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A07666 A mappe of mans mortalitie Clearely manifesting the originall of death, with the nature, fruits, and effects thereof, both to the vnregenerate, and elect children of God. Diuided into three bookes; and published for the furtherance of the wise in practise, the humbling of the strong in conceit, and for the comfort and confirmation of weake Christians, against the combat of death, that they may wisely and seasonably be prepared against the same. Whereunto are annexed two consolatory sermons, for afflicted Christians, in their greatest conflicts. By Iohn Moore, minister of the word of God, at Shearsbie in Leicester-shire. Moore, John, d. 1619. 1617 (1617) STC 18057; ESTC S112851 257,806 358

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comfort in his trouble and still his promise refreshed his soule reason 1 The reason hereof is first in regard of God himselfe the Author thereof Who is the Father of mercies and God of all comfort which thus comforteth vs in all our tribulations which is our rod and our staffe our onely hope and refuge in troubles ready to be found When Abraham belieued God and obeyed his word in forsaking his Countrey and following him whether he would haue him hee needeth neither to care nor feare then God wil be his buckler his exceeding great reward If he walke before him and be vpright then God all-sufficient will make a supply of all his wants and will blesse those that blesse him and curse those that curse him If wee once dwell in the secret of the most high and abide in the shadow of the Almighty If wee make God our hope and fortresse to trust in him then will he deliuer vs from the snare of the Hunter and all noysome euils then need we not to feare the dangers by night or day his truth shall bee our shield and his Angels our guide Thus if we loue him will he deliuer vs he will exalt vs because we haue knowne his name If the Lord bee our light and saluation whom shall we feare If he be the strength of our life of whom shall wee be afraid For in the time of trouble hee shall hide vs in his Tabernacle in the secret place of his tent shall be hide vs and set vs vpon a rocke Paul therefore in the person of the faithfull challengeth heauen and earth with all their force and still resolueth That nothing is able to separate him from the loue of God Secondly Gods word is so effectuall to comfort and recouer reason 2 vs in our greatest extremities in respect of the nature qualitie and vertue thereof being the immortall seed to beget vs againe to a liuely hope Of his owne will begat he vs by the word of truth And so it is called the word of faith and life and that grace of God which bringeth saluation to all belieuers It is full of heauenly wisedome which all the aduersaries of Gods children are not able to resist In it are contained all the promises of God to comfort vs confirme our faith Notable perswasions to appease the troubled conscience with most excellent examples of all sorts both persons and causes to encourage vs euen a whole cloude of witnesses companions of our faith and patterns of our patience in their variety of crosses and afflictions Besides the most famous example of the author and finisher of our faith Christ Iesus himselfe to whose sufferings wee must bee conformed with whom if we suffer we shall raigne together with him Now hee for the ioy that was set before him endured the Crosse and despised the shame and now is set at the right hand of the throne of GOD. There shall wee learne to put on the whole armour of God that we may be able to stand against all the assaults of the Diuell and quench all the fiery darts of the wicked For without it we come naked and vnharnessed as Souldiers into the field to fight vse 1 Which doctrine must make vs very studious of Gods word and diligently to search the Scriptures as wee loue our safety and saluation that so we may fight the good fight of faith and lay hold of eternall life to buckle about vs this armour of proofe which is able not onely to defend vs but to foyle all our spirituall aduersaries and their forces whensoeuer they shall assaile vs. These weapons are not carnall but mighty through God to cast downe holdes and euery thing that is exalted against the knowledge of GOD and will enable vs to wrestle not onely against flesh and bloud but against principalities and powers against worldly Gouernours and Princes of darkenesse yea against all spirituall wickednesse in the highest places This made our Prophet to say I reioyce at thy word as one that findeth a great spoyle In Gods word will I reioyce in the Lords word will I comfort mee Let therefore the word of God dwell in vs plenteously and that in all wisedome to teach and admonish vs how to behaue our selues and hold out in our greatest afflictions Thus Christ got the conquest ouer Sathan and his temptations who hereby was forced to forsake him and so shall wee be sure by the shield of faith and word of the spirit which is the word of God to quench all their fiery darts The comfort of this Word made Peter to sleepe as soundly in the prison bound with two chaines as if he had beene at liberty in a Pallace And Paul and Sylas to sing as sweetly after their imprisonment and beating as in their greatest hearts ease and liberty And this made the Apostles to reioyce That they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for Christs name Secondly it confuteth and confoundeth all Epicures vse 2 and Atheists that scorne at God and all religion that make a mocke at his word and contemne his ordinance What profit is it say they to walke in his wayes They say to God Depart from vs we desire not the knowledge of the highest Who therefore become desperate in their tryals and afflictions being ready for any comfort they can finde to hang and murther themselues with Iudas Saul and Achitophell The delight hee had in Gods law kept him from perishing whence we thirdly obserue That Gods law and word cannot simply profit vs except doctrine 3 we take ioy and comfort in the same we must first taste and proue the sweetnes thereof we must before-hand finde out and feele the vertue thereof as of our foode and phisicke before it can strengthen our hearts heale cure and recouer vs from the maladies and miseries of our afflicted estate When wisedome entreth into thy heart and knowledge delighteth thy soule then and not before shall counsell preserue thee and vnderstanding shall keepe thee and deliuer thee from the euill way and from the man that speaketh froward things c. When we once delight in the law of the Lord and exercise our selues therein day and night then shall wee flourish like the planted trees by the riuers of water that are fruitfull in due season whose leaues shall neuer fade in any drought of danger Then I say whatsoeuer wee doe and take in hand shall thriue and prosper So that if wee will haue comfort in our afflictions wee must first finde comfort in the ministerie of the Word for there is true ioy and peace to be found there is life and saluation as before was said the sweet promises of God faith grace spirituall strength and euery good thing offered vnto vs. GODS Church with the holy ministerie thereof is CHRISTS Garden of pleasures wherein hee
