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heaven_n earth_n king_n lord_n 17,822 5 4.1701 3 true
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A09387 Deaths knell: or, The sicke mans passing-bell summoning all sicke consciences to pr[e]pare themselues for the comming of the grea[t] day of doome, lest mercies gate be shut against them: fit for all those that desire to arriue at the heauenly Ierusalem. Whereunto are added prayers fit for housholders. The ninth edition. Written by W. Perkins. Perkins, William, 1558-1602. 1628 (1628) STC 19684; ESTC S119984 9,405 26

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prophaned and turned into a Den of Deuils His Paradise displanted and made a Wildernesse of Serpents His Spouse deflowred and become an Adultresse to his Enemies Durst we commit such outrage against our earthly Princes Would not the terrour of the Law and popular shame curbe vs from it and shall not the glorious Maiestie of Iehouah and the vnrebated kéennesse of his flaming double-edged Sword deterre vs from offering the like to his dearest Spouse Will he that keepes Register of euery singuler haire suffer himselfe to be wronged and ouer-passe it vnpunished Remember that it is a thing full of horrour to fall into the hands of God who is able to crush the proudest spirit and to make his face his Foot-stoole O wrastle not against the cares and cryes of thine owne Conscience but so keepe and conserue it as that at the last it may gladly goe with thee and be ioyfully prepared before the Throne of God to answer for thee There was a man had three friends two whereof hee loued entirely the third hee made no great reckoning of This man being conuented before the King vpon the accusation of some committed crime solemnly came vnto his best friend and intreated him to goe with him but hee would not yet went hee with him some part of his way Bethinking himselfe better he returned to his second friend and desired him to goe with him but he made him this flat answer that by reasō of his more important affaires he could not go with him yet gaue him a token of his remembrance Being driuen to this hard exigent hee trudged to his third friend of whom hee made slight account and hee at the first word went with him to the King and there stucke to him in all his dangers So fares it with a man being sent for by death comes to his Wife Children or Friends and intreats them to go along with him but they slip their necks 〈◊〉 of the C●l●ar and will not onely beare hi● company to his graue then he perswades 〈◊〉 goods and gold to goe along with him but 〈◊〉 cannot and so turnes him off with a 〈◊〉 simple sheete lapt about him then when all these shrinke backe and faile him at the last point his bosome-friend his Conscience will not forsake him but goe along and make an answer for him Labour then to keepe a good Conscience for in the vtmost of extremities That will neuer faile thee There was a countrey where the Commons vsed to elect their King and againe to banish him at their pleasure into a far Countrey almost naked But one more prouident than the rest so soone as he was chosen King he dayly sent before-hand some prouision into that far Countrey so that when the people banished him from them hee was hauing made a prouident preparation of wealth before most royally there entertained So must euery cantelous Christian prouide vpon Earth as he may be ioyfully receiued into Heauen Prayers for priuate Households at all times O Lord prepare our hearts to pray O Most mighty and eternall God who art the Creator Guider Gouernour and Preseruer of all things both in Heauen and Earth vouchsafe we humbly beseech thee to looke downe with the eye of pittie and compassion vpon vs miserable and wretched sinners who at this time are prostrate heere before thee to offer vp this our Sacrifice of Prayer and Thanks-giuing vnto thee And although we be vnworthy by reason of our manifold transgressions to present our selues before thee yet we humbly beseech thee for thy Sonne Christ Iesus our blessed Lord and Sauiours sake to accept of vs and to grant these our prayers and petitions which we doe make vnto thee O mercifull Lord and louing Father remember the infirmities of thy fraile seruants ●ssisting our weake soules with thy grace ●hat in all things we may loue honour and o●ey thy heauenly will and Maiesty waking ●nd walking in the paths of righteousnesse to ●he scope of perfect Holinesse contemning this witching world with all her foolish illusions for the true glorifying of thy Name through Christ Iesus our Lord Amen Another Prayer O Mercifull Lord and louing Father that of the incomprehensible riches of thy mercy toward the disobedient and lost children of Adam who seruing Satan after the blinde and vnbridled lusts of the vile flesh were carried away through sinne and ignorance to damnation hast reconciled vs to thy fauour through grace and adoption in Christ Iesus the righteous by faith and holy conuersation in whom we are deliuered from eternall death and destruction Haue mercy vpon vs yea Lord haue mercy vpon vs and for loue of thy sweet Sonne our Redeemer defend vs against the power of the Destroyer and with thy mighty hand lift vs vp out of the puddle and deathfull corruptions of this abominable world purifying our hearts with thy grace that wee being wholly inclined to thy heauenly desires may grow perfect in holinesse and abounding in the good works which thou hast prepared for thy Saints to walke in for the glorifying of thy Name we may grow an acceptable Temple for thy continuall dwelling in vs O Lord to the vnspeakable peace and comfort and to the euerlasting blisse and saluation of our soules through Christ our Sauiour Amen LOrd let not the darknesse of ignorance comprehend vs. Leade vs by the continuall light of thy grace to worke r●ghteousnesse Let vs not sleepe in sinne O God Quicken our weake soules against earthly sluggishnesse Giue vs the heauenly rest of thy vnspeakable peace O Lord And nourish vs with thy grace to saluation Lord comfort the needy the sicke the prisoned the tormented the distressed and helplesse with the presence of thy grace and haue mercy vpon them and vs. Pittifully heare our complaints O deare Father and grant our requests for thy sweet Sonnes sake our Sauiour FINIS
