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B07982 A direction to death: teaching man the way to die well, that being dead, he may liue euer. Made in the forme of a dialogue, for the ease and benefite of him that shall reade it. The speakers therein are Quirinus and Regulus. Perneby, William. 1599 (1599) STC 19766.7; ESTC S94700 255,346 516

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feare death For what should a man feare that which doth good and not hurte brings profit and not disprofite is beneficial and commodious not vnprofitable and noxious Q. Nothing at all in my minde But what is death so R. Why else say I so Q. Because it pleaseth you to say so R. What must I speake what pleaseth mee Q. You should not R. Neither will I so neere as I can but that will I speake which may please God and pleasure man Q. Because you say then Death doth good and not hurt brings profite and not disprofite is commodious and not noxious to whome is it commodious R. To whom not It is commodious to him that suffers it and it is commodious to him that sees it suffered Q. But not to euerie one of those that suffer it or see it suffered R. Neither did I yet say so It is commodious to euerie one that suffers it either in faith or for faith or both It is commodious also to euerie one that sees it suffered so hee makes right vse of the seeing it suffered For the first these sayings of Scripture make som what 2. Cor. 4.12 Tob. 3.6 Ro● 8.28 Syr. 41.2 Rom. 8.38 Death worketh in vs. It t s better for ● to dye then to liue to them that loue God a thinges worke together for the best O Dear how acceptable is thy Iudgement vnto the need full and vnto him whose strength fayleth and that is now in the last age and is vexed with a● things Gregor super Mat. 10. in testimo illis For the other this of Gregory makes much The Death of the righteous to the good is an helpe to the euill a testimonie that thence the wicked may perish without excuse whence the godlie doe take example that they may liue Q. What good brings Death to him that suffers it as you haue sayd R. The goods thereof they are vnspeakeable for multitude they exceede number for greatnes they passe vnderstanding for goodnes they excell all that men heere enioy or may enioy Q. I would I might heare somwhat of thē that so both I others might be benefited by them R. Sith so you will I say so you shall First Death killes his familiar enemie Gal. 5. 1. P● 12.11 Rom. 6.7 to witte his bodie or fleshe with all her lustes fighting against the soule For be that is dead is freed from sinne And what a benefite this is that saying of a learned writer sheweth which thus soundeth Seneca There is no pestilence more forceable to doe an hurt then a familiar enemie A familiar enemie betrayeth Christ into the hands of sinners Secondly Death opens a doore to his poore prisoner out of a filthie prison in which he was held bound and captiue that is Death giues libertie to his Soule to depart from the bodie in which it was deteyned from the presence of God as in a prison For many haue thought the body of man to be as a prison to the Soule of man Pythagoras seeing one of his schollers verie busie about trimming vp of his bodie said this man ceases not to make vnto himself a more troublesome prison What a benefite this is it may appeare by Dauids praier Psal 142.7 and our experience Dauids praier Psal 142.1 Bring my soule out of prison that I may praise thy name Our experience is that prisoners hate little more then lockes and boltes because they must stay them from going out Thirdlie Death deliuers him from the carryage of a coffin full of filthines and vncleannes that is his bodie Plato in Cratylo sayeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. Corpus a bodye Plato in Cratylo dicitur quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is said to be ac 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. Sepulchrum A graue Sepulchro quid faedius and what more vncleane then a graue Mat. 23.27 Whited tombes sayeth Christ appeare beautifull outward but are within full of dead mens bones of all filthines such like are the fine and faire bodies of men A corruptible bodie sayth Salomon is heauie vnto the soule Sap. 9 1● the earthlie mansion keepeth downe the mind that is full of cares And what a benefite this is it may appeare not onelie by Paules speach in one place but also by his great outcry in another For thus he saith in one place Whiles we are at home in the bodie we are absent from the Lord 2. Cor. 5.6 And thus he crieth out in another O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from this bodie of death And a miserable thing it is to be absent from the Lord Rom. 7.4 and to be troubled with the bodie of Death When Paul sayth the Ephesians were without God in the world he reckened vp one of the euils the Ephesians were infected with Ephe. 2.12 ere euer the bright light of the glorious Gospell of Christ Iesus did shine vnto them and vpon them but when he said If God be with vs who can be against vs he spake of one of the greatest blessings that is Rom. 8.31 writing therefore to the Philippians he not onelie desireth to bee with Christ but also sayth that so to be is best of all I am greatlie in doubt on both sides desiring to be loosed and to be with Christ Phil. 1.23 which is best of all This therfore was Dauids complaint As the Hart brayeth for the riuers of waters Psal 42.1 so panteth my Soule after thee ô God my Soule thirsteth for God euen for the liuing God Psal 42.2 when shall I come and appere before the presence of God And this otherwhere the saying of the Psalmist It is good for me to drawe neere vnto God 73.28 What shoulde be others thereupon I leaue it to others to discerne My meaning is to proceed to another cōmodity that death brings with it to whom it comes and that is this It puts an end to the painefull Pilgrimage he was going on in this world For what is this mortall life but a way Basil hom 1. in psal 1. and that for the hast that euerie thing generate makes to the end What a commoditie this is may many waies appeare but especiallie by that of Salomon Eccl. 7.3 The day of Death is better then the day that one is borne And that of Syrach Death is better then a bitter life If it were requisite Syr. 30. 17. that eyther of these were better proued proofe might soone be produced For the first there is one that sayeth For two causes the day of death is better to the seruants of God then the day of byrth Perald tom 1. pag. 134. One is because Death is the egresse from miserie whereas the birth is the ingresse to miserie sayeth a wise man though Death be not good yet is it the end of all euils Seneca saith Death is the remedy of all euils The second is because Death is the gate
of glorie to the seruants of God It is the beginning of a blessed life For the other there is another that saieth Syr. 40. 25. 41. 2. It is better to dye then to begge O death how acceptable is thy Iudgement vnto the needefull and vnto him whose strength fayleth and that is nowe in the last age and is vexed with all things and to him that despayreth and hath lost patience To like purpose saide olde Tobit in the anguish of his Soule Tob. 3.6 It is better for me to dye then to liue because I haue heard false reproches and am verie sorowful For the maine point we driue at there is one that saieth Philip. 1.2 Cor. 5 he which dieth is freed from the miseries of the world he goeth to the Lord from whom he went on pilgrimage so long as he abode in the bodye Also in Death he leaueth sinne labour affliction the slime of the earth the matter of continuall conflict against the spirit of God And that bodie made of the dust of the grounde which he leaues in Death he shall receiue againe in the day of the restoring of all things in farre better case then euer it was in this worlde For then it shal be made like the glorious bodie of Christ Whether therefore you respect the Soule of him that dies or you regarde the bodie yet euer is that sure which I saie that death is commodious to him that dies If you respect the Soule It is freed from the bandes of the bodie to be with Christ It is translated to immortalitie It is conducted to the heauenlie countrey from which it was a stranger If you regarde the bodie it is freed from all miserie It is committed to a most safe and sweete sleepe it is prepared to the glorie of the resurrection the flesh resteth in hope whatsoeuer you respect or regarde yet this at length you must come to Raban lib. 9. in eccl cap. 2. The iudgement of present death is good to those that worship Christ because by it they passe to eternall life Sanctus Idiota By a good death a man chaunges his feare into securitie his labour into tranquilitie his want into sacietie his sorrow into iocunditie by a good death he escapeth all daunger of loosing the grace of God his estate comes to be better then euer it was before While he liued Lazarus was contemned Luk. 26.21 neither Master nor Man would regarde him more compassion was had of him by dogges then by men The dogges came licked his sores but no man gaue him the crummes which fell from the rich mans table but when he was dead Lazarus was esteemed the Angels came and carried him into Abrahams bosome of Christ himselfe Myconius saieth While Christ liued Myconi in euang Mar expos he might see nothing but humilitie and many things horrible and dreadfull but being dead see how honorable his burial was great good men burie him there is a magnificent preparation a new Sepulchre in the gardein in which yet neuer man lay As it fared with these so often fareth it with others by these then may others see what commodities drawes towards them when death comes vpon them some I haue shewed mo at pleasure may be conceiued so good so pleasant so profitable there are as Bassus an olde man once said Ser. 30. episto If there be any discommoditie in death it is the fault of those that die and not the fault of death it selfe In his book of the contempt of death saith Seneca Seneca lib. de contem mortis for the paine that is in death It is light if I can beare it It is but short if I cannot endure it for the commodities that are therein they are many I shal leaue of all possibility then to be sick any more I shall leaue of all possibility to be boūd any more I shall leaue of all possibilitie to dye any more Sickenes shall haue no more to do with me bondage shall haue no more to doe with me Death shall haue no more to doe with me the power of the one the other and all of them shall be taken from them what in this point Seneca thought was to betide him is surely to betyde others As Seneca therefore contemned death because of the commodities of Death so may they for the same cause stand in lesse feare of Death then otherwise for therefore is it said that there are many commodities in Death that those which are to dye should be well armed against the immoderate feare of Death For it is but follie to feare that which will come and vpon all come and vpon many verie profitably come when it doth come Manie makes a vertue of necessitie and most wonderouslie loue that which brings commoditie saieth Seneca again Seneca lib. de senectu In death there is no greater solace against Death then mortalitie it selfe I see not therefore howe any shoulde ouer foolishlie feare Death it bringing commodities as it doth not only to them that suffer it but also to those that see it by others suffered Q. No more doe I neither should I if there were asmuch prooued as was erewhile propounded R. Why do you make an if what is there wanting Q. The latter part of your saying R. What is that Q. Doe not you know R. Whether I do or do not I would know of you Q. And that I can tell you R. Doe it then Q. So I meane but I doe but quicken your wit a little with this being by other things fully resolued of your will R. I can but commend your wit for so doing But I would heare what is wanting to be prooued of that which was propounded Q. That you shall that death brings commoditie to those that see it suffered is the thing which I speake of R. And that 's the thing you need not much speake of or at the least not so as you haue spoken For that thing is not now vnprooued Remember you not that out of that auncient and learned doctour Gregory I tolde you that The death of the righteous was an helpe to the good th●● saw it and a testimonie to the euill Q. Yes indeede doe I. R. Be not so hastie then heereafter to accuse before you haue iust cause For that saying of Gregorie is proofe sufficient for that in controuersie Q. It is so I can it not deny but I would haue had more R. Why more than enough is too much and the prouerb is enough is as good as a feast Though more should be said yet would it all come to this issue For euer the death of the righteous is either an helpe to the good or a testimonie to the bad or both to either Q. But how the one to the one and the other to the other R. The one to the one by making them to remember their owne ends to wish the like ends and to prepare against their ends The other to
seruant depart in peace according to thy word Luk. 2.29 30 31 32. For mine eies haue seene thy saluation which thou hast prepared before the face of all people a light to the Gentiles and thy glory of the people Israel Such affection as was in these good and godly men Dauid Tobit Simeon and Paul should also be in those that are sicke and by their sickenesse are admonished to looke for death they should desire rather to die than to liue to be dissolued than to bee restored to bee deliuered than to bee detained For if they marke well what is their life but a vapour that vanisheth a flower that fadeth a winde that passeth a smoake that flieth a lampe that burneth And what should they be desirous to haue a winde to holde a flower to stand a smoake to stay a vapour to continue longer then either they may or God will suffer and permit He numbers their daies he measures their monethes he recordes their yeres when they are all come to their summe number and measure why should they be vnwilling either to end them or to end with them will they nill they end they shall and end them God will And better I thinke it would be with them if God might end them with their good will then it will be if he ends them with their euil will Apoc. 14.13 For blessed are they which die in the Lord but it is in doubt what they are which die vnwillingly for they hardlie die in the Lord because they die not in obedience to the Lord. Q. I but I pray you do not censure them so hardlie you know not what death can do death is fearefull and the feare thereof may affright the best R. But not so I hope as that it shall make thē vtterly vnwilling to die for though death of it selfe be feareful yet is not euery way fearfull nor to euery one fearefull though in it selfe it be the entrāce into eternal misery because of sinne from whence it came whose wages it is as Paul saith Rom. 6.23 yet in Christ it is the gate to eternal life abounding with all felicitie for when Christ tooke away sinne he took away also death issuing from sin which drew with it eternall condemnation and when hee gaue vnto vs righteousnes he gaue vnto vs also immortalitie and celestiall felicity the companion of righteousnes so farre is it therfore from the godly to feare death which terrifies others as often they wish death and soone they desire to leaue this life for they know they are heere but strangers and not citizens and therefore they are euer seeking a Citie to come to them therefore death is pleasant and amiable for then cease all their miseries and troubles yea then begins all their ioyes and pleasures as appeareth by this saying of Iohn the Euangelist Apoc. 14.13 Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord for from henceforth the spirit saith that they shal be at rest from their labours But to the vnfaithfull and vnbeleeuing death is fearefull for then begins their sorowes and miseries their plagues and torments as is to be seene in the historie of the rich man Luk. 16. When the wise man therefore speaketh of this very point in question this is his saying Syr. 41. 