vain by profane swearing blaspheming or jesting nor may we receive his grace in vain as to the meanes the monitions and motions of his Spirit within us or without us So neither may we passe by the dead as the Priest and Levite did by the wounded and half-dead traveller without much regard as if we were unconcerned Gods dispenpensations in this kind must not be in vain to us though we cannot doe the dead any good yet we may get good from them and by them yea account must be given as of other things so of this Thou must not only reddere rationem vitae tuae but alienae give an account of thy own life but of anothers too who may sin at the charge of thy soule while as Eli thou neglectest to hinder or reprove or give them good example or it may be soothest and encouragest them in sin or whose pious life is set before thee as an excellent pattern but ill followed by thee yea further we must reddere rationem mortis alienae give account to God of anothers death not only whom we unjustly slay Gen. 9.5 or neglect to save deliver asmuch as is justly in our power God will require the blood of these both for man and beast but further we must give account of anothers death which we see or hear of and doe not consider which we celebrate onely but lay it not to heart in piety when we are not warned or moved at all when custome as of sinning so of seeing the dead takes away all due sense when being touched with so sharp a spur as that of anothers death should be to thee thou art like a dull jade or tired hackney not at all affected or moved to mend thy pace not one sinners sigh or Christians tear no sad reflection or penitent remorse no quickened endeavours or confirmed resolutions in order to prepare more intentively for death for judgment and eternity only thou joggest on after the wonted rate and carriers pace of a formal and cold-hearted Christian Which evil defects arguments of a dead and unaffected heart either totally or gradually are the lesse excusable in men because the uses or advantages to be
many pens illustrated by frequent Funerals meeting us every moment and at every turn yet seldom laid to heart but as a cloud it passeth over our heads without showring down any softning drops on our souls These discourses as hail on the hills rattle in every Funeral Sermon and exhortation upon our ears and heads but seldome enter and pierce into our hearts They are like Ghosts or Fantasms that appear and vanish scaring us a little but they touch us not at all notwithstanding the heapes upon heapes which are very ten and twenty years made up of our dead friends kindred and acquaintance who are no sooner removed out of our sights but they are gone out of our memories as to any pious improvement Xerxes is reported to have wept when seeing his vast Army which made a million of fighting men he considered how one century of years would mow them all down as so many flowers or spires of grass in a field The softness of Christians hearts should go beyond the savageness of such an Heathen He considered the breaking of the box but he was not sensible of those sweet resentments that savour of life unto life which a wise and gracious heart extracts out of the objects and meditations of death He beheld the carkasses of so many Lions but he found no honey in any of them He had only the eyes of experience sense and reason but not of grace and religion which looks through the dark mist and medium of death to the prospect of a true and eternal life That great Persian Commander as the Roman Emperors after him Quos nec spectasset quisquā nec spectatuus esset Ludi Seculares Suet. in Claud. when they caused to be proclaimed at their greatest secular Interludes and most solemn Pageants which were presented but once in an hundred years Come and see those shows which no man living ever did see heretofore nor shall ever see again These men I say had the Moon and Stars of common reason and experience to shew them their own and other mens mortality but they wanted the beams of the Sun of righteousness the light of God's word in the Scriptures which every where sets so many afterisks or memorable notes of emphasis and terror upon Death In the day that thou eatest thou shalt die Gen. 2. An Oracle which presently began to be fulfilled as soon as the condition was forfeited just as the sea ebbs from the very first minute of its recess or abatement though sensim pedetentim by silent steps and almost insensible degrees according to the patience and indulgence of a long-suffering God Yet as the candle is dying or consuming as soon as it is lighted or burning and the hour-glass is emptying as soon as it is running so the life of man ran to waste and the exhaustings of death so soon as it ceased to have communion and supplies of immortal influx from the God of life When the intercourse between the spring and the current is once stopped and obstructed the constancy fulness and perennity of the stream presently decays and as it drieth up it dies A sinful man is presently surrounded with a thousand deaths every moment Mille modi mortis c. and though we can die but one death in the conquest or completion yet how many legions of deaths are ever marching in array against us both as to the menacing preparation without us and the disposition or infirmity within us which expose us to die on every side There is not only mors in urna but in olla in victu vestitu halitu death in our coffins and urns but in our cups and pots in our meats and drinks and in our bodies and bowels yea in our breath and bread which we use as the breath staff of life the short reciprocations returns of which are the constant supports of our lives and the chief antemuralia defensatives against death Thus the Philosophers discoursed when death striking upon their hard and flinty hearts Poena ad unum terror ad omnes they saw by the sparks or strictures of reason their own mortal condition But the Divine Oracles are like Thunderbolts falling here and there and neer to every one of us though their execution light not presently on our heads Heb. 9.27 yet the terror and contrition should upon our hearts because it is by an unrepealable decree appointed for all men once to die and after that the judgement Death as a great drag-net fetches all into its capacious bosome this King of terror as Job calls death is verè Rex Catholicus truely a Catholick King reigning over all Pallida mors aequo pulsat pede pauperum tabernas Regumque turres Hor. as the Apostle Paul expresses it even those that most glory in their royal priveledges and titles No Emperor hath any Empire over it nor against it any more then the Brittish King Canutus of Kent had against the seas incroaching upon his Throne Or then that cunning Prince Lewis the 11th of France who as Phil. Commines reports fenced himself Phil. de Com. Histor of France but in vain with holy reliques surrounding his body and bed to see if he could scare away death with those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holy terriculaments Kings that have a just power of life and death as to their subjects have no power over their own to prolong their lives or protract their deaths one moment Kings are conquered and cow'd by death Potentates are impotent in this conflict for they assist they very enemy and are traytors to themselves and if no other force doth the force of their own infirmities will certainly destroy them No Protectors can protect themselves or others from this civil war this intestine enemy which is unavoidable irresistable which hath all the engines for battering and arts of undermining us Non domus fundus c. neither house nor land nor father nor friend nor favour nor power nor Courts nor Crowns nor the surest defensative under heaven against men which is a valiant and faithful Army these are all as bulrushes and straws in the way of death which is the way of all the living Death in this absolute empire and unlimited soveraignty using not only jure suo its own right but jure divino God's right as the executioner of his just irrevocable and dreadful sentence upon all mankind Among whom none ever was sufficient to answer that Question Psal 89.48 What man is he that liveth and shall not see death Shall he deliver his soule from the hand of the grave Yea when the Son of the everliving God who is God co-essential and immortal with his Father appeared among men as one of us in the form of sinful flesh Death though he had no just claim against him because no guile or sin was found in him Phil. 2.8 1 Pet. 2.22 John 10.18 yet used its prerogative And though this blessed Messias could
not be forced no man taking his life from him yet he yielded to doe the lowest homage to death as a man not without great horror of that cup yea humbling himself even to the death of the crosse and to the prison of the grave for a short time that by dying he might overcome death in its own fort 1 Cor. 15. By grapling with this Dragon he pulled out his sting and made him cast forth his poyson so far as to be innoxious now and not very terrible to those that fly to this Jesus for protection and life John 11.25 who is the resurrection and the life to believers and holy livers who maketh light to grow up to the righteous out of their darkness and life out of his death To others indeed that are either Infidel Heathens or unchristian Christians which have but forms and no power of godliness on whose hearts the death of Christ hath not yet wrought as a corrasive against sin and a cordial against death to these Death still appears as a direful Comet or blazing star in his full magnitude truculent threatning formidable inevitable infinitely to be dreaded because he threatens them with a total and entire death not onely to their estates and honours pleasures power friends and bodies but as to their soules as to that after and eternal life If death prevailed so far upon the Son of God how far will its vastations reach upon those that are the children of the flesh only that is of the Devil and properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sons of death If the living Lion thus died what must become of those that are but as dead dogs A gracious Christian as Jonathan did Sauls javelin avoids the stroak of death as to the main it may graze on his body but it toucheth not his soul Col. 3.3 when his life is hidden with Christ in God A natural man though while he lived he blessed himself yet dies wholly Death like the flood prevaileth over his highest tops and mountains it gnaweth upon them as sheep Nothing is left him for ever of which it may be said In this he lives as in the houses of the Egyptians there was none in which there was not one dead yea the first born For his children they shal follow the generation of their fathers and never see light if they follow their evil steps His lands which he called after his name in a few years they are alienated his lamp quite extinct and his memorial perisheth For his fair and costly Monument Et habent sua fata Sepulchra These in revolutions of time Psal 49.19 either by the rough hand of war overturning all things or by the gentle and leisurely thawings of peace melt and moulder away till they bury themselves in their own dust which were designed as repositories and conservatories of their Masters As for their souls they never lived the life of God nor can they hope to live in light with him so that eternal death feedeth for ever upon the whole man devouring every-limb of body and faculty of soul as the Lions did the accusers of Daniel before ever they come to the ground O how sad how mad is that security among Christians which sleeps on the top of a mast in so dangerous a sea that dares to live in known and presumptuous sins amidst these infinite and hourly adventures of death playing over the head of that mine where he knows is daily sapping under him and within him nor doth a man know in what moment it may be sprung to his utter dissipation We know