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A13071 The anatomie of mortalitie deuided into these eight heads: viz. 1 The certaitie of death. 2 The meditation on death. 3 The preparation for death. 4 The right behauiour in death. 5 The comfort at our owne death. 6 The comfort against the death of friends. 7 The cases wherein it is vnlawful, and wherin lawfull to desire death. 8 The glorious estate of the saints after this life. Written by George Strode vtter-barister of the middle Temple, for his owne priuate comfort: and now published at the request of his friends for the vse of others. Strode, George, utter-barister of the Middle Temple. 1618 (1618) STC 23364; ESTC S101243 244,731 328

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miseries incident to the seueral ages of man are from the first comming vp vpon the stage of this world to the last act of going downe Eccles 1.14 in al parts of the life full of vanitie and vexation of spirit For the first entrance is our infancie when wee are in our nurses armes and doth not that begin with teares and feares And is not all that time vnhappie sauing that we want reason that is the vse thereof to apprehend that happinesse When we come out of our nurses armes to goe in their hands or to goe by our selues in our next age doe we not weepe long vnder the rod falling into the subiection of a teacher Amongst the ancient Romanes this was their manner and custome for their youth They let their children suck vntill they were two yeers old till they were foure yeeres old they let them play till sixe they taught them to reade till eight to write till ten they learne the Grammer When a boy was once ten yeeres old he was set straight way to some good trade and occupation or else sent to the warres which was a thing the Romanes gloried in most to bee good souldiers In all which ages they sustained great miseries being all this time vnder Tutors and Gouernours When we come out of the prison of boyes and girles and are set at some more libertie in a yong mans life are wee not tossed as vpon a sea of vnquietnesse sailing betweene reason and passion as between two contrary waters and crosse winds Then commeth perfect age or mans age and what haue wee heere but blastes and stormes of greater vnrest then in any age before From one trauaile we passe to another neuer ending but changing our miseries And when we come to old age and haue liued so long that we are come to dotage is there any thing in these ages exempt from miserie and trauaile that is vnder the Sunne Surely our infirmities do then come vpon vs in multitudes yea so loade vs with their waight and number that they make vs to bowe and goe double vnder them vnto the earth And can there be any comfort in these diseases as I may call them and dayes of euill wherein doe meete and flocke together so many vultures of life the weakenesse of infancie the seruitude of childehood the sicknesse of youth the cares of mans age All which come againe and come all together as many stormes vpon one poore old ruinous house that is sore shaken alreadie by death violently to ouerthrow it for euer Heere the excesse and ryot of youth is exercised with gouts palsies and sundrie fearefull aches the watching and cares of manhood are punished with losse of sight of hearing and of sence except the sence of paine There is no part of man which death in that age of yeares doth not take in hope to be assured of him as of a bad pay-master which greatly feareth and would gladly put off his dayes of payment And therefore it bringeth him low in all parts that he may haue power in none to auoid his Creditor and end so neere And touching the miseries incident to the seuerall ages of man the Prophet Ieremie crieth out How is it that I came out of the wombe to see labour and sorrow Ier. 20.18 that my dayes should be consumed with shame How much more cause haue we miserable creatures to crie out of our calamities and miseries who were conceiued and borne in sinne seeing the Prophet complained so much 51.5 Ier. 1.5 being sanctified in his mothers wombe O vaine miserable and vnhappie men before we sinne we are straite fastened to sinne and before we can offend wee are fast bound with offence Consider O man from whence thou camest blush whither thou goest and feare where thou liuest We are begotten in vncleannesse brought foorth with paines and throwes and nourished in darknesse Wee begin our tragedie with nakednesse and weeping we continue with paine and vexation and take our farewell with sorrow and miserie Our beginning is lamentable our continuance wretched and our departure grieuous The whole life of man is beset and incountred with three capitall enemies Paine Care and Sorrow Paine pincheth vs Care consumeth vs and Sorrow endeth vs. There is no age of man free from affliction calamitie and miserie And to begin againe with the miseries of infancie behold in his birth intollerable is his mothers paine and infinite are the infants calamities who commeth into the world crying and weeping poore and naked weake and miserable without speech without knowledge or strength no sooner is the babe borne but straight is hee bound hand and foote and cast into a cradle as into a prison prefiguring the seruitude hee is to suffer In his childhood he beginneth to warre with the lacke of reason and to fight against his owne folly not knowing what hee is where hee is whence nor for what hee came into the world Now must he be kept vnder the feare of the rod and learne some Liberall Science or some Mechanicall Arte or Trade whereby to maintaine his fraile life hereafter if hee continue it Then commeth youth rash head-strong voluptuous ventrous foolish prodigall passionate In this age he commeth into great dangers fighting against the desires of the flesh against fond affections and vaine imaginations which cause the minde to wauer and bee inconstant and to bee carried away with sundrie phantasies In this age hee becommeth a drunkard a gamester a quarreller a loose liuer and oftentimes to be cast into prison to bee hanged and to lose all that hee hath and to be a great griefe vnto his parents Gen. 42.38 in causing them thereby to end their dayes in sorrow in the sence and feeling whereof the Prophet crieth vnto God saying Psal 25.7 Remember not the sinnes of my youth Afterward as he hath to encounter with manhood to which age is incident the charge of wife children the maintenance of family and care of posterity He that is maried saith the Apostle careth for the things that are of the world 1. Cor. 7.33 how he may please his wife Sometimes he is besieged with a desire and carking care and couetousnesse somtime with feare to lose his goods and other infinite such vanities and afflictions Then lastly commeth old age stealing on vnperceiued yea gray haires saith the Prophet are heere and there vpon him Hos 7.9 Ioel 1.2 yet hee knoweth it not In this age man receiues many incurable wounds as baldnesse bleared eyes deafe cares wrinckled browes stinking breath trembling hands faint spirits leane cheekes corruption of stomacke with like miseries innumerable which neuer leaue to wound the bodie disquiet the minde and torment the conscience And thus are wee tossed all the dayes of our life with griefe compassed with cares and ouerwhelmed with miseries and calamities And therefore Plato well obserued that a man is Arbor inuersa a tree turned vpward his haire of his head the root the
daily bread as if wee should reckon the continuance of our life no longer then a day or a few daies And againe the Lord by his prophet calling vpon sinners saith To day if yee will heare his voice Psal 95.7.8.9 harden not your hearts noting thereby that if we liue this day we are not sure to liue the next Where it is said in the Prophecie of Zacharias That we should serue the Lord without feare Luke 1.74.75 in holines and righteousnes before him all the daies of our life We are to note that the Holy Ghost defines life not by yeares or Moneths or weekes but by dayes shewing thereby that our life is nothing else but a composition of a few dayes which how soone they may bee swallowed vp by that long night of death we cannot tell Psal 19.6 but it will be sooner perhaps then we are aware The Sunne arising in the East and falling in the West and all in one day sheweth our rising and falling our comming and going foorth of this world all which may bee done in a day Ier. 6.4 Woe vnto vs saith the Prophet for the day goeth away And a day consisteth but of a morning and euening and a noone Euening and morning and at noone saith the Prophet will I pray and cry aloud and hee shall heare my voice Psal 55.17 Some are taken away in the morning of their life many feele not the heate of the day he that drawes out the line of his life till the euening liues but all the day What pleasure saith one is there in this life when night and day we cannot but thinke that we must passe away It is but a carkas now which yesterday liued yesterday a man to day none The saying of Chrysostome the Lord hath promised pardon to him that repenteth but to liue till to morrow he hath not promised When Pharaoh called for Moses and Aaron to intreat the Lord for him Exod. 8.8 that hee might take away the Frogges from him and his people and Moses asking him when he should intreate for him he said to morrow So many with Pharaoh deferre matters of greatest waight and moment still till to morrow not knowing what may happen to vs before to morrow euen death it selfe for ought we know Is to morrow in thine owne power Canst thou challenge any such promise at Gods hand Happie is that man which of the safetie of his soule can say with himselfe as that olde man Messodamus did who being inuited to dinner the next day answered why inuitest thou me for to morow who of al the yeares I haue liued haue not to morrow day but haue euery houre expected death which alwayes lyes in waite for me The Rich man in the Gospell gathered much possessed much enlarged his garners and promised to himselfe securitie Luk. 12.19.20 with a retired farewell to the world Soule saith hee thou hast much goods laid vp for many yeeres take thine ease eate drinke and be merrie But God said vnto him Thou foole this night shall thy soule be taken from thee then whose shall those things be which thou hast prouided Alas this was it seemeth the first night of his rest and must it be the last too Yes Esay 57.21 Esay answereth them There is no rest to the vngodly He that hath a long iourney to goe in a short time maketh hast and he who remembreth euery day runneth away with his life cannot sit still But where men promise to themselues long life and much time there they waxe wanton and become secure and put farre away the euill day as the Prophet speaketh Amos 6.3 Therefore the Lord doth commend our life vnto vs in all these Scriptures which we haue heard and in other places in a short abstract of dayes and not in a volume of yeeres So Christ saith to Ierusalem If thou hadst knowne Luke 19.42 euen thou at least in this thy day the things which belong to thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes not granting a longer terme then the terme of one poore day vnto her Which was to teach her and vs in her to thinke euery day to be our last day and therefore to do that this day as in our tine which we are not sure to doe the next day as in the time that God hath taken to himselfe and from vs as being more properly his then our day Therefore boast not thy selfe saith the Wiseman of to morrow for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth Prou. 27.1 And there is one more this day of thy number spent and thou art now nearer to thy end by a day But if any man doth think that he may liue as yet many yeeres his yeares may lacke moneths his moneths may lacke weekes his weekes may lacke daies his daies may lacke houres nay his houres may lacke minutes an houre is but a short time But while one houre by continuall succession is added to another the whole course of our life is finished euery houre runneth away with some part of our life and euen then when our bodies grow and increase our liues fade and decrease yea euen this day wherein we liue wee diuide and part with death There is none saith Saint Augustine but is nearer death at the yeares end then at the beginning to morrow then to day to day then yesterday by and by then iust now and now then a little before Each part of time that we passe if time haue parts cuts off so much from our life and the remainder still decreaseth When childhood commeth on infancie dieth when adolescencie commeth childhood dieth when youth commeth adolescencie dieth when old age commeth youth dieth when death commeth all and euery age dyeth So that looke how many degrees of ages we desire to liue so many degrees of death we desire to die Aske an old man where is his infancie where his childhood where his adolescencie where his youth shall he not say true if he answere alas all these are dead and gone What speake I of ages Euery yeare moneth day houre of our life that we haue liued is dead to vs and wee are dead with them What therefore is our whole life but a long death What is euery day therof but as Petrach saith a degree of death what is euery moment thereof but a motion vnto death Againe that the daies of man are but few and his life very short experience and that which we see in daily vse doth shew besides the word of God which for this speaking of mans short time vseth to take the shortest diuision in nature to expresse it As that it is the life of yesterday as in the Psalme Psal 90.4 For a thousand yeeres in thy sight are but as yesterday when it is past a life which is gone as soone as it comes a life of few houres as a watch in the night the life of a thought wherof there may be
