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A64984 The death of ministers improved. Or, an exhortation to the inhabitants of Horsley on Glocester-shire, and others, on the much lamented death of that reverend and faithful minister of the Gospel, Mr. Henry Stubbs By Tho. Vincent, John Turner, Rob. Perrott, M. Pemberton. To which is added a sermon upon that occasion, by Richard Baxter. Vincent, Thomas, 1634-1678.; Turner, Robert, b. 1649 or 50, 4aut.; R. P. (Robert Perrot) aut.; Pemberton, Matthew, d. 1691. aut.; Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1678 (1678) Wing V430; ESTC R221906 43,418 108

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and affections the resolving and removing groundless doubts and perplexing fears concerning your spiritual condition the arming you against Satans temptations the guiding of you in the dark night of desertion and when under the Eclipse of th● light of Gods countenance and for your quickning and encouragement under affliction● and all oppositions and difficulties which you do or may meet withall in Heavens way But should we write particularly and fully to you of these things our Letter would grow into a treatise which is beyond our design therefore we must refer you for Counsel in these things unto the Word of God and those Books in our English tongue which are written on these Subjects and particularly to call to remembrance what your dear Pastor hath taught you and advised you who was the best acquainted with the state of your Souls All that we shall further add is to mind you of some duties and to suggest some considerations for your comfort and encouragement under this so great a loss The duties which God calleth you more especially unto after his taking away your Pastor from you are 1 Watchfulness 2 Fruitfulness 3 Prayer 4 Family-instruction First Watchfulness All Ministers are or ●ught to be the Lords Watchmen the Watch●●n whom the Lord set over you was emi●ently faithful but he is now gone and will ●●itch over you no longer and therefore you ●●ve the more need and are now called to ●atch over your selves the more diligently ●nd to watch over one another 1. Watch over your selves guard your ●●nses which are the inlets of sin and keep ●our hearts with all diligence from whence ●re the issues of sin it is not long since you ●ad the eye of your Minister over you ●ho was a faithful reprover now he is removed take heed you give not your selves the more liberty either to neglect duties or to comply with temptations whereby you may be enticed unto any sin were Mr. Stubbs alive and by you it may be you would not yield to such and such Temptations lest you should offend him and be reproved by him but think with your selves that God is by you always and being infinitely holy is more highly offended with sin than the most holy man on earth can be and you have also an observer within you a reprover we mean your own Consciences and take heed of offending them in offending of God for if God and Conscience should be against you it is a thousand times worse than to have all the men on Earth and all the Devils in Hell against you Watch not only against grosser and more scandalou● sins but also against lesser sins and such as a●● of more ordinary practice in the World an● that not only amongst the profane but all amongst professors of Religion themselve● amongst whom too many hypocrites will b● found at the last day Watch also again● errours especially such as are damnable su● as are in the foundations of Religion whi●● should you entertain would be mor● effectual to ruin your Souls than if you we●● guilty of the grossest immoralities Havin● received the truth hold it fast prize it abo●● Silver and Gold as being far more preciou● yea above life it self and let all go rather tha● let any truth go let truths be rooted in you● hearts imbrace them with love and delight otherwise you may be imposed upon with e●rours by some cunning impostors and be tosse● to and fro with divers winds of Doctrine● by the flight of men and cunning craftiness 〈◊〉 such as lie in wait to deceive always suspec● them as dangerously erroneous who endeavou● to bring the Ministry of Christ's appointme●● into contempt and perswade you to a neglec● thereof which you have reason above othe● ●ighly to esteem and keep close unto having ●●d so eminent and faithful a Minister amongst ●ou Secondly As you ought to watch over ●our selves so also to watch over one another ●hat so instead of one there may be many ●atchmen amongst you Watch over one ●nother in reference to sin and in reference to ●uty In reference to sin both to prevent sin 〈◊〉 one another and to restore such as are fallen 〈◊〉 it Watch to prevent sin so far as you have ●ower say not with Cain Am I my brothers ●eeper As you ought not to murder the ●odies of any nor to suffer any if you can ●inder it to murder themselves so you ought ●ot to murder the Souls of any nor to permit ●hem if you can hinder it to murder their ●wn Souls should you see any of your neigh●ours or acquaintance