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A01992 The wise vieillard, or old man. Translated out of French into English by an obscure Englishman, a friend and fauourer of all wise old-men; Sage vieillard. English Goulart, Simon, 1543-1628.; Williamson, Thomas, 1593-1639.; T. W., obscure Englishman. 1621 (1621) STC 12136; ESTC S103357 144,385 222

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yet is so heedlesse that death doth surprize him hee suddenly falleth into griefes frightes dispaires horrors for not hauing in his life kept reckoning of those things which hee ought maturely and betimes to consider of Wee adde that this is wholly necessary by somuch the more as we are to render our account before the in euitable throne of the eternall Father of that great family which must appeare before him Verily the meditation of death is not irksome anxious perplexing nor ought we to deferre it from one yeare or age to another according to the sottish opinion of the vulgar But cleane contrary to thinke that nothing doth safeguard or assure vs so much in the middest of aduersities and dangers as such meditation It is that which makes vs sober in prosperitie prest ready and prepared in all euents Also as Saint Cyprian sayd to the people of Thibara wee weare not enrolled by Baptisme among Christian Souldiers to thinke that we ought to doe nothing else in the world then there to seeke and hunt after our pleasures and ease turning our backes to conflictes woundes death Saint Augustine writeth in the fifth Chapter of his thirteenth Booke De Ciuitate Dei That faith would vtterly bee weakened if presently after our Baptisme we should become immortall and should be crowned before we had fought 2. Let vs see in the second place what death is how many kindes there are and how it ought to bee feared and contemned Life and death according to Aristotle are common accidents to all liuing creatures for that the reason of originall and corruptible matter doth so beare mainetaine and require it Touching the condition of the first man and how hee had euer liued continuing in his obedience to God wee haue formerly spoken of it in the discourse of the tree of life Furthermore as the condition of man created after Gods image who kindly receiued him into his alliance was excellent By so much the more miserable dreadfull and terrible is the death into which hee fell after his reuolt then the death of other liuing creatures whose soule dyeth with the body and who after this annihilation feare no torment whatsoeuer But wee speake heere of the death of man which God caused not for hee also taketh no pleasure in the death of any but rather in the conuersion good and saluation of vs all This doth not impugne but that God is a iust Iudge punishing sinnes and suffering no misdeedes and transgressions vnpunished but bringing all things to their endes by miraculous meanes wherein his wisedome doth manifestly appeare although very often the instruments which hee vseth to execute his iust iudgements may haue foule crimes and grosse faults In this sence it is sayd That God woundeth killeth whetteth his sword that he bringeth to ruine that hee casteth the body and soule into hell and that hee sendeth the wicked into euerlasting fire So then God hath not made death but death is crept and entred into the world thorough the diuells enuy and malice and mans disobedience Saint Augustine in a certaine place sayth That if God had made death hee would not with teares haue bewayled dead Lazarus whom therefore hee raysed and restored to life that the diuell might see that it is but lost labour with such rage and fury to pursue the children of God to take them out of the world forasmuch as those whom we deeme vtterly lost and destroyed doe liue vnto God Touching their errour who held that Adam should haue dyed though he had not sinned Saint Augustine answereth That all Christians are to hold this point for firme and vndoubted that Adam and Eue were created such that if they had reiected the counsell of the seducer who spake by the Serpent continuing in the free liberty wherein they were they had enioyed eternall life and not dyed But making no reckoning of obeying God their Lord and abusing their free will prone and ready to yeeld to the suggestions of Sathan and their owne lustes and concupiscences so as they very soone felt the effect of the threatning denounced to them both In that day that thou shalt cate of the forbidden fruit thou shalt die the death Before his fall the first man was mortall as touching the condition of his body immortall by the good pleasure of his Creator before sinne hee could not dye But by the redemption of Christ Iesus the elect of God shall obtaine in the life eternall euen the same priuiledge that the holy Angells not to be able to fall from the state of grace nor to dye And as touching this point that our father Adam dyed not so soone as he had obeyed the voyce of Eue it doth derogate nothing from the truth of the sentence pronounced against him nor from the haynousnesse of his sinne For the sence and meaning of the threatning Thou shalt dye the death is as if God sayd certainely thou shalt be subiect to the first death which is a separation of the soule from the body and to the second death a fearefull punishment forasmuch as it is an euerlasting separation from God from the light of heauen from ioy vnspeakeable from the life which is blessed for euer If then it be demaunded how can it bee that Adam liued after his reuolt and falling away Gregorie the great doth sufficiently to the purpose make answere in his 145. Epistle of his fifth Booke that death in two kindes steps in and seizeth vpon vs eyther by the priuation and defection of life or by the quality of life In regard of the first kinde of death Adam dyed not so soone but rather as touching the second For presently after his disobedience being depriued of happinesse of the state of innocency of contentment of minde of a strong sound constitution of body hee felt himselfe couered with shame horrors sorrow with sundry miseries knew himselfe to be aliue in paine vnder the curse of his Soueraigne who was created by Gods fauour to liue in an excellent estate and perpetuall quiet and tranquility of minde Some thinke that wee meddle and goe too farre to say that man transgressing in time was pronounced guilty of temporall and eternall death The Iewes bewitched with the like errour doe dreame that they haue no need of a Messias to abolish and take away sinne and to deliuer from eternall death This errour did grow from the ignorance of the definition of sinne as also of the soueraigne and infinite Maiestie of God whom man had offended by his transgression For sin being a reuolt and falling away from God to ioyne and cleaue to the diuell and a transgression of the holy law in dispite of God man sinning could not escape eternall perdition and punishment but by the grace of his Redeemer as by obedience hee had kept his Creators fauour for euer Euen so then as it is not iniustice as Saint Augustine sayth in the 11. Booke De Ciuitate Dei Chap 11. If Magistrates capitally punishing many haynous
