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A85853 Funerals made cordials: in a sermon prepared and (in part) preached at the solemn interment of the corps of the Right Honorable Robert Rich, heire apparent to the Earldom of Warwick. (Who aged 23. died Febr. 16. at Whitehall, and was honorably buried March 5. 1657. at Felsted in Essex.) By John Gauden, D.D. of Bocking in Essex. Gauden, John, 1605-1662. 1658 (1658) Wing G356; Thomason E946_1; ESTC R202275 99,437 136

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alienated from his fear by the prosperity of any evil doers Psal 73.16 or adversity of well doers in this life But go into his Sanctuary with David search the Scriptures and there thou shalt see the eternal counterpoisings of these strange momentary dispensations how the wicked go away to eternal darkness Psal 97.10 11 c. Luke 12.4 and shall never see any light of comfort when his candle is once put out but to the righteous the Lord preserveth the souls of them from those that can but kill the body Rom. 2.7 yea light is sown in their darkness life in their death a crown of eternal glory will grow out of their crown of thorns rivers of everlasting refreshings shall flow out of the rock of their patience and sufferings in well doing in the midst of which fiery trials the spirit of glory rested upon them 1 Pet. 3.18 1 Pet. 4.13 14. Phil. 1.28 they are made conformable to Christ in sufferings that they may reign with him hence they enjoy a most evident sign of their adversaries condition but of their own salvation and that of God who is a righteous Judge a God of truth and faithfulness who will not forget the labour of love or suffer those to go unrewarded who suffer for righteousness sake Mat. 5.10.12 great is their reward in heaven Do not foolishly fret and envy Dives his delicates when thou seest Lazarus die on a dunghil Luke 16.19 Matth. 14.8 nor grudge Herod his throne when thou seest John Baptists head in a charger There is not a greater argument Certissimum futuri judicii praejudicium Tert. Jer. 51.56 The Lord God of recompenses shall surely require Mal. 3.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or more likely demonstration to confute Atheism to confirm faith and hope in a better and another life which the Lord God of recompenses hath certainly prepared for those that are his when he makes up his jewels Can any man be loser for Gods cause Shall not the just God do right to himself and to every man according to his own word and every mans works No man can think God is unable or unwilling to make such amends in another life as shall infinitely expiate and exceed all the seeming detriments here on the part of the godly and the increments or advantages on the part of the wicked Could he make such a world for the good and bad the just and unjust for men and beasts enemies and servants Matth. 5.45 and cannot he prepare for and bestow a better state upon his friends and children Is this mortal and momentary state worthy the name of life with which we are so taken and we are loth to leave whose welfare consists only in the using and enjoying of creatures either without life or only with life and sense or at best adorned with reason added to their life and sense Col. 2.22 but yet perishing in the use and dying as our selves Is this a life to be so desired and doted upon and must not that excel which consists in communion with and participation of the Creator who must necessarily be better then all his creatures and infinitely exceed them as much as light darkness the sea a drop or the Sun a mote or spark Is it a small matter that the spirit or soul of a good man like Lazarus's and Stephens Luke 16. is presently attended and received by many blessed Angels which light on it as a swarm of bees to conduct it joyfully to its blessed God and Saviour so that as soon as it parts out of the body it enjoys spiritual Angelical and celestial joys But the souls of the wicked loth to leave their carkasses and lingring as it were about their corps are presently beset with so many evil spirits or spiteful divels who like wasps and hornets fall upon it as it were to bite and sting and vex it with such resentments and terrors as they either feel or fear to which the soul is first self-condemned and presently selfe-tormented being its own Hell or Tormentor now as it was its own betrayer or tempter heretofore 10. These and the like serious reflexions may justly be laid to heart by all such as are yet but in the outward court of reason on the bare forms of religion and even by others who are come or seem so at least into the holy place to clearer perceptions of piety carrying sincere purposes in their souls and professing to live in communion with God and Christ I am to speak to the hearts of these also How come they to live still incumbred with so many strange opinions passions lusts and affections which seem very weak partial preposterous disorderly earthly and uncharitable Is this to live as in the prospect of death in the confines of heaven in the aim at eternal life yet so eager solicitous impatient disquieted and concerned for these momentary and transeunt enjoyments of life as if these were the main interests they were to carry on in life or to provide for against death Art thou a Kings son and embracest dunghils Lam. 4.5 talkest so much of heaven and graspest only earth Art thou among Gods Nazarites Lam. 4.7 who profess to be separate from sinners crucified to the world whose heart and conversation should be whiter then milk purer then snow beautiful as the rubies and more polished then Saphirs as Jeremiah laments and yet is thy visage blacker then a coal thy sin cleaveth to thy bones such an hidebound Christian and politick professor so carking and caring so getting and griping so sharking and shifting to and fro in thy judgement and way of religion that thou seemest more to regard the wind and weathercock of civil interests favours and advantages then the constant rule and compass of Gods word shifting thy sails to every point as may most fit thy worldly occasions rather then thy conscience and eternal concernments Whence is it that thou a profest pilgrim and stranger in this world art so great an agitator and so passionately engaged in secular sidings whence is this strange Metamorphosis or change of Christianity from the primitive beauty and Scriptural garb or fashion used by the Confessors Martyrs Apostles by Christ himself and his best followers in all ages when hands and eyes heads and hearts lives and conversations of Christians were all lifted up toward heaven and set upon heavenly things how are they now become dross so groveling to the earth joyning Christ with Belial and God with Mammon 2 Cor. 6.15 1 Thes 2.5 Col. 3.5 Rom. 2.22 Prov. 3.9 Mal. 3.8 professions of light with operations of darkness making Christian liberty a cloke for all licentiousness and malice for all filthy lucre and even sacrilegious covetousness which is worse then Idolatry for the Idolater honours a false god with his substance but a Sacrilegious Christian robs the true God to increase his private substance This temper is far from the mortifying
unreasonable irreligious and divelish A carrionly carkass of a man is aromatick a very perfume in comparison of a dead and rotting soul The body becomes dead and so dissolves by the souls parting from it but the soul by Gods being separated from it first out of its own choise next by Gods penal deserting of it The soul is the salt the light and life of the body so is God of the soul Anima animae the very soul of our souls I mean his grace love and spiritual communion separation from this is the souls death here and hereafter For from the power wrath and vengeance of God the damned are not separated who are dead not to their being but to their well being or happiness to the union at and fruition of God in love The soul apart from God in grace or glory is not only an orphan or a widow condemned to eternal sorrow and desolation for nothing can maintain or entertain wooe wed or indow the soul to the least degree of happines or to any allay of misery when once God hath quite forsaken it But it is emortua conclamata in heaven earth and hell proclaimed as starke dead in Law and Gospel Matth. 13.42 to justice and mercy so represented in Scripture as the horridest expression or the blackest colour to set forth its misery and horror its regret and torpor its weeping and wailing its gnashing and despair Doth then such a thick cloud of horror hang over the face and state of a dead body which is senseless of its own death and deformity of its noysome grave and dark dungeon Sapiens ignis subtilis vermis carpit nutrit urit reficit Chrysol O what a world of horror must lie upon a dead soul when deservedly cast out of God's blessed presence when it feels its death and lives only to die when it feels it is plunged in a dead Sea which is boundless and bottomlesse where the worm dies not and the fire goeth not out because it is as Crysologus calls it a subtil fire and ingenious worm which burns but consumes not devours but destroyes not Who can dwell with everlasting burnings saith the Prophet in an extasie of holy horrour Isa 33.14 Who can live in everlasting dyings Who can abide his own everlasting rottings Is it a gradual and lingring death to want food raiment light liberty fit company Is it a total death to the body to want the little spark of the soul which is the breath and spirit of life to the body What is it then to the soul to want that God who is the breather of that breath of life and Inspirer of that spirit We want a word beyond death to expresse that state Lay it then to heart Phil. 3.11 and consider what cause we have to be humble to tremble and fear exceedingly to escape most solicitously and diligently that second and eternal death if by any means we may attain the resurrection of the dead to life eternal 3. Lay to heart upon the sight of a dead body and the meditation of a dead soul whence it is that these fears and faintings sicknesses and sorrows deaths and darknesses sordidnesse and desolation corruption and condemnation have thus mightily prevailed over the highest mountains as the flood over the most noble beautiful and excellent of all Gods works under heaven even over mankind good and bad great and small Eccles 2.16 wise and foolish upon which nature the great and only God had set such characters of special glory enduing it with a diviner spirit so making man as Moses saith a living spirit or a spirit of life And this after counsel and deliberation Faciamus hominem Sanctius his animal mentis● capa●ius ali●e Gen. 2.7 As in re magni momenti a matter of greater concern and weight then heaven and earth and all the host of them They were made ex tempore as it were Nudo verbo Let there be and there was But man was made ex consilio after