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A17499 The embassador between heauen and earth, betweene God and man. Or A booke of heauenly and healthy meditations and prayers for earthly and sickly soules and sinners Fit to be borne in the hand, and worne in the heart of euery good Christian. By W.C. preacher of the word. Crashaw, William, 1572-1626. 1613 (1613) STC 4316; ESTC S118212 87,812 404

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in thy youth and let Salomon bee thy Tutor Remember thy Creator in the daies of thy youth let it be often recited that it may be once remembred Nor no man thinke it to late least he omit and loose that which he might otherwise haue gained For at what time soeuer a sinner shall repent him of his wickednesse from the bottome of his heart the Lord will forgiue and forget it and his sins shall vanish from his sight and presence as the dew before the Sun O heauen before heauen o heauen vpon earth and the contrary perswasions on the other part o hell before hell ô hell vpon earth and damnation before the time I say againe if hee repent of his wickednesse it is not the misery of this wretched life nor terror of conscience nor malice of foes let them be men or deuils let them bee seuen in one a legion in another all the Principalities and Powers of darkenesse in the third that shall hinder the ascension and blessing of his prayer that shall ●inder the forgiuenesse of his sinne for neuer was the shadow more faithfull to the body then a blessed forgiuenesse to a faithfull repentance on the one side then good successe hath bene to a feruent prayer on the other side zealously conceiued in the brest and powerfully vttered by the voyce of the tongue and the spirit I cr●●d ●n ●● afflictio● 〈…〉 to ●he Lord and hee heard mee but this successe as formerly instructed must not bee looked for if it want these necessary adiunctes these vndenayed vndelayed assistantes that blesse the company wherein they come and speed the suite wherin they are Sollicitors and Plaintiffes that beate not the aire with sounds that arise from the hollow and emptinesse of them like brookes that roare and make a noyse but shew their empty bottomes that containe nothing but grauell and filthines within them like the dissolute and fashionable prayers of vs and our times both at home and abroad in chamber Church who like hipocrites or Gentiles vtter a forme of words rather of custome then of zeale as the Parrat of Ascaniae recited the Creed flattering God with our tongues but dissembling with him in our hearts withall so full of toyes and fansies for want of faith and reuerence that when wee haue prayed wee had need to pray againe that hee would forgiue our sinnes in our prayers because we thinke least of him when we pray vnto him Neuer remembrng the Maiesty of his Person to whom wee speake nor the excellency of the worke wee take in hand neuer rowsing vp our spirits with the thoughts therof or if we stirre thē vp then to pray leauing thē againe as Christ his Disciples before we haue throughly awaked thē as if the offering of the halt and the lame body without soule or soule without deuotiō sound of our lips without the thought of our heart one part of our selues without the other or the whole without a whole intention without clamor crying aloud could please him The prayers of Dauid we may reade were not thus cast off at randome in the 55 Psalme saith he I mourne in my prayers and make a noyse euening and morning and noone will I pray and make a noyse and in the 38 Psalme before I rore for the very griefe of mine heart Lord my whole desire is bef●re thee and my sighing is not hid from thee Cor meum palpitat my ●e●rt is in trauell runneth to and fro I haue no rest no quietnesse within mee Such were the pangues and prickings of Iobs heart I●b chapter 3. My gronings commeth forth before I eate effund●ntur velut aqua rugitus mei And my roarings are powred forth and waue like waters not groning nor crying but plaine roarings with a continuall in-undation Velut vnda impellitur vnda as one waue dasheth forth another now when the soule is thus prepared to speake the eares of the Lord are euer open to heare these are wonderfull passions the hungry Lyon in the desert opprest with extremity of suffering and want neuer rored so much for his prey nor the hart braying after th● w●ter-brookes as the goodnesse of the Lord in the soule of the faithfull after him The mighty Lord of heauen and earth blessed and hallowed bee whose name for euer in earth as it is in heauen and blessed are those that are in loue with his goodnesse and trace nearest vnto his steppes to giue vs heere another example hath beene feruent and euen roared in his supplications as wee reade for Lazarus and Martha and others whom hee loued and afterwards in his owne cause when his soule was hedged in and inuironed round about with vexation euen vnto death and anguish and sorrow incompast him on euery side as also then in his greatest agony when hee cryed with a great voyce not for perticular persons as before hee wept but vndergoing the burthen and punishment of all the sinnes and sinners in the world My God my God why hast thou forsaken me ' and crying againe with a great voyce graue vp the ghost therefore that blessed Apostles mentioning the dayes of his humanity and the exercise of his sacred life and fruit of his lips and the passions of his spirit thought it not enough to giue notice to the world that he prayed to his father that he prayed with teares which distilled downe his blessed cheekes and watered the ground nor of a crye alone weakely sent out but of a vehement and strong crye which if heauen were brasse were able to pearse through it and find way into the sanctuary into the eares of the almighty such a prayer as it ascēds lightly vp borne vpō the wings of faith so it euer comes laden heauily downe with a blessing on the head of him that first gaue it flight thus then this lanthorne of our direction and composition of humility and goodnesse this glorious neuer enough admired Lord of life who prest and opprest with the waight and bu●then thereof groned vnder the affliction of our sins in a most perfect forme of exact obedience with his bleeding teares for them for vs shewed vs the right forme of saithfull supplications for our selues biddeth vs be importunate and feruent in our prayers that they may wrestle with God and ouercome him Was he thus greued for vs and shall not we greiue for our selues groned hee vnder the waight of our deseruings of no infirmity in himselfe but in compassion and pitty towards vs whom we continually greue and no way so much as in committing of sinne and drinking it downe the throte with gredinesse and appetite as Behemoth drinketh downe Iordan without sence or sorrow or greife for the same the consideration whereof and what it may procure vs hereafter biddeth vs be importunate and feruent in our prayers to preuent it before the dreadfull Maiesty of the omnipotent Lord of heauen and earth whom we stand before the royalty of his nature subl●mitie of his
