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A10914 A discourse of Christian watchfulnesse Preparing how to liue, how to die, and to be discharged at the day of iudgement, and so enioy life eternall. By Iohn Rogers minister to the Church of Chacombe in Northampton-shiere. Rogers, John, of Chacombe. 1620 (1620) STC 21185; ESTC S103184 154,709 397

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shall be the more sanctified and they will learne sooner and with greater facilitie the on of an other then of an elder instructour 5. And if the father perceiueth him to be of ready and quicke capacitie he may acquaint him as hee thinketh best with his booke which shall keepe him from bad company or being idle and ill occupied then let him drop into him by familiar tearmes the name and right meaning of God his Creator of Christ his Redeemer of the holy Ghost his sanctifier then of the holy Trinitie in the Vnitie of the Dietie in as plaine easie and briefe manner as possible he can neither shall he labour in vaine for God will giue a wished blessing and comfort to his owne worke 6. Thus the sixth yeere of his age compleatly passed and the seauenth current then must hee prouide him a faithful godly schoolemaster to traine him further on in learning vertuous educatiō yet so that he forget not himselfe that still he is his father and therefore is to watch ouer him and must teach him priuately as his Master publikely to know and loue the Lord and to render some reasons thereof as thus we children must loue God aboue all because he loueth vs he made vs of nothing then God loueth vs for he gaue his Sonne to die for vs and gaue vs his Spirit and word to sanctifie vs and bring vs to him and therefore must wee obay the same and loue and praise God for by these meanes he gathereth vs to the mysticall vnion of his sonnes body and to the communion of his Elect Church Finally God loueth vs for after death he will raise vs to life and we shall euer liue with him in heauen and therefore must we loue and glorifie him in euery thing Then teach him to feare and abhorre sin in thought word and work And first to know as much as conueniently may be by the ten commandements what sin is and the temporall and spirituall penalties thereof As thus also wee must not sinne for then God will be angry with vs then wil he take his grace and peace from vs then will he send vs troubles sicknesses death and cast ve to hell with the diuell and reprobates And let him learne to doubt of his doing and demand of his parents if this should be done or vndone if the Lord bid or forbid it if he loue or hate it and to conclude that if God will it I will doe it if not to die rather then doe it 7. The seuenth yeere complete and the eight current acquaint him with the Bible and the principall stories therof as of the creation fall and recouery of man of the deluge and burning of Sodome of Israels departure out of Aegypt of the whole acts and life of our Sauiour Christ c. Then with other parts thereof and withall to make some vse thereof as we must not breake Gods commandement for this brought sinne and misery vpon the world wee must nor mocke the ministers for this caused God to send Beares to kill the children of Bethel maids must not be gadding about so Dinah was defloured we must not breake the Sabbath for he that gathered stickes that day was stoned to death nor blaspheme the Lord for the blasphemer must die the death nor with Absolon dishonor our parents nor with Cain commit murther c. Only be carefull not to ouercharge him with too many things at once nor yet to cloy or ouer weary him for there is nothing more pernitious then sacietie in well doing this will cause him forsake all but let his labours be workes of libertie freedome and sport knowing that the schoole-house is called not Carnificina a butcherie but Ludus a sporting and playing place where all things bee taught and learned with ease and delight Thus let him proceede till he be readie for some calling but euermore the parents must be watchfull that he be not carried away with ill company or infected with the sinnes of the time place or his age but that euer he proceede according to these beginnings and while the parents bee parents let them watch and command ouer their children and they euer obay c. Then thirdly Masters are to watch ouer their families with as great care for the time being as ouer their children and also ouer their kindred and friends and euery one ouer another that their hearts be not hardened with the deceitfulnesse of sinne and at no hand bee of Cains humour to say or thinke am I my brothers keeper Gen 4. 9. But because it were an endlesse labour to speake of all sorts of people and of all duties belonging to them and to euery period of mens ages where of their be already intire volumes extant I will surcease and speake of on or two more and referre the rest to euery godly mans consideration The next vse serues only for a memento to the godly Ministers not to forget their names but as in Scripture they be called watchmen Ezech. 3. 17. and 33. 2. 6. 7. So must they carefully and faithfully watch ouer the poore sheepe and lambes of Christ Iesus And howsoeuer most men take this to be no labour at all and that such as are in this worke most wakefull to be busie bodies taking more vpon them then neede for these sheepe are as wise and carefull for their saluation as they else it were pitty of their liues c. Yet Gods seruants finde it an Art of Arts and a Science of Sciences to ouersee and superintend this wily flocke euer distrustfull and suspecting all plaine dealing taking their friendly louing watchman euer to be their greatest and most malitious enemie and at euery bray laboureth to hide themselues from him or to escape out of his fould so that they may be resembled to fish which bee so sharpe sighted fearefull and distrustfull that were it not there be so many fishes in euery brooke and riuer Gen. 1. 20. and 48. 16. The fisher could hardly catch any and so if the Lord wrought not miraculously by his word and spirit with his painefull Minister he should neuer catch on of them so wilde and vntractable they be nay hee shall be so farre from catching them be he an vsurer a Church robber an oppressour c. that vnlesse he well see to himselfe the fish will catch the fisher and make him more the childe of hell then themselues and therefore no tongue is able to expresse his care vigilancie labour and trauell neuer at rest that whereas all others worke the sixe weeke daies yet they rest from their labours vpon the Lords day but this poore shepheard is to expect no rest but as the Sunne running his course laboureth all the weeke but most of all vpon the Lords day and what remedie but that as Ierem 10. 19. It is their sorrow and they will beare it Episcopius Printer in Basill had this Embleme in the first page of the bookes
of their resurrection 211 5. from the generality of the iudgement 219 6. from the manner of their appearing p. 240 7. from the place where they shall appear 243 8 of two special signes foregoing his comming 252. 9. of Christs comming to iudgement 285. 10. of separating the elect from the reprobates 269. 11. of Christs proceeding in iudgement pag. 282. 12. of denouncing the sentence vpon both 297. 13. of the execution of the sentence with the Vses of euery of of these thirteene Motiues in their proper places ibid. Sect. 20. The conclusion of the whole with an exhortation to watch pag. 364. A prayer ibid. THE CHRISTIANS WATCH PREPARING HOW TO LIVE how to die and to be discharged at the day of Iudgement and so enioy life eternall Mark 13. 37. Watch WOnderfull and euery ●●ay fearefull was the sleepy and carnall security 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 King of Babilon described 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who being on euery sid● i 〈…〉 with dangers 〈◊〉 as first 〈◊〉 in the high d 〈…〉 of Almighty God for his cruelty oppressing of Gods Church people 〈◊〉 14. 6. whose City and Temple his grandfather had spoyled destroyed 〈◊〉 King 25. and 〈…〉 c. Ier. 5● 〈◊〉 Then 〈◊〉 for giuing his people and himselfe to idolatry superstition I●r●m 51. 44. 52. Dan. 5. 4. As also to Diuinatiōs Sorceries En●chantments Don. 2. 2. Isa. 47. 9. and lastly for his Sacriledge and his prophaning of the holy vessels of the Temple and blaspheming the Lord Dan. 5. 3. 23. Then besides hee had Darius and Cyrus besieging the Citty without and ready to take it and within had his owne subiects ready for his tyranny ouer them to cut his throat and of them his principall Courtiers as Gadata whom he had caused a little before to be gelded and Gobryas whose s 〈…〉 hee had slaine in hunting who to be reuenged conspired against him b 〈…〉 yed the 〈◊〉 and brought in 〈◊〉 A●my ●et 〈◊〉 this case and danger 〈…〉 ring ●othing 〈◊〉 confident in the strength and defence of the City which was compassed ●oth with high walls and with the great riuer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 also they had prouision ●ayd vp in the Cittie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 y 〈…〉 and more which made him so 〈◊〉 that ●ee made a great feast to a thousand of his Princes and to 〈◊〉 against God his people who●●ee kept captiue in his drunken vaine ●●e commanded to bring him the golden and siluer vessels which his Father N●buchadnezzar had brought from the Temple in Ierusalem that the King and his Princes and his Concubines might drinke therein not for any necessary and sober vse which had beene too much Leuit. 27. 28. but in this drunken and lasciuious feast to aduance himselfe his power aboue God and that before his druncken companions and harlots and thereupon which was the greatest impiety of al they praysed their gods of gold and siluer brasse iron wood and stone not onely giuing them the honor of their plenty and feasting as was the manner of the Heathen in the beginning of their feasts to sacrifice vnto their Gods but they ascribed also this victory vnto their Idols when these vessels were taken from the Temple in Ierusalem as though their filthy Idols were stronger and more mighty then the God of Israel Whereupon his iudgement was immediatly written ouer against the Candlesticke vpon the plaster of the w●ll of the Kings Pallace and the King saw the palme of the hand that wrote And according to the contents of this writing read and expounded by Daniel was Balthazar that same night slaine and the City vtterly destroyed Dan. 5. Isa 14. 4. 22. and 47. 11. and 21 41 And that by this stratageme while they were feasting Cytus caused the riuer Buphrates to be diuided into diuers channels and so made it pasable and then his army passed ouer and by the guiding of Gadata and Gobrias they entred into the Cittie and these two Courtiers slew him See what security and slouth bringeth vpon men and whole kingdomes when no danger and warning as Daniel telleth Balthasar will serue Dan. 5. 22. and therefore his vanie glorious feast became his funerall feasts and as of this Balthasar so it fareth with all brutish and secure worldlings and sensuall liuers this day who though they liue in their sinns end thereupon in the Lords danger and hatred and wot not how soone for their domerits the Lord will by death take them away then bring them to iudgment yet in this deadly taking are they so sleepy and secure so full of ioy and gladness when they should giue themselues to fasting weeping mourning to preuent Gods iudgements that they put farre from them the euill day and approach to the seate of iniquitie as though no euill could happen to them giue themselues to feasting ryot excesse that the Lord in the midst of their drunkenness taketh them suddenly away most fearefully vnprepared for death or finall iudgment but as they liued beastly so they dye strangely Wherefore purposing the holy Trinitie assisting mee to deliuer vnto you my brethren holy and beloued in the Lord some word of exhortation and considering in respect of the premises that the chiefest things euery one ought to be most careful of as long as they liue are first how to liue according to Gods holy will during our life heere Secondly how to leaue this life in Gods feare and fauour and full hope of a better life and Thirdly how to be discharged before Gods tribunall in the day of iudgement and so enioy life eternall In which 3. poynts wholly standeth the glory of God and mans welfare so much as of man can be sought for whervpon for effecting of the premises 〈◊〉 at this instant can thinke of nothing more behoofull then to stirre vp your hearts to Christian watchfulnes for the time present and for the day of death and of our appearing before the Sonne of God at the generall iudgement Which taske if we faithfully perform we shall be blessed in life happy in death yea and for euer after death dwell with God in heauen Now for the fundamentall ground of this exhortation I chuse this Scripture which directeth vs to examine 1 The occasion of this exhortation 2 The meaning and parts thereof 3 The instructions and vses for knowledge and conscience wee are to gather hereof And for the first the occasion may be gathered out of Math. 23 where our Sauiour denoūceth woes against the Scribes Pharises threatning them destruction and desolation Whereat his Disciples being much astonied thinke it vnpossible that their Temple should be destroyed vnlesse the whole world should come to an end and be destroyed with it wherefore as they departed out of the Temple one of his disciples shewed him how fortified the Temple was how great were the stones and strong the buildings and indeed it was the stareliest strongest
and brauest building in all the world for besides that all Kings and Princes of any name and fame sent gifts to adorne and enrich it Herod wonderfully repaired it the building was of white marble stones which were each of them 25. Cubites long eight Cubites high or thicke and some 12. Cubits broad c. whereof read Iosephus Antiq. lib. 15. cap. 14. and de●●llo And lib. 1. cap. 16. and lib. 7. cap. 10. and Iosephus Ben Gorion in Hist. Heroid and Hegesippus lib. 1. cap. 35. de excid vrb and lib. 5. cap. 42. 43. where it is said of Titus that Mirabatur saxorum magnitudinem metalli ●itorem v●●ustatem operis gratiam pulchritudinis nec immerito tantam fuisse ●oti celebritatem vt eo ex lo●● omnibus conueniretur quia tantum non nisi summi Dei crederetur esse Domicilium c. But our Sauiour answering sayd vnto him seest thou these buildings There shall not be left one stone vpon another that shall not be throwne down Thereby signifying vnto him that no strength is able to withstand the Lords iudgements how fortified soeuer Then as he s 〈…〉 pon the Mount of Oliues ouer against the Temple for hee neuer entred into it any more Peter and Iames and Iohn and And 〈◊〉 asked him priuately when these things should be c. Mar. 13. 1. to 5. and of the end of the world Math. 24. 3. which they thought wold come together with the destruction of the Temple whereupon our Sauiour most graciously foretelleth them 〈◊〉 Of the Iewes calamities fore-going the destruction of the Citty Mark 13. 5. to 14. 2 Of the flering of the Cittie and Temple vers 14. to 24. Lastly of the end of the world verse 24. to 33. Then to prevent all dangers ensuing he exhorts them to watch vers 33. to 37. lest they should take this aduice to be giuen them foure only he telleth them that this exhortation of watching appertaineth to all men as well to people as Pastors Now the former part of this prophesie came to passe iust 40. years after Christs Passion in An. Dom. 73. 1 And that 1. because they regarded not the time of their visitation though the Sonne of God with weeping eyes besought them Luk. 19. 41. Mat. 23. 37. 2 They refused the Messias to raigne ouer them saying they had no King but Tiberius Caesar Ioh. 19. 15. and preferred a murtherer before him Math. 27. 20. Luke 23. 18. Act. 3. 14. 3 They bought and sold at a most vile price the Lord of glory Luk. 22. 5. Acts 1. 18. according to Zac. 11. 13. 4 They crucified him to death after which time they enioyed not one merry day but were more and more vexed and oppressed by the Romanes vntill in the end they were all in a manner destroyed notwithstanding their strength and fortified Temple the miracle of all the world And therefore this should bee a faire warning for all to bee carefull to walke with their God onely As for the second part of this Prophecie which concerneth the day of Iudgement let vs be assured that in his due time it shall be fulfilled and that as the Lord in full iudgement executed his wrath against the Hierosolomits for their contempt and Apostacie he wil likewise in that day take vengeance against al his enemies who will not haue him to raigne ouer them regard not the time of their visitation sell God himselfe and their soules for the vncertaine loane of this world and with their vngodly liues crucifie to death the Lord of glory neither shall the glory of this world nor pompe of wealth number of friends nor their sinfull lusts and vanities in that day deliuer them no more then the great stones of the Temple their inuincible buildings protected the sinnefull Iewes from their enemies and therefore let vs watch and be wise The Doctrine that we are of the premises to collect before I descend to the exhortation is this That we are not 〈◊〉 our hearts nor eyes vpon any worldly thing wherein is no helpe Seeing all is but corruption and shal we wot not how soone by fire from God be vtterly consumed as was Ierusalem the Temple but wholly and onely vpon heauenly things and the means leading thereunto the proofs be these Salomon crieth that all is vanity of vanities and vexation of spirit and the summe of all is to feare God and keepe his commandements for God will bring euery worke into iudgment and euery secret thing whether it be good or euill Ecclesiast 1. 2. and 12. 13. 14. Loue not the world neyther the things that are in the world If any man loue the world the loue of the Father is not in him c. the word passeth away and the lust thereof but he that doth the will of God abideth for euer 1. Ioh. 2. 15. 16. 17. The day of the Lord will come as a thiefe in the night in the which the beauens shall passe away with a great norse and the Elements shall melt with feruent heate the earth also and the workes that are therein shall be burnt vp Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolued what manner of persons ought yee to be in all holy conuersation and godlines 2. Pet. 3. 10. 11. so Thess. 1. 7. 8. ●am 4. 4. and 1. Peter 1. 24. 25. c. 2. Cor. 5. 10. 11. The first vse wee are to make heereof serues ●oradmonition to watchfulnes for if as in the aboue named testimonies this sinfull world and all therein be but vanity and corruption and shall shortly be fired then is it high time for all sorts of people to see to their soules and to their sinnes that they in that day be not consumed with the fire of Gods wrath and of hell but the while labour by all religious means to be sanctified and purified that as Daniels companions walking in Nebuchadnezzars Ouen vvithout harme we may stand vpright before the Sonne of God filled with the fire of Gods spirit and loue which blessed fire blessed Lord kindle in vs continually The second Vse serues for instruction for the vse of worldly wealth for we see in what short time euē within the space of seauen Months this noble Citie and royall Temple full of worldly pompe iewels riches honor and glory was connerted to dust and ashes So that now it is not knowne where this Temple was founded vpon not one tagge of all the wealth thereof is any where to bee found This meditation should teach vs moderation in diet apparell building and hoording vp for hereafter why but because wee see all is corrupt transitory and vanitle of vanities which shortly it may bee ere seauen Moneths come about will not onely be fired but cause thee be cast to hell fire and so thy vanity of vanities will bring thee to misery of miseries Now then tell me were not hee more then mad
