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B14844 Six excellent treatises of life and death collected (and published in French) by Philip Mornay, sieur du Plessis ; and now (first) translated into English. Mornay, Philippe de, seigneur du Plessis-Marly, 1549-1623.; Cyprian, Saint, Bishop of Carthage.; Ambrose, Saint, Bishop of Milan, d. 397.; Cicero, Marcus Tullius.; Seneca, Lucius Annaeus, ca. 4 B.C.-65 A.D. 1607 (1607) STC 18155; ESTC S94239 82,027 544

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into some straying and by-path Euen so this bodie procures diuers occupatiōs which dull the soules point and slacken our intentions so as the holy man Iob said well to this purpose Iob. 10. Thou hast made mee of clay and slime If this body be of clay we are onely plaistered therewith but it dissolues not nor distempers the soule with the filth of his Intemperāce Thou hast apparelled me saith he with skin and flesh thou hast interlaced me with bones and sinewes So that our soule is confined and extended thorow the sinewes of the bodie many times shee is as it were stiffe and otherwhiles crooked Hee addeth Thou hast not exempted me from iniquitie but if I bee wicked accursed be I yet if I were iust I durst not lift vp my head because I am all confusion for thou hast inuironed me with temptation What is this life but a place ful of ginnes and snares We walke amidst the nets and conuerse in the thickest of many daungers Before Iob had said The life of man is it not a battell vpon earth It is very materiall that hee said vpon earth for there is a life for man in heauen Iob 7. His life addeth he is like a labourers work which is to say spent in toy e and trauel consuming it selfe in vanities ebbing away in words hauing a mansion place in dust a life in slime and clay without resolution or constancie In the day he desires night before he eates he cries and weeps at the time of his repast there is nothing but teares in this life grief feare carefulnes incessant troubles trauell without solace anger and horrible anguish Many wish death cannot obtaine it if they obtaine this good they reioice because it is only death that bringeth a man to repose CAAP. 4. That Death is altogether good aswell because it procures an end to sin as in that the world is thereby redeemed BVt I heare some replie how it is written that God made not Death that life was in the Garden of Eden wherein God had planted the Tree of life and life is the light of men and so consequently the death that entred in is euill I demaund in what sense one may tearme it euill if according to the opinion of the heathen it hath no more feeling or if according to the Apostle Christ is gaine with whom it were better to be How then can death be an euill thing if after the same wee haue no feeling at all For where there is no sense of feeling there can bee no griefe seeing to be grieued is to feele ones selfe euill Or if there be any sense and seeling after death there is then life after death and the soule which vseth sense and hath life suruiueth the body after a separation by death But seeing the life and soule remain after death that which is good continues it not being annihillated by death but contrariwise it is augmented for there is no impediment of death that can detaine the soule but shee labours with the more efficacie being intentiue on those things that properly belong vnto her without being tied to the body which in stead of pleasuring ouerchargeth makes the soule to sinke vnder her burden What euill then receiues the soule if it be maintained in puritie that is to say in the knowledge and feare of God But if she haue done otherwise death notwithstanding is not euill but the life which was not a true life for wee cannot rightly call the course race of mankind a life which is so dayly assaulted and corrupted by sinne Why then doe we accuse death which doeth giue the reward of life or else which finisheth the afflictions miseries of the world I conclude therfore that either death enioyes the happines of his repose or is tormented by reason of the euill of a precedent life Now consider me this point well If life be a burden death is then a discharge and releasement thereof if life bee a punishment death is a deliuerance if there be any iudgement after death there is then a life after death Shall wee then say that such a death is not good Whē as life heere belowe is good how cā the death out of the world be euil seeing there is no apprehension which wee neede to feare during this life What makes this mortall life good but pietie righteousnes Life therfore is not good in respect of the soule bodies vniō but because by the feare of God it putteth to flight this euill and obtaines the happinesse of death more performing that which concerneth the good of the soule than that which pertaines to the society and coniunction of the soule body together If we call life good which is the mirrour of the soule separated from the body and if the soule be good which raiseth and retireth it selfe from the cōpany of the body out of question death is good which frees and deliuers the soule from the society and company of the body In what sense therfore soeuer wee take it death is good both because it separates two aduerse parties for fear lest they should ruine one another and in that it is a Port of refuge to those who hauing roued vp and downe the sea of this world search by faith the hauen of repose as also because it makes not our condition worse but reserues vs to a iudgement to come such as particularly wee are found hereunto may be added that it holds vs at rest it withdrawes vs frō their malice that suruiue in the world and replenisheth vs with the enioyance of those things which before we desired expected To this we may also annexe that it is in vain for men to fear death as if it brought an end to Nature For in calling to minde that God made not Death but man after he fell to sinne receiued the sentence of his disloyaltie and reuolt which was that he should returne to dust out of which hee was framed wee shall finde that death is the ende of sinne for feare least if life had beene prolonged sinne might the more haue augmented The Lord therfore suffered Death to enter into the world to the ende that sinne might cease And to preuent that Nature might not end in death he hath set down a day when all shall rise againe so that Death doeth extinguish sinne and makes our nature perdurable for euer And thus death is the portion of all the liuing And thou must passe it with a good courage for so we go from corruptiō to incorruption from death to immortalitie from labor to repose Let not therefore the very name of death terrifie thee but rather reioice in the commodities of so excellent a passage For what other thing is death but the funerall of our vices and resurrection of our vertues and therfore there was one that said very truely Let my life die the death of the Iust which is to say let it finish for the laying
