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A13752 Thrēnoikos The house of mourning; furnished with directions for preparations to meditations of consolations at the houre of death. Delivered in XLVII. sermons, preached at the funeralls of divers faithfull servants of Christ. By Daniel Featly, Martin Day Richard Sibbs Thomas Taylor Doctors in Divinitie. And other reverend divines. H. W., fl. 1640.; Featley, Daniel, 1582-1645. 1640 (1640) STC 24049; ESTC S114382 805,020 906

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Widow shee is dead while shee liveth even so are all such dead while they live dead in sinnes and trespasses and if so be those that are in this kind dead continue so till the death of the body seize upon them woe woe woe to them upon this followeth an eternall death endlesse easelesse and remedilesse torment upon body and soule for ever Thirdly the Saints have here consolation against the mortalitie and corruption whereto they are subject here in this world wherein their condition is common with the condition of all for that that befalleth one may befall every one in regard of the outward estate and condition All must die Nay further here is consolation against the distresses and afflictions and pressures whereto the Saints are subject above others for their profession sake in this very respect they are hated they are persecuted all that will live godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution and through many afflictions wee must enter into the kingdome of heaven Where is now their comfort surely this that is set before us you heard that naturall men are dead while they live but those that are in Christ doe live while they may seeme to bee dead Ionah lived when he was cast into the Sea swallowed up by a whale and was even as it were in hell so the Saints though swallowed up as wee may say in the tempestuous sea of this world by cruell Whales yet notwithstanding they still live that life that is begun here in this world whereof you heard before And to this purpose the Apostle Saint Paul in 2 Cor. 4. 8 9 10 11 12. sheweth plainly that though they are given up unto death daily for Iesus sake yet they are not destroyed not cleane swallowed up but that they live in Christ and that Christ liveth in them Wee are perplexed but not in despaire persecuted but not forsaken c. And this is it that doth comfort them both the fruition of that life that they have here and their expectation of the accomplishment and fulnesse thereof in the kingdome of heaven Now my brethren this is the rather to be observed of us because of all others the Saints seeme to be most subject to death And the truth is here is matter of admiration in regard of their happinesse that notwithstanding that condition whereto they are subject there is a life they enjoy in this world there is a better life prepared for them hereafter And what can be more desired Life of all things else is most esteemed Men are ready in sicknesse and in other distresses to spend all that they have as the Woman that was troubled with the bloudie issue spent all that shee had upon the Physitians to preserve life to recover health Solomon speaking according to the conceit of men saith that a living Dogge is better than a dead Lyon any life better then a death thus they imagine and Sathan well knew mens account of life when he could say Skin for skin yea all that a man hath will hee give for his life Now if so bee that this temporall life here that is but a flower but a bubble but a blast but a breath yea that life that in the shortnesse thereof is subject to so much perplexitie as it is be notwithstanding so highly esteemed what is the life here promised that while here in the enjoying in regard of the first fruits thereof is accompanied with such a peace as passeth understanding accompanied with the very joy of the Holy Ghost and in the consummation thereof such contentment such glory as the tongue of man cannot expresse the mind of man cannot conceive It is noted of the Apostle Saint Paul when he was caught up to the third heaven and saw but a glimpse of this life he did there see they are his owne words unutterable matter things that cannot bee exprest And therefore in this respect he saith and that which he saith may be most fitly applyed to this the things which eye hath not seene nor eare heard neither hath entred into the heart of man are such as God hath prepared for them that love him This is that Life which we are so to consider of as it may make us say with the Apostle I account that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to bee compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us for our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a farre more exceeding and eternall weight of glory It will be here said whence commeth this or what may bee the ground thereof My Text telleth you It is stiled here Grace of Life Neither will I here insist upon the divers acceptations of grace as it is in man as it is Gratis data or as it is in God as it is Gratis faciens making us accepted with himselfe It is more cleare then need to be proved that eternall life it commeth from divine grace Grace is the ground of it Being justified by grace saith the Apostle and againe by Grace you are saved And indeed all things that bring us thereto are in the Scriptures attributed to Grace And needs must it be so For First out of God there can be nothing done to move him to doe this or that as if it should be done for our sakes either meriting or procuring of it Hee is independant and we are depending upon him and whatsoever wee have is out of our selves and commeth from him Againe in Man there can be nothing What is there in man but miserie whatsoever man had or hath if there be any good thing he hath it from this fountaine of goodnesse all our sufficiencie is of God And this is briefly to be noted against that proud and arrogant position of our Adversaries concerning the merit of mans workes as if man by any thing in him could merit or deserve this life it is not the merit of life but the grace of life Surely they know not God they know not his infinitenesse his all-sufficiencie they know not man his emptinesse his impotencie his vilenesse his cursednesse they know not this life they know not the reward the excellencie of it the disproportion betweene any thing that man can doe and this life that is thus graciously bestowed that have such a conceit Let them therefore passe with their foolish opinion For our owne parts it affordeth to us another ground of comfort and that in regard of our unworthinesse for as we are creatures we are lesse then the least of Gods mercies but as we are mortall creatures dust and ashes much more unworthy of any favour but as we are sinfull creatures having provoked the justice of God most most unworthy of any grace of any life most worthy of all judgements and vengeance of eternall death and damnation Where is now our hope what ground shall wee have that have nothing in
bee dissolved wee shall presently have not a temporary habitation in Purgatory but an eternall in Heaven wee know that those who beleeve in Christ come into no condemnation but passe from death to life Wherefore let us not take on too much for those whom God hath taken away from us let us not trouble our selves for them that are at rest let us not shed over-many teares for them who can now shed no more teares let us not ●…oo much grieve for them who are free from all paine and griefe And for our selves let us not be as some are strucken dead with the very name of death let us not draw backe when God calleth for us when wee draw on and our Sunne is setting when the pangs of death give us warning againe and againe to goe out from hence out of our houses of clay let us embrace the day which bringeth us to our everlasting home which having taken us away from hence and losed us from the snares of this world returneth us to Paradise and the Kingdome of Heaven It followeth And their Workes follow them In the handling of this branch before wee tast of the sweet juyce we must pill the root wherein wee shall finde a fourefold difficulty 1. How workes are here distinguished from labours 2. How workes may be said to follow them 3. Whither they follow them 4. When they overtake them The first difficulty is thus expedited the workes of the dead are neere distinguished from their labours as the fruit from the branches that beare them the hyre from the day labour the prize from the race As those who taste the fruit of a tree are said by an Hebraisme to eate of the tree to him that overcommeth saith the Spirit I will give to eate of the Tree of Life which is in the midst of the Paradise of God So here in this Text workes are taken for the fruit of workes or their recompence of reward But how are workes in this sense said to follow the dead For all the works of the dead are either transient as meditations prayers pious ejaculations present relieving the poore and the like or they are permanent as their writings their building Colledges Hospitalls Churches and other Monuments of Pietie the former cannot follow the dead because they remaine not now nor the latter because they stay behind them here on earth I answer the speech is figurative and signifieth no motion of the deads workes but rather promotion of their persons and plentifull remuneration for their workes the phrase imports no more then that all their workes whether they bee actions of Saints or passions of Martyrs shall not come short of their guerdon but shall bee most certainely and undoubtedly rewarded If wee follow this interpretation of the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may some say will not Popish merit follow thereupon is not Heaven compared to servants wages to the souldiers crowne to the racers garland and here to the labourers pay and doth not a true labourour merit his pay a faithfull servant his wages a valiant souldier his crowne a speedie racer his prize this doubt may bee cleared and the question resolved by these Assertions following 1 That our good workes shall undoubtedly bee rewarded for it is the very dictate of nature that hee that soweth should reape and it is one of the first principles of Divinitie that there is a God and that hee is the rewarder of them that diligently seeke him yea so exact a rewarder is hee that not a widowes Mite not a cup of cold water but shall have an allowance for it Did Abraham did Isaack did Iacob did Ioseph did Iob did Solomon did Constantine did Theodosius and other prime servants of God serve him for nought did hee not open the treasures of his bounty in such sort to them all that they could not but in thankefulnesse subscribe to that protestation of the Propheticall King verily there is a reward for the righteous even in this life and much more in the life to come for Ecce venio behold I come quickly and my reward is with mee to give to every man according as his workes shall bee to them who by patient continuance in well doing seeke for glory and honour and immortalitie eternall life whence Saint Bernard draweth this corollarie though charity is not mercenary yet shee never goes from God empty handed 2 That this reward is some way due unto our workes for the labour●… sayth Christ is worthy his hire and the Apostle is bold to say it is just with God to recompence to them that trouble you tribulation but to you rest and hee seemeth to claime a crowne to himselfe as his due I have fought a good fight henceforth is layd up for mee a crowne of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous judge shall give unto mee it is sayd to be given indeed but given by a righteous judge and as a crowne of righteousnesse and therefore some way due 3 Our good workes concurre actively to the attainment of this reward the words of our Saviour seeke ye first the kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof labour for the meate that perisheth not and strive to enter in at the narrow gate and of the Apostle worke out your salvation with feare and trembling and this momentarie affliction worketh unto us a superexcellent weight of glory import no desire 4 Notwithstanding all this our good workes no way merit at Gods hand their reward neither absolutely neither by the contract of the Law nor by the covenant of grace Not absolutely 1 Because no creature can simply merit any thing of the Creatour as Saint Austin proves by many invincible arguments 2 Because our workes are no way advantagious or beneficiall to God wee indeed gaine by them but he gaines nothing 3 Because there is no proportion betweene our worke which is finite and the reward which is infinite Neither can wee be sayd to merit by the contract of the Law as our Romish adversaries would beare us in hand 1 Because what God requireth by the written Law wee are bound to performe even by the Law of nature and when we doe but that which wee ought to doe our Saviour teacheth us not to tearme our selves arrogantly meritours at Gods hands or such as hee is engaged to recompence but unprofitable servants 2 Because we do not our work sufficiently and therfore cannot challenge as due by contract our reward our best workes are scanty and defective 3 Because wee loyter many dayes and though at some times wee doe a dayes worke such as it is yet many times wee doe not halfe a dayes worke nay for one thing wherein we doe well we faile in a thousand Lastly neither can wee be truly said to merit no not by the covenant of Grace 1 Because the Grace which worketh in us all in all is no waies due to us but most freely given us of
free gift of God And in Rom. 8. hee saith that the sufferings of this life is not worthy of the glory that shall bee revealed all our sufferings all our workes they are not worthy of the glory of God we cannot properly merit them This was the constant Doctrine of the primitive Church that a good life when wee are justified and an eternall life when wee are glorified they all grant that all that is good in us is the gift of God that eternall life is not a retribution to our workes but the free gift of God When God crownes our merits hee crownes nothing else but his owne free gift these and many other sentences wee finde among the ancient Fathers plainely convincing our adversaries that in this point they swerve not onely from Scripture but from all sound antiquitie Secondly then to come to our selves this should humble us in respect of our owne deservings doe all the good thou canst take heede it doe not puffe thee up thinke not to merit heaven Alas thou canst not doe it for what is it to the Almightie as it is sayd in Job that thou art righteous Thy well doing extends not to him thou canst doe him no good therefore thou canst looke for nothing at his hands since thou canst doe him no good but all that thou doest in his service it is not for his but for thy good yet he commands thee and thou art bound to doe it but all thou canst doe is no more then thou art bound to doe Therefore when thou hast done all that thou canst acknowledge thy selfe to bee an unprofitable servant and thou hast done no more then thy duty If thou hast many good workes yet thou hast more sinne and the least sinne of thine in the rigour of justice will deprive thee of thy interest in God Therefore thy appeale must bee to the throne of grace and thy onely plea must bee that of the Publican every one of us God be mercifull to me a sinner when wee have done all wee can it must be mercie and not any merit of ours that must bring us to heaven Thirdly here is comfort for the children of God in that this inestimable treasure of eternall life is not committed to our keeping but God hath it in his keeping It is his gift it is not committed to the rotten box of our merits then wee could have no certaintie of it the devill would easily pick the Locke yea without picking he would shake in peeces the crazie joynts of the best worke wee doe he would steale it from us and take it away and deprive us of this excellent benefit but the Lord hath dealt better for us hee hath kept it in his owne hands hee hath layd it up in the Cabinet of his owne mercy and love that never failes for with everlasting mercie hee hath compassion on us Esay 54. hee loves us with an everlasting love It is his mercie that wee are not consumed because his compassions faile not and whom hee loves he loves to the end It is layd up in the mercy of God hee will have it his gift least we should keepe it and it should be lost hee hath reserved it in his owne hands Therefore in temptations when they drive us to doubt of our attaining of eternall life let us cast our eye upon the keeper of it it is the Lord he is warie to discerne and faithfull to bestow it therefore let us comfort our selves and say every one of us as Saint Paul 2 Tim. 1. 12. I know whom I have trusted and I am perswaded that hee is able to keepe that which I have committed to him against that day Lastly seeing eternall life is the free gift of God it must make us thankefull to him for it which wee should never doe if we deserved it doth a master thanke his servant for doing his dutie So if wee did thinke heaven were our due we should never be thankfull for it Pride is a great enemy to thankefulnesse therefore the way is to humble our selves and to consider that wee deserve no good thing at Gods hands then wee will take this great benefit at Gods hands most thankefully Especially when wee consider it is all that God requires of us as he saith Psal. 50. Call upon me in the day of trouble I will heare thee and deliver thee and what shalt thou doe Thou shalt glorifie me Glorifying God and being thankefull to him is all the tribute wee are to pay to this our royall Lord and shall we deny him this It is a small benefit that is not worth thankes We set eternall life at too low a rate if wee forget to bee thankefull There was never a precious Iewell afforded so cheape as eternall life for our thankefulnesse If wee did know what it were to want it we would give ten thousand worlds rather then be without it Therefore as Naamans servants sayd to him concerning his washing in Iordan If the Prophet had commanded thee a greater thing wouldest thou not have done it So if God had commanded us a great matter for eternall life wee should have done it how much more when he saith take it and be thankfull be but thankefull Thus I have described to you this twofold seruice the wages of sinne that is death temporall eternall The service of righteousnesse the wages and reward of that eternall life which is not wages but the gift of God So that I may now say to you as Moses did to Israel Deut. 30. 19. Behold I have set before you life and death cursing and blessing Therefore choose not cursing chuse not sinne nor the wages thereof it is death but choose life that you and your seede may live If wee follow sinne the wages will be death if wee apply our selves to righteousnesse in the service of God our reward shall be eternall life not that wee deserve it but that it is the pleasure of our heavenly Father to bestow it upon us For the wages of sinne is death and the gift of God is eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord. FINIS THE PROFIT OF AFFLICTIONS OR GODS AYME IN HIS CORRECTIONS PSAL. 119. 71. It is good for me that I have beene afflicted that I might learne thy Statutes ISA. 27. 9. By this therefore shall the iniquitie of Iacob be purged and this is all the fruite to take away his sinne LONDON Printed by Iohn Dawson for Ralph Mabbe 1639. THE PROFIT OF AFFLICTIONS OR GODS AYME IN HIS CORRECTIONS SERMON XXX HEB. 12. 10. For they verely for a few dayes chastened us after their owne pleasure but Hee for our profit that we might bee partakers of his holinesse THere are two things among many others eminently in Jesus Christ which declare him to be an all-sufficient Saviour of his people and these the Scripture frequently setteth forth unto us in a most sweet conjunction Righteousnesse and strength So the Prophet Surely shall one
God our workes as they are good they are not ours as they are ours they are not good 2 Because whatsoever wee doe in fulfilling the Covenant of Grace wee are bound to doe for the inestimable benefits which we receive by our Redeemer 3 Because wee imploy not our Tallent to our Masters best advantage no man walketh so exactly as hee might doe by the power of grace which would not be wanting to us if wee were not wanting to our selves But because wee may seeme partiall in our owne cause and take these reasons for demonstrations which our Adversaries will not acknowledge to bee so much as probable arguments let the ancient Fathers give in the verdict Saint Austine When the Apostle might truly have said the wages of righteousnesse is eternall life he chose rather to say but the gift of God is eternall life that we might understand that he brings us to eternall life not for our merits but for his mercies sake And Saint Basil There remaines an everlasting rest to those who fight lawfully not for the merits of their workes or verbatim according to the Greeke originall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 supple 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Not according to the due debt of their workes but of the grace or by the favour of our most munificent God And Fulgentius To possesse the kingdome prepared for us is a worke of grace for of meere grace there is given not only a good life to these that are justified but eternall life to those that are glorified And Saint Ambrose Our momentarie afflictions are not worthy the glory that shall be revealed therefore the forme or tenour of the heavenly decrees upon men proceed not according to merits but the mercy of God And Marke the holy Hermite The kingdome of heaven is not a reward of workes but a gift of God prepared for his fruitfull servants And let Pope Gregorie conclude all As Eleazar who killed the Elephant yet was killed by the Elephant in his fall upon him so those who subdue vices if they grow proud of their victorie as all doe who conceive they merit heaven by it are subdued by and lye under those vices which they before subdued for hee dyes under the enemie whom he hath discomfited who is extolled in pride for the vice which he conquered The third difficultie was whither the workes follow the dead which may thus be expedited their good workes follow them not to the grave for there there the soule is not nor to Purgatorie for J have already proved there is no such place nor to Hell for none are blessed that come there The workes of the damned indeed follow them thither there they meet with them and with the Divell who seduced them to torment them for them there the swearers and blasphemers gnaw their tongues there the lascivious wantons are cast into a bed of fire there they who swome here in pleasures are throwne into a river of brimstone But the workes of the godly follow them to the place where they receive their recompence for them The fourth difficultie was when the workes follow the dead which may bee thus expedited some of their works follow them immediatly after their death others at the day of Judgement Those workes which they have done by and in the soule only without the helpe or use of the body follow them immediatly after death when the soule receives her reward for them but those which were performed partly by the soule and partly by the body follow them at the day of Judgement When the King shall say Come yee blessed of my Father possesse the kingdome prepared for you for I was hangrie and yee gave me meat I was thirstie and yee gave me drinke I was naked and ye cloathed me I was sicke and in prison and ye visited me Wee have peeled off the rhine let us now taste of the sweet juyce if our workes shall most certainly and plentifully bee rewarded Let us be zealous of good workes let us be filled with the fruits of righteousnesse let us in no case be weary of well-doing let us not cast away our confidence which hath great recompence of reward if a cup of cold water shall be reckoned for what thinke yee of a glasse of hot water to revive many a fainting soule If two mites cast into the treasurie shall be taken notice of what thinke yee of ten talents If Christ hath a bottle for every teare shed for him how much more for every drop of bloud There are infinite motives in holy Scriptures to incite us to good workes I will touch at this time only upon three 1. Our great Obligation to them 2. Our exceeding comfort in them 3. Our singular benefit by them First our Obligation to them is twofold 1. As men 2. As Christians As men wee are bound to serve him with our hands who gave us them As Christians we are to employ them in his service who loosened them after they were manacled and restored unto us the free use of them 2. Our comfort in them is exceeding great they assure us of our spirituall life for as the naturall life is discerned by three things especially 1. The beating of the pulse 2. The letting out of breath 3. The stirring of the joynts or limbes so also is the spirituall if the pulse of devotion beate strong at the heart if wee breath to God in our fervent prayers and lastly if wee stirre our joynts by walking in all holy duties and performing such good workes as are required at our hands we may be sure that wee have spirituall life in us we may build upon it that Christ dwelleth in our hearts by faith and that we live in him by grace 3. Our benefit by them is manifold in this life and the life to come In this life peace of conscience their soule shall dwell at ease 2. Good successe in all we undertake whatsoever we doe it shall prosper 3. The service of the creatures for all things worke for the best to them that love God Lastly a comfortable passe out of this world we are sure our end shall be peace In the life to come the benefits are such as never eye hath seene nor eare hath heard nor ever entered into the heart of man God grant therefore our heart may enter into them quia Aristoteles non capit Eurispum Eurispus capiat Aristotelum because wee cannot comprehend the joyes of heaven let them comprehend us You expect something to be spoken of our deare Sister deceased and much might be said and should by me in her praise but that one of her chiefest commendations was that shee could not endure praise Laudes quia merebatur contempsit quia contempsit magis merebatur Because shee deserved praise shee despised it and because shee despised it shee the more deserved it Silent modestie in her was her crowne in her life and modest silence of her was the charge
which may furnish us abundantly with meditations in this kind It was a custome in former times for men to make their sepulchres in their gardens to mind them of death in the midst of the pleasures of this life This present worke may not unfitly be tearmed a Garden wherein whosoever takes a dayly walke may gather in the severall beds thereof those wholsome flowers and hearbs which being distilled by serious meditation will prove water of life to a fainting spirit in some hee shall finde instruction in some incitation in others consolation in all profit Here thou shalt finde that Lethall gourd sprung up by Adam his transgression that makes all his posterity cry out There is death in the Pot. There thou mayst gather hearbs of grace as a counter-poyson against the malignity of death in a third there is the spirituall Heliotro●…ium opening with joy to the Sunne of righteousnesse the hope of a blessed resurrection Doe the glittering shewes of outward things make thee begin to over-fancie them heere thou shalt finde how little they will availe in death the consideration whereof will make them like that precious stone which being put into the mouth of a dead man loseth it's vertue are thou over-burthened with afflictions here thou art supported in the expectation of a farre more exceeding weight of glory art thou ready to faint under thy labours here thou shalt finde a time of rest and of reaping doth the time seeme over-long that thy patience begins to flag heere thou hast a promise of thy Saviours speedy comming In a word be thy estate and condition what it will be heere thou mayst have both directions to guide thee and comforts to support thee in thy journey on earth till thou arrive at thy Countrey in Heaven Certainely there is no man can sleight and undervalue so deserving a Worke but hee shall discover himselfe either to be ignorant or idle or ill affected especially when so judicious and learned men have thought it a fit concomitant for their severall labours which they have added for the accomplishment of it Therfore take it in good worth improve it for the good of thy soule that being armed and prepared for death when it shall approach thou mayst have no more to doe but to die and mayst end thy dayes in a stedfast assurance That thy sinnes shall be blotted out when the time of refreshing shall come from the presence of the LORD Thine in him who is the Resurrection and the life H. W. THE TABLE THe Stewards Summons Page 1. TEXT LVKE 16. 2. Give an account of thy Stewardship for thou mayst be no longer Steward The praise of Mourning Page 29. ECCLESIASTES 7. 2. It is better to goe to the house of Mourning then to the house of Feasting for that is the end of all men and the living will lay it to his heart Deliverance from the King of feares Page 55. HEBREVVES 2. 14. 15. 14 For asmuch then as the Children are partakers of flesh and bloud hee also himselfe likewise tooke part of the same that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the Divell 15 And deliver them who through the feare of death were all their life time subject to bondage The perfection of Patience Page 79. IAMES 1. 4. But let patience have her perfect worke that you may bee perfect and intire wanting nothing A Restraint of exorbitant passion Page 101. 2 SAM 12. 22. 23. 22 And he said while the Child was yet alive I fasted and wept for I said who can tell whether God will be gracious to me that the Child may live 23 But now he is dead wherefore should I fast Can I bring him back againe I shall goe to him but he shall not returne to me The sting of Death Page 121. 1 COR. 15. 56. The sting of death is sinne and the strength of sinne is the Law The destruction of the Destroyer Page 135. 1 COR. 15. 16. The last enemie that shall be destroyed is death The Worlds losse and the righteous mans gaine Page 151. ESAY 57. 1. And mercifull men are taken away none considering that the righteous is taken away from the evill to come The good mans Epitaph Page 177. REVEL 14. 13. I heard a voice from Heaven saying unto me Write Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth yea saith the Spirit that they may rest from their labours and their workes doe follow them The Christians Center Page 193. ROM 14. 7. 8. 7 For none of us liveth to himselfe and no man dyeth to himselfe 8 For whether we live we live to the Lord and whether wee die we die unto the Lord whether we live therefore or die we are the Lords The improvement of Time Page 213. 1 COR. 7. 29. 30. 31. 29 But this I say Brethren the time is short it remaineth that both they that have wives be as though they had none 30 And they that weepe as though they wept not and they that rejoyce as if they rejoyced not and they that buy asthough they possessed not 31 And they that use this world as not abusing it for the fashion of this world passeth away Securitie surprized Page 235. 1 THESSAL 5. 3. For when they shall say peace and safety then sudden destruction commeth upon them as travaile upon a woman with child and they shall not escape A Christians victory or conquest over deaths Enmitie Page 263. 1 COR. 15. 26. The last Enemie that shall be destroyed is death The great Tribunall Gods scrutinie of Mans secrets Page 283. ECCLESIAST 12. 14. For God will bring every worke into judgement with every secret th●…ng whether it be good or whether it be evill A Triall of Sinceritie Page 299. ESAY 26. 8. 9. 8 Yea in the way of thy judgements O Lord have wee waited for thee the desire of our soule is to thy name and to the remembrance of thee 9. With my soule have I desired thee in the night yea with my Spirit within me will I seeke thee early for when thy judgements are in the earth the Inhabitants of the world will learne righteousnesse The expectation of Christs comming Page 321. PHIL. 3. 20. 21. 20. For our conversation is in Heaven from whence we looke for the Saviour the Lord Iesu●… Christ. 21. Who shall Change our vile body that it may bee fashioned like unto his gl●…rious body according to the working whereby he is able to subdue all things unto himselfe Christs Precept and Promise or security against death Page 345. IOHN 8. 51. Verily verily I say unto you if a man keepe my saying he shall never see death The Young-mans liberty and limits Page 367. ECCLESIAST 11. 9. Rejoyce O young-man in thy youth and let thy heart cheare thee in the dayes of thy youth and walke in the wayes of thine heart and in the sight of thine eyes but know thou that for all these things God will bring thee into
