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A15471 A comfortable meditation of humane frailtie, and divine mercie in two sermons upon Psalme 146.4. and Psalme. 51.17. The one chiefly occasioned by the death of Katharine, youngest daughter of Mr. Thomas Harlakenden of Earles-Cone in Essex. Williamson, Thomas, 1593-1639. 1630 (1630) STC 25738; ESTC S106233 35,205 48

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die in the Lord they rest from their labours and their workes follow them Rev. 14. The thoughts of Gods worship good workes have their abiding fruit for ever and when all faile us they follow goe along with us after death in their reward and crowne but the bent of our hearts if it be on by matters we may say what is this we doe what fruit will this afford us in or after death In that very day our thoughts are cut off and perish Our dayes are a declining shadow Psal 102. and the shadow declines and lengthens as the Sunne goeth off or on us when it is direct or meridian short is our shadow and stretched out at even when the light of Christ is far from us then according to the mold of our owne blinde thoughts our shadow lengthens for life is our shadow Iob 14. but then we thinke of death as farre removed In hoc enim fallimur quod mortem prospicimus saith Seneca Now let our eyes be truly inlightened and all those thoughts perish and we perceive life sliding swifter away than a Weavers shuttle Iob 7. and so the Lord is said to shorten our dayes Psal 89. not that he cuts off or depriveth us of that time which hee had determined but of that which our owne thoughts have minted And ô we vaine and blinde that thinke thus as if wee were at a fee with death and never to be removed Nullius vita non spectat in crastinum saith Seneca wee thinke all to morrow we shall live and we shall live better to morrow and the life we forge and fancie to us failes us even before we thinke on it In that verie day his thoughts perish Be we therefore advised to fasten on the present time to repent to day and beleeve to day let us provoke our hearts to good purposes and to day let us put our hands to practise them But there be who thinke or dreame rather of future expiations or satisfactions to be made after death of a release after a time in hellish durance but these are groundlesse perishing thoughts It is for men once to dye but after death commeth judgement Heb. 9.27 Therefore the tree of our life while it hath a standing let it bend to God-ward and then we shall both stand and fall to our owne Lord and Master and let us seeke presently to bee reconciled to God through the pretious purgation of our soules which is through faith in Christ his bloud and then wee shall never be confounded our thoughts shall not perish or bee made void Praeveniendus ergo dies est qui praevenire consuevit saith S. Austen wee must trim our lamps betime with the oyle of faith and love and prevent the day of death lest it prevent us our eternitie of woe or blisse wee should not hazard it to after-thoughts and to second plots yea surely it cannot be mended afterward the watchlesse virgins because unprovided then were undone for ever and though sorrowing learnt them wit they had no time to practise it In that verie day his thoughts perish And to you especially my Brethren in the Ministerie let me speake in the words of S. Paul As we have opportunitie let us die good Gal. 6.10 let us be doing good while wee may Dum superest Lachesi quod torqueat Should such as wee cast in our thoughts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to serve our selves or the times for a season and thinke then afterward 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to serve the Lord in his Vineyard perhaps at even but when our carnall thoughts have reached up to their ends alas while wee so thinke while our thoughts are in our hearts our thoughts may perish the hand of Justice may write bitter things against us in that verie moment high is our race and life is perishing heavenly be our thoughts let us take that good of our high calling at the first opportunitie the world should stoope to it for the fashion of the world passeth away but the Crowne is uncorruptible which God reserveth for us if wee finish our course with a conscience of his ordinance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with feare and trembling The Atticke Oratours saith Quintilian are Eloquentiae quadam frugalitate contenti ac semper manum intra pallium continentes just so many of us doe thinke with Nicodemus we can plead for God in sober silence husbanding both our professing and preaching of Christ Jesus for feare of the Jewes lest we should run into suspition with great ones and hazard our stocke of worldly favours The argument of my Text is good to raise our diligence namely that we may bee called to dye in the midst of our ambitious and terrene thoughts and so to dye before wee have begun to live and so we may live and dye in vaine and without Use a wretched mishap especially in a most spirituall and heavenly calling a Prophet a Seer of the Lord to perish before hee hath done any good a worthlesse case and most to be feared To conclude heare we the words of our Savior to his Apostles What I say unto all I say unto you Watch Mat. 26. and heare what Salomon saith Whatsoever thy hand findeth to doe doe it for there is no worke no device nor wisdome in the grave whither thou goest Eccles 9.10 In that verie day his thoughts perish FINIS A FVNERAL SERMON PSAL. 51.17 A broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise AS all civill bodies or common-wealths so that of the Jewes was made up of three diverse parts the rich the middle sort the poore and so their oblations were diverse from the herd the flock the fowles of the aire and diverse often was their end and acceptation he in the impurity of his heart killeth an oxe or sacrificeth a kid Decollat canem saith the Prophet is as if he cut off a dogs necke so little is the Lord affected to the worship wee doe him in meere ceremony but the honest contrite soule the poore in spirit that comes trembling with his paire of turtle doves repentance and faith to this man will I looke saith the Lord Es 66. The poore service we doe him if it be in spirit and in truth he takes delight in it wherefore David here at the 15. verse praying for ability to praise or worship the Lord aright sets it out First by negation even what it is not in comparison thou desirest not sacrifice thou delightest not in burnt offerings Secondly hee positively concludes what indeed that is which indeed God wills and likes the sacrifices of God are the contrite spirit A broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise Not that the Jewish rights were not Gods ordinances or were then in abrogation in sepultura in their buriall but because these outward forms or performances did never satisfie not please the Lord without the sacrifice and service of the heart a lip-devotion a deed done an heartlesse manner of worship