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A17913 A casket of ievvells and precious pearles Set forth in a funerall sermon, preached in Heckfield Church, at the buriall of a religious young gentleman, Mr. Barnabas Creswell, sonne of Mr. Thomas Creswell Esquire, by Nathanael Cannon, Batchelar in diuinitie. Cannon, Nathanael, 1581 or 2-1664. 1625 (1625) STC 4575.7; ESTC S115891 12,655 78

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A CASKET OF IEVVELS and precious PEARLES Set forth in a FVNERALL Sermon Preached in Heckfield Church at the Buriall of a Religious young Gentleman Mr. Barnabas Creswell Sonne of Mr. Thomas Creswell Esquire By NATHANAEL CANNON Batchelar in Diuinitie August de Temp. Ser. 49. Dies noster Dominus Christus non facit occasum LONDON Printed by T. S. for Nathanael Newbery at the Starre vnder St. Peters Church in Cornehill and in Popes-head Alley 1625. To the Worshipfull and Christian yoake-fellowes Mr. Iohn Stampe and M irs Iane Stampe his Wife Nathaniel Cannon wisheth true Comforts externall internall and eternall TO you Both as partners in losse and lamentation I tender this Treatise and yet I am to speake vnto you two who are but one apart concerning this businesse Sir he called you Father by a course of Law and yet with conscience declared himselfe a very childe For if obedience reuerence and daily diligence might beget loue then needs must he be a beloued Sonne who was all this to you for conscience sake To you his deare Mother hee was a right Barnabas which is by signification a Sonne of Consolation of which you had no small measure both from his life and death He honoured you you loued him he comforted you you tendered him and this was the mutuall intercourse betwixt you vntill GOD tooke him from you As for my selfe who at his Funerall read the Lecture of our mortality besides the many bands of Christianity wherewith all the faithfull are linked and conioyned together there are other especiall motiues to make you and yours neare and deare to me For first you were a good Instrument vnder GOD both to comfort and counsell mee in that calling whereunto the Lord hath appointed mee Secondly you and that worthy Gentleman my Brother Master Creswell who is falne asleepe were not wanting to mee and mine but made your house vnto vs as the house of Onesiphorus was vnto Paul a place of great refreshing 2 Tim. 1.16 Now as the Prophet saith vnto the Sunamyte who had prouided a Chamber a Table a Stoole and a Candlesticke for the man of God 2 Kings 4.13 thou hast been careful for vs but what may I do for thee so say I what shall be done for you by mee Surely vnlesse it be in the course of my calling to pray with you and for you and sometimes as God offers occasion to present some part of my poore labours vnto you loe this is all I can doe nothing else Wherefore let mee pay my debts vnto you after this manner and the rather for that you both with diuers others haue desired that this Sermon Preached at the Funerall of this faithfull seruant of God and deere Son of yours might see the light Yet let mee not robbe you louing Brother of your desires in making this your especiall request that hee whom you had imprinted in your heart might be put in Print at your instance which is done by way of Dedication to you and her who is a part of you my deere Sister Here shall you take a view of the Saints and of their condition who are the precious Iewels lockt vp in the Casket of this Scripture Doubtlesse your Childe was one of these a rich Diamond whose ground being Christ must needes haue the light both of grace and glory Remember therefore Iobs giuer and taker which Text hee quoteth in the case of Children God giueth saith he and God taketh blessed be the name of the Lord Iob 1.21 If you will blesse him he will blesse you our least submission brings great consolation Yeeld Sister yeeld and God grant you the true comfort of those branches yet in being God blesse them and make his face to shine vpon them that they may liue to doe worthily in Ephrata and be famous in Bethelem Ruth 4.11 Amen Amen Subscribed by your louing Brother in the Lord Iesus Christ Nathanael Cannon Text. PSAL. 116. Verse 15. Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints THE whole world in her full age is but a Kalnder● of yeares and dayes as for Man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that little world he brings his yeares to an end as it were a tale that is told Nam vita nostra similes est Rotae saith Zanchius vpon the fourth to the Philippians our life saith he is like a wheele modo in suprema modo in infima parte versamur sometimes saith he we are rising sometimes falling now wee are at the very top and height of our comforts by and by downe againe in the depth of our sorrowes at length in the transition of this whirling wheele that life that earst was all aloft shall with one gaspe lay it selfe all along What shall we say to this the Heauens doe many times grow blacke and cloudy and yet cleere againe the earth moues not at all yet hath his being the Seas they ebbe flowe but haue returnes yea the very plants and trees let fall their lease but keepe their life for as Iob 14. obserues There is hope of a tree though it be cut downe yet by the scent of water it may bud and sprout forth againe but as for