bones with strong paines What 's the reason of this but that man may come to this conclusion with himselfe that hee may bring his owne heart to a reckoning for his former cariage This is that the Apostle saith for this cause many are weake and sickly among you and many sleepe some were taken with sicknesse upon others there was a consuming weaknesse and others were strucken with death what is the end that God propounds in all this For this reason that wee should judge our selves for if wee judge our selves wee shall not be judged of the Lord but when wee are judged wee are chastned of the Lord that wee should not bee condemned of the world As if hee should say God now calleth you to a reckoning in this life to the end you may prevent that heavy and grievous one that comes after this life Againe when outward afflictions prevaile not God hath spirituall afflictions to awaken m●…n Thus David when hee was in a deepe sleepe of securitie God awakned him with a spirituall judgement see his speech in the 32. Psal. When I kept close my sinnes my bones were consumed and I roared for the disquietnesse of my soule what followed God by this meanes brought him to confession I will confesse my transgressions to the Lord and thou forgavest the iniquitie of my sinne Thus God in this life calleth men to a reckoning sometimes by ●…he preaching of the Word sometimes by judgements upon the outward man or by terrours upon the soule But if all this prevaile not to make a man reckon with himselfe in this life then God hath another reckoning after this life where every man must give an account and cannot avoid it and there hee must abide the sentence of the Iudge that would not prevent it before That there is such a Iudgement to come it appeareth By the equitite necessitie of it In respect of God the Saints the wicked Frst I say in respect of God there is a necessitie of it That his Decree may bee fulfilled and executed Hee hath appointed a day wherein he will judge the world in righteousnesse And his counsell shall stand and hee will doe all his pleasure Secondly it is necessarie that Gods honour may be vindicated Now things seeme to goe in some confusion and disorder in the world Good men the children of God are not alwayes best in the place of judgement I have seene saith Solomon an evill under the Sunne that in the place of judgement wickednesse was there and in the place of righteousnesse that iniquitie was there this observation Solomon makes therefore I said God will bring to judgement every thing both good and evill for there is a time for every worke and every purpose God hath a time to doe that great worke that he hath now purposed What is that worke that is to bring every worke to judgement whether it bee good or evill I say if wee consider this it is necessary that there should come a judgement that shall set all right againe It is necessarie likewise in respect of the Saints The very tribulations of the Saints in 2 Thes. 1. 5. are called Indigma an evident demonstration or a manifest token of the righteous judgement of God There is a necessitie of it in respect of them in two regards First that their innocencie that is traduced here may bee manifest They undergoe many disgraces and hard censures amongst men the world accounts them proud hipocrites singular foolish vaine-glorious and I know not what now saith Iob my witnesse is in heaven and saith Saint Paul I care not to bee judged of you or of mans judgement hee that judgeth me is the Lord. The Word in the Greeke is mans day as if hee should say Men have their day here but God hath a greater day after the Lord will judge in another manner and upon other grounds then men doe Secondly it is necessary also that their workes may be rewarded When we speake of reward wee meane not the reward of merit wee meane the reward of grace called a reward because God is tied to it by his promise The servants of God though they serve him with all care they have not the fatte of the earth as sometimes the Ishmaels of the world have they doe not abound with outward things as many others doe nay sometimes they are in the worst condition and that makes Gods wayes the more despised as if God were not able to maintaine his servants in the world in his wayes and worke God therefore hath a time when his servants shall have full measure heaped up pressed downe shaken together and running over When God shall make up his jewels as hee saith in Malac. 3. then shall yee discerne betweene the righteous and the wicked betweene him that serveth God and him that serveth him not Marke yee shall discerne God will make it appeare to the whole world in the day when hee makes up his jewels that notwithstanding his servants are despised and lie here under divers pressures yet that they are a people whom he delights in and accounteth as his treasures Thirdly it is necessarie in respect of the wicked too that is First that Gods righteousnesse may fully be manifested Secondly that their unrighteousnesse may fully bee punished First I say that Gods righteousnesse may fully bee manifested therefore the day of Iudgement in Rom. 2. 5. is called a day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgement of God As if hee should say As God will manifest his wrath against the vessels of wrath so hee will make it appeare to the world that hee proceedeth in a right manner and by a right rule in judging For wee must know that howsoever God cannot bee unjust and howsoever that the ungodly men in this life contend with their owne consciences such is the hardnesse of their hearts and abundance of corruption that they would faine justifie themselves amongst men and againe howsoever it bee true that the soule when it is departed out of the body is under Gods particular judgement by an intelectuall elevation of it that it may receive the sentence of the Iudge by an illumination and by such a spirituall and contemplative discourse and observation and understanding of Gods actions as that by reflection upon it selfe it may know it selfe to bee accursed or acquitted and accordingly is entred into the possession either of happinesse or miserie Yet all this is secret in the world till the day of Gods tribunall come wherein secret things shal be made manifest and things that have been done in darknesse shall appeare before men and Angels Secondly As Gods justice must be cleared and fully manifested so the wicked and unrighteous must bee fully punished They are not fully punished when they are under the sense of Gods wrath in this life or when the soule is judged at death there must bee yet a further degree for
the world and therefore goe about it now Reckon with others also for workes of mercie what thou hast beene wanting in to thy breth●…en thou hast lived thus long in a plentifull estate what hast thou done with thy estate Iesephus reckons up three severall tenths that were expected and exacted of the Iewes Wouldest thou bee lesse liberall now in the time of the Gospell then they were under the Law Is God lesse mercifull or hath he lesse interest in thy estate Thou hast so many thousands What hast thou done out of this to releeve the poore or to set up those in a course of traffique and trade that want a stocke Beloved you cannot if you looke about you want objects of mercy and meanes to further your reckoning at the day of the Lord. And if you would bee faithfull stewards to God say thus I have beene thus much behind-hand in paying the due I owe to the poore to the Church c. I will pay it while I live and if that bee not enough when I die I will pay it But I hasten That is the second thing Let every man reckon thus with his owne heart The third thing is the daily exercise of repentance upon the sight of your former evils God now saith the Apostle calleth all men every where to repentance because hee hath appointed a day in which hee will judge the world in righteousnesse Let this then stirre us up to repentance God expects that men should judge themselves now Fourthly If you would stand at that great day of Iudgement when there shall bee such an exact reckoning Interest now your selves in Christ. There is no way to escape the judgement to come but by making peace with the Iudge now There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus This was prefigured in the Mercie-seate that was to bee compassed about with the wings of the Cherubins all covering the two tables of the Testament one Cherubin to looke toward another shewing us thus much that there is no covering of ovr transgressions committed against the commandements of God the tables of the Testimonie but by the great Mercie-seate the Lord Iesus Christ upon whom the Fathers of the times before Christ and Beleevers since looke expecting the covering of the guilt of their sinnes from the wrath of God by no other meanes but by this propitiatorie or Mercie-seate that covereth the Arke of the Testimonie Lastly it serveth also for instruction in another point that is To teach us to lead a holy conversation This use the Apostle Peter made of the Doctrine of the day of Iudgement Seeing saith he that wee looke for these things what manner of persons ought wee to bee in all holy conversation and godlinesse Alas beloved little doe you know whether this be the last Sermon that many of you may heare whether this be the last day wherein God will ever call upon you to repent and amend your lives There shall be a fearfull dissolution and destruction of all things that you see There shall be a naked appearance made before the Iudge at that day of reckoning let every man therefore say within himselfe How shall I stand at that time at that Iudgement All our care should bee that of the Apostle Pauls Whether wee be absent from the body or present in the body wee labour that wee may bee accepted of the Lord Whether wee live a day longer or die this day before the morrow that wee may bee found acceptable before the Lord. And for this cause saith hee in another place because there shall bee a resurrection from the dead both of the just and unjust I exercise my selfe to have alwayes a conscience void of offence toward God and toward men Looke to it in your places and in your hearts that you may have a good conscience void of offence toward God and men for the time shall come that nothing in the world shall stand you in stead but a good conscience and if then when the bookes are opened it be found that your reckonings are even and the accounts cleare betweene you and your Master by obedience and repentance by workes and by faith happie shall that servant bee whom his Master at that day shall find so doing The last Vse is a use of comfort to all the servants of God Let them quietly and cheerefully suffer that portion of miserie and affliction that the Lord dealeth out unto them Let them not grudge at the prosperity of ungodly men or at the varietie of changes that themselves are exposed unto because there is a day of reckoning and account when all things shall bee made even The Apostle Saint Iames exhorteth Christians to patience upon this very ground because the day of the Lord draweth nigh If therefore you see wicked men prosper and bring their enterprises to passe bee not troubled at the matter A man doth not much envie an enemie that is now in prison though hee have some good cheare there though hee have some friends that come and see him there because hee knowes hee is but a prisoner and hee shall be brought out at the Assizes and then hee shall bee righted The world is the common jayle whereinto Adam was cast after hee had sinned and wee are all prisoners in this prison-house the enemies of Gods glory and of his Church and people they cannot escape out of this prison here they are tied Gods chaines are upon them and he will bring them to an account before his Iudgement seate and that before all men and Angels With these things let us comfort and support our selves A word concerning the present occasion Yee have heard that all men are Gods Stewards yee have heard that God hath a time wherein hee will call all his stewards to an account the fore-runners of this great account shall bee in this life and after death when God strikes men downe by death it is that they may bee brought into his presence and there receive the sentence either of absolution o●… condemnation as I shewed you before concerning the soule of man in that intelectuall manner receiving the sentence It is appointed to all men once to die and after that the Iudgement You have now a spectacle of mortalitie before you one of Gods stewards tooke away and called by death to give up his account Concerning whom it cannot bee expected that I should say much orany thing at all specially by those that know both the condition of his living and of his dying For his living It was not in the Citie but for the most part it was from us in the Countrey For his dying Hee was here but a day or two before hee was taken hence Hee came to the Citie in the extremitie of his weaknesse and it tooke him with some violence as the nature of that disease the stone is There was much expression expected from him but it pleased God to make a sudden
all have sinned This I say is it that will make sin odious to a man it will make a man looke upon sinne as a deadly evill A man will avoid an infectious disease that is mortall and deadly and pestilentiall and the like Why because it is deadly it is as much as his life is worth The same is sinne it is that that brought death upon all man-kind and will bring it upon thee When doth the creature forfeit his beeing to the Creator but when he doth not use it in the service and for the glory of the Creatour God hath given the creature a beeing for himselfe I have forfeited my beeing when I glorifie not God with it that man forfeiteth his wit his memorie his strength his time his life and all that he is or hath when he doth not imploy them in Gods service to Gods glory Now sinne is that that makes us deny the service and glory we owe to God sin is that that makes a forfeiture of our lives and all unto him Here is the first thing God hath given the creature a beeing for himselfe he preserveth the creature in beeing for himselfe when the creature therefore sinneth it forfeiteth its life and beeing to the Creator This makes sinne odious Secondly this is it that declareth the wonderfull justice and truth of God Hee said to Adam in the beginning assoone as ever he had fallen hee should die and we find it true on him and all his posteritie for Adam stood and represented the person of all men before God that one man was all men in him all men were under the sentence of death And we see it is true to this day Wee find God true in this let this make us beleeve his word in every thing else He hath beene as good as his word he hath declared his justice and his truth in the death of all man-kind upon the sin of Adam he will declare it in every thing else in every promise in every threatning in every passage of his word let us giue him the glory of his truth as we find it in this Thirdly it is advantageous very much for our selves as a meanes to prepare us for death the better When a man seriously concludeth Death is the end of all men then if I reckon and account my selfe amongst men it will be my end too and it may be my end now And we shall see what use Iob makes of this All the dayes of my appointed time I will waite till my change shall come I make account a great change will come such as hath beene upon all my fathers before me so it will come upon me I will make account of it and therefore I will waite all my dayes So should we make account every day that this may bee the day of my change in every thing you doe make account that your change may begin then in that very action and this will be a meanes to make you waite for your change make you prepare for death It is that that Drusius noteth of Rabbi Eleazer that he gave this counsell and advise that a man should be sure to repent one day before he died Hee meant not that a man should deferre his repentance till it did evidently appeare that Death had seized upon him But because a man may conclude if it be possible I may live to day it is probable I may die to morrow therefore I will repent to day Doe it now and doe not delay it till to morrow This is that we are to doe to account of every day as that which may be the day of our change and so to carrie our selves in all our actions and occasions as if wee should have no more time to doe our worke And this is especially to be observed in three things First in matter of sinning be carefull to amend sinne every day labour to mortifie sinne this day as if thou shouldest have no more dayes to mortifie it in take heed of sinning now as if thou shouldest die now Some we see have beene taken away in the very act of sinne Ananias and Saphira were taken away in the very act of sinning when they were telling a lie to the Apostle they died Zimri and Corbie were slaine in the very act of uncleannesse Corah and his company they died in the act of murmuring and resisting of God and his ordinances and ministers Let a man now reason with himselfe these were taken away in their sinnes it may be my case aswell as theirs if I be found in sinne That is the first Secondly bring it home to this particularalso in another case and that is in redeeming of the opportunities of the time of our life Besides the generall time of life there be certaine opportunities certaine advantages of time that the Scripture calleth seasons be carefull to redeeme them though you may enjoy your lives yet you may have none of these such as are seasons of glorifying God seasons of doing good seasons of gaining good to a mans selfe be carefull therefore I say to mannage those opportunities and advantages of time so that you may glorifie God Whether you eate or drinke or whatsoever you doe doe all to the glory of God Which way soever you may most advance Gods glory and promote his worship which way soever yee may promote the cause of God drawing men to God and incouraging them in the wayes of God which way soever you may bee usefull employ your selfe at that time the present time because you must die and you may die now you may have no more opportunities to doe it in And so likewise in all advantages wherein men may doe good to men Exhort one another while it is called to day and while you have time doe good unto all Doe all the spirituall good and all the outward good that you can while you have seasons to doe good Happy is that servant that his Master shall find so doing when he commeth leading a fruitfull and profitable life So doe good to your owne soules while you have time pray while you have time to pray heare the Word while you have time to heare it exercise repentance while you have time to repent perfect the worke of mortification while you have time to mortifie your corruptions doe your soules all the good you can by the advantages of all the ordinances of all the opportunities that God hath given you This is the end of all men it hath been the end of good and bad before and it shall be the end of good and bad now men must die their houses will be houses of mourning therefore mannage the time in doing all the good you can that God may be glorified men may be benefited and your owne soules furthered That is the second thing Lastly in the manner of your conversation consider the time that you have to doe every thing in Will a man be found idleing in
the market-place when hee should be working in the Vineyard Would you be feasting when God would have you mourning you shall see some that have beene taken away when they little thought of it Belshazzer he was in his feasts and then commeth the sentence of death against him and other the like examples you may see in the Scripture Consider therefore the particular actions that you doe whether they bee such as hold agreement with the state of a dying man So for the manner of doing holy duties Would you be found praying perfunctorily and carelesly Would you be found comming to the Sacrament unprepared What though you doe holy actions that are good for the matter would you be found doing of them with unfit and unprepared hearts You see what the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 11. For this cause many are sicke and weake and many sleepe they slept they were dead for this even because they came unworthily to receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper Would you therefore bee found doing of holy duties and not in a right manner The serious consideration of this that Death is the end of all men with the particular application of it to a mans selfe that as it is the state of all men so it is mine in particular I must die and I may die now it hath an influence into all the actions of a mans life To conclude In the last place This point is of use to us also in the death of others First to moderate the mourning of Christians for the death of others Why It is the end of all men it is that that is the common condition of all men it should not be too grievous nor too dolefull to any man Wee would not have our friends to bee in another condition in their birth then others wee would not have them have more fingers or more members then a man and would wee have them have more dayes Let this serve as a briefe touch upon that Secondly it teacheth us to make good use of our fellowship while we are together Not only we may die but those that are usefull to us may die also let us make good use of one another while we live therefore This will make the death of others bitter and will be worse then the death and losse of our friends the guilt upon a mans conscience that hee hath not made that use of them while they were alive that he might have done let us therefore make the death of our friends easie by making good use of them while they live It did smite the heart of those Ephesians that they should see the face of Paul no more specially above the rest it grieved them that they should see him no more how would it have grieved them thinke you if they had alwayes hardned themselves against his ministrie before Thinke with your selves seriously here is such a Minister such a Christian friend that husband and wife that parent and child a time of parting will come let us make it easie now by making good use of one another while we live that when friends are tooke away we may have cause to thanke God that we have had communion and comfort of their fellowship and societie the benefit of their graces the fruit of their lives and not sorrow for the want of them by death So much for that I come now to the second and principall reason why it is better to goe to the house of mourning then to the house of feasting it is this because the living shall lay it to his heart What shall hee lay to his heart That that is the end of all men hee shall lay the death of men to heart The point I observe from hence is thus much It is the dutie of those that live to lay to heart the death of others That is seriously to consider and make use for themselves of the death of others You see the Text is cleare for the point And there is good reason why it should be so First in respect of the glory that commeth to God Secondly in respect of the good that commeth to our selves by it First God is glorified by this when wee lay to heart the death of others there is a dishonour done to God when wee slight the death of others good or bad It is a dishonour to God to slight any of his actions this is one of Gods workes in the world the death of men this is a thing wherein Gods hand is seene he saith to the sonnes of Adam Returne The spirit returneth to God that gave it It is hee that hath the power of life and death If a sparrow fall not to the ground without the providence of God much lesse the servants of God the precious ones upon the earth the excellent ones as David calleth them I say God is seene much in these workes and it is a great dishonour to God when men doe not consider the workes of his hands David by the spirit of Prophesie in Psal. 28. 5. wisheth a curse upon ungodly men and for this reason among the rest because they consider not the operation of his hands this is that that puts men into a curst estate and exposeth them to the wrath of God when they regard not the workes of the Lord. The actions of Princes and great men upon earth every man considereth of them and weigheth them It is that wherein wee give God the glory of his wisedome and of his truth of his power of his justice of his mercy of his soveraigntie and dominion and Lordship over the whole earth when wee labour to draw to a particular use to ourselves the workes of God in the world specially the death of men of all men good and bad for we must give it the same latitude and extent and scope that the Text doth here he speakes here of the death of men in generall and he saith of all men that their death shall bee laid to heart by the living Secondly as there is reason that we should take to heart the death of others in respect of the glory that commeth to God thereby so in respect of ourselves also much benefit commeth to ourselves by laying to heart the death of other men There be three speciall things considerable in the death of any one that is matter of profit and benefit to those that live and survive after them Therein we see the certainty nature cause and end of Death First therein we see the certainty of death For now we have not only the word of God that tels us that we shall die but the workes of God taking others before us that as the Sacraments are called Visible instructions because they teach by the eye and the outward senses so the death of others are visible instructions to the living it teacheth by the eye a man is guided by the eye to see his owne condition and as it were in a glasse there
to heart they consider not the causes wherefore God takes away those good men A Land a Kingdome a State a People a place is much weakned when those that are righteous and mercifull men when those that stand in the gappe and use their endevours to prevent judgements are taken away The house will certainly fall when the pillars are removed They are the people of God only that hold up a state that hold up the world Assoone as Noah is put into the Arke presently commeth the deluge upon the World Assoone as ever Lot was got up to Zoar presently the Lord rained downe fire and brimstone upon Sodom and Gomorrah Assoone as ever the mourners are marked presently commeth the destroying Angell upon the rest Beloved when wee see those that are mourners for the evils of the times and places where they live tooke away we should lay it to heart and consider it as a signe of Gods displeasure as a signe that hee is a going and departing when he takes away his jewels as a signe that he is a comming to judge the world when hee beginneth to separate to take to himselfe his owne Certainly as soone as ever that number of the elect shall bee accomplished when the company of those that God hath determined to eternall life shall be fulfilled when the sheepe of Christ that are yet to be brought into his fold are gathered together when the fulnesse of the Gentiles is come in and the nation of the Iewes added then the world shall bee burnt with fire and the day of Iudgement shall come nothing shall hinder that generall destruction that shall be the end of all things here below As it is with the generall Iudgement of the world so with particular Iudgements upon Nations when God takes away his people when the Saints goe out of Ierusalem to Pila then commeth the sword of the enemie upon Ierusalem when God drawes out his owne people presently commeth judgement upon the rest It is good to observe Gods method and order that he takes in governing of the world at this day that in the death of the servants of God wee may consider our owne time that wee may prepare for those evils that are a comming and for those greater judgements that are hastning Thus you see what use may bee made of laying to heart the death of others God is much glorified thereby For all his attributes are seene in all his workes and the glorifying of God is a declaring of God to be as glorious as hee hath revealed himselfe to be in his attributes which is by shewing of them forth in his workes When men can see the wisedome the justice the power the mercie the truth the soveraigntie of God and all in the death of others then they glorifie God in taking to heart the death of others You see likewise what good commeth to a mans selfe by laying to heart the death of others He sees thereby the certainty of his owne death He sees the nature of death and what the proper worke of it is viz. to separate betweene him and all those outward comforts all those props and staies whereupon his heart rested too much on earth in the daies of his vanitie And lastly he sees the end and cause why God sendeth Death into the world sometime in judgement that men should take heed of sin sometime in mercie in mercy to the men themselves and in mercy also to those that live that they seeing the servants of God lodged up before the tempest may learne to feare and to hide and secure themselves under Gods speciall providence who can either hide them amongst the living or the dead in the worst times Now let us conclude with some application to our selves In the first place it serveth for the just reproofe of that great neglect that is in the world at this day that men lay not to heart the death of others I wish that this were only the sinne of worldly men I know to a worldly man it is of all things the most unpleasant thought that can be to thinke of death hee cannot endure to heare this they shall fetch thy soule from thee It is as unpleasant to him as it is to a bankrout to heare of a Sergeant comming to arrest him as unpleasant as it is to a malefactour to heare of being brought before the Iudge And that is the reason why men in the time of feasting cannot endure such discourses at their Tables as might put sad thoughts of death into them oh these are to melancholy thoughts Yea but in the meane time it is thy folly thy want of wisedome Hee that was guided by the spirit of wisedome and had now bought some wisedome at a deare rate by wofull experience of his former follies hee now seeth that it was farre better to goe to the house of mourning that is seriously to consider of that which men account the most ordinary cause of mourning that is the death of others and of themselves then to goe to the house of feasting that is to sport a mans selfe in the pleasures of the world and to give libertie to a mans selfe to all manner of delights But I say I wish that this were their fault onely and that it may die with them But it is too much the fault of Gods owne people Moses is faine to pray for Israel in the Wildernesse where they saw so many die before them that God would give them wisedome to number their dayes And Ministers have still the same cause to pray for the people and Christians to pray one for another that God would give them wisedome to lay to heart the death of other men Have you well considered of Death when you can only discourse that such a one that was profitable in his instruction is dead such a one by whom we have had good in conversing with is dead such a one that was young and likely to live many yeares longer is dead What of all this this is but idle and emptie discourse What use makest thou of this to thy selfe dost thou gather from thence the certaintie of thy owne death Dost thou consider what Death will doe to thee when it commeth how that it will separate betweene thee and all things in the world as it hath done them Dost thou consider for what cause God sendeth Death abroad into the world Dost thou consider this with thy selfe as thou oughtest to doe This is an act of wisedome This is that wee call due consideration when the soule reflects upon it selfe it is their case now and it will be mine and mine in the same manner therefore it is good for me to set my accounts straite with God When thou accompaniest another to the grave dost thou conclude thus with thyselfe the very next time that any death is spoken of it may bee mine or as Saint Peter speakes to Saphira after the death of Annanias The feet of those that have buried
but how he carried himselfe in the world And truly this is the great Question that every man should put to his soule I must out of the world how have I lived when I was in the world had GOD any glory by mee had men any good by me have I furthered my account against the day of reckoning that I may give it up with joy it makes no matter how I goe out of the world I am sure if my life have beene serviceable to God and beneficiall to men my departure shall be for gaine and advantage it is for a better world Thus much shall serve briefly for the opening of these words and for that that is appliable from them For the present occasion a word Funerall Sermons are not intended for the praise of the dead but for the comfort of the living Therefore I have chosen such an argument to handle at this time as might bee of use and profit to you that live Besides that I am in particular and by particular order debarred of speaking any thing concerning our deceased Sister though I might have spoken much and that very usefull to you The best use that you can make will bee this to consider the life that shee led amongst you Shee was a patterne and example of holinesse of a wise and upright carriage in her wayes follow her in that Marke the Godly and upright man the end of that man is peace There was none that knew her but upon good assurance are perswaded of her happinesse now Would you then have the same happinesse after take the same course that shee did be much in prayer and dependance upon the ordinances and in fellowship with the servants of God be profitable in doing good profitable in receiving good mannage the opportunities and times well that God giveth you as she did gaining much in little she did much worke in a short space let that be your care and then this will be your comfort in the end Thus if you make this use of the death of others before you you shall prepare for your own death and that shal be only a passage for you to Eternall life FINIS DELIVERANCE FROM THE KING OF FEARES OR FREEDOME FROM THE FEARE OF DEATH PSAL. 55. 4. My heart is sore pained within mee and the terrours of death are fallen upon mee PROV 3. 25. Bee not afraid of sudden feare LONDON Printed by Iohn Dawson for Ralph Mabbe 1639. DELIVERANCE FROM THE KING OF FEARES OR FREEDOME FROM THE FEARE OF DEATH SERMON III. HEBR. 2. 15. For as much then as the children are partakers of flesh and bloud he also himselfe likewise tooke part of the same that through death hee might destroy him that had the power of death that is the divell and deliver them who through the feare of death were all their life-time subject to bondage IN these words that I haue read to let passe other parts of the Chapter the Apostle sets downe the humiliation of Christ with the fruit of it His humiliation in his Incarnation and death The fruit of it in subduing him that had the power of death and delivering those that were kept under the feare of death in bondage all their life At this time we will speake onely of the last part the fruit of Christs death in delivering those that were kept under the feare of death The persons that are kept under this feare are said to bee the children Gods owne children those for whom Christ died yet they were kept under the feare of death and that not at some particular time when tentation had got some speciall advantage over them but it was a trouble and a burden to them all their life long and that not a small burthen or an easie trouble but such as kept them as in bondage The words you see are easie There are two points that arise from them First that Gods children those for whom Christ died are many times held strongly under the feare of death Secondly that Christ by his death freeth them from those feares I shall onely insist at this time principally on the first That Gods owne children the Children that were partakers of flesh and bloud it is taken either for the humane nature or the infirmities of that nature even these children were held under the feare of death I will shew the grounds of it The feare of death in the children of God ariseth either from some causes without or from somewhat within them From without them and so the feare ariseth from God an act of his providence upon his children Or from Sathan a worke of his malice These are the causes from without For the first God in his providence and that in his speciall and fatherly providence whereby he doth order all things for the good of his children for the present increase of their grace and the fitting them for glory hereafter Hee I say in his providence ordereth it thus that they shall be kept many of them a great while under the feare of death and this he doth for speciall good ends The first is to humble them Adam as soone as he had sinned against God as his fall was by pride he would haue had a higher condition then he was in so when God would bring him backe againe he beginneth first to humble him and how doth he that Dust thou art saith he and to dust thou shalt returne he sheweth him that he was a dead man by sinne and so would have the meditation of death to humble Adam and in him all his posteritie after him So David when he desired that some meanes might worke upon his enemies for their good he prayeth Put them in feare that they may know that they are but men He doth not onely pray that mortalitie might be presented to them but so presented that it might leaue an impression of feare upon their affections that they might know what they are that they have not their beeing or the power of subsisting in themselves but that they must looke for it above themselves to him that hath the issues of life and death in his owne hande And this is necessarie that all the servants of God should bee kept humble by some meanes or other The Apostle Paul you see he had attained a great measure of grace yet he standeth in need of something to humble him therefore the messenger of Sathan was sent to buffet him that hee should not bee exalted above measure that he might be kept humble God intendeth to raise up his children to a glorious estate therefore as men lay a low foundation when they intend to erect a high building so God layeth the foundation of all grace and comfort in his servants in humiliation therefore he will not onely have them mortall but he will have them apprehend their mortalitie and dying condition with feare that they may be humbled by this feare That is the first thing Secondly God aymeth at the
