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A14280 A divine discoverie of death directing all people to a triumphant resurrection, and euer-lasting saluation. Vaughan, Edward, preacher at St. Mary Woolnoth. 1612 (1612) STC 24596; ESTC S105922 75,056 213

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followed the counsell and directions of the ancient and thereby prospered It is a matter ordinarily expected from old men that they hauing such an extraordinarie fauor at Gods hand should not onely be able well and wisely to gouerne themselues but also well and wisely to gouerne others The second reason why some do die in their minoritie and non-age The answer is fourefold The first is drawne from Gods exceeding great mercy in Christ towards some to whom he imputeth nor sinne for their good euen in this world that they should not see nor heare of those lamentable calamities wofull iudgments that should fall vpon them with whō they sometimes liued His Maiestie duly tēdering the good dispositiō the mild affection tender inclinatiō of all such people takes them therefore before hand into his glorious protection that they should not be greeued with the sight nor hearing of those matters Accordingly saith Esai the Prophet The righteous shall be taken away from the euill to come Esa 57.1 that is as much to say Some of Gods deare children shall not liue to see and heare the miseries which shall come vpon those whom they do so highly loue Marke the vpright man behold the iust Psal 37.37 the end of that man is peace So it is said of Ieroboams sonne 1. King 14.13.17 he only of Ieroboam shall come to the graue because in him there is found some goodnes towards the Lord God of Israel As if it had bin said He onely of that house shall go to his graue in peace because he shall not see the desolation that shall come vpon the land So also was it said of Iosias as if it were in the proper person of God in these words 2. King 22.20 I will gather thee to thy fathers house thou shalt be put in thy graue in peace and thine eyes shall not see the euill that I will bring vpon this place Wisd 1.13.14 Though they were soone dead yet fulfilled they much time as if he had said They did much glorie to God and much comfort to his Saints in that litle time wherin they liued The second answer why some do die in their non-age or minoritie It is drawn from the mercifull goodnesse of God in Christ Iesus in brining them more speedily out of this world into their heauenly inheritance For by how much the sooner he taketh them out of this world by so much the sooner he bringeth them into their wished possession Heb. 11.14 God prouiding better things for them In the prayer which Christ our aduocate hath framed for vs we are taught specially to desire the speedie entrance into this our heauenly inheritance in these words Thy kingdome come And with all for the better enabling propping comforting of his people with patience to abide the time he saith in a figuratiue speech Behold Cant. 2.8 to 14. he cometh leaping vpon the mountaines and skipping vpon the hils like a young Roe or as a young Hart. Iob speaking of the best estate of man liuing in this world saith thus While his flesh is vpon him Iob. 14.22 he shall be sorrowfull and whiles his soule is in him he shall mourne The third answer why some do die in their minoritie It is the sinne of the parents or best affected friend of him that dieth whose death is to him a punishment For as generally amongst parents there is nothing more grieuous nothing more irkesome then the death of their yong children specially such as are tractable so is there no punishment so counteruailable as the death of such children Naomi when her husband her two sonnes were dead said vnto her daughter in law Ruth 1.13 to 21. The hand of the Lord is gone out against me the almighty hath giuen me much bitternes The widdow of Sarepta whē her yong son was dead cried said to Eliah 1. King 17.18.19 20. Art thou come to call my sinnes to remembrance and to slay my sonne As if she had said I see the greatnes of my sinnes against God by the greatnesse of my punishment which by taking away my sonne his Maiestie hath inflicted vpon me The same Prophet in his intercession farther said O Lord God hast thou punished this widdow by killing her sonne As if he had said O Lord do not so the world was not worthy of them Heb. 11.38 the sins of worldly men descrue them not Lord do not lay her sinnes so heauily to her charge Saint Paul said that the recouerie of Epaphroditus out of his mortall sickenesse Phil. 2.25.26.27 imparted the mercie of God towards him lest he should haue had sorrow vpon sorrow The fourth reason why some do die in their minoritie It is the extreme wickednesse and outrage that some would grow into against God and his Saints if they were suffered to liue To which purpose his holy Maiestie saith Psa 101.8 I wil destroy all the wicked of the land that I may cut off al the workers of iniquitie from the citie of the Lord. As if he had said I will preuent by death the vngodly determination of gracelesse men they shall not liue so long as to do villany against my people The third question why some do die languishingly It is answered threefold First to declare that the vse of Phisicke Chirurgerie and such like meanes are nought worth and to no purpose when as God denieth the vertue thereof To make men know that the best meanes and the effects thereof are two distinct things Almightie God in his irefull speech to the Egyptians saith thus Take balme Ier. 46.11 ô virgine daughter of Egypt and in vaine shalt thou vse many medicines for thou shalt haue no health He speakes againe by the same Prophet after this manner Thy burstings are incurable 30.12.13 and thy wounds dolorous there are no plaisters nor medicines nor helpe for thee The second answer why some do die languishingly Is drawne from the fatherly care of Almightie God who knowing whereunto some of his children are inclined and naturally addicted accordingly he keepes them vnder he still disables them from the performance of that they wold euen in matters hurtful to their owne soules As a naturall father tenderly affecting the good of his sonne whom he seeth to take head make way to spend all sometimes he threatens him sore sometimes he beats him sharply at other times he feeds him with hard fare now then he cloathes him with ragged apparrell and alway keepes him without mony Or as a mother intending to weane her child from the breast lets him crie much if that wil not do she annoints it with wormwood or such like euen so God deales with some such as are stubborne or like to grow disobedient he keepes them vnder with many strange deuices and doth disable them euerie where at al times from doing that they would to the hurt of thēselues The peregrination of
come and see before they would condemne vs and heare quietly what we haue to say before they do with their tongues so iniuriously execute vs. Ier. 18.8 As the soule of Ionathā was knit to the soule of Dauid 1. Sam. 18.1 so our soules are knit as in one to them We can truly say our hearts are vpright towards them as the heart of Iehu was towards Ichonadab 2. King 10.15 And yet for all that me thinkes I heare them say as Iehu said to Iehoram 2. King 9.19 what hast thou to do with peace turne thou behind vs. And to be briefe we shal not need to insinuate for feare to haue their fauour euery one of vs may with Christian magnanimitie say vnto them as Nehemiah said to his aduersaries Neh. 6.11 Shall such a man as I flie who is he being as I am that will do it For we may say as Elisha said to his man 2. Kin. 6.16 There are more with vs then be with thē And with the Prophet Dauid If God be with vs who can be against vs Although they haue dealt with vs shamefully and despitefully as the Ammonites dealt with the kind messengers of king Dauid 1 Sam. 10.1 to 17. shauing halfe their beards and cutting off their skirts euen to their buttockes yet we will neither do nor say Iudg. 9. but as Iotham said to the Sichemites If ye haue dealt truly and purely with vs then reioyce ye with vs and we will reioyce with you but if not we will retort vpon thē their own tearms What haue we to do with your peace turne you behind vs. These are they who long since as they say do know right well that they shall die and they doubt not but they shall die so faithfully and so godly as the purest and most perfect Christian of vs all That this their error and grosse perswasion may appeare vnto them and vnto all others I will yet for their sakes for the better patient abiding of the godly deliuer in sorne particular manner by the Scriptures of truth who they be indeed out of this generall nūber that shall die well and so liue euerlastingly in the glorious kingdome of heauen The generalitie of death is not now in question It is generally agreed vpon and withall we find it is of necessitie it is forcible and violent vpon the warrātable decree of the most Highest But the question is who frames himselfe to die willingly and with contentment All shall die of force but none shall enter into the kingdome of heauen but such as in some measure do die willingly and with contentment Saint Paule saith Although I preach the Gospel 1. Cor. 9.16.17 I haue nothing to reioyce of for necessitie is laid vpon me if I do it willingly I haue a reward but if I do it against my wil what is my reward As if he had said what religious dutie soeuer is performed in respect of commandement and feare is not to any man so much as thanke worthie but that which is performed by man voluntarily and freely as from a liberal heart without respect of law or constraint that man shal haue his reward Euen so is it with euery mā that is of force surprised by death but almightie God highly accepteth of euerie man that disposeth of himselfe with a willing heart to die Therefore the Lord said vnto the people of Israel My heart is among them that are willing As if he had said Iudg. 5 9. Though you faile to do such things as I command you yet I will accept of your will This willingnesse is a kind of strong affection and a forcible facultie of the soule and yet for all that it is led captiue vnto sin Such is the corruption of mans nature being inuegled with the manifold forces and assaults of Satan that it preuails against the will of the inner man as S. Paul complains of himelse verse largely and particularly and which makes him to say plainly Ro. 7.15 to the end I allow not of that which I do for what I would that do I not but what I hate that do I. As if he had said Howsoeuer it be that I offend God through corruption and frailtie yet my heart my mind and my will is with God When