crimes and offences doe banish for euer the malefactors from humane society Who shall dare to say that it is iniquity in God the Lord of the permanent and durable City if he eternally banish out of his kingdome of glory his sworne enemies the wicked who continually offend him And the polluted prophane vniust reprobates who plot and conspire against God and their neighbours remaine for euer vnder the wrath and curse of the Lord For iustification of all consider onely the corruption of humane nature and what the sonnes of Adam are in themselues For howsoeuer the beleefe touching the immortality of mans soule be orthodox and most true yet may it fitly bee sayd that the soule is subiect to a certaine kind of death Wee call it immortall because it ceaseth not to liue and in some sort to haue sence and feeling The body is mortall because it may bee depriued of life which consistes in the residence of the soule in it from whence floweth that which doth maintaine it not liuing of it selfe but by the soule which doth gouerne and mooue it But the death of the soule is when God doth abandon it and depriue it of his grace And wee say that man is vtterly dead when the soule is quite gone out of the body and that God doth abandon the soule finally adiudged to euerlasting torments S. Augustine will that the name of death bee deriued from the venomous morsure or sting of the infernall serpent the diuel then by him brought into the world when hee first bit and stung out first mother Eue leauing fast sticking in vs the sting of sinne which the Apostle calleth the sting of death This sting being blunted and taken away death ceaseth mortally to sting vs. When S. Ambrose writeth in his Treatise of the benefit of death Chap. 1. 2. that death hurteth not the soule consequently is not euill seeing that nothing but sinne hurteth the soule it is to bee vnderstood of the bodily death in respect of Gods children Therefore hee maketh a ●hree-fold distinction of death the one good the other euill the third good or euill The good is the mysticall death when a man dyeth to sinne and liueth to God whereof the Apostle speaketh That we are buried with Christ Iesus into his death by Baptisme The euill is the death of sinne whereof it is written Then soule that sinneth shall dye And the third is the end of our race and calling in this world that is the separation of the soule from the body of good men accounted good of wicked men euill Although death doth vnshackle and set all persons at liberty very few yet are to bee found which take pleasure therein But this proceedeth not from any offence that is in death that is in the separatiof the soule from the body but from the infirmity of mortall men who suffering themselues to goe on in their carnall pleasures and delights of this life doe tremble and feare to see themselues at the end of their race in the earth louing long life there to liue euilly that is there to dye hourely O how sweet is the good death to wise old men to men and women who are the seruants of God who watch who pray who cry to their Lord in repentance in faith and charity who manfully fight against all temptations And how bitter is the euill death to those euill soules vnbeleeuers stiffe necked ones hypocrites who wrap themselues in their sinnes who haue no pleasure hope nor comfort but in this world These things being so it is easie to shew how death is to be feared or not Certainely the death of sinners is euill who not content to be borne in sinne liue still in all manner of iniquities But the death of the Saints is precious being the end of their labours and toyles the conseruation and custos of their victory the doore of life and the entrance into an assured perfect glorious rest Those are to bee bewayled in their death who haue hell for their prison But it beseemes vs to reioyce and bee glad at their departure whom God doth bid welcome into his heauenly Palace where they magnifie him for euer If any one aske vs sayth Lactantius in the third Booke of his Christian Institutions whether death be good or euill wee will answere that the qualitie thereof doth consist in the consideration of life in it selfe Death in it selfe cannot bee sayd to bee good pleasing and to be desired on the contrary it is the destruction of nature and the reward of sinne But wee must esteeme it a thing worthy great prayse pleasing and full of grace and delight when wee dye ioyfully in the true knowledge of Christ Iesus to goe out of the prison of this mortall body out of this valley of miseries out of this desart where we are exiled persons to returne to our Father our countrey and heauenly city He dyeth well who with the Apostle sayth in sincerity of conscience all my desire is to depart hence and to bee with Christ Iesus Particularly as touching my selfe I haue fought the good fight I haue finished my course I haue kept the faith also the crowne of righteousnesse is layd vp and reserued for mee which the Lord the iust Iudge shall in that day giue vnto me not to me onely but to those who loue his appearing Againe death and the remembrance and apprehension of it is wonderfull irkesome and bitter to a man which trusteth in his riches liuing in all ease in full strength of body and prosperity Here we demand what we are to judge of the death of those who are cruelly quartered and dismembred by hangmen or by fierce and wilde beastes are swallowed vp in the belly of fishes are stifled with a suddaine apoplexie are bereaued of wit sense and reason by some hot burning feaver or who die franticke and madd As for those who are put to cruell death for the name of Christ Iesus the answere is that their death cannot bee tearmed and accompted but deare and precious in the sight of the Lord and of all his Church For if the heathen Philosophers haue had some reason to say that a vertuous man leaues not to be happie though he bee put to a violent death why should we not say the same of the true vertuous to wit the holy Martyrs seeing we haue so certaine testimonies and so many famous examples of their faith charitie patience and constancie in death The Epistle to the Hebrewes is herein expresse for it conteyneth the heroicall trophies of faith also the opprobries disgracefull reuilings and cruell torments of the invincicible Champions of Christ Iesus But I pray you what torments can dismay and terrifie him which glorieth in the crosse of Christ Iesus among all others a shamefull and terrible torment and death Turtullian obserueth in his Apologetico that in his tyme Christians were called Sarmentitij Semissij bavinistes and poore snakes because they were bound to a stake which
