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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

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They that deny to worship God with lowly reverence of their bodies according as the Church expresses her reverence to God externally 4. They that invent or practise superstitious worshippings invented by man against Gods word or without reason or besides the publike customes or formes of worshipping either foolishly or ridiculously without the purpose of order decency proportion to a wise or a religious end in prosecution of some vertue or duty III. Comm. Thou shalt not take Gods Name in vain The duties of this Comm. are 1. To honour and revere the most holy Name of God 2. To invocate his Name directly or by consequence in all solemn and permitted adjurations or publike oaths 3. To use all things and persons upon whom his Name is called or any wayes imprinted with a regardfull and separate manner of usage different from common and far from contempt and scorn 4. To swear in truth and judgement They sin against this Commandment 1. Who swear vainly and customarily without just cause without competent authority 2. They that blasphem or curse God 3. They that speak of God without grave cause or solemn occasion 4. They that forswear themselves that is they that do not perform their vows to God or that swear or call God to witnesse to a lie 5. They that swear rashly or maliciously to commit a sin or an act of revenge 6. They that swear by any creature falsely or any way but as it relates to God and consequently invokes his testimony 7. All curious inquiries into the secrets and intruders into the mysteries and hidden things of God 8. They that curse God or curse a creature by God 9. They that prophane Churches holy Utensils holy persons holy customes holy Sacraments 10 They that provoke others to swear voluntarily and by designe or incuriously or negligently when they might avoid it 11 They that swear to things uncertain and unknown IV. Comm. Remember that thou keep holy the S. day The duties of this Comm. are 1. To set apart some portions of our time for the immediate offices of religion and glorification of God 2. This to be done according as God or his holy Church hath appointed 3. One day in seven is to be set apart 4. The Christian day is to be subrogated into the place of the Jewes day the resurrection of Christ and redemption of man was a greater blessing then then to create him 5. God on that day to be worshipped and acknowledged as our Creator and as our Saviour 6. The day to be spent in holy offices in hearing Divine service publike prayers frequenting the Congregations hearing the word of God read or expounded reading good books meditations alms reconciling enmities remission of burdens and of offences of debts and of work friendly offices neighbourhood and provoking one another to good-works and to this end all servile works must be omitted excepting necessary and charitable offices to men or beasts to our selves or others They sin against this Comm. 1. That do or compell or intice others to do servile works without the cases of necessity or charity to be estimated according to common and prudent accounts 2. They that refuse or neglect to come to the publike assemblies of the Church to hear and assist at the divine offices intirely 3. They that spend the day in idlenesse forbidden or vain recreations or the actions of sin and folly 4. They that buy and sell without the cases of permission 5. They that travell unnecessary journeys 6 They that act or assist in conten●ions or law-suites markets fairs c. 7. They that on that day omit their private devotion unlesse the whole day be spent in publike 8. They that by any crosse or contradictory actions against the customes of the Church do purposely desecrate or unhallow and make the day common as they that in despite and contempt fast upon the Lords day lest they may celebrate the festivall after the manner of the Christians V. Com. Honour thy father and thy mother The duties are 1. To do honour and reverence and to love our natural parents 2. To obey all their domestic commands for in them the scene of their authority lies 3. To give them maintenance and support in their needs 4. To obey Kings and all that are in authority 5. To pay tribute and honours custome and reverence 6. To do reverence to the aged and all our betters 7. To obey our Masters spiritual governours and Guides in those things which concern their several respective interest and authority They sin against this commandment 1. That despise their parents age or infirmity 2. That are ashamed of their poverty and extraction 3. That publish their vices errours and infirmities to shame them 4. That refuse and reject all or any of their lawful commands 5. Children that marry without or against their consent when it may be reasonably obtained 6. That curse them from whom they receive so many blessings 7 That grieve the souls of their parents by not complying in their desires and observing their circumstances 8. That hate their persons that mock them or use uncomely jestings 9. That discover their nakednesse voluntarily 10. That murmure against their injunctions and obey them involuntarily 11. All Rebels against their Kings or the supream power in which it is legally and justly invested 12. That refuse to pay tributes and impositions imposed legally 13. They that disobey their Masters murmure or repine against their commands abuse or deride their persons talk rudely c. 14. They that curse the king in their heart or speak evil of the ruler of their people 15. All that are uncivil and rude towards aged persons mockers and scorners of them VI. Com. Thou shalt do no murder The duties are 1. To preserve our own lives the lives of our relatives and all with whom we converse or who can need us and we assist by prudent reasonable and wary defences advocations discoveries of snares c. 2. To preserve our health and the integrity of our bodies and mindes and of others 3. To preserve and follow peace with all men They sin against this Commandment 1. That destroy the life of a man or woman himself or any other 2. That do violence or dismember or hurt any part of the body with evil intent 3. That fight duels or commence unjust wars 4. They that willingly hasten their own or others death 5. That by oppression or violence imbitter the spirits of any so as to make their life sad and their death hasty 6. They that conceal the dangers of their neighbor which they can safely discover 7. They that sow strife and contention among neighbours 8. They that refuse to rescue or preserve those whom they can and are obliged to preserve 9. They that procure abortion 10 They that threaten or keep men in fears or hate them VII Com. Thou shalt not commit adultery The duties are 1. To preserve our bodies in the chastity of a single life or
only and when the man repents he is absolved before God before the sentence of the Church upon his contrition and dereliction only and if he were not the Church could not absolve him The consequent of which evident truth is this that whatsoever impositions the Church officers impose upon the criminal they are to avoid scandal to testifie repentance and to exercise it to instruct the people to make them fear to represent the act of God and the secret and the true state of the sinner and although they are not essentially necessary to our pardon yet they are become necessary when the Church hath seized upon the sinner by publike notice of the crime necessary I say for the removing the scandal and giving testimony of our contrition and for the receiving all that comfort which he needs and can derive from the promises of pardon as they are published by him that is commanded to preach them to all them that repent and therefore although it cannot be necessary as to the obtaining pardon that the Priest should in private absolve a sick man from his private sins and there is no loosing where there was no precedent binding and he that was only bound before God can before him onely be loosed yet as to confess sins to any Christian in private may have many good ends and to confess them to a Clergy-man may have many more so to hear Gods sentence at the mouth of the Ministers pardon pronounced by Gods embassador is of huge comfort to them that cannot otherwise be comforted and whose infirmity needs it and therefore it were very fit it were not neglected in the dayes of our fear and danger of our infirmities and sorrow 5. The execution of this ministery being an act of prudence and charity and therefore relative to changing circumstances it hath been and in many cases may and in some must be rescinded and altered the time of separation may be lengthned and shortned the condition made lighter or heavier and for the same offence the Clergy man is deposed but yet admitted to the communion for which one of the people who hath no office to lose is denyed the benefit of communicating and this sometimes when he might lawfully receive it and a private man is separate when a multitude or a prince is nor cannot ought not and at last when the case of sicknesse and danger of death did occur they admitted all men that desired it sometimes without scruple or difficulty sometimes with some little restraint in great or insolent cases as in the case of Apostacie in which the Councel of Arls denyed absolution unlesse they received and gave publike satisfaction by acts of repentance and some other Councels denyed at any time to do it to such persons according as seemed sitting to the present necessities of the Church all which particulars declare it to be no part of a divine commandment that any man should be denyed to receive the Communion if he desires it and if he be in any probable capacitie of receiving it 6. Since the separation was an act of libertie and a direct negative it followes