Secondly what is meant by Patience having her perfect worke Thirdly what is meant by this that doing of this they shall be perfect and intire wanting nothing Patience in a word it is a grace or fruit of Gods spirit whereby the heart of a beleever willingly submitteth it selfe to the will of God in all afflictions and changes in this life I say it is a worke or fruit of Gods spirit In respect of this worke the efficient is called The God of Patience And long suffering which is the same with Patience is made a fruit of the Spirit Gal. 5. 22. The subject of this is the Heart The act of this Patience is to submit a mans selfe willingly to God in afflictions I say willingly for there is a submission which is by force when God subjects a man to himselfe not by a graci●… and sweet inclining of the will but by a powerfull subduing 〈◊〉 the person Now when I say there is such a willing submission to God in afflictions the meaning is thus That there may be in a beleever in a child of God a Velietie an inclination of the will a naturall desire to be freed from Afflictions yet neverthelesse there is in him that willingnesse that is here the Patience of a Christian. There may be a willingnesse and an unwillingnesse in one and the same person arising from divers principles In every renewed soule there is a principle of nature and a principle of grace I speake not now of corrupt nature but of pure nature for we may so speake There is a desire that ariseth from nature and that tendeth to the conservation of a mans beeing and to the conservation of a man in all the comforts and contentments of his beeing This is and may be in a child of God But then it is overswayed by grace which makes a man now resigne up this will of his to Gods hand to be content against his owne naturall desires to bee disposed of according to Gods will This wee may see in our Lord and Saviour Father saith he if it be possible let this cup passe from mee Here is a desire to keepe not onely in his naturall beeing but to keepe in the comfort of nature and life And this is lawfull and a good desire for these affections are the workes of God upon the soule of man The will of man moveth naturally by these affections these desires they are the fruits of nature and so the workes of God in nature and therefore not simply to be blamed But now that which keepeth them within compasse is an over-ruling worke of grace whereby the creature is made to acknowledge his distance from the Creatour and that subjection he oweth to God as the soveraigne Lord of nature and of all creatures And in this sense our Saviour Christ doth check his naturall desires If it be possible let this cup passe from me neverthelesse not as I will but as thou wilt saith he So here is a worke of grace ordering and over-ruling nature that it might not exceed that proportion of the creature and those desires that should be in nature So then you see what kind of willingnesse we meane such a kind of willingnesse as in the issue and close resteth in Gods will The object of this Patience is Afflictions and the changes of this life Affliction is properly any thing that is grievous to a mans sense any thing that crosseth a mans will There are some things that indeed are Afflictions but not to this or that person because heis not sensible of them or because he is not carried with any desires against them But when a man is crost in his will that is an affliction to him but specially when this is set on him with a change when God brings as Iob speakes changes upon him when a man is in another turning and course of life this is an affliction indeed A man that hath tasted the sweetnesse of prosperitie now to be left in affliction this was Iobs case and this is specially the object of Patience You have heard of the patience of Iob. But how did Iobs patience appeare in the Afflictions in the changes of his life That notwithstanding he had felt the sweetnesse of a prosperous estate and the comfort of friends yea and the comfort of Gods favour shining upon his heart and many other particular mercies yet when God turned his hand and tooke away the comforts of his life the comfort and societie of his friends the comfortable expressions of his owne love to his soule and threatned the taking away even of life it selfe Iob could now in this case resolve to rest in the determination and appointment and will of God Here is Patience now Thus briefly you have heard what the duty is to which the Apostle exhorteth It is patience that is a willing resigning of our selves to Gods appointment in the changes of our life But now that is not enough the Apostle contents not himselfe to say Have Patience but let Patience have her perfect worke Hee would have them grow in Patience to grow from one degree to another to abound in Patience as the Apostle speakes of Hope and Ioy in the 15. Rom. 13. that they might not onely have patience but have it brought to perfection which in the 1. Coll. 11. is called all long suffering that there might not be the least defect that they might have a measure of patience proportionable to the measure of Tryals that look as God increased the measure of their tryals upon them so they might have patience to answer those tryals somewhat to support the heart when the greatest weight should be laid upon the soule to presse it downe so the word Hipomene that is translated patience signifieth to beare up a man to support him under a burthen that he be not prest downe by it So hee would have them have such a measure of patience as might beare up the soule in the greatest pressures that though they were afflicted they might not be broken in their afflictions Thus you have the duty opened Let Patience have her perfect worke The reason is that you may be perfect and intire wanting nothing That you may be intire Some understand it thus that you may be intire in respect of every grace in respect of all gracious habits that you may have one grace as well as another that as you have knowledge and faith so you may have patience too that which is so necessary a grace for a Christian as well as any other Others by intirenesse here and wanting nothing thinke that the Apostlemeanes this that they might have that which might supply comfort to their soules in all their wants A man is then said to want nothing when he is content and satisfied with that estate wherein he is as if he had all things So David when Ziglag was burnt his Wives carried away captive his souldiers began to mutinie and threaten
not upon their freedome from condemnation So much for that I come now to a second use You see here the way whereby men aggravate afflictions and get causes of impatience in themselves and if we seriously consider it wee shall find one of these the ordinary causes of all distempers and impatience in losses in sicknesses in distresse of mind in crosses upon a mans name or whatsoever befalleth him amisse in the world that which makes him flie out that which makes him that he cannot submit unto God it is some of these particulars here spoken of Let it therefore in the second place stirre us up every one in the presence of God to set our selves upon this taske of Christianitie to labour for Patience that we may be perfect Christians and to be perfect in Patience Let Patience have her perfect worke But all the question is how a man may get it As there are two sorts of afflictions in a mans life so Patience hath two offices One affliction is those present evils that a man undergoeth and suffereth here Patience is to support him in those present miseries and calamities Another sort of tryall is when the good that a man expects is delayed and is not presently granted and here patience is necessarie in this case also I will shew yee how a man may set patience a worke in both these and so conclude First for the present calamities of a mans life For crosses of any kind in name state friends or familie or in whatsoever a man hath or goeth about they may all be reduced to this one head when a man commeth from a state of health to a state of sicknesse from a state of comfort to a state of sorrow from acquaintance and societie to be as a Pelican in the wildernesse as David speakes destitute of all friends and helpes from inward rejoycing in his heart in the assurance of Gods love to spirituall disertions wherein he seemeth to be as in a cloude under the frownes of God When a man is in this case how shall he exercise patience how shall he come to it Briefly the way for a man to get patience in such cases as these is this First to consider that there is no change in my life there is no condition whatsoever that I am cast into but it is ordered by God Set thy soule aworke now to give God his glory in that change of thy life First give God the glory of his absolute Soveraignty and Dominion Secondly give him the glory of his wisdome Thirdly give him the glory of his mercy in those changes of thy life that seeme most grievous to thee First I say give him the glory of his absolute soveraignty Acknowledge him an absolute in-dependant Lord that doth what he will among the creatures His will is the rule of all his actions upon the creatures here below and uncontrould unquestionable It is high arrogancy and presumption and pride of spirit for the creature to contest with his Creator concerning his actions on earth Let every man reason thus I must give God the glory of his Soveraignty and acknowledge that he hath power and right to rule all the families of the earth and why not mine as well as another Why not my person as well as anothers Why not to order all the changes of my life as well as another mans That which Benhadad spake proudly to Ahab thy silver and thy gold thy wives and thy children and thy house and thy Citie are mine That may God speake truely and by right All that thou hast and all that thou art is mine therefore give him that glory that Iob did in the change of his life The Lord hath given the Lord hath taken away blessed bee the name of the Lord. The Lord that gave hath right to take what he will There is nothing that will keepe the creature in his due place but the consideration of Gods absolute soveraigntie This consideration was that that meekned the spirit of Eli when that heavy message was brought to him that there should come such miserie upon his house that whosoever heard it both his eares should tingle well saith he It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth him good It is the Lord and it becommeth not servants to stand and contend with their Lord. So David when the Priests offered him their service to goe along with him to the field from Absolom If saith he I shall find favour in the eyes of the Lord he will bring me back to Ierusalem and his tabernacle but if he thus say I have no delight in thee behold here am I let him doe to mee as seemeth good unto him Here was that that humbled the spirit of David when he considered that he was under the hands of an absolute Lord let the Lord do with me what seemeth him good Secondly as thou must give him the glory of his soveraignty so of his wisedome Know that God ordereth all his wayes with wisedome and counsell he knoweth what is good for his children Yee are content when yee are sicke that the Phisitian should diet yee because yee account him wise and one that hath skill in that course If God diet thee for the purging out of some corruption and for the curing of some spirituall disease in thy soule submit to God in this case be willing to resigne thy selfe up to be ordered by him A man that hath a Gangreene or such a dangerous disease in his body submitteth to the Surgeon in his course though it be to the cutting and sawing off of a limbe though it bee never so painfull and the losse be never so great yet hee is for the saving of his life willing to have that taken away God is a wise God that knoweth what estate is best for thee not onely when tryals are better then comforts but what one kind of tryall is better then another it may be it is better to exercise one with povertie another with disgrace another with spirituall trouble another with restraint of libertie which particular tryall is necessary to cure that disease and which this that is in my soule the heavenly Phisitian will bring that upon thee as a spirituall prescription and a heavenly course that he takes in infinite wisdome to cure thee Lastly give him in all this the glory of his mercie What hast thou lost but thou maiest have lost a great deale more What dost thou suffer but thou maiest have suffered a great deale more As Alcibiades when he was told that one had stolne halfe his plate I have cause saith he rather to bee thankefull that hee tooke no more then to be troubled that he tooke so much I am sure it is true of God in this case what hath God tooke from thee some part of thy estate some friend some comfort of thy life some one or other particular comfort could he not have done more Hee afflicteth
carefull that they had no sinfull thought they would be patternes of the strangest expressions of conformitie to the rule that can be imagined if it were possible to be granted You may easily be perswaded of this doe you that now which they wish for and wish in vaine make use of the time of grace now there is no comming backe againe afterward Thirdly A third reason is this I shall goe to him As if hee should have have said I have another businesse in hand now the child is dead it is not for me to stand blubbering and spending my time for a dead Child I am going to him The word here is I shall returne to him Returne signifieth to goe backe to a place where one was before So David shall returne to his Child for he was there before there in respect of his body the principles of that is in the earth where the Child is and in heaven in respect of his soule where the Child is The Body returneth to dust whence it was taken and the soule to God that gave it The body is of the dust and returneth to dust the soule commeth from God and returnes to God againe Therefore he saith here I shall returne to him because I came from him When things are reduced to their first principles the body to the earth and the soule to God they are said to returne Yee see the phrase then The point briefly is this That the greatest care of a mans life the greatest businesse he hath to doe on earth is to prepare for death His businesse is not to care for his children that are dead and to spend unprofitable sorrow for them the maine businesse of my life is how I shall make my peace with God and bee fitted for death for I am going thither Wee should observe the death of others to stirre us up to a serious preparation for our owne death the Father should be stirred up by seeing his Child dead before him the elder by seeing the younger die before them we see how death hath shot his arrowes beyond and short and above and below us in those that are elder and younger and richer and poorer all sorts he will strike us at last this thing I say should stirre us up to prepare for our owne dissolution A man would thinke that there were no need of such a thing the very bare sight of Corse or a hearse the bare fight of a dead corpse the bare ringing of a bell or a Funerall Sermon should be warning enough to the living to tell him of death When a man sees a company carrying a dead body to the gaave he should say to himselfe It may bee the feet of these may carrie me next But how commeth it to passe that it is not thus Certainly there is not power in all examples to worke this it is the worke of Gods spirit Though a man observe the death of never so many before him yet this cannot worke in him a serious care to make preparation for his owne death except God adde a further worke to it We may see this in the expression of Moses when so many died in the Wildernesse Lord teach us to number our dayes that wee may apply our hearts to wisedome As if hee should have said Though so many thousands died in the Wildernesse and that by so many severall kinds of death yet we shall never apply our hearts to wisedome by those examples except God teach us that wisdome Therefore we should pray to God to teach us by his Spirit to make use of Examples Men must give account for examples aswell as for rules men must give account for examples of mortalitie as well as for Sermons of mortalitie therefore let the example of others mortality stirre you up to prepare for your owne and that you may doe so be much in calling upon God Lastly Hee shall not returne to mee that is in this sense to converse on earth as he had done before I shall returne to him but hee shall not returne to mee He doth but reitterate and repeat what he had said before in effect This is the thing then that Parents must make account of both for themselves and their children For their children It should make them moderate therefore in their sorrow for them God now hath shewed his purpose and declared his will therefore wee should rest in that will of God This is the thing that David aymed at Gods will was not only to takeaway his child but so to take him away as never to returne to him againe in that manner Now God had declared his will and therefore why should I fast saith he as if he should say I will now rest in the will of God In all the things which we account crosses and losses in children and friends c. The maine businesse of a Christian is not to expresse sorrow but submission and subjection to God to exercise and inure his heart to patience and to rest in Gods good pleasure and will As Eli though he faild in his carriage to his sonnes yet he shewed a dutifull respect to God his heavenly father When Samuel told him the judgement of God that should come upon his house It is the Lord saith he let him doe what seemeth him good in his owne eyes though it were a heavy judgement such as whosoever should heare of it both his eares should tingle yet it is the Lord let him doe what seemeth him good As if he should say I have nothing to doe in this businesse but to subject my selfe with patient submission and contentednesse to his will it is the Lord it becommeth not me to contend with him and to reason with God concerning his worke I confesse hee is righteous let him doe what seemeth him good in his owne eyes And so Aaron There was a heavy judgement befallen him his sonnes were consumed with fire yet the text saith Aaron held his peace When God manifested so great wrath to his house in wasting and consuming and burning his sonnes for offering of strange fire yet Aaron held his peace that is he did only mind how to glorifie God by a contented submission to his will So Iob hee heard not only of the losse of his children but that he lost them in such a manner by a violent death by a house falling on their heads yet the Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken away blessed bee the name of the Lord. Whereas a carnall worldly man would have fallen to strugling and contending and quarrelling against God and so trouble and perplex his owne spirit We doe exceedingly imbitter Gods cup by mingling with it ingredients of our owne passions and so make the affliction more heavy and grievous then God intends it Here is the reason wee possesse not our soules with patience When we are sensible of the losse of friends and children c. let us learne to make it our businesse to thinke I have a
must be the two feet that we walke on toward God Righteousnesse that is one by which we tread the way of the first Table in workes of pietie to God and Mercie is the other by which we tread the way of the second Table in mercy towards men So that as the two Tables kisse each other they are infolded one in another the love we owe to our brethren it hangs and depends on our love to God the love that wee shew to God is to be testified by our love to our brethren So these two are to embrace one anothee wee must not sever them that God severeth not according to this others will judge of us that wee are truly righteous according to this scantling we take of our selves Deceive not your selves if there be not workes of Charitie and mercie flatter not your selves with an opinion of righteousnesse it is an emptie name where mercie is not So the Apostle makes the argument Hee that loveth not his brother whom hee hath seene how can hee love God whom hee hath not seene So likewise here is it possible that there should be righteousnesse toward God when there is not mercie toward men It is the first of those pious instructions that I will commend to this place Ostentation of righteousnesse there is a great deale in the world men desire to be accounted godly men because they can be reserved to themselves They can get pretences of pietie and zealous they will seeme to be for workes of the first Table Did God give onely one Table No but we shall bee tried by the workes of the second Table When I was hungry yee fed me not when I was thirstie yee gave me no drinke Why doe we make boast of pietie to God that men cannot judge of For there is one little graine of hypocrisie that spoileth all We may act mercie to men but we cannot act pietie pietie will shew it selfe here Here is the touch-stone to give proofe of the pietie in our hearts if it bud out in mercie the righteous man is mercifull in every kind Where there is pietie there will not be reviling and disgracing and quarrelling and contention it is impossible that pietie in the heart should be contentious that pure and untainted liquor should passe through a filthy kennell if there bee grace in the heart it will shew it selfe in the hand in the lip in the words in the actions in all It is but a touch that I give you I know you easily ghesse where I am I come not to put you in mind of what you know or rather to put you in mind I am not conscious to your courses but I will tell yee what the world saith It is a great deale of wrong done to this parish and this place if there bee not much contention in it and it is not upon this occasion that I heard it for before now I never knew any one in the parish but as the Apostle saith of the good workes of one of the Churches It is spoken of in all the world so the strife of this place is spoken of in all the Citie Here is the fruit whereby you must examine your selves mercie to men If wee be not those that nourish brotherly love there will be no mercie there is no mercie where there are the fruits of uncharitablenesse and if there be no mercie there will be no pietie Let this therefore be the touch-stone of pietie love and peace with men as the Apostle speakes As much as is possible have peace with all men I will speake no more of the meaning of the first part Mercifull men are taken away It is the Comentary upon the former The second is the Predicate of the Proposition they are taken away that hath reference to this they perish It is great wisedome in the Spirit of God thus to expound one word by another That as in the body of a man those parts that are of most use God in wisedome hath made them double hath made them paires two eyes two hands two eares c. because these are parts of great use that if one part fall away and miscary the other part may supply if one eye be out a man loseth not his sight he hath another and so in other parts so it is in the Scripture if we mistake one word here is another that is more plaine to lead us right in the meaning of the Scripture for else men would have beene offended Godly men perish That is more then to die that that perisheth is lost But it is plaine they are not lost in death Perishing is one step beyond death If it had beene predicated of mercilesse impenitent unrighteous men it might have been said so they perish they not only die But what hath the righteous done who ever perished being innocent Who ever suspected and dreamed that it was possible for mercifull men to perish Here commeth in the interpretation No be not deceived It is a word frequently used in the world carnall men thinke so but they perish not they are but tooke away Yee see how one word helpeth the other so this word giveth us assurance of the meaning of this Scripture and of the state and condition of a mercifull man hee perisheth not though the Atheists of the world thinke so he perisheth not to himselfe for then beginneth his happinesse when death commeth though they perish to mens memomoriall and remembrance there is no remembrance of the wise man more then of the foole saith Solomon that is worldly men that mind the world and their bellies they take no more to consideration when a righteous man a wise man dieth then a foole that is an impenitent man though I say they perish to the memoriall of the world they perish not to God not to the fruition of his happinesse for Death is but a porter a bridge to everlasting life then beginneth their glory Heaven that was begun before in a misterie then it is set open to them literally and personally They perish not because they are taken away there is the proofe of it A man that is removed only from an Inne no man will say that hee is lost That that is transplanted from one soile to another doth not perish A graft or syens though it be cut off and it is to have a more noble plantation It is so farre from perishing that it is more perfect it is stablished in its nature it is set into a better There are but one of these two interpretations of perishing and neither of them can befall a godly mercifull man Either it is a passage from a beeing to a not beeing and so the Beasts when they die perish because their soules are mortall as well as their bodies it is no more a living creature there is no more life in it it resolveth to its first principle the soule it is nourished as well as the body there was a beeing before but now there
hee would not doe it his heart smo●…e him for cutting off the lappe of Sauls garment though he might have gained the kingdome of Israel by it hee would not lay his hands on the Lords anointed And what was the reason of it because he would not advantage himselfe by disobedience to God he would rather want himselfe What was the reason that Daniel when he saw hee was in an apparant hazard not only of the losse of honour but of his life and that for the performance but of one dutie prayer and that but for a short time yet would not omit it no not for a short time though he might by that not onely have saved his life but kept his honour in the Court he prayed to God even at that time when he was forbidden Why so because he lived to God and not to himselfe Had Daniel lived to and sought himselfe more then God he would have dispensed with this and saved both his life and honour though he had offended God in that particular of omission But this is the disposition of a heart that is faithfull and upright with God it will not dishonour God for the greatest advantage that can come to it selfe it will not neglect a dutie to God whatsoever losse it have in the world Thirdly Take another instance whereby we may see what we intend in this tryall Let the will of God and the bent of a mans owne will come in competition together God will have me leave this I will hold it God will have mee forsake this I will keepe it It is a comfort a worldly benefit I lose my comfort if I part with it He that now liveth to himselfe hee will please his owne will and be disquieted and vexed against Gods will that crosseth his But he that liueth to God will bee content that God should crosse him in his will because he would glorifie God in his owne will in his soveraignty in his puritie in his holinesse and justice c. See it in the case of Abraham Abraham had a strong love to Isaak and good cause yet neverthelesse though hee could see a comfort to himselfe in this sonne when God telleth him thou must sacrifice thy sonne Isaack when he had the revealed will of God Abraham now resolveth to shew that he lived to God and not to himselfe therefore he would part with any comfort of his life for God when he required it So David If the Lord will saith he hee can bring me backe that I shall see the Tabernacle and the Arke if not if he say I have no pleasure in thee lo●… here I am let the Lord doe with me as seemeth good in his owne eyes When the case is this when the will of God crosseth thy will what now prevaileth Doth the desire of having thy owne will prevaile against the desire of submitting to Gods will Doth it raise murmuring and impatiencie of spirit So farre thou livest to thy selfe Therefore consider this Here is an occasion now for a lust and a sinfull affection to shew it selfe either a man may advantage himselfe in an evill course or he cannot but disadvantage himselfe in a good course or when God crosseth a man in that hee desireth and delights in in the world That is the first tryall whereby a man may know whether he liveth to himselfe Secondly another tryall will be this Consider if there be any part of the truth of God of his revealed will that for selfe-respects thou art willing to be ignorant of lest the knowledge of it should make thee doe somewhat to thy owne disadvantage in this thou livest to thy selfe See this to be true in all that lived to themselves Balaam though he profest that for a house full of gold hee would not goe beyond the word of the Lord yet notwithstanding he was willing not to take notice of Gods will but to goe on rather to curse Iohanan in Ier. 42. professeth deeply that he would obey the will of the Lord but when he understood the will of the Lord when it crost his will then saith he to Ieremy It is not the Lord that hath bid thee say this but Baruch When men cavill against any part of Gods word or hide any truth from themselves and with-hold the truth in unrighteousnesse Here is a man living to himselfe How many points are there in Religion that many men are willingly ignorant of And when they cannot but know them how doe they labour for distinction how doe they dawbe over the matter that they may hide the truth from themselves that it may not worke upon their consciences to make them leave their profitable sins Some would have the keeping of the Lords day according to Judaisme though it bee revealed to them that there is a broad difference between the Iews observation and the Christians keeping of it Another man he will not understand Usurie to be a sinne because his course is usurious he will not know this willingly because he would not disadvantage himselfe Another will not understand what hee is bound to doe to the glory of God with his estate in what measure according to all the good that God hath blessed him with to honour God and give the first fruits of all his increase nor in what manner that he should be ready to every good worke to contribute willingly to the necessities of the Saints what he should doe to pious and mercifull uses what for publike what for private occasions he would not willingly know these things he should have less ease he makes account Thus when a man is not willing to bee informed in any thing to sift the truth to the bottome to the uttermost to know any thing concerning a duty in any kind when he laboureth not to convince his heart to this end that he may be brought in every thing to obey God when he standeth out with God in any one point this man liveth to himselfe and walketh not as he should according to the rule of God Now then beloved let us be convinced of it I beseech you take it home and let every man consider of it with himselfe Sometime in the actions of religion there commeth matter of glory in the world this setteth me forward much when these things are spoken against and when I shal suffer disadvantages I cānot hold out At another time though all things be wel yet if it crosse me in such a course I murmure as if it were an unprofitable thing to serve God And then again when God revealeth his will my froward and rebellious heart hath hung backe and beene unwilling to submit to Gods wil in this point all this while I have lived to my self And if it be true if a man be in Christ he liveth not to himself then it follows if a man liveth to himself he is out of Ghrist If the weakest Christian live to Christ then the best that liveth to himselfe is out of Christ.
