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A14280 A divine discoverie of death directing all people to a triumphant resurrection, and euer-lasting saluation. Vaughan, Edward, preacher at St. Mary Woolnoth. 1612 (1612) STC 24596; ESTC S105922 75,056 213

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that euer were Iud. 16.28.29 of Sampson the strongest man in all the world and yet they died 1. King 11.43 Dan. 4. Of Salomō who was the wisest man in all the world and yet he died Nabucadnezzar was the richest man in all the world and yet he died Peter and Paul were as holy as euer any before or since and yet Peter and Paul died Gen. 23.1.2 Hest 9. Sarah and Hester were two beautiful Ladies as euer were and yet Sarah and Hester died To conclude there was neuer any time nor place nor person that could exempt any man from death For Sem called Melchizedech was before the flood he out liued all that knew him Gen. 14.14 Heb. 7.1 to 7. and so long that no man knew his kindred euen when Lot was taken prisoner and a great grandfather of eight degrees in Abrahams time whence he was said to be without father and without mother and in part a figure of Christ whose Godhead had no mother and whose manhood had no father without beginning of dayes or end of life in respect of whom also he was said to be king of righteousnesse king of peace and a Priest for euer of the most high God yet for all this Melchizedech died Iob said If God set his heart vpon man Iob. 34.14 and gather his spirit vnto himselfe then man shall returne to dust As though he had said more plainly No man in all the world that liueth but liueth to die whē God will because mans life consisteth of that which is Gods Salomon saith The desire of death cannot be satisfied Eccles 8.8 he gathereth vnto himselfe all nations doth heape vnto himselfe all people Hab. 2.5 Iob speaking to this purpose concerning all mankind and more particularly of himselfe said thus Iob. 6.11 What power haue I that I should endure is my strength the strength of stones or is my flesh of brasse To wit What did men thinke of me when I was at the best or what could I euer thinke of my selfe was I a man like to liue alwayes And what man may be named that now is that euer was or euer shall be so strong or so enduring as that he shall be able to surcharge death The sundrie examples and the common experience euen of our owne time hath told vs and doth still forewarne vs of death which is so due to vs as to them who are gone before The most vnlikeliest do longest liue the most likeliest do soonest die which argueth plainly that there is no stability no certainty nor true token of cōtinuance in any mā whatsoeuer Also S. Paul said to the Corinthians 1. Cor. 15.51 we shal not all die Indeed we shall all once die inrespect of our outward estate ourelementarie inclination and naturall affections but in respect of Gods diuine maiestie innarrable power and secret will they which shall liue at the last day shall be changed they shall not be the same which formerly they were as men in the world I haue aduisedly considered of ten holy motiues or diuine reasons of Scripture why all men must die The first reason why all men must die It is the decree of almightie God which ordereth all inferior causes and binds thē to the obedience of his will No king can produce so ancient a right to his crowne as euerie man hath out of this most ancient decree to chalēge after death the crowne of glorie Salomon said Eccles 3.14 I know that whatsoeuer God hath done he hath done it for euer to it can no man adde and from it can no mā diminish Esai the Prophet as in the proper person of God himselfe saith The Lord hath sworne saying Esa 14.24 surely as I haue purposed so shall it come to passe and as I haue consulted so shall it stand Againe he saith Seeke ye the booke of the Lord and reade none of these things shal faile none shall want his mouth hath commanded it Mal. 3.6 Malachi said to that purpose I am the Lord that changeth not The Author to the Hebrewes saith Heb. 6.17.18 That God more abundantly to shew the stablenesse of his counsell bound himselfe by an oath wherin it is impossible that God should lie that we might haue strong consolatiō Dan. 6.8 As the lawes of the Medes Persians were vnrepealable so is the decree of almighty God concerning death vnrepealable and in regard of the euerlastingnes of it Ieremy said Ier. 17.1 It is written with an iron pen and with the point of a diamond and grauen vpon the tables of the heart The second reason why all men must die Is drawne from the vprightnesse of Gods iustice Sinne being so generall in all men his Maiestie hath decreed to punish it by death in all men yea in his owne deare children who although the guilt of sinne be remoued and taken from them yet sinne remaining in their mortall bodies is to be punished with death and perishing of that substance so subiect to sinne Saint Paul said Death went ouer all men Rom. 5.12 in as much as all men haue sinned As by the law euerie husband may put away his wife for alienating her body to another man euen so sinne by the law doth alienate put away the soule from the body of eueric man Iob. 34.11 Elihu spake most diuinely to this purpose with his friends God will render vnto man according to his work and cause euery man to find according to his way And as sinne increased from age to age so did the anger of God as appeared by the shortning of their dayes Though Christ hath forgiuen vs yet sinne is not out of vs. There is stil in man that will keep him frō soaring and a Quis me in his mouth extending lamentably with Saint Paul from men to Angels with a violent interrogation enforcing an answer who shall deliuer me from the bodie of death The third reason why all men must die All men must die in respect of Gods generall purpose for the changing and renewing of mankind from one substance into another for the transubstātiating of one body into another a transmitting of one life into another This purpose of the Father in Christ Iesus made Iob to say Iob. 14.14 I wil waite mine appointed time till my changing come S. Paul relating the verie same amongst many other things of great weight vnto the Corinthians said We shal all be changed And in another place 1. Cor. 15. at another time Flesh bloud saith he 35 ●4 cannot inherite the kingdome of heauen mortality must be swallowed vp of life 2. Cor. 5.4 And in his epistle to the Philippians he writes the same in effect being occasioned otherwise thereunto and that in these words God shall change our vile bodies Phil. 3.21 that they may be like vnto his glorious bodie The fourth reason why all men must die is That there may
harsh kind of doctrine to wise men and it is very distastfull to all men for it is a melancholy kind of teaching and of no such necessity Ye might rather in steed thereof stirre vp men to be merrie and to endure their miseries patiently Preachers do nothing more then fright and astonish men in the name of God let vs be merrie whiles we may sorrow comes fast inough The other sort reasoning and expostulating with flesh and bloud cannot determine vpon the generality of death They see not they say how it may be nor how it can stand to be true because then it is questionable say they who shall haue the dominion ouer other creatures in the world which are innumerable and most admirable 2 Pet. 3.1 1.3.4 Saint Peter saith these beleeue not that the world shall be destroyed with fire An answer to the first concerning the generalitie of death Interrogatiuely do you know this to be true by any sentence or example of holy Scripture No no you do not For if you did so know it the hearing of the same againe and againe would rather haue bene comfortable thē tedious vnto you That knowledge which is not grounded vpon the Scriptures of truth is nought worth meerly vnperfect True it is that men may know and be induced to beleeue that they which are a dying will die and that they which are in eminent dangers and perils present shall die But truly to beleeue and certainly to know that all men shall die or who or how many shall die flesh and bloud cannot reueale vnto men For the sense of hearing and seeing by the which men are brought to know and to beleeue reacheth no further then vnto things present because light which is the obiect of seeing and the aire which is the obiect of hearing vpon diuers occasions are sometimes giuen and sometimes taken away Therefore to see and to know certainly as an article of beleefe that all men shall die which is my generall doctrine no man can apprehend nor yet comprehend but by the knowledge of the holy Scriptures and by the holy influence of Gods diuine spirit because in verie truth the same reacheth vnto the apprehension of things in time to come and vnto that which is cleane out of sight and out of hearing Saint Paul speaketh directly of two sorts of seeing 2. Cor. 4.18 the one proper to the spirituall eyes or eyes of the vnderstanding in these words We looke not on the things which are seene but on the things which are not seene As if he had said We who are the children of God do not esteeme of that which