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A66469 A young man's fancy to the rising generation being a sermon preached upon the death, and at the desire of John Tappin of Boston, who deceased at Fairfield the 10th of October 1672, being in the nineteenth year of his age / by Samuel Wakeman ... Wakeman, Samuel, 1635-1692. 1673 (1673) Wing W279; ESTC R18408 44,372 48

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the last Verse of that Chapter the latter in the fi●st Verse of this in the words of the Text Both which he is backing wi●h the former Argument the brevi●y of Life and the certainty of approaching Death The first Inference or Duty exhorted to in the last Verse of the former Chapter is Therefore remove sorrow from thy heart and put away evil from thy fl●sh so I do may the young man think while I rejoyce in my youth and my heart chears me while I walk in the wayes of my hea●t and in the sight of mine eyes if this be not to remove sorrow from my h●art and put away evil from my flesh what is Such indeed is the opinion of the flesh touching sensual pleasures but sure the judgement of the Spirit of God is quite contrary hereunto and it is quite another thing that is here intended viz. the putting away sorrow by the putting away sin the removing of the Effect the evil of afflict●on and suffering by removing the Cause the evil of concupiscence and inordinate aff●ct●●n according to the truth of that which he is elswhere speaking Prov 14.13 Even in laughter the heart is sorrowful and the end of that mirth is heaviness A holy heart and a merry heart go together and a sinful heart and a sorrowful heart cannot will not be long asunder be that puts not away the evil of sin from his flesh cannot long put away the evil of smart and suffering whatever vain sensual men may imagine the winding up will prove that of the Wise-man true Prov. 11.29 As righteousness tendeth to life so he that pursueth evil pursueth it to his own death and the Reason backing it is bottomed upon the same main Argument the flittingness brevity and uncertainty of Life even in the young and lusty for Childhood and Youth is vanity i.e. are fading passing uncertain soon spent Young men may bear and behave themselves as if imagining their hot blood lusty bodies activity beauty would last alwayes and their youthful pleasures never be at an end but Childhood and Youth are vanity Death may not wait till they be gray-headed or however the earliest Morning hastens apace to Noon and then to Night The second Inference or Duty exhorted to you have in the words of the Text Remember thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth As in the former he was calling off from sin vanity the empty pursuance of the Creature so in this he is calling to and putting upon the remembrance of the Creator q.d. relinquish your vanities and your sensual pleasures and contentments which will be bitterness in the latter end and set your hearts seriously God-ward turn your thoughts toward the minding him And this Exhortation of young men to the now remembring of their Creator is urged upon them by the same main Argument still The flittingness and vanity of Life and the approaching certainty and the evil and dark dayes of old Age and Death While the evil dayes come not c. as in this and the following Verses q.d. old Age and Death are hastening upon you and will certainly and soon overtake you It is the former part of the Verse Remember now thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth that I shall insist upon taking no further notice of the latter but as it may be an Argument to enforce this And here because I study expedition and the Explication will necessarily take up some room and time as also that the Reason of the duty here required of us is couched in the expressions wherein it is commended to us We shall first lay down the Conclusion or Point of Doctrine from the words and then open it to you and fetch the Reasons out of its own bowels The Observation then according to the terms of the Text which we shall after more fully unfold is this Doct. That it is every mans Duty every young mans Duty now in the dayes of his youth to Remember his Creator Remember now thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth It is every mans duty to remember God it is every young mans duty to do it now in the dayes of his youth For the clearing up of the Doctrine and making way for the Application and Improvement of it we have three things to handle and unfold 1. What this Remembring our Creator he duty which the Text and Doctrine calls for is importing 2. The Reasons of our so doing which the term of Creator is implying 3. Why the Younger may not put it off but it must be now done now in the dayes of their youth I. What this remembring God remembring our Creator is importing Remembring commonly in Scripture acceptation is not strictly taken for the simple act of memory the meer retaining a thing in our heads nor is so here to be taken for any one simple act of the Soul nor yet divers and continued acts of one and the same Faculty but it is taken for the compleat entire motion of the whole Soul the whole man towards God It is the common saying of Divines That words of knowledge of sense in Scripture imply affection and action cogitation and practice take in both the head and heart include the whole Soul by one word of knowing remembring and the like is included the compleat entire motion of the whole Soul the whole man towards God Such is the combination and concatenation of all the Faculties of the Soul as of Links in a Chain that draw one and draw all break one and break all upon this account any one act or the act of any one single Faculty as knowing remembring c. is usually in Scripture put for the compleat entire motion of the whole Soul The term of our remembring God so of his remembring us is used ordinarily not strictly but in such a latitude as we have been speaking if you consult Neh. 4.14 Judg. 8.34 Lev. 26.42 Luke 23.42 and a number of Texts more that might be named and recited but I fear to be tedious you will finde the sense of the phrase to run according to the breadth which we have been saying In a word we then remember God not when we barely think of him but when as such we affectionately and practically acknowledge him when we really own and bear our selves toward him as our Creator in sum when the whole entir● motion of the whole Soul is Godward Thus briefly and in general But because the burthen of the Duty of the Text hangs upon this word Remember we shall yet a little further unfold it and shew you yet somewhat more fully distinctly and particularly what the remembring God is implying and inferring briefly 1. Remembring God is implying and inferring converting turning unto God Psal 22.27 All the ends of the world shall remember and turn unto the Lord All men naturally are forgetting God and turning from him and men then remember God when they convert and turn unto him men naturally too earnestly remember the Creature and