vs conclude that death in it self is not an euill thing for there is no death either for those in this world or those out of it For the liuing it is nothing to them because they liue and for the dead they are out of his clouches And so it is no euill or discommoditie to the liuing who haue nothing to do therwith nor to those which in respect of the bodie are insensible and in their soules freely deliuered from the same CAAP. 8. That it is not Death it selfe of which men are afraid the opinion and apprehensiō therof only terrifies IF death be redoubted of the liuing I say it is not death it selfe but the apprehension thereof as euery one applies the same to his owne affections or in respect of his conscience as it is touched therwith whose wounds we may well accuse and not the sharpnes of death For the rest death is the gate of repose to the righteous as on the contrary it is the shipwracke and ruine of the wicked Out of question it is not the passage of death that offendeth them that feare to die but it is the apprehension and horrible conceit of this passage that thus tormenteth them In briefe as I saide before death greeues vs not but the apprehension thereof Now this terrible apprehension is grounded vpon a precedent opinion of our infirmitie and contrarie to trueth for veritie encourageth opinion daunteth vs. I will further auerre opinion it selfe hath a reference to life and not to death and we shal find that it is life it self which we iudge grieuous wher upon it appeares that the apprehensiō which we haue of death must not be referred to death it selfe but to life for if we haue done nothing in our liues whereof to be afeard wee haue no iust cause to feare death for punishment deserued by reason of offences committed feareth those of true iudgemēt and to commit sinne is an action of the liuing and not of the dead Life therefore hath relation to vs and the vigor and propagatiō of the same is supposed to be in our power but death which is the separation of the soule frō the body doth preiudice vs nothing at all The soule is deliuered and the bodie returnes vnto dust from whence it came The deliuered part reioiceth the body which goes to the earth feeles nothing and consequently hath no apprehension therof But if death bee an euill thing how comes it to passe that young men feare not to growe old and flie not the neighbour age vnto death From whence proceeds it that one which foresees his owne death dieth more willingly than another whom death surpriseth of a sudden So that I suppose they are very well satisfied which tooke death to be an euill thing and it were but for this onely reason amongst many others that by life we passe to death and by death we return to life for none can rise again except he first die It is true that fooles feare death as the worst thing that can befall them but the wise desire it because it is the ease of their labours and the end of their trauels For that which otherwise may bee said there are two reasons why fooles feare death one is that they call it death annihilation which in deed cānot be cōsidering that the soule liues when the body is reduced to ashes besides the bodie it selfe also must rise againe Another is because they fear the torments punishments wherof Poeticall books make often mention that is to say the barkings of Cerberus the terrible profunditie of the riuer Cocytus the Ferri-man Caron the troups of Furies the Infernall depths wherein the monster Hydra remaines that deuoures all where wee may see Titius whose intrailes renew growe again after they haue been eaten by a great huge Vulture which neuer ceases to torment him In like manner Ixion who rowles incessantly the great stone with the huge rock hanging iust ouer their heads that make good cheare beeing ready to fall vpon them These be the Poets fables But so that wee must not denie but there is punishment after death And if wee referre that to death which happens after it let vs also referre vnto life that which fals out after life Punishment therefore must haue no relation vnto death the which as before was deliuered is but a separation of the soule from the bodie And this separation is not euill seeing that to be dissolued Phil. 1. and liue with Iesus Christ is the best thing of all others saith the Apostle It followeth then that death of it selfe is not euill True it is that the death of sinners is euill From whence I collect that therefore all death in generall is not bad but that only of sinners in particular for Psal 14. 116. the death of the righteous is precious the which once more declares that the euil lies not indeath but in sinne The Grecians expressed death by a word which imported to haue end because it is the end of this earthly life The Scripture also calleth death a sleep witnesse hereof that which IESVS CHRIST sayde Iohn 10. Our friende Lazarus sleepeth but I will goe and wake him Sleepe is a good thing for then wee take repose according vnto that which was written Psal 3. I slept tooke my rest awaked againe because the Lord receiued mee into his protection The sleep of death therfore is a sweete repose Furthermore the Lord awakes and raiseth vp them that sleepe for he is the resurrection Ther is also a notable sentēce in the Scripture which sayth Eccle. 2. Praise no man before his death for euery one is knowen at the end of his life and he is iudged in his children if he haue taught and instructed them in his owne knowledge for the childrens misgouernment is euer ascribed to the fathers negligence And because euery liuing man is subiect to offend old age it selfe not being exempted here-from we read that Abraham died in a good old age because hee continued still constant in the good affection which he had to serue God Death therfore serues for a restimonie to a precedent life For if the Pilot be not worthy of his commendation before he hath brought his ship secure into the Porte what reputation can we holde a man in before the houre of his death Hee is his owne Pilot amongst the stormes and waues of this life as long as here hee soiournes he is in danger to perish The Captaine receiueth not his triumphaunt Crowne before the victorie be wonne the Souldier layeth not aside his Armes nor hath his due recompense before the ouerthrowe of the enemie The conclusion is that death is the full and entire payment of the faithfull mans wages it is the summe of his rewarde and his finall Quietus est Let vs also consider what Iob sayth Iob 29. That the blessing of the dead came vpon him for though ISAAC blessed his children dying and