which the imperfections of mad doting old men are bewrayed and discouered and wise old men are so much the more put in minde how they ought to beare and behaue themselues in the sight of God of his Church of their owne seruants and families of their friends which wish them well and of their enemies which wish them ill seeking to discredit disgrace and defame them It is lamentable to see some old men to idle out the time in potting tipling and swilling in drinke others to seeke after meats and provocatiue drugs to enflame and stirre vp their beastly lustes not regarding the commandement of the Apostle in the second Chapter of his Epistle to Titus second verse where he willeth auncient men to bee sober graue discreete and aduised Such persons doe yet lesse remember that which the Author of Ecclesiasticus sayth Chapter 25. verse 3. 4. There are three sorts of men whom my heart hateth and whose life I abhorre A poore man that is proud a rich man that is a lyer and an old adulterer which doteth or is without vnderstanding A wise man sayd that is an imputation to an old man to speake of vnchast courting and dalliance much more to be deuoted to it yea when it were fit to make him a comely withdrawing roome farre from the canopies of the world and the vncleane spirit then to wallow and bemyre himselfe in the perillous pleasures of the world is to neglect and dispise the wise admonitions of Salomons mother and little to consider the euils which happened to that wise Prince for not hauing considered it well when she left him this worthie instruction Giue not thy strength to women Pro. 31. 3. Our wise Vieillard will remember that if true wisedome lodge in his heart and the knowledge of truth delighteth his soule she will deliuer him from the strange woman which smootheth her words which forsaketh the guide of her youth and forgetteth the couenant of her God For her house leaneth vnto death and her pathes lead vnto the dead Not one of them which goe vnto her doe returne againe neither take they hold of the wayes of life Pro. 2. v. 10. 16. 17. c. Keepe thy way farre from her and come not neere the dore of her house least thou giue thine honour vnto others and thy yeares to the cruell least the stranger be filled with thy strength and thy labours be in the house of a stranger Pro. 5. v. 8. c. Salomon hauing in the same place propounded notable things to this purpose euen as a wise Father who with teares trickling a pace downe his cheekes would admonish his lewd stubborne sonne addeth why shouldest thou my sonne bee transported with the loue of a strange woman or embrace the bosome of a stranger seeing the wayes of man are before the eyes of the Lord and he pondereth all his pathes The same wise Salomon further sayth in the sixt Chapter The woman which lusteth hunteth after the precious life of a man Can a man put fire into his bosome and his cloathes not be burnt shall a man goe vpon hote coales and his feete not be burnt so he that goeth into his neighbours wife shall not bee innocent whosoeuer toucheth her Also he that committeth adulterie with a woman is destitute of vnderstanding hee that doth it destroyeth his owne soule In the chapter following hee describeth a shamelesse and impudent woman who by her crafts and subtile deuices brings those to destruction who for want of vnderstanding suffer themselues to be seduced by her enticing wordes comparing such idiots to Beastes that are led to the slaughter house to fooles that are layed and chayned vp in Prison to be corrected to Birds which willingly fall into pit-falles and snares Let our wise Vieillard remember that the author of all holinesse hath expressely condemned whoredome and adulterie not onely in the act but also in the affection In stead of beholding with an euill eye those women whose company he ought to shunne and avoyd let him read or cause to be read vnto him the places of holy Scripture which we goe about to quoate vnto him and which are the parts and points of the inditement according to which God will judge whore-mongers and adulterers Heb. 13. 4. The places are these Gen. 26. 3. Behold thou art dead because of the Woman which thou hast taken shee was onely taken and not defiled Gen. 26. 10. Abimelech sayd to Isaac who somewhat vnaduisedly behaued himselfe in the behalfe of his wife Rebecca it was a narrow hazzard that none of the people lay not with thy wife and that thou hast not beene the cause to haue the sin layd vnto vs. Exod. 20. 14. Thou shalt not commit adulterie Leuit. 18. 20. Thou shalt not lye with thy neighbours wife defiling thy selfe with her Leuit. 20. 10. Adulterers are condemned to death Deut. 22. 24. He that polluteth and defyleth a betrothed virgin is condemned to death with her if she hath consented to it Deut. 23. 17. There shall not be a whore among the daughters of Israell not a whore-keeper among the sonnes of Israel Our Lord Iesus condemneth him of adulterie in the heart which looketh vpon a woman to lust after her Saint Paul propoundeth diuers arguments against whore-mongers and adulterers Rom. 13. 13. and 1 Cor. 6. 15. 16. 18. and the 10. 8. and the 2 Cor. 12. 22. Galat. 5. 19. Ephes 5. 3. Coloss 3. 5. and the 2 Thes 4. 3. c. Heb. 13. 4. Which our wise Vieillard will examine then hee will ioyne thereunto the considerations of the terrible punishments of families defyled with such sinnes the fearefull judgements pronounced against sencelesse and obdurate consciences the lamentable changes and alterations in the familie of Dauid and Salomon and of many others since the strong and inuincible arguments of the Apostle 1 Cor. 6. Chapter to this effect briefely that whore-mongers and adulterers are shutt out of the kingdome of God Therefore that we may haue a part in the inheritance of the Saints who are sanctified and iustified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the spirit of God we must remember first that our bodies are not for whoredome but for the Lord and the Lord for the bodie Secondly that seeing our bodies shall rise againe not to ignominie and pollution but to glory and holines it is reason we should keepe them pure and vnpolluted for so are they members of Christ and consequently it should be horrible sacriledge to make them members of a Harlot Thirdly that being members vnited vnto the Lord and made one spirit with him it is not meete in no sort to ioyne them to a Harlot with whom we are made one bodie Fourthly that whoredome ought to be detested aboue all other sinnes for whatsoeuer sinne a man committeth it is without the bodie but he which committeth adulterie sinneth against his owne bodie Fiftly that our bodies are temples of the holy Ghost which is in vs which
