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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
B05844 Divine breathings: or, A pious soul thirsting after Christ T. S. (Thomas Sherman); Perin, Christopher. 1671 (1671) Wing S3388A; ESTC R184098 42,078 222

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others have the use of it onely the abuse of it he carries to judgement with him he hath made his friends as we say but he hath undone himself so that I may justly write this Motto upon every bagg This is the price of blood Shall I then treasure up the price of blood No Christ hath entrusted me as a Steward therefore what I have and need not Christ shall have in his members that need and have not So the transitory creatures when they shall slide away shall not carry me with them but when I shall pass away I shall carry them with me XII Meditat. GOod Lord what a miserable creature is a wicked man His very Manna turns to worms his very mercies make him miserable look upon him in his larger estate and you shall find either he hath not the benefit of enjoying it only the danger of keeping it and this adds not to his comfort or else if he doth enjoy it he doth so miserably abuse it that as one saith well he makes that which for use is but temporal for punishment to be eternal Alas the pleasures of it are quickly gone but the pain of it lyes in his bones for ever Lord therefore help me to improve thy mercies or else thy mercies will but improve my miseries XIV Meditat. WOuld'st thou know whether thy name be written in the Book of Life why then read what thou hast written in the Book of Conscience Thou needest not ask who shall ascend up into Heaven for to search the Records of Eternity thou mayest but descend down into thine own heart and their read what thou art and what thou shalt be Though Gods Book of Election and Reprobation be closed and kept above with God yet thy Book of Conscience that is open and kept below in thy very bosome and what thou writest here thou shalt be sure to read there If I write nothing in this Book but the black lines of sin I shall find nothing in Gods Book but the red lines of damnation But if I write Gods Word in the Book of Conscience I may be sure God hath written my Name in the Book of Life At the great Day of Judgement when all Books shall be opened there I shall either read the sweetest or the sharpest lines I will therefore so write here that I may not be ashamed to read hereafter XV. Meditat. BE not curious to search into the secrets of God pick not the Lock where he hath allowed no Key He that will be sifting every Cloud may be smitten with a Thunder-bolt and he that will be too familiar with Gods secrets may be over-whelmed in his judgements Adam would curiously increase his knowledge wherefore Adam shamefully lost his goodness the Bethshemites would needs pry into the Ark of God therefore the hand of God slew above fifty thousand of them Therefore hover not about this flame lest we scorch our wings for my part seeing God hath made me his Steward and not his Secretary I will carefully improve my self by what we have revealed and not curiously enquire into or after what he hath reserved XVI Meditat. NOthing is so sure as death and nothing so uncertain as the time I may be too old to live I can never be too young to dye I will therefore live every hour as if I were to dye the next XVII Meditat. AS the Tree falleth so it lyeth and where death strikes down there God layes out either for mercy or misery So that I may compare it to the Red Sea If I goe in an Israelite my landing shall be in glory and my rejoycing in triumph to see all mine enemies dead upon the Sea-shore but If I goe in an Aegyptian if I be on this side the Cloud on this side the Covenant and yet go in hardned among the Troops of Pharaoh Justice shall return in its full strength and an inundation of Judgement shall over-flow my soul for ever Or else I may compare it to the sleep of the ten Virgins of whom it is said they slumbred and slept we shall all fall into this sleep now if I lye down with the wise I shall goe in with the Bridegroom but if I sleep with the foolish without oyl in my lamp without grace in my soul I have closed the gates of mercy upon my soul for ever I see then this life is the time wherein I must go forth to meet the Lord this is the hour wherein I must do my work and that the day wherein I must be judged according to my works I know not how soon I may fall into this sleep Therefore Lord grant that I live every day in thy sight as I desire to appear the last day in thy presence XVIII Meditat. WHat is said of the Mariner in respect to his Ship that he alwayes sayles within four inches of death that may be said of the soul in relation to the body that it is alwayes in four inches of Eternity if the Ship splits then the Saylor sinks if our earthen vessels break the soul is gone plunged for ever into the bottomless Sea and bankless Ocean of Eternity This is the soul therefore that I desire to weep over that shall preposterously launch into the deep before he knows whether he shall sink or swim XIX Meditat. IT was a sad speech of a dying King Nondum caepi vivere jam cogor vivendi finem facere I must now dye before I begin to live It is the sad condition of many a dying man that their work is to do when their hour is come when the enemy is in the gate their weapons are to look for when death is at the door their graces are to look for when the Bridegroom is come their oyl is to buy the pursuer of blood is upon them and the City of refuge not so much as thought of by them In a word the seven years of plenty are wasted and no provision for the years of famine time is spent and nothing laid up for eternity I will therefore now finish every work I have to do that to dye might be the last work I have to finish XX. Meditat. THis impudent age of ours is grown so eminently uncivil that it is now a dayes counted one of the greatest shames to be ashamed of sin but for my part I had rather be accounted the Worlds fool than Gods enemy XXI Meditat. WOrldling thou deridest to see a Ceristian melting at the Word trembling at a sin I tell thee he is of a noble carriage he can triumph in death and in judgement it is not the King of fears that can appall him or Hell it self that can affright him but as a Conquerour over both he can leave the World with a smile O Death where is thy Sting O Hell where is thy victory That is his triumphant valediction and farewell But thou that gloriest so much because thou canst silence Conscience and out-face sin I tell thee thou art of a base
