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A36555 The forerunner of eternity, or, Messenger of death sent to healthy, sick and dying men / by H. Drexelius. Drexel, Jeremias, 1581-1638.; Croyden, William.; Marshall, William, fl. 1617-1650. 1642 (1642) Wing D2183; ESTC R35549 116,212 389

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hast the power of judging and ●iscerning and thou knowest best the medicines to cure our diseases Oh my most loving Saviour reprove correct and chastize me burn me cut me in pieces onely save me everlastingly Let not the flames of hell lay hold upon me I know thy rod comforts as well as thy staffe thou doest I know chastize thy beloved sons and by chastizements doest purge exercise and provest them before thou puttest upon them the crowne of glory My heart my heart ô Lord is ready how and when thou wilt be pleased to prove my patience and subject mee under the rod. My trust is in thee let me not be confounded for ever I submit my selfe and wholly resigne my self to thy heavenly will and pleasure though thou kill yet wil I trust in thee My lot is in thy hands to dispose let it fall to me in a good ground Amen 3 A Prayer to obtaine patience O Almighty GOD Thou kn●w●st what a weake frail and vile piece of earth I am yet the worke of thy hands who was framed of ●he dust who am blown and withered by every blast of winde and shall at last again returne to dust there is nothing that I have wherein I can trust for I have within mee the spirit striving against the flesh and about me the flesh against the spirit I find motions of Anger Impatience Fearfulnes Dissidence and divers other perturbati●ns to rise within mee if thou onely doest but touch me with thy hand I desire therefore thy helpe ô heavenly Physician and that heavenly medicine of thine called Patience to be communicated to me ô Patience it is the easement of all diseases Give mee ô Lord in all estates to carry my selfe orderly submissively and to beare prosperity without pride adversitie without repining whither thou sendest health or sicknes I may entertain them as proceeding from thy fatherly hands and so being assured they are good because they come from thee thou makest all things worke for the best to them that feare thee Amen Let thy holy Spirit teach and instruct me And so much the rather O Lord help because there is none fighteth for mee but onely thou ô God and tha● thy strength may be perfected in my weaknesse So that I may truly say Thy rod and thy staffe have comforted me and thy good grace assisting me I may look upon thy Son and my Saviour Jesus with comfort which shewed himselfe a pattern of all patience to all patient men grant this I beseech for t●y mercy sake in Jesus Christ Amen 4 A Prayer for the increase of Patience OUr life ô Lord is a pilgrimage from Exile and Ba●ishment to our Countrey and lest the pleasantnesse of the way should detaine or keepe us back from comming speedily and comf●rtably to thee ô God thou stirrest us up by Goads and hast ns us by pricks in our sides that so we may the more eagerly desire rest and to bee at our journeys end therefore diseases griefs teares mournings sorrows are as so many spurs to hastē our dull natures and to encourage them to make speed to their quiet repose Cau●e us ô Lord to forget the tediousnesse of the way and to remember our Countrey and if thou pleasest to lay on load upon our shoulders lay on strength l●kewise and patience to carry it quietly and cheerfully having all our intentions and hopes fixed upon thee but seeing all things are at thy disposing Make all things ô Lord worke together in thy unsearchable wisdome that I may never prove an enemy to thee Amen 5 A Prayer containing a full resignment of the sickman into Gods hand and will O Most comfortable and sweet Lord God be mindfull I pr●y thee and mercifully consider mee thy poore creature but thou Lord art my creatour behold ô Lord I doe wholly give and resigne my self unto thy disposing and ordering I am ready and prepared ô Lord to endure what thy fatherly hand shall lay upon mee Deal with mee as thou pleasest in time and for Eternity Whatsoever thou ô heavenly Father hast determined upon me and of me with all Humilitie I am resolved to beare I will take all things well at thy hands whither Good or Evill sweet or sowre joy or heavinesse and will for all give thanks unto thee Keepe me ô Lord from all sin and so I will neither feare death nor hell Because thou wilt not destroy the work of thine owne hands nor blot me out of the booke of life no tribulation shall be grievous unto mee be present ô sweet Jesus with me at all times in all places and let mee comfort my selfe in this that thou only art my comfort and consolation and if at any time thou shalt be pleased to withdraw thy comfortable presence from me yet then I will be comforted in thy tryall of me because it is for my good Thy holy Name be now and ever above all things ô Saviour magnified and blessed Amen 6 Another sh●rt Prayer to the same purpose O Love ineffable ô sweet Jesu my God if thou wouldest give me my desire and wouldest promise to give what I should request I would not desire any thing but what I suffer This this I would desire and request a thousand time that thy most gracious will according to thy good pleasure may be always done in me of me by me for evermore Amen A Prayer for conformity of our wils to the divine will O Sweet Jesu I neither desire Life nor Death but onely thy will be done I wait upon thee If it be thy good pleasure sweet Jesu that I shall die I doe humbly intreat thee to receive my spirit and though I come in at Evening one of the last amongst the Workmen grant yet that I may be with thee and receive everlasting rest in and through thee but if thou so pleasest ô sweet Jesu that my life shall be prolonged I purpose then and resolve and for this I do intreat thy suffrage and the assistance of thy grace that the residue of my life may be amended be offered up to thee wholly as a pleasing sacrifice to thy glory and according to thy good will Amen Another Prayer to obtain the same thing as onely necessary O Lord Jesus Christ I beseech thee by thy love whi●h invited thee so willingly to take all our burdens upon thee that thou wouldest make me to take my visitation patiently and thankfully as comming by thy Fatherly providence and according to thy good will and proceeding out of thy love and affection towards me give me assistance to take it quietly to beare it patiently to resigne my selfe to thy goodnesse and well liking and give mee that strengh and growth in grace that I may not offend thee in the least nor ever depart from or dislike thy godly will and ô Saviour unite my will with thy most holy B●neplacite that what I wish may please thee Amen A Prayer to obtain Patience O Lord my God I confesse I