take Swords or Dag●ers and therewith to gash and wound them●lves lift up their hands to thrust them into ●heir hearts would not you run to them and ●atch away those weapons and instruments of ●eath from them Would not you argue and ●ead with them to forbear the laying such ●●olent hands upon themselves By sin your ●●ighbours wound themselves if they wound 〈◊〉 their flesh they wound their Spirit if they wound not their bodies they wound their Souls and as those wounds are most inward so they are the most deep and dangerous the wounds of sin are mortal wounds and not only temporal death but eternal will be the effect of them without a seasonable application of the blood of Christ. O do what you can to prevent sin in your friends do what you can to arm them against Temptations and to encourage them to resist the Devil to expose themselves to any kind of sufferings and pains and to deny themselves any kind of delights and gains rather than to offend God and wound their Consciences by their sins But if any of your Brethren have been tempted and have yielded if they are falle● and wounded watch to restore such and there in follow the direction of the Apostle Gal. 6 1● Brethren if a man be overtaken in a fault 〈◊〉 which are Spiritual restore such a one in the spirit of meekness considering thy self lest tho● also be tempted If you hear of a fault in any of your neighbours be not forward to believe it unless the thing be evident by clear proof or the parties own confession and then think what the Law of love doth require Lev. 19.17 Thou shalt not hate thy Brother in thine heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy neighbour and not suffer sin upon him When your neighbours lie under guilt let love to their Souls prompt you to use your endeavour for the removal thereof don 't speak of their faults behind their backs to their defamation and the wounding of their names but speak of their faults to themselves in your plain and faithful reproofs in order to their amendment and the healing of the wounds in their Consciences and that your reproofs may be successful they must be managed with much prudence with a due consideration of the fault the person the place the time and the manner as to the manner the Apostle directs you to do it in the
capable of gaining by our diligent hearing sometimes minding us of our death and the eternity which we should enter upon immediately after the separation of our Soul from our Body but did we think his own death was so near and that he would enter into eternity so soon himself We remember with what gravity seriousness and sincerity he used to Preach unto us with what plainness he did accommodate the word to our capacity with what zeal and fervency he did make application to us of the great truths of Religion how he pressed sins upon our consciences by a clear close and powerful conviction adding the most moving considerations to awaken us vnto a sense of them a hearty grief and repentance for them We remember how feelingly he made known to us the glad tidings of Salvation by faith in Iesus Christ how earnestly he urged upon us our duty towards God and one towards another backing his exhortations with the most cogent arguments and how notably he did insinuate what he spake hereby into our affections we remember how he taught us not only by his Doctrine but also by his example going before us in the way of duty and the way to Heaven but did we think however in Heaven he would be above us that he would be also in Heaven before us He came to my house not long before he went to London it may be one may say and another may say and possibly many of you may say ●lthough I were unworthy to receive such a one under my roof and methought his face did look ●ike the face of an Angel I remember his ●umble grave look his image is still upon my ●ind as if his person were still before mine eye ● remember his kind pleasing countenance his ●weet and obliging speeches he came not to eat of my bread but to feed me with the bread of life ●nd how did he entertain me with holy and ●eavenly discourse he spake to my self and he ●pake to my Wife about our Souls I hope I shall ●ever forget his last words so long as I have breath and a memory to retain any thing he spake to my Children and my Servants he would needs ●ave them all called that he might give them some words of instruction that he might speak something to awaken and quicken them to mind ●heir Souls and Salvation He told us all of ●eath and judgment how near we were to Eter●ity but did I think his own glass was so near ●un out and that he would so quickly be himself ●n that Eternity which he spake of so frequently ●nd affectionately to others When he went forth ●f my doors did I think he would never set foot ●ithin them again And that when he went ●way he was going and was so near unto his long ●ome The last Lords day of his Preaching to us ●e gave us notice of his journey that he intended on the Monday and desired to see us the nex● morning not at his house but in the Church that there