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A69531 The dead mans real speech a funeral sermon preached on Hebr. xi. 4, upon the 29th day of April, 1672 : together with a brief of the life, dignities, benefactions, principal actions, and sufferings, and of the death of the said late Lord Bishop of Durham / published (upon earnest request) by Isaac Basire ... Basier, Isaac, 1607-1676. 1673 (1673) Wing B1031; ESTC R13369 46,947 147

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most men doat so much because they have no care for nor hope of a better life 2. The state of a Life after Death that is the Life of Glory implied in these words He speaketh for Speech is the evidence of a living man Ergo Abel though dead in the Body yet is still alive in the Spirit The first is a Corrosive to the state of Nature but the Second comes in as a Cordial to all those who are in the state of Grace This Text appears much like the Israelites Guide in the Wilderness 't was a Cloud and that no ordinary Cloud but such a Cloud as was Dark on the one side and Light on the other side dark towards the Egyptians but Light towards the Israelites Even so is Death dark and sad to the Unbelievers and Impenitent but lightsome and welcome to all true Penitents and Believers 1. To begin with the first The state of Death Man in the state of Innocency was created capable of three Lives the Life Corporal Life Spiritual and Life Eternal The first is the Life of Nature a Transitory Life The second is the Life of Grace a Life permanent upon condition of perseverance in uniform obedience to God The third is Life Eternal the Life of Glory the Life of the Saints Triumphant of the Elect Angels yea the Life of God himself and therefore a Life immutable interminable 2. Two of these three Lives the Life natural and spiritual man had then in present possession and the third in a sure reversion after the expiration of but one Life and that a short one too but a span long this present life is no more by King David's just measure Behold thou hast made my days as it were a span long 3. Man by his Apostasie from God through the first original sin of willful incogitancy and through pride did soon deprive himself of all these three Lives at once and so according to the just sentence of God pronounced upon man aforehand for a fair warning Morte moriêris Thou shalt die the Death man was justly precipitated from that high state of Innocence into the base and damnable state of sin and misery whereby every man none excepted but the God and man Christ Jesus is now by original sin become subject to a threefold Death First Corporal Secondly Spiritual and thirdly without Repentance Eternal The first is Death Corporal which is a total but not final separation of the Soul from the Body the sad Real Text before our Eyes The second is Death Spiritual a far worse kind of death a state of sin which is a separation of the soul from the Grace and Favour of God which is life it self without which we are all by nature dead in trespasses and sins Children of wrath no better The third and worst of all is Death Eternal and therefore called in Holy Scripture The great Death the second Death because it is a final total and eternal separation of both Soul and Body from the Glorious Presence Beatifical Vision and admirable and unspeakable Fruition of God himself whom as to serve here on Earth is the Life of Grace so to enjoy in Heaven is the Life of Glory which is life everlasting 4. The first of these three Death Temporal none of us can avoid die we must die we shall God prepare us all for it But as the thing Death is certain for the matter so for the manner how we shall die in or out of our wits as in Frenzies c. where we shall die amongst Friends or amongst Foes when we shall die whether in youth or in old Age how we shall die whether by a suddain violent or painful Death which God in mercy avert from us all none of us all knows and therefore our best course is while we may by a lively faith timely repentance and real amendment of life to prepare for Death and then come Death in what shape it will and welcome we shall not die unprepared Yet it concerns us all frequently and seriously to think of these great Quatuor novissima Death Judgment Heaven and Hell 'T is Moses his passionate wish O that they were wise that they understood this that they would consider their latter end Since 't is appointed for all men once to die and after that comes Judgment The Vulgar Translation renders it statutum est Death is an universal Statute Law to all mankind and so it is both for authority of coaction and certainty of execution for it is grounded upon two of the greatest Attributes of God which are First God's infallible Truth for the Commination was directed unto man and that also in mercy to forwarn him that he might not sin Secondly God's exact Justice which requires the execution of the Divine Sentence to be done upon the same nature that had sinned Man did sin therefore man must suffer that is man must die and because the first man Adam was the Original Root and General Representative of all mankind Adam's off-spring therefore all men must die pray God we all may die well or if they live to the end of the world yet they must suffer a Change at the least at the last which Change whatever ever it be for 't is a Mystery will be equivalent to a Death so that there lies an universal necessity to undergo a Death some kind of Death In the Antient Register of the Macrobii those long liv'd Patriarchs Adam liv'd 930 years and he died Methuselah the longest liver of all Mankind lived 969 years and he died c. that is the burthen song of them all Neither Methuselah the antientest nor Sampson the strongest nor Solomon the wisest of men could exempt themselves from the fatal necessity of Death Seneca himself though but a Heathen Philosopher being ignorant of the original cause of Death yet observing the generality of the event of Death drew his Topick of Consolation to his Friend Polybius sad for the Death of his Brother from this necessity of Death But God be thanked we Christians have better Topicks of Comfort for the Death of our Christian Friends past or our own Death a coming by opposing through Faith against the terrour of our Dissolution by Death the consideration of our admirable and comfortable conjunction with Christ our Head after Death This glorious state is by St. Paul styled the manifestation of the Sons of God for which by a natural instinct the whole Creation groaneth with an earnest expectation of the accomplishment The word in the Original is very significant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which betokens the looking for some Person or thing with lifting up of the Head or stretching out their Necks with earnest intention and observation to see when the person or thing looked for shall appear as a poor Prisoner condemned looks out at the Grates for a gracious Pardon And if the Creatures inanimate c. do so earnestly
