dissolued by death after the common manner before the flood HENOCH was taken away and hee sawe no death after the flood ELIIAH was transported into a Chariote of fire and strange is it that is written of MOSES that when hee died on the toppe of Pâsgah beeing an hundred and twentie yeare olde his eye was not dimme nor his naturall force abated But we haue not vppon these to fansie vnto our selues a priuiledge whereof God hath not assured vs neither are wee to thinke wee are the lesse beloued of God because after the same singular maner he takes vs not away out of the world but we must looke on the other hand to the remanent Patriarches Prophets and worthie Apostles who finished their daies as Ioshua speakes after the way of all flesh so Abrâham the father of the faithfull died being worne with the infirmities of his age and Isaac thorough weaknes waxed blinde before he died and Iacob that famous Patriarch being in his bed by ordinary death pulled vp his feet vnto him and we must bee content after the same manner to suffer the dissolution of our bodies by diseases which are the Sergeants and officers of death It is true also that they who shal be found aliue at the second comming of Christ shall not be dissolued but suddenly transchanged but this priuiledg in like maner we are not to looke for hauing no warrant that we shall continue alike vntill that day for that man of sinne is not yet so weakened by the Gospell as hee must bee Neyther are our eldest brethren the Iewes conuerted to the faith of Christ as in likelihood they wil be before Christs second appearing Sixteene hundred yeares were they in the couenant when we were strangers from it During that space sundrie of the Gentiles in sundrie partes of the World became Proselytes as Naaman in Syria and Ebedmelech in Ethiopia but that was not the accomplishment of the promised calling of the Gentiles till the bodie of IAPHETS house were perswaded to dwell in the Tentes of SEM. And now other sixteene hundred yeares haue wee beene within the couenant they strangers from it in which space sundry of them also haue embraced the faith of the Gospel but that as wee conceiue is not the performance of the promised recalling of the Iewes but the body of that people shall be conuerted that the prophecy may be fulfilled And there shall be one Shepheard and one Sheepe folde then shall our Lord appeare the second time for our full redemption So that these words of the Apostle doe not make any peraduenture of our death farre lesse doe they giue vs any exemption from death but rather assures vs that our bodies must be dissolued Our life on earth is no inheritance our breath is but a vapour wee haue heere no continuing Citie Men may preasse to repine and sit the summonds of death made by sundrie diseases as long as they can and do all they may to fortifie themselues against the dart of death but it shall not bee eschued These daintie women which wil not suffer so much as their soles to touch the earth must at length lay down not the soles of their feete onely but the Crowne of their head also to be couered by it The labour of man in his life is to turne ouer the earth in the sweate of his brow seeking in her bowels food and fewell materials for building and Mineralles of sundrie mettals for his other vses in all which shee renders to man her seruice receiuing at leÌgth for a recompence man in her bosome to fil vp her wants whose finest flesh is turned by her without difficulty into dust If we were as AdaÌ who neuer saw one die before him by the course of nature for Abel was takeÌ away by violence it were somwhat more tollerable then now it is to doubt whether if or not wee shall bee dissolued It was threatned against him that if he brake the commandemeÌt he shold die yet after the transgression he liued a bodily life I meane nine hundred and thirty yeares euen to the eight generation a father of many children in both the houses of Caine and Seth as he was the first man that liued in the world so it seemeth he was the first that died by the ordinary course of nature But now death is become Via trita a paide gate All generations of men since the beginning of the world haue walked through it Patriarchs Prophets Apostles and all that Congregation of the first borne who stand as witnesses that there is no danger in death and shal we onely scare at it and stand affraid as though it would deuoure vs yea euen the very Ethniks esteemed death to bee Non supplicium sed tributum viuendi Not a punishment but a tribute which euery man must pay for his life and therefore said one of them Quod debeo paratus sum soluere vbi me faenerator appellat I am ready to pay my debt when he who lent mee it shall call vppon me and require it And if notwithstanding oâ al this we liue in securitie as if we were in couenant with death and it would not long come neere vs in verie truth wee deserue that we should perish in it Our earthly house Somtime both the soule bodie of man are compared to an house and that is in regard ofGod dwelling in them by his spirit but heere by thâ house the bodie alone is to bee vnderstood in regard of the soule that soiournes in it and this is cleare in that also he calles it an earthlyhouse And here wee haue three things to consider First that the bodie is called a house next a house of earth and thirdly a Tabernacle and the reasons why Our bodie is called an house for two respects first in respect of the comely and orderly work-manshippe thereof for as Artificers out of an inordinate heape of things amassed together do rais vp most pleasant buildings by walling out one of them from another by preparing theÌ and placing euery thing in the owne roome and making them by line and measure one of them proportionall and answerable to anoâher so that now they make vp a comely house pleasant to looke vnto wher before they were a dissordered masse So is it with the body of man which of a confused lumpe of clay without forme God hath builded vp in this pleasant forme and comely order wherein now it stands It is true al the works of God are very wonderfull what euer is done by him cannot bee but very excellent and good hee himselfe being most excellent and infinitly good But a singular wisedome goodnesse hath God showne in the creation of man for hee came out in the last roome as the perfection of Gods workes and last design of the thoughts of God and therefore was he not created after the
