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A67760 An infallible vvay to farewell in our bodies, names, estates, precious souls, posterities : together with, mens great losse of happinesse, for not paying, the small quitrent of thankfulness : whereunto is added remaines of the P.A., a subject also of great concernment for such as would enjoy the blessed promises of this life, and of that ot come / by R. Younge ... Younge, Richard. 1660 (1660) Wing Y165; ESTC R3044 119,764 146

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the truth and the life John 14. 6. The resurrection and the life John 11. 25. Or more particularly thus In the first place He gave us our selves and all the creatures to be our servants yea he created us after his own Image in righteousnesse and holinesse and in perfect knowledge of the truth with a power to stand and for ever to continue in a most blessed and happy condition and this deserves all possible thankfulnesse But this was nothing in comparison For when we were in a sad condition when we had forfeited all this and our selves when by sinne we had turned that Image of God into the Image of Satan and wilfully plunged our souls and bodies into eternal torments when we were become his enemies mortally hating him and to our utmost fighting against him and taking part with his only enemies Sin and Satan not having the least thought or desire of reconcilement but a perverse and obstinate will to resist all means tending thereunto He did redeem us not only without asking but even against our wils so making of us his cursed enemies servants of servants sons of sons heirs and coheirs with Christ Gal 4. 7. Here was a fathomlesse depth a wonder beyond all wonders 2. But that we may the better consider what an alms or boon God gave us when he gave us his Son Observe that when neither Heaven Earth nor Hell could have yielded any satisfactory thing besides Christ that could have satisfied Gods justice and merited Heaven for us then O then God in his infinite wisdom and goodnesse did not only find out a way to satisfie his Justice and the Law but gave us his Sonne his only begotten Son his only beloved Son out of his bosome And his Son gave himself to die even the most shamefull painfull and cursed death of the Crosse to redeem us that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life John 3. 16. The very thought of which death before he come to it together with the weight and burthen of our sinnes put him into such an Agony in the Garden that it made him to sweat even drops of blood A mercy bestowed and a way found out that may astonish all the sonnes of men on earth and Angels in Heaven Wherefore O wonder at this you that wonder at nothing That the Lord should come with such a price to redeem our worse than lost souls and to bring salvation to us even against our wils The Lord Jesus Christ being rich for our sakes became poor that we through his poverty might be made rich 2 Cor. 8. 9. Even the eternal God would die that we might not die eternally O the deepnesse of Gods love O the unmeasurable measure of his bounty O Son of God! who can sufficiently expresse thy love Or commend thy pity Or extol thy praise It was a wonder that thou madest us for thy self more that thou madest thy self man for us but most of all that thou shouldest unmake thy self that thou shouldest die to save us 3. And which is further considerable It cost God more to redeem the world than to make it In the Creation he gave thee thy self but in the Redemption he gave thee himself The Creation of all things cost him but six daies to finish it the Redemption of man cost him three and thirty years In the Creation of the world he did but only speak the word in the Redemption of man he both spake and wept and sweat and bled and died and did many wonderfull things to do it Yea the saving of one soul single is more and greater than the making of the whole world In every new creature are a number of Miracles a blinde man is restored to sight a deaf man to hearing a man possest with many Devils dis-possest yea a dead man raised from the dead and in every one a stone turned into flesh in all which God meers with nothing but opposition which in the Creation he met not with What shall I say God of his goodnesse hath bestowed so many and so great mercies upon us that it is not possible to expresse his bounty therein for if we look inward we find our Creators mercies if we look upward his mercy reacheth unto the Heavens if downwards the earth is full of his goodnesse and so is the broad Sea if we look about us what is it that he hath not given us Air to breathe in fire to warm us water to cool and cleanse us cloathes to cover us food to nourish us fruits to refresh us yea Delicates to please us Beasts to serve us Angels to attend us Heaven to receive us And which is above all Himself and his own Son to be injoyed of us So that whethersoever we turn our eyes we cannot look besides his bounty yea we can scarce think of any thing more to pray for but that he