a thousand daggers at our hartes to launch and let forth that putrified corruption that returned such muddy chan●elles to thee the fountaine of liuing waters that but with so a high a price and deare expence could not be purified but now beeing thus purged and made cleane let vs be wary we pollute them not againe hauing receiued so pure a guest let vs not harbour with him the vncleane least to our euerlasting losse he take his flight and forsake vs when then our vncleane thoughts and cogitations which his presence expelled and kept a loofe of from vs retire themselues euery one accompanied with seauen worse then themselues and our end be worse then our beginning and so that become vnto vs the sauour of death vnto death which otherwayes had bene the sauour of life vnto life wherefore O Lord blesse vs at this time and this thy holy institution that by our vnworthinesse we turne not that to euill which was ordayned for our good make it O Lord the plaster to heale all our wounds the garment to couer our nakednes the spirituall and corporal bread to the stay of our bodies and soules let it be the cocke to remember our sins and the rocke to stay our soules vppon that we neuer fall from thée againe to that end so blesse vs most gratious God y● this thy sacrament now receyued may be to our euerlasting good and wellfare so conducting vs through this vale of misery with so godly a direction guide enuy contention and malice layed a side forgiuing the offences of our bretheren towards vs as we expect forgiuenesse at thy handes that so in a godly society in this world we may liue together in peace vntill we shall raigne with thee in glory which art the end of peace where we shall then behold thee with our bodily eyes as wee behold thee now with faith by the eye of the Spirit and see that body that was broken and bruised for our sinnes those hands that haue made vs and fed vs that head that was crowned now all glorified neuer to bee debaced more To which blessed vision fruition he bring vs that hath so ransomed vs for the glory of his sacred Name Amen A Thanksgiuing vnto God the Father vsed by the reuerend and learned W. Musc and fit to bee vsed of all good Christians LET all true Christians say and acknowledge with one heart and mouth say also with them O my Soule say in this mortall body without this mortall body Glory Honour and Praise bee vnto thee most mercifull God throughout all ages and Generations of the world which hast not spared thine onely Sonne but offered him vp a bleeding Sacrifice for the sins of thy people giuen him to death euen to the death of the Crosse for most wretched mankind to that end that through him we might be saued and deliuered from distruction and brought into the liberty of euerlasting life graunt vnto vs by thy spirit that we may perfect and continue in this thy grace for euer and euer Amen Mart. Luthers Prayers COnferme in vs O God that which thou hast wrought and finish the worke thou hast begunne in vs to the glory of thy name and the sauing of our soules at the dreadfull day of thy Visitation for thy mercies sake Amen Saint Aust O Deus omnium miserationum pater Abyssus misericordiae tuae absorbeat abyssum peccatorum meorum O Father of all goodnesse and mercy let the depth of thy mercy drye vp the depth of my sinnes A Prayer for a Woman with childe or in trauaile to bee said by those present with her O God most wise most iust the blessed Father of our blessed Lord and sauiour Christ Iesus creator preseruer and gouernor of all things next vnder thee vnder the subiection of man so largely intituled by thy loue extended by thy fauour created with so goodly and beautifull a perfection in the estate of Innocency that hee was the modell and figure liuely Image of thee the fountaine of all perfection and happinesse but through sinne is our image defaced our beauty and perfection darkened our whole disposition and purpose altered the earth made barren and cursed for our sake and we cursed in the curse by the sterility labour and manuring thereof that now denies the increase that before shee brought forth without the sweat and sorrow of the heart and browes of man And for y● woman a party in the sinne a party in the curse In paine and sorrow shalt thou bring forth And to the Serpent vpon thy belly shalt thou creepe and dust shalt thou eate all the dayes of thy life Yet to this woman O Lord as her present necessity requireth bee propitious neere vnto her let thy birth sweeten her sorrow that broke the head of the Serpent that was the cause of the breach of thy Commandement that hath sweetened the sorrowes of all mankinde Heare her O Lord and answere her fauourably and be not angry with thy seruant for presuming to cry vnto thee for the vncessant beating thine eares with her clamou●s for griefe compelleth her to speake and the misery shee indureth inforceth her to cry vnto thee haue mercy vpon her O fountaine of mercy and hearken to her agony that cryeth for thy helpe To her and all women with childe or in trauaile bee mercifull and giue them grace with patience to vndergoe and suffer the decree and pleasure of thy holy will let them neuer striue against thee through impatience but in true faith and inuocation of thy name suffer thy crosse contentedly which their owne originall sinne and wickednesse drew frō thy hands vnwillingly O Lord if her heauinesse induce for a night let her comfort come in y● morning for ioy that a child is borne into the world and to that end blessed God bee thou present and powerfull in the exigent and straite of her greatest extremity for as all thy works are wonderfull and past finding out as our soules know right well so are they not manifested in a shallow measure in the connexion creation and nourishment and preseruation of the infant in the wombe of the mother in the birth and bringing forth of their little limbes into the world all whole and perfect to the which if thy ayd and hand bee absent though all helpe beside in the world bee present they perish vndoubtedly both the one and the other Wherfore thou God of wonders and Father Almighty of heauen and earth as thou hast by the death of thine onely Sonne taken away the sinnes of the whole world and condemned sinne in the flesh so take away the anguish of Childe-birth brought forth by sin to all woman-kinde especially to this woman now in thy hands that shee may ioyfully bring forth that which by thy blessing shee hath happely conceiued that shee may bee to her Husbands and her owne comfort as the fruitfull vi●e on the walles of his house and his children like the Oliue
of fortune lift thee to the stars if thou reigne happy in all these a thousand yeares What then they so suddenly passe and vanish away as things that had neuer beene and a man inspired with true wisedome from aboue findes so much content left behinde after the vse and possession of them all as a poore man that had dreamed hee was a King and that hee had had all the pleasures and contents the world could affoord him in his power and fruition and being afterwards awaked finds nothing so What man that euer liued before or after Salomon that had a greater portion in this world of eminency and glory then hee and yet this Salomon King Salomon King Salomon in all his royalty in some particulars inferiour to the Lillies of the field let the power of the wicked bee neuer so potent the heart of the most cruell tyrant that euer reigned neuer so enuious and though his pleasure therein bee as great as his power neither hee nor it can exceed Pharaohs and yet was both hee and his exceeded vanquished and brought to confusion and his whole Egyptian Hoast by the vnsensible creatures of Gods most sensible power the course of waters or the waters of the red sea wherein they were ouer-whelmed put to confusion Let the power of his command be neuer so absolute neuer so vnquestionable that