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A49238 Love's name lives, or, A publication of divers petitions presented by Mistris Love to the Parliament, in behalf of her husband with severall letters that interchangeably pass'd between them a little before his death : as also, one letter written to Master Love by Mr. Jaquel, one of the witnesses against him : together with seven severall letters and notes sent to him, from Dr. Drake, Mr. Jenkyn Mr. Case, and Mr. Robinson, his then fellow-sufferers : all published for publick good. Love, Mary, 17th cent. 1663 (1663) Wing L3142; ESTC R24435 21,561 16

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State for that your poor Petitioners Friends are willing to give all sufficient security that her Husband shall live peaceably and quietly for the time to come and never act any thing to the prejudice of this Common-wealth and present Government Now the God of heaven bow your hearts to shew mercy And your Petitioner shall pray c. MARY LOVE To the Supreme Authority the PARLIAMENT of the Common-wealth of ENGLAND The humble Petition of Mary the Wife of Christopher Love Condemned to dye Sheweth THat whereas your distressed hand-maid hath in all humility in the exceeding great bitterness of her spirit poured out her very soul to this Honourable House for the life of her condemned Husband which Petition was mercifully received and read in Parliament as your Petitioner is informed For which high favour she desireth to bless God and be thankfull to your Honours And although she hath great cause to be very sensible of your High displeasure against her Husband for which she is heartily sorry Nevertheless she hoping that your bowels yearn towards her in this her sad condition adventures once more to make her humble supplication and doth pray That if your poor Petitioners Husband hath provoked you so far as to render him utterly uncapable of your full pardon yet you would graciously be pleased to let your hand-maid find so much favour in your eyes as that you will say of your Petitioners dear Husband as Solomon said of Abiathar though thou art worthy of death we will not at this Time put thee to death Oh pardon your perplexed hand-maid if she again beseech you by the wombs that bare you and the brests that gave you suck in the bowels of the Lord Jesus Christ reprieve him for a time till she may recover her strength before he depart hence and be seen no more lest at one terrible stroke in his execution the lives of him her and the tender babe in her womb be cut off and two poor innocent Orphans be left behind to begin and end their dayes in misery And though he may not be thought worthy to breath in English aire which God forbid yet give him Oh give him leave to sigh out his sorrows under your displeasure in the utmost parts of the Earth wheresoever you shall think fit to banish him Which although it be a very great punishment in it self yet your hand-maid and her dying Husband shall acknowledg even this to be a great mercy and shall thankfully receive it at your hands And shall pray c. MARY LOVE To the Supreme Authority the PARLIAMENT of the Common-Wealth of ENGLAND The humble Petition of Mary the Wife of Christopher Love Sheweth THat your poor Petitioner hath great cause to say blessed be God and blessed be you for your mercifull Vote the 15th of July a day never to be forgotten in adding a moneth to the life of her dear Husband which hath opened a door of hope to her in the midst of the valley of Achor and made her glad though she be a woman of a sorrowfull spirit yet your distressed hand-maid is overwhelmed with grief and anguish of soul and cannot be comforted when she remembers the dolefull day the 15th of August so near approaching her heart doth almost dye within her and she is as one giving up the ghost before she is delivered of the fruit of her womb Wherefore your greatly distressed hand-maid doth again pour out her soul with renewed and importunate requests beseeching your Honours to commiserate her deplorable condition by putting on bowels of pity and compassion towards her dear and condemned Husband that she may not grapple with the intollerable pains of Travell and the unsupportable thoughts of her Husbands death in one day Oh that the life of your hand-maid and her babe might be a ransome for the life of her condemned Husband she had rather chuse out of love to dye for him than for sorrow of heart to dye with him Now the good Lord incline your hearts to give him his life for a prey wheresoever it shall please your Honours to cast him And your Petitioner shall ever pray c. MARY LOVE To the Supreme Authority the PARLIAMENT of the Common-wealth of ENGLAND The humble Petition of Mary the distressed Wife of Christopher Love Humbly sheweth THat your sad and sorrowfull Petitioner in the multitude of her fears wherewith her spirit is overwhelmed within her After sundry applications and grievous disappointments more bitter than death cannot cease to follow your Honours with strong cries and supplications as the importunate Cannanitish woman did the Lord Christ And O that now at last you would suffer your selves to be intreated and let your bowels yearn within you that so root and branch may not be cut off in one day The great God hears the cries of Ravens O that that God would open your hearts to hear the cries and heart-breaking grones of the Mother with the tender Babes that cannot keep silence whilest there is any hope Your desolate Hand-maid waiteth with all humility and earnest expectation at your doors beseeching you not to forget to shew mercy to your poor Petitioner and her tender Babes Oh make not your Hand-maid a widow and her children fatherless but be graciously pleased to prevent this dreadfull blow which your Petitioner trembleth to think upon and earnestly beseeches you to change the sentence of death into a sentence of banishment and whilest you are propagating the Gospel in New England let her dying husband as a Prophet from the dead be sent to endeavour the conversion of the poor Indians that so many souls may bless God in your behalf and she shall receive it from your hands as a signall favour And your Petitioner shall pray c. MARY LOVE Mr. Jaquel his Letter to Mr. Love My dear