A SERMON At the Funeral of the Right Reverend Father in GOD JOHN Late Lord Bishop and Count Palatine of Durham THE EPITAPH OF THE DECEASED Prescribed by himself in his WILL was this Rev. xiv 13. Beati Mortui qui moriuntur in Domino requiescunt enim à Laboribus suis The dead Mans real Speech A FUNERAL SERMON Preached on Hebr. xi 4. Upon the 29 th day of April 1672 TOGETHER WITH A brief of the Life Dignities Benefactions Principal Actions and Sufferings and of the death of the said late Lord Bishop of DVRHAM Published upon earnest Request By Isaac Basire D. D. CHAPLAIN in ORDINARY to his MAJESTY and ARCH-DEACON of NORTHUMBERLAND LONDON Printed by E. T. and R. H. for James Collins at the Kings Arms in Ludgate-street 1673. TO THE Christian Reader THis untimely Conception might have proved an Abortive or if born a Benoni to the Parent then in sore Travel through sickness both in the Preparation deproperated as also in the present Production being at the earnest intreaty of the Noble Relations of our Lord Bishop deceased now pressed unto the Press When this was delivered vivâ voce out of a due Regard to the Solemn Confluence of so many Worthy Persons for some of them came from far as also out of a respect to the day then far spent I did purposely contract my Meditations and express them then under the Ancient Canonical measure of an Hour Esteeming it a point of Commendable Prudence and also of plausible Thrift to boote on such Solemn Occasions to shorten the double pains both of the Speaker and of the Hearers But since the delivery being desired as by sundry Worthy Relations of the deceased so at the request of my Friend the Honest and Industrious Book-seller I have been perswaded to enlarge the Sermon with the Addition of a Brief of the Life of the deceased Prelate and so my Brooke is become a River I wish it may not prove a Sea to deterr the Reader from launching out into it For the matter of Right done to the dead in General I refer my self to Gods Word For the matter of Fact in particular concerning the Person of the deceased I Report my self to their Report whose Information I have diligently and severally desired and faithfully delivered here relying upon their verity confirmed by the Authority of our late Lord Bishops Last Will in English which should be Sacred My honest Request to the Christian Reader is only for the same Candour in the Reading as was intended by me in the Writing All which commending to God for a Blessing I take leave Praying in K. Davids words That God would spare me a little that I may recover my strength before I go hence and be no more seen AMEN Imprimatur Tho. Tomkins R. R. mo in Christo Patri ac Domino D no Gilberto Divinâ Providentiâ Archi-Episc Cant. à Sacris Domesticis Ex Aedibus Lambethanis Feb. 10. 1672. ERRATA PAg. 6. lin 1. deest but before upon l. 2. an bef uniform 1. 14. in comparison of eternity after span long l. ult and felicity after innocence p. 8. l. 12. for how read which way p. 9. l. 5. dele comma after Statute p. 24. l. 25. r. the Holy p. 37. l. 4. phrase it in p. 42. Marg. for Covarrus r. Covarruvius p. 43. l. 4. r. Calligraphy p. 50. l. 11. r. domestical p. 54. Marg. ad lin 11. r. Constantinopol p. 57. l. 2. add he before much p. 59. l. 29. after teaching add them p. 70. l. 12. after thrive add the. p. 71. l. 16. r. Proprietary p. 85. l. 15. after Character add Conscience p. 92. l. 13. r. Br●n● p. 93. l. 22. for with r. of p. 97. Marg. r. Switzerland p. 110. l. ult for still r. yet p. 118. after the Latin Will dele Vid. J. Will. c. p. 119. before Our help insert The Translation of the Latin Will. p. 121. l. 13. for shading r. shadowing THE Dead Man's REAL SPEECH Hebr. 11. 4. By it he being dead yet speaketh KNow you not that a great man is faln in Israel This was David's noble Epitaph over Abner though his Rebel and how much more may this be our Just Preface to this solemn Funeral to be sure over a better Man than was Abner Therefore in King David's words I may truly say again Know you not that a great Man is now faln in our Israel A great Man indeed as shall appear before we take our Final Leave of him We may be sure greater than Abner not only in his State but which is the crown of all true greatness in his Graces and Beneficence in this indeed and in truth greater than Abner yet Abner was a great man for he was a General in the Field but on the wrong side the Rebels side Our great man a General not only in the Field but which is much more a General in this Church I mean his Diocess a great one and in both these great Capacities constantly Loyal ad Exemplum And yet as high as this great man was so lately behold how low he is laid down now who yet must be laid down lower as you shall see by and by Such Spectacles of Mortality ought to be to us Survivours tot Specula so many true Looking-glasses wherein whatever our Artificial Looking-glasses may flatter us with what our living faces seem to be now this Natural Looking-glass tells us plainly to our faces what all our dead faces shall be must be then God knows how soon He being Dead yet speaketh out Mortality to us all so many Funerals so many Warning-pieces to us all to prepare for our last and greatest Issue This in the Judgment of the wise man is the best use we can make of our Access to the House of Mourning such as this house is at present therefore the Living should lay it to his Heart which that we may all do Let us pray with the Spirit and in the words of King David O teach us to number our days that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom Ye shall further pray for Christ's Holy Catholick Church c. Hebr. 11. 4. THe Scope of this Text which must be the Aim of the Sermon is this to stir up all the faithful living to imitate the faithful that are dead whereof this Chapter is the sacred Roll upon the Divine Records down from Abel unto the Patriarchs the Judges the Kings the Prophets c. that is that we should endeavour to become the followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises The Text is short but the Lesson is long that is to live so now as we may die well at last and by our good works speak when we are dead The Parts are two which do express two States of Man 1. The state of Death He being dead which is the privation of the life of nature common to all men on which frail life