common order which God obserued in the rest for where other creatures were made by his word onely he puts too his hand to the making of man Consultation also among the persons of the blessed Trinity going before which was not in the creation of any other creature whereof thou mayst learne O man Quantitu vnus venias estâmandus in what great account thou art in regard of all the rest of his creatures all other like seruants were brought out by naked commandement homo tanquam eorum dominus ipsa Dei manu est instructus Man as their Lord is built vp by Gods owne hand All this preparation going before was to shew that some great thing was to follow as indeede it did for man is so made a worke of God his wisdome that he is a compend of all Gods creatures admired by those who had no more but natures light as a little world but more highlycommended bythose who had also the light of the word whereby to discerne him Omni miraculo quod fit per hominem maius miraculum est ipse homo Man himselfe said Augustine is a greater miracle then any miracle that euer was done by man And this not onely in regard of his soule but euen of his bodie also which here the Apostle calleth a comely house If there were no more to commend it yet as saieth Gregory this wereenough Quod a corpore humano in se similitudinem trahat deus That God borrows Similitudes from the body of a man to expresse and shaddowe himselfe vnto vs a scribing to himself an eye a mouth a hand and such like which we are not to thinke with the Anthropomorphites that hee hath per naturam sed per effectum But beside this if we doe take but a short view of the workmanship of man his bodie we shall be compelled euery one for himselfe to say with Dauid O Lord I am fearefull and wonderfull made The entrie to this house is the mouth which God hath fenced with a folding doore of the lips opening and closing most commodiously at the will of the Indweller Next vnto it are the grinders which God hath set in the entrie to prepare food for the whole man to nourish him the third roome hee hath assigned to the tongue which he hath made most artificially and set in the thorough gate of the houâe as the Trenchman and Messenger of the soule to declare his will vnto all that come neere And he hâtâ set the head as an eminent Towre in the bodie wherein hee hath placed the seat of foure most excellent senses euery one oâ them neere vnto another and not one of them impeding the function of another he hath locked vp the brain within it as a treasure and fenced it not onely with a couering of haire of skinne and of bone without but hath also spread ouer it within the Golden Ewer the least rupture whereof importeth death and because the windowes and watchmen are also in it hee hath made it to turne like a Wheele pleasantly and without paine to preuent all dangers that from any side may come vnto the body and if wee shall yet goe further in into this house and consider the daughters of singing which hee hath made most artificially for modulation of the voice if wee looke to the siluer cord stretched throughout the length of his body if we coÌsider the Well how it prepares and furnishes blood to all the members of the bodie if wee looke to the Pitchers by which as thorough Conduits it is conueyed through the whole body If we consider the Cesterne which is the heart the fountaine of life if this manner of way I say with Salomon we view the building of mans body beside other innumerable thinges which Naturalists and Theologs haue marked concerning it wee shall bee compelled to acknowledge that man euen as concerning his body is a world of wonders And this haue I but briefly marked that wee might learne to possesse our vesselles in honour acounting it a great shame vnto vs to pollute and defile this bodie in any dishonorable manner which GOD hath created so honorable comely and pleasant Secondly The bodie is called an house in respect of the soule which dwelles in it and this also highly commends the excellencie of the workemanshippe of man marueilous for the substances wherof it consists more marueilous for the wonderful vnion and coniunction of them in heauen there are vnderstaÌding spirits without bodies as Angels In earth are bodies without vnderstanding spirits as beastes in man ye shall find them both wherefore one affirmed man to be all things for there is no creaâure which liues but man partakes of the liâe thereof the plants and trees haue a life vegetiue by which they grow the beastes a life sensitiue by which they heare see smell taste and touch the Angels a life reasonable by which they vnderstaÌd in the first two man coÌmunicates with earthly creatures in the third he transcends them and is companion to Angels But the coniunction of these two substances and the habitation of the one into the other is yet more marueilous commonly the honourable and the ignoble the foolish and the wise thestrong the weake agree no better then Iron and Clay Non sic in opere tuo non sic in commixtione tua O Domine Not so in thy worke O Lord not so in the mixture which thou hast made for heere the Lord hath ioyned in most maruelous manner Spirite with flesh a heauenly substance with an earthly so that Communio haec mentis ad corpus inâffabilis sit incomprehenâibilis intellectu This communion of the minde and bodie can neyther bee conceiued by our vnderstanding nor vttered by our speech the soule being so in the bodie that yet it is not mixed with the bodie it is within vs and yet goes thorough all things that are without vs it is kept in the bodie by blood and breath and yet liues not by blood and breath beeing a Spirituall thing it giues vnderstanding to anie other Spirite by the earthly Organ of the tongue and receiues againe intelligence froÌ another spirite by the earthly Organ of the eare God hath done it we feele it but know not the reason of it all these and many moe âhould moue vs to reuerence the goodnesse and wonderfull wisedome of our Maker âhewed in the creation of man And of this we learn how farre the iudgement of Gods spirite differs from the iudgement of man and that euen as concerning man himselfe It is thought among carnall men that the body is the man Sic dediti sunt carni ac sanguini ac si nihil aliud quam carnem se esse reputarent and therefore are they so giuen to pamper flesh as if they were no other thing but flesh these do not separate the vile from the pretious
presence of euill whereof now we would faine be releeued and yet it lyeth still vpon vs. Concerning this last it is a notable saying the Apostle hath we are now in heauines through manifold tentations that the tryall of our faith being much more precious then Gold when it is tryed by fire might bee found to our praise honour and glory at the appearing of Christ there we see that the end of euills which now are suffered to lie vpon vs is the tryall of our faith and thaâ for our owne greater praise and glory for where no fire is how can gold bee purged where no trouble is how can faith be tryed and where faith is not yet tryed how can it be praised And as to the other when these good things which God hath promised are not seene of vs but hidden from our eyes and delayed to bee performed vnto vs this is also for the tryall of our faith for where we see saluation what praise âs it to beleeue but where we can neither see nor feele thââe good things which God hath promised but rather are exercised with contrary terrours and feares if yet wee still cleaue to the truth of the wordofgod that certainely is an argument of a great faith and such was the faith of that woman of Canaan who beeing not onely refused but as it were disdainefully reiected by Christ did so trust vnto the truth of Gods word that constantly shee looked foâ mercy at the hand oâ Christ who strongly by word had denied it vnto her and therefore receiued this commendation in the end O woman great is thy faith Thus we see how in âhe children of God all these hinderances which wee hâue to stay vs from