Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n abraham_n enter_v great_a 12 3 2.0729 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A90298 Immoderate mourning for the dead, prov'd unreasonable and unchristian. Or, Some considerations of general use to allay our sorrow for deceased friends and relations but more especially intended for comfort to parents upon the death of their children. By John Owen, chaplain to the right honourable Henry Lord Grey of Ruthen. Owen, John, chaplain to Lord Grey of Ruthin. 1680 (1680) Wing O825aA; ESTC R231417 48,707 156

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

habitum non datur regressus our Philosophy tells us that is though it be possible to recover the sight when the Organ of the Eye is only inflam'd or distemper'd or grown over with a film yet when a man is stark blind and his Eyes are dropt out of his Head then such a recovery is utterly impossible and so Death being a total privation of motion sensation and all the acts of the animal life there is no returning after that has once pass'd upon us to any such vital operations we are says the Prophet Samuel 2 Sam. 14. and 14. ver as water spilt upon the ground which cannot be gathered up again that is as Water spilt upon the ground presently vanishes out of sight and sinks into the Earth and by the diffluence of its parts is so disperst and wasted that there is no gathering it up again in the same quantity that it fell so Death causes such a dissolution of the parts of our Bodies that there is no reuniting them in the same manner or forming them into the same orderly lively Fabrick by all the power and art in the World Can these dry bones live says the Prophet is a Question that might very well be askt as being a thing almost incredible but that nothing is impossible with God But then how is it that these dry bones will live surely not in the same way as formerly nor can they be enlivened by any humane power or Art but they shall be quickned by a miraculous power by the same power which raised Jesus from the Dead but at present during the time and reign of mortality they must remain rotten and shatter'd and liveless and only in a possibility to return to life by the wonderful power of God in the Morning of the Resurrection And Job in the 24. c. and 14. v. asks much the same question If a man die shall he live again where Job does not so much doubt or question the truth of a Resurrection as puts it out of all doubt by so propounding it if a man die shall he live yes he shall but not by any power of nature to restore it self nor that there is any remains of spirit in man after death which can quicken into new life of its own accord nor that there is any seed of immortality in humane Bodies as some of the Jews did fondly conceive when they imputed the Resurrection to the vertue of a Worm in the back-bone which never dies And therefore though we are to believe another life yet we must believe it in another place For when our life here is once expir'd there is no return of it till God breath into us a new spirit of life and inspire us with new vigour and motion And therefore pray'd in another place that God would continue his life a little longer upon Earth as verily believing he should never see it any more when he had once left it Spare me O Lord a little longer before I go hence and be no more seen Ps 39. and 13. v. Man sayes Solomon goeth to his long home and the mourners go about the streets long indeed whence there will be no moving or stirring a foot till the great day of Judgment And not improper to our purpose is that observation of the Fox in the Fable who when he was much urg'd and importun'd to go and pay a Visit to the Lyon in the time of his sickness and told that his Company would be more useful and serviceable to the Lyon in order to the helping him to make his will as being one famous for his wisdom and sagacity answered by no means for there was a great deal of danger in going to visit this King of Beasts For he had observ'd a great resort to the Lyon but saw no marks or footsteps of any that ever return'd from him Vestigia nulla retrorsum and so may we say that we have known millions that have enter'd into the shades below but none that ever came back from thence and therefore we find that when Dives was in torment and made this earnest request to Abraham that one might rise from the dead and inform his Brethren of the truth of Hell torments and by such a wonderful information might scare them from doing any thing that might bring them thither yet this request was denied him upon this account Joh. 7. and 9. v. there being so great a publication of a future State by Moses and the Prophets and other divine testimonies and besides Abraham told him that between us and you there is a great Gulf fixed which place is enough to evince the impossibility of a return to this World after Death and therefore we imagin that David at the parting of his Child took his final leave of him bidding him an Eternal farewel and an Everlasting good night For he considered that there was no hopes of seeing him again under the same circumstances or conversing with him in the flesh and therefore having decently committed his Body to the ground and laid him in the bosom of our common Mother Earth and perhaps dropping a tear or two upon the Hearse and besprinkling the Grave with tears as our Saviour did Lazarus in testimony how much he lov'd him he retires from the Funeral with great Solemnity we may imagine but without any further Lamentations saying wherefore should I fast can I bring him back again I shall go to him but he shall not return to me But then perhaps several may be ready to tax this Discourse with impertinency and say what needs there all this stir and ado to prove a thing that never was gainsaid or contradicted as namely the impossibility of the dead coming to life again and rising out of their Graves to live anew in this World who is so silly or credulous as to expect such a thing or who would desire to see the Ghosts or any representations of their Friends when they are dead and gone To which I answer That I believe there is none so silly or whimsical or deeply melancholy as to expect a return of their Friends and Relations from the Grave But then people make a great Argument against themselves and do highly condemn themselves of the greatest folly in their inordinate sorrowings for the Dead For why should they take on and weep so bitterly for the loss of a Child or Relation when they believe no such thing as a return from Death why do they wound themselves with such mighty and piercing sorrows for their Relations when they know they are dead and gone and that there is no hopes of seeing them again as long as the World endures This indeed is their folly to grieve for an irrecoverable loss and to weep incessantly at the remembrance of deceased Friends For t is the vainest idlest thing that can be to mourn when all the mourning in the World will do no good neither to us or our Friends and therefore this consideration that all our