Syria was poysoned by his owne Queene Laodicea for that he loued King Ptolomeus sister By fire the Emperour Valentine was burned by the Goathes Acteus King of Lydia was hanged by his owne subiects Diomedes King of Thrace was deuoured of wilde beasts Cleopatra Queene of Egypt was stung to death by Serpents Diogenes was deuoured with dogges Basilius Emperour of Macedon was killed by a Hart. Anacrion died in eating of an egge the Emperour Fredericke going to Ierusalem was drowned Queene Sisigambis King Darius his mother died of hunger Pyrrhus King of Epirus was slaine with a tyle-stone Fabian a Senator was choaked with haire Pope Adrian was choaked with a flye getting into his throate Iulius Caesar Emperour of Rome was murdered in the Senate-house Tullius Hostilius was slaine with a thunder-bolt Acts 12.23 Herod was deuoured of wormes And if none of these yet old age will arrest vs for yong haires doe soone turne gray and actiue youth is soone metamorphosed into crooked old age which is the champiō of death who neuer grapled with any but at length threw them into the dust which sheweth the comparison of the Prophet to be most excellent Esa 64.6 without comparison that all flesh is grasse and the best of vs but as the flower of the field this day flourishing to morrow fading And we all doe fade as a leafe saith the prophet Esay in an other place Iam. 4.14 Saint Iames compareth our life to a vapor that appeareth for a little while and afterward vanisheth away Can any thing be spoken more plainely to set forth our mortalitie As a vapour a mist a thin watery and aiery substance which a small puffe of winde may disperse or the heat of the sunne dissolue Psal 37.20 Now vnto this if our life may be resembled then as a vapor is but for one morning or euening at the most Psal 109.23 so our life is but a moment for a very short time Againe Dauid compares it to smoake because it is corruptible to a grashopper because it hath but a small continuance Nay he saith man is like a thing of naught Psal 144.4 and lesse then nothing Gen. 4.7.9 2 Tim. 4.7 Iacob calleth it a pilgrimage Paule a course A pilgrimage hath a full poynt a course a stop and our life and end By all which places of scripture wee see that the spirit of God to set forth the frailtie and breuitie of our life compareth it as we haue heard to things of shortest continuance as to the weauers shittle which he taketh and presently casteth it out of his hands againe to the winde which is very swift for the winde bloweth saith our Sauiour where it lifteth and thou hearest the sound thereof but canst not tell whence it commeth nor whether it goeth to a post which stayeth not long in a place to a flower which quicklie withereth to a shadowe which soone vanisheth to a thought which is swiftest of all the rest so fraile is our estate so transitorie our life so short are our dayes and vncertaine that as soone as we be borne we begin to dye The breuity and vanitie of our life was so noted of the Heathen men themselues which made the Egiptians compare it to an Inne where lodging for a night we are gone Pindarus and Basil compare this life to a dreame wherein are pleasing and displeasing shewes but at our awaking are all gone Man saith Pindarus is to be compared to the dreame of a shadow Sophocles to a shadowe Homer vnto leaues that bud grow out decay blow away Pythagoras to a stage-play Aristotle to a beast called Ephemeron which is neuer but one day old And many such comparisons wee finde both in sacred and humaine histories poynting out the shortnes and vncertainty of mans life For dreames are but momentarie fantasies of a disturbed braine for a dreame saith the Preacher commeth of the multitude of busines Eccl. 5.3 A shadowe is a shew and not substance A play is but the handling of some stately or base part for an houre then comes the Epilogue and ends all euen so our life is but a dreame to be thought vpon a shadow to be looked vpon and a play to be acted As therefore dreames are forgotten shadowes do vanish and playes haue their conclusion so our liues haue their limits and bounds which they cannot passe For God that hath numbred the haires of our head hath numbred our yeares and dayes also that we cannot passe them Mat. 10.30 Life is nothing else saith the heathen Philosopher but a glew which fasteneth soule and body together which proceedeth of the temperament whereof the body is made It passeth away as a trace of a cloud and as a bird that flyeth through through the ayre and as an arrow that is shot Our life is nothing but a little breath and how easie is it for God to take away our weake life when weake man by stopping of our breath is able sodainly and most certainely to send vs to our dust Therefore the Prophet saith Psal 104.29 thou hidest thy face and they are troubled when thou takest away their breath they die and turne to their dust Our life it selfe is not giuen vs in perpetuity but lent vs for a time for mans spirit is but borrowed The wise man calleth it a very debt which a man doth owe to yeeld vnto death Wis 15.8.16 Therefore we vsually speake and well too I owe God a death for euery mans death is foreseene and appoynted in Gods eternall decree with all the circumstances thereof The Prophet Dauid compareth our life to the fat of Lambes Psal 37.20 which wasteth away in the rosting and to a new coate which is soone w●xed old and eaten with moths Iob to the burning of a candle which in the end commeth into the socket and annoyeth and then euery one cryeth put it out What thing else is mans life but a bubble vp with the water and downe with the winde Iob. 8.14 Againe the life of man is compared to a cobweb for as the spider is occupied all his life time in weauing of cobwebs and draweth those threds out of his owne bowels wherewith he knitteth his nets to catch flies and often times it commeth to passe when the spider suspecteth none ill a seruant going about to make cleane the house sweepeth downe the cobweb and the spider together and throwes them into the fire euen so the most part of men consume their whole time and spend all their wit strength and labor to haue their nets and bayts in a readines with which they may catch the flies of honors riches preferment and when they glory in the multitude of flies which they haue taken and promise to themselues rest in time to come and will say with the coueteous rich man in the gospell Soule thou hast much honor Luk. 12.19 goods and possessions laid vp for many yeares liue therefore at ease
of all their hard speeches which vngodly sinners haue spoken against him The tense or time that the Apostle speake●h in noteth the certaintie or as I may say the presentnesse of the Iudges comming where hee vseth the time present for future he commeth for he will come And this is to teach vs that a Iudgement will and must most certainly be ere long So it is said Reu. 6.17 That the great day of the Lords wrath is come not will come as if tha● had bin come a thousand and fiue hunddred yeeres agoe that is not come yet The like speech we haue in the Prophecie of Esay Isa 13.9 Behold the day commeth when it was further off In the time of the Prophet Zephany it is said Zeph. 1.14 The great day of the Lord is neere it is neere and hasteth greatly euen the voice of the day of the Lord. And Malachy the last of the Prophets speaketh as Enoch Malac. 4.1 For behold the day commeth that shall burne as an oven and all the proud yea and all that doe wickedly shall bee stubble and the day that commeth shall burne them vp saith the Lord of Hosts Reuel 3.11.20 The Sonne of God saith Behold I come quickly nay hee saith behold I stand at the doore as if he were come already And indeed as the day will most surely come so it cannot be long in cōming as may appeare by the signes tokens which should immediatly goe before this day Of which many yea almost all are already fulfilled And although some flatter themselues with an imagination of a longer day thē God hath set vnto them or perhaps vnto the world for the last houre therof Who are such as the Apostle Saint Peter speaketh of 2. Pet. 3.3.4 That there shall come in the last dayes scoffers walking after their owne lusts and saying where is the promise of his comming for since the Fathers fell asleepe all things continue as they were from the beginning of the Creation But let such know that though the day of Iudgement were farre off yet the day and houre of euery mans perticular iudgement in death cannot bee farre off it being a common and true saying 2. Pet. 3.10 To day a man to morrow none And vnto such then Death doth specially come when they doe least thinke of it euen as a theefe in the night Reuel 3.3 The Sonne of God also saith Behold I will come on thee as a theefe and thou shalt not know what houre I will come vpon thee And theeues haue this propertie to breake open houses when men sleepe soundly suspecting nothing Amos 8.9 The Prophet Amos saith It shall come to passe in that day saith the Lord that I will cause the Sun to goe downe at noone and I will darken the earth in the cleere day That is to say when men thinke it to be the high noone of their age when they thinke they haue many yeeres yet to liue and when they shall say Peace and safetie 1. Thess 5.3 then sodaine destruction commeth vpon them as trauaile vpon a woman with childe and they shall not escape Matth. 24.48.49.50.51 And hereupon also our Sauiour Christ saith But if that euill seruant shall say in his heart my Lord delayeth his comming and shall begin to smite his fellow seruants and to eat and drinke with the drunken the Lord of that seruant shall come in a day when he looketh not for him and in an houre that he his not aware off and shall cut him in sunder and appoynt him his portion with the hypocrits There shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth And for the day of the generall death of this languishing world hee that wisely considereth the wayings and declinings that haue beene found in it within these few yeares and how like a woman with child which hath many pangs and fits before the throwes of her great labour come it is now in paine till it be deliuered hauing much complained in those signes and alterations which haue gone before I say that hee that well obserueth to the true purpose of his saluation these and such like throwes or rather downe-throwes of things in the wombe of this old and sickly world so neere vnto the time of her trauell and appoynted end by fire cannot but say that it cannot continue longer and that the Lord will come amongst vs very shortly When we see a man in whose face wearing age hath made many wrincles and deepe furrowes we say this man cannot liue long so when we see the furrowes of old age to appeare and bee manifest in so many wastes and consumptions as this feeble world is entred into why doe we not see and conclude that the Death of it is neere More particularly and specially as there is no greater signe that a man is drawing towards death then when hee alwaies is catching at the sheetes and blanckets and euer pulling at somwhat so seing ●hat euery one catcheth pulleth all that he can in this griple and couetous age and that there is so insatiable a mind of hauing now in all conditions and callings of people it is a sure signe to the heart of a wise man that this world is sick euen to death so as it cannot hold out long And if there be no greater signe of Death then that the body is so cold that no heat will come vnto it Mat. 24.12 Luke 18.8 surely the cold charitie of the world mens want of zeale in religion our nullitie of faith or poore growth therein in so much as good sermons are seldome heard and with small amendement these things cannot but testifie that the world it selfe can bee of no long life And if it be so should it not much concerne vs presently without delay to turne vnto God to repent and beleeue the Gospell to enter into and keepe the way of truth and vertue and to prepare our selues for our end Which sort of people are rare birds in our dayes The reasons why God would not haue vs to know either the generall or particuler day of iudgment are principally these First to proue and try our faith patience loue preparation for Death and other vertues to see whether wee will bee constant in them till the very day it selfe shall come He that indureth saith Christ Math. 24.13 to the end shall be saued Secondly as it is the glory of a King to know something that no man els can know so it is a part of Gods glory to hide fron men and Angels the particular houres of mans death and this worlds doome which he hath closed vp with the seale of secrecy and put in his owne power In which respect the wise man saith Pro. 25.1 it is the glory of God to conceale a thing Therfore this is hiddē from vs to bridle our curiositie and peeuish inquisition after such high and hidden matters aboue our reach and capacity For it is
not in the fadom of mans head to tell or heart to know how neere or farre off the day is onely God knoweth and Christ as God in what yeare month day and moment this frame shall goe downe In an age long since the day was neere now the houre is neere but curiositie is to be auoided in a cōcealed matter in this forbidden tree of knowledge For secret things saith Moses Deut. 29.29 belong vnto the Lord our God Many men beate their heades about friuolous matters some saith Chrysostome being more busie to know where hell is then to auoide the paines of it others pleasing themselues in pelting and needlesse questions as this is to seeme singular amongst men neglecting in the meane time this dutie of their preparation for their end and such necessary things But when they come to their departing they shall finde that they haue beaten their braines about fruitlesse matters and wearied themselues in vaine It is sufficient for vs therefore to know that such a day will come and it shall bee wisdome in vs alwaies to bee readie for it that it come not vpon vs as the snare vpon the bird vnlooked for Therefore our Sauiour Christ saith Luk. 12.34.35 take heede to your selues lest at any time your hearts be ouercharged with surfetting and drunkennes and cares of this life and so that day come vpon you vnawares for as a snare shall it come on all them that dwell on the face of the earth Thirdly if wee knew the day houre or certaine time of our death wee would put off all ti●l the comming of that day and it would giue vs too great boldnes and incouragement to wallow in all manner of sinne till that time or houre came The whorish woman because shee knew the iust time when her husband would returne who went into a farre Countrey did the more liberally power out her soule to sinne and wantonnesse Pro. 7.19.20 For the good man saith shee is not at home hee is gone along iourney hee hath taken a bagge of money with him and will come home at the day appoynted Fourthly and lastly It is therefore vnknowne to vs when wee shall dye to the end that all the dayes of our appoynted time wee may waite for this day and all our time looke for this last time and prepare our selues for it Argus as is fained had his head inuironed with an hundred watching eies signifiing thus much vnto vs that he was euery way indued with great wisedome prouidence and singular discretion Therefore if a pagan and Heathen man so excelled in wisedome and prouidence how much rather ought a Christian man to be well furnished with wisedome circumspection for his latter end Be thou therfore an other Argus nay more wary then he more wise and prouident then he more watchfull circumspect then hee that thou mayst learne to know to vnderstand and finally to prouide for thy last end Gregory vpon the watches mentioned by our Sauiour Christ in the Gospell of Marke in these words Mark 13.35.36.37 Watch yee therefore for yee know not when the Master of the house commeth at euen or at midnight or at the cock-crowing or in the morning lest comming suddenly he finde you sleeping and what I say vnto you I say vnto all watch he saith that there be foure watches in a mans whole life wherein it behoueth him to be vigilant and carefull and as a wakefull and warie watchman to keepe his watch and so prepare himselfe for his end The first is childhood the second youth the third manhood the fourth old age In all which ages he must prepare himselfe for death but he which remiss●ly passeth ouer his childhood without this preparation and watchfulnesse let him be more carefull of his watch in his youth and pray as it is in Ieremie Ier. 3.4 My father be thou the guide of my youth If he hath passed his youth dissolutely let him be more carefull of his watch in his manhood And if hee hath passed ouer his manhood carelessely let him in any case looke to his last watch of his old age Nay if we prepare not for death before we come to this last watch of old age to which verie few doe attaine it is so fraile weake and feeble and decayed by the custome of sinne that it is an age not so fit for this preparation and watchfulnesse For at such an age men for the most part are like to the Idols of the Heathen Psal 115.4.5.6.7 which haue mouthes but speake not eyes but see not eares but heare not c. Therefore put not off this preparation and watchfulnesse to thy old age which is thy dotage but be thou watchfull and prepared in thy childhood youth manhood Eccl. 12.1 Remember now thy Creator saith the Preacher in the daies of thy youth while the euill dayes come not nor the yeares draw nigh when thou shalt say I haue no pleasure in them Wherfore not without cause our Sauiour Christ crieth so often in the Gospell Matth. 