it be of force throughout territories and dominions to stifle and strike dead that vapour and breath of life that was first breathed by GOD in the face of man to make him a a liuing soule that it keepe not his wonted progresse and passage throughout the gates of his body let his voyce bee as terrible as the roaring of a Lyon be it neuer so fearefull bee it neuer so ample more fearefull and ample then Nabuchaddonezers it cannot bee yet was hee in the middest of his pride and iollity compast and inuirond in for seauen yeares within the walles of wilde Asses Let his cloathing bee neuer so sumptuous the Throne where hee sits neuer so Maiesticall his speech and eloquence neuer so plausible and his praises neuer so generall yet in these was Herod his equall and yet not defended by these from the wormes that gnawed out his bowels Take a suruey in the present from the Monuments Histories Traditions and Reliques of ancient ages going vp from these low descended times of ours to those first that began the world and long since expired and imagine that if the best and most iuditious obseruer that liued in euery age since that time that God sayd Let there bee Day and Night and Times and Seasons or shall liue whilest these creatures of his world that giue rest and labour shall last indure should stand vp to report and poynt out the chiefest men and vertues that in them euer liued and were whether for wealth or wisdome fortitude or temperance eloquence or learning For continency or patience beauty magnanimity or whatsoeuer else might bee numbred in the bead-roll of excellence that could say in the perfection and largest indowment hereof here is munition against the graue and with this will I preserue my body from corruption they would all in their seuerall turnes confirme and testifie the graue hath closed them vp without resistance of quality or vertue and they sleepe with their excellencies together raked in the earth Is it then so and are wee no more but thus Is there not one man of former ages can stand forth to bee darted through with all eyes of wonder and admiration as a monument neuer yet beheld to say I haue peruerted the sentence and the decree hath past by me I haue made a League with Death and a Couenant with the Graue and I shall liue for euer and my body shall not descend into that bed of darknesse If not what true content can bee taken in this life in any thing wee enioy which goes not warranted with an houres security but in the peace of conscience wherein is true ioy present giuen as a taste or earnest of that reall eternall ioy and gladnesse wee shall inherit in the kingdome of heauen to come Vnmindful wretched miserable man shall the best finde no euasion to escape and doe the worst thinke to bee freed from thence Shall beauty descend into corruption and yet will it idolize it selfe in conceit of immortality will it plaister ouer that earth with colours like the morning-Sunne which must bee suddenly transformed into earth and true earth indeede and make her bed in the darknesse more obscure then the clouds of the night Will not wisedome defend a man What folly is it then not to haue so mu●h wisedome as to make ● serious preparation thereunto can strength nor magnanimi●● make no resistance how suddēly then will weaknesse and infirmity yeeld it selfe Will not riches defend a man the rich man in the Gospell answeares no for they sooner transport him thether whether then we runne ouer the liues of the vertuous and godly such as withstood the temptations of Sathan and the illusions of the world with that most forcible presidēt the innumerabilitie of her followers which without thought carries so many head-long to perdition Or the state and condition of the most dessolute vnrepentant sinners such as run through the race of there liues in a most carelesse and dessolute securitie not regarding there end nor the cause of there being we see an equall conclusion and period and end of there da●es all bound vp and shackelled together in the same bundle of corruption and there resolution so that the eye of man cannot distinguish in the graue betweene the bones and ashes of the one and the other betweene Vashti the most beutifull Queenes and the blackest Egyp●ian bond-womans that euer was yet when the Lord both of life death shall come to iudge both the quicke and the dead he alone can distingu●sh which shall raise vp the one to euerlasting life and the other to an endlesse death euer dijng yet neuer ending and herein let the godly take comfort who haue not taken there por●ion and pleasure in this world that they shall be knowne and raysed vp and distinguisht from the wicked and let them willingly and ioyfully therefore without the least feare inbrace this messinger of the Lord which to their bodies brings but a quiet sleepe from the which they shall be awaked to ioy And let the wicked who haue cause feare him as their enemie that is the subduer and danter of all flesh the finisher of all wordly pleasures that takes the earth and ashes of the most maiesticall composure stuft with ambition and pride with thoughts beyond bound without warrant from trampling and wounding the brest bosome of there mother in scorne and contempt into the darkesome and solitarie chambers of her wombe where that earth taken out of that earth that thought it selfe more then earth and yet was but earth becomes earth lesse then earth euen to moates
conscience shal not disquiet and the deuill driue thee to despaire in so that thou canst not truly repent and late repentance is seldome true repentance and besides it stands not with the Lords honour to be so often shaken off when he would lodge with vs and how many in these thoughtes haue perished suddainly preuented by death of their expectation preparation proposed if notwithstāding all this that neither consideration nor perswasion can moue vs to be early wise for our owne good the good of our soules let vs know if we deferre our repentance to the last iudgement shall but iustly requite vs if eyther death do strangle vs before we speake or the wrath of God rebound vpon vs when we haue gone out and wept betterly wept our fill therfore I say againe preuent it lest thou be preuented by it and frustrated of they expectation cast from the fauour of God thou be condemned for euer to that lake that burnes with fire brimstone the terror and torture thereof as inexplicable as vnsufferable which cannot be indured and yet must be indu●ed without ceasing or determinatiō By this we are now resolued we must die either in youth or in age at one seasō or at another the cannō decree so direct to all that no one shall euer find an euasion the sonne of God himselfe hauing taken our nature vpon him was not exempted but died was layed in the bowels of the earth to sweeten it to all mankind we know in regard of our time we haue but a short time to liue and that short not sweet but full of mysery we know that as we liue so we shal die according to that ancient true sentence Qualis vita finis ita vt cecideris it● eris and as we die so shall we rise to iudgement we know that our sins of Omission and Commission of desire consent our thoughtes and our deedes shall be brought vnto iudgement with vs we must render an account of our idle wordes if so no maruell that the scripture telleth vs when these all in vs and all in all of vs are let loose at liberty without any restaint or reckoning That many are called but few are chosen And wee know that wee haue