he might take leave of us and ther● several of us came together to see him and ther● we heard his last Sermon to us his Text was Prov 3.6 In all thy ways acknowledg him and he shall direct thy paths We well remembe● the words that dropped then from his mouth bu● did we think they wou●d be his last words to us Did we think when God was directing his path t● London that he was thereby directing his way so soon to Heaven Did we think that when he took his Farewell of us that it was his last Farewel and that we should meet him no more until the Heavens shall be no more O that we ha● perswaded him for he was a man easy to be entreated that he would have stayed in the Countrey with us some weeks longer and have forborn such frequent Preaching until the hea● of the season were over which his old body and wasted spirits could not so well brook although he thought himself able to bear it well enough and that he should go thorow it as he had done in former times Had we foreseen the issue and ven● of this journey to London rather than fail we would have raised the whole Countrey of his acquaintance and come about him with earnest desires and requests to stay him here we would have hung about his arms and neck we would have ta●en hold of his hands and his feet and forcibly if we could not otherwise have detained him among us that he might have escaped that arrow and stroke of death which was prepared for him in London If he had been resolved to go that he might hasten home to his Fathers house we would have used our endeavour to alter his resolutions we would have wept and cry'd and prayed with importunity Good Sir don't leave us yet good Sir stay with us a little longer pity such and such ignorant Families which when you are gone are like to perish for want of instruction pity such and such unconverted persons who are hastning and rushing forward in ways of sin to their own damnation and although they have not hearkened to former calls it may be some further calls from your mouth may through Gods blessing prevail with them and be effectual to convert and save them Pity your Wise who is like to be left a Widow and what a sorrowful Widow is she like to be Pity your Children which will be Fatherless and if some of them be provided for yet you know who of them are low and shiftless and quickly will feel your loss and all of them will greatly miss your company and your help of them in Heavens way Pity your Spiritual Children some of whom are but new born Babes in Christ who are not like to thrive should they be so soon wean'd from the breast who have need that you should give them more of the sincere Milk of the word which they have tasted and so well relish in order to their Spiritual growth and nourishment pity your poor flock which you are leaving think what grievous Wolves when you are gone may enter amongst them to rend and tear them some of them are sorrowful and they have need of you to comfort them and how will their sadness and sorrow be encreased when they hear of your decease Some of them are weak and they have need of you to strengthen them some of them are staggering they have need of you to establish them yea some have lost their way already and are wandring and they have need of you to reduce them some of them are bruised and they have need of you to bind them up and the most of them are exceedingly diseased all have their Spiritual maladies and they have need of you to administer Soul-Physick to them in order to their cure and healing and will you leave your flock in such a condition when there is so much need of such a Pastor and they are not like in hast to get another
THE DEATH OF MINISTERS Improved Or an Exhortation to the Inhabitants of Horsley in Glocester-shire and others on the much Lamented Death of that Reverend and Faithful Minister of the Gospel Mr. Henry Stubbs BY Tho. Vincent Iohn Turner Rob. Perrott M. Pemberton To which is added A SERMON upon that Occasion by RICHARD BAXTER Printed in the Year 1678. To the Inhabitants of Horsley in Glocestershire and other places of the Country who did ordinarily attend upon the Ministry of Mr. Henry Stubbs late Deceased Beloved Friends ALthough you whose Habitation is so remote are unknown by face unto us as we whose work and Ministry is in London are unto you yet because of the great Love which Mr. Henry Stubbs your most worthy and laborious Pastor and our most dear Friend and Reverend Brother ●id bear towards you whilst he had the oversight of you we are willing to give some Testimony of our great respects to the party deceased whose memory will always be pre●ious to us by shewing our respects to you in sending you some lines to further your im●rovement of this sad Providence which hath ●aken away your Minister looking upon our ●elves as under a particular Obligation to pay ●ur mite by endeavouring to promote the spiritual benefit of Mr. Stubbs's hearers in the Countrey after he hath taken such indefatigable pains for the advantage and Soul-welfare of our Hearers in the City We want words to express this