and drawes him to God therefore I say there are certaine graces that every one should exercise if he would not live to himselfe What are those First the knowledge of God in Christ. Get a more full and particular and experimentall knowledge of God All our looking to the creature is because we know not God perfectly if we did know him we would account him the chiefest of tenne thousand the Church when she knew Christ said so wee would account him as Elkanah said to Hannah Am not I better to thee then tenne sounes better then tenne friends then ten worlds Get therefore a more full knowledge of God that all power is in him One thing have I heard once and twice that power belongeth unto God saith the Psalmist Secondly Get faith in the exercise more All the worthies of the Lord in that 11. Hebr. What made them live ●…o to God and not to themselves as they did because they beleeved they did it by faith by faith Abraham denied himselfe by faith Moses forsooke the pleasures of Egypt by faith those Worthies of whom the world was not worthy wandred up and downe in sheepes skins and goats skins and would not be delivered When a man getteth interest in Christ by faith he shall see that in him that will satisfie all his desires and answer all his losses Thirdly exercise Love Faith workes by love The more we love God in Christ the more perfectly wee shall cleave to him Love is a uniting grace that uniteth the soule to Christ. The love of Christ constraineth mee saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 5. for wee thus judge if one died for all then it is fit they that live should not live to themselves And the truth is the more a soule loveth Christ the more it will live to him Lastly a word of the last Use and that is for instruction Beeing convinced that such is the estate of most men that they live to themselves and that whose estate soever it is it is a sinfull estate and argueth a man out of Christ and that there is a possibility of getting out of this estate Let it be for instruction to all those that in some measure live to God and not to themselves let it be to teach them and perswade them more fully to live to him and lesse to themselves A man simply considered without any relation to others or dependance upon another man he may please himselfe but when a man is considered in his dependance upon God and his relation to men hee must then observe the will of his Creatour in that relation God hath set him he must carry himselfe as his creature and observe the end that the creature is appointed to Nay he must carry himselfe as a Christian and observe the good of the body hee must carry himselfe as a member to doe good to the whole Let every Christian labour to doe this if he would have comfort to his soule that hee doth not live to himselfe that he is of the number of those that are accepted of God in life and death Labour to imploy his time and strength and gifts and whatsoever he is and hath to the good of others As every man hath received the gift let him minister to others as faithfull dispencers of the manifold grace of God If you have received gifts you have received them from God you have received them for the good of others you have received them as dispensers let every man saith the Apostle dispense the manifold grace of God if the Apostle had said be dispensers of the grace of knowledge that you have for the feeding of the soules of many and not of your estates or relieve as many as you can with your estates but take no care for their soules but when hee saith be dispensers of the manifold gifts of God his meaning is that whatsoever I have wherewith I am able to doe men good with whether it be inward or outward gifts the gifts of the mind or of the outward man anything whereby I can bee advantageous to others I must serve God and men in improving of that He that will not live to himselfe is bound to serve every man with every gift he hath If God have furnished a man with inward gifts the graces of his Spirit If a man have knowledge and faith or experience or comfort whatsoever graces of the Spirit hee hath there are duties appointed and a Communion of Saints exprest that men may be stirred up to exercise those graces in that communion for the good of all the Saints Therefore wee are said to have knowledge to profit with And gifts to edifie with All that a man hath God hath given him for this end that God may be glorified by it Herein is my Father glorified that you bring forth much fruit Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your Father which is in heaven Men have much benefit by the graces of the Spirit in others when they are improved as they ought they are as lights amongst men in the world Grace when it is opened like the Box of oyntment raiseth a desire in others after it Grace exercised and communicated to others it sheweth the amiablenesse of it Christians should therefore doe it that they may make Christianity lovely that they may make the profession of Religion amiable to the world that is by communicating the graces of God to others This every man should doe in his place in his person take all advantages this way And as it is good for others so it is good for a mans selfe to doe thus a man increaseth his owne store Liberalitie we say is the best husbandrie There is no promise in the Scripture for hoarding up there are many to distribute I say it is the best husbandrie in the world especially in spirituall things it is as the oyle increased in the pouring out like the loaves the more they were broken the more they multiplied still We see the hand nourisheth it selfe by administring food to the mouth so a Christian not onely exerciseth but increaseth grace in himselfe by communicating grace to others And what I say for spirituall I say for outward things If a man have wealth or honour or any of these outward things and an opportunitie he should imploy them for others that it may appeare that hee doth not live to himselfe Hee that layeth up riches only for himselfe and his family liveth to himselfe Hee that followeth his calling only for himselfe and his family liveth to himselfe Hee doth that which a man out of Christ would doe but a man that would live unto God hee must glorifie God with his estate To doe good and to distribute forget not for with such sacrifices God is pleased Heb. 13. Charge them that are rich in the world that they bee not high-minded but ready to distribute to the necessities of the Saints
that I have spoken that the meditation thereof will stirre them up to make cleare all reckonings with God before they goe hence and bee seene no more You may find this to be true in your owne experience how loath men are to entertaine thoughts of their latter end Goe to one that lies sicke of a Consumption and hee will tell you the Doctors say that I may live and I doubt not but I shall get up againe such a one hath beene brought as low as I and hee is recovered and why may not I. I once knew one that when the Phisitians came and told him that hee must die Good Lord said hee what a deale of worke have I to doe I have all my seed to sow all my evidences to seale that my soule should bee saved c. Such thoughts should enter into us now pitch on them seriously buckle to them soundly Wee may learne this point of wisedome of the divell himselfe Hee because hee knoweth his time is short hee is so much the fuller of rage and malice and plies his worke with so much the more eagernesse Woe bee to the Inhabitants of the earth and the Sea Revelat. 12. 12. for the divell is gone out amongst men having great wrath because hee knoweth that hee hath but a short time So should wee doe Thinke with thy selfe the seventh Angel will come ere long and sweare by him that liveth for ever and ever that there shall bee no more time but GOD will have an account for the time past What if the Angel should come now and sweare as tenne to one but there is some man or woman in this Congregation concerning whom GOD hath determined that they shall have no more time before a weeke bee at an end Put the case it should bee any ones case thine or mine that God should say Goe fetch such a man I will give him no more time It is true I gave him some but now his voyage is at an end his sayle is strucke and then we shouldhave all to seeke no Christ no true faith no evidence for Heaven when wee must come and give an account to God What have you done with all your time will God say I must have a reckoning of it And then commeth in Imprimis so much time in drinking so much in revelling so much in dressing my selfe every day And then God shall say Were these the things I gave you time for Did I bestow time on you for to bee spent about such things as these No it was for Heaven Beloved how could we answer to these things It is good and profitable seriously to consider of this betimes say to thy selfe I have not long to live after a while I must goe hence and be no more I must give an account and a reckoning unto God of all that I have done whether it bee good or evill But this is not the principall point I have to speake of therefore I passe it briefly I come to the Exhortation it selfe It remaineth that both they that have wives bee as though they had none and they that weepe as if they wept not and they that rejoyce as though they rejoyced not and they that buy as though they possessed not and they that use the world as not abusing it c. In a word I take the summe of the Exhortation to be as if the Apostle S. Paul had said thus Brethren you are ready to cast anchor trouble not your selves bee stedfast gird up the loynes of your mindes let your care bee greatest for heaven as for these things that are here below if you have wives bee as if you had none thinke assoone as you are ashoare you shall have none if you bee sicke or under any crosse or affliction bee as though you wept not suppose you bee as a fellow that is faine to plie the pumpe all the day assoone as hee is ashoare hee is free if you rejoyce if you be in prosperity if you be as the Master of the Ship that hath great preferment bee as if you rejoyced not Why you are almost come ashoare therefore bee as if not in all these I will briefly open the meaning of all these particulars and then put all into one point of instruction and so come further to applie it unto you as God shall enable me What therefore is the meaning first Let them that have wives bee as though they had none To that I answer A man that hath a Wife hath two things that another hath not that hath no wife The first is He hath a great deale of joy and comfort he hath a second selfe a loving yoak-fellow one in whose Bosome hee can poure his heart at any time one that he can make partaker of all his contentments one that is willing to helpe him to carry all his crosses so in a Wife supposing her to be a good Wife hee hath that comfort that another knowes not of Secondly he that hath a Wife hath a great many cares that another hath not hee hath a great deale of feare lest hee should leave her in distresse a great deale of care how shee and the children that are begotten by him of her should be provided for when he is gone so that as Saint Paul saith hee cannot but care for the things of the world how he may give content to his wife These two things a man hath that hath a Wife Now What is it to bee in this as if hee had no wife That is this In all contentments that come by a wife to use them as if hee had none at all that is to be moderate not to glu●… himselfe and to thinke now I am a happy man I need no more God hath given me such a yoake-fellow and I have abundant joy in it But to moderate his heart in this And for the other thing for care and thought how to provide for her and her children to goe on as if he had no wife and children to provide for to leave all to God to goe on in his calling in obedience to God and let God doe what hee will And for matter of providing food and rayment when hee is gone let him even carry himselfe as if all the world were gone when hee is gone This is to have a wife as if hee had none to be as moderate in the enjoying of the contentments that come by his wife to be as moderate in cares required for a Wife so moderate in them as if he had no wife at all to joy in or to take care for For the second They that weepe as if they wept not That is for matter of Affliction One man commeth out and he exceedingly glorieth in his happinesse that he hath a wife Another complainet no man is so full of crosses as I every day one crosse after another no man hath such children such a husband such an estate so poore so afflicted so weake ever groaning and
of the Father dwelling in him This shall suffice for the clearing of the point I have spent the more time in it because I would faine lay as good a foundation as I might that the Application may take the deeper impression in your hearts Wee that live in the Countrey when we come up by occasion into the Citie and here see all men so full of trouble every man so toyled in his worke so full of businesse and so little time taken for any thing else me thinkes that such a point as this to Brethren to beleevers should be of speciall use Now beloved this is the summe of that I have to say Bee in all these things as if not Shall wee all resolve as obedient children to carry this point home and examine in deed and in truth whether wee be in these things as if not But alas what shall I say I remember a story of one Thomas Lennot a learned English man who reading once in the fifth sixth and seventh Chapters of S. Mathews Gospel how our Saviour Christ saith You have heard how it hath beene said of old you must doe thus and thus but I say unto you you must love your enemies pray for them that curse you doe good to them that hate you and persecute you and so hee goeth on in injoyning such strange duties to flesh and bloud Hee breakes out Oh Iesus either this is not thy Gospel or wee are not Christians Truly beloved I would to God a Minister might not have just cause to say so in this point that when hee commeth and reades this of the Apostle It remaines brethren that hee that hath a wife bee as if hee had none hee that useth the world as not abusing it and hee that buyeth as if hee possessed not c. And must it be thus if wee meane to be Christians I would to God I say a man might not breake out and say Oh Paul either thou art not the writer of this or wee are no Christians Wee talke and professe it in words that we purpose to doe it but if wee come to the deed and the truth it is cleane contrary wee are not at all moderate in the use of these things In matters of Heaven and in things that concerne our everlasting welfare where God would have us take the kingdome of heaven with violence Where wee should cry out as the Horse-leach his daughter Give give and never say it is enough Wee are even like children that goe to schoole that care not how little they have for their money In hearing if the Sermon bee but halfe an houre wee thinke it enough and in prayer and in conference a little will serve the turne Like the Jesuit that when he thought he had a revelation he cryed out Satis Domine Enough Lord I have revelation enough So wee in matters of religion Enough Lord. But turne us to wives to children to clothes to honours to preferments to riches to ease to pleasures and the like there wee are as the barren wombe that never saith it is enough Brethren is it not thus But me thinkes I should bring you some particular instances to convince you that it is thus and I would to the Lord I could throughly convince you of it that thus it is with you But to instance a little Suppose now a man comes and meets with a Citizen in his businesse and say to him How have you spent this day Truly he will say I am so full of businesse that I have not time so much as to eat my meat But I hope you have beene at prayer in your family have you not Alas will hee say I cannot get so much as a quarter of an houres time Doe you call this as if not brethren Come to another that hath a wife all his care is for her oh my wife and children if I should die and leave them poore what should I doe when I sleepe I dreame of them when I awake in the morning my thoughts are of them Is this to be as if you had no wife and children Another hee is ever a complaining and mourning oh I have such crosses I am so full of afflictions I have lost such and such friends and such and such an estate and though I goe to Church and heare such and such comfortable doctrines one after another and all telling me of the all-sufficiency of God of the comforts and joyes of the Spirit of the good things that are layed up in Heaven yet like Rachel they will never bee comforted for their brother for their sister for their children c. What shall we say to these things Doe you thinke the Lord speakes not as he meaneth or that the Apostle when he saith here absolutely and determinatly that thus and thus you must doe if you be Christians if you be brethren Shall wee doe the contrary to all this and yet thinke that all will bee well I know you may put it off many of you and alledge many things wee have callings and wee must follow our Callings if God brings me in imployment blame me not if I follow it And I know not how to live if I doe not doe thus and thus But be not deceived God is not mocked In a word therefore to put you on the tryall If thou findest in the middest of thy trading and merchandizing or whatsoever calling thou art of thy heart daily gathering towards heaven that thou canst say blessed be God for this and other commodities but Christ is my darling this is good And then in these things if thou hast a care to use them aright as well as to get them and to thanke God for them and that thy project is how thou shalt doe good with that thou hast that thou art alwayes saying with thy selfe Lord how shall I doe good with so much as I have got by such a bargaine God forbid I should say against thee though thou bee full of businesse from morning to evening But alas there are many good people and godly that give hope that they serve God yet if they goe home and examine themselves throughly their owne consciences will tell them that in the things of this world they are not as if not but rather that they have beene over-carefull and too full of distractions in businesses And so for matter of joy if a man have a little pleasure or preferment given him his heart is so up that hee knowes not where he is hee is so transported that he hath cleane forgot himselfe This cannot stand this is not to be as if not and therefore I beseech you in the feare of God thinke of it Now if a man would know how hee should come to have his heart in a good temper to bee in these things as if not In one word let me tell you that rule of Saint Paul In all things bee filled with the Spirit and then thou wilt not take thought
thoughts of Gods displeasure and thinkes it is at peace with God it is an evident signe that wrath is a comming Nay beloved in that measure you are in carnall securitie in that measure you are under wrath let that therefore be enough to awaken you and say thus with your selves It were better for me a great deale to be among the number of those that complaine and are mourning Christians then to bee in the number of those that are full of jollity and Joviality that rejoyce and sport themselves that put farre from them the evill day I might then escape the wrath of God as they doe Who are they that escape wrath See in Ezekiel 9. Those that were awake when others slept those that mourned when others laughed those that humbled themselves before God when others hardned themselves those were the men that were marked in the forehead by the Angel and they escaped And in the third of Malachie Those that feared the Lord and thought upon his name in those evill times that spake oft one to another there was a booke of remembrance of them and they are Gods jewels he will be sure to keepe them safe But how shall wee come to be awakened I should have told you some helpes for this I will but touch upon a few in a word First I will propound sobrietie as a maine helpe Would you be watchfull and kept from spirituall slumber take heed that you keepe your selves sober I speake not of sobrietie as it is opposed to drunkennesse though that be one thing Bee not filled with wine wherein is excesse but bee filled with the holy Ghost Ephes. 5. As if he should say you cannot be filled with the holy Ghost and with excesse of Wine persons that take liberty in excessive drinking certainly they are destitute of the holy Ghost and so of life and salvation But I meane a further sobriety that is as it is opposed to worldly-mindednesse Take heed that you plunge not your selves too much in the world and worldly pleasures and cares for these are against the rule of sobriety Be sober in your diet in your apparell in your gaining in your spending in your mirth in your company in every thing that is moderate your selves and your affections in these things A man may soone grow to such a drunkennesse by excesse in worldly affections that he may bee in a dead sleepe neglecting Gods judgements and his owne estate as wee see men that plunge themselves in worldly businesse are It takes away the thoughts of those things that concerne our spirituall good I say not that you should leave off the businesse of the world for every man must continue in the calling that God hath set him But I say moderate your affections to the things of the world Doe worldly businesses with heavenly mindes in obedience to God Doe them with waking hearts to repent for the sinnes of your callings to avoide the sinnes of your callings And that that I say of labouring in your callings I say of pleasures and of every thing else we should be watchfull and sober as S. Peter saith Bee sober and watch Secondly if you would be free from security which is a forerunner of judgement be sure to keepe your selves in exercise A man that would keepe himselfe awake will busie himselfe in some exercise and imployment or other What exercise should a Christian use The exercise of grace and of the duties of obedience Be sure to keepe your selves in the exercise of all the advantages that God giveth you in your lives to imploy your graces in In difficulties and straites exercise your faith In provocations to anger and discontent exercise meeknesse In crosses and troubles and afflictions exercise patience In the miseries and wants of others whether spirituall or corporall exercise mercy And what I say concerning grace I say concerning duty Keepe your selves in the exercise of prayer and reading and meditation and conference some one thing or other some holy employment or other that may keepe the soule waking For I tell you you shall find that whensoever you let fall spirituall exercise you will at that very instant fall into carnall securitie in some kind or other Thirdly would you keepe your selves from this dead sleepe of carnall security then keepe your spirits in feare Sorrow and griefe makes a man heavy but feare keepes a man waking when Iacob feared Esau he kept a watch that night Sampson feared the Philistims and it wakened him out of his sleepe Feare makes a man watchfull You may perceive it in your owne experience In that measure that the feare of God prevaileth securitie is expelled Keepe feare therefore Blessed is the man that feareth alwayes but he that hardneth his heart falleth into evill Marke how he opposeth the hardning of a mans selfe in carnall securitie to the feare of God Keepe your heart in a constant feare Reason thus Alas shall I doe this thing and sinne against God Will not God be offended and displeased Shall I goe on in this vanity Would I have the judgement of God find me in this company would I have it seise upon mee in this imployment in this businesse in this action Feare lest God should strike thee in such an act lest Death should seize upon thee in such a place and let that make thee keepe a constant watch against the snares that are in those places Fourthly keepe good company Company you know is a good meanes to keepe men awake Two are better then one and woe to him that is alone saith Solomon I say good company for there are a company that will infect you Keepe not company with a froward person lest thou learne his frowardnesse So keepe not company with drunken and swearing persons these are the Divels instruments to keepe a man in carnall security No keepe company with those that have a charge given them to exhort one another daily and to consider one another to provoke to love and good workes Keepe company with the Saints and make use of all opportunities to provoke others and to be provoked by others That is the fourth helpe Fifthly would you bee kept from this sinfull security then keepe God alwayes in your sight It is a good way for a man that would keepe himselfe awake to fix his eye upon some object Fix your eye upon this maine object God Whether shall I depart from thy presence saith David This is that the Lord would have his people to consider to keepe them from sinne in Ier. 23. 23. Am I a God at hand saith the Lord and not a God a farre off Doe not I fill heaven and earth saith the Lord Can a man hide himselfe from God in any secret place Thinke in thy chamber in thy parlour in thy shop in thy house in thy friends house in the street in the Church in every place wheresoever thou art that there God is also If
and testament and be troubled about that when thou hadst more need to have that Will and testament confirmed that Christ hath made And then set thy soule and conscience thy inner house in order let not conscience be to seeke then of any thing that concerneth thee for thy peace toward God and man Die thus and die happily Though Death be an enemie yet thou shalt not be hurt of it because it is subdued and at last thou shalt get the victorie over it when thou shalt see it utterly destroyed And now as I have exhorted you to doe this by way of counsell so yet a little further I crave patience that I may encourage you to doe it by way of example By the example of this blessed servant and Saint of God for whose occasion you have given this meeting and I have preached this Sermon Give me leave to doe by her as Mary Magdelen did by our Saviour Christ to breake a box of Spiknard and poure it on her that I may anoint her for her buriall Concerning whom though I could say a great deale yet knowing how well shee was knowne to you I should not be afraid to say too much Yet on the other side because the night is farre spent and because shee was sufficiently knowne to you although I speake but a little I shall speake enough Shee dwelt among you who is he that can speake ill of her who knew her but reported well of her The Apostle Saint Paul reduceth all the practicall parts of Christianitie to three heads Living soberly and righteously and holily The grace of God saith he hath appeared and teacheth us to doe all this Shee had learned to live soberly Shee was a patterne of sobrietie Sober in her countenance in her diet in her apparell in her speech in all her behaviour And the grace of God taught her to live righteously both in those things that concerne the workes of justice and those things that concerne the workes of mercy both are referred to righteousnesse For her Justice I am perswaded shee was exceeding carefull in all her wayes to keepe a good Conscience I am sure she was a woman very diligent and painfull in her Calling shee was truly one of those good house-wives that Solomon describeth in Prov. 31. and had studied that Chapter well and attained the practise of it she could never endure idlenesse in any there was no plague she said to idlenesse and that diligence in our Callings sets open a dore to many blessings and shuts up the dore to many tentations I may call her a discreet woman that was a crowne to her husband so Solomon said a vertuous woman is Hee had a rich portion when God gave him her Houses and lands come by inheritance but a Prudent wife commeth of the Lord. Shee was an excellent guide to her family to her servants Children she had none She had such children as S. Austin speakes of and he saith they are those children that women are saved by What children saith he Good workes and those children shee was full of She did the part of a Mother in bringing up her servants that were with her insomuch as she would say sometimes though they were none of her owne children Behold here am I and the children that God hath given me And for workes of mercie aswell as justice she was most open-hearted and handed not only to doe according but beyond her abilitie alwayes ready upon every occasion to distribute and administer to the necessities of the Saints and provoked and stirred others to the doing of the like Among her neighbours she lived unblameably A woman of a meeke and quiet spirit and Saint Peter saith Such of God are much set by She was no tattler nor busie medler in other folkes matters For Pietie shee was remarkabl●… Shee shewed it both in her health and sicknesse In her health both publikely and privatly In publike She was a religious frequenter of the ordinances on the Lords day and on the weeke dayes a diligent hearer and attender an excellent rememberer one of the best Remembrancers that I have heard of And in private she was excellent for duties there both for the discharge of her owne dutie by giving ensample to others and many times by good and godly exhortations and instructions and daily by private reading and prayer shee set apart some time for her selfe for private meditation In her sicknesse she was a spectacle for thousands to looke on It pleased God to lay a long and heavy affliction upon her Shee had a Cancer in her breast that had beene on her three yeares in the two last yeares she suffered a great deale of extremity as you may imagine by one thing that I shall say Shee was faine to endure a great deale of dressing with Corrasives and sharpe medicines a great deale of cutting and searing and burning shee was above fiftie times burnt with hot Irons but Lord with what patience did she still endure it Shee would say It was no matter sanctified afflictions were better then unsanctified prosperity Apelles said when the picture of a beautifull woman was to be compleatly drawne he must borrow one part from one and another from another and put altogether She had learned this Shee had looked on many good patternes in the Scripture and had drawne to her selfe an imitation of them all so that she was a perfect and compleat Modell Though I say much yet I know I say nothing but the truth I read of few excellent women in the Scripture but she made them a patterne of one vertue or other For obedience she was a Saraah for wisedome a Rebecca for meeknesse a Hannah for a discreet temper an Abigal for good houswiverie a Martha for pietie a Mary a Lydia I know not any necessarie thing that belonged to make up a good Christian but in some measure it pleased God to bestow it on her Thus she continued all her life in the time of her health and in sicknesse with so much patience as after a sort she endured a martyrdome and I see no reason but we may allow a Martyr of Gods making aswell as of mans I am sure if God make Martyrs I know not any fitter then she so meeke and patient and constant Many daughters saith Solomon have done vertuously but thou surmountest them all I will not say so of her because I decline flatterie But this I will say that I know not many excell her scarse any that come neere her She hath the reward of that shee hath done given her of God and her workes follow her We leave her to God and having committed her soule into his hands we beseech his gracious favour upon our selves FINIS THE GREAT TRIBUNALL OR GODS SCRUTINIE OF MANS SECRETS ROM 14. 10. Wee shall all stand before the Iudgement seat of Christ. 2 COR. 5. 10. That every one may receive the things done in his body according to that hee hath done