friend and beloved in the Lord MY bowels are troubled within me I am pained I am pained even at the very heart The Lord knows I want words to express the thoughts of my heart to you to you I say right Christian Friend and true Souldier of Jesus Christ I was thinking to have been silent being even ashamed to send you a line written by that hand which is very much slackened and taken off from the plough which I thought not many weeks agoe had been very fast setled Give me leave to breath forth my heart to you in such rude words and language as I can utter and I pray you receive them and spell out my heart towards you which at this time is so full that I know not how to empty it but in tears before the Lord for you night and day And oh that the remembrance of the seventh and one and twentieth of June might often come into my thoughts to keep my heart humble for my folly in taking my own and carnall friends counsell and not the counsell of those that are right godly which as I now perceive did help to bring forth that sad and never
LOVE'S NAME LIVES OR A Publication of divers PETITIONS presented by Mistris LOVE to the Parliament in behalf of her HUSBAND WITH Severall LETTERS that interchangeably pass'd between them a little before his Death AS ALSO One LETTER written to Master LOVE by Mr. Jaquel one of the Witnesses against him Together with Seven severall LETTERS and Notes sent to him from Dr. Drake Mr. Jenkyn Mr. Case and Mr. Robinson his then fellow-Sufferers All published for Publick Good PSAL. 112.6 The Righteous shall be had in everlasting remembrance 〈…〉 To the READER Reader take notice THere are severall Letters published entituled Love's Letters pretended to have past between M. Love and his Wife Which Letters are not Printed by true and exact Copies having in them both more and less than they should have Now to prevent the like inconvenience for the future these Letters and Petitions are here published The publishing of which will I hope give no offence I am sure can give no just offence to any and if any shall take offence thereat certain I am they 'll take that which is not given them and that they cannot do unless they will be injurious both to themselves and others But whether offended or not offended I am not need not be sollicitous the rather for that I can truly say it is at as great a distance from any intention in the least to give offence as 't is from my apprehension to imagine that the publishing of these should give just offence to any The Petitions are some of those and those very affectionate ones which Mistris Love presented to the Parliament in the behalf of that blessed Saint and Minister of Christ her dear Husband Master Love and that either for the taking off the sentence of death which he then lay under and so wholly to remit it or if not that for his banishment and if neither of them for his reprieve till her delivery she being then big with child that so she might with greater hope and probability of safety both to her self and unborn babe undergo so sad and sore an affliction The Letters are some from Mistris Love to her husband which again occasioned others from him to her Now Master Love having his wife frequently with him in prison after his tryall was ordered had thereby opportunity as to open his very heart unto her in reference to his own estate and condition and the apprehensions which he had both of it and of his sufferings which accordingly he did to her exceeding great satisfaction and comfort so also to speak that to her that might be and that afterwards did prove to be a great means of her support under those trying and pressing afflictions with which she did encounter and upon that account did not and indeed did not need to write unto her so fully and largly as otherwise he would have done And yet these brief Notes of his for so they would rather be called than Letters which were not by him intended to be published do clearly and abundantly evidence what and how indeared his affections were both to his wife and children and will I doubt not be an answer sufficient to that charge of unnaturalness that is in print against him Though I may say as to those that knew him or have but the least degree of that charity that is called common remaining in them that unchristian charge and most malicious slander invented by the father of lyes himself with many more of the same Satanical production of that foul-mouth'd false-mouth'd Animadverter and impudent Detractour needs no answer And notwithstanding all that hath been said by that Doctor of the Chair of Scorners whose design seems to be to fright men more with the rabble of his words than with the reason of them the former being not more formidable than the latter feeble Master Love though dead yet is not dead for HIS GOOD NAME LIVES and the remembrance of it to the godly is and will never cease to be even to perpetual generations as a box of most precious and costly oyntment broken or poured forth the pleasant savour and sweet perfume whereof spreads it self every way even to the scattering and overcoming of all that noisome and unsavoury breath of reproach and calumny that by the sons yea and daughters too of slander with great indeavour would be but by no means whatsoever can be cast upon it and to the refreshing and reviving of every one who is within the reach of its fragrant and perfuming odour The other Letters are one from M. Jaquel to M. Love which Jaquel was one of the witnesses against him The rest from several of those Ministers who as to imprisonment were his fellow-sufferers which Letters do sufficiently demonstrate what their thoughts and apprehensions were of M. Loves sufferings and do all contain in them very precious and spirituall matter that may be of considerable use as in general to any that shall peruse them so especially to those who are or hereafter may be in a suffering condition Reader They are intended for thy benefit which that thou maist reap by them is the desire of The Publisher● To the Supreme Authority the PARLIAMENT of the Common-Wealth of ENGLAND The humble Petition of MARY the distressed Wife of CHRISTOPHER LOVE Sheweth THat whereas the High Court of Justice hath lately sentenced to death her dear and tender Husband in whose life