man the man of earth for so he is rightly called as Chrysostome obserues in his 12. Hom. in Gen. Homo rectè terra apellatur quia prorsus est terrenus he may well be called earth that is so earthly Alas this man as Iob notes falles sicke and dyes gone he is with a nunquam rediturus the eye that hath seene him shall see him no more Orimur morimur wee liue wee dye Sic transit gloria mundi Wee neede not turne our bookes to proue this point for in Gods standing Library which is the world there are two Lieger Bookes the one liber Creaturarum the booke of the Creatures the other liber Scripturarum the booke of the Scriptures in both these volumes it is written that Death hath a Habeas-Corpus for vs all As for that of the Creatures it speakes vnto vs in the matter of our mortality as the Prophet Dauid doth in the 19. Psalme touching Gods glory One day tels another and one night certifieth another and there is neither speech nor language vnder the heauens but the voyce of Gods glory is heard amongst them so verily one day tels another and one night certifies another there is neither speech nor language vnder the heauens but the voyce of death is heard amongst them As for that of the Scriptures we know that all Scripture is giuen by inspiration from God and is profitable to teach as the Apostle witnesseth 2 Tim. 3.16 Each leafe doth reade a lecture to our life teaching vs so to liue the life of the righteous that wee may die the death of the righteous yet notwithstanding wee may say of the Scriptures as the Apostle doth of the starres 1 Cor. 15. one starre saith hee differeth from another in glory so doubtlesse one Scripture may giue more light
resurrection and then comes that coniunction and re-vnion of both againe now then death cannot preuent or alter that marriage day for as the Apostle saith What shall seperate vs from the loue of Christ Iesus shall afflictions shall Principalities shall powers shall things present or things to come shall life or death no nothing shall remoue vs from the lone of Christ Iesus Rom. 8.39 Thirdly the sting and poyson of death is taken away Christ Iesus like a triumphant Conquerour hath subdued Consūmatum est it is finished and the debt paid and the hand-writing that was against vs fastened to his Crosse Colos 2.14 now then put it to the question why shall wee feare to dye I deny not but nature hath trembles in the very best of vs vntill we ouercome it by grace and diuine meditations we doe at death as Moses did with his rod who when hee saw it turned into a serpent primo intuitu he started from it but afterwards goes neere vnto it takes it vp and makes vse of it so wee indeede at the first vntill wee see death disarmed start from it but afterwards finding that Christ hath gotten victorie ouer the graue and that the sting is gone as the challing shewes Hosea 13. then with Moses we draw neer and surrender into the hands of the Lord beeing but tenents at will then wee can take the rod and make good vse of it as he did Exod. 9.4 As for those that feare to dye notwithstanding these comforts if wee should enter into their reasons they must needes be dreadfull as First either they haue not tasted of the life to come and so are lothe to change this present life or else they haue not dyed aforehand that is considered of death before it came or else thirdly they haue carried their bane euill consciences about them We will take view of these reasons by themselues For the first of them their not tasting of the life to come indeede their case is miserable for they liue onely in body and cannot say with the Apostle I liue by Faith in the Sonne of God Galat. 2.20 These men must haue their soules beaten out or driuen out of them as wee finde of the hypocrites estate in the 27. of Iob What hope hath hee saith the Text when God shall beate out his soule Indeede such men sing loath to depart for here was their blisse and to be taken from hence being aliens and strangers from the life of God Ephes 4. alas what shall they doe As for those that haue not dyed afore hand it must needes be as terrible to them how many greets and re-greets passe betwixt God and the soules of the faithfull Paul desires to be dissolued and to be with God which is best of all Phil. 2. and the blessed Apostle tels vs that by the reioycing that he hath in Christ he dyes dayly 1 Cor. 15. He numbers his dayes and so that he may apply his heart vnto wisedome as Dauid prayes Psalme 90. this spirituall Arithmeticke is a good knowledge but the prophane and carnall men desires to meete with no such reckoning this not dying afore-hand makes many so bebinde-hand with repentance but let Hadrian the Emperour be an example vnto them it is storied of him that death comming and he not expecting and when the diuorce betwixt the body and soule was to be executed hee cryes out as amazed O aminula vagula blandula quae nunc abibis in loca O my poore soule whether art thou going Doth hee aske of his hopes then when the partition was to bee made A poore soule indeed for all his Empire If therefore wee would not bee surprized let vs bee prepared Now last of all which is not least of all but rather worst of all comes they who are loath to dye because they carry their bane about them and that is an euill conscience this puts them vpon the racke and tortures