exclaime that hee can make no commodity nor gather any fruit out of his garden or orchard when as hee neuer set on good herbe nor plant in them one or other The like is euery husband to deeme of his wife watch for her good and shee will doe thee all good Then secondly euery father is to watch ouer his children that they degenerate and grow not from pure wheare to wilde oats as Helies sonnes did to the destruction of parents and children 1. Sam. 4. 17. c. And this watch is hardest of all because they be the fruit of our bodies in which respect we are ouer indulgent as was Dauid to Absolon 2. Sam. 18. 3. and 19. 33. and to Adoniah 1. King 1. 6. And therefore are they too often more rebellious and head-strong then wee can rule or willingly would bend much lesse breake or cast out of our houses and stone to death Deuter. 21. 18. And who though he were full of eyes and neuer sleeping is sufficient for these things and therefore parents with heauie hearts often sing Moses song in Numb 11. 11. c. Lord if I haue found fauour in thy sight kill me that I behold not my misery What is heere then to be done shall wee in the most needfull place giue ouer our watch God forbid But rather herein follow Salomons counsell in Prou. 22. 6. Traine vp or Catechize a childe that is while he is a childe in the way he should goe and when he is old he will not depart from it And good reason for looke how the first institution of children is sutable thereunto will be their whole life continually aspecting thereupon as we see the Sunne euer setteth euen against the place it first that day arose And looke what impression the waxe taketh when it is new it will retaine when it is hard and old Gods people were carefull hereof for wee see how watchfull Iob was ouer his children how he sent and sanctified them and rose vp early in the morning and offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all For Iob thought it may bee my sonnes haue sinned and blasphemed God in there hearts thus did Iob euery day Iob 1. 5. Abraham was commended for commanding his sonnes and houshold after him to keepe the way of the Lord to doe righteousnesse and iudgement Gen. 18. 19. Which how we l he performed appeared in that in one day he circumcised himselfe his sonne Ishmael and all the men in his house Gen. 17. 26. 27. Whereof were 318. able men of war Gen. 14. 14. And how could Ioseph approoue so wise and godly a man departing from his fathers house at seuenteene yeeres Gen 37. 2. Or Samuel so holy a Prophet or Daniel and his three companions so excellent Moses and Dauid men after Gods owne heart Salomon so toward Ezechias seruants so gracious that they penned a part of Salomons prouerbs as Prou. 25. 1. Ioshua and Nehemiah so zealous and godly gouernours Nathaniel Paul and Timothy so religious but that from there cradles they were by their godly parents continually trained in the feare fauour and knowledge of the Lords word and will Mose deliuered Israel Gods lawes to teach them their sonnes and sonnes sonnes all their daies that is euery day while they liued Deut. 6. 2. And before his death bound all Israel men women children seruants and bond-slaues by an oath to keepe and maintaine Gods lawes all excuses set apart as writes Iosephus Antiq. lib. 4. cap. vlt. which they failed not for many yeeres to performe most carefully they in these last times not only from their cradles instruct their children in the principles and summes of religion which they call there little Bible but at fiue yeeres old set them to reade Moses law at tenne the commentaries and expositions of there Rabines at thirteene rules and precepts morall at fifteene the Thalumd controuersies and disputations of the Rabines law Humphred and Ioh. Buxdorph Syn. Iud. cap. 3. So that their children were compared to spungies greedily sucking from their parents the water of life to houre-glasses measuring so their houres that no minute should be mispent to wine sackes retaining the substance of pietie and stilling out the sweetnesse to others to ciues with holding within the pure wheat of the word but shifting out the dust yea they were so skilfull and painefull text-men that they could tell you how many times euery letter of their Alphabet was written in the booke of Genesis which Willet testifieth also in Gen. 50. at the end saying this booke the Iewes make such account of meaning Genesis that they haue numbred the very letters which make 4395. c. Thus in old time little children became old men Grying euen to Christ in the Temple Hosanna Matth. 21. 15 16. But now old men are twise children to wit in age and knowledge Neither doe I take it any sin besides holy writ to shew vnto you how the holy ancient Christians were not sleepy in this worke as Leonides Origens father was so painfull in the education of Origen that daily he exercised him inreading and learning by heart set portions of the holy Scriptures wherein the childe had such inward and mysticall speculation that many times he would mooue very profound questions concerning the meaning of the Scriptures that his father in outward shew would reprooue him for wading so deepe into matters vncapable for his age and often would vncouer his brest being asleepe and kisse it giuing thankes to God that made him father of such a childe and being but seuenteene yeeres of age had such desire to suffer martyrdome for Christ with his father that his mother priuily in the night hidde away his clothes that for shame he could not go forth but writ to his father to take heede for affection to wife or children to recant Euseb. lib. 6. cap. 2. So in the time of the Tenth persecution of the Primatiue Church a little childe of feuenteene yeere old made a glorious confession of the vnitie of the Dietie and together with Noble Romanus suffered martyrdome Prudent de cor Martyr And when Valeus the Arrian Emperour sent his deputie to slay all the Orthodoxe Christians congregated in a Church at Edesse in Mesopotamia a poore woman of the citie hearing thereof hastned with her children in her armes thither which the Deputy seeing asked her whether she would she answered to the Church to suffer martyrdome so godly giuen mother and children were in those daies Ruffinus lib. 2. cap. 5. Theodoret lib. 4. cap. 17. Tripart hist. lib. 7. cap. 32. So Dionysia Africana when her most noble yong sonne Maioricus was martyred in the midst of his torments shee exhorted her sonne to constancie and to remember the holy Trinitie in whose name he was baptized and to keepe vndefiled his wedding garment Victor de perseq Vandal lib. 3. So Frumentius a ladde together with his fellow Aedesius Phoenicians conuerted
to render vp to the Lord our speciall callings and talents with their well-occupied encrease And last●y as to the best keeper our bodies life and soules beseech his Grace as he in mercy and of his vnspeakeable loue gaue them vs and all temporall and spirituall good things with them hee will now in like fauour and mercy receiue them againe and keepe them safe for vs vntill the day of iudgement and then bestow them and himse●fe vpon vs grant we may euer be with him and he with vs. 8. In the last agony of death we must draw vnto vs al strength of body and soule now in this ●ast combat quit vs like men As 1. we are to rest by faith vpon the presēt fauour mercy of God in Christ perswading our hearts soules that now Neyther death nor life nor Angells nor Princip●lities nor Powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be abie to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord R●m 8. 38. 39. and so plucking vp ●●r broken hearts shew our selues to be that which long we laboured for viz. to be true Christians 2. Then let heart tongue and voyce bee imployed onely in prayer to God for patience in our anguish for comfort in this our greatest distress for strength in our temptations and for wished and victorious deliuerance from them for a godly end and a ioyfull receiuing and conducting of vs by his holy Angels vnto Abrahams bosome yea endeauour to dye praying for now our weapons be but prayers teares sighes and groanes misery must ca●l for mercy and let our last words be Lord be mercifull to me a sinn●r Lord Iesu receiue my soule Come Lord Iesu come quickly And thus with our ●iues let vs breake vp our watch And thus farre of our watch against Death yet there bee that for better keeping of a true watch and performing of this most necessary necessity thoroughly contriue this preparation vnto a weekes worke or weekely Diarie sorting for euery day of the weeke vnto themselues certaine deuout exercises and meditations so as though they were to die presently that day as thus The first day of the weeke they wholly spend in this meditation that they are morta●l and must die and therefore they so vse and dispose of the commodities of this life and their callings as though before night they must hence labouring to obey that cōmandement of Christ Luk. 12. 35. 36. Let your loynes be g●rt about your lights burning And ye your selues like vnto men that wait for their Master when he will returne from the wedding that when he commeth and knocketh they may open vnto him immediately Blessed are those seruants whom the Lord when he commeth shall find waking c. and so set their house in good order for they must die The second day they spend in meditating vpon death the precedents and horror thereof to whom they willingly yeeld yet so that by faith in Christ true repentance and renued obedience they sweeten the ta●t sharpnesse thereof whereby they shall be able they doubt not cheerefu●ly comfortably to drinke of this cup Math. 20. 22. 23. The third day they thinke vpon their sins and with broken and contrite hearts confesse them to the Lord. Psal. 32. 5. 6. 7. and that with such vehement feruency of spirit earnest sweating agonie in soule as if within that day or houre they shuld by death be attached The fourth day with their greatest deuotion and most careful preparation they come to the holy Communion which they call viaticum and so victuall themselues therewith for reliefe in their iourney to heauen ioyning therevnto the reading and preaching of Gods sacred word applying the same to the present purpose so nye as may be suting and agreeing with Christs last Sermon in the Chamber before his death Iohn 13. and 14. 15. and 16. not without prayer and praise to the holy Trinity I he fift day they spend in meditation and prayer for the more liuely and effectuall working of Gods holy Spirit in their harts the better entertainment of Gods sacred word in their soules and opening of their eyes to see their weakenes wickednesse and accursednesse and for wished power to ouercome all temptations assaulting their soules specially at their death-time The sixth day in all humblenesse of heart and feruentnesse of deuotion they pray for a spirituall death wholly heauenly free from all doubtings greefe temptations or fears with an infallible sight of the Sonne of God in some though small manner most comfortable feeling apprehension of the ioyes of heauen contempt of this world with the perfect fulfilling to them of all Gods promises made to them for the life to come and that whatsoeuer holy duty is in them wanting by ignorance or weakenesse the holy spirit of God would suggest vnto them and supply that so the whole glory might be the Lords and to them in life and in death Christ should be aduantage Phil. 1. 21 and that walking through the valley of the shadow of death they should feare nothing for the Lord would be with them and his Angels safely conduct them to Paradise The seuenth day they giue hearty thanks to Almighty God for the innumerable benefits bestowed vpon them spiritually and temporally beseeching his maiesty to continue the same so far forth as hee seeth expedient for them vowing to make the rest of their life if any part be remaining a perpetuall Sabbath vnto the Lord vntill they bee translated to his kingdome where with all his Angels and Saints they shall solemnize an euerlasting Iubilie then this day they vse a deepe meditation and repetition of all the exercises of the sixe daies going before and to euery of these dayes they select certaine fit Psalmes and praiers c. And thus according to my skill haue I charged my watch-man in the best manner I could deuise to prepare for death and when I haue done all I find my selfe vnable to finde the depth of this principle for want of experience which I cannot learne vntill I dye my selfe Onely this I know that albeit this watch be vnreprooueable and necessary for all Christians yet as we see in a Master of Fence if a strong champion set vpon him he will soone set him out of all his fence and make a foole of him so if Death assaile vs aboue our nature and strength wee will soone forget all these instructions and fall to cursing blaspheming and no man woteth with what violence death will assault him therefore would I wish him euer to lead a godly life and keepe a carefull watch annexing to the first obseruations this weekely Diary and that circularly that is weeke after weeke to renew it to our dying day and then to both to desire the Lord himselfe to watch ouer vs else all will be in
vaine when we haue done all we are so weake and corrupt yea and ignorant of this way by Deaths doore to Heauen but if the Lord assist vs with his holy spirit wee shall not misse of a prosperous voyage for if God be with vs who can be against vs and questionlesse he will be with vs if wee carefully keepe this watch and though wee know not the way further then with our eyes we see it yet he knowes it and euery balke and temptation and stumbling stone and will both put in our hearts how to answere euery temptation and as Peter out of prison will lead vs safely that nothing shall let vs for his owne Names sake And therefore let vs confidently sticke vnto the Lord and he will sticke vnto vs for hee hath said I will not faile thee neyther forsake thee Iosh. 1. 9. Heb. 13. 5. Luk. 22. 43. The second Vse serues to put vs in minde of Death for seeing it is thus conuenient profitable for vs to watch against Death and so dangerous and pernitious to forget death vntill it sodainly taketh vs away vnprepared we must subscribe to the iudgement of the godly and also of Heathen writers who would haue mans life to be but a meditation of Death because it meeteth both young old at euery stile and for that nothing is more dangerous nor comfortlesse to any then at an vnawares full of sinne and full of the world to be arrested by Death for if thou look about thee thou shalt finde Death painted in euery place and worke thou doest And therefore thinke vpon it not as thou wouldest of a thing that were to come or some deuised figment but euen as Gods messenger now present and withall not as a thing appertaining onely to others but belonging to thy selfe The Indian Gymnosophists called Brachmanes were so carefull to make their liues a continuall meditation of Death that they had their graues alwaies open before the gates of their houses to the end that at their going out and comming in they might euer be mindfull of their passage to death and this house of earth to wit our graues is the schoole of true wisedome where God teacheth those that be his the misery and vanity of this life and whereas the world considereth no more but the painted face of Iezabel shining gaily at a window and not the miserable and extreame parts of her which after her body was eaten vp of dogges God would haue to remaine whole that thereby as in a figure vvee might see that the world is another manner of thing indeed then it appeareth in shew and that we should in such wise consider the face of it as also to be mindfull also of the extreame griefes sorrowes wherein the glory of it endeth 2. King 9. 30. 1. Let vs then preuent this misery and thinke on our death for this will first make the proudest Peacocke ●ay downe his fairer feathers so often as hee thinketh vpon it though hee pricke them vp againe when hee draweth his eye from this glasse 2. It will make vs serue God sincerely the feare of whom is the beginning of wisedome Marriners while they saile peaceably giue themselues to all riot and disordered excesse but when the tempest beateth into their shippe and death is before their eyes they cry mightily to God so we rocked in the cradle of security as in a ship glutte the forbidden fruit but stricken in aduersity loath this life and labor for a better 3. The memory of Death causeth vs to know that none of these things can be called ours which wee cannot carry with vs out of this world and therfore while we haue time wee should doe all good with them we can 4. In what calling soeuer a man bee hee cannot choose but deale vprightlie in most things if he doe but remember hee must die for what ambitious man would be proud of his honour and offices seeing he must die when all honor wealth and glory shall forsake him and another shall step in his roome as proud as he and when his glasse is runne out another shall succeed him c. vntill Death catch all as fish in his nette and to what purpose should I hoord money or purchase Lands c. seeing that Nakednesse shall be my last end Iob 1. 21. Of the want of this consideration arise all errors deceits for vvho vvou●d haue a sparke of presumption to sinne that knevv his end shortly to bee dust and ashes or would make his belly his God that were sure shortly his belly should become worms meat or would bestow one penny in building that were perswaded the graue should become his Pallace or braue himselfe in braueries considering hee shall be turned hee knowes not how soone out of all yea out of house and home in a poore winding sheet Therefore beloued let vs adhorre all vanities which doe but make vs vnwilling to die and open the gates of our soules to all our spirituall enemies a rule in policy it is to vvatch and ward that City which is beseeged round about and such as vvould keepe their cities in flourishing estate must euer be watchfull as if their enemies were at the gates so our Sauiour seeing that wee haue enemies on euery side and that Death the terriblest enemie knocketh at our gates foreseeing the danger might come of our sleepie security commendeth to his Church and commandeth watchfulnesse and therefore let vs not bee wanting to our own saluation but euer desire the Lord to grant vs this grace to number our daies aright and aboue all to perswade our faithlesse hearts that wee cannot heere long continue but must die The next Vse serues for comfort against the feare of Death for 1. If against the comming of Death wee be watchfull and euery way prepared as is aboue said then need wee not feare Death for then we shall die in the Lord and the Angell and Gods Spirit pronounceth from Heauen that such are blessed as is Reucl. 14. 13. Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord from henceforth yea saith the Spirit for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them If then it be a blessed thing to die in the Lord we need not feare it for all manner of seare presupposeth some euill and danger for we are not afraid of a good thing but affect it offered vs and receiue it cheerefully If then wee be not in danger of the second death as none that die in the Lord are it is folly to dread it seeing it is a blessed thing If a towne be well furnished with victualls as was Babilon which was prouided for twenty yeares as writ Xenophen and Herodotus though the towne be besieged the people within are secure but being vnstored quaketh for fear whence we may iudge of what importance it is to preuent dangers and be well prepared in time for that which astonisheth many at their death