I do any thing contrarie to the will of God I must confesse it is not I that do it but finne that dwels in me Phil. 1.23 Saint Paul did desire to die and yet in a stronger appetite and affection he would not So was it with Christ Iesus Luk. 22.42 So long as a man can finde in himselfe a will to do well although it be properly the gift of God it shall be accounted vnto him a deede as it was vnto Abraham Gen. 22.12 when as his will led him to sacrifice his sonne and yet did it not from his naturall affectiō He that will die willingly and wel must liue willingly and well accordingly There must be a continuall combat betwixt the spirit of man and his fleshly members Col. 3.5 Ephe. 4.21 to the end 5.8 to 22.6.10 to 19. The earthly members must be mortified and subdued by little and little with the will and desire of man to wit man must carrie a loathing in his mind and will of that which is euil by a cleane contrarie affection lifted vp to heauen Our sauiour Christ referres vs vnto the serpent for two speciall instructions concerning this businesse in these words Be wise as serpents Mat. 10.16 The serpent being fiercely pursued in dāger of her life not able to shift any longer she with her teeth wings and clawes will earnestly labour in the ground to hide her head being then sure enough from the pursuers as not caring for her body because her life lies in her head euen so they that make a good preparation to die willingly and well must not regard their goods Ionah 1.5 when their bodies are in question nor regard their bodyes when their soules are in question because indeede the life of their body and soule lies in their head Christ Iesus who hath so enioyned them The other qualitie of the serpent is to rouse and rub herselfe very vehemently when she is old against the ground vntill she hath gotten off all her old skinne and then hauing new vnder it she flieth vp on high with such agilitie and nimblenesse as when she was young euen so if we will die well and willingly so as our soules may mount vp to heauen we must in our youth and in our age rub off and shake away the old man which is sinne and wickednesse Rom. 6.6 and be renewed in the spirit of our mindes Three diuine causes mouing willingnesse to die The 1. is drawne frō the generall decree of God who in respect of death deales indifferently with all the generation of mankind all men must die the noble and the ignoble the King as the
begger why then should any man mourne or murmure at the death of his dearest friends and why should he not be moued to yeld himselfe with al willingnesse contentment to die Why should any one man thinke himselfe worthy of that prerogatiue and priuiledge as not to die yea rather willingly then of constraint Iosua the Lord Generall of Israel at his death tooke this as a strong forcible argumēt to perswade with his people to liue well and that they might die willingly therefore emphatically he said Iosua 23.14 This is the way of all the world to wit Although I be a man as ye know in an extraordinary acceptation with God yet I must die so must you and so must all mankinde that liue and are yet to be borne looke not you to be exempted from this sentence but prouide accordingly A voyce said vnto Esai Crie Esai 40.6 What said he That all flesh is grasse the grace thereof as the flower of the field This holy Prophet being suggested and instigated by the Spirit of God to prepare the way of Christ in the hearts of the people he receiues as from the Lord also the manner how to moue them effectually thereunto euen by telling them that they were all subiect to death and that the most wise and most excellent amongst them was subiect to the same end The second cause mouing willingnesse to die It is drawne from a threefold exchāge that we make with the Almighty the first is the exchange that we make of our bodies 1 Cor. 15.25.54 Phili. 3.21 Esai 49.10.25.8 for this corruptible body which is subiect to manifold miseries and to fall from God we shall haue incorruptible and immortall bodies For these our bodies subiect to hunger to thirst to cold to heate to manifold diseases to sundrie passions and other such like calamities we shall haue celestiall and glorified bodies euerie way freed of all those perturbations The Lambe which is in the middest of the throne Reue. 7.15.16.17 shall gouerne his people and shall leade them vnto the liuely fountaines of waters and God shall wipe away all teares from their eyes 21.3.4 The tabernacle of God is with men and he will dwell with them and they shall be his people and God himselfe shall be their God with them There shall be no more death neither sorrow neither crying neither paine Euery Christian is alwaies longing and desiring this exchange yea senselesse creatures do alway straine with a feruent desire to be vnburthened to be discharged of this life how much more euery good man As he that is in prison desires and longs to go abroad or as Hagar in her bondage so miserable is man liuing in the flesh as a liuing soule in a body subiect to death The second exchange that we make is of our goods as when we change earthly riches for heauenly momentanie and transitorie treasures for euerlasting and that which neuer fadeth To which purpose the holy Ghost saith Mat. 6.19.20 Lay not vp treasures where moath or canker corrupteth and where theeues breake through and steale but lay vp treasures for your selues in heauen As if it were to say The best things of this life are subiect to corruptiō to manifold casualties but the treasures which are in heauen are not subiect either to mutability or yet to decay And our sauiour Christ saith by way of a parable Luk. 12.15.10.22 that the abundance of worldly wealth auailes nothing for the time prefent which is but momentanie neither doth it any way minister comfort vnto the distressed soule Thus he saith take heed of couetousnesse for though a man haue abundance yet his life standeth not in his riches Saint Paul seeing and perceiuing the inordinate desire of riches which was in his time and knowing that the like would be continued he speakes by way of comparison verie disdainefully and contemptuously of worldly riches 1 Timo 6.17.18.19 and charges men to prouide for better things and to build vpon a better foundation In heauen is all kinde of plentie maturitie and satietie Iudg. 18.9.10 As the Spies said vnto the children of Dan their brethren concerning Laish Arise and let vs go vp we haue seene the land and surely it is verie good it is a place lacking nothing that is in the world be not slothfull to possesse it for God hath giuen it into your hands euen so do innumerable sentences and examples of holy Scripture say and assure vs as touching the kingdome immortall ioyes of heauē The third exchange that we make by dying willingly and well is of our societie of our companie as when we change the societie fellowship and cōpanie of men for the company and societie of Angels Heb. 12.22.23.24 Reuel 14.1 to 6. the company of whoremongers drunkards liers swearers oppressors and such like for the company of the Saints the company of children on earth for the company of children in heauen the company of husband or wife for the company of Iesus Christ himselfe As a virgine that is affianced to a man thinkes it long before the solemnization thereof so is euery one that is affianced with Christ euermore desiring his full fruition and holy fellowship The third cause mouing willingnesse to die It is the mitigations cōforts helpes that almightie God yeelds against the torments of death to such as do commemorate their mortality with prayers and intercessions vnto almightie God that they may be faithfully prepared Of which gracious qualifications of sicknesses and diminishing of deaths torments the holy Prophet Dauid speakes Psal 41.3 most plainely The Lord will strengthen him vpon his bed of sorrow thou Lord saith the Prophet hast turned all his bed in his sicknesse as if it were to say God wil enable a mercifull religious man to endure all that he will lay on him or else will diminish the qualitie or quantitie of the disease To whom also Christ Iesus saith I am the physition as if it were in effect to say I am a present discharge for the soule that is surcharged with sinne and also a present qualification of bodily griefes and naturall diseases as was manifoldly and plainely experimented by Christ vpon diuers poore people who were miserably and mortally distressed with both The second instruction Concerning the manner sort or kind of death to wit how diuersly and how many wayes death seizeth on all the generation of mankind I will distinguish into foure sorts The which for assignations sake I must call by foure names vnder the which the holy Ghost comprehends as in a close narration dispersed ouer the Bible all maners sorts and kinds of death whatsoeuer howsoeuer and wheresoeuer which are these 1. the Penall death 2. the Naturall death 3. the Vnnaturall death 4. the Politicall death These three are comprehended in that answer of Dauid the selected man of God to Abishai concerning Saul the king whom God deliuered into their
