Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n day_n die_v soul_n 6,945 5 5.0141 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
A29132 The last conflicts and death of Mr. Thomas Peacock, batchelour of divinity, and fellow of Brasen-nose Colledge in Oxford published by E.B. from the copy of that famous divine Mr Robert Bolton, late minister of Broughton in Northhampton-shire. Bolton, Robert, 1572-1631.; Bagshaw, Edward, 1629-1671. 1646 (1646) Wing B414A; ESTC R34191 21,040 82

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

THE LAST CONFLICTS and DEATH OF Mr THOMAS PEACOCK Batchelour of Divinity and fellow of Brasen-nose Colledge in Oxford Published by E.B. from the Copy of that famous Divine Mr Robert Bolton late Minister of Broughton in North-hampton shire LONDON Printed by George Miller dwelling in Black-Fryers 1646. THE PREFACE TO the READER Christian Reader I Had not performed a trust had not I published this ensuing Narrative and I had not paid a debt which I doe and shall ever owe to the Publike had not I made it common Mr Bolton a man of precious memory and famous in his generation desired me upon his death-bed to publish such of his papers as I thought fit for the Presse which I have already done This copy being found amongst them though penned by another hand I durst not withhold being to my knowledge intended by him for the presse in memory of his familiar friend and spirituall father Mr Thomas Peacock who was a very Godly Minister of Christ and of rare example for humility and holines of life for a Religious care in educating his scholars and for exceeding charity to the bodies and souls of poor distressed Christians And yet this godly man that for piety had in him the root of an Oak when God cast him upon his bed of sicknes and suffered Satan to winnow him he was no more in his hands then a leaf tossed too and fro with the winde Gods dealings with him in these his last conflicts are of singular use in these present times in which the ends of the world and the dreggs of schisme and sinne are come upon us at once First for caution to the true servants of God to take heed of small sinnes for from the lesser sinnes and infirmities of Mr Peacock the Devil did thence take a rise to cast him into the most bitter spirituall desertion that we shall lightly read of under which he had sunk had not God wonderfully pat to his hand by making the issue of his afflictions more glorious and comfortable then the combate was grievous and terrible It was a memorable saying of Francis Spira which he spake to his mournfull children and friends beholding that sad spectacle of his finall despaire earnestly wishing them to take heed of committing the smallest sinnes against conscience By this means saith he I fell into greater sinnes till I came to deny the Gospel of Christ and after that to renounce it in writing and deliberately to subscribe to it with my hand though saith he I heard a voice in my conscience telling me Spira doe not subscribe it after which I thought I heard the voice of Christ whom I denyed before men to pronounce the sentence of death upon my soul and to exclude me from salvation And thus he dyed Secondly for confutation of sundry sorts in Religion in these unhappy dayes of Civill warre as naturally producing them as mud and filth doe toads and vermin Some there are that quite abrogate the Law which Christ came to fulfill and so make the gate of Heaven wider then ever our Saviour made it by admitting lawlesse persons into it Holy Bradford was of another minde who was wont to say that the gate of Heaven was so strait that he which halted could not enter into it and the way so narrow that he which reeled could not walk in it Others there are whe though they doe not wholly destroy the law yet they cast it into a dead sleep thinking it unlawfull in the children of God to be sorry or to mourn for sinne contrary to the Doctoine of the primitive Fathers teaching this lesson Semper doleat paeniten● de dolore gaudeat Let the penitent person alwaies mourn and rejoyce in that mourning agreeing with the rule of our Saviour Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted Nay I lately heard it not without horrour that some men in outward appearance of great sanctity doe hold an opinion that it is a fault in godly men to pray for pardon of sin all sinnes being pardoned in Christ before they pray contrary to the prayer of our Saviour Forgive us our trespasses Neither Mr Peacock nor any of those godly Divines that came to comfort him knew this kinde of Doctrine neither we nor the Churches of God till within these few late unhappy dayes What will become of our reformed Religion streaming down to us in the blood of so many Martyrs if God by a miracle of mercy should not shorten these our miserable dayes For whiles some are taking from us the Ten Commandements others the Lords Prayer there is scarce any thing left us of Christianity but our Creed and how long we shall enjoy this the Lord in Heaven knowes For so long as the civill sword of warre devoures so much Protestants blood from without and a worse civill warre of sinne and separation destroyes so many Protestant souls from within we may justly feare that we shall either want sound Orthodox Protestants to maintain it or we shall want a Creed for them to maintain I shall for conclusion desire that Reader into whose hands this ensuing discourse shall fall to observe three things concerning Mr Peacock a man whom I well knew and blesse God that ever I knew him 1. That the sorest and sharpest afflictions doe very often befall the dearest and choisest servants of God I mean not outward and temporall afflictions common to good and bad but inward and spirituall afflictions and the heaviest of these spirituall desertions whereby God withdrawes his glorious countenance from his children and Satan in liew thereof shews them his ugly visage thereby convincing a secure world That it is no easy matter to goe to Heaven and that the safest and surest way to it is to sayl by the gates of Hell If the righteous can scarcely be saved saith the Apostle where shall the wicked and sinner appear 2. That the deepest humiliations of Gods children doe usually determine in the highest consolations And hereby the wicked who like ravening wolves hunt after such opportunities doe misse of their prey and returne ashamed when they consider what end God hath made And thus it fell out with Mr Peacock here 3. Lastly Though a spirituall desertion be the highest affliction that befalls Gods childe yet it discovers in him the greatest sincerity of an upright heart For at such a time he is so farre from hiding his sinnes that he cares not what shame he puts upon himself so God may have glory For in a spirituall desertion though the soul of a Christian be extreamly distressed through the terrour of sinne yet at the same time hath it a true touch of grace though not of the comforts of it like iron touched with the Load-stone it stands directly Northward though with much trembling So doth the soul of a Christian stand directly Heaven-ward in this hellish agony and the absence of God and of his consolations is the cause of those bitter convulsion-fits in the soul