Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n child_n time_n zion_n 26 3 8.6707 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
A93061 The hypocrites ladder, or looking-glasse. Or A discourse of the dangerous and destructive nature of hypocrisie, the reigning and provoking sin of this age. Wherein is shewed how far the hypocrite, or formal professor may go towards heaven, yet utterly perish, by three ladders of sixty steps of his ascending. Together with a looking-glass, clearly discovering that lurking sin of hypocrisie. As also another glass to try sincerity of grace by. / By Jo. Sheffeild minister of the word at Swithins London. Sheffeild, John, d. 1680. 1657 (1657) Wing S3063; Thomason E1570_1 172,287 360

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

wings a peece they had also hands under their wings and feet besides And it is said their appearance was like burning coals and their motion was like a flash of lightning Here was nothing but activity and readiness for service with the greatest expedition Let mee quicken you with a few Motives 1 Look you faile not of grace for if you do you will faile of glory and faile of Heaven Heb. 12. 15. you read of failing of the grace of God Rom. 3. 23. you read of failing or falling short of the glory of God It is the same word faile of grace and faile of salvation By grace you are Eph. 2. 5. saved The Schollar must bee at School fitted for the University or hee cannot bee admitted there is not the place to learn his A B C or his Eight parts of Speech and the Christian must bee in the School of the Church trayned up and made fit or meet for that heavenly society here practise the singing the Songs Psal 137. 4. Rev. 14. 1. 3. of the Lord in a strange land that hee may sing them the readier upon Mount Sion The childe usually lives not when borne that had not his due time and growth before borne if wee dye before the time before wee have had our due formation and qualification for our translation Christ formed in us there is no possibility of living there The stroke of death and bar of judgement fit no man for heaven There is not the time and place of conversion The stone and timber was hewed and fitted in Lebanon there was no hammer to be used in the building You must get your 1 King 6. 7. work done here in the Grave is no place of opportunity 2 If you faile of True grace the grace of God it is all one you will faile of salvation There is no base mettal currant in heaven but such as hath the Image or superscription of God upon it It must have solidity and weight The Lord weigheth the spirits They must have their weight Thou Lord hast pleasure in uprightness requirest truth in the inward Prov. 16. 2. 1 Chron. 29. 1● Psal 51. 6. 1 Tim. 1. 5. Rom. 12. 9. Eph. 4. 24. 2 Cor. 1. 12 parts It must not bee the Kings stamp upon Adulterate Coyne It must bee faith unfained love without dissimulation holiness of Truth sincerity of God or nothing 3 If you shall faile in the number and measure of growth and degrees in grace I will not say but you may bee saved that is it is possible but you will have a hard bargain of it to bee as Peter saith Scarcely saved 1 Pet. 4. 18. or as Pauls phrase is to come off with some loss or difficulty and bee saved yet so as by fire 1 Cor. 3. 15. Whereas as Paul saith If you come behinde in no gift of grace you may with comfort wait for the appearing of Christ 1 Cor. 1. 7. And Peter saith If these bee in you and abound an abundant or open and easie entrance will bee granted to you into 2 Pet. 1. 8 11. the Kingdome of God 4 On the other side True Grace attained and maintained gives True peace of conscience and security to the soule in whatsoever distresses If pressed above measure even to despair of life the conscience is full of rejoycing upon the testimony of simplicity and godly sincerity that 2 Cor. 1. 12. not in fleshly wisdome but by the undoubted grace of God such have had their conversation in the world Such may say with holy Job Though hee kill mee I will trust in him but I will maintaine my wayes Job 13. 15 16. before him hee also shall bee my salvation for an hypocrite shall not come before him Such may as Peter saith When the heavens shall pass away with a hideous noise and the elements melt with extremity of heat and the 2 Pet. 3. 10 13. earth with all therein bee dissolved then m●y they according to the promise of God expect a new and better heaven and a new earth Yea such shall have a heaven on earth such shall see the New Jerusalem coming down from God out of heaven Yea saith Rev. 21. 2. Christ to such I will make him a Pillar in the Temple of my God and hee shall go no more out And I will write upon him the name of my God and the name of the City of Rev. 3. 12. my God the New Jerusalem which cometh down from my God out of Heaven and I will write upon him my new name 5 Which is more This is the onely way to glorifie God and his glory is much more to bee prized than our glory yea than our salvation To seek our own glory is no glory especially in competition with Gods glory Prov. 25. 