whether it be good or bad LONDON Printed by Iohn Dawson for Ralph Mabbe 1639. THE GREAT TRIBVNALL OR GODS SCRVTINIE OF MANS SECRETS SERMON XIIII ECCLESIAST 12. 14. For God will bring every worke into judgement with every secret thing whether it be good or whether it be Evill DEath and judgement are two subjects about the meditation of which our thoughts should every day bee conversant wee should every day be thinking of those two dayes Every day upon the day of death because there is no day wherein death may not befall us And every day upon the day of Iudgement because as the day of Death leaveth us so the day of Iudgement findeth us We had an occasion like to this not long since Then you may remember I discoursed of Death considered as an enemie I shewed you what kind of enemie it is it is a common enemie a secret enemie a spirituall enemie Now at this time having the like occasion I thought it not amisse for me to discourse of that that commeth immediatly after Death that is Iudgement The Apostle saith Heb. 9. 27. It is appointed to all men once to die and after Death commeth Iudgement And it is that that Solomon mindeth us of here in the words of my Text which he addeth as a reason to that grave advice he gave in the verse before going Having discoursed at large in this booke concerning the vanity of all earthly things and the vexation among those things that are under the Sunne he telleth us where it is best for us to set up our rest that is in learning that one lesson Feare God and keepe his commandements for this is the totall all that God requireth That we might the rather be stirred up to hearken to this counsell hee telleth us that whether we doe or no the day will come that we shall be called to an account when God will bring every one of us to Iudgement and take a tryall of every worke we have done and of every secret thing whether it be good or evill In handling of these words we have two things in generall that Solomon speakes of First the Person Iudging Secondly the things Iudged The Person Iudging is God And there I will speake First of the Iudge And then of the Iudgement The things that God bringeth to Iudgement and tryall hee telleth us first every worke every thing be it never so secret And then a more particular resolution those things that are good and those things that are evill God will bring every worke to Iudgement and every secret thing whether it bee good or whether it be evill I begin with the Person judging And here first of the Iudge himselfe God shall bring to judgement God essensially meant all the Persons in the God-head Father Sonne and holy Ghost For all concurre in this worke being as the Schoole-men say Opus ad extra It is one of the Externall workes of the Godhead and it is an Axiome in Divinitie that the Externall workes of the Godhead are not to be divided It is true there are certaine internall workes of the Godhead that are said by the Schooles to bee divided incommunicably proper and peculiar to every Person as it is proper to the Person of the Father incommunicably to have his Beeing of himselfe Of the Sonne to be begotten of the Father And it is the property of the Holy Ghost incommunicably to proceed from both But those workes that they call Externall that is those workes by which the power and wisedome of the Godhead are externally made manifest to the creature such as creation preservation redemption those equally and indifferently proceed from all the Persons not from one in parcular but from all in generall and this of Iudgement is one For as they all concurre in the creating of us so they shall in the judging of us all of them shall co-operate together in the executing of justice and mercy Justice in the damnation of the wicked and mercy in the salvation of the godly You will object peradventure that the Scripture seemeth to speake otherwise though Iudgement here be attributed essensially to God in some places it is attributed personally to Christ Hee shall judge the quicke and the dead and therefore oftentimes it is called in the Scripture the Ivdgement seat of Christ as 2 Cor. 5. 10. Againe sometimes this worke of Judging is appropriated to the Saints Know yee not that the Saints shall judge the world 1 Cor. 6. 2. and by and by againe Know you not that we shall judge the Angels verse 3. How shall we reconcile these when it is said Christ and the Saints shall judge I answer This threefold doubt is reconciled by a threefold distinction God is said to judge if wee respect the Authority of Jurisdiction Christ is said to judge if we respect the Promulgation of the sentence The Saints are said to judge if wee respect the Approbation The power and right are equally given to all three Persons but the particular Execution is given to Christ the Approbation of what Christ doth is ascribed to the Saints As at our common Courts of Assize here one is set upon the Bench as Judge and others are joyned in commission with him as Accessories the Judge only pronounceth the sentence and they that sit in Commission with him ratifie and approve his sentence that he pronounceth so at that day Christ shall sit upon his Throne as Iudge the Saints they shall joyne as Commissioners Christ he alone pronounceth the sentence upon every one that is summoned there to the tryall but then his Apostles and Saints that are joyned in commission with him for such honour have all his Saints they shall ratifie and approve and give attestation to the sentence that he pronounceth and say Amen to the condemnation of the wicked So that the difference is easily reconciled and we see how God and Christ and the Saints are said to judge The Authoritie is Gods The Execution Christs The Approbation the Saints The Apostle in Rom. 2. 16. makes the point plaine hee telleth us that God shall judge by Christ In that day God shall judge the secrets of all hearts by Iesus Christ So Christ himselfe Ioh. 5. The Father judgeth no man but hath committed all power to the Sonne Hee hath given him power to execute judgement as he is the Sonne of man Why to him For this Reason That his second comming may be in glory to make amends for his first comming in humilitie Christ at his first comming into the world he came meanly and homely at his second comming hee shall come triumphantly and gloriously Before he came like a Lambe then he shall come like a Lyon Before in the forme of a servant then in the forme of a Lord. Before Pilate sate upon the Bench and Christ stood as a malefactour but then Pilate shall stand at the Barre as a Malefactour and
with full faile is carried toward heaven stormes will not beat him off but hee will persevere Secondly there is a necessary use as there should be perseverance so that there should be a kind of excellencie and precellencie of all holy duties which I mentioned in the generall before which a man should exercise so much the more industriously and painfully in stormes and difficulties All sweet odours are refreshing to the head at any time but when there is a stinking place that is offensive men hold them closer to them so it should be with all the graces of Gods Spirit with all holy duties they should bee precious to us at all times but specially in times of stresse and difficultie Oh then we should cleave close to them then multiplie in prayers then multiply in our holy walking with God then multiply examining diligently our wayes and looking more strictly and narrowly to our selves then we should reflect more seriously upon our lives and then we should excell our selves or else it will not countervaile and be an Antidote against the evill and bitternesse of the times Thirdly there should be shewed patience in the time of affliction in the time of Gods Judgement we should not mutter against God nor struggle nor be violent against him but humbly and meekly lay our selves downe before him It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth him good in his eyes And lastly there should be a proficiencie the the inhabitants of the earth will learne righteousnesse we should patiently waite upon God in the way of his Judgements and withall we should be good proficients then to learne righteousnesse Gods rod should be to us as the fescue is to the child the fescue points out to the child the letter makes him take notice of it and so Gods rod points out many good lessons which we should never otherwise learne and take notice of I had never knowne as Luthers wife said sometime what such and such things meant in such and such Psalmes such complaints and workings of spirit I had never understood the practise of our dutie if God had not brought me under some affliction affliction was a Comentarie and fescue to point out my lesson to me and by that I understood Let me but mention one thing more in a word I shall leave the Application because I am prevented Here is now the summe of a Christians dutie which I have recommended to you out of the words of the verses read partly generall duties that belong to all Christians in all times and partly some particular duties which concerne them more specially in some speciall times There is a motive or two to presse and stirre us up to the performance of these duties There is one in the verse before those I have read the seventh verse The way of the just is uprightnesse thou most upright doest weigh the path of the just Here the first Motive is from the consideration of God God is a holy overseer of all our wayes a spectatour of all our carriage and behaviour how we doe carry our selves and approve our selves to him God is not only a spectatour and an overseer of our wayes but hee is an expencer a weigher and Judge of our wayes to reward everyman according to his workes and wee should often cast our eyes to God and see him looking upon us in our carriages to put some more awe upon our spirits that we may not wantonly breake out against God not daring to doe evill in the presence of that holy God which one day we know we must bee brought to account for at the great Judgement But I can but name it There is a second Motive in the close in those words which stand last of those I read and a verse following And that is from men from the particular proper character of a Christian it is that which differenceth a godly man from a wicked man Herein lies the difference of their temper and of their spirit the godly man he is described already what his carriage is that is his carriage which is here limned out in the Prophets owne expression in their name but the wicked men they are cleane otherwise they doe not performe these duties neither the generall nor the particular Now it behoveth every one to take care to depart from the tents of those wicked men that shall bee swallowed up and goe downe quicke to hell every one as it was in the case of Korah It is the command of God that they should depart and sever themselves and make as broad and vast a difference and bee jealous and take heed lest they assimulate themselves to wicked men in their lives lest they be like unto them in their deaths that they live not as they doe lest they perish as they doe Now there be two or three things that are exprest concerning these wicked men First of all their Character is to be refractary to God in what way soever he shewes himselfe to them if he shew his favour or send his Judgements it is all one in the land of uprightnesse they will doe wickedly and when Gods hand is lifted up they will not see nothing will doe them good no way of working upon them neitherby faire nor by foule meanes And we must be unlike them therefore every way we must take every dealing of God by the right eare as he said and make the right use of it for good There is another thing exprest of them that God will one day meet with these wicked men let no man deceive himselfe it is not a vaine thing to serve God nor a cheape nor a safe thing to rebell against God for his hand shall be lifted up and hee will breake them in peeces and the longer he spareth and the gentler he is the more heavy it will come at last Gods Mill grindeth slow but it grindes to powder as the ancient saying is the more God is long-suffering and long lifting up his hand to lay his stroake the heavier stroake he layes upon them and crusheth all to peeces at last But there is another thing too even those wicked men that are so stubborne and refractary and scorne Gods word that lift up the heele and kicke against him and it may be scoffe and jeare and deride the wayes of God time shall come that even these wicked men shall be convinced they shall see their envie against the godly and hatred against the wayes of God they shall see their foolerie and they shall at last repent when repentance shall doe them no good repent when they are even turned into hell when they heare that sentence Depart from mee you cursed Therefore now seeing these things will befall the rebellious that doe not walke according to this rule according to this Canon which I have characterised a godly man by this should bee a good incouragement to godly men so much the more to walke constantly and to be
in respect of the former societie and converse they had but now he speakes to the point she is no more his Wife but his dead It is translated by all in the Neuter Gender not my dead shee but my dead simply in the Neuter gender as a thing which now had not so much relation So it is true when men and women are severed by Death they are no more man and wife but one anothers dead For as the Apostle saith Doe you not know that as long as a man liveth his wife is subject to him and shee must not converse with another So likewise for men againe but when God dissolveth the contract by Death then as she is free for another man so she is no more his Wife so long as she was alive upon the ground she was his Wife but now when she is to goe into the ground he calleth her his dead but not his Wife The substance and summe is this That Matrimonie is Gods blessing for present use of mankind for the propagating of the Species to continue the seed of man to the worlds end that there may be still a generation to praise God their Creatour and so being a temporall thing ordained for the office of this life it ceaseth when Death commeth there is nothing but Death and that which Christ speakes of in the Gospell can make a separation when Death commeth all relations cease and a wife is no wife and a husband is no husband Behold out of th●… the infinite love of God in Christ that hath made all things all unions and contracts hath made all to be void but his owne for our Lord Jesus in life and death is our Husband our Lord our Master our Father as well in the one as in the other whereas by the intercourse of Death all things are dissolved two of the best friends that are may part upon discontent and body and soule must part at Death and Husband and wife the Symboll of Christ and his Church must part one from another yet when all societies and contracts part Christ doth not part from us but he is in the Grave as well as in the highest heavens our Husband and Lord and Spouse and wee are his Church still we keepe the same relation and as strong bonds in death as in life My Dead Yet notwithstanding though she was not Abrahams Wife yet she was Abrahams dead This must teach a man after he is freed by Death from the combination and contract yet that there is a care remaining to the Dead a love to that though not as to a Wife the respects of Man and Wife are carnall and fleshly Death commeth and cutteth downe the flesh therefore cutteth off that respect too but because she was dead and there was such bonds betweene them formerly therefore a man is bound to lament and sorrow for his dead as Abraham did here to love the memorie of the dead to speake well of the dead when occasion serveth to commend them for their vertues to use the friends of the dead as farre as is in their power with all courtisie to bee good to the children of the Dead those that the Mother hath left and not to cast them into the hands of a furious woman a new Wife that neither careth for dead nor living but to have a speciall regard to the bonds and familiaritie and that spirituall acquaintance that God made in this life and so to be good to all that come of that issue for their sakes Let me bury my dead Lastly it followeth why hee would burie his dead Out of my sight A strange thing Out of my sight Was his griefe so aggravated as hee could not still behold her face or was it necessary that the carkasse it selfe must be conveyed away must it needs be that the body being now no way amiable but noisome must be conveyed out of a mans sight The best friend in the world cannot endure the sight of a dead body it is a gastly sight especially when it commeth to that dissolution that the parts begin to have an evill savour and smell as all have when they are dead then to keepe themselves in life and health it is necessary to avoid them to burie their dead out of their sight And what so sweet a sight once to blessed Abraham as Sarah What so sweet a spectacle to the world as Sarah The great Kings of the world set her as a Parragon and shee came no where but her beauty enamoured them shee was a sweet prospect in all eyes every man gazed on her with great content to see the beautie of God as in so many lines marked out in the face of Sarah Yet now she is odious every eye that looked upon her before now winkes and cannot endure to looke upon her shee must bee taken out of sight Oh bethinke your selves of this you that take pride in this fraile flesh that pranke up your selves to make you gracefull in every eye you that studie to please the beholders you that are the great Minions of the world you that when age beginneth to purle your faces begin to redeeme your selves with paintings thinke of this Mother Sarah the beautifullest woman in the world is loathsome to her husband her sweetest friend therefore I beseech you in the feare of God leave these fooleries and vaine fancies remember what danger Sarahs beauty cast her into though it were a great gift of God yet shee had better have beene without it then to have that hazard of soule and body that shee was brought to by Abrahams travels and necessitie and know it that your best beauty is to please the eye of God to looke beautifull in his sight for the sight of God is never weary the sight of men will bee weary of you the best friends you have will loath to see you dead you will then be grisly in the eyes of men but the eye of God it is all one even in the dust and nothing can make you so ill-favoured but God will like you therefore labour to please Gods eye that never ceaseth nothing will make him alter his affection whereas the eyes of men this life is so full of foule alterations as the least sicknesse bringeth an abomination unto them I see the time prevents me I will speake a little to the present occasion We have here a depositum a gage a pawne of a deare Sister of ours a woman knowne to you all to be of a holy Christian conversation a neighbour full of peace and quiet and of good workes according to her calling Shee was also in the spirituall part a woman of a very good inclination loving the Word of God curious and attentive in the hearing of it Shee was much delighted in it and desired to communicate the knowledge she had in the Scriptures to others and to speake of it as often as occasion permitted By this studie it pleased the Lord to worke a constant and lively faith in
of the Sermon he usually repeated to his people 4. His exemplary vertues in his whole course of life 1. His meeknesse and peaceablenesse of disposition A grace which in the sight of God is much set by and a notable testimonie of inward holinesse according as it runnes Iam. 3. 17. Pure then Peaceable Hee was not apt to quarrell matters that concerned him not never being observed to beare a part in any faction a favourable interpreter of things not evident readier to reconcile then to make differences and choosing rather to part with his right then with peace as appeared in a suite knowne unto many here 2. Though he were meeke in his owne cause yet hee was zealous in Gods Hee could not endure any thing repugnant to holy Scripture nor would he neglect either seasonably to admonish or reprove the faulty that were within the compasse of his admonition or to whet on and exhort others to love and good workes 3. Yet his Zeale did not miscarry being allayed and tempered with wisedome as the heart is by the braine and as the conceit is of the Primum mobile with the Chrystalline heaven neere it His wisdome appeared first in his discreetnesse in his undertakings and all affaires an argument of which some take to be this That hee was never troubled nor so much as questioned in any Court concerning any fact Second in his observing a fit season when and a fit decorum in speaking Third in his choyce of company and specially of such acquaintance as hee would be neere with and intimate which were only such as might be able to afford him spirituall assistance in a time of need 4. His freenesse from worldlinesse and contentednesse with his estate not as those in Horace Quocunque modo rem but hee would not improve his estate by the raysing it as haply hee might have done and as others doe upon his tenants Hee counted himselfe rich because hee needed not all that he had but could have lived with lesse for hee that can make a little to bee his measure all else that hee hath is his treasure which was the observation of a good Poet but a better and a more mortified Divine 5. His humilitie and even among the very temptations to pride It is an hard thing to be humble in an humble and low estate but much more difficult in the affluence of outward things You know his kindred and his relations yet as he manifested this grace in his whole cariage so in particular in not being puffed with his brothers and sisters greatnesse or the advancement of his children 6. His diligence in the use of the meanes of grace 1. Hee had a right conceit of Sermons most relishing such as were most wholsome and usefull for edification 2. Hee tooke paines to heare Hee was often knowne in his younger time to goe ten miles on foot in those times of greater scarcitie 3. His behaviour in the Church in the time of prayer and in hearing was very observable for his reverend attendance and devotion 7. His answerable practise fitted and proportionable to his exterior profession 1. Hee was much in private prayer If you would have a tryall of sinceritie follow a man home and to his closet and see what hee doth within dores for there may bee many respects that may set a man on worke coram populo Secret prayer if it bee constant cannot lodge long with hypocrisie in the same heart 2. Hee was often as they say in secret fasting by himselfe alone a Dutie not only lamentably neglected in these lazie times of easie Christianitie but ill spoken of too as a character of a Pharisee by such as are loath to be at the paines of subduing their bodyes and yet are desirous to come off with the credit and reputation of religion 3. Hee was temperate in his dyet and in his habit sober and grave as counting wisedome and grace a better and trimmer dresse then Lace or the fashion and so hee was in his recreations though constantly chearefull yet a man of little mirth or delight in any thing but spirituall 4. Hee was full of charitie which appeared in these particulars 1. Alwayes upon the Lords day he had sixe poore at dinner to every one of which hee gave a piece of beefe away with them besides and at night hee sent what was left to other poore Besides what hee gave at his dore and what hee gave privately to the poore houshold of faith 2. His hospitalitie according to his ranke was such as Peter Martyr reported of Martin Bucer whose table was ever open to any good people especially to Ministers whom he much respected 3. Hee sate up many nights for the comfort of thesicke not thinking that worke of mercy sufficiently performed by an How doe you or a cold visit 4. Hee had a Sympathie with the condition of Christs Church abroad 5. In the last place let us view him in his last act his sicknesse and death which as the Text hath told us is pretious in the sight of the Lord. 1. Hee prepared himselfe to die not only being willing but desirous also to bee set at libertie being often at S. Pauls Cupio dissolvi which they that were with him say was much in his mouth 2. Hee was very thankfull for Gods assisting him with memorie and understanding to the very last for the continuance of which he prayed and desired others that were about him to pray 3. Hee employed both his memorie and speach for the comfort and counsell of such as visited him 4. Hee made a confession of his faith but chiefly in the matter of Iustification by faith which an eminent Roman Prelate called a good supper doctrine and in the comfort of that point hee resigned his soule to Christ and slept sweetly in the Lord. Thus as his life was holy his death was pretious Hee made no great noyse in the world nor raised greater expectations of himselfe then hee could well manage like many exhalations that rise out of dunghills as if they meant to reach the skie but presently fall downe againe and wet us But as a taper hee gave light till hee went out and now hee is gone wee will leave upon his Grave Memoria ejus in Benedictionibus and apply to him the words of the Text Pretiosa in oculis Iehovae Pretious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints FINIS THE DESIRE OF THE SAINTS AFTER IMMORTALL GLORY PHIL. 1. 23. I desire to bee dissolved and to be with Christ which is farre better LONDON Printed by Iohn Dawson for Ralph Mabbe 1639. THE DESIRE OF THE SAINTS AFTER IMMORTALL GLORIE SERMON XXI 2 CORINTHIANS 5. 2. For in this wee groane earnestly desiring to bee cloathed upon with our house which is from heaven WHen I reade these words I am in a great doubt whether I should rather admire the excellencie of the temper of these Saints or deplore the vilenesse of ours so celestiall the one so
us in this life and crowne us in the life to come Hee that can truly say that while he lived hee lived to God not to himselfe that he sincerely propounded the glory of God and the good of others unto himselfe this man may write upon his Tombe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have lived take this out of the life of man and what is it but a meere death if not worse though it bee protracted to the yeares of Methusalem twice told Thus simply to defire death is not good but cloathe this with some circumstances and then to desire death is not onely warrantable but commendable when we have done all the good we can when our lives will be no more serviceable to Church or Common-wealth when we have with all fidelitie done our Masters worke when we have the testimonie of a good conscience that wee have fought a good fight that wee have kept the faith that wee have finished our race then may we say with old Simeon Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace then may we with our Apostle lift up our eyes to the crowne of righteousnesse which the righteous Iudge hath laid up for them that feare him then we may expect the Euge of the good servant Well done good and faithfull servant enter into the joy of the Master Againe when we are called to be Holocausts or sacrifices oblations of sweet savours the Frankincense of the Church to perfume others to deliver up our lives unto God to seale his Truth with our bloud to encourage others then we ought to runne unto death with all alacritie rejoycing that wee are counted worthie to suffer for his Name to triumph to boast in this out of these cases to have such a taste of God such a rellish of the joyes of heaven such a longing after the presence of Christ as not to be ready but to be willing not to be prepared for the stroake of death but to be desirous of it to esteeme of death as the funerall of sinne the interring of vice the period of miseries the Charter of freedome the Pattent of of exemption from evill of sinne from evill of punishment the day of our birth the season of harvest the seale of our victorie the haven of our happinesse our introduction into heaven our inauguration into a kingdome the Chariot of our triumph the day of our returne to our proper house to our Parents to our best friends This is the affection which is required in us at which we ought to ayme Let this house of clay be resolved into the principles of the same what wonder if that which is built be throwne downe and that which is compounded be resolved and that which was borrowed of the Elements bee repayed againe and that which was taken from the earth be committed to the custodie of the earth Nay let me triumph in the resolution of this peece of clay into the exilest atome and admire the counsell of God that this Carkasse is crumbled into the smallest dust and sifted into the coursest branne even to dust and ashes Were not this body resolved into dust who would beleeve his originall to be from the earth what pride what elevation would follow what carking and caring for this earthly Tabernacle if now when we see it to be but a spawne of wormes and the food of Emmits there is such immoderate excesse what would there be if the body were exempted from putrifaction what desolations would follow in Cities in Townes how many would dwell in monuments with those whom they have honoured or affected in their lives if many be now so impotent that though the body bee putrified they cannot forbeare imbracing of it and to solace themselves make Pictures of their dead friends and dote upon these what would they not doe if their bodyes were immortall What neglect would there be of the soule the better part of a man who would know the vertue of it that it is not onely salt to the body to keepe it sweet but the life the beauty the comlinesse of the body Who would beleeve the consummation the period of the world if our bodyes were immortall who would mind heavenly things who seeke those things that are above what deifying of the body would follow what Idolatries what superstitions what Temples built what Altars erected what varietie of Ceremonies instituted to the body All which God hath pluckt up by the rootes by this putrifaction and incinneration of our bodyes by this teaching us to contemne earthly things to have our cogitations on heaven to thinke upon this scale to ascend up to this Mount to aspire to this intention which that we may let me adde fuell to the fire and oyle unto the flame the expression of this affection to the intention of it earnest groaning to eager desiring In this wee groane earnestly That is for this wee sigh out not our breath but our spirits we groane out not fuliginous vapours but our very hearts we weepe not teares but bloud for this wee immolate the sufferings of our bodyes and macerate them with watchings and fastings we roule them in dust and ashes we exercise them in all humiliation and repentance And this is to groane earnestly in my Text. This is the negotiation of the outward man whereby it trades for heaven this is the conversion of a peece of clay into a pile of frankincense this addes wings unto our Prayers this openeth the eares of God this dissipateth the cloudes of his countenance this inclineth him to clemencie towards us this maketh the Widow continent and the Virgin unspotted this lifts up the voluntarie Eunuch to the kingdome of heaven this perfects the grace that is in the soule this washeth away the staines and contaminations that are in the soule this is the beautie and comelinesse of a Christian. How lovely were the Ninivites how glorious was the King in sackcloth sitting in his throne of dust and ashes what were his Robes of Majestie and Royaltie to these ornaments they might dazle the eyes of the body for a time these dazle the eyes of the mind even at this day after so many hundred yeares they might procure him honour with men these made him honoured by God himselfe Letcorporall eyes looke upon an abject and meane apparance of a King in these weedes yet doe not spirituall eyes see through these garments Humilitie Patience submission feare of God and the like and are there any Jewels like unto these what are those garments which are the labour of a worme to these robes that are the worke of Gods Spirit What is a chaine of Pearle to a chaine of warme and successive teares beaten out of the rocks of a broken and contrite heart they may adorne the body this adornes the soule and which is more bindes the hands of God himselfe Let whose will admire the victories and triumphs of David over the enemies of Israel which are indeed worthy of admiration I admire him