the life of your Petitioner is bound up in the execution of which sentence your poor hand-maid should become an unhappy widow and the miserable mother of two young fatherless children And she being so near to her appointed hour having sorrow upon sorrow be forced through unexpressable grief to bow down in travell and give up the ghost and so with one blow there be destroyed both Father and Mother and Babe in one day Yet her spirit is somewhat revived with the thought that there is hope in Israel concerning this thing when she considers that her humble Petition is this day presented before so many professing godliness who have tasted abundantly how gracious the Lord is and who through mercy are called of God to inherit a blessing and to be a blessing to the afflicted in the midst of the Land Therefore your distressed hand-maid throwing her self in all humility at your feet beseecheth you by the womb that bare you and brests that gave you suck in the bowels of the Lord Jesus Christ mercifully to interpose that this fatall blow may be prevented which act of compassion in you will be to your poor hand-maid as resurrection from the dead and not only all the tender-hearted Mothers in England but even the Babe yet unborn shall rise up and call you blessed and this will be to you a glory and crown of rejoycing in the sight of the Nation when the blessing of them that are ready to perish shall come upon you And your poor hand-maid humbly conceives That your mercy herein will be no danger to the
to be forgotten day and Sentence on the fifth of July against my dear friend Truly could not I appeal to God who knoweth all things what the intention of my heart was thinking I might rather do you good than hurt knowing one had gone before me and fearing he had much wronged you made me willing to testifie what I did being told and informed it would do you good and not hurt being but Misprision at the most I say were it not for the testification in mine own conscience I were not able to bear up my spirit but should I fear even sink under the burden But when I consider to whom I now write who I know is full of charity and doth believe what I say and will forgive what wrong I have done him and I hope will pray for me to your God and my God to your Father and my Father that he will not lay this to my charge for you may charge me to be as one of those Paul chargeth in 2 Tim. 4.16 And deer Sir If the Lord will be pleased to let me see your face once more that I may open my self to you I hope I shall stand right in your affections Some promises I have met withall in the word that do methinks add wings to my faith that God will not suffer you to fall by the hands of violence as in Psal 79. Psal 91. Psal 94. Psal 3. Isa 41.10 Isa 66.5 and many others that I know you are better acquainted with than I am and can beat them out and lay them by you as a glass of cordiall water for fainting times But dear Sir let me earnestly beg of you that you will use what means you can for your own preservation and go as far as you can in your Petition to them in whose power your life is for many reasons As first Because if you shall fall O! how would the enemies rejoyce Malignants and others would make songs at your death and say Where is all his Fastings and Prayers His God will not help him Oh Sir it would be a day of reproach and blasphemy And secondly Consider how would it sadden the hearts of Gods people and make them wring their hands if they should miss the fruit of their prayers in your deliverance which I am confident have been poured out in an extraordinary way for you And thirdly Consider the service you may yet do in the Church of Christ How many souls may God make you instrumentall to bring home to Christ And what service may yet this poor bleeding Nation have by your life And fourthly I need not remember you of your dear and precious Consort who I am confident is dear in the heart of God and also to you and her life even bound up in yours and her condition being as it is And then I humbly beg you will consider my condition for surely in that day I should hear of your life being violently taken away mine would be but little comfort to me being instrumentall in taking yours away although the Lords knows not intentionally but accidentally Therefore for these reasons I humbly beg of you again and again that you will do what you dare and go as far as you can for your preservation and the Lord will make you instrumentall for his glory if not here yet in some other place and methinks where ever the Lord cast you I could willingly make that promise and perform it that Ruth made to Naomi and so I am confident could my dear wife whose heart I know bleeds for you and her eyes run down with tears to God for you Good Sir in your addresses remember me to God that I may learn to lean upon him more firmly and rely upon the Rock of Ages and not upon broken reeds And I hope through the strength of Christ and the supply of your prayers I shall be better fortified for the time to come as Peter was after his fall I would fain be remembred to my good friend Dr Dr. I hope I have got better armour of proof than I had before but I hope there will be no need of shewing it about him For poor Po. he hath wronged himself more than any man can for I hear he hath sent more Papers of his confession since he was there Good Sir I have many things more to say but will not presume to be more burdensome to you at this time Will the Lord let me see your face once more here I hope he will However it will not be long before we shall enjoy one another in that place where violent hands shall not touch us and then eternity shall be little enough to praise and magnifie the Lord for his riches of mercy he shews to us The Lord stand by you The Lord preserve you and put his everlasting arms under you and deliver you Which shall be the earnest groans and sighs of him who is he hopes a dear yet a most unworthy Friend not worthy to be look'd upon by you Dr. Drake's Letter to Mr. Love Dear and precious friend I Cannot but congratulate your liberty and the singular honour God hath laid upon you The Captain of our salvation is wise and knows whom to call out for his Champion He hath pleased to call you to the forelorn-hope we are