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A42640 A sermon of mortalitie preached at the funerals of Mr. Thomas Man at Kingston in Svrrey Feb. XXI, 1649. R. G. 1650 (1650) Wing G56; ESTC R40870 14,085 33

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young and strong Remember thy death in the daies of thy youth in the daies of thy strength before sicknesse and weaknesse seize upon thee Lay not the greatest burthen on the weakest beast Adjourne not the longest journey to the shortest day A whole life is but short enough to provide for Death We are a week providing for a Feast a moneth preparing for a Wedding three moneths deliberation about a Bargaine And will we make no provision no preparation for this aforehand We take time to make provision for the buriall of the dead And shall we take no care to provide for Death it self Many men never think of Death untill Death come and take away their thinking Think upon it I beseech you in season whoever thou art that hearest me this day whether freind or foe stranger or familiar be not deceived the great God of Heaven and Earth the great Determiner of time and daies hath allotted thee such a portion of time which thou shalt not passe Death * Rev. 6.8 mounted on his pale horse is posting towards thee Here is not thy abode nor rest thou dwellest a House of clay in a Tent pitch'd up to day and removed to morrow Thou art a Didapper peening up and down in a moment depart thou must and be gone God knows how soon First then this may reach us watchfulnesse we know not the hour goe let us watch every houre We know not the hour wherein Death the Lords Handmaide with the broom of sickness or sorrow will sweep us away as the maide doth the spiders house 2. It may teach us to provide for things Eternall what ever becomes of Temporals for Death will strip us of all 3. Labour to bid Death welcome How shall I doe this First follow the precious Counsell of Christ * Mat. 6.20 Lay up Treasure for your selves in Heaven Which are Workes of Pietie and Deeds of Charity they will comfort you in Death and accompany you to Heaven 2. Looke carnestly to things that are above To GOD to IESUS CHRIST who sits at Gods right hand carrying on the great worke of Mans Redemption So did * Acts 7.55 Stephen in that extraordinary vision he saw the admirable Glory of Christ in Heaven 3. Live after the Laws of the new Ierusalem become a new creature be borne againe he that is borne but once shall die twice and he that is borne twice shall die but once 4. Labour to get an assurance of the forgivenesse of thy Sinnes Labour to finde God reconciled unto thee Labour to feele the power of CHRISTS Death and the vertue of His Resurrection 5. Live in all good Conscience they that live in all good Conscience till their dying day shall depart in abundance of Comfort at their dying day Get a good Conscience and keep a good Conscience that when thou shalt come to die though thou want the benefit of a comforting Minister thy Conscience may supply the place of a comforting Minister and may be the same to thee as the Angell was to CHRIST in His Agony and minister such comfort unto thee as may make thee ready for joy to leap into the grave Lastly be willing to die feare it not IESUS CHRIST was once among the dead thou must follow him through the horrours of the grave Art thou a child of God Hast thou given up thy Name to IESUS CHRIST Though Death invade the naturall powers of thy body and suppresse them though Death breake in upon this lodging of clay and demolish it to the ground yet be in no wise daunted thy death is but like the renting of * Gen. 39. Iosephs garment from him the man of God fled and left his garment in the hand of his Mistrisse So a child of God escapes out of the hands of Death without danger Vivendo decrescit transeundo nos terit he leaves his garment in the hands of Dea●h i. e. his body which like a garment the longer we weare it will be the worse for wearing The dissolving of the body to the man of God is but the unfolding of the Net and breaking open the Prison that the Soule which was prisoner may escape Here is notable comfort for the man of God He hath a life in him which no death can extinguish though the body descend into the grave the Lord will take it out againe He will not leave it in the grave neither cast off the care thereof but shall watch over the dust therof though it taste of corruption it shall not perish in corruption The Holy Ghost who dwelt in the body shal be unto it as a Balm to preserve it to Immortality This same flesh and no other for it though it should be dissolved into innumerable pickles of dust shall be raised againe and quickned by the omnipotent power of the eternall Spirit of GOD. Occasion I now come to the Occasion Something I shall say of this deceased Gentleman here arrested before our eyes for a debt of Nature I shall not praise his Birth nor his Education nor his Profession but as * Hierom Epitaph Mar. Hierom said of Marcella that godly Woman Nihil in illa laudabo nisi quod proprium I will praise nothing in him but what was proper and peculiar to him Consider him as a Man Husband Christian And we shall find him a patterne worthy imitation 1. Consider him as a man As a man he had his Infirmities For Lord what is man 8 Ps An infirme fraile creature many and great infirmities we labour under as we are men We have strong Corruptions in us as we are men we can doe no thing but Sinne Yet this I may safely deliver of him that he kept himselfe or rather GOD by His Grace kept him from those Sinnes against which Holy David prayed * Ps 19.13 Lord keep thy servant from presumpteous sinnes Wee are are naturally prone to great sinnes he was not a strong Sinner O the strength of sin in our daies Notwithstanding Admonitions Iudgements Mercies men