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A12558 Munition against mans misery and mortality A treatice containing the most effectual remedies against the miserable state of man in this life, selected out of the chiefest both humane and divine authors; by Richard Smyth preacher of Gods word in Barstaple in Devonshire. Smyth, Richard, preacher in Barnstaple, Devonshire. 1612 (1612) STC 22878; ESTC S100020 65,151 158

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in vs as hath in part * alreadie beene touched And therfore u In this chap. sect 3. ● 2. Corinth 4 vers 16. the blessed Apostle ioineth both these benefits together saying that while our outward man perisheth our inward man is renued thereby meaning that as afflictions do weaken and cōsume our naturall life so they strengthen further our spiritual life And ô happy losse that causeth such gain ô happy smart that causeth such ease yea ô happy death that causeth such a life Thus we ever come out of afflictiō better thē we were before Wherof we haue a notable resemblance or rather a type prefiguration in the children of Israels bondage in Aegypt recorded by x Genes 15. ver 13. 14 Moses in his holy historie God fore-told that they should be slaues in Aegypt for many yeares and suffer great affliction there but yet that in the end they should come out of it and that with advantage namely with gold silver iewels and far greater substance thē they had when they went thither as y Exod 12. v. 35.36 the event indeed manifestly shewed Even so it fareth with all true Christians they must go into Aegypt and endure bondage there that is they must suffer many troubles and miseries in this life but they shall come out of them in better case then they were before But what doe Gods children come out of their troubles and adversities with more gold and silver or with better apparell then they had before as the Israelites did out of Aegypt No surely but yet with far more pretious things then golde or silver or gorgeous attire namely with more knowledge with more wisedome with more potiēce with more humility with more zeale with more contēpt of this transitory life aed more longing after the life to come which is eternall Now what goodly treasures are these and how farre more pretious then those which the Israelites brought out of Aegypt after their long bondage and manifold grievances there z Tertull de p. ● ētia c. 7 Tertullian saith strangly Let the whole world perish so that I may gaine patience If hee helde that one vertue of patiēce worth the buying at so high a rate evē with the losse of the whole world how much more should we thinke so many other vertues together with it worth the buying with some short transitory adversities and crosses of the world 10 Last of all a true Christian hath by the benefit of his holy profession this notable comfort against the miseries of this present life that making such religious vses thereof as hath beene said he is acquitted of eternall miseries of the life to come So a Luc. 16. ver 25. Abraham frō heaven tels the rich glutton in hel Remember saith he that thou receivedst good thing in this life Lazarous evill therefore now is he comforted at thou art tormented And saith b 1 Corinth 11. vers 32. S Paul When we are iudged of the Lord wee are corrected to the ende we should not be damned with the world Thus if God correct vs the Divell shall haue nothing to doe with vs. And how happy would the sonne thinke himselfe that having deserved to bee strangled by the hangman might scape by whipping and the whipping too referred to his owne father Thus the evils of paine or the afflictions of this life to a true Christian minister many comforts yeeld them many benefits so that we should rather desire them then bee overmuch afraid of them or dismaide with them Therefore c Bern in Cant. ser 42 S. Bernards meditation is excellent touching this point that God is never more angry then when he is not angry that is when hee sheweth no tokens of his displeasure by correcting vs. For although this may seeme to be mercy and favor yet saith he I will none of this mercy this mercy is worse then all wrath or anger To cōclude let vs make such holy vses of the miseries which we endure in this life as hath beene shewed and they shall serue vs for an acquittance of al miseries and torments in the life to come CHAP. 8. That the Christian religion only affordeth vs true remedy against the second kinde of evils that is the evils which wee doe or our sinnes 1 THAT the greatest evils in this worlde are the evils which wee doe that is our sinnes hath been * Chap. 2. Sect 5. already sufficiently declared * Chap. 5. Sect. 7. 