those which saile by sea were to be esteemed amongst those neither liuing nor dead For man being created to liue vpon the earth hee launches out into the waters minding at one instant to participate of two contrary elements and casts himself desperatly into the armes of Fortune Thou wilt peraduenture say that the labour and tillage of the earth is a pleasant thing I agree thereunto but with how many miseries is this contentment accompanied Doth it not bring foorth euery day some occasion of griefe and sorrow now rain by and by drought to day burning heat to morrow nipping frost and thus by times either vnseasonable scorchings or immoderate cold But not to insist vpon many other vocacations of life to how many perils is the gouernment of States subiect whereof many doe so highly esteeme The ioy and pleasure therein comprehended resembleth fitly an vlcer or violent beating of the pulse the being put beside the saddle in such offices makes the ambitious cold at heart procures them more discontentment than if they were to suffer a thousand deaths Can a man be happie while he liues at the discretion of the vulgar what reputation otherwise soeuer he be in or though euerie one reuerence him neuer so much seeing he is but the peoples puppit who may disgrade him hisse at him condemne him to penalty bring him to miserie and somtimes also puts him to death I demand of thee Axiocus because thou hast swayed this Scepter of Magistracie where died Miltiades Themistocles Ephialtes with other Princes and great Captaines which preceded them For my part I would neuer accept of their suffrages supposing it a thing very vnproper for mee to be an associate or head of so dangerous a beast as the common people but Theramines and Callixines together with their guarde sending Iudges the day after cōstituted vpon purpose condemned to death all those that any waies were their opposites without permitting thē any hearing As for thee Axiocus thou with Triptolemus vpheldest equitie although in the assembly there were thirty thousand of a cōtrary opinion which gaue negatiue voyces Axi You say but truth Socrates and since that time I haue had enough of such conuentions nothing seems vnto me more harsh and vnfauorie than the management of publike affairs They that euer had to do therein can wel auerre so much as for your selfe you speake but afarre off and as one iudging by the blowes which haue light vpon others But wee that haue played our part therein may speake by better proofes In very trueth my friend Socrates the people are verie ingrate cumbersome cruell enuious euill taught compounded of the very dregs of men and of those that are insolent and great mockers I iudge him to be most miserable that wil bee too familiar with such a beast Soc. Why then Axiocus seeing you detest the fairest imployment of all others what may we say of the rest must wee not shun them But for the remainder I haue heard this Prodicus adding to the other discourses this also ensuing that death concerned not either the liuing or the dead Axio What 's this you affirme Socrates Socr. Why because Death is no wayes hurtfull to those that are liuing and for the dead they are out of his iurisdiction And therfore now it does not endammage you because yet you liue and when you shal not be aliue he can haue no power ouer you because then you are past his stroake any more It is therefore but a vaine sorrowe for Axiocus to lament that which neither doth nor shal hereafter concerne him no otherwise than as it would be a notable folly to be afeard of monsters which thou seest not which presently haue no existence and that after thy death haue no beeing That which is redoubtfull therein is hideous onely to those that forge feares to thēselues For is there any thing that can bring terror to the dead Axioc You haue stollen these wise perswasions from the Orators that at this day beare all the sway for they are the men that make these pleasant relations to sooth and humor yong men but I for my part am exceeding loth to leaue these worldly goods whatsoeuer you are able to alleage vnto me in your conference of pleasing apparance my mind findes no perfect contentmēt in this smooth course of words which doe but a little delight and tickle in their vtterance They beare a good shew with them but they are too remote from truth and our cogitations are not fedde with fantasies but with things firme and solide that are able inwardly to pearce settle themselues Soc. But Axiocus you inconsideratlie couple together those things which should not be cōioined in making vs beleeue that to feele euill and be depriued of good are the selfe same things for the suffering of euill brings griefe vnto him that loseth a good Now you forget that being dead you are no more and he that is not cannot perceiue this priuation how can he therefore be greeued at a thing whereof hee shall haue no apprehension If at the first you had resolued with mee that in death our bodies are depriued of sense you would neuer haue been so fond as to feare death Now you contradict your selfe in fearing to bee depriued of your soule ioyning this soule to your imagined losse For in fearing to lose your sense you suppose by the same sense to comprehend an euill which you build vnto your self in the aire and that you are afraid to feele Besides this aboue alleaged there are many excellent arguments to prooue the immortalitie of the soule For a mortall nature would neuer haue vndertaken such great matters as to contemne the violence of cruell beasts to crosse the Seas to build cities to establish publike gouernments to contemplate the heauens to obserue the course of the starres of the Sunne and of the Moone their Eclipses and sudden restitutions the rising and falling of the Pleiades the Equinoctials the Solstice of Winter and Summer the windes violent raines with flashings lightnings and thunder She would not haue comprehended in writing nor consecrated to eternity those things that fal out in the world were she not accompanied with some diuine Spirit to haue the intelligence and knowledge of such high and mysticall matters And therefore Axiocus thou must passe vnto an immortall life and not to death thou shalt not be stripped of all but enioy true goods thou shalt haue pleasures no waie intermingled with this mortall body but absolutely pure and indefectiue and such as most truely deserue to be called pleasures For thou being loosed out of this prison and become truely free thou shalt goe vnto a place where there is no trauel nor lamentation from whence sorrow and old age are banished thy life shall bee exempted from all euill replenished with secure repose and eternal ioyes Thou shalt there behold the nature of al things conferring no more thy mindes trauell to their affections
