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A59194 Daniel Sennertus his meditations setting forth a plain method of living holily and dying happily / written originally in Latin, and now translated into English. Sennert, Daniel, 1572-1637. 1694 (1694) Wing S2536; ESTC R19038 74,434 198

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that our first Parents fell from that primitive Holiness and Righteousness and so lost the Image of God for after that by the perswasion of the Devil they had entertained a love of themselves contrary to God and to the love of their Creator preferring their own Glory and Delectation before the love and glory of God and desiring to be equal with God himself their understandings were presently overspread with ignorance and blindness instead of Wisdom Their Wills grew Refractory and Disobedient to God and all their affections were perverse irregular and out of order so that now the thoughts of man from his infancy are evil and thus man not only fell from that eternal life for which he was Created but also became obnoxious to eternal Damnation Thirdly 'T is firmly to be believ'd that God took pitty on fallen Mankind and sent his Son to take upon him Humane Flesh and being made Man did by suffering and dying satisfie for us and deliver us from eternal death And did by his Merits relied on by a true Faith again make us Heirs of that blessed life which by our sins we lost and restored in us the decayed image of God and made us his and Sanctified us by his Holy Spirit that we might serve him in Righteousness and Holiness all the days of our life From whence it plainly appears who Christ is and what is the duty of a Christian viz. Christ is our Redeemer who reconciled us unto his Father and by his Merits made us his Brethren and Coheirs of his Kingdom when we were enemies to God defiled with sin and deserved to be punished with eternal death And a Christian who derives his name from Christ is one who acknowledges that he was indeed created by God in Righteousness and Holiness but by the Wiles of Satan fell from and rebelled against God and so being polluted by the stains of Original Sin and contaminated with many actual Transgressions he became liable to the wrath of God and everlasting punishment from which he is freed and redeemed by the alone Merits and Righteousness of Christ which by Faith is imputed unto him so that now he is to undertake such a way of living as may be well pleasing not to the Devil but unto God and therefore he is to avoid all sins from which he is redeemed by the pretious Merits of Christ and to serve God alone in an holy and religious life And from hence arises a threefold duty of a Christian The first is to acknowledge himself a sinner and to bewail his sins Secondly To believe Christ to be his Redeemer and to trust only in his Merits Thirdly To obey his Laws to follow the guidance of the Holy Spirit not to relapse into sins from which by the death of Christ he is redeemed but to love God above all things and his Neighbour as himself Or to comprize all in a word the life of a Christian is a continual Repentance For since he is defiled with Original Sin and even the Just Man falls seven times Prov. 24.16 He will therefore be always sorrowful for his sins and sly to the Merits of Christ and serve God in true Righteousness and Holiness In sum 't is the Duty of a Christian to believe in Christ and to live holily which if he doth for Christs sake he will be acceptable unto God and shall in the end inherit eternal life But if he shall be deprived of this happiness if he is not in favour with God although he should possess the Riches of the whole World although he were Monarch over all the Earth although he were wiser than the best Philosophers yet would all be in vain and to no purpose Vanity of Vanities Eccles 1. all is Vanity except to serve God and to please him There are indeed many things to be done which are allowed of God but there is one thing necessary None shall be Condemned in the last Day that they were not rich that they were not in high places that they did not enjoy great honours that they were ignorant of many nice Subtilties of Nature But they alone shall be Condemned who do not believe in Christ and who are not the Children of God The Prayer GRant O Lord Jesus Christ that I may never forget those Vows wherewith I have obliged my self unto thee in the Holy Sacrament of Baptism but that renouncing the Devil and all his Works I may obey thy Commandments with my whole Heart and confessing my self to be a Miserable Sinner I may confide in thy Merits and serve Thee in Holiness and Righteousness all the days of my life Amen CHAP. XI That we must repent And first of sorrowing for our sins FOR as much as the Christian knows that he is conceiv'd and born in sins and that in this corruption of Humane Nature no body can sufficiently resist the Temptations of the World the Flesh and the Devil that there is no Man which sinneth not 2 Chr. 6.36 Prov. 20.9 for who can say I have made my Heart clean I am pure from my sin and that even the Just man falleth seven times Prov. 24.16 therefore he hates and bewails his sins and confesseth that by them he hath provoked Gods anger against him so that he justly deserveth the eternal pains of Hell But the Christian must bewail his sins seriously and from his heart 2 Cor. 7.10 For that is godly