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A48948 A sermon preached at Lambeth, April 21, 1645, at the funerall of that learned and polemicall divine, Daniel Featley, Doctor in Divinity, late preacher there with a short relation of his life and death / by William Leo [sic] ... Loe, William, d. 1645. 1645 (1645) Wing L2817; ESTC R7483 22,538 42

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the State of the Venetians and the French Monarchy abundantly confute Yea the boyes in Schoole conclude That Numeri quà numerus nulla vis nulla efficacia But mine endeered and most Christian Auditory I will make bold with you and surely I cannot give you a more glorious title if I did study to give you ten thousand to signifie what gives me satisfaction in this point even the Prophet Daniels interpretation of Nebuchadnezzars vision in a Dreame The Vision was this An Image appeared to the King whose head was of fine gold his breasts and armes of silver his belly and thighes of brasse his legges of iron and his feet part of iron and part of clay This head of fine gold breasts and armes of silver belly and thighes of brasse legges of iron and the feet part of iron and part of clay were the four Monarchies of this world this glassie Sea like Crystall The head of fine gold was the Monarchy of the Assyrians and Babylonians The breasts and armes of silver were the Medes and Persians The belly and thighes of brasse signified the Monarchy of the Greekes and Macedonians And the legges of iron and the feet partly of iron and partly of clay pourtray unto us the last Monarchy of the Romanes and Germanes The three first Monarchies to wit of the Assyrians and Babylonians Medes and Persians Graecians and Macedonians are long agoe slipt away in this slippery and brittle world And the last of the Romanes and Germanes is now at a very low ebbe for it is come to a titular Emperour and that is all that remaines of the House of Austria and at this very day ready to return to their prime and pristine commencement to be Comites de Kyburgh onely the proud Spaniard ventures at all to uphold their tottering state and low condition Assuredly no expectation at all remaineth but when the stone hewed out of the rocke of our sinnes shall fall upon the remaining stumps and then downe falls all the Gold Silver Brasse and Iron upon the feet of clay and so then this Sea of Glasse in Chaos antiquum confundetur And verily my Prayer is and shall be this Come Lord Jesus come quickly and stretch out thine hand close up the two eyes of this dying world the Sun and the Moon that we may attain that heavenly Jerusalem where there 's no need of either but the glory of the Lamb of God the Lord Jesus shal be our exceeding glorious recompence of reward for ever The second Use of the Doctrine is mournfull sad and sable even of lamentation for the witlesse wights of this glassie brittle seas inhabitants Oh how many sots are there in this restlesse sea of the world who albeit they see and may discern this truth in a vision and revelation of Jesus yet think of nothing but seek here for their content and care for nothing but here to finde their Requiem for their soules Behold blessed in the Lord their extreame folly Some seek and conceive hope that they shall find it in the lust and brutish lustfulnesse of the flesh and what is that but the foame of this sea and what tends it to and ends in but fordid luxurie which brings us to rottennesse pox and penurie This foame dwels in drunkennesse vomit and spewing in riot and excesse which ends in filthy annihilation fit for the draft-house and nothing else Others seek their Requiem in this restlesse sea in the lust of the eyes which is riches and the pomp of the world which the Scripture cals Phantasie When King Agrippa and Bernice his wife came in to hear Paul the Greek speaks thus {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} What are these but Conchyliamaris the shels of this glassie sea which doe weary us in seeking them befoole us in the possession of them and vex us to the heart when we must part with them Others seek their Requiem in the pride of life and what are all the pleasures of this life but the billowes of this sea of glasse wherewith some are lifted up to vain glory that feather which children and fooles labour to catch in the streets and abundantly sweat for it and know not what to doe with it when they have it but set it flying again Others it lifteth up to Honours and yet his Lordship must say to rottennesse Thou art my father and mother and to the wormes not of the earth for they scorne to come nigh thee but to thine owne skinworms as Job speaks You are my brothers and sisters Some are lifted up on the billowes of their policie and learning whereas we know that the prudent and politique dye as well as the ignorant and foolish Others are lifted up upon the billowes of their beauty which with a gleame of the Sun will be burnt with three fits of a Spanish Calenture will be discoloured with old age furrowed with wrinkles and with three dayes of death made hideous Others pride themselves in their gay garments which every week grow out of fashion as the world it self doth Is it not a strange thing that a Malefactor should be proud of his halter that must hang him Surely our clothes may put us in mind of our evil doing for had we not faln from God by our evil doing we had had no use of raiment In a word what are all our pleasures but Lilia terrae like the Lilies of the field what gold and silver but Ilia terrae the garbage of the earth and what are honours and promotions but Ludibria venti feathers for the wind to play withall The third Use of this Doctrine is of Expostulation Have and doe we not too too often forget where we are verily we have and doe so still Ay me we little consider that we are poore passengers in this sea of glasse we are in this world and this world is a sea of glasse restlesse as a sea and brittle as glasse our Port and Haven is Heaven every one of us is his owne Pilot to guide his own vessel The Pilots place is to sit in the sterne of his ship Why there To see how she steeres That true Christian Passenger that sailes towards heaven will ever be minding his end sitting in the sterne and considers how his Ship steeres toward the Haven of Heaven Never do any saile in safety in this restlesse world but they that in their voyage have the Rudder in their hand and the Compasse and Sea-Card in their eye that is to say think and meditate of their end and steere toward heaven The fourth Use of this Doctrine is of holy Resolution What is that Surely to resolve as the holy Divine adviseth Not to love the world for if we doe the love of God is not in us Can any man love a traiterous and treacherous Judas which if you confide in him will betray you with a kisse And if the world smile upon you take heed lest the next thing you heare of