all parts this makes their case like vnto the strooke Deare the arrow shee hath at her heart and yet skips vp and downe but carryes that about her that will dispatch her so is it with an euill conscience well they may skippe vp and downe but they haue that at the heart of them that will make all vncomfortable and no meruaile for a wounded spirit who can beare saith Salomon This gaue as Folydore Virgill obserues King Richard the third more wounds in his dreame the night before then hee had the next day in the field Well let vs all labour pray and endeauour for good consciences this makes a continuall feast this sends vs with boldnesse to the throne of grace Hebr. 4. In a word this will make vs both in life and death fit for CHRIST IESVS whose wee are and not our owne and therefore ought to glorifie God both in our bodies and soules which were redeemed with the precious bloud of IESVS CHRIST through whom we haue redemption euen the forgiuenesse of our sinnes Ephes 1.7 And thus much shall suffice to bee spoken for our instruction who are in our way towards God now a word or two of him who is already gone to GOD. The Testimony of him that liued and dyed in the Faith of Christ Iesus VVEE doe reade of the Patriarches and others that after their deaths they were embalmed Genes 50.2 but this Gentleman embalmed himselfe aliue I speake it according to the sense of Salomon Eccles 7.1 A good name saith he is as a precious oyntment many sweete odours belongs vnto it which time can neither wash nor waste away Nam virtus post funera viuit Thus did this hopefull young Gentleman follow the tracke of the Elders who by Faith obtained a good report Heb. 11.2 Demetrius like it was with him of whom Saint Iohn speakes largely in his third Epistle Demetrius saith he hath a good report of all men yea and of the truth it selfe If any that knew not this person would presse the reason of his commendation answere will be made that if sincerity in his Re●igion industry in his Vocation and affability in Conuersation might giue their voyces it will be no sinne to say this was a gracious youth And first for his Religion He was not with Agrippa almost a christian nor yet with Laodicea luke-warme in his profession but found in al true tenents of the faith worshiping that one and onely God from whence saluation comes to men As for his Vocation with a diligent hand and faithfull heart hee went about it his gaine therein was godlinesse which the Apostle saith is great gaines if men be content with that they haue 1 Timoth. 6. Surely hee was content for peace-sake to passe-by his profits many times and to end matters at home for the preuenting of further inconueniences that might arise in poynt of law If all that were towards the law had the same heart surely that calling would haue a great part of that blessing which CHRIST pronounceth Beati pacifici Blessed are the peace-makers Mat. 5 For surely the law is good and surely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which comes of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to distribute or dare suum cuique to giue to euery one that which is his had a good ordination and therefore they shall doe well who haue other mens causes to follow to remember that one day their owne cause shall come before the Iudge This yong Lawyer did so being tender in his conscience and vpright in the causes he vndertooke As for his Conuersation it was such that all that knew him did desire him for hee had matter and apprehended things with good iudgement and then the manner of his conuerse was so affable as that hee found fauour wheresoeuer he came which is the blessing promised Pro. 16. When a mans wayes doe please the Lord hee will make his enemies to be his friends In a word hee was to his deare mother a right Barnabas that is a Sonne of consolation for so the word signifieth he was gratiou with men and precious with God he did liue the life of the righteous and did dye the death of the righteous he is gone before and wee shall follow In which progresse let vs end FINIS
vnto a matter then another and one Scripture may yeeld more comfort against death then another which being granted then let me say for this Text that it doth so prepare or rather resolue the faithfull so perfume their graues which are their beds Esay 57.2 that they knowing themselues to bee the Saints and Seruants of God and the spirit of God bearing witnesse vnto theirs that they are his Rom. 8.16 Yea his deere darlings and precious Iewels they then feele that comfort wherof the Apostle speaketh Rom. 14.8 whether they liue or dye they are the Lords and they apprehend their aduantage in Christ Iesus who as the Apostle saith is aduantage to him both in life and death Phil. 1.21 This makes the Saints with old Simeon ready to cry Lord now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace according to thy word for mine eyes haue seene thy saluation Now the Saints haue the same obiect to looke vpon and the same subiect to speake on and must not they then bee precious who shall bee heyres of saluation Such honour haue all the Saints of whose happy state and condition my Text here speakes Let mee therefore say thus much of this portion of Scripture that it is very seasonable for the occasion and very sutable to his person that here lyes before