are but dead and damned vse 2 This word considered in the properties power and wonderfull effects thereof sheweth vs also the difference betweene it and the lawes of mortall men their doctrines and traditions their commandements and inuentions This word alone is the rule of faith and the resoluer of the conscience All other humane deuises are but as straw and slubble yea drosse it selfe to the purest gold This hath beene tryed to the vtmost in the furnace and is still more glorious The turning of mens deuises are but as clay Should not a people enquire at their God To the law and the testimony for shame if they speake not according to his word it is because there is no light in them And Ieremie reproacheth those that say they are wise Ye haue cast away the word of the Lord and what wisedome is in you Therefore the Prophet that hath a dreame let him tell a dreame and he that hath my word let him speake my word faithfully What is the chaffe to the Wheate Is not my word euen like a fire saith the Lord and like a hammer that breaketh stones c. See more in the vses of the first doctrine The end of the first Sermon The second SERMON LAMENT 3.55.56.57 I called vpon thy name O Lord out of the low dungeon thou hast heard my voyce stop not thy eare from my sight and from my crie Thou drewest neare in the day that I called vpon thee Thou saidst feare not O Lord thou hast maintained the cause of my soule and hast redeemed my life THe Prophets meaning is that hee prayed heartily to God the ruler of the whole world from the place condition of greatest extremity when no meanes of deliuerance appeared resting still in the experience of Gods loue who heretofore had heard his petitions and now hopeth will not refuse them being earnest and hearty And though he seeme to be farre off will yet take notice of them in the manifestation of his loue in the meanes according to his gracious promise still encouraging his seruants in their greatest dangers Neither doubteth hee but God will defend both his life and good cause that procured the danger and will send deliuerance from the lands of all those that would destroy him and his Church The words containe first a description of the Prophets misery in times past Secondly the meanes hee vsed for his deliuerance Thirdly the fruits and effects thereof His misery is enlarged 1. In regard of the place being a low dungeon 2. In regard of his condition hee sighed and sorrowed he was full of feare and in danger of his life The meanes which he vsed was Prayer which is commended 1. For the faithfulnes 2. For the feruency thereof For the faithfulnes he called vpon God alone and grounded his prayer onely vpon his name and power For the feruency of his prayer he saith hee called cryed sighed and sorrowed 3. The fruits and effects of his prayer are noted by these circumstances 1. God heard him 2. Hee drew neare manifesting his care and prouidence towards him in the meanes 3. He freed him from feare maintained his cause and redeemed his life from the danger of death The summe is that as God heretofore had heard and deliuered him in and from such great dangers and distresse so he would still heare helpe and deliuer him and his afflicted Church in sauing him and redeeming him and it from their so great present dangers and afflictions Being in the low dungeon destitute of all worldly helpe hee called vpon the name of the Lord Teaching vs. That true faithfull prayer and inuocation of Gods name doctrine 1 is a most soueraigne means remedy for comfort and deliuerance in and from our greatest distresses when all other helpes doe faile vs this will serue our turne and is the onely refuge of all Gods children I looked vpon my right hand but there was none that would know me all refuge failed wee then cryed I to the Lord and sayd thou art my hope When the snares of death compassed me and the griefes of the graue caught me when I found trouble and sorrow then I called vpon the name of the Lord saying I beseech thee O Lord deliuer my soule reason 1 The reason hereof is that God hath commanded and ordained it so to be Call vpon me in the time of thy trouble so will I deliuer thee and thou shalt glorifie me Come to me saith Christ all that trauaile and are laden and I will ease you Hee shall call vpon mee and I will heare him I will be with him in trouble I will deliuer him and glorifie him reason 2 Secondly God is the iudge reuenger and defender of all his that suffer wrong he heareth all causes and controuersies defendeth the cause of the widdow and fatherles he sitteth in the throne and iudgeth right O Lord God the auenger exalt thy selfe clerely exalt thy selfe thou iudge of the world How long shall the wicked triumph and so he concludeth that God is his refuge and rocke of his hope The vse hereof is to make vs feruent and forward in prayer Is any man afflicted let him pray for the prayer of a vse 1 righteous man preuaileth much if it be feruent heauen and the eare of God is open to him When Moses held vp his hand Israell preuailed That the Israelites might see that his hand had a greater stroake in the fight then all theirs the successe must rise and fall with it Therefore we must wrestle with Iacob who by his strength had power with God and striue with Paul and stand in the gap with Moses Secondly it condemneth all such as contemne this ordinance vse 2 and doe not preferre this meanes before all other without which indeed all other actions and instruments are vnholy and vnprofitable as Chariots Horsemen Money Bread Physicke which most excellent ordinance of God is yet least and last thought vpon by many For if men or diuells can sted them they will not be beholden vnto God when it is too late then will they send for the Priest as their Prouerbe is yet so will infidells doe Yea Pharoh himselfe with Ahab and the greatest Athiests vse 3 Thirdly it maketh for the consolation of Gods children that their case cannot be desperate or themselues destitute of helpe If they can but call and cry vnto God if they can but sigh and groane though they can but chatter like a Swallow with Ezekiah make a noyse in their prayers with Dauid and but euen mooue their lips with Hannah it is sufficient if thy soule bee powred out with hers for God knoweth the meaning of the spirit which likewise helpeth our infirmities So that when Gods children are in any danger faith doth accompany them and mooueth them to prayer and in praying they are still more feruent they can neuer be
brought so lowe but they can cast their eyes to Heauen When they haue none other to deliuer them they can deliuer themselues by faithfull prayer So Ionah was heard out of the Whales belly Daniell out of the Lyons denne Moses at the red Sea Dauid out of the deepe all these wonderfully perplexed and ouerwhelmed with outward sorrowes yet heard and deliuered by faithfull prayer He onely called vpon Gods name in the dungeon True and faithfull prayer must be made and directed doctrine 2 to God alone Thou that hearest the prayer to thee shall all flesh come Whosoeuer calleth vpon the name of the Lord shall be saued For this is Gods commandement with his promise annexed that we call vpon him in our troubles and he will helpe vs. Aske and you shall haue saith Christ seeke and you shall finde knocke and it shall it be opened vnto you reason 1 It is a part of Gods worship and seruice Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him onely shalt thou serue In the dayes of Enosh sonne of Seth men began to call on the name of the Lord that is they began to be religious and professed the same by calling on Gods name Therefore God vpbraideth Iacob for not calling vpon him and saith Israell had wearyed him in not performing this seruice and going reason 2 to other Againe to call vpon creatures is without any warrant and whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne and it crosseth the reason 3 practise of all Gods Saints doubtlesse thou art our father though Abraham be ignorant of vs and Israell know vs not yet thou O Lord art our father and our redeemer thy name is for euer Which doctrine serueth to direct vs to God alone in our prayer and supplications being according to his word vse 1 and will a worship which is proper vnto him and which he requireth at our hands a most safe warrantable course still practised in Gods church agreeable to the forme of Christs prayer a most perfect patterne for vs to follow and Christ himselfe doth assure vs that whatsoeuer we aske the father in his name he will giue it vs if as S. Iohn saith we aske it according to his will vse 2 It likewise confuteth all pagans and papists which cry to their Baal from morning to euening roaring like beasts that pray to angels and Saints and other creatures that offer so many sacrifices of praier and praise to the Queene of heauen deuising I know not how many Letanies and Dirges to He-Saints and Shee-Saints with the multitude whereof they haue stuffed their Kalenders till their be no roome and to fill vp their accompt haue cannonized and inuested a number of Traitours to God and their gouernours in time past who more iustly may be placed in hell then haue the meanest roome in heauen yet these be their goodly intercessours that must haue their prayers I called