Selected quad for the lemma: mercy_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
mercy_n abel_n blood_n cry_v 2,397 5 9.4770 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A64099 The rule and exercises of holy dying in which are described the means and instruments of preparing our selves and others respectively, for a blessed death, and the remedies against the evils and temptations proper to the state of sicknesse : together with prayers and acts of vertue to be used by sick and dying persons, or by others standing in their attendance : to which are added rules for the visitation of the sick and offices proper for that ministery.; Rule and exercises of holy dying. 1651 Taylor, Jeremy, 1613-1667. 1651 (1651) Wing T361A; ESTC R28870 213,989 413

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

warres and violencies that seven years fighting sets a whole Kingdom back in learning and vertue to which they were creeping it may be a whole age And thus also we do evil to our posterity as Adam did to his and Cham did to his and Eli to his and all they to theirs who by sins caused God to shorten the life and multiply the evils of mankinde and for this reason it is the world grows worse and worse because so many original sins are multiplied and so many evils from Parents descend upon the succeeding generations of men that they derive nothing from us but original misery But he who restored the law of Nature did also restore us to the condition of Nature which being violated by the introduction of death Christ then repaired when he suffered and overcame death for us that is he hath taken away the unhappinesse of sicknesse and the sting of death and the dishonours of the grave of dissolution and weaknesse of decay and change and hath turned them into acts of favour into instances of comfort into opportunities of vertue Christ hath now knit them into rosaries and coronets he hath put them into promises and rewards he hath made them part of the portion of his elect they are instruments and earnests and securities and passages to the greatest perfection of humane nature and the Divine promises So that it is possible for us now to be reconciled to sicknesse It came in by sin and therefore is cured when it is turned into vertue and although it may have in it the uneasinesse of labour yet it will not be uneasie as sin or the restlessenesse of a discomposed conscience If therefore we can well manage our state of sicknesse that we may not fall by pain as we usually do by pleasure we need not fear for no evil shall happen to us SECT II. Of the first temptation proper to the state of sicknesse Impatience MEn that are in health are severe exactors of patience at the hands of them that are sick and they usually judge it not by terms of relation between God and the suffering man but between him and the friends that stand by the bed-side It will be therefore necessary that we truly understand to what duties and actions the patience of a sick man ought to extend 1. Sighes and groans sorrow and prayers humble complaints and dolorous expressions are the sad accents of a sick mans language for it is not to be expected that a sick man should act a part of patience with a countenance like an Orator or grave like a Dramatick person It were well if all men could bear an exteriour decencie in their sicknesse and regulate their voice their face their discourse and all their circumstances by the measures and proportions of comlinesse and satisfaction to all the standers by But this would better please them then assist him the sick man would do more good to others then he would receive to himself 2. Therefore silence and still composures and not complaining are no parts of a sick mans duty they are not necessary parts of patience We find that David roared for the very disquietnesse of his sicknesse and he lay chattering like a swallow and his throat was dry with calling for help upon his God That 's the proper voice of sicknesse and certain it is that the proper voyces of sicknesse are expressely vocal and petitory in the eares of God and call for pity in the same accent as the cryes and oppressions of Widows and Orphans do for vengeance upon their persecutors though they say no Collect against them For there is the voyce of man and there is the voyce of the disease and God hears both And the louder the disease speaks there is the greater need of mercy and pity and therefore God will the sooner hear it Abels blood had a voice and cried to God and humility hath a voice and cries so loud to God that it pierces the clouds and so hath every sorrow and every sicknesse and when a man cries out and complains but according to the sorrowes of his pain it cannot be any part of a culpable impatience but an argument for pity 3. Some senses are so subtile and their perceptions so quick and full of relish and their spirits so active that the same load is double upon them to what it is to another person and therefore comparing the expressions of the one to the silence of the other a different judgement cannot be made concerning their patience Some natures are querulous and melancholy and soft and nice and tender and weeping and expressive others are sullen dull without apprehension apt to tolerate and carry burdens and the crucifixion of our Blessed Saviour falling upon a delicate and virgin body of curious temper and strict equall composition was naturally more full of torment then that of the ruder theeves whose proportions were course● and uneven 4. In this case it was no imprudent advice which Cicero gave Nothing in the world is more amiable then an even temper in our whole life and in every action but this evennesse cannot be kept unlesse every man follows his own nature without striving to i●itate the circumstances of another and what is so in the thing it self ought to be so in our judgements concerning the things We must not call any one impatient if he be not silent in a feaver as if he were asleep or as if he were dull as Herods son of Athens 5. Nature in some cases hath made cryings out and exclamations to be an entertainment of the spirit and an abatement or diversion of the pain For so did the old champions when they threw their fatall nets that they might load their enemy with the snares and weights of death they groaned aloud and sent forth the anguish of their spirit into the eyes and heart of the man that stood against them so it is in the endurance of some sharp pains the complaints and shrikings the sharp groans and the tender accents send forth the afflicted spirits and force a way that they may ease their oppression and their load that when they have spent some of their sorrows by a sally sorth they may returne better able to fortifie the heart Nothing of this is a certain signe much lesse an action or part of impatience and when our blessed Saviour suffered his last and sharpest pang of sorrow he cryed out with a loud voice and resolved to die and did so SECT III. Constituent or integrall parts of patience 1. THat we may secure our patience we must take care that our complaints be without despair Despair sins against the reputation of Gods goodnesse and the efficacy of all our old experience By despair we destroy the greatest comfort of our sorrowes and turn our sicknesse into the state of Devils and perishing souls No affliction is greater then despair for that is it which makes hell fire and turns a natural
