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A61390 A discourse concerning old-age tending to the instruction, caution and comfort of aged persons / by Richard Steele ... Steele, Richard, 1629-1692. 1688 (1688) Wing S5386; ESTC R34600 148,176 338

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fourscore and four years yet departed not from the Temple but served God with fastings and prayers night and day Luk. 2. 37. So that all Aged persons are not precluded from spiritual exercises And though they should become unable to frequent the Publick Ordinances of God yet they may pray and sigh and meditate in their chambers and these proceeding from a sincere and sensible Soul are most acceptable unto God. As for the external Acts of Religion they avail nothing without faith and love which lodge in the heart The immanent Acts of the Soul which are to understand to meditate to will and to desire do most perfect the same And where the Deed cannot be done God doth accept the will for the Deed. The weakest and poorest Old man or woman may have high meditations under a low roof and a large heart within narrow walls No Aged person therefore should be discouraged by their Inability for Gods Service since He knoweth their frame he remembreth that they are but dust The Lord hath said When the poor and needy seek water and there is none and their tongue faileth for thirst I the Lord will hear them I the God of Israel will not forsake them I will open Rivers in high places and fountains in the midst of the valleys I will make the Wilderness a pool of water and the dry Land springs of water Isa. 41. 17 18. In the want of ordinary supplies I will provide them with extraordinary supports the wilderness shall produce a pool of water rather than any Child of God shall dy for thirst When they cannot wait upon God as before he will wait to be gracious to them he will come to them and teach and comfort them If indeed a man be inwardly pleased that his weakness excuseth him from his Devotions he hath cause to blame himself but if he hath the same desires and holy affections with others the old Law shall stand to wit he that stayes by the Stuffe shall part the Spoil with him that goes out to battel You have a trade going in every Ship an Interest in every holy Assembly in the World. SECT X. THE Tenth and last Inconvenience in Old-age is That they are Terrified with the approach of Death For Death is a word hard of digestion to any man. The Philosopher counted it of all dreadfull things the most Terrible And Mr. Latimer observes of Hezekiah that he was more afraid of Death than of all Senacheribs Army Now Old-age is a near neighbour to it and the aspect of it alwayes before them is not very pleasant Most men saith Seneca are miserably tost between the fear of Death and the miseries of Life are unwilling either to live or dy Especially they who have had their portion in this life and have made no provision for a better This made Lewis 11 th of France to charge all about him to forbear the mention of Death The strict Account which follows it and the long Eternity which follows that makes Death a most serious matter No wonder if the hand tremble when it is going to take that Cup which will mend or end them Now the Old man is at the door of this fatal place Though a Casualty may bring Death suddenly though a sickness may bring it probably yet Old-age brings it certainly Peradventure there are fifty weeks or dayes remaining in their life peradventure but forry five perhaps but forty but thirty yea but twenty as Abraham said of Sodom nay since it is dubious every moment and no mortal man knows at what Wat●… of the Night he shall be called the 〈◊〉 person that is but a step from death must be through fear of Death in continual bondage But the Lyon is not so terrible as he is painted neither is Death so formidable as it is by many represented Though it be against the Desires of Nature yet it is not against the Series of Nature For if we consult this we find Autumn kindly after Summer and Winter after Autumn and Death is as natural after Old-age And the Light of Nature taught some of the Heathens to reckon the worthy men especially that are dead to be most truly alive in that while we live in this world the Soul is imprison'd in the body and is set at liberty by Death Thus Xenophon brings in Cyrus discoursing to his Children on his Death-bed Think not O my Sons that I leave you quite and am lost when I dye perhaps you will not see me neither do you now see the most Essential part of me nor never did only by my actions you believed it was in this body and that will live out of this body as well as in it And if Pagans set so light by Death what notion should we Christians have of it that can look more clearly beyond it It is styl'd a falling asleep and what 's more welcome to an Aged person than a sound sleep And from that Expression 1 Thess. 4. an Old Toletan Council ordained that the dead should be followed with Psalms of Praise to their Graves In short 1. All Aged People are not oppressed with the fear of Death Too few there are that think at all of it Men generally put far from them the evil day and it will be an evil day to such as put it far from them Most people can think of any place in the Parish rather than the Church-yard yea I doubt it be one of the Faults of the Aged to think seldom of Death and they who think little of it are in no danger of being frighted with its thoughts 2. The Young have the same reason to be concern'd about Dying as the Old. For Youth hath more wayes to Death than Age hath And far more dye in their Youth than that dye for Age. It 's true they hope to live longer but their hopes have no good ground at all They have neither Promise nor Experience to build their hopes upon And in Young Peoples Death they being in their strength Nature receives a more violent shock whereas the Aged are more quietly extinguished like a Candle in the Socket 3. No good man need be affrighted at the approach of Death For the power and sting of Death is utterly taken away by our Saviours Death and so it can do us no hurt A Child of God doth not so much as tast Death The true Believer now hath not to do with Death but with its shadow with a toothless Dog with a dead Lyon with a Wasp without a Sting with a conquer'd Enemy What man in his wits is afraid after a tempestuous Voyage that he is drawing nigh his Haven It was a sweet saying of S. Ambrose near his end I have not so lived that I am ashamed to live among you neither do I fear to dy going to so good a Master The unprepared and the ungodly may dread Death As Aristippus told the wicked Mariners trembling in a Storm You may well