that the restitution was a meer doing that which they refused formerly and to give the holy Communion was the formality of absolution and all the instrument and the whole matter of reconcilement the taking off the punishment is the pardoning of the sin for this without the other is but a word and if this be done I care not whether any thing be said or no. Vinum Dominicum ministratoris gratia est is also true in this sence to give the chalice and cup is the grace and indulgence of the Minister and when that is done the man hath obtained the peace of the Church and to do that is all the absolution the Church can give and they were vain disputes which were commenced some few ages since concerning the forms of absolution whether they were indicative or optative by way of declaration or by way of sentence for at first they had no forms at all but they said a prayer and after the manner of the Jews laid hands upon the penitent when they prayed over him and so admitted him to the holy Communion for since the Church had no power over her children but of excommunicating and denying them to attend upon holy offices and ministeries respectively neither could they have any absolution but to admit them thither from whence formerly they were forbidden whatsoever ceremonie or forms did signifie this was superinduced and arbitrary alterable and accidental it had variety but no necessity 7. The practise consequent to this is that if the penitent be bound by the positive censures of the Church he is to be reconciled upon those conditions which the laws of the Church tye him to in case he can perform them if he cannot he can no longer be prejudiced by the censure of the Church which had no relation but to the people with whom the dying man is no longer to converse for whatsoever relates to God is to be transacted in spirituall wayes by contrition and internall graces and the mercy of the Church is such as to give him her peace and her blessing upon his undertaking to obey her injunction if he shall be able which injunctions if they be declared by publike sentence the Minister hath nothing to do in the affairs but to remind him of his obligation and reconcile him that is give him the Holy Sacrament 8. If the penitent be not bound by publike sentence the Minister is to make his repentance as great and his heart as contrite as he can to dispose him by the repetition of acts of grace in the way of prayer and in reall and exteriour instances where he can and then to give him the Holy Communion in all the same cases in which he ought not to have denied it to him in his health that is even in the beginnings of such a repentance which by humane signes he beleeves to be reall and holy and after this the event must be left to God The reason of the rule depends upon this Because there is no Divine commandement directly forbidding the Rulers of the Church to give the Communion to any Christian that desires it and professes repentance of his sins And all Church discipline in every instance and to every single person was imposed upon him by men who did it according to the necessities of this state and constitution of our affairs below but we who are but Ministers and delegates of pardon and condemnation must resigne and give up our judgement when the man is no more to be judged by the sentences of man and by the proportions of this world but of the other to which if our reconciliation does advantage we ought in charity to send him forth with all the advantages he can receive for he will need them all and therefore the Nicene Councel commands that no man be deprived of this necessary
comfort or prevent an evil or cure the little mischiefs which are incident to tempted persons in their weaknesse this is the summe of the present designe as it relates to dying persons And therefore I have not inserted any advices proper to old age but such as are common to it and the state of sicknesse for I suppose very old age to be a longer sicknesse it is labour and sorrow when it goes beyond the common period of nature but if it be on this side that period and be healthfull in the same degree it is so I reckon it in the accounts of life and therefore it can have no distinct consideration But I do not think it is a station of advantage to begin the change of an evil life in It is a middle state between life and death-bed and therefore although it hath more of hopes then this and lesse then that yet as it partakes of either state so it is to be regulated by the advices of that state and judged by its sentences Onely this I desire that all old persons would sadly consider that their advantages in that state are very few but their inconveniences are not few Their bodies are without strength their prejudices long and mighty their vices if they have lived wickedly are habituall the occasions of their vertues not many the possibilities of some in the matter of which they stand very guilty are past and shall never return again such are chastity and many parts of self-deniall that they have some temptations proper to their age as peevishnesse and pride covetousnesse and talking wilfulnesse and unwillingnesse to learn and they think they are protected by age from learning anew or repenting the old and do not leave but change their vices And after all this either the day of their repentance is past as we see it true in very many or it is expiring and towards the Sun-set as it is in all and therefore although in these to recover is very possible yet we may also remember that in the matter of vertue and repentance possibility is a great way off from performance and how few do repent of whom it is onely possible that they may and that many things more are required to reduce their possibility to act a great grace an assiduous ministery an effective calling mighty assistances excellent counsell great industry a watchfull diligence a well disposed mind passionate desires deep apprehensions of danger quick perceptions of duty and time and Gods good blessing and effectuall impression and seconding all this that to will and to do may by him be wrought to great purposes and with great speed And therefore it will not be amisse but it is hugely necessary that these persons who have lost their time and their blessed opportunities should have the diligence of youth and the zeal of new converts and take account of every hour that is left them and pray perpetually and be advised prudently and study the interest of their souls carefully with diligence and with fear and their old age which in effect is nothing but a continuall death-bed dressed with some more order and advantages may be a state of hope and labour and acceptance through the infinite mercies of God in Jesus Christ. But concerning sinners really under the arrest of death God hath made no death-bed covenant the Scripture hath recorded no promises given no instructions and therefore I had none to give but onely the same which are to be given to all men that are alive because they are so and because it is uncertain when they shall be otherwise But then this advice I also am to insert That they are the smallest number of Christian men who can be divided by the characters of a certain holinesse or an open villany and between these there are many degrees of latitude and most are of a middle sort concerning which we are tied to make the judgements of charity and possibly God may do so too But however all they are such to whom the rules of holy dying are usefull and applicable and therefore no separation is to be made in this world but where the case is not evident men are to be permitted to the unerring judgement of God where it is evident we can rejoyce or mourn for them that die In the Church of Rome they reckon otherwise concerning sick and dying Christians then I have done For they make profession that from death to life from sin to grace a man may very certainly be changed though the operation begin not before his last hour and half this they do upon his death bed and the other half when he is in his grave and they take away the eternal punishment in an instant by a school distinction or the hand of the Priest and the temporal punishment shall stick longer even then when the man is no more measured with time having nothing to do with any thing of or under the sun but that they pretend to take away too when the man is dead and God knowes the poor man for all this payes them both in hell The distinction of temporal and eternal is a just measure of pains when it referres to this life and another but to dream of a punishment temporal when all his time is done and to think of repentance when the time of grace is past are great errours the one in Philosophy and both in Divinity and are a huge folly in their pretence and infinite danger if they are believed being a certain destruction of the necessity of holy living when men dare trust them and live at the rate of such doctrines The secret of these is soon discovered for by such means though a holy life be not necessary yet a priest is as if God did not appoint the Priest to minister to holy living but to excuse it so making the holy calling not onely to live upon the sins of the people but upon their ruine and the advantages of their function to spring from their eternal dangers It is an evil craft to serve a temporal end upon the death of souls that is an interest not to handled but with noblenesse and ingenuity fear and caution diligence and prudence with great skill and great honesty with reverence and trembling and severity a soul is worth all that and the need we have requires all that and therefore those doctrines that go lesse then all this are not friendly because they are not safe I know no other great difference in the visitation and treating of sick persons then what depends upon the article of late repentance for all Churches agree in the same essential propositions and assist the sick by the same internal ministeries as for external I mean unction used in the Church of Rome since it is used when the man is above half dead when he can exercise no act of understanding it must needs be nothing for no rational man can think that any ceremonie can make a spiritual