Gods own Image full of beauty health honour riches wisedome the Spirit of the living God given him in an extraordinary beam Whence is this lapse to earth to dust to a sad and wretched a decaying and dying condition both temporal and eternal Sure not from the impotencie or envy of the blessed Creator whose omnipotent goodnesse is inconsistent with such infirmities nor yet from the frailty and inconsistency of the subject matter which he raised to so goodly a fabrick little lower then the Angels Psal 49.12 as man was made who should have been as long immortal as Angels had he continued a man that is Rom. 6.23 rational and religious enjoying the Image of God on him which forbids and excludes as all shadow of sin and defection so of all death or mutation to worse No. The Psalmist tells us after the history of Genesis Man being in honour did not so abide but is become like to the beasts that perish by the frailty of his will which fell from adherence to God as the durable and supreme Good Sin hath levelled us to beasts to death to devils to hell This death in all sizes and degrees from the least ache and dolour to the compleatnesse of damnation is the wages of fin So the Apostle oft tells us Rom. 5.17 by one mans offence death entred and reigned over all The soul that sins that shall die Ezek. 18. Sin is the source of all our sorrows the lethalis arundo poysoned arrow whose infection drinks up the spirits and eats up the health flesh bodies and soules of mankind No wonder we die since we sin at such a rate the wonder is that we live any one of us one moment How much more is the miracle of Gods love and mercy that hath by Christs death and merits brought forth to light eternal life and offered it to all penitent and believing sinners as purchased and prepared for them Because sin once lived in us we must once die and till sin be dead or mortified in us we cannot hope for life eternal Through death then thou wilt best see the face of thy sin What Poet what Painter what Orator whose colours are most lively can expresse the amazement horrour and astonishment that seized on the looks and hearts of Adam and Eve Rom. 27. 2 Tim. 1.10 when they had the dreadful prospect of their first great sin and curse written with the blood and pourtrayed on the face of their dead son Abel who in that primitive paucity of mankind was barbarously slain by his brother Cain Who can expresse or conceive the woful lamentation they made over their dead son in whom they first beheld the beauties of life swallowed up by the deformities of death Is death then so dreadful so dismal so deformed so putid O think what that sin is which thou so embracest and huggest The fountain of bitternesse is more bitter then the stream Our madness and misery is
arbitrary business but of Divine Authority and Institution of highest necessity in the Church so esteemed and so used by all good Christians The modern neglect and indifferency to it either argues the Clergy miserably embased in all points from their ancient dignity or the minds and actions of Christians to become very degenerous and licentious unholy and unthankful not to be mended till the majesty of Religion and the double honour of the Ministry be restored 11. Lay to heart upon the whole matter drawing all the beams of my discourse and your meditations into one point arising from this or the like Funeral-occasions in what posture thou art for death how furnished fitted and prepared I once told this Noble Gentleman two months before he died when I saw his tedious cough very importune and his dispiritings so great that I could say little to him Sir you have nothing so much concerns you as to prepare and to dare to die Ask thy soul O poor mortal not what goods thou hast laid up for many years not what beauty and virtue thou hast married not what honours thou enjoyest not what lands thou possessest or expectest but what preparation thou hast made to meet thy God what defensative to encounter death how far the power of sin is weakned how far the progress of grace is advanced what viaticum aeternitatis provision for eternity thou hast made A Christian must not onely look to Augustus his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sueton. in vita Augusti a gentle and civil or well-natured death but to a gracious a comfortable death for himself and also hopeful and exemplary to others about him The last lightnings or coruscations of a good Christian should be if his natural spirits permit his brightest as the preludium of eternity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He should adorn his death as the last act of his life with speaking good of God with telling all about him what the Lord hath done for his soul what experiences of trials and conflicts of comforts and refreshings by Christ his Word and Spirit I allow any mans or womans death-bed to be their pulpit let them then turn preachers as much as they can let them shew forth the loathsome and deadly deformities of sin the worth and excellencies they have found in Christ and his grace the benefit found in his Word Spirit Ministrations and true Ministers that so the surviving world may be the better for those nayles which as Masters of the Assemblies as now candidates and expectants yea percipients of Heaven dying Christians do happily fasten in the minds memories and consciences of their weeping auditors The best Sermons are those that dying men and women preach before their own Funerals Gen. 29. Deut. 32. 1 Kings 2.1 Joshua 23. John 14 15 16 and 19. Chapters 1 Sam. 25.37 as Jacob Moses Joshua and David did yea our blessed Lord Jesus most expressed his inmost and sublimest sense to his Disciples a little before he died as to heavenly comforts prayers and praises A Christian should avoid what possibly may be to die like Nabal as if his heart were first quite dead as a stone within him I mean when God gives spirits and strength to express themselves None are such Infidels as not to believe these dying Orators who are got beyond our pulpit-strains and affected forms above all human fears and flatteries all studies of sides and factions Illum vita nondum dissimulatio deseruit Sueton. in vita Tiberii then or never they are in good earnest Few with Tiberius can be such hypocrites as to act a part only of piety when they are going off the stage of life If we are grafted in the tree of life we shall bear some good fruits living or dying I know the best experiments of grace and the surest both 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signes and indications of sincerity are from a good conscience kept up in our lives not hudled up in haste a little before death as goods in a scare-fire only upon the alarm of sickness and death but wisely leisurely gravely and practically methodised and digested yea expressed in our health in the humble and impartial constancy of attending holy duties private and publique in orderly waiting on the true and duly ordained Ministry of Christ in his Church in frequent devout and fervent partakings of the Lords Supper in righteous holy charitable and exemplary lives toward all men which are both useful to mankind by good works and acceptable to God in all humility adorning the Christian and reformed Religion highly magnifying the glory of the grace of God in Jesus Christ An humble heart and an holy life are the best cordials in our deaths for without peace and holiness as the Apostle tells us no man shall see God And Heaven it self will not be welcome to us if holiness be not Heb 12.14 Nec coelum ipsum placebit cui sanctitas displicet for its happiness is no other but perfected holiness then we shall be such as we would be hereafter when we like to be such as God would have us here 12. Last of all The neerer the more remarkable and emphatick any object of death or Funeral-occasion is the more we should lay it to heart As when great wise valiant and honest men like mighty Cedars of Lebanon fall by death either natural or violent by open hostility or treachery as Abner died 2 Sam. 9.33 whose Biere David himself followed honoring by a most generous example that virtue loyalty and fortitude which he found in an enemy toward him nor doth he do it in a courtly formality but with ample publick and unfeigned sorrow even to weeping looking upon that sad and shameful accident as a great reproach and affront to his own party and cause as a dehonesting of his own honour and that Religion which he professed to remove so great a scandal and dishonour from his person conscience Kingdom and profession as attends all treacherous murtherings even of reconciled enemies and rivals David himself doth Abner this honour at his burial to follow the Biere 1. So in the deaths of such excellent Princes as have been or were like to be the Patres patriae Fathers of their Country maintainers of law and justice provident for the publick good in peace and plenty Patrons of learning virtue and established Religion wise and valiant assertors when need requires of their own honour and their peoples safety merciful dispensers of such favours and remissions as may abate the rigors of law with regard to human surprises and infirmities and yet neither weaken the hands of justice nor strengthen the hands of malicious offenders Such Kings and Princes yea any soveraign Magistrates under any title as Joshua and other Judges that are not wholly degenerate from their dignity duty and place are to be duly lamented and their deaths are seriously to be laid to heart because they do not only shew us the