1. Oh death how bitter is the remembrance of thee to a man that liueth at rest in his possessions vnto the mā that hath nothing to vexe him and that hath prosperity in all things yea vnto him that yet is able to receiue meate or that yet setteth his mind on bellie cheare Sy. 41.2 O death how acceptable is thy iudgment vnto the needfull vnto him whose strength faileth and that is now in his last age and is vexed with all things and to him that despaireth and hath lost patience and this therevpon is his exhortation Feare not thou the iudgement of death remember them that haue beene before thee and that come after this is the ordinance of the Lord ouer all flesh And why wouldest thou be against the pleasure of the most high whether it be ten or a hundreth or a thousand yeeres there is no defence for life against the graue Q. But like you this his exhortation and that which hee saith touching the matter in question R. What else I know no reason why I should dislike either he speakes truth and according to truth and should I dislike his speaking of truth Q. No but yet you may examine the truth R. What where there is no doubt but I doubt whether I may examine the truth further then for the finding out of the truth for the truth is to be beleeued not examined Q. Put in if it be once manifested R. Whether that bee in or no the truth must bee beleeued Heb. 11.1 For faith as the Apostle saith is the ground of things which are hoped for and the euidence of things which are not seene And Gregorie saith Grc. ho 26. super euāg Amb de Trinitate That faith is worth little which hath proofe from humaine reason Take arguments away saith Ambrose where faith is sought In her owne schooles let logicke now holde her peace Fishers are beleeued not Logicians August super Ioh. What is faith but to beleeue which thou doest not see whence and how the Trinitie is comprehended ô man thou doest well enquire how it is beleeued thou doest not well aske yea therefore it is well beleeued because soone it is not comprehended for if it were soone comprehended it were not needefull that it should bee beleeued because it should be seene But to leaue this and to returne to what we were in hand withall What is it that you dislike in the wise mans saying you make so much adoe about it Q. I dislike not any thing though I doubt of something R. What is that you doubt of of a mans fear●ng death Q. I neede not doubt of that that 's a thing a man cannot auoide R Yet that 's a thing a mā should refraine Q. Why would you not haue a man to be afraide of death R. No not a good man not a faithfull and beleeuing man for what should he feare death that hath his faith fixed on Christes death Death is swallowed vp into victorie through Christs death death hath neither power nor dominion ouer him that beleeueth Q. But that all men doe not for all men haue not faith R. But I speake to him and of him that hath faith Q. And would you not haue him that hath faith to feare death R. Not so as he should therefore be vtterly vnwilling to dye for it is appoynted by God that all men shall once dye and I would not haue him that hath faith to withstand the ordinance of God for his it is to obey not to resist Q. How then would you haue him to feare it R. First as it is the destruction of humaine nature in him i. as it makes him cease
to be a liuing man for so Christ feared it when he sweat water and blood in the garden herevpon said My soule is heauie vnto death Mat. 26.38 Secondly as it is an hurt to the church or common wealth for often by death the church and commonwealth are depriued of those which either were then indeed or might haue been in time a great help stay and comfort to either Q. Otherwise than thus would you not haue him to feare it R. No. Q. And why R. For many causes First because it is vnto him an abolishing of sinne For he that is dead Rom. 6.7 is freed from sinne he then ceaseth to offend God any more as hee hath done Secondly because it is a bettring of his bodies condition for whereas before it was sensible and so perplexed with many miseries it is by death made insensible and therefore freed from all calamities whereas before in life it was both an actiue and passiue instrument for sinne it is then after death neither of both Thirdlie because it is the way for his soule to come to rest life and glorie For they that die in the Lord rest from their labours enioy life and remaine in glory Rest from their labors Apoc. 14.13 Enioy life Mat. 22.32 remaine in glorie Rom. 2.7.10 Dan. 12.3 And they that come to these things must die ere they come at them As one saith There is no other way to come to heauen by but death Q. And what conclude you thereupon R. That which I should viz. that hee which hath faith in Christ should not so feare death as therefore he should be vnwilling to leaue this life Cyprian in serm de mortalitate For as Cyprian saith It is his part to feare death which hath no will to goe to Christ It is his to haue no will to goe to Christ which beleeueth not he shall beginne to raigne with Christ God saith he hath promised to thee departing out of this world immortalitie and eternitie and doest thou doubt this is not to haue known God at al this is with the sinne of incredulitie to offend Christ the maister of all beleeuers this is being set in the Church not to haue faith in the house of faith Let him bee afraide to die who not being borne anew by water and the spirit is mancipated to the fire of hell let him be afraide to die which is not marked with the crosse and passion of Christ let him bee afraide to die which from this death must passe to the second death let him be afraide to die whom the eternall flame shall torment with euerlasting paine so soone as hee departes this world let him be afraide to die vpon whom this by his long stay heere is bestowed that during his abode heere his punishment is deferred but let him neuer bee afraide to die that knowes himselfe to be heere a Pilgrime and stranger that beleeues the resurrection of the bodie and the life euerlasting that loues the Lord with all his heart As the forenamed writer saith What stranger is he that hastens not to returne into his countrey Wee make account that Paradise is our countrey now we haue begun to haue the Patriarkes our Parents Why do we not make hast and runne that wee may both see our countrey and salute our parents A great number of our deare friendes doth there expect vs a mightie traine and troupe of parēts brethren and children now sure of their owne immortalitie and yet carefull for our safety doth wish vs to come vnto their sight and companie what ioy is it in common both to them and to vs What pleasure there without feare of dying and with certaintie of liuing How great and perpetuall felicitie Againe who would be afraide to dye that beleeues the resurrection of the dead For as one saith The most sure trust of christians is the promised resurrection of the dead from aboue And no meruaile when Christ himselfe saith This is the will of him that sent me Ioh. 6.40 that euery man which seeth the Sonne and beleeueth in him should haue euerlasting life and I will raise him vp at the last day And againe I am the resurrection and the life he that beleeueth in me although he were dead yet shall he liue and whosoeuer liueth and beleeueth in me shall neuer dye Lastly who would be afraide to dye that loues God sincerely For it is the propertie of him that loues to adioyne himselfe to the thing he loues and to wish that he might enioy it and to grieue at that which doth hinder his enioying of it It is a token therefore that he loues not God as he should that is either afraide or vnwilling to dye for other way to come to God to heauen to immortalitie than by death there is none he that dyeth not commeth to neither And who if hee might would not come to all Except the wheat corne fall into the ground and dye it bideth alone so except a man fall into the earth and dye he bideth alone Eccl. 4.10 and woe saith Salomon to him that is alone but if the wheate corne die it bringeth forth much fruite so if a faithful man dye he attaineth to much fruite He commeth as I said to God to heauen to immortalitie And who would not if he might come to all these None surely that is wise that is godly that is faithfull and beleeuing for to come to God is to come to the fountaine of liuing waters which who so commeth to shall neuer more thirst to come to heauen is to come to the hauen of euerlasting happines which who so commeth to shall neuer more faint to come to immortalitie is to come to eternall life which who so commeth to shall neuer more dye none therefore that is wise that is godly that is faithful that is beleeuing should be afraide and vnwilling to dye for dye any when he wil that is so qualified death shall not hurt him death shall haue no power ouer him death shal be game not losse vnto him Q. I but whensoeuer he shal dye death will be painefull vnto him R. And what then Let him be neuer the more vnwilling to die for that for why the Apostle saith Act. 14.20 By many tribulations we must enter into the kingdome of God By many and therefore he must be willing to haue the paines of death some we must enter into the kingdome of God and therefore neuer be vnwilling to die for the paines of death for as the same Apostle saith Rom. 8.18 All the afflictions of this life are not worthie of the glorie which shal be shewed vnto vs and therefore the few afflictions in death are vnworthie thereof The paines that are suffered are but temporal but the ioyes which are to bee enioyed are eternall and who wil not be content to suffer a short paine for a long pleasure He is not worthie of any sweete which came away with
strangers that dwelt heere and there throughout Pontus Pet. 4.7 Galatia Cappadocia Asia and Bithynia now the ende of all things is at hand be ye therefore sober and watching in prayer And what is this but to prepare to dye because yee must dye For a man cannot prepare himselfe aright but he must be sober and watching in prayer Q. Is this reason thinke you as forcible as the former R. If it be not it should be For this I am sure is Christs saying Ioh. 15.14 Iohn the fifteene Ye are my frends if ye do whatsoeuer I commaund you And this as I haue shewed is his commaundement as well therefore because he hath commaunded it as also for other reasons which alreadie I haue expressed preparation to death should be vsed Q. God graunt it may so be R. Amen I wish For in asmuch as we haue all sinned wee must all dye For as there is a time to bee borne in sinne so there is a time to dye for sinne And to that that must be done it is better that we prepare our selues then not That comes daungerously that comes vnlooked for Eighteene were slaine when the Tower in Siloam fell but moe perished in the gaynesaying of Corah Iude. 11. Num. 16.32 1. Pet. 3.20 and the deluge spared none but eighte Now death is like a theefe A theefe comes vnawares and so doth death A theefe comes when he is not looked for and so doth death A theefe comes suddenly Barnard and so doth death As nothing is more certaine than death so nothing is more vncertayne then the houre of death A Thunder cracke commeth on the suddaine euen so doth death As one saith our life is like a ruinous house alwaies readie to fall like a thin thred alwaies readie to rot like a running cloude alwaies readie to droppe This cloude sometime melteth in the cradle sometime in the chayre death is like the sunne whensoeuer it shineth it melteth our cloudie life be the cloude thereof neuer so thinne or thicke in yeares Our life then being as vncertayne as the weathercocke which turneth at euery blast or like the waue which mounteth at euery storme or like the reede which boweth at euery winde ours it is to prepare our selues to leaue it to forgoe it to lay it downe to entertayne that which doth dissolue it Q. You say true ours it is to doe so but our blindenes is such and our senselesnes so much as we thinke wee haue heere a continuing citie and therefore we little prouide for that which is to come we thinke we shall liue long and therefore we prepare not to death which shortly and vncertainlie will ensue we put death farre from vs oh I may liue twentie yeares yet c. and therefore wee neglect what wee should regarde and despise what wee ought to embrace R. In regarde of nature this is our dealing but in respect of grace it should not be so and sure I am that they whome God hath indued with grace haue not done so As they haue thought of death so haue they prouided for death Hence is it that some of them bought burying places in their liues there to be buryed when they were dead Hence is it that some of them fitted their toombes eare they dyed in which they were intoombed when they were dead Hence is it that some of them both appointed what sheetes they would be wounde in when they were dead and what they would haue giuen to the poore that then should be liuing Abraham bought him the caue of Machpelah both to burie and to be buried in Ioseph in his life prouided himselfe of a tombe against his death So haue many others done and so now amongst vs many doe By the one and the other it is easie to learne what euery one should do What is one mans duetie in this regarde is euery mans As no man layes himselfe to sleepe without preparation so no man shuld yeeld himselfe to death without preparation as one saith Death sleepe are brethren Diogenes awaking out of sleep being asked by his physitian as he lay vpon his death bed how he did answered I do well man Stob. serm 115. For brother embraceth brother To like effect did Gorgias Leontius answer his friends whē they asked him what he did as he lay drawing on sleeping For he said Now sleep begins to deliuer me to his brother As Moses therefore once said euen so now say I Oh that men were wise Deut. 32.29 and would vnderstand their latter ende Oh that we would remember the certaintie of our death the vncertaintie of our life the ieopardie we are in if death take vs vnawares then no doubt but as Ioseph layd vp in the seuen plentifull yeares what might minister reliefe in the seuen deare yeares so we in the time of this our vncertaine life would store vp what might comfort our yearning soules in the bitter agonie of our most certaine death For wondrous comfortable it is to be prepared for death before death As Gregorie saith Greg. in hom sint lumbi v. 1. Seneca in extrema parte epist epist 20. Maximus serm 36. So death it selfe when it commeth is conquered if before it commeth it euer be feared No man well welcometh death when it cometh but hee which long time before hath disposed himselfe thereto Hence is it that Musonius being once asked who it was that could finish his last daye best answered Hee that euer propounded to himselfe that the last day of his life was present and at hand And hence is it that man should prepare for his end before his end that so he might assuredly speede well at his end Q. Oh would to God that man eyther could or would what man should As his mighte is weake so his minde is wicked And through the weakenes of the one and the wickednes of the other oft is that neglected which much should be regarded R. So it seemes when preparation to death is neglected As death is the last thing in this world a man shall vndergoe so preparation thereto is the first thing hee ought to ouergoe Q. It is not now the duetie wee stand vpon but the time The first is confessed the second is suspected that man should doe this you speake of it is not denyed but when he should doe it it is somewhat controuerted R. More without cause than with cause For there is no cause the time should be doubted when the truth cannot be denied Q. You speake as if there were as much truth for the time as there is in the thing R. I speake then but as I ought for the truth is as much for the one as it is in the other Q. When is it then that a man should prepare to dye sith that prepare he must R. When when not there is no time which thereto and for is not a tyme because we all are euer vncertayne of our time Hee which now liueth may