vs of whom I doubt not to pronounce him the faithfull St. seruant of Iesus Christ and therefore precious in the sight of God Now come wee to the worke wee haue in hand that so wee may see how this Text takes place in point of Coherence with tha rest of the Psalme The voyce of Thankesgiuing doth with a spirituall trumpet soundforth the praise of God in this Psalme wherein Dauid who was the sweet Singer of Israell hath many notes of thankful remembrance for the manifolde deliuerances that GOD had vouchsafed vnto him but more particularly hee instances in that mercy that the Lord shewed in keeping him from Saul who hunted after his life in the desart of Maon And in the 3. verse he tels vs that when the sorrowes of death had compassed him round about then hee began to lay hold on God assuring himselfe that neither Saul nor any of his argents should eyther catch or kill him without that diuine permission which did watch ouer him and there fore hee will put his life into the hands of God and vpon that very ground he will set vp his rest which hee doth in the 7. verse Returne O my soule vnto thy rest and because they are vnworthy of future blessings who are not thankfull for former hee therefore comes in the 12. 13. verses with his quid retribuam Domino what shal I render to the Lord for all his mercies then the cup of saluation must bee mentioned and the vowes must bee paide making my Text the reason of all this Because the Lord will take such care both of the bodies and soules of the liues and deaths of his Saints that whether hee preserue them from the hands of Tyrants or else suffer them to be euill intreated or persecuted that so God may be glorified this shall be surely imprinted in the hearts of the faithfull that they are right deere and precious in the sight of God And thus much shall suffice for the Analysis of the whole Psalme and the particular sense and meaning of the Text it selfe Now it remaines that wee take the Text asunder and note vnto you the diuident Branches thereof 1 Obserue the disp●sition of the Saints themselues that so their corruption may put on incorruption and that in their earthly peregrination they may passe from the Kingdome of Grace to the Kingdome of Glory 2 Obserue the Acceptation of the Saints with God to earthly men they are but meane base and contemptible in the sight of this world but in the sight of God right deere and precious and as they value Dauids life in the 2 of Sam. 18.3 thy life say they is worth tenne thousand of ours So indeed one faithfull Seruant of the Lord is worth tenne thousand others in the sight of God for they are precious in his sight 1 Ratione praetij by reason of the price that was paide to redeeme their soules withall and that was the precious bloud of Iesus Christ as the Apostle witnesseth 1 Pet. 1 Chap. Verse 19. Potens non perdet saith a Father quod pecunia emebat A great man will not loose that which hee purchaseth with his money Nec Christus perdet quod sanguine emebat then may wee bee sure that Christ will not loose that which hee purchased with his bloud that precious bloud 2 Ratione tituli they are precious by reason of their title that God hath giuen them they are called the Saynts of God What greater honor can there bee Crownes and Scepters comes short of this vnles they be within the compasse of this Herauldry hath no such scutchions Christianity hath the best Coate the Crest or helme it is saluation it selfe Ephes 6.17 therefore no meruaile though Theodosius the Emperour did preferre his Christianity before his Crowne Mallem me esse Christianum quàm Imperatorem 3 Ratione proemij precious they are by reason of the reward laide vp for them they haue precious promises made to them as Saint Peter saith 2 Pet. 1.4 They labour not in vaine as the men of this world doe Doubtlesse man saith Dauid disquieteth himselfe in vaine he heapeth vp riches and cannot tell who shall gather them But as for the Saints when they haue finished their course there is laide vp for them a crowne of glory yea for all them that loue the comming of the Lord Iesus Christ 2 Tim. 4.8 Loe thus haue wee lookt vpon the Tree and the Branches the Text and the parts now let vs gather the fruit thereof beginning first with our first Branch which is the Dissolution of the Saints There is a hedge made about Iob the iust which doth much trouble the Diuel insomuch that Sathan cannot come at him Iob 1.10 nor yet the gates of hell preuaile against him what is this but Gods prouidence which watcheth ouer the righteous and so protects that a hayre fals not from their heads without it Wherevpon it is that Chrisostome cheares vp the hearts of the faithfull thus Si sic custodiantur superflua tua in quanta securitate est anima tua If saith hee the haires of thy head and the least part of thy body be so kept in what safety is thy soule preserued And yet notwithstanding this keeping out of Sathan by the moundes of Gods mercy yet wee haue no quare impedit against death nothing keepes it out for the very Saints who are so deare in the sight of God euen they must dye the sentence is irreuocable all the children of Adam are within compasse of it for in him as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 15. in Adam al men dye Here then let vs erect our first pillar from this first poynt The