Selected quad for the lemma: enemy_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
enemy_n death_n die_v reconcile_v 1,129 5 9.1851 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A12558 Munition against mans misery and mortality A treatice containing the most effectual remedies against the miserable state of man in this life, selected out of the chiefest both humane and divine authors; by Richard Smyth preacher of Gods word in Barstaple in Devonshire. Smyth, Richard, preacher in Barnstaple, Devonshire. 1612 (1612) STC 22878; ESTC S100020 65,151 158

There are 4 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

benefite to be delivered from a loathsome disease of the body by an vnlawfull and wicked death we haue reason to think it a benefite yea a singular benefite to be ridde of a loathsome and incurable disease of the soule namely sinne by a lawful death which it pleaseth God to send vnto vs. 8 But death doth more for vs than all this For it doth not only free vs from all evils and from that evil of evils sinne but puts vs into actual possession of all good things yea of such good thinges as our eies haue not seene our eares haue not heard neither are our harts able to conceiue brings vs to that place where if there were place for any passion we should be angry with death for not bringing vs thither sooner But I reserue a more particular declaration of that point vnto the thirteenth and last chapter CHAP. 12. Consolations against the terrours of the generall iudgement 1 THERE is yet an other thing which considered in it selfe is a greater branch and part of mans misery in regard of passiue evils than all the rest namely the last and generall iudgement where all flesh shal be arraigned before Gods Tribunall bar to giue an account of all they haue done to receiue their recompense accordingly The terror wherof I had rather expresse in a Anselm in libro medita tionum Anselmes wordes than in mine own O hard distresse saith he on one side wil be our sinnes accusing vs on the other side iustice terrifying vs vnder vs the gulfe of hell gaping aboue vs the iudg frowning within vs a conscience stinging without vs the world burning Which way then shall the sianer thus surprised turne himselfe To hide our selues will be impossible to appeare will be intolerable Wherewithal then shal miserable man arme himselfe against this so great terrour danger Surely our Christian profession affordeth munitiō against this assault also 2 And first that which hath beene spoken against the feare of death in the former chapter serveth also here against the feare of the last iudgmēt For that which made the first death so terrible and dangerous the same maketh the second death also so to bee namely sinne and as deliverance frō sinne doth as we there heard free vs from al annoyance by the first death so doth it also from all annoyance by the second death that is eternal condēnation at the last iudgement They that in Christ are cōquerers over the first death shall not nor cannot bee conquered by the second death and b Rev. 2c 6. on those that haue their part in the first resurrection the second death shall haue no power saith the spirit That is condemnation cānot take hold on those whom God hath gratiously called to the knowledge and love of his saving truth reveiled by the Gospell 3 But to come to more peculiar comforts against this matter of terrour and amazement let vs farther consider that Christ had mercy on vs whē we were meere strangers to him nay even when we were his enemies as c Rom. 5. v. 8.9.10 S. Paul well vrgeth God herein saith he commended his loue towards vs that when we were sinners Christ dyed for vs being thē now iustified by his bloud much more shall we be saved by him from that wrath Note that he saith from that wrath that is frō the wrath of the last iudgemēt For if saith he when we were enemies we were reconciled vnto God by the death of his sonne much more being reconciled wee shall be saved by his life Wee may easilie perceiue the force of the Apostles comfortable reasoning to wit that sith Christ died for vs when wee were sinners that is nothing but sin surely hee will saue vs being now righteous in him if wee were pardoned through his death when we were enimies wee shall much more bee saved by his life now that we are friendes For how incredible is it nay rather how impossible that he which pardoneth an enemy should condemne a friend He loved vs when wee bare the image of the devill and will hee not much more loue vs now since he hath in parte repaired his fathers image in vs and confirmed vs to himselfe We were deare to him when there was no iot of goodnesse in vs can hee reiect vs nowe that wee haue some good things in vs although but weake specially hee himselfe being the author and former of them by the grace of his holy spirit And so d Bernard epist 190. Bernard reasons For having spoken of our calling vnto the grace of the Gospell he inferres this beeing thus puld out of the power of darknesse I will not now feare to be reiected by the father of light being iustified freely in the bloude of his sonne Why it is he that iustifieth who is it that shall condemne Surely hee will not condemne the iust that had mercie on a sinner c. Thus wee see he reasoneth from that which GOD hath done for vs already to that which he will doe yea in a sort must doe for vs here after And we must all reason after the same manner and saie everie one to his owne soule with e Augustin in Psal 96. Saint Augustine Thou wast wicked and hee dyed for thee thou art now iustified and will hee forsake th●e 4 Moreover to take away the terrour of the last iudgement consider who shall be the Iudge even Christ himself that was thy redeemer And hovve canne wee feare such a iudge How happy in our case that hee must be our iudge that was himself iudged for vs He is our husband and wee his wife by whō would the wife chuse to be iudged but by the husband specially by so kinde a husbande as wee haue * Chapt. 