not at what hour of the day Mat. 24.42 43. or watch of the night this notable Thief will come to break up our house of clay and spoil us of all our goods together with our lives and he is but the Vancourrier of our Judge whose counsel is holy and wholsome advising all his disciples to watch and pray lest we be surprised at unawares by the arrests of Death and Judgment Nothing concerns a wise man or evidenceth a good man more then to be never so imployed as he shall not dare to die that like an honest and able debtor he may confidently walk at all hours of the day in every street of the City where he dwells and where he owes a debt which he is able and willing to pay whereas the lewdnesse and riot of impenitent sinners makes them like bankrupt debtors shift and shark hide and skulk up and down in by-wayes and at twilight for fear of those Creditors whom they are neither able nor willing to satisfie and yet they cannot long escape the Bayliffs and Jaylors hand nor by any artifices avoid that prison out of which is no redemption till a man hath paid the uttermost farthing that is never unlesse while we are in the way we agree with our merciful Creditor Mat. 5.29 who is ready upon our humble request to forgive us all that we owe him like that gracious and generous Master in the Gospel Mat. 18.27 6. Lay to heart what little cause any mothers child of us hath to presume to sin and to procrastinate our repentance since we have no cause to presume of life till to morrow to neglect agreeing with our adversary while we are yet in the way that is under the meanes offer and capacity of reconciliation and happy accord to adventure so precious and momentary an opportunity upon which depends our everlasting fate in weal or woe Ex hoc momento pendet aeternitas never stirring up any Sympathies in our souls toward our Saviours death nor any compassions to our selves as to our own mortality never to return any holy Ecchoes or humble Amens either to the precepts or promises terrors or comforts of Gods word but as if stark deaf and quite dead so we are utterly dumb and unmoved as to all that is thundred and lightned from heaven 2 Cor. 5.20 2 Cor. 6.1 to all that Gods Embassadors those Boanerges and Barnabasses sonnes of thunder or of consolation daily cry unto us with infinite counsels and reproofs Sermons and prayers inviting and beseeching men to pity themselves to flee from the wrath that is to come to disarm Death and defeat the Devil of his expected prey There is no rock that Ministers should more avoid thenthis of giving people any encouragement to delay their repentance which no man may upon good grounds do e that hath not any assurance of his life nor any insurance against death Nor doth any thing usually more contribute to this vulgar presumption and dilatories then the courting and complementing with the dead and living too in Funeral Sermons making them rather Panegyricks and Harangues of commendation to the dead then serious summons and alarms to the living when neither the life nor the death of the interred gave any pregnant evidences of such grace and comfort as deserves either the commendation or imitation of the living No Funeral Sermons as I
preach his revealed will which is our sanctification by our repenting and amending according to the tenour of the Gospel Such as deaffen their ears harden their hearts and turn their backs on God and the meanes of grace all the time of their strength and health will find it very hard to see or seek his face in the disorder darkness and clouds of sickness which is the twilight and evening of Death As in civil conversation no man may so presume of Gods providence as to neglect honest industry so in religious respects no man may hope for grace that doth not rationally duely and conscienciously apply to the use of those meanes which God hath appointed in his Church All blessings temporal and eternal which are acquirable by and offered to reasonable creatures are ordinarily the effects of Gods mercy and mans industry not of miracles or omnipotence The meanes of grace given by God in his Church are never barren or ineffectual but to those who neglect to attend them and use them as they may and ought to doe if they look upon them as from God and in order to their soules good which is to be attained by this or no way 7. In order therefore to promote and speed by Gods assistance our repentance while we are yet in life and health we should lay to heart specially at the summons of another death What infinite patience and long-suffering it is that hitherto God hath shewed toward thee for many years of vanity sin and desperate folly Rom. 2.4 in which he hath spared thee notwithstanding thou hast daily provoked him to his face yet thou art not to this day cut off from the land of the living nor is the door of mercy and repentance shut upon thee How many have been cut off by the sword by sudden death and by lingring sickness here one there another while thou art reprieved Should not this forbearance of God lead thee to repentance Is it not enough in all conscience and too much in all reason and gratitude thus far to have offended a God that is loth to destroy thee giving thee space to repent Wilt thou after the hardness of thy heart and vain confidence of life still treasure up wrath against the day of wrath The time past may suffice to give thee sufficient experience how unwilling God is thou shouldest die 1 Pet. 4.3 and how willing thou shouldst repent and live Ezek. 33.11 For it is of the Lords mercy that thou art not consumed Thou mightest have been the corps now to be put into the grave Lam. 3.22 where is no device or wisedome of counsel or repentance or preaching Eccl. 9.10 or praying O turn no longer the grace of God into wantonness which is offered in Christ by his Ministers Breve sit quod turpiter audes Of a short precious and uncertain moment the least part is too much to be lavished in those wayes Jude 4. which are not only unprofitable but pernicious Our whole lives after the vanity of childhood and youth are too little to be spent in well-doing Isa 20.15 and in undoing what hath been either vain or wicked To live as if we had made a covenant with death and hell is not onely a fool-hardiness but a madness which hath by infinite sad and horrid instances been fearfully punished but not yet sufficiently cured in mankind Eccl. 8.12 Though a sinner live an hundred years twice told yet it shall not be well with him Eccl. 11.9 Though young and strong men please themselves in the delights of their eyes and desires of their own hearts yet they must know that for all these things God will bring them to judgment A mans debts and dangers are not the lesse because he is not presently arrested nor sees the books and specialties which are against him or the Serjeants which will arrest him 'T is high time to cease to offend that God who is willing to remit all our former arrears and debts upon our return to him begging his pardon and resolving to live worthy of such grace Doe not then feed any longer on ashes it is a deceived heart that turneth thee aside Isa 44.20 Jonah 2.8 Phil. 2.12 Heb. 2.9 so that thou canst not deliver thy soul nor say Is there not a lye in my right hand Take heed of following lying vanities lest thou forsake thy own mercies which are offer'd us but from moment to moment so as every minute of time that passeth every clock that striketh calls upon thee in the wise man's counsell Eccles 9.10 Whatever thine hand findeth to do do it with all thy might And what hast thou to do but to work out thy salvation with feare and trembling as the Apostle calls upon the Philippians All without this is time and labour lost 8. Lay to heart upon the sight and reflexions of death the infinite want thou hast of such a Saviour who may be able and willing to redeem thee a captive to sin and held all thy life in the fear of death from both these miserable bondages Lay to heart the infinite grace transcendent love and mercy of Christ Heb. 2.9 who is offer'd thee as a sufficient Saviour to all purposes Who hath tasted death for every man and hath overcome death as well as satisfied for the death of the whole world excluding none nor excepting any but putting all into a capacity of life and salvation upon their faith and repentance John 5.40 John 6.37 40. Ver. 54. John 8.52 John 11.25 Mark 16.15 so that whoever will come to him and believe in him shall not die but have eternal life yea though he die as to the body yet he shall continue to live in the happiness of his soul and his body shall be raised to live in glory and immortality by Christ who hath wrought this for us by his death and brought it to light by his Gospel which is commanded to be preached to every rational creature under heaven Lay then to heart that is seriously and alone ponder with thy self what Christ hath done and suffered for thee what he hath deserved of thee what he expects from thee as a man Christian for whose sake he hath died Wouldst thou have greater instances of his love to thee John 10.11 John 15.13 then thus to die for thee Shall not thy unthankful and sinful importunity be satisfied with that which hath satisfied divine justice stopped the Devils mouth conquered death and purchased life eternal to every true believer It wrought up blessed Ignatius's heart to an ambitious zeal of Martyrdome that he might shew his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reciprocal love to Christ when he deeply considered and oft repeated Christ my love hath been crucified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Doth it become thee to neglect despise sinne against such love any longer Canst thou trample that blood under feet which hath been shed for thee Wouldst thou have him
daily crucified for thee Canst thou fancy or desire greater benefits then those that accrew to thee and are offered thee by Christ who hath taken away the sting of death 1 Cor. 15. which is sin that when thou diest in the Lord thou art sure to be eternally blessed with the Lord Vitam non amittimus sed mutamus Hieron for true Christians doe not lose but exchange life by death Like a turning chatr which serves for a door so death natural is but a moving us out of one room which is an ontward antecamera chamber or common gallery or base court into another which is most ample and nobly furnished with all company and other accomplishments befitting the Majesty Palace and presence of the King of Heaven Death is but a transition or passage from grace to glory the taking of the candle of our soules out of a dark and close lanthorn of our bodies to set it on a fair candlestick in a stately chamber till the body be restored fitter for it crystalline celestial incorruptible When Christians defer their repentance and comming to Christ they forget the priviledges and benefits which are enjoyable only by them both in life and death at resurrection and judgment to come There being no other name under heaven by which we may be saved in any of these exigents Acts 4.12 which will in after-years overtake us all O bethink thy self and say in thy heart with David What shall I render to the Lord for all his mercies Psal 116.12 What shall I return to my blessed Saviour who hath redeemed me by his precious blood from so many and so great deaths I will devote both soul and body to him as a living and acceptable sacrifice Rom. 12.2 which is but my reasonable service Though I have done foolishy ungratefully unchristianly and desperately hitherto yet I will adde no more drunkenness to thirst or iniquity to sinne since he hath by his meritorious passion both redeemed my life from the death in sin and my death from the penal horrors for sin Yea in this he hath made my death better then my life that while I live I shall sin by daily defects and infirmities but when I die sin shall wholly die in me This one cordial is in every good Christians death that his sin shall not be immortal but as he shall be ever with the Lord so he shall never sin more against him 9. Lay to heart upon this and the like sad occasions to what good end or purpose thou hast hitherto lived for many yeares as a man or a Christian in the sphear of reason in the bosome of the Church and in the light of true Religion Bethink thy self how many hours dayes weeks moneths yeares God hath given thee since thou cam'st to be master of reason and instructed in Religion knowing good and evil as a space of repentance and opportunity to shew thy fear love duty and obedience to God that thou mightst be capable of his eternal rewards There are in every year eight thousand seven hundred seventy five hours if we should allow the greater half of these for sleep and necessary attending our bodies take but four thousand houres for our work and business of consequence how poor account can most men women of ripe age but not yet come to yeares of discretion give of all these in a whole year Not one hour in seven which is as a Sabbatical hour in every day not one hour in ten which is but the Tithe of our time is generally devoted to God or any good duty Nay many are weary of doing nothing Mark 11.20 and how solicitous to ravel out their time in the most impertinent and excessive pastimes they can imagine They are like to doe very well who know not what to doe with themselves and their time Phil. 3.