vpon thy name As one acquainted with Gods power he dependeth alone vpon his prouidence and protection Obserue againe from hence doctrine 3 That true and effectuall prayer is and must be grounded vpon the assured knowledge of gods name and power Therefore he that will come to God saith the Apostle must beleeue that God is and that he is a rewarder of them that seeke him They that know thy name hauing experience of thy grace and might will put their trust in thee for thou Lord hast not failed them that seeke thee The name of the Lord is a strong tower the righteous runne vnto it and are exalted being beaten from their standings as poore souldiers in the field yet the name of the Lord is their sure defence and onely refuge Dauid assuring himselfe of Gods protection and resting vpon his name and power secureth himselfe against all assaults as one that is in the strongest castle and surest hold be dare come forth into the field and challenge all his foes when once he hath got the Lord to be his shield and buckler then Abraham neede not to feare wheresoeuer he goeth Now as calling vpon Gods name is a most speciall meanes to deliuer vs from our greatest dangers so How I pray you shall they call vpon him in whom they haue not beleeued and how shall they beleeue on him of whom they haue not heard Such aske and haue not because they aske amisse All Gods promises are intailed to those alone that doe beleeue such are within his couenant which he hath indented and sealed yea deliuered with his hand for the vndoubted assurance of their deliuerance Such may but aske and haue if they doe but knock the dore shall be opened Be it vnto thee saith Christ according to thy faith O woman great is thy faith If Gods children haue faith in their hearts it beareth downe all before it and breaketh through all manner of lets and hinderances in the world it ouercomes the world and vanquisheth the diuell and he that truly hath it may challenge the force of all the creatures if they should lay siege against him For there is nothing impossible vnto faith which onely is grounded vpon God and his word So that we must know our faith in God by our knowledge of God If we haue no word we haue no warrant our faith is but infamy This made Paul to suffer with chearefulnesse for the gospell and was not ashamed for I know whom I haue beleeued and I am perswaded he is able to keepe that which I haue committed to him against that day so saith Peter let them that suffer according to the will of God commit their soules to him in well doing as to a faithfull creatour So sure and well knowne is God to the faithfull that they put both bodies and soules life and goods with all things else to his disposing For faith is the ground of things hoped for and an assured euidence of things that are not seene it maketh things absent as though they were present and maketh things promised so certaine as if they were performed The consideration whereof must make vs very industrious vse 1 in prayer and painefulnesse for the obtaining of true faith and attayning to the sound knowledge of God which in a Christian are alwaies inseperable and so to vse the meanes whereby they may bee come by and increased which are the Word and the Sacraments experience of gods loue examples of good men and their conference delighting in Gods Sabaoths and holy assemblies c. vse 2 Secondly it confuteth all ignorant sencelesse and carelesse Christians that are ready to content themselues with any formall faithlesse prayer which indeed is but lip-labour and full of distrustfulnes whereby they prouoke the Lord against them rather then obtaine any blessing making him a weary of their seruice and to hide his face The very prayers and sacrifice of such vngodly ignorant and faithlesse persons are
one of the greatest to be tormented with the cares of this life which as Flyes by no deuice can be expelled They rush vpon them in the morning as soone as they awake they accompany them in the day they follow them in the night they forsake them not to bed they let them from their sleepe they afflict them in their rest they trouble them in their dreames and they are like to those fierce and mercilesse tyrants threatned to the wicked which shall giue them no rest neyther by day nor night For I haue taken away my peace from this kinde of people saith the Lord I haue taken away my mercy and compassion from them The very bruite beasts are fed and prouided for without their care but man is constrayned to sweate day and night and with sorrow to torment himselfe by sea and land to get a poore liuing Our dayes consume away like the Spiders webbe who laboureth night and day in spinning wasting euen her bowels and consuming her selfe to bring her web to an end and what is her worke but to make a fine and tender net to catch poore Flyes So miserable man doth toyle and trauell like a hireling both his body and minde to catch the Butter-flyes of this world euen needlesse toyes and trifles froath and vanities and many times in the end doth come the blustering winde of Death that carryeth away both web and workeman in a moment As our life is full of care so it is fraught and set with many snares God saith Dauid shall raine snares vpon sinners teaching vs how infinite snares are set in this world being as plentifull as the drops of raine For euery thing almost is a deadly snare vnto a carnall man Euery sight that he seeth euery word that he heareth euery thought that hee thinketh his youth his age his friends his foes his honour his disgrace his riches his pouertie his solitarinesse his societie his prosperitie his aduersitie his meate his drinke his apparell that hee weareth all are snares to draw him to destruction that is not watchfull in the Lord. Now to auoid these snares that wee be not caught there is no better refuge then that of the Birds who by the benefit of their wings mount vp into the ayre to flye aloft for the net is laid in vaine before the eyes of such as haue wings and can flye The Spyes of Iericho though many snares were laid for them yet they escaped them all for that they walked by hils and hid them in mountaines If wee lift vp our eyes to the hils with Dauid whence all our aide and assistance commeth to auoid the dangers of this life then likewise may wee say with him Our soule is deliuered as a bird from the snare of the Fowler If wee can truely say with S. Paul Our conuersation is in heauen then shall wee little feare all these deceits and dangers vpon earth for as the Fowler hath no hope to catch the birds except he can allure them to his pitch and to come downe to his lure so hath the Diuell no way to intangle vs but to say as hee did to Christ Throw thy selfe downe come to the baites which I haue laid eate and deuoure them tye thy affections to earthly things c. But King Dauid was past them all when he said to God Whom haue I in heauen but thee and there is none in earth which I desire before thee c. And so was Paul when hee accounted all things dung for though he liued in the flesh yet he walked not after the flesh I haue a whole army of traitors within mee saith Augustine who vnder colour of friendship are mine enemies and yet behold with them haue I liued from my youth vp them haue I pleased them haue I beleeued as the friends whom I loued as the Masters whom I obeyed the Lords whom I serued the Counsellors whom I trusted c. That the Adamant draweth Iron vnto it is a secret in Nature but for the World and Flesh to draw vs is a matter as naturall as for the water of a riuer to runne downe the channell and as for a Coach to runne downe a hill for being naturally giuen to the corruptions of the flesh wee neede no soliciting the onely sight of the thing we loue is sufficient to hale vs forward As the wanton harlot allures her louers the baite vpon the hooke the fishes the call of the Fowler the foolish Birds so is this World and Flesh with their baites and allurements They are like a violent streame that carryes away the highest and tallest trees not sufficiently rooted yea the best men are rightly resembled to those that liue among Colliers and Millers who hardly can shunne defiling and deforming of coale and meale The Diuell setteth before our eyes enticing pleasures that by the sight of them