beleeuing do so much the more commend and approue our faith vnto God Wee loue rather Of two loues wee see in the Apostle the stronger ouercomming the weaker he loued his body protested before he had no will to want it but he loued the Lord Iesus better then his body and therfore perceiuing that hee cannot now enioy them both together for while hee was in the body he was absent from the Lord he is now very wel content to remoue out of the body that he might dwell with the Lord there is nothing naturally a man loues more then his body nothing he feares more then death because it imports a dissolution of his body but where the loue of Christ is strong in the heart it casts out not onely the feare of death but ouer comes also all other loue whatsoeuer And here haue wee a point of holy wisedome discouered vnto vs by which we may cure that vnquietnesse of minde which arises in vs of the wandring of our affections after secondary obiects the best way to remedy it is to set our affections vpon the right obiects if the loue of the creature haue snared thee set thy loue on the Lord and bend thy affection toward him and the otheâ shall not troble thee If the feare of men terrifie thee learne to sanctifie the Lord God in thine hart make him thy feare and and thou shalt not feare what flesh can doe vnto thee and if the care of the world disquiet thee cast thy care vpon God and labour by continuance in prayer how to feele the sense of his loue toward thee in Christ and thou shalt finde that where the one care like thornes did pricke thee with sorrowes the other shall bring contentment peace and ioy vnto thee But to returne when we consider this strong loue of Christ that was in the Apostle wee we haue great cause to be ashamed of that weak and little loue which in our heartes wee feele towardes our LORD how many this day professe that they loue him who for his loue will not want the superfluities of this life and what hope then is there that for his sake they will lay down the life it selfe if smaller crosses be vnpleasant to vs and his loue be not so strong in vs as to make vs reioice in them how shall death be welcommed of vs wherin there is a concurse of all crosses into one Wee must therefore learne for the loue of Christ to inure our selues with the beginnings of mortification not onely to slay the vnlawful affections but also to want ouâ wills euen in those things which are lawful that so by degrees we may be inabled willingly to want the body and all that euer we loued in the body for Iesus Christs sake To remooue out of the body Two manner of waies in this treatise doth the Apostle discribe death first in regard of that which it doth to the body and then he calleth it a dissolution of our earthly Tabernacle Next in regard of that which it doth to the soule and so he calles it a remouing out of the body so that if we will think of death as the spirit of God doth teach vs there is no cause why wee should bee discouraged with it Againe we see heare that the death of the godly is a voluntary remoouing out of the bcdy to dwell with the Lord as to the wicked like as they liue in disobedience so they die in disobedience their death is involuntary that which is spoken of that one wicked rich man O foole this night they will take thy soule from thee is true in all the wicked their spirits are taken from them against their will exeunt istinc necessitatis vinculo non voluntatis obsequio whereas the Godly willingly commend their spirits into the handes of GOD offering vp both soule and body to him in death in a full free and voluntarie oblation This difference betweene the death of the Godly and wicked men may be commodiously shadowed by the fourth comming of Pharao his Butler and Baker out of prison whereof the one knew he shold be restored to serue the king his Master and therefore went out with ioy the other knew by Iosephs Prophesies hee should be hanged within three dayes and therefore if it had beene giue to his choice would still haue remained in prison rather then to haue come foorth to be hanged euen so is it with the godly who are certified before hand that they are receiued into fauor and after death shall haue plaââ to stand about the throne of God there to serue him by praising him continually are well content wheÌ the Lord cals them to remoue out of the body whereas the other having receiued a sentence of condemnation within themselues no maruaile they go out of the body with feare and trembling like malefactors going from the prison to the place of execution vincti impliciti catenis variorum peccatorum ad terribâle illud iudicium trahuntur Or otherway if at any time the wicked bee willing to dye it is not for any loue or knowledge they haue that they shall be with the Lord but either els because they are impatient of
must looke to other of the Fathers who dâed the common course of death Gen. 27.1 Gen. 49.33 The godly also aliue at Christs comming shal not be dissolued But we haue no warrant that wee shall be of that number For before Chriâts comming the Iâwes must be recallâd Rom. 11.24 It is out of al doubt our bodies must be dissolued by death Heb. 13.14 Al fortification against death is in vaine Deu. 28. marg As Adam was the first liuing man so the first that died by the course of nature But now so many haue gone through death before vs that it is a shame for vs to scare at it Seneca By the earthly house our body here is to be vnderstood For two causes is our body called an house I For the câmly and orderly workmanship thereof Other creatures were made by the word of God but to the making of man God put too his hand also And consultation among the persons of the blessed Trinity goes before Basil hexam hâm 10. Tortul de resur car This preparation before shewes that some great thâng was to follow as it did indeed Aug. de ciuit Dei l. 10. cap. 12. Man an excellent workmanship euen iâ respect of his bodie Gregor mâral l. 32. Sect 13. Bernard A short view of the excelleÌt workmanship of mans body as it is giuen by Salomon Psal. 139. Man euen in regard of his body is a world of wonders Eccles. 12. VVe should not dâshonour the bodie which God hath honouredso highly 2 The bodie is called a house in respect of the soule dwelling in it Man for his two substances whereof he consists is a compend of all Gods creatures But the coniunction of these two substances is more marueilous Bern. in die â Natal dom er 2. Nazian That flâsh and spirit should agree so well together That the soule shâuld be kept in the bodie by blood and breth yet not liuing by them Carnal men so liue as if they were nothing but flâsh onely Ierem. 