we may apprehend with our natural eyes in cōparison but we esteeme and allow specially of that which we may comprehend and apprehend by faith And in that verie place he verifies the same calling the one in a sort an obiect temporall the other an obiect eternall The same Apostle saith to the like purpose We walke not by sight but by faith 2. Cor. 5.7 to wit We iudge not so highly nor so truly of that which the light or the aire doth manifest vnto our senses as of those things which the word of faith doth manifest vnto our soules The effects and fruites of the one and the other shewes the difference As the vertue attractiue was not in Noahs Arke Gen. 7.7.9.10 that drew famous and most worthy creatures and of all sorts into it nor the vertue attractiue was not in Elias cloke that drew Elisha frō his plowing 1. King 19.19 but both in the effectuall vse of Gods word Euen so the vertue of hearing seeing and beleeuing the general doctrine of death and life proceedeth not from any matter in nature nor from worldly reason nor yet from the wisest humane narration but from the holy Spirit of the liuing God who worketh in vs by faith which is grounded vpon the written word of God As for example briefly 2. King 6.18.19 Elisha his man as he was a naturall man saw onely an armie of the Aramites who were come to take his maister but when the eyes of his vnderstanding were opened vpon the prayers of his maister he saw a farre greater army of Angels that were come to protect them This made S. Paule to pray Ephes 1. That the eies of the Ephesians vnderstanding might be opened which was in effect that God would be pleased to inflame to kindle their hearts and their affectiōs with the splendor of his word and Spirit As the same host of the Aramites was led with blindnesse 1. King 6.18.19 vnto their mortall enemie the king of Israel at Samaria the eyes of their vnderstanding being shut vp and as the Sodomites did strike at Lots doore with blindnesse Gen. 19.10.11 when their naturall eyes were open or as Saule and his company 1. Sam. 26.12 being in the iustice of God striken into a dead sleepe euen so all such as haue not their sight and their knowledge for spirituall things out of Scripture they weare out themselues with wearisomnesse and in the end do bring thēselues as through ignorance into that ineuitable gulfe of perdition Labour you therefore ye seruants of the Lord labour ye the Scriptures and know you for certaine that ye know nothing as ye ought to know vnlesse ye know it by the Scriptures and beleeue it by the same Spirit that wrote the Scriptures As the light of the body is the eye Luk. 11.34 so the light of the inner man is the word of God and consider I pray you consider in due time I aduise you If I be to be blamed for this long discourse concerning the generalitie of death why then did the holy Ghost so largely discourse thereof Why did his holy Maiestie so often particulate one and the same matter so variably and in so many places of Scripture How can this be answered If you say fewer places would haue suffised thē you do directly blaspheme which God forbid Then you charge the holy Ghost with superfluities and tediousnesse where as through Gods mercies with such and so many iterations he doth importune you to remember your mortalitie and to make prouision for the same accordingly If you say this doctrine was not so needfull because you knew it long since out of your owne words you proue this doctrine of all others to be most needfull and my selfe of you most carefull And whereas you know alreadle as you say that you shall die neuerthelesse it is questionable whether you be readie prepared to die euerie houre for the testimonie of a good conscience as his Maiestie hath commanded yea or no. And it is questionable whether you be willing and desirous to die You wil say peraduenture you are of that mind you trust euer to be so that there is nothing vainly spoken in Gods word and you will count them vaine and friuolous that shall speake any thing out of this word that doth
Ecclesiasticall histories The paines and pangs which the body doth endure before the soule be sundred may be likened vnto the paines and pangs of a woman in her trauell with child of whō the holy Prophet speakes Her hands saith he on her loynes Iere. 30.6 Esai 13.7.8 her face turned to palenesse her heart weakened and melting with feare and anguish Yea the paines and pangs of death do well resemble the paines and torments of hell and therefore the first second death is but one selfesame with this difference onely the one is naturall and temporarie the other is supernaturall and euerlasting The feare of this death made our blessed Sauiour Iesus Christ as he was a man to importune the Maiestie of his Father with teares that it might passe from him Mat. 26.39.40.41.42.43 being brought vnto it through the agonie thereof he was enforced to call and to crie vnto God his Father as if in part he had despaired O my Father why hast thou forsakē me The like obliuion and desperate speeches are heard seene in the time of deaths torments euen from many of Gods deare children and canonized Saints Saint Paul saith that death hath a sting thereby inferring that death is venimous as all creatures which haue stings are noysome and hurtfull either more or lesse but death is like vnto the diuell himselfe stinging and poysonful therfore called a serpent the most noisome and the most pestiferous creature of all others Againe Saint Paul calleth death an enemie inferring thereby as out of the naturall disposition of a naturall enemie the greatest mischiefe that possibly he can deuise to the poore body of man specially being godly The torments of death must needes be held innarrable if we do but consider the combate and conflict that is betweene the soule and the body the one affecting cleane contrarie to the other and in nature quite opposite Which opposition and conflict may well be resembled vnto that dangerous tempest on the sea of Tarshish which was raised purposely by God himselfe for the arresting of Ionas who was as he thought secure The winds were sent into the seas which being an element light laboured vehemētly according to the nature therof to ascend and the seas being an element heauy laboured mightily according to the quality thereof to descend so that the seas being violently kept vp by the winds and the winds being violently kept downe by the seas made such a storme such an outragious tempest as if heauen and earth had ratled and rang together or as if the shippe had bene still a rushing and a riuing in peeces vpon the rocks euen so is the soule and body of him who is in the hands of death The soule according to the nature and quality thereof being a spirituall an heauenly and holy creature of the Almightie vseth and enforceth all meanes thither to ascend but the body being of a cleane contrary disposition massie heauy and earthy according to the qualitie thereof in sort and kind labors thither to descend The one being of a cleane contrarie disposition to the other they become hindrances to the passage one of another meanes one against another of greater enduring passions And to conclude briefly the torments of death are as the hewing of Agag in peeces 1 Sam 15.33 Psal 50.22 as the irefull execution of God whereof Dauid speaks Although this tormēting be the decree of the Almighty for the subduing of mans body and for the depriuation of his life yet it is euident that the variety and sundrie manners sorts and kinds of death whereunto his Maiestie hath left himselfe at large is the cause that many wicked men so well as the godly do depart this life with litle pangs or paines And at other times out of his Maiesties roiall and extraordinary fauor through Iesus Christ the paines and pangs of death in many of the godly are mitigated and diminished as may appeare out of manifold sentences and examples of Scripture For it is all one with him in regard of his power and mercie to abate or to annihilate the qualitie and the quantity of executing creatures or things appointed for torments as it is for him to increase and to multiply the same As the sauage and hungrie lions were so asswaged in their natures so mitigated Dani. 6.20.21.22.3.20.21.22 that they became as playfellowes vnto Daniel the fierie fornace being seuen times hotter then ordinary was vnto him and his companions but as a place of recreation So no doubt were the fiery tormēts vnto the Saints of God who were cruelly executed in Queene Maries dayes After another sort most powerfully doth his Maiestie multiplie or increase the qualitie of bread and water for the good of the poore who otherwise could not possibly liue and abateth the extremitie of their cold in the winter Remember the augmentation of the 7. Mar. 8.8 Dan. 1.15 loues and few fishes so that more was taken vp then was layd downe and remember Daniels pu●●● And albeit I should absolutely grant that there is no mitigation of paines in death for any and that it must needes be concluded that the verie Saints and seruants of God shall suffer the most grieuous torments of naturall death equally with the reprobates which