I saith hee and presently they fell downe to the ground they were beat downe with the very breath of his mouth as a man is sometimes with the wind of a bullet or as the walls of Iericho with the sound of the trumpets of Rammes-ho●…es The very word Ego sum it was no more they fell all to the ground Now I may say with that Father what shall hee doe when hee comes to judge that was able to doe thus when he was to be judged Quid regnat●…res patuerit c. what shall he doe when he comes to reigne that was able to doe thus when he was to die But alas you will say if hee be so great a God so glorious how shall such a poore wretch as I stand before him I confesse my selfe a poore wretched and grievous sinner how shall I stand before him Oh marke here hee that is called the great God hee is called the Saviour Iesus Christ. Here is the comfort hee is a Saviour hee came to worke the worke of Redemption Hee was made like us in all things sinne excepted that he might be mercifull And it is wondrous comfortable that in that very nature hee shall be our Judge in which hee stood before the Judge at the judgement seate of Pilate God hath appointed a day saith Saint Paul in which hee will judge the world in righteousnesse by whom by the man Iesus Christ Act. 17. 31. O but what a comfort of comforts is that indeed I pray marke our Lords words Iohn 5. 27. God the Father saith hee hath given all authoritie to his Sonne to judge Why Marke his reason because hee is the Sonne of man He doth not say he hath given him power to judge because hee is his Sonne but because hee is the Sonne of man It made sweet Saint Bernard crie out O verum P●…trem misericordiae c. O true Father of mercies that wouldest have men judged by man he hath beene a man and lived he knew no sin he knew temptation he knew what it was to be tempted hee knowes that we are tempted and hee knowes that wee are but men hee remembreth that wee are but dust Thus I have gone over the words briefly There is a generall Doctrine to bee touched which I can but touch in a word it is this Everie true Christian must so live as a man that waites and lookes for this blessed hope at that glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Iesus Christ. The holy men that lived before Christs first Epiphanie his first comming here in the flesh they are described thus to be men that looked for that comming After his comming Anna the Prophetesse the Scripture saith shee spake of Christ to all that looked for redemption in Ierusalem Luke 2. 36. and in verse 25. it is said that ●…ld Simeon a devout man and one that looked for the consolation of Israel And the like is said of Ioseph of Aremathea hee was a just man one that feared God and looked for the redemption of the people of God he looked for the kingdome of God There was looking then And the Children of God now in the New Testament they are all described by this looking for the second comming of Christ. Gods children are still looking for this second comming Let me give you but a place or two of Scripture The Apostle saith Phil. 3. 20. Our conversation is in heaven from whence wee looke for the Saviour Saith S. Iude verse 21. Keepe your selves in the love of God as men that looke for the mercie of God at that great day to eternall life Gird up your loynes saith our blessed Lord and let your lights bee burning in your hands that you may be as men that looke for the comming of the Bridegroome Indeed beloved if wee looke into the lives of men I cannot tell whether I shall say they looke for his comming or no this blessed hope Wilt thou prophane the sanctified day of rest wilt thou blaspheme the great and glorious name of God wilt thou want only abuse the creatures of God in drunkennesse wilt thou lie and steale and whore and yet tell mee thou lookest for that blessed hope surely thou dost not If quoth the Apostle we doe looke for these things in the place named before 2 Pet. 2. 14. Then let us doe our diligence that wee may bee found of him in peace If thou doe not thy diligence that when he comes thou mayest bee found in peace never tell me thou lookest for him There was never time yet for us to lie and wallow in sinne to thinke nothing that wee doe dishonest there was never time for these things since time was Surely there is no time for it now All the dayes since Christ are called the last dayes all of them are the last dayes since that day of the first Epiphanie but there is a day that will be the last of all those last dayes And me-thinkes it will not be long before that last day of all come me-thinkes I see the day broke already it is breake of day alreadie Therefore brethren if you doe indeed looke for the comming of Christ for this blessed hope at his appearing bee diligent that you may bee found of him without spot in holinesse I have done with the Text. I come now to the occasion at this time You have brought hither a dead body of a very good neighbour of ours and whom I acknowledge I ever found a kind and a loving friend You have brought it here to be laid up in the Grave in hope of a blessed and joyfull resurrection I need not speake much of his life here an ancient inhabitant When it pleased God to call mee first to this place 26. yeares since I found him then in the chiefe office of the Church and divers times since he hath been in it and I have seldome knowne any more painfull and more industrious and more honest in those places then he was Wee have all knowne him a man humble in his conversation just of his word true in his promises mercifull in his dealing charitable to the poore readie to every good worke His life was such a life as the Apostle would have ours to be a life sober and just and pious in this present evill world Hee lived and lead a life pious in regard of God just in regard of men sober in regard of himselfe I can say no lesse of him and I will say no more of him I know you desire to heare of his death and it hath much afflicted my soule to heare what unjust aspertions have beene upon the manner of it There was a sudden stroake indeed of Gods hand and it was in my house and seeing that it so pleased God I am glad that it was in my presence and sight that I might give the better testimonie of it The suddennesse of the stroake made him liable to some misconstruction and hath
of our life may be the more easie considering the shortnesse of it so the shortnesse of our life may be the lesse grievous considering the miserie of it for if God should lengthen out many mens lives what would it bee but a lengthening of their miserie But our life it is but a little while therefore let us indure it with comfort And as it serves for comfort so for instruction for if the life we live in here be but for a little while then learne to bestow this little time of life that we spend here as profitably and as faithfully as we can both for the receiving and doing of good Thou that livest now under a good Magistrate under a good Minister under a good Father under a good Master gaine all the good thou canst now for peradventure they shall live nay certainly they shall live but a little while and when their life is once quenched thou knowest not what light thou maist have to walke by And for our selves since our life is but a while let us be carefull to doe all the good we can be stirring betimes while wee have opportunitie let us doe good to all It is the madnesse of the Epicures because they shall live but a while they will live onely to themselves Let us eate and drinke because wee shall die tomorrow and that is the reason they die as beasts because they care not to live as men When they sing out their first canto we will fill our selves with pleasure the burden of the song must bee that wee have wearied our selves with sinne And it is the folly of the Mammonists considering that they have not long to live to put off the doing of all good till they die whereas the rule of Christ is to worke while wee have day for shortly the night will come when no man can worke They contrary put off all their worke till night all the day their charitie sleepes and doth nothing as one said wittily that that men give then they give of other bodies then their owne for they give that that they can keepe no longer and though it be said to bee given by their Will and Deed it is rather their Deed then their Will for if they could have their will it should never bee their Deed they would rather be possessers of it themselves then that others should be their Executors but be exhorted to doe workes of charitie and other good workes while you have time while you may make your owne eyes your overseers and your owne hands your executors while you have opportunitie doe good to your selves and others and the rather because you know not how long opportunitie will be afforded or tooke from you For what is your life it is even a vapour that appeareth for a little while Thus of the first circumstance wherein the resemblance consists the shortnesse of abiding The next is the suddennesse of departing It appeares for a while and then vanisheth away And here my discourse must be like a vapour short it suddenly vanisheth away that is the nature of a vapour ‑ for as there is no matter to give it a fixed foundation so when it appeareth for a little it soone dissolveth and vanisheth awayto nothing and such a vapour is the life of man it is gone suddenly it is gone before wee be aware and when it is gone there is no memorie of it remaines no print of it how suddenly and quickly in a moment in the twinckling of an eye have many been deprived both of breath and life as one would put out a candle or tread out a snuffe It is true sicknesse is one common Bailiffe that arests men at the suite of Death but many a one hath beene made the prisoner of Death that was never arested at the suite of Death yee know Abell was murthered in the field Ely broke his necke from the chaire Absalon was snatched up in an Oke the disobedient Prophet was slaine by a Lyon the disobedient Prince was trodden to death in a crowde Abimelech was slaine by a peece of a milstone Pope Adrian was choaked with swallowing a flie Pelus slaine with the fall of a tile Such is our life as a vapour as the sand of an houre-glasse ever spending and ever running out as Gregorie hath it in his Moralls Looke how many dayes a man addes to his life so many steps hee takes to his death So Ieremie to Heliodorus wee are ever dying for we every day change when I am writing this all the points of my penne spends a point of my life nay while we are hearing this Sermon we are passing on I will make a little Vse of it and then I have done First make the Vse the Apostle doth to them that build upon futuritie and thinke they may do what they list you that thinke you wil do to day and to morrow what you list Oh saith the Apostle what reason have you to build on to day and to morrow when yee know not what a day will bring forth We may not promise our selves life for to morrow much lesse may we do as the foole in the Gospel promise years when we cannot assure our selves of a moment of life if wee might assure our selves of a moment of life in which it might be said it were impossible to die we might possibly be immortall and not die at all but as Ambrose saith corruptible is not so capable of incorruption but since it hath beene subject to fall till it doth fall it is ever declining there is no building nor trusting to uncertaine futuritie we must not rest and trust on those things which are to come but only upon God and speake conditionally of them not absolutely referre the successe and disposing of all things to come to the will and good pleasure of God remembring what our life is so make lesse accompt of our life and of our selves and all Secondly seeing our life is so vanishing let us ever prepare for death for sudden death because life is vanishing Thou knowest not in what houre thy master will come Therefore every houre we should so bestow our selves that our Master may find us at worke For this two things are requisite First ever thinke of death death cannot be sudden to that man that ever thinkes of it Secondly be carefull to lead a godly life the goodnesse of the life consists not in the long continuance of it but in the well imploying of it it may be any mans case to live well it can be no mans to live long our comfort is though our life bee momentarie yet notwithstanding this very moment of time is enough to gaine to us here-after eternitie and how much better is a short time well spent for the purchasing of eternall happinesse then a short time ill spent for the purchasing of eternall miserie your life is momentarie yet eternity depends on it if it be spent ill eternall miserie if well we are eternally happy
howsoever here we vanish as a vapour yet one day wee shall become as fixed starres in the right hand of Christ wee shall shine as starres for ever Thus I have shewed how the life of man is compared to a vapour that appeares for a little while and then vanisheth away Beloved I pray let not this Sermon passe as a vapour let not all of it passe away in the sound you heare but fix it as a naile in a sure place in your understanding in your memorie in your affections and remember how short and sudden every mans end and life is or may be O that my people were wise they would understand this they would consider their latter end Wee have a spectacle here before us that was a reall comment upon this Text She did understand the Doctrine of it and was excellent in the practice of it A Gentlewoman that deserved a better Orator to commemorate the vertues that were in her and to give her praises due it had beene a fitter worke for your reverend and worthy Minister whose absence at this time I supply he could have spoken more fully of her then I can because he was acquainted longer with her then I was I account it a part of my unhappinesse that I knew her so little a while and peradventure you will say it is a part of her unhappinesse that this office is done by one that knew her so little a while It is true indeed I am not able to say much of her for my knowledge of her was but a few weekes or moneths by reason of our neighbourhood in the Countrey but then I observed her to be one of the ornaments of her sexe and every thing that came from her was gracefull and comely the sweetnesse of nature and grace in my opinion concurred in her But I must deliver the most that I have to say from the report that I have from others yet from very good hands Solomon saith A good name is as a good oyntment poured forth like the precions Alablaster-boxe that Mary broke on the head of our Saviour the smell of it perfumed all the house I may say of her as the Apostle saith of Demetrius She was well reported of by all and I am perswaded she was reported well of the truth it selfe shee had a name answerable to her vertues Solomon saith A prudent wife or a good wife is the gift of God shee was a Theodosia that was her name The gift of God and a gift God bestowed to the comfort of him that had her Shee was constant both in the performance of publike duties and private in hearing Gods word not only on the Lords day but as occasion gave leave on the weeke-dayes and she was not only constant at good exercises abroad but which was the crowne of her commendations she was so at home also shee was constant in reading the Word I am credibly informed that shee read over the Bible seven times in the seven yeares that shee was married Shee constantly made use of that shee heard I my selfe saw no lesse then two quires of paper writ out with her owne hand collected partly out of other bookes but principally out of Sermons not noted at Church when shee heard them but when she came home being in this like Mary that layed up the sayings of Christ in her heart her daily spending of her time was commendable and exemplarie in the morning up to prayer with her familie and then unto private prayer by her selfe from prayer to reading and then to worke and then to prayer and to dinner and then to worke this was her continuall course of life without interruption Shee was a Sarah for obedience Rebecca for wisedome Mary for pietie Martha for houswiferie a true Lidea shee heard and God opened her heart that shee attended to those things she heard A true Dorcas full of good workes they that knew her knew her so farre as wisedome and discretion dictated to her full of charitie of good workes and almes-deedes But her life was a vapour that appeared for a little while and then vanished away Shee verefied my Text too truely in that it pleased God suddenly to call her even in the prime and strength of her yeares she was but a young woman and shee died in Child-bed You that are Child-bearing women I wish you to set this patterne and example before your eyes and learn by this spectacle to see how neere you walke to the brincke of your grave when you come to be delivered of childe I wonder therefore by the way that any should find fault with that solemne thanks-giving that is appointed by the Church to be rendred to God for women for his preserving them from the great danger of Child-birth there is but a step betweene you and death you should then have a care to prepare for your death I see a great deale of time spent to prepare all brave and fine God may quickly turne all your chambers and hang them with blacke and turne your jollitie into mourning therefore you should rather prepare for your winding-sheete and for your grave for undoubtedly she did so and I may in some sence apply that literally of the Apostle to her In bearing of children shee is saved It is true the Apostle gives that as an argument of comfort to women because before hee had preached obedience to them a doctrine that they doe not well relish yet he gives two reasons because Adam was first made and she first sinned that is another reason yet lest shee should bee too much discouraged with that of the Apostle and because the paine of child-bearing was threatned to women for a part of their curse the Apostle addes that as a comfort In bearing of children they shall bee saved Notwithstanding the paine and sorrow of child-bearing was inflicted as a punishment upon them yet under that curse there is a way of salvation opened if they be such women saith the Apostle as continue in faith and charitie with holinesse and sobrietie These vertues being eminent in this deare Christian sister of ours no doubt but in bearing of children shee is saved that is she found under that curse a way to a blessing an everlasting blessing of salvation How shee disposed her selfe in the time of her sicknesse those of the family well know truly I have not oft scarse ever heard of a woman of her ranke and quality for shee was a woman well descended and well bred and yet I never heard of a woman more beloved and more bewayled her Husband complaines of his losse never man lost a better wife all the servants never any had a better Mistris and all the neighbours never any had a better neighbour Concerning her in the time of her sicknesse they can give a better and more particular testimonie then I I only did one office and service to her when in the absence of your reverend Pastor I was called I visited her an houre or
should be an effectuall meanes to make us carefull of holinesse and new obedience so to speake and so to doe as those whose words and actions must be brought to judgement Now that this is so and is intended so and hath prevailed with the servants of God I might prove many wayes I will ranke and order the proofe under these heads First I will shew you how this hath beene a meanes to draw some to the wayes and duties of obedience Secondly how it hath beene the way to direct and guide others in those actions Thirdly how it hath confirmed and strengthened them in those actions and by this we shall see what it should be to us First we shall see how it hath beene a way to draw men to the actions of obedience How are men drawne to bee obedient First they are drawne from their owne sinnes from their owne evill wayes Now the consideration of the judgement to come it hath prevailed and beene used for this purpose to draw men from their sinnes As wee see in Eccles. 11. saith Solomon to the young man Rejoyce now in thy youth it is Ironnically spoken but know saith hee that for these things thou shalt come to judgement That is let this coole thy courage and moderate thy excessive joy know that thou shalt come to judgement Act. 17. 30. Now saith he God calls upon all men every where to repent because hee hath appointed a time in which hee will judge the world Hee calls men to repentance by this argument because hee will judge the world and hath appointed a time for it You know repentance it is nothing else but to forsake our former evills Now he calls them to repentance because he will judge the world and so calls as he drawes men from sinne First he drawes men from the world to God by this You know that even worldly affections hinder men from comming to the obedience of Christ therefore saith the Apostle I account all as dung c Philip. 3. 7. Why because he looked for a Resurrection his thoughts were upon that and saith hee verse 20. our conversation is in heaven from whence wee looke for the Lord Iesus Christ. Therefore we are drawne to this holy course of obedience because we looke for Christ from heaven And then againe in the disposing of men to new obedience there is not only a forsaking of sinne and the world but besides that there is an inward qualifying of the heart Now the heart is qualified that is it is fitted by certaine qualities to the service of God by the helpe of this consideration as wee see Eccles. 12. 10. Tou see the summe of all feare God and keepe his Commandements for God will bring every worke to judgement Upon this ground hee mindes them to feare God which is that qualitie that disposeth a man to keepe his Commandements hee perswades them upon this ground because God will bring every worke to judgement Let us have grace in our hearts to serve the Lord with reverence and feare Heb. 12. I say this qualifies and disposeth us to the service of God and we are fitted to seeke and to serve God with due reverence and feare by the consideration of the judgement to come that he is a God that will judge the world So in Revel 14. hee would have the Nations to feare God because hee will come to judge the world So much for the first thing you see the consideration of the judgement to come prepares men to holinesse Secondly besides that it quickens them to all the actions of obedience when they are in it when now a man is in a good course and his heart is prepared to seeke God aright yet neverthelesse there are many temptations and many corruptions that sometimes indispose and unfit his heart againe Now then the consideration of the judgement to come it serves to revive and quicken the heart to these actions to Those of a mans particular Calling Those of his generall Calling For his particular calling the Apostle exhorts Timothie and chargeth him before God and Christ that shall judge the quicke and the dead to be faithfull in his ministerie Hee would have him faithfull in his ministerie upon this ground because Christ will come with his elect Angells to judge the quicke and the dead And so for our generall Calling Act. 24. I desire to keepe a good conscience before God and men upon this ground because I beleeve the Resurrection and so a judgement to come So in 2 Pet. 3. 11. Seeing all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought wee to be in all holy conversation and godlinesse Why all these things shall be dissolved therefore we had need to bee other manner of persons then we are to be better kinde of persons then we have beene Thus I say the servants of God quicken themselves to more holinesse upon consideration of the judgement to come Thirdly they have beene confirmed and strengthened upon this ground for when the heart of man is brought to this plight that he must be ever chearefull and lively and active in the service of God yet there are many discouragements and temptations to draw him out of the way againe that it may be hee may fall if he have not somewhat to support him and hold him up therefore the consideration of the judgement to come it hath kept the hearts of Gods servants in a good frame when they have beene in it Saith the Apostle be constant and immoveable alwayes abounding in the worke os the Lord for as much as yee know that your labour is not in vaine in the Lord 1 Cor. 15. As if hee had said You know this that there will a time come when it will appeare that you serve not God in vaine therefore for the present bee constant in the good you are in Hold fast that thou hast till I come saith Christ to the Church of Philadelphia and let no man take thy crowne Rev. 3. 21. Christ will come and it is but holding fast a-while and then the Church shall have a crowne and the servants of God shall have a crowne of glory an abundant recompence of all that they have done in the service of God therefore hold fast Hereupon Iam. 5. the Apostle exhorts to patience because they should meet with many persecutions and oppositions bee patient for the comming of the Lord drawes neere Beare the injuries that you suffer for the present and the indignities and the unkind usage of men for the comming of the Lord drawes neere when you shall have a plentifull harvest so he goes on illustrating this by a comparison taken from a Husband-man that waits for a harvest and then he shall have a plentifull croppe and increase for all his paines in Winter and in seed time so saith he the Lord will come and then you shall have a plentifull increase A word or
you know applieth the horseleaches to his distempered Patient the Horseleech intendeth nothing but the satiating and filling himselfe with the blood of the sicke partie but the Physitian hath another ayme even the drawing out of the putrified and corrupted blood God suffereth wicked men and divels as Horseleeches to suck his people to draw their blood but it is in order to their good it is no matter what wicked men thinke though Ashur thinke not so yet God purposeth it and aymes at it and in conclusion effects it and then saith hee it shall come to passe that when the Lord hath performed his whole worke upon mount Sion I will punish the fruit of the stout heart of the King of Assyria and the glory of his high lookes Againe in the third place Seeing this is Gods ayme in all his afflictions whatsoever the instrument be how sharpe soever the castigation be or of what nature whether it be in a spirituall way by sore temptations and buffetings of Sathan or outwardly by losses in our estate or death of friends c. seeing I say this is Gods purpose and intent that his people may be profited Let us quietly and patiently apply our selves unto God and expect the quiet and peaceable fruit of righteousnesse that shall spring up in due time to those that are this way exercised by the Lord Looke for it and presse on to this quietly to waite on the Lord our God for a blessed fruit of such administrations An argument ab utili is an argument of great prevayle what will not men doe for Profit It is for profit that men rise up early and goe to bed late and eate the bread of carefulnesse The Husbandman takes much paines and plowes his ground indures many sharpe stormes and piercing winters the Machant runnes divers hazards abroad and all for profit so should we be willing patiently and quietly to submit to Gods dealing humbly to apply our selves to his wise and fatherly administrations seeing hee intendeth by it our profit And take heede of murmuring and repining against the Lord this will make him indeede to lay heavier blowes upon us an impatient Patient makes the Physitian deale more harshly and a strugling child procureth for himselfe the more and sorer stripes what though our potion bee bitter so long as it is wholesome have wee not reason to submit our selves But here is the mayne thing wee sticke at You may happily reply Indeed if we could see our corruptions subdued our hearts humbled the pride that is within us abated and that God would be pleased to bring us more nearer to him and make us more heavenly minded and weane our affections from the world if wee could see this fruite of all our sufferings and temptations and crosses it would be an abundant satisfaction to our soules but alas alas wee cannot see this profit our hearts are still full of many spirituall distempers and great prevaylings of evill there is upon us notwithstanding all these Stormes and Frosts and tempestuous hard Winters yet these weeds of wickednesse grow and are marvelous lively this is the bitternesse of the cup and this is that which sinketh the heart most under all those pressures which lye upon us To which I answer first wee must judge rightly and wisely and consider well whether it be the time for the fruite of affliction to spring forth No affliction for the present seemeth joyous and no affliction it may be for the time of its working appeareth commodious But saith the Apostle they doe bring forth the quiet fruite of righteousnesse Againe secondly wee may perhaps beare too much upon the physicke alas afflictions and crosses of themselves they will rather drive us further then draw us nearer unto God wee are therefore to submit our selves unto God in his way of administration and to intreate his blessing upon them that through that they may be made successefull As every creature so every condition both of prosperitie and adversitie is sanctified to us by the Word and by prayer And take heede of disputing against the Lord as wee are apt to doe he is wise above all that wee can conceive he is wonderfull in working and knoweth how to bring about the good of his people in a wonderfull way what if he will plunge thee into the mire in order to holinesse what if Christ will put clay upon a mans eyes in order to sight a medicine more likely to put out his eyes Considering therefore that God is wise and wonderfull in his working let us apply ourselves to him and in due time wee shall see the fruite and benefit of all his administrations I should now have come to the third and last proposition and that was That this profit that God aymeth at in all his castigations of his children is to make them partaker of his holinesse And this is profit indeede when God thereby draweth us from the world and makes us more heavenly minded and more dead to the creature purgeth away our drosse and takes away that filth and corruption that is in us oh this will I quit all the cost and make amends for all the labour and paines and hardship wee have beene made to endure But I shall forbeare to insist upon this So much for the Text. There is a word to be spoken according to custome with respect to the occasion of our meeting I have done the maine part of my taske which was to present to you a word of instruction and therefore for the occasion concerning this young gentleman disceased whose Funeralls wee now solemnize I shall but speake a few words and so conclude I neede not to speake any thing concerning his parentage and discent nor much concerning his education I am confident that that was religious and gracious and such as wherein there was a second travell in order to his spirituall birth that Iesus Christ might be formed in him For his owne particular though I can speake nothing upon my owne knowledge being a meere stranger yet I have such a testimony concerning him from those that deserve credence both of me and you as that I shall conclude that of him as may give us good hope concerning his finall and eternall estate If so be contrition of heart and sorrow for sinne If earnest and constant prayer unto God If lamenting of youthfull miscariages and the not answering of time and meanes and opportunities and religious education and that godly care that was exercised in order to his spirituall welfare and building of him up in the knowledge of God and of Christ. If I say the lamenting of the neglect of opportunities of this kinde If so●…e the desire of the prayers of others for him and that out of a sense of his owne disabilitie to plead his owne cause If so bee a gracious communication of God unto him in wayes of comfort in the time of his sicknesse supporting him under divers