of God in Christ Iesus by whom the guilt of sinne and the condemnation of the law together with the sting of death is qualified and in a sort done away leauing indeed no more to do nor to say against such as can take hold of his promises but onely the perishing and destroying of that body so naturally subiect to sinne According as Paule proclaimed in a most comfortable manner in these words Death went ouer all men Rom. 5.11 in as much as all men haue sinned as if he had said Such was the infinite mercie of God and yet mingled with his iustice that he would lay no more to the charge of his chosen then he must needes by the open rules of religion reuealed word Moses in his defence to the people of Israel concerning that open rebellion of Corah and his company speakes most diuinely and most plainely of this kinde of death in these words Numb 16.29 to 36. If these men die the common death of all men or if these be visited with the generall visitation of all men then the Lord hath not sent me As if he had said There is a sort or kind of death which is naturall which is vsuall and which is rightly appertayning vnto the nature of mankinde and that which most commonly falles out vpon good and reasonable deliberation vpō orderly disposing of worldly affaires vpō due bequeathing of the body to be buried This naturall death which he calles the common death and the general visitation of all men Iob saith it is as a ricke of corne Iob. 5.26 which comes into the barne in due time As if he had said This is the death indeede that is full of maturitie and seasonablenesse lo thus we haue inquired of it and so it is Againe he saith to the same effect Iob. 34.14.15 As a rush cannot grow without mire and as grasse without water can grow no longer but withereth though it be not cut euen so man by nature liueth vntill nature be quite worne and wholly extinguished and then dieth though he were not touched nor medled withall in any sort which death is nothing so nor so as the penall The man of God intimating such a kinde of death said to Hezckiah King of Iudah Esai 38.1 Thou shalt not die with the sword but thou shalt die in peace To wit thou shalt not die the penall death which is terrible and painefull nor an vnwonted death but the common death the generall visitation of all men to wit the naturall death This naturall death which is also called the common death and the generall visitation of all men hath by the reuealed word of God foure other inferior sorts or kinds of death whereof I must dispose for methods sake after this manner 1. Some do die In their old age 2. Some do die In their nonage 3. Some do die Languishingly 4. Some do die Suddenly The first reason why some liue long Is drawne from the singular fauor of almightie God in granting vnto some one amongst many that which in his heart he specially desireth For amongst all things that man specially desireth there are principally these two to wit health and wealth For wealth a man will bestow all his wits all his indeuor all his labour all his friends and whatsoeuer else he possibly can deuise but for health and that he may liue long he will bestow all his wealth that was so industriously so laboriously gotten and be contented to be counted a foole yea a forlorne wretch and to be indeede a begger at euerie mans doore all the dayes of his life To be breefe as chastity is a singular gift of God to one amongst ten thousand so long life is a singular guift of God to one amongst ten thousand Salomon therefore said Pro. 16.31 Old age is a crowne of glorie wherein are two goodly and godly respects one is that a man may the better the more abundantly gather riches by looking more respectiuely into the workes of God and the end of his creation For the longer a man lines in a reasonable kind of husbandrie the more his gaine and getting must needes be Although his reuenewes be but small yet if he get and spare here a litle and there a litle in continuance of time according to the old prouerbe Many a little makes a mickle following the example of that little poore pismire who according to her small strength and yet being diligent Pro. 6.6 hath against winter a great heape of prouision and being also prouidident she painefully nibleth the heads of euery graine lest they should grow and so her labor lost The Maiestie of God to set forth his renewed loue towards Iudah and Ierusalem said thus Zach. 8.4 Their men shall liue so long as that they shall go by a staffe As there is no commandement that hath any promise but the honouring of parents so there is no such reward pleasing to any man as to liue long therefore God made promise thereof to thē that keepe his commandement What temporal blessing did the Lord bestow on Dauid 1 King 3.14 for a reward who was a man according to his owne heart but long life as the holy Ghost testifieth he liued so long that he could liue no longer 1 King 1.1 nature was quite extinguished in him This was also a reward specially bestowed vpon the ten holy Fathers Gen. 5.1 to the end before the floud Thus shall men be enabled with their hands to performe the desire of their hearts in contributing vnto the necessitie of the Saints Abraham also had for his temporarie blessing Deut. 31.2 an hundred and twenty yeares life euen in his old age he was carefull to fulfill the worke of the Lord so long as he said that he could go no more out and in Length of life Deut. 11.9 saith Moses is a reward for keeping of Gods cōmandements they then that keepe not Gods commandements shall be guilty of Gods iudgmēts for the same and also for the time which they haue mis-spent The other speciall and most principall respect of long life is that such men might also gather spirituall riches For as by little and little men come to be stored with the things of this world specially if it be long continued euen so by the continuall keeping of the Sabboth by the often reading and hearing of Gods word by vsual praiers by often reiterating with thankefulnes the mercies of God such like men may grow increase most richly and abundantly in the things that concernes a better life If the increase be but as Esai the Prophet saith here a line and there a line Esai 28.10 to wit a little at one time and a little at another either gotten or saued To which purpose Iob saith Iob. 12.12 In length of dayes there is wisdome and amongst the ancient there is vnderstanding Therefore the holy man Dauid all his life long
the people of Israel frō Egypt to Canaan was through the most vaste deep and dangerous places of all the world and sometimes through goodly valleyes by pleasant riuers and such like places of contentment sometimes in great penurie scarcenesse of all good things and sometimes in great plentie of euerie thing thus with vncertainties mutabilities liking disliking 40. Num. 33.1 yeares together before they came into the promised land not resting in any one good place one whole yeare intermingling one with another Euē so is it with gods people specially such of thē as his Maiesty knoweth will not trauel rightly the right way Moses said God led them 40 yeares in the wildernes Deut. 8.2.3 to trie thē to humble them to know what was in their hearts God said by the mouth of his Prophet thus Ier. 30.11 Although I haue striken thee with the wound of an enemie and with a sharpe chastisement because thy sins were increased I will correct thee but not vtterly cut thee off So God said to Dauid concerning Salomon his sonne 2 Sam. 7.13 If he sin I will chastise him with the roddes of the children of men but my mercy will I not vtterly take from him Whom the Lord loueth Heb. 12.6 saith the holy Author to the Hebrues he chastiseth he scourgeth euery sonne that he receiueth We haue a famous example in Dauid whō if God had not humbled with continuall persecution it is certaine he would haue driuen Saul violently out of his kingdome The third reason why some do die languishingly As the former proceeded from the mercie of God towards those whom he would reforme so in this we shall finde the ineuitable iustice of God vpon the wicked euery way disabling and putting them downe from their intents and enterprises keeping them at a low rate and as it were at a scantling He deales with them as with the house of Ioab the murtherer 2 Sam. 3.23 neuer without running issues neuer without the leprosie or one that leaneth on a staffe or doth fall on the sword or lacketh bread So God said he would deale with the people Israel if they would not keepe his commandemēts in these words The Lord wil make thy plagues wonderfull and of long continuance Deut. 28.59 sore diseases and of long durance Such a writing was brought to Iehoram King of Iudah from the Lord because of his Idolatrie contayning this effect Thou shalt be in great diseases 2 Chro 21.12 to 16. 2 King 15.5 in thy boweles day by day Ahaziah King of Iudah was disabled with a leprosie for euer The fourth reason why some do die suddenly or instantly hath these two respects The first respect is the matter wherewith they die Some die with old age as did Dauid some with long endured sicknesse some with the eminency of the place which ministreth present danger and death as a ship against the rocks a wildernesse of wilde beasts a storehouse of gunpouder Sometimes in respect of Gods sudden decree because the Lords breath is in his nostrels Sometimes being occasioned from a naturall cause which learned Physitiōs say doth arise ab apoplexia a stoppage in the head or à vomida pulmonū a suffocation in the lungs or else à sincope vel cardiaogmo from the stomacke or heart All which is common both to good and bad men to the iust and vniust and that which neuer giues warning nor knowledge any manner of way formerly to be preuented by physicke and therefore rightly called Mors repentina a sudden and an vnprouided death The second respect is the manner or difference betwixt both The bad and vniust man dieth suddenly how long soeuer he liueth and what warning soeuer he hath Mat. 25.3 because of his vnpreparednesse like the foolish virgins or like the vniust and carelesse steward The good and vpright man who feares the Lord and rules himselfe according to his lawes is alwaies vpon his guard like the good householder who knowes on a night suddenly his house shall be broken vp and like those wise virgins alwaies in a readinesse euer looking for death This resēblance of both was in the old world Noah was well prepared the rest were nothing at all The eight vses that we are to make of this doctrine concerning the naturall death which is the common death and the generall visitation of all men The first vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue old men who either idlely or riotously spēd their patrimonies and their parents portions The holy Prophet Hosea saith Hose 7.9 Gray haires are here and there vpon him and he knowes it not to wit the aged man considers not the old man whose life is almost ended remembers not he thinkes vpon time enough to be getting and sparing which is yet left behinde he deuiseth vpon many more yeares so goeth on vntill his strēgth faileth him and he purposeth to bring many matters vnto good effect euen by his wits when as indeede with his strength his senses will faile him Therfore Ieremy the Prophet said Lam. 3.27 It is good for a man to beare the yoke in his youth It is expedient that he do take paines in his profession while he may lest when he should giue he be enforced to take Salomon not onely for matters of saluation but also for matters of this life doth exhort very earnestly particularly plainly Eccle. 12.1.2 to 8. thus Remēber thy maker in thy youth whiles the euil dayes come not nor the yeares approch wherein thou shalt say I haue no pleasure in them To conclude with that patheticall saying of Saint Paul 1 Timo. 5.8 If there be any man that prouideth not for his owne namely for them of his household he denieth the faith and is worse then an infidell the honorable age is not that which is measured by time neither that which is measured by the number of yeares but wisdome is the gray haire Wisd 4.7.8 an vndefiled life is the old age As if he had said It is not the age of any man how old soeuer that deserues reuerence and speciall account amongst men but it is the knowledg of God and an vnreproueable life The second vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue those who by their ouer much care and excessiue labors haue gotten much wealth alway getting euer sparing neuer spending accounting from ten to the hundred and from the hundred to the thousands for euery of their children yea and many times hauing neither sonne nor daughter they know not for whom and yet in all this time and amongst all this wealth hauing nothing at all for themselues against the day of the Lord hauing indeede neither oyle nor lampes Much like the gluttō that fared deliciously euery day Luk. 16.19 gorgeously apparelled but inwardly for his soule he was more miserable then any and as the poore begger at his doore outwardly So commonly