in the abolition of all my sins so shall I praise thy glories with a tongue not defiled with evil language and a heart purged by thy grace quitted by thy mercy and absolved by thy sentence from generation to generation Amen An act of holy resolution of amendment of life in case of recovery O Most just and most mercifull Lord God who hast sent evil diseases sorrow fear trouble and uneasinesse briars and thorns into the world and planted them in our houses and round about our dwellings to keep sin from our souls or to drive it thence I humbly beg of thee that this my sicknesse may serve the ends of the Spirit and be a messenger of spirituall life an instrument of reducing me to more religious and sober courses I know O Lord that I am unready and unprepared in my accounts having thrown away great portions of my time in vanity and set my self hugely back in the accounts of eternity and I had need live my life over again and live it better but thy counsels are in the great deep and thy footsteps in the water and I know not what thou wilt determine of me If I die I throw my self into the arms of the Holy Jesus whom I love above all things and if I perish I know I have deserved it but thou wilt not reject him that loves thee But if I recover I will live by thy grace and help to do the work of God and passionately pursue my interest of Heaven and serve thee in the labour of love with the charities of a holy zeal and the diligence of a firm and humble obedience Lord I will dwell in thy temple and in thy service religion shall be my imployment and alms shall be my recreation and patience shall be my rest and to do thy will shall be my meat and drink and to live shall be Christ and then to die shall be gain O spare me a little that I may recover my strength before I go hence and be no more seen Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven Amen SECT VIII An Analysis or resolution of the Decalogue and the speciall precepts of the Gospel describing the duties injoyned and the sins forbidden respectiuely for the assistance of sick men in making their confessions to God and his Ministers and the rendring their repentance more particular and perfect I THou shalt have none other Gods but me Duties commanded are 1. To love God above all things 2. To obey him and fear him 3. To worship him with prayers vows thanksgivings presenting to him our souls and bodies and all such actions and expressions which the consent of Nations or the Lawes and Customs of the place where we live have appropriated to God 4. To designe all to Gods glory 5. To enquire after his will 6. To beleeve all his word 7. To submit to his providence 8. To proceed toward all our lawfull ends by such means as himself hath appointed 9. To speak and think honourably of God and recite his praises and confesse his Attributes and perfections They sin against this Commandement 1. Who love themselves or any of the creatures inordinately and intemperately 2. They that despise or neglect any of the Divine precepts 3. They that pray to unknown or false gods 4. They that disbeleeve or deny there is a God 5. They that make vows to creatures 6. Or say prayers to the honour of men or women or Angels as Pater nosters to the honour of the Virgin Mary or S. Peter which is a taking a part of that honour which is due to God and giving it to the creature it is a religion paid to men and women out of Gods proper portion out of prayers directed to God immediately and it is an act contrary to that religion which makes God the last end of all things for this th●ough our addresses to God passes something to the creatures as if they stood beyond him for by the intermediall worship paid to God they ultimately do honour to the man or Angel 7. They that make consumptive oblations to the creatures as the Collyridians who offered cakes and those that burn incense or candles to the Virgin Mary 8. They that give themselves to the Devil or make contracts with him and use phantastic conversation with him 9 They that consult Witches and Fortune-tellers 10. They that rely upon dreams and superstitious observances 11 That use charmes spels superstitious words and characters verses of Psalms the consecrated elements to cure diseases to be shot free to recover stolne goods or inquire into secrets 12. That are wilfully ignorant of the lawes of God or love to be deceived in their perswasions that they may sin with confidence 13. They that neglect to pray to God 14. They that arrogate to themselves the glory of any action or power and do not give the glory to God as Herod 15. They that doubt of or disbeleeve any article of the Creed or any proposition of Scripture or put false glosses to serve saecular or vitious ends against their conscience or with violence any way done to their reason 16. They that violently or passionately pursue any temporall end with an eagernesse greater then the thing is in prudent account 17 They that make religion to serve ill ends or do good to exil purposes or evil to good purposes 18. They that accuse God of injustice or unmercifulnesse remissenesse or cruelty such as are the presumptuous and the desperate 19. All hypocrites and pretenders to religion walking in forms and shadows but denying the power of godlinesse 20. All impatient persons all that repine or murmur against the prosperities of the wicked or the calamities of the godly or their own afflictions 21. All that blaspheme God or speak dishonourable things of so Sacred a Majesty 22. They that tempt God or rely upon his protection against his rules and without his promise and besides reason entring into danger from which without a miracle they cannot be rescued 23. They that are bold in the midst of judgement and fearlesse in the midst of the Divine vengeance and the accents of his anger II. Comm. Thou shalt not make to thy self any graven image nor worship it The morall duties of this commandement are 1. To worship God with all bodily worship and externall forms of addresse according to the custom of the Church we live in 2. To beleeve God to be a spirituall and pure substance without any visible form of shape 3. To worship God in wayes of his own appointing or by his proportions or measures of nature and right reason or publike and holy customes They sin against this Commandement 1. That make any image or pictures of the Godhead or fancy any likenesse to him 2. They that use images in their religion designing or addressing any religious worship to them For if this thing could be naturally tolerable yet it is too neer an intolerable for a jealous God to suffer 3.
publike or private general or particular * That God by testimonies from heaven that is by his word and by a consequent rare peace of conscience hath given approbation to this holy duty * That by this instrument those whose office it is to apply remedies to every spiritual sicknesse can best perform their offices * that it is by all Churches esteemed a duty necessary to be done in cases of a troubled conscience * That what is necessary to be done in one case and convenient in all cases is fit to be done by all persons * That without confession it cannot easily be judged concerning the sick person whether his conscience ought to be troubled or no and therefore it cannot be certain that it is not necessary * That there can be no reason against it but such as consults with flesh and blood with infirmity and sin to all which confession of sins is a direct enemy * That now is that time when all the imperfections of his repentance and all the breaches of his duty are to be made up and that if he omits this opportunity he can never be admitted to a salutary and medicinal confession * That S. Iames gives an expresse precept that we Christians should confesse our sins to each other that is Christian to Christian brother to brother the people to their Minister and then he makes a specification of that duty which a sick man is to do when he hath sent for the elders of the Church * That in all this there is no force lies upon him but if he hides his sins he shall not be directed so said the Wise man but ere long he must appear before the great Judge of men and Angels and his Spirit will be more amazed and confounded to be seen among the Angels of light with the shadowes of the works of darknesse upon him then he can suffer by confessing to God in the presence of him whom God hath sent to heal him However it is better to be ashamed here then to be confounded hereafter pol pudere praestat quam pigere totidem literis * That confession being in order to pardon of sins it is very proper and analogical to the nature of the thing that it be made there where the pardon of sins is to be administred and that of pardon of sins God hath made the Minister the publisher and dispenser and all this is besides the accidental advantages wich accrue to the conscience which is made ashamed and timorous and restrained by the mortifications and blushings of discovering to a man the faults committed in secret * That the Ministers of the Gospel are the Ministers of reconciliation are commanded to restore such persons as are overtaken in a fault and to that purpose they come to offer their Ministery if they may have cognizance of the fault and person * That in the matter of prudence it is not safe to trust a mans self in the final condition and last security of a mans soul a man being no good Judge in his own case And when a duty is so useful in all cases so necessary in some and encouraged by promises Evangelical by Scripture precedents by the example of both Testaments and prescribed by injunctions Apostolical