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earth_n day_n lord_n rest_v 6,331 5 10.2675 5 true
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A18615 The Best choyce a funerall sermon / published at the desire of some of the friends of the dead. 1607 (1607) STC 5141.7; ESTC S288 17,327 59

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sheweth vs his desire and in his desire sheweth vs that death and desolution is a thing to bee desired of the godly When the labourer hath wrought stoutly in the vineyard all the day and at length the euening commeth wherein he may rest hee is glad of it yea hee doth desire and wait for the comming of the euening that he may rest Our life here beneath is but as a day and a short winter day and here vpon the earth as in the Lords vineyard we are appointed to labour so the Parable of the labourers hired to worke in the vineyard Matth. 20. doth teach vs. When the euening of our daye namely death dooth come the seruant of God reioyceth that he may rest from his labour yea in wisedome hee shoulde desire the comming of it that hee might rest from his labour for death bringeth such rest The holy Ghost from heauen affirmed to Iohn the Euangelist Reu. 14.13 that they which die in the Lord doe rest from their labours and are therein blessed And a wise Poet truly saide it Est finis miseria in morte in death our miseries end When the souldier hath put on armour and lieth in Campe against the enemie hee longeth for victorie that hee may put off his armour and rest from that daungerous and painefull seruice And when that wished day is come hee reioyceth for his rest For as the King of Israel answered the king of Aram though he that girdeth on his armour boast himselfe yet he that putteth it off after victorie hath whereof to boast Now wee are all Souldiers and our life vpon the earth is a warfare So Ierome reades the first wordes of the seuenth chapter of Iob Milita est vita hominis super terram A warfare saith hee fighting against inuisible aduersaries And wee are sent into this world as the Lordes prest men vnder the Banner of Christ following him our Captaine to fight against sinne against the flesh the diuell and the worlde by dooing good workes and resisting tentations Sinne fighteth against vs and often taketh vs captiues Rom. 7.23 Paul saith I see an other Lawe in my m̄ebers rebelling against the Law of my minde and leading mee captiue vnto the law of sin which is in my members The flesh fighteth against vs striuing against the spirit as the spirit striueth against the flesh And Peter biddeth vs Abstaine from fleshly lusts because they fight against the soule 1. Pet. 2.11 The Diuell commeth fiercely vpon vs as a roaring Lyon and fighteth against vs. Eph. 6.16 beeing armed with fierie darts And the worlde dooth not loue those whom God hath choson out of the world Iohn 15.19 and the battel which we haue to maintaine against those enemies is most perillous because Eph. 6.22 wee wrastle not against flesh and blood but against principalities and powers against the worldly gouernours the princes of the darknesse of this world This battell endeth not till the day of our dissolution commeth then are wee freed from tentations and deliuered from sinne For Romans 6.7 the Apostle saith Hee that is dead is freed from sinne Then doe wee rest and reioyce triumphing ouer all our enemies sauing that death for a time holdeth our bodies in the dust of the earth And therefore the day of our dissolution as the end of our both painefull and dangerous warre is to be desired Hee that can discerne betweene labour with wearinesse rest with reward betweene warre with perill and victorie with ioyfull peace hee will say that the daye of death to a good man is to bee desired more then life because life is labour with wearinesse and woe with perill but the houre of death bringeth rest with reward and victorie with ioyfull peace Ciprian in a Treatise of his De mortalitate in the third section saith of life Quid aliud in mundo quam pugna aduersus diabolum quotidie geritur quam aduersus iacula eius tela conflictationibus assidius dimicatur While wee are in the world what do we but fight against the diuell and warre with continual conflicts against his arrowes and darts but of death hee saith Illa est pax nostra illa fida tranquillitas illa stabilis firma perpetua securitas Death is our peace our sure tranquilitie our stable firme and perpetual securitie When Balaam that false Prophet that loued the wages of iniquitie beeing hired by the King of Moab to curse Israel had considered that cursing could not bee the ende of Gods people but that they were heires of blessing hee pronounced these wordes Numbers 23.10 Let mee die the death of the righteous let my last end be like his The man did see his eyes beeing opened of God that the end of the righteous for the peace and happinesse thereof was to be desired The day of dissolution to a righteous man is like that day in which Ioseph was brought out of prison and stoode before Pharaoh Hee had long beene in bonds In prison hee was basely clothed as became a prisoner In the end his fetters are laid aside hee is taken out of prison he putteth off his base attire he is washed and shauen hee putteth on new apparrell is brought into the presence of the King and made a ruler throughout the Kingdome The iust mans life is like the time of his captiuitie and his death is like to his deliuerie While wee liue the soule is inclosed in the bodie as in a prison and is clothed with the flesh as with filthie garmentes and is clogged with sinne as with fetters of yron and brasse and is cumbred with iniuries and tentations more greeuous and noysome then the hunger colde and noysome sauour of the prison But when the houre of dissolution commeth the prison is broken and wee are deliuered Wee put off the ragges of the flesh and are clothed with white we are loosed from the fetters of sinne we are washed in the blood of Christ wee are admitted into the presence of God and are made togither with Iesus Christ heires of a heauenly kingdom And therefore as Ioseph desired to bee deliuered and had cause to riot when that daye came euen so may the righteous desire their dissolution they haue cause to reioyce when the day thereof draweth nigh The death indeed of the wicked is very fearefull and by all meanes to be auoided if it could bee auoided For their death is like the euening to the slothfull seruant when his Maister will examine his daies worke It is like the comming home of the Lorde to the vnprofitable seruant that had wrapped his Tallent in a napkin and buried it in the ground hee was called to account and because he had beene idle Mat. 25.26 his Talent was taken from him and giuen to an other and after sharpe rebukes hee was cast into vtter darknesse where is weeping and gnashing of teeth It is like the fearefull assises and day of goale deliuerie vnto the malefactor who being brought from the prison