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 When they have most leisure to intend their spiritual and eternal improvement then are they most lavish of their precious houres Debuisti boc tempus non perdere So Pliny the elder checked his Nephew for losse of time when he saw him walking in the streets and indisposed thereby to read or note any thing Canst thou not tell how to spend this or that long day Wouldst thou adde spurs to the wings of time I will tell thee the very waste and seeming superfluity of thy time would serve thy turn for an eternal happiness to work out thy salvation Those lost shreds of hours which thou flingest away lazing and laughing and chatting and visiting stretching yawning and playing and fooling so long till from doing nothing art tempted to doe evil things idleness being the Devils anvil Incus Diaboli desidia Cavene te Diabolus inveniat oriosum Hieren Pro. 17.16 These parings and rags I say of thy precious time which is infinitely more precious then the finest gold is a price put into thy hand if thou be not an egregious fool of which infinite gain and advantage may be made for ever In this and that good hour which thou prodigally losest not knowing how to spend it thou mightest be seeking thy lost-self thy lost soul thy lost conscience thy lost God thy lost Saviour who came into the world to seek and to save that which is lost O what might not be done in that chain and circle which St. Jerom commends to Laeta Orationem lectio lectionem meditatio meditationē oratio sequebatur Hieron of dispensing time nay if we wrought but now and then a link of grace O what prayers what tears what meditation what contrition what compunction what godly sorrow what ingenuous shame what self-abhorrence what self-despairs might be wrought upon thy heart as to the reflection of thy sins past Yea what fear of God what reverence of the Divine majesty power wisedome justice goodness evident in his works providences word What breathings sighings and seekings after God! What purposes vowes holy resolutions thou mightst take up and begin What hatred and loathing of sin as the greatest abasing of a reasonable creature what search into and admiration of the mystery of Christ crucified what longing after him what faith in him what sense of thy want of him what zeal for him what humility meekness charity holy industry sense of Gods savour sweet influence of his Spirit power against corruptions comforts against death hopes of heaven delight in well-doing joy in God! What serious considerations of the deformity and danger by sin of the beauty and benefits by Christ of the vanity of the world the certain uncertainty of dying These meditations and many such like effects of our thoughts and reflexions of things might be the happy fruits of thy true of thy holy considerations and sober endeavours if thou wert worthy of one moment of that life which thou art so weary of and wastest so impertinently a little portion of which will be one day when thy distresses and terrors come upon
alienated from his fear by the prosperity of any evil doers Psal 73.16 or adversity of well doers in this life But go into his Sanctuary with David search the Scriptures and there thou shalt see the eternal counterpoisings of these strange momentary dispensations how the wicked go away to eternal darkness Psal 97.10 11 c. Luke 12.4 and shall never see any light of comfort when his candle is once put out but to the righteous the Lord preserveth the souls of them from those that can but kill the body Rom. 2.7 yea light is sown in their darkness life in their death a crown of eternal glory will grow out of their crown of thorns rivers of everlasting refreshings shall flow out of the rock of their patience and sufferings in well doing in the midst of which fiery trials the spirit of glory rested upon them 1 Pet. 3.18 1 Pet. 4.13 14. Phil. 1.28 they are made conformable to Christ in sufferings that they may reign with him hence they enjoy a most evident sign of their adversaries condition but of their own salvation and that of God who is a righteous Judge a God of truth and faithfulness who will not forget the labour of love or suffer those to go unrewarded who suffer for righteousness sake Mat. 5.10.12 great is their reward in heaven Do not foolishly fret and envy Dives his delicates when thou seest Lazarus die on a dunghil Luke 16.19 Matth. 14.8 nor grudge Herod his throne when thou seest John Baptists head in a charger There is not a greater argument Certissimum futuri judicii praejudicium Tert. Jer. 51.56 The Lord God of recompenses shall surely require Mal. 3.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or more likely demonstration to confute Atheism to confirm faith and hope in a better and another life which the Lord God of recompenses hath certainly prepared for those that are his when he makes up his jewels Can any man be loser for Gods cause Shall not the just God do right to himself and to every man according to his own word and every mans works No man can think God is unable or unwilling to make such amends in another life as shall infinitely expiate and exceed all the seeming detriments here on the part of the godly and the increments or advantages on the part of the wicked Could he make such a world for the good and bad the just and unjust for men and beasts enemies and servants Matth. 5.45 and cannot he prepare for and bestow a better state upon his friends and children Is this mortal and momentary state worthy the name of life with which we are so taken and we are loth to leave whose welfare consists only in the using and enjoying of creatures either without life or only with life and sense or at best adorned with reason added to their life and sense Col. 2.22 but yet perishing in the use and dying as our selves Is this a life to be so desired and doted upon and must not that excel which consists in communion with and participation of the Creator who must necessarily be better then all his creatures and infinitely exceed them as much as light darkness the sea a drop or the Sun a mote or spark Is it a small matter that the spirit or soul of a good man like Lazarus's and Stephens Luke 16. is presently attended and received by many blessed Angels which light on it as a swarm of bees to conduct it joyfully to its blessed God and Saviour so that as soon as it parts out of the body it enjoys spiritual Angelical and celestial joys But the souls of the wicked loth to leave their carkasses and lingring as it were about their corps are presently beset with so many evil spirits or spiteful divels who like wasps and hornets fall upon it as it were to bite and sting and vex it with such resentments and terrors as they either feel or fear to which the soul is first self-condemned and presently selfe-tormented being its own Hell or Tormentor now as it was its own betrayer or tempter heretofore 10. These and the like serious reflexions may justly be laid to heart by all such as are yet but in the outward court of reason on the bare forms of religion and even by others who are come or seem so at least into the holy place to clearer perceptions of piety carrying sincere purposes in their souls and professing to live in communion with God and Christ I am to speak to the hearts of these also How come they to live still incumbred with so many strange opinions passions lusts and affections which seem very weak partial preposterous disorderly earthly and uncharitable Is this to live as in the prospect of death in the confines of heaven in the aim at eternal life yet so eager solicitous impatient disquieted and concerned for these momentary and transeunt enjoyments of life as if these were the main interests they were to carry on in life or to provide for against death Art thou a Kings son and embracest dunghils Lam. 4.5 talkest so much of heaven and graspest only earth Art thou among Gods Nazarites Lam. 4.7 who profess to be separate from sinners crucified to the world whose heart and conversation should be whiter then milk purer then snow beautiful as the rubies and more polished then Saphirs as Jeremiah laments and yet is thy visage blacker then a coal thy sin cleaveth to thy bones such an hidebound Christian and politick professor so carking and caring so getting and griping so sharking and shifting to and fro in thy judgement and way of religion that thou seemest more to regard the wind and weathercock of civil interests favours and advantages then the constant rule and compass of Gods word shifting thy sails to every point as may most fit thy worldly occasions rather then thy conscience and eternal concernments Whence is it that thou a profest pilgrim and stranger in this world art so great an agitator and so passionately engaged in secular sidings whence is this strange Metamorphosis or change of Christianity from the primitive beauty and Scriptural garb or fashion used by the Confessors Martyrs Apostles by Christ himself and his best followers in all ages when hands and eyes heads and hearts lives and conversations of Christians were all lifted up toward heaven and set upon heavenly things how are they now become dross so groveling to the earth joyning Christ with Belial and God with Mammon 2 Cor. 6.15 1 Thes 2.5 Col. 3.5 Rom. 2.22 Prov. 3.9 Mal. 3.8 professions of light with operations of darkness making Christian liberty a cloke for all licentiousness and malice for all filthy lucre and even sacrilegious covetousness which is worse then Idolatry for the Idolater honours a false god with his substance but a Sacrilegious Christian robs the true God to increase his private substance This temper is far from the mortifying