15. VVhâreas the body is but the house the man is he who dwels in the bodie Let vs so care for the house that much more wâââre for him who dwâls in it The bodie is called an earthly house First because it was made of the earth And herein appeares Gods power and wisdome that of so base a matter hath made so excellent a creature Tertul. de resurrect car Gen. 2. Ambros. hexam l. 6. cap. 6. The soueraignty of God ouer man is more thân that which the Potter hath ouer his clay 1. Cor. 10.22 Therefore wo to him who liues in ânmity with God Act. 12 20. The consideration of our originall does leârne vs humility They who will not learn it by their originall âet them looke to their end and they shal see no cause of pride Gen. 23.4 Greg. moral l. 16. sect 105 Neither is there strength nor beauty nor stature of the body to be delighted in Esa. 40.6 The body like a wall of clay plastered ouer and painted with colours Esa. 14.11.19 Remâmbrance of that which we haue bin should keepe vs from waxing proud for that which we arâ Secondly the bâdy is called an earthly house because it is vphoâden by earthly meanes Our body is called a Tabârnacle first because we haue here a couering but not a foundation Ber. parui Sermones Esa. 4.6 Heb. 11. Ibid. Sâcondly because we should vse it as a Sconse or Tent for the warfare Basil. ser. 10. in Psal. qui habitat Thirdly because it is not fixed in one place as an house but is made for transporting That death whârein all deaths concurre is the proper punâshment of sinne Aug. de ciuit Dei l. 13. cap 12. Of the two kindes of death mentioned in holy scripture Eph 4. Eph. 2. 2. Tim. Reuel 3. Death of the whole man what it is It is demanded seeing the soule and body of the wicked shâll be vniâed in the resurrectâon how shall they be punished with the second death Gregor moral l. 15. Sect 55. It is answered that this ânion of their âoule and body is for their greater punishment Aug. de ciuit dei l. 13. c. 13 A great difference betweene the death of the Christian and the wicked The Christian shall neuer die that death which is the punishment of the wicked And the wicked cannot free themselues of that death which they inflict on the godly â beside that a worse abides them By death we get deliuerance from our present euils Aug. de ciuit Dei l. 9. cap. 10. VVhat a great benefit it is that our bodies are mortall By death we are set at libertie to enioy our greatest good Aug. de ciuit dei l. 9. c. 20. Athanas in qâestionibus quaest 18. Many lookes to the dissolution but not to the coniuction made by death and therefore are affraid at it Two things remoued which make death fearefull 1 The feare of punishment after death Ambr. de bono mortis c. 8 But indeede death is not to be blamed for thatwhich comes after it 2 An apprehension that death destroyes man Ambros. ibid. Death it self is not terrible but the opinion of death Nazian orat de funere patris Greg. moral l. 4. sect 47. Death should not be looked vpon in the glasse of the law but in the mirrour of the Gospell Comfortable phrases by which death is described by the spirit of God Gen. 25.8 Deu 31.16 Psal. 16.9 Luke 2. Pet. 1.14 S. Paul expresses the nature of our death by thrâe similitudes 1. He compares it to the changing of a garment To the sowing of seed in the earth thaâ it may grow againe 1. Cor. 15. 3 To a flitting from one house to another Albeit death be certaine yet the time place and kinde thereoâ is vncertaine Many dreame of more daies theÌ they haue are far deceiued at the length Aug. Ber. de fallatia vitae praesentis Time of our death left vncertaine to make vs the more vigilant Gregor The life of man is but a life that turnes vpon seuen daies and in one of them man must die Therefore shâld he take heed to them all The place of death vncertaine VVe can come to no place in the which some haue not died before vs. Bernard The kinde of death is also vncertaine that for all deaths we might be prepared VVe come all into the world by one way but we go out of it by many VVe should not much care for the kind of death but for the way we goe after death Aug. de ciuit dei l. 1. c. 11. Men should not be violeÌt actors of their owne death but patient sufferers Gen. 9. 2. Mac 14. A selfe murtherer neuer allowed but condemned in holy scripââre The second parâ oââhe verse conteynes the vantage we âaue by death The comfort giuen here against death concernes the soule onely Comfort concerning the losse of our bodies by death is to be sought ân other places of Scripture The Lord will noâ forsake that body whiâh was
the well of life and in thy light shall we see light O what a loue of God is here discouered vnto vs Angells made Apostasie from God and mercy neuer ãâã to them to restore them Man also made Apostasie from God mercy is both offered giuen vnto him to restore him Angells left their habitation and are now reserued in chaines vnder daâkenesse to the iudgement of the great day Man is translated from the Kingdome of darkenesse to be raysed vp to the place from which Angels fell And where that state of glory was not made sure to Angels for they lâft their first estate it is made sure to man wee shall so be placed there that we shal dwel there neuer any more to bee remooued from it so hath the Lord declared the riches of his mercy vpon vs his holy name be praised therefore Now out of all this let vs tak vp in one short Sum the reasons which here moued the Apostle and makes all the rest of Gods children willingly content to remoue out of the body we reduce theÌ to three First the miserie vnder which weely while wee are in the body Next the Felicity to which we goe when wee remoue out of the body and thirdly the helpes wee haue to carry vs on in this iourney froÌ the body to the Lord and these are not vnlike those 3. motiues which made Iacob willing to depart froÌ Canaan suppose it was the Land of promise to the land of Egypt wherin he knew his seed shold be afflicted 1. the scarsity and famine which was in Canaan Next the plenty that was in Egypt whereof Ioseph his beloued sonne was gouernor and dispenser liuing there in great honour notwithstanding that all his fathers house supposed him to haue beene dead and rotten and thirdly the oracle of God warrnting him to goe and the Chariots which were sent by Ioseph to helpe him in the iourney but we haue as I said three greater motiues to make vs willing to goe from this Egypt a land of darkenesse a house of vile seruitude and bondage to our heauenly Canaan For 1. what haue we here in this life but a feârefull famine and scarsitie of all thinges which are truely good it is not worthy of the name of good which commonly among men is esteemed good non solum quia facilem habeat ad res contrarias conuerâionem seâ quod etiam possessores suos meliores red dere non valeat not onely because it is easily turned into a contrary euil but also for that it is not able to make the possessors there of any better and what a good I pray you can that bee by which he is not made good that possesses it Beatus ille qui post illa non abiit quae assequi miserum est quia possessa oner ant amata inquinant amissa crusiant happy is he that walkes not after these things which to obtaine is a misery because being possessed they burden vs being loued they defile vs being lost they torment vs and truely no better are the best thinges which growe heere in this land of our Pilgrimage and absence from God Our life is but an exchanging of many sorrowes we liue in the body like Israel in the Wildernesse in danger to bee sting'de euery houre with fiery Serpents like Daniell in the Den in danger to be deuoured by Lyons like Lot in SodoÌ vexed with the vncleannesse which is within vs in our selues without vs in others But were it so that we had abundance of good things in this life yet shold webe