cannot be truly agreeed vnto and which God forbid yet considering that the guiltinesse of sin is cleane taken away in Iesus Christ that these torments of death are but as it were momentanie or as the twinckling of an eye in comparison of the euerlasting torments of the reprobates what man or woman hauing any hope thereof hauing any feeling of faith or hauing any one motion of Gods spirit but would most willingly endure the torments of bodily death were they yet greater yea before it come to cōmemorate and withall to celebrate the remembrance of death by which there is an end of all sorrowes and the possessing of all ioyes and immortall happinesse If the person dead or dying be an husband Then the matrimoniall association which by Gods ordinance was made singularly and plurally two in one and one in two the better to be helpfull one vnto another is now by death dasht as it were into powder and violently parted a sunder and seuered one from another for euer into two distinct places which deuision to the husband or wife is so naturally grieuous as it is for one limbe being cut off from another as Ruth doth impart out of her most singular affection to Nahomie her mother in law in these words Ruth 1.17 The Lord do so to me and more also if ought but death part thee me euen so is the loue of a wife fearing God towards her husband that she concludeth in her heart from the first houre vnto the last that nothing shal infringe her faith towards him but death which when it cometh exceedingly moueth her to mourne This also appeares vpon the wofull and lamentable experience
begger why then should any man mourne or murmure at the death of his dearest friends and why should he not be moued to yeld himselfe with al willingnesse contentment to die Why should any one man thinke himselfe worthy of that prerogatiue and priuiledge as not to die yea rather willingly then of constraint Iosua the Lord Generall of Israel at his death tooke this as a strong forcible argumēt to perswade with his people to liue well and that they might die willingly therefore emphatically he said Iosua 23.14 This is the way of all the world to wit Although I be a man as ye know in an extraordinary acceptation with God yet I must die so must you and so must all mankinde that liue and are yet to be borne looke not you to be exempted from this sentence but prouide accordingly A voyce said vnto Esai Crie Esai 40.6 What said he That all flesh is grasse the grace thereof as the flower of the field This holy Prophet being suggested and instigated by the Spirit of God to prepare the way of Christ in the hearts of the people he receiues as from the Lord also the manner how to moue them effectually thereunto euen by telling them that they were all subiect to death and that the most wise and most excellent amongst them was subiect to the same end The second cause mouing willingnesse to die It is drawne from a threefold exchāge that we make with the Almighty the first is the exchange that we make of our bodies 1 Cor. 15.25.54 Phili. 3.21 Esai 49.10.25.8 for this corruptible body which is subiect to manifold miseries and to fall from God we shall haue incorruptible and immortall bodies For these our bodies subiect to hunger to thirst to cold to heate to manifold diseases to sundrie passions and other such like calamities we shall haue celestiall and glorified bodies euerie way freed of all those perturbations The Lambe which is in the middest of the throne Reue. 7.15.16.17 shall gouerne his people and shall leade them vnto the liuely fountaines of waters and God shall wipe away all teares from their eyes 21.3.4 The tabernacle of God is with men and he will dwell with them and they shall be his people and God himselfe shall be their God with them There shall be no more death neither sorrow neither crying neither paine Euery Christian is alwaies longing and desiring this exchange yea senselesse creatures do alway straine with a feruent desire to be vnburthened to be discharged of this life how much more euery good man As he that is in prison desires and longs to go abroad or as Hagar in her bondage so miserable is man liuing in the flesh as a liuing soule in a body subiect to death The second exchange that we make is of our goods as when we change earthly riches for heauenly momentanie and transitorie treasures for euerlasting and that which neuer fadeth To which purpose the holy Ghost saith Mat. 6.19.20 Lay not vp treasures where moath or canker corrupteth and where theeues breake through and steale but lay vp treasures for your selues in heauen As if it were to say The best things of this life are subiect to corruptiō to manifold casualties but the treasures which are in heauen are not subiect either to mutability or yet to decay And our sauiour Christ saith by way of a parable Luk. 12.15.10.22 that the abundance of worldly wealth auailes nothing for the time prefent which is but momentanie neither doth it any way minister comfort vnto the distressed soule Thus he saith take heed of couetousnesse for though a man haue abundance yet his life standeth not in his riches Saint Paul seeing and perceiuing the inordinate desire of riches which was in his time and knowing that the like would be continued he speakes by way of comparison verie disdainefully and contemptuously of worldly riches 1 Timo 6.17.18.19 and charges men to prouide for better things and to build vpon a better foundation In heauen is all kinde of plentie maturitie and satietie Iudg. 18.9.10 As the Spies said vnto the children of Dan their brethren concerning Laish Arise and let vs go vp we haue seene the land and surely it is verie good it is a place lacking nothing that is in the world be not slothfull to possesse it for God hath giuen it into your hands euen so do innumerable sentences and examples of holy Scripture say and assure vs as touching the kingdome immortall ioyes of heauē The third exchange that we make by dying willingly and well is of our societie of our companie as when we change the societie fellowship and cōpanie of men for the company and societie of Angels Heb. 12.22.23.24 Reuel 14.1 to 6. the company of whoremongers drunkards liers swearers oppressors and such like for the company of the Saints the company of children on earth for the company of children in heauen the company of husband or wife for the company of Iesus Christ himselfe As a virgine that is affianced to a man thinkes it long before the solemnization thereof so is euery one that is affianced with Christ euermore desiring his full fruition and holy fellowship The third cause mouing willingnesse to die It is the mitigations cōforts helpes that almightie God yeelds against the torments of death to such as do commemorate their mortality with prayers and intercessions vnto almightie God that they may be faithfully prepared Of which gracious qualifications of sicknesses and diminishing of deaths torments the holy Prophet Dauid speakes Psal 41.3 most plainely The Lord will strengthen him vpon his bed of sorrow thou Lord saith the Prophet hast turned all his bed in his sicknesse as if it were to say God wil enable a mercifull religious man to endure all that he will lay on him or else will diminish the qualitie or quantitie of the disease To whom also Christ Iesus saith I am the physition as if it were in effect to say I am a present discharge for the soule that is surcharged with sinne and also a present qualification of bodily griefes and naturall diseases as was manifoldly and plainely experimented by Christ vpon diuers poore people who were miserably and mortally distressed with both The second instruction Concerning the manner sort or kind of death to wit how diuersly and how many wayes death seizeth on all the generation of mankind I will distinguish into foure sorts The which for assignations sake I must call by foure names vnder the which the holy Ghost comprehends as in a close narration dispersed ouer the Bible all maners sorts and kinds of death whatsoeuer howsoeuer and wheresoeuer which are these 1. the Penall death 2. the Naturall death 3. the Vnnaturall death 4. the Politicall death These three are comprehended in that answer of Dauid the selected man of God to Abishai concerning Saul the king whom God deliuered into their
