Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n call_v young_a youth_n 140 3 7.8811 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A47525 An exhortation to a personal and national repentance a sermon / preached at St. James Church, Westminster, Feb. 5, 1688/9 by Tho. Knaggs ... Knaggs, Thomas, 1660 or 1-1724. 1699 (1699) Wing K663; ESTC R36232 11,547 38

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

be displeasing to him but always be doing that which shall be well pleasing in his sight The best of us may blush to think how often we have done that which has occasioned grief in the Court of Heaven What odious scents arise thither daily from bloody murthers beastly uncleannesses and cruel oppressions which like the blood of Abel cry aloud to Heaven for vengeance Even sins that grieve the Holy Spirit of God and cause a sadness in the blessed Trinity For so sure as Repentance pleaseth God and causeth joy in Heaven so certain it is that sin continued in and not repented of gives occasion of grief and sadness to him 2ly Repentance is well pleasing to the Blessed Angels Luke 15.10 There is joy in the presence of the Angels of God over one sinner that repenteth Those tears which run down the cheeks of a true penitent are the Angels heavenly banquet There shall be more joy in heaven over one sinner that repents than over ninety nine just persons that need no repentance But tho repentance be well pleasing to the Blessed Angels tho they are ministring spirits for our good rejoyce at the conversion of a sinner do many good offices for the godly on earth and be a communion between them yet we are not to think that they interpose their Merits for us and therefore we are to perform Religious Worship to them This is a fond conceit of the Papists the invention of mans brain and wants warrant from the word of God See thou do it not Rev. 22.9 are express words in Holy Scripture 3ly Repentance is matter of joy to the penitent himself O what joy and tranquility of conscience has that man whose eyes are opened and in whose heart by Gods Grace a change is wrought And no wonder that he is so pleased with himself for being sensible that he is withdrawn from sin and brought back again to God that he who once was a servant of sin and running headlong to perdition is now a child of God and making Provision for his immortal soul these thoughts speak comfortable things to him and leaves upon his soul a a sweet taste a pleasant relish St. Austin after his conversion when he had repented and began a new life made this sad complaint I have loved thee too late O God O thou beautiful Being I have 〈…〉 too late He repented he had not served God sooner that his conversion was so long delay'd and that he was so long a beginning to be acquainted with God How sweet and delightful O Lord was it made to me presently to want those pleasures of the world which before I doted upon Thou O Lord didst cast them out of my heart and didst thy self enter in their place which I find now to be more sweet than all pleasures and sweetness it self Lib. 9. Cons ch 1. Thus having shewn how joyful and well pleasing it is to Father Son and Holy Ghost that men shu'd repent how acceptable to the blessed Angels and how grateful to the Penitent himself I come 4thly To offer to your consideration what great Danger and Unreasonableness there is in impenitency whether in particular persons or in a publick Nation And 1. As to particular persons John the Baptist in his first Sermon exhorted his Auditors to bring forth fruits meet for Repentance And except ye repent ye shall likewise perish was the Doctrine Christ preached to his Disciples Now the longer men delay their Repentance the more they are hardened in their corruptions and confirmed in their sins and consequently more indispos'd every day for that great and necessary work The longer men live in sin the more strongly they are inclin'd to continue in it Sin being once rooted in the Soul the labour will be great in plucking it out The young man in his Youth and Strength is apt to say that it is not yet time to busie himself about Reformation and amendment of life and that it will be soon enough to repent of his sins when he comes to be old and then and not before he 'll become penitent and serious But how know'st thou O young man that thou shalt live till old Age Death is a tribute we all owe to Nature and Experience teacheth us that the young man is as suddenly taken away as the grey head The strongest man can call no time his own but the present He cannot prolong his days as he pleaseth All his futurity is in the hands of God and how he will dispose of him whether for life or death he cannot tell And yet alas how securely do such men live How eagerly do they run through all the stages of their youth in a rebellious obstinate course and commit sin as if they were not flesh and blood subject to a dying stroak Certainly nothing hath made more ample Harvest for the Devil than the deserring of Repentance upon such a vain consideration as this For how often have many men lain down in their strength at night and that night has clos'd their Eyes and sent their Souls into another World to answer for what they have done in this But suppose God out of his unconceivable Mercy doth not cut off a sinner in the strength of his years suppose he lets him alone to live as he lists to walk in the ways of his heart and in the sight of his eyes and therefore is resolved to sin on till old age overtakes him yet I have three Arguments to lay down before him which if rightly considered wou'd make him think and bring him to a right understanding of himself First Repentance requires the strength and vigour of our minds and therefore 't is a sad design to lay all the sins of our youth upon feeble old age Our bodies are then decay'd our limbs feeble our understandings shatter'd all the parts distemper'd and our infirmities so many that we are altogether incapable of every thing but dying In the midst of so many Distempers as old age brings along with it 't will be a difficult matter to go through with Repentance For then pains are apt in an high measure to seize upon us which will so disturb our minds and deprive us of the use of Reason that we cannot pray to God with that fervency or spread our fins before him with that hearty sorrow that is requisite to procure an absolute pardon Old Age is an unfit time to have the great work of Repentance to do and therefore my second Argument to shew the Danger and Unreasonableness of putting it off till that time is this Secondly The little hopes they can have that God shu'd be pleas'd with those men who never drew nigh to him by Repentance till they themselves were drawing near to the grave Mankind must needs think the Almighty a tame Being an easie God if they perswade themselves that every sin is as soon expiated as confess'd Let men have a care how they flatter themselves with such vain hopes as
