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A02715 Samuels funerall. Or A sermon preached at the funerall of Sir Anthonie Cope Knight, and Barronnet. By Mr. Robert Harrice Harris, Robert, 1581-1658. 1618 (1618) STC 12848; ESTC S103801 24,630 36

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not die he goes to bed but cannot sleepe he tastes his meate but it will not downe he shifts his roome but not his paine death saith the conscience would end and amend all wert thou prepared for death but to die before were to loose those comforts one hath and to fall vnder those curses that are vnsufferable c. But as yet we are but in the way to death After sicknes hath for a time entertained vs with sharpest conflicts it deliuers vs vp to death it selfe then the armies of feare display themselues and stabbe the vnprouided soule through his thickest shield then two powerfull officers seize vpon a maimed man at once death vpon the body terrour vpon the soule death hales much like Salomons officers and the soule holds as Ioab the altar so she the body 1. King 2. loth they be to part but death will rend them in twaine the conscience the whilest that meditates feare that quakes that trembles Whither am I going So Adrian dying Animula vagula blandudula c. where must I lodge this night where shall I liue hereafter Oh that I might liue Oh that I might die Oh that I might doe neither and knowes not what to chuse meane while what case is this man in whilest death thus rips him vp and thrusts his hands into his bowels to pull out his heart Ah beloued wee may intimate somewhat of his miserie but it falles not within our thoughts to conceiue what his feare be who hangs between life and death earth and hell thus forthwith ready to drop into flames at euery stroke of death and to sinke downe downe downe till he be gone for euer And yet this is not all when I am dead saith the carnal wretch all the world is done with me he saith truth al the world and all the comforts of the world haue done with him indeed he shal neuer laugh more he shal neuer haue a moniēts ease more but though the world hath done with him yet God hath not done with him he sends for his soule hauing first taken order that the body be forth-comming conuents that and doomes that casts that from him with greatest indignatiō into such a place such a cōpany such a condition as would make the heauens sweat and the earth shrinke to heare it Well then beloued sith die wee must sith we must be sicke be in paine in feare in tentation whilest here sith we must to iudgement when we go hence sith that is most true of death which antiquitie hath faigned of the Wolfe and Basiliske if wee see death before it comes to see vs we shall then preuent the sting and poyson and fiercenesse of it if it steale vpon vs vnseene it leaues vs dumbe nay dead bee wee entreated by all the mercies of God as we would please him and pleasure our selues to take into our thoughts the often meditation of death and to make due preparation for the same Tell thy heart euery day when thou takest it alone in the words of Iob When a few yeeres Iob 16.22 or as the text runnes when the yeres of number which are allotted me namely are come then I shall goe the way whence I shall not returne say with him Iob 17.1 the graue is ready for me indeed graues I must die I must from all these profits these pleasures these friends I must answere for all these deeds these words these thoughts I must bee ashamed cast cursed damned burned plagued as long as God liues if I prepare not I shal be spared saued blest crowned and be as neere to God as a creature can be to his maker if I doe prepare therefore I must I must I will prepare for death This done without all delayes as a man that is now dying as well as he for whom the bell toles though not happily so neere to death set vpon two things First set thy house in order next thy soule For the first thou hast persons and things to looke vnto to begin with persons so liue with thy wife being a husband with thy seruants being a master with thy children being a father exercise such wisedome kindnesse faithfulnesse mercy euery day as thou wouldest doe if thou knowest it to be the last day And for things marke me wel ●…ken not to Satan who disswades all seasonable willes because hee would administer the goods by being timely in this errand thou shalt not shorten thy dayes but hauing taken thy leaue of the world shalt better attend on death Things therefore vnlawfull restore I say againe restore Things lawfull dispose of and as in a iourney hastie and vncertaine wait the call But what auailes it to set house in order with Achitophel and to forget ones selfe In the second place therefore