sorrow which worketh Repentance unto Salvation not to be repented of that is a true sorrow for sins joyn'd with faith Now this grief and sadness the Holy Ghost excites in us as also doth the Consideration and Meditation of Christs Passion As if a Man considers who he is whom he hath offended who it is that is angry with him and that his sins were the cause of his Saviours Passion For Man from himself is nothing but he is Gods Creature and whatever any one hath he hath it from God But God is the Creator of all things the King of Kings and Lord of Lords Omnipotent Immense most Wise most Good and most Great insomuch that between Man and God there is no proportion And yet Man by his sins rebell'd against God and deliver'd himself up into the Bondage of Satan and so provoked the infinite anger of his God against him Now the Passion of Christ is the Mirrior of the Divine anger And whoever considers with himself the reasons that mov'd the Son of God to become Man to suffer and to die and confesseth that it was the sins of the World which could no other ways be atton'd for than by the Death and Passion of the Son of God himself he who shall consider that Man who is Dust and Ashes fell away from his Creator the great and good God and listed himself under the Devils Banner and so by his sins provoked Gods anger enough to have thrown him headlong into Hell and withal shall confess it to be in part his own fault that the
best done if instead of thinking any more on Death it self he rather transfers his thoughts and fixes them on the most Happy State of the Heavenly life to which he is hastning Apoc. 14.13 For Blessed are the Dead which die in the Lord they rest from their Labours and their Works follow them For although Death be the Wages of Sin yet by the Death of Christ it is changed into a happy passage to a true life by which being set loose from the Prison of this World from the Bondage of Trouble and from the Chains of sin we come unto Christ By the Dissolution of our Corporeal Tabernacle we are Translated from our Earthly Pilgrimage to dwell for ever with the Lord By Death we leave this valley of Tears this Dungeon of Misery and mount up to the Heavenly Jerusalem where there is no crying nor pain nor Death but perpetual Pleasures and rejoycing for evermore Hence the Apostle truly calls Death the gain of the godly for is it not great gain to leave evil things and to possess an infinite good The sick Person may perhaps be sad and melancholly when he thinks that he must now endure a great deal of pain and when he is dead must be left by all his Friends and Travel alone into an unknown Region but to confort him against this let him consider that he enjoys the presence of God and the Divine assistance according to Gods promise that the Blessed Angels will wait on him to Conduct his Soul to the Pallace of the Great King for they are all Ministring Spirits Heb. 1. ult sent forth to Minister unto those who shall be Heirs of Salvation That as no Body is born into the World by chance so doth no body die by chance neither but that Diseases and Death happen to us by Gods appointment And let him Meditate on such Texts of Scripture as these Thus saith the Lord Isa 43.1 ● when thou passest through the Waters I will be with thee and through the Rivers they shall not overflow thee When thou walkest through the fire thou shall not be burnt neither shall the flame kindle upon thee Call upon me in the day of Trouble Ps 50.15 I will deliver thee and thou shalt glorifie me Though I walk through the Valley of the shaddow of Death I will fear no Evil Ps 23.4 for thou art with me Ps 43. ult Why art thou cast down O my Soul and why art thou disquieted within me Hope in God for I shall yet praise him who is the health of my Countenance and my God Ps 73.25 Whom have I in Heaven but thee And there is none upon Earth that I desire besides thee vers 26. My Flesh and my Heart faileth but God is the strength of my Heart and my portion for ever vers 28. It is good for me to draw near to God I have put my Trust in the Lord God Mat. 10.29 vers 30. vers 31. Joh. 8.51 One Sparrow shall not fall to the ground without your Father and the very hairs of your Head are all numbred Fear ye not therefore Verily verily I say unto you if a Man keep my saying he shall never see Death That is not only he shall not see Eternal Death but also shall not feel the bitterness of the Temporal Death Rom. 8.31 2 Chr. 20.21 If God be for us who can be against us O our God we know not what to do but our Eyes are upon thee 2 Pet. 2.9 The Lord knoweth how to deliver the Godly out of Temptations Shall we receive good at the hand of God Job 2.10.1.21 Job 13.15 Job 19.25 and shall we not receive evil Blessed be the Name of the Lord. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him I know that my Redeemer liveth and though after my skin worms destroy this Body yet in my flesh shall I see God 1 Cor. 10.13 God is faithful who will not suffer you to be Tempted above that ye are able but will with the Temptation also make away to escape that ye may be able to bear it But suppose you should feel some of the cruel pangs of Death yet consider that they befal you by the Will of God to whom the very Hairs of our Head are known and without whose Pleasure nothing in the World happens That they are Tokens of Gods Favour rather than his Anger Heb. 12.6 for whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth However these pains are very short and Momentary and by them we have admission into Eternal life Our Nativity is attended with Sorrow and Crying But the sharper these pangs are the sooner they will be over and then succeeds everlasting Joy and Gladness Rom. 8.18 For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us 2 Cor. 4.16 For which cause we faint not but though our outward Man perish vers 17. yet the inward Man is renewed day by day For our light affliction which is but for a Moment encreaseth for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory If we die with him we shall also live with him 2 Tim. 2.11 We must through much Tribulation enter into the Kingdom of God and the God of all grace 1. Pet. 5.10 who hath called us unto his Eternal glory by Christ Jesus after that ye have suffered a while will Establish Strengthen and Settle you Chronical Diseases may perhaps be troublesome and painful for some time yet all even the longest are but a moment in respect of Eternity Therefore wait on the Lord Ps 27.14 be of good courage and he shall strengthen thine Heart wait I say on the Lord For though he should seem to hide his face from thee for a Moment Isa 54.8 yet with everlasting kindness will he have Mercy on thee His anger may endure for a Moment Ps 30.5 but in his favour is life weeping may endure for a Night but joy cometh in the Morning If any should be concern'd least in the agony of Death their Ears should be deaf and their Senses fail them and so should be destitute of necessary Consolations let them remember that the Spirit it self will bear witness with our Spirits Rom. 8.16.26 that we are the Children of God Likewise the Spirit also helpeth our infirmities for we know not what we should pray for as we ought but the Spirit it self maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered He is the true and only Comforter who when our Eyes are darkned inlightens our Heart when our Ears are shut will speak Consolation to our Souls Let them also attentively meditate on what our Saviour said a little before his Passion Now is the Prince of this World judged Joh. 16.11 that is he who brought Death into the World is overcome by my Death and condemned and is deprived
God to call him out of it Let not any then despise these counsels and directions as if they belonged only to sick and Dying Men but rather consider that if they daily exercise themselves in the use and practise of them whilst they are in their health and strength they will reap the greater benefit by them when they come to die and will depart this life with a comfortable assurance of God's favour but it is to be feared that they will find themselves very ill prepar'd for an happy departure hence at the time of their dissolution who when they were well us'd all their endeavours to put the thoughts of death out of their minds Be therefore intent and diligent in reading and meditating on Lectures of Mortality and learn to die whilst you live Put on the person of a dying man even now whilst the strength of your mind and body remains perfect and entire in you Do those things now which you would desire to do when you are a dying and then when ever the tim● draws nigh that you must die indeed you will find all those holy preparations with which you so frequently exercised your self in your life time will be wonderfully helpful and subservient to you in that your last hour All the Divine Comforts and Consolations with which you entertain'd your self during the days of your Pilgrimage here will come afresh into your mind and you will have little more to do than to rejoyce in the reflexions on a well spent life and to commend your Soul into the Hands of God as into the Hands of a faithful Creatour and most Merciful Saviour And when ever any sickness seizeth on you remember that it doth not come by chance but by the hand of God and thank him for his Fatherly Correction towards you Commit your self to his Divine Providence and rely not too much on the Physitians help which we find king Asa reprov'd for in Holy Scripture Yet according to the advice of the Son of Sirach Honour the Physitian and make use of such means as God and Nature offer but let your greatest care be for the health of your Soul For since a dreadful Eternity succeeds the short moment of your life What madness would it be to employ all your Care and Diligence about this vain life which passeth away like a shaddow and to make no provision for your everlasting State in the other World till you are brought to the very confines of it But O Christian if you are wise be every day thinking that you must shortly put off this your Earthly Tabernacle even as the Lord hath shewn you And in any sickness that befalls you first reconcile your self to God and then you may be assured that either he will make the means you use conducive to the health of your Body or else will make your Disease and even Death it self healthful to your Soul A TABLE Of the Chapters in the ensuing Treatise comprizing the Sum of Christian Religion CHAP. I. IT is appointed for all Men once to die p. 1. Chap. II. And at death all things in the World are to be left behind p. 4. Chap. III. But after death there remains another life and death is the passage either to Eternal Happiness or Misery p. 10 Chap. IV. All Men after death must stand before