hee may supplant our chastitie hee tempteth our eares with the sweetnesse of Musicke that hee may weaken our Christian strength hee moueth our tongues by bitter words and by iniurious deeds prouoketh our hands to fight and slay hee offereth vnrighteous gaine to induce vs to fraud and pernicious profits to kindle couetousnesse in our soules hee promiseth temporall honours wherby to defeat vs of celestiall ioyes he sheweth falshood that hee may seduce vs from the truth hee practiseth cunning in time of peace and violence in persecution In this wicked world who can liue peaceably among so many enemies of peace where the mother is against the daughter and the daughter against the mother yea manifold are our foes in our owne families yea in our owne selues and soules Reason against the Will and Will against the Reason yea which is more euery man is two men the Flesh against the Spirit and the Spirit against the Flesh the Law of the members against the Law of the minde And this conflict is not for a time but so long as wee continue in this body of sinne Perfect peace here we cannot possibly haue seeing the Flesh which euer rebelleth is in this world as one that is planted in his owne Countrey Cast downe this enemy may be cast out hee cannot be vntill this mortall hath put on immortalitie yet we must endeuour that though it be inhabitant yet that it be not regnant The Flesh is strong yet Grace is stronger in Gods Children to subdue the rigour thereof the Flesh is as the elder Grace as the yonger but in this Gods Children haue a promise also that the elder shall obey the younger Wee may not thinke our selues safest when wee seeme to be freest from the buffettings of Sathan for bearing in our bodies a diuided Kingdome betweene the Flesh and the Spirit represented vnto vs in the wrestling of Rebeccaes twinnes in her wombe if wee haue peace with God wee shall haue warre with the Dragon and hauing forsaken Egypt yet in the way to our
holy life heauenly conuersation chearefull death and blessed daparture of the faithfull redeemed by Christ section 1 GOds children now being redeemed from Sinne and Death and truely vnited to Christ by his spirit whom they apprehend by an vnfained faith cannot chuse but shew forth the fruits of this their high calling to the glory of him that hath chosen them And being partakers of the diuine nature they flye from the corruptions of the world and giue all diligence to ioyne vertue with their faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperance and with temperance patience and with patience godlinesse and with godlinesse brotherly kindenesse and with brotherly kindenesse loue and these things being among them and abounding will keepe them from being idle and vnfruitfull The grace of God to them appeareth not in vaine but teacheth them to denie all vngodlinesse and worldly lusts to liue soberly righteously godly in this present world c. and being risen with Christ from the graue of corruption they euery day more and more seeke those things which are aboue setting their affections where Christ sitteth and not on the things that are on the earth for they are dead to the world and their true life is hid with God in Christ therefore they labour to be holy as he that hath called them to his kingdome and glory is holy They daily imploy themselues in reading and meditating of the word of God in prayer and religious exercises of holy deuotion loathing still this world and sinfull life daily growing to be spirituall and heauenly hauing their affections and zeale inflamed with the loue of God They say with Augustine O Lord I delight to heare of thee to talke of thee to write of thee to deuise of thee and in my heart to print whatsoeuer I learne of thee So must wee walke in these holy paths with all Gods Saints Godly deuotion and holy meditations saith one are section 2 as brine and pickle to keepe and preserue this corruptible flesh of ours from the euill scent that breedeth in our nature by originall sinne They are as faggots and firebrands that enkindle and inflame the loue of God in our hearts And as the fish out of the water die forthwith and the drops of raine distilling from the clouds vpon the ground doe quickly dry and drench vp and the fire without fuell is soone extinguished So our faith and loue c. without these sanctified meanes doe suddenly decrease They are as precious perfumes burnt in a polluted house and sick-mans chamber The sweet incense of prayer and the sauory smell of that odorifferous balme of a liuely faith and effectuall knowledge of God purge and clense the corruption of our liues and vncleane desires God hath chosen vs to be his glorious temple in whom hee dwelleth by his spirit therefore wee must haue our hearts purified by faith and clense our selues from all filthinesse and vncleanenesse both of bodies and soules and so adorne the place of his presence and habitation with all vertue and holinesse Hee that destroyeth the Temple of God him will God destroy for the Temple of God is holy which you are Saint Peter willeth vs to gird vp the loynes of our mindes teaching vs that as they which weare long garments when they come in the foule wayes doe take and gird them vp lest they should tag in the way So we whose mindes and affections doe traile as it were vpon the earth trudging through this foule and filthy world must heaue them vp towards heauen lest they should touch the damnable filth of sinne and wickednesse It is in vaine to boast of iustification without the vnfained sanctification of Gods spirit For as there can be no fire section 3 without warmth and light so neither can God by his spirit be in vs of with any of vs but he will also purifie vs from vice and corruption therefore wee must follow peace and holinesse without the which no man can see the Lord. Christ hath crucified our old man and put to death our vice and corruption and shall wee reuiue the same Shall we maintaine our Sauiours enemies and giue life againe to these deadly poysons of our soules If wee will be Burgesses of heauen we must be strangers to the earth Where is the house of our Father but in heauen and there dwelleth our eldest brother Iesus Christ and all our christian friends and kindred Heauen then is our true Country and on earth we are but trauellers section 4 When Moses had conuersed with God but fortie daies vpon the Mount-Oliue at his comming downe his face shined and glistered with heauenly glory So must we beholding in a mirror the glory of our Lord Iesus Christ in his word and Gospell as it were with open face and not with a vaile as did Moses be changed into the same image from glory to glory as by the spirit of the Lord. If I say but this short time while we liue we be conuersant in heauen by our most holy faith and fruits thereof in all holy affections thoughts words and meditations we shall in the end become heauenly and spirituall both in word and deede As wee see by experience when a country-man hath beene trayned vp sometime in the Court he forgetteth his clownish kinde of life and becommeth a Courtier Let vs therefore leaue the speaches habit fashions and manners of this wicked world wherein we liue and inure our selues with the customes and course of the court of Heauen Let all our thoughts words and communication testifie that in spirit wee are already there section 5 Christ Iesus whom all true Christians haue put on by baptisme as a garment is a most royall robe of grace holinesse and sanctification and shall we be so sloathfull to traile and trample him in the dyrt of filthinesse and sinne or putting him off to put on the vile and spotted garment of the flesh by following the lusts thereof When winter is once ouer the nearer that the Sunne draweth vnto vs the more doth the earth being warmed with the heate thereof fructifie and increase and the longer the daies are the more worke we may doe euen so the nearer the kingdome of heauen doth approach vnto vs by the comming of Iesus Christ the sonne of righteousnesse or the nearer we draw to death the more we should be inflamed in the loue of God and all good workes As the Sunne beames doe come to the earth and yet are in the region from whence they are sent so the mindes and soules of Gods children though conuersant in the earth are truely seated and setled with God in heauen from whence they came Let vaine-glorious worldlings who with the Camaelion section 6 liue by the ayre and therefore are alwaies found gaping and who haue with the Moone but a borrowed light in the world and no true light of