and by the Canon of all Churches and the example of all ages and taught us even by the proportions of dutie and the Analogie to the power Ministerial and the very necessities of every man he that for stubbornnesse or sinful shamefac'dnesse or prejudice or any other criminal weaknesse shall decline to do it in the dayes of his danger when the vanities of the world are worn off and all affection to sin are wearied and the sin it self is pungent and grievous and that we are certain we shal not escape shame for them hereafter unlesse we be ashamed of them here and use all the proper instruments of their pardon this man I say is very neer death but very far off from the kingdom of heaven 2. The spirituall man will find in the conduct of this duty many cases and variety of accidents which will alter his course and forms of proceedings 1. Most men are of a rude indifferency apt to excuse themselves ignorant of their condition abused by evil principles content with a generall and indefinite confession and if you provoke them to it by the foregoing considerations lest their spirits should be a little uneasie or not secured in their own opinions will be apt to say They are sinners as every man hath his infirm●ty and he as well as any man But God be thanked they bear no ill will to any man or are no adulterers or no rebels or they have fought on the right side and God be mercifull to them for they are sinners But you shall hardly open their brest further and to enquire beyond this would be to do the office of an accuser 3 But which is vet worse there are very many persons who have been so used to an habituall course of a constant intem●er●nce or dissolution in any other instance that ●he crime is made naturall and necessary and the conscience hath digested all the trouble and the man thinks himself in a good estate and never reckons any sins but those which are the egressions and passings beyond his ordinary and daily drunkennesse This happens in the cases of drunkennesse and intemperate eating and idlenesse and uncharitablenesse and in lying and vain jestings and particularly in such evils which the lawes do not punish and publike customs do not shame but which are contenanced by potent sinners or evil customs or good nature and mistaken civilities Instruments by way of consideration to awaken a carelesse person and a stupid conscience IN these and the like cases the spirituall man must awaken the L●thargy and prick the conscience by representing to him 1. * That Christianity is a holy and a strict religion 2. * That many are called but few are chosen * That the number of them that are to be saved are but very few in respect of those that are to descend into sorrow and everlasting darknesse * That we have covenanted with God in baptisme to live a holy life * That the measures of holinesse in Christian religion are not to be taken by the evil proportions of the multitude and common ●ame of looser and lesse severe persons because the multitude is that which does not enter into heaven but the few the elect the holy servants of Jesus * That every habituall sin does amount to a very great guilt in the whole though it be but in a small instance * That if the righteous scarcely be saved then there will be no place for the righteous and the sinner to appear in but places of horror and amazement * That confidence hath destroyed many souls and many have had a sad portion who have reckoned themselves in the Calendar of Saints * That the promises of heaven are so great
learning in publike charge and by all others in their proportions 10. The ministers of religion must take care that the sick mans confession be as minute and particular as it can and that as few sins as may be be entrusted to the generall prayer of pardon for all sins for by being particular and enumerative of the variety of evils which have disordered his life his repentance is disposed to be more pungent and afflictive and therefore more salutary and medicinall it hath in it more sincerity and makes a better judgement of the finall condition of the man and from thence it is certain the hopes of the sick man can be more confident and reasonable 11. The spirituall man that assists at the repentance of the sick must not be inquisitive into all the circumstances of the particular sins but be content with those that are direct parts of the crime and aggravation of the sorrow Such as frequency long abode and earnest choice in acting them violent desires great expense scandall of others dishonour to the religion dayes of devotion and religious solemnities holy places and the degrees of boldnesse and impudence perfect resolution and the habit If the sick person be reminded or inquired into concerning these it may prove a good instrument to increase his contrition and perfect his penitentiall sorrows and facilitate his ablution and the means of his amendment But the other circumstances as of the relative person in the participation of the crime the measures or circumstances of the impure action the name of the injured man or woman the quality or accidentall condition these and all the like are but questions springing from curiosity and producing scruple and apt to turn into many inconveniencies 11. The Minister in this duty of repentance must be diligent to observe concerning the person that repents that he be not imposed upon by some one excellent thing that was remarkable in the sick mans former life For there are some people of one good thing Some are charitable to the poor out of kind-heartednesse and the same good-nature makes them easie and compliant with drinking persons and they die with drink but cannot live with charity and their alms it may be shall deck their monument or give them the reward of loving persons and the poor mans thanks for alms and procure many temporall blessings but it is very sad that the reward should be all spent in this world some are rarely just persons and punctuall observers of their word with men but break their promises with God and make no scruple of that In these and all the like cases the spirituall man must be carefull to remark that good proceeds from an intire and integrall cause and evil from every part That one sicknesse can make a man die but he cannot live and be called a sound man without an intire health and therefore if any confidence arises upon that stock so as that it hinder the strictness of the repentance it must be allayed with the representment of this sad truth That he who reserves one evil in his choice hath chosen an evil portion and colliquintida and death is in the pot and he that worships the God of Israel with a frequent sacrifice and yet upon the anniversary will bow in the house of Venus and loves to see the follies and the nakednesse of Rimmon may eat part of the flesh of the sacrifice and fill his belly but shall not be refreshed by the holy cloud arising from the altar or the dew of heaven descending upon the mysteries 12. And yet the Minister is to estimate that one or more good things is to be an ingredient into his judgement concerning the state of his soul and the capacities of his restitution and admission to the peace of the Church and according as the excellency and usefulnesse of the grace hath been and according to the degrees and the reasons of its prosecution so abatements are to be made in the injunctions and impositions upon the penitent For every vertue is one degree of approach to God and though in respect of the acceptation it is equally none at all that is it is as certain a death if a man dies with one mortall wound as if he had twenty yet in such persons who have some one or more excellencies though not an intire piety there is naturally a neerer approach to the estate of grace then in persons who have done evils and are eminent for nothing that is good But in making judgement of such persons it is to be inquired into and noted accordingly why the sick person was so eminent in that one good thing whether by choice and apprehension of his duty or whether it was a vertue from which his state of life ministred nothing to dehort or discourage him or whether it was onely a consequent of his naturall temper and constitution If the first then it supposes him in the neighbourhood of the state of grace and that in other things he was strongly tempted The second is a felicity of his education and an effect of providence The third is a felicity of his nature and a gift of God in order to spirituall purposes But yet of every one of these advantage is to be made If he conscience of his duty was the principle then he is ready formed to entertain all other graces upon the same reason and his repentance must be made more sharp and penall because he is convinced to have done against his conscience in all the other parts of his life but the judgement concerning his finall state ought to be more gentle because it was a huge temptation that hindred the man and abused his infirmity but if either his calling or his nature were the parents of the grace he is in the state of a morall man in the just and proper meaning of the word and to be handled accordingly that vertue disposed him rarely well to many other good things but was no part of the grace of sanctification and therefore the mans repentance is to begin anew for all that and is to be finished in the returns of health if God grants it but if he denies it it is much very much the worse for all that sweet natur'd vertue 13. When the confession is made the spirituall man is to execute the office of a Restorer and a Iudge in the following particulars and manner SECT IIII. Of the ministring to the restitution and pardon or reconciliation of the sick person by administring the Holy Sacrament IF any man be overtaken in a fault ye which are spiritual restore such a one in the spirit of meeknesse That 's the Commission and Let the Elders of the Church pray over the sick man and if he have committed sins they shall be forgiven him that 's the effect of his power and his ministery But concerning this some few things are to be considered 1. It is the office of the Presbyters and Ministers