nay in the first looke to thy selfe and sith the places be but two and they so different go not to hell so long as heauen may bee had there is no man so forlornely wicked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Basil but if he repent wee may warrant him heauen if he will not who can helpe him But what must he doe first he must repent that is see his life and nature confesse mourne hate sinne and leaue all in practice or allowance Secondly he must beleeue that is acquaint himselfe with the Word and yeeld consent vnto it apply it to his owne particular and dwell vpon it hee must threaten himselfe in euery threat curse himselfe in euery curse blesse himselfe in euery promise Thirdly he must die daily to sinne and the world he must liue daily in the constant practice of al duties religious towards God righteous towards man priuate in his place calling And so if he doth in truth vprightnesse though in much weaknesse there is no heauen if he go not to heauen if he do not thus out of a presumption of mercy of life and I know not what there is none in hell if he be not one Vp then my brethren and foreslow no time now the wind serues hoyse vp saile now is the market make your prouision now is the seeds-time sowe apace as yet you haue all aduantages from grace and nature Word Sacrament wit memory sense strength c. Now apprehend the opportunity repent and be pardoned beleeue and be saued obey and be for euer blessed if any hath perswaded himselfe otherwise my soule shall weepe in secret for his destruction which I know will be as certainly effected as now it is plainly threatned Be entreated then let God entreat you and once ouer-rule you you must die you must die but once being once dead you returne not to make a new preparation doe that once well which being once wel done will make you men nay more then men then Angels for euer And this is the vse for our selues A second respects our friends Must all die is there no remedie then must we haue patience in our friends departure a common lot
glorie his peace his ioy his comforts his contentments all his portion is onely in this life Psal 17. saith the Prophet all the sweet he hath foregoeth death after he hath a portion indeed but it is a portion of fier and brimstone Psal 11. of stormes and tempests of anguish and tribulation of shame and confusion of horror and amazement in a firy lake from the presence of God in the middest of cursed spirits Thus death must needs be terrible to him but as comfortable to the godly for it makes his crosses as short as the others comforts the wicked cānot promise to himselfe comforts of an howres length nor may the godly threaten himselfe with crosses of an howres continuance death in an instant turnes the sinners glory into shame Anima absoluitur corpus resoluitur Ab. de bono vit e. c. 8. pleasure into paine comfort into confusion death in an instant easeth the godlies body of all paine his soule of all sinne his conscience of al feares and leaues him in an estate of perfect happinesse Let then the godly comfort himselfe in those thoughts which kill the wicked euen in thoughts of death let him for outward troubles resolue that death will be to him as Michal once to Dauid a meane to rid him of the hands of sorrow so that afflictions shall meete with none other then Sauls messengers did a dead trunke in stead of a liuing Dauid let him comfort himselfe in the thoughts of his owne death as once Esau in the thoughts of his fathers The dayes of mourning said he will shortly come then I will slay my brother but the day of refreshing let the Christian say wil shortly come and then I will slay my enemies pride vnbeliefe selfe-loue yea all corruptions all tentations all miseries which stand some aboue vs some about vs as the insulting Philistimes about Samson shall end with the same blow and fall with the same clap with our selues happie they whose miserie is no longer then life but woe be to the wicked whose iolity ends when death enters and whose torments suruiue death it self and so we leaue Samuel to his rest Well Samuel is well himselfe but in what case doth hee leaue his poore neighbours at Ramah that the Text now speakes and it is my trouble yet better one then al troubled that I must speake it so briefly Israel saith the Text Iacobs issue Gods people all Israel distributiuely taken that is of all forts some were gathered in great troopes either by publike command or of their owne voluntarie or both waies first to lament according to the then custome in most solemne manner Samuels end and their owne losse and next to honour him at his buriall in his Ramah Here you see we haue farre to goe and little time to spend the faster I hasten the more you will