still keepe life in the Root for feare lest the whole become fuell for Hell fire for where the tree falleth there it lyeth Imagine that Time hath flied off the better part of thy naturall forces and left thee in the Lees of thy dying dayes and that thou art onword in thy voyage and not farre from the period of thy last harbour bee not therefore disfurnished of necessaries required in so perrillous a iourney O how men doe carefully beginne industriously prosecute and effectually end their labours in attaining to this transitory trash vpon earth but of that great affaire of winning Heauen or falling into hell there is had no respect Nay they doe not so much as remember that there is a Hell for sinners a Heauen for good liuers a dreadfull day of Iudgement or a strict reckoning to be made Death in its owne property is sufficiently fearefull but far more terrible in respect of the Iudgement whereto it summoneth If ●hou wert now laid on thy departing Pillow wearied with waiting pinched with paine drowned in dolour oppressed with the heauy load of thy fore-past committed sinnes wounded with the sting of a guilty crying conscience if thou feltst the force of death cracking thy heart-strings asunder ready to make the sad diuorce of thy soule and body if thou layest panting for shortnesse of breath sweating a fatall sweat and tyred with strugling against deadly pangs O how much then wouldst thou giue for a dayes contrition an houres repentance or a minutes amendment of life Then worlds would be worthlesse in comparison of a little time which now by whole moneths and yeeres thou lauishly mis-spendest How déeply would it wound thy soule when looking backe into thy life thou shouldst espy many faults cōmitted but none amended many good workes omitted but none recouered thy duty to God promised but not performed How disconsolable would thy case bee thy friends being fled thy senses affrighted thy minde amazed thy memory decayed thy thoughts agast and euery part disabled in its proper faculty sauing onely thy guilty conscience crying out against thée What wouldst thou doe when stripped and turned out of thy house of Clay into the World of Wormes the Den of dust and Cabine of corruption from thence to be conuented before a most seuere Iudge carrying in thy owne bosome thy Inditement ready written and a perfect Register of all thy mis-deedes when thou shouldest behold the glorious Maiestie of Iesus Christ clothed in white linnen through which his body shining like precious stones his eyes like burning Lampes his face like lightning his Armes and Legs like flaming Brasse and his Uoice as the shout of a multitude prepared to passe the sentence vpon thée when thou shouldest sée the great Iudge offended aboue thee hell open beneath thee the Furnace flaming the Deuils waiting the World burning thy conscience accusing and thy selfe standing as a forlorne wretch to receiue thy fearefull and irrecouerable sentence of condemnation Oh bethinke thy selfe how these visions would affright thee to behold the gnashing of téeth the horrour of the place the rigour of the paine the vglinesse of the company and the eternity of these punishments where the fire is vnquenchable the torments insupportable hopelesse helplesse easelesse and endlesse For our fire may be endured that intolerable ours for comfort that for torment ours if not fed extinguisheth that without féeding neuer goeth out ours giueth light that none ours consumes the matter and ends the paine that torments but neuer wasteth to make the paine perpetuall In Hell the lazie Loyterer must bee pricked with flaming Forkes the Glutton fed with hunger and thirst the Drunkard quaffe bowles of burning Brimstone the Couetous pine in penurie the lustfull embrace vgly Su●●es and the proud apparelled with shame and confusion and further to aggrauate their griefe and vp heape the measure of their vnmeasurable miserie they shall turne vp their affrighted eyes and behold the méeke triumphing the Godly reioycing then shall they perceiue base apparell to bee glorious gawdy attire ●●●amous the humble Cottage commended the guilded Palace despised simple obedience shew fairer then subtill policie a cleere conscience better accepted then profound and abstruce Philosophie zealous prayers farre worthier then fine tales good workes preferred before swéet words Is not he more then mad that will play away his time allotted to preuent these intolerable calamities Is it not a senselesse security to hug in thy bosome so many serpents as sinnes or to foster in thy soule so many malicious accusers as mortall faults wouldst thou not then thinke one life too little to repent for so many iniquities the least whereof is strong enough to hurle thee irrecouerably into these vnspeakable torments Betimes then deuote the residue of thy dayes to make an atonement with Iehouah the generall Iudge and so endeuour to set free thy soule from such confusion as by sinne thou art sure to fall into What canst thou purchase by being so long a customer to the World but false ware sutable to such a Marchants Shop where trafficke is toyle wealth woe gaine losse what interest canst thou recouer that can equall thy detriments in grace and goodnesse or what canst thou find in this vale of vanities that is comparable to the fauour of God Let not thy youthfull affections ouersway thee for time will tell thee they are but bubbling follies Let not temporall feare misleade thee for the force of reason will rather draw thee to feare God then man and to stand more in awe of perpetuall then temporall punishments Who would fasten his eternall affaires vpon the slipperinesse of vncertaine life or who but one of distempered wits would offer to put tricks vpon him who is the strict searcher out of the closest secrets with whom he may dissemble to his cost but to deceiue him t is impossible Wilt thou account it a craft to steale time from God to bestow it on his enemies who keepes tale of the least minute of thy life and at thy ending will call thee to question how thou hast employed euery moment Is it not preposterous policie to fight against God till our weapons bee blunted our forces enfeebled our strength made impotent our best spent and at last when wee are falne into fainting and fought our selues wel-nigh dead then so presume of his mercy whom wee haue to much offended so long opposed Would it not be held an exorbitant course that while the Ship is sound the Pylot well the Saylors strong the Gale fauourable and the Seas calme to lie carelesly idle at rode losing so seasonable weather and then when the Ship leakes the Pilot sicke the Mariners féeble the winds aloft the stormes boysterous and the waues outragious to lanch forth hoist sayle and set out for a farre Iourney Such are our euening-repenters who in the soundnesse of health and perfect vse of reason cannot abide to cut Cables and weigh those Anchors that with-hold them from GOD but when their