24.42 Mar. 13.32.33 Take yee heed watch and pray because yee know not the day nor the houre nor when the time is the which is as much as if he had more plainely said because yee know not that yeere watch every yeere because yee know not that moneth watch euery moneth because yee know not that day watch euery day and because yee know not that houre watch euery houre That is to say watch continually yeares moneths dayes houres yea all your life if you haue a care of euerlasting life And let your loynes saith our Sauiour Christ be girded about and your lights burning Luke 12 35.36.37.38 and yee your selues like vnto men that waite for their Lord when he will returne from the wedding that when he commeth and knocketh they may open to him immediately Blessed are those seruants whom the Lord when he commeth shall finde watching Verily I say vnto you that hee shall girde himselfe and make them to sit downe to meate and will come forth and serue them And if he shall come in the second watch or in the third and finde them so blessed are those seruants Prou. 19.20 Therefore heare my counsell and receiue instruction that thou mayest be wise in thy latter end The end of the third Diuision THE FOVRTH DIVISION OF THE RIGHT BEHAVIOVR IN DEATH THis behauiour is nothing else but a religious and holy behauiour especially toward God when we are in or neere the agonie and pangs of death Which behauiour containes foure especiall duties The first is to die in or by faith And to die by faith is when a man in the time of death doth with all his heart wholly rely himselfe on Gods especiall loue fauour mercie in Christ as it is reuealed in his holy word And though there be no part of mans life void of iust occasions whereby he may put faith in practise yet the speciall time
contempt and refusing the time of grace the Lord cast them off and reiect them I deny not but that in respect of vs till God hath manifested his will there is hope but in respect of Gods secret decree the time of Gods mercie may bee out euen during this life therefore when mercie is offered wee must take heed we wilfully cotemne it not lest we prouoke the Lord to be gone and vtterly to reiect vs. One of the most feareful signes of a Cast-away is to delay and put off the Lords gratious offer of mercy as we reade of Pharaoh who when Moses offered himselfe to pray to the Lord for him he put it off till the next morrow Exod. 8.9.10 so he that hath the mercies and graces of God offered him to day and puts them off from his youth to his age and from his old daies till his death-bed may iustly feare an vtter reiection euen then when he hopes for most comfort And as it is most certaine that after death teares are fruitlesse repentance vnprofitable as after death no mercie is to be expected nothing but miserie nothing but wrath so is it doubtfull and very dangerous that our sighes teares and groanes are of little force at the very neere approach of death whether by age extremitie of disease or otherwise For at that time when our powers are distracted or spent when no part is free eyther from the sence or feare of his cruell gripe we may well be said to be in death or at leastwise in such a condition or state that doth lesse participate of life then death And therefore at the least it is doubtfull that at that time we shall not remember God and that our repentance shall come too late What a shame is it that the children of this world are wiser in their kind then the children of light A good husband will repaire his house while the weather is faire and not deferre till winter doth rise A carefull Pilot will furnish his shippe whiles the Seas are calme and not stay vntill tempests doe rage The traveller will take his time in his iourney and will hasten when he sees night approach lest darknesse ouertake him The Smith will strike while the iron is hot l●st it coole vpon him and so hee lose his labour The Marriner will not let the tide passe him for as the common prouerbe is the time and tide tary for no man The Lawyer will take the terme because he knoweth that it being ended his clients will be gone So we ought to make euery day the day of our terme and a prouident man will repent him of his sinnes in the seasonable time of health and strength and not protract till hee bee in the very armes and the imbracement of death when many occasions may cut from him either his minde or power or time to repent For we haue iust cause to feare that if we would not when we might we shall not be able when we would and that by our will to do euill we may happily lose the power to doe well Thy very tongue will condemne thee in thy trade if thou trust a man with thy wares thou wilt require a bill or bond saying all men are mortall and at lesse then an houres warning But let the Preacher exhort thee to accept of the gratious time of the Lord and put thee in minde that thy life as a vapour is soone gone yet thou wilt not beleeue him but so lead thy life in sinne as if thou hadst the same in see farme And to thee that callest thy neighbours friends and companions to Cards Dice or any such pastime saying come let vs goe passe the time away Is time so slow that it must be driuen I tell thee there are at this day many thousands in hell who if they had many kingdoms would gladly giue them all for one houre of that time whereof thou hast many not to passe it away or driue it from them but in hope to recouer that which thou dost most gracelessely contemne Alas who dares trust to the broken reed of extreame sicknesse or age bruised by originall but altogether broken by our actuall sinnes We haue good cause not to trust to this deferring of time and late repentance For if Esau could not finde repentance albeit he sought it with teares Heb. 12.17 how may we with good reason suspect our extreame late seeking for repentance Not because true repentance can euer bee too late but because late repentance is seldome true as wee haue alreadie heard Et sera rarò seria that which is late is seldome liuely as proceeding rather from feare then from loue from necessitie then from willingnesse and desire rather outwardly pretended then with the heart intended We all of vs in our iolitie thinke we may doe what wee list and so long as God forbeares to punish we will neuer forbeare to sin but still deferre the time of repentance But God grant we may remember and lay to our hearts what that good Father Saint Augustine saith Nihil est infoelicius c. Nothing is more infortunate then the felicitie of sinners whereby there penall impietie is nourished and their malice strengthened and increased When God doth suffer sinners to prosper then his indignatiō is the greater toward them saith that Father and when hee leaueth them vnpunished then he punisheth them most of all For the further pressing of this doctrine on our consciences let vs obserue some places of Scripture And first let vs see what the Lord saith to such as despise wisdomes call being of three sorts viz. The first that like fooles content themselues with ignorance The second that scoffe at the Lords offer by his seruants The third which are carried away by their owne lusts Prou. 1.24.28 Because I haue called and yee refused I haue stretched out my hand and none would regard and then they shall call vpon mee but I will not answere they shall seeke me early but shall not finde me Noting to vs that as they did refuse the time in which he called so they should call in hope of mercy but finde none Esay 23.12.13 The like we reade how the Prophet Esay calling Ierusalem to repentance in sack-cloath and ashes for their sinnes shee fell to sporting and feasting despising the Lords message and offer of grace by his Prophet what came of it You may reade presently that their contempt comming to the Lords eares he doth answere Surely this iniquitie shall not bee purged from you till you die saith the Lord of Hostes giuing them to vnderstand that seeing they set so light by the admonitions of the Prophet there should bee left them no time to repent in till hee had destroyed them But of all the places of Scripture for this purpose let vs see what the Lord saith to Ierusalem by his Prophet Ezechiel Ezech. 24.13 Because saith hee I would haue purged thee and thou wast not purged thou
euen against God himselfe I know you will hearken vnto these things Consider saith the Apostle what I say 2. Tim. 2.7 and the Lord giue thee vnderstanding in all these things It is sufficient to waigh these matters with the waights of the Lords Sanctuarie and not needfull to try them by fetching helpes of humane reason Yet to giue them ouer measure that will not rest satisfied with the comforts which the holy Scripture doth affoord let it bee first considered what humane wit and reason hath said in this case And touching this matter which now is mooued I haue read and you may see what Heathens by learning and naturall light haue said to themselues and their friends in such losses but this did I neuer read neither shall you finde that all their comforts haue counteruailed one promise out of Gods booke I confesse the bookes of heathen Writers doe promise comfort in this case but alas they performe it not but are like a brooke that swels in winter when there is no need of it and is dry in Summer when the passenger fainteth and panteth for heat no if we will haue good gold we must goe to Ophir if good balme to Gilead if good wine to Christ at the wedding of Cana and if good tidings to the booke of God They did say well in many things but neuer like this word that is from the Lord. Iohn 7.46 For neuer man spake like this man as the officers told the chiefe Priestes and Pharisies concerning Christ They considered the necessitie of death the miseries of life the examples of great men that had gone before them and such like But what are these to those that the word of God will shew vs our safety in Christ our resurrection in immortality in the presence of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost with such like yet both good vnto a sanctified mind First the necessitie of death is a true comfort against death be it of our selues or of our friends no liuing flesh but must die as we haue heard in the first Diuision What man is hee saith the Psalmist that liueth and shall not see death Psal 89.48 And shall we feare that in our selues or bewaile immoderatly that in our friends which cannot be auoided This were with witlesse wil to disturbe the peace of our whole life and with a seruile dread of the last houre to bereaue of comfort all the rest of our houres that we are to liue in this present euill world which in your iudgment conceiue how fond a thing it were The carefull view of natures course doth shew vs degrees from age to age till we come to a full and a like decrease by step after step till we come to the change againe Youth followeth childhood and age followeth youth by assured necessitie if we liue But when we are children wee feare not to be men neither when we are men to become olde but many rather wish it why then should we either feare in our selues or lament in our friends death to follow age in his course appointed more then age to follow youth as was said before Surely the one must bee receiued as well as the other without choice And whereas Christ said in the Gospel touching man and wife Matth. 19.9 What therefore God hath ioyned together let no man put in sunder it may be more peremptorily said of this What God hath ioyned or coupled together no man can separate nor put asunder And therfore a wise content both in our friends and in our selues shall become vs best Who will not die let him neuer liue for we receiue the one to endure the other when God appointeth and we must all die both friend and foe to wise men necessitie is a comfort and so I hope to you Secondly the miseries of this life is another head from whence heathen men haue deriued comfort against death be it of our selues or of our friends Consider then with your selfe from the first age vnto the last houre the diseases incident to our bodies to vexe vs with woe according to their seuerall natures some more some lesse and yet the least too much All the changes and chances of this most wretched sinfull world whereunto whilst we liue wee must lye open will we nill we from all which our death doth free vs and our friends Therefore how should wee either feare or sorrow for our selues or for our friends for that which doth so befriend vs If we conceiue hereof as we ought we must needs be of the same iudgment with Seneca and in some sort approoue his speech O men most ignorant saith hee of their owne miseries who praise not death as the best inuention that euer nature had which includeth felicity excludeth miserie finisheth the toyles of age preuenteth the perils of youth to many is a remedie to some a wish to all an end and deserueth better of none then them to whom it commeth before it be called Yea we must confesse these things beeing well considered that it befalleth to men concerning death as vnto young children concerning their friends Litle children if their friends bee disguised with some strange shewes they are afraid of them and crying flie from them Exod. 4.3 as some that would hurt them as Moyses fled from his rod of death when it was turned into a Serpent But take off these vizards that their friends may appeare as they are and then by and by they are comforted and reioyce and imbrace them gladly againe euen so it is of death when we are misled it appeareth vnto vs disguised and couered by ignorance of the truth and his approaching maketh vs shrinke but plucke off that vizard of supposed euill and behold it as it is to vs in Christ and it is then but a painted death and we see him then our great friend that cutteth the thrid that we do weaue and then we neither flie nor feare any more but are truely comforted and imbrace him most willingly as we ought and loue him as Ionathan loued his friend Dauid 1. Sam. 18.1 as his owne soule Thirdly the heathen considered againe the famous and worthy men that died before them and what they endured and could not auoid and therevpon thought great shame either to feare or flie to lament in themselues or in their friends The greatest lights that euer were amongst them died all Socrates Demosthenes Plato Pompey Caesar Cicero learned martiall or whatsoeuer yea what wisedome and knowledge what valour and prowesse what act what gouernement soeuer they had all gifts and graces all pompe and power all empire and maiestie were it ouer thousands or thousand thousands yeelded to death death had his place when his time was come and as well these great lights and loftie gallants as the lowest wretches and poorest wormes the high okes as the small shrubs drunke of deaths cuppe when they were inuited and inioyned Shall it not then euen in reason seeme