A YOUNG MAN'S LEGACY TO The Rising Generation Being a SERMON Preached upon the Death and at the Desire of John Tappin of Boston Who deceased at Fairfield the 10th of October 1672. being in the Nineteenth year of his Age. By SAMUEL WAKEMAN Pastor of the Church of Christ there Eccles 7.2 It is better to go to the house of mourning then to go to the house of feasting for that is the end of all men and the living will lay it to his heart Eccles 11.9 Rejoyce O young man in thy youth and let thy heart chear thee in the dayes of thy youth and walk in the wayes of thine heart and in the sight of thine eyes but know thou that for all th●se things God will bring thee into judgement CAMBRIDGE Printed by Marmaduke J●●●s●n 1673. A YOUNG MAN'S LEGACY TO The Rising Generation Eccles 12.1 Remember now thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth while the evil dayes come not nor the years draw nigh when thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them BE pleased to understand That the Text that I have now read unto you is not of mine own choosing but was chosen by him a little before he left us who is now in another World It was his earnest desire about two or three dayes before his death being apprehensive that his change was at hand that I would Preach a Sermon for him upon this Text His surviving Friend and Companion who held him very dear and with whom he left it to prosecute this his desire hath been unsatisfiedly urgent with me in this behalf That the earnest desire of the dying and the will of the dead as to this matter might be fulfilled which seconded by others hath drawn me to this which i● may be I have been too loth to attend I would not reluct or deny when mans will and desire carrieth with it any signification or intimation of the will of God or shun any occasion or opportunity of doing any the least good which his Providence is commending to me and such I dare not say but this is You may look upon this Sermon then as the Request of the Deceased as The Legacy which this Young man hath left by his last W●●● to the Rising Generation Me-thinks it seems to me that our business with this Text at this time mine and yours is from the becknings of Divine Providence thereunto directing for not onely the desire of the deceased calling us as it were with his last breath to the consideration of this Subject but his Death nor his alone but that of others lately taken away both among our selves and in Neighbour-Plantations whose gray hairs and wrinkles of Age Death hath prevented and the solemn and awakening Providence of God in these Dispe●sations are loudly calling me and you and all of us ye Younger sort especially who are apt to put it off to an early timely remembring God according to the Counsel given in our Text Remember now thy Creator in the d●yes of thy youth c. THis whole Book is in the substance of it a serious calling men back unto God a recalling men that are forget● ng God forsaking their own mercies and following after lying vanities from those vain emp y fru●tless pursuances to the remembrance of him The sum of this whole Discourse wherein G●eat and Wise and Experienced Solomon is giving us in his own account that we may know what to trust to stand upon these two Points 1. That the Chief Good of the sons of men is not to be found in all Creatures under the Sun nor in mens labours and travails about them all the good that by the greatest industry can be gotten out of them being but vanity and vexation of spirit as he after a thorow tedious search had found ●y woful experience 2. That mans Happiness is to be found onely in God and in the being unto Him This is that great Conclusion that he is laying down as the sum and issue of all in the 13th Verse of this 12th Chapter Let us hear the Conclusion of the whole matter Fear God and keep his Commandments for this is the whole of man Upon these grounds we have him throughout this Discourse as cautioning men against Creature pursua●ces and seeki●● happiness where it is not to be had and nothing can be extracted by the most skilful Chymistry but vanity and vexation of spirit so calling them to the Creator and the remembrance of him in whom and wherein their Happiness doth indeed consist Amongst many other Arguments Motiv s and Perswasions which we have used all along in this Book to disswade men from an over-mindfulness of thoughtfulness about and eager seeking happiness in the Creature the Wise-man drawing towards a conclusion is urging home this great Argument taken from the brevity of life the certainty of approaching death and the solemn and momentous Consequences attending and following upon it We have him sometimes touching upon it before but more fully falling in with it at the 7th Verse of the 11th Chapter and prosecuting it to the 8th Verse of this 12th Chapter Of al● the Argument● which to untye and take us off from the Creature as vain and provoke and necessitate us to the remembrance of God there is none more plain sensible palp●ble pr●ssi g cog●nt and that may go further to convince fl●sh and b●ood a Se● 〈◊〉 ●t himself th●n the consid●●● 〈…〉 the brevity 〈◊〉 Life a d the l ng Eternity ●fter the certainty of D●●●● a d the strict A●count that follows i● 〈◊〉 A●gument 〈◊〉 the most fo cib●e tak ng p e●●ent the W se-man is rese●ving to and improvi g in the last p●ce taking in with i● ●s we were s●yi●g at ver 7. of t e fo●●going and urging 〈◊〉 home in the s●●●●l of that and in the b g n●ing of this Chap 〈◊〉 especially up●n Yo●●g m n that are most apt t p●●●s●●nd pamper themselves 〈…〉 fl●urish ●g Age putting the evil any f●r off B●●n a few words to come to our ●ext I 〈◊〉 in in Argument tak n from the brevity of Lif● the certainty of Death and the momentous C ●sequences attending it which we have the P ●a her propo●●ng in v r. 7. 8. of the foregoing Chap er Truly ● ght is ●weet an●●●p●●●●nt th ng it is for the eyes to behold the Sun but if a man ●ive many years and rej●yce in them all yet let him remember the dayes of dar●ness for they shall be many all that cometh is vanity and closely ●nd cuttingly applying to young men that are most apt to put it off in v●r 9. R joy●● O young man in thy youth and let thy heart chear thee in the d●yes of thy youth and walk in the wayes of thy heart and in thy sight of thine eyes but know thou that for all these things God will bring thee into judgement We have ●im making two Inferences or exhorting to a twofold duty the forme we have in