goe on still in sinnes No reformation no amendment we were sinners before the Wars and we are sinners still He was none of these 2. Consider him as a Husband And there he observed the rule of the Apostle * Col. 3.19 Husbands love your Wives and be not bitter against them He lived lovingly with his Wife in the sacred Conjunction of their GOD six and thirtie yeares together Children he had none that lived but a chearfull respecter of them whom Law and Love had made his own No Lyon in his house no Tyrant among his servants freindly affable courteous towards his Neighbours observing another precept of the Apostle * Rom. 12.16 equalling himself to them of low degree whereby he gained love and lost nothing of his reputation 3. Consider him as a Christian And so hee was 1. Peaceable 2. Humble 3. Charitable 4. Devout Foure most infallible evidences as I take them of a true Christian and
to see the goodnesse of the Lord in the land of the living St. Paul was ravished with the assurance of life after death his note ever after was to be dissolved * Phil. 1.23 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I desire to be dissolved or resolved into my first Principles or to be discharged or released out of the prison of my body that I may presently be with CHRIST my Saviour in Heaven in rest and in blisse View Annot in Philip. Now a word or two of my third Doctrin and I shall make Application A Change will come and we must daily expect it We are all desirous of Change Adam would be changed 3 Gen. He had enough Wisdome he would be as wise as his Maker And * 2 Sam. 15. Absolom would be changed hee would sit in his Fathers Throne and of a Subject become a Soveraign Solomon would have change of Wives 1 K. 11.3 700 whom he solemnly married The Israelites would change Samuel for Saul 1 Sam. 5.8 And the food of Angels for the flesh-pots of Aegypt 11 Numb 4,5,6 Men affect alterations choppings and changes but we seldome or never remember the great Change of which the Apostle speakes 3 Phil. 21. Who shall change our vile bodies or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Beza Annot the body of our vilenesse that it may like unto His glorious body or the body of his glory We never think of this Change O the glorious estate that a child of God shall be transchanged into this corruptibilitie and mortalitie shall be changed into incorruptibilitie and immortalitie But I will fall Application upon the Application of these Points Application being the Life of Doctrines The use in gerall that we are to make of all this precedent Discourse is to prepare for Death and Dissolution We read in Solomons distribution of times that * Eccl. 3.2 there is a time to be borne and a time to die but of no time to live as if our Birth bordered upon our Death and our Cradles stood in our Graves That Death therefore may not surprize you as it did that wicked * Adversus omnia pericula me munivi praeterquàm adversus mortem amp c. 1. Seriously Caesar Borgia think upon it 1. Seriously 2. Rightly 3. Seasonably 1. Seriously 1. Doe it Seriously this doe by laying it to heart * 7 Eccl. 2. This is the end of all men and the living will lay it unto heart to the very heart of our heart We must not lay it to our Eyes to gaze upon it nor to our eares to heare of it nor to our tongues onely to discourse and talke of it O such a one is dead such a one is gone to his long home but we must apply it to our hearts ruminate it in our minds rivet it in our memories ponder it in our meditations suffer it to make a deep impression in us And that for these reasons * Qui considerat qualis erit in morte semper fit timidus in operatione Lud. Gra. Tit. Morb. He that thinks seriously of his death will be very circumspect in his deeds Men will not be such traders in Sin such drinkers in of Inqiuity Religion and the Waies of GOD will not be so slighted set before thine eyes the picture of Death A serious thought of thy Death will help to drive evill thoughts out of thy heart Mortem cogitare est vitiis omnibus renunciare ' Twi●l divorce thee from the Vvorld 't will alienate thy affections from things earthly this pricketh in the right veine 2. The thought of Death will make you lessc worldly you will not be such drudges to the world Now thou art like a Mole over head and eares in earth anon comes Death like a Mole-catcher and takes thee up The * Luke 12,19,20 Rich man had Goods for many years but not many years for his Goods Death will turne thee empty into thy Grave as Carriers turne their horses into a dirty Stable with a gaulled back and thee perhaps with a gaulled Conscience Now thou mayst state it and stout it out but shortly death will make thee stoop Now you may feed your unsanctified desires but you shall have at length your full deserts 3. Thinke of thy death and it will take thee off from all thy unjust dealings VVe should not have so many Oppressours there would be lesse wrongs in the world A heavy Judgement hangs over mens heads because of oppression and violence Nay thy Conscience will one day rebuke thee at thy death it will trouble thee * In Barons Wars I have read of a Great man in this Land by whom a poore VViddow was exceedingly wronged and put from her house and home and constrained to make an old Oake her best harbour But when he came to die he was so affrighted that in horrour of mind he often exclamed O the Widdow under the Oake O the Widdow under the Oake In the midst of your Ruling remember your Reckoning He that thinks upon his death seriously will be afraid to get his goods wrongfully 4. To think of Death will greatly humble thee nothing so powerfully treads down Pride as this Consider that thou art but a dead man and thy body be it never so strong or beautifull is but a lodging of Death thou art but a rotten creature yea vermis