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A18351 A sermon preached at Snarford in Lincolnshire at the funerals of Sir George Sanct-Paule, knight and baronet, December the 9. 1613 by Iohn Chadvvich ... ; together with a briefe and true relation of his vertuous life and holy death. Chadwich, John. 1614 (1614) STC 4930; ESTC S1548 20,059 34

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man is not to be condemned because a crue of sinfull wretches that looke through the mirrour of their mis-informed mindes crie out crucifige neither is any ill man good because the multitude of sinfull drunken wretches prefer him before Christ then obserua vide will bee a good ground whereon to build our determinations and then shall we iudge righteous iudgement and neyther suffer our selues to bee beguiled with supercillious lookes nor condemne the iust whose end is peace The last point I entreat you obserue in the obseruation of my Text is That a good life is graced and blessed with a happy death August de doctrina christiana non male moritur qui bene vixerit vix bene moritur qui male We haue only one example of a man that liued ill and died well and yet his repentance is set down with the fruits thereof as short time as he had but wee haue no example of any man that liued well and died ill which Balaam did vnderstand when hee wished to die the death of the righteous Of these Baalamites there be no few who dedicate their liues to vanity and yet forsooth if wishing would preuaile they would haue heauen for their inheritance But bee not deceiued my brethren for since they sow in the flesh they shall therof reape corruption and who so soweth in the spirit shall of the spirit reape life euerlasting Labour therefore my brethren to spend the short time of your life which remaineth in the truth of holinesse without hypocrisie in righteousnesse without sinfull vncleanenesse so shall your end be peace in your selues peace with men and peace with God which passeth all vnderstanding And thus you see the whole of a Christian man both in the premisses and conclusion the premisses two perfection and iustice the conclusion well suting both Maior Minor finis illius pax A Demonstration of which truth giue me leaue to set before you in the life and death of that honorable Knight and Baronet for the solemnizing of whose direfull obsequies we are at this time met together of whose life and death if I should say nothing I might iustly bee accused of vnthankfulnesse to God for passing by such excellent vertues as I know the Diuine Maiestie had bewtified him withall And if I shall say much I feare the ordinary aspersion of flattery which blacke-mouthed enuie spitteth out to disgrace vertue withall may perhaps be cast vpon mee and therefore to auoide Silla on the one hand and Caribdis on the other I will speake nothing but that I dare auouch for truth before the Angels in heauen and which many in this place can witnesse of their owne knowledge before men vpon earth My regard of this honourable Knight while he liued was not mercinarie and my report of him at this time is not in hope of reward and therefore without any further Preface thus much in the Front of my speech I may say That he was a Gentleman of as ancient and honourable continuance as any in this Kingdome and therfore not to be blamed that he was desirous being resolued that in law and conscience it was equall as himselfe confessed he was to vphold the honour of his house in his name which for nine descents hath continued at this his house at Snarford This truely-honoured Knight and Baronet if you please may be remembred in the gifts of nature of art of grace or in the practise of them all In the first he was for person and naturall endowments very complete and by the second the former were so well disposed that in his behauiour Adamant-like he drew the hearts of many people to affect and to speake plainly the eyes of the inhabitants in this Countrey was set vpon him as vpon a worthy obiect in his place and calling In the gifts of grace this may I report that he knew the truth We were euer graced by him and in whose company hee tooke great content so doe many wicked men He loued the truth and the instruments that published the same so doe none but the good He was couragious for the truth and so are none but Gods secret ones and from his knowledge the ground of his faith and from his loue the fruit of his beleefe and from his courage the pledge of his sanctitie he had the ground of S. Pauls reioicing which is a good conscience For the practise of all these graces let mee intreat you consider him as a husband to a wife a Master of a family a friend to his acquaintance a Magistrate in his country and a Christian in all For the first hee dwelled with his wife as a man of knowledge free from inhumane austeritie on the one side and voyde of fond and idle complementing indulgence on the other which wise and Christian behauiour was answered by his vertuous Ladie For the second as he was a Master of a Family whilest he was a father though God knoweth that was but for a short time he vsed that blessing as though hee had not possessed it And as he was a Master ouer seruants this was his care that all vnder his charge were bountifully rewarded for their seruice and wanted no means though to his great charge to know God Such as were vertuous wanted no encouragement such as were lesse tractable to goodnesse in the spirit of mildensse he vsed all good means to reclaime them In briefe he was to his seruants a fatherly Master in authoritie in care in counsell in countenance in loue and in bountie I say in bounty to them whilst he liued and in his large portions he hath cut out of his estate for them after his death so that if any that followed him be irregular like Gehesie annointing his fingers with bribes or ryoting with the euill seruant in the Gospel I say no more but this They haue not so learned Christ neither by precept nor by their Masters practise For the third point as he was a friend let enquirie be made when euer he failed any that had occasion to vse his helpe and for true affection hee was as often he said of a friend alter idem or as Salomon speaketh one that loueth at all times rather with Mordach enquiring how his friends did and in what case they stood then staying till hee was sought vnto for his helpe and more reioycing to do good to those he loued in case they wanted his help then fawning vpon such as were happed with the thicke clay of worldly prosperitie He was a right and true-hearted Ionathan and such a friend may I say he was as I feare I shall neuer finde till my soule rest with his For the fourth point which concerneth him as he was a Magistrate If Iethro were liuing hee would haue called for him as one fit to assist Moses Hee wanted no courage for a good cause and to out-face and resist the wicked attempts and practises of vniust and vnlawfull disorders his feare of God