10. Sect. 2. marginal letter d. before heard him to be who sheweth that favour that no husband doth yea he is our head we are his mēbers wil the head giue sentence of condēnatiō against his own mēbers This in effect were to giue sentēce against himself He is our advocat and Proctor how happy would we think our selues if in causes touching this life our own atturney might be our iudg He is now thine advocate f August in Psal 51. saith Augustine that hereafter shall be thy iudge Let vs then assure our selues he vvill not cōdemne vs that hath already been cōdemned for vs. 5 Yea so farre of is it that the last and generall iudgement shoulde be terrible vnto vs that it should rather minister matter of great ioy and comfort vnto vs. And therefore our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ having set downe the chiefe signes and tokens that should go before the day of iudgment saith to the faithful g Luc. 21.28 When yee see these things begin to come to passe looke vp and lift vp your heads for your redemption draweth neere So that by Christes owne exhortation in this place when wee thinke vpon the
to him when we imagine he is so severe and righteous that he can not or will not pardon our sinnes when we confesse them and are hartely sory for them whereas hee even delighteth to doe it and takes pleasure in it a Psal 51. v. 18. according to that in the Psalmist that a bruised spirit and a contrite heart are a sacrifice to God Thus God drawes arguments both from our imperfection and his owne perfection to perswade vs of his readinesse to pardon and to let vs see how easily it may be done 6 To conclude looking backe to the foundation of his mercy namely the incomprehensible misterie of the incarnation and passion of his sonne Iesus Christ * Chap. 8. throughout before declared wee must needes see that his loue towards mankinde is infinit and because infinite therefore greater then our greatest sinnes b Cyprian sermon de patientia Christs bloud washed even them that shed it vpon their repentance and whom then can it not wash God would haue his owne and only sonne to dy that mā might liue was content that his bloud should be our ransome Doubtlesle thē saith c Augustin Ie●m 10● Augustine hee that bought vs with so great a price will not haue vs cast away Let vs then haue refuge to this infinit mercy of God and our sinnes will vanish away as a bubble Our sinnes saith d Basil in regul contract quaest ●3 Basil may both be measured numbred but it is impossible that Gods goodnes should be measured or his mercies numbred Let vs then resolue e Anselm in Meditat. that although our offenses haue deserved damnation our repentance bee not sufficient for satisfaction yet Gods mercy is greater then all transgression yea that as far as God is superiour to man so farre is our wickednesse inferiour to his goodnesse Wee may then with f Bernard feria 4. hebdom poenosae Bernard reason thus What shall mis●rie overcome mercy shall not mercy rather conquer miserie Yes sure g Chrysost proaem in E●ai our sicknesse hath measure but the medicine is without measure and shal not vnlimited goodnesse prevaile against limited wickednesse or shal not a salue of infinit vertue cure a soare of finite malignity Gods mercy is a huge yea a boundlesse and bottomlesse sea and our sinnes compared therevnto are but as a little sparkle now saith Chrysostome suppose that a little sparkle should fall into the maine sea could it abide there would it not instantly be extinguished and never appeare more Doubtlesse so great a water must needes out of hand quench so small a fire yea a sparkle onely of fire Away then with despaire and let vs assure our selues h Gregor Moral lib. 3● cap. 11. as Gregorie well saith that despaire for sinne is worse then sinne it se●fe CHAP. 11. The Christians peculiar comfories against death and the terrours thereof 1 DEath beeing the greatest temporall punishment for sinne it may seeme to some that I should haue spoken thereof * Chap. 7. sect 2. se● before when I hanled the remedies against all temporarie evils which wee suffer in this life Notwithstāding I haue purposely reserved the handling thereof vnto this place because it may bee obiected against our deliverance from sinne by Christ declared in the Chapter next before going that for al that the faith full die as well as other men and cannot not possibly escape death but must be and are subiect to the vniversall lawe of inevitable mortalitie Besides the chiefe and soveraigne remedy against this evill namely death is our deliverance from sin therefore I thought good to speake of that before that so I might