attend our Children and those great infirmities which they often labour under and the more reason to be humbled when we reflect upon our selves as the Authors of them The truth is we have laid a train of mischiefs in our Bodies by our Vices which will certainly ruine and blow up our Children we have Created Diseases in our Bodies by trespassing too much upon nature and offering great violencies to our Constitution we have broken and shattered our Bodies by great excess by hard and unseasonable Drinkings and that may be one reason why we deliver down such a weak and crasie Progeny We have turn'd our Bodies into Bogs of uncleanness and putrefaction by our lust and wantonness and that may be a very proper reason why our Children carry about them such an Hospital of Diseases We have made our Bodies Sepulchres and burying places of Wine and that may be another reason why our Children become Corpses so soon and go so early to their Graves we eat and drink destruction to our Children by our Gluttony and Drunkenness we dig their Graves as well as our own with our Teeth and by swallowing down over-much we prepare them for the devoration of the Worms and 't is not any whit probable or likely that our Children should prove sound and healthful when we distemper our Bodies and treasure up Diseases And we may consider that we do propagate Diseases many times as well as our nature and there are Diseases which our Posterity find by woful experience run in a blood And therefore it is the duty of all Parents who desire the good of their Posterity and have a regard to the welfare and happiness of their Children to be very strict and punctual in observing the Rules of temperance and sobriety and in keeping their Bodies pure and undefil'd forasmuch as by a vicious and debaucht life we store up Diseases for Posterity and transmit great evils to our Generation For 't is certain that by great excesses and impure mixtures we do corrupt our bloud and consequently must convey a taint to our Off-spring and a rotten Father seldom produces any other than a Consumptive Child and besides our Vices are as communicable to our Children as our Diseases and who knows but that God might determine to take away Davids Child for this very reason lest he should Patrissare take after his Father he being the Child of an Incontinent Father and the Issue of such unhallowed Embraces And therefore when David was devoting his Enemies he makes this one of his dreadful Curses Let the iniquity of his Father be remembred with the Lord and let not the sin of his Mother be blotted out in the 119. Ps and 14. v. And truly I fear that there are too many ungodly Fathers and Mothers in the World whose wickedness and folly is such as that their Children suffer for it deeply being cover'd with Sores and Boils and having such Diseases breaking forth as are plain marks and tokens of their Parents sins God visiting the iniquities of the Fathers upon the Children and not suffering the iniquity of the Father to be conceal'd nor the sin of the Mother to be blotted out And therefore those Parents that are conscious to themselves of any such great and foul sin as Davids was have very great reason to lament the Diseases and Death of their Children when they consider that they themselves were the great Instruments of bringing all those miseries upon their Children and that their sins have had the greatest hand in their destruction And 't is very well worth our observation that in the first Age of the World it was never seen that the Son died before the Father but the oldest always went first But then when the wickedness of men grew great and their Pride so great that they were too high for their Station and would needs be building Castles in the Air and climbing up to the Battlements of Heaven it hapned presently afterwards that Terahs Son died before his Father and there is a special note and mark set upon it as a kind of wonder in the 9. of Genesis and 28. v. And Haran died before his Father Terah in the Land of his Nativity From whence we may observe that the wickedness of a Father is enough to alter the course of nature and to shorten his Childrens days and to accelerate their Death and bring them to the dust before their time And thus I have been somewhat long on this Argument that I might represent to you the danger of a sinning Father and Mother and what a fatal mischief they do their Children by their wickedness in that they bring a Curse upon their Family and by their sin occasion the Death and ruin of an Innocent Child as is clear and manifest in this one instance of Davids Child being taken away for the sin of his Father And we may also remember what a greivous Curse God entailed upon old Eli's Family and Posterity that they should die in the Flower of their Age and be cut off in their very prime and that chiefly upon the account of old Eli. And therefore Parents had need take a care to please God and that they do commit no great offence and to keep from great transgressions that so their Children may not repent that ever they were born of them and suffer sadly for their miscarriages And indeed all Parents that desire it should be well with their Children and that they should live long and see good days are concern'd to live a pure and unspotted life to possess their Vessels in sanctification and honour not in the lust of Concupisence otherwise they may bring great miseries upon their Children and perhaps a sudden Death and if they are resolv'd to continue their debaucheries and lewd Amours they had even as good strangle their Children when they are newly born and it may be a mercy to tear them in pieces as Medea did her Brother Absyrtus rather than they should live to inherit their Phthisicks Consumptions and loathsome Diseases and to be plagu'd all their life long with the miserable effects of their Parents sins And truly all vitious and ungodly Parents have the same grounds that David had to lament over their Children when they shall see them sick of their Diseases consuming with their Lusts and expiring under the curse of their sins And therefore if Parents would but take care to live better and more vertuously possibly their Children would not prove so sickly and might live longer for 't is certain that Davids Child was sick and died so soon for the wickedness of the Father Secondly Davids great grief and mourning for his Child during the time of its sickness was very just and reasonable upon another account as being an expression of humanity and the result of a natural affection For our Religion has not like the Stoick seal'd up the fountain of tears and wip'd them away from our eyes whilst we are in this bitter Achor