hearken and then I runne the points which in a passage or two must be touched from this part are two the first is this Samuel a publike and prositable man dieth Israel publikely mourneth you see what followeth Doct. 1 Great and publike losses must bee entertained with great and publike sorrowes sorrow must be suited to the losse as a garment to the bodie a shoe to the foote when the cause of griefe is great the measure of griefe must bee answerable This is one principle when a good man and neighbour dies there is cause of great sorrow this is another the inference will soone follow and result hence and that is our conclusion Good men of publike vse and place Doct. 2 should neuer passe to the graue vnlamented their death should be considered and be wailed Shall we proue this God complaines when it is not so in Isaiah The righteous perish Isaiah 57.1 and no man considereth it Next the Church hath practised euer this when Iacob died hee was lamented so Ioseph so Iosiah so Stephen Thirdly wicked men haue performed this for good men as Ioash for Elisha O my Father my Father 2. Kings 13.14 the Chariots of Israel and the Horsemen of the same Fourthly good men haue performed this for wicked men when vsefull Gouernours as Dauid for Saul 2. Sam. 1.19 Lastly 2. Sam. 1 19. Lastly reason calls for it we must mourne in respect of the cause of such mens deaths not priuate but publike sinnes too Reas 1 God neuer beheads a State a Countrie but for some treason If Samuel die it is because God is angrie with the people the sheepe be not thankfull nor fruitfull therefore the shepheard is smitten Secondly in respect of the consequents take away good men and good Magistrates and secret sinners grow open desperate the State lies open as a field vnfenced the godly either mourne with Israel or hide themselues with Dauid The righteous is taken away from the euill to come saith Isaiah Isay 57.1 ther 's a storme comming so soone as he is housed Thirdly in respect of the losse it selfe righteous men in the time of peace are the pillars of a State they vphold the Iland saith Iob In time of warre and peace the horsemen and Chariots of their Israel like Salomons waiters for safety and honour as needeful in a State as the head in the body a stake in a hedge Now should it be thus when vsefull persons die Vse what then shall we say to these times wherein men haue not put off pietie onely but nature also No maruell if the Prophet complaine the righteous perish and no man considereth it in heart The wife perisheth and the husband doth not consider it the parents perish and the children do not consider it the children perish and parents do not consider it few such brethren as Dauid to Ionathan such husbands as Abraham such children as Isaac Blind Polydor could taxe this de iuuen l. 6. c. 9. in vs of England such fathers as Iacob These long and long felt the losse of their dearest friends but now one month is enough to weare out al thoughts of a brother nay of a child nay of a mother nay of a wife nay in the nearest tyes one in that space may bee buried a second woed a third married Now when nature dies shall we looke for any life of grace When these so neere be forgotten can we hope that the righteous shal be remembred The righteous said I nay his death is some mans life they sit like Ahashuerosh and Haman drinking when all Israel is lamenting ●…st 3.15 they shoote with Gath and Askelon as in the day of haruest like impure Philistimes sport themselues with others miseries But stay your selues prophane mockers died Samuel like a foole as Dauid speakes of Abner or is his death any aduantage to you No his death is his owne gaine but your losse his death tels you that you must die those soules of yours must bee torne from your bodies those bodies of yours must be mangled by death after death you must be iudged after
Ferre quam sortem patiuntur omnes nemo it cusat Senec. no man should shrug at euen in the Poets iudgement who quarrels summer for some heate or winter for some cold a thorn for pricking or a brier for scratching who is angry that he is framed like other men subiect to like hunger like thirst like sleepe and why I pra'y should not our friends resemble others in their death as well as in their birth we would not haue them haue more eyes or hands then others v. Greg. Nyssen synod de dormientibus and why more dayes what doe we make of life what of death surely to the godly life is but a prison death is an aduantage Say our friends were tied in prison would wee begrudge them liberty say tost on the seas would you enuie them the hauen say doubtfull in the skirmish would you bee sorie for their victorie nay say but beaten with a tempest would you not wish them