and high condition We are too weak for such a weight of glory therefore God will bear us up that we may bear up it and because our joyes cannot fully enter into us we shall fully enter into them Who would then set so large a Vessel as the Soul under a few drops of carnal pleasure and neglect the spring and spouts of everlasting joy Oh my soul What a glorious day is there coming When the Vessels of mercy shall be cast into the Ocean of mercy and be filled to the brim with mercy When the Sons of pleasure shall drink their fills at the torrents of pleasures and be set for ever at rest in the rivers of pleasure When the soul that is sick of love shall lye in the bosome of love and for ever take its fill of love When the Children of God shall have a full fruition of God and be for ever satisfied with the presence of God the joy of which glorious presence the fulness of which joy the sweetness of which fulness the eternity of which sweetness the heart of man in its largest thoughts cannot conceive Lord Let the thoughts of the joy and glory which thou hast prepared for me in the Heavens turn away my Soul from the pleasures and delights which are presented to me on Earth that so neglecting them I may be pressing to thee and be breathing forth with thine Oh! When shall I come and appear before God! POSTSCRIPT By A READER AND now being Refreshed with these fragrant leaves what shall I say Blessed Author Art thou yet alive Breath longer in this fruitful Air and extract more out of so Rich a Stock A Scribe so well Instructed cannot have spent all but must have new or old to bring out of his Treasure Do not hide but Improve thy Talent Be not only a good and wise but faithful Steward and yield us more of thy pleasant Fruits Thou hast begun well who what should hinder thee Thy present were there no succeeding Reward is spurr enough to future Work Religion is Recreation and Heaven is the way to Heaven Good men are there on this side the grave Thy Longing Soul was still peeping into it and sending thy Thoughts as Spies to view this promised Land But art thou at Rest from thy Labours this among others thy work follows thee and hath here Erected thy Lasting Monument Where ever thou wert Buried Obscurity shall not swallow thee Every good Heart that knew thee is thy Tomb and every Tongue writes thee an Epitaph Good men speak well of thee But above all God delights in thee Thy Thoughts were still fluttering upwards Richly fraught with Divine Breathings and ever Aspiring till unladen themselves in the Bosome of thy Beloved We are hugely Thankful that a few dropt from thee for the Comfort and Example of fainting sluggish Mortals below Thou liv'd Indeed while most live onely in Shew and hast changed thy Place but not thy Company Blush and be ashamed my Drowsie Soul at Sight or Thoughts of such Active Christians These are Redeeming Times whil'st thou art Mis-spending it These are working and thou loytering These are Conversing with God whil'st thou art following or trifling in the World These are Digging in Scripture Mines whil'st thou passes over them as Barren Empty Things Backward to Read slow to Hear most averse to ruminate on the Word David meditated day and night but thou scarce day or night Shall God be to thee hereafter All in All and here as nothing at All Have all thy Thoughts then and be afforded so few now Is he thy Portion and wilt thou live no more upon him Thy Treasure and thy Heart so seldome with him Is there so much in God and his Attributes in Christ and his Offices in the Spirit and his Workings in the Law and its Exactness in the Gospel and its Sweetness in Grace and its Excellency in the World and its Vanity in the Guilt of Sin in the Beauty of Holiness in the Preciousness of the Soul in the Paucity that shall be Saved in the Frailty of Life in the Certainty of Death in the Torments of Hell in the Happiness of Heaven in the Vnalterableness of Judgement And art thou barren in so fruitfull a Soyl Only a Cumberer of the Ground notwithstanding all the Cost bestowed upon thee Oh see thou be not only alive but a lively Christian Canst thou think of an eternal weight of Glory and rest contented with a little work Who ever served God for nought Hath he not passed his word to make thee amends for all thou canst do or suffer for his sake What Harm is there in a Heavenly Life What Dishonour in Adoring thy Maker What great Danger in being strictly Religious What Discomfort to live and dye in the sense of Gods favour Where is thy best friend What is thy chief Interest What wilt thou wish upon a dying bed Who doth or can do most for thee What into another World will accompany thee O live in the sense of Dreadful Happy Eternity and of the difference to stand with boldness before the Judge when the careless World shall stand trembling Let Heaven be alwayes in thy eye the World under thy feet Christ nearest thy heart the last Trump in thy ear the Work the Word of God in thy hand and his Praises continually in thy lips Listen what Yellings under thee Heark what Acaclmations over thee Look round what Snares are laid for thee Behold whose eye is upon thee what hast Death makes towards thee how near thy course is finishing See who stands holding thy sparkling Crown how the wicked would die like thee how the Devils for Envy grinn at thee how the Angels rejoyce over thee stand round thee and long to be carrying thee thy Father will be no longer without thee Yet a little while and God shall wipe away all Tears turn every Holy Desire into an Embracement every Prayer into a Song of Praise every Sigh into an Hallelujah every Tear into a Pearl every Stone of Reproach into a Diamond in thy glittering Crown Reflection into Possession Faith into Vision Hope into Fruition the Glass into the Face for we shall see him as he is to whom be glory for ever Amen FINIS