day Christ gave the Jewish Nation many years time for Repentance yet such a strange and incorrigible a people they were that neither mercies nor judgments cu'd work upon them to amend and alter their course of living The very Prophets that call'd upon them to repent they kill'd and ston'd Nay so obstinate a people they were that tho God sent his Son to preach Repentance to them and warn'd them from continuing in their wickedness yet they still added iniquity to iniquity and at last put to death the Lord of Life Not long after God destroy'd them for their sins and laid the Axe of his Judgments at the root of their Tree and hew'd them down from ever being a Nation more Thus the Jewish Nation fell by impenitency and 't is too much to be feared that ours is much in the same posture now as theirs was when God came upon them with a total destruction The Jews were a divided people and had several factions both in Church and State Profaneness on the one hand and Hypocrisie on the other did act and command in a furious manner among them In this state was the Jewish Nation when God sent down his Judgments upon them And now let us cast an Eye home Are not we as divided a people as the Jews were Are not we as factious as they Are not we as factious as they And do not Vice Prophaneness and Hypocrisie reign as much among us as that they did among the Jews Your preachers have cry'd aloud and told you the danger of living in your sins but you have not hearkned unto them God sent the Pestilence but we repented not He kindled a fire which burnt our great City and turn'd it into Ashes but we fear'd not his Judgments We have been embroyl'd in several Wars but none of them have better'd chang'd or reform'd us And therefore what can any man imagin shu'd follow such despised signs as God has sent to warn us from our sins but wrath and indignation from Heaven Without a miraculous mercy what can we look for but that God shu'd utterly destroy us throw us away in his anger and trouble himself no more with us And therefore to prevent the Judgments of God which may justly fall upon us for our sins whether in particular persons or in a publick Nation I come Fifthly To shew the great advantage profit and benefit that redound to both by Reformation and Amendment Repentance of all things in the world makes the greatest change It changeth profligate and vicious persons into sober and virtuous It changeth the licentious into strict and regular livers It changeth the whole man from sin to grace and from wicked habits to pious and godly customes Nay so great is the Efficacy of Repentance and so much doth it redound to the profit and advantage of every penitent that God himself is pleas'd by descending to our weak understandings to say that he changeth also upon mans Repentance This moves him to alter his Decrees to revoke his Sentence to cancel his bills of Accusation and to put a stop to Divine Vengeance A particular person by Repentance may remove a particular Judgment from himself Ahab's humbling himself turned away the anger of God and made the Divine Vengeance walk as softly as he did 1 Kings 21.27 This is the only thing that is wanting both in private and publick and wu'd set both at rights Hath God a controversie with a Nation Repentance will tye up his hands from striking At what instant I shall speak concerning a Nation and concerning a Kingdom Jer. 18.7 8. to pluck up and to pull down and to destroy it If that Nation against whom I have pronounc'd turn from their Evil I will repent of the Evil that I thought to do unto them So likewise God dealt with Niniveh Jon. 3. for though he had resolved to destroy that great City yet they repenting in Sackcloath and Ashes stopt the proceedings of God Justice against them and by their amendment prevented that punishment he design'd to have brought upon them And 't is the Prophet Hosea's exhortation to the people whom God had visited with several judgments Come and let us return unto the Lord Hos 6.1 for he hath spoiled us and he will heal us he hath wounded us and he will bind us up again What 's to be done then to prolong Gods Mercy and keep off his Judgments Even this that all of us from the highest to the lowest wn'd amend our lives and become new men For then and not till then must we expect Gods blessing upon us 'T is a common complaint the times are bad and 't is a great wonder they are not worse for unless men mend the times will not 'T is bad men which make bad times The times are just as men are for they grow good or bad as men do What an Age of Virtue shu'd we see if men of dignity and honour birth and fortune wu'd be as good as they are great Men of lower rank wu'd be asham'd and afraid to sin if men of high Titles and long Pedigree wu'd give good Examples and offer themselves to the World for Patterns of life and conversation He that is in Honour and understands not is like the beasts that perish Psal 49.20 The Temple of Honour and the Temple of Virtue were so plac'd at Rome that no man cu'd enter the Temple of Honour unless he pass'd through the Temple of Virtue which was a signification to the Romans that the way to Honour was only by virtue But alas High and Low Rich and Poor have sinn'd against God and he has reason enough to be angry with all Orders and Degrees of men Those fearful Oaths those grievous Blasphemies and other Debaucheries with which our Nation is defil'd I now tell you with an afflicted Soul that these sins cry aloud to Heaven for Vengeance When men begin to resemble Sodom in her sins what must we look for but Sodom's punishment God rain'd down fire and brimstone from Heaven upon Sodom and Gomorrha An Vnnatural Judgment for fire to descend downward but we read before of their Vnnatural Sin they burn'd inwardly with the fire of an Vnnatural Lust If the same sins be committed now which procur'd those dismal Judgments we are then liable to the same and if Repentance step not in may expect the like punishment Uncleanness was one of the sins of Sodom and I wou'd to God I cu'd say it was not one of the sins of England too We are too like Sodom in her sins I pray God keep us from Sodom's punishment For the Sin of Uncleanness three and twenty thousand of Israel were cut off in one day 1 Cor. 10.8 For this sin David was plagu'd with the violation of his Wives the murder of his Children and the Rebellion of his Subjects This sin has pull'd down many flourishing Kingdoms destroy'd the Bodies disgrac'd the Names and overthrown the Estates of many men I