is that they are suddenly taken at vnawares and vnprouided and this makes them vnpatient and to cry for some respit to make them ready for Death that is the Lord must stay for them stil but let them watchfully prepare for Death and wait for the Lord as is meet and say Come Lord Iesu come quickly 2. The vnprepared want faith for had they neuer so little faith it would free them from this feare and would animate them against all terrors as Psal. 46. 1. c. for as the body so long as the soule remaineth therein liueth so man so long as Faith abides in his soule needeth not feare Death no more then we feare sickenesse whiles wee enioy perfect health or pouerty while wee abound in wealth 3. There is no feare of death where there is no sinne for sinne is the cause that God depriueth vs of life but the vigilant and godly in time pull out the stings of Death and in Christ their sins are couered and not imputed vnto them Psal 32. 1. 2. Rom. 4. 7. and they sinne not 1. Iohn 3. 9. yea now to them death it selfe is slaine and swallowed vp in victory by the death of Christ 1. Cor. 15. 54. 55. 56. foreseeing that the prick or sharpnesse of Death is sinne and the power of sinne is death Iesus Christ hath accomplished the Law for vs and thereby taken away the sting of Death so that it shall neuer hurt vs any more and so to vs death now is no death but an entrance to life 4. God is euer with the Elect in their troubles and will not for sake them and though they walke in the valley of the shadow of death they will feare nothing Psal. 23. 1. 4. Gen. 46. 4. Luke 22. 43. hee being with them how can they feare to say nothing that he is in league and couenant with them to doe them all good and to remooue from them all harmes and hurts as Isa. 43. 1. c. Feare not I haue redeemed thee I haue called thee by name thou art mine when thou passest through the waters I will be with thee and through the riuers they shall not ouerflow thee when thou walkest through the fire thou shalt not bee burnt neyther shall the flame kindle vpon thee c. 5. Death is but a passage or vvay to life which now is so broad and smooth beaten by all Gods Saints that a man may blindly in the darke tread it without stumbling 6. Such as die in the Lord rest from their labors and their workes follow them and what labouring man after his dayes toyle and trauell would not rest from his labours and betake him to his bed and sleep so we by death shall rest from all the miseries whereunto this life is subiect and shall sleepe as in our beds and what a blisse is this specially to the godly who of all others in this life bee most miserable for they are subiect not onely to the common calamities of this life as of sicknesse pouerty losses c. but also besides these the world doth hate reuile persecute them that so bitterly and extreamely that many of them be imprisoned racked and tormented and cruelly put to death as Heb 11. 36. c. and 2. Cor. 11. 23. c. So that to them it is a great happinesse to rest from their labours and yet to rest from their labors by Death is but a part and not perfect blisse or happines for then a labouring Oxe or trauelling Horse were happy when they died yet they loath tremble to die but they that die in Christ haue another increase of happinesse for they enter into glory and their workes that is the reward of their workes follow them for they shall bee in euerlasting ioy why then should Gods children feare death seeing it is an end of present euills and a beginning of felicitie eternall 7. Death bringeth vs in glory to see God our Father and Iesus Christ our sweet Sauiour and the Holy Ghost our sanctifier of whom wee haue seene nothing hitherto but his pourtrait described by the Prophets Apostles which one thing ought to moue vs more then any thing to desire our dissolution for if the Queen of Saba came so farre to see Salomon and to heare his Wisedome how farre should wee goe to heare a greater then Salomon Luke 11. 31. Saint Austin wished he had liued to see Roman triumphantem Paulum praedicantem Christum in carne but those sights were nothing to these in the highest Heauens wher Christ with all his Angels Saints triumph in glory for now shall that blessing of our Sauiour in Luke 10. 23. be perfectly in vs fulfilled viz. Blessed are the eyes that see the things that ye see for I tell you that many Prophets and Kings haue desired to see these things which ye see and haue not seene them c. the only contemplation of whom will make vs fully content and will dampe and take from vs the remembrance and sense of all other profits and pleasures whatsoeuer Then with him wee shall see all the Angells Patriarchs Prophets Apostles Martyrs and Saints of God who haue in all ages excelled in vertue and godlinesse with all the holy Preachers who shine as the Sunne and Starres in the firmament of Heauen a sight surpassing that which Socrates hoped after his death to see to wit the Noble Heathens that liued before him as Agamemnon Aiax Vlisses c. 8. By Death our soules shall be separated from our bodies and made more free and capable of the profound mysteries of Gods Hierarchy and Heauenly Kingdome for then the vaile being remoued from our eyes and as Nazianzen writeth Our heauenly soules no longer pressed downe by our earthly bodies wee shall see the Lord face to face and know him as wee are knowne 1. Cor. 13. 2. and plainely behold that which we now worship for them shall we enter into the sanctuary of our God euen to the Holy of Holies there will God shew vnto vs as to his intire friends the whole glory and riches of his house and blessed kingdome and keepe nothing backe from vs. Blessed Death wilt thou not make hast to come and conduct vs thither for thou art the wholesome Physicke which curest vs of all diseases and afflictions and by casting vs into and vnder the earth liftest vs to the highest heauens to liue with God for euer 9. Death is to vs the beginning of life which Epaminondas a Heathen at his Death could see saying to his frends Be merry for now I begin to liue and so Ignatius Now I begin to be Christs Disciple so then in truth death is life and the life wee heere lead is but a limping death onely the one and the other are masked vnder false visages for as writes Chrysostome Our life which is full of misery hath a faire visour on which causeth fooles to loue it and Death which is the beginning
he now extenuate his mercy and presse his iustice to draw him to desperation so that now all his sinnes vvhich hee in his life-time committed vnrepented vvith so great facility shall violently at once rush vpon him as an armed host of bloudy enemies vvhich vvith open eyes hee shall novv to his shame and damnation behold oh how heauy and grieuous vvill they then seeme to bee vvhich formerly vve●●-so sweet pleasant Thus the soule fighteth vvith painefull sickenesse heauy temptation and feare of Gods iudgement with many mo● troubles temporall as spirituall at one instant on man a sicke and a dying man not vvoting vvhether to turne himselfe nor yet vvhat shift to make for if hee looke vpvvard hee seeth the sword of Gods iustice if downe-vvard his sinnes accusing him if to the time past all his vanities past like a shadow if to the time to come eternity it selfe and vvhat shall he doe recoyle to the body he cannot longer to abide in this sort he shall not be permitted but forsaking God in his life time shall be forsaken of God in Death if repentance preuent not and thus in the end the soule remoueth to his place and the body to the earth whence it came now this is thy case and therefore though we cannot escape Death yet let vs escape the sting and bitternesse of this Death for the true vvisdome of man is to measure all his actions by the squire of his short life and so to goe through all temporall affaires that he lose not the eternall and if some small losse of goods or preferment take away our sleepe what should the meditation of assured death doe should vve not doe as in games of actiuity at Olympus exercise our selues some fiue yeares before that in the day of triall we might winne the prize so we should now consider al inconueniences in death and against the game day be sure to get the prize and goe to heauen let fore-warned be fore-armed The fift Vse serues for comfort for Gods elect who take vvarning betimes hasten to prepare themselues against this fearefull guests comming to take away all frights feares he brings with him meet him halfe the vvay not to entreat for their liues as Shemei did Dauid but to iustle vvith him ere he come to his full strength to pull out all his stings while hee as Sampson sleepeth and as vve see vvhen bloudy vvarres bee at hand such as doubt of the victory betake themselues either to a forrein countrey a farre off or to some noble mans seruice vvho is the generall and commander of the vvhole field so escape And so vse vvise men seeing it vnpossible for them to escape death and iudgement they take godly courage and with all carefulnes prepare for his comming and vvhen all this is done seeing hee is like to be too hard for them in this combat they in time betake themselues vnto the seruice of the Lord of life and death vvho vvill not see his seruants at any hand miscarry and if they beleeue in him though they were dead yet should they liue and whosoeuer liueth and beleeueth in him shall neuer die Iohn 11. 25. 26. for though death as an armed man assault them to the separating of their soules from the bodies yet all this shal to them turn to the best for Death now hauing no further Dominion nor power ouer them departeth as a dastard curre that hath bit one of his Masters sheepe yet not slaine it whereby the sheepheard tendereth it the more and man thus torne is not slaine but dismembred a little but the sheepheard of our soules will recouer and fully cure it and in the meane while the body freed of all fears and troubles shall be honourably buried and the Lord of life will see it shall not be awaked abused nor miscarry vntill he awake him vp to life neuer to die any more and as for the soule his Angells shall carry him to Abrahams bofome and what looseth hee now by this combat for though he be ouer come of death as Christ his Lord and Master was yet he getteth the victory and by dying conquereth death and thus the day of Death is the master day iudge of all other dayes the triall and touch-stone of our life the last Act of the worlds comedy for if wee die a godly death it honoureth all our actions but if an euill then it defameth and deformeth them all yea the death of the righteous that is of euery beleeuing and repentant sinner is a most excellent blessing of God and brings with it many worthy benefits for 1. Death is to vs conuerted into a sweet sleepe and our bodies shall lye in our graues as in a doulne bedde freed from all dangers cares vexations and temptations and is the complement of the mortification of our flesh and wee now are freed from sinne 2. They are blessed that die in the Lord they rest from their labours and their works follow them Reuel 14. 13. 3. It separates vs from the company of the wicked 4. It seateth vs in heauen where we shall see God face to face Iesus Christ in his glory which sight so rauisheth the holy Angels that it is the fulnesse of their contentation as Psal. 16. 11. Thou will shew me the path of life in thy presence is the fulnesse of ioy and at thy right hand there are pleasures for euermore Yea this farre surpasseth Salomons royalty commended by the Queene of Saba 1. King 10. 1. 8. 9. 5. It puts vs in possession of all these benefits that Christ hath purchased for vs Psal. 126. 5. 6. for so ong as wee are in this world wee are saued but by hope Rom. 8. 24 but when we die we shall fully enioy them a ioy it was to the Israelites after their long bondage in Egypt to enter into the land of promise so to a Prentice to be made free much more to vs to bee set at the liberty of the sonnes of God in heauen 6. If there were no death sin would neuer end with vs but wee should be euer filled with iniquity our sorrowes and labours would neuer forsake vs but wee should bee euer in soule and body most miserable if wee died not who would regard the death of the soule nor prepare against the day of doome 7. It openeth vnto vs the gate of heauen euer since we were borne we haue beene sailing to this Hauen and now being within sight of it we rowe backward from it yet no Sailer beaten with tempestuous waues but would be at the hauen no traueller passing dangerous waies but would bee at home and no godly man but would be at rest If an old aged man would make true relation of his life from his conception to his dissolution and declare all the sorrows he passed through and the heart vtter all her greefes and gripings it sustained all this while I suppose that not onely wee our selues
the violaters thereof 6. as that day wa● for the good of the Elect so will this be to Reasons enforce this Doctrine 1. Because the Iudge himselfe commandeth vs so to doe Luke 11. 28. 2. Gods iustice mercy calls for this day to punish the wicked and crowne the godly 3. The Lord sundry times and after diuers manners forewarned vs heereof as 1. by pronouncing the sentence of Death for sinne before it was committed Gen. 2. 17. 2. by often repeating the same sentence in the Law Deutr. 27. 26. 3. by the euidence of euery mans conscience summoning as it were all men to appeare at the day appointed before the great Iudge of all the world Ioh. 8. 7. and 1. Iohn 3 20. 21. Rom. 2. 15. 16. 4. by his speciall temporall iudgements that figure it as vpon the old world Sodom Babel Canaan c. 5. by many signes and tokens fore-running and presaging the same 6. by deliuering his talents to bee occupied vntill his comming againe Luk. 19. 12. 7. 7. by the word of God warning all to iudgement 4. The ends for which Christ commeth to iudgement iustifie the same as 1. for the glory and praise of his Iustice for all eternity 2. inrespect of the compleat fulfilling of Christs three offices And then shall he deliuer vp the kingdome to his father when hee hath put downe all power rule and authority 1. Cor. 15. 24. e. 3. for the crowning of the Elect with immortality in heauen for hauing abolished Sinne and Death and reconciled the Elect hee shall deliuer them to his Father to be crowned with eternall glory and shall triumph ouer all his enemies for euer 4. In respect of men that euery man may receiue his iust desarts be they good or euill 5. for the deliuerance of the creatures from the slauish bondage of corruption whereunto it is subiect Rom. 8. 20. 6. meet and right it is that the Lord should bee reuenged vpon Satan and all his complices for troubling his Elect and consequently vpon all the world for persecuting and afflicting any manner of way his holy Church who now as the bloud of Abel cry against their oppressors Reuel 6. 9. ●0 Luk. 18. 7. and with their prayers hasten the Lord to iudgement and so likewise do the cries of the poore of the hireling the stranger widdow and fatherlesse Deut. 24. 14. 15. Gen. 18. 20. and 4. 10. 6. 5. 6. 7. Iam. 5. 4. the complaint of the Angels of Satans sowing t●res Mat. 13. 27. the accusations of Sathan Reu. 12. 10. and the sins of all the world crying to God all which hasten his comming to this great assises and the while he stayeth and delayeth his comming for causes best knowne to himselfe as the complement of the Elect c. also he is faine by strange fearefull and extraordinary iudgements to punish the world when for want of executing Iustice men hiding their eyes Leuit. 20. 1. and to visit countries and people vvith strange plagues and calamities and that for the peace of his Elect else the world would grow out of frame Satan and his kingdom become ouer-insolent and the poore and weake be trodden vnderfoot and therefore there must be a day of generall iudgement The Doctrine thus proued it followeth to giue some vses for the edifying of the conscience whereof the first serues for confutation of all Atheists Sadduces Epicures ignorant Sotts Mockers and whosoeuer besides of that cursed crue and litter who impudently desperately deny there shall be any day of iudgement and therefore without reremorse giue the raines of liberty to all sensuality and abhominations Math. 22. 23 and Acts 23. 8. and 1. Cor. 15. 12. Phil. 3. 18. 19. and 2. Pet. 3. 3. 4. The reasons of these foolish-witty sinners be these the whole world stands of beleeuers and vnbeleeuers but there is no general iudgment day for neyther of these for the beleeuer hath life euerlasting and shall not come to iudgement but passeth from death to life Ioh. 5. 24. as for the vnbeleeuer hee is condemned already Iohn 3. 18. and needs no further iudgement and therefore there shal be no iudgement at all for it is needless I answer By iudgement is meant sometimes absolution as Math. 25. 34. other while condemnation Iohn 5. 24. now God will iudge the iust and the wicked Eccles. 3. 17. the beleeuer shall not come to the iudgement of condemnatiō yet shal he come to the iudgement of absolution Math. 25. 34. 40. 41. they reply that all men at their seuerall deaths and departure out of this world are iudged and what needs the generall I answer That notwithstanding this particular iudgement granted onely vpon mens soules there must and shall be a generall Sessions and that for the aboue recited reasons as also 1. Because in the first particular iudgement the soule onely is iudged and the body is interred in the graue therefore meet it is that as soule body honoured or dishonoured God together both should be paid or pained together and therefore must both appeare that day to be iudged according to their workes 2. The Lord in pronouncing his sentence of absolution as of condemnation will be iustified and glorified in the face of all the world 3. The Lord will haue this to bee a day of generall triumph ouer sinne and Satan and there must a day be assigned for it and therefore are wee to watch for it The second Vse serues for instruction for Gods children to bee wise and watchfull for seeing there must bee a generall day of iudgement wee must without delay or procrastinations prepare for it which I take we shall performe the better if wee vse the few motiues offered to your considerations to stir vp your hearts for this work wherof I raise my first motiue from the very names and attributes of that fearefull day for the names in part shew the nature thereof whereof some be fearefull to rouse the sleepy sluggard others comfortable to encourage forward the godly and both in time to regard their saluation as 1. This day is called the day of iudgement Math. 12. 36. Luk. 10. 14. and who knoweth not that to iudge meaneth properly to doe iustice vpon malefactors for it is contrary to the name of sauing deliuering or redeeming Ioh. 12. 47. 48. and therefore thereby is meant a day of damnation which implyeth thus much that in that day Christ the Iudge will bee so offended with his enemies that hee himselfe will sit in iudgement vpon them to condemn them to hell we know that Monarchs sit not in iudgment for toyes howsoeuer reprobates make but a sport of sin Pro. 4. 19. though they tread vnder foot the very bloud of Christ the Iudge himselfe 2. It is called a snare Luk. 21. 35. because as birds when they fare best misdoubt no danger are vnawares caught in a snare so when the wicked are most secure this