thou 'T is hard for us to give a just reason and Christian account for most of our weepings and least of those that are most excessive we weep more for any loss of a momentary toy then for the absence of our Lord the loss of Gods love the loss of a good conscience the Churches wastes Jerusalems ruines and the sins of our own souls or of others which call us to mourning As our blessed Lord said to the women weeping when they saw him led to be crucified so may every dead friend or other object of our weeping say to us Weep not for me but weep for your selves Luke 23.28 who many times have most cause to sorrow then when you sorrow least some tears are to be wept for again Tears cannot profit the dead but they may the living yea I recant they may profit even dead souls who are dead as St. 1 Tim. 5.6 Prov. 8.36 John 11.35 Paul speaks even while they live who love death tears and prayers may be a means by Gods grace to revive these as Jesus his tears were to bring to life Lazarus Tears are the distillations of love resolved into drops by the coolings of some ambient sorrow We cannot love any thing in our selves or others so justifiably as our and their souls In reference to these all our passions and affections should be rightly disciplined and ranged duly and exercised and improved as most needing and deserving our cares and counsels our prayers and tears Nor can I here omit to lay to your hearts what this Noble Gentleman suggested to me when being sent for I came to him the morning before he died He told me he was very sorry that it was so late with him yea he feared very late he had been long fed with some hopes of life but now he believed his time was short which he could wish he had more improved to his souls comfort while his strength of body had been somewhat better I know men and women too have a feminine and foolish fear to dispirit or deject any patient or decumbent with the serious thoughts or speech of their dying for fear their sad physick and nauseous prescriptions should not operate well on the ill humors of their bodies But the care of removing any burthens or obstructions upon their souls and consciences this must be deferred and neglected till there is such a decline of life and spirits as hangs out the black flag of death and despair then ubi desinit Medicus incipit Theologus when Physitians have in vain done their best the Divine must God knows too oft in vain do his best also for alas he hath little time in the agonies of death and the precipitations of life to search and apply the necessary remedies or comforts of a languishing soul which is as if a man should begin to read a long letter of great and present concernment when his candle was at the last twinkling A method certainly not more preposterous then dangerous to sick bodies and diseased souls If our Physitians were meer disciples of Galen and Hippocrates I should not wonder at their dilatory indifferencies as to mens souls and intensiveness only to their bodies but being many of them very learned men and some of them very good Christians I humbly conceive it would no way misbecome them nor any way impede the success of their arts and applications if they did upon the first perception of a dubious and dangerous state of any sick body with Christian wisedom and charity advise them yea and intreat them not to neglect the care of preparing their souls for God that as they will do their best with Gods help to cure their bodily distempers so it will no way hinder their skill or cure to carry on the concurrent welfare of their souls so as becomes good Christians because the event of all sickness is uncertain diseases oft flatter where they destroy therefore Physitians and Friends should be with all speed faithful to their Patients souls as well as bodies It bears no proportion for a sick patient to be visited twice or thrice in a day by Physitians in order to the bodies health and by a Divine once in a week it may be and this not till the last exigent and gasp of life as if this would abundantly serve the turn When men begin more to value their pretious and immortal souls they will more prize the help of true Divines whose prayers connsels and spiritual assistance being Gods indulgence and ordinance in his Church is usually followed with most gracious and comfortable successes toward sick persons that desire their help and send timely for them as St. James 5.14 James adviseth yea commandeth to do when Christians are cast down in bodily or spiritual dejections and when they are desirous to have the comfort of forgiveness of sins further sealed to them yea who is there so able so knowing so self-confident so comfortable in health that may not and usually doth not finde great damps dulness and difficulties of soul in sickness these are prone to be dispirited as well as the bodies of the best Christians and may well bear with nay most earnestly desire to have their weak hands supported and feeble knees strengthned by the counsel prayers and comforts of true Ministers Yea in the most desperate cases when dissolute livers are catched in Gods net or toile and now begin to make their addresses to God and preparations for eternity even in these cases the diligent and frequent assistance of discreet Ministers helping poor creatures to search and try their hearts to see their sins to look to God in Christ to turn to him and lay hold upon him doth many times work miraculous effects both to sanctifie sickness and to save souls so much doth God blesse the means he hath appointed when duly used which supinely neglected the end must needs fail I know many men and women too are now turned Preachers as not a few are turn'd Physitians which truly in my judgement amount no higher for the most part then Empiricks and Mountebancks in both making more work for able Divines and Physitians too This I am sure few men in their wits and willing to live but court the best Physitians nor do I see less reason why they should not desire and employ the best and truest Divines such as are most able and skilful most willing and faithful most authorized and commissionated by Christ and his Church to assist and comfort to instruct and absolve if need be dying sinners beyond what any man ordinarily can do in his health much less in the distempers dejections and darknesses of his sickness both corporal and spiritual who yet now affect in it most what in the frolick of their lives to be their own Teachers and Preachers their own Ordainers and Confessors their own Bishops and Presbyters too contrary to the judgment of all pious Antiquity who thought the Evangelical Ministry not an
made from the occasions and spectacles of mortality are excellent and many yea as obvious and easie as they are very useful and necessary for the state and heart of poor sinful mortals One Commentator oppressed with the plenty and variety of the benefits which rise from the due contemplation of Death of which he enumerates very few wraps up his thoughts in this oratorious expression He must be a potent and pathetick Orator full of a copious and apt eloquence who can sufficiently set them forth Gregory the Great in his Morals gives us this in general Mr Cartwright on Eccles Fructus mortis tum esse muliplices ut illis recensendis prolixa oratio sufficeret Oculos quos vitae voluptas claudit mortis amaritudo aperit That many times the bitterness of death opens those eyes which the sweetness of life had quite shut up We read that the famous Thomas Waldo of Lions the Father of the Waldenses had his first deaths wound I mean as to his sin and luxury made upon his heart by his seeing one fall down suddenly dead in the streets It was a dart which so strake through his liver that he presently applyed to a severe and pious reformation of life It is your unhappiness Right honorable and beloved that you are not at present blessed with such a Preacher who might most improve to you this sad occasion by shewing you according to the merit and import of it and the Text what are the excellent advantages you may make of it by laying it in the several aspects and instances of it to your heart But if I were able to doe it yet the streights of time and your other occasions urging upon you and me would not permit me to use so diffused and ample a way of speaking as possibly I might in this particular case and at this time attain being my self none of the least pathetick mourners And we know as Synesius tells us nothing is more eloquent then unfeigned sorrow if I list not to be silent or only to weep Great grief hath something exstatick 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and is capable of as high an Enthusiasm as love Indeed both of them in their paroxysms like some fits of sickness doe as it were lift a man above and transport him beyond his wonted and everyday Self However since your and my duty is not to leave this Text and occasion unapplyed to our hearts give me leave as far as I may with bounds of discretion to set forth to you what advantages Solomon intended and if they cannot reach your hearts possibly they may mine own but I hope by Gods blessing they may come home to all our hearts 1. At the house of mourning upon Funeral occasions lay to heart what is first in view and next to hand Phil. 3.21 that is the state of thy frail and vile body 1. As it is the prison burthen snare poyson and oppression many times of thy precious soul which I doe not now aggravate or lay to its charge and at its best Rom. 7.24 it is but the cage of many foul noxious and noysome humours and diseases its truest stile and title is what Paul gives it a body of death it s own traitor devourer killer and destroyer for the most part conceiving and hatching carrying and contriving many times such principles of mortality and methods of malignity in it as lie in wait and unawares break out to surprize thee in thy greatest security confidence of life Like a flattering and smiling Sea so is a youthful healthful handsome and athletick body soon cast into a dangerous storm of sickness and dashing it self in pieces by violent and unexpected diseases Thus is thy body in its seeming health 2. View the body in its sicknesse and inquietudes its pains and anguishes its various and tedious distempers like the Demoniack in the Gospel sometimes cast into the fire of Calentures sometimes into the water of long and fainting sweats sometimes it 's in an African Syrtes or hot sands boyling its self in its own grease and washing by its unnatural flames that native oyl or Balsam of life which sustains that lamp otherwhile it is condemned to Scotish colds and Northern torpors having in the same little world both the inhabitable Climates Thus tormented between its Canicular fryings and its Hyperborean freezings what tongue can expresse sufficiently the alternative torments which by a strange vicissitude seem to delight in taking turnes to rack the poor and pitiful bodie of man 3. Which now wasted with their intestine conflicts and having nothing to complain of or contend against so much as it self grows faint and feeble exsuccated dis-spirited loathing as Job speaks all manner of food Job 33.20 and robbed of its sleep by those pestilent vapours which rise from it self At length helplesse and hopelesse not able to remove or move it self it would grow its own dunghill and be buried in its own putrefaction and filth if the humanity and charity of some and the mercenary necessity of others did not move them to help this poor carkass whose flesh falls its skin shrivels the beauty and majesty of the face vanisheth the vigour of the eyes sink the sinews are feeble the whole fabrick totters like a crazy house ready to fall with its own weight 4. At last all the powers of nature fail and the soule weary of so crazy and unquiet a lodging which is haunted with so many evil spirits flies away leaving this poor carkass to it self O then look seriously upon it view it well and lay to heart whether the fanciful Poets and other amorous flatterers did not lye strenuously and blaspheme the Creator most wittily when they were ready to swear that they saw a brighter and fairer Heaven in the face of such a body living then that which was over their heads that the lustre of those eyes now sadly and severely closed was sufficient to supply the Sun's absence or dazle its noon-day light that those were the cheeks whose orient beauty made the morning toblush for shame to see it self overcome that those were the lips which contended with roses and conquered all rubies that the eloquence of that mouth and tongue now shut and eternally silent was the charm and amazement of all that were happy to hear it speak that this rare creature was the center and dispenser of all favours or terrours life and death to the world Now O fictitious fool lay to heart and see Quantum mutatus ab illo Hectore what a sad and horrid change on a sudden is befaln this Specter this Empusa this poor and pitiful body how pallid how livid how dreadful how menacing it is at first to all spectators At length how loathsome and putid how offensive and abominable even to those that most loved admired adored it You are forced at last to recant your foolery by removing it out of your sight out of your sent out of your doors