to their faces that all that they haue is but lent them and borrowed Let vs therefore vpon euery blow when the Lord shall strike vs be ready to receiue it and to yeeld vp our bands vnto him the condition whereof is that wee be ready to remoue when hee will haue vs knowing that Gods prouidence alwayes forceth vs to the best and as the most may make for the hastning of our soules to our euerlasting inheritance Let vs learne then not to reckon with our host and that wee hold our liues and all wee haue not in Fee-simple but as Tenants at will that so from day to day wee may resigne to God the soueraigntie of reuoking vs at his pleasure Thus when wee see our selues shut vp and finde that wee be entertayned in this life as Iourney-men for the present day not knowing what will become of vs to morrow wee shall better desire to take our rest in the bosome of Gods prouidence and to strike our sayles the lower when the Lord proclaymeth warre with our secure estate and learne to cut our prosperitie by the patterne of humilitie that when wee are well to looke for worse that so in abounding we may see our wants in health our sicknesse and still to stand in doubt that these outward things may be holden with one hand and lost with another section 5 A worldly mans body shall dye but once but his heart shall dye as often as he shall remember those things whereon hee sets his affections and loue for as much as death shall put the knife betweene him and all things hee loued The deeper roote the tooth hath in the iaw the greater paine there is in plucking it out So the more the heart is set vpon the things of this life the greater griefe will it be to depart from them all The Diuell had spoyled that holy man Iob of all manner of things saue onely of his life and it seemed to him that all the rest were of small account in comparison of the losse thereof So that the thing that naturally is loued is let goe lost with greatest griefe of heart Earthly things in themselues without Gods blessing in the vse are like alluring strumpets catching many in their snares of beauty to lust after them yet depriuing such as inioy them of all vertue and happinesse They are like vnto sweet wines of artificiall Nectar alluring a man to excessiue drinking yet withall taking man from himselfe in making him senslesse They trouble the minde and replenish the heart with passions When wicked men will vse their riches they pollute themselues with pleasures and pride when they keepe them care consumeth them and eateth out their hearts when they labour to get them they grow more wretched and miserable They are like to wilde beasts which a man can hardly take and when he hath taken them must take great heede they doe no hurt Vaine confidence in wealth becomes not onely a poyson to Humilitie Modestie and Faith but quite and cleane transformes them into Pride Arrogancie and Infidelitie Such goods are as plenty of Sugar fruit in the liberty of children as pleasant wine to a drunkard and as a sword in a mad naked mans hand more ready to hurt them then to doe them good All immoderations are enemies to health so said skilfull Hipocrates Hee that desires wants as much as hee that hath nothing The drunken man is as thirstie as the sweating traueller It is true of riches and all outward blessings that we say of Fire and Water They are good seruants but ill masters Make them therefore thy slaues and they shall be good in vse good to thy selfe and good to others by thee But if they be thy masters thou hast condemned thy selfe to thy owne Gally-slaues Now if a seruant rule he proues a Tyrant If thou seruest God for goods and greedinesse of worldly section 6 gaine as Iudas did his Master thou maist soone proue a looser of a happy estate and strangle thy Soule Wherefore let vs vse our riches as our rayment such as are fit are better then those that are too long For couetousnesse groweth with riches as the Iuy with the Oake Our hutches may be filled but not our hearts and though wee here loose all our goods yet are wee scarce depriued of a farthing And in another life we haue not onely Kingdomes and Empires but God himselfe and euerlasting goods in comparison whereof all the pomp mirth cheare honour dignities and preferments of the world are not to be esteemed as casting Compters towards the finest Coyne and vilest drosse to the purest plates of gold and precious stone Wee may lend our selues to the things of the world but not giue our selues vnto them Neyther is any thing possessed as it ought except wee be ready at all times to loose it Wee must remember alwayes that they are transitory things which may be lost and forgone when time requireth These earthly things are good but woe be to thee if for the loue of the creature thou forsakest thy creator If we loue not any thing that seemeth not good vnto vs then let vs be ashamed so to sticke to them and not to the loue of him that hath made them good O Lord saith Augustine hee loueth thee too little that loueth any thing with thee and loueth it not for thee God therefore is to be loued aboue all things and all things for him He requires all thy loue that made thee wholy and maruell not that hee will haue thy whole heart being sufficient to fill thy heart O Lord thou hast made all things to serue man that man alone might serue thee and that man might be wholy thine thou hast made all the creatures his God hath created all outward things for the body and section 7 the body for the soule and both body and soule for himselfe that man might onely obay him and onely loue him enioying God for his onely solace and all inferiour things for his seruice That was neuer throughly good that maybe lost My true riches will not leese mee though I forgoe all to my skinne For if hee be rich that hath some thing how rich is hee that is the maker and owner of all things whom I enioy So long as God fauours mee I shall haue liberty in prison home in banishment honour in contempt in losse wealth health in infirmitie life in death heauen in hell and in all these happinesse and rest If the fire commonly flame according to the quantitie of fuell heaped vpon the same great then is the fire of Gods loue to the faithfull who in stead of fire to inflame it hath as many benefits for man as hee hath Creatures All things loue him that loueth God for to those that loue God all things worke for their good Good men therefore so vse the world and the things thereof that they may enioy God And the wicked so
will set vs all at rest in his due time section 12 Wee must therefore neyther hate this life for the toyles therein for that is sloath and cowardlinesse nor loue it for the delights for that is folly and vanitie but serue our selues of it to serue God in it who afterward shall place vs in ioyfull rest and replenish vs with pleasures which shall neuer more perish Againe to flye it is childish and in flying from it wee meete it Much lesse ought wee to seeke it for that is temer●tie nor euery one that would dye can dye It is enough that constantly wee waite for deaths comming that shee neuer finde vs vnprouided Wee must not fall sodainely vpon death but march valiantly towards the same by little and little wee must not rashly or vnaduisedly leaue our life like one that takes his runne to fetch the better rise CHAP. VII Consolations against the agony of Death and horrour of the Graue and Corruption THE very remembrance of Death is bitter section 1 enough to frayle and mortall man but the agonies and bickerings wee haue in the flesh are farre beyond the conceit of men For such is the weaknesse of our nature and the guiltinesse of sinne making warre in our flesh that without especiall aide and helpe from heauen wee shall be swallowed vp of griefe And what man is hee so strong in Faith that can contayne himselfe in this pittifull tryall of deaths combat It made Christ himselfe to sweat and cry and pray before he got the victory Although I confesse the burden of our sinnes and Gods wrath