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A46315 Abraham's death, the manner, time, and consequent of it opened and applied in a funeral sermon preached upon the death of the Reverend Mr. Thomas Case ... June 14th, 1682 : with a narrative of his life and death / by Thomas Jacomb ... Jacombe, Thomas, 1622-1687. 1682 (1682) Wing J111; ESTC R11297 37,227 59

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Abraham's Death THE MANNER TIME and CONSEQUENT of it Opened and Applied IN A FUNERAL SERMON Preached upon the Death Of the Reverend Mr. THOMAS CASE Minister of the Gospel June 14th 1682. With a Narrative of his LIFE and DEATH By THOMAS JACOMB D. D. LONDON Printed for Brabrazon Aylmer at the three Pigeons against the Royal Exchange in Cornhill 1682. To Mrs. Anne Case Wife to the Reverend Mr. THOMAS CASE Minister of the Gospel lately deceased Much Honoured Friend IT was the reiterated Request of your Dear Husband and my worthy Friend that I would perform the last Office of Respect to him in the preaching of his Funeral Sermon when-ever it should please God to take him hence And this Request of him whilst living your self was pleased to back after his Death I have again and again publickly testified my Averseness from engaging in Services of this Nature and possibly as to engaging in this there were some special Reasons and Considerations to heighten my Averseness Yet considering how I was pressed to it by the Desires both of the Dead and of the Living I thought I should be disingenuous and defective in the Obligations of Friendship if I did not comply with them which therefore accordingly I did Having discharg'd the Preaching Part you further desired me to publish what I had preached To gratify you in that I was the more inclinable because I had left things in the Sermon so imperfect and unfinish'd for I had not time to go through a considerable part of what I had to say both upon the Text and also upon the Occasion The Truth is while I graspt at too much I did nothing to purpose and therefore was willing to do what you desired that I might have an Opportunity of filling up what then was wanting I am very sensible what a Captious and Litigious Age we live in how Divisions and Animosities do abound amongst us how hard a matter it is for One to commend One of his Party especially if he be of any considerable Eminency therein but some or other of a differing Party will be finding fault and picking out something to be the matter and ground of severe Censures If this shall be my lot I must submit but I have done whatever I could to prevent it For I have so commended the Person discoursed of as not in the least to reflect upon any others of a different Perswasion And as to the commanding of him too I have not done is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but all along to the best of my Knowledg 〈◊〉 ha●● kept with in the strict Bounds of Truth and Justice Yea to avoid Partiality and Flattery the too common Attendants of Funeral Sermons I have with all due Modesty taken notice of his Infirmities as well as of his Excellencies If all this will not 〈…〉 I hope I shall bear them with Patience if not with Contempt How many Funeral Sermons did your dear Husband live to preach for others here is now one preached for himself and God knows how soon some may do that for me which I have now done for him We live in a fluid State and have no Abiding hare No sooner had I dispatch'd what I had to do upon the Death of this Friend but God threatens me with the Death of Another a most Eminent Person of another Profession Vanity of Vanities all is Vanity The Lord bless you and yours and grant you all to reap the Benefit of those many many fervent Prayers which he who is gone sent up to the Throne of Grace daily for you All that I shall further say it but to assure you that now you are deprived of the Prayers of the Dead you shall ever have the hearty Prayers of him who whilst he lives shall be ready upon all occasions to shew himself Your Servant and Friend in Christ Tho. Jacomb July 21 1682. Abraham's Death GEN. 25.8 Then Abraham gave up the Ghost and died in a good old Age an old Man and full of Years and was gathered to his People THE Words give us a brief Historical Account of the Death of the Patriarch Abraham A large Description we have of his Genealogy Birth and Life from the close of the 11th Chapter to the beginning of this 25th Chapter But as to his Age Death and Burial the History of them is contracted within the short Bounds of three Verses here the 7th 8th and 9th Verses 'T is the Death only of Abraham that I shall discourse of Concerning which here 's as much said in a little as could well be expected or desired upon such an Argument The Occasion of our present assembling is That we may pay our last Respects to the Reverend and Worthy Mr. Thomas Case Minister of the Gospel lately deceased With whom the Text does so well suit as that mutato Nomine we may read it thus Then CASE gave up the Ghost and died in a good old Age an old Man and full of Years and was gathered to his People In the managing of the Work in hand I will first speak to the Instance here mentioned and to the Matter asserted of him and then bring that down to our precious Friend upon whose account we are come together this Day As to the first observe 1. The Person spoken of ABRAHAM 2. What is spoken of him here he Died. 3. The Amplifications about his Death 1. From the Manner of it He gave up the Ghost 2. From the Time of it In a good old Age an Old Man and full of Years 3. From the Consequent of it And was gathered to his People 'T is the Third Head that I design to stay upon the Two First I 'll put together and briefly dismiss Then ABRAHAM Died. This Abraham was a great Man a great Saint who in the whole Catalogue of Saints bears a greater Name than He He was a Prophet Gen. 20.7 the Friend of God Jam. 2.23 The Father of the Faithful Rom. 4.16 One who was and for ever will be renown'd for those two unparallell'd Acts of Obedience and Love to God his forsaking of his own Country and his readiness to offer up his dear and only Son Well! what became of this eminent Person Surely his extraordinary Grace and Holiness that high Rank of Faith and Obedience wherein he stood exempted him from that Death which we poor Striplings are exposed unto No 't was not so he Died went the way of all Flesh under-went the Stroke of Death just as we do Saints themselves the highest and choicest of them Observ the Servants of God they who are most eminently useful and faithful even They are subject to Dying as well as others 'T would be tedious and unnecessary in so plain a Case to heap up parallel Instances That great Servant of God Moses he died that great Prophet Samuel Deut. 34.5 1 Sam. 25.1 Zech. 1.5 he died all the Prophets of the Old Testament all the Apostles of the New all died as we have