leading up the van our brethren in the black bill are like to bring up the body and for our rear blessed be God we have armies of prayers and tears yea through mercy we may say Our righteousness goes before us and the glory of the Lord shall be our reward Isa 58.8 Well might we fear had we not a good God a good Cause and a good Conscience but where God justifies who shall condemn Certainly that God who hath done us so much good by a prison blessed be his name can do us much more good by our tryall He bids us not fear them who at worst can but kill the body and why should we be afraid of man that shall dye c. and forget the Lord our Maker yea our Redeemer It s too much honour God laies upon us to suffer any thing for his Name and Covenants sake that hereby we are so indeared in the hearts of his Faithfull people and have been occasions to blow up the spirit of prayer that was almost exstinct Will not God incline his ear when he hath prepared the heart Did he ever set his children a begging but he had a boon for them I need not stir up your Christian resolution but desire rather to light my candle at your Lamp Yet when lately I looked upon Rev. 2 3. I espied no less than seven rare Cordials to persons in our condition Rev. 2. v. 7 10 17 27. c. 3. v. 5 12 21. 1. A tree of life 2. Freedome from hurt by the second death 3. The hidden Manna and white stone 4. The morning star and weilding the rod of iron 5. The white garments the Book of life and owning us
before his Father 6. That we shall be pillars in his house having his new name graven upon us 7. That we shall sit in his throne c. and all this made over not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to him that it overcoming A Christian is sure to conquer if he dare but fight and no souldier but he can glory when he puts on his harness The Lord arm you with such courage and wisdom that you may avoid the snares and be above the fury of your Adversaries God Angels and Men look upon you and while you are a fighting Christ is weaving your Crown He by your example so hearten his people and damp the adversary as they may rejoyce and bless God who favour your righteous dealing and all iniquity may stop her mouth So prays Your unworthy Brother and Companion in Tribulation and in the Kingdome and patience of Jesus Christ I prae sequar June 1. 51. I beg your prayers and present my best affections to your self and Mistris L. I 'd rather dye with grace than live with blame Far better dye with Love than live with shame For my most honoured friend Mr. L. Another of Dr. Drakes to Mr. Love June 17. 1651. Dear Friend I Cannot be unmindfull of your person and condition as being not only in the body but also in an especiall manner bound with you Heb. 13.3 And certainly if habituall and active grace be such motives of Christian love is not passive grace much more To suffer for Christ is a grace as well as to believe in him Phil. 1.29 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Christ and his people are never more lovely than upon the Cross May we not under God thank our prison that we are so gracious this day in the eyes of Gods people yea and I am perswaded in the eyes of some enemies Must not we by suffering enter into glory as our blessed Saviour Luk. 24.26 Doth not Christ by this means set a higher rate upon reformation the Ministry and the Government How do the Northern people prize the Sun who see it but once in three or six moneths and do not our dunghill-hearts ordinarily value blessings more by their want than injoyment In particular Sir how are you indeared to God and man in this call to be the Proto-Confessour or Proto-Martyr the Lord inable you by grace to bear the honour as well as the burthen I bless God for your chearfullness and constancy whose slame contributes much to the keeping of my poor spark alive But my errand is if it may be to prevent the latter and may it stand with Gods will I would not have you yet to be a Martyr Haply you will say I wish you worse than your Adversaries do if so yet I am sure it is with an honester heart c. Sir I have only one thing to adde which I apprehend as a providence not to be slighted namely that your day of tryall is your day of Jubilee and your day of Pentecost it being precisely the fiftieth day from your apprehension ordered so I am confident by especiall providence not by the intention of the Adversary The Lord make it a Jubilee to you for liberty of spirit and a day of Pentecost for effusion of the Spirit of grace wisdom and utterance I shall say Amen to the Omen and follow it with what poor interest I have in heaven still choosing rather to dye with Love than to rule with Lust which is the Magna charta of these apostatizing times My best affections to your self and dearest consort I beg your prayers and rest Yours c. Another of Dr. Drakes to Mr. Love MY most dear and precious friend in the Lord in whom I observed great reason both of love and honour from the first day that God blessed me with the knowledg of you but never more than at this time when you are ascending your triumphant chariot and mounting into the cloud of witnesses Heb. 12.1 to guide and encourage us who are left yet behind to run with readiness the race that is set before us Sweet Sir I wonder not you are so chearfull being so near your journeys end steered by our great Pilot out of a dangerous and troublesome Sea and entring into the harbour putting off your pilgrims weeds that you may be cloathed with the white robes as a free de●ison of the heavenly Jerusalem I mistook in dreaming of an earthly Pentecost and Jubilee that 50th day I now perceive was an hint and summons to call you to the everlasting Jubilee above Heb. 12. v. 22 24 a Parasceve to the eternal Sabbath Heb. 4. v. 9 10. How much are we beholding to our very enemies rather to God for them who never do us more good than when they think to do us the shrewdest turn I wonder not now at that Epinicium of the Apostles Rom. 8. ver 28 33. to the end 1 Cor. 3. v. 21 22 23. Death is so far from separating that it brings us immediately to Christ Phil. 1.23 and that by a stroke so honourable so easie so comfortable so speedy that you need but wink and go to Heaven The Lord is pleased to give you a writ of ease and to pay you