crastino moriturus a worme that must dye to morrow So oft therefore as corrupt Nature stirreth up thy heart to Pride because of the flowers of beauty and strength that grow out of it let this humble thee thy flowers O man cannot but wither for the root from which they spring namely the body is dead already 2. Rightly Secondly thinke of thy death Rightly Send out the scouts of thy heart aforehand And that for these reasons 1. To discover the Power of Death 2. The Perill of Death 1. The Power of Death Great is the Power of Death 't is unresistible thou art not able to encounter it Art thou able to withstand the Messenger of the Almighty No Death is an Iron-hammer that breakes us all to peices as so many Potters vessels Death comes upon the Wicked as Iehu came upon Iehoram 2 K. 9. v. 23 24. He made with all speed to his Chariot thinking to fly away but in vaine for the Arrow of Iehu overtooke him So when men with all speed run to their Chariots i. e. to their refuges of vanities the dart of Death surely overtakes them 2. To discover the Peril of Death O there is a great dealt of peril and danger in Death Death will be very terrible to an unregenerate man Art thou a Sweater or a Drunkard 't is the Devils Serjeant to arrest thee and carry thee without baile to the prison of utter darknesse It is Satans Cart to carry thee presently to execution in Hell 3. Sesonably 3. We must think upon it seasonably timely and in due season Think on it while we are
a Sanctified heart His Devotion towards GOD was not onely publique but private He was carefull to set up the duty of Praier in his Family for he had often heard from my mouth that Families as well as Kingdomes were cursed that called not upon the Name of the LORD And truly GOD will visit private Families as well as publique States GOD will lay His Axe to the root of an unpraying Family as to the root of an unpraying Kingdome O set up the duty of Prayer in your Families that they may be GODS Families Many men rise in the morning like the wild Asse to their prey to their trade to their businesse and they lie downe at night as Dogges doe in their kennels they call not upon the Name of the Lord. I never knew a praying Family a Family of much Sin Prayer doth break the power of Sinne in a Family and weakens the Kingdome of Satan in the hearts of Gods people I have been often called to pray with his family doubt not but GOD hath in mercy accepted the services of his poor servants He had a weake and crazie body but GOD gave him a religious mind in so great weaknesse of body He was born for the good of Many Most liberally he remembred the poor both in his life time giving often privily many large gifts to his poor Neighbours when he saw them in want and at his death bequeathing ten pounds to the poor of lower Tooting in Surrey where he dwelt and fifty pounds to the poore of Kingston upon Thames where he was borne and both his Father and Mother and his elder Brother and Sister with himselfe now lie buried to be distributed among them the next yeare after his decease Yea in his life time according to a former promise made to his loving Brother in Law Mr. Abraham Colfe Minister and Pastor of the Church of CHRIST at Lewisham in Kent near Greenwich and as a farther testimony of his love to his loving Wife Elizabeth sister to the said Mr. Abraham Colfe he did from the 25th of March 1642. now almost nine years past give six pence every week weekly on every Lords-day in every yeare yearely to six poor people of Lewisham being of honest life and conversation and chosen by the Minister Incumbent and Officers of the Church and Parish to be distributed at the publique Church they being in health at the end of the Sermon before noon And also at his death hath given by Will thirty pounds to purchase lands for the perpetuating of the said gift to six poor people of Levisham in like manner successively for ever Also he bequeathed great Legacies to the value of above two thousand pounds to his poor kindred freinds and servants As GOD gave him Riches so GOD gave him a rich heart O this distribution of Wealth is the onely thing This breaking of Loaves among the needy This casting our Bread upon the face of the waters Eccles 11.1 Men think laying up the way to be rich but God thinks laying out to be the way The loynes of the poor will blesse you for your Liberality I see the faces of many rich men I know not the frame of your hearts I know not the bias of them This I know that the clouds that are full poure out raine to refresh the earth so the rich that have abundance must distribute it liberally Now for his sicknesse Dolore calcu●i miserè expiravit terrible as his discase of the stone in the bladder wherein were found twelve stones weighing above six ounces which put him to strong Out-cries Out-cries for the Lords Mercy Outcries for pardon deep acknowledgements for his great and many sins God had layd great paine and torment upon him I never heard him repine nor charge GOD foolishly 1 Job 22. He was patient and pray'd for patience Lord give me patience to suffer thy good will and pleasure He died praying even when death shooke him by the hand his Prayer was O FATHER SON and HOLY GHOST O Blessed Saviour and Redeemer have mercy upon me Thus lived and dyed this worthy Gentleman The Garment which he wore of borrowed earth he hath left to be restored to the earth againe I forbid not his Freinds to lament him We may lament the dead but not the estate of the dead CHRIST sorrowed for his Friend Lazarus But my counsell is let not the Temple of GOD be over-sad And as the Apostle adviseth * 1 Thes 4.13 Sorrow not without hope for him that is asleep Hee is but a sleep his Grave his Bed hee shall awake as sure as he lay down yea more fresh and glorious in the great Day of Resurrection FINIS