A DIVINE DISCOVERIE OF DEATH Directing all people to a triumphant resurrection and euerlasting saluation It is ordained that all men shall die HEB. 9.17 Vnum hoc gestit verit as ne ignorata damnetur LONDON Imprinted for WILLIAM IONES and RICHARD BOYLE dwelling in the Blackefriers 1612. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE MY VERY GOOD LORD HENRY THE EARLE OF HVNTINGTON AS amongst all ordinary accidents incidēt to the prosperity aduersity of mankind there is nothing more momentarie then mariage euen so right honorable there is nothing more answerable to the saluation condemnation of mankind then death For as by the one all men come into the world by the other all men go out of the world euen so by both all men without the merits of Iesus Christ shall go into hell fire Yet for all that there is nothing more out of the minds of men then death nor any thing lesse feared then Gods irefull iudgments which follow after As may appeare in euerie profession which is stained and polluted with heathenish impietie the like was not in the time of blindnesse and ignorance whereby it may be truly said that the last of the three reuolutions signified by seales Reu. 5.1 8.2 17.1 by trumpets by viols related to be the dishonour of God and the disturbance of the Church militant is now more fresh and more ragingly reuiued then in any of the two former reuolutions consisting of 600. yeares Your Lordship perhaps will say What is that to me how can I redresse it I know my Lord I know and in truth I must acknowledge that you are an example vnto others for the diligent hearing of Gods holy word preached and for the sincere receiuing of the Sacrament well may your Honor go on and be strengthned with the zeale of Gods glory and be recommended before the throne of Gods grace by the prayers of such as you did releeue when they were oppressed But the principall cause of this my clamor is to put you in mind of that you know to wit seeing sinne is so generall the same so horribly hainous that there is nothing else to be looked for but death and not that death onely which is the common visitation of all men but also the second death which is the perpetuall reward of the diuell and the damned And also my Lord the speciall end of my writing vnto your Honour is so much as in me lieth and as dutie binds me to make you partaker of the fruit of my poore labor with other my honourable and worshipfull friends Nothing doubting but vnder that truth and plainenesse wherein I haue so faithfully endeuoured and so heartily desired the good also of so many thousands as to whom it may come your Lordship shall sauour so much of some thing as that you will say hereafter for your labor in reading of all you are right glad and haue therby lost nothing Thus briefly and most humbly I end desiring the Maiestie of our eternall God through the mediation of Iesus Christ to beautifie and to adorne you and your honourable Lady with all spirituall graces and that you both may see like your selues according to your hearts desire your childrens children vnto the third and fourth generation From Stretton Lefield the 3. of Iuly 1612. Your Honours most humble in the Lord Edw. Vaughan TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE LADY THE COVNTESSE of Leicester Douger RIght Honorable I know none amongst all the women in the world vpon my forty yeares reading neither yet truly reported by any to whō this book doth so properly appertaine to be carefully read as to your self In respect specially of Gods mercy wherin he hath made your honor admirably memorable for your exceeding wisedome and abounding graces which was plainly seene in your patient abiding of one such double deadly dayes newes cōcerning your noble son your worthy honorable husband as made al England France and Ireland more astonished thē that great inuincible Armado of Spaine valorously floting vnder saile vpon our narrow seas And there is also another famous respect of Gods mercie and the kings Maiesties fauor vpon you for that there is yet aliue a noble Earle of Essex euen out of your owne loynes who is like to repaire the ruines of his father to raise his and your honourable house farre more renowmed and lineally to leaue it so to be vpholden for euer Madame when the foundation of the Temple at Ierusalem was newly laide the sound of the people for ioy could not be discerned from the noise of the Priests Ezra 4. Leuites and Ancients for weeping euen so right Honourable your and their most louing friends in that dolefull day could not discerne whether the ioy for the Queenes maiesties safetie or the sorrow for their deceasse was the greatest Although indeed some of both sides most vnconsiderately were partiall in their ioying and other some exceeding in their sorrowing yet the maiestie of God did most diuinely and most duly traduce the one to temper the other in you who had the greatest cause of both Labor you therefore good honorable Lady so to abound in ioy for them whose soules are in heauen so to abound in sorrow for your owne sinnes that whilest you are aliue it may not be discerned in which of both you exceed And labour to abate your sorrow for the father which is dead because his heroicall honour and Christian magnanimitie is yet aliue in his sonne As for the maner of their death it maketh nothing at all to the matter of their saluation nor for the time of their dissolution as you may reade in this booke by many infallible sentences and warrantable examples of Scripture particularly after this maner First that death hath his prerogatiue and priuiledge in generall Secondly that death makes this world no world and men to trade and trauell to buy and sell vpon all vncertainties Thirdly that the decree concerning the time of death is inuiolable and vnrepealable And fourthly how variable and how sundrie wayes death seizeth vpon some with the stroke of an Angel vpon some with the stroke of iustice vpon some with the stroke of a friend and that vnwittingly and vnwillingly vpon some with the stroke of an enemie wittingly and willingly Some godly men do kill and destroy themselues but vnwittingly and vnwillingly and some vngodly men do kill and destroy themselues wittingly and willingly euen by their owne act and deed And now to conclude you know that honourable honor resteth not in the dignitie that men women haue but in the good works whereby they deserue and you know as stigmaticall brands are tokens of former felonies euen so procrastinatiō breadeth dangers Apply your selfe therefore good honourable Lady vnto the conueniency of the time for you know not when death will light on you by many yeares nor the manner of it by many hundred wayes that whensoeuer and howsoeuer it fals you may haue recourse to the
death of Iesus Christ to whose holy protection I leaue you c. Newly from the Printers Presse the 3. Iuly 1612. Your Honours most humble in the Lord Edw. Vaughan TO THE RIGHT VVORSHIPFVL SIR IOHN HARPER AND SIR PHILIP STANHOP in the countie of Darby Knights And to the worshipfull Maister Richard Hall of London Maister Humphrey Bonner of Nottingham and Maister George Abney in the said countie of Darby Esquiers MY singular selected friēds hauing published many and sundry bookes of diuinity and resolutely cōcluded with my self there to surceasse knowing this to be the enuious and maligning age in which few men shal be condignely rewarded neither yet from vniust imputations and impious calumniations freed yet for all that I was occasioned or rather as I may say violently importuned for my owne better instruction and satisfaction being more surprised with sorrow then with the losse of all the kingdomes of the world carefully to collect answers to diuers questions and obiections which did assaile my soule for and as concerning the deceasse of some such as did most nearely concerne me and exceeding dearely appertaine vnto me And hauing therewithall receiued through Gods mercie that which of all other things I most specially desired I was drawne dutifully and respectiuely to consider that my case was or might be yours and the cōmon case of all men Wherefore I tooke in hand methodically to dispose of all those dispersed collections into this booke as your Worships may see Wherin I alledge nothing but true sentences examples of holy Scriptures and that so warrantably so briefely and so plainely as that I might not seeme tedious to the wise and learned nor yet obscure to the simple and sorrowfull hearted Humbly and heartily desiring you in liew of my labor and in recompence of my loue that you wil be pleased sometimes to sequester your selues from your publike affaires yea and sometimes from your most priuate occasions for the orderly and through reading thereof Assuring you vpon my poore experience and vpon the iudgement of the best learned writers that there is nothing so effectuall in Gods word except the graces of his holy Spirit to make a regenerate man to mourn in mirth to solace in sorrow and to apprehend the right vse of all the meanes which God hath ordayned for the preseruation of life vntill the time of death doth come as the meditation of mortality with Scripture answers cōtemplatiuely to euery such question and obiection as may be raised concerning death together with deuout prayers going before and thanksgiuing following after Or otherwise a thousand to one death brings with it feare feare brings an increase of naturall torments an increase of torments brings distraction of memorie Afterwards followeth all idle dissolute and damnable speech and so from one defect vnto another an obliuiō of Christ and his kingdome as the diuell would haue it Thus I end hauing timely inough I hope forewarnd you with my hearty desires vnto his holy Maiestie to comfot you in your affliction and tribulation that you may be able and readie to comfort others to the glory of his holy name and the euerlasting comfort of your owne soules From Stretton Lefield