to hide it as carrion in the earth commit it to the wormes and leave it to its own corruption Ossa vides regum vacuis exhausta medullis Vnus Pellaeo juveni non sufficit orbis Sarcophago contentus erit Even this body which was the lanthorn of so bright and noble a soul as Solomon's The Citadel or Fort of so great a strength as Sampson's who had an Army in each Arm The Throne or Metropolis of Beauty as Queen Esther's The Magazeen of so much wit and knowledge as Achitophel's The Seraglio of so much pleasure as Sardanapalus's The Bel and Dagon of so much good cheer as Dives devoured To this deformity necessity poverty rottenness baseness sordidness is it brought in a few days Blessed God! if we laid this to heart could we so much dote and pamper so much indulge and cocker our wretched bodies to the neglect prejudice detriment and destruction of our precious souls Go now O you wanton Herodiasses O you proud Jezebels O you tender delicate women whose curiosity to adorn your bodies poseth Interpreters to know what those artifices and instruments were which you used in Isaiah's time Isa 3. when luxury and curiosity were as it were under age and in their minority which now are much more ingenious adult and full grown after two thousand years improvement Lay to heart what fine dishes you dress for worms for fishes for fowls it may be for dogs to feed upon Lay to heart and consider whether your ways be equal or your hour-glasses proportionate which measure out many hours in a short day to dress your bodies and scarce allow one half hour or a few minutes in one or many days to purge to wash to prepare and adorn your souls by prayers and tears by reading and meditating by humbling and repenting by fitting and dressing them for God Whether it be not an high degree of folly and madness to bestow so much of a momentany and precious life in doing that at morning which is to be undone at night to spend the best and most of your time in a circle of vanity Not that decency and elegancy cost and comeliness are wholly denied by the severities of religion but comparatively they are by the two great Apostles in respect of the inward 1 Tim. 2.9 1 Pet. 3.3 adornings of the soul Go now O you Shee-men you delicate and effeminate Gallants of my own sex lay to heart whether it be worthy of masculine wisedome and strength of manly vertue and honour of Christian gravity and modesty to trifle out your time also in female studies of softness and luxury in being your own babies Idols and Idolaters in studying your backs and bellies your food and raiment more then any good books or any good men or any good and great design worthy of you Ad quid perditio haec To what purpose is this waste of thoughts and time of cost and pains in both sexes O lay to heart what a rotten post you guild for a moment and what a marble pillar you neglect to polish for eternity I mean your souls which are divinae particulae aurae the breath and beam of God in your original Lay to heart when either you see the deformed frowns and fedities of a newly dead body or the black flesh and sordid dust which you may see in the coffins of those that have been long dead think then how little cause you have to be proud of these rotten rags of the soule this rubbidg of mortality how injurious you are to your divine and immortal souls when you leave them to their own native decays and eternal ruines when you neglect to raise polish and improve them when you thus study by Atheistical luxuries to deprave debase and debauch them much worse being wholly or chiefly intent to the trimming feeding and pampering of your bodies as if your souls were given you only for salt to keep you sweet of which you never have so true a view and prospect as when they are represented to you in anothers death Let dead carkaesses be your looking-glasses then bring forth all the flowers of Oratory all the Poets fancies all the ornaments that art and wit can steal from all creatures and see if by these Spices Gums and odours thou canst keep thy vile body from appearing rotten and unsavoury to thee or that by those colours and adornings thou canst preserve it from death and abominable deformity Since then all these things the whole frame and goodly fabrick of our Microcosm these little Epitomies of the great world our petty and pygmy bodies in which the heaven and earth the light and darkness the celestial and elementary bodies are as it were bound up in a small volume or decimo sexto Since as St. Peter says all these things shall be dissolved 2 Pet. 3.11 What manner of persons ought we all to be in all holy conversation and godliness 2. When thou hast taken a full view of this sink of putrefaction a dead body then lay to heart and consider by way of Analogy or proportion if a dead body be such a mass of corruption such a summary of sordidness such an abstract of loathsomness to thy self and others though formerly indeared as friends and lovers to it as wives or husbands as parents or children as friends and favourites yet thou canst now no longer indure its company or sight O how foul how filthy how nasty how ugly how loathsome how abominable would a dead soul be and appear if thou couldst see it as God's pure eyes do Tully had a very good fancy and well expressed That if we could see vertue which is the rational beauty of the soul with our bodily eyes no man would be a suiter to or lover of any other beauty it would so excite attract and concenter all our affections to it By a parallel allusion I may tell you that if we could by any spectacles or opticks by our owne or others eyes heightned to a spiritual perspicacity behold as St. Bernard speaks how rueful dreadful Quam foedum quam horendū sit spectaculum Deo Angelis anima cadaverosa in peccatis mortua libidinum tabe squalida ira invidia tota deformis horrida and execrable an object the soul is to God and Angels when it is as a dead carkass naturally and impenitently dead in sin rotten with predominant vices squallid with enormous lusts dissolved into sensual pleasures and deformed with all manner of confusions and corruptions This alone would monopolize and ingross all the irascible faculties of the soul by which we hate loath abhor detest and fly from any thing Corruptio optimi est pessima no carkass is so unsavoury or pestiferous as mans Hence plagues oft follow great slaughters of men in war unburied carkasses poysoning and infecting the very air No soul but that of man can putrefie or die nor is any putrefaction like that of the divine and reasonable soul become
Sun yet have I lived to see both their lives ended all their humane hopes and joys and honours buried in the dust the one before she was 27. years old the other before he had compleated four and twenty So great and neer experiments are these two for the confirmation of those two verses used to display the excellent emptiness and glorious nothingness of this world and present life of which subject as many pens and wits have largely descanted so none have expressed more in few words then he that made this distich Punctum bulla vitrum glacies flos fabula fumus Vmbra cinis somnus vox sonus aura nihil Thus in prose No point is more concise no bubble more pompously swelling and suddenly vanishing no glass more brittle no ice more self-dissolving no flower more fair and fading no tale more short and fabulous no shadow less substantial Introitus exitus lugubris Cum nascimur mundi hospitio excipimur initium a lacrymis auspicamur cum lacrymis extinguimur Cyp. Ordimur vitam lacrymis claudimus omnes Quisque suis natus sic sepelitur aquis no ashes more easily scattered and never to be recollected no sleep or dream more delighting and deceiving no voice more vanishing no sound more transient no breath more soft and unseen in sum nothing is a truer emblem of absolute and perfect nothing then this poor life which is begun as St. Cyprian and many observe continued and ended with tears An Egyptian reed on which if the heart of man leanes it soon fails and the defeats of it pierce the very soul O what a small thread is this on which we poor wretches hang the weight of our eternal state the great interests of our immortal souls while we delay our repentance multiply our sins dayly and hourly adding burthen to a crazy vessel which is leakey with its own infirmities and already over-laden with its pondus mortalitatis body of death O ye sons and daughters of men who are lifted up filled and stretched to the highest pitch and uttermost extents of pride self-conceit vain-glory who have already deified your selves in your owne imaginations of your heaven upon earth your humane happinesses who expect that all that see you should admire and adore you as creatures so compleatly blest that the Angels or Gods themselves have cause to envy you when you are so fair so fine so young so lovely so witty so nobly descended so mightily befriended so invested with honour so fortified with power so furnished with estate so attended with servants so lodged in sumptuous palaces so surrounded with all manner of pleasures so over-flowing with all sensible contents of life See see in this and the like sad spectacles of vanity mortality and misery What a perfection of folly 1 Tim. 6.17 what an apparent madnevs it is for you to be high-minded to be proud of any thing you enjoy here to trust in your uncertain riches and not in the living God You may as justly swell and look big and magnifie your selves for taking up some rich Jewels in a shop or for seeing and handling some fine and pretious wares a little while in your hand which you must shortly lay down and leave behind you and then when thou art driven from the living and thy soul taken from thee Luke 12.19 Thou egregious fool whose shall all these things be Experience hath taught us that a dead hand is an excellent means by rubbing it on wens and tumours of the body to allay disperse and as it were mortifie that irregular and deformed excrescency The same receipt of a dead hand might serve if duly applied to our souls for it would be a very soveraign remedy as against all that is in the world 1 John 2.16 which is of a puffing and exalting nature as the lust of the eyes the lust of the flesh and the pride of life so against all those flatuous and high imaginations of our hearts For the world passeth away and the lust thereof but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever 1 John 2.17 Yea in every Funeral there is as it were a special hand of providence Dan. 5.5 like that which Balshazzar saw upon the wall which not only wrote his fate but weighed him as it were in a ballance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Stobae and shewed him by his own terrors and tremblings how much he was too light in God's esteem and in his own mistaken fancies of earthly felicity It is among the mementos of the ancient Greeks Being momentany and mortal it well becomes all mankind to be very lowly minded Mich. 6.8 to walk humbly before their God Not to lay much weight upon so small pillars as our legs and sinews are not to build upon so loose a foundation which like quick-sands or quagmires in a short time swallow and bury up the building which is set upon them How ridiculous would he be that should bestow much time to hew and square and polish cakes of ice in order to build himself a splendid and perspicuous palace which he should fancy to be like the Chrystal Firmament and comparable to the etherial mansions of heaven Magno conatu nugas agimus Truly such are the industrious self-cheats of those who fancy to themselves rare felicities or real fulness in this life Isa 44.20 Hos 12.1 Edunt tanquam hodie morituri Aedificant tanquam semper victuri so greedily feeding on the East-wind and ashes the pleasures of sense which blast our fouls and abase them as if they had but one day to live and yet so solicitous for the morrow as if they were to live here for ever No man takes the true dimensions of life who doth not as Pythagoras did the Pyramids measure it by the shadows of death Nor do we begin truly to live as rational and religious creatures till we lay to heart the true state and proportion of this life of which we are but Tenants at will having no lease much less see simple or inheritance but are at the will of the Lord to be turned out of house and home at a moments warning Blessed God! If we laid this to heart as we should what manner of men and women should we be in all humble holy 2 Pet. 3.11 1 Cor. 7.21 Frui utendis summa est dementia Aug. and heavenly conversation as St. Peter writes using this world as if we used it not at least enjoyed it not For as St. Austin observes it is extream fatuity to enjoy that as ours which is but lent us for a very little yea for no time but from one moment to another The very ancient Heathens will rise up against Christians in this point which they notably studied variously and wittily expressed yea and in many things modestly practised 5. Add to the thoughts of lifes frailty and vanity the certain uncertainty and inevitable necessity of death A subject adorned by
