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A44681 A funeral sermon on the decease of that worthy gentlewoman Mrs. Margaret Baxter, who died the 28th of June, 1681 by John Howe. Howe, John, 1630-1705. 1681 (1681) Wing H3030; ESTC R26809 27,363 48

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upon the account or pretence of Religion whose only design it is to save Souls And how many to save their Bodies destroy even their own Souls Not having learn'd that instruction of our Saviour's not to fear them that can only kill the Body or being unable to suffer some lesser bodily Inconveniences apostatize and abandon their Religion whereby that and their Souls too become Sacrifices to the safety and accommodation of an idoliz'd lump of Clay And how certainly if a seasonable Repentance do not intervene do they who only thus tempt the Souls of other Men destroy their own Nor can it be doubted at this time of day and after the experience of so many Ages wherein Christianity hath been so visibly and grosly carnaliz'd but that it is a Religion perverted to the support of the bodily and animal Interest that hath thus embroiled the Christian World How plain is it that they who desire to make a fair shew in the Flesh to strut in pomp to glitter in secular grandieur and splendor to live in unrebuked sensual ease and fulness are the Men that would constrain others to their carnal Observances Men that serve not our Lord Jesus Christ but their own Bellies Who can think it is pure love to Souls and zeal for the true ends of the holy peaceable Religion of our blessed Jesus that makes them so vexatious and troublesome to all whom their fleshly Arm can reach and ruin and whom their Spirit and way cannot allure and win Who that understands Religion and the true design of it and the blessed end wherein it will shortly terminate would not be glad to be rescued out of this large diffusive unquiet Empire of the Body that extends it self over all things mingling its odious impurities even with what is most Sacred Who would not long to be from under this Reign of the Beast if he might have a fair way of escape And where Religion is not in the case what multitudes of terrene Creatures earthly-minded Men are stupidly going down to Perdition daily and destroying their Souls by meer neglect while they are driving designs for the Body Which yet in the mean time is at the best but a Prison to the best of Souls O how could they love God! admire and praise him were they once out of this Body But it is not enough to a Subject wherein Love is implanted and is a part of its Nature to have only the prospect of what is unlovely or be told only what is not to be loved There must be somewhat to invite and draw as well as to depel and drive off Therefore 2 ly Consider also on the other part The Lord and that Life you are to transact and live with him Little can now be said You are not ignorant where much is and your own thoughts may upon much conversing with the Holy Oracles suggest yet more And you have need to use your Thoughts here the more largely where your sense doth not instruct you as on the other part it doth Consider the Descriptions which you are copiously furnish'd with both of him and of the state in which you are to be present with him Recount his glorious Excellencies his immense and all-sufficient Fulness his Wisdom Power Holiness and Love in absolute perfection Consider his high equal comely amiable Regency over the blessed Community above that spiritual incorporeal People the pleased joyful Inhabitants of the Celestial Regions And that he rules over them and communicates himself universally to them in a state of perfect Light Purity Peace Love and Pleasure that is also immutable and never to know end There is nothing capable of attracting an intellectual Nature which is not here But on both parts suffer your selves to be directed also 1. Take heed of over-indulging the Body keep it in subjection use it and serve it not Primitive Nature and the Creator's wise and holy Pleasure ordained it to serve Lose not your selves in it take heed you be not buried where you should but dwell and that you make not your Mansion your Grave Mansion do I say call it as this Apostle doth and another 2 Pet. 1. your Tabernacle only a Tent pitched for you but for a little while Every day look upon it and without fond pity as destin'd to rottenness and corruption And as that which when it ceases to be your cloathing must be Worms meat Labour to make the Thoughts easie and familiar to your selves of leaving it think it not an uncouth thing How doth that part of the Creation that is inferior to you abound with like Instances Of Fruits springing up out of this Earth and growing to ripeness and maturity with Husks Shells or other Integuments which then fall off such as never ripen they and their enfoldings rot together Esteem it your perfection when your Shell will fall off easily and cleaves not so close as to put you to pain when it is to be severed from you Endeavour the Holy and Heavenly Nature may grow more and more mature in you so Death will be the more also an unregretted thing to your Thoughts By all means labour to overcome the fear of it which that you might our Lord also took a Body Forasmuch as the Children are partakers of Flesh and Blood he also himself likewise took part of the same that through Death he might destroy him that had the power of Death that is the Devil And deliver them who through fear of Death were all their life-time subject to bondage Heb. 2.14 15. Reckon not much of that fear which is only the meer regret of sensitive Nature purely involuntary And that can no more obey the empire of the Mind or be regulated by it than you can make strait a crooked Leg by a meer act of your Will or make your Body not feel pain A fear from which the perfection of our Nature in our blessed Lord himself was not exempt But it is one thing to extinguish even that Fear another to overcome it The former is impossible to you the latter necessary It is overcome when a superior Principle governs you and your Resolutions and Course as it did our Lord. He did not because of it spare himself and decline dying You may feel perhaps somewhat of such a fear a secret shrug when you are to be let Blood or have a Wound search'd It governs not in such a less important Case when being convinc'd it is requisite you omit not the thing notwithstanding Labour herein to be hardy and merciless to this Flesh upon the fore-thoughts of the time when God will allow you to step forth and go out of the Body and say to it with an obdur'd mind For all thy craving and shrinking thou shalt be thrown off Labour it may not only not be the matter of your prevailing Fear but be the matter of your Hope Look towards the approaching Season with pleasant chearful expectation Aspire as it belongs to you to do who have received
