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A46825 A sermon preached at the funeral of the right honble the Lady Frances Paget, the religious consort of the right honble William Lord Paget, (eldest daughter to the right honourable Henry Earl of Holland, who was beheaded for his loyalty to this King) in the parish-church of West-Drayton in the county of Middlesex, on the 12th of Nevember, 1672. By Jehu Jenny, M.A. and Vicar of Harmondsworth. Jenney, John, d. 1697. 1673 (1673) Wing J673A; ESTC R220733 15,009 28

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A SERMON PREACHED At the FUNERAL of the Right honble the Lady Frances Paget The religious Consort of the right honble William Lord PAGET Eldest Daughter to the Right Honourable Henry Earl of Holland who was beheaded for his Loyalty to his King In the Parish-Church of West-Drayton in the County of Middlesex on the 12th of November 1672. By JEHU JENNY M. A. and Vicar of Harmondsworth LONDON Printed by J. D. for Nevil Simmons at the Princes Arms in St. Paul's Church-yard 1673. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE William Lord PAGET Baron of Brandesert Knight of the Honourable Order of the Bath c. My Lord NOthing but your Lordships Commands could have forced into the Light this Discourse of so hasty conception and they give some countenance to the confidence of this Dedication otherwise I am too conscious that nothing of mine can deserve the Patronage of so great a Name or Title nor do I hope for Acceptance of this Service further than it is a Testimony of my Obedience and bears some though faint Characters of your late dear Consort That the Piety and Virtue of that excellent Lady may still live in your Noble Family of which there are visible hopes largely promising and consequently the Blessing of it on your Posterity reach the utmost extent of the Promise to such Obedience shall be a considerable part of the constant Devotions of My Lord Your Lordships most Obsequious Chaplain Jehu Jenny MATTH 24.46 Blessed is that Servant whom his Lord when he cometh shall find so doing FOR Man to know God and himself is the Comprehension of his whole Duty The Poet could tell us of the latter that it is that Wisdom which is from above from Heaven heavenly that which will trans-element us have that happy influence to sublimate us into that which is coelestial make us partakers or the Divine Nature and at length when we shall be ripen'd and sufficiently refin'd translate us to the enjoyments of that Kingdom Thus for Man to understand himself to know what he is will make him new create him what he is not and render him happy in that degree to which without this knowledge he could never attain And upon this notice this discovery who thirsts not after so much Goodness followed with so great Reward who is not impatiently eager on the study of this Philosophers Stone who will not judge it thrifty prodigality to lay out all to purchase this Pearl of so great price to any considerate man this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must needs be matter of his highest satisfaction this acquirement is a recompence infinitly beyond all his labour and severity in the search after which there is no befooling darkness no discouraging difficulty no climbing the Clouds or crossing the Sea for it but this word of Wisdom is nigh thee Deut. 30.12 13 14. 't is plain and easie that which God hath sent down to us nay which the Son of God when for us men and for our Salvation he came down from Heaven himself hath delivered to us that which in the Text he preach'd to his Disciples and in them to us all in which he hath satisfied the Psalmist's question What is man what is man but a Servant to the great Lord and in this given a further resolve to the inquiry of those Publicans and Souldiers Luke 3. and who else shall come with the like case Master what must we do if Servants what 's our work our imployment He informs them to be deligent in their Office and to whet them to this he lets them know that he himself will have an eye over them and take an account of them and to encourage them to all this that as he findes them to be faithful so shall they be looked by him enjoy his favour the fullest blessedness Blessed c. And in this short account of the words I have given you the Parts of my Text which are these I. In what capacity man stands here he is a Servant That Servant II. As such what is his employment exprest in these words so doing III. The account will be taken of him the Lord of the family will come to take it himself though it be intimated that the time when he will come is very uncertain IV. The reward of that Servant that shall be found faithful and deligent Blessed is that Servant Of each of these with as much brevity as the Subject will allow I. In what capacity man stands here he is a Servant That Servant God made man but made him not for nought but to the excellency of his endowments in the design of Heaven was proportion'd an employment for him The Schools maintained this Axiome Quicquid agit agit propter finem that whatsoever moves in the nature of an Agent designs something as the end of its acting And certainly this perfection must be eminently in the Author of Nature and no end can we define worthy his proposal but his own Glory in the manifestations of his Power Wisdom and Goodness the most learned Philosopher and the greatest Divine that ever was in the World affirms this of the great work of Creation Pro. 16.4 The Lord hath made all things for himself yea even the Wicked for the day of evil That disorderly improfitable part of the Creation Telluris inutile pondus as the Poet speaks the wicked though God made them not so he made man upright and left him in the hands of his own counsel as the Son of Sirach Ecclus. 15.14 yet his over-ruling Wisdom makes them serve the designs of his inflexible Justice because they will not pay that homage they owe to their Maker but refuse to be happy and so defeat the purposes of enthroning his Mercy therefore he obliges them to wait on the triumph● of his Vengance as the just demerit of their obstinacy and rebellion In the 1st of Genesis last verse when the Ahnighty surveys the workmanship of his fix dayes creation he gives his approbation God saw every thing that he had made and behold it was very good Good in this respect among others in regard of that the God of order had placed in this large family of the Creation allotting each part its station and assigning them operations according to what powers and faculties he had implanted in them so that from the Seraphim to the Pismire there is no creature but what in a larger or less capacity is a Servant of its Creator The Philosopher could say that all things do serve in his notion the first Being and Cause of all things which is one of the meditations of the Royal Psalmist which he hath left us Psal 119.89 90 91. where he enumerates particulars For ever O Lord thy Word is setled in Heaven Thy Faithfulness is unto all Generations thou hast established the Earth and it abideth They continue this day according to thine Ordinances And then he concludes For all are thy Servants And upon enquiry we shall find his assertion true