hold them in many cases very fit and of excellent use so they ought to be serious severe and wholly circumcised as to all danger of sowing pillows under the elbows of the living or of dawbing with any untempered mortar and no lesse from whiting the Sepulchres of the dead as if there were no rottenness in their bones Preachers should in no point of their Embassy be more rigid exact precise and punctual Matth. 3.2 Matth. 4.17 then in urging that which was Christs and his forerunners first Text and Sermon Repent for the Kingdome of God is at hand As the Roman Legate or Consul Marcus Popilius circumscribed with a wand he had in his hand the person and answer of the proud King Antiochus Valerius Max. in M. Popilio when he desiring time to resolve of war or peace which was offered him was confined to give his definitive answer before he stirred a step out of that litle circle So concise and peremptory are Gods commands and so must be our conjureings and requirings of all men every where to repent and turn to the Lord Acts 17.30 Acts 3.26 Gen. 27.2 Heb. 3.11 young as well as old even daily exhorting them while it is called to day because as Isaac said they know not the day of their deaths nor we of ours and if they die in their sins unwarned God wil require their blood at our hands Ezek. 33.6 A dreadful account as Chrys cals it Can you blame us Ministers O Christian people if we be quick and importune in calling upon you if we seem religiously rude and piously uncivil with you even pulling and snatching and haling you while you are lingring as the Angels did Lot out of Sodom or as fire-brands out of the fire Our deferring to call upon you and your delayings to repent these run the hazard of your and our souls You must therefore forgive those kind and charitable injuries we sometimes seem to doe you by our Christian importunities Currat poenitentia nè praecurrat poena Amb. which are but the effects of our fidelity to you to our own souls and to God St. Ambrose's counsel is excellent Let repentance make haste lest vengeance overtake thee True repentance only can bring thee to the City of refuge Christ Jesus where thou mayst be safe against the pursuits of death and wrath Seneca in his concise and witty way can tell us how necessary it is to be as passengers on the shore that expect a fair wind and passage by Sea alwayes in readiness to have our packs and truncks packed up that we may answer the first summons of the Master or Pilot who when he calls to be gone will stay for no mans occasions If Heathens had such principles of prudence who saw but one side of death and that but darkly in a very distant narrow view as to Eternity O how should Christians who have so great discoveries take the alarm of every night and sleep which is a shadow of death of every morn renewing which is the dawning of Eternity the gallicinium cock-crowing of the resurrection of every infirmity in their own feeling of every other Funeral and death they see or hear of of every history they read which alwayes closeth with the worke of death drawing this black vail of burial and oblivion over all the pomp and glory strength and victory pleasures and passions of the world and those great men in it who in their greatest glistering are but gloeworms shining a while in this night of mortality and then extinct for ever yea every hour which men live is a monitor of death being no sooner lived out but they are so much dead so is every meal they eat which is but a daily subsidy given to the body to relieve its daily expences and decays which are the secret depredations and essayes of death We should take yea and make many occasions to reflect soberly upon this meditation and lay death to heart that the defensative of repentance may the better work upon our souls before death hath taken the suburbs of our bodies by age and sickness which are not the constant procedures of death nor may any man rationally expect it will deal with him upon such termes of Treaty or Parly No 't is oft upon the snap and sudden with us and may be so to the ablest and youngest He or She. Sometimes indeed death plays with smaller shot upon us and hews us down with many little chops But 't is frequent that he batters us all in pieces with one great and sudden Cannon and blows us up at once by a storm either of inward Apoplectick stroaks or outward violences as the wind overthrew the house on Jobs children against which there is no foresight no warning or defence Death doth not alwayes so befriend either Physicians gaines or their patients designs as to vouchsafe them the benefit of a lingring sickness or a leisurely death How infinitely then doth it concern us to be alwayes in procinctu in our harnesse never to wake or sleep but with the compleat armour of our soules upon us or rather within us Gen. 6. Sure it was pitiful padling work to be building of boats or hewing down trees to make ships and vessels of then when the flood began to be poured down upon the Old world of ungodly men who so long neglected their temporal and eternal safety by delaying their repentance when they had Gods warning by Noahs preaching for an hundred years 1 Pet. 3.19 2 Pet. 2.5 that of so many millions of mankind which in that generative and vivacious age had peopled and overstock'd the earth there should be but eight persons found fit to be preserved alive in the Ark which afforded room for birds beasts and serpents but not for wicked and impenitent men who had refused the voice of God calling them so long so oft to repentance as he now doth every where by that Tuba Evangelii Trumpet of the Gospel which is but the Praecentor first peal and noise of the last Trumpet The one calls us so to prepare for Death that we may stand with comfort in the day of Judgment the other will call us out of a state of death to the eternal doom of that last day of Judgment The state and tenour of a Christians life should be a continued course of repentances well begun and daily renewed never intermitted because of daily failings All the parenthesis of businesse as to secular affairs should not interrupt the series nor confound the care of a Christians Repentance and daily proficiency Blessed God! What pity 't is that men women can find time for every thing else under the Sun and none for their repentance which is the work of works 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Opus operosissimum the first rough-hewing and foundation of the great building of our eternal salvation Hast thou time to dresse undresse thy body to eat and drink and sleep to
buy and sell to sport and play to fight and kill others yea to gratifie thy senses in all sorts of pleasures and to attend nature in the most sordid necessities and yet canst find no time to repent no nor to admit one serious thought of repentance to lodge in thy soul one day one hour no not one minute Yea canst thou find time to sin all manner of sins over and over that thou thinkest safe from the vengeance of man and yet no time to repent of thy sins against God No time in youth to repent of the sins of childhood or puerice which St. Austin now an aged yet tender-hearted penitent did reflect upon and repent of with tears St. Austin's confession Tantillus puer tantus peccator No time in riper years to repent of the inordinate hears of youth to quench the flames of extravagant lusts which God and nature reason and Religion command to be confined as fire to their proper hearths and chimneys the order of modesty and chastity but they are not allowed to set fire on the house-top to the fighting against and endangering both soul and body Canst thou find no time in the high noon and Solstice of thy life no nor yet in the decline and evening when gray hairs are here and there when thy eyes grow dim and the shadowes long to repent of thy former misdemeanors thy neglects and slightings of God thy despising his mercies thy uncharitableness sacriledge Psal 50.21 cruelty oppressions hypocrisie lying swearing murthers blasphemies insolencies hardness and impenitency carried on against thy God and thy Saviour thy Mediator and thy own soul with so high an hand so long a time Sure thou either believest there is no God or that he is such an one as thy self neither wise nor good not holy nor just that he hath revealed no Word or Will Law nor Gospel to mankind that he is indifferent what we do or impotent to reward or revenge that he hath neither heaven nor hel crowns nor flames for either good or bad that they who feare God and they that feare him not shall be all blended by death in an eternal Chaos medly or confusion without any distinction of reward or punishment according to their works upon these perswasions only thou canst be hitherto impenitent But if any one of those sharp arrows of divine truth which are shot from heaven which thou hast heard of Atheus est qui non tam credit quam cupit non esse Deum seen and received into thy brest which thou canst with no colour of reason deny or repel and which with much adoe thou bafflest and shufflest off to a kind of cavilling unbelief I say if but one of them had well fixed it selfe upon thy heart and conscience it would move thee to the speedy thoughts and essays of repentance at least to pare off the superfluity of thy sins and that excess of riot 1 Pet. 4.4 which argue more a monster then a man and a Divel then a Christian who loves darkness more then light and in the midst of that glorious Gospel which hath shined from Patriarchs Prophets Apostles Martyrs Confessors John 3.19 all good Christians in all ages and places yea from Christ himself confirmed to be the light life the Redeemer and Saviour of the world by many infallible signs and wonders In this blight Temple thou affectest the dungeon and vault of thy rotten and nasty lusts chusing death and refusing life digging deeper into hell then when thou mightest make an ascent to heaven by those gracious means as the ladders of heaven which are offer'd thee in precepts promises terrors comforts holy patterns and great examples set before thee in all grace and virtue which whoso seeth not must needs be blind whoso sees and doth not praise yea admire must needs be unthankful whoso is not proportionably affected to their truth and worth Divinae veritatis majestatem benignitatis gloriam gratiarum nitorem virtutum pulcherimam suavitatem qui non videt caecus est qui videt non laudat