of God in Christ Iesus by whom the guilt of sinne and the condemnation of the law together with the sting of death is qualified and in a sort done away leauing indeed no more to do nor to say against such as can take hold of his promises but onely the perishing and destroying of that body so naturally subiect to sinne According as Paule proclaimed in a most comfortable manner in these words Death went ouer all men Rom. 5.11 in as much as all men haue sinned as if he had said Such was the infinite mercie of God and yet mingled with his iustice that he would lay no more to the charge of his chosen then he must needes by the open rules of religion reuealed word Moses in his defence to the people of Israel concerning that open rebellion of Corah and his company speakes most diuinely and most plainely of this kinde of death in these words Numb 16.29 to 36. If these men die the common death of all men or if these be visited with the generall visitation of all men then the Lord hath not sent me As if he had said There is a sort or kind of death which is naturall which is vsuall and which is rightly appertayning vnto the nature of mankinde and that which most commonly falles out vpon good and reasonable deliberation vpō orderly disposing of worldly affaires vpō due bequeathing of the body to be buried This naturall death which he calles the common death and the general visitation of all men Iob saith it is as a ricke of corne Iob. 5.26 which comes into the barne in due time As if he had said This is the death indeede that is full of maturitie and seasonablenesse lo thus we haue inquired of it and so it is Againe he saith to the same effect Iob. 34.14.15 As a rush cannot grow without mire and as grasse without water can grow no longer but withereth though it be not cut euen so man by nature liueth vntill nature be quite worne and wholly extinguished and then dieth though he were not touched nor medled withall in any sort which death is nothing so nor so as the penall The man of God intimating such a kinde of death said to Hezckiah King of Iudah Esai 38.1 Thou shalt not die with the sword but thou shalt die in peace To wit thou shalt not die the penall death which is terrible and painefull nor an vnwonted death but the common death the generall visitation of all men to wit the naturall death This naturall death which is also called the common death and the generall visitation of all men hath by the reuealed word of God foure other inferior sorts or kinds of death whereof I must dispose for methods sake after this manner 1. Some do die In their old age 2. Some do die In their nonage 3. Some do die Languishingly 4. Some do die Suddenly The first reason why some liue long Is drawne from the singular fauor of almightie God in granting vnto some one amongst many that which in his heart he specially desireth For amongst all things that man specially desireth there are principally these two to wit health and wealth For wealth a man will bestow all his wits all his indeuor all his labour all his friends and whatsoeuer else he possibly can deuise but for health and that he may liue long he will bestow all his wealth that was so industriously so laboriously gotten and be contented to be counted a foole yea a forlorne wretch and to be indeede a begger at euerie mans doore all the dayes of his life To be breefe as chastity is a singular gift of God to one amongst ten thousand so long life is a singular guift of God to one amongst ten thousand Salomon therefore said Pro. 16.31 Old age is a crowne of glorie wherein are two goodly and godly respects one is that a man may the better the more abundantly gather riches by looking more respectiuely into the workes of God and the end of his creation For the longer a man lines in a reasonable kind of husbandrie the more his gaine and getting must needes be Although his reuenewes be but small yet if he get and spare here a litle and there a litle in continuance of time according to the old prouerbe Many a little makes a mickle following the example of that little poore pismire who according to her small strength and yet being diligent Pro. 6.6 hath against winter a great heape of prouision and being also prouidident she painefully nibleth the heads of euery graine lest they should grow and so her labor lost The Maiestie of God to set forth his renewed loue towards Iudah and Ierusalem said thus Zach. 8.4 Their men shall liue so long as that they shall go by a staffe As there is no commandement that hath any promise but the honouring of parents so there is no such reward pleasing to any man as to liue long therefore God made promise thereof to thē that keepe his commandement What temporal blessing did the Lord bestow on Dauid 1 King 3.14 for a reward who was a man according to his owne heart but long life as the holy Ghost testifieth he liued so long that he could liue no longer 1 King 1.1 nature was quite extinguished in him This was also a reward specially bestowed vpon the ten holy Fathers Gen. 5.1 to the end before the floud Thus shall men be enabled with their hands to performe the desire of their hearts in contributing vnto the necessitie of the Saints Abraham also had for his temporarie blessing Deut. 31.2 an hundred and twenty yeares life euen in his old age he was carefull to fulfill the worke of the Lord so long as he said that he could go no more out and in Length of life Deut. 11.9 saith Moses is a reward for keeping of Gods cōmandements they then that keepe not Gods commandements shall be guilty of Gods iudgmēts for the same and also for the time which they haue mis-spent The other speciall and most principall respect of long life is that such men might also gather spirituall riches For as by little and little men come to be stored with the things of this world specially if it be long continued euen so by the continuall keeping of the Sabboth by the often reading and hearing of Gods word by vsual praiers by often reiterating with thankefulnes the mercies of God such like men may grow increase most richly and abundantly in the things that concernes a better life If the increase be but as Esai the Prophet saith here a line and there a line Esai 28.10 to wit a little at one time and a little at another either gotten or saued To which purpose Iob saith Iob. 12.12 In length of dayes there is wisdome and amongst the ancient there is vnderstanding Therefore the holy man Dauid all his life long
at deathes doore the wicked parteth with all ioyes and there the godly receiues it The third vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue all such parents who hauing a sonne or a daughter taken from them by death in his minority they do not take to heart nor thinke the extraordinary care the greedy griping the intollerable shiftes and the manifold deuices which they vsed to get worldly wealth and preferments for him So that they euer kept from their heart or for the most part all conscionable care of trayning him vp in the feare and nurtour of the Lord so as he might be a necessary member in Church or comon wealth They consider not neither can they be made to thinke much lesse to beleeue that God tooke him away for their punishment And for this cause also God takes away another and so another of their best and dearest children leauing such parents either none at all or else such as are gracelesse and without hope to be any comfort vnto them If parents out of their naturall affection or out of Gods word would but imagine what a dolefull day what a sorrowfull sight and a galling griefe it would be vnto them to see one child after another suffer the bitter paines and pangs of death then being dead to be doubtfull of their saluation such parents might the better and the sooner see take knowledg of their sinnes towards their poore children and so by true repentance be turned vnto the Lord. The fourth vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue those who out of their ouer abounding naturall affection towards their children are neuer prepared to part with their children no not though they be to change their company for the company of God himselfe and the company of others their brothers and sisters for the company of the holy Saints and Angels in heauen And their worldly riches for the true treasures purchast by the precious bloud of Iesus Christ And this because that either they want knowledge or faith The fift vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue those who liue so securely and so carelesly as if they had made a couenant with death vntill an appointed day or as if they could keepe death away so long as they would or at least giue themselues lawfull warning Vpon these comes the day of the Lord suddenly not in respect of God but in respect of themselues being vnprouided By how much they want of that they should haue against his coming or by how little they feare death by so much the more terrible and fearefull death is vnto them The sixth vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue those who arrogate to much vnto the worthinesse of the meanes attributing that vertue vnto them which indeede is due vnto God as in the time of sicknesse to physicke surgery and such like No maruell though they languish in their diseases and no man able to helpe thē What was the ouerthrow of so many thousands of the Israelits the taking away of the Arke of God by the Philistines 1. Sam. 4.5 was it not because they relied to much vpon the arke as appeared by their shooting and loud reioycing as though heauen and earth rang together Ieremie speaketh of them at another time how they vanted and boasted of their temple saying Ier. 7.4 The temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord therefore the Lord gaue their Temple to be ransacked and ruinated by Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon Dan. 1.1.2 Ieremie likewise speaking of the pride and presumptusnesse of the Egyptians who in their strength and multitude of their men concluded most infallibly the vtter