by and by be dead Sodayne death wee know seiseth vpon many Q. I many in regarde of themselues but not many in regarde of others for moe dye deliberately vpon their beds than sodainly at their boards R. The greater is the mercie of God towardes vs that it is not so Lam. 3.22 Dan. 9.7 For his mercie it is that we all dye not suddenly we haue deserued worse and therefore that Q. I denie not that R. Presume not then vpon the other Q. Neither will I for the workes of God are merueilous and his iudgements past finding out Rom. 11.33 But I will enquire when a man is to prepare himselfe to death Whether in sickenes or in health or in both R. And I will answere in both and neither in health alone nor in sickenes alone Q. And why that R. Because there is a twofould preparing to dye a preparing in health and a preparing in sickenes a preparing in health because then we are verie vnsure to liue For the healthiest man in the world cannot promise himselfe one howre of life Much lesse can he saie To day or to morrow I will goe into such a citie Iam. 4.13 and continue there a yeare and buy and sell and get gaine A preparing in sickenes because then wee are all like to die There is but a step between the sicke man and death As one sayth of men and young men so say I of sickemen and sound men Bern. de Conuers Cler. c. 14. To sicke men death is at the gate to sound mē death is lying in wayte Both in health therefore and also in sickenes he that knowes he must dye must prepare himselfe to dye Q. What needes he prepare in health will it not serue well enough in sickenes R. Truelie no. For first the time of sickenes is not the fittest for such a purpose First because all the sences are then occupied about the paines of the disease And Augustine saith Scarcelie will hee come to true satisfaction Aug. ser 36. whome sickenes doth vrge and paine terrifie especially when the children whome he vnlawfully loued are present and his wife and the worlde do call him vnto them Secondly because then the diuell is most busie to draw a man from all goodnes as knowing that if then he hold him he shall for euer keepe him Olympiodorus in the 9. chapter of Ecclesiastes For as Olimpiodorus saith Such as the day of death doth leaue him such shall and will the day of iudgement finde him And you know it was said to the serpent which was more subtill than any beast of the fielde touching himselfe and the womans seede Gen. 3.15 He shal breake thine head and thou shalt bruise his heele Which as one saith is as much as thou shalt lye in waite against the latter part of his life And well may it be so for that auncient writer Gregorie saith Greg. lib. 6. moral The auncient enemie of mankinde in the time of death is mad through the violence of crueltie to snatch vp the soules of sinners and whome he deceiued while they liued by his flatteries them he tormenteth when they dye by his crueltie Secondly in the time of health it is verie needfull because as in sommer the lillie hath a worme in the roote that doth consume it so in health man hath a worme that doth dissolue him Wheresoeuer he goes hee carries death with him As the lillie that flourishes in the morning is not sure to stand till the euening so man that triumphes in the health of his youth is not sure to liue to the infirmitie of his age Absolon dyes in his health aswell as Dauid in his sickenes And the prouerbe is When health is highest death is nighest Many euen now as it were are aliue and merrie yet in a moment they are dead and gone Sometime death warnes ere she strikes and sometimes againe she strikes ere euer she warnes As therefore it is euill to delay till sickenes so it is good to prepare in health The wise man saith Syr. 18. 20. Humble thy selfe before thou bee sicke and whilest thou mayest yet sinne shew thy conuersion In health the wit of man is greater and the feare of death lesser than in sickenes In health therfore also to prepare for death the time is somewhat fitter Q. Why but it is neuer to late to repent For a man may repent when he will R. The proposition is true if a man doth truely repent But the prouerbe is It is scarse true which is not due It is sicke like him that vseth it As you hearde before out of Augustine August serm 36. He whome sickenes constraineth and punishment affrighteth hardlie to true repentance atteyneth Q. But are you of that minde R. Of what other minde should I be Q. If so you are and other you cannot be of what reason haue you for being of that R. Reason enough and forcible enough to content any man reasonable First repentance should be voluntarie as all other obedience to God should bee But repentance in sickenes is vsually constrayned The feare of death hell and iudgement doth enforce it Zeale loue and religion doe not then alwaies effect it And there is a learned writer that saith Enforced seruices are not pleasing vnto God Greg. Secondly in true and sound repentance men that repent Ambros do forsake their sinnes For as Ambrose sayth True repentance it is to sease from sinne Hugo lib. 3. de Mist ecle And as Hugo saith Repentance is called as it were a punishment because the man himselfe that repenteth doth by his repenting punish in himselfe what wickedly he hath committed For the three things which are in the smiting of the breast to wit the breast the hand and the sound doe signifie that repentance is of those things which we haue offended in by heart voice and worke But in this repentance both raysed by sickenes and neuer vsed but in sickenes the sinnes forsake the men for therefore then many forsake their sinnes because their sinnes forsake them and not because they forsake their sinnes For why their minde is toward them asmuch as euer though their might serues not to follow them so well as euer The historie of Andronicus and the lion of both which it is written This lion is this mans hoste and this man is this lions physitian or chirurgian doth argue that in sickenes the lion the Prince of Beastes doth leaue his crueltie and experience doth testifie that in sickenes man the Lord of lions and other creatures doth lay downe his iniquitie but as the one did leaue his crueltie to the ende he might be cured of his maladie so doth the other lay downe his iniquitie to the ende he may bee freed from his miserie The truth of what I saie is apparant in Antiochus the proud 2. Machab. 2.11 2. Machab. 9.5 For before that a paine of the bowels that was remediles came vpon
The generall is that by which a man doth prepare himselfe to dye through the whole course of his life in this world But the particular is that by which a man doth prepare himselfe to dye in the time of his sickenes onely Q. To beginne with the first then what course should a man take in his life that hee might euer be prepared for his death R. That course that is fitting for that purpose Q. What is that R. This first let him meditate vpon death in the prosperous time of his life Secondly let him daylie endeuour to take from his owne death the power and strength of death Thirdly let him striue by all meanes he may to enter into the first degree of eternall life Fourthly after he hath once gotten entrance thereinto let him inure himselfe by little and little to dye before euer hee comes indeede to dye Fiftly and lastly let him doe presently whatsoeuer his hand shall finde to doe and not with the crow procrastinate from this day till to morow Q. That I may now question with you touching each of these why is he to meditate vpon his death in the prosperous time of his life R. Because the whole life of a Christian ought to be nothing else but the meditation of death because also in the best time of his life he is vncertaine of his death For man knoweth not his ende Mar. 15.43 the one and the other of these reasons made Ioseph of Aramathea an honorable counsellour which also looked for the kingdome of God to make his tombe in his life time in the middest of his garden And this did he to put himselfe in minde of death in the middest of his delights and pleasures and also to teach others by his example what they should doe For what is the duty of one this way is the duety of euery one For once it is appointed for euery man to dye as it is for any man As therefore Paul saith of all men It is appointed for all men once to dye Heb. 9.27 Syr. 38. 21. so Syrach saith to euery man Remember thy last ende forget it not Q. And what will this minding of death in the time of life worke any good in him that liues R. It either will or should Q. I speake not of the dutie but of the vertue R. If so it doth for first it humbles him that thinkes thereof vnder the mightie hand of God remembring himselfe thereby to be but dust and ashes Thus therefore said Abraham vnto God Gen. 18.27 Behold now I haue begunne to speake vnto my Lord and I am but dust and ashes Thus did he humble himselfe vnto God by remembring what he was Thus no doubt will others doe that thinke as he did For what should dust and ashes be proude Syr. 10. 9. As it is one of the lowest things vpon earth so it is one of the lightest It is troad vnder the foote of euery thing and blowne away with a small blast What should it exalte it selfe against God the clay is not to rise against the potter neither is man to huffe against his maker as the clay is in the handes of the potter so is he in the hands of his creatour As the clay therefore submits it selfe to the potter so must he himselfe to his maker The clay because it is clay and he because he is dust Gen. 2.7 Eccl. 12.7 Dust of dust Gen. 2.7 and dust to dust Eccl. 12.7 Secondly it furthereth him to repentance For hee would be loath to be taken in his sinnes Ionah had no sooner cryed to Niniueh fourtie dayes Ionah 3.4 and Niniueh shall be destroyed but Niniueh repented As the remembrance of Niniuehs destruction wrought Niniuehs conuersion so the remembrance of mans dissolution workes mans saluation For he cannot do wickedly that thinks to dye presently August lib. exhortat Nothing doth so much recall from sinne as the often thinking of death the wages of sinne For what Rom. 6.23 Luk. 18.11 1. sa 25.14 2. Sa. 13.1 Num. 11.29 can the Pharisie be proude if hee remember hee is but dust can Naball be couetous if he remember he must goe naked can Ammon be voluptous if he remember hee shall bee wormes meate can Iehoshua be enuious if he remember he shal be without life 1. Sa. 22.9 and despised of these whome he most enuied in life can Doeg be sclaunderous if he remember he shall be tongles and most talked of by those himselfe talked most against finally can any man be vitious that remembers hee shall bee infamous and lapped in the bosome of his inglorious mother earth surely no. For Syrach saith Syr. 7. 27 He that remembers his latter ende shall seldome or neuer offend Esai 38.2 Hezekiah the king no sooner heard by I say the Prophet Set thy house in order for thou shalt dye but streight way he turned his face to the wall and wept and prayed and said I beseech thee Lord remember now how I haue walked before thee in truth and with a perfite hearte and haue done that which is good in thy sight c. Thirdly it stirres him to contentment in euery estate and condition of life that doth befall him For he cannot be discontente with any thing Hierom. that remembreth hee must goe from euery thing As Hierome saith He doth easily despise all things which alwaies thinketh hee must dye As another saith If any man remembreth the last things of his life easily refuseth all things which are vpon the earth For Seneca saith Seneca Nothing will so much profite thee for the moderation of things as the often cogitation of death In the midst of all his afflictions which were both many and mightie righteous Iob comforted himselfe with this Naked I came out of my mothers wombe Iob. 1.21 and naked shal I returne againe The Lorde hath giuen and the Lorde hath taken away euen as it pleased the Lorde so are thongs come to passe blessed therefore be the name of the Lord. As Iob did so may we What was his comfort will also be ours If there be any fault it will be in the applying and that because it is either not applyed at all or else because it is not applyed aright If it bee applyed and rightly applyed good is euer thereby effected Greg. lib. 12. moral He which considereth what kinde of one hee shall be in death will alwaies be fearefull in his worke and therevpon liue euer in the eye of his maker he desires nothing that passeth all the desirs of life present he contradicteth and he considers himselfe almost dead because hee knoweth certainly he must dye For a perfect life is the meditation of death which while the iust diligently buzie themselues about they escape the snares of sinne For as another saith To remember that this our life must bee ended destroyeth pride extinguisheth enuie driues away lechery auoydes vanitie erecteth discipline and perfecteth
your owne skill for all my will for I may minde what is not meete and you may wish what is more conuenient Your enough is nothing too much for that which you said was both pleasurable to heare and profitable to learne And it may be my minde is little amisse For I would learne what I know not and get what I haue not For my part therefore I can be contented to proceede can you so too R. Yea verily for I am now at your direction Q. We will now then to the third thing you say he was to regarde which in prosperous time of life was desirous to prepare against perilous day of death R. As you please for that But doe you remember what it was Q. Very well I thanke you For this it was He must striue by all good meanes he may to enter into the first degree of eternall life R. You say true but what would you touching this point Q. I would first know how many degrees of life eternall there are for your naming of the first argues that there are diuers I would secondly learne what it is to enter into the first degree of eternall life For you say he must striue and striuing argues it is not common nor easie to enter into it Thirdly I would know by what meanes a man may come to enter thereinto For enter a man cannot into any thing without meanes R. And these things in some sorte will I manifest vnto you Touching the first therfore there are three degrees of life eternall The first is in this life when men being iustified and sanctified haue peace with God The second is in the ende of life when the body freed from all diseases paynes and miseries is layd to rest in the earth and the soule is receiued into heauen The third is after the daie of Iudgement when bodie and soule being reunited shall be both aduanced to eternall glorie Now to enter into the first of these 3. degrees of life eternall is to haue such peace with God through Christ as he that hath it can say with Paul I liue not but Christ liues in me The meanes to enter heereinto are three Repentance of sin Fayth in Christ and Newenes of life For none can enter heereinto but he that repents him of his sinnes beleeues in Christ and riseth to newenes of life He that repents not perisheth He that beleeueth not is condemned He that walketh not in newnes of life is yet in his sinnes Hence it is that Peter said vnto the Iewes A mende your liues and turne that your sinnes may be put away when the time of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. Act. 3.19 Hence is it that Paul said vnto the Iayler 16 31. Beleeue in the Lord Iesus Christ and thou shalt be saued and thine household Dan. 4.24 Hence is it that Daniel said to Nebuchadnezar Breake off thy sinnes by righteousnes and thine iniquities by mercie toward the poore Loe let there be an healing of thine errour Hence it is that as Peter said of Ioyning vertue with faith and with vertue knowledge 2. Pet. 1.5 and with knowledge temperance and with temperance patience and with patience godlines and with godlines brotherly kindenes and with brotherly kindenes loue if ye doe these things ye shall neuer fall So may I say of mixing repentance with faith and with faith obedience and with obedience more if ye doe these things ye shall neuer fall for as Iohn the Euangelist sayth Apoc. 20.6 Blessed and holy is hee that hath part in the first resurrection for on such the second death hath no power By which is signified that hee which will escape the second death must be made partaker of the first resurrection of which none is in deed partaker but he that is regenerated iustified and sanctified regenerated by the spirit of God iustified by the death of Christ and sanctified with the gifte of the holy ghost for none but such can say with Paule I liue not now but Christ liueth in me Q. I but others than such haue parte in the first resurrection R. In shew they may but in truth they haue not Q. How then may a man come to be able to say with Paule I liue not now but Christ liueth in me R. By three especiall graces in which the first degree of euerlasting life consisteth Q. What three are these R. The first is a sauing knowledge by which a man doth truely resolue himselfe that God the father of Christ is his father Christ his sonne his redemer and God the holy ghost his sanctifier for as Christ sayth This is life eternall to know thee the onely God Ioh. 17.3 and whome thou hast sent Iesus Christ The second is peace of conscience Pro. 15.5 Philip. 2. which as Salomon saith Is a continuall feast And as Paul saith Passeth all vnderstanding For as the same Paul saith The kingdome of God is righteousnes Rom. 14.17 peace of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost And no meruaile for the horrour of a giultie conscience is the beginning of death and destruction Syr. 25. 14. The greatest heauines is the heauines of the heart saith Syrach and the greatest trouble is the trouble of conscience say I. As Syrach also saith Giue mee any plague saue onely the plague of the heart So say I giue me any trouble saue onely the trouble of conscience For as the plague of the heart passeth all other plagues so the trouble of conscience passeth all other troubles Pro. 18.14 The spirite of a man saith Salomon will sustaine his infirmitie but a wounded spirit who can beare it As one in Plautus saith Seruus in Mustellaria There is nothing more miserable than a mans owne guiltie minde In a prouerbe it is Seneca lib. de moribus Ibidem A guiltie conscience is as good as a thousand witnesses As Seneca saith The conscience goes beyond all the euill the tongue can speake An euill conscience is often safe without daunger neuer sure without care Hmbros lib. 2. de offic Bernar. in serm Bern. 3. considerat ad Euge. But saith Ambrose The peace of conscience makes a blessed life And saith Bernard He prepares a good dwelling for God whose reason neither hath been deceiued nor wil peruerted nor memorie defiled The opinion of good men with the testimonie of conscience is euer sufficient against the mouth of them that speake euil Horat. Hor. Iudgeth it an happie thing for a man to know no euil by himselfe nor to waxe pale through some default Hugo lib. 2. de Ani-cap 9. Hugo therefore speaking in the praise of a good conscience saith A good conscience is the title of religion the temple of Salomon the field of benediction the garden of delight the declinatorie of gold the ioy of angles the arke of couenant the treasure of the king the house of God the habitation of the holy ghost the booke