were reprobate or saued Of which matter saith he it is not for me to determine Our Iudge is his Iudge who will lay all thinges open when the time commeth This in the meane time is certaine that the deede of the man ought in no wise to bee allowed If wittingly I discommend his reason if in a phrenzie as one out of his wit then doe I greatly lament and pitty his case Yet notwithstanding seeing Gods iudgements be secret and wee be likewise in doubt vpon what intent he did thus punish himselfe nor any man can be certaine whether he repented or not before the last breath I think their opinion herein is more indifferent who doe rather disallow the example of the dead then despayre any way of his saluation Otherwise if we will adiudge all these to hell that haue departed the World after this sort how many examples haue we in the first persecutions of the Church of those men and women who being registred in the Works of worthy Writers haue notwithstanding their prayse and commendation For what shall wee thinke of those young men who being sought for to doe sacrifice to heathen Idols did cast down themselues headlong and brake their neckes to auoyde such horrible pollution of themselues What shall I say of those Virgins of Antioch who to the end they might not defile themselues with vncleannesse and with Idolatrie through the perswasion of their mother casting themselues headlong into a riuer together with their mother did for doe themselues though not in the same water yet after the same manner of drowning as this M. Hales did What shall I say of other two sisters which for the selfe same quarrell did violently throw themselues headlong into the Sea as Eusebius doth recorde In whom though perchance there was lesse confidence to beare out the paines that should be ministred of the wicked vnto them yet that their good desire to keepe their faith and religion vnspotted was commended and praysed Another like example of death is mentioned by Nicephorus in another Virgin likewise whose name is expressed in Ierome to bee Braessila Diraehima who to keepe her Virginity fayned her selfe to be a Witch and so conuenting with the yong man which went about to deflowre her pretended that shee would giue him an hearbe which should preserue him from all kind of weapons and so to proue it in her selfe layde the hearbe vpon her owne throat bidding him smite wherby shee was slain so by the losse of her life saued her Virginity Hereunto may bee ioyned the like death of Sophronia a Matron of Rome who when shee was required of Maxentius the Tyrant to be defiled and saw her husband more slacke then he ought to haue been in sauing her honesty bidding them that were sent for her to tarry a while till she made her ready went into her Chamber and with a weapon thrust her selfe through the breast and so dyed Likewise Achetes biting off his owne tongue did spit it in the face of the harlot Which examples sayth M. Fox I doe not here alledge as going about to excuse or mainetaine the hainous fact of M. Hales which I would wish rather by silence might bee drowned in obliuion But yet notwithstāding as touching the person of the man what soeuer his fact was because we are not sure whether hee at the last breath repented againe for that wee doe not know nor are able to comprehend the bottomles depth of the graces and mercyes of God which are in Christ Iesus our Sauiour Wee will therefore leaue the finall iudgement of him to the determination of him who is appointed the onely Iudge of the quicke and dead And thus far M. Fox Touching the Cases wherein it is lawfull to desire death they may bee reduced principally into fiue The first is that if God can bee more honoured and glorified by our death then by our life then in such a case it is lawfull to desire death Iudg. 16.28.29.30 In which case Sampson desired death knowing wel therby that he should slay more of the vncircumcised Philistines the enemies of God at his death then he slue in his life In this case Moses the seruant of God desired to dye yea he went further for hee desired not a temporall but an eternall death for the glory of God in the saluation of his people For when Moses perceyued that the Lord was greatly offended with the people for making and worshipping the golden Calfe and that the Lords wrath waxed hote against them and that hee meant to consume them for the same Exod 32.31.32.33 It is sayd that Moses returned to the Lord and sayde Oh this people haue sinned a great sin and haue made them Gods of gold yet now if thou wilt forgiue their sinne and if not blot mee I pray thee out of the booke which thou hast written Also in this case the Apostle Saint Paul went as farre as Moses in desiring the same death for the like cause as Moses did which was for the glory of God in the saluation of his people Who being exceeding much sorrowfull for the Lords reiecting and casting off the Iewes sayth Rom. 9.1.2.3.4 I say the truth I ●…e not my Conscience also bearing mee witnesse in the holy Ghost that I haue great heauinesse and contin●al sorrow in my heart for I could wish that my selfe were accursed or separated from Christ for my Brethren my Kinsemen according to the flesh who are Israelites to whom pertayneth the adoption and the glory and the couenants and the giuing of the Law and the seruice of God and the promises whose are the Fathers and of whom as concerning the Flesh Christ came Who is ouer all God blessed for euer Amne In this case also the holy Martyres greatly longed after and desired death and ranne most ioyfully and gladly vnto it Well knowing with Sampson that they should slay more at their death then they slue in their Life as first that they should slay their last enemie by death which is not slaine but by dying And secondly that by dying they should kill the spawne of all enmitie sinne that causeth death and thirdly they knew that God should be more glorified and honoured by their death then hee could be by their life in that it would thereby bee an occasion of daunting his enemies and of the increasing and flourishing of his Church and Children For the death of the Martyrs was the seed of Gods Church Acts and Monuments 113. In which respect M. Foxe in his Acts and Monuments sayth that in old time Martyrdome was more desired then Bishoprickes be now Secondly it is lawfull to desire death in respect of the wicked through zeale to Gods glory to the end that wee may bee freede from their society whereby wee might not bee eye-witnesses nor eare-witnesses of theyr dayly blaspheming and dishonouring of God In which case Rebecka desired death Gen. 26.34.35 for when Esau had taken
armes the branches and so of the rest So that our infancie is but a dreame our childhood but folly our youth madnes our manhood a combate our age a sicknesse our life misery and our death sorrow How weake is infancie how ignorant is childhood how light inconstant adolescencie how intractable and confident bee yong men how grieuous and irkesome is old age What is a yong boy but as a brute beast hauing the forme only and shape of a man What is a flourishing yonker but as an vntamed horse what is an old man but a receptacle of all maladies and diseases And this age is a degree neerer to death by common course then the former ages for these yeeres take all pleasures from our life wherin affliction followeth affliction as the clouds returne after the raine Eccles 12.2 2. Sam. 19,34,35 and in these stooping yeeres euery steppe is in death and they may say with Barzilla How long haue I to liue when their houses are turned into their prisons and they haue no taste in that they eate or drinke And they hauing thus the markes of age in their face and vpon their heads yet as they that would stil be yong they cōsider not that they draw neere to their graue haue tokēs vpon thē of a blasted life in which age they can neither put off nor put on their owne clothes Yong men saith Seneca haue death behind them old men haue death before them and all men haue death not farre from them Experience plainly teacheth and all ages approue that God● plague threatneth sicknesse calleth and old age warneth death sudden●… taketh and the earth finally deuoureth Death most commonly hath three harbengers that make way against he come viz. Casualtie Sicknesse and Old-age Casualtie telleth me death is at my backe Sicknesse telleth me shee is at my heeles and Old-age telleth me shee is before my face Sicknesse is reckoned by Hugo amongst the messengers of death of which there are three Casus Infirmitas Senectus Casus nunciat mortem latentem Infirmitas apparentem Senectus praesentem Casualties shew vs death lurking for vs Sicknesse appearing vnto vs Old-age saith death is present and ready to fetch vs. The aged man holdeth his life as an Eele by the taile which he would faine hold fast but cannot because it is so slipperie and slideth from him Many times death taketh for a gage one part or other of our body as an arme or eye or legge or hand finger or tooth or some of our sences or such like for an aduertisement that hee will very shortly fetch away the rest If any man be long a dying and paying Deaths debt Nature like a rigorous creditor that will be paid at the iust day sueth out an execution against her debtor taking from one his sight from another his hearing and both from some and he that tarieth longest in the world shee foundereth maineth and vtterly disableth in his limbes So that as man in respect of himselfe is vaine and miserable so also is hee much more in regard of the qualitie and condition of his life and calling For there is no kinde of life meaning wherby life is maintained but it is mingled with frailetie and many grieuances If thou liue abroad to wit in Offices there are strifes if at home there are cares in the field labours in the sea feare in iourneying if it be void of ieopardie yet it is painefull and tedious If thou art maried then canst thou not be without cares if not maried then is thy life wearisome Hast thou children then shalt thou haue sorrow Hast thou none then is thy life vnpleasant Thy youth is wilde and foolish thy age weake and fraile and infinit are the dangers that depend thereon For one bewaileth his losses another weepeth for lacke of health liberty and necessarie liuing The workman maymeth himselfe with his owne toole while he earnestly plyeth his businesse the idle person is pined with famine the gambler breaketh his limbes with gaming the adulterer consumeth himselfe with botches and leprosie the dicer suddenly stabbed with a dagger and the Student continually wrung with the gout besides infinite more miseries incident to mans life too long heere to rehearse For there is no calling state or degree exempt or free from vanitie miserie and death All are vaine all are vexed all are tormented with worldly tempests all doe suffer the dolefull blasts of miserie and calamitie To begin with the strongest Champion the mightiest Monarch the greatest Emperour or Prince that euer liued on the earth and to come downe to the poorest wretch and meanest miser in the world you shall find that all of all sorts poore and rich master and seruant maried and vnmaried subiect and Prince to conclude the bad and the good are tormented with temptations tossed with tempests disquieted with aduersities and therefore are most fraile most miserable yea and nothing but miserie The poore man he is grieued with famine and thirst suppressed with sorrow and heauinesse and oppressed with cold and nakednesse he is dispised and contemned buffeted and scorned Luke 16.19 he lieth grouelling at the rich mans feete and dying at their heeles as they goe in the streete or at the gates and yet vnregarded Prou. 14.20 he is shunned of his brethren loathed of his friends Iam. 2.3 and hated of his neighbour And as the Apostle saith he is set vnder the rich mans foot-stoole so that none account is ma●e of him Luke 16.3 To aske for Gods sake he is oftentimes ashamed and if he will not aske he is pi●…d and therefore meere necessitie constraineth him to begge He accuseth God of vnrighteousnesse and partialitie because hee diuided not the goods of the world equally He blameth his neighbour of vnmercifulnesse and cruelty Matth. 20.11 because he releeueth not his necessitie He fretteth and fumeth hee murmureth repineth and curseth Whereupon it was truely said Eccle. 40.28.30 My sonne lead not a beggers life for better it is to die then to begge Begging is sweete in the mouth of the shamelesse but in his belly there shall burne a fire Againe on the otherside Psal 49.6 the rich man himselfe is ouerthrowne in his abundance he is puffed vp with vain-glory he putteth his trust and confidence in his wealth and substance whereupon he braggeth and boasteth Ezech. 28.5 They trust in their wealth and boast themselues in the multitude of their riches he swelleth with pride and disdaine Their heart is lifted vp saith the Prophet because of their riches Prou. 22.7 The rich saith the Wiseman ruleth ouer the poore and the borrower is seruant to the lender Yet labour in getting feare in possessing and sorrow in losing doth euer trouble and disquiet his minde And so as saith the Apostle they that will be rich fall into temptations and snares 1. Tim. 6.9.10 and into many foolish and hurtfull lusts which drowne men in perdition and destruction
