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A39733 A funeral sermon on his late Royal Highness, William, Duke of Glocester preach'd Aug. the 4th. 1700. By W. Fleetwood, chaplain in ordinary to His Majesty. Fleetwood, William, 1656-1723. 1700 (1700) Wing F1246A; ESTC R216786 11,999 17

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A FUNERAL SERMON On His Late Royal Highness William Duke of Glocester PREACH'D Aug. the 4th 1700. BY W. FLEETWOOD CHAPLAIN in ORDINARY TO HIS MAJESTY LONDON Printed and Re-printed in Dublin at the Back of Dick's Coffee-House in Skinner-Row And are to be Sold by Matthew Gunn at his Shop in Essex-Street MDCC A SERMON Preach'd Aug. the 4 th 1700. BY W. FLEETWOOD CHAPLAIN in ORDINARY TO HIS MAJESTY LONDON Printed and Re-printed in Dublin at the Back of Dick's Coffee-House in Skinner-Row And are to be Sold by Matthew Gunn at his Shop in Essex-Street MDCC PREFACE I Give this Sermon up to the desires of a great many good People of the Parishes of St. Austin and St. Dunstan in the West to whom I can deny nothing of this Nature which they shall find reasonable to ask of me But not to their Desires only but also to the hopes I have that from something or other hinted at in it other Wise and Virtuous People may be put upon considering whereabouts we are and on contributing all that lies in them to the preventing whatever Evils we may apprehend from the great Loss we have sustained in the Death of the most Noble and most Hopeful Prince the Duke of Glocester I know I have no other Aims than these in making this Sermon publick and they who know me well will I believe think so too I undertake not therefore to defend the Irregularity of some of my thoughts nor the Order in which they are ranged They were produc'd in Grief and deep Concern and that I think may in some sort excuse them with tender and good-natur'd People I am only careful of guarding against two sorts of Men 1st Such as will needs call This great Misfortune a Judgment of God for what hath passed amongst us 2d Such as will certainly try to make it one as soon as ever they can To the first we must freely own we have deserved God's greatest Judgments but not for the causes they assign and freely own that this Misfortune has the Face of one and is as heavy as a Judgment and therefore I hope all People will improve under it and make as good use of it as if it were indeed a Judgment But till they shall produce some certain and impartial Rules by which they proceed in forming Censures and in applying them to Nations or to private People they will give us leave I hope to suspend And to the second sort who think to turn a Kingdom into a Common-wealth I can only say that I hope the Extent of our Dominions the Number of our Nobility the Honour of our Gentry the Genius of our People and the whole Current of our Laws will always provide us with a ready Answer to an impudent and clamorous Faction God I hope will evermore preserve us from a Species of Government as ill fitted for our Nation as Popery is for our Religion A SERMON On Psalm cxlvi vers 3 4 5. O put not your trust in Princes nor in any Child of Man for there is no help in them For when the breath of man goeth forth he shall turn again to his earth and then all his thoughts perish Blessed is he that hath the God of Jacob for his help and whose hope is in the Lord his God WE know not who it was that composed this Psalm nor what it was that occasion'd it But the Providence of God furnisheth all People with occasions more then enow of applying these words to themselves but too too pertinently It hath furnish'd Vs with One not many years ago so very proper that it gives fresh and lively pain to every one that remembers it with half the Consideration it deserves It furnishes us now with another of which no living Man perhaps can see the consequence at full but every one can see enough to drive him to Sorrow and Amazement and cause him to say with the Psalmist The Lord is King the Earth may be glad thereof yea the multitude of the Isles may be glad thereof glad that their Affairs are in the hands of him who has all Power and is all Wisdom and all Goodness who bringeth Light out of Darkness Good out of Evil and can turn every thing to their Advantage who serve him truly Whether it were that the Psalmist here directs himself against the common inclination of Men which is to build great hopes upon the Promises of Princes and great Men and rather to depend on them than on God above who keepeth his Promise for ever or whether the Death of some Great Prince had given to the Jews in their Captivity some mighty disappointment whatever it was that occasion'd the composing of this Psalm 't is plain the words of the Text advise us First Not to put our trust in Princes nor any Child of Man and that for this reason There is no help in them because when the breath of Man goeth forth he shall turn again to his Earth and all his thoughts perish Secondly they direct us where we are to place our Trust and Confidence and that is in God Blessed is he that hath the God of Jacob for his help and whose hope is in the Lord his God I. Of the Persons in whom we are not to place our Trust and Confidence and they are Princes Put not your trust in Princes i. e. in no Body no Child of Man for if you might in any body you might in them because they have most Power and more opportunities of answering to your Confidence than any Men besides I see no reason to think that any thing is here said to the Disparagement of Princes as tho' they were to be trusted less than other Men for Falshood or Forgetfulness of Promises And therefore to trust is not here put for believing But they are rather here consider'd as the Faithfullest as well as the most powerful Managers of human Affairs of the best Intentions as well as greatest Abililities both to design and execute great Matters and yet not to be entirely depended on for other Reasons 'T is much the same that is express'd in Psalm cxviii 8 9. It is better to trust in the Lord than to put any Confidence in Man It is better to trust in the Lord than to put any Confidence in Princes i. e. the chiefest and the best of Men And the Reason here assign'd why they are not so to be trusted and depended on namely because they are so subject to Death delivers them from all suspicion of Blame to put our trust therefore in Princes does in this place signify to think the settlement of their Affairs so strong and sure that nothing can disturb them to trust so to the Wisdom of their Management their Valour and their Might their good Intentions and their great Abilities as to be quite secure and to suspect no Change can happen it either signifies this Confidence which is innocent tho' inconsiderate or this Confidence with Impiety trusting in the