be slayne of life And as Barnard saith The head that the Angelicall spirits tremble at was pricked with thornes the face fayrer than the sonnes of men was defiled with the spittle of the Iewes the eyes which are brighter than the sinne were dimmed in death the eares which heare the Angelicall songs did heare the speaking against of sinners the mouth which teacheth the Angels was filled with viniger and gall the feete whose footestoole is adored were fastned to the crosse with a naile the hands which made the heauens were stretcht vpon the crosse and thereto fastned with nayles the body was beaten with roddes the side was thrust through with a speare and what more there remained nothing but the tongue in him that he might therewith pray for sinners and commend his mother to the disciple whom he loued What now shall I looke to goe hence in peace no no the man must not looke to speed better than the master Mat. 10.24 Saith the master himselfe The desciple is not aboue his master nor the seruant aboue his Lord. It is enough for the disciple to be as his master and the seruant as his Lord. Now for himselfe thus said the master of himselfe hauing spoken much out of the scriptures to his disciples of his passion and resurrection Luk. 24.26 Ought not Christ to haue suffered these things and to enter into his glory For all others said a seruant of his 2. Tim. 3.12 All that will liue godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution How much more some other light affliction such as is sorrow sickenes and paine all which and many moe are nothing comparable to persecution persecution is farre more grieuous than the paine which I feele or the sicknes which I abide Hauing therfore a desire to liue godly in Christ Iesus shall I not beare quietly and suffer patiently the paines of this my sicknes and disease The Apostle saith that Act. 14.22 Wee must through many tribulations enter into the kingdome of God This my sickenes is but one A weake souldiour is he that cannot beare one blow A weake christian were I if I would be daunted with one crosse though it be grieuous as no chasting for the present seemeth to be ioyous but grieuous yet is it neither tedious nor discommodious not tedious for it is but momentany Psal 30.5 As Dauid saith Heauines may endure for a night but ioy commeth in the morning Heb. 12.11 Not discommodious for it bringeth the quiet fruite of righteousnes vnto them which are thereby exercised Yea saith Paul Our light affliction which is but for a moment 2. Cor. 4.17 causeth vnto vs a farre more excellent and an eternall weight of glory And what should I either grudge or grieue at that which neither comes for my hurt when it comes neither yet will tary long after it is come A welcome guest is hee that comes but for a night and yet much enriches his host ere the morning Such a guest should sickenes be for so it deales with the host to whome it comes As Heli therefore said when hee heard hee should be punished 1. Sam. 3.18 It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth him good So say I now I am punished It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth him good I am not too good to be smitten of him Where my betters haue not escaped his hands there is no reason that I should wish I might I daily say if daily I pray as daily and duely I should thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen Now in heauen it is done willingly readily and faithfully If therefore I will any thing doe as I say I must willingly readily and faithfully beare this burthen which the Lord hath imposed vpon me To comfort and encourage me in the bearing thereof I now haue Christ my captaine being in glory to looke vpon me and behold me for as the Apostle saith Heb. 4.15 We haue not an high Priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all things tempted in like sorte And therefore I neede not either feare or faint vnder my burthen For why he which redeemed me seeing mine affliction and misery wil no doubt both comfort me in measure sufficient and release me at time conuenient Exod. 2.25 In the second of Exodus it is said God looked vpon the children of Israel and God had respect vnto them And in the third of Exodus the Lord saith I haue surely seene the trouble of my people which are in Egypt and haue heard their cry because of their taskemasters for I know their sorrowes Therefore I am come downe to deliuer them out of the hand of the Egyptians and to bring them out of that land into a good land and a large into a land that floweth with milke and hony euen into the place of the Cananites and the Hittites and the Amorites and the Perizzites and the Hiuites and the Tebusites And therefore he saith vnto Moses Come now and I will send thee vnto Pharaoh that thou maist bring my people the children of Israel out of Egypt After the manner that he dealt with them will he also in mercy deale with me For he is euer one and the same Gal. 3.20 Malac. 3.6 Iob. 13.15 God he is and is not chaunged As ob therefore said in his affliction so say in this my visitation Loe though he slay me yet will I trust in him and I will reprooue my waies in his sight He shall be my saluation also for the hypocrite shall not come before him it is not this paine that shall part him and me it is not this sickenes that shall separate vs it is not this disease that shal daunt or dismay me Nay to say at once Rom. 8.38 Neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate me from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Thus now you see by what meanes he that is sicke may munite his soule against the paines of his sickenes Q. I doe so I cannot deny it But what if his sickenes be mortall R. Though it be yet there these will be effectuall For they are of force not onely against the paines of some one sickenes but also against the paines of euery sickenes yea the mortall and deadly sickenes Q. I but to the paines of sickenes there may come an immoderate feare of death which will not very soone be vanquished because Death is the last enemie that shall be destroyed 1. Cor. 15.26 R. Though there so do as it is very like there will for death is the most tetrible of all things to wit in this life yet may the soule be armed as well against that as against the other Q. It may so and it is good to haue it so But how
shall he that is sicke and that mortally bring it to be so R. By meanes Q. What meanes R. These two practises and meditations Q. By practises how R. Fower waies First by considering himselfe Secondly by considering his life Thirdly by regarding more the benefits of God that are to be enioyed after death than death it selfe Fourthly by looking vpon death in the glasse of the Gospell and not in the glasse of the law For she is not comfortable to looke vpon in the first how terrible soeuer she shewes her selfe in the last And terrible she is in the last though comfortable she be in the first Q. But will the consideration of each of these serue to arme the soule of him that is sicke against the immoderate feare of death R. I thinke no lesse I teach no lesse I know not how to perswade you lesse Q. Shew me the reason of each and I shall the better beleeue you R. Will you not beleeue else Q. I did not yet say so I speake comparatiuely not simply R. That comparatiuely then you may beleeue me if simply you will not I will endeuour to doe as much as you desire Q. So doe and I will beleeue you simply and comparatiuely R. To the purpose intended then may the consideration of the first of the fower well serue for consider he himselfe that is sick and he shall finde that his body is but a prison to his soule and his soule a prisoner in his body And why should not this arme him against all immoderate feare of death for what should he feare the breaking of his prison the freeing of his prisoner Dauid desirous of life eternall and the sight of his master cryed out Oh how long shall I liue in this prison Psal 142.7 And Paul reuoluing with himselfe the miseries that infested him in this prison cryed out Rom. 7.24 Oh wretch that I am who shall deliuer me from this body of sinne Dauid and Pauls practise should be the sickemans president His body to him is no better then Pauls and Dauids body was to them His body therefore is but a body of sinne a prison of the soule a burthen to the minde and spirit As a man of God hath said no bocardo no dungeon no sinke no puddle no pit is in any respect so euill a prison for the body as the body is of the soule For it is such a cage as stinketh in the sight of God a body of sinne is this cage of the soule And therefore he that is sicke should feare no more to goe out of it than out of a prison To feare the deliuery of the soule from prison is meere folly It is to wish a stinking lodging and a filthy cage to dwell in and euer to cary it about which is extreame misery It is to wish continuall banishment from the ioyfull realme of heauen his naturall country which is extreame madnes What man would be so foolish wretched careles mad as to wish any such matter none wise sober and in his right witts The sicke therefore vnles he will be counted foolish wretched careles and mad must neuer feare immoderately the opening of his prison and the loosening of his prisoner Now if the consideration of this first practise doth thus well serue to the fencing of the soule against al immoderate feare of death what shall wee thinke any of the rest that follow to bee of much lesse value Truly no. For going from the consideration of himselfe to the consideration of his life shall he there finde any lesse force than before Iam. 4.14 surely no for what is his life It is but a vapour that appeareth for a little time then vanisheth away What is the certaintie that he hath either of it or in it it is a meere vncertaintie Syr. 18. 8. For as Syrach saith No man hath certaine knowledge of his death His life is like the weathercocke which turneth at euery blast the waue which mounteth at euery storme the reed which boweth at euery winde but his death is like a theefe which commeth at vnwares What is the peace hee hath all his daies little or none His life is but a warfare full of continuall labour and sorrow And now what should he feare inordinarily the vanishing of a vapour the turning of a weathercocke the breaking vp of a warfare the Saints in the Apocalips say Apoc. 22.20 Come Lorde Iesu come Shorten these latter daies for thine elects sake and saue vs. Their saying should teach others what to say For as Paul saith Heb. 13.1 We haue not heere an abiding city but we seeke one to come Merily therefore should he wish and willingly cry O father of heauen Matt. 6.10 Apo. 22 20 thy kingdome come Come Lord Iesus come And not inordinately or immoderately feare the comming of that which certainly will come and necessarily must come Seneca enterpre For as Seneca saith It is but folly to feare that which connot be eschewed It may be saith he thou wilt say thou shalt dye and what matter is that saith he vpon this condition thou camest into the world that thou mightest goe out But thou shalt dye It is the law of nations that thou must restore againe what thou hast receiued Againe thou shalt dye What then thy life is but a pilgrimage When thou hast walked much and long thou must returne once againe thou shalt dye neither the first nor the last All that are dead haue gone before thee all that are liuing shall follow thee But thou shalt dye young It is the best thing that cā be to dy before thou wishest to dy While life is pleasantest death is profitablest It is then best to dye when it delighteth most to liue But once more thou shalt dye young It may be fortune takes thee from some euill if none other yet surely she takes thee from old age And what a good that is Augustine sheweth when he saith August de Catechizandis rudi When men wish vnto themselues olde age what other thing wish they but a long infirmitie Thus as you see doth Seneca harten a man against death and the feare of death And thus may any wise sicke man harten himselfe For what is death that hee should immoderately feare it August super Ioh. Saith Augustine Death is the leauing of the body and the laying downe of a grieuous burden Saith Chrysostome Death is a necessary gift of nature now corrupted Chrysost super Matt. cap. 10. which is not to be eschewed but rather embraced Saith Secundus the Philosopher to Adrian the emperour asking him what death is Death is the rich mens feare the poore mens desire And saith Chrysostom againe Chrysost homil 5. ad popul Antioch Brandm pag. 567. Eccl. 9.12 Death is a sleepe somewhat longer than vsuall For the like things happen to those that dye that doe to those that sleepe He that sleepes knowes not when hee begines
to sleepe hee that dyes knowes not when he beginnes to dye Man knowes not his end He that sleepes rests from al the care and labour he had while he waked he that dyes resteth from all the care and trouble he had while he liued Apoc. 14.13 He that sleeps liues while he sleepes Mat. 22.32 he that dyes when he is dead For the soule is immortall And God is not the God of the dead but of the liuing Yet when Abraham and Isaac and Iacob were dead God said I am the God of Abraham and the God of Isaac Exod. 3 6. and the God of Iacob He that sleepes dreames either of things pleasant or things pestilent he that dyes and is dead Luk. 16.22.23 enioyes either things ioyfull as the ioyes of heauen or things painefull as the paines of hell he that sleepes Iob. 19.25 sleepes in hope to awake againe he that dies dies in hope to rise againe And therefore the Iewes call the churchyarde the house of the liuing because they which there sleepe shall thence in the last daies rise He that sleepes is stronger when he awakes than before he that dies is better when he rises againe than euer he was before He rises in incorruption he rises in power 1. Cor. 15.42 43. Mat. 19.26 1. Cor. 15.25 He that sleepes may easily be waked he that dies may easily be raised The trumpet shal blow and the dead shall be raised vp incorruptible To come to some point now what should a man feare either the laying downe of a burthen or the taking vp of a sleepe being weary hee desires both the one and the other Being wearied with the cares and crosses of this life what should he then feare death no man feares to be cast into a sleepe neither should a sicke man feare much to die As Seneca saith Senec. in prouer Epist It is a foolish thing to be delighted with sleepe and yet to abhor death when as a continuall sleepe is the imitation of death againe Through the feare of death we make vnto our selues an vnquiet life and so great is the madnes of men that some are driuen to die by the feare of death We are to be strengthened least we too well loue our life too much hate our death And we must be perswaded when reason thereto perswades to ende our life but not to feare death A valiant and couragious man ought not to flie but to goe out of his life For himselfe and of himselfe he saith otherwhere It repenteth me not to haue liued because I haue not so liued Senec. lib. de senectyte that I should thinke my selfe borne in vaine And so depart I out of this life as if I departed out of an Inne not as if I departed out of an house for nature hath giuen vs an Inne to stay in but not an house to dwell in Thus by his example he shewed what he himselfe did and by his reason what