knowes in what place Death attends him look for him therefore in all places Consider sayd a certain Philosopher whether is most commodious that Death come to vs or we go to Death that we lay hold of him or he of vs. Marke the meaning hereof It is an excellent thing to learne to die but it will bee superfluous mayest thou say seeing we can but once put it in practise Why with the greater reason we should the more carefully vnderstand meditate therupon For we must alwayes studie thereon because till that hower we can make no iust triall of our owne sufficiencie He which exhorts to meditate on Death exhorts to meditate on liberty and he that hath learned to die hath forgotten to bee seruile For this is aboue all other power or at the least out of the power of any other thing whatsoeuer What cares hee for prisons for guardes for yron barres He hath alwaies a gate open There is but one chaine onely which keeps vs bound which is the loue of this life and this must not wholly bee shaken off but extenuated and loosened that when occasion serues nothing may hold or hinder vs. Epist. XXVII BVt aboue all other things we must endeuour that our vices may die before our selues that in like maner wee giue ouer all these vain pleasures the which though they do no great hurt yet they are mutable and soone passe away vertue only is a secure solid perpetual delight if any other thing present it self vnto vs it is but like a fogge or clowd which can neuer obscure the brightnes of the Sunne Epist XXX IT is an excellēt thing my good friend Lucilius and that which should bee well learned long before to depart chearfully from hence whensoeuer this ineuitable hower comes He hath neuer been willing to liue that is vnwilling to die For Life was giuen vs with a condition to die and with such a prouiso we must merily meet Death the which in no wayes wee are to feare considering there is nothing more certain than the same and vsually we looke after certaine things and feare those vncertaine but Death brings an equall and ineuitable necessitie ouer all Now who can complaine for being of such a cōdition as from which no man else is exempted for the first and chiefest point of equity is equalitie and wouldest thou neuer stand in feare of Death why then thinke thereupon continually Epist. XXXII OH what a goodly matter it is to perfect accomplish our life before our deaths Oh when shalt thou see the times when thou mayest know that thou hast nothing to do with Time that thou shalt be quiet and still not carefull for to morrowe and plentifully replenished onely with thy selfe Epist XXXVI A Childe that were borne in Parthia would quickly learne to bend a bowe If it were in Germany euery ladde would throwe a Dart. If in our forefathers dayes he would bee expert in riding of an horse and to charge the enemie These be things which the discipline of each coūtrey enioineth and layeth vpon euery one What then of this Marry hereupō we must consider that against all kinds of darts against al kinds of enemies there is not any thing more properly preualent than to make no reckoning of death which surely no man doubts but that it hath in it some thing terrible that offends our mindes and courages which nature hath compounded and framed with a loue of themselues for otherwise there were no neede of any preparation or fortification of our selues against that whereunto we all did willingly run out of a naturall instinct and desire as wee vse to goe in cases of our preseruation and defence Out of question no man learnes how he should lie if need were vpon a bed of roses but how hee might endure torments rather than to speak any thing against his faith how if necessitie required hee might passe an whole night without sleep being sore wounded how to be wary of leaning so much as against a Pike for feare sleep surprize him not when he thus rests himself But death hath no discommodity in it at all For then ther must needs be somthing in the same thus incommodious For if thou desirest greatly long life thinke that of all things which are hidden from thine eyes and are concealed in nature by whō either they are already or presētly to be brought forth nothing is cleane consumed They finish indeede their time but so they perish not And the death which wee so much feare and flie takes not from vs life but giues it only a truce and intermission for a little time A day will come to bring vs again to that light which many would feare but that they shall be reduced to such a state as wherein they shal not remember whatsoeuer is past But hereafter I will more precisely declare that all this which seemes to perish doth onely but change He should depart willingly that goes to come backe againe Obserue how all things returne in their due season Thou mayest see that in this world there is nothing vtterly extinct but it descends and ascends againe by turnes The summer is it past The next yeere brings it againe The Winter is it done his due moneths will reduce it again Hath the night obscured the sight of the Sunne why the next day will discouer it againe The course of the starres is performed through the same circles which before they passed Alwayes some part of the heauens riseth vp another goes downeward In briefe to conclude I affirme that neither children nor mad men feare death and how base a part would it then bee that reason should not be as able to furnish vs with security as they are fortified by their simplicitie and idiotisme Epist. L. THe swiftnesse of time is incomprehensible and so it appeares principally to those that looke backward to it For it deceiues them that are too intentiue on present things So swift is the passage of so precipitant a flight that which we liue is but as it were a minute nay and lesse if it were possible then a minute and yet notwithstanding as little as it is Nature hath distributed and diuided it as if it were some long space Of this minute she hath allotted part to our Infancie another proportion to Adolescencie the other part to those yeeres which decline from youth tending to old age and to another part old age it selfe Marke but howe many degrees shee hath constituted in so narrow roumes Euen now I pursued it and this very now is a portion of our life of which one day wee shall conceiue the breuitie Somtime I thought not time swift footed but now his violent course seems vnto me incredible wherefore I wonder at those that in this little space employ the greatest part thereof in superfluous things wee must no longer amuse on these matters of nothing we haue a greater businesse in hand Death pursues me Life flies from mee Arme mee
