Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n eternal_a sin_n temporal_a 8,837 5 8.6794 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A42149 The Catholique doctor and his spiritual catholicon to cure our sinfull soules a communion-sermon preach'd to the Right Honourable Sr. Robert Foster Lord Chief Justice of the King's bench, and the rest of the reverend judges, and serjeants at law, in Serjeants-Inn in Fleetstreet, on Sunday May the 26th, 1661 / by Matthevv Griffith ... Griffith, Matthew, 1599?-1665.; Foster, Robert, Sir, 1589-1663. 1661 (1661) Wing G2010; ESTC R2789 24,194 37

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

Physick for it is no ordinary English simple or Indian drugge but it is blood and not any blood neither as the blood of the Levitical Sacrifices but by way of singularity it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The blood even the blood of the Physician himself The blood of Jesus Christ his Son In the third note the admirable efficacy and operation of this blood for it is not onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but also Catholicon an Universal cleanser In the fourth note the extreme misery of mankind since the fall express'd in the parable of the wounded Travailer and here implied in this Us which I properly call The Patient In the fifth Note the extraordinary malignity of the deplorable and almost desperate malady which is here call'd Sin For this Sin is such a sickness as can not possibly be cur'd by any other meanes then Blood nor by any other blood then that of Jesus Christ the Physician in the Text. In the sixt and last Note the vast extent and latitude of this disease express'd in this Collective All and so St. John's meaning is to assure us for our comfort that the blood of Christ cures all our sickness when he saith here that it cleanseth us from all Sin These six are the parts of all which in this order with so much brevity as can any way stand with perspicuity and I begin with him who deserves to be our first consideration viz. Jesus Christ his Son Of whom that I may speak more distinctly let your attention intention and retention keep pace with me through these two considerations The one is of our Saviours Person and the other of his Profession which in the regular prosecution of this allegory continued in the Text I call A Physician Again in opening the former consideration viz. that of our Saviours Person I shall take just occasion to speak somewhat both of his names Jesus Christ and also of his natures the divine and the humane one of which is clearly express'd and the other necessarily implied in these two tearmes His Son A word of each and first of his proper name Jesus This signifies a Saviour it is a broken Hebrew word as Criticks observe and it is our Physicians proper name and indeed it is not improper for any Physician to be stil'd a Saviour because his principal aim and end is to save his Patients that is to keep them safe and sound so that by the help and benefit of Physick They may have what all men do or should pray and labour for viz. Mentem sanam in corpore sano But the Physician in my Text is a Saviour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for at the very imposition of his name the Angel Matth. 1. 21. made this the Exposition of the same Thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people from their sins Then a Physician he was yet with this difference Other Physicians cure our bodies He our Souls they our sickness He our Sins This Jesus was a Saviour yet not like Joseph Josua Jepthah Gedeon Othoniel and some others who in Scripture are call'd Saviours too in their kind but they were onely typical and temporary Saviours they saved the people among whom they lived onely from temporal evils and enemies but this Jesus was the truth of all those types and justified to be a Saviour under Gods broad Seal as having power thereby to save his people both from Sin the root and miseries the branches from death I mean eternal which St. John calls the second death and the Devil who is said to have the power of death and the curse of the Law and the wrath of God from all which none could save us but this Jesus in the Text. Of which sweet and saving name St. Bernard descants thus Nomen Iesu lux cibus medicina est The name Jesus is both our light our meat and our medicine lucet praedicatum saith he pascit recogitatum sanat invocatum And elsewhere in his devotions he calls this Jesus Mel in ore melos in aure jubilus in corde This Jesus say others is the sick mans salve and the Souldiers sheild he solaceth the Patient and supports the deficient and encourageth the proficient and crownes the perseverant I may call this name Jesus Angelical for in the second Chapter of St. Luke at the twenty first verse I find him call'd Iesus by the Angel before he was conceived in the womb His name Christ is prophetical for the Prophets still call him in Hebrew The Messias which in Greek signifies The Christ And if with St. John in the Text we put the two names together then we have his name Evangelical for Iohn 20. 31. These things were written that you might believe that Iesus is the Christ the Son of God and that believing you might have life He is Jesus in Hebrew to shew that he is a Saviour to the Jews and he is call'd Christ in Greek to shew that he is a Saviour to the Gentiles also And both these names are commonly given him in holy writ to shew that he is the Common Saviour of both and St. Iohn hath coupled them in the Text to signifie that the wall of separation is now broken down and so no difference between his Patients as the Apostle Gal. 3. 28. speaks plainly There is neither Iew nor Greek neither bond nor free neither male or female for ye are all one in Christ Iesus Christ signifies Annointed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nomen verbale a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ungo say Criticks And this which I call his Appellative shews him to be a Physician too for he was Annointed himself that he might annoint us yea he was annointed the rather that he might as a Physician be the more successful which I take to be the meaning of that prophecy in the 61 chap. of Isaiah which our Saviour applies to himself in the 4th chap. of St. Luke The Spirit of the Lord is upon me therefore hath the Lord annointed me he hath sent me to preach good tydings to the poor to bind up the broken hearted c. Never such a Physician as this none can binde up and heal the broken hearted but He never such Physick as this Blood in the Text which he administred onely as he was annointed Yea he is not onely Annointed in himself but he is our Ointment too in the second Chapter of the first Epistle of St. John at the twenty seventh Verse and such annointment as is transient from him and immanent in us for that ointment which you have received from him as Christians dwells in you saith St. John and this inhabitation makes you to be as well as to be call'd Christians And as the precious ointment which was poured on Aarons head ran down his beard saith the Psalmist and thence to the skirts of his cloathing so Christ was not so much annointed for himself who is the head of all principalities and powers saith the Apostle and in