more of heauen then any of vs yet the thinking of that country much encreaseth his sorrow and so will it be to the wicked in the midst of their iollities a sting in their soules as a tart sawce making their sweetest melodies sowre deadly If this meditation were holpen with the light of a liuely faith it would as Elishaes salt sweeten all the waters of Iericho and as Elias fiery Chariot soone lift vs vp to heauen and the vvhile make al the bitter pains of this life comfortable to vs for if the loue of Lands and desire of Riches cause the paines taken for them to seeme nothing vvhat should the loue of Heauen effect in our soules should vvee for this Countrey refuse any toyle vvee know how all condemne Esau for selling his birth-right for a messe of redde pottage and what are the very best things in this world but vanity and vexation of spirit and God forbid wee should loose our birth-right in heauen for the loue of vncertaine pleasures a wise pilgrime will forbeare all delights that hinder his return and reserue all pleasures vntill hee come home and so should we else we will not come thither in haste Abraham obeyed God calling him out of his country Heb. 11. 9. because he looked for a City whose maker was God and Paul vvas content to beare all afflictions because hee looked for things that were not seene 2. Cor. 4. 17. and 5. 1. 2. and vvhosoeuer assureth himselfe of heauen will little regard this sinfull life which one point should cause worldlings to looke about them The second Vse serues for thankefulnesse to our good God for redeeming vs from hell and all miseries whereunto by our sinnes and the sinnes of our sorefathers we had wretchedly plunged our selues and of his vnspeakeable loue and mercy made vs his elect children heyres of his kingdom and if thou take this to be but a slender benefit then cōder what a damned soule would giue if he had wealth to be thus freed and do thou now the like for by nature thou wast the childe of wrath as well as hee Ephes. 2. 3. And therefore if Noah escaping the Deluge wherein millions were drowned and Israell deliuered from Pharaohs tyranny and Dauid from Saul forgat not due thankefulnesse much more ought wee deliuered from the flouds of Gods wrath tyranny of Sathan and cruelty of all enemies yea and from the euerlasting paines of hell be euer thankefull in this and the life to come for this most gracious deliuerance and blessed aduancement to his holy kingdome in heauen The third Vse serues for comfort to the Elect which goe to euerlasting life and to heauen and that in three respects 1. Of the ends why eternall life was ordained 1. that God might manifest the riches of his grace to his Elect 2. that the godly might enioy the full fruits of Christs death and the promised rewards of their labours and indignities in this life sustained 3. that they might magnifie the great vvorkes and mercies of God wrought for them 2. In regard of the effects of eternall life 1. that they may be as the Angells of God Math. 22. 30. not in substance but in conditions 2. that wee may be made partakers of the dignity of Christ in his three offices as Kings Priests and Prophets though not in the same excellency 3. In regard of certaine degrees of heauenly ioyes vvhereof the first degree of our comfort and ioy shall be in respect of the generall resurrection 1. For it shall bee a ioyfull day to vs. 1. For the Angells will awake and comfort vs in the Lord. 2. Ioyfull it shall be for that our soules and bodies separated by death shal now againe be ioyned together and glorified together eternally 3. Ioyfull shall it be in respect of the holy communion of Saints whereunto we shall be ioyned to praise the Lord. 2. A second degree of glory will this he that wee shall appeare before Christ our Sauiour be absolued and sit vvith him to iudge the wicked enter vpon his sweet promises of eternall life 3. A third degree of glory is that he will iustifie and saue vs from our sinnes 4. The fourth degree of ioy is in that wee shall be honoured with the dignity of Iudges 5. A fift degree is after we haue thus triumphed and troden our enemies all vnder feet in most glorious and triumphant manner we shall with Christ our head and all his Angells and Saints goe to life eternall which is the end of all our wishes and desires where for euer we shall enioy the presence of the holy Trinity where the inhabitants of the heauenly Ierusalem bee all Angells and Saints for Nobility all the Sonnes of God for vnity brethren for wisedome and knowledge all taught of God for experience they al ouercame the world for multitude they cannot be numbred for amity they liue in cōtinuall peace their work praising seruing the Lord for piety they keep a perpetual sabbath euery day an holy day to the Lord. 6. The 6. degree is in regard of our continuance in heauen which is euerlasting without end but if these ioyes had had an end then had it not been an heauen but it is eternall without end greefe wearinesse oldage or any corruption for vvhen Death is swallowed vp in victory how possibly can wee die our Sauiour being life it selfe 7. The seauenth degree is that the Lord will poure into our soules and bodies all the communicable graces of his Spirit for when we are vnited to Christ our head and then by vertue of this vnion and communion mysticall wee be in all created gifts and graces belonging vnto all and euery part of our soules and bodies like him but not in the same degree 8. The eight degree of ioy is a freedome from all miseries whatsoeuer belonging to body and soule and in stead thereof be enriched with the contrary blessings which the Lord grant vs. And thus farre of the thirteene Motiues for watchfulnesse against the day of iudgement and of the timely vses wee are to make thereof Hauing dwelt thus long vpon these Motiues I will now draw in my sailes and hasten to the shore exhorting euery man in the Lord that as this triple watchfulnesse is necessary and concerneth euery man that euery Christian particularly watch and prepare himselfe accordingly for while the arrows of the Lords wrath flie ouer euery mans head and are not yet fallen euery man may see and prouide for himselfe and escape were it proclaimed that for some priuy fault onely known to himselfe the King whole life the Lord long preserue would execcute in euery town some 100. ●0 or 10. persons nay but two in euery towne whom pleased him all would feare and by all meanes labour to exempt and secure themselues least he should be one of that number but we know that the fewer number in euery Towne or Hamlet shall bee saued Mat. 7.
he printed An Herne standing vpon on foote vpon a dead mans tombe or a Crosiers staffe or sheephooke with a stone in the other clawe spying about and ready to fling it if he spied any enemy with this Impresse vnder a Bishop aluding to his owne name which signified so much intimating that a Bishop or Minister must as the Herne bee a continuall watchman ready to encounter with euery aduersarie of Gods truth and euer ouerseeing his charge remembring that a man with one foote in his graue he must die and render account of his stewardship but seeing I my selfe haue more neede to bee instructed of them and who of their owne accord are so wakefull and watchfull ouer their charges seuerally that for want of sleepe their eyes bee almost sunke in their heads and for want of rest their bloud and strength is out worne that few of them liue to the yeeres of the life of their fathers so few and euill their daies be for that they good men voluntarily take more weight vpon them then their weake nature is able to sustaine in so much that the image of death appeareth not only vnder their feete as to the Herne but in their faces also aboue all othermen Thus dying to the world and to all the comforts thereof and liuing to God The Lord God of heauen strengthen them lengthen their daies increase his graces in them blesse their labours and their flockes and make vs euer thankfull to God for them and obedient to their healthful admonitions and instructions And euer blessed bee the Lords holy name who hath multiplied the number of learned zealous Ministers in these our daies and countrey and that in greater aboundance then in any age before vs and those two men of singular hope full of Gods Spirit graced with most excellent gifts whose vertues and holy life in their yong yeeres doe shine farre aboue the gray heires of their forefathers would God we were but halfe thankfull ynough for so admirable blessings The ioy of the whole earth and the gladnesse of all the world that is the blessed hope of the Gospel shineth not a little in their gracious contenances the Lord encrease them a thousand thousand fold and giue them double and triple his spirit that they may be greater then all his enemies and abide euer faithfull that through them the King may reioyce the Magistrates be glad their fellow Ministers be backed and encouraged the people edified sinne abolished Idolatrie rooted out Antichrist ouerthrowne Satan troden vnder foote hell confounded the Gospell highly farre and wide flourish righteousnesse shineth God haue all the glory So be it and the Lord say so too and ratifie it Another vse serues for reproofe of a contrarie generation who in Scripture be also called watchmen but full sleepie and snorting euen at noone-day and therefore may as well be called watchmen of waking ouer their flockes as mountaines of moouing they are blinde they haue no knowledge they are all dumbe dogges they cannot barke they lie and sleepe and delight in sleeping and these greedie dogges can neuer haue innough and these shepheards cannot vnderstand for they all looke to their owne way euery one for his aduantage and for his owne purpose Isa. 56. 10 11. They eate the fat they cloth them with the wooll they kill them that are fed but they feede not the sheepe c. Ezech. 34. 3 4. And whereas the watchmen of Ephraim should bee with my God the Prophet is a snare of the fowler in all his waies and hatred in the house of God Hos. 9. 8. That is they should bring men to God and not to be a snare to catch and pul them from God which is abominable and what more lamentable then to see them so hard hearted that though the children crie for bread yet no man breaketh it vnto them nor affoord them on graine of salt to eate with their meate and yet as they bee improperly I grant called watchmen so are they ca●led the salt of the earth Math 5. 13. And therefore should season the carnall and vnsauory soules of their people else they themselues are no better then vnsauorie salt If a Gentlemans table be laid and ouercouered with aboundance of meate and varitie of dishes yet if the meate be fresh and no salt vpon the table to what vse serueth all that prouision but to cast it to dogs salt is it that seasoneth all things so if a Minister come I will not say to Church and season not the soules of the people with the salt of the word but if he come to a Gentlemans house and sit at table if hee season not the company with the 〈…〉 rie salt of his diuine knowledge what is hee but the shame and disgrace of the company and contemned yea cast out and troden vnder foote as vnsauorie salt Whereas he ought both at Church and at home and else-where with this spirituall salt couer and cure the putrifactions and diseases of the people For heare it fareth with men liuing as with beasts dying which anone putrifies scrawle with wormes stinke and serue not for mans vse vnlesse in due time they be wisely and carefully salted so man when by sinning he looseth the life of God and becommeth wholly earthly minded hee forthwith begins to stinke and to scrawle with the wormes of carnall lusts and sensualitie with beastly and diuellish affection which not only fill the heart and soule but withall most fearefully come out at the mouth in scurilous filthie talke horrible and bl●sphemous oathes and cursings and at the hands feete and whole body in most vngodly gestures actions and behauiour Whereby hee is vnsit for the table of his heauenly Father vnlesse the faithfull Minister forthwith steppe in and ouercouer it with his salt and so sweeten and purifie it againe else will all whoope at this vnskilfull cooke that spoileth all his Masters prouision for want of salting it in due time and who if he saw a Goliah come to a towne with full intent to murther and kill all the people therein would not rise against him but this is a murthering of the soules of a whole Parists if the Lord giue them not the more grace to prouide for themselues What more treacherous then to set a man a watchman ouer a citie who for a bribe will open the gate at first to the enemie to slay and spoile all and doe not these by their sleepie silence open for sinne and Satan to seaze vpon Christs inheritance regarding nothing but their priuate commoditie thinking when they enter vpon a liuing they enter vpon a farme to liue vpon or a flock of sheepe and yet watch not herein not so well as the shepheard of Bethlem did ouer their sheepe Luk. 2. 8. And who seeth not how foolish and dangerous it is to set vpon the walles of a citie besieged by the enemie a drowsie sleepie and sluggish watchman who can but snort all night in the
and yearely pay the Minister so much as thou reapest aboue thy paines and charges in gathering the fruits And faile not to binde thy posteritie in all ages to pay the Church this yeerely anuitie and holy tribute but if thou doe neither be assured thou shalt not long prosper for this is a crying sin against thee and thine And I doubt not but the Lord beholding the affliction of his Ministers the crueltie and vnmercifulnesse of these transgressors and the famine and oppression of the poore blind and ●ame of this land will in time stirre vp the heart of some Noble Nehemiah or godly Ebed-Melech to speake to our most gracious Soueraigne for redresse of this Maladie and so farre of this vse and remedie Hauing proceeded thus farre in the first member of watchfulnesse for this life present which in deede is most difficult and of largest scope and without which the other two are to small purpose and seeing that this weighty work concerneth all men all women all ages all functions and all dealings in the world yea in euery thought word and worke we must carefully watch for vnder euery stone lyeth a scorpion ready to sting vs to death and yet to enter to euery of these particulars were infinite I therefore for better discharging of the whole thought to annexe a few helpes to further you the more cheerefully to vndertake this watch with vndoubred assurance the Lord assisting to effect it to Gods glory your comfort Whereof the 〈◊〉 helpe to watch in all our affaires is for euery man to betake himselfe to a calling which will keepe him from idlenesse and many sinnes this calling is two-fold generall and speciall first the generall calling of a Christian is by all godly meanes ordained by God to endeauour to become truly religious according to the Lords gracious couenant made and sealed at our Baptisme the reasons why wee must make this our calling and daily exercise is first for that we are full of impietie originall and actuall and so liable to eternall damnation by due desert vnlesse we labour to abolish it and become godly and the nature and powerfull working of Gods religion is such that as a precious oyntment it perfumeth sweetneth sanctifieth with the graces of Gods Spirit the whole man otherwise is no better then an vnsauory carrion in the nostrils of the Almighty 2. Then the doctrine of eternall life is so heauenly profound and ample that we cannot in any sufficient measure be furnished therewith vnlesse we make a continuall labour and practise thereof so throughly are we inuenomed by the stingings of the old serpent and ouercouered with the leprosie of sinne that we are wholly vnnaturalized and vnapt for any good thing vnlesse we betimes enter into this holy trade of life this is our plough wherewith we must manure the Church gleebe of our hearts else it ouergrowes with bryers and weeds this is our paradise wherein we must euer be occupied in dressing it else it will become a desart full of Serpents heare must wee euer be learning else wee forget euer watching else our enemy preuaileth no sleeping in sinne then the enuious man soweth tares among our wheat no truce with Satan for then he conquereth no looking backe then vnfit for Gods kingdome The second helpe is for euery man to set and settle himselfe in a speciall calling and honest trade of life whereby he may get a sufficient maintenance both for himselfe his family and the Church and poore to Gods glory and good of his Church and this is Gods ordinance Gen. 3. 