the Judgment Seat of God p. 16. Chap. V. And some shall be Translated into Eternal life abounding with infinite Felicities p. 22. Chap. VI. Whilst others shall be cast headlong into the unspeakable Torments of Hell p. 27. Chap. VII And since they only are partakers of the Blessed life who die well it therefore concerns all Men to be careful how they live and to prepare themselves for a Blessed death as a thing very difficult Now this Preparation is either general and to be exercised every day or particular to be performed when death approaches p. 36. Chap. VIII Towards this general and daily Preparation it is requisite for a Man first to consider the certainty of death the shortness of life and uncertainty of the hour of death p. 38. Chap. IX Secondly Not to fear Death p. 52. Chap. X. Thirdly That he perform the Duty of a Christian p. 61. Chap. II. Now the Duty of a Christian consists chiefly in true Repentance And first in sorrow for sin p. 68. Chap. XII Secondly In an Humble Reliance on the Mercies of God and in Faith in Christ p. 73. Chap. XIII Thirdly In an Holy life p. 79. Chap. XIV And he lives well who loves God above all things p. 85. Chap. XV. And his Neighbour as himself p. 93. Chap. XVI And to this end he is to strive against all Capital and Enormeus sins which are contrary to the love of God and his Neighbour p. 97. Chap. XVII And that the Christian may the better persevere in the exercises of Virtue and Repentante it may be very useful for him to compose a Diary or a daily Form of Devotion p. 118 Chap. XVIII The particular preparation for death consists in two things one whereof concerns the sick Person and the other his Neighbour The first is that the dying Man make his peace with God and fortifie his mind against all those Temptations which usually insinuate themselves at this time The second is that he be in perfect Love and Charity with all Men and rightly dispose of all his Worldly concerns p. 140. IMPRIMATUR Feb. 15. 1693 4. Guil. Lancaster R P D Henrico Epis Lond à Sacris Domestic●s ERRATA PAg. 13 line 5. for Theogenis read Theognis p. 45. l. 2. f. neglact r. neglect p. 52. l. 15. f. the r. a. p. 53. l. 28. f. World r. World p. 69. l. 19. f. Mirrior r. Mirroir p. 81. l. 9. f. in r. and. p. 103. l. 23. f. this r. his p. 108. l. 28. f. Languish r. Anguish p. 127. l. 11. f. putrisying r. putrify p. 172. l. 10. f. desire r. deserve p. 173. l. 8. f. make r. maketh Daniel Sennertus HIS MEDITATIONS OF Living holily and dying happily CHAP. I. That all must die WE are taught both by Sacred and Heathen Writers that we must all die whilst they often inculcate that it is appointed unto men once to die Heb. 9.27 Wisd 7.6 1 Kings 2.2 that all-Men have one entrance into Life and the like going out that Death is the way of all the Earth Thus also Ovid speaks Tendimus huc omnes metam properamus ad unam Omnia-sub leges mors vocat atra suas We all pass swiftly on to the same state And all are subject to the Laws of Fate And Horace Lib. 2. Od. 18. Omnes manet una nox calcanda semel via lethi A long dark Night will all the World o're spread And all the rugged paths of Death must tread But much more plainly doth daily experience and the Funerals we continually see go by our doors admonish us of our mortality Sen. Ep. 100. Omnis dies omnis
one may receive the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad so that as every one is found at the hour of death such shall he be judged They shall live happily in the other World that die well they miserably that die ill And thus it is that the hour of death separates the good from the wicked at the greatest distance To the good death is the end and determination of all troubles and the beginning of Eternal Felicity and Blessedness but to the wicked death is the privation of all the delights and pleasures and riches of this life and is the beginning of Eternal Misery and never ending Punishment The Prayer O Merciful Father who didst create me for a far more blessed condition then this miserable life which the brute animals enjoy vouchsafe so to direct me in my passage through this World that I may never set my affections on things below but use them with such indifferency that I may at length attain to the joys and glories of the blessed life above and that knowing I have here no continuing City I may with the greater earnestness seek one to come Heb. 13 14. CHAP. IV. The Consideration of the last Judgement AFter Death comes Judgment Think therefore O Man that immediately after Death thy Soul must appear before God Ecc. 12.7 and that at the last Day it shall be joyned again to thy body and then thou shalt be Judged before Gods Tribunal in the presence of all the Angels and Saints Consider that thou must appear before a Judge whose unerring Wildom thou canst by no means deceive whose power thou canst by no ways avoid whose Justice thou canst by no means corrupt A Judge who will enquire into thy vainest words and thy most trivial thoughts who is now present at and beholds all the words and actions of the whole World Who is there so bold so desperately wicked that dares contumaciously violate the Laws and commit Crimes worthy of Death in the presence of his King And yet more than this dare Men do who spightfully break the Commands of God before his face but this Judge who knows all our actions Eccl. 12.14 Rom. 14.12 shall bring every work into judgement with every secret thing whether it be good or whether it be evil so that every one of us shall give an account of himself to God For he which is Lord over all Wisd 6.7 shall fear no mans person neither shall he stand in awe of any mans greatness for he hath made the small and great and careth for all alike Let therefore your thoughts be always employ'd in meditating on this severe Judgement in which there will be no more place for pardon nothing shall then be granted either by Prayers or Tears but either this merciful Sentence shall pass on the Righteous Matth. 