oftē hath the Lord vouchsafed to teach vs How often hath he cōmaunded mee to protest and preach incessantly before you al that you should not lament for your brethren whē it pleaseth God to call and to deliuer them out of this worlde seeing I knowe that they do not perish but precede and go before those that remaine behind and that we may be grieued or a little touched for them as for friendes that remooue to some other place or that embarke themselues to arriue in a good Port But wee must not lament nor weare mourning weeds for them here belowe on earth seeing they haue now put on white roabes in heauen We must not giue the Painims iust occasiō to tax reprehend vs when they shal see that throgh immoderate loue wee seem to iudge those perished forgottē whō otherwise we affirme to be liuing with GOD whē they perceiue that by euident testimoniall of our thoughts we cōdemne the faith wherof we make profession by mouth In this wise we should ouerthrowe our hope and beleefe that which we say would but proceed frō hypocrisie It is nothing to appeare couragious in wordes if we subuert the trueth by effects The Apostle S. 1. Thes 4. Paul condemnes sharply reprehends those that are too sorrowfull for the death of their kinsmen and friends Brethren said hee I would not that you should bee ignoraunt concerning those that sleep to the end you may not lamēt like those that haue no hope For if we beleeue that Iesus Christ died and was raised again in like manner they that sleepe in Iesus God will bring thē vnto him He sayes that they which are void of hope sorrow for the death of their friends But we that liue by hope which beleeue in God which are assured that Christ died and rose again for vs remaining in Christ rising againe in and by him why should we refuse to goe out of this worlde why do we mourn and lament for our friends which GOD takes to himselfe as if they perished Why giue we not eare to our Lorde and God Iesus Christ admonishing vs and saying Ioh. 11. I am the resurrectiō he that beleeues in me though he be dead shall liue and whosoeuer liues and beleeues in me shall neuer die If wee beleeue in Iesus Christ let vs giue eare vnto his sayings promises that in stead of dying eternally we may vndoubtedly and ioyfully come vnto our Sauiour with whom we shal liue and reigne for euer For this our temporall death it is but a passage vnto immortality and we cannot attaine to euerlasting life before we dislodge and remoue out of this world Death is not a going foorth but a passage and transportation out of the way of this life to eternall rest Who is he that doth not merrily go forward when there is any possibility of his honor profit Who refuseth to be trāsformed chāged into the image of Christ and quickly to come to the graces of God Our conuersation Phil 3. saith S. Paul is in heauen frō whence we look for the Lord Iesus Christ who shal chāge our vile bodies to the end they may be conformable to his glorious body Our Lord Iesus Christ promiseth that we shall be such when he intreated his father for vs that we might bee with him that wee might liue in his eternal mansion and that wee might reioice in his heauenly kingdome Father said he I desire that those whom thou hast giuen me may be where I must be and that they may see the glory which thou gauest mee before the world euer was He that is to go to the Court of Iesus Christ into the light of the kingdom of heauē should not weep and lament but rather according to the promise of the Lord and the certaintie of his word he should reioice at his departure and transportation To this end we read that Enoch was trāslated it so pleasing God and the holy Scripture affirming in Genesis Gen. 5. Enoch walked according to God and was no more seene for God tooke him vp See what it is to please God for it is to be taken frō the corruptions contagions of this world The holy Ghost also teacheth vs by the mouth of the wise man Eccle. 14. that those whom God loues he quickly deliuers out of this world for feare lest soiourning there too long they might be infected with the ordures thereof Wisd 4. The iust man saith he was takē away to the end that malice might not depraue his vnderstanding for his soule pleased God and therefore made haste to be remooued from out the midst of iniquity In the self same maner the faithfull deuout soule runs a great spirituall pase towards her God saying Psa 84. O God of armies my soule sighes makes haste towards Gods Courts For the rest it belongs to him that takes all his pleasure in the worlde that suffers himselfe to be caught with the bait of earthly delights and the flatteries of the flesh such an one I say it concernes to desire to tarrie long in the world But seeing the world hates the childrē of God why louest thou thine enemie why folowest thou not rather Iesus Christ thy Redeemer who so ardently loues thee Saint Iohn admonisheth vs very earnestly in his first Epistle saying Loue not the worlde 1. Ioh. 2. nor the things that are in the world If any man loue the worlde the loue of the Father is not in him For all that is in the world that is to say the concupiscence of the flesh the desire of the eyes the pride of life are not of the Father but of the world The world and the desires thereof passe away but hee that performes the will of God liues for euer euen as God himselfe is eternall Let vs therefore deare brethren attend patiently whatsoeuer God sends with a pure vnderstanding an assured faith and a constant resolution Let vs driue away far from vs the apprehension of death and bee mindfull of the immortality which is to succeed Shew we our selues such as our profession imports not to lament the death of our friēds but our hour being come let vs merrily and chearfully goe to the Lord when hee calles For seeing Gods seruants should bee alwayes prepared to this point they ought most of all to be so now considering how the world declines it being assieged with infinite euils that ouerwhelm it We haue seene and passed many dangers these are but slight euils in respect of those that are to come we may therfore thinke our gaine great in going out of the same so quickly If the wals of thine house shake with age if thy roofe totter if thy hole edifice not being able any longer to stand presage a neer fall and ruine wouldest thou not make more thā ordinary haste to bee gone If thou wert sayling in the main sea and that a furious storme swelling the waues