19. that all creatures should be of some speciall calling but man aboue all the rest else that he should not eate 2. Thess. 3. 6. to 13. And the law of equitie requires it that as wee enioy the fruits of other mens callings they should likewise of ours and so increase vnitie and amitie as bretheren and this is our paradise wherein we should euer be occupied else we walke not in the way of all creatures Satan excepted who is of no calling yet neither idle nor well occupied we walke inordinately busie-bodies troublers of such as walk in the callings open to all temptations and vanities and yet therein so conceited and wiser then seuen that can render a reason Prou. 26. 16. And such as at no hand can keepe true watch but euer disturbing and persecuting the watchmen of their soules excluded from the protection of Gods Angels a gracelesse generation and if you obserue what heauie iudgements befall the wicked you shall finde that they are cast vpon them by the hand of God when they ranged out of their callings as to Sampson by Dalila to Dauid in the matter of Vriah to I●●as going to Tharsus to Peter at the high Priests fire c. And contrarily that most of mens wealrh prosperitie commeth to them by their godly and painefull walking in their vocations But because worldlings would cast of their generall vocation to embrace this speciall only and idlers would not labour but pretend walking in their generall calling both complaine they cannot discharge both vocations in on day and therefore take it sufficient to serue God on the Lords day and themselues all the weeke daies I for satisfaction herein thus as in a diary digesting order both callings together and what is spoken of on daies worke may bee meant and applied to euery day First then so soone as thou awakest out of thy sleepe stand vpon thy watch and awake to God for the tempter with his vncleane suggestions is at hand and know that if our first thoughts be holy after our sleepe we be such if vnpure we be wicked then offer to God the sacrifice of prayer for thy sleepe and life and thine that so the Lord being first in account with thee may graciously hold with thee all the whole day 2. Then thinke of all thy sinnes thou canst call to minde and the punishments due to them temporall as eternall pray for pardon for them and be thankefull for thy happy deliuerance from them by Gods mercies Christs merits and working of Gods Spirit in thee which thou shalt the readier performe if thou think of thy death of Gods iudgement day of the paines of hell and ioyes of heauen of the vanities and afflictions of this life as of the momentanie pleasures thereof and how blessed are such as furthest estranse themselues from them and draw nightest to God in all Christian obedience 3. This done thinke vpon the discharging of thy speciall calling this day to Gods glory thy soules health and good of all men and the furthering of thy peace at thy death and of thy reckoning in the day of iudgement These meditations will first keepe thy minde from bad thoughts and Satanicall temptations secondly will sanctifie thy soule thirdly will be forcible motiues to prayers and thankes giuing and fourthly will cause the Lord draw neere thee and
kill vs neither booteth it vs to waste our goods on Physitians to keepe vs frō it for albeit they promise faire yet they their babes die as soon as others our Lawers cannot in this book-case plead no not for their owne liues no King so welthy no Sampson so stout no horse so swift no spear so long no armor of proof so sure but as the Behemoth Leuiathan he scorneth all Therefore to preuent all the hurts harms that accōpany Death such as die vnprepared I gather this doctrine All Gods children must whilest they liue heere seeing they know they must die bee exceeding carefull to watch and wake for Deaths comming whensoeuer it be least it come suddenly vpon them and so surprise and take them away vnawares and vnprepared the proofes be in Isa. 38. 1. The Lord said to Hezekiah by Isaiah Put thine house in order for thou shalt die and not liue And this did all the godly Fathers before their death as Abraham disposed and prouided for his children before his death Gen 25. 5. 6. Isaak Iacob blessed their children Gen. 27. and 48. and 49. so did Moses blesse the twelue Tribes exhorting them also to serue the Lord and the like did Ioshua Deutr. 33. Iosh 23. and 24. and Dauid did the like prouiding further for the Temple and the functions thereof 1. Chron. 22. to the end of that booke that God might bee serued after his death better then while he liued Abraham Iacob and Ioseph had an holy care for their buriall Gen. 23. and 49. and 50. Simon and Paul desired to die in peace and bee with Christ our Sauiour and Steuen commended their soules to God forgaue and prayed for their enemies c. Then Moses desired God to teach him to number his dayes that he might apply his heart to wisedome Psal. 90. 12● This also by a voyce from heauen is confirmed to be a blessed thing as Reu. 14. 13. Blessed are the dead which hereafter die in the Lord euen so saith the Spirit for they rest from their labors and their works follow them And contrarily how fearefull it is to die vnprepared we see in that Corne hoorder who when hee made most account to eat drinke take his ease and be merry that night his soule was taken from him Luk. 12. 15. to 23. Reasons ratifie this truth likewise 1. All our former watchings ouer all our life is lost labour if in this point we become sleepy and secure 2. To die is one of the greatest works and most dangerous ro●kes mans life is subiect vnto if heere wee make shippewracke wee are vndone for euer for what auaileth it to liue godly and die wickedly not one iot as Ezech. 18. 24. 3. At our death time Satan is most subtle busie and fierce to ouerthrow our faith for if now hee preuaileth against vs he hath gotten his wished desire but if now he be vanquished he is out of hope euer to preuaile and so layeth downe the bucklers at our feete for euer therefore stands it vs much on hand to watch and for want hereof many goe meerely to the pit of perdition 4. Death by this premeditation and preparation will be more welcome vnto vs for dangers foreseene are lesse greeuous 5. I shall more easily contemne this world by often thinking that I am a stranger in it and abstaine from many sinnes which otherwise I would commit and will repent of all my sins committed and omitted and the rather because all Gods Elect did so and were saued and so shall I. 6. God commands vs to watch for commanding vs to watch for the day of iudgement he will haue vs make a godly death for as wee die so shall wee be iudged and therefore must bee watchfull and pray much for a godly end 7. If we performe this duty many commodities accompany it if not vndoubted damnation to all that die in sin vnrepented for death in it selfe is the way to hell to the wicked but to the godly a portall by which the soule passeth out of the fraile body to heauen or is as the Angell that guided Peter out of prison and sets them at liberty Acts 12. 8. 9. whereas to the wicked it is a cruell Sergeant to arest and cast them into prison The first vse serues for instruction for my vigilant Christian how hee is to watch generall and speciall for death The first generall care whereof is in leading a godly life and then shall hee be sure of a godly and blessed death for eternall life hath three degrees one in this life when a man leades a new sanctified heauenly life and can say truely that now hee liues not but Christ liueth in him Galath 2. 20. and this all such can say as doe vnfainedly repent beleeue and obey iustified from and sanctified against their sinnes and haue the peace of Conscience with other good gifts graces of the holy spirit which are the earnest penny of their saluation The second degree is in the end of this life at our death when the body goeth to the earth and soule to God the third at the last iudgement when body and soule revnited doe ioyntly enter into eternall blisse and of this first watch I haue spoken in the first part before Then secondly we must watch and be in readinesse for the second degree of eternall life euen for death for man goeth to the house of his age as Eccles. 12. 5. that is towards his graue and therefore must prepare for it and labour to pluck out of our hearts that erroneous imagination wherewith euery man naturally blesseth himselfe thinking so highly of himselfe that though hee had one foot in the graue yet beleeues hee shall not yet die and what a folly is it for man to stumble thus at the threshold ere they be aware of the house many charge and chide olde age to come vpon them vnexpected but who compelleth them thus falsly to conclude So if any complaine of Deaths vnlooked-for approach wee may answer Who bade them bee so foolish as not to looke for him Cruell and vnmercifull Death makes league with no man though as Isai saith chap. 28. 15. 18. The wicked make a league with Death that is in the fond imagination thinking that Death will not come neere them though all the world should be destroyed and seeing this naturall corruption is in euery mans heart we must daily fight against it and expell it out for so long as it preuailes we shall be vtterly vnfit to make any preparation for death but will bee like the foolish debtor that keepes no account of his debt and then maruells how the Creditor should remember to demand it thou hast owed this debt euer since thou wast borne and before thou wast borne and is it strange that now after some yeares past thou art called vpon for it what if the day of payment be not
expressed in the counterpane that which is presently and at all times due must continually be in readinesse Thirdly we must labour to meditate often and seriously of our death and of the state of the dead whereunto wee all hasten for rich poore shall lie down alike in the dust and the wormes shall couer them saith Iob. chap. 21. 23. to 26. but because our selfe-loue and world inesse is so great that wee account nothing so bitter and vntoothsome as the meditations of our departure as Ecclus. 41. 1. O death how bitter is the remembrance of thee to a man that liueth at rest in his possessions vnto the man that hath nothing to vexe him and that hath prosperitie in all things yea vnto him that is able to receiue meate and therfore let vs strengthen this practice with prayer as did Dauid and Moses Psal. 39. 4. and 90. 12. so wee may bee inabled to resolue our selues of death continually for how soeuer by a generall speculation wee thinke sometimes something of our ends yet vnlesse the spirit of God be our Schoolmaster to teach vs this duty wee shall bee neuer able soundly to resolue our selues of the presence and the speedines of death for hee alone must lighten our mindes with knowledge and fill our hearts with his grace that wee may rightly consider hereof and so esteeme of euery day and houre as if it were the very day and houre of our death So the dangers foreseene will be lesse greeuous and we shall more easily contemn this world with the vanities thereof and keepe our selues in good fashion according to the Prouerbe Remember the end and thou shalt neuer doe amisse Ecclus. 7. 36. and approoue right Christians for as saith Gregorie The life of a Christian is nothing else but a continuall meditation of Death and as a watchman euer thinketh and looketh for the enemies comming and therefore will not sleepe so must wee often meditate of death and make account that euery present day shal be our dying day and euery night our bed to be our graue and so for that remnant of time wee haue to liue euer walke in the feare of God and so hee shall neuer need to feare Death who by a godly life hath giuen due entertainment to the feare of God We must not onely be euery day willing to die but bee ready with oyle in our Lamps esteeming euery day the last day of our liues which that wee may the more cheerefully doe we must endeuour before death come to pull out the stings of death that is the power strength thereof by true repentance and faith in Christ Iesus Sampson was soone vanquished when the Philistines found where his great strength lay and thou mayest put safely a serpent in thy bosome if thou pull out his sting so take sinne away which is the sting of Death then may Death as a Bee without a sting hum and buzze about thine eares but not harme thee wherefore if wee would liue when we are dead wee must die to sinne and to the world and flesh while we are aliue and not omit these duties 1. To humble our selues for all our sinnes past confessing them wholly against our selues and in prayer crying instantly to God for pardon of them 2. For the time to come to turne to God and to carry a purpose resolution and endeuour in all things to reforme both heart and life according to Gods word 3. We must euer beleeue in Christ by whom the sting of death is taken out for they onely feare Death who feare and doubt whether Christ died for them if then Death hath bin slaine by Christ Iesus then now to the faithfull it is no death but a sleepe a separaration a passing from the world and a going vp to God a disioyning of the soule from the body Philip. 1. 22. 23. Ioh. 13. 3. and a consecration as if wee said it is a solemne ceremony by which the faithful are wholly consecrated and dedicated vnto God to the end that hereafter they should render vnto him no other sacrifice nor exercise but to sing and set forth the prayses of God to sanctifie his holy name and so it is called Baptisme also for that by Death we passe as Israell through the red Sea and Iordan to the Holy Land of the liuing for the thing that maketh vs most feare death is that we behold it in the myrrour of the Law which sets it forth vnto vs vnder a shape and shew that is very fearefull to looke vnto and vnder the forme of a Sergeant armed with the anger and wrath of God and accompanied and guarded with all the threats and curses of the Law against all those that violate transgresse the same who commeth violently and implacably to serue his writ to arest vs to appeare before Gods high Tribunall all excuses set apart and to receiue the sentence of damnation to hel fire eternally without ease or release baile or maine-prize which dealing of Death is so terrible to the flesh and soule of a sinner that the very remembrance of it is exceeding bitter to a man that is sowsed and soaked in the pleasures of this world for it now flattereth none regardeth no persons weigheth not friendship careth not for rewards to looke vnto but in imagination is very grimme ougly and cruell and killeth downe-right without mercy where it hitteth and who can abide his comming Now to free vs from this sight fright and feare we are to behold Death in the myrrour of the Gospell stinglesse disarmed and conquered by Christ and so swallowed vp in victory for vs his Beloued and Elect. 5. Seeing then that the sting of death is sinne and that the power and force of euery mans particular death and iudgement lieth in his owne sinnes wee must heerein be exceeding watchful to spend our time and study in vsing all good meanes that our sinnes may be remoued and pardoned for see how many sinnes be in thee so many stings of sinne be in thee also which wound thy soule to death therefore let not one sin remain for which thou hast not humbled thy selfe and repented seriously and if we will liue eternally let vs begin to liue that eterna'l life before wee die which is the first degree of eternity Let vs now rise to a new life by the first resurrection that we may haue part in the latter Reuel 20. 6. and now labour for sauing knowledge that we need not be Catechized on our death-bed Now labour we for true peace of conscience that we be not to agree with our aduersary when we are arested and when it is too late we hauing nothing to pay yet we see to our sorrow that of all businesse this is least respected much care is for the tenement the body little for the tenant the soule and least for the Landlord Christ Iesus But such as hasten not their worke shew they looke not for their Master and they that