were importable to any but himselfe yet was hee fitted with grace and power without measure and for all that felt this horrour and therefore the best and strongest regenerate men cannot goe free but are made conformable to the sufferings of Christ in a measure Besides the corruption of sinne remayning in vs which finally must be purged by the bitter pill of death Ezechiah after the sentence of death pronounced section 2 against him by the Prophet complayneth how his dayes were cut off that he should goe to the gates of the graue to the pit of corruption where hee could not see the Lord any more in the Land of the liuing nor the inhabitants of the world to confesse and prayse God as the liuing doe and hope for his truth He cryes out that his habitation is remoued like a Shepheards Tent and his life cut off as the weauers webbe that God brake all his bones like a Lyon and so made an end of him This made him in his prayer to chatter like a Swallow and mourne like a Doue Hee saith hee was oppressed and walked to his graue in the bitternesse of his soule c. What should I speake of many other of the faithfull which cry out aliue as men free among the dead drawing neere to the graue and going downe to the pit who are remembred no more but cut off by Gods hand lying in a place of darknesse and in the deepe feeling Gods wrath lying vpon them being vexed with all his waues and stormes How doe they stretch out their hands with lamentable complaints saying Shall thy louing kindnesse be declared in the graue or thy faithfulnesse in destruction Shall thy wondrous workes be knowne in the darke and thy righteousnesse in the land of obliuion I omit to speake of Iob of Ionah and many of Gods children who haue rufully complained in this case section 3 If the parting company of one way-faring man with another when they haue trauelled but for a time together doe cause such sorrow and solitarinesse what a griefe then will it be to thinke that two such friends as the Soule and Body haue beene shall be separated and singled one from another which so long haue trauelled together euen from the mothers vvombe vntill the instant moment of death Betweene whom there hath beene so many knots and bands of mutuall loue O Death how imperious art thou to carnall mindes aggrauating their other miseries not onely by expectation of future payne but by the remembrance of wonted ioyes not suffering them to see ought but what may torment them Great no doubt are the horrours of death when the sicke man shall see the world his friends and all earthly things forsaking him but farre greater is the horrour of iudgement to consider hee is now going to answere for all that hee hath done in his body whether it be good or ill If the countenance of an earthly Iudge be fearefull to a guilty prisoner how much more shall the beholding of an eternall Iudge amaze all such who finde a thousand witnesses in themselues to giue in euidence against them But as hee that is to passe ouer some great and deepe Riuer vpon a narrow plancke and straite passage must not looke downeward to the streame of the water but for preuenting of feare must set his foote sure and cast his eyes to the bancke on the further side So must hee that draweth neare to death as it were looke ouer the waues thereof and fixe the eye of Faith vpon eternall life If in the time of temptation wee looke to sayle a right course neyther sincking nor slipping into the gulfe of desperation neyther battering our Barke against the rocke of presumption let vs in a contrite spirit cry to the Lord our God and say Heale my soule for I haue sinned against thee for thou healest those that are broken in heart and bindest vp their soares I see and that with ioy how my flesh must decay for looke what freshnesse soeuer was in it at the first diminisheth day by day And I neede not goe farre to seeke for death for I feele not so small an infirmitie in my body but the same is vnto mee a messenger of dissolution Yet for all this I shall see my God and when I am couered in the belly of the graue I am assured hee will reach mee his hand to raise me vp againe to immortalitie and life so that this base cottage and shade of leaues being brought to dust shall yet in the end be conuayed vnto my incorruptible house in heauen That dissolution is well bestowed that parts the soule section 4 from the body to vnite them both to God All our life here is but a vitall death How gainefull therefore is that death that determines this false and dying life and beginnes a true and happy life Hee that hath Stephens eyes to looke into heauen cannot but haue the tongue of the Saints to say Come quickly Lord Iesus Such a man seeing the glory of the end cannot but contemne the hardnesse of the way but who so wants these eyes though hee say and sweares hee feares not death beleeue him not But is thy soule sorrowfull vnto death Remember Christs prayer in his Agonie Father not my will but thine be fulfilled Teaching vs what to doe in the time of distresse what wee should thinke
citie hauing a foundation whose builder and maker is God And all the godly groane in these their earthly tabernacles being laden with corruption that this mortalitie may be swallowed vp of life for they know that corrupt flesh blood cannot enter into heauen Gods children I say are grieued not because they beare about their bodies for it is a griefe for them to lay them downe but they sigh to be clensed from their sinnes and corruption of their bodies which make them so wretched We ought not therefore to long so much for this present life which indeede is nothing else but an image of death but rather loath it to be vnloaden of our sinnes And as for Death it appertaineth to all men as we haue section 3 heard for neither rich nor poore old nor young prince nor people can escape it It respecteth no mans person no sexe no age no condition whatsoeuer No power no wealth no learning no wisedome art or skill can auoide it There is no salue to heale this soare no Physicke to be found for this sicknesse it is the way of all the world and the house appointed for all the liuing It is an Axe that heweth downe not onely the low shrubs and small Osiers but the great Elmes and huge Oakes yea all the high and tall Cedars of Libanon The daies of man are but as the winde and weauers shittle as grasse and flowers which in the morning are fresh and greene but anone towards the euening dried vp and withered We bring our yeares to an end as it were a tale that is told Our life is like a stage on which men play their parts and passe away Man is like a thing of nought his daies are like a shadow God bids Esay to cry All flesh is grasse and that all the grace and goodlinesse thereof is but as a flower of the field O that the Lord would open all our eyes that in this glasse wee might behold our estate What are we all but grasse and shall we wither like hay Alas wee cannot so perswade our selues for if we could it would plucke downe our pride and lay our lofty lookes it would then reforme our disguised ruffes and make our monstrous attire more modest it would mitigate our madnesse and make vs humble minded we would then throw downe our selues with Abraham and say to God we are but dust And to the end that our resolution to death may be more chearefull and this rough way as it seemeth to the section 4 flesh may be made more plaine Let vs comfort our selues with these meditations let vs say vnto our soule why art thou so sad why art thou so vnquieted within vs Put thy trust in God which is the helpe of our countenance and our God For why should a Christian man so feare the violence of Death whose force is broken Can Death depriue him of Christ which is all his comfort ioy and life No but Death shall deliuer him from this mortall body full of sinne and corruption which beareth and beateth downe the soule Faine would the flesh make strange of that which the spirit doth imbrace Oh saith a holy Martyr how loath is this loytering sluggard to passe forth and goe forward in Gods path to heauen So that were it not through the force of Faith plucking it forward by the bridle of Gods sweet promises and of Hope the anchor of saluation pricking still behinde great aduenture there were of fainting by the way section 