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A36322 The mourner directory, guiding him to the middle way betwixt the two extreams, defect, excess of sorrow for his dead to which is added, The mourners soliloquy / by Thomas Doolittle ... Doolittle, Thomas, 1632?-1707. 1693 (1693) Wing D1888; ESTC R17535 114,706 250

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Dead that shall so surely live and be with him Doth not some other Frame and Temper more become thee Dost thou believe the future happy State of their Bodies whose present death thou dost bewail yet canst thou not abate thy sorrow nor turn it yet into the actings of some other Affections nor into the exercises of some Grace which if thou dost will it not more tend to the Glory of God to thine own Comfort and to the Encouragement of thine own Relations which yet do live with thee and to the setting off the Power of the Christian Religion when thou shalt believe the Promises and Principles thereof and behave thy self as one that is endued with such Faith and hast such firm Foundation for thy Faith Blessed Lord by thine assistance now I can and by thy helping Spirit now I will endeavour that I might no longer sorrow as if I had no hope when the sincere dying Christian hath hope in his Death and after he or she is dead the Living have such grounds of hope that the Dead by Christ shall conquer Death and that the day will come when if they be looked for in the Grave there they shall not be found but may be said they are not here but are risen come see the place where they did lye but are not here but gone to meet the Lord and to be for ever with him in the highest Heavens Then Lord I will no longer droop but hope Awake my Hope and let my Sorrow give place to thee Hope Oh how sweet is this how pleasant and delightful If my Sorrow was as bitter as Gall this Hope is as sweet as Honey And this I do begin to feel the more lively is my Hope of their joyful glorious Resurrection the more my Sorrow doth abate tho now for the present they be the captives of Death Indeed had it not been that I had got this Hope my Heart would break with Grief but through Grace I have obtained this good hope and by it my Spirit is revived my Sorrow is more moderate And having this Hope my Sorrow is turned into desire and longing for the Day and Coming of my Lord that all that sleep in Jesus might awake and their Immortal Souls be cloathed with Immortal glorious Bodies Oh how much better do I find it to groan with desires that they might live and come up out of their Graves than to groan thro grief that they are dead and cast into them O Time make haste and flye with greater speed that this day of the Coming of the Lord and rising of the Dead may come It is approaching it is approaching it is nearer by every Day by every Night by every Hour that comes and passeth away As time doth wear away so let my Sorrow as to its excess wear off and that by my desiring instead of sorrowing Yet thou must wait patiently O my Soul tho thou dost so earnestly desire it and tho this Morning might not dawn before the night of Death doth overtake thy Body yet wait while thy Life doth last and leave thy Body in hope that thine and theirs that be already dead shall surely live again in a Glorious Blessed and Eternal Life For doth the Husbandman cast his Seed into the Ground and know that it shall rot yet patiently wait till it rise out of the Ground and grow untill the Harvest when it shall be gathered in with great advantage and canst not thou O my Soul be patient and wait for the Redemption of those Bodies that are rotting in the Grave till the Harvest-day shall come and they be gathered with so great Advantage into the Kingdom of their God And while thou dost desire and wait thou mightest also O my Soul rejoyce and be exceeding glad because that what thou waitest for and dost desire thou hast such well-grounded Hopes that it will surely be And tho the Object of Desire and Hope is good as absent and the Object of Joy is good as present and enjoyed yet let thy Faith make that as present which is yet to come that thou mayest rejoyce therein as if it were already present O Lord notwithstanding all my Sorrow while my Faith and Hope were sleeping yet now by thy good Spirit of Grace they are awake my Sorrow is turned into Joy thou hast put off my Sackcloth thou hast turned my Weeping into Hoping Desiring and Rejoycing in the firm Belief that my Dead shall rise to Glorious Life and being not ignorant of this Lord pardon my Sin that hath been in my Sorrow and let me sorrow no more as one that hath no hope FINIS Books printed for and sold by Thomas Cockeril at the Three Leggs in the Poultrey over against the Stocks-Market London 1. THE Morning Exercise at Cripplegate or several Cases of Conscience Resolved by sundry Ministers In Quarto 2. The Supplement to the Morning Exercise at Cripplegate being sundry more practical Cases of Conscience Resolved Quarto 3. Speculum Theologiae in Christo Or a View of some Divine Truths which are either practically Exemplified in Jesus Christ set forth in the Gospel or may be reasonably deduced from thence Quarto 4. Christus in Corde Or the Mystical Union between Christ and Believers Octavo 5. Precious Faith considered in its Nature Workings and Growth In Octavo These three last by Edward Polhill of Burwash in S●ssex Esquire 6. A Discourse of Regeneration Faith and Repentance Octavo 7. A Discourse of Christian Religion in sundry Points Octavo 8. The Incomprehensibleness of Imputed Righteousness for Justification by Humane Reason till enlightned by the Spirit of God Twelves These three last by Thomas Cole Minister of the Gospel in London 9. A succinct and seasonable Discourse of the Occasions Causes Nature Rise Growth and Remedies of Mental Errors Whereunto is added 1. Vindiciarum Vindex Being an Answer to Mr. Cary about Infant Baptism 2. A Synopsis of Antinomian Errors 3. A Sermon about Unity In Octavo 10. The Reasonableness of Personal Reformation and the Necessity of Conversion 12o. 11. The Remains of Mr. John Flavel being Two Sermons one on the Day of Coronation of their Majesties K. William and Q. Mary the other at a Meeting of Minis●ers With some Account of his Life Octavo 12. An Exposition of the Assembly's Catechism with Practical Inferences from each Q●estion Octavo These four last by Mr. John Flavel late Minister of the Gospel at Dartmout● Devon 13. A Practical Discourse of Gods Sover●ignty In Octavo 14. Instructions about Heart-work By Mr. Richard Allein Octavo 15. The Evidence of things not seen A Scriptural and Philosophical Discourse conce●ning the State of Good men after Death O●tavo 16. A Discourse of Closet or Secret Prayer Twelves 17. Poems in Two Parts Twelves Both by Samuel Sla●er 18. Love to Christ Necessary for all By Th● Doolittle M. A. In Octavo 19. The Righteous M●n's Hope at Death By Samuel Doolittle