take no care of paying their rent shew they despise their Landlord to their own losse hurt and confusion 6. Study and exercise daily the Art of dying most men lay how to liue in the world but a Christians care should be how to die well out of this world and that master-care carrieth about all the inferiour and subordinate cares and affaires of this life therefore let vs invre and accustome our selues daily by little and little to die before death come for hee that leaues the world before the world leaues him reacheth the hand to death as to a welcome messenger and with Simeon departs in wished peace and as men that are appointed to runne a race exercise themselues before in running that they may get the victory so should we begin to die now while we are liuing that we might die well in the end so Paul 1. Cor. 15. 31. said that hee died daily not so much for that hee was daily in danger of death by reason of his calling but for that in all his dangers and troubles hee inured and exercised himselfe to die for when men do make the right vse of their afflictions and endeuour to beare them patiently humbling themselues as vnder the correction of God then they begin to die well and to doe this indeed is to take an excellent course He that would mortifie his greatest sinnes must begin to doe it with small sinnes which when they are once reformed a man shall be able more easily to ouercome his miseries so likewise he that would beare the crosse of all crosses namely death it selfe must first of all learne to beare small crosses as sickenesse troubles losses which may fitly be tearmed little deaths and the beginning of death it selfe and wee must first of all acquaint our selues with these little deaths before wee can be able to beare the greatest death of all Against the afflictions and calamities of this life are as it were the Harbingers and Purueyors of Death and we must first learn how to entertaine these messengers that when the Master shall come wee may in better manner welcome and cheere him 7. As many as bee able to doe any good seruice eyther for Gods glory or his Church or Common-wealth or to any priuate man or woman because his departure hence is vncertaine and the night of his day draweth on hee must hasten with all speed to doe it lest death preuent him and it be laid to his charge so that hee loose his reward for this point note Eccles. 9. 10. Iohn 9. 4. Galat. 6. 10. And hee that hath care to spend his daies in well-doing shall with much comfort peace of conscience end his life for he that labours for the good of others shall be beloued while he is here and lamented when he is gone but such as onely make worke for themselues as hogs at the trough both liue without being desired nor beloued and dying are neuer missed nor lamented Let vs then doe all to Gods glory and mens good and thus farre of our generall watch Next followes our particular vvatch for death as thus So soone as wee feele sickenesse seize vpon our bodies then is it high time to begin our particular watch and preparation for death where 1. Wee must consider whence our sickenesse commeth euen by the speciall prouidence of God and the cause of this affliction is our sinne as Lam. 3. 30. Mich. 7. 9. Math. 9. 2. Iohn 5. 14. Wherfore is the liuing man sorrowfull Man suffereth for his sinne and though there be no other causes of our death yet sickenesse comes ordinarily and vsually of sinne and therefore speedily must we make a new examination of our hearts and all our liues passed say with Israell Let vs search and try our wayes and turne againe vnto the Lord Lamen 3. 40. and so labour to bee reconciled vnto him in Christ though wee haue formerly beene long assured of his fauour 2. Wee must make a new confession vnto God of our new and particular sinnes not forgetting the old specially the sinnes of our youth and ignorance before our calling and thereto Thirdly make new prayers and more earnest then euer before with vnexpressed sighes and grones of the spirit and that for pardon of the same sinnes and for full reconciliation with God in Christ. In the exercise of these three duties stands the renouation of our faith and repentance whereby they are increased quickened and reuiued and the more sickenesse preuailes in the body the more should we be carefull to put them in vre that spiritual life might encrease as temporall life is decayed then are we to forgiue and desire to be forgiuen of all the world specially of our owne Minister 4. If our paines and sickenesse discourage vs wee are to set speedily our house in order and then send for our Parish Minister who if it may be must not be absent from vs while breath is in our bodie but to exhort perswade encourage answere our doubts pray with vs and for vs help vs in our feares and temptations and as a Bride for her Bridegroome make vs ready attyring vs in the wedding garment and robes royall for the marriage of the Sonne of God neyther must their godly neighbours be now absent but as they haue been formerly privy to our godly liues so if we accuse and condemne our selues they must testifie the truth of vs further then the Ministers knowledge extends and so comfort and set them as eye and care-witnesses of our former life in assured hope of vndoubted saluation 5. And because no godly meanes must be omitted to preserue life till God take it away the Physitians skill is not to be refused obseruing this order that where the Diuine ends there the Physitian must begin and not contrarily for let vs neuer look for health in body vntill wee haue a faithfull and sanctified soule desiring God to blesse the meanes he vseth for vs which we truely cannot doe vntill our Consciences perswade vs of the pardon of our sinnes 6. This done let vs set our soules in order and see how wee stand in the fauour of God and so shall wee die more voluntarily quietly and patiently and let vs labour that our sinnes die in vs before we die in the world and consider we what an excellent thing it is for vs to end our liues before our deaths and in such sort that at that houre wee haue nothing to doe but to die and that then we haue need of nothing no not of time nor of our selues c. but sweetly and comfortably to depart this life 7. This sanctified preparation will cause vs not onely ioyfu●ly and cheerefully to depart this life but withall in ful and hopeful assurance of a glorious resurrection First to commit our wiues and children and people vnto the protection of Almighty God to receiue them at his hand in his b●essed Kingdome againe Secondly then
of life hath a foule visage to fright boyes and fooles which causeth it to be feared and hated for want of wisedome and true iudgement but take off the maske and thou shalt see Death very amiable and life odious and terrible 10. Death is to be desired before life and the day of our decease before the day of our Natiuity I meane in respect onely of temporall good and euill prosperity aduersity else not for by our birth wee enter to sorrow and by death end it and goe vp to God wherefore in olde time Sepulchers were built in Gardens as Ioh. 19. 41. not only among our sports to put vs in mind of our ends and so to vse the same moderately but also to teach vs that ioy and pleasure is a consequence of death and an entry to Gods Paradise of pleasure and therefore let vs liue to God and Death shall not hurt vs. The fourth Vse serues for terror to the wicked who hearing of this early watch and preparation for death will none of it they bee not so foolish as to defraud themselues of the comforts and delights which God gaue them with the frightfull thoughts of gastly death this would bee able to fright a fearefull simple body out of his wits and to draw honest neighbours to desperation and what needs this pudder shall not wee be saued as our neighbours and vvhat doe wee desire more doth euery man so as you say or shall all that prepare not so as you prescribe be damned our fathers nor forefathers euer taught vs any such matters and we will not nor desire to bee better then they as for you ye be vncharitable men God forgiue you I answer here is a great deale of good stuffe pact together if wee had time to vndoe and consider it But in the meane while know ye that wee desire nothing of you more then the Lord exacteth of his dearest children and therfore not to be trodden vnder foote by you for we liue not by examples but by the Lawes of the Almighty whereunto all men ought in all humility bee obedient before father or life it selfe neyther is heere any thing pressed but what your selues know to be requisite and could wish ye did if you as many and most men doe and you must lay vpon your death-beds knowing feeling what they miserable men doe Yet if you refuse this diet as ouer tart take then your owne no man will blame me for giuing you good counsell and because I giue you ouer yet follow wise Salomons aduise and that the rather for that without compulsion you often of your owne accord vse it viz. Goe to the house of mourning for there is the end of all men and hee that is liuing taketh it to heart Eccles. 7. 2. where hee would haue all men bestow sometime daily to think what pressures and agonies shall assault vs at the houre of death and for the better consideration hereof hee would haue vs goe to the house of mourning and not of banqueting and there behould a man dying and that we should marke the heauy accidents and painfull passions of that houre and take it to heart for as it fareth to day with him so shall it tomorrow fare with thee and with all the world this thou canst learn without his or any further direction for comming to the house to visit thy neighbours there shalt thou see a very sick man forsaken now of naturall heat his senses without much mouing his face like lead the bowles of his eyes sunke in his head his mouth full of fleame and some his throat ratling his tongue swollen his necke winding euery side his breast beateth and panteth for life ready to burst for paine the veynes still all infallible tokens of death Now take this to heart and take the case to be thine own for this is the way of all the world and then now seeing and viewing such perplexed extremities in others reflect and represent the like image to bee shortly in thy selfe Imagine that thou lay vpon thy death-bed that thy Physitions had now giuen thee ouer thy friends and kinsfolke stood weeping wringing their hands about thy bed vnable to help or comfort thee but rather augment the greefe of thy departure and thou the while speechlesse and helpelesse O how dreadfull shall this departure and last farewell be to thee and to them where wealth shall not asswadge thy woe but plunge thee deeper in the gulph of calamity neither honours assist thee for thou must leaue them with like vehement smart as thou gottest them with greedy desire and badde conscience thy wonted delights breed within thy soule that neuer-dying worme and neuer-quenched fire what counsell wilt thou heere take who formerly hast refused all good connsell couldest not abide to heare of death no more canst now to goe out of thy body will bee too intollerable to abide within is vnpossible to deferre the time to end thy will but vntill to morrow will not bee granted death is in poast-haste now art thou abashed that thou diddest not watch and prepare for this houre Oh hadst thou wist but it is too late now thou cryest fye fye vpon thy brutish behauiour and now for feare horror wouldest flee from thy selfe for then shalt thou see thy selfe beset with horrible monsters that is with thine owne sinnes which as furies pursue and hedge thee in all the time past shall seeme vnto thee as the twinkling of an eye but the time to come endlesse pittilesse and remedilesse so that thou maist truly say The snares of Death compasse me round about and the pangs of hell got hold vpon mee and I shall finde trouble and heauinesse c. Psal. 116. 3. 4. But returne wee to our sicke man againe whom vnexpected Death frustrateth of all his counsels and could not come in a worse time for now hee curteth off violently the webs of all his deuises and with one pellet ouerthroweth all his castles built in the ayre then commeth in the Physitian with his It will not be thinke good sir no longer of life you must be gone These be heauy tidings then his sorrowes shall bee vnspeakeably encreased when he recounteth with himselfe that his body which now hath some life in it shall after an houre be depriued of sense life spirit soule for if it be an hard matter to bee pulled away from these things which no doubt so neerely toucheth man how bitter I pray you will be the separation of the body from the soule for such two louing familiar friends which haue alwaies liued sweetly together cannot be diuided without vnspeakable griefe if the Oxe doe commonly low and mourne when his yoke-fellow which was wont to draw with him is taken away how will euery one of vs mourne when the soule shall bee separated from the body and as Sathan in our life time set forth to him Gods mercy nothing but Mercy hiding his Iustice so vvill
day as a snare entrappeth them and therefore good were it for them not to sleep in sin nor feed on euery bait lest being circumvented by Satans snares they cannot flie to the heauens Psal. 124. 6. 3. It is called as an appellatiue proper that day Luk. 21. 34. that is a day of note known to babes children from their cradles to fright them from sinne at the name of which day Satan trembles infalix felix quaketh Balthasar sinketh the rich weepe and howle all workers of iniquity are quite confounded 4. It is named a great day Reuelat. 6. 17. and 16. 14. because the great God that day will doe great workes and determine of great matters of the life and death of men and Angels and great is it in that it includes in it the workes of all ages 5. A day it is of Anger Wrath Rom. 2. 5. Reu. 6. 17. for then all shall drinke the cup of Gods wrath that formerly haue prouoked his wrath against them for hee will poure vpon them his wrath in flouds of indignation and streames of anger Psalm 11. 7. and 50. 1. 2. 3. in such exceeding measure as no witte can conceiue 6. It is called the day of the Lord 1. Thes. 5. 2. and 2. Pet. 3. 10. 12. and the day of Christ 2. Thes. 2. 2. and the day of God 2. Pet. 3. 12. thereby insinuating that all other daies were the daies of men wherin they did what pleased them and this while the Lord was silent Psal. 50. 21. but this is Gods day wherein he will speake and thou shalt be silent so there be but two daies of all the world thy day and Gods day Now in this thy day thou as Lord of all dost what pleaseth thee to anger the Lord withall but in that day hee will breake silence of so many daies and yeeres of so many iniuries and indignities done to him and his and will answer for his honor and glory and then shew himselfe to bee God of Gods and Lord of Lords and as man in this his day did all things heere below out of order to Gods great dishonour so the Lord in that day will reduce them all to thir owne order to mans confusion and as it is greater sorrow paine and greefe to put an arme once out of ioynt in his right place againe then it was at first to put it out so shall the wicked finde this cure this day more sharper and bitterer then the putting of it out of ioynt was in their day and it is well for as wee see when Rebels and Traitors bee imprisoned the land is quiet and the Prince secure so when these rebels be cast into hell then is God vniuersally glorified and the Church secured and as there was a time when Christ wept Luke 10. 41. and thou didst laugh so in this day thou shalt weepe and howle and hee will laugh at thy destruction Prou. 1. 26. 7. It is called the day of the declaration of the iust iudgement of God according to the Gospell Rom. 2. 5. 16. signifying that howsoeuer now matters be out-faced and the verity of the. Gospell contradicted and that worldlings make no conscience of sacriledge violence and oppression and the impotent fatherlesse stranger widdow appeale being wronged vnto Christ the iust Iudge Psal. 26. 1. to be iudge betweene them their enemies that molest them and yet now this appellation is not regarded yet in this day God will declare who haue right who doth wrong and will bee reuenged vpon the workers of iniquity and highly reward the wronged for he is mercifull 8. It is called the day of refreshing Acts 3. 19. wee see how heere the godly are persecuted afflicted and of all men most miserable but in that day they shal be comforted and refreshed and haue all teares wiped from their eyes 9. It is called the day of redemption Luke 21. 28. Rom. 8. for then all the Elect shall be sure to receiue the effects and fruits of their former redemption purchased them by the death of Christ and therfore are the godly with ioyfull hearts to watch and wish his comming and the wicked in time to prepare their lamps And so farre of this first motiue and appellations of this day The second motiue to watchfulnesse for Ohrists comming is that the signes of his approaching are fulfilled by the iudgement of the learned these signes be of three sorts some long agoe fulfilled others more neere at hand some to bee fulfilled at his comming of the first sort are the preaching of the Gospell through the world Math. 24. 14. Rom. 10. 18. and 2. the reuealing of Antichrist 2. Thes. 2. 3. of the second are the departing of most from the faith Luke 18. 8. and 2. Thes. 3. 2. and secondly terrible and grieuous calamities Math. 24. 6. 16. thirdly deadnesse of heart with secure sleeping in sinne Math. 24. 37. and 25. 6. to 13. 31. Luke 17. 24. c. as in the dayes of Noah and Lot fourthly the calling of the Iewes Rom. 11. 25. fiftly many false Christs and false Prophets and seducers sixtly warres and persecutions of the last and third sort are the signes in the Sunne and Moone and starres Math. 24. 29. and the signe of the Sonne of man comming in the clouds of which signes further to consider I refer to euery godly mans priuate meditation and as he acknowledgeth them fulfilled so to prepare himselfe and where he doubteth of any of these first eight to conferre with the godly learned and not harden his heart but euer be thankfull to our good God who in mercy giueth vs these signes of his most gracious and glorious comming least wee should be taken vnprouided as when a mighty Monarche to represse the rebellion of his treacherous subiects intendeth a Parliament and sendeth forth his messengers with proclamations throughout the Empire to summon and admonish all estates vpon paine of death personally to appeare at the appointed day and place so the father of mercies by determinate and fore-told signes summoneth all the world against that appointed day to appeare before his glorious tribunall to render a strict account of their liues since the first creation to that day and to receiue their rewards accordingly good or euill and for their further instruction in the premises it pleaseth his Maiesty to sort his signes so as they may be liuely vocall preachers to direct them in the nature of the thing they signifie and that heereby men may prognosticate without a teacher not onely the nighnesse of this great Assises but also the greatnesse and dreadfulnesse thereof and so at no hand be taken sleepy or vnfurnished and so farre of the second motiue The third Motiue is the consideration of the vncertainty of that day Mat. 24. 36. Mark 13. 32. Luk. 12. 39. 46. and 1. Thes. 5. 2. Reuel 16. 15. all which quotations with one voyce and consent proclaime his certaine vncertain sudden