left being obedient It was neuer beautifull and cheerefull since it waxed old in youth through manifold attaxes and disorders and at this day lyes bedrid waiting for the comming of the Son of God And we full well know and are taught by the reading of the Scripture and also by experience that men are not so long liued nor of that goodly tall proportion or strong constitution of bodie as in former ages For the world as a voice out of a bush telleth Esdras 2. Esdr 14.14 hath lost his youth and the times beginne to waxe old and we are borne weaker and more feeble then all creatures and had we not some body to receiue vs when we come into the world woe were it with vs wee might make a short and wofull stay or tragedie to bee borne to weepe to die We haue no cause to perswade vs that this is the golden age but rather that according to the dreame of Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 2. The golden head the siluer breasts the brasen thighes are long since past and wee now liue in the time of the Iron legges the feete whereof are partly yron partly clay In the fortunate Islands beyond the Atlantick seas in the vttermost borders of Ethiopia where the people that liue there are called Macrobij for their long life a man perhaps may liue a long life but what countrey may bee found where a man may auoid the sickle of Death Hence it was that Hormisda did answere the Emperour Constantine demaunding him of the bewtie of Rome stately buildings goodly Statues and sumptuous Temples if he thought that in all the world were any such Citie Surely saith Hormisda there is indeede none comparable vnto it yet hath it one thing saith hee common to all other Cities for men die heere as they die in all other places And what doth it profite to liue long and wickedly and die at length It were better like Cadmus progeny to die the same houre wee were borne What Duellum is this betweene death and nature And if God should not suffer vs to die alas what a miserable life would this be when we come to be old and full of sorrowes Eccle. 11.1 aches sicknesses diseases and griefes When our sences are gone and we haue no pleasure in any thing And when as the Psalmist saith Psal 90.10 our life is but a labour and a sorrow In which age we had need if we haue our sences then to pray hartily to the Lord. Psal 71.9.18 Cast me not off in the time of old age forsake me not when my strength faileth me And also When I am old and gray headed O God forsake me not And alas if we should not then die we would wish to die and say it were better a thousand times to die then to liue For death saith Iesus the sonne of Syrach is better then a better life Eccle. 30.17 or continuall sicknesse And therefore we reade of a certaine Isl●nd where they liue so long that they are faine to bee carried out thence that they might die And God hath prouided wonderous well for mankind that whereas any man may take our life from vs yet there is none that can take Death from vs who can stoppe the winde that it blow not Who can hinder death that it come not If Iacob counted his time but short Gen. 47.9 hauing already liued an hundred and thirty yeeres what reckoning may we make of our time which is farre shorter Gen. 5.5.27 In the time before the Floud the age of man was great Adam liued nine hundred and thirtie yeeres Noah nine hundred and fiftie Gen. 9.29 Methusalem nine hundred sixtie nine yeeres but after the Floud in Terahs dayes who was father to Abraham Gen. 11.32 Gen. 25.7 Deut. 34.7 Iosh 24.29 the age of man was a great deale shortned from nine hundred brought downe to two hundred and twentie and vnder For Terah liued two hundred and fiue yeeres Abraham his sonne not so long one hundred seuentie fiue yeeres Iacob in his time brought it to a shorter account one hundred and thirty Moses 120. and Ioshua one hundred and ten yeeres And yet are wee not truely said to liue any one of these yeeres vnlesse it be religiously and holily in Christ as a certaine worthie souldier seruing in the warres a long time vnder Adrian the Emperour yet in the end returned to his house and liued Christs souldier where and in which manner after he had liued seuen yeares he departed this life and being readie to die commanded that it should be written on his tombe Heere lyeth Similis for so was his name who was a man many yeeres and liued but seuen accounting that he liued no longer then he liued a Christian How many spend their daies in war after the flesh vnder the Emperour of the Ayre not vnder Adrian who yet I cannot say for seuen yeeres I would I could truely say seuen daies or seuen houres before their death cast away these weapons of sinne that it might be written vpon their grauestone for their Epitaph that seuen dayes or seuen houres before their last houre they not only had a being but a life in the world and not onely were but also liued Therefore it is our duetie to liue well that at the day of death we may speede well and to liue well should be the delight and sweete perfume of euery Christian Thus liue well that thou mayest die well and after death eternally speed well Psal 90.12 Yea So teach vs to number our daies saith the Prophet that we may apply our hearts vnto wisdome Where we are to obserue that he speaketh heere not of weekes or moneths or yeeres but of daies noting thereby the shortnesse of our life in this word Daies And the same phrase is vsed of all the holy men of God vpon the like occasion Iacob being asked by Pharaoh how old he was Gen. 47.8.9 tould him That few and euill were the dayes of his pilgrimage speaking of the time to note the shortnesse of the time or of his life he names not yeeres but daies and speaking of the toyles and troubles of life he calles it a pilgrimage as to be euery day hastely iourneying towards our end Iob 9.25.26 Iob 14.14 Iob in like manner numbring his dayes My dayes saith he are more swift then a post and swifter then the ships And againe he saith All the daies of my appointed time will I waite till my change come The time of Iobs attending or waiting on God for his helpe is the whole terme or acte of his life which he calleth not yeeres but dayes so hee measureth his short time by the inch of dayes rather then by the span of moneths or long ell of yeeres teaching thereby that the dayes of man are few and his life short vpon earth Our Sauiour Christ teaching vs to pray Matth. 6.11 bids vs to pray thus Giue vs this day our
prolonged or finished For say that a man had in his keeping sundrie britle vessels as of glasse or stone some made fortie fiftie or threescore yeeres agoe and some but yesterday We will agree that the vessell will soonest be broken not that is made first but which is first striken or first receiueth a knocke So for these brittle vessels of our earthly bodies they that soonest receiue the blow of death though but made yesterday first perish not that were first made and haue longest liued What then is our life and how vaine and false is our hope of long life seeing no man can tell who he is that shall receiue the first stroke or knocke to the destroying of this his mortall tabernacle In a prison where are many condemned should some riot and forget death because they are not first drawne out to die or because one goes before another to execution Shall he that commeth last 1. Sam. 15.32 come forth pleasantly with Agag and say Surely the bitternesse of death is past because we die not so soone as others And we shall not all die at once shall we therefore count our selues immortall If wee bee old wee may be sure our turne is neere and if we be yong it may be as neere for they that are old may trauell long but they that are yong may haue a shorter way home For the short liuer runneth his race no faster then hee that liueth long both runne alike both make speed alike the difference is the first hath not so farre to runne as the latter It is one thing to runne further another thing to runne faster Hee that liues long runneth further but not a moment faster Euery man hasteneth to death alike though one haue a lesse way to goe then another Death is come vp saith the Prophet into our windowes Ier. 9.21 and is entred into our Pallaces to cut off the children from without and the yong men from the streetes Seeing then this hope of liuing till we be old is so vaine and deceitfull wee should make as great hast to God at twentie as at fourescore When we heare a solemne knell we say some body is departed Acts 5.9 and why should not we thinke that the feete of them who caried out that bodie is at the doore readie to carry vs out also He was not an old man and had much peace in his daies to whom it was said Luke 12.20 O foole this night they will fetch away thy soule so death worketh in vs whether we will or not Againe the strong constitution in a yong man perswadeth him that hee shall liue long but no constitution in a man can enlarge his charter of life one poore houre Indeed the good complexion of a man may be a signe of long life Exod. 20.12 but he that prolongeth our dayes on earth he only can make vs to liue long Againe the strength and beautie of youth maketh him beleeue that he hath many yeeres yet to liue Therefore the Wiseman saith Prou. 20.29 that the glory of yong men is their strength but how soone is this blighted strucken as the faire flower of grasse with an East-winde For beautie and strength is but a flower which if some sicknesse strike not suddenly yet the Autumne of ripe yeares impaireth and the winter of olde age killeth And what careth death which is indifferent to all for a faire strong and goodly complexion Is not a beautifull face as mortall as a foule hue The like may be spoken of health and stature of bodie for what are they and of what time In their owne nature they are fickle things and without good vse crosses For touching health the devouring vulture of sicknesse doth after some short time wast it to nothing Strength is common to vs with beasts and there are many beasts exceede vs in strength And for our comely stature it may as soone be brought downe to death and as deepely bee buried in the coffin of the earth as one of a meaner size And further if men haue not vsed these to Gods glory but to pride and vaine-glorie nor haue made them helpes to godlinesse but haue giuen them their head to sinne it will be said after death of such that a beautifull person a strong yong man a goodly tall fellow and one that neuer knew what sicknesse meant is gone to hell Therefore of beauty and her attendants as strength health and a goodly stature that may be spoken which vsually is spoken of fire and water that they are good seruants but ill Masters where they are ruled they doe good seruice but where they ouer-rule they make foule worke Or is it for the greatnes But that cannot priuiledge thee from death for Solomon who in wisdome excelled all other men who in riches exceeded euery man who in power as mighty as any man and who in birth was surpassed by no man who for his wisdome was admired of all for his riches beloued of all and for his power feared of all and honored of all for his birth euen he I say could not refraine to confesse for all his wisdome which was angelicall for all his riches which were innumerable for all his power so maiesticall and for all his birth so regall Wis 7.1 2.3.4 5.6 He I say could not chuse but cry out and say I my selfe am a mortall man like to all and the ofspring of him that was first made of the earth and in my mothers wombe was fashioned to be flesh in the time of ten months being compacted in blood of the seede of man and the pleasure that came with sleepe And when I was borne I drew in the common ayre and fell vpon the earth which is of like nature and the first voyce which I vttered was crying as all others doe I was nursed in swadling cloathes and that with care If then Salamon who was begotten by a King and borne to be a King and one whose liuing and conuersation before he fell to Idolatry seemed rather diuine then humane if he I say were subiect to such imbecillity and had no more fauour shewed him by nature then so to what misery and imbecility then should all wee be subiect or what may wee say that are made of a baser stuffe fashioned in worse mould and more obscurely and poorely brought into the world For as much weaknes and feeblenesse in birth by nature is incident to a Prince as to a peasant For sayth Salomon in the same place there is no King that had any other beginning of birth for all men haue one entrance into life and the like going out Iob 31.15 Did not he that made me in the wombe saith Iob make him and did not one fashion vs in the wombe A certaine man desired to see Constantine the great whome intentiuely beholding he cryed out I thought Constantine had bene some great thing but now I see he is nothing but a man Constantine