others after his example should doe if either his example be worth the following or his reason worthie the beleeuing for his reasons sake and after his example he that is sicke and therefore not farre from death should neither immoderatly feare death nor negligently expect death How fearefull soeuer death is if it be looked vpon in the glasse of the law yet is it not so being looked on in the glasse of the Gospell In the one it hath a sting and that a sharpe one in the other it wants a sting and therefore it is no wondrous fearefull one Saith Gregory What is this mortall life but away and consider my brethren what a thing is it in the way to be wearied and to nill that the way should be ended He that trauailes desires to be at his iourneies ende what should he that liues be afraide to die death is the ende of his ●ourney Euery thing reioyces in the ende What should the sicke man feare death death vnder the Gospell to him that beleeues ●s The passage to life not to destruction For be which beleeueth in Christ dieth not Ioh. 5.24 death hath no power ouer him but he passeth from death to life The death of those that beleeue hath another Epitheton than hath the death of those that beleeue not Pretious in the sight of the Lord saith Dauid is the death of his Saints Psal 116.15 Sap. 3.19 Bern. in quadam ep●●co but horrible saith Salomon is the end of the wicked generation Pretious is the death of the Saints pretious truely as the end of their labours as the finishing of their victorie as the gate of life and the entrance to perfect securitie And againe in the same place saith he The death of the righteous is good for the rest that followes it better for the newenes of that rest best of all for the securitie that is in that rest that both followes it and is new For as the same Bernard otherwhere saith Bern. ser 25. paru serm Three things there are which makes the death of the Saints pretious 1. Rest from labour 2. Ioy of the newenes of that rest 3. Securitie of the eternitie of the same rest But on the contrary part the death of the wicked is most vile It is euill truely in the loosing of the world for without griefe they cannot be seuered from that which they loue it is worse in the seuering of the flesh For their soules are puld from their bodies by wicked spirits it is worst of all in the double suffering of the wormes and the fire For the worme euer stingeth and the fire alwaies burneth neither euer cease to torment Much what to the like effect doth Chrysostome write of the death of the one and the other Although they die at home Chrysost hom 66. in Genes de morte peccator both wife and children being present familiars and acquaintance standing by if yet they want vertue their death is but euill So although he be in a strange countrey though he lies vpon the pauement and what say I though he be in a straunge countrey although he falles into the hands of theeues although he be deuoured of beasts yet if he be indued with vertue his death shall be pretious As Anselmus writeth Anselm It hurts not those which are good whether they be murthered or taken away by sodaine death For they neuer die sodeinly which euer thought they were to die Whether therefore they be slaine with the sword or torne in peeces of beastes or burned with fire or drowned by water or hanged on a tree or haue their legges broken or die by some other misfortune yet euer is the death of his Saints pretious in the sight of the Lord according as it is At what time soeuer the righteous dieth his righteousnes shall not be taken from him And so death hurteth not but profiteth much If therefore he that is sicke or any other doth beleeue he needes not ouermuch to
hath any communion or fellowshippe R. What then that seperation for a time notwithstanding they shall againe at length be reunited and ioyned togither and then shall they haue full communion one with another world without end Q. I know they shall so in the resurrection at the last day R. Why then obiect you as you do that knowledge is to strengthen you and any that knowes it against the feare of death with that Dauid comforteth himselfe saying Psal 16.9 Mine heart is glad and my tongue reioyceth my flesh also doth rest in hope for thou wilt not leaue my Soule in graue neither wilt thou suffer thine holie one to see corruption With that Paul comforteth himselfe and others himselfe when he said Philip. 1.22 In death and life Christ is to me aduantage Others when hee prooued vnto them the resurrection of the dead with that also should you comfort your selfe and others What vse both Dauid and Paul made of it should others also make For why the thing of it selfe is one vnto all And all that beleeue shall haue much alike benefits thereby but I minde not now to speake of them neither neede I for they pertaine to another life and I now glaunce at them but as they yeeld comfort in this life Q. That comfort you speake of should mooue you more fullie to display them for those things which follow after death may in this life yeelde comfort against Death R. You heard me euen nowe professe so much and I like it well you will so soone thereupon confesse so much Q. I must confesse the truth for therefore I learne R. I am glad thereof for therefore I teach you it Q. If I should not make that vse of it both you should teach it in vaine and I learne it in vaine but that that may not betide I will marke both what you doe teach and what I may learne R. In so doing you shall do well Q. I perswade my selfe so and therefore I will doe as I say so neere as I may but now seeing you haue no mind to speake of some things after this life I would you would speake of something in this life R. So haue I alreadie Q. I deny not that in demaunding this but I now speake of a more speciall thing then those which are past R. It is verie like so but what is that that I may soone satisfie you Q. The last of your 4. meditations which you long since said were verie sufficient to comfort the Soule of man against the immoderate feare of Death R. If that be it we shall do well ynough but what would you that I should say touching it Q. First whether that the Lord hath promised his presence to his seruants as you said or not Secondly whether so much will thereupon follow as you inferred or no R. It seemes you doubt at euerie turne but it is no matter to shew you that I speake no more then I will iustifie I will shewe you both the one and the other Q. I thank you for that not because I doubt of what you say but because I would know your ground for that you say R. For the first therefore thus saith the Lord by his Prophet Dauid Psal 91.15 I will be with him in trouble Isai 43.3 and by his Prophet Esaie When thou passest through the waters I will be with thee and through the flouds that they do not ouerflow thee When thou walkest through the verie fire thou shalt not bee burnt neither shall the flame kindle vpon thee and thus by his Sonne and our Sauiour Christ Iesus Ioh. 14.18 Mat. 28.20 I will not leaue you comfortlesse I will be with you vnto the end of the world And by these is it not manifest that the Lord hath promised his presence to his Seruants in time of neede and necessitie Q. Yes it is so I neither can nor will deny it but the Lord himselfe is inuisible is he not R. Yes for as the Scripture saith No man hath seene God at any time to Moses he himselfe said Thou canst not see my face Exo. 33.20 1. Tim. 1.17 Col. 1.15 Iud. 13.22 for there shal no man see me and liue of him Manach said vnto his wife We shall surelie dye because we haue seene God When they saw as the text saith but an Angell of God Q. By what meanes therefore doth he manifest his presence that so wee may perceiue a performance of his promise R. By meanes many In number three First by moderating and lessening the paines and torments of sickenes and death as the verie words of his promise by Esaie his Prophet doe plainelie import For he saith Isai 43.3 When thou passest through the waters I will bee with thee that the flouds doe not ouerflow thee and when thou walkest through the fire thou shalt not be burnt neither shall the flame kindle vpon thee So that if the flouds do not ouerflow a man when he is in the waters nor the flame kindle vpon him when he is in the fire hee may well thinke the Lord is there present restraining both the waters from swelling and the fire from burning For naturally either of them would do the kind if he did not restraine thē so in the paines of sicknes pangs of death if a man findes his sorrowes nothing so greeuous as the afflictions of his life he may well thinke the Lord present for the paines of the one and the pangs of the other are painefull ynough of themselues and ouermuch yrkesome to many Yet this that I now say many haue true indeed found of many such there is mention made in the Acts Monuments of the Church they which haue the booke may looke into it assuredly they shall finde what I heare say neither shall they loose their time whē they haue so done or repent them of their labour in so doing For my part I must now proceed from this meanes of the Lords manifesting his presence though he be inuisible and not to bee seene visibly to the next Secondly therefore the Lord doth manifest his presence in the paines of sickenes and pangs of death by giuing in inward and vnspeakable comfort of his spirit vnto them that are afflicted with the one and distressed with the other for to many then doth he giue a greater portion of his spirit thē at many other times bypast and foregone In one place of scripture the Apostle Paul speaking of himselfe and his afflictions saith thus As the suffering of Christ abounded in vs so our consolation aboundeth through Christ 2. Cor. 15. And in another place speaking of his owne and his fellowes behauiour in their tribulations hee saith thus Wee reioyce in tribulations knowing that tribulation bringeth forth patience c. Rom. 5.3 Now there must bee some thing that must worke this ioye and comfort For as the same Apostle saith Heb. 12.11 No chastising for the present time seemeth to
be ioyous but grieuous And what must that be but the spirit of God for a fruite of the spirit Gal. 5.22 as the same Apostle saith is ioy yea ioy in tribulation and affliction as seemeth by the fruits of the spirit thereto annexed for after ioy followeth peace long suffering gentlenes goodnes faith and meekenes all which are vertues more to be practised in tribulation than any other time When the Apostle therefore will expresse the cause of all this ioy and reioycing in tribulation he saith Rom. 5.5 Because the loue of God is shed abroade in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is giuen vnto vs. Thereby shewing that the holy Ghost which is God is cause of all this ioy And therefore not absent from him or them in whom this ioy is For as he saith 2. Cor. 3.17 Where the spirit of the Lord is there is libertie So may I say where the spirit of the Lord is there is ioy And where the spirit of the Lord is there the Lord himselfe is For the Lord is the spirit 2. Cor. 3.17 So that by this ioy vz. inward ioy in greefe and vnspeakable reioycing in tribulation a man may gather that the Lord doth then visit him as it were in his owne person and minister vnto him refreshing for his soule hence is it that the Church saith in the Canticles Cant. 2.5.6 She being sicke of loue his left hand is vnder mine head and his right hand doth embrace me And the Prophet Dauid in his Psalmes of him that iudgeth wisely of the poore Psal 41.1 Blessed is hee that iudgeth wisely of the poore the Lord shall deliuer him in the time of trouble the Lord will keepe him and preserue him aliue The Lord will strengthen him vpon the bed of sorrow thou hast turned all his bed in his sickenes What thence should follow shall hereafter follow for now the third meanes thereby the Lord doth shew himselfe present in sickenes and death is to follow And that is the ministerie of good Angels For then doth the Lord send them to his seruants as nources and keepers to holde and beare them in their armes For as the Apostle saith Heb. 1.14 Are they not all ministring spirits sent forth to minister for their sakes which shall be heires of saluation And as the Psalmist saith Psalm 34.7 The Angell of the Lord pitcheth round about them that feare him and deliuereth them And againe hee that is the Lord Shall giue his Angels charge ouer thee to keepe thee in all thy wayes Psal 91.11 They shall boare thee in their hands that thou hurte not thy foote against a stone So much sundry histories of scripture doe manifest if of it selfe it were not manifest When Hagar Abrahams bond-woman said touching her sonne Ismael I will not see the death of the child Gen. 21.16 The Angell of God called vnto her from heauen and said What ayleth thee Hagar Feare not for God hath heard the voice of the childe where he is Arise take vp the child for I will make of him a great people 1. King 19.4 When Elijah was vnder the Iuniper tree and desired that he might die saying It is enough oh Lord take my soule for I am no better than my fathers the Angell of the Lord came and touched him saying vp and eate for thou hast a great iourney When Christ himselfe was tempted Mat. 4.11 The Angels came and ministred vnto him When he was to be crucified he said vnto Peter labouring to shend him from his foes Thinkest thou that I cannot now pray vnto my father and he will giue me more than twelue legions of Angels Thus euer in trouble they are readie to helpe succour and relieue and that by the speciall decree and appointment of the almightie As Bernard saith Bern. ser 4. sup illud acc●sserunt ang c. They are present that they may protect They are present that they may profit At death also they are readie to receiue and carrie the souls of Gods seruants into heauen This appeares plaine by the historie of Lazarus for the scripture saith When he died Luk. 16.22 he was caried by the Angels into Abrahams bobosome Thus in their sickenes to their death in their death and after their departure till they being Angels in heauen doe attend vpon those which are Saints on earth And by this their attendance how doth not the Lord shew himselfe present for without his commaundement none of them all doth any thing They all watch what he speakes they all go whither he sends and they all do what he commaunds As the Psalmist saith Psal 104.4 He maketh the spirits his messengers and a flaming fire his ministers Againe if the Lord be present as I haue both said and shewed how will it not follow as I inferred that inordinately and immoderately death is not to be feared for what should he feare that hath the Lord with him and of his side Psal 118.6 The Lord is on my side saith Dauid and therefore I will not feare what man doth vnto me The Lord is with me therefore I will not feare what man can doe vnto me The Lord is with me among them that helpe me therefore shall I see my desire vpon mine enimies Yea saith he though I should walke through the valley of the shadow of death Psal 23 4. I will feare no euill for thou art with me thy rod and thy staffe they comforte mee And againe Though I walke in the middest of trouble yet wilt thou receiue me thou wilt stretch forth thine hand vpon the wrath of mine enimies and thy right hand shall saue mee What was Dauids comfort either in death or in any other distresse ought also to bee any others comfort in the like case and condition And therefore Paule was confident and vpon his confidence said Rom. 8.31 If God be on our side who can be against vs Who spared not his owne sonne but gaue him for vs all to death how shall he not with him giue vs all things also who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen it is God that iustifieth who shall condemne it is Christ which is dead yea or rather which is risen agayne who is also at the right hand of God and maketh request also for vs. Who shall separate vs from the loue of Christ shall tribulation or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednes or perill or sword As it is written Psal 44.22 For thy sake are wee killed all the day long wee are counted as sheepe appoynted to the slaughter Neuerthelesse in all these things we are more then conquerors through him that loued vs. Neither is it any thing to bee marueiled at that Paule vpon the consideration of the Lords presence was thus bolde and confident For wee finde by experience that he that is in a foule way in a darke night feares little either the