would continue those blessings which he hath bestowed on us already Yet we covet still as though we had nothing and live as if we knew nothing of all this his beneficence God might have said before we were formed Let them be Toads Monsters Infidels Beggars Cripples Bond-slaves Idiots or Mad men so long as they live and after that Castawayes for ever and ever But he hath made us to the best likenesse and nursed us in the best Religion and placed us in the best Land and appointed us to the best and only Inheritance even to remain in blisse with him for ever yea thousands would think themselves happy if they had but a piece of our happinesse For whereas some bleed we sleep in safety others beg we abound others starve we are full fed others grope in the dark our Sun still shines we have eyes ears tongue feet hands health liberty reson others are blind deaf dumb are sick mained imprisoned distracted and the like yea God hath removed so many evils from us and conferred so many good things upon us that they are beyond thought or imagination For all those millions of mercies that we have received from before and since we were born either for soul or body even to the least bit of bread we eat or shall to eternity of which we could not well want any one Christ hath purchased of his Father for us and yet God the Father also hath of his free grace and mercy given us in giving us his Son for which read Psal. 68. 19. 145 15 16. 75 6 7 Yea God is many times working our good when we least think upon him as he was creating Adam an help meet for him when he was fast asleep And as much do we owe unto God for the dangers from which he delivereth us as for the great wealth and dignities whereunto he hath alwaies raised us CHAP. XV. But the better to illustrate and set out this Love it will be good to branch it out into some more Particulars As First Call to mind all these external inferiour earthly and temporal
the L●●d to provide for their childrens bodies not for their soules to shew that they begat not their soules but their bodies to leave faire estates for the worser part nothing for the estate of the better part They desire to leave their children great rather then good and are more ambitious to have their sons Lords on earth than Kings in heaven But as he that provides not for their temporall estate is worse then an Infidell 1 Tim. 5. 8. So he that provides not for their eternall estate is little better then a Devill The use which I would have you make of the premisses is this Let none refuse to give because they have many children but give the rather out of love to and for their children sakes that God who as you see hath ingaged himselfe may be their Guardian and provide and take care for them Or if not for their soules yet for thine owne For why shouldest thou love thy children better then thine owne person and in providing for them neglect thy selfe Yea why shouldst thou preferre their wealth before thine own soule and their flourishing estate in the world which is but momentany and mutable before the fruition of those joyes which are infinite and everlasting Will it nor grieve and gall thy conscience another day to thinke that for getting or saving some trifles for thy posterity on earth thou hast lost Heaven or to remember that thy children ruffle it out in worldly wealth and superfluous abundance when thou shalt be stripped of all and want a drop of cold water to cool thy scorching soul in hell CHAP. XXXV Thus I might go on and inlarge my selfe upon this and add thereunto many other reasons First in regard of God Secondly in regard of Christ. Thirdly in regard of the poore Fourthly in regard of others I should also according to the order first proposed shew what are the ends to he propounded in our giving almes and lastly the severall impediments that hinder men from giving but I finde which when I fell upon it I did not soresee matter representing it selfe like those waters in Ezekiel Chap. 47. which at the first were but anckle deep and then knee deep and then up to the loynes which afterwards did so rise and flow that they were as a River which could not be passed over Or like that little cloud which Elias his servant saw 1 Kings 18. Much hath been said of this subject but much more might be said for I could carry you a great way further and yet leave more of it before then behind But I am loth to tire my Reader or cause any to make an end before they begin as not seldome doth Addition in this case bring forth substraction and more writ cause lesse to be read Wherefore I will onely give you the sum of some few particulars briefly and leave the rest That little which I intend to deliver is First the neer communion that is between the poor and us with our head Christ. For besides the civill communion that is between all men as being of one fl●sh the off-spring and generation of God Acts 17 28 29. The sonnes of the same Father Adam and Noah and so brethren one with another and proceeding as so many flowers from one root many Rivers from one fountain many arteries from one hea●t many veines from one liver and many ●ine●s from one braine And likewise of the same Country Common-wealth yea of the same City and Corporation yea perhaps neer Neighbours and parishi●ners every of which the Holy Ghost maketh a sufficient argument to move us to do these works of mercy in relieving the poor Isa. 58. 