broken all thy Commandements and the breach of the least is eternall damnation These things considered and daily and seriously layd to heart which concernes the well-fare of euery Christian what cause haue wee but to mourne and sorrow For what will it profite a man to winne all the world to enioy all the riches and pleasures thereof and to loose his owne Soule And if wee stand vpon pleasure what pleasure is like vnto this To lay vp Treasure in Heauen which the moath shall not corrupt nor theeues breake through and steale to walke in the paths of the Lord all the dayes of our life to liue in his feare that we may dye in his fauour that at the last day wee may stand with confidence vnshaken when the wicked shall tremble at his presence like Popler in the Forrest What are all the pleasures of this world but Vanity but vanity and vexation of the minde and there is no true content vnder the Sunne And in their passage which is very sudden they leaue a kinde of sting behinde them and there besides is more griefe in a little sorrow then content in a great deale of pleasure And this is the sowre reckoning that euer killes the sweete welcome of all earthly pleasure And therfore once againe if wee stand vpon pleasure what pleasure is like vnto this and the more pleasant because the more secure to thinke how sweete that breath that flowes from the lippes of our Sauiour shall bee vnto vs aboue Myrrh and Cassia Come you blessed I was hungry and you fed mee I was naked and you c●oathed mee inher●te the Kingdome of my Father prepared for you from the beginning On the other side the thought of that heauy Sentence the thought imagination whereof like the vpper and the neather Mill-stone is able to c●ush and grinde in peeces all the pleasures of the world and the sensuall appetites thereof and to throw them into the ayre like Chaffe against the winde that indanger or bring vs within the compasse thereof The tenor whereof shall be more grieuous against whom it is pronounced that day then all the pleasures of the world in the fullest sayle were euer contentiue Ite Maledicti Goe you cursed descend to the lake of perdition you that haue had your portion in this world Purple and fine Linnen and fared dilitiousoy euery day that haue neglected me in my members in charity and pitty and in deedes of mercy that beeing hungry gaue mee no foode and beeing naked gaue mee no rayment Will this bee the answere of Christ at that day to those that to him in his persecuted and afflicted members denyed their releefe when they therewith plainly euicted excuses shall craue mercy at his handes and shall not obtaine it Si in igne ardebit qui non dedit propria sua vbi ardebit qui surripiat aliena Si sterilitas in ignem mittitur rapacitas quid merebitur All the sonnes and daughters of men in the world from Adam the first man of the race to the last that shall stand vpon the earth shall to their ioy or griefe receiue one of these two sentences Then If Let vs all therfore labour to be partakers of the best of the blest and that wee may let vs serue him in loue For Seruire eo regnare est his seruice is perfect freedome Let vs obey him in feare for The feare of the Lord is the beginning of wisedome Let vs be acquainted with him in this world that wee may not bee as strangers and aliants to him in the world to come Let vs heare him when hee speakes vnto vs and not with our eares stopped passe by him like the deafe Adder not regarding the Voyce of the Charmer charme hee neuer so wisely lest the Prophets and Preachers of the Word the Law and the Gospell our Parents and Tutors our owne Consciences consenting and witnessing thereunto send vs vnto the Iudgement seat of GOD with this Inscription written on our Fore-heads No●●erunt i●cantari they would not be charmed they would not bee acquainted Let vs not waste our time and weigh ●t not heape vp sinne and feare it not awake GODS wrath and sorrow not lye fettered in death and struggle not slippe into the Graue and see it not least wee perish and preuent it not And let vs not haue lesse regard of our time then wee haue of our treasure which we somtimes reckon by graine and weight that wee reserue with heede and care imploy with diligence and fore-cast and let that passe a thousand times more pretious without Arithmetike and Ballance thought or regard Let not the slashes of vaine-glory that flye through the world like lightening and the subtile plots and
restraine vs from it if the sonnes of men shall take the deuill at his word as the Son of God did not and for the glory of the world which hee shall shew and cannot giue shall fall downe and worship him if hee shew honour preferment pleasure riches saying all these will I giue thee though the Minions and Louers of the world that seeke for their heauen vpon earth shall be ready to betray their soules as Iudas betrayed Christ with their hayle Maister shall bee ready to embrace him to serue him to serue themselues yet with the Sonne of God Math. 16. 20. after his fasting bee thou so strong in thy strength as hee was in his weaknesse to bid him depart and to say him nay For it is but a bitter recompence to buy the pleasures at so deere a rate as at the prise of thy soule in thy euerlasting confusion for a short and fading life and but the length of a spanne if thou thinke it more take the counters into thy hand and see what reckoning thou canst make of it what is past grieueth thee with the remembrance thereof because so much of thy time is spent what is present burtheneth thee with the waight therof because in sweate and sorrow study and trauel thou dost wast thy time what is to come troubleth thee with the vncertainety of it least the graue do swallow thee before thou see it yea make thy account as as thou oughtest and thou shalt finde it swifter then the Weauers shuttle Iob. 7. 6. and speedier then a post on the wings of the winde Iob. 9. 25. Then in consideration of this and whatsoeuer hath bene spoken to the vncloathing of our nakednes and humbling vs before God to the pulling off of our roabes of leuity and lightnesse and the preparing our bodies to the graue and our soules to this insuing exercise whether to the daunting of all flesh all must come and the houre may bee neere but it cannot bee farre off and howsoeuer wee forget it it will bee sure to remember vs and therefore let vs know that here as Pilgrimes and strangers wee wander hauing no abiding Citty but wee seeke for one to come but wee must not seek to find it here nor suffer the vaine applause of the world and the vainer conceit of our selues to make vs forget where we liue what we are of our selues being but as a tree turned vpwards hauing no sap from the earth but refreshed and moistened with the dew of heauen let vs so husband our iourney that wee misse not the Citty we seek for let vs so runne our race that we obtaine the victory and reward we runne for and therefore if thou expect in thy labour blessing in thy peace continuance in affliction comfort in thy death triumph in thy iudgement ioy respect in thy life sobriety in thy calling honesty in thy pleasures iudgement in thy sorrowes mercy in thy life religion For if God bee not with thee to direct thee that thou stray not to correct thee that thou presume not to sustaine thee that thou famish not to pardon thee that thou despaire not to support thee that thou stumble not to strengthen thee that thou fall not and to sanctifie thee that thou sinne not and to glorifie thee that