your penny at the sixth hour Blessed be God we serve a good Master who puts us only upon honest and honourable imployments makes our task easie and short doth all our works for us and in us and after all rewards us freely and richly as if we had earned our wages Better be Gods hireling than the worlds darling Luk. 15. v. 17 19. Dear Sir I bless God for your faithfullness patience courage wisdom whereby you have both tryed and discovered the policy and strength of your Antagonists and shewed to your poor unworthy fellow-sufferers that by grace they are conquerable The Lord is with thee thou mighty man of valour go in this thy might and smite the host of Midian as one man Judg. 6. v. 12 14 16. The Lord make you a true Samson that you may do the Devils kingdom more mischief at your death than ever you did in all your life God is now but in his old method to make the blood of the Martyrs the seed of his Church Col. 1.24 Hiel deserved a curse for building Jerico Josh 6.26 but God deserves blessing for building the new Jerusalem though he lay the foundation thereof in Abiram his first-born so is Christ our high Father compare Gen. 17.5 with Isa 9.6 and set up the gates thereof in his younger Son Segub 1 King 16 last such are we poor contemptible creatures exalted and strengthned by God not only to do but also to suffer for his Name Act. 5.41 Phil. 1.29 Cause Church and Covenant The Lord is making you such a blessed Segub making that to be your honour strength and safety which many judged to be your shame weakness and danger Dear Sir God honours you to
I have writ this to fill you more and more An Ax and a severer are all one you shall dye without sickness When you think of the present ignominy look on the future glory you shall be with God Christ Angels the souls of just men made perfect in a short time What a happiness is it to have grace in perfection to see God face to face to be freed from the being of sin Temptations of Devils society of wicked men You have faught a good fight you have finished your course you have kept the faith c. and you are going to receive your Crown a crown of glory that fadeth not away You are now going to that place where the voice of the oppressor shall never be heard You are going to your bed the best and safest you ever slept on The steps of the scaffold will be a Jacobs Ladder upon which you shall ascend to your loving Father The Scaffold will be as mount Nebo The Ax of the Executioner will cut off the head of sin and put an end to all misery Be sure Sir Not only the Angels of God but the God of the Angels himself will mightily strengthen you If your death and this kind of death were not most for the glory of God and the benefit of the Church I am confident God would have saved you from this hour I have writ thus not because you want advice but to testifie my love my dear love to you and to give you remembrance of me and mine before your departure hence Good Sir accept of it as my last farewell farewell farewell dear Friend God that hath bound up your soul in the bundle of life be your comfort joy hope peace confidence in life and death to all eternity Yea he will be your guide unto death He will be an Husband and head to your dearest Wife He will be a tender Father to your little Babes This is the confidence this shall be the prayer of SIR Your dear Friend Aug. 19. 1651. A brief Note from Mr. Jenkyn to Mr. Love My dear dear Heart THou art very near to my soul The Lord Jesus Christ smile with the pleasantest face upon thee that ever he did upon Sufferer I here send thee a Book that I have been much relieved by in my Imprisonment What are ten thousand Deaths where Christ is apprehended by faith These considerations where the leaf is turn'd down pag. 335. do sweetly support faith I am afraid almost to send these thoughts for fear over-many notions may disturb thee I judge these more profitable than speculative discourses of death The great God that hangs the Earth upon nothing but his Word bear up thy soul on his promises Oh sweet most sure sure sure oh remember sure promises as stable as the very Essence of God for the performances whereof God hath pawn'd his Being As I live c. My Heart I love thee I kiss thee I weep upon thee I rejoyce for thee I shall see thee in glory The Lord Jesus strengthen thee He will Mr. Jenkyn his Letter to Mr. Love My dear Heart BLame me not of this backwardness to cast in this mite I was hardly perswaded of the fitness thereof your greater danger is in the plenty of these tokens considering your own store Though your appetite be never so good it 's impossible you should concoct all the food dish'd up in Books Friends Papers and your own Meditations by and for you I shall desire to make up my Paper-defects by servent prayer and oh that I could pray so this once as if I were not to do it a second time My only counsell must be that which I know hath been your only care and will be your only comfort namely that you sleep in Jesus Thou shalt not sleep though that were much in the lap bosome and arms of Jesus but in this sleep he looks upon thee as a piece of himself even as a member a dear limb In dying thou shalt not dye They who are fallen asleep in Christ perish not 1 Cor. 15.18 20. Christ the first fruits a most sweet resemblance the happy hansell of the grave the first born from the dead the Head of the body did rise from the dead as such and not as a private person Coloss 1.18 So that our resurrection is even now in its cause The union 'twixt Christ and thee and this union is not only 'twixt Christ and thy soul but thy body also and therefore he is the first fruits of the dead cannot be broken off by death Christ should rebell against the will of his Father which were blasphemy to think if he should lose any thing which his Father hath given him as he should were it not to be raised up at the last day Christ is the very RESVRRECTION and he that believeth in him though dead yet shall live Oh how hath Christ persumed the grave and beautified the grisly face of Death Death is now a priviledge our best friend next to Christ and the truth is all our meanes and sorrows in this life are for want of that which we so much fear death as the child that cries for want of sleep and yet cannot endure to undress