from all both former and following miseries and that is this If in the time of our life here our being subject to corruption and sinne hath seemed unto us the greatest burden and bondage They which have groaned and mourned under their owne naturall corruptions as it were under some heavy and tyrannous yoke or as the Israelites mourned under their Egyptian Task-masters to them only shall the day of death be a day of freedome If sinne be not a burden to thee if thou dost not many times lament and even mourne to thinke how thou art carried captive unto evill if thou dost not with griefe feele how thou art clogged with corruption and hindred by it from doing the good which thou shouldest certainly death will bee to thee the beginning of thy thraldome and after it thou shalt be a perpetuall bond-slave unto Sathan in the kingdome of eternall darknesse Marke this all yee that take delight in evill to whom it is a pastime to doe wickedly and who seeke rather how to satisfie then how to suppresse your owne corruptions who repute it a kind of happinesse to follow the swinge of your owne Iusts and to have libertie to doe as your owne hearts doe lead you when you dye this shall be your reward even a most miserable and endlesse captivity under Sathan him have you served in the lusts of sinne while yee lived his slaves shall you be without hope of releasement world without end This is the right Application of this Doctrine death is a day of enlargement to the godly it is a dismission The next particular is that it is a dismission accompanied with peace the lesson we are taught hence is that The servants of God have at their going out of the world a comfortable quiet and peaceable departure Thus Simeon here hee prayed for no other thing but that his end might be as the end of the Righteous is ever wont to bee even a departure hence in peace Hence is that generall rule of the Psalmist Marke the perfect man and behold the upright man for the end of that man is peace Agreeable whereunto is that of Solomon that the righteous hath hope in his death And memorable to this purpose is that which is storied of old father Iacob shewing unto us the quiet end of the Righteous Hee gathered up his feet into the bed and so gave up the Ghost It was the blessing promised to Abraham that he should goe to his fathers in peace And the same was made to good Iosias There is a twofold reason hereof First the assurance which they have of the favour of God in Christ. This must needs breed quietnesse when I am perswaded in my soule and conscience that all cause of danger after death is removed and that God is and will be gracious unto mee in his Sonne What cause of feare is here left what occasion of perplexitie If any man shall doubt whether the servants of God have this assurance I prove it thus that all of them first or last have it in some good measure If any man saith the Apostle have not the Spirit of Christ hee is none of his Hence it necessarily followes that all that are Christs have the Spirit of Christ but now the office of the Spirit is to beare witnesse with our spirit So that all that are the Lords as they are endued with Gods Spirit so they feele this Spirit bearing witnesse to their soules of this Adoption Secondly the comfortable Testimonie of their owne consciences touching their former care to glorifie God by a Religious and godly conversation Hence came Saint Pauls peace I have saith he fought the good fight I have kept the faith Therefore I am sure there is laid up for mee a Crowne of life Hence Hezekiahs I have walked before thee oh Lord in truth and with a perfect heart Not that they doe ground their hope upon the desert of their fore-ranne courses but because they know good workes to bee the way and doe understand by the Scripture that a holy life here is the first fruits of a glorified life hereafter Thus we see the truth of this point and the reasons upon which it is grounded Now here some may object first Wee see many worthy men that have made a great and an extraordinary profession of Religion in their lives and which have also carried themselves unblameably yet to give appearance of much angiush and perplexitie and even of a kind of despaire in their death How can wee say then that all good and holy persons have a peaceable departure I answer first Wee ought to remember the Rule our Saviour gives not to judge according to the outward appearance It is a very weake argument to say that this or that man dyeth without peace because to the standers by hee makes not shew of peace Certaine it is that as a man may have peace with God and yet himselfe for a time by reason of some tentation not feele it so a man being sicke or going out of the world may feele it and yet others that behold him cannot perceive it Secondly wee must know that these outward unquietnesses which doe many times accompany sicknesse doe happen as well and as ordinarily to good men as to the most wicked such as are ravings idle-talkings and strange accidents in the body in this sence all things come alike to all God hath made no promise in Scripture that those that serve him shall be freed in their deaths from violent sicknesses Therefore these things must not bee thought to be any abridgement of their peace Thirdly wee must consider that with the best servants of God Sathan is most busie when his end is neerest and when hee is as it were out of all hope of prevailing The red Dragon in the Revelation had greatest wrath when he knew his time to bee short When the evill Spirit was commanded once to come out of the child then it rent him sore Now these temptations though for the time they be very violent and extreme so that the party may hapily utter out some words and speeches of dispaire yet be they no finall prejudice to the inward peace Interrupt they may but utterly quench it they cannot because the power of God is made perfect through weaknesse And so even in death Sathan receives the greatest foile when hee thinkes to get the greatest victorie Thus then I answer in one word The peace of Gods servants at death is not ever in the like measure felt by them but yet it never dieth in them they which behold their death doe not alwayes see it yet they themselves sooner or later are sure sweetly and secretly to feele the same My reason for my assertion is grounded first upon that of the Apostle God commands light to shine out of darknesse Hee brings his servants to Heaven by the gates of
hell out of sorrow and angvish and tentation hee raiseth out their greatest quiet Secondly because the love of God is eternall and unchangeable Whom hee loves hee loves to the end It is unpossible that the Lord albeit he trie and that sharply yet should finally forsake those that are his in their greatest extremitie But againe secondly if you make a peaceable death to bee the reward of the Righteous what say you to this There bee many that in all their life gave little evidence of any Religion or grace but of the contrary rather yet in their death were very quiet and still and seemed to all that were by to have in them no manner of vexation no troublesome thoughts no perplexed motions shall wee say that these were good men because they seemed to goe away in peace It is true indeed it is the common opinion Doth a man lye quietly hath hee his memorie to the end died he like a Lambe surely then hee is gone to heaven but this is an absurd colection for First sometime this outward calmenesse is an ordinary consequent of some diseases as Consumptions and such like by which Nature being formerly weakned hath not power left to make resistance Secondly this outward calmenesse is no argument of a peaceable and quiet soule The Psalmist tells us of the wicked in whose death there are no bands Thirdly wee must distinguish betweene securitie and peace betwixt carnall senslesnesse and true spirituall quietnesse Nabals death was quiet enough yet hee were but a foole that would adventure his soule with Nabals I see many ignorant persons many of heathenish and brutish conversation very quiet in sicknesse without any feare of hell and judgement to come making no doubts casting no perills asking no questions complaining of no sinnes and so away they goe without any more adoe What shall I say that these died in true peace God forbid No when I compare together their ignorant secure benummed hardned kind of life with their senslesse and drowsie kind of death I must say that these are fearefull signes these things argue that the Divill had quiet possession where hee made so small adoe Thus then notwithstanding these Objections I will conclude that a peacefull death is the peculiar and individed priviledge of Gods servants However it be yet I know saith Solomon that it shall goe well with those that feare the Lord but there is no peace to the wicked saith my God Wee may make Use of this first to be a tryall betwixt our Religion and the Romish for from this Doctrine I avouch that Religion to be no true Religion because a Papist by the Rules of his owne Religion can never die in peace This is a hard saying thou maist object or how can I make it good I answer by two reasons First every Papist is taught to beleeve under paine of Anathema and the great curse that whosoever dyeth if hee have not in this life attained to perfection and throughly purged himselfe from the remainders of sinne by workes of satisfaction his soule must after death goe into Purgatory and there continue untill hee hath made a full satisfaction now the paine of Purgatorie is held for the time to bee as great as the paines of hell differing onely in this that it is not perpetuall Now I would faine know how can a man die comfortably and in peace and with a joyfull heart when hee thinkes with himselfe that albeit perhaps after some yeares hee shall goe to heaven yet in the meane space his soule must goe into such a place of unspeakable torment where if the matter be not well plyed by the prayers of them that are alive and by well feeing the Priests they may hap to lye for many yeares I say how can the Doctrine of Popery beget a peacefull death when it teacheth an expectation of such an hellish Purgatory Secondly every Papist as he is bound of a certaine to beleeve a Purgatory so further must he beleeve that hee cannot in this life be assured of salvation otherwise then by a kind of confused hope which may deceive him Now hee which by the witnesse of his owne conscience is sure that hee hath deserved hell and cannot attaine to any certaintie of discharge what comfort can such an one have to dye hee knowes that when hee is dead he must come to his account before God but yet can have no assurance that the Lord will acquit him in Christ Jesus I wish that this may seriously be considered by us for the establishing of us in the truth of Religion I say againe and testifie these reasons which I have alledged being weighed that a Papist by his owne doctrine can never expect that which Simeon did a departure hence in peace He knowes he must to torment he is taught that he cannot know in this world that God will pardon him In the next place let us come neerer home to our selves that we must all dye nothing more certaine Dust thou art and to dust thou shalt returne God hath decreed it and it cannot bee revoked if our end be not peaceable our estate after cannot bee happy Let our care then be spent about this one point how one may attaine to this to end our dayes in peace I doubt not but wee will all bee ready to say we hope so to doe but this is nothing for when the wicked man dyeth his expectation perisheth What becomes of the hope of the Hypocrite said Iob when God takes away his soule But what course then shall wee take that wee may finish our course with joy I will tell thee in few words I touched it a little before the best meanes for a peaceable departure is a godly and religious life I have fought the good fight saith Saint Paul and he could comfortably from thence inferre that therefore there was laid up for him a crowne of righteousnesse It was Christs owne inference I have glorified thee on earth I have finished the worke which thou gavest mee to doe and therefore now O Father glorifie thou mee with thine owne selfe The reason of it is first Gods promise blessed shall bee the undefiled in the way Those that honour mee I will honour said God Now this promise God will not breake He that goeth this way though it be with much weaknesse with many falls with sundry imperfections with divers wandrings yet he cannot misse of the promised peace Secondly life eternall hath three degrees the first is in this life when a man repenteth and beleeveth and is purged from dead workes to serve the living God The second is in death when the body goes to earth and the spirit returnes to him that gave it The third is at the last judgement These three degrees hang together like three linkes the second followeth the first and the third the two former the last cannot be hoped for where
the resurrection Luke 20. 36. So much may suffice for comfort A second Use of the point may be for tryall and examination since we professe to be Christians to be members of Christ let us here trie the truth whether wee be so indeed or no. Christ is the Resurrection he is the Author of the first Resurrection to a spirituall life The first thing that Christ doth in the soule of a sinner is to raise the soule to a spirituall life therefore examine whether thou have feltthis quickning power or no this first Resurrection to a spirituall life When Christ was upon the earth he had power to raise up all those to life againe that died but yet hee raised but few there are but three that wee read of those that we named before The Widowes sonne Iairus Daughter and Lazarus here So likewise Christ now hath power to quicken all those that are dead in sinne to raise them to spirituall life but yet he quickens but few in comparison of those that continue still in their sinnes Therefore let us all examine our selves upon this point whether we have attained the first Resurrection or no. If we be true members of Christ we partake of the first Resurrection for Christ is a fountaine of spirituall life to all his members therefore examine this looke to the first resurrection to the Life of grace thou maist know it briefly by three signes First by forsaking of sinne Secondly by newnesse of life Thirdly by thy continuall progresse in both First by thy forsaking of sinne whether hast thou left those sinnes thou formerly livedst in As in the Resurrection of the body as soone as the soule is united to the body presently the man leaves the Grave he leaves the societie of the dead and comes forth as Lazarus as soone as he was quickned and his soule returned to his body presently hee came forth Vers. 44. Hee that was dead came forth out of his grave Examine therefore whether thou be come forth of the grave of sinne whether hast thou left the societie of sinners of prophane persons and whether hast thou left the grave of thy sinne Is there not some lust some sinne that still holds thee captive in this Grave to which thou willingly and wittingly obeyest If thou live in any one knowne sinne if thou be ruled by any one lust whatsoever it be be it swearing or drunkennesse or uncleannesse or covetousnesse or lying or open and publike prophaning of the Sabbath I say if thou live in the practice of any of these or the like knowne sins this is a plaine case thou art still in the noysome grave of thy sinnes thou art not risen out of the grave of thy sinnes and therefore thou art not quickned by the Spirit of Christ and if thou art not quickned then thou art not a member of Christ thou art not a true Christian. Againe Secondly thou mayest know it by the newnesse of thy life whether dost thou feele a spirituall life wrought in thee and whether doth it appeare outwardly Dost thou feele a spirituall life wrought inwardly That spirituall life that Christ restores to the soule is universally spread through the whole foule As when the soule of a man quickens the body it quickens the whole body every member of it so here the Spirit of grace quickens the whole soule Therefore examine whether dost thou find spirituall life wrought in thy whole soule or no whether dost thou find this change wrought in thy understanding and judgement whether hast thou a new judgement and thoughts and opinion of God and of the wayes of God a new opinion of Christ a new opinion of the members of Christ Whether dost thou find this change in thy heart and affections whether hast thou new desires new affections spirituall inclinations whether are the studies and desires of thy soule set upon heavenly things If yee bee risen with Christ seeke those things that are above Collos. 3. 1. Whether are thy affections and meditations heavenly and spirituall Dost thou feele this change inwardly in thy soule Againe doth this spirituall life appeare outwardly also by thy speeches and actions Doth it appeare outwardly in thy speeches is there a change there canst thou now speake to men in the language of Canaan and to God in the voyce of his Spirit crying Abba Father Againe is there a change in thy outward actions hast thou left the societie of sinners and dost thou converse with living Christians Dost thou love those that excell in vertue and dost thou manifest the graces of the Spirit in the conscionable performance of all the duties of thy generall and particular calling As soone as Lazarus was quickned presently as he left the Grave so he conversed with living men and walked in his Calling so examine if thou have left the societie of the dead and converse with living Christians and delight in them and whether thou walke on conscionably in the place that God hath set thee in making the word of Christ the rule of all thy actions If it bee thus with thee if thou feele this spirituall life wrought in thy soule and it appeare outwardly in all thy speeches and actions this is a good signe thou partakest of the first Resurrection to the life of grace In the third place thou maist know this also by thy progresse in both these First by the progresse of thy Mortification Is sinne daily more and more mortified in thee Dost thou daily get ground of thy corruptions Is sinne in thee like the house of Saul as that waxed weaker and weaker so doth corruption in thee daily Is sinne in thee like an old man as it is in every member of Christ and therefore it is stiled the old man an old man growes weaker and weaker till at the last he dies so it is with sin in every Christian examine if sin be such an old man in you that it growes weaker daily Againe thou maist know it by thy progresse in thy vivification Dost thou grow in grace daily Is grace in thee as the house of David as that grew stronger and stronger so doth grace in thee Is grace like a young man as it is in every member of Christ and therefore it is stiled the New man because it is as a young and lustie man that daily growes stronger till he come to his full strength doth grace in thee grow stronger daily and dost thou goe forward in thy Christian course It is the dutie of a Christian to walke on daily in his Christian course Rom. 6. 4. wee must walke on in newnesse of life If thou find this progresse in thy mortification and vivification it is a good signe indeed that thou hast attained to the first Resurrection of the soule to a spirituall life Therefore let mee intreate you to set upon this worke of examination of your owne hearts diligently and faithfully Let not the multitudes of worldly businesse
this is a truth concernes you in particular Judge your selves so farre profited by the Word you heare as you can make good application of it to your owne estate and condition Whensoever men come to heare the Word they come to heare somewhat that concernes themselves therefore whatsoever wee say befalls them that are in Christ apply it your selves and make account this is my case if I bee in Christ. Fourthly hence we might note thus much also that When a man is in Christ there is a reall change There is an evident change from what hee was before hee was in Christ. For so the Apostle reasons now you are in Christ there is such a change as from death to life there is a mervellous great change in you If there bee not this change in you neither are you in Christ and all the hopes you build on of being in Christ they are without a foundation they are upon an imaginarie Christ not upon Christ that is yours indeed If you bee in Christ let it appeare in a change let us see how you are changed since you were in Christ from that you were before for this make account of conclude thus much for your selves that all that are in Christ are changed But fiftly and lastly hee expresseth wherein this change consisteth and hee makes choice of such termes as are most acquisite and fit for his purpose He would expresse this spirituall change and marke what expressions hee useth to manifest it by no lesse then life and death There is such a change when you are once in Christ from what you were before as there is between a man that was dead and is now alive or a man that was alive and is now dead and this is that that I will insist now upon wherein note these particulars First the Analogie and proportion the aptnesse and fitnesse of the termes wherein the Apostle expresseth the spirituall change of those that are in Christ how fitly they may be sayd to be dead and alive Secondly it is observeable in what order the Apostle expresseth these first dead and then alive Make account that the worke of Grace in the effectuall change in your hearts it proceeds in this order First you are dead and then alive dead to sin first and then alive to God Thirdly note the certaine connexion of these two together so there is not onely a certainty in the object but a certainty in the subject too not only a certaintie that those that are in Christ shall live but it is certaine to you make account of this make this conclusion for your selves build on it know it for your selves as he sayd to Iob it is certaine if you be in Christ you are dead with Christ and you shall live with Christ make account of this Lastly the efficient cause of this great change exprest in these termes it is Iesus Christ our Lord make account of this if you be in Christ there comes a vertue from Christ an effectuall working of Christ by his spirit in your hearts such a powerfull worke as will conforme you to Christ dead and to Christ risen that you shall be dead to sinne and alive to God not by any strength in your selves or any excellent endowment in your owne natures not by any naturall inclination and abilitie but through the vertue and power of Iesus Christ our Lord working in you Thus you have the Text opened Wee will speake first of the Analogie and proportion the agreement betweene the metaphors here used and the things exprest by them That which the Apostle would expresse is that there is a marvellous spirituall reall change in all those that are in Christ from what they were before Now let us see how fitly it is exprest in these words that he sayth you are dead to sinne and alive to God that hee choseth to expresse it by life and death Had it not beene fit to have sayd thus much you are changed in your dispositions in your inclinations in your intentions in your actions you are changed in your conversations you are other kind of men in the inclination of your hearts you bring forth other fruit you lead other lives then you were wont to doe But hee expresseth it here yet more fully that is by that that includes all these and if there be any thing more may be added it includes that too yee are dead and alive Then we will consider First generally how death and life expresse the state of them that are in Christ. Secondly consider them in their particular application how death expresseth the first part of a mans change in sanctification and life the second part First wee take them in generall and let this bee the point that A man that is indeed effectually changed by vertue of his union with Christ hee hath such a change wrought in him as in a dead and living man as in life or in death Now first take it in generall you know life and death they imply first a generall change when a man is alive or when a man is dead there is not a change in some part onely but in the whole So it is here when a man is effectually changed from what he was by vertue of his union with Christ. A member may bee dead and yet neverthelesse the man alive but if the man be dead there is a general change that goes throughout it possesseth every part every member so that now there is no member of him but death rules in it then hee is a dead man So it is in this when a man is dead spiritually there is not a change in some particular actions onely in some particular opinions onely there is not an alteration of some of his old customes onely but it is a generall change so it goes through the whole man It is a change in the understanding he judgeth things otherwise then hee was wont to doe And there is a change in the will the inclination of it is to other objects then he was wont to bee inclined to And thence there is a change in his intentions he propounds other ends to himselfe then he was wont So there is a change in respect of the whole the Word is the rule of all a mans actions There is a change from particular evills from one as well as another that when any thing is discovered to him to bee a sinne to bee a transgression of the rule hee is turned from it So likewise when any thing is discovered to him to be a dutie agreeable to the rule according to the will of God revealed in his Word hee is a vessell of honour prepared for it and that is it the Apostle especially means when he compares them to vessells and he describes them thus they are vessells of honour fit for the service of their Master prepared for every good worke So that now as the Apostle sayth there remaineth no more conscience of sinne That is
concurrence betweene the action and the affection with conformitie to the Rule First there must be actions It is not speaking good nor meaning good only but it is doing good Saith the Apostle If a brother be naked or hungrie or cold and you say to him goe in peace warme thee but you give him no fire and goe and cloath thee but you give him no apparell and goe and feed thee but you give him no meate Here are good words now but the deedes are not answerable here are no good deedes at all Solomon compares such complementall charitie that is only verball and in outward expression to Cloudes and windes without raine Not much unlike the boxes of Apothecaries that are adorned with glorious tytles without but open them and examine the insides you shall finde nothing but emptinesse Well that is the first thing there must bee good actions Againe secondly these must have a good rise they must proceed from a good affection too or else they lose the name of good actions Make the tree good and the fruit shall bee of the same condition the actions are not good if the affections bee naught and therefore the same God that requires beneficence hee commands benevolence also and would have men become tender-hearted and put on the bowels of compassion that they should Sympathize with others and be like affectioned to them to mourne with those that mourne and to be with those that are bound as being bound with them This is that which our Saviour calls being mercifull Bee mercifull as your heavenly Father is mercifull Hee saith not only doe workes of mercie but be mercifull doe them from a mercifull heart from bowels of compassion that yearne towards those that are in necessitie That is the second thing But then thirdly these actions and these affections whence they rise they must hold conformitie with the Law There is no good but what is conformable to the rule of goodnesse that is the written word of God and therefore all those will-worships and idle ceremonies made according to the inventions of man as a thousand devices in Poperie wherein they intimate a show of great Liberalitie they are not good deedes because they want that good rule that should uphold and make them so So much shall serve for the opening of it Good deedes then are such actions as rise from a sanctified affection and receive ground and warrant from Gods will revealed in his Word to men Againe there is a third terme yet Doe good to all men What doth the Apostle meane that every man should receive the fruits of our Beneficence There are some men notoriously wicked and rather to be punished than relieved The Apostle meanes not such for hee gives you a Caution If any man worke not let him not eate Relieve him not that hath abilitie to get and will live idlie and unprofitably But doe good to all men that is to all men so farre as you see them in extreme want unable to helpe themselves if their lawfull necessities call upon your charitie in this respect all men must be looked unto but especially To the houshold of Faith By houshold of faith here he meanes the multitude of beleevers and not only those that dwell neere us and about us but those that are dispersed throughout the whole earth the Churches of God The dispersion spoken of through all the parts of the world are this houshold of faith all the Saints of God in what difference or distance soever one from another yet they are of the same houshold together of the same Church of God So the Church of God is called the house of God and sometime it is understood of the Church militant and sometime of the Church triumphant Of the Church triumphant In my Father 〈◊〉 many mansions There it is heaven the place of the blessed Then for the Church militant Moses was faithfull in all his house saith the Text. And Paul exhorts Timothie how hee should carry himselfe in the house of God that is in the Church militant As for those that live above us they need not our good workes and actions therefore it is intended of those that are here in the Church militant that is called Gods houshold because there is such a communion amongst beleevers as amongst those that live in the same house that abide under the same roofe that live under the same government that eat at the same Table c. So then you have the meaning of all which is no more but this Take those advantages of times which you can obtaine or el●… many will slip unprofitablie to bee conversant in such actions of mercie which tend to the reliefe of tho●… that want them If there be extreme necessitie doe good to all but if you may make choyce of persons to whom you may doe good choose the houshold of faith Thus you have the substance and the meaning of the words In them you may observe briefly these three parts The first is a determination or limitation of time to which the Saints are tyed in the performance of the duties that are injoyned them as you have opportunitie and while you have time Secondly there is a declaration of dutie doe good Thirdly there is a description of the persons to whom this good must be done first more generally Doe good to all and then more particularly and with an especiall note Especially to those of the houshold of Faith Of these in order First for the determination of time to take the words as they lie while you have time therefore or as you have opportunitie the words themselves doe render the maine point It is the dutie of Christians to take their advantages of times to take the best opportunities of their life to doe good I will speake somewhat by way of Explication of the point and something by way of Application and so proceed to what followes First for the Explication what is intended or meant in it when we incite you to embrace times and opportunities Briefly these two things are meant in it First that you should bee sure not to lose the time of life And Secondly that you should not forgoe the advantages and opportunities of estates You shall not alwayes have life to doe good and it may bee if you have life you ●…all not alwayes enjoy meanes and abilitie to doe good Wh●…●…ou have life therefore and time doe good or while you enjoy meanes and so power to doe good embrace these opportunities That is the meaning of the Apostle in this place First then there must be a doing good while you have life let your good workes goe before you doe things while you live and deferre not the performance of them till your death Make you friends of the unrighteous Mammon that when you want they may receive you into everlasting habitations Hee calls that unrighteous Mammon not that it is unrighteously gotten only though