coÌtent to go from them seeing we know that by so doing we shal exchange for a a better for euen now while we are in by body we may finde the experience that at no time wee haue such ioy in the spirit as when by feruent prayer and heauenly contemplation after a sort wee are rauished and transported out of the body to walke with God and haue familiar conuersatioÌ with him whereas otherway when the soule comes downe from contemplation to exercice her function by externall senses toward these things which are below then is shee incontinent disquieted with perturbations so that she cannot looke out by the eye and not be infected nor heare by the eare and not bee distracted nor touch by the hand and not be defiled Thus if the soul take a view of the thinges of this world by the senses a world of strange cogitations are wakened in her which quickly againe euanishes if the soule forsaking the familiar vse of the senses by continuance in prayer ascend vnto God Tunâ anima non fallitur quando solium veritatis attingit quando se sâcernit ab isto corpore decipiturenim visu oculorum auditu aurium That same reason by which Athanasius did prooue that the Soule liues out of the body may serue to prooue that it shall liue in greatest peace and ioye out of the body Si enim connexa corpori extra Corpus vitam agit corpore enim in lectulo cubante as velut in morte quiescente ipsa naturam corporis transilit For if the Soule euen while it is knit to the body liues a life without the body as may bee seene in that while the body is sleeping and as it were resting in death the Soule transcends the nature of the body howe much more shall wee thinke that out of the body it liues the own quiet and peaceable life deliuered from this waltring Sea of restâesse temptations wherein it is tossed too and fro so long as it is in the body And as to the second if wee looke to these things which are before vs in heauen there is our most louing Father in whose face is the fulnesse of ioye and at whose right hand are pleasures for euer More there is not our yonger but our elder brother liuing and rayning in glorie he once died for our Sinnes but he is risen againe and gone vp before vs to prepare a place for vs. Since hee is the fairest among the children of men and we haue not yet scene him if we loue him why doe wee not long to goe to him Many also of our beloued are gone there before vs to that assembly and Congregation of the first âorne wherin are the Spirits of iust and perfect men and to the which all these Sonnes of God which shall remaine behind vs shall shortly bee gathered and shall it be grieuous to vs to remooue to so sweete a fellowlowship when it shall please GOD in our coursâ to call vpon vs. And thirdly we haue most notable helpes giuen of God to aduance vs in our iourney for not onely haue wee the Oracle of God to warrant vs from all euill which may follow vpon our remoouing and to assure vs of a ioyfull welcome Come thou faithfull seruant and enter into thy Masters rest And againe Blessed are
the Lord from the seruant the indweller from the lodger âor in the iudgment of Gods spirit the body is no more but the house the man is hee that dwelles in the bodie and looke what difference there is betweene a house and him that dwelles in it such are wee to put betweene the soule and the body in exteriall dangers thogh the house bee burnt and blowne downe with windes if the indweller be safe we account that the losse is the lesse and much more if the soule escape when the house of the body is throwne downe by death are we to esteeme that the losse is but small It is reasonable indeed that the soule should loue the body but so that it neglect not the owne selfe let Aâam loue his Euah but so that hee hearken not vnto her voice more then to the Lords if we seeke the welfare of our bodies with neglect of our soules we shall lose theÌ both but if we subdue the body by discipline that the soule may be safe then shall the body also bee partaker of her glory Earthly The second general obserued here is that the Apostle cals our body an house of earth and this he doth for two causes first in regard of the matter for it was made of the earth next in regard of the means by which our bodies are continued and vpholden for they are earthly As to the first that man is made of earth which is manifest out of the second of Genesis it doeth highly commend the great power of the Creator to doe great thinges by great meanes is no great matter but when by smallest meanes greatest things are done it doth argue without all doubt the great excellency of the worker as that God made all things of nothing and that of the basest matter he had made before man hee made man a more excellent creature then any other that hee had brought out before him hee made him of clay but in many respects more honourable then that whereof he made him in this that he hath giuen to man Vt sit aliquid sua origine gloriosius Hee hath set out the glorie of his power and wisedome As likewise in that hee hath placed such a Grace and Maiestie in that same face which hee framed of Clay that the feare and terrour of him was vppon all liuing creatures which they acknowledged by their first comperance before him at his calling to receiue names from him as it pleased him to improue them and yet euen after the fall by the benefite of restitution wee haue in CHRIST they so reuerence man that albeit in nature there can bee none stronger then the Elephant stowter then the Lyon fiercer then the Tygre yet all these dooth seruice to man Et naturam suam humana institutione deponunt Secondly we learne heere GODS Soueraignty ouer man he is but a vessell of earth framed by the hand of God therfore VVoe must be vnto him if he striue with his Maker a vessell of clay is not so easily broken by the Potter as man is confounded by his Maker if once his wrath kindle in his breast against him It were therefore good for man before hee enter into enmitie with God to bethinke himselfe of an answere to that question of the Apostles Do ye prouoke God vnto anger are yee stronger then he The Sidonians would not make warre with Herod because they were nourished by the kings land and it might more iustly be a reason to keep vain man from waging battel with the Lord that he holds his life of the Lord that if he do but take his breth out of our nostrils wee fal incontinent as dead vnto the ground Surely of all follies in the world this is the greatest for a man to cast himselfe in danger of Gods wrath which he is neyther able by flying to eschâe nor yet by suffering to endure Thirdly the consideration of our originall learnes vs humility siâce wee are of the earth why shal we wax proude specially for any quality of our body which was taken from the earth and must returne to earth againe Therefore God gaue vnto the first man the name of Adam signifying redde earth that as oft as hee heard his name he might remeÌber his originall and and his posterity also considering the Rocke froÌ whence they came might let fall the comb of their naturall pride Which if we cannot learne by looking to our originall let vs at least remeÌber our end it shall learne vs that we are but dust yea much more vile then