good of their neighbour for that wise old men by their good counsells doe maintaine and support publique estates and their owne priuate estates be they great or small For he that is a prudent gouernour of a small family deserues great commendation As on the contrary if the followers and seruants of the mightiest and most eminent persons that may be imagined doe liue dissolutely it is a woefull shame And heereof wee must appeale to the iudgement of Salomon in the fourth Chapter of his Ecclesiastes 13. v. where hee sayth Better is a poore and wise childe then an old and foolish King that will no more be admonished And what is a wise old man in a counsell of State It is an incomparable treasure And what is a King Prince Lord that is old and wise It is a true and liuely image of God among men There are other fruits which old men themselues enioy who liuing discreetly rest in peace health and welfare reducing their course of life within the lists of pietie temperance where they spend their dayes in holy meditations and with ioy of heart passe their time in seeing Their vertuous children in comely showe About their table all on a rowe Like Oliue plants to stand and growe Then they reape the sweet and precious fruite of their labours past But to proceed who would dare to tearme wise old men idle persons who doe imploy themselues to the true and proper exercises of a man to wit to the actions of the minde Magnanimitie true fortitude is not inclosed in the muscles nor in the synewes but in the bearing and sustaining of grieuances in leuying all our powers and forces to fight against impatience carnall lusts against Sathan and the world The famous deedes of old men are wise counsells instructions good examples zealous prayers seruices to the Common-weale and State succours and helpes to friendes protection and maintenance to orphanes and children Plato Sophocles Isocrates and a number of Heathens more who in their old age began and perfected workes which are yet extant and vsefull were they doting old persons Basil Nazienzen Saint Augustine so many ancient and moderne Diuines who during the profound darkenesse of Atheistes and prophane persons wallowing like swine in all confusions dyed very old men and their tongues and pennes neuer lay still but were busie and mouing to edifie and instruct the Christian Churches are these old men which haue spent their time badly So many white beardes which yet to this day serue their soueraigne Lord of whom they expect a glorious reward are they to bee cast behinde the doore as vnprofitable vessels Is it wisely done of young men to reuile them in wordes and shamefully to spurne and tread on them But as Zenophon said Those men liue wisely who are carefull more and more to reforme themselues and they liue cheerefully who euery day feele themselues to profit in vertue which may be truely said of wise old men whose hearts are lifted vp to the Lord and who already haue a foot in Paradise Wherefore then doe we accuse nature and her impediments as we call them I meane old age and the infirmities thereof Seeing that the milde and meeke conuersation of old men is of better esteem and more gracious in them a pregnancie and dexteritie to counsell well is more eminent in them their constancie to suffer death more assured and stedfast and the temperance to bridle and restraine fond foolish lusts and desires is more potent and forcible in them Though their body be weake their minde is strong A wise old man is no more daunted at the approach of death then a labouring man who hauing vndergone the raine heat and cold of the day is not grieued to see the sunne set because it is a signe of his surcease and rest from his labour and of receiuing his promised wages And old man fearing God doth already feele the pleasures of Paradise and being ascended to the top and pynacle of true knowledge dispiseth the base deceiuing perishing to wit the woefull and corrupt riches of the world According as old men haue beene better or worser trained vp and instructed according also to the diuersitie of gifts which they haue receiued of God we see they yeeld diuers fruits and effects It is the incredulitie impatience vitiousnesse and leudnesse of life not old age which is the cause that many in stead of referring themselues and their actions and affaires to the prouidence of God of learning that whatsoeuer distasters and discommodities doe happen vnto vs abroad and at home in our bodies in our goods from our seruants and those of our family from our friendes from our enemies is a gracious chastisement vnto vs of our heauenly Father and an exercise and triall of our faith we still perceiuering in the sincere knowledge of him in our calling ioyned with a good conscience Doe woefully torment themselues childishly bewaile their condition if their proiectes and plors deuices and wishes haue not that speedy successe which they desire As that great Orator Cicero who forgetting what hee had written in his booke of Offices That no man can be iust which feareth exile paine or death being forlorne and in a desperate taking a few dayes before hee was slaine cowardly exclaimes in a letter of his to Octauius Beast that I am In vaine haue I beene taken and held for the man I am not My old age is most vnfortunate and disastrous My white haires after a miserable life stand vp fearefully staring and out of order There remaineth for conclusion of this Chapter to adde vnto the felicities of old age certaine excellent priuiledges which those that are learned in the ciuill law doe attribute vnto it I will giue you the cullings and choyce of fiftie or threescore and more quoated by sundry collectors Men that were auncient themselues did beare no lesse honour to very aged persons then they did to Magistrates The older a man is the more is his iudgement esteemed In consultations and in matters ambiguous and doubtfull to be decided the aduise of old men is preferred before the aduise of yong men Old men enioyed the priuiledges of noble men Old men are not sued nor scited to appeare in any Courts of iustice without the Pretors expresse permission and licence and particular information of the cause The auncientest men haue their names alwayes enrolled and set downe first Old men ought to haue the first places and seates and to sit at the vpper end of the Table The auncientest Counsellors in the absence of the President may appoynt and call a counsell If there be question touching the obseruing and keeping of common contractes and rates the auncientest men of a fraternitie or company haue the first voyce It is graunted and permitted to old men to censure and reforme their neighbours Many willing to accuse and beare witnesse against any one the testimonie of the oldest man is of most credit Old men are Magnificoes and