thou perish not If the Lord throughout the whole course of thy life and in thy death bee not present and powerfull to thee thou faintest in the one and failest in the other and desperation inuironeth thee on euery side for where the Lord keepeth not watch or turneth away his face all the miseries in the world lay their siedge therefore to him let vs day and night send vp our supplications and prayers without ceasing like incense into the aire to continue what we haue and giue vs what wee want to support vs by his grace to direct vs by his Spirit and so lead vs through this exemplary world of sinne and wickednes with our eys so looking forward fixed on him that wee let not temptations in at their windowes so captiuating our desires vnto his will that with Lot wee may bee righteous in a Citty in a world of vncleanesse that so wee may saue our soules at the last though wee loose all the pleasures in the world besides the losse whereof would more reioyce Sathan then hee sorroweth for the damnation of his owne which grant Lord for thy mercies sake Amen Of the Force the vse and necessity of Prayer SInce all the dayes and howers of the life of man the consumers of the world the measurers of time it selfe are the subiects succeeders of the Lords owne handes and by him only lent to thy vse be not thou then so vnnaturall against the Lord the owner thereof and against thine owne good as not sometimes to lend him some of his owne howers to his seruice for thine owne good Amongst the many perturbations and troubles of this life as sickenes imprisonment losse of frendes vexation of spirit wrought by the bretheren with vs of the same inheritance in the portion of the same infirmitie from the loynes of our first parent Adam The world in Rebellion offering diuers assaultes against the peace and tranquility of her children and nothing to be found vnder the sunne but Vanity and vexation of Spirit The vnrulye passions and affections of our owne nature and the head-strong lustes of the flesh and the concupiscence thereof euer at enmity with the spirit euer readye to intangle vs in the snares of sinne and death our pronenes vnto euill and our backwardnesse vnto good The Many that are called and the few that are chosen the certainty of our death the vncertainty of the time when or the manner how the fearfull account that must be rendered vnto thee at the day of thy appearing in Maiestie and power to iudge both the liuing and those that are departed the consideration whereof in the hart of a Christian toucht with the least finger of his grace that can heale all our infirmities will call him aside into his retired clofset or chamber where he may not only find ease for his body but ease also for his soule and spirit within him by calling to mind the promises of God the largenesse of his loue the extention of his fauour the inheritance layed vp the kingdome prepared from the beginning the peace and rest euerlasting which no distraction tumult nor vexation shall annoye which by the ouer-eager pursuit of our affections and loue to this world which is but a sea subiect to all passions and Mare amarum a bitter sea with all kind of myserie we may lose if we take not heed And being so with-drawne with most prostrat humylitie and obedience we may sacrifice the good thoughts of the spirit and send vp prayers like the smoke of incense into the ayre laying our mouthes to the eares of that wisedome that knoweth our wantes better then we vnderstand them our selues be we new so afflicted
right hand is of more puissance then the whole arme either of flesh or any spirit besides yea then the whole loines whole substances whole bodies of Angels or of Men siluer gold silke purple all other creatures so it shall walke through life and death without controulement if it find Angels Principallities powers things present things to come or any other creature in the world stopping her passage and rebuking her forwardnesse shee shall cleare her way notwithstanding and clime into the presence of her God and in his eares deliuer her message Bee we in sickenesse to him the true Ph●sition that knowes both the cause and the cure shee comes for health bee wee in imprisonment there shee sollicites a release from him the Lord of liberty bee we opprest with pouerty or want The earth is the Lords and all that dwell therein to him shee comes for the blessing of the Lord maketh rich are we afflicted aboue measure beyond the strength of man insomuch that we doubt whether we liue or no receiuing the sentence of death within our selues so as in our opinion we comprehend no deliuery no euasion but lie open to the direct accomplishment thereof yet in this exigent and extremity wee come to God in this meanes euen almost beyond hope without expectation and by his good pleasure we are deliuered therefore heerein let vs receiue comfort hee hath hee doth and will deliuer vs not onely from the death of our bodies when wormes and rottennesse haue made their long and last prey vpon them but from the death of our mindes too when the spirit is buried vnder sorrowes there is no creature found in heauen or earth to giue it comfort Therfore be our misery bee our affliction neuer so great and though in our weake immagination wee can imagine no deliuery no release when all earthly meanes and comforts forsake vs let vs not yet forsake this refuge let vs not despaire in his helpe no more then Ionas did who in the bottome of the sea within a prison within that bottome in such an affliction so great so strange as greater nor stranger could not bee nor to humane reason more without hope yet saith hee Ionas 2. 2. I cryed in mine affliction vnto the Lord and hee heard mee out of the belly of hell cryed I and thou heardest my voyce Therefore I say againe in aduersity let vs not despaire but pray with hope In aduersity be it neuer so great let vs pray with confidence In our prosperity let vs pray in our prosperity neuer so flourishing let vs pray let vs pray continually In our health and prosperity let vs pray to continue it in our sickenesse and aduersity let vs pray to release it And if we consider our estate rightly we shall perceiue many reasons that may moue vs to this exercise daily to seeke his fauour and louing countenance without whose protection and care ouer vs wee are ready to fall into a thousand dangers to perish continually let vs therefore in time and season with wordes sutable to our purpose and intention either thankes-giuings for benefites receiued or with petitions and intreaties for necessities implored in the time of sickenesse in the time of our health in the time of our aduersity in the time of our prosperity let vs come before him suting our wordes in the habite of our occasions with such fitnesse and decency that they sal not harshly and from the purpose in the eares of the Almighty And to that end good Reader I haue heere compiled and set downe many formes and moulds of prayer fitting for seuerall persons occasions and times after the example of our Sauiour Christ the true patterne of all wisedome and goodnesse who hath giuen vs the first and best forme thereof himselfe who hath both taught vs to pray and taught vs how to pray and that will both heare our prayers and grant our requests as farre as seemes expedient to his vnsearchable wisedome that knowes our wants before hee heares our cōplaints our necessities better then we our selues for because Prayer is so excellent a thing so ready so swift so