so great and publick loss of this so great and excellent Minister who as he was generally known by the best of people in the City and adjacent parts and as his Ministry was highly prised although but sometimes tasted when he came occasionally to London so his death both by Ministers and People here hath been greatly Lamented But what Tongue can utter your loss who were more especially under his Pastoral charge and inspection his care and instruction We suppose it was grievous to you to part with him for a while when he came last to the City although it were with hopes of receiving him again But when you heard from London that your ●astor was fallen sick taken sick in Preaching so sick that he could not Preach and then he was sick indeed when you heard of his Feaver the violence of it and his danger O what thoughts of heart had you What fears di● there then arise in your hearts Wha● wr●stlings at the Throne of grace Lord spare him Lord restore him to us again Lord try us again a ●●●tle longer with this mercy What care was there among you and solicitude abou● his health and recovery Not without some hopes that the Lord might be entreated and ●end a gracious ear to the many prayers both ●n City and Country put up in his behalf so as to raise him and rescue him from the Jaws of death in order to his further serviceableness in the land of the living But when the doleful tidings came to you that Mr. Stubbs was departed that your Pastor was dead that he had finished his course and resigned up his spirit what were your looks your thoughts your speeches then What ●ighs what sorrows what tears what bitter mournings and lamentations were there generally then to be found amongst his acquaintance and hearers in the Country And is he gone ●ndeed Shall we no more see his face No more hear his voice Will he pray amongst us and pray for us no more Will he appear in the Pulpit and Preach to us no more Did we think that the last Sermon which he Preached before his last ●ourney would be the last Sermon which we should have and hear from him He lately Preached to us of praying without ceasing and did we think he would so soon cease to pray himself He called upon us with great importunity that we would pray fervently and he lived in the practice of his own Sermons we have heard of his constant secret Devotions his dayly prayers with his Wife and in his Family and he did bear us upon his heart in his private addresses unto God But O how did this good man waste and spend his spirits in his fervent prayers with us and upon our account when he prayed amongst us on ordinary and extraordinary occasions We have often known him to continue five or six hours together in Preaching chiefly in prayer on fasting-days being in the Country destitute of the help of any other Minister and that without impertinencies tautologies tedious repetitions or any crude raw rude and nauseating expressions but with a great and delightful variety of holy pleas and arguments and if our base hearts have been tyred sometimes with the length of his administrations yet he himself hath seemed to be little tyred at least his spirit hath been unwearied with all his pains and labour We remember how affectionately be used to make acknowledgment of sin of our sins which he was more grieved for than our selves we remember his sighs and groans which from an oppressed heart brake forth at his mouth signifying an inward sense beyond the utterance of words we remember how the tears did often steal from his eyes and run dow● his old cheeks how he hath often wept for us when our eyes have been dry our hearts stupi● and hard like a stone within us We remember his humble Petitions his fervent supplications a● the throne of grace for us how he would wrestl● with God like Jacob and when we thought he ha● been quite spent how he hath recovered his strength and renewed his hold as one resolved to take no denyal and not to let the Lord go without his blessing for us as well as for himself And did we think that these extraordinary motions and affections in one so ancient did presage his near approaching death that he was come now very nigh to the end of his race That being so ripe for Heaven he would not be long out of Heaven in the Suburbs of which he seem'd to be when he was in his Devotions Did we think that the Lord would so soon gather him and receive him to himself and say to him pray no more for this people We remember his introductions to his work when he first entred his Pulpit beyond the ordinary custome of other Ministers and indeed there were many things extraordinary in him how before his Sermon and Prayer too he used to be speak our attention and endeavoured to incite and stir up our affection with various arguments sometimes minding us of Gods Omnipre●ence and his all-seeing eye sometimes of the Divine Authority of the word which he was to Preach that it was indeed the word of God by which we should be judged at the last day sometimes minding us of the worth of time especially of such seasons of grace sometimes of the worth of our Souls which the gain of all the world could not compensate the loss of sometimes of the worth of grace beyond all the treasures of the Earth which we were