25.23 Well done good and faithful Servant thou hast been faithful over a few things I will make thee ruler over many things enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. Ver. 34. Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdom prepared for you from the Foundation of the World or on the contrary this terrible Sentence shall be thundred out against the wicked by the most just Judge Ver. 41. Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels What can our minds conceive more sweet and pleasant than to hear God saying to us come ye blessed what more sad and dreadful than depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire In this day of Judgement wealth will not help the rich nor power nor honours the great Ones of this World Knowledge will not absolve the wise nor will force preserve the strong This Judge will not be pleased by flatteries nor brib'd by rewards no Prayers will move him no Tears will appease him Psal 9.8 but he shall judge the World in righteousness and shall minister judgement to the People in uprightness Then as 't is said in Wisdom shall the righteous man stand in great boldness Chap. 5.1 c. before the face of such as have afflicted him and made no account of his labours when they see it they shall be troubled with terrible fear and shall be amazed at the strangeness of his salvation so far beyond all that they looked for And they repenting and groaning for anguish of spirit shall say within themselves This was he whom we had sometimes in derision and a proverb of reproach We fools accounted his life madness and his end to be without honour How is he numbred among the Children of God and his lot is among the Saints Consider farther O man who they are that in this future Judgement shall hear this joyful word come ye blessed and shall be made partakers of eternal Glory and on the contrary who they are on whom this dreadful Sentence shall be pronounced depart from me ye cursed and so shall be cast into Hell fire and then give all diligence that you may be found in the number of the blessed and not amongst the miserable Now who both these are the Holy Scriptures do sufficiently declare Our Saviour himself tells us Mat. 13.41 that the Angels shall gather the wicked together and cast them into a furnace of fire John 3.36 He that believeth not the Son shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him John 3.19 And this is the Condemnation that light is come into the World and men loved darkness rather than light because their deeds were evil But the fearful and unbelieving Rez 21.8 and the abominable and murderers and whoremongers and sorcerers and idolaters and all liars shall have their part in the Lake which burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death 2 Thes 1.7 8 9. The Lord Jesus shall be revealed from Heaven with his mighty Angels in flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God and that obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ Who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit 1 Cor. 6.9 10. the Kingdom of God be not deceived neither fornicators nor idolaters nor adulterers nor effeminate nor abusers of themselves with monkind nor thieves nor coveteous nor drunkards nor revilers nor extortioners shall inherit the Kindom of God Now the works of the flesh are manifest which are these Gal. 5.19 20 21. adultery fornication uncleanness lasciviousness idolatry witchcraft hatred variance emulations wrath strife seditions heresies envyings murthers drunkenness revellings and such like of the which I tell you before as I have also told you in time past that they which do such things shall not inherit the Kingdom of God On the contrary we are told who they are that shall be sav'd Joh. 3.18 Mark 16.16 Rom. 5.1 He that believeth on the Son of God is
and if it be needful make his Will which ought to be plain and intelligible comformable to the Law of Nature to the Word of God and to the Laws of the Country wherein he lives that so there may be no occasion given to his Heirs and Executors to have any Litigious Disputes and Law-Suits after his Death and this he ought to do whilst his Mind and Tongue and Hand can perform their Functions and not to defer it till he is not able to make his mind known clearly and distinctly either by word or writing And indeed they do most conveniently and to the purpose who make their Wills whilst they are in perfect health on the contrary they very ill consult their own Affairs who put off the making of their Wills till some dangerous sickness assaults them and then perhaps they are suddenly taken out of the World or the Disease causes a Frenzie and so their minds become utterly indispos'd for the settling of their Worldly concerns If the sick Person remembers that he hath taken any thing away from