at home Beleeue it Brethren this world is but a sea a prison this life a iourney a warfare if God hath preuented our wishes shall he bee returned frowardnesse shall wee trouble the ayre with needlesse cries my husband my husband my father my father as if wee were the first widowes and Orphans in the world no let them mourne without hope whose life and death is without hope as for Christians who die liuing and liue dying they loose nothing by death but what may well bee spared sinne and sorrow they meet with nothing in heauen worthy teares they goe not from but to their friends not from but to their home not from but to their ioyes a change indeed they haue but to their gaine For first so soone as death arrests them the world is well amended with them especially for the soule howbeit the full accomplishment of their happinesse is reiourned to the last day that day of refreshing that day of reioycing that day of marriage of solemnity then a full a blessed change shall euidence it selfe to the whole world and this change if wee speake in generall is onely in qualities as all alterations be not in substance the mettall is the same onely it is refined the stuffe the same only it is trimmed the body and soule the same onely it is newly clothed If we descend to particulars the change will bee found to bee in these following in body soule estate place company for the body that is stript of all sinfull and naturall defects the abortions of sinne and filled with all heauenly complements of mortall it becomes immortall of corruptible incorruptible of naturall spirituall that is not needing naturall helpes or props there is no vse of meat apparell sleepe beds of dishonourable glorious like in its measure to the body of Christ which is the standard In short whatsoeuer might make to the annoying blemishing dishonouring disquieting of the body is remoued whatsoeuer might make it amiable actiue honourable glorious comfortable is added the glory of the Sunne will be but darknesse to it For the soule that is first eased of all the rags and reliques of sinne deliuered of ignorance pride selfe-loue c Generally all whose obiects are either future or euill deliuered next of all the consequences of sinne griefes guilts feares accusations yea deliuered of all things which may any way import an imperfect state though an vpright heart as faith repentance hungring after righteousnesse c and then in a second place it is filled with the image of Iesus Christ First all the powers and faculties therof are perfected and aduanced aboue the ordinary straine of nature next all those vessels are stuffed with knowledge loue and all things else that are there requisite and not only so but the soule is furnished with all the attendances of Christs image euerlasting ioy perpetuall peace a constant correspondency and communion with God and in briefe whatsoeuer might offend staine blemish the soule is remoued and whatsoeuer may enrich it ennoble it and make it blissefull is according to each mans measure added And thus of the person The rest we dispatch with all speed for the estate thus there shall be nothing that shall be wanting that shall trouble distract or discontent there shall bee nothing that the soule shall then desire but there it is For the place thus there shall bee nothing lesse then what shall bee desired nothing more that can bee desired what it is the Word no where for ought I know tels vs. The Church on earth is more tich thē gold more precious then pearle more bright then the Suaue more glorious then the Moone Read 21.22 but what is there to be seene Paul could not vtter wee cannot conceiue onely this we know that none shall be euer weary of it or willing to alter it Lastly for the companie there bee of three sorts first Angels who shall not then terrifie but attend the worst and lowest seruant there shall bee as an Angell 2. All the famous and godly men that euer liued Illic Apostularum 〈…〉 Pro ●…tarum c. Cypr. de mort ad fratres there shall we meete with Adam abraham c there shall we be acquainted with Dauid Paul c. 3. The blessed Trinity there shall we see him who hath done and suffered so much for vs him whom the Fathers before and since his incarnation so much longed to see Iesus Christ the blessed all which considered and beleeued what can wee lesse doe then abandon all fruitlesse and fleshly teares for friends departed what way are they gone but the way of all flesh with whom doe they liue but with Samuel with God where are they but in better place and case with better friends then euer before In stead of carking therefore doe two other things first whilest friends bee present Our vulg●… seldome 〈◊〉 for friends till gone doe the part of a friend