powerful so vnseperated from vs that it cleaues vnto vs when all other meanes forsak vs therfore that wee should the more earnestly imbrace it more zealously imply it more deerely esteeme it there is great reason that it finds vs oftētimes out cōfort in greatest extremities that whē we find our selues in misety our waies hedged vp as with thornes that wee cannot stirre to deliuer our selues there hence when wee are ouerflowne with the deluge of sinne as with a floud and iudgements inuiron vs on euery side this is the Doue that brings vnto our soules the Oliue branch of comfort yet because for the most part we kill the life therein through the coldnesse of our deuotion and carelesnesse of our deliuery and vnfit preparation thereunto and finde not the sweetenesse and successe that else we might expect and obtaine at the hands of God thereby Therefore I haue here drawne them out to life shewed both the excellency thereof and preparation thereunto befitting that these formes hereafter following and all other whatsoeuer in this kind may be the more powerfull blessed and comfortable to all that shall vse them without the which it is impossible that they should please God or any good successe follow thereupon The Embassadour betweene Heauen and Earth A morning Prayer for the Sabaoth day MOST mercifull God and eternall father what may we render vnto thee for all thy louing kindnesse for the which blessings and thankes-giuings for euermore be heaped vpon thy holy name in whom the treasures of mercy and louing kindnesse dwell bodily who of thine owne good will and pleasure hast bene pleased to communicat vnto vs so many of thy fauours so many seuerall ways without any manner of desert of ours to the which may it please thee to ad stil to the number by taking away those iniquities of ours that take away thy fauours and blessings from vs or as a stranger that knoweth them not passe by our transgressions retaine not thine anger against vs foreuer though w● retaine our sins the cause of thine anger but returne to vs by grace who returne not to thee by repentance and haue compassion vpon vs who haue not compassion on ouer owne soules subdue our raigning and raging vnrighteousnesse and drowne our offences in the bottome of the sea which else will drowne vs in the bottome of destruction raise vp our soules from the dead sleepe of sinne as thou hast raised vp our bodies from this night of darkenesse protect vs from all dangers from the which no minute we are secured of our selues but in thee brought vs to the begining of this thy blessed sabaoth of rest which good father so sanctifie vnto vs through thy blessed spirit that thy name may be hallowed thy power admired thy mercy magnified and thy loue manifested to thy glory and our euerlasting
that it is thy vncomprehended mercy that before this thou hast not abridged our dayes cut vs off and cast vs into the bottomlesse pitte of hell from whēce there is no redemption or thought of mercy but in vayne wherefore bouldened by this one mercy of thine thy patience and long suffering more then all our deserts can euer recompence we will presume to begge another which is that thou wilt touch our harts with a godly sorrow for our sinnes not small but greuious not a handful but innumerable not past but present not secret but exemplary and open in the face of God and man so that if thou shouldest deale with vs according to our deserts Sathan would reioyce but we should mourne neuer to see thy face againe the sun nor the moone the day nor the night although a perpetuall darkenesse the heauen nor the earth nor any other of the blessed workes of thine hands that of thine infinit goodnes thou hast prepared for man what shall wée then doe but vnder the wings of thy mercy séeke our refuge beseching thee to extend thy goodnesse and compassion towards vs which thy dearly beloued sonne our Sauiour and redemer with a loue aboue all loue hath so dearly purchased for vs by his innocent and pretious bloud the least drop whereof is sufficient to heale all our wounds and to wash away all our iniquities to releiue all our wantes and blot out all our transgressions but without thy grace a light vnto our feet and a lanthorne vnto our pathes we are able to do nothing but sinne losing our selues in the thicke mists of iniquity Therefore good father as thou hast appointed all the creatures in the world to serue man and hast ordayned him only to serue thee so giue vs grace that we considering the largenesse of our priuiledge and the honour thou hast indued vs withall with changed affections our willes and natures regenerate and purified by thy gratious spirit we may serue thee in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of our life vntill we be renued to the image of thy sonne in whom thou art well pleased and in vs wilt be well pleased if we displease not thee to please our selues if we be angry with our sinnes the deuil our vanities and all that would seperate vs from thee and with harty repentance for our former misdeedes and a zealous indignation against our selues that euer wee haue fallen into so beastly corruption taking héed that wee fall not againe into the same relapse vpon paine of thy heauy displeasure and yet there is no cause O God most iust why thou shouldest bee pleased with sinners which art displeased with sinne but for his sake that dearly payd therefore in the heat and burthen thereof and sinned not the bosome of whose merry in this desert of his if it be not open with Abrahams to receiue vs poore and impotent Lazars with the rich glutton we goe downe into hell from the which deliuer vs for thy mercies sake sweet Sauiour Christ Amen A meditation against the feare of death written in french by the learned P. M s du Plessis THe Crowne and end of all wretchednesse and mysery the key to let vs out of this world of sorrow the doore and the passage to all eternity why should we feare why should we thinke of with so leaden an appetite why should we feare to find that we liue to seeke why should we not harken to the summons therof with ioy as the sicke man harkeneth to the clocke which to the godly brings an end both of sinne and sorrow and all the miseries which are due vnto eyther being so many and so great that they passe the explication or comprehension of man for the best of this life what euer was it but as a bed of flowers ouergrowne with a feild of weedes but as a calme of the sea disquieted with the breath of euery wind the temper of what mans brest was euer so seasoned that it was not subiect to a thousand passions wrested and wrung with so many discontentes that the waight and burthen thereof hath ouer-borne the patience of suffering In beauty honour riches wealth or in any other sensual pleasure who euer found contentme●t that hath wisedome to way them and esteme them truly as the were for the first who euer possest it in the greatest desire with the largest extension that found not saciety or discontent in the fruition and possession that was not tormented with enuy or iealousy the one lancing within or the other reuelling without in honour or riches or any other corporall or mentall guift the fayrest and most admired flowers that the earth brings forth to the delight and pleasure of man-kinde from the which preheminence or prayse or pleasure may be deriued or nature something soothed vp which itches after ambition and admiration that found not vnder these flowers weedes ' nay serpentes to poyson and sting