common dust for as beautifull Snow when it is resolued into water whereof it was congealed becomes fouler water then any other else so man being turned again into earth it becomes viler earth then any other earth whatsoeuer so that the flesh which in life is most beloued death causes to be most abhorred Abraham loued Sarah well but froÌ the time that her soule departed from her bodie hee was glad to entreate the Hittites for a Sepulchre that hee might burie his dead out of his sight And truely if as Gregory councels vs Vnusquisque hoc quod viuum diligit quid sit mortuum pensaret euery man would pondâr what that creatur is being dead which so greatly man loueth while it liueth it would serue to represse in vs the immoderate desires of our affections O man why wilt thou bee bewitched with that which in the bodie seemes worthy to bee loued Is it for the strength or the beautie or stature therof that thou art delighted with it I pray thee consider what these are Is not the strength of the body weakenes Ere it be long the grashopper shall be a burden to the strongest And as to beauty is it not deceitfull All flesh is grasse and the glorie thereof as the flowre of the field As a wall of clay plastered ouer and painted after that a little winde and raine hath beaten vponit the Lime fals away and the clay appeareth so is it with the most pleasant bodie which now being trimmed with the colours of God seemes very beautifull but after that the storms and showers of diseases hath beaten vppon it then shall it appear that which it is to wit but Clay indeede and though for stature thou were like to the sonnes of Anack yet neither art thou for that the more pretious for the highest trees are not most fruitfull the mightie Oakes of Basan beares fruit for Swine where the little Vine-tree renders comfortable fruite for man neither can thy height protect thee against death for euen gold thristy Babel which grewe vp like a great tree so high that the fowles of heauen made their nests vnder it was at leÌgth broght to the graue like an abhominable branch so shall it bee with the pompe of all flesh the wormes shall be spread vnder thee and the Wormes shall couer
of a wall as those eighteene men slaine by Siloam Tower some by the cast of a stone as Abimelech some of a paine in their head as the Shunamits sonne some of a paine in their belly as Antiocâhus some of a Gowte ân their feete as Asa âome by the priuate corruption of their owne distemperate humors some by distemperature of publicke humours which are corrupt lawes In a word so fraile a vessell is man that easily by innumerable wayes hee is broken and all these haue we seene before vs that for aâl them wee might be prepared making readie our selues to die referring the kinde of our death to the good pleasure of God Non est multum curandum necessariò morituro qua morte moriatur sed quò post mortem ire Compellatur since of necessity wee must die let vs not care much for the kinde of death but rather of the way which after death wee are to goe And for this cause did our blessed Sauiour vndergoe a cursed death that euery death might bee made blessed to them who die in the faith of the Lord. Be dissolued Last of all wee obserue here that the word which the Apostle vses being passiue wee are taught that men shold not bee violent Actors of their owne death but patient sufferers at the good pleasure of God In all the Booke of God there is not asillable allowing selfe-murther The law which forbids to kill dooth first of all forbidde to kill thy selfe I wil require saith the Lorde your bloode at the handes of Beastes at the handes of a man himselfe at the hands of euery brother will I require it And heereby that storie of the Maccabâes commending RAZIS for selfe murther may bee knowne to bee but a bastard breath being so discordant fâom the rest of Scripture breathed by diuine inspiration of the holy Ghost Ethnikes counted it magnanimity in desperate troubles to dispatch themselues but indeed it is pusillanimity that is a great mind which can endure trouble with patience and it is but a feeble spirit which being impatient of trouble seekes by selfe-murther to eschue it Properly did Ierome call such Martyres slultae philosphiae As to Samsons fact it was singular no more to bee followed then Abraham his offring of his sonne or Israels policie in spoyling the Egyptians which had their owne warrants but cannot warrant vs to transgresse the knowne and common commaundements of God Wee haue a building Now followes the second part of the verse conteyning the vantage we get by that exchange wee make in death to wit that by it wee are translated into a better building where before we enter into the wordes if it bee demaunded what then Is there no more to bee done to the bodie When it is dissolued must it lie still in Dust and Ashes And haue wee no further comfort concerning it The aunswere is that the comfort which here is giueÌ doth only concern the soule but if we wil conioyne with this other places of Scripture wee shall finde full and perfite comfort both for body and soule For not only know wee that our bodies shall bee raised vp againe in the last day but that when they shall sleepe in the graue the holy Ghost who now dwelles in them shall watch ouer them to preserue them to immortality from the time wee be dead our bodies are neglected and forsaken of these who loued vs most deerly in our life after that they haue laid vs in the graue they returne to eate and drinke and in their wonted manner to refresh themselues and within short time they quit all remembrance of vs But as to the Lord our God he will neuer nâglect nor forsake nor forget that body which he honored to bee his owne Temple dwelling in it by his holy spirite but wil keepe the very dust thereof till he restore it againe to life An example whereof wee haue in the fauourable dealing of God with Iacob who dyed in Egypt and was conueyed to Canaan by Ioseph and Pharaoh his Chariots yet vnto none of them wil God giue the praise of the buriall of Iacobs corps hee is not ashamed to take to himselfe according to the promise hee made vnto his seruant that he would not onely go with him downe to Egypt but also would bring him vp againe to Canaan therby declaring how pretious in his sight the death of his Saints is and how honorable he esteemes these bodies which haue bin the Temples of his holy spirit Now in these words wee haue three things to be considered first what is meant by this building secoÌdly how saies the Apostle that we haue it Thirdly what are the properties by which it is described By this building some vnderstands that immortall and glorified body which shal be giuen vs in heauen the same body in substance which now wee haue but transformed and made like vnto Christs glorious bodie and indeede vnto it agrees this description for that body is of God not made with handes not preserued by the helpe of secondarie meanes as is this body which was begotten by our father conceiued by our mother nourished and brought vp to the state wherein now it is by the helpe of hands and again where this mortall body is a temporal Tabernacle the immortall shall bee an eternall habitation All these are true but