be the briefer here referring the Reader to the former chapter for particularity and cōtenting my selfe heere with a generall repetition and application thereof 2 First then as for death we are to consider that it is chiefly sinne that makes it so terrible vnto vs therefore a 1 Corinth 15. vers 56. the Apostle saith that sin is the sling of death Now as wee haue seene at large * 8.9.10 in some former chapters we are so delivered from sin in Christ that it cannot hurt vs nay is converted to our benefit and profit therefore Death having her strength from sinne is not to be feared sith sinne which is her sting is overcome What need we feare the snake that hath lost her sting Surely the snake that hath lost her sting can only hisse and keep a noise but cannot hurt therefore we see that many having takē out the sting will carry the snake in their very bosomes without any feare Even so although we carry death in our bodies yea in our bosomes and bowels yet sinne which was her sting being pulled out she can only hisse and stirre shee may and ordinarily doeth looke black and grimme but yet cannot any way annoy vs. 3 Which will bee the more manifest if we weigh that Christ our head hath conquered and quelled this Gyant so that none that bee his neede stand in feare thereof Death b 1. Corinth 15. v. 55 saith S. Paul is swallowed vp in victorie c Revelat. 1. v. 18. Christ was dead but now he liveth and that forever and hath the keyes of hell and death as he himselfe testifieth of himselfe Now he that hath the keyes of a place hath the cōmand of it it is as much then as if it had been said he had the cōmand of death power to dispose of death at his pleasure And will Christ that hath such an enemie at his mercy let him annoy his deare friends nay his owne members and so in effect himselfe No no he conquered death for vs not for himselfe sith death had no quarrell to him by his vniust death then hee hath vanquished our iust death as we heard * Chap. 8. Sect. 5. before out of Augustin d Bernard ad mi●i●es Templi sermon 4. The death of Christ is the death of our death sith he dyed that we might liue and how can it bee but that they should liue for whom life it selfe dyed Surely death by vsurping vpon the innocent fors●●ted her right to the guilty e Hieron ad Heliodor While shee devoured wrongfully was her selfe devoured 4 Yea in that Christ hath vanquished death we also may be truely said to haue vanquished it hee beeing our head and wee his members for where the head is a conquerour the members cannot be captiues f Tertul de resurre●t carms ● ●1 Let vs then reioice we haue already seyzed vpō heaven in Christ who hath carried our flesh thither in his owne person as an earnest pennie and pledge of the whole summe that in time shall be brought thither We may then boldly say g Augustin in Psal 148. there is somewhat of ours aboue already yea the best part of vs namely our head and are the members farre from
the head h Idem in Psa● 88. Yea we may assure our selues that being members of such a head yea body to it we are in ●ff●ct where ou● head is For saith Augustin this body cannot bee beheaded but if the head triumph forever the members must needes triumph for ever also And that wee haue this benefite by Christs ascension into heaven before hand for vs i Bern. serm de eo quod legitur a pud Iob. in sex tribulatio nibus c. Bernard excellētly sheweth Bee it saith he that only Christ is entred into heaven yet I trowe whole Christ must enter and if whole Christ then the body as well as the head yea every member of the body For this head is not to bee found in the kingdome without his members Hence it is that the Scripture speakes of the faithfull as already raised from the dead placed in heaven with Christ yea as of them that shall not nor cānot die as k Ioh. 11. vers 26. Hee that liveth and beleeveth in me shall never die And l Ioh 5. v. 24. againe Verily verily I say vnto you whosoever heareth my word and beleeveth in him that sent me hath eternall life and shall not come into iudgement but hath passed from death to life And Hee saith m Ephes 2. v. 6. S. Paul hath raised vs vp togither hath placed vs togither in heaven with Christ He saith not he will raise vs vp hee will place vs in heaven with Christ but he hath so raised and placed vs which is spoken both for the certaintie thereof also for the streight vnion betweene the head and the body by means whereof that which is already actually accomplished in the head is said to bee so also in the body In a word the head being aboue water the body can never bee drowned although it bee never so much beaten and tossed with waues And thus much for our first and principall defense against death the sum whereof is this that it is not onelie a weakenesse but also a shame for the members to fear an enemy which the head hath already conquered subdued 5 There are also diverse other Christian comfortes against death which I wil briefly touch And first as we heard * Chap. 7. Sect. 2. leq before that all other evils of paine are to a Christian chaunged into another nature and of punishments become favours and benefits so is it also in this of death For now it is not a tokē of Gods anger for sin but an argument of his loue and mercy it is not properly death but a bridge by which wee passe to a better