directions only we desire you to remember what the Counsels perswasions and practice of your deceased Pastor was in this particular and accordingly let your practice be And now it is high time to draw to a close we shall add only one word or two for your support and comfort under this sad providence your loss is great and we doubt not but this loss is very grievous to many of you that you do and will feel it more and more that you feel it on the Lords days and feel it on the week days when you miss him in the pulpit and miss him in your Families But none of you ought to be over-whelmed with sorrow upon this account considering first that your loss is his gain if he had continued still in the flesh and further exercised his Ministry amongst you it might have been more profitable for you but his dissolution and departure was best for himself His body is decently interred here and is fallen asleep asleep in the bed of his grave his wearied body doth sleep now quietly without any disease or pain and will abide in rest until it be raised up in glory in the morning of the Resurrection His Soul immediately after its separation had the attendance of Angels upon it to be its convoy into the heavenly Paradice and think what joy there was in heaven at his arrival there if there were joy in heaven at his conversion surely there was great joy at his Coronation after he had done his work and been instrumental in the conversion of so many some there before him and others whom he hath left behind but O how full of joy was he himself How ravished and transported with joy when he appeared in the presence of the glorious Iehovah and was welcomed into Heaven by his dear Redeemer when he first viewed the glorious place he was brought into and saw the glorious face of God and perceived such glory to be put upon himself which we want thoughts to conceive and think how full his enlarged Soul is now of joy you are weeping but he is rejoycing and he might say could he make known his mind as our Saviour to the Daughters of Ierusalem Weep not for me but for your selves What do you grieve that your Minister is so highly promoted Will you mourn for him as if he were lost or annihilated Could you wish that he were alive again Surely he would not for a world change his place nothing could perswade him to come out of the bosom of Christ and assume again a body of sin and death and could you wish that he would lay aside his glorious robes and clothe himself again with black garments you should rather joy in the ●houghts of his joy than grieve inordinately for the loss especially when you think he is ●ut gone before and you may and will arrive at the same place of felicity if you follow his example and walk in the same way as he walked Consider also that although your Minister be gone from you yet the word of God doth remain with you to guide and counsel you to quicken and comfort you and you have or may have ordinances with you if you look after them indeed they will be no more dispensed by him but you ought to bless God and rejoyce that they have been dispensed by him so long that ever you had such a Minister amongst you you ought to rejoyce in the good you have received by his Ministry and you may receive further good by the Ministry of others if you seek after it and give your diligent attendance Chiefly Consider although your Minister is gone yet God is not gone if you are truly gracious God will never remove his gracious presence from you If you walk in Gods ways according to the teachings and example of your deceased Minister you will have both the gracious and com●orting presence of God with you in those ways Therefore what things you have learned and received and heard and seen him do and then though so eminent an Em●bassadour of peace be gone from you th● God of peace shall yet be with you which the hearty Prayer of Your unfeigned and assured Soul friends Tho. Vincent Iohn Turner Rob. Perrott M. Pemberton A SERMON PREACHED AT THE FUNERAL OF That Holy Painful and Fruitful Minister of Christ Mr. Henry Stubbs About fifty Years a Succesful Preacher at Bristol Wells Chew Dursley London and divers others places By his unworthy Fellow-servant hasting after him RICHARD BAXTER Printed in the Year 1678. Act. 20.24 But none of these things move me neither count I my life dear unto my self so that I might finish my course with joy and the Ministry which I have received of the Lord Iesus to testifie the Gospel of the grace of God THis hour being designed to such a commemoration of our deceased friend Mr. Stubbs as is laudably used at such mens Funerals I have chosen words of this Text which the heart and life of this holy man did so constantly express that doubtless the same Spirit suggested them to blessed Paul and him They are the profession of a full devotedness to God in his Christian and Ministerial work notwithstanding