answered with thankes thou onely hast looked on me with open and true iudging eyes Saint Ambrose saith How far will ye great men stretch your couetise Will ye dwell alone vpon the earth and haue no poore man with you Why put you out your fellow by kinde and challenge to your selfe the possession common by kinde in common to all for high and lowe rich and poore the earth was made Why will ye rich change proper right herein Kinde knoweth not riches that bringeth forth all men poore for we be not got with rich cloathes and borne with gold ne with siluer naked he bringeth them into the world needy of meat and drinke and cloathing naked the earth taketh vs as she naked brought vs hither She cannot close with vs our possession in sepulcher for kinde maketh no difference betweene poore and rich in comming hither ne in going hence All in one manner he bringeth forth and in one manner he closeth in graue Who so will make difference between poore and rich abide till they haue a little while lyen in graue then open looke among dead bones Lam. 4.5 who was rich and who was poore but if it be thus that more cloathes rot with the rich then with the poore and that doth harme to them that are then liuing not profiting them that be dead And it may be that the wormes shall feede more sweetely on the rich Iob. 24.20 then on the poore But thou wilt say saith Saint August I am not such a one as he is God forbid I should be so he is base and beggerly I am high honorable and rich tell me not saith Saint August The ods of your apparell or other externall things but marke ye the qualitie of nature remember the day of your birth and the day of your death There is no difference in the one or the other both weake both miserable for all of all sorts and conditions are made of one mold and one matter of clay and earth whose foundation is in the dust which shal be destroyed before the moth It is true that as there is difference of starres though all made of the same matter and difference of mettals some gold Iob. 4.19 some siluer some lead some tinne but all made of one earth and differences of vessels some gold some siluer 2 Tim. 2.20 some wood some earth and some to honor and some to dishonor but all made of the same mould so are there differences of bodies some more excllent then other and made of purer earth but yet all subiect to corruption as the matter is whereof they are made It being the body then that dyeth and seeth corruption one must dye as well as an other For as great men haue no priuiledge from error nor protection from reproofe for their faults blameable so haue they no priuiledge from Death For all men haue one entrance into the world a like danger in life the same necessity of death respect cannot change nature nor circumstance alter substance a great man is a man a man hath a body and a soule both haue their diseases which greatnesse can neuer diminish but oftentimes augments And therefore in a bodily infirmitie of some noble personages the Phisition takes them in hand not as noble men but as men Physick they must haue although with better attendance more exquisite and costly medicines and skilfuller Doctors then the poorer sort haue Therefore doe they thinke because they liue better and are in better estate and haue better meanes to preserue life then poore men that therefore they shall liue longer and what difference concerning death betweene a noble man and a begger when both goe to one place All goe to one place saith the Preacher all are of dust Eccl. 3.20 and all turne to dust againe When in these acts and scenes of seeming life as at a game at chesse the highest now vpon board may presently be lowest vnder board And the breath in the nostrels of the rich man may as soone be stopped and they as soone turne to the dust as other men Deaths cold impartiall hands are vsed to strike princes and pesants and make both alike Therefore in this respect the case of the rich and poore great and small high and low may be resembled to the play or game at Chesse Heare this therefore all ye people giue eare all yee Inhabitants of the world both low and high Psal 49.1.2 rich and poore together For while the play indureth there is great difference in the men greater respect had to some then to others but whē the Check-mate is giuen play ended then the men are tumbled together and put vp into the bag frō whence they were taken out and the lesser men vppermost many times there being no difference And so it is in this world There is great differēce in men greater respect had to some then to others as it is meet to be but when death cōmeth as surely it will come to all sorts then there will be no such differēce in the graue neither doth Death know any such difference for hee spareth none the yong as well as the old dyeth the Lambes skinne is brought to the market as well as the olde Crones the rich as well as the poore the Prince as wel as the subiect for there is no difference in the mould from the rich Crowne of Kings to the poore beggers crutch from him that sitteth on a Throne of glory vnto him that is humbled in earth and ashes from him that weareth Purple and a Crowne Eccle. 40.3.4 vnto him that is cloathed with a linnen frocke Reu. 20.12 Saint Iohn in his vision in the booke of the Reuelation saw the dead arraigned at the barre of the great Iudge both great and small Matth. 27.33 olde and young In Golgotha are skulls of all sizes saith the Hebrew prouerbe Death attendeth youth behinde vshereth old age and walketh before it and it is hard at hand to all and to all sorts All must grinde to greete Princes are old cold and chillerie Princes as well as others must decay and weare away Againe in this respect they may be resembled to Actors of a Comedy vpon a stage wherein one acteth the part of a prince an other of a Duke another of an Earle another of a Nobleman another of a Gentleman another of a Magistrate another of a Merchant another of a Countreyman another of a seruant euery one acteth a seuerall part And so long as they are vpon the stage so long there is respect according to their parts had one of another but when the Comedy is ended and the stage pulled downe then there is no such respect had amongst them Yea many times he that plaies the basest part is the best man So likewise so long as men doe act sundry parts vpon the stage of this world that is so long as men doe liue in seuerall vocations and callings so long
will haue his course they both keepe their old wont Since the first diuision of waters the Sea hath beene accustomed to ebbe and flow who hath euer hindered it And since the first corruption of Nature Death hath beene accustomed to slay and destroy who hath resisted it Other customes haue and may be abolished a King may command and it is done but what Monarch so absolute what Emperour so potent that can abrogate within his Dominions this custome of dying Nay there is no priuiledge no not spirituall neither can that grace and excellent gift of holinesse and pietie preserue a man from a naturall death viz. the first death out of no Court or Church can a man fetch a writ of protection against this Sergeant no place will preserue no person can bee priuiledged from it Esay 57.1 For heere the holy and good man the righteous and religious man is taken from the earth and dieth Iames 1.18 For if any should be spared he that is begotten againe of Gods owne will by the word of truth he that is borne againe of water and of the Spirit Iohn 3.5 and so borne not of bloud nor of the will of the flesh Ioh. 1.13 nor of the will of man but of God He that is borne a new not of mortall seed but of immortall by the word of God 1. Pet. 1.23 which liueth and endureth for euer A man I say would thinke that such if any should not die and yet behold the whole generation of Gods children they all die in their appointed time and vndergoe death not as a punishment but as a tribute as Seneca the Heathen man speakes which euery man must pay for his life The foole dies the wise-man the subiect the Soueraigne I haue said saith the Psalmist yee are gods Psal 49.10 Psal 82.6.7 and yee all are children of the most high but yee shall die as a man and yee Princes shall fall like others and so also the Prophets and holy men of God Dauid was a man after Gods owne heart and yet he died Moses saw God face to face and yet he died Zach. 1.5 The Prophets were indued with a great measure of sanctification yet the Prophet Zachary ioynes them all together in one state of mortalitie Your Fathers where are they And doe the Prophets liue for euer What say I the Prophets Nay Christ Iesus himselfe the Sonne of God the onely Sonne the Sonne in whom he was well pleased more faithfull then Abraham more righteous then Iob more wise then Salomon more mightie then Samson more holy then Dauid and all the Prophets though hee knew no sinne in himselfe yet for taking on him the burthen of our sinnes became subiect to the same condition of mortalitie with vs and he died also Examples of other times experience of our owne teach vs that all of all sorts die and are gathered to their fathers yea the dumbe and dead bodies cry this aloud vnto vs. As Basil of Seleucia saith of Noah he preached without words of Preaching for euery stroake vpon the Arke was a reall Sermon of repentance so euery corpse that wee follow and accompany to the graue preacheth really this truth vnto vs. All the worthiest of the first times and whomsoeuer else the word of God hath well reported of where are they Are they not all dead Doe they not all see corruption our Sauiour Christ excepted Are they not all gone downe into the slimie valley Haue they not long since made their bed in the darke None of them all our Sauiour Christ excepted was able to deliuer his life from the power of the graue Art thou better then Dauid and wiser then Salomon Nay art thou greater then our Father Abraham who is dead and the Prophets which are dead Whom makest thou thy selfe If thou thinkest thou shouldest not die Then surely if the holiest begotten and borne of man doe die then all must die And if holinesse must yeeld then prophanenesse cannot stand out And therfore whether holy or prophane Iew or Greeke bond or free male or female all must die If the tender harted woman that wept for Christ then the stony hearted men that scoffed at Christ If those that imbalmed him then those that buffeted him If shee that powred oyntment on his head then he that spat in his face If Iohn his beloued Apostle then Iudas that betrayed him Man is a little world the world a great man if the great man must die how shall the little one escape We must not thinke much to vndergoe that which all are enioyned vnto necessarily Equalitie is the chiefe ground-worke of equitie and who can complaine to be comprehended where all are contained For there is not a sonne of man in the cluster of mankinde but Eodem modo nodo vinctus victus is liable to that common and equal law of Death And although they die not one death for time and manner yet for the matter and end one death is infallible to all the sonnes of men Lift vp your eyes to the heauens saith the Lord and looke vpon the earth beneath Esay 51.6 for the heauens shal vanish away like smoake and the earth shall waxe old like a garment and they that dwell therein shall die in like manner But if any shall obiect that Enoch and Elias died not Gen. 23.24 Hebr. 11.6 2. King 2.11 I answere We know not I rather thinke they did and that Elias in his fiery Chariot had his body burnt and Enoch who in his yeares matched the dayes of the Sunne 365. was without paine dissolued when God tooke his soule to heauen or if they died not yet as Origen saith the generall is not therefore false because God hath dispenced in some particulers though one or two died not yet this is an vniuersall truth of all men to be receiued and duely pondered Heb. 9.21 It is appointed vnto all men that they shall once die from which there is no auoidance For the Lord of life and death hath so decreed it the decree was made in the beginning Gen. 3.19 For dust thou art and to dust thou shalt returne If it be his decree it must needs haue a certaine effect The decree is certaine the euent is ineuitable Our God saith the Psalmist Psal 115.3 is in heauen and hee doth whatsoeuer hee will Gods will is the deede as saith Saint Cyprian if he hath once willed it it is as good as wrought If he haue decreed it it is as certaine as if it were done It is heauens decree and it cannot be reuoked Dan. 6.1 I haue beene somewhat too tedious in this first Diuision which is somwhat contrarie to the common prouerbe that he should not be tedious that reades a Lecture of mortality but because this is on the one side a matter worthy to be obserued and on the otherside a matter too too much neglected I haue beene somewhat the bolder to
insist the longer vpon it And therefore to conclude with my Statute It is appointed c. It is therefore a care that euery one ought to haue viz. to know that they must die and that they cannot auoid it The decree is gone out against them from the highest court of Parliament of the most High What contempt were it not to take notice of it Euery one therfore ought to labour to number his daies and truely to know his mortalitie the greatest as well as the meanest the wisest as the simplest For if any one then all and if any more then other then the greatest for the greatest are most subiect to death As they challenge themselues to be the finest of the common mould so they must know that by that they are not exempted from the common law of Nature and force of Gods decree But as the finer the mettall or the purer the matter of any glasse or earthen vessell is the more subiect it is to breaking and so the daintiest bodies the soonest gone It behoueth vs all therefore to seeke for spirituall Arithmeticke thereby to number our dayes in a religious meditation of the incertainties of the time and the certaintie that that time will come Let vs therefore liue to die yea liue the life of grace that wee may liue the life of glory And then though we must go to the dead yet we shall rise from the dead and from thenceforth liue with our God out of the reach of Death for euermore The end of the first Diuision THE SECOND DIVISION ON THE MEDITATION OF DEATH THen if Death be thus certaine in the next place the law of reason aduiseth vs to thinke of the worlds vanitie to contemne it of death to expect it of iudgement to auoid it of hell to escape it and of heauen to desire it And thinke it not needlesse or superfluous to bee exhorted to this Meditation that the ignorant may learne the carelesse consider and the forgetfull remember that they all must die For as Saint Augustine saith nothing so recalleth a man from sinne as the frequent remembrance of death For the error of all men for the most part taketh his originall from hence that they forget the end of their life which they ought alwayes to haue before their eyes And of the want of this commeth pride ambition vaine-glory too much carefulnesse of the body too much carking and caring after the things of this life Hence also it commeth that we build Towers vpon the sand For if wee did consider what we shall be after a few dayes our manner of liuing would perhaps bee more humble temperate and godly for who would haue a high looke Psal 131.1 and a proud stomacke if hee did with the eyes of his minde behold what manner of one he shortly after shall be in his graue who would then worship his belly for a god Phil. 3.19 when he waigheth with himselfe that the same must in short time be wormes meate who would be so in loue with money that he would runne like a mad-man by sea and land as it were through fire and water if he vnderstood that he must leaue all behinde him If this were well thought vpon our errors would soone be corrected and our liues bettered Wish therefore rather for a good then