conference with such an humble ejaculation O how infinite is the mercy of our heavenly Father that hath given us poor sinners such gracious promises to lay hold on Afterward I was sent for to him and went betimes that morning before he departed which was at four afternoon His weakness then was great and urgent yet his calmness to speak and hear was better then I had found before Then he deplored as I formerly touched the vain hopes of living which he had had and that it was so late There was now no delay to be made no time to be lost in impertinent visiting and cold how-do-yous I craved therefore his patience privacy and leave to doe my duty as a Minister of Christ in order to his souls present good Then I did according to the wisedome that God gave me demand many things of him in the cleerest exactest and shortest method which I could whereby to receive from him such a confession of his sins and of his serious repentance of his deep sense of the want of Christ as a Saviour of owning the excellent worth that is in Christ of the full and free grace of God offered by Christ of his humble desires and hopes of it also his patience and preparedness to die if God would have it so And in general of his firm perswasion that those things were true which he had been taught by me and other Ministers of the Church of England out of Gods word To all the whole series of my questions discourse he severally answered with such prayers tears such deep sighs such fervent Amens and such pathetick expressions as I could expect in his weak condition To my last query concerning his belief of the Truths of God in his Word he replyed with a vehemency of voice and spirit Do I believe them yes Sr. I thank God I do believe them as most gracious and glorious truths and I hope my heavenly Father will make them good to my soul This last expression my heavenly Father he oft used as alone so to me and others A sweet name and title used oft in the private devotions which his pious and noble Mother had wrote with her own hand as the effusions of her devout soul After this my private discourse with him about a quarter of an hour his noble friends joyned with me in prayer to God for him to which he was composedly intent and fervent In the afternoon soon after he had againe spoken in his dying agonies some like passionate pious and humble words to me as best befits the mouth of a dying Christian he calmly and suddenly expired without any great contest with death Far be it from me who never flattered him or any man living except my self to commend him now dead and gone after those riotous Hyperboles and envied excesses which the Greek and Roman Orators used at the Funeral piles or busta of their deceased friends Nor will I scatter upon his herse those flowers which ancient Fathers and other Christian Orators used gravely and more deservedly in their Funeral Sermons Orations and Epitaphs applied to many holy men and women of old who died either young as Nepotian whom St. Jerome so highly commends or elder as Martyrs Confessors and eminent professors of Christ crucified it was but pious and prudent that their light both living and dead should so shine before men Matth. 5.16 both Christians and Heathens that all might see their good works and glorifie God These were set forth by their accurate yet honest eloquence that they were Virtutum thesauri gratiarum gazae humanarum perfectionum cumuli c. treasures of virtue magazeens of grace heaps of divine perfections in the midst of human imperfections No Sancta illa anima nec laudes quaerit nec cupit humanas Hieron I better understand the proportions of modesty gravity and verity which become both living and dead Great applauses never so much deserved as St. Jerome speaks can do the dead no good and may do the living much hurt when they seem not so eminently deserved I am severely confined to the bounds of soberness and truth therefore I shall say no more then this that as I hope he was not far from the Kingdom of Heaven in his health Mark 12.34 so I trust his long sickness brought him not only neerer to it in the graces of true faith unfeigned repentance with charity patience humility and willing submission to Gods will living and dying I well know that the rack and skrew of sickness and killing infirmitie do commonly squeeze or force something of such expressions out of every one which sound to the tune of Christianity the best verification of which is former frequent and faithful experiments in health enjoyed in a mans own conscience and given also to others by walking humbly with God and keeping constant communion with Christ in all good duties and good works the one affords nourishment the other fruits of grace Yet I conceive I may without any offence to God or good men say thus much That if sinite parvulos ad me venire suffer little ones to come unto me Mark 10.14 be applicable to Infant graces if the indulgent tenderness of Christ Matth. 11.28 bidding the weary laden with corporal and spiritual infirmities to come to him and promising them rest if that sweet promise worthy of our blessed Saviours beniguity to mankind have any spirits and life in it for a poor dying and dejected yet believing and trembling sinner to lay hold of Matth. 12.20 The smoaking flax he will not quench nor break the bruised reed if these be significant to poor sinners in their contrite state I may without presumption or turning grace into wantonness hope that they were made good to this Gentleman whose honour health hopes happiness and heart too were so long under the burdens and breakings of Gods hand in his sickness so early in his life and so suddenly casting him down from the highest pinnacle of worldly happiness where he fancied most to settle himself Certainly there are many times great comforts spiritual cordials secretly infused with Gods bitter potions Zach. 4.10 which keep up our spirits under them and mend us by them I know God despiseth not the day of small things if sincere nor shall faith like a grain of Mustard-seed Matth. 17.20 be in vain to remove mountains of sin if it be true and lively sown on Christ and growing in him growing up and fructifying to him But I have done with the Anatomizing of his soul to you as far as I had time opportunity and skill I could also give you a true and full account of the Anatomy of his body as it was dissected the next day by six able Physitians and two skilful Surgeons my self being an eye witness whose testimony under their hands is hereafter printed in their own words The account of their discovery amounts to no more then this That
FUNERALS MADE CORDIALS IN A SERMON Prepared and in part Preached at the solemn Interment of the Corps of the Right Honorable ROBERT RICH Heire apparent to the Earldom of WARWICK Who aged 23. died Febr. 16. at Whitehall and was honorably buried March 5. 1657. at Felsted in Essex By JOHN GAUDEN D. D. of Bocking in Essex Therefore I hated life for all is vanity and vexation of spirit Eccles 2.17 But the things that are not seen are eternal 2 Cor. 4.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato LONDON Printed by T. C. for Andrew Crook and are to be sold at the Green Dragon in St. Pauls Church-yard 1658. TO The Right Honorable the Lady FRANCES RICH. Madam THough I am justly tender of exasperating so vehement and unfeigned a grief as your Ladiship hath constantly expressed to the noble Mr. Rich both living and languishing dying and dead by my applying any such Balsame as may seem to renew your wound and pain yet knowing that your Ladiships greatest comforts next those of divine infusion arise from those proportions which your just sorrows bear to your generous affections which are now become the occasion and measure of your affliction I thought it would neither be offensive to your honour nor unbeseeming my respects if I justified your exceeding grief by representing to the world how diservedly you have loved and how worthily you have mourned for that Gentleman of whose honour and happiness even from his infancy I was most seriously ambitious Hence it is that I have adventured to dedicate to your Name this Funeral Cordial which was first devoted to adorn the Christian Interment and revive the honored Name of your dear Husband that since You lived not long together in your marriage yet You might at least be inseparable in this monument which aims not to add any further secular pomp to his dust much less to gratifie the impertinent curiosity of this or after ages touching his life sickness disease or death but rather to advance the glory of God in his unsearchable ways also to summon such as yet survive him to consider their latter ends that they may betimes even in youth remember their Creator and apply their hearts to true saving and eternal wisdom To these great and good ends I presume your Ladiships passionate piety will permit me to improve so sad a dispensation of providence whose aspect not only looks to your Ladiship but to all that stand within the view reach and terror of so sharp a stroak which deserves to be so far laid to heart by all spectators until they find their hearts mollified and mended through that gracious virtue which may by fear of death and grief for sin make way for faith in Christ and love of God Certainly a penitent and pious use is the best that can be made of such dreadful monitions that no seeming splendor of prosperity no vain confidences of youth and life no cumulations of worldly contents no momentary honours and imaginary pleasures should either blind or divert any of us from dayly taking a serious prospect of our sins and our souls of our death and judgement of our God and Saviour Nothing in all my lifes observation except one unparallel'd instance hath ever faln out of more pregnant and potent influence to abate the presumption of human vanity worldly confidence and earthly glory than the sudden Eclipse and fall of this great Star which was but lately risen to its lustre and conspicuity The contemplation of his so early death is no small warning to us that are yet living especially to those who most dally with death while they affect a dilatory indifferency as to any practise of repentance and true piety being afraid of nothing so much as of being good too soon as if they could be too soon in a capacity of happiness I know the folly and madness of many who have had not only ingenuous but religious breeding is usually such that though they please themselves in being civil and accomplist toward men yet they make no scruple of being neglective rude affrontive yea insolent toward God and therein cruel to their own souls forgetting at once both their moment and God's eternity which desperate frolick usually holds with many not only during the adventerous extravagancies of their youth and spring which is the chief hour of temptation and power of darkness but it extends by the hardning habits and deceitfulness of our sinful hearts to our Autumn and decline God knows our vicious accesses to the vanities and inordinacies of life are early and speedy but our gracious recesses in order to an holy life and happy death are very flow and late if ever unless special grace prevent the best of nature and God's good Spirit perfect the best of our educations Madame I write not at this rate out of a Censorian vanity to reproach others but out of an humble sense of my own infirmities and out of a Christian sympathy to others impendent miseries Alas 't is too evident that many persons otherways of excellent useful parts do live amidst the offers of eternal life and the terrors of eternal death as if they had never laid to heart either their own or any others death no nor the death of their blessed Saviour by the price of whose blood they have been both meritoriously Sacramentally redeemed from their vain conversation It is both a sad and shameful thing to consider that the least and last thoughts of many titularly Christians are devoted to their God their Saviour and their Souls These grand concernments are late unwelcome and but hardly admitted after the surfeits of sensual pleasures the crowds and pester of worldly affairs the importunities of ambitious designs and other busie vanities which so ingross the whole man and time that there is little place allowed in most mens and womens hearts or space in their lives which are always upon the confines and brink of death for that great point of wisedom and work of salvation which consists in beginning betimes to resist and retrench those evils to which our depraved hearts do naturally prompt us that so we might with greater speed and less impediment advance to that Supream and immutable good to which as we are invited and beseeched by the tender mercies and love of God in Christ so by the principles of true reason and religion and no less by the real interests of our own safety honour and eternal felicity The promoting of all which being my main design in publishing this grave piece I hope both your Ladiships great sadness and passion and my own deep resentments for the dead may be sufficient Apology for my freedom both of tongue and pen toward the living not only my natural genius prompting me but my conscience commanding me specially in publique and sacred remonstrances to speak and write out that is to use such honest Parrhesie as will least smother wholesome truths or flatter secure sins Nothing is more deformed