the very life bloud of that felicity if any there were in them from the fullest fountaine of worldly ioy floweth some bitternesse there was neuer pleasure so absolute were it as short as the flash of lightning that before a man hath power to say behould inlightneth the world then dies in obscurity that was not alayed with some abatement and if it were absolute for the time the time is so short that there is a griefe therein what are all pleasures but as a vapor that appeare for a little time and afterwards vanish away sometimes pleasure asswageth paine but most commonly paine killeth pleasure and if our dayes were distinguished the good with white and the euill with blacke stones at the end of our liues we should find more blacke then white the pleasures in the dayes of Noah there eating drinking marying and giuing in mariage thy gaue there content for a time till the flood came and tooke them all away the yongman hath is pleasure to reioyce in the dayes of his youth the chearfullnesse of his hart and the lustes of his owne eyes but in all these there lies a bitternesse the richman hath his pleasure Luke 16. Purple and fine linnen delitious fare euery day and he knoweth not what the griefe of Lazarus meaneth and yet there li●s a worme vnder the root of all these goodly branches and surfets and sacieties with these creep in vpon him and if he set his hart therupon let him know with the yongman and all that are caried away with any pleasure in the world that there is a heauy re●conning to be rendered for these things the thought w●ereof in the middest of all ●ollities shall be stroken dead therwith and to these the thought of death will be greuous Be not therefore drunke with these sensuall delights and pleasures as with new wines which are not pleasures absolute but limited allayed with a thousand discontents and if they were absolute yet of no continuance and therefore greuous since there is nothing else but the
inioyng of these that seme what they are not as we haue allready examined that make thee to desire life that thou mayst reioyce therein the forsaking whereof maketh it death vnto thee to thinke of death yet know they are all but vanity thou must die aut sero aut setius eyther soner or later for there is no preuention no resistance can hinder it therefore that which must be imbrace willingly make a vertue of necessity and though thou mightest escape it yet it were but a madnes because if we peruert not the true nature of it it is the end of all misery and sorrow and labour and trauayle the gate that opens the may vnto all true pleasure happines whereof all in this world are but counterfets and shadowes so resolue thy selfe hereof prepare thy selfe hereto that the remembrance of thy passed dayes augment not the bitternes therof at the last hower and then thy paines shall not dismay thee because thou trauellest to bring forth eternall life which for the merry-madnesse of one hower take heed that thou lose not for euer But vse thy pleasures with such moderation euer remembring they are momentary he that hath most hath not all and he that least hath some that for a moments ioy thou reap not eternity of sorrow that thou loue them not so much y● you forget God in whose presence is fullnesse of ioy at his right hand pleasures for euermore psal 16. and who giueth vs drinke out of a whole riuer of pleasures psal 36. contemne therefore these transitory pleasures and reserue your selues for pleasures there eternally compleat where neyther enuy nor iealousy nor sickenes nor taint shall alter or distast your happinesse where your ioy shall be euer present yet you cannot be filled rather you shall be filled but cannot be satisfied or if not satisfied then there is hunger or that you may then there is a loathing I know not how to expresse it Deus habet quod exhibeat God hath somthing there to bestow which I know not but ibi beata vita in fonte there is blessednes at the head of the spring not in cisternes that thou may be sure of and could you drinke vp the pleasures of the whole world at a draught as Cleopatra drunke the valew of 5. thousand pound yet remember it is but a draught quickly downe the throat and there hath an end and therefore I say againe vse them with moderation to sweeten and allay the many anguishes that if euer perdominant would vntimely waigh vs downe to our graues and we should faint in the middest of our race euer looking vp from these to that eternall rest and peace of mind which hereafter wee shall inioy and then when death shall approach neare vnto thee his aspect shall not be fearfull which shall end all our miseries heale all our infirmities wipe away all discontents in it we shall there finde an end of sinning an end of all vncleanesse an end of all wandering thoughts and cogitations by it we be freed from this wicked and exemplary world when the soule cannot looke out at the eye as her window but a whole army of vanity is ready to sease vpon her nor vse any of her seruants whereby treason is not offered vnto her by death the soule shall bee deliuered from this thraldome and bondage and as the Apostle speaketh this corruptible body shall put on incorruption and this mortall immortality 1. Cor. 15. 53. O blessed thrise blessed bee that death that ends in the Lord which deliuers vs out of so euill a world and freeth vs from such corruption and bondage Why then should we feare that wee would not escape because our chiefest happinesse is behinde where wee cannot come but we must passe through this doore of death and if euery houre of our life we should dye a death were too little to keepe vs from thence And but that our portion and felicity is behinde and when this our shadow of life ends our true life begins and the graue shall not euer inclose vs in her wombe which if it should then woe were man aboue any other creature liuing when sencelesse and irrationall creatures as the Stagge the Rauen and the Daw Rockes and Trees and such like haue an ages date beyond man for whose vse they were all created and made but that he hath an euerlasting inheritance in heauen with that great God that created made both him and them when so we shall raine euerlastingly whil'st they vpon earth in distance of time shall moulder and rot and drop downe to nothing O let vs not then dote so much vpon these vnprofitable and fading vanities vpon our wodden cottages our tottering buildings of painted clay such as our bodies are which are but y● tents of vngodlinesse and habitation of sinners but let vs looke and long after this heauenly Citty whose builder and maker is God whither that we may the sooner come let vs with the Apostle desire to bee dissolued and to be with Christ The Sicke-mans Prayer O Gracious God look down from heauen with y● eyes of mercy vpon me a most miserable wretched sinner grieuously afflicted in body and in minde a worme no man if a man such a one that neuer any with more need lifted vp eyes nor heart to the throane of thy mercy from whence all comfort commeth looke vpon mee O Lord with y● eyes of thy mercy giue me patience to endure this my affliction tryall and giue mee grace O Lord to make such vse thereof that it may bee to thy glory and my good put into my minde all the precepts comforts instructions I haue heard or read of al my life before as strōg meditations to comfort mee in this my extremity Be not farre from me O Lord lest Sathan preuaile ouer me make thou my bed and I shall rest in peace visite me O Lord as thou didest visite Peters wiues mother and the Captaines seruant for vnto thee belongeth health and saluation thou bringest to the doore of death and to the brinke of the graue and yet if thy good will pleasure be thou restorest to health and perfection againe And gracious and louing father seale in my heart by thy holy spirit the forgiuenesse of all my sins throughout the whole course of my life that what I haue done or said amisse may bee buried in the wounds of thy sonne so that they be neuer layd vnto my charge nor imputed against me in his bloud purge my body and soule from all their corruptions and if this my visitation bee not vnto the death may it please thee to helpe me vpon the bed of my sorrowes speake but the word and it shall bee done renue my former health vnto me that I may take vp my bed and walk and by a happy transmutation turne my whole heap of sorrow into a bundle of ioy Heale me and I shall be whole saue me