in the countie of Darbie this 3. of Iuly 1612. Yours in the Lord Edw. Vaughan The contents In the displaying of this diuine discouerie of death is necessarily to be obserued these foure generall heads of instruction approued by many sentences and holy examples of Scriptures viz. First the Generalitie of death to wit how inuincibly death reigneth ouer all the generation of mankind no place exempted no time priuiledged nor any person vpon any occasion fauoured Secondly the sundrie sorts maners and kinds of death that is to say how diuersly and how many wayes death seizeth vpon all people with the seuerall reasons thereof Thirdly the timelinesse of death relating by particulars the day the houre the moment and point of time in which almightie God hath decreed that euerie the generation of mankinde shall die so that no man by the diligent vse of the meanes can lengthen his life nor any man by the negligent vse of the meanes shall shorten his life Fourthly the memorabilitie of death that is to say the commemoration and religious solemnization which the liuing ought to haue for their dead with foure principall and Christian respects THE GENERALITIE OF DEATH DEath hath dominion ouer all mankind not all together as they are innumerable but one after another in their appointed time To which purpose the iust man Iob by the holy influence of Gods diuine Spirit said not onely of himselfe but also of all others Iob. 30.23.24 Surely I know that thou wilt bring me to death and to the house appointed for all the liuing Salomon the wisest man then in all the world hauing duly considered of mans abode in this life said Eccles 6 6. Man shall be couered with darkenesse if he liue an hundred yeares twise told and shall not all go into one place Saint Luke speaking by the same spirit sets downe the diuine speech of Saint Paul to the Athenians among which he doth plainely relate the maner of mans creation in this wise Act. 17.26 God hath made of one bloud all mankind to dwell on the face of the earth As if he had said by a vulgar phrase of speech Where there is a contagion or an infection it goes through that familie because they are of one nature and of one bloud euen so he meant that all the generatiō of mankinde being of one bloud and of one flesh shall all taste of one death Saint Paul in his exhortation to the Corinthians for their enduring affliction and to liue well 2. Cor. 5.10 said We must all appeare before the iudgement seate of Christ as if he had said There is no helpe nor hope we must all die Iosua a man exceeding victorious and full of magnanimitie and Christian courage yet being prepared to die in his exhortation to his people points vnto himselfe saying Iosua 23.14 Behold I enter into the way of all the world as if he had said Maruell not my brethren at me who must needs depart this life the like must be your lots your posterity The wise womā of Tekoha amongst many other emphatiticall speeches which she vsed to Dauid the king in the behalfe of Absolon his sonne said vnto him We must all die 2. Sam. 14.14 and we are as water spilt on the earth which cannot be gathered neither doth God spare any person As Dauid said 2. Sam. 11.25 The sword deuoures as wel one as another euen so it may be said of all people that death seizeth one manner or other vpon euerie man without exception Furthermore Gen. 5.28 the ten holy Fathers who liued euery man almost his thousand yet died Deut. 2.3 Iosua 8.9.10.11.12 We may speake of diuers by examples as of Moses Iosua the most valiant most victorious warriours
that euer were Iud. 16.28.29 of Sampson the strongest man in all the world and yet they died 1. King 11.43 Dan. 4. Of Salomō who was the wisest man in all the world and yet he died Nabucadnezzar was the richest man in all the world and yet he died Peter and Paul were as holy as euer any before or since and yet Peter and Paul died Gen. 23.1.2 Hest 9. Sarah and Hester were two beautiful Ladies as euer were and yet Sarah and Hester died To conclude there was neuer any time nor place nor person that could exempt any man from death For Sem called Melchizedech was before the flood he out liued all that knew him Gen. 14.14 Heb. 7.1 to 7. and so long that no man knew his kindred euen when Lot was taken prisoner and a great grandfather of eight degrees in Abrahams time whence he was said to be without father and without mother and in part a figure of Christ whose Godhead had no mother and whose manhood had no father without beginning of dayes or end of life in respect of whom also he was said to be king of righteousnesse king of peace and a Priest for euer of the most high God yet for all this Melchizedech died Iob said If God set his heart vpon man Iob. 34.14 and gather his spirit vnto himselfe then man shall returne to dust As though he had said more plainly No man in all the world that liueth but liueth to die whē God will because mans life consisteth of that which is Gods Salomon saith The desire of death cannot be satisfied Eccles 8.8 he gathereth vnto himselfe all nations doth heape vnto himselfe all people Hab. 2.5 Iob speaking to this purpose concerning all mankind and more particularly of himselfe said thus Iob. 6.11 What power haue I that I should endure is my strength the strength of stones or is my flesh of brasse To wit What did men thinke of me when I was at the best or what could I euer thinke of my selfe was I a man like to liue alwayes And what man may be named that now is that euer was or euer shall be so strong or so enduring as that he shall be able to surcharge death The sundrie examples and the common experience euen of our owne time hath told vs and doth still forewarne vs of death which is so due to vs as to them who are gone before The most vnlikeliest do longest liue the most likeliest do soonest die which argueth plainly that there is no stability no certainty nor true token of cōtinuance in any mā whatsoeuer Also S. Paul said to the Corinthians 1. Cor. 15.51 we shal not all die Indeed we shall all once die inrespect of our outward estate ourelementarie inclination and naturall affections but in respect of Gods diuine maiestie innarrable power and secret will they which shall liue at the last day shall be changed they shall not be the same which formerly they were as men in the world I haue aduisedly considered of ten holy motiues or diuine reasons of Scripture why all men must die The first reason why all men must die It is the decree of almightie God which ordereth all inferior causes and binds thē to the obedience of his will No king can produce so ancient a right to his crowne as euerie man hath out of this most ancient decree to chalēge after death the crowne of glorie Salomon said Eccles 3.14 I know that whatsoeuer God hath done he hath done it for euer to it can no man adde and from it can no mā diminish Esai the Prophet as in the proper person of God himselfe saith The Lord hath sworne saying Esa 14.24 surely as I haue purposed so shall it come to passe and as I haue consulted so shall it stand Againe he saith Seeke ye the booke of the Lord and reade none of these things shal faile none shall want his mouth hath commanded it Mal. 3.6 Malachi said to that purpose I am the Lord that changeth not The Author to the Hebrewes saith Heb. 6.17.18 That God more abundantly to shew the stablenesse of his counsell bound himselfe by an oath wherin it is impossible that God should lie that we might haue strong consolatiō Dan. 6.8 As the lawes of the Medes Persians were vnrepealable so is the decree of almighty God concerning death vnrepealable and in regard of the euerlastingnes of it Ieremy said Ier. 17.1 It is written with an iron pen and with the point of a diamond and grauen vpon the tables of the heart The second reason why all men must die Is drawne from the vprightnesse of Gods iustice Sinne being so generall in all men his Maiestie hath decreed to punish it by death in all men yea in his owne deare children who although the guilt of sinne be remoued and taken from them yet sinne remaining in their mortall bodies is to be punished with death and perishing of that substance so subiect to sinne Saint Paul said Death went ouer all men Rom. 5.12 in as much as all men haue sinned As by the law euerie husband may put away his wife for alienating her body to another man euen so sinne by the law doth alienate put away the soule from the body of eueric man Iob. 34.11 Elihu spake most diuinely to this purpose with his friends God will render vnto man according to his work and cause euery man to find according to his way And as sinne increased from age to age so did the anger of God as appeared by the shortning of their dayes Though Christ hath forgiuen vs yet sinne is not out of vs. There is stil in man that will keep him frō soaring and a Quis me in his mouth extending lamentably with Saint Paul from men to Angels with a violent interrogation enforcing an answer who shall deliuer me from the bodie of death The third reason why all men must die All men must die in respect of Gods generall purpose for the changing and renewing of mankind from one substance into another for the transubstātiating of one body into another a transmitting of one life into another This purpose of the Father in Christ Iesus made Iob to say Iob. 14.14 I wil waite mine appointed time till my changing come S. Paul relating the verie same amongst many other things of great weight vnto the Corinthians said We shal all be changed And in another place 1. Cor. 15. at another time Flesh bloud saith he 35 ●4 cannot inherite the kingdome of heauen mortality must be swallowed vp of life 2. Cor. 5.4 And in his epistle to the Philippians he writes the same in effect being occasioned otherwise thereunto and that in these words God shall change our vile bodies Phil. 3.21 that they may be like vnto his glorious bodie The fourth reason why all men must die is That there may