and go to bed My dear heart thou hast better cloaths to put on in the morning of the Resurrection This mortall shall put on immortality Thy garment of grace hath had many spots perhaps Ephes 5.27 Jude 24. vid. this day thou shalt take thy leave of mourning for them and therefore the Lord help thee to mourn more holily and meltingly than ever but the garment of glory shall not have one Lord is there a condition wherein I shall never sin more wherein I shall have as much grace as I can hold and wish and will desire wherein I shall no more wash the feet of Jesus Christ and now and then be suffered to give them a kiss but shall lye in his blessed bosome and be clasped in his glorious arms to eternity This is thy approaching happiness and every comfort by how much the nearer is the sweeter Now is thy salvation nearer than when thou first believedst Oh dear heart Now for a strong faith oh wrestle mightily with the great God for strength to overcome him cling about the promises precious promises not only for their fullness but infallibility adventure thy soul upon them The faithfullness of God is a foundation which bears the heaviest structure and the greatest load of sin and expectation Jesus Christ calls beseeches commands threatens and all to make thee believe The Lord increase thy faith thou art to go through a very great work but Christ hath laboured and thou art but to enter into his labours Death is but a nominall enemy when Christ hath disarmed it there is more terror in the pomp of it as Seneca said the Scaffold the Axe Spectators Reports than in the thing it self Oh how may a Christian insult over it Oh Death where is thy Sting
Christ hath spoiled principalities and powers disarmed disrobed them His death is the death of Death all its stings are left in his side Say not therefore Dear heart who shall role away the stone from the mouth of the sepulchre when thou comest thither thou shalt find it rol'd away to thy hand Its difficulties and distresses are taken away in Christ To this dear Lord Jesus I commit thee who in his due time will wipe away all tears from the eyes and sin from the souls of his poor servants and out of all our storms bring us to that haven where we would be I know not where to break off and yet not where to leave thee so well as there Thine in the bowels of this Saviour Master Case to Master Love Heavenly Saint THou art now awaked out of thy last natural rest to go to thy eternall rest the night is past thou shalt never know night any more but God shall give thee light and thou shalt reign for ever and ever Rev. 22.3 4 5. Thou art now going where thou shalt be in a true sense above ordinances and above Scripture 1 Cor. 13.12 13 where God in Christ shall be thy all in all Thy prison shall be turned into a Palace and thy filthy garments shall be taken away and thou shalt be cloathed with long white Robes and in the moment when thy body and head shall be severed thou shalt be united to Christ thy Head in him thou shalt be crowned and with him thou shalt reign to eternity It is finished Joh. 17.1 4 5 6 11 13 24. Let me see that face once more which I shall see no more till the last day Send up one sigh before thee for thy following Brother and Companion in tribulation and in the Kingdom and Patience of Jesus Christ Another of Master Case's to Master Love Dear soul THou art now going to heaven to quicken thy desires put it into these notions that are most sutable to thy condition To the weary it is rest Isa 57.2 Rev. 14.13 To the banished home 2 Cor. 5.6 To the reproached glory Rom 5.2 To the molested and captived with corruption it is the glorious liberty of the Sonnes of God Rom. 8.21 To the resister to bloud it is conquest Rom. 8.37 To the vexed with sin and sorrow it is the exstinction of both To the hungry soul it is the hidden Manna Rev. 22.17 To the thirsty rivers of pleasure water of life fountain of life Rev. 22.17 Psal 36.8 9. To the grieved soul it is fulness of joy and to the sorrowfull heart pleasures for ever more Psal 16.8 In a word To them that have lien upon the dunghill here and kept their integrity it is a throne upon which they shall sit and reign with Christ for ever and ever Rev. 3.31 22.5 Dear heart chear up a sharp breakfast but a blessed supper the supper of the Lamb. The Bridegroom saith Loe I come quickly Let thy rejoyced soul eccho back again Even so come Lord Jesus There is but a little time for prayer left in that remember me and then everlasting halelujahs will be thy work and rest Live for ever with thy God Amen I shall accompany thee with my prayers though I cannot with my person Mistress Loves Letter to Master Love My dear heart BEfore I write a word further I beseech thee think not that it is thy wife but a friend now that writes to thee I hope thou hast freely given up thy wife and children to that God who hath said in the 49. of Jer. v. 11. Leave thy fatherless children I will preserve them alive and let thy widdow trust in me thy Maker will be my Husband and a father to thy children O that the Lord would keep thee from having one troubled thought for thy relations I desire freely to give thee up into thy Fathers hands and not only look upon it as a crown of glory for thee to dye for Christ but as an honour to me that I should have an husband to leave for Christ I dare not speak to thee nor have a thought within my own heart of my unspeakable loss but wholly keep my eye fixed upon thy unexpressable and unconceivable gain Thou leavest but a sinfull mortall wise to be everlastingly married to the Lord of glory Thou leavest but children brothers and sisters to go to the Lord Jesus thy eldest Brother Thou leavest friends on earth to go to the enjoyment of Saints and Angels and the spirits of just men made perfect in glory Thou dost but leave earth for heaven and changest a prison for a Palace And if naturall affections should begin to arise I hope that spirit of grace that is within thee will quell them knowing that all things here below are but dung and dross in comparison of those things that are above I know thou keepest thine eye fixed on the hope of glory which makes thy feet trample on the loss of earth My Dear I know God hath not only prepared glory for thee and thee for it but I am perswaded