and I shall not bee condemned deliuer mee from the pit of corruption that openeth her mouth shutteth vs therein and keepeth vs as part of her owne bowels For the graue will not acknowledge thee nor the dead confesse thee but the liuing shall extoll and magnifie thy name world without end But if to thy vncomprehended wisedome to ballance against which all the wisedome in the world is but folly it seeme better to thee that I dye then liue then deale with me according to thy good pleasure giue thine Angels charge ouer my soule that it may be receiued in peace which into thine hands I commend that gauest it me strengthen my faith in thee and in thy Law that I may willingly resigne that into thy hands that was due vnto thee the first day that I liued if it had pleased thee to call for it by a double right nay so many rights that might claime a thousand liues if I had them to lay downe for thee that hast layd downe thine owne Sons and done so many things for me and for my sake and for all mankinde and teach me O Lord to make such true vse of this my sicknesse that the former miseries of this wretched life ioined with my present griefe anguish make me weary of these times of sin and willing to resigne my soule into thy hands prepared by this vnwelcome yet wholsome summoner that will transport mee out of this vale of misery to that euerlasting kingdome which thou hast purchased for mee which grant I beseech thée for Christ Iesus sake my onely Sauiour and Redéemer Amen The commendation of the soule to bee said at a sicke mans death out of the Man of M. Crashaw I Here commend thee to Almighty God most deere brother and I commit thee to him whose creature thou art Goe forth therefore O Christian Soule get thee gone out of this filthy world goe forth in the name of the Almighty Father who created thee in the name of Iesus Christ who dyed for thee in the name of the Holy-ghost who hath beene powred out vpon thee and when thou happy soule art deliuered out of the prison of the body the glorious quier of heauenly Angels meete and the Company of all holy Saints entertaine thée the louing countenance and cheerefull face of Iesus Christ shine vpon thee a mercifull iudge be he vnto thee that thou maist haue sentence to sit for euermore amongst his Saints on his right hand thy dwelling be in peace and thy habitation in the heauenly Ierusalem for euermore farre bee it from thee euer to feele or know how horrible the darknesse how terrible the flames how intollerable the torments of hell are Sathan and all his hellish g 〈…〉 be confounded at thy presence and if he dare set vpon thee victory and triumph bee on thy side shame and trembling fall vpon him from the presence of Gods Angels and be hee banished into the blacke mists and confused Chaos of eternall darknesse But let the Lord arise and his enemies bee scattered and as the smoake vanisheth so let them flye away but let the iust bee exalted and reioyce in the presence of the Lord let the infernall legions not dare to touch thee nor all Sathans Hell-hounds presume to hinder thee and hee who disdained not to dye for thee bee hee thy Sauiour and deliuerer from all spirituall vexation Bee the gates of Paradice open vnto thee and thy Christ giue thee thy place and mansion in the same and hee that is the true Pastor and great Sheepheard of the sheepe acknowledge thée for one of his true sheep and receiue thee into his fold Iesus Christ absolue thee from all thy sinnes and place thee on his right hand among his elect that there thou mayst see thy Redeemer face to face and in the society of blessed soules maist enioy the comforts of heauenly contemplation and the blessed vision of God for euer and euer Amen W. C. Six signes according to S. Anselme vpon the which a man may ●est confident of his saluation 1 If he beleeue the articles of Chrian faith as many as are determined by the Church 2 If he reioyce to dye in the faith of Christ 3 If hee know that hee hath grieuously offended God 4 If he be hartely sorry for it 5 If he resolue to forsake his sinnes if God giue him life 6 If he hope and beleeue to come to eternall saluation not by his owne merits but by the merits of Iesus Christ. Then say to the sicke person If Sathan obiect any thing against thee oppose thou the merits of Christ betwixt thee and him And thus without all doubt he shall be saued Another Meditation against the feare of death for strength patience in that last houre Statutum est omnibus semel mori THe mettall and substance wherof we are made being but dust ashes slime corruption might alone without further motiue reason perswade vs that we are not euerlasting nor made for continuance what is man therefore O Lord that he should be proud or what are our bodies that we should so regard them the beauty delicasie whereof so much pampered and adorned so much accounted esteemed of so curiously carefully preserued kept must so suddenly discend to corruption amongst the wormes creepers of the earth and to rubble and ashes This mutation and dissolution of our bodies the separation and seuering of two antient Inne-mate-friends must needs as in the act so in the consideratiō therof strike a strange amazement in a weake and vnresolued Christian that truly vnderstands not what death is which is indeed to the godly and those that haue made a preparation thereunto the gate and passage to a better life the end of sorrow and a rest from labour yet O Lord consider the weakensse of our nature and helpe vs in that which euen thy blessed Saints Prophets and Apostles that knew thee in a measure aboue our knowledge that haue giuen rules and motiues and reasons against the ●eare thereof yet in the tryall and accomplishment thereof haue found the imbecility of flesh and nature repugnant against it and for the adding of a few lingring dayes of further cares and sorrowes some haue forsworne thee others haue wept vnto thee and all haue beene willing to stretch it out to the last minute and yet it is but a prolonging not a preseruing Ezechias may turne to the wall and weep and mourne like a Doue and pray for life yet at the last hee must render it vp O Lord giue vs therefore patience to part with it being no inheritance to vs but debt to thee beeing most certaine and assuredly perswaded that thou wilt one day restore it to his former nay fuller perfection lessen our loue toward the world and our selues and increase it towards thee and thy Kingdome Make this good Father the frequent thought and meditation of our hearts to thinke that wee must dye that it may