life from corruption to incorruptiō from mortality to immortality from earth to heaven that is in a word frō vanity and miserie to ioy and felicity And who would not willingly passe over this bridge whereby hee passeth from all cares and sorrowes and passeth to all delights and pleasures leaveth all miseries behinde him hath all contentation and happinesse before him 6 The Gentils taking it for graūted that after death either wee should be happy or not be at all and so concluding that at least death would free vs from all evill and misery therevpon made litle reckoning of death nay manie times voluntarilie procured their own death and imbraced it as a rich treasure as wee haue * Chap. 4. Sect 3. Chap. 5. Sect 3. already heard But how fowly they were mistaken herein hath withall beene sufficiently declared It is the Christian only that enioyeth this benefite by death namely the exemption from all cares and troubles and an ende of all sorrowes Wherefore the death of the godly is called n Esai 57. vers 2. Dan. 12. v. 2. 1. Thes 4. vers 13.14 Revel 14. v. 13. in Scripture by the names of bedde of rest sleepe peace and such like being all names of benefite and commodity How sweet is peace to them that haue beene vexed with warres and broiles how plesant is the bedde rest sleepe to the weary and those that are overwatched The labourer is glad when his daies work is done the traveller reioiceth when he is come to his waies ende the marriner and passenger thinke themselues happy whē they arriue in the harbour and all men shun paine and desire ease abhorre daunger and loue securitie It were madnes thē for a Christian to feare so advantageous a death and to wish for continuance of so wretched a life I conclude this pointe with that elegant laying o Tertul. de testim animae cap. 4. of Tertullian That is not to bee feared which sets vs free frō all that is to be feared And indeed what weaknesse folly is it to fear a superfedeas against all the things which heare we do feare 7 But the true Christian hath yet a farre greater benefit by death For it doth not only put an end to the evils of paine but also to the evils of fault not only to the punishments for sin but to sinne it selfe Now we haue often heard before that the evils of fault are farre worse then the evils of paine yea that the least sinne is more to be abhord and shund thē the greatest punishment for sinne H●w welcome then should death bee vnto vs that endeth not only our sorrowes but also our sinnes As long as wee liue here and beare about vs these earthly tabernacles wee daily multiply our rebellings against God and sustaine a fierce conflict and continual combat in our very bosomes while p Galat. 5.17 the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and q Rom. 7 2● the lawe in our members rebelleth against the lawe of our minde as S. Paule speaketh and leadeth vs captiues to the law of sin which is in our members O bondage of all bondages to be in bondage vnto sin r Sen ep 37. 39. The Gentill that apprehended vice only as a morall evill could say that men beeing in bondage to their lusts were more cruellie handled by them than any slaues were by the most cruell maisters Howe much more should wee that feele sin as al spiritual evill and groane vnder the burden thereof account the bondage there of intollerable and worse than subiection to the most barbarous Tyrant in the world And how welcome should he be that would set vs free from the same Now it is death and only death that can doe this for vs and indeede doth it for vs. What great cause them haue wee with all willingnesse to imbrace it ſ Diogenes Laertius vit Phil. l●● 7. Zeno the founder of the Stoicall sect helde it lawfull for them that had loathsome diseases vvhich were incurable to kill themselues that so they might be rid of them and t Con. Nepos in vita Titi Pomp. Attici See also the like of Tullius Marcellinus in Seneca ep 78. Pomponius Atticus others put it in practise If they counted it a
last iudgement we haue cause to reioice not to fear to lift vp our heads not to hang them downe And that for sundry reasons but I will specifie one or two that are most materiall fittest to cleare this truth 6 And first for as much as the dissolving of the world is for our ful deliveraunce from the bondage of the world the māner of dissolving it must needes bee comfortable vnto vs although in it selfe otherwise terrible Wee see that in particular humane iudgements the things that are terrible to malefact ours are comfortable to good subiects and that which amaseth the theefe reviveth the true mā The maiestie of the iudges their scarlet robes whose very colour threatēs death their guard that environ them with holdbards yea the gibbet the hangman are pleasing sightes to the good who knowe that all this is for their maintenance and sauegard although they miserably terrify the wicked for vvhose destruction they are prepared Even so the comming of Christ in maiestie and glorie the troupe and traine of Angels that attend on him the shrill sounde of the trumpet summoning all flesh to appeare are before his iudgement seate at this great and generall assises and all other solemnities belonging to the pompe and magnificence thereof wil cheere vp the faithfull knowing that all this is to doe them iustice touching