ingratus est qui videns laudansque parili affectu non movetur aut mortuus est aut insanus Eccles 12.6 must needs be either mad or dead as St. Austin speaks Surely if thou couldst once meet thy self that is thy conscience in the cool of the day apart from the heats of thy passions and the rapid torrent of thy foolish and hurtful lusts thou wouldst bethink thy selfe at length before thou diest of the necessary work of Repentance and not only before thou diest but before thou declinest and droopest It is indeed a sad uncertain and uncomfortable work to begin when a man is drawing to his end then to tune thy soul for God when thy body is most out of tune and thy mind too then to begin to wind up the strings of an Instrument when the very ribs of it are flying in pieces Who of a thousand can hope to draw waters out of the deep wells of salvation when the golden bowl and silver cord of life as Solomon speaks are almost broken and loosed It must needs be an hudling and most confused work then to set thy house in order I mean that interiorem animae domum inward withdrawing room of thy soul thy heart which ought to be as a Temple always fitted for God purged from sin adorned with all gracious habits then when the Tabernacle or out-house of thy body in which thy soul dwels is wholly out of order either burning with feavorish flames or tottering with consumptionary weakness or burdened and falling with unnatural loads and painful obstructions Thou couldst never have chosen a worse or unfitter time to repent then when the pains of sickness the inquietudes of body the impertinent visits of friends the cryes of relations the want of sleep all extremities the terrors of death and the stupors of soul are before thee or pressing upon thee Repentance is a work to be begun seriously in the most sedate temper of soul and calmest state of life when we enjoy the greatest serenity of body and mind when we have most leisure fewest interruptions and least diversions strongest temptations potentest oppositions and the greatest abilities of soul to resist them Once well begun it must at the same rate be carried on every day For this like oft pumping in a ship that hath but little leaks will keep her afloat but it is desperate plying the pump when a vessel hath now so many foot water in hold that it begins to sink The early repentings in our health are the best Antidotes and Cordials in our sickness like Summer provisions seasonably laid in against an hard Winter nor is there any bitter potion which a sick man is less able or disposed to take then that of Repentance when he is weak languishing sunk dispirited almost despairing in his sickness which is like a mans setting himself to cleave logs and therewith to make himself
a childish and stupid indifferency or with a vulgar formality or in some cases with a proud unchristian and unmanly insolency rejoycing and triumphing in the death of those who possibly were thought their betters or equals or rivals or enemies As Ahaz in his distresses sinned yet more against the Lord 2 Chro. 28.22 so do some men and women too amidst those Funerals which concerned them most to lay to heart How doth covetousness ambition envy and lasciviousness make many men and women unfeignedly rejoyce in the death of Parents Children Husbands Wives Rivals and Princes that they can hardly suppress their odious joys and unseasonable contentments from breaking forth into such abhorred expressions as Vitellius a most ungenerous Prince and profligate person used when after the battel ended which in civil wars as that was makes even victory it self sad and ashamed was heard to say when he rode amidst the now putid and unburied carkasses of the slain Citizens The smell of dead strangers corps is pleasing Bonus odor hostis occisi at melior civis but most of dead Roman Citizens being my enemies A speech which Suetonius brands with a stigma of just-infamy so infinitely distant from the clemency of Julius Caesar Quique dolet quoties cogitur esse ferox who ever in the chase commanded to spare the Roman Citizens and was unfeignedly grieved to use necessary severities which are next door to cruelty Poor mortals forget in their revengeful impatiencies military jollities and victorious triumphs how soon the wheel may come about and the same measure may be meeted to them Judg. 1.6 which they meet to others Adoni-Bezek may live to see his own thumbs and great toes one off Should not we tremble before the great and terrible God when we see his judgments so executed that our selves are sometimes made the sad executioners of them upon others who it may be in Gods sight are not greater sinners then our selves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Stobaeus Matth. 5.28 They that joy in anothers calanity or insult in their death though just doe adopt a murther and commit man-slaughter in their hearts as Christ speaks of Adultery As a Judge who pleaseth his private spite and malice in that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 most depraved passion which sucks honey out of anothers gall while he justly condemnes a malefactor to die he may be a just Judge according to the Law of man but is unrighteous according to the Gospel of Christ which commends charity and compassion tenderness and bowels to Christians beyond all burnt sacrifices Gods High Court of Justice will judge even judges themselves and Death will in a few years not only conquer but triumph over those that are lifted up above the fate and pitch of poor mortals in their gloryings over an others ruines Let him that stands upon a mountain never so high and fast remember the day of death is coming he shall also fall and perish like one of the Princes Yet mens sins are not to be measured by the evil or seeming calamity of their death but by the open wickedness and impieties of their lives The same fate may befall good and bad they may die in peace as it is said of Josiah who are slain in warre and of Zedekiah 2 Kin. 22.20 Jer. 34.5 who died blind and in captivity The death of men is the more to be laid to heart by how much less they deserved it from men and more from God It serves to exhort and excite every one of us to search and try our own hearts Vse 2 to examine how far this or another Funeral is gone beyond our eyes and eares so as it is or shall be laid to our hearts What fear what trembling what holy purposes and what humble resolutions are raised in thee What sins mortified what vanities left what neglects repaired what graces increased what improving of life what preparings for death by a constant and conscientious use of all duties opportunities and means proper for so great ends as aym at eternity Your mourning with never so great pomp and state yea with unfeigned grief out of humane and momentary reflexions onely is not that just improvement which God expects As Fullers earth cleanseth spots of cloaths and Wood-ashes rince foul vessels so should the contemplation of anothers death their dust and ashes help to cleanse our souls In vain do you wear black mourning on your bodies if you still keep pullatas atratas animas black and sullied soules soyled and scorched with the inordinate flames of lust pride malice covetousness c. which are the soot of hell These sine black garments are but in stead of courser sackeloth the fittest coverings indeed for your bodies of sin and death but they must put you in mind to get your soules cloathed in white garments the robes of Christs righteousness for justification and sanctification without which thou wilt follow this corps to thy grave also with cause enough and too much for such everlasting mournings as admit no comforters or comforts Let thy mourning be not only civil formal and humane but Christian humble penitent Acts 20.25 As Jacob to the Angel so let not a Funeral goe without a blessing as Felix at St. Pauls Preaching so let thy heart tremble at these visible as well as audible instructions of death and judgment to come Retine to thy closet after these Solemnities and earnestly pray to God to give thee Funeral graces that by an holy Christian Chymistry thou mayst extract spirits out of dead bones Doe not play with Death lest it bite or sting thee next as that serpent did a merry Greek of old who jestingly putting his hand into the jawes of a Lion that was figured of stone for an ornamental statue in one of the Temples of the Gods was so stung with a scorpion which lay in the mouth of that Lion that he presently died having first laughed with his companions at that monition he had the night before in his dream as he told them that he should next day be destroyed by a Lion which beast never haunted that place and so he thought himself most secure Death many times lies then nearest us and in wait for us when we least mind the monitions or credit the warnings which may by providence be given us I cannot but make use of this Text as a just vindication of this and the like religious solemnities at Christian Burials Vse 3 against those severe Aristarchus'es and super-reforming Reformers who cast most supercilious browes and use very severe invectives against all Funeral Sermons and much more against all Scriptures read exhortations and prayers used by and to the living at the graves and interments of the dead by which tetrick austerities they seem to me not only to reproach the piety prudence and charity of this deserved famous and well reformed Church in its sacred offices and appointments on such occasions which were seriously approved happily
established and used for above an hundred yeares by the most noble wise and religious persons in this Nation of all degrees with no small benefit of piety to the living especially the common people but they crosse also the permissions yea the Institutions even of God himself in his holy word as by Solomons pen here so by the Apostles afterward injoyning us to Preach and so to pray in season and out of season to doe all things to edification and with decency becomming Christians as well as men especially in such eases as most affect the living in reference both to their own others mortal state which dasheth all faith hope and holy industry of a godly life the best men being of all men most miserable 1 Cor. 15.19 if there be not a frequent and full Antidote against our dying and sorrowing condition duely applyed from the holy word of God as to the happy and hopeful state of such as live and die in the Lord 1 Cor. 14 26 40 2 Tim. 4.2 both as to their spirits which return to God and their bodies which rest in hopes of an happy resurrection to glory For which purpose we see the Scripture hath furnished the Church with as many clear 1 Thess 4.13 See the long discourse of the Resurrection 1 Cor. 15. large and pregnant places to establish the faithful in that Article of their faith the bodies resurrection as any other point whatsoever There needs no other Form of Liturgy of exhortation or consolation or prayer or gratulation or benediction or comprecation then what is guided by and grounded upon the Scripture Nor was there other prescribed or used in the Church of England by any discreet Minister If such sad occasions may nay must in many respects be duely and devoutly laid to heart by the living as I have shewed you what hinders I beseech you but that Sermons instructions exhortations consolations and prayers too may be used at them in order to apply them most neerly to and work most effectually upon the hearts of the living And then especially when the hearts of men and women of parents and children of neighbours and friends yea of enemies and strangers too are most prone to be moved and affected to good purpose some being softened by common sympathies of humanity others steeped in teares by their more indeared relations and tender affections the whole assembly being as it were in the bath and furnace more pliable humble and melting then at any other time If we Christians only brought the