because our soules shall not dwell in these bodies till the resurrection they cannot bee meant here by this building to the which wee are transported incontinent after death By this building then wee are to vnderstand that place of glory which in the third heauens God hath prepared for his children called in the Gospell the euerlasting habitations and by our Sauiour his Fathers house wherin are many Mansions called by Saint Paul a Citie hauing a foundation whose builder and maker is God and by Saint Iohn called the New Ierusalem a City hauing the glorie of God in it a Citie foure squared in leÌgth breadth and height equall a Citie wherein al the Citizens sees the face of God through the streets wherof runs the water of life and in euery side thereof the tree of life this is the glorious building into the which our soules are carried by Angels so soone as they depart out of the body The second thing we proposed here to speak of was how is it that the Apostle saies We haue this building hee saies not we shal get it but that presently wee haue it The reason is because presently wee haue the rights and securities If worldlings account theÌselues sure enough of earthly inheritances wheÌthey haue the charter seazing coÌfirmation and possession of them how much more arewesure of that heaueÌly building who haue already receiued all these rights and securities thereof from the Lord our God The Charter of our heauenly inheritance is the good worde of God wherein the
they that die in the Lord for they rest from their labour But we haue also Chariots which our eldest Brother hath sent to attend vs and conuey vs in our iourney these are his holy Angels who conueyed the Soule of Lazarus from the dunghill vnto Abrahams bosom euen these same fierie Chariotes which tooke vp Elijah into heauen waite vpon vs also to carie vs vp when the time of our Transmigration shall come Besides that we haue also with vs the holy Spirit of promise who as he is sent in our harts to witnesse the loue of God vnto vs so doeth he remaine with vs in the troubles of our life hee comforts vs in the terrours of Death hee strengthens vs and in al the way wherein wee haue to walke he guides and conducts vs till atlength he put vs in possession of that inheritance whereunto hee hath Sealed vs wherof then shall we bee afraide Seing then wee are compassed with so many and great comforts let vs in time transport our affections vpward towards heauen where Christ is at the right hand of God let vs liue in the body ready to go out of the body when God shall call vs watching and praying continually for we know not the hower Beware that wee lie not downe into the hollow of our hearts to sleepe in carelesse securitie as Ionus sleeped in the sides of the Ship least the fearefull tempest of Gods wrath come vpon vs vnwares to wallow vs and wrap vs vp in endlesse confussion woe be to him that shall bee found sleeping in his sinâes when the Lord cals vpon him to come out of the body But let vs stand prepared like Israel at the Passeouer with our loynes girded vp and our staffe in our hand waiting when the Lord shall warne vs to remooue As the Birds which are desirous to flie stretch out their wings so the Soule that would be with the Lord should first stretch out her affections toward him Or as Abraham sitting in the doore of his Tabernacle when the Angels came to him and Elâiah standing in the mouthe of his Caue that hee might meete with the Lord so should we soiourn in the body that we come out to the dore to the mouth of the borders of it ready alway to remoue out of it that wee may be with the Lord Blessed are these seruants whom the Lord when hâe comes shall finde waking And thus much concerning these reasons which makes the Godly willing to remoue out of the body haue wee obserued not onely for the comfort of Gods children but aâso to distinguish the death of the worldling from the death of the Christian for oftentimes in naturall men there is seene a carnall boldnes to die by which they enforce themselues to dye couragious and as they cal it like men which neither workes in them for the present any inward contentment nor yet assures theÌ of any greater comfort when they goe out of the body it is no more but the last puffe of their naturall pride which soone euanishes and is not Christian Magnanimitie flowing from inward consolation of the Spirit Surely neither in suffering nor in doing doth the Lord regard the outward shew of Godlines but the power Non enim florem interrogat sed radicem Neither are we to thinke much of those who being but Martyrs Satanice Virtutis doe in externall appearance dy with boldnes as may be seene in many who being of an euill conuersation die for the maintenance of an euill cause neither ashamed of the one nor the other these may pretend courage in the face but be sure can haue no comfort in the conscience VER 9. Wherefore also wee Couet that c. WE come now to the 3. conclusioÌ which the Apostle inferres vpon his former ground of coÌfort which is that the certain knowledg of the glory to com wrought in him a care both in life and death to be acceptable to god and this conclusion is very well annexed to the former they cannot be seperat he that loues to dwell with the Lord no doubt will haue a care to please him wee see by experience how carefull we are to please those with whome wee are to dwell but a short while vpon earth much more will we be careful to please the Lord if so be we desire for euer to dwell with him and againe where there is in the life a care to please the Lord there is also in death a boldnesse to go to him whereas an euill conscience desires not to heare the Lord farrelesse dare it âee bold to see him We Couet The word which here the Apostle vâes commonly signifies an ambitious coueting of honour but here the Apostle vses it to the best to expresse his most earnest and sincere affection which caried him to loue this honour that he might bee in fauour with the Lord his God esteeming it the highest honour to bee acceptable to the Lord his God not to be greatwith men ofworldly power which is the greatest designe of those who can mount no higher then the earth bât to bee ââeat with God therefore protests hee that where away soeuer the affections of other men goe this is the honour which hee loued that both in life and death he might be acceptable to God As to that honour which may come to vs from the countenance ofman by courting with them it is but an euânishing shadow they themselues in their best estate are altogether vanity they are but like vnto grasse and their glory fades as a flower of the field and what true honour then can they communicate to vs let the most glorious Monarch who euer liued in the world be presented to vs let him bee placed in his Chariot of Triumph decked in most gorgeous maner with all magnificence that can be devised two questions propounded to him shall quickely discouer his vanitie First what hath he here which is his owne let that which âee borrowed from the creature to make vp his begged glory bee taken from him and what behinde shall remaine vnto him Next that state ofhonour wherein he stands how long shal he continue in it that Samaritan Prince who this day leaned on the KINGES shoulder and the next day was trampled vnder the peoples feete may serue among many other inumerable examples to shew how short and vaine the glory of flesh is as Nebuchadnezarsâmage âmage had a head of Gold but feere oâ yron and clay so is it with all the glorious pompe of worldlings golden in the beginning but the ende thereof is dust and ashes If wee compare the Christian the worldling together wee shall see that both of them shoots at life riches and honour these are the common endes of all mens actions but where the one pursues after apparens bonum the other foâlowes after Reuer a bonum they folow shewes the other ââe substance they are busied about