cost but six Liards three halfe pence or thereabouts and there were burned with faggotts of reedes or brush wood which were set round about them Behold sayth he our equipage our munition and armour of victorie this is out triumphall Chariot Eusebius writeth in the fiftie booke of his Historie of a holy martyr burned aliue with certaine plates of iron made red hot and set to his naked bodie notwithstanding which tormentes hee made a constant profession of the Christian faith even to the last gaspe Eusebius addeth that this sheweth that nothing is terrible to him which feeles that God loueth him and that whosoeuer seekes the glory of Christ Iesus is guarded and saued harmelesse from euery painefull and terrible accident and casuall event As for the vncouth and strange diseases and kindes of hideous death whereunto to mans life is exposed as they are to be seene in the horrible convulsions of Epilepsies falling sicknesses in the violent fittes of Apoplexies in cruell and hot burning feavers these are pittifull cases to behold and incident to our fraile and sinnefull nature But they are also certaine monitors of a better life seeing that our health and happinesse consisteth not in a sound temperature of humours but in this that our names are written in heauen and that wee haue bin dedicated to Iesus Christ For the Lord God who knoweth our heartes who in his secret judgement exerciseth some more then others regardes and considers what he hath done for vs and what the holy Ghost who comforteth vs in such accidents and cases doth for vs by vnspeakeable groanings not the intemperature of our bodies nor the effectes of it For this is an assured thing that there is no condemnation to those that are in Christ Iesus and that nothing is able to seperate vs from the loue which the father of heauen beares vs for his sonnes sake yea that all things doe helpe together for the good of those whom according to his determinate counsell he hath called to the participation of his grace Therefore all Christians ought to remaine vndoubted and resolued in this poynt that there is no kinde of maladie torment or death which doth hurt Gods elect that there is no death happie ioyful peaceable to the wicked vnbeleeuers and miscreants whom God often times for a while doth vphold in this world to the end more heauily to punish them after hee hath dragged and haled them out of the earth Hereupon it will be demanded wherefore then so many great personages members of the Church of God and Christ Iesus himselfe the head thereof did feare death and prayed to be guarded and secured from it I answere that there was something of singular note in our Lord and which must be differenced and distinguished from others In that he not onely bore and felt a common death or seperation of the soule from the bodie but also vnder-went and sustayned the wrath of God and all the torments and agonies that may be imagined without sinne notwithstanding because hee was an hostage and pledge for vs Neuerthelesse in such sort that he did not yeeld nor shrinke vnder the burthen nor murmured a whit against God but voluntarily offred himselfe in sacrifice stood not demurring and shifting of death with natures delayes wholly submitted himselfe to the will of God his Father as it was foretold and figured by Dauid in the fortieth Psalme Here am I O God that I may doe thy will Behold as touching the head of the Church who had had no subiect of combat and victorie if he had not felt the tormentes and terrors of death without sinne or any offence and fault on his part In respect then we are his members let vs keepe and obserue this rule That wee cannot commend euery refusal or euery desire of death nor discommend all contempt of death Some wish death not so much for any desire they haue of a better life as for the despite and dislike they conceiue against their abode and stay in the world where they see miseries which their weake mindes cannot brooke and endure and which giue terrible shockes and assaults to the most resolued and stoutest hearts The Israelites wanting bread in the wildernesse wished death as also when newes was brought them that the Cananites were men of a very tall stature Iob in the depth of his panges and griefes desired to die as also the Prophet Eliah did during his escape in the Desert On the contrary Dauid Ezechias and other great personages very much feared death and instantly besought the Lord to guard and saue them from it But this was for a speciall consideration to wit in as much as they being afraide of the threatninges and judgements of God the approach of death appeared more terrible vnto them or because they wished to continue longer to aduance Gods glory and to yeeld their helpe and seruice to the edification of the Church Againe the same personages banished all feare from them looking vpon death according as now it is made vnto vs by the grace of God the rest from our labours the passage to a better life In this sense the Patriarch Iob spake in the 19. Chapter I know that my redeemer liueth and that I shall rise againe at the last day that I shall be againe cloathed with my skin and shall see the Lord in my flesh So Dauid did sing in the 16. Psalme For this cause my heart is glad my tongue reioyceth Moreouer my flesh resteth in assurance for thou wilt not leaue my soule in the graue And in the 23. Psalme Though I should walke in the shadow of death I will feare no euill because thou art with me CHAP. XVIII The sequele of the poynts propounded in the former Section concerning the resolutions and consolations against Death IF there be any men bound to meditate ordinarily vpon death to be armed with remedies against the alarumes of it to procure that their children friends and families doe liue as prest and readie to die wise old men are especially they whose true Philosophie is called the Meditation of death To draw them so much the more easily vnto it we will remember to euery one of them some sayings of wise Pagans and Heathens which will cause vs to say to all persons who vaunt themselues of the name of Christians At least doe not afflict and torment your selues more with the death of the your selues and yours then the silly Heathens who had no hope who so manfully contemned the approches of death who with so great constancie haue embraced it and striuen against it I speake thus considering the cowardize of some Christians who haue nothing so much in their mouthes and take so little to heart as death S. Ierome in the Epistle to Heliodorus shewing how we ought to be more resolute against the assaults of death and all accidents and casualties of humaine life then Infidells were maketh mention of Xerxes that mightie Monarch who ouerthrew mountaines and paved