disarmed their revenges forced them to shed teares even over their enemies corps or graves as Alexander the Great did over Darius and Julius Caesar when he saw his potent Rival Pompey the Great 's head deformedly parted from his body by treacherous villany These glasses shewed to every man their own faces in the truest and most unflattering representations Mors sola fatetur Quantula sint hominum corpuscula Some of the ancient Philosophers professed they profited most by conversing with the dead that is with good books whose Authors were long agone dead as to their bodies but living in the noble monuments of their minds Libri animorum urnae Mentium magnarum aeterna monumenta Lipsius their writings which are the urns or repositories of souls here on earth This was very elegant and very true there being as none more durable Monuments so no better Monitors Tutors and Instructers then those that are farthest remote from all passions of fear or flattery from the vices and parties of the age in which men live Nor is the frequenting of dead mens funerals less effectual to work on living mens hearts For as some Nonconformists of old the dead never speak louder then when they are most silenced nor shine brighter then in that night of darkness which is sending them to their long homes and to make their lasting beds in the cold grave that dismal house of darkness Dead men by an holy kind of Magick which is a due meditation of them and our selves doe in a sort revive to us and walk with us yea haunt us and talk with us in a dumb but potent kind of oratory Sometimes their noble deeds and good works praise them and upbraid us who are strangers yet to their worth and enemies to their holy examples Sometimes they lift up their voice like a trumpet of terrour to us in the sad riot and debaucheries and security of of their lives and in the suddenness the despair and dreadfulness of their deaths Sometimes the solemnity of their Funerals the mementoes of their Epitaphs and those Inscriptions which give Marmora animata as it were breath to their dust and a spirit or life to their marble monuments All these summon us to serious reflections that as Pliny tells us the dead sea affords some medicinals and mummy it self is become a useful drug in medicaments so great and special good use may be made of those that are recens mortui new dead among our neighbours friends acquaintance relations superiors inferiors Nulla unquam de morte hominis cunctatio longa As no mans death should be precipitated because life is invaluable and once lost is irreparable so nor is any mans death to be taken with a careless and useless indifferencie specially when it is neer us and like Balshazzars hand on the wall by the fingers of a man pointing to us Mortuorum funera viventium monita or writing as it were either some lesson for us or terrors against us some monition or instruction One of the great Egyptian Kings Sesostris as I remember commanded this to be written on his Tomb or Urn 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Whoever lookes on my Sepulchre Discite justitiam moniti ne temerite dives let him learn to be religious to fear and serve the gods The Scythians while yet Heathens and synonymous with Barbarity yet were so ingenuous to improve the Deaths of their most deserving Princes that they cut their dead bodies into little pieces which they kept about them as Jewels in precious boxes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as amulets or defensatives against vice and maladies no less then incentives to virtue and conservatives of their felicity The Ethiopians in a different manner yet to the same design were wont to put the intire bodies of their Princes exsuccated or dried by sweet spices and the Sun into glass Urns or transparent Coffins which they set in publick and most conspicuous places as Varro tells us the Romans did their Statues to be as it were the great Censors and Monitors no less then the exemplary inciters of posterity to parallel vertues 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Infinite were the inventions of ingenious Antiquity either to advance the honour of the dead or to vindicate or revenge them as much as might be done by poor mortals from mortality or at least to moderate and qualifie the impotent passions and enormous grief of Survivors Hence they not only held their Geniusses immortal which they venerated by a will-worship and is properly Superstition but they built them stately and portentous Sepulchres for their bodies in Pyramids Mausoles and the like Fabricks which were Miracles of Architecture that their dust might have as stately palaces as themselves once living enjoyed Ludos solennes Besides they instituted solemn Sacrifices and magnificent conventions mixt with activity and bravery Judg. 11. See Ludo. Caepel votum Jephtae interludes and devotion in memorial of them as Jephtah did for his daughters being sacrificed as a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 curseor Anathema so devoted to God as was not redeemable Alexander the great at the Funeral of Ephestion squandred in a profuseness of passion and prodigality fit for none but himself so many Talents as amounted to more then a million of pounds sterling Nay See Bish Vsser his Chrono Imp. Alex. M. the Roman pride and glory dared Coelum ipsum petere ambitiosà nimis stultitiâ to vye with the Gods in Heaven and by the sumptuous pomp of their Funeral Piles and the Eagles mounting from the flames of them upward to raise the vulgar credulity beyond the thoughts of their Princes mortality to the imaginations of a Deity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. vid. Lip alios Thus fearing that Heaven should not be fully planted they sent them Colonies from earth that such as had either deserved very well of mankind or were able unpunished to do much mischief by such soveraign impiety as was great but not good might fill up the lower formes of Heaven which yet wanted Gods to supply them Which fancy did not stray much from that of some Christian Fathers who conceive the fall and defalcation of Angels when they degenerated to Devils is to be repaired by substituting as many Saints or Christian Heroes into their room How the souls of all those got to Heaven whom vulgar clamours and applauses or politick Deifications or Papal Canonizations lift up thither I list not to enquire I believe many of their Spirits went no higher then their Eagles might soar I am sure popular Superstition or passion is prone to fix upon many a golden Calf this title and proclamation Exod. 32.8 These are thy Gods O Israel Nor is any thing more frequent then as Crysologus observes for the pomp of Funerals to lye and flatter Mentitur funeris pompa fallaci vanitate adulantium Multos pompa funeris ad coelum evehit quos peccati pondus
higher form of life are scarce among Solomons living who lay things to heart that is Altâ mente reponunt they deeply and devoutly seriously and solemnly rationally and religiously consider resolve and ponder in intimis animi recessibus the inward recesses of their soules or consciences the whole purport of such occasions what they mean in all their aspects They make as it were a speculative Anatomy and intellectual dissection of the dead yea and of death it self in all its forms and fashions in its causes and effects its antecedents concomitants and consequences They look upon the face of it which is neer at hand and the long train or extent of it which reacheth to Eternity This is the Lecture that the living read upon the dead and many lessons they learn from them because they are men that have an heart which is wise and understanding duely weighing in the scale of true reason and divine wisdom every occurrence and event of providence which hath any remark or signal character upon it as the death of any man or woman young or old infant or decrepit hath to such as have an heart able to apply it notwithstanding this frequency of such spectacles which with many men and women takes away the sense and regard of them though such persons need every day a memento mori some spectacle or remembrancer as King Philip had daily to put them in mind that they are but men Philippe memento te esse mortalem How necessary is it for them to remember their latter end to consider in what a vain shadow they live or rather die in their life because they are without an heart as silly birds not aware of the snares of sin the pits of death and hell over which they carelesly and confidently passe every moment Frequencie of Funerals doth not lessen the right use and influence of them to such living as know how to lay them to heart They doe not as women and children or country clowns only start amain when some sudden and unexpected death befals any as if it were the discharging of a great cannon near them which they never dreamed of but as valiant Commanders who finding that an hot battery and frequent shot slayes men round about them wisely consider that they may be the next mark whom death will hit which thought is so far from discouraging or appalling a man of a good heart that is pious and generous that it onely summons him to muster up all the fortitude and strength of his soul that whether he live or die he may do neither like a fool or a coward or a beast but like a valiant man and a good Christian who being engaged in a good Canse having a good God and a good conscience doubts not to make a good end when God shall call him out of this life to a better The Living that is the wise and considerable sort of mankind are the only persons who have hearts to consider all things as they ought to reflect upon their own hearts to commune with them to try and examine their state and tempers their defects and disorders their extravagancies and necessities The Living are they that duely consider the true interests and eternal concernments of their hearts and spirits their soules and consciences far beyond those of their bodies senses or fortunes The Living doe upon such occasions of mortality in se descendere make sober retreats home looking to themselves and searching into the penetralia animae their hearts above all Which they know to be as the rudder or steerage of the soule and of the whole man of all thoughts words and actions the card or compass by which our momentary and eternal course is shaped They know the infinite importance of a well or ill constituted and managed heart They find that verified which our Saviour tells us That out of the heart of man proceed evil thoughts murders Matth. 