any Man wrongfully let him restore it again to the right owner or if he be Dead and that cannot well be done let him appoint it to be given to pious uses to the poor of the Church or State For as St. Augustin saith Si res aliena propter quam peccatum est cum reddi possit non redditur non agitur poenit●ntia sed fingitur Epist 54. ad Ma●don A Man is an Hypocrite and not a true Penitent if he doth not restore goods wrongfully taken when it is in his power to do it And let those also who abound in Riches honestly gotten take care that some portion of them be given to good and pious uses and that amongst the rest of their Legacies something be left and assigned to Christ Moreover the sick Person ought to look after such things as concern the Souls of those under his care and to commend unto all his Family that Religion which is contained in the Word of God and diligently to exhort them to a Holy life to the love and service of God Although as it hath been said such things were better to be ordered and provided for when we are well and in good Health because Death takes away many on a sudden and some Diseases are of such a Nature that they presently deprive a Man of the power of thinking on and ordering such things so that it will be most safe and prudent for the sick Person to put off all thoughts of Earthly things and not to distract himself with any cares but to fix his mind wholly upon God and on his happy passage out of this life And now when the sick Man finds his end approaching that the time of his departure is at hand and that he is now to struggle with the pangs of Death laying aside all Worldly cares let him intirely submit himself to Gods Will and in no wise withstand it and say Father thy Will be done whether it be by Life or by Death And then let him endeavour that he may die in the Faith of Christ and rest in the Lord that is let him give himself up wholly to the grace and mercy of God in the Merits of Christ and to the Consolations of the Holy Spirit For since in that last hour this World and all things in it Friends and Relations Riches and Pleasures and whatever else is taking and delightful must be quite abandon'd it is very fitting that his mind should bid farewel to all things here below and by Faith lift up it self to God alone And the Man being thus plac'd as it were out of himself he ought with the most earnest Affections and with the most Ardent Prayers and Fervent Sighs to fly unto the Mercy and Goodness of God and say with David Ps 73.26 My Flesh and my Heart faileth but God is the strength of my Heart and my Portion for ever In thee O Lord do I put my trust Ps 31.1 let me never be put to Confusion deliver me in thy Righteousness And then at last when he is just going out of the World let him commend his Soul unto God as unto a faithful Creatour and most Merciful Saviour and say with Christ Father Luk. 23.46 into thy Hands I commend my Spirit And with St. Act. 7.59 Stephen Lord Jesus receive my Spirit If any of the foregoing Temptations should be suggested by Satan to the sick Person when he lies under the agonies of Death let him not trouble himself to give an answer but commit himself wholly to Christ and depend only upon him and presevere to the last in pious Prayers and Ejaculations As also those that are present with him ought to do especially when they find his senses begin to fail him For the Prayers of the Righteous avail much and our Lord hath promised that where two or three are gathered together in his Name there will he be in the midst of them and that whatsoever we ask of the Father in his Name he will give it us Now where-ever Christs gracious presence is the Devil of necessity must flee before him Neither can the Devil tempt any Man beyond what God permits him And therefore every one ought not to be admitted to the sick Person when he is at the point of Death but only such who are Religious who by Devout Prayers can commend the departing Soul to God but such are not to be suffered to come to him who may in the least excite in him an hatred against any Man or a love towards any Worldly thing Or if they are permitted to come to him care must be taken that they behave themselves so as not to raise in his mind any evil affection which he had before laid aside and forsaken For a Soul that would depart happily out of this life ought to be inflam'd with the love of God alone and not to be mov'd either by the love or hatred of any Creature whatever And more especially let care be taken that the Dying Man may be visited and assisted by some Minister of Gods Word of good Learning and Judgment that he may know how to speak a word in season to the wearied Soul that he may so govern and temper his Discourse as neither to deceive the departing Soul by too much condescention and flattery nor to drive him to despair by an unseasonable sharpness and severity but may be able to instruct and fortifie him against all the Temptations of Satan with Divine Counsels and Consolations The Prayer O Lord God and my most merciful Father who hast now sent unto me the messenger of death and hast chastised me with sickness I confess my self to be a grievous sinner and that I have oftentimes offended thee even from my very infancy and therefore I acknowledge that this punishment is justly inflicted on me and that I desire death it self but I beseech thee of thine infinite mercies blot