that may be meant but that which is unrighteously kept is unrighteous Mammon to you if you procured it never so justly unlesse you doe rightly dispose of it and if you be desirous to doe right in disposing of your mammon of your wealth doe it now That when you want that power and those times you may enjoy the comfortable fruit of the well-redeeming of the time of your life to receive you into everlasting habitations In the 25. verse of the 16. Luke it is the challenge of Abraham to Dives Sonne remember that thou in thy life-time haddest thy goods for so the word signifieth thou haddest thy opportunities of life and of goods too but now thou hast neither life nor goods left thee to doe good with and therefore hee is blessed and thou art tormented It was the folly of those five Virgins They tooke not the opportunitie of life for that is the thing meant there but they posted over all to the last and hoped that all might bee effected in a trice or minute of their life which would haue held them employment enough all the dayes of their lives And therefore they came short of heaven the gates were shut against them as you see when the Bridegroome came If any man imagine because it is said Blessed are they that die in the Lord for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them That therefore it matters not so long as a man doth good at his death though hee have neglected the wayes of goodnesse all his life Let them know that by works there is not meant the actions of men but the fruites of their actions Their workes follow them not the workes they have deferred untill death but the fruites of those workes they did while they were living and received not the benefit of them untill death Their workes follow them that is the fruits of their workes It is more good and pleasant by farre to have the actions goe before and the fruites and comfortable effects to succeed and follow after But if any man yet suppose that hee may make that up in his Will which he hath neglected all his life long and though hee have lived miserably covetously and unprofitably all the dayes of his life yet his thoughts may tell him that by the Charitable Bequests of his last Testament as bequeathing largely to the Church and Common-wealth and to all sorts of people hee may at the last make fit compensation and satisfaction for neglect of former duties Let no man deceive himselfe with such a bad resolution for first it argues a signe of infidelitie that a man will not trust God for feare he should want in his life-time what is the reason else that he deferres the doing good in health unlesse it be for feare of wanting himselfe such distrust hee hath in the providence of God Besides the same God which bids thee doe good when thou hast opportunitie and while thou enjoyest the advantage of life hee expects it now And it may bee truly said of many that neglect those times of doing good while they lived and have now supplied that defect in their death by the large benevolence of their Wills Their will is good but their deed is ●…ught So much for the first point I proceed unto the second that is thou must not only take the time of thy life but also the opportunitie of thy meanes and thy estate while there is yet a price in thine hand while thou hast opportunitie and enjoyest wealth to doe good with redeeme the advantages and opportunities by employing them in that way for which thou didst receive them The time may come wherein you may desire to doe good but cannot wanting at estate and opportunities whereby to doe it Marke what Solomon saith Wilt thou trust in a thing of nothing for Riches have wings as an Eagle and flie away toward heaven It is the vanitie of men that they still forbeare and stay while their estates increase pretending that then they shall bee better able to doe good and extend themselves more largely or that they may keepe their wealth and waite for a better opportunitie But why wilt thou trust in a thing of nothing Thou seest a fowle in her flight and now it may be thou perceivest it but instantly it vanisheth out of thy sight Why riches have wings saith Solomon Thou hast them now in thy possession and retainest them fast in hold but presently they are departed they flie as an Eagle out of thy sight And the same wise man when he exhorteth men to cast their bread upon the waters Hee gives them this reason Thou knowest not what evills thou knowest not what judgements and calamities God intends to bring upon that Nation where thou livest upon the Citie upon the Familie where thou dwellest upon thy person or estate Thou knowest not what evils God will bring upon the earth And so likewise charge rich men in this world that they hee not high-minded and that they trust not in uncertaine riches but in the living God that they bee readie to distribute and to communicate and to doe good workes What is it that hinders men from distributing and communicating Because they trust in uncertaine Riches For if they would now learne not to trust in uncertaine Riches but account them uncertaine as they are and put confidence in the living God who can provide for them when those outward meanes which they so much rely on faile their expectations they would then be more liberall and bountifull and readie to doe good and to communicate So then here is the meaning of the point Take the opportunities of life That is first take the time of life while you may doe good and then take the meanes the wealth and estate which is the time of your meanes For this observe Iobs case hee goes on discoursing of this very point he was now a man stript of all hee had but the other day the Richest man in the East the S●…ans and Caldeans had carried away his goods his cattell and his children and all things were taken from him Yet there was onething that administred comfort in the day of his adversitie and his affliction And it was this saith he If I have made the eyes of the poore to faile or if I eate my morsels alone or if I have not relieved the fatherlesse c. If I have not done thus and thus then let the Lords fiercest judgement fall upon mee But herein consists my comfort my conscience beares mee witnesse that when I had wealth and estate and enjoyed the goods of this life I did good I was father to the fatherlesse a foot to the lame and eyes to the blind I did all the good that lay within the compasse of my power to doe when I had meanes to doe it I say little doe you know beloved whatsoever thou art whatsoever estate thou hast though thou
be as a naile fastned in a sure place and thinkest thou shalt never bee moved from this condition Thou knowest not how soone God may turne his hand upon thee when thou maist bee as Iob was on the dunghill deprived of all comforts What will be thy consolation then that when thou hadst wealth thou didst good with it It will adde to thy affliction that thou hadst great possessions and didst neither glorifie God nor doe good to men So much for the opening of the point I come to apply it First then it serves for the reproofe of many to whom God hath given the price in their hands But they want hearts to embrace the opportunities of doing good They pretend to doe good and have a mind inclining to good But they have no heart to take the opportunities and advantages of times and meanes which God hath bestowed on them for the same purpose they want hearts to embrace those Remember what Solomon saith Say not to thy neighbour goe and come againe to morrow if it bee now in thine hands to give him The Lord will not only have a man not denie to doe good but besides that hee would not have him delay to doe good put him not from thee till to morrow if his helpe remaine in thine hands to day yea though thou have a purpose to doe it to morrow if it be in thy power to day doe it and deferre it not till to morrow But what shall we say to those who doe not only delay their purposes but by protracting lose their purposes There is nothing more ordinarie then in some cases for men not only to purpose truly but to promise heartily to God that they will performe these and these acts of mercy if God will d●…iver them from such feares and dangers as they at such times are incompast with A man that endures extremitie of weather in a tempestuous Sea if happily hee may attaine the land in safetie a man that is diseased with sicknesse if now he may recover his health againe or one that suffers imprisonment if he may procure his libertie or a man that is in feare of the losse of his estate by the meanes of some unhappy casualtie if now hee may escape that losse hee will bestow a great deale on God and on the servants of God nay hee promises and vowes unto God in his extremitie But how many of those promises as well as those other purposes come to nothing they have libertie they receive health they enjoy safetie and have the full fruition of all their desires but alas how short come their vowes of peformance not one of many of them but turnes God away without his bargaine Remember how the Lord taxeth the people of Israel In the day of their distresse and the Lord reckons up divers and sundrie troubles they were in then they spake good words to God they would cleave to him and promised to doe thus and thus But thus saith the Text They flattered the Lord with their lippes and were false in the Covenant with God Is not it so beloved with many of us Oh that your hearts might smite you this day before the Lord for many purposes and promises that you have made of doing this or that for the glorifying of God and the discharge of your dutie One man hath promised restitution of unjust gaine another to become more liberall and bountifull towards others And the Lord hath waited weeke after weeke moneth after moneth and yeare after yeare and yet neverthelesse you continue the same men either unsensible or carelesse to accomplish your promise to God or rendring unto him his due That is the first Use. Secondly let it stirre up every one of us to a care of his dutie of embracing opportunities And when wee perswade you to take opportunities wee would draw you a degree higher not only to take them but to seeke them for how shall a man obtaine the advantage of taking opportunities if he first seeke them not and therefore we perswade you to that Wee see Abraham sitting in the dore of his Tent that hee might observe opportunities of doing good hee stayed not till the men knocked at his doore for reliefe but tooke notice of their passing by that he might call them Wee see a good old man in Iudges 19. As hee perceives a stranger passing the streetes first takes occasion to question his wants and forbeares not till the man complaine so willing was hee to administer to his necessities and to embrace a fit opportunitie of doing him good Wee see David expressing his thankfulnesse to God and to Ionathan Hee enquires if there were any of the house of Saul that h●… might shew him kindnesse for Ionathans sake So should we doe Is there any of the houshold of Faith as the Text saith and as the Scripture calls them unto whom I may shew kindnesse for the Lords sake Hee hath beene better to us then Ionathan was to David and yet wee are much more backward to Retribution and expressions of thankfulnesse then David was to Ionathan But the Scriptures are plentifull in this wee need not stand on it I say this is a dutie that every one should discharge this taske not to stay and forbeare till the reports of mens wants are brought to them but to bee circumspect and seeke for all occasions that may deserve the extent of their goodnesse If you live in a Parish wherein happily there remaines not many poore yet you live in a Citie there are many there if there bee not many in the Citie you live in a Country in a Kingdome doubtles where there are many if there bee none there yet thou hast further meanes to extend thy charitie Thou livest in a Church is there any member of the Church in all the World dispersed in Bohemia in the Palatinate in any place of the earth where the poore abide enquire after them that you may know their wants and relieve their necessities I come now to the second from the determination of time to the declaration of dutie while wee have time Let us doe good I told you what this goodnesse is in the intent of the Apostle in this place Doing good is a releeving those that are in necessity for that is the Apostles meaning as we may see in the context and coherence of these words with the former So then the maine Point is no more but this It is the dutie of Gods servants as to make advantages of their times so to employ themselves in releeving of others Take it more briefly It is a doing good to releive others that is the dutie of Gods servants and it well becomes them to be employed in this work while we have time on earth and meanes to doe it to employ our selves in doing good and releiving others And there is familiar appearance of this in Scripture and by reasons also By Scripture it is commanded in precept and
praise of men but ayming to approve our selves to God in that wee doe This is that which Christ advised the Pharisees that they should not admit their right hand to know what their left hand did Lastly as it must be simple so it must be chearefull God loves a chearefull giver And this is a perfect signe of chearfulnesse when a man doth not only give without grudging upon all opportunities but when he will be carefull to prevent them in his willingnesse to seeke them As I said before So much for the second point the dutie it selfe Now I proceed to the last thing that is the description of the persons to whom this must be done First generally All and then particularly The houshold of faith First generally Doe good to all It is as I have told you to all that endure such wants and necessities as that it may be a worke of mercy and no transgression of the rule to releeve them for those that live unprofitably and become burthens to the Common-wealth except in case of extreme necessitie it loses the name of mercy to releeve them and deserves neither reward nor commendations Yet if they live in extreme necessitie then take the Rule of the Apostle Doe good to all even to them also Wee have the Parable of our Saviour to direct us in this path where the good Samaritan lends his assistance to the Iew that fell among theeves Wee cannot but know of the opposition and enmitie betweene the Samaritans and the Iewes yet wee see that in case of extremitie the Samaritan helpes the Iew. Therein our Saviour teacheth us that every man in this case is a mans neighbour and therefore the same law that commands to love thy neighbour as thy selfe intends wee should doe good to all if necessitie require The Reason is in regard there is the same maker of one as of another Wee have all one Father sayth the Prophet and hath not one God created us Then by Creation wee are all alike Children though not by Adoption and especiall Grace and as they are the Creatures of God and beare the Image of their Maker there ought to bee some consideration extended toward them in case of extreame necessitie Againe there dwells a part of Gods Image in all man kinde and that resemblance makes us alied to each other by the bonds of Nature then if wee love not our brother whom wee see daylie how shall wee love him whom wee never saw sayth the Apostle To make some use briefly of this Is it so that doing of good is to bee extended to all when necessitie requires it Then let it teach us without all evasion and protraction of those duties commanded to embrace every object and occasion that may invite us to doe good and to bee mercifull But some man may reply in this fashion my intent is very plyable that way of goodnesse I could willingly extend it toward such a man but hee is a stranger unto mee and one with whom I was never acquainted What is this but the churlish reply of Nabal to the servants of David there are divers men abroad whom I know not there are some servants that are runne from their masters shall I give my bread and that I have provided for my shearers unto them Nabal was his name and follie was with him Abigal did truly interpret his nature to bee answerable to his name which signified a man of follie for if his conditions had beene otherwise he would not have sent them emptie to their Master knowing their absolute necessitie in which case a stranger ought to bee relieved and we cannot thrust him backe from our charitie Secondly such a one I confesse is not a stranger but an enemie and when it lay in his power hee procur'd mee all the mischiefe hee could and should I now relieve him Marke the rule of the Apostle If thine enemie hunger feed him if hee bee naked cloath him if he thirst give him drinke for in so doing thou shalt heap coales of fire upon his head But some man will say there remaines so much unthankfulnes in the World that one is soone discouraged by peoples ingratitude in the office of doing good But what saith the Lord Cast thy bread upon the waters for after many dayes thou shalt finde it Thought it seeme no more to thee but as a stone suncke downe into the deepe or as a morsell of bread in the water that floates from the sight of him that cast it in without possibilitie of recovering it againe or receiving any fruit or benefit from the same yet cease not to cast it there for after many dayes thou shalt finde it But some man replies I doe good to some already I give something to the maintaining of a Scholler in the Universitie somewhat I doe for the binding of a poore Child to an Apprentishippe and I have bestowed my good will towards the setting up of a young beginner in his trade what is there no end of doing good Marke again the advise of Solomon for that Give a portion to seven and to eight If thou have done good to one extend it to a second to a third and againe to a fourth and a fift and sixt and a seventh and to eight and so long as there remaines an object of mercie and power in thine hands to doe it though thou hast extended the like bountie to seven and to eight already Some man will answer againe that by this course if every man bestow his benevolence so largely no man could become rich in this life and God appoints some rich men in this World as well as poore Solomon answers that objection thus If the Clouds bee full they poure downe raine As if hee should have argued thus God hath bestowed riches on men as hee hath given raine to the Clouds hee gave them that superfluitie of waters to poure downe on the earth for the benefit of the same and not that they shall still detaine it to no purpose at all So God hath given riches to men that when they arive at a fulnesse of estate they should then poure downe and distill the fruits of that blessing on them that are poore and live in necessitie as the raine descends upon drie clods of earth But some man will say a man might poure downe comfort but the ill successe it meets with and the little good it begets in them on whom it is bestowed for they oftentimes become worse by the receipt of such benefits disheartens the giver from the extending of his charitie according to Gods command and his owne good nature Saith Solomon for that As the Tree falls so it lyes whether to the East or West to North or South his meaning is this As the Tree being hewen downe lie which way it will falls to the profit and advantage of the owner so
Kindnes so unkinde and harsh But what was his behaviour under all these For the generall sweet and heavenly For some particulars sad and weak when faith did worke hee was above all his stormes In the deepest calamitie faith can settle and compose the soule and fill it with the sweetest comforts When sense and nature did worke then hee was much impatient and the winde had the better over him In the one hee shewes himselfe a Christian In the other a man In the one Iob is beyond himselfe in the other below himselfe According to the time and manner of these severall workings he is like or unlike himselfe Thus it is with the best whose outward change doth not more vary but their inward carriage doth as much change At length Iob after many disputes with his friends and conflicts with himselfe concenterates his thoughts in two maine Points 1 One was still to trust in God let him bee what hee will and let him doe what hee will though hee should continue his present tryalls yea and exceed them though hee should kill mee yet saith hee Chap. 13. 15. though hee slay mee I will trust in him and there he disposeth of his soule 2 Another was to prepare for death all the dayes of my appointed time I will waite till my change come and there hee disposeth of his bodie Many arguments hee layeth downe in this Chapter which did occasion him to these thoughts and resolutions The first is the brevitie of mans life Verse 1. 2. Man th●…t is borne of a Woman is of few dayes hee commeth forth like a Flower and is cut downe hee fleeth also as a shadow and continueth not He sayth not yeeres nor moneths nor weekes but dayes and these dayes not many but few and these few dayes not long but short as quickly set as the shadow as quickly cropt as the flower Secondly the misery of that short life in the same place and full of trouble as if every Article of life were replenished with sorrow even as every veine of the body is with bloud this is own experience could tell him Thirdly the certaintie of Death The Sunne hath his appointed race which in the Winter is short in the Summer long but in both it hath a certaine time of setting so the race of mans life to some it may be shorter to some longer but the night will come and all must be closed up in Death verse 5. His dayes are determined the number of them they are with thee thou hast appointed his bounds which hee cannot passe and if so then high time for Iob to thinke of it and prepare for it Death began in a manner to seize on him already in severall parts in his feet for his wealth was gone in his loynes having lost his children in his heart his friends leaving him in his bosome for his wife was a discomforter nay in his very life it selfe so much as was wrapt up in the outward part of his body for that was diseased in his speech and spirits they grew hoarse and faint all these were the harbingers of a future dissolution Well therefore might Iob conclude ever I must not live and long I cannot live therefore though in much miserie and in bad dayes I will thinke of Death and fit my selfe for a good end and apply my selfe seriously and wisely for a good worke All the dayes of my appointed time will I waite till my change come Which words containe in them two parts First his future dissolution which hee calls a change and a change that is comming upon him as if hee had beene the next man till my change come Secondly his present disposition I will waite hee thinkes of death before death and prepares to die while yet he lives Neither was this a death-pang a fitte a humour which began quickly and expired suddenly Nay he will make it a serious businesse as if this should be his every dayes worke All the dayes of my appointed time will I waite Some reade it of my appointed warfare and others of my appointed labour they all intimate that hee meanes by his appointed time his appointed life the lease or terme of breathing which God had allotted allowed and decreed There are two propositions which naturally issue from the words and comprehend the juyce and marrow of the Text. First that there is a change which will befall the sonnes of men 2. Secondly we should alwayes waite till it come I begin with the first that There is a change which will befall the sonnes of men Be we poore or bee we rich bee we noble or bee we ignoble be we prosperous or be we afflicted be we strong or be we weake be we old or be we young be we good or be we bad be we male or be wee female whatsoever our natures bee whatsoever our parts be whatsoever our places be whatsoever our ages be whatsoever our courses be whatsoever our wayes be how faire and how durable our estates may appeare yet at length there is a change which will befall us That which Iacob spake in a patheticall way Ioseph is not and Simeon is not may truly be said of all the sonnes of men once they were now they are not though once we reckoned them upon our account yet at length they are shut out and stand aside as cyphers But that you may the better understand what change it is that is here meant you are to know that there is a fourefold change First a change of the condition this I call a temporall change wherein some or more or all of our outward c●…mforts are shrivelled and feared up by some present miserie When povertie breakes in upon us as the hunter doth upon his game and causeth our riches as so many birds to which Solomon compares them to take to themselves wings and flye away When sicknesse stayeth our health in the bed and imprisoneth us to the chamber When our friends glide away from us like a river through their Apostacie or start aside like a broken bowe through their falshood or trecherie When the neere relation of Husband and Wife Parents and Children is cut asunder and the many sad teares for their losse imbitter all our former comforts But this is not the change intended in the Text. Secondly there is a change of the Body and this I call a corporall change for even these vilde bodyes of ours shall bee changed Looke as the spring is a refreshing change to the season of the yeare so shall the Resurrection be an exceeding change to our bodyes or as the morning is a change to the night so at the Resurrection shall our bodyes awake and their corruption shall put on incorruption neither is this the change which Iob here intends immediatly though some expound his ayme to be at this from whom I cannot absolutely dissent yet I thinke they hit not the right scope Thirdly there is a change of the Soule that I call a
hee was in publicke but what was hee in private wee have seene him in the Sunne how demeaned hee himselfe in the shade True Religion is like the precious stone Garamantites which casteth no great lustre outwardly but semper intus habeat aur●…as g●…ttus but wee may discerne as it were golden drops within Three of these after I have presented to your view I will then set free your patience and give your sorrow full scope to vent it selfe in teares The first of these was tendernes of conscience which is one of the most infallible tokens and markes of the Child of God so tender was hee that he would undertake no businesse before hee was fully perswaded of the lawfulnesse thereof both by cleare texts of Scripture and the approbation of most learned and conscientious Divines hee made scruple not onely of committing the least knowne sinne but of imbarking into any action which was questionable among those that love the truth in sinceritie And therefore although God blessed him with great wealth and store of coyne yet hee never put it to Usurie or Interest thereby to increase it for he held the tolleration of the Law in this Kingdome to bee no sufficient warrant for any violation of the divine Law the distinctions lately coyned of toothlesse and biting Usurie hee no way allowed judging truly that all Usurie according to the Hebrew Etymologie is biting and hath not onely teeth but Adders teeth envenomed for all Usurie if it bi●…e not our Brother as per accidens sometimes it may not yet it bi●…eth the conscience of all such who have any remorse of sinne The second aurea gutta was Christian compassion whereby he tooke to heart the afflictions of Ioseph and miserie of Lazarus whose sores hee cured with the most precious balsamum hee could buy for his money What Plinie writeth lib. ●…2 c. 8. Attalus usus est Thynni recentiores adipe ad ul●…era on the Fish in Latine Thynnus that it is a soveraign remedie against many diseases and cureth all kinde of ulcers was truly verified in him for hee furnished himselfe with the best cordialls and the rarest medicinall receipts and when hee heard of any poore sicke or hurt hee not onely sent them money but Bezar and balsamum thinking nothing could cost him too deare whereby he might save the life or recover the health of the poorest member of Christ Jesus In the yeares of dearth and sicknesse he sent provision to all the Parishes about him and thrice a weeke relieved a hundred atleast at his gate neither did his compassion dye with him for in his Will and Testament confirmed by him the day before his death hee bequeathed divers Legacies to the poore whereof these following came to my notice To Saint Margarets in Westminster 10. pound To Kempsford 60. pound To Cosley 60. pound To Froome and the Woodlands 100. pound To Warmester 100. pound To Deverill and Mounten 100. pound The last aurea gutta which I shall present to your view at this time was his fervencie of zeale for the truth of the Gospell in all the Benefices which hee bestowed hee tooke speciall care to make choice of men sound in the Faith no way warping either to Popish superstition or 〈◊〉 seperation as he made greatest accompt of those Ministers of the Gospell who were serve●… i●… spirit zealous for the truth so hee hated none more then 〈◊〉 and luke-warme Laodica●… he ●…eldome spake of any Romanist without expressing a great dete●…tation of their idolatrie and superstition the night before he changed this life for a better after an humble confe●…ion of his sinnes ingenerall and a particular 〈◊〉 of the Articles of his beliefe in which hee had lived and now was resolved to die he added I renounce all Popish superstition all mans merits trusting only upon the merits of the Death and passion of my Saviour and whosoever trusteth on any other shall finde when hee is dying if not before that hee leaneth upon broken reedes Here after the benediction of his Wife and Children being required by me to ease his mind and declare if any thing lay heavie upon his conscience he answered nothing he thanked God yet like an obedient child of his Mother the Church of England both heartily desired and received her absolution and now professing that hee was most willing to leave the world he besought all to pray for him and himselfe prayed most ●…ervenely that God would enable him patiently to abide his good will and pleasure and to goe through this last and greatest worke of faith and patience and the pangs of Death ●…oone after comming upon him he fixed his eyes on Heaven from whence came his helpe and to the last gaspe lifted up his hand as it were to lay hold on that Crowne of righteousnesse which Christ reacheth out to all his children who hold out the good fight of Faith to the end and conquer in the end Which crowne of righteousnesse the Lord who hath purchased with his blood after we have finished likewise our courses of his infinite bountie bestow upon us all Cui c. FINIS TEMPVS PVTATIONIS OR THE RIPE ALMOND GATHERED A SERMON APPOINTED to be Preached at the Funeralls of the Right Honourable the Earle of EXETER in the Abbie Church at Westminster SERMON XLII GEN. 15. 15. And thou shalt goe to thy Fathers in peace thou shalt bee buried in a good old Age. IT was the manner of the Egyptians and Greekes to embalme the dead bodies of great Personages and anoynt them all over with Honey which kept them a long time from corrupting and putrifying in their Sepulchres Thus the Macedonians preserved the Corpes of Alexander as some Historians report above a hundred yeares from rotting in his Coffine But Gemistus Phleton being to performe a like Rite to Ages●…laus for want of Honey layd his Corpes in Waxe made of Honey-combes I am sor●…e I am at this time to give the Motto to this Embleme A Person of qualitie a Person of wealth a Person of noble birth a Person of Honour a Person of fame and renowne whose soule is alreadie bound up in the bundle of life is now to hee brought with Honour to his long home and though not his Bodie yet his name to bee embalmed and preserved as it were in honey in the sweet Commemoration of his Vertues and the first Standard-bearer of Religion under his Majestie and the great Master of these sacred Rites and Ceremonies was designed to doe this office and hee richly provided for it of whom I may truely say as Homer of Nestor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cujus ex ore melle dulcior flueb●…t oratio But si●…h it hath pleased the Divine Providence whose footsteps are not knowne to take away for a time the use of his feete who should at this time have stood on this holy Mount Bounden dutie and service hath layd upon mee Genistus Phletons taske and I am constrained as hee was in-apia