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A59194 Daniel Sennertus his meditations setting forth a plain method of living holily and dying happily / written originally in Latin, and now translated into English. Sennert, Daniel, 1572-1637. 1694 (1694) Wing S2536; ESTC R19038 74,434 198

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much pains do some Men take how many Difficulties do they Encounter with that they may leave a Rich and Pleasant Inheritance to their Children Tho' many times in the getting of it they do such unjust and wicked Actions as are never to be purg'd away but in the Eternal Flames of Hell And what do they keep to themselves as the reward of all their Labours Nothing but a Despicable Winding-Sheet and a Coffin made up of four Boards this is the Recompence of all their Toil But if something more be spent at thy Funeral it is commonly laid out more for the Fame and Credit of thy Kindred and the Surviving Heir than for thee so that a farthing should not sometimes be bestowed upon the dead Corps if they could but secure their own Honour The Prayer O Merciful Father give me such Courage and Resolution that I may not be affrighted at the ghastly appearance of Death nor faint when I think on my last dying Agonies and that my Body must rot in the Earth But having my mind fix'd on thee and on the Glories of the Eternal State I may put off all fear of Death and depart this Life with Joy and Readiness with a firm hope of a Glorious Resurrection and of enjoying that Bliss and Glory with which both Body and Soul shall be endued in the Celestial and Happy Life And because I came naked into this World let me willingly leave all Worldly things which may retard my flight to Heaven O Lord Jesu who for our sakes didst taste the bitterness of Death and in those Agonies of Mind didst sweat great drops of blood grant that by the Merits of thy Passion I may never feel the bitter pangs of Eternal Death CHAP. III. After Death there remains another Life and Death is the entrance either to Eternal Happiness or Misery ALthough the Body after Death corrupts and putrifies and returns to the Earth from whence it was taken yet for as much as the Soul is immortal and the Body shall arise at the last Day and be again united to the Soul and so the whole Man shall be translated into another State It is therefore requisite that a Christian should not confine his Meditations upon death only but should be very Solicitous that his Life may be happy in the other World Many Men indeed lead such Lives as if they did not believe there were a God nor any other life after this but when they come to dye they will be convinced of these truths by their own Consciences and by those notions which are implanted in the minds of all Men that good Deeds shall be Rewarded and Wickedness punished in the other World and though they should not believe this even when they are dying yet afterwards they will feel it to their unspeakable Sorrow However the immortality of the Soul has been believed by the whole Race of Mankind at all times and if we Consult either Sacred or Heathen Writers we shall find that another life after this hath been asserted by all not to heap up the many Testimonies of Holy Scriptures this one of our Saviour may suffice which Comprehends as it were the Sum of all the rest The Hour is coming Joh. 5.28 in the which all that are in the Graves shall hear the Voice of the Son of God v. 25. And shall come forth they that have done good unto the Resurrection of Life and they that have done Evil unto the Resurrection of Damnation And indeed if we consider the lives of those Persons which the Sacred Scriptures affirm to have liv'd devoutly from hence we may have an evident Testimony of a future Life for in all Ages how much Misery have they undergone who have endeavoured to lead Pious Lives and to be conformable to the Divine Will very Remarkable are the Calamities of the Holy Fathers under the Old Testament the Martyrdoms of Christs Apostles under the New and the Tribulations of others who have Worshipp'd God in Spirit and in Truth But if they had look'd no farther than this Life no doubt but they would have follow'd the common way of the World and have indulged themselves in Ease and Pleasures as their Lusts and Appetites bid them Which since they did not do it is a convincing Testimony that they sought a more happy and a better Life after the Miseries of this For as St. Paul says 1 Cor. 15.19 If in this Life only we have hope in Christ we are of all Men most miserable Now if we Consult the Heathens as often as we hear them commend Piety and Justice and other Virtues so often we are to think they declare Mans Immortality and a Future Life for to what purpose were it to follow Virtue and suffer Evil if there remain'd no hopes of another life This Doctrine the Wise Men in all Ages taught Zoroaster Hermes Trismagistus Orpheus Phocylides Theogenis Homer Hesiod Pindar Pythagoras Socrates Plato Aristotle Cicero Virgil Horace Ovid Seneca and all the Wise Famous Philosophers and from hence it was that all Nations had a Religion and certain Rites whereby they worshipp'd the Gods and believ'd a Hell and Elysian fields If we run over the whole World we shall find that the most Rude Barbarous and Savage People even those who scarcely seem to have any Humanity in them have all by a common consent embraced this Faith for this Notion was not bred in the Schools of Philosophers and so spread abroad in the World but it is implanted and engraven in the Breast of every Man Rom. 2.14.25 and if some Men have endeavoured to perswade themselves that things are otherwise yet could they never bring their minds firmly to believe so for a wicked Man as that Platonick said would not have his Soul to be Immortal for fear he should suffer the due Punishments of his Crimes but he prevents the Sentence of his Judge and condemns himself to be guilty of Death But there is no need of saying more on this Argument since amongst Christians t is certain and undoubted that after this life there remains another But forasmuch as the future State of Men after this life is not alike but some shall abound with all felicity whilst others shall suffer all kind of miseries hence we see that the success of a Man's happiness depends upon his death and that all our felicity or infelicity happens either from a good or a bad death and that on one moment depends an Eternity either of infinite blessedness or unspeakable misery for in what ever condition death finds and leaves any Man in the very same shall he appear at the last judgment Eccl. 11.3 if the tree fall toward the South or toward the North in the place where the tree falleth there it shall be And thus as every Man dies the same shall he be in the other life for as St. Paul says we must all appear before the Judgment Seat of Christ 2 Cor. 5.10 that every