27. and it is less sincerity Joh. 7. 18. God hath no glory at all upon earth but from a few sincere gracious souls of whom God saith This people have I formed Isa 43. 21. for my selfe they shall shew forth my praise And the godly have learnt to set a higher price on Gods glory than their own salvation as did our Saviour Joh. 12. 27 28. When hee first prayed for himself My soule is troubled Save mee c. hee gives that over with submission Thy will bee done I came therefore to this houre But bee I saved or not saved Father glorifie thy Name and in the Lords Prayer we are taught to pray first Hallowed bee thy Name and then Thy Kingdome come A godly soule like his Saviour Jo. 17. 4. Desireth first to glorifie God then that God should glorifie him True Grace doth not onely procure to the soule an heaven upon earth but to God an heaven on earth And hee doth seem to rejoyce more and so do the heavenly Rev. 11. 15. 12 10. host when the Kingdomes of the earth are become the Lords by a considerable increase and addition of new godly Converts then that the Kingdome of heaven is the Lords I read that Israel in the day of their solemn Thanksgiving and Rejoycing Exod. 15. 2. did proclaime God to bee their God and did promise to prepare for him an habitation It is more piety to prepare the heart for an habitation for God than to desire God to prepare heaven for an habitation for us 6 Lastly Bee diligent to get to keep to exercise to increase and improve Grace you will live usefully cheerfully fruitfully you will dye hopefully joyfully heaven-fully and enter into heaven with full assurance by a free and open passage 2 Pet. 1. 11. Now to conclude the Use with a few Directions 1 If thou wouldest not meet with Capernaums sad disappointment in the end Luke 14. 28. when thou first makest entrance begin and count the cost and resolve to goe through or never begin Resolve to regard neither winds nor clouds or never lay thy hand to the Plough nor go out Eccles 11. 4.
slew two hundred Husbandmen of the Villages thereabouts Zisca hearing of these men and their detestable practises led out his Army against them and destroyed them I am loath to rake any longer in such a kennel but judge Reader if there bee any thing new under the Sun 18 Hee may bee vehement rigid or violent in preaching the Law and urging good duties Hee may lay a heavy load on anothers conscience himself doing just nothing the while like the Egyptian Task-masters Matth. 23. 3. Powerfull and thundring Preachers they may bee to others themselves livelesse and hollow as the silver Trumpets when sounding loudest filled only with wind Some have preached liberty to others when themselves were servents of corruption the Apostle saith and some preach bonds and duty to others but keep themselves at liberty But as it is not knowing 2 Pet. 2. 19. but knowing and doing makes the blessed hearer so it is not preaching but Jo. 13. 17. doing and teaching which makes the good Preacher such a one was Christ Act. 1. 1. himself The godly Minister must not docere facienda but faciendo the language of the life must go along with the language of the lip The man of God must bee a Seer not a Sayer and not a Word-man or a Sword-man but a Work-man that he may not be ashamed rightly dividing the word of truth dividing it to others and taking his part of it himself 19 Hee may go yet further be zealous for the Law the Law of God the Moral Law and that not onely to preach it but to observe it zealous to keep the whole Law onely he fails in one point the end of the Law he seeks righteousness Rom. 9. 33. 10. 2 3. from it and builds his hopes of justification upon it Thus did the Jews of old and to this day their children Thus do the Papists tread in their steps being ignorant of Gospel-righteousness of the righteousness of God by faith as it is called Phil. 3. 9. They seek to set up a righteousness of their own and perish They are for repentance and obedience for piety and charity too yet they perish These attain not the Law of Righteousness Rom. 9. 31. Fall from Grace Gal. 5. 4. Fall under the curse Gal. 3. 10. Stumble at Christ Rom. 9. 33. and lose all benefit by the Gospel making the death of Christ void Gal. 2. ult Take the Law out of the hand of a Mediator and it worketh nothing but wrath discovers all cures no sin Hence Paul told the Galathians he feared all his labour was lost on them while they turned from mount Sion to Sinai to the Gal. 4. 11. 20. 21. Law from the Gospel for justification It is observable when the Lord appointed two Mountains one for blessing Mount Deut. 27. 4 5. 13. compared Gerizim the other for cursing Mount Ebal that the Law was to bee written not on Gerizim but Ebal whence all the curses were poured out Wee pity the ignorance of some who make the Creed a Prayer and thou art as far out if thou make the Ten Commandements a Creed to expect salvation from the Law 20 The last step is a very high one indeed whereby the hypocrite is lifted up above the middle to the highest Region even lifted up to heaven and yet doth perish in his way Hee may be righteous overmuch Eccles 7. 