at deathes doore the wicked parteth with all ioyes and there the godly receiues it The third vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue all such parents who hauing a sonne or a daughter taken from them by death in his minority they do not take to heart nor thinke the extraordinary care the greedy griping the intollerable shiftes and the manifold deuices which they vsed to get worldly wealth and preferments for him So that they euer kept from their heart or for the most part all conscionable care of trayning him vp in the feare and nurtour of the Lord so as he might be a necessary member in Church or comon wealth They consider not neither can they be made to thinke much lesse to beleeue that God tooke him away for their punishment And for this cause also God takes away another and so another of their best and dearest children leauing such parents either none at all or else such as are gracelesse and without hope to be any comfort vnto them If parents out of their naturall affection or out of Gods word would but imagine what a dolefull day what a sorrowfull sight and a galling griefe it would be vnto them to see one child after another suffer the bitter paines and pangs of death then being dead to be doubtfull of their saluation such parents might the better and the sooner see take knowledg of their sinnes towards their poore children and so by true repentance be turned vnto the Lord. The fourth vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue those who out of their ouer abounding naturall affection towards their children are neuer prepared to part with their children no not though they be to change their company for the company of God himselfe and the company of others their brothers and sisters for the company of the holy Saints and Angels in heauen And their worldly riches for the true treasures purchast by the precious bloud of Iesus Christ And this because that either they want knowledge or faith The fift vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue those who liue so securely and so carelesly as if they had made a couenant with death vntill an appointed day or as if they could keepe death away so long as they would or at least giue themselues lawfull warning Vpon these comes the day of the Lord suddenly not in respect of God but in respect of themselues being vnprouided By how much they want of that they should haue against his coming or by how little they feare death by so much the more terrible and fearefull death is vnto them The sixth vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue those who arrogate to much vnto the worthinesse of the meanes attributing that vertue vnto them which indeede is due vnto God as in the time of sicknesse to physicke surgery and such like No maruell though they languish in their diseases and no man able to helpe thē What was the ouerthrow of so many thousands of the Israelits the taking away of the Arke of God by the Philistines 1. Sam. 4.5 was it not because they relied to much vpon the arke as appeared by their shooting and loud reioycing as though heauen and earth rang together Ieremie speaketh of them at another time how they vanted and boasted of their temple saying Ier. 7.4 The temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord therefore the Lord gaue their Temple to be ransacked and ruinated by Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon Dan. 1.1.2 Ieremie likewise speaking of the pride and presumptusnesse of the Egyptians who in their strength and multitude of their men concluded most infallibly the vtter ouerthrow of the people of Israel Ier. 46 7. They come saith he like floods and riuers with raging horses swift chariots Blackemores and Libians to shoote and to beare shields yet all in vaine The seuenth vse concerning the naturall kind of death It serueth to reproue those who do derogate from the worthinesse of the meanes which God in his mercie hath ordained in his Church and common-wealth to be in him and for him or as in his stead helpers comforters vnto his people as in the time of sicknesse not to seek to the Physitiā they rather scoffe and scorne them and they deride their profession These indeed as the former are accessarie to their owne cōtinuall diseases languishing maladies and in the end to their owne death not because that they thereby do directly shorten their liues but because that they do frustrate so much as in thē lieth the holy ordināces of God which are ioyned with his decree The eight vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue those who run into eminent dangers places of contagion they auoid not when they may conuemently outragious elements as fire water and such like or enterprise to performe actions which stand not either with their wits or with their abilities The 3. generall sort manner or kind of death to wit the vnnaturall death The vnnatur all death is that which is more violent more abhorring nature more crosse and contrarie to the lawes ordinances of God A kind of death which proceedeth from mans selfe or rather a death instigated by the diuell meerely derogatiue to the Maiestie of Gods gouernment dishonourable to his name by the reuealed word impeachfull to the saluation of the soules of such An vntimely and an vnseasonable death Vnder this kind of death there are 4. other inferior sorts First when a man killeth himselfe vnawares or against his will as Ahaziah king of Israel did with a fall 2. King 1.6 Secondly when a man kils himselfe wittingly and willingly 1 Sam. 31.4 2. Sam. 17.23 1. King 16.18 as Saul did with his owne sword as Achitophel hanged himselfe and as Zimry did that burnt himselfe Thirdly when a mā is killed by another vnwittingly and vnwillingly not hauing hated him before Nu. 35.22 Ios 20.1.2.3 for whose saftetie God appointed cities of refuge Fourthly when a man is wittingly and willingly killed by another 2. Sam. 3.27 2. Sam. 20.10 as Abner was by Ioab and as Amasa was The first question concerning the maner of the vnnaturall death Why it is or how it comes to passe that some vnwittingly and vnwillingly do kil and destroy themselues yea with their act and deed some hang themselues some burne themselues some drowne themselues and such like manner of vnnaturall death This kind of vnnaturall executions happeneth many times on the iust as well as on the vniust vpon the wise as vpon the foolish vpon the rich as vpon the poore The answer therefore is twofold one concerning the vngodly the other concerning the godly That which concernes the vngodly is when any such man or woman vnwittingly puts or brings himselfe into perillous places puts himselfe to death by his owne act and deed It proceedeth from the vpright iustice of God ruling and ouer-ruling man how
as though that they which die naturally in their beds or they themselues which liue in the good appearance of the world were not as guiltie of condemnation for euery small sinne which they commit without faith in Iesus Christ as they who are hanged burned beheadded or pressed or as those vpon whom the tower of Siloam fell Here I conclude asking pardon of the learned wherein soeuer I haue erred or haue wanted in the disconise of the common lawes of this land Knewing the profunditie thereof to be passing the reach of all men and withall acknowledging it to be a meere subiect out of my element and therefore as a man hauing spoken nothing in effect of that which it deferueth I am cōtent to be condēned without replication vpō a nihil dicit if reason require it The third instruction concerning the timelinesse of death Not withstanding there are such variable and sundry sorts or manners of death as hath bene formerly enlarged and howsoeuer almightie God hath bene occasioned in his iustice to punish sinne yet none of the generation of mankinde departs this life before his appointed day so that no man by diligence can lengthen his life nor any man by negligence shorten his life The holy Prophet Dauid hauing Saul his enemie in his hand would not be perswaded to lay his hands on him but said His day shall come to die 1 Sam. 26.8.9 I will not smite him As if he had spoken more plainely It is not for me to kill him for God hath appointed him his time in which he shall die To this purpose said the iust man Iob by way of two interrogations Iob. 7.1 Is there not an appointed time for man vpon the earth And are not his dayes determined Iob. 14.5 The number of his moneths are with thee thou hast appointed him his bounds ouer which he shall not passe As if it were to say Certainely there is an appointed time for mans departure out of this world euen by the diuine ordinance sacred decree of the Almightie which cannot be shortened nor lengthned no not so much time more as to go ouer a meere or baulke nor so much time lesse as to come vnto it Againe he saith verie emphatically and affirmatiuely beleeuing in the promise of God therin after this manner I will waite my appointed time as though he had said Iob. 14.14 My God hath determined and set downe the day and houre of my dissolution it is hid from me I will therefore attend I will be looking for it from day to day Salomon after his conuersion amongst many excellent most diuine instructions he particulateth this secret decree of God most plainly after this manner Eccl. 3.12 To all things there is an appointed time And from this generall he descendeth into a more particular thus There is a time to be borne and a time to die to wit as there is a most certaine time inclosed in euery womans wombe in which she shall bring forth into the world euen so there is a certaine and an appointed time in which he that is borne of a woman shall go out of the world Saint Paul said to the Athenians Act. 17.26 God hath assigned the times that were ordained before and the bounds of their habitation By that saying the time of mans departure is decreed and vnreapeable why because there is no alteration nor change in Gods diuine Maiestie that which he is he was the same he will be for euer Iehoida said 2 King 11.15 He that comes within the ranges let him die the death euen so it may be said Whosoeuer comes within the compasse of the time which God hath decreed let him die without delay there is no hope nor helpe for him there will be no partiality or fauourable respects The liues of the 10. Gen. 5.3 to the end Fathers were twise exactly reckoned and their death once for diuers causes but specially that thereby euerie man thenceforth might be able to know the age of the old world before the floud The ages of these holy men being computated and layd together do amount iustly to 1656. yeares In which obseruance or sure rule for numeration and multiplication the holy Ghost deliuereth plainely that God doth strictly seuerely recken the liues of all men yea from their verie beginning to the verie day of their death Saint Iohn and other the Euāgelists affirme out of their owne knowledge that the Iewes vsed all cunning meanes practised diuers wayes to apprehend our Lord and Sauiour but all was in vaine something or other went betweene and why his houre was not yet come Ioh. 8.30 the time which his holy Father had decreed was not when they would To this effect Moses by a large measure of inspiration spake of an holy woman the wife of the Patriarch Abraham who had a particular and gracious respect before God specially for the time of her life the time of her death Gen. 23.1.2 When Sarah saith he was 127. yeares old so long liued shee then Sarah