of religion to declare publike criminals and scandalous persons to be such that when the leprosie is declared the flock may avoid the infection and then the man is excommunicate when the people are warned to avoid the danger of the man or the reproach of the crime to withdraw from his society and not to bid him God speed not to eat and celebrate synaxes and Church-meetings with such who are declared criminal and dangerous and therefore excommunication is in a very great part the act of the Congregation and communities of the faithfull and S. Paul said to the Church of the Corinthians that they had inflicted the evil upon the incestuous person that is by excommunicating him all the acts of which are as they are subjected in the people acts of caution and liberty but no more acts of direct proper power or jurisdiction then it was when the scholers of Simon Magus lef● his chair and went to hear S. Peter But as they are actions of the Rulers of the Church so they are declarative ministerial and effective too by morall causality that is by perswasion and discourse by argument and prayer by homily and materiall representment by reasonablenesse of order and the superinduced necessities of men though not by any reall change of state as to the person nor by diminution of his right or violence to his condition 2. He that baptises and he that ministers the Holy Sacrament and he that prayes does holy offices of great advantage but in these also just as in the former he exercises no jurisdiction or preheminence after the manner of saecular authority and the same is also true if he should deny them He that refuseth to baptize an indisposed person hath by the consent of all men no power or jurisdiction over the unbaptized man and he that for the like reason refuseth to give him the Communion preserves the sacrednesse of the mysteries and does charitie to the undisposed man to deny that to him which will do him mischief and this is an act of separation just as it is for a friend or Physitian to deny water to an Hydropic person or Italian wines to a hectic feaver or as if Cato should deny to salute Bibulus or the Censor of maners to do countenance to a wanton and vitious person and though this thing was expressed by words of power such as separation abstention excommunication deposition yet these words we understand by the thing it self which was notorious and evident to be matter of prudence security and a free unconstrained discipline and they passed into power by consent and voluntary submission having the same effect of constraint fear and authority which we see in secular jurisdiction not because ecclesiastical discipline hath a natural proper coercion as lay-Tribunals have but because men have submitted to it and are bound to do so upon the interest of two or three Christian graces 3. In pursuance of this caution and provision the Church superinduced times and manners of abstention and expressions of sorrow and canonical punishments which they tyed the delinquent people to suffer before they would admit them to the holy Table of the Lord. For the criminal having obliged himself by his sin and the Church having declared it when she could take notice of it he is bound to repent to make him capable of pardon with God and to prove that he is penitent he is to do such actions which the Church in the vertue and pursuance of repentance shall accept as a testimony of it sufficient to inform her for as she could not binde at all in this sence till the crime was publike though the man had bound himself in secret so neither can she set him free till the repentance be as publike as the sin or so as she can note it and approve it Though the man be free as to God by his internal act yet as the publication of the sin was accidental to it and the Church censure consequent to it so is the publication of repentance and consequent absolution extrinsecal to the pardon but accidentally and in the present circumstances necessary This was the same that the Jews did though in other instances and expressions and do to this day to their prevarica●ing people and the Essenes in their assemblies and private Colleges of scholars and publike Universities For all these being assemblies of voluntary persons and such as seek for advantage are bound to make an artificial authority in their superiours and so to secure order and government by their own obedience and voluntary subordination which is not essential and of proper jurisdiction in the superiour and the band of it is not any coe●citive power but the denying to communicate such benefits which they seek in that communion and fellowship 4. These I say were introduced in the speciall manners and instances by positive authority and have not a divine authority commanding them but there is a divine power that verefies them and makes these separations effectual and formidable for because they are declarative and ministerial in the spirituall man and suppose a delinquencie and demerit in the other and a sin against God our blessed Saviour our hath declared that what they binde in earth shall be bound in heaven that is in plain signification The same sins and sinners which the Clergie condemns in the face of their assemblies the same is condemned in heaven before the face of God and for the same reason too Gods law hath sentenced it and these are the preachers and publishers of his law by which they stand condemned and these laws are they that condemn the sin or acquit the penitent there and here whatsoever they binde here shall be bound there that is the sentence of God at the day of judgement shall sentence the same men whom the Church does rightly sentence here it is spoken in the future it shall be bound in heaven not but that the sinner is first bound there or first absolved there but because all binding and loosing in the interval is imperfect and relative to the day of judgement the day of the great sentence therefore it is set down in the time to come and sayes this only The Clergie are tyed by the word and laws of God to condemn such sins and sinners and that you may not think it ineffective because after such sentence the man lives and growes rich or remains in health and power therefore be sure it shall be verified in the day of judgement This is hugely agreeable with the words of our Lord and certain in reason for that the minister does nothing to the final alteration of the state of the mans soul by way of sentence is demonstratively certain because he cannot binde a man but such as hath bound himself and who is bound in heaven by his sin before his sentence in the Church as also be-because the binding of the Church is meerly accidental and upon publication
pasport in the article of his death and calls th●s the ancient and canonicall law of the Church and to minister it onely supposes the man in the communion of the Church not alwayes in the state but ever in the possibilities of sanctification They who in the article and danger of death were admitted to the communion and tied to penance if they recovered which was ever the custome of the ancient Church unlesse in very few cases were but in the threshold of repentance in the commencement and first introductions to a devout life and indeed then it is a fit ministery that it be given in all the periods of time in which the pardon of sins is working since it is the Sacrament of that great mystery the exhibition of that blood which is shed for the remission of sins 9. The Minister of religion ought not to give the Communion to a sick person if he retains the affection to any sin and refuses to disavow it or professe repentance of all sins whatsoever if he be required to do it The reason is because it is a certain death to him and an increase of his misery if he shall so prophane the body and blood of Christ as to take it into so unholy a breast where Sathan reignes and sin is principall and the Spirit is extinguished and Christ loves not to enter because he is not suffered to inhabite But when he professes repentance and does such acts of it as his present condition permits he is to be presumed to intend heartily what he professes solemnly and the Minister is onely the Judge of outward act and by that onely he is to take information concerning the inward But whether he be so or no or if he be whether that be timely and effectuall and sufficient toward the pardon of sins before God is another consideration of which we may conjecture here but we shall know it at doomsday The spirituall man is to do his ministery by the rules of Christ and as the customs of the Church appoint him and after the manner of men the event is in the hands of God and is to be expected not directly and wholly according to his ministery but to the former life or the timely internall repentance and amendment of which I have already given accounts These ministeries are acts of order and great assistances but the sum of affairs does not relie upon them And if any man puts his whole repentance upon this time or all his hopes upon these ministeries he will find them and himself to fail 10. It is the Ministers office to invite sick and dying persons to the Holy Sacrament such whose lives were fair and laudable and yet their sicknesse sad and violent making them list-lesse and of slow desires and flower apprehensions that such persons who are in the state of grace may lose no accidentall advantages of spirituall improvement but may receive into their dying bodies the symboles and great consignations of the resurrection and into their soules the pledges of immortality and may appear before God their Father in the union and with the impresses and likenesse of their elder