kindled them His thoughts who rais'd our thoughts perish and therfore ours must perish with them Who can enough esteem those Lives which by experience are found so useful to the World to the securing its tranquility and happiness or those who from their earliest Infancy have promised all the good that Men can look for from the most virtuous towardly disposition and whose precocious advances could not fail of giving us some jealous Fears with our most lively Hopes Who can enough esteem such Lives if we consider these fine Qualities and who can value them too little or trust too little in them who considers how soon their breath goeth forth and they return again to Earth and all their thoughts perish What must we do in this uncertainty Our Affairs require a life as durable as Brass and the Laws of our Mortality will admit of none but what is subject to a thousand certain and a thousand accidental evils each of which may break us all to pieces Let us do any thing in this uncertainty but blame the Providence of God who hangs the good of so much people on so small a Thread for Righteous are his Ways and just his Government whatever we may fear whatever we endure But may I not unblam'd say with the Prophet Jerem. 12.1 I know I say it with all deference and humility Righteous art thou O Lord when I plead with thee yet let me talk with Thee of thy Judgments When thou in mercy turnedst away the Captivity of our Zion we were like them that dream when our Enemies were just upon us they stumbled and fell then was our mouth filled with laughter and our tongue with joy The greatest Enemies we had could not forbear proclaiming The Lord hath done great things for them We could not our selves in Gratitude forbear proclaiming The Lord hath done great things for us already whereof we rejoyce Either to temper these Felicities or punish our Ingratitude Thou stoppedst up for ever the Breath of our Nostrils The anointed of the Lord was taken away from us of whom we said under her shadow we shall live not among the Heathen but at home in plenty and security To shew thou didst intend but to correct and not to give us unto Death thou didst by unexpected Instruments deliver the Life of the King from fear of the Enemy and from the Snare of the Hunter Thou savedst him from Destruction and crownedst him with Mercy and Loving Kindness and mad'st him instrumental in procuring the desire of all our Hearts an honourable Peace the Opportunity of healing all our Wounds recovering all our Losses and making up the Breaches our intestines Foes our foolish Discords and ill grounded Animosities had occasioned the Opportunity of settling our Affairs and looking to the Ground we stood upon of putting them in such a Posture that neither Enemies abroad nor Enemies at home might give us any great Disturbance that the Religion of our Countrey and its most ancient properst and best-tempered Government might be secured against the Attempts and Machinations of its old inveterate Enemies the Sons of Violence and Darkness and from the noisy Importunities of unexperienced raw new-fangled Schematists and Speculators But contrary to this the Spirit of Discord is gone out among us and the sweet Hope of all the Kingdom is in a moment snatch'd away from us e're we had time to try to move thee by our Prayers or time to apprehend a Stroke so painful and so mortal Thy former Favours did not promise such Conclusion But we will hold our Peace since 't is thy doing We are much surer that thou may'st in Justice thus chastise us for our Sins than we could be that thou hadst so much Mercy for such Sinners as we have all our Lives experienced from thee Permit us never so long to talk with thee of thy Judgments yet must we still conclude Righteous art thou O Lord when we plead with thee Such Losses and such heavy Disappointments needs must prove effectual Cures of all our Confidence in Princes Never were Hopes more justly raised nor placed more reasonably than ours have been upon two Noble Objects and yet six years have quite defeated them dried up our Springs and almost desolated a Royal Tribe one of the fairest and most fruitful in the World How short is our Prospect now in what a little Compass is our Kingly Family contain'd Two precious Lives make up our whole Treasure The People of the East we find in Scriptures addressed to their Princes with O King Live for ever 'T is a vain Complement to Men of Flesh and Blood whose Breath goeth forth so suddenly who dye like other Men who return again to their Earth and whose Thoughts all perish in a moment but if 't were ever reasonable our Case would call for it and we would use it May God enlarge these Borders build to these Princes a sure House and bind up their Souls in the Bundle of Life a long one here for our sakes and for their own an Everlasting one in Heaven II. Let us now withdraw from this uncomfortable side The Lives of Princes are it seems like Lands of Darkness where every step we make is in Distrust and Fear They give us little but Alarms Defeats and Disappointments Let us seek a Country of more Light and Safety where Hope dwells and where we may abide with Confidence Blessed is he who hath the God of Jacob for his help and whose hope is in the Lord his God This is a Life and Will and Power we may depend upon Great is the Lord and marvellous worthy to be praised there is no end of his greatness The Lord is good to all and his tender mercies are over all his works His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom and his dominion endureth throughout all ages These are Foundations strong enough for all the Trust and Confidence a Heart can hold He is of infinite Goodness to intend the Happiness of all his Creatures of infinite Wisdom to know wherein it lies and of infinite Power to effect his wise and good designs towards us Here therefore we may place our Trust without any Fears of Disappointment here we must fix our Hopes for here we can only find our Help Were there not such a Power above to over-look and govern Men and their Affairs what a place of Misery and Confusion would this World be what with the certainty of natural Causes working many sad effects tho known before yet unavoidable what with the multitude of fearful Accidents never to be prevented nor foreseen what with the Folly Ignorance Mistakes the Malice and Perversness and the Rage of one anothers Passions how wretched a thing would the Life of a Man be The Ways of God I think are to permit natural Causes to work their natural Effects according to the Powers he hath endued them with reserving to himself the Power of altering or suspending them as he sees fit and when he pleases