died That is as much to say Shee liued iust so long indeede and no whit longer when her appointed time was come then she died and not before Likewise Moses doth computate the age of Abraham her husband and saith Gen. 25.7 This is the age of Abrahams life which he liued 175. yeares Then Abraham yeelded the spirit died in a good age As if he had said This 175. yeares was the full time in which God had appointed him to liue When as Moses himselfe was to depart this life almightie God called him saying Thy dayes are come Deu. 31.14 thou must die to wit my decree is certaine towards thee my louing and my faithfull seruant as towards all the generation of mankinde As in an hoast of men furiously in fight so in the world some shall die now because God hath so appointed and some shall not die then because God hath not so appointed To which effect he spake by the mouth of his Prophet Eze. 9.4.5.6 Set a marke vpon the foreheads of thē that mourne And cōcerning others he said vnto him Go and smite destroy vtterly the old and the young Gen. 4.15 So likewise God was said to set a marke vpō Caine but touch no man vpon whom the marke is set shewing therein that euen amongst furious and outragious men in martiall affaires and in the determinations of malicious men life and death is euen then particularly in Gods hands and also the verie time thereof Here arise two necessary questions One why hath God so exactly determined the time of death the other why God doth conceale the time The first whereof is Why hath God so exactly determined the verie time of euery mans departure out of this world so that no man can go beyond it nor come short of it Why did he not rather resolue vpon this Let euery man shift for himselfe and
life of another As a king that is to gouern a kingdom must be powerful and seuere in the execution of instice against the mightie and readie to minister mercie to the needie and distressed euen so the Maiestie of this eternall King hauing the whole world to guide and to gouerne must be powerful and seuere To which effect he faith by his Prophet Ier emie Feare ye not him faith he Ier. 5.22 who hath placed the sand for the bounds of the sea by a perpetuall decree that it cannot passe Againe he said Cannot I do with you ò Israel as this Potter Ier. 18.6 The holy Prophet Ezekiel speaking of his predomināt power ouer the wicked faith after this manner Ezech. 6.7 I will take the bloud out of his mouth his abhomination frō amongst his teeth The same prerogatiue our Sauiour Christ manifesteth himselfe to haue in his speech to his Disciples If any man saith he Mar. 11.3 do say vnto you Why loose ye the Colt say ye vnto them The Lord hath need and they will straight way let it go As if he had said Do but tell them of me vse but my name and they shall haue no power to withstand you The second question why God doth conceale the time of mans departure out of this life Why doth he keepe it secret to himselfe This seemes to be hard iustice that a matter of so great importance should be hid Eccl. 9.12 No man knoweth his time saith Salomon but is suddenly taken as a fish or as a bird Dan. 12.4 It is shut vp and sealed vnto theend of the time appointed said Daniel Gen. 27.2 I know not the day of my death said the holy Patriarch Isaac And as Saint Luke said to the disciples concerning the restoring of Christs kingdome It is not for you to know the times seasons which God hath rescrued in his owne power Act. 17. euen so is it not for any man to know the time and season of his departure out of this life I conclude this question with the forewarning of Saint Paul to Timothie in these words Put away foolish and vnlearned questions knowing that they ingender strife There are three speciall and diuine reasons why the time of death is concealed The first reason is That euerie man should stand vpon his guard lest the enemie come suddenly Watch and pray therefore said our Sauiour Christ Iesus Saint Luke knowing the manner of death exhorts to watchfulnesse in these words Luk. 12.35.36.37.38 Let your loynes be girded about and your lights burning and ye your selues like vnto men that wait for their maisters God told Moses where he should die but he told him not the time and why because he as all other men should stand vpon his watch or guard Deu. 28.66 Thy life saith the Lord shall hang before thee and thou shalt feare both day and night and shalt haue none assurance of thy life The second reason why the time of death is concealed It is for the continuall good of all succeeding ages that the one ought to prouide for the other Therefore specially it is said by Salomon Eccl. 1.4 One generation passeth and another cometh as of heauenly so in some proportion of earthly which made Christ to say One soweth and another reapeth Ioh. 4.37 Were it that some might know the time of their departure they would not renue any thing that might be for them that should come after partly through malice and enuie and partly through extreme idlenesse or superfluous expences The third reason why the time of death is concealed That all men should carefully conueniently vse the meanes for life which God hath appointed in his Church Whereas if they knew the exact time of their departure they wold hold it friuolous to vse any of those good means which his holy Maiesty hath inserted annexed to the decree for the time of mans departure So should the ordinance of God concerning the vse of his creatures be made frustrate and those his exceeding good creatures stand of none effect The fourth reason why the time of death is concealed If the time of death were knowne to some they would liue very desperately and damnably for many yeares and the more neare to the time of their death they would grow the more sad sorowfull and heauy and into such intollerable passions as would driue them into desperation or at least into an vnwilling and a most gracelesse striuing with death in a sort against God himselfe Therefore Moses said Deu. 29.29 Secret things belong to the Lord our God but the thing reuealed belong vnto vs and to our children for euer Besides these two questions which formerly you haue heard there arise out of this doctrine concerning the timelinesse of death three obiections First if God haue so resolutely decreed vpon the verie day and houre of euery mans departure To what end shall a man vse indeuor or any of the best meanes for the preseruation of life The first answer for the vse of meanes to preserue life As almightie God hath decreed the time of death so withall he hath annexed and commanded religious and pertinent meanes for the preseruation of life vntill the time come As for example The people vnder Moses and Aarō might haue perished in a naturall contagion of the leprosie therefore God commāded that the whole might be singled and seuered from the sicke and infected Leuit. 13.1.2.3.4 The same people might haue bene destroyed in the iudgment which God had prepared for others therefore God commanded some saying Separate your selues from the tents of Corah Numb 16.1.2 2 King 10.23 Dathan and Abiram Iehu the King said Search see whether there be any of the Lords seruants amongst the seruants of Baall lest they be also destroyed with them Good men may perish in the outrage of the wicked Mat. 2.12.13 therefore God forewarned the wise men to depart home another way And Saul said to the Kenites 1 Sam. 15.6 Depart from amongst the Amalekits lest I destroy you with them That vertuous woman so highly in the fauor of God might haue bene famished in that seuen yeares of dearth 2 Kings 10.23 had not God forewarned her by his Prophet that she should shift for her selfe and her houshold in due time All men by the iustice of God for their sinne might lawfully be destroyed together in this or that plague or vengeance yet he hath in his mercie forewarned some and so doth to saue thēselues with the vse of meanes which he hath commended and commanded in his Church And withall in the vse of the same meanes or the like to preserue very reprobates frō the plagues which falle vpon their fellowes to the end they may liue vnto the time which he hath decreed for their death in which their sinnes will be full ripe As may appeare in the foure recited examples The second
more then it may be truly said that a man performing the will of God in some speciall matter is a meane thereby to lengthen his life but onely by a phrase of speech So it was said to Ebedmelech the Blackmore Thy life shal be a prey vnto thee Iere. 39.16.17 because of the fauor thou didst shew to Ieremy The sixth answer concerning him that doth neglect or contemne meanes If the diligent vse of the meanes be a prolonging of life and the neglect thereof be a shortning of life then of necessity it must be granted that there is an inseparable vertue and an inherent qualitie of sauing life in the means and that were no lesse sinne then sacrilidg arrogating to the creature by derogating from the creator or as absurdly to say 2 King 6.6 Gen. 7.7 that Elisha his bough caused iton to swim or that Noahs arke caused some of all sorts of creatures to come into it Thus did that proud and prophane Philistine 1 Sam. 17.45 presumptuously challenging all Israel crusting in his greatnesse in his speare in his shield but Dauid manfully met him with his sling and his shepheards crooke trusting in the vertue and power of God whom he did serue The Lord speakes vnto wicked mē trusting to the means by the mouth of his Prophet Dauid I said Psal 89.43 I will turne backe the edge of the sword as if he had said When the wicked thinke with their instrumēts of death to destroy my people I will take away their force they shall not cut nor hurt Iere. 6.22 So he saith to the same purpose I wil turne backe the weapons of warre that are in their hāds The Lord makes question by his Prophet Ieremie thus Is there no balme in Gilead Iere. 9. is there no physicke there why then is not the health of my people recouered As if he had said That pretious medicinable balme and those people skilfull in Gilead of all others in the world shall do no good on them to whom I deny the vertue therof these licors oyntmēts such like the most exquisite physitions shall not preuaile Againe he saith by his Prophet Ezechiel Eze. 5.16 I will breake the staffe of bread to wit I will take away the vertue and efficacy euen of their daintiest foode To which purpose Hosea the Prophet said They shall eate and not haue enough to wit Hose 4.10 those which do relie wholly vpon the meanes shall faile of their expectation Likewise said Micha the Prophet All hands shall be weake Mich. 6.14 and all knees shal be weake as water to wit those valiant and mightie men that do depend vpon their strength when they come to the push shall faile of their purpose for they shall not be able to stand of themselues vpō their feete because the Lord hath disabled them Againe the Lord saith vnto all such by the mouth of his Prophet Ezechiel Ezech. 