he will sweeten the way for thee to come to the enjoyment of it When thou art putting on thy cloaths that morning O think I am now putting on my wedding garments to go to be everlastingly married to my Redeemer And when the messenger of death comes to thee let him not seem dreadfull to thee but look on him as a messenger that brings thee tidings of eternal life When thou goest up the scaffold think as thou saidst to me it is but thy fiery chariot to carry thee up to thy Fathers house And when thou layest down thy precious head to receive thy Fathers stroke remember what thou saidst to me Though thy head was severed from thy body yet in a moment thy soul should be united to thy Head the Lord Jesus in heaven And though it may seem something bitter that by the hands of men we are parted a little sooner than otherwise we might have been yet let us consider it is the decree and will of our Father and it will not be long ere we shall enjoy one another in heaven again Let us comfort one another with these sayings Be comforted my Dear heart it is but a little stroke and thou shalt be there where the weary shall be at rest and where the wicked shall cease from troubling Remember though thou maist eat thy dinner with bitter herbs yet thou shalt have a sweet supper with Christ that night My Dear by what I write unto thee I do not hereby undertake to teach thee for these comforts I have received from the Lord by thee I will write no more nor trouble thee any further but commit thee into the arms of that God with whom ere long thee and I shall be Farewel my Dear I shall never see thy face more till we both behold the face of the Lord Jesus at the great Day MARY LOVE July 14. 1651. Another of Mistress Loves to Master
Love My heavenly Dear I Call thee so because God hath put heaven in thee before he hath taken thee to heaven Thou now beholdest God Christ and Glory as in a glass but to morrow heaven gates will be opened and thou shalt be in the full enjoyment of all those glories which eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither can the heart of man understand God hath now swallowed up thy heart in the thoughts of heaven but ere long thou shalt be swallowed up in the enjoyment of heaven And no marvel there should be such quietness and calmness in thy spirit whilest thou art sailing in this tempestuous Sea because thou perceivest by the eye of saith a haven of rest where thou shalt be richly laden with all the glories of heaven O lift up thy heart with joy when thou layest thy dear head on the block in the thought of this that thou art laying thy head to rest in thy fathers bosome which when thou dost awake shall be crowned not with an earthly fading crown but with an heavenly eternal crown of glory And be not discouraged when thou shalt see a guard of souldiers triumphing with their trumpets about thee but lift up thy head and thou shalt behold God with a guard of his holy Angels triumphing to receive thee to glory Be not dismayed at the scofs and reproaches that thou maist meet with in thy short way to heaven for be assured God will not only glorifie thy body and soul in heaven but he will also make the memory of thee to be glorious on the earth O let not one troubled thought for thy wife and babes arise within thee thy God will be our God and our portion he will be a husband to thy widdow and a father to thy children the grace of thy God will be so sufficient for us Now my Dear I desire willingly and chearfully to resign my right in thee to thy Father and my Father who hath the greatest interest in thee And confident I am though men have separated us for a time yet our God will ere long bring us together again where we shall eternally enjoy one another never to part more O let me hear how God bears up thy heart and let me taste of those comforts that support thee that they may be as pillars of marble to bear up my sinking spirit I can write no more Farewel farewel my Dear till we meet there where we shall never bid farewell more till which time I leave thee in the bosome of a loving tender hearted Father and so I rest Till I shall for ever rest in Heaven MARY LOVE August 21. 1651. Master Love to his Wife when he should have first suffered My dearest Beloved I Am now going to my long home yet I must write thee a word before I go hence and shall be seen no more It is to beg thee to be comforted in my gain and not to be troubled in thy loss Labour to suppress thy inward fears now thou art under outward sorrows as thy outward suffering● abound let thy consolations in Christ abound also I know thou art a woman of a sorrowfull spirit My time is short I have but a few words of counsel to give thee and then I shall leave thee to God who careth for thee and thine 1. Whil●s thou art under desertions labour rather to strengthen and clear up thy evidences for heaven than question them 2. Remember a faith of adherence or reliance on the Lord Jesus bring thee to heaven though thou want the faith of Evidence or Assurance 3. Labour to find that and more also in God which thou hast lost in the creature 4. Spend not thy days in heaviness for my death if there were knowledg of things below or sorrow in heaven I should grieve to think my beloved should mourn on earth 5. Lye under a soul-searching Ministry I know thou art not a spungy hearer to suck in foul water as well as fair God hath given thee a good understanding to be able to discern things that differ as the mouth tasts meat thy ear tryeth words 6. Be conversant in Christian meetings and much in the exercises of the duties of mortification in fasting and prayers yet have respect to the weakness of thy body and thy present condition 7. Have a care of thy self and babes God will take care for thee and them I can write no more farewell my Dear farewel farewel These are the last words written by Thy dying yet comforted Husband CHRISTOPHER LOVE From the Tower July 15. 