15.18 adulteries fornications thefts false witness blasphemies c. That God chiefly requires and regards this as the Gemme of the man most precious in it self most proper and proportionate for God That all beauty strength wit estate honour offered to God without the Heart is but the sacrifice nay the sacriledge and affront of fools and hypocrites Therefore it is frequently inculcated from Heaven and in the Scripture Prov. 23.26 to all sorts of men under all dispensations of Religion to Jew and Gentile Give me thy heart an honest and good heart Psal 51. a pure and peaceable heart an humble and contrite heart God will not despise yea in this he delights all things else are loss and dung in comparison Nothing else in man is worthy of God and yet nothing less worthy of him that is Gen. 6.5 naturally less fit and prepared for him What God complained long ago is verified in every mans experience That every imagination of the thoughts of mans heart was evil and that continually The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 distempers diseases yea and deaths of the heart of man are as many as dangerous and as desperate as those of the body yea infinitely more For the bodies diseases doe but kill us as to mans society and to a moments life on earth but the diseases of the heart kill us as to the life of God and an eternal happiness of conservation in Heaven The living God who delights not in the death of a sinner nor yet in a dead heart which is the first death of a sinner as a gracious Father and compassionate Physitian hath discovered to us the many plagues which are in our hearts the sicknesses to which they are subject by the surfets they take of the world and their senses Sometimes the Heart swels with the tumor of intolerable pride sometimes it burns withcholerick inflammations sometimes it is scorched with passionate calentures of inordinate lusts sometimes it is almost drowned like hydropick and overgrown bodies with its sensual luxuries and fulness even to abominable fedities sometimes it hath such a gout as it is in great pain at any the least motion for God or any good motion from him sometime it pines away in a Consumption amidst all its sensible pleasures plenty and honours not finding any satisfactory solid and durable good in them all Sometimes the heart is shaken with paralytick tremblings and terrors like Earthquakes which seem to arise from the dark and pestilent vapors in it self sometimes it hath not only fits of the stone refractory tempers but a petrified habitude of a hard and stony heart which nothing doth soften neither mercy nor judgment love nor wrath bounty nor patience of God Sometimes the heart falls into Lethargick and Apoplectick stupors like Nabals and Achitophels it growes remorseless benummed stupid senselesse dull and dead within men past fear or feeling of any thing either sharp and pungent in the Law or spiritful and reviving in the Gospel Solomon who was a great King of hearts and had a
very large soveraign knowledge of them Eccl. 8.11 beyond any meer man tells us that the hearts of the sons of men are not onely full of folly 1 Kings 8.38 Eccl. 9.3 and set upon evill and sick of several sorts of plagues but frenzy fury and madness are in their hearts while they live which is a distemper not easily if ever perfectly cured But if any thing as to humane applications be likely to work any good upon the worst mens hearts Job 41.7 if any dart or weapon can reach and pierce these Leviathans whose natural proneness and customary habits in sin are so closely fixed and hardened to all manner of sin without any remorse it is such as Death brings with it not as it is pictured to scare children but as it is really it self and perceived among all sorts of men good or bad sparing none surprising any one even in the pride hardness deadness and damnableness of his heart Nothing in life is a more consummated fear then that which death carries with it It is called the King of terrors Job 18.14 Isa 14.9 11 12. Ezek. 32.27 Rex longimanus whose Scepter or sword reacheth all even Kings themselves such as were most impatient not to have all men living stoop down to their Scepter and Empire even these mighty Cedars and Colosses of Monarchs hath death subdued in a short time with a little labour and brought them down to the pit and bound them in chaines of darkness in the prison and dungeon of the grave triumphing over these Triumphers with an ironick Epinicion as the Prophet expresseth How art thou faln Art thou also become weak as we who wert a terror in the land of the living with thy sword lying in vain under thy head while thine iniquities are upon thy bones This representation of death to the living should be laid to Heart by all men and will be so by all such as truly live and not only breath There is a great difference between vixit and fuit being and living he lives that liveth wisely and worthily As bene valere is vivere health is the life of life so much more bene vivere est vita vitalis to live well is the welfare of life For as every disease of the body is a partial death to such a degree of health and life as is wanting so every sinful distemper of the rational heart of man is so far a deadness as it is a disorder upon it Which God seeks to cure and conquer by setting before us frequent spectacles of mortality which not to lay to heart and to entertain meerly with a specious formality with a childish historick or histrionick indifferency is the way firmare morbum corroborare mortem to increase the diseases and confirm that death which is upon mens hearts who are yet living in a vain shadow or shew of life only which is to these filly inconsiderate and sinful fooles not only mortalis and moriens but mortua yea mortifera vita a mortal and dayly dying but a dead yea a deadly and killing life while they live onely to beasts to men to their bodies and to a moment but are dead to soules to their own hearts to Gods Spirit and to Eternity as to their present impenitent state and posture of heart God by the Prophet complaines That the righteous perish and no man laid it to heart Yea when he sent many messengers and promiscuous executioners of death among the Jewes Isa 57.1 Aezek 14.21 his four sore judgments yet they laid not those terrors to heart nor considered their latter end that they might fear before God and live no more presumptuously Our blessed Lord at once reproacheth and threatneth those that had not so laid to heart the death of those on whom the tower of Siloa fell and whose blood Pilate mingled with their sacrifices Luke 13.4 that except they repent they should likewise perish Deaths must be so laid to heart that by the sadness of the countenance the heart may be made better Eccl. 7.3 as Solomon speaks The house of laughter may afford the heart of a fool more seeming pleasure for a season but the house of mourning affords a wise mans heart more solid and durable profit Luke 17.37 who like the Eagle will chuse to be there where the body not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea the dead corps is as our Saviour speaks in an higher sense where the Eagle-eye of a believer quick and clear seeing afar off eagerly hastens firmly seizeth pertinaciously holdeth and greedily feedeth upon Christs blessed body and blood which is given to die for us as the only food of our soules in its infinite merits As we must not take the name of God in vain by profane swearing blaspheming or jesting nor may we receive his grace in vain as to the meanes the monitions and motions of his Spirit within us or without us So neither may we passe by the dead as the Priest and Levite did by the wounded and half-dead traveller without much regard as if we were unconcerned Gods dispenpensations in this kind must not be in vain to us though we cannot doe the dead any good yet we may get good from them and by them yea account must be given as of other things so of this Thou must not only reddere rationem vitae tuae but alienae give an account of thy own life but of anothers too who may sin at the charge of thy soule while as Eli thou neglectest to hinder or reprove or give them good example or it may be soothest and encouragest them in sin or whose pious life is set before thee as an excellent pattern but ill followed by thee yea further we must reddere rationem mortis alienae give account to God of anothers death not only whom we unjustly slay Gen. 9.5 or neglect to save deliver asmuch as is justly in our power God will require the blood of these both for man and beast but further we must give account of anothers death which we see or hear of and doe not consider which we celebrate onely but lay it not to heart in piety when we are not warned or moved at all when custome as of sinning so of seeing the dead takes away all due sense when being touched with so sharp a spur as that of anothers death should be to thee thou art like a dull jade or tired hackney not at all affected or moved to mend thy pace not one sinners sigh or Christians tear no sad reflection or penitent remorse no quickened endeavours or confirmed resolutions in order to prepare more intentively for death for judgment and eternity only thou joggest on after the wonted rate and carriers pace of a formal and cold-hearted Christian Which evil defects arguments of a dead and unaffected heart either totally or gradually are the lesse excusable in men because the uses or advantages to be