a heauy and vnsupportable burthen whose weight doth suppresse them and cause them to tumble into euerlasting perdition 5. Fifthly let vs now adde some assured consolations against death and first we will draw from certaine places of the holy Scripture the faire termes and names which it giueth to death to sweeten vnto vs the apprehension of it By whose testimony to dye is to bee gathered to his people as it is said of Abraham Gen. 25. 8. It is to goe the way of all the earth 1. Kings 2. 2. It is to be bound vp in the bundle of life 1. Sam. 25. 29. It is to be taken away from euill to enter into peace and rest in our beds Esaiah 57. 1 2. It is to be in the shadow and at rest as the hireling which hath ended his dayes worke Iob 7. 1. 2. It is to sleepe Iohn 11. 11. 1. Thess 4. 13. To rest from his labours Apocalips 14. 13. It is to goe out of the world to goe to God our Father Iohn 13. 1. It is to goe to our Fathers house where there are many dwelling places Iohn 14. 1. It is to returne to our home and countrey after a long painefull and perillous voyage 2. Cor. 5. 6. It is to be vnshackled and deliuered out of a galley or prison to bee with Christ Iesus Philip. 1. 23. It is to goe hence out of a poore beggarly tabernacle 2 Peter 1. 14. It is to be clothed in heauen with glory and immortality 2. Cor. 5. 1. 2. It is to finish our course and our fight to receiue a crowne 2. Timoth. 4. 7. 8. It is to goe to the Nuptialls of the Lambe and his Bride in the Celestiall Ierusalem in the City of God all garnished with gold and precious stones that is adorned with incomprehensible glory and eternall happinesse Apocalips 21. 1. c. It is to liue with Iesus Christ a thousand yeares to wit for euer Apocalips 20. 4. This life and glorious immortality is manifested vnto vs in the Gospel by Christ Iesus who by his appearing hath abolished death 2. Timothie 1. 10. Wherefore then should a wise man feare to goe to his Fathers and would haue a way by himselfe Is it well done not to will and desire to be gathered with the true liuing from so many euills without within aboue belowe behinde before and round about vs After so many battailes so many conflicts skirmishes and wounds especially in the soule to refuse peace to rest out of the short and danger of the weapons teares alarmes vacarmes gurboyles and stirres of the world of our owne heart of the corruption of the wicked and of the powers of Sathan our capitall aduersary O strange case Wee runne after peace and rest and flye from it when it offers it selfe Trauailes and labours weigh vs downe and oppresse vs and we are agaste and abashed to bee ridde of them There is no bed in the world so soft as that where the bodies doe rest when the soules are separated from them notwithstanding not to lie in it we would be contented to bee condemned to goe wooll ward in sackcloth and haire cloth in totters and ragges and to lye on the hard ground or vpon thornes Had we rather dwell with Vipers then with our Father in his heauenly Mansion Those euerlasting Mansions so much to be desired are in lesse account and esteeme with vs then the vncleane and nastie stables of Beastes The earth doth more infinitely please vs then heauen This galley of our life where we tugg both day and night at the oare of ambition auarice cruell lustes debauched pleasures These darke dennes of innumerable sinnes are the resting places that we make much on and wherein we bristle vp our selues and outragiously curse whatsoeuer sacred Philosophie doth propose and set forth vnto vs of the blessed estate of the triumphant Church with her head in heauen What old men are we who grow young in our vices who had rather renounce our sweete Countrie and trott vp and downe in the hideous desertes of the world full of scorpions and Basilisques of horrid ghostes and hob goblins and so many kindes of Deuills then to set one steppe in the right way of repentant faith of charitable hope and patient humilitie Men of wit where is our wit when our bodies are of more price vnto vs then our soules and we are willing to forgoe and loose our armes to saue our sleeues Who preferre a garment before eternall glory a handfull of crownes before most durable treasures a fond idle wicked damnable pleasure before euerlasting ioyes Who still desire to runne on in the way of perdition who fight and striue against nothing but pietie righteousnesse holinesse to conclude who purchase a buryall place for vertue to cause vice to raigne and triumph When will it be that the invitation to the solemne feast of the Sonne of God with his Church will please and be well-come vnto vs When will we prouide our costly rich robes to appeare in this holy assembly Will we still deferre to cleanse our selues from the filth of sinne which makes vs holds downe the head to blush to looke pale and wan to be halfe dead or in a traunce not to dare once to lift vp the eyes of our minde but in hypocrisie and a very strange stupiditie to him which calleth vs to him to the gates of the Pallace whereunto we are so neere Wise old men awaken and rouze vp your selues and more deepely yet consider and meditate vpon the consolations insinuated and inserted in the termes and names which diuine wisedome giueth and ascribeth to death It is demanded seeing Christ Iesus hath abolished death and that by him we are reconciled to God to obtaine eternall life how comes it to passe that we are still subiect to death S. Augustine answereth that heretofore death came and was by sin haled into the world but now death takes away our temporall life to the end we should cease from sinne and that the remembrance of death doe keepe and conteme vs in our dutie So by the vnspeakeable mercie of God the punishment of our sinnes was changed into an armour or shield against sinnes And although that the death of the flesh proceedeth originally from sinne so is it that the good aspect and face of death hath made many excellent Martyrs And although death and all the euils trauailes and turmoyles vexations and sorrowes of this present life proceed from the desert of our sinnes and that after hauing obtained pardon these euills remaine still it is to the end we should haue aduersaries to wrastle against and to exercise vs to make knowne and sensible to vs how strong the power of the Lord is in our weakenes And that so the new man may grow vp and bee fitted and prepared in this world for the world to come looking for the perfect and compleat happinesse of all Gods children Therefore repentant Christians whose sins are pardoned and who accept