8. as also that the best remedies that naturall men though never so wise learned haue beene able to devise against the same are of no force nay that they are rasher poysons then medicines Let vs now see what helpes and comforts Divinity and true religion will afford vs againe the same 2 And first wee must admit it for a ground that neither our selues nor any other like vnto our selues that is meere men can remedy this matter that is deliver vs from sinne For both we and they are so captivated enthralled therevnto that wee cannot possibly free our selues from it as hath beene * Chap. 2. Sect. 8.1 Chap. 6. Sect 4. before declared wherevnto we may adde that golden speech of a Bern. trac● de gratia libero arbitrio Bernard that although power were given to mans will to stand not fal yet not a power to rise againe if it did fall For it is not so easie for a man to come out of a pit as to fall into a pit It is in vain then to seeke helpe either from our selues or others like vnto our selues in this case namely against sinne 3 Here mans state being both so miserable and also so remediles God steps in to stelpe him when hee was not able to helpe himselfe and after an incomprehensible manner so tempered mercy and iustice one with the other that neither sinne shoulde bee simply pardoned nor yet the sinner be condemned but that both the offense should be punished and yet the offender absolved This may seeme strange and indeed is most strange therefore b Rom 16. ver 25. Colos 1. vers 20. in the scriptures is called a mistery yea a hiddē mistery yea a mistery hidden from the beginning of the world vntill the fulnesse of time that is vntill the time appointed by God in his infinit wisdome for the revelation thereof This mistery in few wordes is that God sent his only sonne Iesus Christ into the worlde to take vpon him the nature of man in the wombe and of the substance of the virgin Mary and in this nature to preach all truth and to fulfill all righteousnesse in his life and afterwardes to suffer a most both ignominious and painful death vpon the crosse that by his bloud he might wash away mans sins so reconcile to himselfe all those that by faith embraced him as their redeemer and applyed to thēselues that most glorious and soveraigne sacrifice
for my owne particular it hath ever beene far beyond not only my desert but also my desire But to come to the more ordinary endes of such dedications they are principally three comfort honor duty or rather discharge of duty all which I confesse haue prevailed with me in the dedication of these my slender discourses vnto your Lady ship Many haue not only dedicated their writings but directed their whole Treatises to such as they desired to comfort as i Plutarch consolat ad Apollonium Plutarch k Senee consolat ad Polyb Abin Martiam Seneca and others Now this Treatise of mine tēding only to comfort vs in generall against all misery wherevnto our life in this fraile and transitory world is subiect I haue dedicated the same to your Ladyship that if it afford any vse of that nature your Ladiship might principally haue the benefitte thereof whose almost insupportable crosses yea without great measure of grace meerely insupportable stand not a little in need thereof I must in discreation omit particulars which are to well knowne to them that know you your state Secōdly whereas many in their dedications as much as in them lie seek to honor their vertues to whom they intitle their works I professe that I haue here in much respected the same in behalfe of your Ladiship For having beene a long time an eye witnesse of your vertuous and religious conversation occasionally as it were enforced to take notice of the manifold and excellent graces of God shining in you I could not but most willingly imbrace any opportunitie to giue some publike testimonie therevnto and a fitter could not occur then the publishing of this Treatise And yet here I must doe you wrong by omitting particulars who of your excessiue modestie would hold your selfe wronged if I should in particular giue you but your due praises and specifie your most eminent vertues I therefore rather chuse to wrong you indeed then you should conceiue and complaine that you are wronged Lastly as for obligation and duty mine towardes your Ladishippe is so greate that this consideration alone without any other motiue would haue beene sufficient to make mee straine my best indeavours to the highest to strike out some part of my scoare if paper payment may bee currant and verball acknowledgement may satisfie for reall benefittes which indeed cannot bee but by the favourable acceptance of generous and noble mindes who deeme that mercenarie beneficence is no beneficence Of which temper knowing your Ladiships spirit to be I haue beene encouraged to shift out by this kinde of beggerly recompence I heare therefore deare Madame present vnto you the Anatomie of my best thoughts entreating your favorable acceptation thereof To you are they due aboue al others such as they are being the fruits of that tree to wit my vnworthie selfe that hath continually bin watered and cherished by your manifold Christian favors But here againe I must forbeare particulars least I should be offensiue and therefore I end mosi affectionately commending your good Ladyship to the grace of God in Christ Barstable in Devonshire 1609. Ianuarie 1. alias Newyeares day Your Ladiships most obliged RICHARD SMYTH THE CONTENTS of the severall Chapters