a long life It is a thing doubtlesse worthy of euery mans best thoughts and intentions For seeing euery man must die and hath a course to finish which being finished hee must away It is speciall wisdome to learne to know the length of his dayes as it were the length of his lease for as he hath vsed himselfe in his farme he shall enter at the expiration of his time vpon a better or a worse 1. Sam. 13.14 Dauid for his learning a Prophet for his acceptation a man after Gods owne heart for his authority a King was then very studious in this knowledge when after fasting and watching he besought God to be instructed in it Lord let me know my end Psal 39.4 and the measure of my dayes what it is let me know how long I haue to liue Act. 7.22 So Moses wise in all the wisdome of Egypt and Israel accounted faithfull in the house of God Heb. 3.2 prayed yet for this point of wisdome to be informed in it Psal 90.12 and as well for himselfe as others Teach vs so to number our daies saith he that we may apply our hearts vnto wisdome like carefull schollers who forsake their meat and drinke and breake their sleepe and are often in meditation when they beate vpon some serious subiect What thinke you it will profit a man if by his skill in Arithmetike hee be able to deale with euery number and to diuide the least fractions and neuer to thinke on the numbering of his daies with the men of God and yet his dayes are few and euill What will it profit him if by Geometrie hee bee able to take the longitude of most spatious prospects and not be able to measure that which the Prophet hath measured with his spanne Psal 39.51 What will it auaile him if with the astronomer he be able to obserue and know the motions of the heauens and yet haue his heart so buried in the earth that hee cannot thinke of that which passeth away as swiftly as any motion of them all What profiteth it I say If he be able with the Philosopher to search out the causes of many effects and to know the causes of many changes as of the ebbing and flowing of the seas the increasing and wayning of the Moone and the like and be not able to know his owne changes and the causes of them Doubtlesse all this wil profit them nothing all this knowledge will be to little purpose in the end And vnlesse they think vpon death they cannot apply and fashion themselues to a godly life Yea we finde daily by experience that the forgetfulnesse of death maketh vs applie our hearts to all kinde of folly and vanity The holy men in old time were wont to keepe such an account of their dayes and so to think on death that aboue all things they might apply their hearts vnto wisdome So mindfull of these things was Saint Ierome who saith of himselfe that whether he did eate or drinke or whatsoeuer else he did he thought alwaies this sound of the last trumpet did euer ring in his eares Arise yee dead and come to iudgement Which when I consider saith he it makes me shake and quake and not dare to commit sinne which otherwise I should haue committed Likewise that ancient and reuerend father Innocentius the fourth was so carefull to auoid the vengeance to come that to stirre vp all the powers and faculties of his minde with due consideration of the vanitie of this world the vilenesse of his nature the shortnesse of his time the causes of sinne and the punishment for the same he still imagined to
to all kinde of sinne and wickednesse but not applyed our selues at all to wisdome godlinesse vertue and true piety Democritus was wont to walke amongst the graues that he might become a right Philosopher for true philosophie saith Plato is the meditation on death and thou which art instructed in the true Christian Philosophie how canst thou behold the bones of the dead but thou must needs fall into this patheticall meditation with thy selfe Behold these legges that haue made so many iourneyes this head which is the receptacle of wisdome remembreth so many things must shortly be as this bare skull and dry bones are I will therefore betimes bid worldly vanities adieu betake my selfe to repentance and newnesse of life and spend the rest of my dayes in the seruice of my God and continuall meditation on my ende As the last day of our life leaueth vs so shall that last day the day of Christs comming finde vs. How good were it therefore before we run into desperate arrerages to cast vp our bils of accompt and the rather because we shall be warned out of our office we know not how soone Luke 16.2 Some Emperors amongst the heathen as bookes say were wont to be crowned ouer the graues and sepulchers of dead men to teach them by the certaine but vnknowne end of their short life to vse their great roomes as men that must one day be as they are whose graues they tread vpon The old Saints who liued in a continuall meditation of their short and vncertaine time were wont alwayes like wise merchants to think of their returne homeward and therfore tooke vp their treasure by bils of payment not where they were but where they would be and meant to make their long aboade that is meant to be for euer And the Philosophers who saw not beyond the clouds of humane reason whē they perceiued how much men did decline by course of yeares wast of time were wont to say that the life of a wise man was nothing else but a continuall meditation on death the remembrance whereof made the world which wee for want of this meditation so willingly embrace vile and contemptible vnto them and auayled greatly to guide them in all godlines So a Christian mans life is or should be nothing els but a continuall meditation on death All that is within vs and without vs are so many remembrances of Death all things crye out vnto vs that we must hence Ioh. 8.23 as Christ cryed I am not of this world The apparrell which we weare vpon our backs Ioh. 17.14 the meate disgested and egested and returning to putrefaction the graues shrouding so many corpes vnder our feete time the mother of all things and the changeable state of times euen winter and sommer cold and heat seede time and haruest all doe crie vnto vs that wee shall weare away and dy and corrupt As they who were liuing are now dead and lye in the dust first we wax dry then old then cold then sicke then dead So that euery thing doth serue to put vs in minde that our bodies which wee beare about vs are mortall for even on our table we haue moments of Death for we eate not the creatures till they be dead our garments are either the skinnes or excrements of dead beasts we often follow the dead corps to the graue and often walke ouer their bodies and in Churches Church-yards especially men that doe vse to walke there shall doe well to remember that they treade vpon the dead and others shortly must tread vpon them Moreouer in great Citties wee haue almost euery day Death rung in our eares the deadly bell telleth vs that dust wee are and to dust wee must goe againe To this perhaps the old Oracle hath reference of whom the Philosopher Zeno being desirous to chuse the most honest and best rule for the direction of this life demaunded as the manner then was his opinion therein and receiued this answer That if he would frame the course of his life aright he should vse the commerce society of the dead And the Church-yards which are the howses of Christians and as it were the chambers or beds to sleepe in they are the places to which wee may resort to be put in minde of our mortalitie and future mutability But we Christians haue in stead of commerce and societie with the dead Luk. 16.29 Moses and the Prophets to put vs in minde of our death and if we will not heare them Ezeck 3.7 neither will we be perswaded though one rise from the dead to tell vs of our death Adam knew all the beasts called them by their names but his owne name he forgot Adam of earth What bad memories haue wee that forget our owne names and our selues that we are the sonnes of men corruptible and mortall Proud man I say forgets this sentence that earth is his natiue wombe when he was borne and that being dead the earth is his tombe When we looke to the earth it should put vs in minde that earth we were earth we are and earth we shall be the earth prouides for our necessity and feeds vs with her fruits neither in life nor death doth she forsake vs while we liue she suffers vs to make long furrowes on her back and when we dy her bowels are digged vp and she receiueth vs into her bosome here now a pit is digged seuen or eight foote long and so as it may serue for Alexander the great whom liuing the world could not containe And how loftie soeuer men looke death onely shewes how little their bodies are which so small a peece of earth will containe whom before nothing would content and therein the dead carkasse is content to dwell whom at his comming the wormes doe welcome and the bones of other dead men are constrained to giue place And in this house of obliuion and silence the carcasse being woond in a sheete and bound hand and foote is shut vp though it neede not to haue so great labour bestowed vpon it for it would not run away out of that prison though the hands and feete were loose And now if we doe but consider a little of the tombes of noble men and Princes whose glory and maiestie wee haue seene when they liued here on earth and doe behold the skill and sillie formes and shapes which they now haue shall wee not cry out as men amased Is this that glory that highnesse and excellencie Whether now are the degrees of their waiting seruants gone Whe●e are their ornaments and iewels Where is their pompe their delicacy and nicenesse All these things are vanished away like the smoake and nothing is now left but dust horror and rottennesse such is mans body now become yea though it were the body of an Emperor King or Monarch where is now that maiestie that excellencie and authoritie which it had before time when men trembled to behold it
warning And experience sheweth the truth of this plentifully The rich Churle in the Gospell Luk. 12.19.20 that boasted of store for many yeeres euen that very night had his soule fetched from him when like a Iay he was prouning himselfe in the boughes hee came tumbling downe with the arrow in his side his glasse was runne when he thought it but new turned the axe was lifted vp to strike him to the ground when he neuer dreamed of the slaughter-house Wee had need of monitors of Philips boyes to put vs in minde of our end not the oldest man but thinkes he shall liue a yeere and the yong man in the April of his age when his breasts are full of milke and his bones runne full of marrow full little thinkes of the slimie valley and that he shall shortly remaine in the heapes Certainly we dwell but in houses of clay and Corruption is our father Iob 17.14 the wormes our mother and sister We are creatures but of a dayes life and the foure Elements are the foure men that beare vs on their shoulders to the graue Assure thy selfe ere many yeares or months be past pale Death will arrest thee binde thee hand and foote and carry thee whither thou wouldest not to a land darke as darkenesse it selfe What then remaineth but that thou make thy graue presently with Ioseph of Arimathea in thy garden the place of thy delight to put thee in minde of thy death and mourning euery day amongst thy entising pleasures as if the sun of thy life were to sette at night For time past is irreuocable time present momentary and time to come full of vncertaintie When thou goest to bed and art putting off thy cloathes remember and meditate that the day commeth when thou must be as barely vnstript of all that thou hast in the world as now thou art of thy cloathes And when thou seest thy bed let it put thee in minde of thy graue which is now the bed of Christ which he hath sanctified and warmed for the bodies of his deere children to rest in and let thy bed-cloathes represent vnto thee the mould of the earth that shall couer thee thy sheets thy winding sheete thy sleepe thy death thy waking thy resurrection for when wee rise in the morning we must remember thereby that we shall rise out of the graue of the earth at the last day For all these things appertaining to Death yea and Death it selfe Christ Iesus hath sanctified vnto vs by laying his blessed bodie three da●es and three nights in the graue from whence the third day he rose againe ouercomming thereby Death it selfe and all the difficulties thereof and the miseries incident to the same for vs most miserable distressed sinners With this key of meditation we should open the day and shut in the night and what befalleth others in the dust of their bodies we must thinke will come to vs we know not how soone in our owne dust and mortalitie here And therefore as the third Captaine sent from the King of Israel to Eliah to bring him 2. King 1.13 and perceiuing that the other two Captains with their fifties were deuoured with fire from heauen at the request of Eliah grew wise by their experience and therefore fell downe and besought fauour for him and his fiftie so we hearing and seeing of so many fifties yong and old that in these late yeeres of mortalitie haue ended their liues in a fire of pestilence sent from the Lord should make supplication day and night not as that Captaine to the man of God but as true Christians to the Man and God Christ Iesus that our l●ues and deathes may be precious in his eies And that wee may not forget that what is done to others may come to our selues Againe the meditation of Death is a most soueraigne and effectuall medicine against d●seases of the soule if we would well practise the same and applie it to our spirituall wounds Other medicines are aua●leable to some certaine and particuler diseases and serue for their seuerall vses and seldome doth one medicine profit for many diseases though it excell Triacle of Venice Mythridatum or the herbe Moly so much extolled by Homer but only the meditation on Death is profitable to the extirpation of all the diseases of the soule Of this it may be said as Dauid said of the sword of Goliah 1. Sam. 21.9 there is none to that giue it mee and I by the grace of God will bee a conquerour of vices As bread is necessarie for a man before al other elements so the serious meditation on Death beareth the prize aboue all other good exercises of pietie and vertue And surely as wings are to the bird to fly to the Mariners their sailes Cōpasse Pole-starre gouernment and direction for their nauigation to fishes their tayles and finnes to swimme to a Chariot wheeles to carrie it to horses hoofes and shooes for their trauell So necessarie is the meditation on Death to the leading of a holy Christian and godly life The Wise-man saith Eccl 7.3 Remember thy end and thou shalt neuer doe amisse and Seneca could say That nothing profiteth so much to keepe vs within the bounds of temperance in all our actions as the often meditating on our short and vncertaine life Aptly and elegantly speaketh the golden mouthed Doctor Iohn Chrysostome of sinnes saith hee are borne two daughters Sorrow and Death but these two daughters destroy their wicked mother as the worme which is bred in timber or cloath doth by little and little consume the same As the Viper killeth his Dam and the Dam the male in conceiuing and as the Naturalists affirme the biting of a Viper is cured with the ashes of a Viper the stinging of a Scorpion with the oyle of a Scorpion the biting of a dog with the burnt haires of a dog as Achilles speare cured Tellephus whom before it had wounded the rust thereof being cast into the wound so sinne which is more hurtfull then any Viper or Scorpion or other thing hath begotten Death which hath stung and hurt vs and of immortall made vs mortall but the meditation on Death doth wound and kill sinne which begate it The wound of this Viper Scorpion Dogge Speare that is our propension and greedinesse to sinne the ashes of this Viper the oyle of this Scorpion c. that is the remembrance and meditation on Death doth wound and slay in vs in as much as Sinne is the parent and author of all euill And shall a Christian man then bee so sencelesse and doltish to intertaine and embrace sinne in his heart which hath beene the murtherer and paricide of mankinde and will also be our destruction vnlesse by time we banish it by often meditation on our end Had it not beene for sinne Death had neuer entred into the world and were it not for Death sinne would neuer goe out of the world Basil saith God made not death