the contemplation of God in this present life is the sound food and solid substance of wise old men But let vs grow old in such sort that wee may make a good end that it be not reproached vnto vs in Gods presence that the last yeares of our life haue beene the worst of all But let vs striue to partake of that singular benediction contained in the end of the Song of the wise Debora in the fifth Chapter of the Historie of the Iudges That those who loue God shall bee as the Sunne going foorth in his strength It is not to decline but to rise euen to midday Our midday is to continue such neuer to declyne Not onely old age but the world also is in a decline Let vs then lift vp our eyes to the East aboue let vs behold the Sonne of righteousnesse let vs turne our faces that way least we perish with the world When we shall be departed hence sayth Saint Cyprian against Demetrius there will be no more time to repent satisfaction shall haue no more effect In this world wee lose or saue life Let no man then bee hindred by his sinnes or by the yeares of his life to come to the saluation which is offered vnto him There is no repentance too late to him that remaines yet in the world The gate to obtaine pardon of God is open those which seeke and follow the truth close shall without difficulty approach to it Although you bee ready to topple into your graue and haue not much longer to liue if you pray the onely true God to pardon your sinnes confessing them vnto him and calling vpon him in faith vnfainedly who hath manifested himselfe vnto you your request shall bee granted his mercie shall giue you grace to saluation and you shall passe from death to eternall life Christ affoordeth vs part of such grace hee giueth vs that excellent present of his mercy hauing slaine and put death to death for vs by the Trophie of his Crosse redeeming whosoeuer beleeueth in him by the price of his blood reconciling man to God quickening him that is dead by a heauenly regeneration If it bee possible let vs follow after this Sauiour let vs bee taken and recognized for his Souldiers let vs fight vnder his banner It is hee which openeth vnto vs the passage to life which doth bring and set vs vp againe in the possession of Paradise which doth guide vs to the Kingdome of heauen wee shall liue altogether with him who hath made vs the children of God and being restored by his precious blood we shall enioy ioy for euer in his presence We shall be glorified with our head blessed in God the Father haue our fill of gladnesse and euerlasting happinesse in his presence whom wee shall thanke without ceasing And truely whosoeuer acknowledging his miseries past hath beene made assured of immortall life it cannot bee but hee will bee alwayes ioyfull and render continuall thankes to God These are the sayings of S. Cyprian the meditation of which we doe recommend to the wise Vieillard and for to excite and stir him vp yet the more thereunto wee doe present vnto him these two Prayers following O Lord my God who hast giuen to man life vpon condition to bee a while on the earth and then to goe thence by death to the end to admonish mee that there is a better life heauenly and eternall Grant mee thy grace I beseech thee that as alwayes I ought to thinke by all meanes to liue holily so now I may endeuour to depart happily out of this world Let the hope to behold speedily and out of hand thy glory remooue from mee the feare of death that I may waite in ioy for that day wherein that approaching and euerlasting libertie shall vnlose mee from the chaynes of my sinnes which doe so mightily ouerload mee Let this hope vphold mee so that I may make no reckoning of any transitory thing and let humane affections bee so mortified in my frayle members that I may not desire to beginne againe or to continue my course but to bee soone at an end Grant that I may not bee carefull for this wretched body and this decayed building but so much onely as may bee fit for this short life which remaines for mee to vse Especially fortifie my minde against the many impostures and guiles of Sathan which doe compasse mee about on euery side I am ashamed that I am become a childe againe and worse then a young man who doth forge yeares to himselfe and doth dreame of immortalities in the shadow of death Suffer not this fond confidence of lingering still in the earth insensibly to steale away my life from mee so as without thinking on it and too late I shall finde my selfe at the end of it surprised and suddenly taken desperate and past hope wherevpon would follow a vaine complaint to haue wretchedly cast away thy graces to see my selfe shackled with an vnsupportable chaine and from which I feare to bee loosed My life is betweene my lips why then should I pant and sigh after transitory thinges What haue I any more to doe with the profits and commodities of this life My weakenesses doe bidd mee enough to turne my backe to all infamous lendnesse and licenciousnesse and O my God though I should be stronger then I am should it bee to offend thee My sight is dimme and decayes my hearing is dull and deaffed should I reuiue these dead senses with the remembrance of old pleasures and new also O let mee not with new crimes and sinnes increase and adde to mine iniquities past And if thy fauour hath vpheld mee in my young age oh let mee not abuse it in old age or vilely sinke into the bottomlesse gulfe of death notwithstanding so many graces of thine for which I am bounden and indebted to thine infinite goodnesse and am to make account before thy iudgement seate Thy holy Angels shall they mourne euer mee Thy Spirit shall it be made heauy in beholding mee My conscience shall it accuse mee to bee hypocriticall and malicious Make this old age O Lord free from stupiditie and sottishnesse from pollution from weakenesse talkatiuenesse from arrogancie bragging doating from too much niggardship and from vnnecessarie vaine odious expences make me become charitable honest sober temperate alwaies mindfull of my neere departure and desirous of that immortalitie which I hope for In fine let my old age haue nothing that I may feare nothing that my friends and enemies may lament or condemne Let it be beloued and welcome vnto mee in that it will make mee shorly to returne into thy heauenly Pallace where thou shalt wipe away the teares from mine eyes where I shall see my selfe deliuered from all sinnes filled with thy grace and closed about with blissefull glory in the holy company who there continually magnifie thee O my God deliuer mee from these so many cares and miseries which doe presseme downe to the end