eyes the hearts and senses of beasts to these Funeral-occasions it were venial to give our children parents friends husbands wives kindred and our selves no other honour or comfort then the burial of an asse or of a dead dog would afford and require or if we came together only as so many Gymnosophists Brachmans and Philosophers or so many Heathens Indians and meer men without hope and not as Christians who have much to learn to hear to say to pray and to practice upon these texts of mortality not only as to natural death but as to the spiritual and eternal death as to judgment to come as to a resurrection and after recompenses their scrupulous restraint were excusable but blessed be God what a field of excellent matter as to saith and manners as to hope and comfort in reference to both dead and living Christians is there to be gone through to be beaten oft over from the Scriptures suggestion and direction that the living the living might duely effectually and frequently lay those things to heart which are presented to them by every Funeral-occasion but not easily improved by the generality of people if they have nothing else but a dumb shew and silent procession at their Funerals Object But some are afraid of superstition lest we pray for the dead or praise God on their behalf beyond that ancient gratulation for their departure in the faith and that comprecation for a blessed consummation of the Kingdome of Christ and all his Church at and after the Resurrection which is under a divine promise upon all good Christians hopes hearts and future expectations blessings certainly no less lawful to be prayed for as the ancient Churches did then desired and expected by all the faithful living as I believe they are by all the Saints departed Answ To these Objecters I answer Let them forbear Funeral Sermons exhortations and prayers till they get more wit to understand their own good and more charity then to grudge others their Christian liberty either to do or get good in such wayes as Gods word and the customes of this Christian well reformed Church allow us This Indulgence I easily grant to such as are simply and honestly scrupulous but to others that are rudely captious and contemptuous yea ridiculously clamorous and contumacious against any thing which they doe not form and fancy though they give no reason why they scruple or condemn it my answer is as that of our Saviour to the Pharisees You hypocrites Matth. 16.3 can you discern the face of the sky and can you not discern the signs of the times Are you so fearful of praying for the dead that you will not pray for and with the living Can you endure the pomp of a Funeral and not the piety of it Can you bear with Trumpets Banners Escucheons and not with the word of God with Sermons and Prayers which sanctifie all things in themselves lawful and expedient Is not sanctity the best part of Christians Solemnities who in all temporal things must look to things eternal Are you so afraid of superstition that you grudge us our devotions and holy exercises as God gives us more signal calls and occasions Can you endure Heraldry and not the Liturgy in this part of it which sets forth very handsomely and fully to the living out of the lively oracles of God those most pertinent places and excellent truths which make most for the good hope comfort and instruction of the living both in respect of their dead relations and themselves Take heed you swallow not camels while you strain at gnats If you think a dead Christian that dies in the faith of Christ and in the compass of our charity differs not from a dead Heathen or a dead beast if their spirits goe all one way with their bodies to the dust if neither they dying nor you living have any lively hope of a resurrection without which all your faith living is but dead and in vain if you know not how to make a holy rational and religious use of their death much good may you have with those dumb shewes which you have lately taken up with your silent solemnities and processions at the Funerals of your Christian friends much comfort may you have in your burnt wine and biscuits in your black cloaks and ribbands in your mourning gloves and boxes of sweet-meats which good you somtimes get gape for at Funerals These are toyes
vertues must never wholly die nor be buried in oblivion because to the injury both of the dead and the living The name of the wicked justly rots but the name of the righteous ought to be had in everlasting remembrance It is fit they should be quite forgotten who never did any thing worthy of memory or imitation Nor is it less fit to remember those with eternal honour who did all things with honour and in reference to Eternity Commendation is the least reward due to Vertue Imitation is the highest commendation of it just commendation and imitation make the most noble and durable Monument for it Which good ends are aimed at by this following Inscription dedicated to the Mothers Vrne at the Sons Funeral that seeing how Holy the Parent or Root was mankind may conjecture how hopeful the Son or Branch might be and how happy themselves may be by imitating both of Them in those things which were praise-worthy in Them That God in all may have the glory of all as infinitely above all Piae Memoriae Sacrum Quam a Posteris meritò exigit Nobilissima Heroina ac Domina D. ANNA RICH. Illustrissimâ Devonienfis Comitis Familiâ oriunda Warwicensis Filio Haeredi connubio juncta Ingens utriusque Gentis decus ornamentum Praestantissimum verae Nobilitatis Nobilissimarumque virtutum exemplar Optatissimis Animi Corporisque dotibus Supra Invidiam Laudemque cumulata Animi excelsi constantis generosi Nec Aulae splendore nec Sortis suae fastigio elati Ingenii vividi elegantis splendidi Ad summa pulcherrimaque nati Genii benigni amoeni mitissimi Ad infimorum usum suaviter demissi Sermonis politi Rerum pondere magis quàm verborum numero copiosi Gestus decori gratissima Majestatis Comitatisque temperie venerandi Amoris puri invicti stupendi Amicitiae cordatae fidae amicissimae Vitae Admirationi quàm Laudi proximae Conscientiae probè instructae Christique sanguine perpurgatae Pietatis non vulgaris non fictae non verbosae Quanta quanta fuit Tota vera solida sincera Ad speciem plausum populumve Nihil datum Ad Deum ad Christum omnia Quicquid praeclari dixeris Viator cogitaverisve Par esse non potes meritis nedum nimius Id enim omne quâ Fuit Fecitque superavit Illa Quantum Res verba superant effectusque Cogitata Aureus reverâ Pudicitiae Formae Nodus unio fulgentissimus Candoris Judicii Nodus unio fulgentissimus Acuminis prudentiae Nodus unio fulgentissimus Humilitatis honoris Nodus unio fulgentissimus Gravitatis dulcedinis Nodus unio fulgentissimus Sublimitatis patientiae Nodus unio fulgentissimus Rationis pietatis Nodus unio fulgentissimus Humanae divinaeque pulchritudinis Nodus unio fulgentissimus Sexum Aetatem Spem vota Amicorum Faecundissima virtute supergressa Cui ad summam Mortalium Claritatem Nihil defuit Nec ipse poteris ultra desiderare Lector Praeter Vitam in Terris diuturniorem Quum enim Annos Nondum 27. numerasset Caelo Matura Spectatissimos Parentes Nobilissimum Conjugem Integerrimos Fratres Numerosissimos Amicos Charissimum Filiolum unicum castissimi Amoris pignus Mortales denique omnes Amplissimam sibi virtutum Messem pollicentes Pio certè pretiosoque Numini placido felicique Sibi Solis Invidis laeto Caeteris acerbo tristissimóque FATO Infanda tam praesentis quam posterae aetatis Jactura deseruit Aug. 24. 1638. Hoc Devotissimi pectoris monumentum Lubens Maerensque posuit J. G. AN EPITAPH UPON The LADY RICH. POssest of all that Nature could bestow All we can wish to be or reach to know Equal to all the patterns which our mind Can frame of good beyond the good we find All beauties which have power to bless the sight Mixt with transparent vertues greater light At once producing love and reverence The admiration of the soul and sense The most discerning thoughts the calmest breast Most apt to pardon needing pardon least The largest mind and which did most extend To all the Lawes of Daughter Wife and Friend The most allow'd example by what line To live what path to follow what decline Who best all distant vertues reconcil'd Strict cheerful humble great severe and mild Constantly pious to Her latest breath Not more a Pattern in Her life then death The Lady RICH lies here More frequent Tears Have never honour'd any Tomb then Hers. SIDNEY GODOLPHIN THE SUMMARY OF THE SERMON OF Funeral Solemnities civil and religious Page 1 1 Of Feasting its danger and disadvantages p. 6 2 Of the House of Mourning its advantages p. 8 Of Holy Necromancy learning from the dead p. 9 The Honour paid antiently to the dead p. 11 3 Who the living are in the Text p. 12 No advantages from the livings devotion to the dead Romish Superstition p. 13 4 How the living may be benefitted by the dead p. 15 5 The Hearts decays dangers distempers p. 17 Account to be given of others deaths p. 21 6 Fourteen considerations rising from the death of any to be laid to heart by the living 1 Of our mortal and vile bodies in their health sickness decay death p. 24 Not to be preferred before our souls p. 26 How little cause we have to be proud of our selves or to flatter others 2 Consid By way of analogy the putid horror and fedity of a dead soul p. 27 3 Consid The fedity and horror of sin as the meritorious cause of all deaths p. 29 4 Consid The vanity of this life and all things in it set forth in the pregnant instance of this noble Gentleman 5 Consid Of the certain uncertainty of death Its Catholick Empire p. 37 6 The danger of delaying Repentance p. 42 The pious importunity of Ministers urging speedy Repentance p. 44 Impenitence riseth from unbelief p. 47 Death-bed Repentance less certain and less comfortable to our selves and others p. 50 Vulgar pleas for delaying repentance answered p. 54 Of rational and religious living how far in our power p. 57 7 Consid Of God's patience and long suffering to us p. 59 8 Lay to heart the death of Christ the onely antidote against the curse and terror of death p. 61 9 Cons●d The chiefe end of our lives unprofitable and pernicious waste of a short and pretious life p. 63 10. Consid The seeming samenesse of mens deaths after their various lives Arguments for an after life or being p. 67 11 The folly of Christians uncharitable and excessive passions as to any concerns of this life p. 70 12 The wisedom of Christians moderation in all things in their passion or grief for the dead p. 74 Of timely disposing our selves to die when we are sick p. 74 Why sick men are more attended by Physitians then Divines p. 75 13 Consider how prepared thou art at present for death of adorning the last act of a Christians life p. 77 All Christians may be preachers on their death-beds p. 78 14 What deaths are most emphatick and chiefly to be laid to heart p. 79 1 Of Kings and Soveraign Magistrates p. 80 2 Of chief-Priests Prophets and Ministers of God's Church p. 81 3 Of any gracious and eminent Christian p. 83 4 Of neer Relations as Parents Husbands Wives Children p. 85 5 Of such as have been very wicked and die in their sin p. 87 Of David's mourning so passionately for Absalom p. 88 Three Vses 1 Reproving such hearts as are senseless and unconcerned in any ones death or joy in it p. 89 2 Vse exam How we have improved this and the like spectacles of death p. 91 3 Vse vindicating religious as well as civil Solemnities at Christians burials p. 92 Lastly An account of this noble Personage Mr. ROBERT RICH from his cradle to his coffin His education domestick Academick forraign His temper of body and mind His health sickness disease death p. 92 The conclusion A Prayer preparatory for death p. 115 The judgement of six Doctors in Physick and two Chirurgeons upon the dissection of the Corps p. 120 An Epitaph upon His noble Mother added as an honour to the Funeral urne and memory of this Her onely Child