any physicke it will cause their worke to haue the better successe For oftentimes the impenitencie of the sicke is an hindrance to the physitions It causeth that the physicke by them giuen will not worke either as in reason it should or by hope they expect it would Secondly after they haue ministred any physicke they are to pray vnto almightie God that he in mercie would vouchsafe to giue thereto happie and prosperous successe for as the Prophet saith Except the Lorde doth builde the house Psal 127.1 they labour in vaine that build it except the Lord keepeth the citie the keeper watcheth in vaine So heere may I say except the Lorde doth blesse the Physicke the physitions doe giue it in vaine If they any thing doubte whether this duetie doth ly vpon themor no they may consult with Iesus the sonne of Syrach touching it and he will teach it then out of doubt These are his wordes They also shall pray vnto the Lord that he would prosper that which is giuen for ease and their physicke for the prolonging of life And I thinke they giue asmuch as I either aske or seeke Whether they doe or no I will not spend either more time or further labour in proouing of it For they will readily graunt it without gaine saying if they be as they should be For why it is the part of the Godly man at euery turne to pray and one thing that he is to pray for is that God would blesse him in his labours and giue successe to that he takes in hand Dan. 6.10 Psalm 109.164 Rom. 1.9.10.2 1. Thes 5.17 Daniel saith that hee prayed thrise a day Dauid saith that he prayed seuen times a day Paul saith that hee prayed without ceasing And Luke saith that Cornelius prayed continually And Paul willeth the Thessalonians and in them others to pray continually And he that prayed himselfe without ceasing and taught others to doe the like prayed also that by some meanes one time or other he might haue a prosperous iourney by the will of God Rom. 1.9 thereby teaching what others in the like cases are to doe But I will not stand vpon this It is apparant enough of it selfe that as they are to pray ere they giue that they may giue so they are to doe when they haue giuen that good may be done by that which is giuen that so they may acknowledge the blessing by giuing to be Gods aswell as they doe the power to giue To proceede Thirdly if either before or after their giuing they see any certaine and manifest signes of death in the sicke they are to certifie their patients thereof and to tell them plainely in what perill they are For this as it will bereaue the sicke of all confidence in earthly thinges as those thinges which are vaine and transitorie so will it make them to put all their affiance in the meere mercie of God as the safe and sure anchor of their soules For as once the Apostle said of himselfe and his like 2. Cor. 1.9 we receiued the sentence of death in our selues because we should not trust in our selues but in God which raiseth the dead So then they may say of thēselues we receiue the sentence of death in our selues because we should not trust in our selues but in God which raiseth vp the dead and therefore is able if he will to raise vs vp againe and set vs vp vpon our feete For easier it is to restore vs to health ere we dy than to raise vs to life when we are dead Q. There is no doubt of the effect of that which you say but of the office that in so saying you lay vpon physitions For physitians make it a question whether this that you say doth belong vnto them yea or nay R. It is more than they neede if they so do For when Hezekiah was sicke the Prophet spake plainly vnto him and said Isai 39. ● Set thine house in order for thou must die And of him they may learne it Q. How so when as Isaiah was no phisition but a Prophet R. His being a prophet hinders not but they may learne of him asmuch as I say For I thinke not but without offence I may speake it heere Isaiah plaid the part of a phisition aswell as of a Prophet For as at his first comming to Hezekiah being sicke he said Set thine house in order for thou must die So his departure againe from him or at least his last leauing of him he said Take a lump of dry figs and lay it vpon the bile Isai 38.21 and hee shall recouer If he plaid only the part of a prophet in the first I see not but hee plaid only the part of a phisition in this last But if any man will say he might play both the Prophet and a phisition in this last because he might be aswel a physition a Prophet as Samuel was a Prince and a Priest I see not but I may also say he plaid both in the first because he might aswel say as a phisition set thy house in order for thou must die as a Prophet For as it is not the Prophets part alone to moue men to make their willes but others may do it aswell as they so is it not the phisitions part alone to tell men they shall die but others may doe it aswell as they Yet as the Prophets are especially to moue men to make their willes because they best know how they should be made so the phisitions are especially to tell their patients they shall die because they best know the most certaine and infallible signes of death Others may see some but they can see moe And as they can see most so they can Iudge best And as they can Iudge best so they can tell soonest And as they can tell soonest so they may tell first Q. Tell let them then because you will to tell haue them But if they see no certaine signes of death what will you that they shall then doe R. As the Prophet before named did Apply phisicke according to the nature of their patient and the qualitie of his disease And that being done as the wise man counsels them to doe Pray vnto the Lord Syr. 38. 14. that he would prosper that which is giuen for ease and their phisicke for the prolonging of life Q. And after what sort shal the sicke take it R. After that sort that euery sicke man is to take it as the ordinarie meanes that the Lord hath ordeined for the recouery of health empaired and decaied Q. But how in more particularitie is that to be taken R. First with preparation to it Secondly with sanctification of it Thirdly with consideration of the vse and end thereof Q. And why with the one and the other of these R. With the first because he that is to take phisicke must not onely prepare his bodie as Phisitions doe prescribe but his soule also as Diuines
rule of others so both must take care for others If he be ecclesiasticall he must cast as much as he can for the continuance of the good estate of the Church ouer which he is placed It is little for a man to care onely for himselfe and his owne time and to regard nothing the time that is to ensue By the historie of the Gospell it is euident what care the chiefe shepheard and Bishop of our soules had of this matter for both before his death and at his death and after his death he was mindfull and zealous of this busines before his death he chose certaine to succeed him in the ministry of the word at his death as hee commended Iohn to Mary Ioh. 19.26 so he commended Mary to Iohn to her hee said woman behold thy sonne to him he said man Mat. 28.19 behold thy mother After his death hee gaue his Disciples commission to teach all nations baptising them in the name of the Father and the Sonne and the holy Ghost teaching them to obserue all things whatsoeuer he had commanded them In the second Epistle of Peter the Apostle it is easie to be seene how carefull hee was to persist in his masters steppes in regarding what hee regarded for there this was his saying 2. Pet. 1.15 I will endeuour alwaies that ye also may be able to haue remembrance of these things after my departure from both there may wel be collected what I haue wisht to bee considered this I am sure is the saying of Christ himselfe Ioh. 13.15 I haue giuen you an example that ye should doe as I haue done and that which was spoken by Paul himselfe may well be taken as spoken by Peter 1. Cor. 11.1 Be you the followers of men euen as I am of Christ but I mind not further to dilate this point as now I meane to proceed if he be a magistrare he must prouide before he dies as much as hee can for the godly and peaceable estate of the Towne Citie and common wealth whereof and in he is magistrate ruler and gouernour So did Moses so did Iehoshua so did Dauid and so should he for what fitted them being magistrates fittes him also being a magistrate Q. What if he bee a priuate man and yet hath some gouernement of others as wise children and seruants what must he then doe R. If he be an housholder and master of a familie he must endeuour himselfe what hee may to set his familie in order before he die for thus said the Prophet Isaiah to Hezekiah the king being sicke Isai 38.1 Set thine house in order that is make thy testament that so thou maiest preuent the braules and iarres that otherwise may arise among thine heires tell thy household-folkes what thou wilt haue done when thou art dead or as Ionathan hath it commend thine house to some good honest godlie and religious man for why thou must die and not liue and what was here spoken by the Prophet to Hezekiah the king we must thinke spoken by God to euerie man For as one Apostle saith 2. Pet. 1.20 no prophesie in scripture is of any priuate motion or interpretation For the Prophecie in olde time came not by the will of man but holie men of God spake as they were moued by the holy Ghost And another saith whatsoeuer things are written aforetime Rom. 15.4 they are written for our learning that we thorough patience and comfort of the scriptures might haue hope And againe 2. Tim. 3 1● the whole scripture being giuen by inspiration of God is profitable to teach to improue to correct and to instruct in righteousnes that the man of God may bee absolute being made perfect vnto all good workes and therefore also this part and peece thereof Q. I denie not what you say yet if you will giue me leaue to speake you shall heare what I will say R. Take leaue and say on Q. You haue all this while spoken of troublesome matters for how shall either the magistrate prouide peace for the cōmon wealth after his death or the minister the word for his people or the householder loue for his heires when it neither is in the magistrates hands to appoint a new nor in the ministers power to place another nor in the householders compasse to make heires R. How troublesome soeuer they bee as you say yet must they all be cared for as I say neither shall it be so difficulte as you imagine to doe what I say if each of them will doe as I say Q. What say you then each of them is to doe R. If the magistrate will haue peace among his people aswell after his death as in his life in his life he is to procure the maintenance of true religion and vertue and to establish the due execution of Iustice to seeke by all meanes the outward peace of his people and common wealth this if he doth there is no doubt but he shall prouide peace for his people for sometime after his death Some I am sure there are mentioned in scripture who by taking this course while they liued procured peace to their people when they were dead When Moses was an hundreth twentie yeres olde and was no more able to goe in and out before the people of Israel he called them before him and signified that the time of his departure was at hand and therefore tooke order for their welfare after his death First of all hee placed Iehoshua ouer them in his steed to be their guide to the land of promise Secondly he gaue speciall charge to all his people to be valiant and couragious against their enemies and to obey the commandements of God how they speed heere through the book of Ioshua better manifests then I can mention Yet in a generalitie thus much can I say that here through they sped wonderous well their enemies they vanquished the land of promise they obtained and much peace and plenty they therein enioyed Iosh 23. the like course to Moses tooke Ioshua when he was a dying the like effect thereto that like taken course tooke among the people for in the book of Ioshua it is said that all Israel serued the Lord all the daies of Ioshua and all the daies of the Elders that ouer-liued Ioshua 1. Kin. 2.1.31 what should I speake of king Dauid who when he was to goe the way of all earth lying sicke vpon his death bed placed his owne sonne Salomon vpon his throne and therby prouided happily for his common wealth subiects by these it may be gathered what might be said of others but for magistrats these presidents are inough To come to the minister now if hee will haue the word to sound in his Church no lesse after his death then it did in his life in his life he is diligently to preach it to his people and christianly to walke according to the same and at
Israelites a dying looked vpon the brasen Serpent which was erected by the appointment of God that so they might bee healed from the stinging of fiery Serpents so others a dying must with the eye of a true and liuelie faith looke vpon Christ exalted and crucified on the Crosse that so they may bee saued from their sinnes and the wrath of God due vnto them for the same For the brasen Serpent was a figure of Christ Ioh. 3.14 and Christ as Paul saith is to the godlie both in life and death aduantage Philip. 1.21 In either whosoeuer beleeueth in him shall not perish but haue eternall life Ioh. 3.15 For God so loued the world that he hath giuen his onely begotten Sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life for God sent not his Sonne into the world that he should condemne the world but that the world through him might be saued Q. Is it not inough that in times past the sicke man hath beleeued though in the agonie of death he doth not beleeue R. No marrie First by the Euangelist the Lord saith Be thou faithfull vnto the death Apoc. 2.10 I will giue thee the Crowne of life Secondly by his Sonne hee saith Mat. 10.22 He that endureth to the end hee shal be saued by neither he saith be faithfull a while and it is well but be faithfull to the death and endure to the end arguing by both that it is not inough to beginne well and then giue ouer but that hauing begun they must neuer bee wearie but continue to the end In vaine is good done Greg 1. moral if it be left before the life be ended because he runs in vaine which giues ouer before he comes at the mark There is no ioy of a ship that perisheth in the hauen neither yet of a man that beleeueth not in death Blessed are they saith the Spirit which dye in the Lord Apoc. 14.13 they therefore which would be blessed after their death must labour to die in the Lord at their death now they die in the Lord which are ingraffed in Christ by faith and rest and stay onely on him and reioice to be with him they therefore which wil die in the Lord must till their death continue in faith for the Lord faithes time is this liues time so that faith doth want of her time if she hath not all of this lifes time when this life is once past the time of faith is ouerpast faith exceedes not this life neither should she faile during this life As in the agonie of death the diuel is most busie to bring vnto death so thē should faith most striue to helpe vnto life for thus well it is written The iust man shall liue by his faith Abac. 2.4 1. the iust in this life shall liue after this life by his faith in God and his Christ had and held during the terme of this life for except he beleeues in this life during the time of this life he shall not liue with God after this life by this you may easily tell whether it bee inough yea or no to haue beleeued in God and his Christ before death though he doth not beleeue at all in death Q. I may so but yet I cannot tell how any shall shew that then he doth beleeue R. Neither neede you to seeke that it is inough for you to know how hee that doth beleeue shall shew that he doth beleeue Q. To come to that knowing asketh great cunning for euerie one that saith hee doth beleeue doth not shew indeede that hee doth beleeue R. But euery one that doth indeed beleeue may shew that he doth beleeue Q. I denie not that if he be in health but I aske how he that is sicke and in the agonie of death shall then shew that he doth beleeue R. And that I answere hee may diuerse waies doe first by praying vnto God secondlie by speaking well either of him or of his religion Q. Why but may a man pray when he is a dying R. I thinke not but oft times he may so I am sure Iaakob the Patriarke did so Christ our Sauiour did so also Steuen the Protomartir did Gen. 47.31 when death had seised vpon the body of Iaakob he raised vp himselfe and turning his face towards the beds head he leaned on the toppe of his staffe by reason of his feeblenes and then he praied vnto God and this his praier is counted a fruit of his faith Heb. 11.22 When Christ was in his agonie in the garden he praied Heb. 11.22 Mat. 26.39.27.48 Luk. 23.34.46 Mat. 26.37 and vpon the crosse againe he praied thrice vpon the one and thrice within the other In the garden once he said ô my Father if it bee possible let this cup passe from me neuerthelesse not as I wil but as thou wilt Another time he said O my Father if this cup cannot passe away from me but that I must drinke it thy will be done Againe he praied the third time saying the same words Vpon the crosse the first time he said Mat. 27.46 Eli Eli Lamasabachtani that is my God my God why hast thou forsaken me the second time he said Luk. 23.34 Father forgiue them for they know not what they doe the third time he said Father into thine hands I commend my Spirit When Steuen was a stoning hee called vpon the Lord and that twice once for himselfe and once for his enemies for himselfe he said Act. 7.69 Lord Iesus receiue my spirit for his enimies hee said Lord lay not this sinne to their charge And this his calling vpon the Lord there is attributed to his being full of the holy Ghost by all this I gather that the sicke man beleeuing when he is dying may also pray when he is dying It is well knowne what the good thiefe vpon the crosse did euen when death was seising vpon him and life leauing him and by that as by the former it may bee collected what by a sicke man dying may be practised for his crucifying death might be as hard a death as some sicke mans death if not harder the thiefe then praied Lord remember mee when thou comest into thy kingdome and so also the sicke man may nay ought asmuch as euer he ought for saith God call vpon mee in the time of tribulation and anguish and that 's a time of both and saith Iames Iam. 5.13 Is any man sicke let him pray And then I thinke a man is sicke if euer he be sicke no sicknes or affliction to the agonie of death Q. Alas Alas when sence failes tongue falters and death nippes how would you haue a man to pray R. With heart if not with tongue in affection if not in action for praier stands not in the enuntiation of words but in the affection of hearts when Moses spake neuer a word vnto God God said vnto Moses