in praying for them in calling vpon them and in fitting of them to death that so thou maiest haue peace in thy selfe and hope of them in their departure Else when thy conscience shall say vnto thee Wretched man thy wife thy child thy charge is now dead and for ought thou knowest in hell if not no thankes to thee for thou wast neuer the man that would call vpon thē pray with thē or mind them of their departures when I say thy cōscience shall thus greet thee thou shalt not tell how to take it Secondly when they are gone to bed and fast asleepe awake them not with thy cries but make ready to follow after so the time shall be best redeemed the losse and crosse best improued and Satan who loues to fish in such troubled waters most preuented and so farre this vse We will touch vpon a third as we passe and that is this must we all die then here is a cooler for the wicked and comfort for the godly The wicked holds all his comforts onely for tearme of life death ends his wealth his
iudgement plagued a 1000 yeres when that 's done then another then another and another and another so long as God liues so long your plagues shall last His death tels you Exod. 32. that you are left as Israel in Moses absence naked The righteous being remoued you lie open to all sinnes snares tentations sorrowes and haue none to case and helpe you by his prayers Your secret ioy at his death shewes you to be secret hypocrites for what true member can part with a fellow member without some sorrow your reioycing at calamities presages your owne miseries as Salomon tels you and therefore tremble and mocke not mourne and iest not say if not in loue to the righteous yet to your selues My Father my Father the Chariots of Israel and the horsemen of the same But let vs affoard them a little mirth here that haue none else-where and for our selues sith God complaines that the righteous perish and no man considereth his death le ts spend some thoughts vpon that point That the righteous perish who seeth not Nay alas who seeth it The Lord hath been vpon vs these many yeeres and comes not in fauour to weede out the worst but in displeasure to gather the ripest amongst the sonnes of Maieslie hee hath smitten at the chiefest amongst our Nobles he hath taken of the best Come to the gent●…e and the best goe Nay what shall we instance any farther Death hath been at the Court in the Citie in the Countrie in the Vniuersitie in places of highest marke of greatest zeale and hath fetcht away the best of Princes the best of Nobles the best of Magistrates the best of Captaines of Scholars of Christians of all sorts all most the best and should not this be considered But there is more then this in the Egipt of this world we haue hitherto found a Goshen hitherto in hardest pressures worst measures Dauid could go to Samuel in Ramah and there meete with good counsell and comfort but now both Samuel himselfe dies and poore Dauid must flie Shall I beloued speake as the thing is In the fall of one Cedar of Ramah wee haue lost much shade and shelter in the splitting of one vessel of price wherein we had all our interesses and aduentures we are all loosers what we haue lost we shall better see seuen yeeres hence then now but loosers we are all loosers Wife Children Neighbours Friends Minister People all loosers so that here that is verified which was anciently vttered of another in one we haue lost many a chaste Husband a tender Father a religious Magistrate a kind Neighbour a good Church-man a good States-man in few a Samuel Speake I this after the flesh to please No I speake it for vse to profit I report my selfe to your hearts You tell me that you haue a publike losse your mouthes haue vttered it your faces speake it my eares and eyes haue receiued it from you and if so then see what followes if we haue Israels losse we must make Israels lamentation if with them we haue lost in one many at once much we must be much and many in bewailing this losse S●…th 1.20 Is our case Naomies say with Naomi call me pleasant no more call me bitter for God hath fed me with bitternesse and witnessed against me by denying mee this comfort he testifies my vnthankfulnesse for it Is our place Dauids let vs take vp Dauids words with Dauids affection I am distressed for thee brother Ionathan 2. Sam. 1.26 very pleasant hast thou been to me thy loue to me was wonderfull passing the loue of women Are we as Dauid to Saul Isaac to Rebekah sonnes Are we as Ieremiah to Iosiah Prophets As Dauid to Abner Kinsmen are we by any name intituled to this losse mourne then mourne not as the infidell desperately nor bitterly as doth the froward but soberly as did Dauid when Abners death put him to a fast As God in life so let vs