ouerthrow of the people of Israel Ier. 46 7. They come saith he like floods and riuers with raging horses swift chariots Blackemores and Libians to shoote and to beare shields yet all in vaine The seuenth vse concerning the naturall kind of death It serueth to reproue those who do derogate from the worthinesse of the meanes which God in his mercie hath ordained in his Church and common-wealth to be in him and for him or as in his stead helpers comforters vnto his people as in the time of sicknesse not to seek to the Physitiā they rather scoffe and scorne them and they deride their profession These indeed as the former are accessarie to their owne cōtinuall diseases languishing maladies and in the end to their owne death not because that they thereby do directly shorten their liues but because that they do frustrate so much as in thē lieth the holy ordināces of God which are ioyned with his decree The eight vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue those who run into eminent dangers places of contagion they auoid not when they may conuemently outragious elements as fire water and such like or enterprise to performe actions which stand not either with their wits or with their abilities The 3. generall sort manner or kind of death to wit the vnnaturall death The vnnatur all death is that which is more violent more abhorring nature more crosse and contrarie to the lawes ordinances of God A kind of death which proceedeth from mans selfe or rather a death instigated by the diuell meerely derogatiue to the Maiestie of Gods gouernment dishonourable to his name by the reuealed word impeachfull to the saluation of the soules of such An vntimely and an vnseasonable death Vnder this kind of death there are 4. other inferior sorts First when a man killeth himselfe vnawares or against his will as Ahaziah king of Israel did with a fall 2. King 1.6 Secondly when a man kils himselfe wittingly and willingly 1 Sam. 31.4 2. Sam. 17.23 1. King 16.18 as Saul did with his owne sword as Achitophel hanged himselfe and as Zimry did that burnt himselfe Thirdly when a mā is killed by another vnwittingly and vnwillingly not hauing hated him before Nu. 35.22 Ios 20.1.2.3 for whose saftetie God appointed cities of refuge Fourthly when a man is wittingly and willingly killed by another 2. Sam. 3.27 2. Sam. 20.10 as Abner was by Ioab and as Amasa was The first question concerning the maner of the vnnaturall death Why it is or how it comes to passe that some vnwittingly and vnwillingly do kil and destroy themselues yea with their act and deed some hang themselues some burne themselues some drowne themselues and such like manner of vnnaturall death This kind of vnnaturall executions happeneth many times on the iust as well as on the vniust vpon the wise as vpon the foolish vpon the rich as vpon the poore The answer therefore is twofold one concerning the vngodly the other concerning the godly That which concernes the vngodly is when any such man or woman vnwittingly puts or brings himselfe into perillous places puts himselfe to death by his owne act and deed It proceedeth from the vpright iustice of God ruling and ouer-ruling man how
by their words whē as the viper fell vpon Pauls hand Act. 28.1.2.3 c. Sure said they this man is a murtherer who although he hath escaped the seas yet vengeance hath not suffered him to liue Gen. 4.10.11 The bloud of Abel cried for vengeance And to conclude Murther is so detestable in Gods sight and so abhorring nature as for what cause soeuer one man shal or doth wittingly willingly kill another if it be secretly done Deut. 21.1 to 10. as doth appeare by diligent inquisition made for the finding out of the murtherer the hainousnesse of the sinne also appears by the greeuousnesse of the punishments which are no lesse then death Leui. 24.17.21 Deu. 21.8.9 It endangereth the whole congregation with the plagues of God how guiltlesse soeuer they be of that fact Gen. 4.10 Re. 6.9.10.11 It calleth and crieth out from earth to heauen for vengeance the soules of the Saints in heauen do call and crie vnto God for instice The holy man Dauid who by his regall authoritie also in his martiall affaires was to shed the bloud of many yet he prayed that God would deliuer him from bloud-guiltinesse Now concerning the killed to wit why God doth suffer innocent blood to be shed wilfully or to be subiect to the will of the wicked The answer is twofold The first answer concerning the killed is to manifest Gods secret decree concerning the time of mans departure and as for the manner how it is all one with God and so is it with a righteous man The manner of death maketh nothing against the matter of saluation Christs Iesus speakes comfortably and verie directly to this purpose vnto his Apostles and disciples and so vnto all true Christians You shall be betraid of your brethren Luk. 21.16.17.18.19 and kinsmen friends some of you they shall put to death ye shall be hated of all men yet there shal not one haire of your heads perish possesse your soules in patience The second answer concerning the killed It makes the iustice of God the more manifest vpon the killer As Salomon said concerning Ioab who had murthered Abner and Amasa 1. King 2.32.33 The Lord shall bring his bloud vpon his owne pate for he slue two men causlesse and more righteous then he their bloud shall returne vpon the head of Ioab The Prophet Habacuck questions to that purpose with God concerning the innocent that were slain so vniustly O God Hab. 1.13.14.15.16.17 saith he thou art of pure eyes and canst not see euill wherefore dost thou looke vpon the transgressours and holdst thy tongue when the wicked deuoureth the man that is more righteous thē he Shal they therfore spred forth their net not spare continually to slay the nations This is answered by the same Prophet in the same chapter after this manner Art not thou ô Lord my God 12. my holy one we shall not die O Lord thou hast ordained them for iudgement and ô God thou hast established them for correction As if he had said Thou wilt not suffer these lewd and gracelesse ones any longer then vntill thou hast accomplished thy will in mercie vpon vs then thy heauy wrath shall consume them Saint Luke affirmes interrogatiuely the same after this maner Shall not God auenge his elect which crie day and night vnto him Luk. 18.7.8 though he suffer long I tell you he will auenge thē quickly As Christ said concerning the man that was borne blind Ioh. 9.1.2 It was not his sinne nor his parents but that the worke of God might be seene euen so these whom the monsters of the world do kill and destroy is not in respect of that which they pertinently or properly haue deserued but that the iustice and vengeance of God might be seene iust vpon such as kill them There are many wayes and diuers manners by the which the deare children of God do depart this life but no way nor manner can preuent their preparatiō to die well how sudden and how vnusuall soeuer it seemes to be vnto others And seeing the case so standeth let all men beware of rash iudgement and vncharitable censuring of such as are slaine Let the manner of death be rather an occasion to forewarn others to be readie also as not knowing the time nor the manner of death It is commonly alike both to the iust and to the vniust for the outward manner of death but the inward is nothing so nor so As we may reade of the two theeues the one vpon the right hand Mat. 27.38 the other vpon the left hand of Christ the outward maner of their death was alike but the inward was not so for the one died faithfull and therfore Christ said This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise the other being vnpenitent inwardly went vnto the dāned Againe the suffering or permission of God is alway the meanes of his secret decree no man can kill another no not iniure his brother in the least measure but by the will of God because no sinne can be committed against his will nor any otherwise will God permit and suffer a sinner to outrage then in that maner so far forth as may stand well with his diuine purpose yet for all that such a will purpose and permission of his cannot be said to be the immediate cause of such an outrage or iniurie done howsoeuer but rather out of mans will who for his owne part respects not the fulfilling of Gods will so much as his owne which proceedeth from his corrupt nature being inuegled by the diuel And when as almightie God doth withdraw his helpes his gifts and graces which he may because properly they are his owne Ezod 7.4 thence it is said that God hardened the heart of Pharaoh that Sihon king of Heshbon would not let Israel passe by Deut. 2.30 for the Lord had hardned his spirit and his heart Further it must be granted that almighty God might verie well and most fitly if he would haue restrained and withholden that murther and shedding of innocent bloud and so the wrong and killing of other his Saints but it was not his wil it pleased him not so to do he foresees it not to be for his honor and a further good As may plainly be euidenced by a speciall difference betweene the purpose of God and Gods election for it is certaine that election was before the purpose of God to saluation or damnation because in election there is the holy will of God without regard either of good or euill to be found in man or before he had done either good or euil The concurrence and the prosecution whereof stands in these three most holy asseuerations of the Almightie the first being vocation the second iustification and the third glorification To which effect and purpose the holy man Dauid being preuented of his murthering mind said with all holy consideration