thee as an armed man attended with death and judgment sin and hell an evil conscience and an angry God then I say one day or hour will be as earnestly desired by thee as one drop of water was by Dives and it may be as justly and certainly be denied thee the common fate of riotous Prodigals following thee in this to be reduced to a morsel of bread after sottish profusenesse and shameful luxury We unjustly quarrel with God and nature as Seneca observes that our life is so short when indeed our care is too little to live well which is the onely true life It is one thing to be a man and another to live as a man It was a true fig-tree which was barren and cursed by Christ Maximam partem hominum brutum occupat In most men for a long time the beast in them overlayes the man Sensual lusts are night and day the imperious Incubusses or Ephialtae of their reason What one said with much salt to an Epicure Deus tuus est porcorum Deus is verified in most people during their youth and in many long after even through the whole course of their life They own no other God then the God of swine reverencing the Divine Majesty no more then hogs doe nor expecting more from him then may serve their bellies which is the God they serve as the Apostle speaks nor returning more acknowledgment or service to him yea they live tanquam poeniteret non pecudes natos as if they only repented they were not made only beasts with bodies In titles perhaps noble in estates splendid in words rational and in formalities civil yea perhaps religious in shews but in deeds they are debasers of their native and divine dignity Victa libidine succed it ambitio victa ambitione succedit avaritia victa avaritia succedit superbia vitium inter ipsas virtutes timendum Hieron dethroners of reason despisers of their God and true Religion doting on sensible objects all their lives by a continued succession of vices and inordinate defires and delights which succenturiate or supply the places decayes and recesses of one another as St. Jerome observes till they have wasted life and spirits and time and talents to the very last snuff mean time they have done nothing unde constet vixisse worthy of themselves their relations their God the Church of Christ or their Country From youthful and extravagant lusts they run to pride from pride to hypocrisie from hypocrisie to ambition from ambition to covetousness from covetousness to sacriledge from sacriledge to Atheism from Atheism to stupidity or despair Mean time they have at first it may be with great mirth jollity next with affected gravity and severity not only bought and sold planted and builded married and given in mariage but it may be griped and oppressed killed and possessed subverted and sacrificed all things sacred and civil as much as they could to their own lusts but have never yet had leisure all this while to live or to act any thing but dead works Let them ask their own souls and consciences not quàm fortiter feliciter but quam sanctè justè quid praeclarè quid egregiè fecisti Nay let them ask apart from flatteries Quid non turpiter quid non pudendum quid non poenitendum fecisti What have they done conscienciously justly honestly valiantly for God for the Truth for their own soules or their neighbours good Nay what have they done which in the inward aspect of conscience and many times to outward view of all men is not vile impious to be ashamed of to be repented of They have it may be with Caesar Borgia and Lewis the 11th had much art and Policie but no true piety and charity in them much self-seeking but nothing of self-denying which is the truest touchstone of a Christian constitution They may have been prosperous and yet not pious they may have conquered others but yet not themselves which is the noblest victory They may have gotten much and yet shall be sure to lose all for want of that one thing necessary a good conscience which is the end of living and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only provision for an eternal life A temper of soul which is rightly instructed and guided by the written word of God only sanctified accordingly by his holy spirit practically conformed to his blessed example in all manner of holy conversation this this temper purged by faith in the blood of Christ and so accepted by Gods mercy and dignation through Christs merits makes a good conscience the getting and preserving of which is the main end of life as to our private concern next Gods glory and this alone will bring a man peace in his latter end this alone dares look death and divels in the face to others that have a forme of godliness yet deny the power of it 2 Tim. 3.5 John 3.19 to whom the light of Christian Religion is come and they love darkness more then light their condemnation will be the greater 9. Lay to heart the sameness or variety of aspects wherein death represents to thee the faces and fates of all men living and dying either so alike Eccles 2.16 that as the fool dieth so dieth the wise man as the wicked so the righteous as to the kind and manner of death by sickness pains violence Vide Psal 73.12 Behold these are the ungodly who prosper in the world they increase in riches c. Job 21.7 Wherefore do the wicked live become old yea are mighty in power Jer. 12.1 2. Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper why are all they happy that deal very treacherously c. John 7.24 Psal 73.15 suddenness in all shapes or figures of death Besides thou maist observe the frequent riddles and Paradoxes not only of mens lives but of their deaths The righteous and godly that eschew evil and do good who fear God and walk uprightly before him who chuse to suffer rather then sin these are oft persecuted and oppressed with poverty prison banishment and distresses while they live yea and their innocency is many times persecuted to the death by violent and unjust men whereas these live and thrive a long time yea and end their days in prosperous impiety to the great scandal of many that are godly and infinite incouragement of wicked doers as Job David and Jeremiah complain Take heed you judge not as Christ forewarns his Disciples by outward appearance or the fight of thine eyes but judge righteous judgement lest thou condemn the generation of God's people many Prophets Apostles Martyrs and Confessors who have most what been sufferers yea lest thou condemne that Just One Christ himself who died as a Malefactor by popular suffrages and the sentence of a timerous judge nay take heed lest thou condemn the righteous God as if he were unjust in his providences and permissions Take heed thy heart fret not against God nor be
thou 'T is hard for us to give a just reason and Christian account for most of our weepings and least of those that are most excessive we weep more for any loss of a momentary toy then for the absence of our Lord the loss of Gods love the loss of a good conscience the Churches wastes Jerusalems ruines and the sins of our own souls or of others which call us to mourning As our blessed Lord said to the women weeping when they saw him led to be crucified so may every dead friend or other object of our weeping say to us Weep not for me but weep for your selves Luke 23.28 who many times have most cause to sorrow then when you sorrow least some tears are to be wept for again Tears cannot profit the dead but they may the living yea I recant they may profit even dead souls who are dead as St. 1 Tim. 5.6 Prov. 8.36 John 11.35 Paul speaks even while they live who love death tears and prayers may be a means by Gods grace to revive these as Jesus his tears were to bring to life Lazarus Tears are the distillations of love resolved into drops by the coolings of some ambient sorrow We cannot love any thing in our selves or others so justifiably as our and their souls In reference to these all our passions and affections should be rightly disciplined and ranged duly and exercised and improved as most needing and deserving our cares and counsels our prayers and tears Nor can I here omit to lay to your hearts what this Noble Gentleman suggested to me when being sent for I came to him the morning before he died He told me he was very sorry that it was so late with him yea he feared very late he had been long fed with some hopes of life but now he believed his time was short which he could wish he had more improved to his souls comfort while his strength of body had been somewhat better I know men and women too have a feminine and foolish fear to dispirit or deject any patient or decumbent with the serious thoughts or speech of their dying for fear their sad physick and nauseous prescriptions should not operate well on the ill humors of their bodies But the care of removing any burthens or obstructions upon their souls and consciences this must be deferred and neglected till there is such a decline of life and spirits as hangs out the black flag of death and despair then ubi desinit Medicus incipit Theologus when Physitians have in vain done their best the Divine must God knows too oft in vain do his best also for alas he hath little time in the agonies of death and the precipitations of life to search and apply the necessary remedies or comforts of a languishing soul which is as if a man should begin to read a long letter of great and present concernment when his candle was at the last twinkling A method certainly not more preposterous then dangerous to sick bodies and diseased souls If our Physitians were meer disciples of Galen and Hippocrates I should not wonder at their dilatory indifferencies as to mens souls and intensiveness only to their bodies but being many of them very learned men and some of them very good Christians I humbly conceive it would no way misbecome them nor any way impede the success of their arts and applications if they did upon the first perception of a dubious and dangerous state of any sick body with Christian wisedom and charity advise them yea and intreat them not to neglect the care of preparing their souls for God that as they will do their best with Gods help to cure their bodily distempers so it will no way hinder their skill or cure to carry on the concurrent welfare of their souls so as becomes good Christians because the event of all sickness is uncertain diseases oft flatter where they destroy therefore Physitians and Friends should be with all speed faithful to their Patients souls as well as bodies It bears no proportion for a sick patient to be visited twice or thrice in a day by Physitians in order to the bodies health and by a Divine once in a week it may be and this not till the last exigent and gasp of life as if this would abundantly serve the turn When men begin more to value their pretious and immortal souls they will more prize the help of true Divines whose prayers connsels and spiritual assistance being Gods indulgence and ordinance in his Church is usually followed with most gracious and comfortable successes toward sick persons that desire their help and send timely for them as St. James 5.14 James adviseth yea commandeth to do when Christians are cast down in bodily or spiritual dejections and when they are desirous to have the comfort of forgiveness of sins further sealed to them yea who is there so able so knowing so self-confident so comfortable in health that may not and usually doth not finde great damps dulness and difficulties of soul in sickness these are prone to be dispirited as well as the bodies