heart is infinitely deceitful unknown to it self not certain in his own acts praying one way and desiring another wandring and imperfect loose and various worshipping God and entertaining sin following what it hates and running from what it flatters loving to be tempted and betrayed petulant like a wanton girle running from that it might invite the fondnesse and enrage the appetite of the foolish young man or the evil temptation that followes it cold and indifferent one while and presently zealous and passionate furious and indiscreet not understood of it self or any one else and deceitful beyond all the arts and numbers of observation 8. That it is certain we have highly sinned against God but we are not so certain that our repentance is reall and effective integral and sufficient 9. That it is not revealed to us whether or no the time of our repentance be not past or if it be not yet how far God will give us pardon and upon what condition or after what sufferings or duties is still under a cloud 10. That vertue and vice are oftentimes so neer neighbours that we passe into each others borders without observation and think we do justice when we are cruel or call our selves liberal when we are loose and foolish in expences and are amorous when we commend our own civilities and good nature 11. That we allow to our selves so many little irregularities that insensibly they swell to so great a heap that from thence we have reason to fear an evil for an army of frogs and flies may destroy all the hopes of our harvest 12. That when we do that which is lawful and do all that we can in those bounds we commonly and easily run out of our proportions 13. That it is not easie to distinguish the vertues of our nature from the vertues of our choice and we may expect the reward of temperance when it is against our nature to be drunk or we hope to have the coronet of virgins for our morose disposition or our abstinence from marriage upon secular ends 14. That it may be we call every little sigh or the keeping a fish-day the dutie of repentance or have entertained false principles in the estimate and measures of vertues and contrarie to the Steward in that Gospel we write down fourscore when we should set downe but fifty 15. That it is better to trust the goodnesse and justice of God with our accounts then to offer him large bits 16. That we are commanded by Christ to sit down in the lowest place till the Master of the house bids us sit up higher 17. That when we have done all that we can we are unprofitable servants and yet no man does all that he can do and therefore is more to be despised and undervalued 18. That the self-accusing Publican was justified rather then the thanksgiving and confident Pharisee 19. That if Adam in Paradise and David in his house and Solomon in the Temple and Peter in Christs family and Iudas in the College of Apostles and Nicholas among the Deacons and the Angels in heaven it self did fall so foully and dishonestly then it is prudent advice that we be not high minded but fear and when we stand most confidently take heed lest we fall and yet there is nothing so likely to make us fall as pride and great opinions which ruined the Angels which God resists which all men despise and which betrayes us into carelesnesse and a wretchlesse undiscerning and an unwary spirit 4. Now the main parts of the Ecclesiastical ministery are done and that which remains is that the Minister pray over him and reminde him to do good actions as he is capable * to call upon God for pardon * to put his whole trust in him * to resigne himself to Gods disposing * to be patient and even * to renounce every ill word or thought or undecent action which the violence of his sicknesse may cause in him * to beg of God to give him his holy Spirit to guide him in his agony and * his holy Angels to guard him in his passage 5. Whatsoever is besides this concerns the standers by that they do all their ministeries diligently and temperately * that they joyn with much charity and devotion in the prayer of the Minister * that they make no outcries or exclamations in the departure of the soul * and that they make no judgement concerning the dying person by his dying quietly or violently with comfort or without with great fears or a cheerful confidence with sense or without like a lamb or like a lyon with convulsions or semblances of great pain or like an expiring and a spent candle for these happen to all men without rule without any known reason but according as God pleases to dispense the grace or the punishment for reasons onely known to himself Let us lay our hands upon our mouth and adore the mysteries of the divine wisdome and providence and pray to God to give the dying man rest and pardon and to our selves grace to live well and the blessing of a holy and a happy death SECT VII Offices to be said by the Minister in his visitation of the sick IN the Name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Our Father which art in Heaven c. Let the Priest say this prayer secretly O Eternal Jesus thou great lover of souls who hast constituted a ministery in the Church to glorifie thy Name and to serve in the assistance of those that come to thee professing thy discipline and service give grace to me the unworthiest of thy servants that I in this my ministery may purely and zealously intend thy glory and effectually may minister comfort and advantages to this sick person whom God assoil from all his offences and grant that nothing of thy grace may perish to him by the unworthinesse of the Minister but let thy Spirit speak by me and give me prudence and charity wisdom and diligence good observation and apt discourses a certain judgement and merciful dispensation that the soul of thy servant may passe from this state of imperfection to the perfections of the state of glory thorough thy mercies O Eternal Jesus Amen The Psalm OUt of the depths have I cryed unto thee O Lord Lord hear my voice let thine ears be attentive to the voice of my supplications If thou Lord should mark iniquities O Lord who shall stand but there is forgivenesse with thee that thou mayest be feared I wait for the Lord my soul doth wait and in his word do I hope my soul waiteth for the Lord more then they that watch for the morning Let Israel hope in the Lord for with the Lord there is mercy and with him is plenteous redemption and he shall redeem his servants from all their iniquities Wherefore should I fear in the dayes of evil when the wickednesse of my heels shall compasse me about No man can by any means redeem