in death put a difference betwixt Samuel and Iehoiachim Ier. 12.18 let the one be buried in silence without an Ah my brother Ah sister as Ieremiah describes it in his 22. Chapter but for the other all Israel must mourne with an holy mourning Let his dearest yoke-fellow say Ah mine vnthankefulnesse and vnfruitfulnesse let children say Ah our disobedience and stubburnesse and seruants Ah our idlenesse and vntrustines and all Ah our folly and frowardnesse Who could not see vertues through frailties and corne through chasse til we had lost all These sinnes of ours haue stript vs of a Samuel and couered vs with darkenesse He is gone the arme and shoulder is fallen from this our little body the sooner for our sins let vs see it or else what abides vs. In the body what medicines cannot doe cutting must what that cannot burning must or else nothing saith the master of Physick Hippocrat It is so in the soule to Oh that we could see it In our friends sicknesses we haue been medicined in priuate distresses launced but in the losse of publike persons the Lord proceeds to burning If these wounds vpon the very head of vs strike vs not downe What shall next bee smitten but our heart it selfe Well Israel laments and he hath cause what doe they next that next we must heare They burie him and the place and manner bee obserued For the place they bury him at his house in Ramah the ancient and the Manner house his father dwelt there before him 1. Sam. 1 1. Sam. 1.19 where also you may bee informed touching the towne Whereas there were of Ramahs foure or fiue v. Adrichom of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this was Ramah Zophim in Mount Ephraim which borrowes his name from the situation of it it stood high and the name importeth no lesse In this Ramah Samuel sometime liued as a Magistrate and here hee is interred For the solemnity of the Funerall it is such as argues Israels loue and Samuels worth they doe him all the honour that is possible First Israel the first borne of men the glory of the world comes to the Funeral all Israel all at once in the same place they come from far they come vpon the wings of the wind they come to lament al mourners they come to burie him to bury him in his owne towne at his owne house what can be done more in Samuels honour To bee buried is an honour buried in ones owne countrey much in his owne place more but to bee so buried as Samuel was in such a place by such a people with so many teares so great a solemnity this is Samuels happinesse and the Saints honour You see then our third doctrine An holy and profitable life ends in an happy and honourable death Doct. 3 life is deaths seeds-time death lifes haruest as here we sowe so there we reape as here we set so there we gather of holinesse happinesse and of a blessed life a death as blis-full He that
spends himselfe vpon God and man shal at the last haue all the honour that heauen and earth can cast vpon him So Samuel found it so Iacob few men comparable to him in holinesse as few so honourably buried So Asa 2 Chron. 16.14 Hezekiah Iosiah Dauid c but especially for Iosiah and Hezekiah those great reformers those profitable members the text takes speciall notice of their obsequies Iosiah hauing receiued his deaths wound abroad is brought home in his chariot 2. Chron. 35.29 and much honour attends him to his graue he is buried amongst his fathers and friends all Ierusalem nay all Iudah and the neighbouring townes are mourners nay not professors onely but Preachers too as Ieremy is expressed These so mourned as that their lamentation grew into a prouer be Zach. 12. God and man concurred in this that Iosiahs name should neuer die 2. Chron. 32.33 And as for Hezekiah the holy Ghost points vs to his life and death in his life time he was of greatest vse for Church and Common-weale therefore when he died Israel slockes to the buriall and where is he buried in the chiefest Sepulcher of Davids sonnes and how with greatest honour all Israel saith the text and Iudah too met together to doe him honour at his death 2. Chron. 