will reply that this requireth much businesse and it is a death to many a good fellow to leaue his folly and labour for piety and therefore we know when our Sauiour walked vpon earth he was so meeke and mercifull and is so still that hee would deny vs any thing that we requested of him and will hee not now likewise be intreated at the generall supplication of all poore people appointed to death yea almost of all the world to grant vs this one and neuer but this one petition that there shall neuer bee any day of iudgement then should we liue meerely sleepe carelesse from all feares and frights and die ioyfully and as for any estate after this life we should looke for none nor yet trouble him to prouide for vs while we be heere for we would shift euery man for himselfe and liue by our wits and me thinkes he should not deny all the world this one request so easie for him to grant and so tending to his honour and glory and beneficiall to vs for now would we serue him duly and offer euery man bountifully vnto him gifts and offerings yea and restore to ho●y Church for Gods seruice all the spoyles taken from it so all things considered hee should bee no looser for what losse to him to depriue a few of life eternall seeing he hath the fulnesse and perfection of all glory in himselfe and needs not our prayers nor praises better that a few busie fellows should euer loose heauen then that all reprobates being so many gentlemen and so tall proper and faire conditioned men should for euer boyle fry in hell-fire This supplication questionlesse would soone be granted and if all will not ioyn with me I know God respecteth neyther persons nor multitude I will my selfe request it I know he will not deny it me I answer This indeed would be a fine deuise to gather heapes of gold and ●●l●er for if any couetous Balaam or Iudas who sometimes were in high fauor with God were bid as once Salomon was 1. King 3. 5. to aske what hee would haue granted him or as Elisha did the Shunamite 2. King 4. 13. 14. Methinkes I see in my minde what concourse and suite would of all the world bee made vnto them not to desire wisedome nor children nor any temporal boone but that there should be no day of iudgement to as many as at a reasonable rate price would buy it at Iudas hand euery man according to their ability and as for kingdomes riches honour and glory hee should not bee to seeke for Herod would giue Master Iudas the halfe of his kingdome to liue securely with Herodias Balthasar would make him third Ruler in the kingdome cloath him with purple and put a chaine of gold about his necke to deliuer him from the hand-writing vpon the wall and Felix to deliuer him from this feare of that day would shew him no small friendship Esau to pleasure him would sell his birth-right Satan the God of the world would giue him all the kingdōes of the world and the glory of them to secure him from this day nay who would not make a purse for this collection and contribution yea crouch and kneele too to master Iudas to buy this immunity no pardon to this neuer was heauen so little regarded nor immortality at a lower price nor God himselfe as now when most men are content to forfeit heauen and depriue themselues of all the good things of God and withall to giue to the most accursed of men euen to the Deuill Iudas masses of gold and siluer which they would neuer do to the poore members of Christ to procure this cursed pardon and now Iudas fault is that he is not couetous enough oh that hee would for this pardon aske aboundantly gold pearles iewels and what not and hee should haue it vvith thankes though they themselues liued beggers euer after for now the couetous Iudge would poure out his bribes the deceitfull Counsellors his Angells the double-faced Atturney his double fees the Oppressors and Sacriledgers their ill gotten goods spoyls of Gods Church the crafts-men their cousening money the Physitions their spoyles of the sicke the Vsurers their bagges the inordinate liuers as hunters faulkners seruing-men and banquerupts their idle and false prophane theeueries yet the poore harlot wil sell to her very petticoat to get money for Christs poore Apostle yea all theeues robbers murtherers and adulterers all rogues vagabonds and who not will now spare no labour nor cost by hooke or crooke to satisfie master Iudas his greedy gutte that he shall neuer neede heereafter to sell his Master for money To conclude what vngratious hypocrite miserable corne-hoorder inordinate pestilent liuer out of a calling egregious malefactor theeu●sh cut-purse subtle conycatcher filthy and beastly liuer swaggerer swearer drunkard and idler whosoeuer yea the very A theists howsoeuer otherwise they contemne all yet would sell all for this freedome for then would they open the very gates of hell to entertaine Satan himselfe and all his children not regarding what mischiefe they did being now exempted from iudgement and hell-sire neyther is this my deuised fiction to sport recreate your mindes as it is a lamentable truth to be mourned sorrowed of all Gods elect for goe through the whole world enquire of this point wishing euery man as in the sight of God to declare his Conscience and if they doubt not you shall finde that not onely malefactors but infinite swarmes of Professors are of this minde if wishing would preuaile them that there should bee no day of iudgement for howsoeuer in their troubles they desire to be dissolued and be with Christ yet as weomen great with childe desire they were deliuered but vvhen their houre commeth they cry out and wish it were further off So when the time of their dissolution approacheth they abhorre death and iudgement which noteth they haue not yet learned to die nor prepared for iudgement but with that hypocrite in Micha 6. 6. Would bow and bribe the Lord with burnt offerings and calues of a yeere old with thousand of Rammes and ten thousand riuers of Oyle and giue his first-borne for his transgression and the fruit of his body for the sin of his soule which plainely conuinceth that there is no faith vpon the earth Luke 18. 8. This is the case of all men almost that they would giue any thing that there should bee no day of iudgement and that because their consciences tell them that the day of iudgement is their very day of execution and therefore to escape this day regard not though they depriue all Gods Elect from heauen yea God himselfe from his honor and glory Christ Iesus from his body mysticall the Church and themselues be transformed to beasts in body and soule dying together And this is a notable touch-stone to try mans present state God-ward If with Simeon Paul
Iohn he mourne for death and cry Lord I●su come quickly he would not contribute one penny to this pardon if otherwise it is high time to awake from this sleepe A godly Matron desireth the returne of her husband and reioyceth to heare hee is at hand but a strumpet is contrarily affected and so it is in this case betweene the Elect and Reprobate But whosoeuer thou art to answere this impious request thy money perish with thee no money will alter the decreed counsell of the God of Heauen for his Elect the Iudge of all the world will not be bowed at any mans petition to deal vnrighteously no though Noah Iob Moses and Daniel entreated him Ez● 14. 14. to 20. for God is not as man that he should speake and not doe he abhorres thy money-marting and will not fell thee for mony that which was neuer bought for mony Psal. 49. 7. and if there should be no day of iudgement Gods Elect would wish they had neuer been born for this day makes them full amends for the manifold vexations and indignities of this life and deliuering them from this body of sinne clotheth them with Christs righteousnesse as with a wedding-garment and ioyneth them to him as the body to the head or wife to the husband eternally Let this bee then the conclusion forall Wee must all appeare before Gods iudgement seat and giue account to the King of Kings of all our workes and as many as haue tasted the forbidden fruit must if repentance preuent not dye the death But yet because thou shalt not depart comfortlesse from me I will shew thee a ready easie way to procure the Lords fauour that there shall bee no day of iudgement for thee that is that thou be not damned with the wicked neuer runne to Balaam nor Iudas for they are out of fauour now with the Iudge and cannot helpe themselues nor yet to any Angell nor Saint for they haue oyle little enough for themselues and when they haue done all they are vnprofitable seruants but doe thou following the Iudges aduise in Luke 14. 31. distrusting thy weakenesse and disability before-hand appease his wrath with these holy subtilties First let vs thou and I examine our soules thorowly and suruay our whole liues then speedily from our harts confesse and repent vs of our former vnreformed liues and vpon the knees of our hearts with the Publican cry mightily for pardon and peace at the Iudges feet and he is mercifull and ready to forgiue and iudging our selues we shall not be iudged of the Lord. Secondly then by a sted fast faith let vs apprehend Christs merits and vvee shall not miscarry for hee neuer failed any true beleeuer Thirdly let vs reforme our liues and walke before him in new obedience without halting or looking backe and shew our faith by our workes and the money which we vvould so prodigally bestow vpon Iudas for this supposed pardon let vs bestow it totally vpon Christ himselfe in his poore members and hee will reward it in the day of iudgement with eternall life Math. 25. 34. 35. 36. Fourthly Watch in Prayer and continue in well doing for Christs comming to iudgement and whereas thou fearest and abhorrest the day of Death and Iudgement acquaint thy selfe with God and with it daily by degrees and holy meditation and as a man that carrieth an ouer-heauy burden doth lighten it by pulling out the stickes one by one so endeuour thou daily to lessen and pull out thy sinnes and then thou shalt not need to feare that day if so be also as thou forsakest thy sinnes thou haue a care to grow in grace and fauour with the Iudge and as Fencers which are to play the Prizes of Triall doe daily try their strength and exercise their weapons bending their whole mindes how they may best foyle their enemie that when the day commeth they may haue honour and triumph so ought we to doe for whom a greater reward without comparison is layed vp if vvee will die well and appeare vpright in iudgement but if otherwise it come to passe wee shall bee punished with vnspeakeable shame and reproach and this our meditation of iudgement shall be handled in no other order then the same our death and departure bringeth with it For as they which are to runne a race doe oftentimes leade their horses vp and downe the running place that they may see and be the better acquainted with the stones and vn-euen places and other impediments in the same that when the day commeth they may finish the race without stay or stoppe so vvee which must measure the pace and race of Death and Iudgement whether vvee will or no shall doe very well if now in our minde meditation wee frame this race and diligently consider all things which are in the same specially seeing the way is obscure and perillous and many for want of this consideration miscarry This doe now and thou needest not then feare to appeare in iudgement The Vse serues for comfort to the Elect that albeit the reprobates arise and against their wills as beares to a stake or fellons to the barre are haled to iudgement for greater increase of their sorrowes yet this shall be an exceeding ioy to the faithfull that they are sent for to appeare before their heauenly Father who is to be their Iudge wh● would feare to come to iudgement that vvere assured his Father should be his iudge yet Christ loued vs aboue any Father and spilt his bloud for vs and how then can hee condemne vs then this ioyfull appearance is to vs the fruit and crowne of our watchfull godly life and holy death and therefore the day of our reredemption being come we shall enter to the inheritance purchased vs by the bloud of Christ and bee freed from all feares and dangers He that stands vpon a sure rocke may laugh when others weepe and drowne and he that is built vpon Christ the Rocke is safe when others sustaine shipwracke and howsoeuer the reprobates find it a terrible day to vs it shall be right heartily welcome as a day long wished and expected for and shall be so farre from all trembling that it shall fare with vs as with a Kings sonne taken prisoner by the Turke and put vp in hould in close Prison which his father hearing of comes hastily with an exceeding Army Royal layeth siege against the Castle and with his Ordinance 〈…〉 tereth the Walls which causeth the ●●emies within to tremble and quake but the Kings sonne much reioyceth for now hee shall be set at liberty and returne to his country with much ioy and triumph and so shall it be with vs if we approoue Christs true hearted subiects and children we need not feare but much reioyce at this summons else woe vnto vs So then you see that to Gods chosen this shall bee a most ioyfull day 1. In respect of Gods singular mercy
towards them aboue all other people 2. In regard of the holy Angels awaking and comforting them in the Lord. 3. In respect of their owne persons for now soule and body shall be combined which formerly by death were parted and shall now and for euer as the Sun shine in the fulnesse of glory 4. Now shall they enioy the company of all Gods Saints the Patriarkes Prophets Apostles and all Gods elect know them and they vs and their enemies also and be thankefull to such as did them good and this is so certaine that it can not be denied For first wee shall see God and know him as wee are knowne 1. Corin. 13. 12. though not absolutely wherof the Angels are vncapable he being incomprehensible but as a man standing vpon the shore of the Sea seeth the Sea perfectly yet seeth not the depth nor bredth ofit so the Elect shall see God yet not comprehend the depth of his greatnes nor bredth of his power nor height of his Essence Maiesty and glory Then we shall see and know one another the King his subiects the Pastor his people the Parents their children the Husband his Wife the Master his seruants and they them and if they bee good be thankefull to God for them if bad thanke God for pardoning their sinnes if they be saued if damned iustifying and praysing God for executing his iust iudgement vpon them This is confirmed out of the word of God Zach. 12. 10 Iohn 19. 37. They shall see him whom they haue pierced Math. 7. 22. and 25. 37. 44. Luke 13. 28. and 16. 23. Wisd. 5. 1. c then our knowledge shall be perfect 2. the soule by departing from the body looseth nothing of his former knowledge but rather his knowledge is cleerer and more perfect else how could they remember that they heard Christ ate and dranke in his company wrought miracles in his name reason with him when saw they him hungry c Math 7. 12. and 25. 44. This is so plaine in Nature that the very heathen thought this to bee a great benefit that men specially vvise men had by death that their knowledge should be perfected in the other world and that none could possibly attaine to perfect wisedome knowledge till he came thither and as for that Pythagoricall fancie that men by washing in the Riuer Lethe forg●t all they formerly did It is a plaine fiction more to be derided then confuted and Plato in his Apology of Socrates relateth how Socrates being condemned by the Iudges reioyced that if the soules were immortall then should hee see the famous men that liued before him And Tully in his first booke of Tusculus questions brings this as an argument not to feare but desire death and Tertullian lib. ad Martyr saith That the Martyrs shall iudge their Iudges which they could not if they knew them not 5. Christ our Sauiour will know vs and call vs to himselfe Come ye blessed of my Father c. and they shall see their desire vpon their enemies according to their prayer in Reuelat. 6. 10. Now considering the premises what childe of God would desire there should be no day of iudgement or would seeke a place to hide himselfe or giue a penny to buy a pardon to exempt him from appearing and for euer lose God heauen all the company of heauen and communion of Saints not wish this day and giue all vvorldly treasures that this day might be hastened and vncessantly cry and pray Come Lord Iesu come quickly for now such as sowed in teares shall reape in ioy and haue all teares wiped from their eyes and liue in perpetuall ioy and their reioycings shall no man take from them nor euer end Secondly knowing these things before hand this should be a faire warning for good and badde to acquaint themselues now with the Iudge and labour for grace that being well prepared and their Talents wel imployed they might be sure of the Iudges acceptance and the fauor and comfort of all his Saints And so farre of the fifth Motiue The sixt Motiue to Watchfulnesse is the consideration of Christs comming to iudgement who now vvill not come poore contemptible and in the forme of a seruant as in the time of his first visitation but in most glorious triumphant power might and maiesty and as a Lion most victorious of the Tribe of Iuda to take vengeance of his enemies and highly to reward his loyall Subiects So we read in Math. 25. 31. When the Sonne of Man shall come in his glory all the holy Angells with him then shall hee sit vpon the throne of his glory c The day was when he poore man meek as a Lambe stood before the iudgement seat of Pontius Pilate proudly vaunting that hee had power to crucifie or loose him Ioh. 19. 10. but in this day Pilate and all Potentates must stand and stoope before his foote-stoole to be iudged and shall know that hee onely hath all power in his hand to saue and condemne The vse we are to make heereof is to giue the Lord now all honour and glory and to kisse the Sunne least h● be angry Then secondly we are to obserue the mystery of this that is said in Math. 24. 30. Hee shall come in the clouds of ●eauen with power and great glory which is to humble and to teach vs that if wee will hereafter ioyfully behold him comming in the clouds we must thankefully and gladly receiue and intertaine him now comming vnto vs in the clouds of his holy Preachers who instill the gracious deaw of his Gospell into our soules Then thirdly consider further in what blessed estate his Angels stand in vvho shal accompany the Lord to iudgement and most ioyfully and securely behould his glory and now together with all the Saints of God receiue the fulnesse of all felicity all enemies troden vnder feet and if thou couldst wish then thy selfe to be one of his number and not of Satans damned rabblement then now labour for holinesse and true righteousnesse that thou mayest then bee numbred amongst the Sonnes of God then contrarily marke in what a miserable taking shall these accursed wretches be in that they scorned were ashamed of and crucified our Sauiour to death reuiled and persecuted his word and ministers flouted them and their appeales against the sentences cruelty and vniustly denounced against them which now shall be fauourably heard and they seuerally plagued so that to their cost anon they shall know how the Lord will take part with the Lambes against those sauage Lyons let them then become now such as then faine they would bee found and reputed And thus farre of the sixt motiue The seuenth Motiue concerneth the place where the Iudgement shall bee which is euidently expressed but guessed diuersly of diuers men when our Sauiour was demanded this question in Luke 17. 37. Math. 24. 48. hee answered prouerbially yet doubtfully thus