5 Who would be sorry to forsake this life which cannot but be most certain of eternall life Who loueth the shadow better then the substance who can so loue this life but he that regardeth not the life to come who can desire the drosse of this world but such as are ignorant of the true treasure euerlasting ioyes in heauen I meane who is affraide to die but such as haue no hope to liue eternally A greater assurance next saith in Christ of our election cannot be found then not to stand in feare of Death which like a Tayler putteth off our ouer-worne rags to apparell vs with royall robes of immortalitie incorruption glory If the wals of thy house shake with age if the roofe thereof totter if the whole edifice not being able any longer to stand presage a meere downefall and ruine to approach wouldst thou not make more then ordinary hast to remoue and be gon If thou wert sayling in the maine sea and that a furious storme swelling the waues thereof with the blustering windes should threaten thy shipwracke wouldest thou not endeuour to recouer some cricke or hauen Behold this world how it shaketh and is ready to fall manifesting very shortly her vtter ruine Wherefore thinkest thou not on God why reioycest thou not at thy condition being ready to depart this world seeing thy selfe taken betimes out of those shipwracks warranted frō the blowes that threaten al such as suruiue thee Wherefore to the end that the former perswasions may section 6 better preuaile pierce the deeper let vs further consider for the same abridgement of all that hath been hitherto spoken what this life is which wee so loue what death is which we now so feare and what is prepared for vs after death which we so little regard First therefore concerning this present life we know and haue heard already that it is full of miserie vanitie vexation woe being a plaine exile from God For if heauen be our country what is this earth but a place of banishment If the departing out of this world be an entrance into life what is this world but a graue wherein we are buried what is it else but to be drowned in death If to be deliuered out of the body is to be set at liberty what is this body else but a prison a Iayle and a dungeon If to enioy the sweet fellowship of God be the highest felicitie why then to be kept from it is it not the extreamest misery for certainly til we be escaped out of this life we wander goe astray from the Lord our God If we consider that this vnstedfast faulty corruptible frayle withering rotten tabernacle of our body is shall therefore be dissolued by death that it may afterward be restored againe vnto a stedfast perfect incorruptible and heauenly glory shall not faith compel vs feruētly to desire that which nature feareth If we consider that by death we are called out of banishment to inhabit our country yea our heauenly country shall we not reioyce and be glad therefore Alas this our wretched life is a vapour a smoake a shadow a warfare a wildernesse and a vale of wretchednesse section 7 wherein wee are compassed on euery side with most fierce fearefull foes And should we desire to dwell here should we lust and long to liue in this loathsome and laborious life should wee wish to tarry in this miserable wretchednesse should
resurrection And shall we so lament our death which is so gainefull The very Pagans in some places as it is recorded did celebrate the day of their death with mirth melodie and minstrelcie and shall wee that are Christians be so dismaid and cast downe should such a friend as it is be vnwelcome shall the foulenesse of his face feare vs from his good conditions shall the hardnesse of the huske hinder vs from the sweetnesse of the kirnell shall the roughnesse of the tide feare vs from the banke and shoare and so hazard our drowning rather then the desire of our home driue vs to the land with all expedition shall the hardnesse of the saddle set vs on foote to slacken our voyage rather then wee will leape vp and endure the same a little and so come swiftly to the place wee doe desire section 18 Lastly touching the heauenly life prepared for the faithfull after death if I should goe about to expresse it the more I should so doe the further I should be from it so farre exceeding the sight thought or conceit of man or any creature Behold saith Saint Iohn the tabernacle of God is with men and he will dwell with them and they shall be his people and he their God and he shall wipe away all teares from their eyes and there shall be no more death nor sorrow nor crying nor paine for the former things are past O most blessed tabernacle O most safe refuge O region most resplendant and glorious All thy inhabitants weare crownes of glory sit in thrones of maiestie liue in life eternall and possesse a paradise of infinite pleasures Which as Saint Bernard saith are so many that they cannot be numbred of such eternitie that they are endlesse so precious as they cannot be estimated and so great as they cannot be measured This Citie is made of pure gold the very wals of precious stones hauing twelue foundations made of twelue distinct precious stones hauing twelue gates set with pearles the very streetes paued with gold interlaied with precious stones The light of this citie is Christ in his shining brightnesse sitting in the midst thereof from whose seate proceedeth the water of life and there growes the tree of life bearing continuall fruit for the continuall refection of the Saints There is no night in that citie nor any defiled thing but they which are within shall raigne for euer in vnspeakeable glory who shine as the Sunne in the Kingdome of their Father If one Sunne can lighten and fill the whole world with section 19 his brightnes if the Maiestie glory of his beames be such and so great that some Ethnicks haue worshipt him for a God and haue called him the father of gladnes the eye of the world and the fountaine of light What shall so many glorified bodies of the blessed appeare that shall be as so many Sunnes so many Lampes and so many shining lights in heauen Then shall we be blessed indeede when we shall be like vnto God which by nature is blessed and we shall be like vnto God when we shall see him as hee is For this onely sight of God is our whole happinesse O what a ioy shall it be when at one view we shall behold the most high and hidden misterie of the inseparable trinitie and of the loue of God therein For what shall not he see who seeth him that seeth all things Then shall mans minde haue perpetuall rest and peace neither shall it desire any further vnderstanding when hee hath all before his eyes that may be vnderstood Then shall mans will be quiet when he enioyeth that felicitie wherein all other good things as in the fountaine of all happinesse are contained Then shall Faith haue her perfect worke Hope shall inioy that which she long desired but Charitie shall indure for euer Then shall be sung continuall praises vnto the Lambe the song although it be alwaies sung yet it shall be euer new The ioy mirth melodie pleasure power wealth riches honour beautie fellowship dainties odors glory wisedome knowledge treasures securities peace quietnesse and eternall felicitie is beyond all vnderstanding and comprehension of man which the faithfull shall haue and inioy world without end with God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost with Angels and Arkangels Patriarks and Prophets with the Apostles and Euangelists with the Martyrs and Confessors and with the Saints of God in the pallace of the Lord in heauen the kingdome of God the glory of the Father Where there shall be an euerlasting Saboath which no euening shall end section 20 There we shall rest and we shall see we shall see and we shall loue wee shall loue and wee shall praise Behold saith Augustine that which is in the end is without end for what other end is there ordained for the godly but to attaine to that kingdome which hath no end Wee call Paradise our Country and the Patriarks our Fathers and the Saints our brethren and friends Why runne we not then with all speede to enioy our Country and to salute our Parents A great number of our friends and kinsfolkes brethren and children already assured of their immortalitie and desirous of our good doe