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A42228 The mourner comforted an epistle consolatory / written by Hugo Grotius to Monsieur Du Maurier the French embassadour at the Hague ; translated on a sad occasion by C.B.; Epistola consolatoria ad Benjaminum Auberium Maurerium, Regis Christianissimi apud Foederatas Belgii Provincias legatum illustrissimum. English Grotius, Hugo, 1583-1645.; Barksdale, Clement, 1609-1687. 1652 (1652) Wing G2114; ESTC R1086 13,310 35

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would not have any credit given me without a most competent witnesse the Doctor of the Gentiles the Founder of Churches called to be an Apostle by a voice from heaven who being indued also with humane learning all other arguments omitted checks the immodesty of sorrow with this alone I would not have you ignorant Brethren concerning them that are asleep that ye sorrow not even as others which have no hope For if we beleeve that Jesus died and rose again even so them that are asleep will God bring with him It is the manner of Epistles to deliver in short that which familiar discourse doth expresse more liberally But if Paul as it is beleeved after he wrote this visited his Disciples of Macedon again he might haply prosecute this most wholesome point more at large after this sort Freinds whom nature hath made of the same kinde with us and the Word of God hath new made and raised to the same Grace ye know it is our duty throughly to purge out whatsoever old corruption remaineth in you your countenance your habit and gesture speak you to be much and long grieved in minde it any of your dearest Relatives be taken out of your sight Nor is it any marvel for thus did your fathers and thus do the people with whom you live intermixed Great is the power of a vice commended by the authority of parents and the diseases which have seized not upon single persons but whole Nations are very contagious but you must remember to what Institution you have given your name in your baptism when the washing of your body figured the cleannesse of minde I received your vow to forsake the world Peace with God is not bought at any cheaper rate We have doctrines we have also rites which separate us from the world and make us a people different from all the rest of mankinde Even our words are not the same whom they call dead we say are fallen asleep So are we taught to speak by him that is not only the Master of life but speech What is the meaning of that new word That sleep is the image of death even the Poets of the Grecians and their Philosophers have delivered but with them the similitude holds not which with us is most exact By motion and action we understand life there is a defect of these when the body is tied up with the bonds of sleep and lies as it were buried when the morning Sun hath driven away the night that vigour that was not lost but intermitted returns again mean while the soul which hath a power not depending on the body performing the offices of both times perpetuates her action So when the term of mortall life is come the body lies torpid and unactive whether it retain as yet the shape it had immediatly before or else hath rendred its parts to the original dust But wait untill the great day shine forth there it will appear the body rested for a time which seemed lost In the mean that part which is invisible keeps possession of life in behalf of the whole man Compare with this our faith what others running into so many by-waies do conceive when in very many and the greatest things their opinions differ in this almost alone they agree that they are without hope of life ever to return unto the body and therefore deprive man of his immortality For man is a body animate not a soul without a body nor a body without a soul The soul it self departed from the body many of them either think to be annihilated or at least not to retain the state of its own substance So the whole man to them is destroyed without hope of restitution as appears by those very consolations which they apply to mourners For they say Dead men indeed have no good but neither have they any ill Now although the opinion of these men is hard yet theirs is much harder who make the soul outlive the body For that lower place which they will have to be the cōmon seat of souls gone out of the body they describe as a wilde place horrid and dark and of such a condition that one would die another death to get out of it Moreover which is worst of all They to whom other punishments are remitted are according to this opinion everlastingly under this torment a vain and never satisfied desire of returning back again to their former life If some few among those men have any better conjectures they doubt and fluctuate more like to those that wish then affirm But ye have learned among the elements of our doctrine that life remains in the soul and shall be restored to the body That which is the consummation of our desires concludes the formula in our holy initiation For being asked whether ye beleeved the Resurrection of the body and the life everlasting ye answered every one before God and his Chuach that ye did beleeve Upon this formula the confession that you made I now treat with you but it is not sufficient to give a light assent that perswasion must be firmly rooted in your mindes so shall it bring forth mature and fair and lasting fruits Much will avail to this purpose the attent meditation of those Arguments by which you were induced to subscribe to this Faith We caught you not by the affected ornaments of humane eloquence nor did we by a long chain of consequences entangle the mindes of the more ignorant but we brought the businesse to that which is common to men and women learned and unlearned young and old and which is accounted the greatest assurance of all even to the judgement of sense The most famous enquirer into nature among the Grecians gives this reason why we have not the knowledge of many things because we can neither see them with our eyes nor touch them with our hands by which way things are wont to come unto the understanding God hath excluded us from this excuse and pretence for our ignorance He hath presented to our hands and eyes a specimen and pledge of what we hope for That Jesus Christ the Authour of our faith was nailed to the crosse and died on the Crosse all Jerusalem saw the Senate saw the Roman band saw it with their eyes and also that multitude of strangers wherewith that great City was then filled That he was buried and lay in the Sepulcher two whole nights and the day interposed is manifest both by the declaration of the Seal and by the testimony of the watch So far we and our adversaries are agreed This same Jesus after that time women saw living again his followers also saw him both severally and all the eleven together at divers times There were some also that handled his hands and side That nothing might be wanting to make faith compleat He shewed himself to be seen and heard by five hundred witnesses at once who in good part are living and do testifie the same To come