gladsomnesse 1 Sam. 25.33 Blessed art thou which hast kept me this day from shedding innocent blond The fourth manner sort or kind of death to wit politicall In the discourse wherof there will arise many dolefull questions with crosse and contrarie obiections made by thē which are perplexed some for their sonnes some for their daughters some for their deare familiar friends some for their wiues and some for their husbāds who before their faces were cruelly executed vnto death which parēts friēds of theirs do attribute the same vnto the rigour of law or vnto the vniust proceedings of law or at least vnto the cruell executioners of law For the remouing of all which vniust imputations as also for the comforting of all such sorowfull soules I will deliuer so particularly so plainely and so directly my mind my knowledge therein as I hope through Gods mercy shall stand them in good stead for perswasion and satisfaction in this manner and method First what the lawes ought to be in generall in a well gouerned kingdome Secondly what the lawes now are in generall inthis our glorious and so selected a kingdome Thirdly what the law politick in particular is in this kingdome for the complainants instanced First concerning the lawes in generall how they ought to be The lawes of all well gouerned kingdomes ought to be grounded vpon diuine intentions and peaceable ends consisting of iurisdiction regall without partiality and of a ciuill policy without corruptiō for the nourishing and vpholding of spiritual iurisdiction tending to the religious worship of God and the mutuall society amongst brethren which is indeede rightly reckoned to be the summe of the morall law of Moses and the chiefest respect of our common lawes The principles of all which lawes also are to haue their fit their conuenient their warrantable application and denommation first to the glorie of the blessed Trinitie secondly to the honor of the immediate Maiestie of the King thirdly to the reuerent regard of his or their substitutes and fourthly to the good of the people in publicke according as times places persons shall vrge their importunities still inferring and extending rules of iustice and equitie thereby making an euident difference betwixt the plaintiffe the defendant and betwixt the iust and vniust because cōtrarieties being layd together makes iustice to appeare the more iust and the same law to be the more commendable and vnrepealable Secondly concerning the common lawes as they are now in England This little Isle of England and Northerne side of the world of which the great Prophet Ezechiel speakes in some particular Chap. 38.2.3.4.5.6.15 hath bene more anciently endued with Gods particular fauors then any other part else of the whole world for matter of his Maiesties religious seruice and for matter of ciuill gouernement in this land now most graciously established All which law is full of profound maturitie full of needfull iustice and full of druine well ordered policies And wheras other nations round about this realme through their owne homebread mutinies and forren deuastations cānot prescribe by any record custome or memorie of man by what law iustice or equitie other then by the law of nature which is common amongst heathens that they do execute any malefactor or inflict any pecuniarie punishment almightie God out of his infinite prouidence and mercie although that many times religion through the corrupt iudgement of Kings and Queenes of this land the manifold sinnes of the people therein were sometimes altered and sometimes quite ouerthrowne yet our common lawes were still maintained and extolled euen vnto this day All which lawes had they not excelled the lawes of other nations they could neuer haue continued without extinguishment without impeachment or at least without some anullity publike indignity by the Kings of the Brittans or by the Kings of the Saxons or by the Kings of the Danes or by the Kings of the Normans euery of which men were verie wise verie politicke verie religious and most admirably valorous which Kings immediatly succeeded one another euer since this Iland was first found habitable In all whose times these our said lawes slorished and by many necessarie additions were publickly enlarged Againe had not these our common lawes bene euerie way besitting the maintenance of Gods sacred and true religion and for the preseruation of peace as also by all former ages since the confusion of tongues left vnto our dayes and times vncontrollable vnrepealable then without all question some one or other of our godly Kings or Queenes would haue established other lawes or else would haue in some sort reformed them But by reason of the great multiplication of this nation and through some disorders likely to accrue amongst so many who would in time crosse and contrarie the true meaning of those lawes our renowned Princes haue onely repealed some few statutes and in stead thereof haue enacted others to better purpose as necessarily was required alway with this prudent prouiso that no law nor statute should be in sence and intendement but according to the rules and former patterns which they had receiued from former ages tending to the true worship of God and the peace of the people So did Alfred a famous King of the Saxons in the yeare of our Lord 880. adde vnto these lawes holy precepts and statutes namely against sacriledge against the violating of the Sabboth against treason against the immodest and vnchast touching of another mans wife or daughter all which facts were euen then held to be most vile most odious and most detestable and yet for all that euen then were they most likely to haue bin committed by many irreligious persons So in like manner Caesar the Emperor before the incarnation of Christ by an established law brought that wife within the compasse of petty treason which was found guilty for betraying the life of her husband and to be burned for the same So likewise the sonne that did betray his father and the seruant that betrayed his master should be hanged for the same as petty traytors all which well contriued lawes are in force vnto this day blessed be the Maiestie of God for it Thirdly concerning the politicall law which is a chiefe part of the common law whence indeede ariseth the matter instanced The politicall law is that by vertue whereof malefactors are iudicially executed vnto death vpon publicke trials and arraignment by witnesses produced and then by the verdict of 12. substantiall honest sworne men The common law whereof I haue spoken doth consist of a law Regall and a law politicall both which were in request many yeares before Christ was borne This law Regall is said to be grounded vpō diuers anciēt customes rules and orders drawne out of the naturall law or as it may be said out of the will of the King be it good or euil which is effected by his auctoritie vpon the subiects The political law is indeed a
such as are nearely appertaining vnto them as if the want of meanes or the neglect of some dutie had directly shortned his or their liues all which is a plaine euidence of an vnbeleeuing heart Fourthly it serueth to reproue those who to preuent death in the time of danger do arrogate vnto the vse of vnlawfull meanes as forceries witchcraft and such like which God hath directly absolutely forbidden or else do first vse vnlawfull meanes and afterwards do applie themselues to the vse of lawfull meanes Da. 2.1.4.1 as Nebucadnezzer did who first sought to his astrologers soothsayers and others of that kind and afterwards sought helpe of Daniel the seruant of the liuing God For to attribute that vnto the meanes which is due to God is euery where inhibited as it was forbidden the people of Israel to say Deu. 8.17.18 My power the strength of my hands hath prepared me this abundance but remember the Lord thy God for it is he which giueth thee power to get substance Fiftly it reproues those who spend the time of their renowm the time of their dwelling here the time wherein they possesse their soules so vainly Euerie point whereof is precious although not riotously nor wantonly nor couetously yet carelesly vnconscionably spent without desire of the knowledge of God according to his word without groweth in zeale to his holy ordinances in the strength of faith and in the power of his spirit hauing all meanes therof brought euen home vnto them but euen as a people that doth neither good nor harme luke-warme or halting betweene two opinions The time of this ignorance want of zeale knowledge and such like God regardeth not in vs whiles we are without the