this life wee are afrayde to see so quicke an ende of this our earthlie course wherin notwithstanding there is more gall than honie Vertuous men such as feare God haue alwaies done otherwise for the long continuāce of their trauels in this world made them to mourne and think it much better to bee separated from this body Phil. 2. to bee with Iesus Christ so that some of them haue growen to such a point as to detest the day of their birth witnes he who said Iob 3. And let the day wherin I was borne perish For what pleasure is ther here in this life ful of anguish care replenished with a million of calamities miseries with the tears and lamentations of the afflicted wholly destitute of all consolation Therefore it is that Salomon in his booke of Ecclesiastes rather cōmends the conditiō of the dead than of the liuing Eccles 4. and further addeth Nay and I thinke him better than them both that neuer was borne for he neuer sawe the wicked workes that are committed vnder the Sunne In another place hee holds opinion that the dead infant is in better state and condition than an olde man by reason hee neuer sawe the euils that are wrought in the world hee neuer came into this darknes he neuer walked in the vanities of this present life and therefore he that neuer entered into the worlde enioyes more peace repose thā he that is come into the same And in deed what good can a man reape in this world that walkes therein but as an image and can neuer be satisfied with the desires thereof If there be any wealth to deuoure hee loseth his peace being constrained to haue his eye alwaies ouer that which with miserable greedines he sought after most miserably to possesse that which can stād him in no true stead could there be a greater slauery thā to see a man labour to amasse and heap those goods together that bring him no profit If this present life then be a continuall and insupportable burden we must needs coūt the same for a great cōfort This end is death and comfort is a good thing it followes therefore that death is a good thing That was the cause why Simeon so reioyced who knowing that hee should not die before he had seene the annointed of the Lord when they brought Iesus into the Temple he tooke him in his armes and sayd Lord thou lettest now thy seruant depart in peace as if hee before had remained in this life rather by compulsion then of his own free-will hee requiring to be set at libertie as if being hampred in some bonds he had then gone to take possession again of his freedome This bodie is as it were chained yea and which is worse with the chaine of temptations which shackles bindes torments outragiously by reason of the cruelty of sinne For we see in dying how the soule of man loseth it selfe by little and little from the bands of the flesh and beeing let out by the mouth flies away being deliuered out of the dungeon of this body Dauid made haste to go out of this temporall course saying I am a stranger Psal 39. and pilgrime before thee on the earth as all my Fathers were wherfore as a stranger he ranne speedily towards the common countrey of all the Saints requiring before death pardon of his sinnes wherewith he was defiled while he soiourned on the earth For hee that obtaines not pardon of his sinnes in this world shall neuer attaine to eternall life And therefore Dauid addes Let me retire my selfe suffer that I may bee refreshed before I goe and be no more Why pant we therfore after this life wherin the lōger any one remains the more he is surcharged with sin The Lord himselfe sayth Euery day is content with his owne miserie Mat. 6. And Iacob complained that the hundred thirty yeeres of his life Gen. 47. were short and irksome not that the dayes were tedious of thēselues but because malice here increaseth as the dayes passe away For there is not a day that passeth ouer our heads wherein wee doe not offend And therefore the Apostle sayde very well Phil. 1. Christ is gain vnto me both in life and death in the one hauing relation to the necessity of his life for the seruice of the Church and in the other to the particular benefit which he receiued by dying as wee also liue in seruing of Christ towards whō his seruants must needs shew their good affection in deliuering vnto others the doctrine of his Gospel And as for Simeon who said Now thou sufferest thy seruāt hee stayed because of Christ who is our King so that wee may not omit nor reiect his commandements How many men were there that the Romane Emperors caused to remaine in remote and strange Regions in hope of future recompense and honors Came they from thence without their masters leaue and without all comparison is it not a more excellent thing to obey the will of God than of men CHRIST therefore is gaine to the beleeuer as well in life as in death for in the qualitie of a seruant hee refuseth not to serue in this life and as a wise man hee embraceth the gaine of death It is a great gayne to bee out of the haruest of sinne to be remooued from euill and in full possession of good Saint Paul also addeth My desire is to remooue and be with Christ which were far better for me but for you it is more necessary that I should remaine in the flesh Hee set down this word necessary by reason of the fruit of his trauels and the worde better by reason of his celestial grace and thrise happie coniunction with Christ CHAP. 3. What death is and what life according to the Testimony of the holy Scriptures and of spirituall death SEeing then the Apostle teacheth that whosoeuer leaues this mortall bodie goes to Christ if he hath truely knowen serued him let vs a little consider what death what life is We knowe because the holy Scriptures auerre it that death is a loosing of the soule frō the body and as it were the separation of a man For in dying the soule is disioined frō the bodie Dauid therefore seems to allude hereunto when he sayes Thou hast broken my bonds Psal 116. I will offer thee sacrifice and praise The precedent verse of this Psalm because the death of the Saints is precious in the eyes of the Lord sheweth that by these bonds is vnderstood the coniunction of our bodies with the soule And therefore foreseeing euen then that hee was in the number of those faithfull that had deuoutly rendred their liues into the handes of Christ he reioyceth on his part hee also faithfully offring vp himselfe for the people of God to fight with huge Goliath hand to hand and by himselfe alone to remoue the opprobrie peril which then threatned the