Chap. 1. The vanity of all knowledge without the right knowledg of our selues Chap. 2. Agenerall consideration of mans miserie Chap. 3. The Gentils miserable ignorance of the true cause of mans miserie Chap. 4. That as the Gentils knew not the true cause of mans misery so neither did they know the vtmost and height of it Chap. 5. That the Gentils being ignorant both of the cause and the greatnes of mans misery haue grosly erred in the true remedies against the same Chap. 6. That true religion reveiled vnto vs by Gods word only discovereth vnto vs the cause of our miserie Chap. 7. The true remedies which Christiā religion affordeth against the first kinde of mans miserie that is the evils of paine Chap. 8. That the Christian religion onlie affordeth vs true remedie against the second kinde of evils that is the evils which we do or our sinnes Chap. 9. Consolations against certaine circumstances of sinne namely long cōtinuance therein before our conversion and relapse into it after our cōversion Chap. 10. Of the greatnesse of Gods mercie wherewith the greatnes of sinne hath no proportion Chap. 11. The Christians peculiar comforts against death and the terror thereof Chap. 12. Consolations against the terrours of the generall iudgement Chap. 13. The ioies of heaven and glorious state of the faithfull after death The sinners counsell to his soule A Sonnet of the Authors A wake ô Soule and looke abroad Shake off this drowsie sleepe of sin Shake off the clogs that thee so load And to be wise at length begin Thou commest of a race divine Derived from the Deitie And therefore shouldst with vertue shine Such parentage to testifie But thou through Satans guile and spite Didst shamefully degenerate And now to sense and appetite Thy selfe dost basely captivate And so with vice art thou defilde Which fowler is than leprousie That now thou seem'st no more Gods childe But one of Satans progenie Appointed heyre of heavenly ioies With God himselfe aboue to reigne Thou doatest here on earthly toyes On ciphers shaddowes meerely vaine And here thou foolishly dost thinke In pleasures vaine content to finde While thou dost but thy poison drinke Such deadly dregs they leaue behinde For pleasure which in sin men take Is in a moment gone and past Whereas the wounds which it doth make Remaine behinde and ever last And of such wounds thou bearst the print And with them fowly gashed art Although that thou more hard than flint Felst not at first their deadly smart But now that God in mercie great Good thoughts into thee daignes to send And everlasting death doth threat Except with speede thou dost amend O flie thou from that monster vile From subtill and inchanting sinne That hath so wrongd thee all this while And cause of such annoyance bin The birds and beasts that scape the snare Backe to the same no baite can traine So wary afterwards they are As never to come there againe Then blush ô soule that creatures mute The dangers past should after shunne And thou shouldst be so mad and brute As into them againe to runne Thinke how thou dost thy selfe expose To danger deepe by every sinne Even heaven and heavenly ioies to lose And bell and bellish woes to winne For who so ventures to rebell Against the Lord and followes vice His soule he to the divell doth sell And takes vaine pleasure for her price Then loath this world sofull of snares A maze of errours shop of lies A stage of shaddowes cage of cares An Eccho of complaints and cries Thou seest all worldly ioyes deceiue They promise to content the minde And yet still emptie doe it leaue Which shewes they feed it but with winde Then cleaue to God thine only stay Who for himselfe
benefite to be delivered from a loathsome disease of the body by an vnlawfull and wicked death we haue reason to think it a benefite yea a singular benefite to be ridde of a loathsome and incurable disease of the soule namely sinne by a lawful death which it pleaseth God to send vnto vs. 8 But death doth more for vs than all this For it doth not only free vs from all evils and from that evil of evils sinne but puts vs into actual possession of all good things yea of such good thinges as our eies haue not seene our eares haue not heard neither are our harts able to conceiue brings vs to that place where if there were place for any passion we should be angry with death for not bringing vs thither sooner But I reserue a more particular declaration of that point vnto the thirteenth and last chapter CHAP. 12. Consolations against the terrours of the generall iudgement 1 THERE is yet an other thing which considered in it selfe is a greater branch and part of mans misery in regard of passiue evils than all the rest namely the last and generall iudgement where all flesh shal be arraigned before Gods Tribunall bar to giue an account of all they haue done to receiue their recompense accordingly The terror wherof I had rather expresse in a Anselm in libro medita tionum Anselmes wordes than in mine own O hard distresse saith he on one side wil be our sinnes accusing vs on the other side iustice