there attend wishing and expecting our comming What ioy will it be both to them and vs there to renew our acquaintance and meete one another What pleasures are there amongst the inhabitants of heauen which now feare death no more and are sure to liue for euer Woe to the blindnesse of our eyes that see not this woe to the hardnesse of our hearts that feele not this woe to the deafenesse of our eares that heare not this in such wise as we should do where through we might be so farre from fearing death that rather wee should wish it with old Simeon Now let thy seruant depart in peace and with Dauid when shall I come and appeare before thee section 21 If true knowledge and faith possest our hearts as they should feare and doubtfulnesse would vanish quite away For assurance of heauenly things maketh vs willing to part with earthly Hee cannot contemne this life that knoweth not the other If wee would dispise this world we must thinke of heauen If wee will make death easie we must thinke of the glorious life that followeth it And if we can endure paine for health much more should wee abide a few pangs for glory How foolish are wee to feare a vanquished enemie Christ hath triumphed ouer death it bleedeth as it were and gaspeth vnder vs and yet doe we tremble It is enough that Christ died neither would he haue died but that we might die with safetie and pleasure How truely may wee say of this our Dauid thou art worth ten thousand of vs yea worth a world of Angels yet he died and died for vs. Who would therefore liue that knowes his Sauiour died Who can be a Christian and would not
anatomy of his and the best mans frailty in their afflictions reason 1 Thus God doth manifest his own strength by our weaknesse and his vnchangeable condition by our variable disposition who the best of vs are notable of our selues to stand vpright in the day of our trials without his helping hand power and speciall prouidence vnder-prop vs. reason 2 This is Gods priuiledge and soueraignty who onely hath this name and nature I am to shew his being of himselfe and vnchangeable essence and to let vs know that all his Creatures haue not onely their being but their standing and vpholding by him that onely is and so constantly abideth without fainting or failing euermore Againe by this meanes God doth beat downe our pride reason 3 that so blindeth vs in our owne conceipts to thinke so highly of our strength and estate God therefore will proue vs by afflictions that we may know our selues our faith our strength and chiefest of our man-hoode that so finding out our weaknesse wee may onely and wholly relye vpon his strength and might reason 4 Which lesson may teach vs the excellent vse and profit of afflictions sent vnto vs as instructions to learne vs to know our selues in our best strength and state to beat down our pride and to teach vs true humility to trust onely in the Lord and to distrust our selues and all other meanes whatsoeuer they be without him Also it maketh much for our consolation in our greatest vse 2 distresse when all outward meanes and helpes shall faile and forsake vs that yet we raise and rouze vp our selues through the affiance wee haue in GOD and the strength of his might knowing the supply of his grace to be sufficient for vs at all assayes who still manifesteth himselfe to be the strongest in our greatest weaknesse and that when there is no other hand or helpe to relieue vs yet he himselfe with his own right arme is able to saue vs and to prouide such meanes as shall bee sufficient to comfort vs in our greatest assaults Thus much of Dauids confession Now followeth his resolution I will neuer forget thy precepts since they kept me from perishing in my afflictions and ministred such ioy and comfort vnto mee not onely refreshed but reuiued and quickened me being as good at dead in my owne apprehension For this cause I resolue neuer to forget so comfortable and powerfull meanes of my recouery From whence we may learne That it is the dutie of euery Christian still to remember doctrine 5 the meanes of their comfort and deliuerance from their former troubles and afflictions so to manifest their loue and care for the vse and respect of Gods ordinances not onely for the time past but also for the dayes to come As he that hath beene cured of an olde disease and healed of a wound will hardly forget the receipt and plastour Dauid hauing formerly found that the comfort of Gods word had kept him from perishing had quickened and reuiued him being as good as dead in his owne iudgement and sense resolueth neuer againe to forget Gods precepts So he telleth vs how he was disquieted and found no rest how his very bones consumed how he roared all the day vntill he confessed his sinne which was the cause thereof Then I acknowledged my sinne neither hid I my iniquity for I thought I will confesse against my selfe my wickednesse vnto the Lord and thou forgauest the punishment of my sinne Therefore shall euery one that is godly in like case make his prayer vnto thee in a time when thou mayest bee found for then is God neerest vnto his children when their troubles are the greatest surely in the flouds of great waters they shall not come neere him So going into the field against Goliah he remembreth how God deliuered him from the Lyon and the Beare and so still resolueth to hope for helpe and deliuerance at gods hand and he prayeth to God to haue mercy vpon him and to harken vnto his prayer who heretofore had heard him in his distresse and set him at liberty reason 1 Now the reason why we must remember the meanes of our deliuerance together with our forme distressed estate is because we are subiect againe to fall therein and may still haue need of the old receipt as those that fall againe into the same disease as they haue their relapses so they must haue the same remedies He that is well may and will be sick againe he that is healed may be wounded againe or at least haue his sore to ranckle and breake out againe therfore the prouident patients record their receipts and resolue to vse them as occasion serueth reason 2 Secondly no new prescription can proue so safe and sure as those that are experienced such for the most part are voyde of danger and infallible And as he is worthily accounted the best Physition that recouereth most patients and he the skilfullest Surgeon that healeth most dangerous wounds So that phisicke that potion that plaister by which sicke and sore men haue been cured healed and restored is most worthy to be registred and recorded Such receipts I say are most pretious that haue been proued and will not likely faile reason 3 Thirdly that we should remember these comfortable meanes and remedies to ease vs in our trials and to keepe vs from despaire they are written registred to our hands in Gods booke as also to confirme our knowledge practise and obedience in and for the holy vse thereof they are commended vnto vs by Gods word they are vrged and applyed for that purpose in the holy ministery thereof So is the patience of holy Iob by Saint Iames You haue heard saith he of his patience and what end the Lord made And whatsoeuer things are written aforetime are written for our learning that wee through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might haue hope And as the same infirmities sicknes and maladies both of body and soule doe still remaine to mortall men So the same wholesome receipts meanes and medicines with the same Physitians hand and manner of recouery are still commended in Gods word to all the faithfull for their vse Which serueth for the instruction of euery Christian to vse 1 be a studious obseruer of Gods word and diligently to search out the most comfortable and commodious vse of the Scriptures both for their knowledge and obedience to cast the eyes of their minde and vnderstanding vpon the best examples of Gods Saints and Children that there are propounded for their vertues and infirmities both to helpe and heale them in the like condition So when we fret and chase as Dauid did at the prosperity of the wicked wee must learne with him to see our folly and goe to Gods Sanctuary and obserue the end of such like sinners and so bee comforted and confirmed from falling away from God or following their wicked