IACOB also blessed the Patriarkes these benedictions can not bee referred to any further matter but to that which the benedicents considered in those whō they blessed or to their fatherly affection But here we neither see the one nor the other more then the priuiledge onely of death the benediction of him who dies being of such efficacie as the holy Prophet desired to be made partaker thereof Let vs meditate and consider well on this verse to the end that when wee see the poore man die we may assist him and euerie one of vs say the blessing of the dead come vpon me If we see any body sicke let vs not abandon him if hee bee forsaken of others let not vs drawe backe but let vs remember to desire that the benedictiō of the dead may come vpō vs. How many men hath this short verse procured to be blessed How often hath it made me blusn when I forgot the dying when I visited not the sicke when I despised the poore when I haue suffered the poore captiue to be oppressed in prison or when I contemned and neglected the auncient man Let this therefore bee deeply imprinted in our hearts for the spurring forwarde of the more dull and for the further encouragement of all those which are already in a good course Let the last wordes of a dying man resounde in thine eares and let his soule issuing out of his body carrie with it from thee this benediction Deliuer him that is ledde to die and who had perished without thy succour to the end thou mayest then iustly say to thy selfe The blessing of the dead light vpon mee CHAP. 9. That the soule perisheth not together with the bodie WHo can then make any doubt but that death is good seeing that which troubleth vs that maketh vs ashamed that is our enemie that which is violent tempestuous alluring to all vices remaineth then vnprofitable for the earth and as it were inclosed in an iron cage that is in the graue On the contrary Vertue Science Honor Iustice and Pietie flie vp to heauen the soule continues with immortall goodnesse being conioyned and dwelling in him Act 17. from whom shee had her being as one sayd very well that we are his line progeny For the rest it is most certain that the soule dies not with the body for it is not of the body as the Scripture proues by diuers reasons Gen. 2. Adam receiued from our Lord God the spirit of life was made a liuing soule And Dauid sayde Psal 116. My soule return to thy rest because the Lord hath done good vnto thee But wherein He hath sayd he deliuered my feete from destruction Thou seest how he reioyceth to be assured of this death wherein all error takes end where sinne and not nature faileth Afterwards being stripped and at full libertie as it were hee addeth I will please the Lord in the land of the liuing Heauen is the land of the liuing where foules haue repose and where sinnes enter not but where vertues haue their true force and vigor But the world is a region full of the dead because it is replenished with sinne and in all reason it was well sayd Mat. 8. Let the dead burie the dead It is sayd in another Psalme Psal 23. His soule shall lodge amidst riches and his seed shall haue the earth to their inheritance which is to say His soule that feareth God shall bee placed in the middest of riches and wealth so as it shall remaine neere amidst the same This may also be vnderstood of him that liues in the body who inhabiteth in the middest of riches conuerseth in celestiall places if he feare God possesseth his bodie and the soueraignty therof hauing brought it into seruitude briefly he enioyes the inheritance of glory and the promises of saluatiō If we would therefore bee placed amidst wealth and riches after the death of this body let vs take heede that our soule be not cōbined mingled nor vnited to this body for fear it drawe her out of the right way and make her stagger to fall like a drūken man being disturbed by the illusions of the same let her defie it and the recreations therof that she may not be ouer-ruled by the external senses For the eye may runne into errour and be fondly deceiued by reason this member may be mistaken the like may fall out to hearing and taste In summe it is not in vaine that the wise man saith vnto vs Let thine eyes beholde that which is right Prou. 4. let not thy tongue vtter peruerse things wherof we should not be admonished were it not that the senses erred very often If thou hast beheld a shamelesse woman hast been taken in her lookes or hast lusted after her as she was faire thine eyes haue looked astray they haue seene pernicious things and haue reported that vnto thee which they ought not to haue done For if they had behelde as they should they would haue discouered the villanous desires of this impudent woman her detestable impudencie her shamelesse immodestie her stinking ordures her infamous villanie the woundes of the soule and the scarres of the conscience Hee hath committed adulterie with a woman in his heart whome hee beheld at any time to desire her Thou seest that such an one sought after deceit in desiring the Adultresse and not truth because he desired to see to couet and not to vnderstand trueth The eye therefore lookes astray when the affection leaues the true path the which deceiues as the eye also doeth and therefore it was sayd vnto thee Bee not taken that is Let not thy soule be taken by thine eyes for a woman takes the precious soules of men Prou. 6. The hearing also deceiueth and by speach alluding vnto wantonnes hath often seduced abused and cousined euill instructed youth Let vs therefore defie these traps and snares which deceiue and surprise for hearts are tempted and thoughts intangled by the senses In stead of following these allurements let vs adhere to that which is good and prosecute it For the presence and communication thereof makes vs the better this company giues tincture and glosse vnto our maners for he which cleaueth to good drawes good there-from The soule that cleaues to the inuisible immortal good which is God flying abandoning frail earthly and mortall things becomes like vnto the good which she desires wherein she liues finds true nourishment so leaning to that immortall she is no more mortal The sinful soule dies not because she turns to nothing but in that she dies to God and liues to sin On the contrary the soule which workes not iniquitie dies not at all for she remaines still in her first substance afterwards in her full perfection and glory How can the substance therof perish seeing it is the soule that giues life he that receiues the soule receiues life and when the soule departs life flies