6 7. There are many spirituall respects and divine relations which make a more neer communion between Christians one with another for we are elected to the same eternall life and happinesse we are not onely Gods workmanship created in Adam according to his owne glorious image but re●created and restored unto the divine Image lost by Adam in Christ the second Adam we are redeemed in our soules and bodies with the same precious blood of Jesus Christ we are partakers of the same calling whereby we are chosen out of the world and gathered into the Church and communion of Saints that we may inherit eternall glory together and that out of darknesse into marvellous light and out of a desperate condition to be partakers of the same precious promises And by vertue of this Calling we serve one and the same God are of one Church and family and have one Religion one faith one baptisme are invited guests to the same Table and Supper of our Lord are all Heirs and Co-heires of the same heavenly kingdome and therein annexed also with Christ our elder brother Finally we are brethren of the same Father the onely Spouse of the same heavenly Bridegroom and members of the same mystical body whereof Jesus Christ is the head so that the neerest and strongest communion that can be imagined is between Christians one with another and all of them with their head Jesus Christ And should not all this move us to relieve them Yea more then all this If we do good to our fellow-members the benefit will redound unto our selves who are of the same body even as the hand giving nourishment to the mouth and the mouth preparing it for the stomacke do in nourishing it provide nourishment for themselves also Yea more then all this there is such a neare and strong union and communion with the poor together with us and with our head Christ our Saviour That he esteem●th th●● as done to himselfe which is done unto them even as the head acknowledgeth the benefit done unto it which the meanest member of the body receiveth Yea in truth that is much more acceptable which we do for his poor members then if we should do it to his owne person as being a signe of greater love For it is but an ordinary kindnesse to confer benefits upon our dearest friends but to extend our bounty to the poorest and meanest that belong unto them is a signe of much greater love For if for their sakes onely we do good unto these how much more would we be ready to do it unto themselves if they had occasion to crave our help And as in this regard he much esteemeth this Christian bounty so he will richly reward it also at the day of ●udgeme●t For then these mercifull men who have relieved the poor for Christs sake shall with ravishing joy heare that sentence Come ye blessed of my Father because the works of mercy which they have done to the poor Christ will acknowledge as done unto himselfe And this will more rejoyce thy soale hereafter then it doth now refresh the others body when Christ shall say unto thee Come thou blessed and inherit the Kingdome Nor will it then repent thee that thou hast parted with a small part of what God hath given thee to the poor CHAP. XXXVI And
onely with the true Treasure of spiritual graces and eternal glory but stooping to our infirmity even multiply and pay us with our own mony also even with the coyn of worldly blessings which is so currant among us And what greater gain can be imagined then to change Earth for Heaven transitory trifles for eternal treasures the bread of men for the bread of Angels rotten rags for glorious robes and a little drink yea a cup of cold water if the Well or River be our best Celler for the Water of Life which will infinitely delight and satisfie us without glutting or satiety Then is our Saviours words Luke 12. 33. worth harkening to of all rich men where he saith Give alms provide your selves bags which wax not old a treasure in the heavens that faileth not where no thief approacheth neither moth corrupteth And indeed it being so a man would think there needed no pressing or perswading any to this duty that have either grace or wit for who does not wish well to himself and his and yet no duty more neglected insomuch that I can never enough admire the little Charity of most rich men in these daies or pity their simplicity For the want of Charity is the strongest conviction of folly that can be Nor were it possible they should be so close-fisted if they were not as barren of Wit as they abound in wealth As observe but the depth of such an one he buies a Lease of seven years with an Inheritance that is everlasting There can be nothing more stange in my judgment then that covetous men who are all for themselves and for gain should so neglect the greatest gain and interest with infallible security that ever was heard of But Solomon gives the reason Prov. 17. 