all expected difficulties and oppositions which he resolved with unmoved patience to undergo to the joyful finishing of his course The witness of the Holy Ghost with his own experience did teach him to expect bonds and afflictions at Ierusalem it being the ordinary entertainment which every where did abide him but how much worse might come he knew not but was resolvedly prepared for all The joyful finishing of his course was so desirable to him that no suffering though it were the loss of life it self did seem too dear or hard a means for its accomplishment Here is then first The great and desirable prize for which nothing could be too dear Secondly The chearful resolution of the Apostle to go on and part with life it self to attain it The first though the words have no great dfficulty yet as to the matter may need to some a brief explication viz. 1. What is meant by his Course 2. What by his Ministry and testifying the Gospel of the grace of God 3. How this was received of the Lord Iesus 4. What is meant by the finishing of his course 5. How it was to be done with Joy 6. Why he was not moved by foreseen sufferings no● accounted his life dear to attain this end And for brevity I shall now observe thi● method to add the instructions and other applications to each part of the Text as I explain it First The word translated Course signifieth a race to be swiftly run And a threefold race is here included 1. The race of human life which is short and uncertain we are not born for nothing nor doth God give us life and time and maintenance to live in idleness or to serve the flesh The Sun stands not still whether we sleep or wake Our breath our
Though it be an errour to be oft Baptized it is a hundred times worse errour never truly to understand consent and practice after so solemn a Vow and Covenant IV. When you have given up your selves to God as your God and Father your Saviour and your Sanctifier remember that your great relations have engaged you in the greatest business and the highest hopes in all the World And therefore now live as fellow Citizens of the Saints and the Houshold of God that have nobler converse work and hope than worldly unbelievers Remember now with whom and what you have to do and that it is not a by and trifling business but the best and greatest that you have undertaken V. Joyn with those that are for Heaven whose Counsel and Company may be your help separate from no Christians by way of division further than God commandeth you and do not easily forsake the judgment of the generality of godly men But make few your familiar friends and those such as are most wise and humble and sincere and cheerful in the belief and hopes of glory and suitable to your use and converse VI. In all doubts and difficulties of Religion judg not hastily before you have throughly heard and tryed Prefer a suspended judgment that stayeth till it have tryed before a rash and hasty judgment of what you know not and may repent of VII Carefully govern your fleshly appetites and sense and avoid needless temptations especially to sinful ●leasure For lust will conceive else and bring forth sin and sin being finished will bring forth death You will find sin and comfort contrary VIII Especially fear the flatteries of the world and hopes of a pleasant life to the flesh on earth and an itch after riches plenty or preferment and designs for the attaining them love not the World nor the things that are in the World the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and pride of life the portion of the wicked for if any man love the World for the flesh and it self so far the love of the Father is not in him 1 Ioh. 2.15 16. IX Value precious Time and live not in idleness spend time as you would hear of it at last and as those that know what it is to have but one short life to determine where they shall live for ever Hear and abhor all pastimes and triflings that would rob you of your time X. Converse daily in Heaven while you are on earth let Faith still see it Let Hope still make after it and let Love desire it and delightfully remember it There is our Father our Saviour our Comforter our friends with whom we must live for ever There let our hearts be as the place of all our hopes And let the strain of your Religion be as Heavenly as you can Let it consist in love in unity and concord in the joyful praises of Iehovah and in a pure holy life This will raise you above the sinful love of this transitory life and the fear of death and give you the soretasts of Heaven on Earth while you do Gods will on earth as it is done in Heaven But it is the Spirit and grace of Christ which you must beg and seek and on which you must obediently depend for the performance of all this and not upon your unconstant wills Without Christ we can do nothing but by his strengthening us we can do all things necessary to our Salvation and we are more than Conquerors even in our patient sufferings through the Captain of our Salvation who hath Conquered for us Thus we may finish our Course with Joy FINIS