16. Hee may exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees yet not enter into the Kingdome of heaven Such were the Essaei or Esseni a noted sect among the Jews about the time of our Saviour of whom though no mention is made in the Evangelists yet do Ecclesiastical Writers speak much of them and Josephus largely They called themselves Essaei quasi Mag. Cent. 1. l. 1. c. 5. In Pharisaeis hipocrisin fueosamque pietatem cernevant in Sadducaeis Epicurismum c. dicas operatores as if they would say they were all Works not words and shews as the Pharisees were not Brutes and Epicures as the Sadduces were As once some Hereticks called themselves Gnosticks as if none had any knowledge of God but themselves so these called themselves Essens as if none had any works or good life but they That as the Chinois say of themselves They onely have all their eyes the Europeans have one eye other Nations none so these thought and gave out that they were above the common rank of Professors ● D●vid 〈◊〉 dicit h●c discrie● 〈◊〉 in●●● just●m ●he●ed justus ea fac●t quae lex praescribi● Chesed vero aliquid amplius Vide plura in Cameron ad Mat. 19. 3. De Pharisaeis others were called Simpliciter p●i these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 others did observe what the Law required these exceeded they had their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sive auctarium legis their over-measure whereby they over-shot the Laws Standard saith Camero and he gives another derivation of the name from the Syriack Chesi which signifies one extraordinary righ●eous It would astonish one to read and consider what is recorded of them for their piety doctrine life excess in devotion their charity morality severity contempt of the world So that you would think if any were lifted up to heaven and should as Constantine said to Acesius Socrat. l. 1. c. 7. Climb up by a Ladder of their owne these should I shall transcribe some passages concerning them out of Josephus The Essens saith he were the third Sect a sort of people abounding in love each Mutuo inter se amore conjunctissimi voluntates qu●si maleficia vi●ant nu●tias fastiamat c. to other they shun all pleasure as unlawful or as Witchcraft Continence is a chief vertue with them they forbid not marriage but forbear it yet are very charitable in bringing up others children for them as if they were their owne kindred Riches they contemn for all is common with them no man hath more than another Poverty is no disparagement Riches no advantage to any They live as so many brethren of one Patrimony or joynt-stock Oyntment and ornaments of the body they detest judging slovenliness Squalorem decorem putant for a grace if any of their Profession come from other parts they entertain them as freely as their Neighbours and they who never saw one Tanquam conluetissimi ad cos ingrediuntur quo● nunquam ante viderunt anothers face before at first sight are as familiar as if they had been acquainted seven years They are all cloathed alike Their cloaths or shooes they change not till they can wear them no longer They buy not nor sell to one another but give or exchange But saith he for Religion to P●aecipue erga Deum Religiosi sunt God-ward they are singular For before Sun-rise not an evil word do they speak but tendring their vows and prayers they pray for the Sun-rising Then every one to his business till almost noon when they meet they
these three signes come to pass when thou feelest these three drawings do as occasion serveth for 1 Sam. 10. 7. the Lord is with thee As when the Fig-tree and all the other trees put forth leaves you know the Summer is nigh so when these three drawings come know the Kingdome of God is nigh even at the door Lastly If thou canst not say Thou hast ever yet come to Christ in these former comings thou canst not say Thou ever camest humbly penitently beleevingly self-despairingly importunately c. or that ever thou wast drawn to him as I said even now thy case is sad I confess yet not desperate I have one word to say to thee yet ere I have done to thy comfort Hee that hath ears to hear let him hear hee that can receive this saying let him receive it Despair not no mans case is utterly desperate There is one more coming yet the last the late coming the coming of the Theef on the Cross come yet to Christ come judging thy selfe condemning thy selfe suing for mercy and cast thy selfe upon Christ there is a possibility yet left and some hopes that thou mayest bee safe but I speak not so certainly and confidently here as upon the former comings This was the late coming of the Theef upon the Cross hee had never been called before nor haply heard of a Christ before but now when death was upon him and his sin heavier than death hee looks up to a crucified Saviour judging himself rebuking his railing companion confessing Luke 23. 