the first Fruits of the Spirit that blessed Spirit of Adoption and groan for the Adoption the season of your being more solemnly own'd for Sons viz. the redemption of the Body Rom. 8.23 Which though it ultimately refer to the Resurrection may be allowed to have an incompleat meaning in reference to Death too For I see not but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may admit such a construction as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 9.15 i. e. that redemption of the Body may mean redemption from it wherein it is burthensome a grievance and penalty here as well as there The redemption of Transgressions doth truly mean liberation from the penalty of them From which penal Evil of and by the Body so materially at least it is we are not perfectly freed as our blessedness is not perfect till Mortality be swallowed up of Life and all the adopted the many Sons be all brought to glory together How happy in the mean time is your case when Death becomes the matter of your rational well-grounded hope You have many Hopes wherein you are liable to disappointment You will then have one sure Hope and that will be worth them all none can prevent you of this Hope Many other things you justly hope for are hindred by ill minded Men of their accomplishment But all the wit and power of your most spiteful Enemies can never hinder you from dying And how are you fenc'd against all the intervening Troubles of Life Nihil metuit qui optat mori You have nothing to fear if you desire to die nothing but what at least Death will shortly put an end to Make this your aim To have Life for the matter of your Patience and Death of your Desire 2 ly On the other part also labour to be upon good terms with the Lord secure it that he be yours Your way to that is short and expedite The same by which we become his Ezek. 16.8 I entred into Covenant with thee and thou becamest mine Solemnly and unfeignedly accept him and surrender your selves Without this who can expect but to hear from him at last Depart from me I know you not Know of your selves demand an account Are you sincerely willing to be his and to take him for yours without limitation or reserves Matters are then agreed between him and you And who can break or disanul the Agreement Who can come between him and you I often think of the high transport wherewith those words are uttered The excellent knowledg of Christ Jesus my Lord Phil. 3.8 This is Christian Religion not in a System but as it is a vital principle and habit in the Soul inclining us making us propense towards our blessed Lord addicting and subduing us to him uniting us with him Whereby we come to know by inward sensations to feel the transfusions of his spiritful Light and Influence and our Souls thereby caught and bound up in the bundle of Life So we have Christ form'd within His Holy Truths Doctrines Precepts Promises inwrought into the temper of our Spirits And as it follows in that Context Phil. 3. to have him according to the States wherein he successively was by correspondent impressions represented in us So as that we come to bear the Image of him crucified and dying first then reviving and rising and afterwards ascending and glorifi'd To know him and the power of his Resurrection and the fellowship of his sufferings being made conformable to his Death If by any means we might attain unto the Resurrection of the Dead Vers. 10 11. Let us not be at rest till we find it thus in some measure with us If we feel our selves after this manner internally and initially conform'd to him this will be both a Preparative and a Pledg of our future perfect conformity both internal and external It will fit us to be ever with the Lord and assure us we shall and can be no where else That he and we shall not to eternity dwell asunder We shall neither fear to be externally conform'd to him in his Death to quit and lay down the Body as he did nor despair of attaining with him the Resurrection from the Dead and of being present with him in Glory Or that he shall recover for us out of the Dust our vile abject Bodies the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Body of our Humiliation wherein we were humbled as he was in his as it follows in that Phil. 3. vers 21. and make it like his own glorious Body 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 conform and agreeable by that power by which he is able even to subdue all things to himself In the mean time as this present state admits converse much with him every day Be not strangers to him often recognize and renew your Engagements to him Revolve in your Thoughts his Interest in you and yours in him And the nearer relation which there is between him and you than that between you and this Body Recount with your selves the permanency and lastingness of that Relation That whereas this Body as now it is a terrestrial Body will not be yours long He is to be your God for ever and ever That though Death must shortly separate you from this Body Neither Life nor Death Principalities nor Powers things present nor things to come shall ever separate you from the Love of God which is in Christ our Jesus our Lord. While this Body is a Body of Death to you he is your Life your Hope and your exceeding Joy your better more laudable and more excellent Self more intimate to you than you can be to your self as hath been anciently and often said And for the obtaining whose presence absence from the Body is a very small matter A great Prince in an Epistle to that Philosopher tells him I seem to my self not to be a Man as the saying is while I am absent from Iamblichus or while I am not conversant with him That we can better endure our Lord's absence is surely a thing it self not to be endured We should labour our acquaintance with him such as is fit to be between so great a Majesty and such mean Creatures as we should grow daily Yea and endeavour to make the Thoughts more familiar to our selves of spiritual Beings in the general For we are to serve and converse with him in a glorious community of such Creatures An innumerable company of Angels The General Assembly and the Church of the First Born and the Spirits of just Men made perfect Heb. 12.23 In a Region where an earthly Body remaining such can have no place Why do we make the Thoughts of a Spirit out of a Body so strange to our selves We meet with hundreds of Spirits in Bodies and moving Bodies to and fro in the Streets every day and are not startled at it Is a Body so much nearer a-kin to us than a Spirit that we must have so mean a thing to come between to mediate and reconcile us to it