in their eyes So ô Father even so c. There is no feare of that mans perishing who so effectually can reconcile himselfe with the Judge § 2. How to recover time ill spent and lost WHosoever desires earnestly to redeem lost time let him turn away himselfe from all vanities and seriously meditate upon Eternity in which he shall see God and in Him all things are to be f●und and recovered that are lost here let him fix his thoughts and expresse himselfe to God in these or the like terms O my eternall God! I do heartily wish that from the day of my birth to the day of my dea h I had lived before thee in puren●sse obedience and holinesse ô would to God! I had lived as all those men did who by following the practice of grace and vertue did please God in all their trials and troubles ô that I could for thy love weep my self into teares and be always helpful to the poore and needy ô that I could afford comfort to the comfortlesse and love thee with that ardencie that all thy blessed Saints and Angels doe for it is fit and due that all prayses should be given to thee And now ô my God have mercy upon mee according to thy infinite wisdome and good pleasure Of such the Psalmist hath pronounced that they shal die ful of days now as Gregory saith They die in a full age who doe that worke in this passing and fleeting time which will never fade or passe away Hee hath recovered and repaired time that was lost who hath truly sorrowed that he hath lost it § 3. How a short life is to be made long A Well minded man must look not how long he can live but how long he ought to live the Wise man sai●h Wisd 4.13 Hee being made perfect in a short time fulfilled a long time Well may hee say hee hath liv'd long which comprehends all perfection for he hath finished his course which passeth to Eternity he lives long who hath lived religiously wee are not to reckon long life by the number of yeers but by the number of vertues he may worthily be said to have finished his time which at no time would lose or leave his piety his goodnesse therefore an unwearied care and study of profiting and going on in goodn sse and a daily indeavour to perfection is reputed and esteemed perfection it self § 4. There is an end of all things bu● Eterni●y is endlesse WHy may wee not be cheerfull and sing some Elegies to or before a sick man especially if it be the custome of the place Iacoponus an holy man of life wri● certain merry Verses in which very pleasantly he hath described the vanities of the world and the precipices of Death and I have here Englished them 1 Cur Mundus militat sub vana glori● Cujus prosperitas est transi●oria Tam citò labitur ejus potentia Quam v●sa figuli quae sunt fragilia Englished Why wars and strives the World for such vain glory Whose great prosperity is transitorie So soone and sooner doth her power decay Then Potters vessels or frail things of clay 2 Dic ubi Salomon olìm tàm nobilis Vel ubi Sampson dux invincibilis Vel pulcher Absalon vultu mirabilis Vel dulcis Jonathan multùm amabilis Englished Tell me where 's Solomon that King so wise Or where now that stout Champion Sampson lies Or where is Absalon so faire to th' sight Or where is Ionathan so lovely bright 3 Quo Caesar ab●it Celsus Imperio Vel Dives Epulo totus in prandio Dic ubi Tullius claus el●quio Vel Aristoteles summus ingenio Englished Where is that lofty royall Caesar gone Or where that purpled rich high fed Glutton Where 's Tully who in Eloquence did abound Or Aristotle for his wit renown'd 4 Tot clari Proceres tot rerum spatia Tot ora Praesulum tot Regna fortia Tot mundi Principes tanta potentia In ictu oculi clauduntur omnia Englished So many high born Nobles so grea● things So many Clergiemen so many Kings So many Princes so great Powers so high Are all shut up in th'twinckling of an eye 5 Quàm breve festum est haec mundi gloria Vt umbra hominis sunt ejus gaudia Quae semper subtrahunt aeterna praemia In ictu oculi clauduntur omnia Englished How short's the Feast of worldly glory found Our joys are but as shadows on the ground They doe substract from our reward on high And are shut up in th' twinkling of an eye All these are true and most true is that that they are all so soone concluded and shut up It is the saying of Saint Gregory All the length of the time of this present life is but a point being it is terminated with an end And hee confirmes it again saying Whatsoever hath a period is but little and short For that cannot seem to us to be long that goes on with the course of time till it be not which while it goes on by minutes is driven on by them to its end and may be decern'd from whence it may be h●ld but is driven thither where it cannot be held Saint Augustine most cleerly All the time I speak not of this present unto the end of the World but even of that from Adam to the end of the World is but as a little drop compared to Eternity All things have an Ex t but Eternity hath none none a● all In the World there is no h●ng whose end is not neere Banquets and Dances end all sports and laughters end but never Eternity In a moment Vessels and Ships where they were but even now becalm'd and safe at Anchor presently after are sunke and perish The swarming Theatres for pastimes doe suddenly fall In a trice all pleasures have their vanishings In a minute all things shall have a grave Why doe wee therefore follow and pursue such short vanities That cannot delight a noble spirit which is not durable all things are concluded in the twinkling of an eye Whatsoever had beginning shall have end Onely Ete●ni●y is void of a period § 5. The consideration of a dying Man JOb that M●ster of patience saith The waters wear the stones Iob ●4 19 ●0 and as the earth is washed away by the flouds so shalt thou destroy man Thou strengthenest him by little and little and so hee passeth away for ever Thou changest his beauty and sendest him away What a few Ceremonies doth God use when he sends men out of this World into another He doth but change his beauty and so hee is commanded to be gone elswhere Then certainly when Death cals the beauty is wholly chang'd and as Hippocrates in his book of Prenotations observes Man is alter'd as it were cleane contrary to what hee was his Nose is sharpe his Eyes are hollow and sunke into his Head his Temples are falne his Eares are drawne together the ends of them turn'd backwards the skin