7.17.39.3 I will strike thy bow out of thy left hand and thine arrowes out of thy right hand as if he had said How ready soeuer the wicked be prepared against the faces of the godly yet they shall not do the least harme The same in effect he saith by the mouth of Haggai the Prophet Hagg. 1.6 Ye haue sowne much and bring in little ye eate but ye haue not enough ye drinke but ye are not filled ye cloath you but you be not warme and he that earneth wages puts it in a bottomlesse bagge To conclude as a man may vse all lawfull meanes for an honest and a vertuous wife and yet may haue a graceles and an irreligious wretch euen so a man may vse all meanes and all endeuors for the preseruation of life and shall not be able to preuent death Because the vertue the efficacy and power of the meanes is in the hands of God and the vse onely in the hands of men As in Noah his oliue leafe which the doue brought into the arke Gen. 8.12 there were actions of two sundrie natures to wit peace and plenty and as in the ministerie of Gods word there is an action of life and an action of death euen so in this matter or meanes concerning life and death there are actions of two sundry natures one concerning God the other concerning man That which pertaines to man is the diligent vse of the meanes that which pertaines to God is to giue vertue and efficacy vnto the meanes As for example God said vnto the people of Israel Iere. 38.2 He that remaineth in the citie shall die without the sword by the famine and by the pestilence but he that goeth forth shall liue he shal haue his life for a prey Here life and death was in present question to flie out of the citie was the meanes of life which was for the people to do and to giue vertue vnto their flight was in God to do On the contrary side the neglect of that duty made thē guilty of their owne death and accessary by a phrase of speech to their own destruction yet in that very rebellious actiō of theirs was the decree of God fulfilled concerning the time of their death Mat. 2. Likewise in that Herodian persecution the wise men tooke the forewarning of of God for the meanes of their preseruation and his Maiestie gaue good successe and effect thereunto I conclude againe that he which vseth meanes how lawfull soeuer with an vnderstanding and with a beleeuing that the same of it selfe is effectuall for the lengthning of life that man is an Infidell But to vse meanes which are not inhibited for the preseruatiō of health wealth and libertie and such like is very religious The third obiection concerning addition or conditionall life If the time of death be so exactly set downe and so resolutely concluded in the counsell of God Why then doth his holy Maiestie promise to lengthen the life of the godly as is in the first commandemēt of the second table Exo. 20.12 I will prolong thy dayes if thou wilt walke in my wayes The performāce of his promise concerning long life Gen. 5.5.8 to 32. may be euidenced from the ten holy Fathers before the floud who for keeping of his commandements did liue many hundred yeares more then any other liued after them And the same we haue in a sort truly said of Ezechias whose sinceritie was such as God vouchsafed to adde fifteene yeares vnto his life And againe 2 King 20.5.6 Why is it said by the Prophet Psal 55.23 The bloud-thirsty man shall not liue halfe his dayes Or he shall liue long cōditionally as God said to Abimelech Deliuer Abraham his wife that thou maist liue Gen. 20.7 but if not be sure thou shalt die the death thou and all that thou hast The answer to this obiection is threefold First as by a decree from the beginning is set downe how long the godly and the wicked shall
of Nahomie who by death was violently rent from her husband which made her as out of a sorrowfull heart to crie out saying Ruth 1.20.21 The Almightie hath giuen me much bitternesse I went full I returne empty the Lord hath humbled me and brought me to aduersitie By which words and by many daily examples it is plaine that the parting of an husband from a wife ministreth many occasions of weeping mourning and calling vpon God If she be old then is she void of hope and the farther from helpe in her greatest neede if she be young then is she the more subiect to vtter vndoing by her choise which standeth so in generall amongst all men in the world In the meane time she is in danger by her singularity to the subtill temptations of the diuell and so to the prouocations of diuelish men together with the breaking vp of her houshold and the dispersing of her fatherlesse children All which dolefull dangers should be sufficient matter to moue her to commemorate her husbands death and by the diuine ordering of her selfe in the same to solemnize her owne If the partie dead be priuate and a wife the husband in like manner is occasioned to commemorate her death with much mourning The more godly and wise the husband is the more is his griefe with the consideration of that danger which is to come in the choise of another and in step-daming and mother-lawing his little young children and when as specially he shall endanger religious exercises in his house amongst his familie and in himselfe the decay of Gods seruice by meanes of a wife who perhaps will crosse and contrarie all The consideration of these and such like disturbances no doubt together with natural affection being powerfull in Abraham although a man highly in the fauour of God it wrought in him exceeding great passions which made him to mourne much with heartie grife Gen 23. vers 3. not able to abide the sight of his corps Here a complaint may well be raised against husbands who most carelesly and most vnconscionably do passe ouer the deceasse of their wiues and in like manner the wiues passing ouer the deceasse of their husbands sauing onely for the present time the matter seeming irkesome they burst out passionatly into some few funerall teares saying with admiratiō what is he dead or is she dead what dead alacke what dead who would haue thought it With clapping of hands and striking of thighes as if death were vnwōted they still for a few dayes speake admirably Such a man is dead the onely honest husband is dead or the onely honest wife that euer man had is dead wel this is the world there is no remedy weeping will not serue we shall all die or else dissemblingly they mourne on their backs but ioy in their hearts making an outward shew of that which is not inward Sam. 14.1 to 13. Like the woman of Tekoha who with her mourning apparell with her heauy countenance and with her lamentable cries made Dauid the King though a great wife man to beleeue that her husband her two sonnes were dead in deede as she said which was nothing so Or else most vnnaturall of whom S. Paul speaketh Rom. 1.23 who are nothing moued to mourne being in sort a people forsaken of God and branded with the marke of vnnaturall affection To yeeld no naturall affection is so much abhorring nature and so contrarie to pitie and so voyd of pietie as it is to denie the buriall of the dead so that before God it is all one kinde of prophanenesse and so much as that husband or that wife can do to condemne them that are graciously dead in the Lord to be in state of damnation and therefore not any way worthy of commemoration whom the Prophet Ezechiel reproueth after this manner Crueltie is risen vp Eze. 7.11 a rod of wickednesse none of them shall remaine nor of their riches nor any of theirs neither shall there be lamentation for them And Esay saith Esai 57.1 The righteous perisheth and no man considereth it in heart and mercifull men are taken away and no man vnderstandeth that the righteous is taken away from the euill to come If the person dead or dying be priuate and a sonne or daughter the inherent qualitie and the vnanswerable affections of parents towards their children whiles they are aliue doth sufficiently discouer their continuall mourning their griefe and their hearty sorrowes whē the children are dead And now I call to minde out of my owne tormented heart and fatherly afflicted soule my sorrow for many sonnes specially forone Parents cannot be included within this account of reproose but rather truly be reckoned amongst those who mourne too much and ouerlong being drawne thereunto as out of their vnanswerable affections deriued no man knowes whence nor how sauing that which is in respect of children begotten in mariage to which the exceeding diuine affection of God the Father in Christ Iesus hath relation and perfect reference If the person dead or dying be priuate and a father or mother What exceeding great cause haue the childrē continually to commemorate and religiously to celebrate his or her death with mourning with fasting and with calling heartily vpon God for these two speciall causes One is for their continuall care of parents tending onely for their welfare in the world the other their Christian conscience for the saluation of their soules in the world to come where parents faile in the one they exceed in the other according to the common prouerbe Happie is the child whose father goes to the diuell As if it were to say more particularly and more plainly The father and the mother are so vnsatiable in their coueting so infidell-like pinching their backes their bellies and so diuellishly oppressing the poore yea many times so atheistlike hazarding their owne liues by vnlawfull getting and so directly opposing themselues against God for to enrich their children as that indeed they make whole shipwrack of their soules The truth whereof is so cleare and the matter it selfe so probable as if there were neither many millions of godly witnesses neither the wicked liues and wastfull behauiour of their children yet their owne conscience to their own condemnation would manifestly declare it And haue not such children great cause to mourne yea alwayes to bewaile the deceasse of such parents specially because of the hellish torments and the ineuitable paines which they do endure Me thinks I heare and see the same or greater torments which God in his vpright instice doth prepare for such children not onely because of their vnnaturall and vndutifull behauior towards their parents being dead and whiles they were aliue but also for that they do so ioy and so reioyce in their goods being so gathered and so left vnto them which is indeed no other then the price of bloud and I may say more plainly the price of their