the Temple of hââ spirit âut will keâpe the dâst thereof Iâcobs dead body honourably buried by God Three things to be considered here The fiâst thing to be considered here is what is meant by this building By this building is not to be vnderstood our glorisied bodies for those we get not till the resurrection But that place of glory into which we are transated aftâr death Luke Ioh. Hebr. Reuel The second thing to be considered here is how saies the Apostle we haue this building The reason is because presently we have the rights and âecurities of it which are Charter Confirmation Seazing and Possession Of the Charters of our heauenly building Luke 12.32 Most comfortable Meditations Ioh. Psal. 2. Of the confirmation we haue receiued vpon our Charter Heb. 6.17 Of our seazing and inuestment in our heauenly building Of our present possession we haue of that building The 3 thing to be considered here is the description of the building wherein are foure things Fiâst God is called the Authour and maker of this building and theâefore it must be a glorious house Ahasuerus made a royal banquet in a very pleasant place to shew his glorie Esth. 1. VVhat shall we then thinke of that building and banquet God hath prepared for declaration of his glory The glorie of Sa'omons Temple may lead vs to consider of the glorie of our heauenly building 1. K. 7.14 It is taken for a sure âule that the inuisible works of God are most excellent This we may see in the workemanship of man The same is to be vnderstood in the Fabric of this world which is very pleasant and yet but a figure in respect of that which is aboue How farre this visible world is inferiour to that invisible building The 2. thing in this description is the manner of the building Mat. 25.34 The Lord hath prepared that house for vs and also prepares vs for it The glory of both the creations belong to God only Iob. 38.4 Of all Gods workes he craâes no more but the praise giues vs the profite Psal. 116. The third thing in the description of this building is the eternity thereof Our present life is but for a moment Basil. in Psal. 143. Our life is finished by many deaths This is made cleaâe by parting our life into âoure ages euery one whereof doth die before we enter to another Since by nature wee loue a long life and care for it why wil we not loue an eternall life The last thing in the description of this building is the situaâion thereof Psal. 16 Dwelling places assigned to men according to the disposition of their persons If such comforts be on earth what may we looke for in heauen Cant. The place of our dwelling admonishes vs that we should be holy and heauenly 2. Pet. The Apostle now comes to shew a threefold fruit of godlines which the knowledge of the glory to come workes in the children of God The first is ân earnest desire of that glory to come The nature of the liuely knowledge wrought in vs by the Gospell It is not only a mirrour whereby we see God but it is his power whereby we are carried after him How the two lights of heauen shadow two sorts of knowledge in the minde of man The knowlââge of many woâkes nothing but their conuiction 2 Pet. 2.21 T. ââgodly while they sigh for things that are to come do thereby declare that they finde no contentment in these which are present Desires in the godly goe besore satisfaction Psal. 145.19 Our perfection vponâ earth consists rather in desiring to doe as we should then in doing it Aug. in Ioan. tract 4. Rom. 7. God accepts our desires for deeds âut this is to âe vnderstood of true desires which aâe discerned from vâine desires two waies 1 True desires are ay the longer the greater 2 True desire uses all meanes lawfull to bring vs to the thing desired An example thereof in Zacheus Luk. 19.2 The desire which worldlings haue of Christ is described The ãâã of glory âo come is shâdowed to vs by sundây similitudes Rom. 8. No glorious thing but glory it selfe is promised vnto vs. Beââde fall ac pââsen vitae The spirit of God vses many similitudes to declare that no similitude can expresse that glory The godly speake oââe glory to come like men transported For no order of words can be kept in speaking of that which passes vnderstanding Psal. 36.8 The Apostle expones what he meant by wishing to be clothed vpon The Godly in desiring things not absolutely promised submit their will to Gods will Vnlawfull desire of things simply agaânât Gods will shâuld be sâr srom vs. All Gods children shall come to one end suppose not in one maner Reuel 14.13 The Apostle dâsires not âto want the body if it might stand with the Lords dispânsation How this plâce agrees with Philip. ãâã where hee dâsires to bee dâssolued and loosed from the body Delay of of death is som time desirâd of the Godly for three respects 1. That thây may bâ bâtter prepaâed to ãâã Psal. 39.13 Nazian od suum Animum Nazianzâns doubt whether he should desire life or death A meditation how as Dauiâ spared Saul sleâping in the campe So God maây â time hath found vs sleepâng in our sins and hath not sââine vs âut waknâd vs. But our wakâng hath beene no bâtter nor Sââls working in vâ a tâmpoâall râpânâance 2 Pet. 2.22 How we should vse the time of life granted vs on eârth is shâwâd by tâe example of Dauidâ ambaâsadors Aug. 2. They desire delay of death that they may doe the greater good in the body Psal. 6. Phil. 1. Gala. 6.10 Iohn 11.19 3. Thây desire delay of death for the âoue they haâe to the body wâich they desire not to want This loue of ââe body is not euill in it selfe For âuen the glorified soule rests not in ful contentment so long as it waÌts the bod Ber tract de diligendo deum Ibid. Vhat great need there is to prepare our selues to die with willingnesse For this cause God seasons to his children the plâasurs of their life with bitter paines Yet the Apostle wishes not to kâepe the body with the sin and mortality of the body But so that sin and mortality might be swallowed vp in the body by that life as at length it shall be 1 Cor. 15.55 The excelleâsy of the life to come it shall not leauâ any remanent of sinne or death in the body Death like a tyrant hath deuoured al since Adam but shall be deuoured by that life Reuel 21.4 This is expressed by the similitude of a little water turned in to wine ââr ser. de diligendo Deo Comfort against the feare of death He prooues that this desire which he had was no vain desire by two reasons 1. First because by Gods ordinance we are appointed to tâat immortall liâe both in the first and second creation Neitherâ hath God only