Brother But if the persons be of ill report and have lived wickedly they are not to be invited because their case is hugely suspicious though they then repent and call for mercy but if they demand it they are not to be denied onely let the Minister in generall represent the evil consequents of an unworthy participation and if the penitent will judge himself unworthy let him stand candidate for pardon at the hands of God and stand or fall by that unerring and mercifull sentence to which his severity of condemning himself before men will make the easier and more hopefull addresse And the strictest among the Christians who denied to reconcile lapsed persons after baptisme yet acknowledged that there were hopes reserved in the court of heaven for them though not here since we who are easily deceived by the pretences of a reall return are tied to dispense Gods graces as he hath given us commission with fear and trembling and without too forward confidences and God hath mercies which we know not of and therefore because we know them not such persons were referred to Gods Tribunal where he would finde them if they were to be had at all 11. When the holy Sacrament is to be administred let the exhortation be made proper to the mystery but fitted to the man that is that it be used for the advantages of faith or love or contrition let all the circumstances and parts of the Divine love be represented all the mysterious advantages of the blessed Sacrament be declared * That it is the bread which came from heaven * That it is the representation of Christs death to all the purposes and capacities of faith * and the real exhibition of Christs body and blood to all the puposes of the Spirit * That it is the earnest of the resurrection * and the seed of a glorious immortality * That as by our cognation to the body of the first Adam we took in death so by our union with the body of the second Adam we shall have the inheritance of life for as by Adam came death so by Christ cometh the resurrection of the dead * That if we being worthy Communicants of these sacred pledges be presented to God with Christ within us our being accepted of God is certain even for the sake of his well beloved that dwells within us * That this is the Sacrament of the body which was broken for our sinnes of that blood which purifies our souls by which we are presented to God pure and holy in the beloved * That now we may ascertain our hopes and make our faith confident for he that hath given us his Son how should not he with him give us all things else Upon these or the like considerations the sick man may be assisted in his addresse and his faith strengthened and his hope confirmed and his charity be enlarged 12. The manner of the sick mans reception of the holy Sacrament hath in it nothing differing from the ordinary solemnities of the Sacrament save onely that abatement is to be made of such accidentall circumstances as by the lawes or customes of the Church healthfull persons are obliged to such as fasting kneeling c. though I remember that it was noted for great devotion in the Legate that died at Trent that he caused himself to be sustained upon his knees when he received the viaticum or the holy Sacrament before his death and it was greater in Hunniades that he caused himself to be carried to the Church that there he might receive his Lord in his Lords house and it was recorded for honour that William the pious Arch-Bishop of Bourges a small time before his last agony sprang out of his bed at the presence of the holy Sacrament and upon
his knees and his face recommended his soul to his Saviour But in these things no man is to be prejudiced or censured 13. Let not the holy Sacrament be administred to dying persons when they have no use of reason to make that duty acceptable and the mysteries effective to the purposes of the soul. For the Sacraments and ceremonies of the gospel operate not without the concurrent actions and moral influences of the suscipient To infuse the chalice in to the cold lips of the Clinick may disturb his agony but cannot relieve the soul which onely receives improvement by acts of grace and choice to which the external rites are apt and appointed to minister in a capable person All other persons as fools children distracted persons lethargical apoplectical or any wayes senselesse and uncapable of humane and reasonable acts are to be assisted onely by prayers for they may prevail even for the absent and for enemies and for all those who joyn not in the office SECT V. Of Ministring to the sick person by the Spiritual man as he is the Physitian of souls 1. IN all cases of receiving confessions of sick men and the assisting to the advancement of repentance the Minister is to apportion to every kinde of sin such spiritual remedies which are apt to mortifie and cure the sin such as abstinence from their occasions and opportunities to avoid temptations to resist their beginnings to punish the crime by acts of indignation against the person fastings and prayer alms and all the instances of charity asking forgiveness restitution of wrongs satisfaction of injuries acts of vertue contrary to the crimes and although in great and dangerous sicknesses they are not directly to be imposed unlesse they are direct matters of duty yet where they are medicinall they are to be insinuated and in general signification remarked to him and undertaken accordingly concerning which when he returnes to health he is to receive particular advices and this advice was inserted into the penitential of England in the time of Theodore Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and afterward adopted into the Canon of all the Western Churches 2. The proper temptations of sick men for which a remedie is not yet provided are unreasonable fears and unreasonable confidences which the Minister is to cure by the following considerations Considerations against unreasonable fears of not having our sins pardoned Many good men especially such who have tender consciences impatient of the least sin to which they are arrived by a long grace and a continual observation of their actions and the parts of a lasting repentance many times overact their tendernesse and turn their caution into scruple and care of their duty into inquiries after the event and askings after the counsels of God and the sentences of dooms-day He that asks of the standers by or of the Minister whether they think he shall be saved or damned are to be answered with the words of pity and reproof Seek not after new light for the searching into the privatest records of God look as much as you list into the pages of revelation for they concern your duty but the event is registred in heaven and we can expect no other certain notices of it but that it shall be given to them for whom it is prepared by the Father of mercies we have light enough to tell our duty and if we do that we need not fear what the issue will be and if we do not let us never look for more light or inquire after Gods pleasure concerning our souls since we so little serve his ends in those things where he hath given us light But yet this I adde that as pardon of sins in the old Testament was nothing but removing the punishment which then was temporal and therefore many times they could tell if their sins were pardoned and concerning pardon of sins they then had no fears of conscience but while the punishment was on them for so long indeed it was unpardoned and how long it would so remain it was matter of fear and of present sorrow Besides this in the Gospel pardon of sins is another thing Pardon of sins is a sanctification Christ came to take away our sin by turning every one of us from our iniquities And there is not in the nature of the thing any expectation of pardon or signe or signification of it but so far as the thing it self discovers it self As we hate sin and grow in grace and arrive at the state of holinesse which is also a state of repentance and imperfection but yet of sincerity of heart and diligent endeavour in the same degree we are to judge concerning the forgiveness of sins for indeed that is the Evangelical forgivenesse and it signifies our pardon because it effects it or rather it is in the nature of the thing so that we are to enquire into no hidden records forgivenesse of sins is not a secret sentence a word or a record but it is a state of change and effected upon us and upon our selves we are to look for it to read it and understand it We are onely to be curious of our duty and confident of the Article of remission of sins and the conclusion of these premises will be that we shall be full of hopes of a prosperous resurrection and our fear and trembling are no instances of our calamity but parts of duty we shall sure enough be wafted to the shore although we be tossed with the winds of our sighs and the unevenness of our fears and the ebbings and flowings of our passions if we sail in a right chanel and steere by a perfect compasse and look up to God and call for his help and do our own endeavour There are very many reasons why men ought not to despair and there are not very many men that ever go beyond a hope till they passe into possession if our fears have any mixture of hope that is enough to enable and to excite our duty and if we have a strong hope when we cast about we shall finde reason enough to have many fears let not this fear weaken our hands and if it allay our gayeties and our confidences it is no harm In this uncertainty we must abide if we have committed sins after baptisme and those confidences which some men glorie in are not reall supports or good foundations The fearing man is the safest and if he fears on his death-bed it is but what happens to most considering men and what was to be looked for all his life time he talked of the terrours of death and death is the king of terrours and therefore it is no strange thing if then he be hugely afraid if he be not it is either a great felicity or a great presumption but if he wants some degree of comfort or a greater degree of hope let him be refreshed by considering 1. That Christ came into the world to save sinners