they see a tempting troublesome world so looking forward they see by Faith a state of perfect Holiness and Happiness prepared for them This Faith assures them that the end of their fight is the beginning of their Victory and as they part from their labours they take possession of their honours And doth not any Apprentice rejoyce when the time of his service is near its expiration I know Nature recoils at the approach of Death in the best but Faith is then of greatest need and use and the just may be said to dy as well as to live by his faith Thereby he sees Life and Immortality just before him and one only miry step to pass and then he is well Indeed the idle man desires not to go to bed but to all that take or suffer pain saith S. Chrysostome an end of it is sweet the traveller gladly beholds his Inne the hireling often computes when his year is out the husbandman greedily expects harvest the pregnant woman waits for her expected deliverance and the Aged person for his Writ of Ease One would wonder what shift even the Heathen made to render Death desirable who had such weak glimmerings of any other life And yet even they would thus argue Death either it annihilates us or else translates us Annihilation will but reduce me into the State wherein I was and if it translate me it will put me into better lodgings my Soul can be no where so pen'd up as here it is in the Body What boast would they have made of Death had they but firmly believed everlasting life For this it was which enabled the Apostle to make this expression Phil. 1. 23. Having a desire to depart and to be with Christ which is far better For where should the Spouse desire to be but with her husband or where the members but with the head And upon this account that good Lady Falkland would usually say when she was going to bed Now am I nearer Heaven by one day than ever I was The Aged person sees a wofull wilderness behind him and the blessed land of Promise before him and therefore no wonder that with Moses he longs to be in it And the nearer the holy Soul approacheth its perfection the more earnest and almost impatient it is to attain it And one great Advantage of the Aged lies in this that the Meditation of Death which is then in view is of great use to compose the Mind to keep us in the Fear of the Lord all the day long and our Consciences void of offence towards God and men to work in us a great contempt of the World and a singular freedom of spirit and of speech It will make us neither much to fear nor much to hope or desire any thing that the world can do for us or against us and finally doth greatly conduce to keep us steady and constant in faith and holiness And if some Ancient people do not make this use of their approaching dissolution what would they or others do if they did not grow Old at all what a careless worldly and vain life would men live if they had no certain Indications of their dying Surely the nearer to Heaven the more heavenly we should be as any man when he is come to the confines of another Countrey will frame himself to the guise thereof so he that hath this hope in him doth purifie himself as he is pure and will begin the Life below which he expects to live above And the other Priviledge herein contained is this that being weary they are near to their Journeys end They have bin long toss'd upon the Sea and now they see the Haven and rejoyce that they are ready to put into it This could make Cato in Tully to say My old-age is herein pleasant to me that by how much I approach nearer to death so much sooner do I as it were descry land and after long sailing am ready to enter the Port. Not that a good man should desire to dye for ease only to be freed from the troubles of life all the tribulations of that blessed Apostle Paul never made him cry out O wretched man that I am but his body of death forc'd him to it But whil'st we carry these earthly Tabernacles about us even the Sufferings of this present time will make us rejoyce in hope of the glory of God. Especially when we behold that innumerable company of Angels the general assembly and Church of the first born the spirits of just men made perfect yea God the Iudge of all and Iesus the Mediator of the new Covenant amongst whom we are going to reside in perfect bliss then will our heart and our flesh cry out O when shall we come and appear before God! And this is the Priviledge of Old-age that there is but one feeble life between them and a Crown and you know that he who is shortly to be invested in some Dignity feasts himself with the hopes of it Yea this is the constant relief of the Aged man under all his bodily and other temporal afflictions that they will last but for a moment Hold out Faith and Patience the Iubilee is at hand Therefore it behoves all that are in years to lay up for themselves a good foundation for the time to come that they may lay hold on eternal life to get some unquestionable evidence of their right to the tree of life of their part in Paradise and then their thoughts of what 's beyond death will support them against all events on this side it or in it That Death is never to be dreaded saith an Heathen Poet which is followed with Immortality All your riches reputation or friends will then nothing comfort you like a lively sense of Christ in you the hope of glory He that hath liv'd to God will chearfully go to him and they who have run with difficulty will dye with ease And thus you have an account of some of the many Priviledges of Old-age for besides all these it is a Priviledge to attain to such an Age as that we may our selves see to the Education and Disposal of our Children and also to have the comfort of their piety and prosperity Thou shalt see thy childrens children and peace upon Israel Psal. last Hereupon it is recorded among and as the crown of the Blessings bestow'd upon Iob after his restoration that he lived an hundred and forty years and saw his sons and his sons sons even four generations Job 42. 16. From all which we may conclude that although every Age of mans life hath its peculiar bitterness and sweetness yet all things well weighed a quiet and honest Old-age is to be preferr'd before any other age It is the assertion of the learned Petrarch who thereupon breaks forth into the praises of it concluding them unworthy to arrive at it that are afraid of it and them unworthy to possess it that