1651. MY Dear I beg thee to be satisfied my heart is greatly comforted in God I can quietly submit to the good pleasure of his will and I hope thou dost so also I am delivered by the determinate counsel of God the will of the Lord be done Read for thy comfort when I am dead and gone Jer. 49.11 and the beginning of the 12. Isa 54. vers 5 6 7 8. Psalm 146. ver 9.2 Cor. 4. ver 17 18. Heb. 12. ver 6 7. Another of Master Loves to his Wife More dear to me than ever IT adds to my rejoycing that I have so good and gracious a wife to part with for the Lord Jesus In thy grief I have been grieved but in thy joy I have been comforted Surely nature could never help thee to bear so heavy a stroke with so much silence and submission to the hand of God! O dearest every line thou writest gladdeth my heart I dare not think that there is such a creature as Mary Love in the world for Kit and Mall I can think of them without trouble leaving them to so good a God and so good a Mother Be comforted concerning thy Husband who may more honour God in his death than in his life the will of the Lord be done he is fully satisfied with the hand of God Though there be but little between him and death he knows there is but little between him and heaven and that ravisheth his heart The Lord bless and requite thee for thy wise and good counsel thou hast prevented me the very things I thought to have written to thee thou hast written to me I have had more comfort from thy gracious letter than from all the counsel I have had from any else in the world well be assured we shall meet in heaven I rest till I rest in heaven Thy dying but comforted Friend CHRISTOPHER LOVE From the Tower the Lords Day Another of Master Loves to his Wife My dearest delight on Earth I Was fast asleep when thy Note came I bless God I break not an hours sleep for all my sufferings I know they work for me a more exceeding and eternal weight of glory I slept this night from ten at night till seven in the morning and never waked My Dear I am so comforted in the gracious supports God gives thee that my burdens are the lighter on my shoulders because they are not so heavy on thine or if they
be heavy yet that God helps thee to bear them The Lord keep it in the purpose of our hearts for ever to submit to the good pleasure of God I bless God I do find my heart in as quiet and composed a temper as ever I did in all my life I am till I dye Thy tender hearted Husband CHRISTOPHER LOVE From the Tower August 18. 1651. Master Loves last Letter to his Wife on the day he suffered My most gracious Beloved I Am now going from a Prison to a Palace I have finished my work I am now to receive my wages I am going to heaven where are two of my children and leaving thee on the earth where are three of my babes those two above need not my care but the three below need thine It comforts me to think two of my children are in the bosome of Abraham and three of them will be in the arms and care of so tender and godly a Mother I know thou art a woman of a sorrowfull spirit yet be comforted though thy sorrow be great for thy Husbands going out of the world yet thy pains shall be the less in bringing thy child into the world thou shalt be a joyfull Mother though thou beest a sad Widdow God hath many mercies in store for thee the prayers of a dying Husband for thee will not be lost To my shame I speak it I never pray'd so much for thee at liberty as I have done in prison I cannot write more but I have a few practical counsels to leave with thee viz. 1. Keep under a sound orthodox and soul-searching Ministry Oh there are many deceivers gone out into the world but Christs sheep know his voice and a stranger will they not follow Attend on that Ministry that teaches the way of God in truth and follow Solomons advice Prov. 19.27 Cease to hear instruction that causes to erre from the ways of knowledg 2. Bring up thy children in the knowledg and admonition of the Lord the mother ought to be a teacher in the fathers absence Prov. 19.27 The words which his mother taught him and Timothy was instructed by his Grandmother Lois and his mother Eunice 2 Tim. 1.5 3. Pray in thy family daily that thy dwelling may be in the number of the families that do call on God 4. Labour for a meek and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price 1 Pet. 3.4 5. Pore not on the comforts thou wantest but on the mercies thou hast 6. Look rather at Gods end in afflicting than at the measure and degree of thy afflictions 7. Labour to clear up thy evidences for heaven when God takes from thee the comforts of earth that as thy sufferings do abound so thy consolations in Christ may abound much more 2 Cor. 1.4 8. Though it is good to maintain a holy jealousie of the deceitfulness of thy heart yet it is evill for thee to cherish fears and doubts about the truth of thy graces If ever I had confidence touching the grace of another I have confidence of grace in thee I can say of thee as Peter did of Silvanus I am perswaded that this is the grace of God wherein thou standest 1 Pet. 5.12 Oh my dear soul wherefore dost thou doubt whose heart hath been upright whose walkings have been holy c. I could venture my soul in thy souls stead such a confidence have I of thee 9. When thou findest thy heart secure presumptuous and proud then pore upon corruption more than upon grace but when thou findest thy heart doubting and unbelieving then look on thy graces not on thy infirmities 10. Study the covenant of grace and merits of Christ and then be troubled if thou canst Thou art interested in such a covenant that accepts purposes for performances desires for deeds sincerity for perfection the righteousness of another viz. that of Jesus Christ as if it were thine own Oh my Love rest rest then in the love of God in the bosome of Christ 11. Swallow up thy will in the will of God it is a bitter cup we are to drink but it is the cup our Father hath put into our hands When Paul was to go to suffer at Jerusalem the Christians could say The will of the Lord be done Oh say thou when I go to Tower-hill The will of the Lord be done 12. Rejoyce in my joy to mourn for me inordinately argues that either thou enviest or suspectest my happiness The joy of the Lord is my strength oh let it be thine also Dear wife farewell I will call thee wise no more I shall see thy face no more yet I am not much troubled for now I am going to meet the Bridegroome the Lord Jesus Christ to whom I shall be eternally marryed Thy Dying yet most Affectionate Friend till death CHRISTOPHER LOVE From the Tower of London 22th August 1651. The day of my glorification FINIS