meanes thereof as in his mercie he declared himselfe also towards the heathen But now it is called to day Christ said partly concerning himselfe and partly concerning others I must work while it is called to day Ioh. 9.4 the night commeth when a man cannot work Let vs also take it as spokē to vs we are Gods children and therfore may not be idle let vs be doing in time for time will away A man not knowing by the word of God the timelinesse of death to wit that death cannot take hold on him vntill Gods appointed time and that then he must needs depart the same man dieth willingly comfortably whereas a man that is ignorant thereof mournes and murmurs imputing the cause of his sickenesse and death vnto casuall meanes Sixtly it is sharpely and warrantably to rebuke those most ignorant and most prophane caluminators who do derogate from the worthinesse of the meanes which God hath ordained in his Church whose detracting tongs do manifest their hearts in speaking so maliciously so vntruly and euery way so indignely not only of graue learned Physitions but also euē of that laudable and honourable vse of Physicke it selfe which was highly commended carefully vsed amongst the holy Patriarches the Prophets and Apostles and thence from age to age successiuely by all and amongst all godly men ruling themselues by the former examples sufficient grounds of Scripture Some of which malicious profane persons wil neuerthelesse in their depth of danger vse the aduico and helpe of Physitions whom at other times before and after they vse in a parable of reproch disdaine as they do the Ministers and Pastors of their soules without whose ministerie they cannot possibly be saued and as indeed they do vse the learned the graue and most honest professors of the law who in their places do stand for the defence of their goods their good names and their patrimonies Euerie of which stately and most honourable professions is so needfull and so necessarily required in Church and in commonweale as that neither the one nor the other can be nor in any good seasonable sort continue And to be breefe the ignorant and dissolute man doth alway beare armor defensiue to defend his owne euilles and armes offensiue to assaile the good maners of others according to the old saying cōmon Prouerbe Yet according to my humble duty in Christ and in Christ his steede euen by the mercifulnes of God I do exhort all such as in an acceptable time to make vse of these honest and holy professors as of the meanes of his mercie towards them and as of effectuall instruments for their bodies and for their soules and that according to the directions of the Scriptures of truth and examples of holy men in all ages And as Abimelech said vnto his folke Iudg 9.48 What ye see me do make hast and do the like looke on me and do likewise euen as I do so do ye euen so say I and more also vnto you my good christian brethren let all things be spoken and done in the feare of God according to knowledge and according to the good example of such as guide themselues by the word and Spirit The fourth instruction concerning the memorability of death hauing in it these 4. principall respects or christian considerations as the persons are in place or in behauiour so is the cōmemoration either more or lesse after their decease to be solemnized priuatly or publickly with mourning fasting and praying First the person dead or dying Secondly whether priuate or publicke Thirdly whether spirituall or temporal Fourthly whether iust or vniust First whether the person dead or dying be priuate or publicke we are instigated vnto this mournefull memento for the terrors and torments of death which he endured in our sight and in our hearing as did appeare by his wofull complaints to such as were about him who would and should but by no meanes could minister any helpe vnto him as also by the galling griefes and griping grones he endured who being yet aliue was so surprised of al his vigor and force of spirit as made him blind yea deafe and dumbe O how detestable is sinne whence death and the intollerable pangs thereof are originally deriued Sinne being so odious and so detestable with God his Maiestie deuised an odious and detestable punishment and plague for it which is death A plague of all plagues and the most vnwillingest plague of all other for any man to vndergo There was neuer any punishment that God did inflict vpon man for the breach of his holy lawes nor any torture which the Imps of the diuell could deuise for the Saints of God but euerie man was more willing to endure it then death Not onely because it did depriue man of the world and worldly things but also and more specially because that man hath euen in nature a great loathing an vnspeakable feare of it as may partly appeare by the strange meanes by the notable deuices and by the desperate attempts which men haue vsed and indeuored onely to shunne and to auoide the torments of death and as also may appeare by the examples of many in the Scriptures and of others who are recorded in
of Nahomie who by death was violently rent from her husband which made her as out of a sorrowfull heart to crie out saying Ruth 1.20.21 The Almightie hath giuen me much bitternesse I went full I returne empty the Lord hath humbled me and brought me to aduersitie By which words and by many daily examples it is plaine that the parting of an husband from a wife ministreth many occasions of weeping mourning and calling vpon God If she be old then is she void of hope and the farther from helpe in her greatest neede if she be young then is she the more subiect to vtter vndoing by her choise which standeth so in generall amongst all men in the world In the meane time she is in danger by her singularity to the subtill temptations of the diuell and so to the prouocations of diuelish men together with the breaking vp of her houshold and the dispersing of her fatherlesse children All which dolefull dangers should be sufficient matter to moue her to commemorate her husbands death and by the diuine ordering of her selfe in the same to solemnize her owne If the partie dead be priuate and a wife the husband in like manner is occasioned to commemorate her death with much mourning The more godly and wise the husband is the more is his griefe with the consideration of that danger which is to come in the choise of another and in step-daming and mother-lawing his little young children and when as specially he shall endanger religious exercises in his house amongst his familie and in himselfe the decay of Gods seruice by meanes of a wife who perhaps will crosse and contrarie all The consideration of these and such like disturbances no doubt together with natural affection being powerfull in Abraham although a man highly in the fauour of God it wrought in him exceeding great passions which made him to mourne much with heartie grife Gen 23. vers 3. not able to abide the sight of his corps Here a complaint may well be raised against husbands who most carelesly and most vnconscionably do passe ouer the deceasse of their wiues and in like manner the wiues passing ouer the deceasse of their husbands sauing onely for the present time the matter seeming irkesome they burst out passionatly into some few funerall teares saying with admiratiō what is he dead or is she dead what dead alacke what dead who would haue thought it With clapping of hands and striking of thighes as if death were vnwōted they still for a few dayes speake admirably Such a man is dead the onely honest husband is dead or the onely honest wife that euer man had is dead wel this is the world there is no remedy weeping will not serue we shall all die or else dissemblingly they mourne on their backs but ioy in their hearts making an outward shew of that which is not inward Sam. 14.1 to 13. Like the woman of Tekoha who with her mourning apparell with her heauy countenance and with her lamentable cries made Dauid the King though a great wife man to beleeue that her husband her two sonnes were dead in deede as she said which was nothing so Or else most vnnaturall of whom S. Paul speaketh Rom. 1.23 who are nothing moued to mourne being in sort a people forsaken of God and branded with the marke of vnnaturall affection To yeeld no naturall affection is so much abhorring nature and so contrarie to pitie and so voyd of pietie as it is to denie the buriall of the dead so that before God it is all one kinde of prophanenesse and so much as that husband or that wife can do to condemne them that are graciously dead in the Lord to be in state of damnation and therefore not any way worthy of commemoration whom the Prophet Ezechiel reproueth after this manner Crueltie is risen vp Eze. 7.11 a rod of wickednesse none of them shall remaine nor of their riches nor any of theirs neither shall there be lamentation for them And Esay saith Esai 57.1 The righteous perisheth and no man considereth it in heart and mercifull men are taken away and no man vnderstandeth that the righteous is taken away from the euill to come If the person dead or dying be priuate and a sonne or daughter the inherent qualitie and the