of the best Christians and may well bear with nay most earnestly desire to have their weak hands supported and feeble knees strengthned by the counsel prayers and comforts of true Ministers Yea in the most desperate cases when dissolute livers are catched in Gods net or toile and now begin to make their addresses to God and preparations for eternity even in these cases the diligent and frequent assistance of discreet Ministers helping poor creatures to search and try their hearts to see their sins to look to God in Christ to turn to him and lay hold upon him doth many times work miraculous effects both to sanctifie sickness and to save souls so much doth God blesse the means he hath appointed when duly used which supinely neglected the end must needs fail I know many men and women too are now turned Preachers as not a few are turn'd Physitians which truly in my judgement amount no higher for the most part then Empiricks and Mountebancks in both making more work for able Divines and Physitians too This I am sure few men in their wits and willing to live but court the best Physitians nor do I see less reason why they should not desire and employ the best and truest Divines such as are most able and skilful most willing and faithful most authorized and commissionated by Christ and his Church to assist and comfort to instruct and absolve if need be dying sinners beyond what any man ordinarily can do in his health much less in the distempers dejections and darknesses of his sickness both corporal and spiritual who yet now affect in it most what in the frolick of their lives to be their own Teachers and Preachers their own Ordainers and Confessors their own Bishops and Presbyters too contrary to the judgment of all pious Antiquity who thought the Evangelical Ministry not an
fit for children not to be denied or envied you only please to give those Christians leave who may without vanity think themselves by Gods mercy as well advised and consciencious in their Religion as your selves yea and more cautious of superstition then you seem to be Eccles 7.16 Be not righteous overmuch neither make thy self over-wise who are thus of late shrunk to be over-righteous and negatively superstitious I say give us leave to use such Christian liberty and duties as God hath allowed Religion encourageth and experience of pious proficiency highly recommends to us by the vote and suffrage of your and our pious Progenitors in the Church of England which in this as many other excellent appointments hath most undeservedly and indignely suffered infinitely below its former reformed worth its admired constitution and most enviable condition through the ignorance petulancy and insolency of some pitiful pretenders God knows for the most part of plebeian spirits and mechanick proportions who undertake thus severely to catechise and discipline not only the Nobility Gentry and Commonalty of this Nation but the Clergy and Ministry of this Church which was not exceeded in all the world as if they never knew how to spell the A b c or primer of Religion for so I esteem these outward orders and exercises of it until some new Masters had lent them their sharp fescues which were first made of a Scotch scabbard This vindication as I owe to the honour of this Nation to the piety of this Reformed Church to my own calling and conscience so I cannot omit to ground it upon this Text and express it upon this occasion as very proper methods and pious means used to lay those things to heart which Solomon here commends and the wisedome of God requires of the living in their respects to the dead who in my judgment are far more becoming to the interests of both living and dead Christians committed to their graves by the sound of the Evangelical trumpet setting forth the hopes of both dead and living by reading prayer or exhortation then by those uncouth soundings of military trumpets which seem only to add to the triumphs and pomp of death but not to the hope or faith or comfort or manners of Christians If it be matter of civil state and decorum to persons of great quality yet I see no sense or reason they should justle out of the Church any offices of Christian piety befitting the dead or the living Thus I have done with the Text and am now to give you Right Honorable and Beloved some little model of this house of mourning to which you are come this day which is greater in many degrees then you are wonted to go to This sad occasion if rightly understood will make its own way to your hearts when I have given you some account of those special regards for which it doth deserve not only a more then ordinary mourning emphatick sympathies from you but to make deeper impressions upon your spirits And this I shall do briefly not tanquam conductitius orator venalis praeco or as a man professoriae linguae truncae manus as Agrippina called Seneca no I thank God I am above any such snares and servitudes of soul as will for fear or favour flatter either the dead or the living What I shall speak of the dead shall be words of soberness and truth as in the presence of God and of you his people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as a lover of truth and virtue as an assertor of such honest and ingenuous freedom in speaking as dares to oppose and confute if need be vulgar errors and false surmises And however I am most unfeignedly sorry as a man for this sad occasion yet I am as a Minister so far glad of this present imployment because however I may be less proportionable to its dimensions and your expectations yet I have hereby the opportunity given me to express such an honour love and respect to this noble person's name and memory now dead as I confess was one of my highest ambitions in this world Not only as he stood related a Grand-child Son and Heir apparent to that Right Honorable Family whose happiness I have rather seriously wished then been able ever effectually to promote But taking him in his private sphear and personal confinements you will give me leave to own him as a Gentleman many ways endeared to my particular love care honour and prayers first by long acquaintance from his cradle to his coffin which breeds secret and tacit endearments on our hearts as Ivy that roots where it is long contiguous Next by neerer and domestick conversation he living four years in my house with his Tutor and other attendants befitting his quality at those years when being but a youth of 13 or 14 years he carried himself with so much civility modesty ingenuity and manliness as made his company both worthy and fit for men so little of petulancy pride or moroseness incident to young Gentlemen of high parts and expectations that he seemed by his gentleness candor and humility as if he were ignorant both of his own high and noble quality and also of others usual but ignoble vanities and vapourings which ill become any men but most of all those that pretend to any true honour or generous extraction The confidence of his noble parents and relations committing him thus to my care and superintendency gave me an opportunity as welcome to me as any could have befaln me which was to discharge a solemn promise I made to his most noble Mother seven years before not only with civility but with sanctity at her earnest and importune desiring of me to assure her while I lived I would not be wanting what in me lay to his honour and happiness She also then bespake his living with me when ever it should be opportune for his breeding and my reception of him Gods providence so ordered things that what was passionately desired and seriously promised in time came to pass in which I need not tell you how much the grateful memory of her most deserving virtue commanded me to contribute all the care and discretion I was capable of for the absolving of my soul to God and the dead in that particular that I might answer and follow with my best endeavours of counsels prayers and examples those thoughts of virtue piety and honour which his excellent Mother had living expressed toward him as her only child a Son I am sure of her cares and counsels prayers and tears both living and dying so oft and infinitely solicitous have I seen her noble and pious soul that this her Son might prove a person of such virtue and piety as are the only true foundations of temporal and eternal honour From my domestick care of him he was sent much at my instance and perswasion to Trinity Colledge in Cambridge continuing there two years that he might first add learning to his
seasonable Physick as well as food Who knows but his bodily infirmities might be an holy meanes to cure those of his soule of which as he could not but be conscious so he did with a very pathetick humble and I hope penitent unfeigned sense confess them to God and my self and possibly to others His knowledge as a Christian was too great to suffer ●im to be ignorant or sensless of his sins whereof he stood guilty before God He is very miserable that flatters himself to be without them or is reniorseless for them Who can know that is acknowledge sufficiently with penitent shame and sorrow the transgressions and errors of his youth as David saith Psal 25.7 Optimus ille qui minimis urgetur as St. Jerome by his own experience cries out He is happyest that is least overcome by them most humbled for them and strives most against them till he hath quite overcome them Although I must profess to all the world my ignorance of any way either foul riotous notorious scandalous or debauched in him as to swearing profaneness or luxury in his later yeares since he wrote man and was out of his pupillage not any thing heretofore did I observe or hear beyond what is usual but not therefore venial in most young persons as quick passions and such surprises of the beast and devil within us as are incident to high yea all spirits together with the usual methods of young Gentlemen by sports and idle travellings to unravel by their after-neglect and forgetting of all literature and serious studies whatever learning their former education had wrought for them and woven in them He did acknowledge that he had sins enough to exercise Gods infinite mercy and to need all good Christians charity and prayers while he lived Who is so happy as he can dispense with either of them I know after the rate not onely of our times which are bad and loose enough but of all times that a little modesty and civil restraint short of the highest vices seem a great vertue in young great and florid persons The impotent and impudent debanchery of many makes their folly outvye their fortunes Magnitudinem fortune peccandi licentia metiuntur deform their Honours blaspheme their Baptism corrupt the age in which they live disdain their God and damn their own with others soules insomuch that many young people are ripe in sin while their years are yet green and their experience of