2 That God delights not in the confusion and death of sinners 3. That in heaven there is great joy at the conversion of a sinner 4. That Christ is a perpetual advocate daily interceding with his Father for our pardon 5. That God uses infinite arts instruments and devices to reconcile us to himself 6. That he prayes us to be in charity with him and to be forgiven 7. That he sends Angels to keep us from violence and evil company from temptations and surprizes and his holy Spirit to guide us in holy wayes and his servants to warn us and reminde us perpetually and therefore since certainly he is so desirous to save us as appears by his word by his oaths by his very nature and his daily artifices of mercy it is not likely that he will condemn us without great provocations of his Majesty and perseverance in them 8. That the covenant of the Gospel is a covenant of grace and of repentance and being established with so many great solemnities and miracles from heaven must signifie a huge favour and a mighty change of things and therefore that repentance which is the great condition of it is a grace that does not expire in little accents and minutes but hath a great latitude of signification and a large extension of parts under the protection of all which persons are safe even when they fear exceedingly 9. That there are great degrees and differences of glory in heaven and therefore if we estimate our piety by proportions to the more eminent persons and devouter people we are not to conclude we shall not enter into the same state of glory but that we shall not go into the same degrees 9 That although forgivenesse of sins is consigned to us in Baptism and that this Baptism is but once and cannot be repeated yet forgivenesse of sins is the grace of the gospel which is perpetually remanent upon us and secured unto us so long as we have not renounced our Baptisme For then we enter into the condition of repentance and repentance is not an indivisible grace or a thing performed at once but is working all our lives and therefore so is our pardon which ebbes and flowes according as we discompose or renew the decency of our Baptismall promises and therefore it ought to be certain that no man despair of pardon but he that hath voluntarily renounced his Baptism or willingly estranged himself from that covenant He that sticks to it and still professes the religion and approves the faith and endeavours to obey and to do his duty this man hath all the veracity of God to assure him and give him confidence that he is not in an impossible state of salvation unlesse God cuts him off before he can work or that he begins to work when he can no longer choose 10. And then let him consider the more he fears the more he hates his sin that is the cause of it and the lesse he can be tempted to it and the more desirous he is of heaven and therefore such fears are good instruments of grace and good signes of a future pardon 11. That God in the old law although he made a Covenant of perfect obedience and did not promise pardon at all after great sins yet he did give pardon and declared it so to them for their own and for our sakes too So he did to David to Manasses to the whole Nation of the Israelies ten times in the wildernesse even after their Apostacies and Idolatries and in the Prophets the mercies of God and his remissions of sins were largely preached though in the Law God put on the robes of an angry Judge and a severe Lord but therefore in the Gospel where he hath established the whole summe of affairs upon faith and repentance if God should not pardon great sinners that repent after baptisme with a free dispensation the Gospel were far harder then the intolerable Covenant of the Law 12. That if a Proselyte went into the Jewish communion and were circumcised and baptized he entred into all the hopes of good things which God had promised or would give to his people and yet that was but the Covenant of works If then the Gentile Proselytes by their circumcision and legall baptisme were admitted to a state of pardon to last so long as they were in the Covenant even after their admission for sins committed against Moses law which they then undertook to observe exactly In the Gospel which is the Covenant of Faith it must needs be certain that there is a great grace given and an easier conditon entred into then was that of the Jewish law and that is nothing else but that abatement is made for our infirmities and our single evils and our timely repented and forsaken habits of sin and our violent passions when they are contested withall and fought with and under discipline and in the beginnings and progresses of mortification 13. That God hath erected in his Church a whole order of men the main part and dignity of whose work it is to remit and retain sins by a perpetuall and daily ministery and this they do not onely in baptisme but in all their offices to be administered afterwards in the Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist which exhibits the Symbols of that blood which was shed for pardon of our sins and therefore by its continued ministery and repetition declares that all that while we are within the ordinary powers and usuall dispensations of pardon even so long as we are in any probable dispositions to receive that Holy Sacrament And the same effect is also signified and exhibited in the whole power of the Keyes which if it extends to private sins sins done in secret it is certain it does also to publike but this is a greater testimony of the certainty of the remissibility of our greatest sins for publike sins as they alwayes have a sting and a superadded formality of scandall and ill example so they are most commonly the greatest such as murder sacriledge and others of unconcealed nature and unprivate action and if God for these worst of evils hath appointed an office of ease and pardon which is and may daily be administred that will be an uneasie pusillanimity and fond suspicion of Gods goodnesse to fear that our repentance shall be rejected even although we have not committed the greatest or the most of evils 14. And it was concerning baptized Christians that Saint Iohn said If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father and he is the propitiation for our sins and concerning lapsed Christians S. Paul gave instruction that if any man be overtaken in a fault ye which are spiritual restore such a man in the spirit of meeknesse considering lest ye also be temted the Corinthian Christian committed incest and was pardoned and ‑ Simon Magus after he was baptized offered to commit his own sin of Simony and yet Saint Peter bid him pray
for pardon and S. Iames tells that if the sick man sends for the Church and they pray over him and he confesse his sins they shall be forgiven him 15. That onely one sin is declared to be irremissible the sin against the Holy Ghost the sin unto death as S. Iohn calls it for which we are not bound to pray for all others we are and certain it is no man commits a sin against the Holy Ghost if he be afraid he hath and desires that he had not for such penitentiall passions are against the definition of that sin 16. That all the Sermons in the Scripture written to Christians Disciples of Jesus exhorting men to repentance to be afflicted to mourn and to weep to confession of sins are sure testimonies of Gods purpose and desire to forgive us even when we fall after baptisme and if our fall after baptisme were irrecoverable then all preaching were in vain and our faith were also vain and we could not with comfort rehearse the Creed in which as soon as ever we professe Jesus to have died for our sins we also are condemned by our own conscience of a sin that shall not be forgiven and then all exhortations and comforts and fasts and disciplines were uselesse and too late if they were not given us before we can understand them for most commonly as soon as we can we enter into the regions of sin For we commit evil actions before we understand and together with our understanding they begin to be imputed 17. That if it could be otherwise infants were very ill provided for in the Church who were baptized when they have no stain upon their brows but the misery they contracted from Adam and they are left to be Angels for ever after and live innocently in the midst of their ignorances and weaknesse and temptations and the heat and follies of youth or else to perish in an eternall ruine we cannot think or speak good things of God if we entertain such evil suspicions of the mercies of the Father of our Lord Jesus 18. That the long-sufferance and patience of God is indeed wonderfull but therefore it leaves us in certainties of pardon so long as there is possibilitie to return if we reduce ●he power to act 19. That God calls upon us to forgive our brother seventy times seven times and yet all that is but like the forgiving a hundred pence for his sake who forgives us ten thousand talents for so the Lord professed that he had done to him that was his servant and his domestic 20. That if we can forgive a hundred thousand times it is certain God will do so to us Our Blessed Lord having commanded us to pray for pardon as we pardon our offending and penitent brother 21. That even in the case of very great sins and great judgements inflicted upon the sinners wise and good men and Presidents of Religion have declared their sense to be that God spent all his anger and made it expire in that temporall misery and so it was supposed to have been done in the case of Ananias but that the hopes of any penitent man may not rely upon any uncertainty we find in holy Scripture