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A51442 A narrative panegyrical of the life, sickness, and death, of George ... Lord Bishop of Derry in Ireland as it was delivered at his funerals in the Cathedral Church of the Holy Trinity (commonly called Christ Church) in Dublin on Friday the 12th of January, Anno Domini 1665/6 / by R. Mossom ... Mossom, Robert, d. 1679. 1666 (1666) Wing M2864_VARIANT; ESTC R14435 6,183 19

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advantage as the Churches good or rather indeed in the Churches good seeking his best advantage as having an eye with Moses to the recompence of reward And now beholding him taking his leave of his London-friends in his farewel design for Derry methinks I see St. Paul encompassed with those devoted ones of the Church of Ephesus taking his farewel bound for Jerusalem Acts 20. Some are sighing some are weeping all are sorrowing Sorrowing for this especially that they believed they should see his face no more Sure the good Man did here undergo an hard tryal much like that of St. Pauls And had he not had an Heroick Piety cheerfully to encounter difficulties and dangers he had certainly been entangled with his friends embraces but his love to Souls brings him to Derry where he hath left this testimony of honorable fame That he was faithful in his office to God the King and the Church In his constant Preaching he fed the Peoples Souls and not their Humors and in his Pastoral Discipline he struck at their Pertinacy not their Persons He did aedificare but not in ruinam in the words of Tertullian he did edifie but not to ruine as do too many with their edifying Sermons falsly so called who teach Sedition and Schism under the mask of Religion and Zeal which the more home they Preach the more hurt they do This we too sadly know the deceased Bishop Taper-like consumed himself to give light to others so that to all contemners of his Ministry and opposers of his Pastoral charge to them I say Behold not the dust of his feet but even the carcase of his body is cast off against you For for your sakes it was that his heart became troubled with cares and his spirit wasted with studies and thereby his body the sooner brought to its Grave After almost five years continuance in his Episcopal charge as the duty of his place in service to the King and Church did require he repairs to Dublin to attend the sitting again of the Parliament in which himself was a Peer and at his entrance into the City he brought death in his face which not long after seized his heart some sensible decays he had to which his sprightly Genius would not stoop but bore up with chearfulness till Christmas Eve intending the service of Pulpit and Altar of Sermon and Sacrament at St. Brides on Christmas-day and sitting up late in preparation for that intended Service he was seized with the first Paroxysme of his sickness as a summons of Death who now laid siege to the Cittadel of his Heart And thus though he died not standing in the Pulpit yet he died studying of the Sermon and blessed is that servant whom his Lord when he cometh shall finde so doing He was then upon his duty and guard when by Death encountred which encounter hath thus far onely prevailed to a conquest over the outward man His pious Soul being on the Friday following translated by the ministry of Angels from the Militant state of Christs Church on Earth to that state which is Triumphant in Heaven Now before we close give me leave to reflect a while in some pertinent observations upon the Life and Sickness and Death of the deceased 1. In a review reflecting upon his Life I observe his days were like the Suns revolution in a continued sphear of heavenly vertues And that to give you a Summary of his Religious conversation were to do with Christian piety what Florus did with the Roman History In brevi tabella totam ejus imaginem amplecti draw its full Portraicture in a short Table for indeed he was no Mercurial Statue to point out the way and not walk it himself no but rather he was like the Angelical Star at the Birth of Christ which declared Christ born to the Magi and went along with them to him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the words of St. Basil on Psal 63. He was a Preacher in Life as well as in Doctrine in Pattern as well as in Precept Again I observe such were his frequent Fastings and Prayers that wheresoever he did reside if he had not time and place opportunity and conveniency for Gods publick Worship he either made his Chamber a Chappel or the House a Temple the Churches Prayers being still a part of his constant Devotions Again I observe his Charity that was greatly diffusive even into all the Three Kingdoms having his poor Widows his necessitous Gentlemen young Schollars and puny Catechists all his continued Pensioners some in London some in Cambridge some in Oxford some in Dublin some at Glascow some at Derry some at Faughen indeed what place did he ever come into or could well send into that did not taste some influence of his bounty The whole sum of his Charity besides the charge of his Buildings hath been computed by them that best know it 500 l. per annum And observe that which speaks his goodness hugely ingenuous when he gave any thing of his Purse in a contribution of Charity he gave something also of himself in a compassionate pitty ay and something of his Office too in a Benediction or Prayer In the Will which he made there are indeed many Legacies but none to gratifie the rich most to relieve the necessitous some indeed are Honorary such as that of his giving to the Library of St. Johns Colledge in Oxford many of his best Folio's with an 100 l. towards the building their Founders Tomb Ay and that his Charity might not die with him he desires in his Will that what could be spared from the charge of his Funerals which he ordered to be decent and not pompous might be disposed of for the relief of the poor Thus the deceased dying in the Lord rests from his labors and his works follow him So that great no doubt is his gain in Heaven who is entred into the joy of his Lord but sure I am great is ours and the Churches loss on Earth which thousands in both Kingdoms do bewail His number of endeared Friends out-vying that of most mens common acquaintance O how many are ready to say of him taken from them by Death what St. Jerome said of Nepotian O avulsa sunt viscera mea O my Bowels are torn from me Ay in a louder accent of sorrow how many are there poor Souls who cry out Avulsa sunt alimenta mea Oh my Bread my Food and so my Life is taken from me by his Death Such was their maintenance and supplies administred from his hand of Bounty and Love And observe what is not to be buried in silence his devotions so zealous were all a Vestal Flame a Virgin Piety not defiled with the ravishments of the Flesh or the impurities of the World he had espoused himself to Christ and therefore engaged in no other marriage then that of his Soul in love to Jesus according to that which was his frequent and fervent ejaculation O bone Jesu esto