this pardon by the gift and hand of a liuely faith doe wrastle against the image of death against a bruised Serpent a wourried torne Lyon against a stinglesse Waspe against a vanquished enemie Chrysostome censureth in good manner those wretches who feare death and feare not sinne wherein they are insnared and wrapped nor the vnquenchable fire of hell which gapes for them Thus sayth he as children are wayward and wrangle if their mothers come neere them with maskes on their faces but when a lighted Candle is brought neere vnto them they readily thrust their handes in it and are burned So those men feare death who know not what it is to liue Death snatcheth away a miserable and short life to make vs to enter into an eternall and perpetuall blessed life Death doth seperate vs from the heapes of Iewells the robes moueables coffers crammed with gold and siluer the sundrie immoueables which we must leaue But in heaven we haue vnseperable riches with the Angels death extrudes and thrustes vs out of the earth but to bring vs into paradize death kills the bodie but it shall rise againe to die no more but be conformable to the glorified bodie of Christ Iesus If any man fight with his owne shadow he hurtes no bodie so death doth but beate the ayre in bickering and jousting against the just It hath beene Gods will and pleasure so sayth Chrysostome that this present life should be painefull and miserable to the end that being buffetted on all sides with so many and manifold miseries we should eagerly aspire to the happinesses to come But seeing we are thus farre ill aduised to wallow and idle it so willingly in this present life where so many disasters and miseries doe surround and encompasse vs how would it be with vs if there were nothing but ioy peace and rest here Our most mercifull heauenly Father doth so mitigate and temper the afflictions of this life that as a Lute-player doth not winde vp too high his Lute strings for feare to breake them nor slacken them too much that so their sweete harmonie tunablenesse may be more distinctly perceiued So doth the wise maister of our life not leauing vs in continuall prosperitie nor too much oppressed He is faithfull who will not suffer vs to be tempted beyond and aboue our strength but will giue a good issue to our temptations and tryalls to the end we should be able to beare them We see men of warre desirous of honour and to attaine to some rancke and degree manfully to expose themselues to a thousand dangers The couetous Marchant to runne vpon all hazards and risques for a handfull of yellow earth The voluptuous person to disdaine and set light by infinite reprochfull and woefull dangers to satisfie his passions and humours And you wise old men will you slumber and sleepe in a corner will you still sit with your armes and legges a crosse not rouzing lifting vp your selues to the contemplation and diligent seeking after so many happinesses prepared for them which loue God Doe you feare death you which in the middest of the shadowe of death haue standing at your ell-bow the Prince and Author of life If you beare in your hearts that quickning spirit which raised vp Iesus Christ from the dead whence is it that you feare death Haue you blotted out of your remembrance him who hath the wordes of eternall life who is the way the truth the resurrection the life who dyed for our sinne and is risen againe for our iustification But soyle not this gracious remembrance with the myre and mudd of sordid and obscene pleasures Let not the perswasions of the vncleane and filthie flesh stoppe and hinder the motions of the spirit illuminated by sacred Philosophie Let the repetitions of his most sweete most certaine and most holy promises bee potent and powerfull in your hearts who was willing to participate of our flesh and bloud that in the same nature foyled by Sathan our Sauiour hath abolished it by his death as by a most sufficient ransome he which conquered death to wit the Deuill Giue me leaue to reforme and rectifie you by recitall of the excellent promises following of the Lord. Verely I say vnto you that whosoeuer heareth my word and beleeueth in him which sent mee hath eternall life and shall not come to condemnation but is passed from death to life Iohn 5. 24. This is the will of him which sent me that whosoeuer beholdeth the sonne and beleeueth in him hath eternall life and for this cause I will raise him vp againe at the last day Such perspection and contemplation of faith is not as prophane persons chatter and mutter a vaine imagination but is coupled and covnited with his effect and with the true apprehension and laying hold of Iesus Christ and his benefites This great Sauiour hath so often times and againe and againe recommended it and for confirmation of it hath prepared his holy Table to which we draw neere there to receiue the bread of life ordayned to the nourishment of our soules to eternall life not for our bellies to receiue which bread we hold vp the hands of faith to heauen and beleeuing in him doe eate it That bread I say which is giuen to the children of the house not to reprobates who sometimes eate the bread of the Lord but not the bread of life which is the Lord. He which is not reconciled to Christ Iesus eateth not his flesh and drinketh not his bloud although euery day hee receiue but to his condemnation the Sacrament or the holy signes of so excellent a thing But he which confirmes and establisheth vs in Christ and who hath annoynted vs is God who also hath sealed and giuen vnto vs the earnest of his spirit in our hearts It is this holy spirit of promise wherewith we haue beene sealed yea for the day of redemption without which spirit the visible signes in the Sacramentes are receiued to condemnation by which spirit faith taught by the word confirmed by the signes or seales of the righteousnesse of the same faith takes daily new growthes and growinges and is manifested by holy workes of which the summe and totall is that we liue and die to the Lord who is dead and risen againe to haue dominion as well over the liuing as the dead to gouerne and guide vs as the sheepe of his pasture and finally to draw vs out of the hideous deserts of this worldly life no life in deed to gather vs to himselfe his heauenly sheep folde If God be on our side who shall be against vs Who shall bee able to make vs afraide and dismay vs Iesus Christ who is dead is risen againe it is he who now being set at the right hand of God maketh request for vs. Let vs adde some worthie sayinges of S. Cyprian in his excellent Treatise of death Simeon the iust reioycing to hold in his armes the little babe Iesus whom he had so