all the wrongs and oppressions which they haue sustained at the hāds of the wicked and terrifie and daunt the wicked only that now must come to an account for all their enormities and outrages And as it fareth with them that are narrowly besieged in a strong castle when a puissant armie is raised to rescue them draweth neere to the place and is come within sight the neighing and trampling of the horses the glitring of the armour the clashing together of the weapons the noise of drum trumpet are most pleasing vnto them yea the very roaring of the canon is the sweetest musicke that ever they heard because they knowe that all this is to raise the siege and set them free even so the faithfull being straightly besieged in this world as in an impregnable fort by the flesh sinne and the devill when Christ shall come in the clowds with power and maiesty when the glorious army of Angels shall march onward with him as their generall when the last trumpet shall be sounded yea when the earth shal trēble the sea roare the sunne shall be darkned the moon turned into bloud the stars fal from heaven in a vvorde the elements dissolved and the heavens shall melt and bee shriveled vp like a scroale of parchment the faithfull shall reiolce at the sight as knowing that al this is but to raise the long and grievous siege vvhich they endured in this world to set them at liberty for ever yea to put them in possession of a heavenly kingdome where they shal raigne for ever in vnspeakable blisse 7 Finally that we may see vvhat folly it is to be afraide of this iudgement we must remember that we our selues shall be iudges there So Christ telleth Peter Mat. 19.39 that he and the rest that had followed him in the regeneratiō that is at the last iudgement when the worlde should be refined should sit vpon twelue throans iudge the twelue tribes of Israel which being somewhat obscurely vttered Christ there alluding to the present state of things the number of the twelue tribes of Israell and of his twelue Apostles i 1. Cotin●● c. v. 2.3 S. Paul expresseth more cleerely applying it in generall to all the faithfull vnder the new Testament affirming that the Saints shall iudge the world yea the Angels that is to say wicked men and wicked spirits And hence k Tertul. exhortat ad Martyres cap. 2. Tertullian notably comforteth and encourageth the Martyrs that were in durance daily expecting the Iudges comming and to receiue sentence of death Perhaps saith hee the Iudge is looke for yea but you shall iudge your iudges themselues Were it not then great folly to feare that iudgement wherein wee our selues shall sit as iudges iudges as I haue said of all wicked both men and spirits that is of all our enimies that haue oppressed vs For although Christ our head principally and properly shall be the iudge yet we that are his members shall haue a braunch of his authority and shall be as it were ioined in commission with him Let vs not thē feare this last and generall iudgement the bench not the barre is our place there CHAP. 13. The ioies of heaven and glorious state of the faithfull after death 1 BVT that which most of all should comfort vs against our misery mortality here and the terror either of particular iudgement by death or vniversall iudgement at the last day is this that not only all these cannot hurt vs nay are made many waies profitable vnto vs in this world but that through them we passe to a most happy state in the world to come the excellency whereof requires the tongue and penne rather of Angels then of men to describe it or rather cannot be perfectly expressed by Angels thēselues I must be content then darkly to shadow it out sith liuely representation of it is meerely impossible 2 And first the benefits and comforts of this life although miserable as we haue heard doe argue that a far better state is reserved for vs in heaven We see that God even here on earth notwithstanding our sinnes whereby we daily offend him vouchsafeth vs many pleasures and furnisheth vs not only with matters of necessity but also of delight There is a Pas● 10●● a whole Psalme spent only on this matter a Psalme worthy to be writtē in letters of gold in papers walles windowes but specially to be imprinted in every godly heart for the admirable excellency thereof God canseth b Cyprian de patienti● saith S. Cyprian the sunne to rise set in order the seasons to obey vs the elements to serue vs the windes to blow the springs to flow corne to growe fruits to ripen gardens and orchards to fructifie and aboud woods to rustle with leaues meaddowes to shine with flowers c. And c Chry●ōst de compūct cordis lib. 2. Chrysostome excellently handling the same point further shewes that God hath in a sorte made the night more beutifull then the day by infinit variety of bright and glittering starres that hee hath beene more mercyfull to man then man would haue been to himselfe who of greedinesse woulde haue overtoiled himselfe but that God made the night of purpose for his rest in a word he saies and truely saies even of these earthly benefits commodities that although we were never so vertuous nay if wee should die a thousand deaths wee should not be worthy of them And d Silv. Italic lib. 15. the very heathen Poet considering this could not chule but breake out into admiration saying *