things but very raw Commonly men and women flatter themselves as if they were birds of a rare feather and jewels of oriental lustre if they be but civil polite formal inoffensive to man if they be but onely apishly petulant scenically affected and fulsomly vain and not monstrously vicious To expect any thing from them at those years that is learned serious studious judicious vertuous generous consciencious truly religious towards God seems to them as unreasonable and unseasonable as if one should look for ripe fruits in time of blossomes or for harvest in the spring as if life time strength beauty wit and spirits with all other talents which they have in their youth were none of Gods gifts nor any good use or account to be made of them more then children doe of their babies and rattles to use and abuse them to break and loose them Whereas indeed so soon as we begin to be capable to sin knowingly and reflexively we ought to begin to repent seriously The smitings of our hearts and checks of conscience which this Gentleman told me he ever had after any known fin should be minded and religiously considered as Gods gracious rebukes as Christs looking back on Peter which smote that rock so effectually that rivers of tears gushed out As we are loth to be long or a little miserable so we should be as loth to be long or little sinful The civil and formal righteousness of Scribes and Pharisees will not bring us to the kingdome of heaven it must be exceeded or we shall be damned both young and old There must be Christian graces proportionable to Christs doctrine precepts promises baptism sufferings and love to bring us to Christs glory They are undone that are afraid or ashamed in their youth to be too good As we cannot be too soon happy in our own sense nor can we be too soon holy in Gods sense Such as intend Gods glory and their own eternal welfare in earnest must not flatter themselves in youth as if a little good nature would goe a great way to save young men because the highest praise as Aristotle sayes of young ones is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be hopeful accessible tractable 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not to be monitoribus asperi morose offensive disdainful to all good counsel and counsellors This is well spoken for heathen Philosophers and Poets but this is not the height which Christian Preachers must require and Christian people exact of themselves if they mean to go to heaven in case they die as they may in their youth Are not many cut off daily in their essays of repentance and delays of reforming being miserable before they would because they would not be good so soon as God would and they should have been As for those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 refractory reluctancies and recalcitrations against all good counsel monition and example to which high-crested and obstinate youth is too prone this noble Gentleman was so far removed as to my experience from them that a little before and soon after he had compleated what he imagined to be his chiefest worldly happiness when I visited him he did of himself desire me once and again that I would advise him what I conceived the best method of living to the improvement of his mind and time both for God and man what books were most proper for his reading and study both in piety and prudence The procedure of this good motion was prevented by his languishing sickness and that valetudinary 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indisposition which presently grew upon him and after five moneths so prevailed that it banished all hopes of long lasting in this world The importunity of his cough was such as forbad almost all long discourses with him which perceiving I thought it a work not unworthy of my faithful respects to him to send him my advise in writing that he might at his best leisure either read it or have it read to him which I know he did with as much regard and attention as could be expected in the course of his languishing tedious state yet he had some frequently to read choise places of Scripture to him particularly when the 8th of the Romans was read to him by that person whom he most loved whose tears in reading best interpreted not the Text but her own heart and sympathies to him he would oft pray her to repeat some verses once and again to give him leave to pause upon them and sometimes he ended his meditation and
by the meritorious death and passion of the Lord of life and glory the great and promised Messias thy beloved Son our blessed Saviour Jesus Christ who by suffering death hath both overcome death and satisfied thy justice for us freeing all true believing and penitent sinners from the sting curse and fear of death both temporal and eternal bringing by his glorious Gospel life and glory honour and happiness to light We beseech thee O heavenly Father for his sake who hath tasted death for us all to magnifie thy infinite mercy upon us before we go from hence and be no more seen O be better to us then ever we should be to our selves or we are utterly lost Bestow upon us all those graces and gifts which may both teach and help us to lead an holy life and die an happy death Prevent us graciously and follow us effectually with the motions and operations of thy holy Spirit which may excite and inable us speedily and throughly to mortifie the life and power of every sin in us even while it is called to day lest death and hell prevent us in our delays and presumptions Sanctifie to us all those occasions monitions and warnings by which thy providence presents the thoughts and state of death to us as the truest glass of all earthly glory that we may so lay them to heart as to die dayly to all inordinate love of our selves and of this world which at best is loss and dung in comparison of the excellency of our Lord Jesus Christ in whom thy love to us is better then life it self Thou hast by thy power given us our lives in this vain world by thy providence thou hast preserved them by thy patience thou hast spared them to this day notwithstanding we have with many sins and much unthankefulness provoked thee to our hurt yea by thy holy Word thou hast shewed and offered to us the way and reward of a better life upon our turning to thee with all our hearts from dead works to serve the living God O teach us so to number our days as to apply our hearts to true wisedom to value this pretious moment not to mispend it yea to redeem it because the days past have been evil and upon this moment depends our eternal fate O thou that hast made our moment here though it be sinful not wholly miserable but hast sweetned it with many mercies let not our eternity be miserable and sinful It is one great comfort in our mortality as to this life that we consider our sins shall not be immortal in us O let not sin die with us but before us as a work of choise and grace not of infirmity force and necessity We humbly lay hold on that eternal life which is thy gift through Jesus Christ our Lord. As we every day grow elder so Lord make us every day somewhat better as neerer to our graves so fitter for heaven teach us to live every day as if it were our last that we may never live in any such way wherein we cannot meet death comfortably make us such as thou wouldst have us while we live that we may find thee such as we would have thee when we die that when we come to die we may have nothing else to do but to resign our bodies to thy custody and our souls to thy mercy who having made this life on earth common to the bad and good the just and the unjust hast certainly prepared another state in which shall be infinite difference and everlasting distinction of recompenses to such as fear thee and such as fear thee not O enable us to do our duty and we are sure to receive thy rewards write thy name in our hearts and we need not doubt but our names are written in heaven even in thy Book of Life Sweeten the bitter thoughts of death to us by our faith and hope in the meritorious death the victorious resurrection and glorious ascension of Jesus Christ for our sakes let us find by our holiness and newness of life by our being dead with Christ and living to him that we are passed from death to life That our departure hence may be a joyful passage to a better life which consists in the vision and fruition of thy self O blessed Creator who must needs be better then all things thou hast made and as more necessary so infinitely more useful sweet and comfortable to us O that we may be willing and fitted to leave all to come to thy self that we may with all the blessed Angels and Saints for ever in heaven see love praise admire adore and enjoy thee O holy Father Son and Spirit the only true God To whom be glory and honour life and power thanks and dominion for ever Amen Februarii 17. Anno 1657. Observationes habitae In Dissectione Corporis Illustrissimi Nobilissimi Viri D. ROBERTI RICH coram Medicinae Doctoribus Chirurgis infra subscriptis 1. INventi sunt Pulmones substantiâ duriores quam secundùm naturam mole longè majores quam pro ratione pectoris toti ferè scrophulosi caseosâ materiâ magna ex parte purulentâ referti Superiori parte lobi dextri lacuna reperta est pure plena ad quantitatem cochlearis unius 2. Aqua collecta in sinistra cavitate Thoracis ad fesque librae quantitatem vel circiter 3. Auricula dextra Cordis major erat sinistrâ proportione ferè quintuplici 4. Mesenterium refertum glandulis scrophulosis aliquibus magnitudinem Ovi Gallinacei aequantibus aliis minoribus materiâ quadam sebaceâ plenis cum purulentiae guttis hinc inde sparsis in aliquibus 5. In substantia Panchreatis glandulae peregrinae huic annexus tumor scrophulosus grandis ad hepar usque protensus Orisicium Venae Portae comprimens 6. Vesicula fellis exteriùs albicans flaccida aliquam quantitatem fellis dilutioris continens 7. Hepar colore Albidiori substantiâ debito majori 8. Splen satìs laudabilis nisi quòd hinc inde granulis scrophulosis refertus 9. Inte Musculos Lumbares glandulae duae ingentes scrophuloae à quinta vertebra sinistrae partis una ad Inguen usque se protendebat ex dextra parte altera non adeo longa Fran. Prujean Geor. Bates Tho. Coxe Robertus Lloyd J. Goddard Theophilus Garancieres Edward Arris Chirurgus John Soper Chirurgus I Have judged my publishing of this Funeral-Sermon upon the immature death of the Son the fittest occasion I am ever like to have while I live to present those who can look upon eminent goodness without evil eyes with a short Epitome of the Mothers worth as it was long since in way of Epitaph composed by a person whose ambition is That justice might be done to the dead as well as to the living Vicious minds and manners like dead carkasses are then best when so buried that nothing may appear to posterity of their noysome and contagious fedities But exemplary and meritorious