third rule is that wee must carry in minde the right and proper end of Physicke lest we deceiue our selues We must not therefore thinke that Physicke serueth to preuent old age or death it selfe for that is impossible neither doe we eate drinke and sleepe that we may neuer die but that we may prolong our l●fe for a few dayes and to spend those dayes in the seruice of God preparing our selues to die For life c●nsists in a certaine temperature and proportion of naturall heate and radicall moisture which moisture being once consumed by the heate is not by all arte reparable and therefore Death must needs follow But the true end of physicke is to continue and lengthen our life to his full natural period which is when nature which hath beene long preserued by a●l possible meanes is now wholly spent Now this period though it cannot be lengthened by any art of man yet may it easily be shortened by intemperance in dyet by gluttony by drunkennesse by violent diseases and such like But care must be had to auoide all these euils and the like that the little lampe of corporall life may burne till it goe out of it selfe by Gods appoyntment and vntill God hath fulfilled the number of our dayes Exod. 23.26 And this very space of time is the day of grace and saluation And whereas God in his iustice might haue cut vs off and vtterly destroyed vs long before this day yet in his great mercie he doth giue vs thus much time that we might prepare our selues for our end Which time when it is once spent which may be neerer then we are aware if a man would redeeme it with the price of ten thousand worlds Mat. 16.26 it cānot be obtained For what is a man profited saith our Sauiour if he shall gaine the whole world and lose his soule And hauing thus seene what bee the duties of the sicke man to himselfe now let vs see what be the duties which he oweth to his neighbour And they are two First the dutie of reconciliation whereby hee is freely to forgiue all men and to desire to bee forgiuen by all In the old Testament when a man was to offer a Bullocke or a Lambe in sacrifice to God Matth. 5.23.24 He must leaue his offering at the Altar and first goe and be reconciled to his brother if he had ought against him and then come and offer his gift much more then must this bee done when wee are dying to offer vp our selues soules and bodies as an acceptable and reasonable seruice and sacrifice to God in forgiuing of all men And if the partie bee absent or will not bee reconciled yet the sicke partie by forgiuing hath discharged his owne conscience and God will accept his will for the deede in such a case For if yee forgiue men their trespasses saith our Sauiour your heauenly Father will also forgiue you Matth. 6.14.15 but if yee forgiue not men their trespasses neither will your Father forgiue you The second dutie is that those which are Rulers and Gouernours of others must haue great care that they which be committed to their charge and gouernment may be left in good estate after their death wherein are three duties to be handled the first of the Magistrate the second of the Minister of the Gospell and the third of the Master or Gouernour of the family The Magistrates dutie before his death is to prouide as farre forth as he can for the godly and peaceable state and gouernment of all such as are vnder his charge and gouernment and that is done partly by procuring the maintenance of pietie godlinesse and sound religion and partly by establishing of good and wholesome lawes for their safetie peace and quietnesse Whereof there are examples of the practise of these duties in Gods word Deut. 31.1 When Moses was an hundred and twentie yeeres old and was not longer able to goe in and out before the people he called them before him and signified that the time of his departure was at hand and therefore he tooke order for their welfare after his death And first of all hee placed Iosua ouer them in his stead to be their guide to the promised Land Secondly he gaue speciall charge to all the people to be valiant and couragious against all their enemies and to obey the Commandements of their God And Ioshua followes the same course Ioshua 24.1 for he called the people together and telles them that the time of his death is at hand and giues them a charge to bee couragious and to worshippe the true God which being done he ends his dayes as a worthy Captaine of the Lord. And so when King Dauid was to go the way of all flesh 2. King 1.1 and lay sicke on his death-bed he placed his owne sonne Salomon vpon his throne and gaue him charge both for the maintenance of true religion and for the execution of ciuill iustice Touching the dutie of Ministers of the Gospell when they are going out of the world they must cast about and prouide as much as in them lies that the Church of God ouer which God hath made them ouerseers may flourish after they are gone An example whereof we haue in Saint Paul Take heede therefore saith he vnto your selues Acts 20.28.29.30.31 and to all the flocke ouer which the holy Ghost hath made you ouerseers to feed the Church of God which hee hath purchased with his owne bloud For I know this that after my departure shall grieuous wolues enter in amongst you not sparing the flocke Also of your owne selues shall men arise speaking peruerse things to draw away disciples after them Therefore watch and remember that by the space of three yeeres I ceased not to warne euery one night and day with teares If this dutie had been well obserued and performed there could not haue beene such abundance of errors and heresies in the Church of God as hath beene and are at this day But because men haue had more care to maintaine personall succession then the right succession which stands and consists in the wholesome word and doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles therefore Wolues and vnprofitable teachers haue come into the places and roomes of faithfull and painfull Pastors and teachers not sparing the flocke of Christ but haue made hauocke of the same the Apostacie whereof hath ouerspread the face of the Church Thirdly housholders and masters of families must haue great care to set their houshold and family in good order before they die Which dutie the Lord himselfe by his Prophet Esay doth command that good King Ezechiah to performe Isa 38.1 Thus saith the Lord set thy house in order for thou shalt die and not liue And for the procuring good order in the family after death two things are to be done The first concerning this life and that is touching the ordering and disposing of lands and goods And that
death is of no continuance it is buried in its own birth it vanisheth in its own thought and the paine is no sooner begunne but is presently ended Though the flesh bee weake and fraile yet the spirit is strong to encounter the crueltie of Death and to make it rather a kinde kisse 1. Cor. 4.16 then a cruell crosse We faint not saith the Apostle for though the outward man perish yet the inward man is renued day by day Our Sauiour Christ said at his death and last farewell Iohn 17.1 Father the houre is come glorifie thy Sonne that thy Sonne also may glorifie thee Is there glory in death and is death but an houre It is of no long abode that abideth but an houre and little doe I doubt but that in that houre the soule is more rauished with the sight of God then the bodie is tormented with the sence of death Nay I am further perswaded that in the houre of my death the passion of mortalitie is so beaten backe with impression of eternitie that the flesh feeleth nothing but what the soule offereth and that is God from whom it came and whither it would as Saint Augustine saith with as great hast as happinesse And therefore whether you please to define or diuine of death what it is if it bee rightly broken into parts and passages the elect of God shall finde it a very easie passage euen as it were but a going out of prison a shaking off of our giues an end of banishment a breaking off our bands a destruction of toile an arriuing at the hauen a iourney finished the casting off an heauie burthen the alighting from a madde and furious horse the going out of a tottering and ruinous house the end of all griefes the escape of all dangers the destroyer of all euels Natures due Countries ioy and heauens blisse And from hence doe flow those sweete appellations by which the holy Ghost which is the Spirit of truth doth describe the death of the godly in saying that they are gathered or congregated to their people that is to the company of the blessed and triumphing Church in heauen to come to those which haue deceased before them in the true faith or rather haue gone thither before them So that the holy Ghost vseth a most sweete Periphrasis of death as speaking of the death of Abraham Gen. 25.8 Then Abraham gaue vp the ghost and died in a good old age Gen. 35.29 Gen. 49 33. Numb 20.24 Num. 27.13 an old man and full of yeeres and was gathered to his people And of the death of Isaac And Isaac gaue vp the ghost and died and was gathered vnto his people and so likewise of Iacob of Moyses of Aaron c. It is but the taking of a iourney which we thinke to bee death it is not an end but a passage it is not so much an emigration as a transmigration from worse things to better a taking away of the soule and a most blessed conueying of it from one place to another not an abolishing for the soule is taken from hence and transposed into a place of eternall rest it is a passage and ascension to the true life it is an out-going because by it the godly passe out of the slauerie of sinne to true libertie euen as heretofore the Israelites out of the bondage of Egypt into the promised land And as S. Peter termes it it is a laying downe of the tabernacle 2. Pet. 1.14 2. Cor. 5.4 for so he stiles our bodies And as S. Paul termes it it is an vnclothing or putting off of it and a remouing out of the bodie from a most filthie lodging to a most glorious dwelling They are said to be loosed from a port or from a prison and to come to Christ Phil. 1.23 seeing they are led out of the Inne of this present life to the heauenly Countrey and out of the dregs of wicked men to the most blessed societie of Christ and his Saints in heauen They are loosed by death out of the bonds of the bodie for euen as cattell when they haue discharged the labour of the whole day at last about the euening are set free and as they which are bound in prison are loosed from their fetters so the godly are led foorth by death from the yoke of their labours and sorrowes of this life and out of the filthie prison of sinne and by a wonderfull and most sweet translation are caried to a better life Out of all which it clearely appeareth Phil. 1.21 how truely the Apostle hath called the death of the godly aduantage seeing it is aduantage to haue escaped the increase of sinne aduantage by auoyding worse things to passe to better from labour and daunger to perfect rest and security and which is all in all to eternall blessednesse All which appellations of death doe teach vs to be so farre from beeing afraid of it that we ought willingly to welcome it as the easie and ioyfull messenger of our happy deliuerance and not sing loth to depart as all worldlings doe who tremble at the very name of it And thus I passe from the facility of dying to the felicitie of dying of which I may say as Sampson did of his riddle Out of the eater came meate Iudges 14.14 and out of the strong came sweetnesse Now the meat that commeth out of this eater and sweetnesse that proceedeth forth of this strong one is a cessation of all euill and an indowment of all good and by this doore we haue an easie and readie passage to all blessednesse and happinesse where God and with him all good is Man that is borne of a woman saith Iob hath but a short time to liue Iob 14.1 and is full of misery O sweet death that turneth time into eternity and misery into mercie so graciously hath our Sauiour done for vs making medicines of maladies cures of wounds and salues of sores and to his children producing health out of sicknesse light out of darknesse and life out of death Psal 27.13 This made Dauid to daunce in the midst of all his affliction and calamitie when he said I should verily haue fainted vnlesse I had beleeued to see the goodnesse of the Lord in the land of the liuing This hath supported the soules of Gods Saints in the seas of their sorrowes when they thought vpon the day of their dissolution wherein they should be made glorious by their deliuerance For as our Sauiour Christ tooke his flight from the heauen to the Virgins wombe from her wombe to the world from the world to the crosse from the crosse to the graue from the graue vnto heauen againe Euen so from the womb wee must follow his steppes and tread the same path that he hath traced out for vs. Iohn 14.6 I am the way saith our Sauiour the truth and the life He is the way without wandring the truth without shadowing the life without