40 41 42. Christ when all the Disciples had left him and casting himself upon his mercy Lord remember mee when thou comest into thy Kingdome I say there is yet a possibility for thee This example is written for our consolation that none should despaire yet have wee but one such example in all the Scripture lest any should presume And of this Scripture wee may say as much as of any one other wicked and ungodly men have perverted it to their own destruction 2 Pet. 3. 16. But very observable it is that though all the four Evangelists speak largely of our Saviours passion and mention his suffering between two Theeves yet onely one of them St. Luke mentions the conversion of the Theef The Holy Ghost fore-saw what ill use might bee made thereof therefore thought fit it should bee but sparingly set down But is this a good Argument Elias was taken up into heaven in a Chariot of fire ergo I may bee so too There were many Prophets in Israel only Elias was so taken up to heaven Many Lepers in Israel in Luke 4. 25 26. 27. Elishaes dayes A Syrian was cleansed but not one of them One Widow relieved miraculously by Elias when there were many others that famished But I may as well retort this Argument and turn it upon thee There were two Theeves crucified with Christ the one saw Christ dye heard him pray c. saw the other Theef repenting yet hee repented not as hee lived hee dyed a Blasphemer hee lived a Blasphemer hee dyed hee lived denying God dyed despising Christ so mayest thou Thus dyed he and it was just with God to leave him at his death who had left God all his life I have heard of one taken out of the belly of hell Jonah so calls the Whales Ionah 2. 2 belly where he had been three dayes and three nights in great distress you never read of a second and I know the Papists speak of one Trajan delivered out of hell it self by the prayers of Gregory and one Falconella by the prayers of Tecla But all these cases were extraordinary and miraculous and not to be expected every day This dreaming of late repentance hath slain not his Thousands but his ten Thousands Therefore I do not say certainly if thou comest in the last hour thou shalt be safe All that I can say is there may be some good hopes The other former comings are the safe comings The shortest and easiest way to Heaven is not the safest But fear rather to promise thy self such a fair gale at last upon neglecting present coming It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 6. 37. not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rev. 22. 17. that the promises are made unto The present tense is the saving tense Him that cometh not that will come shall not bee cast out Esau came and found it too late the five foolish Virgins came and came too late Those Scoffers Prov. 1. 28. Those in Hos 5. 6. Those in Mat. 7. 21. and Luke 13. 25 26. All too late These are the comers of whom wee are Heb. 12. 17. afraid of these we cannot say one is taken and another left but one taken and an hundred left So that these run the greatest hazard that may be Caelum stultitia petimus amittimus it is as if they should think to take heaven by storming and break into Paradise by force when the Angel of God stands with a drawn fiery sword to keep them out Those forementioned Scriptures Prov. 1. 28. Mat. 7. 21 22. Hos 5. 6. Luke 13. 24 25. are as so many drawn swords to shut thee out I see we can give over the attempting a nearer way to the East Indies by a North East passage because all have perished or miscarried in that undertaking and we are content though it be a great way about to cross the Line to come thither safely and wilt thou adventure on that way that so many have miscarried in Thou hadst better cross the Line by self-denial and taking up the yoke and thou art safe Suppose there were some dangerous Gulph which once one ship passed and never but one and that with much hazard but an hundred attempting it had all suffered shipwrack and were cast away will not all fear how they adventure If there were a narrow plank laid over some high bridge over which one had rode safe by night as the story goes such a thing was once done at Rochester will any advisedly do it by day it is a thousand to one he fell not in There is but one since the world began that wee read of that came off safe thus and must it needs be so with thee Shall the dead praise God or shall a man bee borne when he is old or a childe bee born at all without any conception The presuming to come to Christ at death is as if thou Isa 66. 8. mightest come safe to Christ on dry land but thou wilt chuse to come with Peter on the waters a thousand to one but thou sinkest But to conclude if thou comest seriously self-judgingly casting thy desperate case into the Arms of infinite Power and Mercy though thou seest thy self ready to sink even into hell Cry Lord save mee I perish It may bee Christ may stretch out his hand and save thee FINIS