that those Christians who had for their scandalous crimes deserved to be given over to Sathan to be buffetted yet had hopes to be saved in the day of the Lord. 22. That God glories in the titles of mercy and forgivenesse and will not have his appellatives so finite and limited as to expire in one act or in a seldome pardon 23. That mans condition were desperate and like that of the falling Angels equally desperat but unequally oppressed considering our infinite weaknesses and ignorances in respect of their excellent understanding and perfect choice if he could be admitted to no repentance after his infant Baptisme and if he may be admitted to one there is nothing in the Covenant of the Gospel but he may also to a second and so for ever as long as he can repent and return and live to God in a timely religion 24. That every man is a sinner In many things we offend all and if we say we have no sin we deceive our selves and therefore either all must perish or else there is mercy for all and so there is upon this very stock because Christ died for sinners and God hath comprehended all under sin that he might have mercy upon all 25. That if ever God sends temporall punishments into the world with purposes of amendment and if they be not all of them certain consignations to hel and unlesse every man that breaks his leg or in punishment loses a child or wife be certainly damned it is certain that God in these cases is angry and loving chastises the sin to amend the person and smites that he may cure and judges that he may absolve 26. That he that will not quench the smoaking flax nor break the bruised reed will not tie us to perfection and the lawes and measures of heaven upon earth and if in every period of our repentance he is pleased with our duty and the voyce of our heart and the hand of our desires he hath told us plainly that he will not onely pardon all the sins of the dayes of our folly but the returns and surprises of sins in the dayes of repentance if we give no way and allow no affection and give no peace to any thing that is Gods enemy all the past sins and al the seldom returning and ever repented evils being put upon the accounts of the Crosse. An exercise against despair in the day of our death TO which may be added this short exercise to be used for the curing the temptation to direct despair in case that the hope and faith of good men be assaulted in the day of their calamity I consider that the ground of my trouble is my sin and if it were not for that I should not need to be troubled but the help that all the world looks for is such as supposes a man to be a sinner * Indeed if from my self I were to derive my title to heaven then my sins were a just argument of despair but now that they bring me to Christ that they drive me to an appeal to Gods mercies and to take sanctuary in the Crosse they ought not they cannot infer a just cause of despair * I am sure it is a stranger thing that God should take upon him hands and feet and those hands and feet should be nailed upon a crosse then that a man should be partaker of the felicities of pardon and life eternall and it were stranger yet that God should do so much for man and that a man that desires it that labours for it that is in life and possibilities of working his salvation should inevitably misse that end for which that God suffered so much For what is the meaning and what is the extent and what are the significations
his brother nor give to God a ransome for him for the redemption of their soul is precious and it ceaseth for ever that he should still live for ever and not see corruption But wise men die likewise the fool and the brutish person perish and leave their wealth to others but God will redeem my soul from the power of the grave for he shall receive me As for me I will behold thy face in righteousnesse I shall be satisfied when I awake in thy likenesse Thou shalt shew me the path of life in thy presence is the fulnesse of joy at thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore Glory be to the Father c. As it was in the beginning c. Let us Pray ALmighty God Father of mercies the God of peace and comfort of rest and pardon we thy servants though unworthy to pray to thee yet in duty to thee and charity to our brother humbly beg mercy of thee for him to descend upon his body and his soul One sinner O Lord for another the miserable for the afflicted the poor for him that is in need but thou givest thy graces and thy favours by the measures of thy own mercies and in proportion to our necessities we humbly come to thee in the Name of Jesus for the merit of our Saviour and the mercies of our God praying thee to pardon the sins of this thy servant and to put them all upon the accounts of the Crosse and to bury them in the grave of Jesus that they may never rise up in judgement against thy servant nor bring him to shame and confusion of face in the day of finall inquiry and sentence Amen II. GIve thy servant patience in his sorrows comfort in this his sicknesse and restore him to health if it seem good to thee in order to thy great ends and his greatest interest And however thou shalt determine concerning him in this affair yet make his repentance perfect and his passage and his faith strong and his hope modest and confident that when thou shalt call his soul from the prison of the body it may enter into the securities and rest of the sons of God in the bosome of blessednesse and the custodies of Jesus Amen III. THou O Lord knowest all the necessities and all the infirmities of thy servant fortifie his spirit with spirituall joyes and perfect resignation and take from him all degrees of inordinate or insecure affections to this world and enlarge his heart with desires of being with thee and of freedome from sins and fruition of God IV. LOrd let not any pain or passion discompose the order and decencie of his thoughts and duty and lay no more upon thy servant then thou wilt make him able to bear and together with the temptation do thou provide a way to escape even by the mercies of a longer and a more holy life or by the mercies of a blessed death even as it pleaseth thee O Lord so let it be V. LEt the tendernesse of his conscience and the Spirit of God call to mind his sins that they may be confessed and repented of because thou hast promised that if we confesse our sins we shall have mercy Let thy mighty grace draw out from his soul every root of bitternesse lest the remains of the old man be accursed with the reserves of thy wrath but in the union of the Holy Jesus and in the charities of God and of the world and the communion of all the saints let this soul be presented to thee blamelesse and intirely pardoned and thorowly washed through Jesus Christ our Lord. Here also may be inserted the prayers set down after the Holy Communion is administred The Prayer of S. Eustratius the Martyr to be used by the sick or dying man or by the Priests or assistants in his behalf which he said when he was going to martyrdom I Will praise thee O Lord that thou hast considered my low estate and hast not shut me up in the hands of my enemies nor made my foes to rejoyce over me and now let thy right hand protect me and let thy mercy come upon me for my soul is in trouble and anguish because of its departure from the body O let not the assemblies of its wicked and cruell enemies meet it in the passing forth nor hinder me by reason of the sins of my passed life O Lord be favourable unto me that my so I may not behold the hellish countenance of the spirits of darknesse but let thy bright and joyfull Angels entertain it Give glory to thy Holy Name and to thy Majesty place me by thy mercifull arm before thy seat of Judgement and let not the hand of the prince of this world snatch me from thy presence or bear me into hell Mercy sweet Jesu Amen A Prayer taken out of the Euchologion of the Greek Church to be said by or in behalf of people in their danger or neer their death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. I. BEmired with sins and naked of good deeds I that am the meat of worms cry vehemently in spirit Cast not me wretch away from thy face place me not on the left hand who with thy hands didst fashion me but give rest unto my soul for thy great mercy sake O Lord. II. SUpplicate with tears unto Christ who is to judge my poor soul that he would deliver me from the fire that is unquenchable I pray you all my friends and acquaintance make mention of me in your prayers that in the day of Judgement I may find mercy at that dreadfull Tribunall III. Then may the by-standers pray WHen in unspeakable glory thou dost come dreadfully to judge the whole world vouchsafe O gracious Redeemer that this thy faithfull servant may in the clouds meet thee cheerfully They who have been dead from the beginning with terrible and fearfull trembling stand at thy Tribunall waiting thy just O Blessed Saviour Jesus None shall there avoid thy formidable and most righteous judgement All Kings and Princes with servants stand together and hear the dreadfull voyce of the Judge condemning the people which have sinned into hell from which sad sentence O Christ deliver thy servant Amen Then let the sick man be called upon to rehearse the Articles of his Faith or if he be so weak he cannot let him if he have not before done it be called to say Amen when they are recited or to give some testimony of his faith and confident assent to them After which it is proper if the person be in capacity that the Minister examine him and invite him to confession and all the parts of repentance according to the foregoing rules after which he may pray this prayer of absolution OUr Lord Jesus Christ who hath given Commission to his Church in his Name to pronounce pardon to all that are truly penitent he of his mercy pardon and forgive thee all thy sins deliver thee from all evils past present and future