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heaven_n church_n earth_n triumphant_a 4,427 5 11.4398 5 true
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A57640 Balaams better wish delivered in a sermon / by William Rose. Rose, William, fl. 1647-1648. 1647 (1647) Wing R1940; ESTC R25527 34,950 42

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cannot die evill who liveth well Now as that is a good and wel-led life which is passed in holinesse and vertuous actions that an evill one which is led in wickednesse answerably the death is to be weighed from the forepassed actions of life so that if the life be led in a religious observance of God his Law in a holy obedience to his will the death cannot be bad for it is a translation to immortality But if otherwise it is necessary it must be evill for it transmits to eternall misery how comfortably could a good old Simeon pray that hymne and sing while he prayed Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace with what a religious confidence could old Hilarin farewell with his soule d Hier. de Hilar who had served his God sixty years the conscience of that faithfull service satisfied that his future being could not bee unhappy A heavenly life here on earth must needs give security of a happy life in heaven he that lives here hath no cause to feare to die hereafter e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Doroth. doctr 8. for indeed I call the holy the onely life the wicked man hath a being here but onely the righteous man lives We use to count our dayes and number our years according to the time we are on earth Deceive not thy self who ever thou art Compute thou hast only lived that day in which thou hast denyed thine own will in which thou hast resisted thy corrupt affections in the which thou hast not transgressed the rule of equity Compute thou hast onely lived that day which malice and wickednesse envy or pride hath not clouded which hath not been wasted in sin in which thou hast stood upon thy guard and hast not been foyled by fleshly temptations Compute thou hast only lived that day which pious meditation and holy practice hath enlightned not which the darknesse of sin hath turned into a night apply only unto thy life that day the benefit of which by a holy conversation hath redounded unto thy soul The rest is but idle pastime a phrase which humours most men well but such empty cyphers will prove nothing but reall woes at heavens account Shall we compute that a day of life in which men consume eternity and heape unto themselves punishments never to have an end such a life tends unto and ends in death and is in truth but a death live therefore while here thou art sow the seeds of holinesse that thou mayst reape happinesse Bud forth in the blossomes of a future life that thou mayst gather the fruit hereafter the present must answer to the future the worldly lusts subdue thy corrupt appetites let the spirit of God rule in thy heart set thy affections on things above let thy conversation be in heaven and hope well one day thou mayst come thither as Cicero said of Hercules he had never been inrolled among the gods in heaven if he had not laid out his way thither while he lived so if we walke not in that holy way while here we live we shall never be registred with the Saints in blisse f Beru There is no way unto the Kingdom without the first-fruits of the Kingdome neither may they hope to reign there as Kings who have not here ruled over their properlusts If yee looke God should take you as he did Enoch you must as he walke with God a holy ever ushers in a happy life It was a bold and sharpe reply of those Philosophers to Alexander an exemplary Prince for Armes and Arts who passing some territories where his conquering sword had made him master hearing of learned men as his manner was sent for them and propounded to them many questions they giving him good resolution as an argument of his royall satisfaction he would have them aske him what they pleased that hee might grant it to them they joyntly asked of him immortality the Prince began to smile before sayes he I thought you wise men but now I thinke you fools to aske of me immortality who my selfe am mortall While I consider the condition and manners of the most of men I may make the like demand give me immortality if nature prompts them or Religion hath better taught them that they are mortall I make my reply with them to Alexander why then doe you live evill letting loose the reynes of all kinde of sin and wickednesse as if you were immortall as if you had no thought of death or feare of judgement For if we weigh well the actions of the most can we judge any otherwise of them for where is he who lives according to the decorum of heaven whose practice answers to that holy faith he would be accounted to make profession of Philosophy tels us that naturally men desire the chiefest good eternalll happinesse But all this while Religion hath been preached in the world it cannot worke so much upon mens affections as to win them to the right means of gaining of it they would obtein the chiefe good yet they would not be good g Aug. Ser. 12. ae verb. Dom. Doest thou not see how thou oughtest to blush at thy selfe who wouldest have all things good yet thy selfe wouldest not be good thy house thou wouldest have filled with goods and shall it have thee an evill master What is it that thou wouldest have ill not a wife not a childe not a servant not a house not a garment not thy shoos and yet thou carest not though thy selfe be evill thinke better of thy life then of thy shoos All things about thee if they be elegant and faire please and wilt thou be vile and filthy in thy selfe if thy good things could speake unto thee which thou enjoyest would they not say unto thee as thou wouldest have us good so doe we desire thee to be and may they not secretly murmur to God against thee behold thou hast given so many good things to this man yet he himselfe is evill Cannot he who gave these good things and makes them good unto thee if thou displease him take away the comfortable enjoyment of them turne the blessing into a curse thy prosperity into thy destruction get therefore with them his good will by doing his good will that at last he may give thee better and more reall the true goods Conjoyne thy selfe to the fellowship of Saints be of the holy Church here below that thou maist be one of the Church triumphant in glory Labour according to the grace of God given unto thee to doe the will of God here on earth as they doe in heaven that so thou maist doe it more perfectly hereafter with them h Cum quibus fuerit vobis consortium devotionis erit communio dignitatis Leo Ser. 5. de Epip For with whom we have a consort devotion we shall have a community of dignity If thou wouldest have the righteous mans end live as doe the righteous let it be thy delight to