our sinnes Math. 6.11 The reward of sinne is death Rom. 6.23 Eternall life which wee lose by our corruption and transgression is restored again vnto vs by Iesus Christ THe gift of God is eternall life by Iesus Christ our Lorde Rom. 6.23 At the same time when we were dead in sinne hee reuiued vs together by Christ by whose grace you are saued Ephe. 2.5 The determination and grace of God is manifested vnto vs by the apparition of our Lord Iesus Christ who hath destroyed death and brought to light life and immortalititie by the Gospel 2. Timot. 1.10 In this the loue of God appeared vnto vs when he sent his onely Sonne into the worlde to the end wee might liue by him 1. Iohn 4.9 And this man is witnesse that God hath giuen vs eternall life and this life is in his Sonne 1. Iohn 5.11 To whom eternall life is giuen GOd so loued the world as he gaue his only begotten Son that no man which beleeueth in him might perish but haue euerlasting life He that beleeueth in the Son hath eternall life but he that beleueth not in the Son shall not see life but the wrath of GOD shal remaine vpon him Iohn 3.15 36. Verely verely I say vnto you whosoeuer heareth my words and beleeueth in him that sent mee he hath eternall life and shall not come into condemnation but passe from death to life This is the will of my Father which sent me That whosoeuer sees the Sonne and beleeues in him he may haue eternall life and I will raise him vp at the last day Verely verely I say vnto you hee that beleeues in mee hath eternall life Iohn 5.24 and 6.40 47. Iesus sayde I am the resurrection and the life hee that beleeueth in me although hee be dead shall liue Iohn 11.25 These things are written that you may beleeue that Iesus Christ is the Sonne of God that in beleeuing you may haue life in his Name Iohn 20.31 God shal giue to euery one according to his workes which is to say to those that with patience in well-doing seeke glory honor and immortalitie eternall life Rom. 2.6 7. Being now deliuered from sinne and made the seruants of God you haue your fruit in sanctification and for your ende eternall life Rom. 6.22 If we be children we are also heires heires I say to God and coheirs with Iesus Christ that is to say if wee suffer with him that with him wee may also bee glorified Rom. 8.17 Seeke peace with all men and holinesse without which none can see the Lord. Hebr. 12.14 The excellencie of eternall life WHen the account is cast I think the sufferances of this present time no wayes equiualent to the glory to come which shall be reuealed in vs. Rom. 8.18 The things which the eye hath not seene the eare heard and that neuer entred into the heart of man are those which God hath prepared for those that loue him 1. Cor. 2.9 This present life is limited THe dayes of a man are short the number of his moneths remaine with thee thou hast set downe limits which hee must not exceede Ioh 14.5 The shortnesse and vanitie of the same WE are strangers and forreiners before thee as our Fathers were our dayes are as the shadow vpon the earth and there is no mention of them 1. Chron. 29.15 Man borne of a woman is but of little continuance and those few dayes are replenished with trouble sorrowe hee cometh out like a flower and is gathered vp hee flies away like a shadow and stayes not Are not his dayes set downe Iob 14.1 2 5. Thou hast assigned my dayes the measure of an hand-breadth and my life time is before thee as nothing in effect there is nothing but vanitie with euery man that liues As soon as thou chastisest a man reprehending him for his iniquity thou consumest all his excellencie like a moth so slight a thing is euery man Psal 39.12 The sonnes of men are nothing they are but the lyers of great Princes so that if they were all put together in a ballance they would bee found lighter than vanitie it selfe Psal 62.10 The dayes of our life are threescore and ten yeeres and of those that liue longest but fourescore and yet the best of them are but affliction miserie they soon passe hence and we our selues flie away swiftly Psal 90.10 The dayes of a man are like the grasse and flourish like the flower of the fielde Psal 103.13 Man is like to nothing his dayes are as the shadowe which vanisheth away Psal 144.4 See thorowout all Salomons Ecclesiastes All flesh is grasse and all the glory thereof is as the flower of the field Isa 40.6 I tell you this my brethren that the time is short 1. Cor. 7.29 What is this your life it is certainely but a vapour which appeareth for a while and then vanisheth away Iames 4.14 The end of mans life WHether you eat or drinke or whatsoeuer you doe do it al to the glory of God 1. Cor. 10.31 The first death which is the separation of the soule from the body and the second which is eternal death proceede from sinne THe day wherein thou eatest of the fruite of the Tree of knowledge of good and euill thou shalt die the death Gen. 2.17 As by one man sinne entred into the worlde and by sinne death so death came vpon all men because al men sinned Rom. 5.12 The first death is common to all IT is ordained that all shall once die and after that comes Iudgement Heb. 9.27 The Children of God ought to feare death FEare not those that can slay the bodie and not kill the soule Math. 10.28 Hee that loueth his life shall lose it and whosoeuer hates this worlde hee shall finde it in eternall life Iohn 12.25 We knowe when our terrestrial lodging is defaced we haue a dwelling place in God an house not made with handes but eternall which is in heauen 2. Corint 5.1 I am inclosed on the one side and the other desiring to be dissolued and to be with Christ the which were much better for me Phil. 1.23 Death destroyed by Iesus Christ IEsus Christ hath destroyed Death and brought to light Life and immortality by the Gospel 2. Tim. 1.10 Death is swallowed vp in victorie 1. Cor. 15.54 Who sits at the right hand of God hauing swallowed vp death that we might be made partakers af eternall life 1. Pet. 3.22 What opinion wee should hold of the dead HAppie are those that die in the Lord yea saith the holy Ghost for they rest from their labours and their works follow them Apo. 14.3 We must not mourne for the dead as profane persons doe ALso my brethren I would not haue you ignorant concerning those which sleep to the end you may not be sorrowfull as others are that haue no hope 1. Thes 4.13 Their soules which die in the Lord are receiued into rest and glory in heauen ANd it happened that