32.33 He studied their good in life they his honour at his death thus a profitable life resignes to an honourable death thus are they honoured of all that minde Gods glory and the common good A matter of lesse marnell if we consider three things First that God hath vndertaken taken it shall be so 1. Sam. 2 30. They that honour me shall be honoured by me saith truth and honour it selfe and in the hands of wisedome is honour as well as wealth Prou. 3. Secondly all matter of disgrace is remoued by death life and sinne in the godly die together when God diuides the soule from the body he separates sinne from both sinne for the punishment he will not smite sinne for the staine that shall not blemish Thirdly he swayes the hearts of men to thoughts of mercy towards his when once departed hauing first couered their sinnes himselfe he wipes the remembrance of them out of the heart of men and presents them with a daily view of grace and vertue Thus Samuel that was so much quarrelled in his life is as much honoured in his death when hee dies mans en●…e dies his owne corruption dies God will see none iniquity in Samuel men after God shall doe the like And is this so then here we see what course must bee taken Vse if we will arriue at honour men may dreame to meete with honour in many pathes they may thinke to make their name by other meanes but when they haue tyred themselues in seeking this in by-paths as the young students Elyahs body they must with them seeke in heauen 2. King 2.16 if euer they will finde All honour comes from aboue and there rests where the God of honour places it so that hee must be wonne by a godly life before that honour can bee obtained Beleeue it brethren nothing mends the name but what mendes the soule Nebuchadnezzar may haue wealth Achitophel wit Herod speech Sh●bna a tombe Ahab all and yet be base and contemptible Doeg may fawne Diotrephes climbe Iezabel paint Absalom plot and yet leaue their name as a curse these these things that grow out of the dunghill or dust will neuer build a name of honour because they will neuer worke any life of grace The onely way to honour is through vertue in the Heathens iudgement a speech as true as truth it selfe if we vnderstand it of the exercise not of morall vertues but of sauing grace A godly fruitfull life hath a fairer prospect towards honour then all the aduantages in the world besides Be one as poore as Onesimus yet if Onesimus that is profitable his name out-liues him be one as great as King Iehoram or Iehoiachim if he idle out his life he dies vndesired he liues vnlamented In the second of Chron. 24 2. Chron. 24. we haue two notable instances in one Chapter to this purpose the men are Ioash and Iehoiadah the difference much betwixt them the one was a king the other a subiect in life this ods the one was truly profitable and godly the other contrary in death therefore thus they are differenced Iehoiadah waxed old the other was rotten before tipe next Ichoiadah died naturally the other by a violent hand Ichoiadah in the loue of all the other in the hatred of his owne men Ichoiadah buried amongst the kings the other denied that honour the reason Ichoiadah saith the text had done good in Israel and towards God and his house Ioash neither what is the inference surely this the memoriall of the righteous is blessed the name of the godly shall remaine for euer God hath allowed both the good and the bad their portion Prou 10. the righteous hath a double blessing the wicked a double curse vpon his name The blessings are these the name of the righteous is blessed his memoriall precious his name a perfume secondly his remembrance is for euer Psalm 112. The curses these the name of the wicked rots it quickly comes to nothing whilest it lasts it stinkes like carrion and at last is left as a curse behind him as Esay saith What we heare spoken we see executed in all ages Consult with your owne experience and tell me whether the names of Idolaters drunkards adulterers swaggerers be not rotten and accursed in despite of all titles offices policies fauours whatsoeuer when in the meane the righteous notwithstanding all slanders clamours imputations and aspersions is of blessed name and memorie and if so feede vpon the wind no longer build Babels no more lay no more foundations in hell whilest you thinke to erect a building by flattery basenesse dependancie lying swaggering c but goe to the Lord of honour for lasting honour pray much reade much heare much honour him in all the passages of his worship and you haue his word for your preferment and as for men bee to them as Iehoiadah was profitable and they shall bee to you as Israel to him mercifull Ah the fruitfull liuer findes mercy in his death his conscience fauours him and hartens him vpon death it selfe the Angels of God those officers of heauen comfort him and fetch him in all state to his crowne the Lord of glory receiues him with all honour and puts vpon him the glory of heauen the Saints departed regard him as a part of themselues of Christ the Saints liuing honour his name and follow him to heauen with their loues and affections the wicked haue a word of commendations for him and the blind Balaam can say O that my end might be like his Numb 23. thus honour and happinesse and nothing else abide vs hereafter if now we can lay forth our selues to God and mans aduantage