vnanswerable affections of parents towards their children whiles they are aliue doth sufficiently discouer their continuall mourning their griefe and their hearty sorrowes whē the children are dead And now I call to minde out of my owne tormented heart and fatherly afflicted soule my sorrow for many sonnes specially forone Parents cannot be included within this account of reproose but rather truly be reckoned amongst those who mourne too much and ouerlong being drawne thereunto as out of their vnanswerable affections deriued no man knowes whence nor how sauing that which is in respect of children begotten in mariage to which the exceeding diuine affection of God the Father in Christ Iesus hath relation and perfect reference If the person dead or dying be priuate and a father or mother What exceeding great cause haue the childrē continually to commemorate and religiously to celebrate his or her death with mourning with fasting and with calling heartily vpon God for these two speciall causes One is for their continuall care of parents tending onely for their welfare in the world the other their Christian conscience for the saluation of their soules in the world to come where parents faile in the one they exceed in the other according to the common prouerbe Happie is the child whose father goes to the diuell As if it were to say more particularly and more plainly The father and the mother are so vnsatiable in their coueting so infidell-like pinching their backes their bellies and so diuellishly oppressing the poore yea many times so atheistlike hazarding their owne liues by vnlawfull getting and so directly opposing themselues against God for to enrich their children as that indeed they make whole shipwrack of their soules The truth whereof is so cleare and the matter it selfe so probable as if there were neither many millions of godly witnesses neither the wicked liues and wastfull behauiour of their children yet their owne conscience to their own condemnation would manifestly declare it And haue not such children great cause to mourne yea alwayes to bewaile the deceasse of such parents specially because of the hellish torments and the ineuitable paines which they do endure Me thinks I heare and see the same or greater torments which God in his vpright instice doth prepare for such children not onely because of their vnnaturall and vndutifull behauior towards their parents being dead and whiles they were aliue but also for that they do so ioy and so reioyce in their goods being so gathered and so left vnto them which is indeed no other then the price of bloud and I may say more plainly the price of their
be a performance and a seisure vpon Gods promises for the perpetuall good of his Saints after death which in this life can not be obtayned and also for the ineuitable destruction of the wicked With the godly Esai 23.18 saith Esai shall be ioy and gladnesse slaying of oxen kiling of sheep eating flesh and drinking wine reioycing and triumphing By which words is meant all spiritual heauenly plenty of immortal melodies and vnspeakable alacrities the father ioying and reioycing in the sonne and the sonne in the father and both the father and the sonne in other the Saints in the Angels and specially in the Lambe Christ Iesus The same Prophet continueth his speech as being halfe rauished with the meditation thereof in the behalfe of his fellow brethren who saith Awake thou that sleepest in the dust Esai 25.9 in that day men shall say Lo this is our God we haue waited for him he will saue vs we will reioyce and be ioyfull in his saluation Againe the Lord himselfe speakes by the same Prophet Esa 26.19 The dead men shall liue euer with my body shall they arise awake and sing ye that dwell in the dust Saint Paul said to that effect 1. Cor. 5.10 We must all appeare before the iudgment seate of Christ that euerie man may receiue the things which he hath done in his body As it was with Christ the head so is it with his members Except the wheate corne die and fall into the ground it abideth alone but if it die it bringeth much fruite Concerning the seisure of Gods iudgments vpon the wicked according to Gods promises these ioyes these preparations and these exultations are turned vnto weeping and gnashing of teeth Then saith Esai Esa 23.9 that the noise of them that reioyce endeth intimating the wicked then their mirth ceasseth they shall not eat and drinke with mirth 24.8.26.21 and good things shall be bitter vnto them Lo then the Lord commeth out of his place to visite the inhabitants of the earth The earth shall disclose her bloud and shall no more hide her slaine Then the Lord hath decreed to staine the pride of mās glorie and to bring into contempt all them that be glorious vpon earth Here the glorie of the wicked endeth and euen here the glorie of the godly beginneth as by the example of Diues and Lazarus And as Abimelech hauing fought against the city Sechem fiercely and exceedingly wrathfull he slue all the people that were therein left none aliue and afterwards in signe that it should neuer be inhabited he sowed salt in it euen so is the Lord in his wrath against the wicked of the world at that day The fifth reason why all men must die It is drawne from the matter or substance whereof man was made to wit of earth and therefore subiect to perishing earth cannot continue long out of its spheare whence it was exhausted Earth how cunningly and how curiously soeuer it be built as earth vpon earth it will descend and presse downward according to the nature thereof vnto the place whence it came and by little and little in short time much wil come to nothing According to the which God said vnto Adam Thou art dust Gen. 3.19 and into dust thou shalt returne Man is built vpon a bad foundation Iob. 4.19 therfore Iob said that the soules which came from heauen do dwell in houses of clay and their foundation is in the dust which shall be destroyd before the moath Eccles 3.20 And Salomon said that the spirit shall returne to God that gaue it The sixth reason why all men must die It is drawne from the matter or substance whereof the woman was made or for her immediate conuersion from one substance to another to wit from earth to flesh which being rightly considered in it selfe is a matter or substance lesse durable and more momentanie then the former For flesh how fine soeuer it be in it selfe and how curiously or costly so euer it be preserued yet if it be not vsed and taken in season it will putrifie and become exceeding noisome of it selfe specially the flesh of a woman for by how much more excellent braue beautifull she is in the constitution of her body then the man by so much the more foule filthy stinking her body will become shortly after she is dissolued following therein the nature of other pure and purified creatures which in their time and right vse are much to the prayse of God and to the comfort of man but being abused or not vsed as they ought are the most vile and the most venimous things of all others The flesh of beasts are good for men and the flesh of men good for something but the flesh of women when they are dead is good for nothing Iob therefore being borne of a woman said of him selfe of all others of that kinde My flesh is meate for wormes Job 7.5 my flesh is clothed with wormes and filthinesse Man both by father mother is a stigmaticall note a word of disdaine or an appellation of anger therefore Dauid saith What is man that thou art mindfull of him Ye are all but men the sons of men S. Paul said O wretched man not ô wretched Apostle nor ô wretched Christian but ô wretched man the cause of his wretchednesse was in him selfe a man miserable because a man The seuenth reason why all men must die It is drawne from the vigour and virility of mans nature which being growne vnto the height declineth fadeth and falleth It weareth waneth like the Moone and like Nabucadnezzars image Dan. 3.31.32.33 which being raised from the earth to iron from iron to brasse from brasse to siluer and from siluer to gold the head and highest perfection then it declined it returned and abated from gold to siluer from siluer to brasse from brasse to iron and from iron to earth euen to that indeede whence first it came When nature is quite decayed thē the body extinguisheth as in the example of that renowned man Dauid 1 King 1.1.2 King of gods peculiar people he was so old that he died when nature was quite worne out of him This is also variably to be proued euen by the nature of naturall things which hauing their licour moisture or iuice dried and worne away do decay and perish presently To which purpose God said by the mouth of the Prophet Esai in part touching the desolation of Israel They shall be as an oake Esai 7.30 whose leafe falleth and as a garden without water So likewise saith Iob interrogatiuely Can a rush grow without dirt Iob. 8.11 or can grasse grow without water As if he had said Take dirt water away then neither the rush nor the grasse but will presently wither and come to nothing Saint Peter likens mankind to the flower of the field 1 Pet. 1.24 and to grasse which being growne to the