terrifying vs vnder vs the gulfe of hell gaping aboue vs the iudg frowning within vs a conscience stinging without vs the world burning Which way then shall the sianer thus surprised turne himselfe To hide our selues will be impossible to appeare will be intolerable Wherewithal then shal miserable man arme himselfe against this so great terrour danger Surely our Christian profession affordeth munitiō against this assault also 2 And first that which hath beene spoken against the feare of death in the former chapter serveth also here against the feare of the last iudgmēt For that which made the first death so terrible and dangerous the same maketh the second death also so to bee namely sinne and as deliverance frō sinne doth as we there heard free vs from al annoyance by the first death so doth it also from all annoyance by the second death that is eternal condēnation at the last iudgement They that in Christ are cōquerers over the first death shall not nor cannot bee conquered by the second death and b Rev. 2c 6. on those that haue their part in the first resurrection the second death shall haue no power saith the spirit That is condemnation cānot take hold on those whom God hath gratiously called to the knowledge and love of his saving truth reveiled by the Gospell 3 But to come to more peculiar comforts against this matter of terrour and amazement let vs farther consider that Christ had mercy on vs whē we were meere strangers to him nay even when we were his enemies as c Rom. 5. v. 8.9.10 S. Paul well vrgeth God herein saith he commended his loue towards vs that when we were sinners Christ dyed for vs being thē now iustified by his bloud much more shall we be saved by him from that wrath Note that he saith from that wrath that is frō the wrath of the last iudgemēt For if saith he when we were enemies we were reconciled vnto God by the death of his sonne much more being reconciled wee shall be saved by his life Wee may easilie perceiue the force of the Apostles comfortable reasoning to wit that sith Christ died for vs when wee were sinners that is nothing but sin surely hee will saue vs being now righteous in him if wee were pardoned through his death when we were enimies wee shall much more bee saved by his life now that we are friendes For how incredible is it nay rather how impossible that he which pardoneth an enemy should condemne a friend He loved vs when wee bare the image of the devill and will hee not much more loue vs now since he hath in parte repaired his fathers image in vs and confirmed vs to himselfe We were deare to him when there was no iot of goodnesse in vs can hee reiect vs nowe that wee haue some good things in vs although but weake specially hee himselfe being the author and former of them by the grace of his holy spirit And so d Bernard epist 190. Bernard reasons For having spoken of our calling vnto the grace of the Gospell he inferres this beeing thus puld out of the power of darknesse I will not now feare to be reiected by the father of light being iustified freely in the bloude of his sonne Why it is he that iustifieth who is it that shall condemne Surely hee will not condemne the iust that had mercie on a sinner c. Thus wee see he reasoneth from that which GOD hath done for vs already to that which he will doe yea in a sort must doe for vs here after And we must all reason after the same manner and saie everie one to his owne soule with e Augustin in Psal 96. Saint Augustine Thou wast wicked and hee dyed for thee thou art now iustified and will hee forsake th●e 4 Moreover to take away the terrour of the last iudgement consider who shall be the Iudge even Christ himself that was thy redeemer And hovve canne wee feare such a iudge How happy in our case that hee must be our iudge that was himself iudged for vs He is our husband and wee his wife by whō would the wife chuse to be iudged but by the husband specially by so kinde a husbande as wee haue * Chapt. 10. Sect. 2. marginal letter d. before heard him to be who sheweth that favour that no husband doth yea he is our head we are his mēbers wil the head giue sentence of condēnatiō against his own mēbers This in effect were to giue sentēce against himself He is our advocat and Proctor how happy would we think our selues if in causes touching this life our own atturney might be our iudg He is now thine advocate f August in Psal 51. saith Augustine that hereafter shall be thy iudge Let vs then assure our selues he vvill not cōdemne vs that hath already been cōdemned for vs. 5 Yea so farre of is it that the last and generall iudgement shoulde be terrible vnto vs that it should rather minister matter of great ioy and comfort vnto vs. And therefore our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ having set downe the chiefe signes and tokens that should go before the day of iudgment saith to the faithful g Luc. 21.28 When yee see these things begin to come to passe looke vp and lift vp your heads for your redemption draweth neere So that by Christes owne exhortation in this place when wee thinke vpon the