for husbands and parents impiety separated from God and stand in the same transgression If to thy Minister he it is whom thou hast euer hated robbed persecuted and which is another vexation hee shall anon sit in iudgement vpon thee If to the Saints they haue not oyle enough for themselues If to thine own good workes they as smoake vanish being all done in hypocrisie and for vaine-glory and from an vnregenerate heart If to thy former life behold a blacke cloud of trecherous inditements against thee If to Satan thy suggester he now stands in the like condemnation If to the Angells they are the haruest-men sent to gather the tares and to cast them into the fiery furnace If to the Iudge himselfe he calls thee to surrender thy talents and stewardship If to carnall shifts and helpes the Iudge will not be corrupted with bribes nor mooued with flattery nor deluded any longer with promises nor terrified with threats nor touched with pitty thy threats will not bee respected wringing of hands pulling of hayre tearing of thy flesh weeping howling and endlesse lamenting will not be regarded praiers be but babling vowes past date no truce no sureties no appeale no repriuing no delay no repentance a wicked life calleth for iustice sin for death contempt of God for finall damnation turne thee what way thou wilt there is no cōfort euery creature proclaims that the mighty must be mightily tormented and woe is to the wicked for now it shall goe euill vvith him for the reward of his hands shall bee giuen him What shalt thou doe looke vp to heauen it is shut against thee to the Iudge hee commeth to denounce the sentence vnder thy feete hell gapeth for thee within thee is a condemning conscience without thee the bookes opened about thee the reprobates mourning to goe forward is vnpossible to goe backward is not permitted to stand still thou canst not to runne away is bootlesse no remedy but miserably to sustaine and vndergoe all torments and extremities of this fearefull day and place vnlesse now thou repent ioyne with Gods Church forsake thy former wickednesse and that thou maist die the death of the iust liue the life of the godly and if thou vvilt haue a wished place in iudgement and after in heauen with Gods Elect get thee a place heere vpon earth with Gods Church bee not now separated from them in the exercises of religion and holy communion of Saints and thou shalt not be diuided from them in the enioyments of the fruits thereof both in death iudgement and glory eternall in heauen for looke what place and profession thou choosest heere now among the godly or wicked and the like place shalt thou find with the like company in iudgement and euer after Behold I set before thee life and death good and euill c. as in Deut. 30. 15. to the end And thus farre of the second Motiue The eight Motiue to watchfulnesse is the consideration of the glorious comming of the Son of God to iudgement immediately after the whole world is assembled to the appointed place but so that first two euident signes shall goe before the one immediately before his comming or as I may say at his setting forth which is this 1. There shall be signes in the Sun c. as in Luk. 21. 25. The Sea and the Waters shall rore and mens hearts shall faile in them for feare for the powers of Heauen shall be shaken Luke 21. 25. 26. As for the signes in the Sunne Moone and Starres Math. 24. 29. saith they shall be darkened that is to say as the learned expound it Christs comming vnto iudgement shall be with such resplendant and vnspeakeable glory that euen the most excellent creatures shall bee thereat astonied so that the Sunne and Moone shall bee darkened and the starres as if they fell from heauen giue no light that is these most glorious and bright-shining creatures shall be clouded obscured and damped by the vnconceiuable brightnesse of Christs comming to iudgement whereat the wicked shall despaire for feare as Reuel 6. 12. to the end which place is an euident fore-running figure hereof as that also in Exod. 19. 16. to 20. Then the sea and waters shall for feare roare least now they shall bee turned to nothing such as dwell by the Sea side obserue that against tempestuous weather the Sea roareth but this being a most fearefull day in respect of Gods inquisition for sinne and sinners and all other accessaries therevnto and no storme to the tempest of Gods wrath they not onely roare but as it were set out their feare with all the strength and power they can that so the Lord might respect and preserue the miserable sencelesse creatures abused by mans sinfulnesse and the powers of heauen shall be shaken as threatning a downefall by reason of mans sinne and the Lords indignation and punishing of all sinners As when the Father of a family punisheth and whippeth in his anger any one of the seruants all the house as the very children and seruants will feare and so is it heere when the Lord in his vvrath commeth to punish all workers of iniquity the Angells the Heauens and Saints of God all subiect and guilty of their infirmities compared vvith Gods holinesse and perfection cannot but tremble and quake as we read the Prophets did in all their visions much more in this So likewise when the Master of a great family dieth the whole house is troubled the wife taketh on the children weep the seruants lament the retainers mourne the house is turned vpside-downe hospitality giuen ouer and all come to ruine and desolation so heere when man the center and glory of this world draweth to his end and triall and is like to bee vtterly confounded in hell fire Oh Lord What shall become or to vvhat vse serues this world the heauens the earth the sea and all the powers thereof but vvith man to be turned to nothing or set vpon a light fire to bee consumed to dust and ashes if the Lord in mercy do not otherwise determine and dispose of them and is it any maruell that they tremble quake and roare for feare and how much-more should man the cause hereof seeing and knowing all these things tremble weepe and howle for his sinnes now while time serueth and he may be heard but in these great water-flouds of misery they shall not come nigh him nor be heard Wee see that onely an earth-quake if it bee any thing vehement is exceeding fearefull the least extraordinary inundation of waters very terrible but now when the vvhole massie globe of this world shal thus totter and shake the mightiest seas and waters rore and rage for feare and the glorious heauens become darke and dusky how shall the hearts of men be appalled with dread and terror to behold the same and the cause thereof wise men preuent dangerous diseases lest they take away their colour and kill them
the faithfull or deceifulness of sinne the warnings of the zealous Ministers or the damnable wiles of Sathan But now what remedy it is too late to be wise there was a time vvhen they might escape hell but now shall be no time for euermore Yet to vs that as yet liue there is remedy enough if vve will accept of the acceptable time these frights and feares shall not touch vs. 1. If first we will euery man betimes watch and wake to God and seriously with mature sad deliberation consider in what a dolefull case mans sinfull soule shall that day stand and what paines endlesse pittilesse and remedilesse are ordained for all prouokers of Gods wrath and vengeance and therefore now let vs preuent his iudgements embrace his mercies be thankefull for this timely warnings and not delay amendment of life 2. Consider how hartily thou wouldest wish then that in this world thou hadst reformed and framed the whole course of thy life according to Gods reuealed will in all points and doe so now speedily and no longer heape to thy selfe wrath against the day of wrath but yeeld vnto the Lord the honour due vnto his name Rom. 2. 4. and 2. Cor. 7. 1. else thou shalt wish in vaine that thou hadst abated thy haughty stomacke and humbled thy selfe vnder the mighty hand of God obeyed his Ministers watched for this day but all too late 3. Looke what paine and penance thou wouldst then gladly vndergoe to obtaine saluation if in that dreadfull day it should bee granted thee and doe it now voluntarily assay labour and liue so now in such sort as thou wouldest wish then thou hadst liued in that thou need not heereafter take vp the fooles prouerbe I neuer thought of it else be sure the Iudge will ouer-turne all thy stuffe more throughly then Laban did Iacobs search all the corners of Ierusalem as with a cādle thou shalt be vnable to hide the least thought from him much lesse the originall as actual impieties abhominations of thy sinful life 4 Cōsider that as his promises be most free to all that in due time will accept therof so in that daywil he in iustice most seuerely punish the contemners therof 5. Marke here with me the superexcellent purity and diuine sincerity of Christian religion and the vpright integrity it requireth in euery man and with what exquisite precisenesse it exacteth the same purity in daily practise and therefore see that against the day of death and of iudgement thy croppe be answerable to thy seede sowne Galat. 6. 7. 8. Ier. 12. 13. and therefore setting now and for euer aside all prophanenesse and vnion or communion with the wicked and all wickednesse addresse thy selfe if thou wilt then escape this punishment to lead a pure sincere vpright life according to the contents of the fifteenth Psalme and to the purity and sole sincerity of the religion thou professest for thou now seest that the vngodly shall not stand in iudgement nor the sinners in the assembly of the righteous Psal. 1. 5. therefore approue now thy selfe a wise man striue for this heauenly prize and looke not backe to Sodom with Lots wife when thou mayest escape hell fire the difference betweene a wise man and a foole is a wise man wil foresee a mischiefe ere it come and auoid it but a foole will doe neyther Heere first wee may see what shall bee done vnto the men whom the King of Kings will honour they shall be preferred farre aboue the honour King Assuerus bestowed vpon Mordecai Ester 6. 9. and 8. 15. and 9. 4. for as in great Assises Noble men and men of worth are for honour sake made to sit on the bench with the chiefe Iudge so the Elect as standing below in a place too low for them are now called to sit vpon the seat of iudgement with the chiefe Iudge to iudge the wicked as Luke 22. 30. which passeth all the glory of this world by infinite degrees and yet such honour haue all his Saints and after thence goe to greater euen to life eternall the excellency whereof the wit of man in this life is vncapable and therefore as I haue no tongue to describe it no more haue ye eares to heare it onely let vs beleeue it and neuer cease to pray for it vntill wee come and enioy it and in the meane while seeing the Scriptures as of purpose be sparing in describing these celestiall ioyes I will not be copious in relating them but contain my selfe within my measure and labour to bee wise with sobriety which the Lord grant me to doe The second vse we are to make heereof is this that seeing the ioyes of the Elect and the glory of the Kingdom prepared for them is vnspeakeable glorious and blissefull It stands all men and women vpon to long for it and by all meanes whatsoeuer it cost them to labour to obtaine it and no longer to fixe their hearts vpon this life and world so decoitfull and transitory and if Cleombrotus an Heathen man reading but a booke of Plato concerning the immortality of the soule and the felicity thereof was so rauished with the desire of that estate that to enioy it speedily hee cast himselfe headlong into the Sea and yet Plato beeing a Pagan writ of that subiect but plain naturally blindly vncertainly but we haue a sure Word are taught heereof in Christs owne Schoole not blindely but plainely diuinely and most truly and that not by Plato but by the Iudge himselfe who will not deceiue nor be deceiued and yet are for all that still lumpish at the report hereof and as it were dead our hearts as is to be feared testifying vnto vs that we haue no part in that heauenly Country specially because wee be so desirous and eagre of this life as if soule and body liued and died together without hope of resurrection or eternall life else surely we would as that Marchant and Ieweller in the Gospell sell all to procure it not as Esau resigne our birth-right and all title to Heauen for a messe of redde broath or for a trifling pleasure or profit lose an inestimable good and what are the best things in this world but vanity and vexation of spirit and God forbid that we for such should lose an vnvaluable prize a wise Pilgrime will forbeare all delights that hinder his returne home and reserue all pleasure vntill he come to his owne country and so should wee poore pilgrimes in this strange country cast vp our eyes to heauen our country and iourneyes wished end and be much greeued when by the least meanes wee are out of our way thither and be sure euer to vse the things of this life as a Pilgrime doth his staffe who makes much of it while it furthers him in his way but if it trouble him he flings it away and questionlesse whosoeuer desireth earnestly and perswades himselfe of saluation will little
hast so closely couered vvithin the secret and darke corners of thy heart and habitation which thou deemest should neuer come to light are now before God and all the world detected so that both God and Man Angells and Saints thy Conscience and all creatures shall ho wt thee abhorre and in disdainfull and scornefull manner pointing at thee say Behold the man his works How shalt thou then at this clamor no more then a theefe or a traitor hold vp thy head shew thy face be able to stand in iudgement or hope for release or any fauour from thy persecuted Iudge or his Ministers thy ancient enemies when as thou diddest to Gods people they hate loath abhorre and spit at thee and all thine abhominations yea laugh at thy destruction saying Depart from vs thou cursed into euerlasting fire Be wise then in time watch and pray repent and lead a new life and thou shalt escape all these out-cryes and be numbred among the sonnes of God The second point to bee obserued in the manner of Christs proceeding in iudgement is when the workes be thus manifested they must further bee conuinced to be euill or good and so to deserue hell or by Christs mercy heauen and that triall must be done after this manner First such as liue out of the Church and neuer heard of Christ neither was his word preached among them they must be iudged by the Law of Nature Rom. 2. 12. 14. 15. and the couenant of workes and testimony of their conscience together with the booke of Gods workes Rom. 1. 18. to 26. and secondly such as liue in the Church by the Law of Nature and the Law written and the Gospell as also by the booke of their Conscience and the booke of Gods works Iohn 5. 45. and 12 48. for the sentence of the Iudge shall be nothing else but a manifestation declaratory and ratified execution of the sentence formerly pronounced by the Preachers out of the Word and lightened by nature The Vse is for admonition to the ignorant to submit themselues to the meanes ordained for their saluation and neuer to forget that Christ will come with his mighty Angells in flaming fire rendring vengeance vnto them that doe not know God and which obay not the Gospell of our Lord Iesus Christ 2. Thes. 1. 8. and therfore not with the wicked to degenerate from men to goates and beastlinesse Isa. 13. 21. but rather of men to labor by vsing all godly meanes of men to become sheepe and the Saints of God by regeneration Isa. 11. 6. c. and beware wee to sell for gold or siluer that which was not redeemed with gold nor siluer but it cost more to redeeme their soules Psal. 49. 7. so that the whole world cannot ransome mans soule Math. 16. 26. and therfore more then madde are they that will forfeit so precious a iewell to Satan damnation for the loue of any trifling pleasure or profit whatsoeuer And so farre of the eleuenth Motiue The twelfth Motiue to Watchfulnes is the vpright denouncing of Christs definitiue sentence vpon all the world which is indeed the very doome iudgement it selfe All that hitherto hath been spoken is but preparation to this period and this Iudgement is necessary to bee known of vs because it maketh much for the well ordering of our liues and preparing for the same in serious watchfulnesse and prayer for if it be better to goe to the house of mourning then to the house of feasting because this is the end of all men and the liuing shall lay it to his heart and againe the heart of the wise is in the house of mourning but the heart of fools is in the house of mirth Eccles. 7. 4. 6. whatsoeuer thou doest remember the end and tho● shalt neuer do amisse Ecclus. 7. 36. Then verily the consideration of Gods mighty and terrible iudgement should much more moue our hearts to due preparation for this day which is more fearefull by infinite degrees then death and whereas men now liue without regard of God and godlinesse as if there were neyther God heauen death hell nor iudgment but mans end as the end of a beast and therefore care not what mischiefe they doe so they may escape the Magistrates sword and as for the day of iudgement they scoffe at it as 2. Pet. 3. 3. 4. Iude 18. Ezech. 12. 22. out yet in this day the truth of the Ministers predictions and threats will appeare true according to Acts 17. 31. and then shall they see feele to their cost that which formerly they would not beleeue though it was told them and was an article of the faith Now this sentence is twofold according to the two diuers sorts of people who are to be this day iudged that is of the Elect vpon the right hand Reprobate vpon the left but first hee will deale with the Elect for in this case it shall fare with the world as if an earthly King should sit in iudgement to arraigne a number attainted of high treason yet so that before he commeth to sit in iudgement he knoweth by their former priuate examinations confessions and euidences who be guilty who not so that vvhen the prisoners be presented before him hee forth-with causeth the guiltlesse Earles and Lords to be vnbolted arraied in cleane apparell and stand apart or come vp vnto him and sit vpon the bench and then declaring before all the assembly their innocency wrongs acquitteth them with all fauour and honour and as his truest and trustiest subiects causeth them as ioyned in commission with him to iudge and testifie what they can informe against those ranke traitors so heare when the Lord sitteth vpon the throne of his glory and separateth the sheepe from the goates he foreknowing by their former liues ledde vpon earth the innocency of the Eiect will in the sight of all the world iustifie absolue and acquit them from all guilt and punishment saying vnto them first ofal Come ye blessed of my Father inherit ye the kingdome prepared for you from the foundations of the world c. Math. 25. 34. and withall declareth vnto them the reason of this high prerogatiue preferment for I was an hungred and ye gaue me meat c. vers 35. 36. against which reason when they good men answere ac-acknowledging in al humility that they remembred not any good they miserable sinners did to him but all came of his mercy and merits he replieth that what they did to the meanest of his poore brethren they did it to him and therefore meet it was that hee in royall bountifulnesse should remember acknowledge and highly reward them answerable to the loue he bare to his distressed and afflicted brethren whom he loued better then himselfe so rewards them now as himselfe receiuing them to his owne inheritance and glory But first causeth them to sit vpon thrones to iudge the wicked with