Wherefore cryest thou vnto me Exod. 14.15 When death therefore assailes me all sences external failes so as the sicke bee vtterly vnable to pray with tongue yet if through the instigation of others he be willing thereto that his will to praier is as good as if he did pray for as Dauid saith Psal 10.17 145.19 God heares the desires of the poore and he will fulfill the desires of them that feare him he also will heare their cry and will saue them And this he speakes as if the sighes sobs and grones of a repentant and beleeuing heart were praiers before God as well as the supplicatory words of a loud and mournfull crying tongue but to stay further speech of this though I might make much more you see many speake and vnderstand well to their last gaspe and they I think may vse their tongues in praier aswel as their hearts Q. There are but a few that doe so and seldome when it is that any doe so R. Yes vndoubtedly they are many that doe so and such times fall out often and neither is greatly to bee marueiled at for why As good words either of God and godlines or to God and his goodnes are sighes of a true and timely faith so often doth God enable many to the last point of their liues both to speake and to vse many good words to his glory their owne comfort and others great good If you will looke either into the Scriptures or into other histories you shall find there many good men to haue spoken to the last and to haue vsed merueilous good words at the last In the nine and fourtieth of Genesis the last words of Ia●kob were prophecies of blessings and curses vpon his children the duration of gouernement in Israel and ardent praier for his owne good Amongst all and other things by him there said these are neither least nor last Gen. 49.10 The Scepter shall not depart from Iudah and the Law-giuer from betweene his feete till Shilo come And againe O Lord I haue waited for thy saluation In the two and three and thirteth of Deuteronomie Deu 32.35 the last words of Moses were his most excellēt song conteining the benefites of God toward his people and their ingratitude towards him and Moses his blessing wherewith he blessed the children of Israel before his death the words are better for you there to reade then forme heere to repeat referring you thither therefore there to reade them heere for this time I willingly omit them In the second of Samuel and the three and twentieth Chapter the last words of Dauid were The spirit of the Lord spake by mee 2. Sam. 23.1 and his word was in my tongue the God of Israel spake vnto mee the strength of Israel said Beare rule ouer me c. In the foure and twentieth of the second booke of Chronicles the last wordes of Zacharias the sonne of Iehoiada 2. Chro. 24.22 when he was stoned were these The Lord looke vpon it and require it the last words of our Sauiour Christ when he was dying vpon the crosse as they were many admirable so they were full of spirituall grace and comfortable Mat. 27.46 First speaking to his Father he said 1. Eli Eli Luk. 23.34 Luk. 23.43 lamasabachtani My God my God why hast thou forsaken me 2. Father forgiue them they know not what they doe 2. to the theefe he said Ioh. 19.26.27 c. Verilie I say vnto thee to day shalt thou be with mee in Paradise 3. to his mother he said Woman behold thy Sonne and to Iohn Behold thy mother 4. Earnestly desiring our saluation he said I thirst 5. Hauing made perfect satisfaction vnto God for mans offence he said Luk. 23.48 It is finished Lastly when body and soule were parting hee said againe vnto God Father into thine hāds I commend my spirit Act. 7.56.59.60 the last words of Steuen were these 1. Behold I see the heauens open and the Sonne of man standing at the right hand of God 2. Lord Iesu receiue my spirit 3. Lord lay not this sinne to their charge In other writers you may see the last words of others and those very good all spoken at the last cast of life Euseb lib. 4 cap. 15. At the last and as the last thus spake Polycarpus Bishop of Smyrna Thou art a true God without lying therefore in all things I praise thee and blesse thee and glorifie thee by the eternall God and high Priest Iesus Christ thine only sonne by whom and with whome to thee and the holy spirit be all glory now and for euer And thus Ignatius Bishop of Antioch Id. lib. 3. c. 30. I care not what kinde of death I die I am the bread of the Lord must be grounde with the teeth of Lions that I may be cleane bread for Christ who is the bread of life for me And thus Ambrose Bishop of Millaine Paulinus in vita eius I haue not so lead my life among you as if I were ashamed to liue Neither doe I feare death because we haue a good Lord. Possidonius in vita Augustini And thus Augustine Bishop of Hippo. 1. He is no great man that thinkes it no great matter that trees and stones fall and mortall men die 2. Iust art thou ô Lord and righteous is thy iudgement Foxe preface to Luthers Comment vpon the Psalmes of degrees And thus Luther comparable to the chiefest as Master Foxe once said My heauenly father God and father of our Lord Iesus Christ and God of all comfort I giue thee thanks that thou hast reuealed vnto me thy sonne Iesus Christ whome I haue beleeued whome I haue professed whome I haue loued whome I haue praised whome the Bishop of Rome and the whole company of the wicked persecuteth and reuileth I pray thee my Lord Iesus Christ receiue my poore soule my heauenly Father though I be taken from this life and this bodie of mine is to be laide downe yet I know certainely that I shall remaine with thee for euer neither shall any be able to pull me out of thy hands And thus Bishop Hooper O Lord Iesus sonne of Dauid haue mercie on me and receiue my soule And thus Annas Burgius Forsake mee not O Lord least I forsake thee And thus Melancthon if it be the will of God I am willing to die and I beseech him that he will graunt me a ioyfull departure and to the like effect many others But to speake of them al were too much the examples of those good men that at the last end of their liues haue expressed their notable faith in God and his Christ are infinite and therefore too many as well for me to recite as for you to remember As these which I haue mentioned may suffice to shew what many haue done so may they well serue to signifie what all should do for good words by the good are
not euer fruitles they that know this well frame themselues to die willingly for to die willinglie is a fruit of knowing they shall die once Q. But they haue more then then this knowledge to make them willing for that 's not the onelie tree whereon this fruit doth grow R. Neither did I yet say so there are many things which may moue men in sicknes to be desirous of death ere it comes and maketh them willing to die when it comes Q. I would I might bee acquainted with some of them if you will not or cannot recite all yet I beseech you reckon vp some if not the most yet the best of them that so whensoeuer death doth come I may the better know how to bidde her welcome R. To pleasure you therewith I passe not for any paine thereabout First it is Gods will pleasure and ordinance that all shall die for God created vs that we should once die no man therfore is to repugne and striue against the good pleasure of God Rom. 9.19 For who euer resisted his will the sicke mans and euerie mans dailie praier is Thy will be done in earth Mar. 6.10 as it is in heauen Why therefore should he be vnwilling to haue that thing chance vnto him for which hee dailie praies That were but a drawing neere vnto God with his lippes and a dishonouring of him with his heart And what were that but an assuring of his soule that in time he shal be despised abhorred of God for thus the Lord himselfe saith 1. Sam. 2.30 Them that honour me I will honour and they that despise me shal be despised But to proceed it is naturall to die for who euer liued that hath not died who doth now or shall heereafter liue that shall not also taste of death why then should he that is sicke desire to degenerate and grow out of kind One man is willing to bee rich because an other is rich to haue wife and children because another hath so to goe trimly apparelled because another doth so c. Why should hee not also be willing to die because another doth so In this there is greater necessitie then in the others possibilitie for euerie man cannot be rich euery man cannot be braue and trim euerie man cannot haue wife and children c. but certaine it is that euery man must die his auncesters the most holy and perfit haue died why should he disdaine to follow their steppes Is hee better then Abraham Isaac and Iaakob and the rest of the Patriarkes that hee should not die Is hee wiser then Dauid and Salomon and other of the kings that hee should heere vpon earth for euer liue Is he holier then Aaron and Eleazer and other of the priests that he should escape Death is he cunninger than Nathan and Esaie and Ieremie and other of the Prophets that he should not yeeld to nature when as all these Kings Priests Prophets and Patriarches are dead why should hee grieue and grudge to die as by them hee is to learne that once hee must dye so by their example he is to gather that neuer either wisedome or holines or cunning can saue him from death If death had been only cast vpon him the burthen thereof might haue been thought somewhat the more vnrighteous and intolerable But for so much as all the forenamed haue alreadie tasted of death and all other heereafter shall there is no reason but he also shuld both willingly and patiently submit himselfe thereto for hee is heere no other than they were and all are A stranger and soiourner as all his fathers were an aliaunt and Pilgrime as all his brethren are Heere he hath no continuing citie but he is to seeke one which is to come Whiles he is heere at home in the body he is absent from the Lord. The daies of his Pilgrimage are both few and euil Nature hath giuen him but an Inne to rest in not a place to dwell in what should a straunger be vnwilling to depart hence and go home that is neither the part nor propertie of a stranger A stranger as he delights to heare frō his country when he is thence so he desires to go thither that he may for euer abide there There is his father there is his mother there are his brethren there are his kinsefolkes and acquaintance And with thē he is desirous to be As the Eagles are where the carcase is so his affection is where these are why then should he or any sicke who is no other than a stranger be vnwilling to die and lay downe his life his father his mother his brethren his kinred are all hence and in heauen Matth. 6.9 Gal. 4.26 Our Father saith he which art in heauen Ierusalem which is aboute is free and is the mother of vs all saith Paul Act. 3.21 Iesus Christ saith Peter the heauens shall conteine vntill the time that all things be restored And saith Salomon Sap. 3.1 the soules of the righteous are in the hands of God and no torment shall touch them And who would not be willing to be with them Luk. 15.18 Ruth 1.16 I will goe to my Father quoth the prodigall Intreate me not to leaue thee nor to depart from thee quoth Ruth whithersoeuer thou goest I will goe and where thou dwellest I will dwell Philip. 1.23 I desire to be dissolued to be with Christ quoth Paul And againe in another place to Barnabas he said Act. 15.36 let vs returne and visite our brethren in euery citie and see how they doe Much more may he say thus if he be wise stay heere he cannot he is mortall He may not he is miserable he shall not Vpon that condition he came in that once he should goe out It is appointed of God that all men shall once die It is appointed and therefore it cannot be altered Heb. 9.26 It is appointed of God and therefore it will not be chaunged He is God and is not chaunged his counsell shall stand and his will will be performed It is appointed of God that all men shall once die and therefore it will not be remedied but once he must die What is appointed all men must needs be appointed him As where all are expressed none are exempted so in all he must needs be comprehended I hope he will not expect to haue that graunted him which was denied Christ himselfe By how much the more he is inferiour to him in other things by so much the lesse is he like to be superiour to him in this As he was man he died because he is man he must neither grieue nor grudge to die The seruant is not greater than his Lord Ioh. 13.16 Ioh. 15.20 Matt. 10.24 Ioh. 13.13 the disciple is not aboue his maister Neither must he be aboue Christ or greater than Christ Christ is his master Christ is his Lord. As Christ therefore dyed willingly for him so should he