give of your Repentance for the Sins of your Youth is a watchful care against the Sins of your Old-age otherwise your Sins are not forsaken but changed Withal if your Repentance be sound it is attended with a will and endeavour to make Restitution wherein you have injur'd any in their Souls Bodies Names or Estates This will be as Letters Testimonial of the truth of your Repentance you must not nay you cannot be quiet if your Repentance be sound until you have seriously endeavour'd as far as in you lies to recover the Souls to restore the Bodies to heal the Reputations and to repair the Estates which you have injur'd without which there can be no true Repentance on Earth and without which there will be no Remission in Heaven SECT II. ANother work of Old-age is obtaining Assurance of Salvation I mean hereby not only a General Certainty that some good people shall be saved for the Devils believe this and rage at it which I think is the same with Objective Certainty nor that Assurance which may come by special and extraordinary Revelation sith we find few or no examples in Scripture of such a thing but rather that the Apostle Paul himself grounds his Assurance of the Crown upon the righteousness of God which he extends to all them that love Christs appearing 2 Tim. 4. 8. Neither do I mean a Conjectural Hope of Salvation which admits both of anxiety and of slavish fear fith the Scripture represents it by Faith and full assurance and produceth Earnests and Seals for confirmation Nor lastly is this Assurance confin'd to Grace at present but extends to final Salvation Thus the Apostle 2 Tim. 1. 12. I know whom I have believed there is Assurance of his present State but was he certain of his Perseverance Yes that follows and I am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day That such Assurance hath been attained is clear enough from the Instances of Iob 19. 25 26. of David Psal. 16. 9 10. of Paul 2 Tim. 4. 7 8. and many others That it may be attained is as clear sith there is no intimation that these or the rest had any extraordinary Discovery thereof unto them but arriv'd thereat in the use of those means and by the consignation of that Spirit unto which we have access as well as they And the Apostle doth expresly comprehend the generality of Believers in this Priviledge 2 Cor. 5. 1. For we know that if our earthly House of this Tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God c. That it ought to be endeavoured by all true Christians is most evident from the plain commands to that purpose 2 Pet. 1. 10. Wherefore the rather Brethren give diligence to make your calling and election sure c. That few do labour to attain it thinking it to be impossible or unnecessary is to be bewailed That many deceive themselves with a false perswasion of present Grace and future Glory is manifest by Scripture and daily Experience And that it is most proper and needful for Old people the thing it self speaks For you cannot deny but that you have Souls immortal Souls which being Spirits cannnot dye but must return to God that gave them and are these Souls of so small value to be left to a Hazard to an everlasting venture And it is as evident that this life is uncertain we may say as Isaac Gen. 27. 2. Behold now I am Old I know not the day of my Death and therefore it 's time for us to go about this work without delay Children desire the time of youth and youth longs to be at mans age and they then would live to be Old but Old-age hath no further Age to desire it hath none other to succeed it here and they are wholly uncertain how long it will last and therefore it is absolutely necessary that they should be on sure grounds for Eternity and then the day of death will be better than the day of their Birth You know how much of your life is already spent you can see the Sands that are run into the nether end of the Glass but the upper Part is covered with a Mantle you know not how few Sands are left there to run Nay you cannot but perceive that Death is approaching very near you You are filled with Wrinkles which is a Witness against you and your leanness rising up in you beareth witness to your Face as it is Job 16. 8. For as it is observed of All men that they are Mortales apt to dye and of all Good men that they are Mortificati dying to Sin so it is of all Old men that they are Morituri about to dye And for such to have Oyl to seek when they should have it to Use Evidences to procure when they should have them to produce is an unexcusable neglect Especially knowing that your last Breath wafts you into an unalterable Estate What Journeys and Presents were heretofore made to the Oracles to assure the Votaries concerning the Event of some temporal affairs and how many do now Hazard their Souls by seeking to Necromancers to know the success of their Marriages Voyages and such like and yet a miscarriage in these things is remediable there may be some alleviation in them there may be some end of them but you are lanching into the Ocean of Eternity and are at no certainty whether it be eternal Happiness or eternal Misery What an anxious and uncomfortable State must this be If you were not loose in your belief of future things you would be restless in this condition you owe your Ease to your Let●…argy if you were not half Infidels you would be more than half distracted Which brings to mind the course which some Eminent persons among the Heathens took they durst not dye sober but drank great Draughts o●… Wine saying That no voluptuous person can go in his Wits into an invisible Estate With what poor comfort must that man dye that must cry out with that Old Philosopher I dye in great doubt and know not whither I am going yet out the Soul must go ready or unready Then will the careless sinner gnash his Teeth for rage at his slothful and sinful life which he hath spent as a Tale that is told Then will he have time enough to curse all the worldly business or wicked Company that hath devoured his precious time and left his Soul to shift for it self for ever Do not we in all other cases strive to be at a point will May-be's and Peradventure's satisfie us in any material humane affairs The Tenant who is warned out of one House cannot enjoy himself until he be sure of another The Steward that was discharged of his Office Luk. 16. took present course to be provided of some other Subsistence The poorest man is uneasie when his old Suit of Cloaths is worn out till he have a