to kill him called vpon God and sayd Lord Iesus receiue my spirite Act. 7.59 By this example shoud other learne for this is written for others learning if Dauid did it when hee was but in some danger of death much more should others doe it when they are past all hope of life For more is to bee done vpon a certaintie then a ieopardie But Dauid being in some ieopardie did it for thus hee said Psal 31.5 O Lord into thine hands I commend my spirit Others therfore being out of hope of life as all those are that are mortally sicke should not be slacke remisse and negligent in doing it a third reason is because so the soule shall be well kept And it is reason that which a man hath some care of should be committed to his custodie which will keepe it well For things committed to ill keepers are soone lost now the Lord is the best keeper that is Out of his hands he is so powerfull as no man can plucke it Iohn 10.28 And in his hands he is so mercifull as nothing may hurt it Wisdome 3.1 And therefore reason that as it was of him in the beginning receiued so now againe in the ending it should to him be commended as nothing hath better right vnto it so nothing will haue greater care of it The right that is had in it and the care that will be had of it should worke this disposition of it Q. What if it be not then done R. It can neuer after be done After death there is no doing of any such thing Q. If it be not done at all will not God take his owne where he finds it R. Yes it is like that he will take it But it is vncertaine whether he will take it into his owne hands to preserue and keepe it or giue it in to the Diuels hands to plague and punish it It may be for his negligence in not doing it the Lord will so take it as nothing but vengeance shall light vpon it It is good euer to preuent the worst The Diuell lieth alway in wait to deuour but neuer is he so greedy as them For then he knowes that what he gets he for euer gets as then he for euer looses what then he looses Q. Thinke you there is no good man but doth it R. God forbid I should so say so might I soone condemne the righteous and iustifie the wicked doer For God knoweth many a good man dieth sodeinly and hath no time to bethinke himselfe of any thing Q. That a man may both doe it and doe it well what must he of necessitie doe R. First he must resolue himselfe of the power that God hath to preserue his soule if he commends it vnto him Secondly of the will that he hath to take it vnto his custody being commended into him He that is not resolued aswell of the one as of the other of these he cannot surrender his soule into the hands of God as into the hands of a faithfull creatour Q. It is an easie matter to be resolued of the first vz. Of the power of God becaus God is omnipotent and nothing can resist his power Rom. 11.34 But how shall he be resolued of the second that is of the will of God for as the Apostle saith Who hath knowne the minde of the Lord or who was his counseller Wisd 9.13 And as the Wise man saith What man is hee that can know the counsell of God or who can thinke what the will of God is R. Though no man of himselfe can think know or be resolued of the will of God Iere. 10.14 because by his owne knowledge euery man is a beast before God yet by the spirit of God the righteous may yea shall know it because as Dauid saith The secrete of the Lord is reueiled to them that feare him Psal 25.14 Esa 54.13 I●re 31.3 Ioh. 6.45 and as it is witten in the Prophets they shall bee all taught of God Q. But how shall the righteous know by the spirit of God that God will receiue his soule and keepe it R. By the witnesse it giueth to his owne spirit for the spirit of God certifieth his spirit that hee is redeemed iustified and sanctified by Christ and that in the end he shal be glorified And he that is thus certified and assured may boldlie commende his soule into the hands of God as into the hands of the faithful creatour and that in assurance that it shall be for euer preserued and kept For why Rom. 11.29 Rom. 8.30 the gifts and calling of God are without repentance and looke whom hee calleth him hee iustifieth and whom he iustifieth him he glorifieth This assurance made Dauid commend his soule into the hands of God for a reason why hee did commend it vnto him was the redemption which he had wrought for him For as in these words Psal 31.5 Into thy hands I commend my spirit is his action so in these for thou hast redeemed me O Lord God of truth is his reason and this assurance also may make any good man to commend his soule into the handes of his almightie creatour and most mercifull redeemer neither needes he doubt but that it shall be accepted being so commended for what soule soeuer God hath loued to redeeme that soule he will still loue to preserue Q. I thinke well that but how shall he know that the testimonie that is giuen to his spirite is the testimonie of Gods spirit R. By other fruites of the same spirit for the spirit of God is no where without fruit saith the Apostle Where the spirit of the Lord is there is libertie and saith Christ 2. Cor. 3.17 when he is come i. the spirit Ioh. 16.8 he wil then reproue the world of sinne and of righteousnes and of iudgement c. Ioh. 16.8.9.10.11.13 Q. But what may those fruits of the spirit be by which hee shall knowe the testimonie that is giuen to his spirit to bee the testimonie of Gods spirite R. His liuing and dying in faith and obedience for these are fruits of the spirit of God Gal. 5.22 and he that liues and dies in these is not without the spirit of God for where his fruits are there he himselfe also is Q. Why ioine you these two togither his liuing and dying in faith and obedience R. Because it is hard to haue him die in them that hath liued without them Petrarc Optate bene mori quod ipsu●● nisi bene vixeritis frustra est I know but one example in al the Bible of a man that died in faith which liued without faith and that is the example of the theefe vpon the crosse who is one that no mā might despaire and one alone and no moe least any man should presume Q. What is the reason that he which liueth not in faith and obedience should hardlie die either in the one or in the other and verie
Satan departed from the presence of the Lord and smote Iob with sore boiles from the sole of his foot vnto his crowne Iob. 2.7 Is all my bodie pained yet is not my case like Dauids when being distressed in soule Psa 55.4 he cryed Mine heart trembleth within me and the terrours of death are fallen vpon me Am I distressed in soule yet is my case vnlike theirs which are in hell 2.49.14 Luk. 16.24 Death gnaweth vpon them and they cannot get so much as one droppe of water to coole their tongue What therefore though one of my members suffer yet is not that to trouble me for God could make all my members suffer as that one and with that one What though my heart paines me yet is not that to disturbe me For God could enlarge my heart and therewithal increase my paine What though my soule bee disquieted within me yet is not that to dismay me God could giue me ouer to desperation the height of all sinne What though I be afflicted both in body and foule yet is not that to astonish me For God could cast both body and soule into hellfire and what should then become of me but see how mercifully the Lord dealeth with me Where he could doe much he doth but little where he could torment me a thousand thousand waies he troubles me but one where he could afflict me in euery part and so leaue me sound in no part he spares me in all the rest due and punisheth me but in one Psal 42.5 c. O my soule then be not thou cast downe nor much disquieted within me Wayte on God for I will yet giue him thankes for the helpe of his presence If I did suffer more than I doe yet would not that be halfe so much as I haue deserued to suffer no more than that which I doe suffer is For what suffer I the aking of my head the pinching of my heart the stopping of my lungs the stuffing of my breast the weaknes of my stomacke the griping of my bowels the torments of my bellie or what else the shaking of my ioynts the quaking of my bones the dimnes of mine eies the dulnes of mine eares the streightnes of my pipes the losse of my taste the want of my legges c. Though I suffer some of these many of these most of these yea all these Rom. 6.23 yet all is nothing to that which I haue deserued to suffer death For death is the wages of sinne and that that death which is the curse of God the fire of hell the confusion both of body and soule which farre exceedeth the other more than either tongue is able to expresse or heart sufficient to conceiue For why it is infinit it is vnspeakable Oh what a happy change is this to change eternall death into a temporall sicknes great oddes betweene a temporall sicknes and eternall death There is no comparison betweene thē too too much to blame were I if I would not take patiently what the Lord doth lay vpon me wisely and louingly As Dauid saith by this I know that thou louest me because mine enemie doth not triumph ouer me so may I by this I know that thou ô God dost loue me because thus and thus thou now dost punish me Heb. 12.6 For the Lord chasteneth whome he loueth Which of all the Saintes of God whome he neuerthelesse loued well hath not in his life time been subiected to the like paines sicknes and diseases that I now am Gen. 48.1 verily none Iacob the patriarch was greatly beloued of God yea so well as God himselfe said of him Iacob haue I loued yet was he visited with sicknes as I am Iob the patient was an vpright man one that feared God and eschewed euill yet so well as Iames the apostle propoundes him as a patterne of patience to the whole church Iob. 1.1 yet was he smitten with sore boiles from the sole of the foot to the crowne of the head Elizeus was an holy Prophet of God 2. Kin. 13.14 one vpon whome the spirit of Eliah was doubled yet that notwithstanding he both fell sicke and also died Lazarus was a good man 20.1 so his name signfies for it is asmuch as the helpe of God and one whome Christ loued well behold how he loued him Ioh. 11.1 Yet all this neuerthelesse he sickened and died What should I then once looke to bee free by this my comfort is greater then my crosse my consolation better than my affliction Vpon this I may better say my portion is among the Saints of God then looke how I am hated and abhorred of God For after this sort were they tormented and afflicted and yet all their torments affliction notwithstanding highly were they esteemed and singularly well beloued of God And so may I for all my sickenes paine and griefe August Iohn That which the Lord permitts me to suffer is a whip of him that correcteth not a punishment of him that condemneth by it I am trayned vp to an eternall inheritance shall I then disdaine to be whipped Nothing is that which I suffer to that which I expect It is but sorrow which I suffer it is ioy which I expect the sorrow which I suffer is but temporall the ioy which I expect is eternall Of all temporall paines the Apostle saith Rom. 1.10 The afflictions of this present time are not worthie of the glory which shall be shewed But of eternall ioyes the same Apostle saith The things which eye hath not seene nor eare hath heard neither come into mans hearte are which God hath prepared for them that loue him 1. Cor. 2.9 Why therefore should I not possesse my soule in patience what will not a man do or abide for a kingdome yea for a kingdome earthly and transitorie for that a man will goe ride runne sue serue and spend What therefore should not I suffer for a kingdome that this heauenly eternall and euerlasting alas what not if well I weigh and consider what weigh and consider well I should Aswell may I now say as once one said Heere burne heere cut that for euer thou maiest spare One that was alwaies as deare to thee as I now am or may be suffered once as many and as great things as I now suffer and moe and greater too ere euer he entred into glory August in lib. de 8. virtu charita as Augustine saith The sonne of God is lead to the crosse he is vnpalmed which is the true palme of victory hee is crowned with thornes which came to breake the thornes of sinners he is bound which looseneth those that are bound he is hanged vpon a tree which lifteth vp those that were throwne down the fountaine of life had his thirst quenched with viniger discipline is beaten saluation is wounded life is killed death for a time slew life Bern. in quodam sermon that death for euer might
For hee being asked whether he would die willingly aunswered I die willingly for willingly I go out of my body as out of a rotten house Furthermore both in his sicknes after his health in his health before his sickenes I would wish him to crucify his old mā acquainte himselfe with forsaking the world and the things both of and in the world in few words I would wish him to learne to die while he is like to liue For as a drie tree is sooner burnt then a greene so is he more willingly dissolued that is in spirit mortified then hee which yet with the loue of the world is intangled Chrysost Tom. 5. pag. 502. He which contemneth riches saith Chrisostome and pleasures and vaine glorie for whose sake he doth desire to liue cannot but suffer patientlie his going out of this life For as Seneca saith Hee hath contemned to die Seneca in Traged 3. Chrysost ad populum Antio which doth not couet I told you a day agoe saith Chrisostome to the people of Antioche that we feare death not because it is terrible but because neither the loue of the heauenly kingdome doth enflame vs nor the feare of hell trouble vs nor a good conscience remaine in vs will you that of this importune anxietie I relate vnto you the fourth cause not lesse true than the former wee liue not in that asperitie which is fitting Christians but this softe loose and easie life wee loue so that it is verie likely wee are delighted with these present things But if wee would passe ouer this life in fastings and watchings and a thinne diet cutting off our desires restraining our absurde pleasures suffering the troubles of vertue according to Paule chasticing our body 1. Cor. ● 27 Rom. 13.14 and bringing it into subiection taking no thought for the flesh to fulfill the lust of it quickly would wee desire the things which are to come making hast to be deliuered from our present labours c. For this mortifying of the deedes of the flesh by the operation of the spirit is a readie way to make vs willing to die and vnwilling to liue But the cockring of the flesh and the giuing our selues to delight is that which makes vs altogether vnwilling to leaue this present world and wholly desirous euer to remaine and abide in the same For this we finde by proofe that no man is more vnwilling to die than he that desires to followe the delights of the world and to fulfill the lustes of the flesh If therefore any man would be willing to die he sees what is one point of his dutie by one part of the aduise I giue him More he may see by farther aduise to bee giuen him But my meaning is not to burthen him with precepts all that I will further say is this that I would perswade him to recal into his minde some of those good lessons which all his life long either he himselfe hath read or else heard either read or preached by others For the time of sickenes is the time wherein a man is to make vse of al the good things he hath learned al his life long And he that hath not furnisht himselfe with some thing for that purpose hath not so wel prouided for himself as he ought Neither shall he be so able to stand in the euill day as otherwise he might For it is written is a good weapon to fight with against our aduersarie which then will fight hardly against vs. With it Christ himselfe repeld Satan in his conflict Matthew fourth and with it Paul willes vs to withstand him Ephesians the sixt Matth. 4.4 Ephes 6.17 Take saith he the sword of the spirit which is the word of God Happy is he which can euery way so furnish himself therewith as able he may stand in the euill day and that so as the wicked one may haue no aduantage against him But woe vnto him that being vnfurnisht therewith is not able to withstand any assaults of the wicked him hee will conquer subdue and leade captiue to the kingdome of darknes there to be tormented for euer him hee will trouble molest and afflict him hee will plague punish torment him he will so hardly intreate so cruelly handle so seuerely opresse as curse euer he shall the daie wherein he was borne the yeare in which hee liued and the verie moment of time in which he came thither But further to increase his miserie all his yelling and cursing shal be in vaine Q. God then enarme vs that wee may bee able to stand that standing wee may ouercome and ouercomming wee may bee crowned and being crowned wee may reioyce and reioicing prayse and honour and glorie Apoc. 5.13 and power bee vnto him that sitteth vpon the throne and vnto the Lambe for euermore R. Amen And whensoeuer God calles hee himselfe giue vs grace to answere him patientlie to goe to him quietly to leaue this world willingly that so dying wee may die aswell obediently as faithfully to his great glorie and our eternall felicitie Q. Amen also to this say I for this at his hands are we euer to aske that so once we may speede for of him it must bee or else it will neuer be Iames 1.17 But I will cease further to trouble you in this poynt I see by your petition you are at a conclusion But yet I will not wholly cease as I remember somtime since sayd that euen when the verie pangs of death were vpon him the religious and well minded sick man was to haue care of three things that he might die in the Lord and be blessed the first was that he might die in faith the second that he might die in obedience the third that he might render againe vnto God his soule which once he had of him and hitherto hath enioyed by him Of this third thing what I pray you might or may your reason bee R. As then it was so now it is diuerse one is because God was the first giuer of it and it is reason when a man is a dying if he hath not done it afore that he restore euery thing to the proper owner Now the proper owner of the soule is God for as hee was the first Creator thereof so was he the sole bestower Eccl. 12.7 Genesis 2.7 Another is because so Christ our sauiour did for when he was dying vpon the crosse for vs this amongst others was his saying Luk. 23. Father into thine hands I commend my spirit And it is reason that the seruant in this case should doe as his master did For euerie action of him the master is the instruction of other his seruants he also hath said First learne of me Mat. 11.27 Ioh. 13.15 secondly I haue giuen you an example that yee should doe as I haue done More ouer the first Martyr that euer was after Christs death did thus Blessed Stephen while his aduersaries the Iewes threw stones at him