16. for what he speaks there of a Fool is more true of a Covetous Uncharitable Rich man He hath a price put into his hand but he wants an heart to make use thereof As O the brave opportunities such have ● to be happy and to make their seed happy here and much more hereafter if they were wise and did but truly love themselves and their precious souls Whereas now like ●ouls and mad men they will needs be more miserable then thousands that want those blessings wherein they abound yet so foolish and mad are most rich men as common experience does too wel teach us As wil they not lend a man on his Bond for six in the hundred sooner then accept God's hundred for one ensured on a Word so firm that one lot● of it shal not perish in the general fire of heave● and earth and how could this be were not these words of Christ Matth. 25. 41. to the end and the great day together with the signs of God's love manifested on the Cross a meer tale that is told and of no concernment to us But CHAP. LIII THirdly If with what measure we mete to the poor it shall be measured to us again as it fared with Dives touching Lazarus Luke 16. 20 25. If the sentence of Absolution or Condemnation at the day of judgment shal be pronounced either for or against us according as we have performed or omitted these works of mercy to those and onely those who have fed the hungry cloathed the naked visited the sick c. Come yee blessed c. And contrarily to those that have not done these duties in relieving Christs members according to their abilities and the others necessities Depart ye cursed into everlasting Fire c. In what a case are all miserly and unmerciful muckworms Yea what wil become of most rich men in these dayes who being worth thousands wil let the poor starve rather then relieve them with any considerable supply I profess it is wonderful to me that ever such fordid self-lovers can looke for or expect to find the least mercy from God at the great Day of Retribution Certainly they must needs think there wil be no such Day of Judgement as Christ speaks of or that he is a notorious Lyar and means not to be as good as his word For if they do in the least believe either of these yea if they did but come so near believing as to grant such a thing may be or it is possible they could not be such careless witless and wicked fools as to venture and hazard the salvation or damnation of their souls upon the doubtful event of such a weighty business O my Brethren bethink your selves before your Glasses be run out be perswaded be perswaded to love your money less and your selves and souls more And do not lose your souls to save your silver or if you do you wil one day dearly rue it I mean when you come in Hell As let me ask your Consciences but this question What would you give in those scorching flames to be delivered out of them into Abrahams bosom or the Kingdom of Heaven Yea what would you not give if you then had it Let Nabal be but ransomed out of Hell he wil no longer be a Churl Let Dives return from that fiery Lake to his former riches the sensible World shall admire his Charity Let Judas be ransomed out of Hell he wil no more betray his Master for money Let Esau find the same favour he will never again sell his Birth-right Nabal then would no longer oppress Achitophel then wil be no longer a false-Counsellor nor Ahab a bloody Tyrant Finally if all damned souls could but be admitted to come out of Hell and get a promise of Heaven upon condition of extraordinary obedience for a thousand years how precisely would they live And how would they bestir themselves that they might please God having once tasted of those torments which now many are in doubt of because no man ever saw Hell that returned back to make the relation yea if the offer were but made to these Churls on their death-beds when Conscience begins to accuse God appears to be angry and Satan is ready to seize upon their souls they would then give all they have had they ten thousand worlds for a short reprieve to the end they might have the like possibility As certainly when Pharoah saw the Sea ready to swallow him he was heartily sorry that ever he had wronged poor innocents and oppressed God's own portion How much more when he felt the flames of Hell-fire about his ears And the like of Ahab touching Naboth and all such covetous and cruel men What gained Laban and Nabal or Dives or that rich man in the Gospel by heaping up Riches and ingrossing all to themselves when shortly after by their covetousness and cruelty they both lost their Estates and themselves The foolish Virgins to save or spare a a shilling brought no Oyle but when their Lamps were out and the Bridegroom was come what would they have given Yea what would they not have given for a little Oyle and for entrance with the wise into the Wedding Such will
hath enjoined thee to bestow and by the utter neglect and contempt of his Commandment Or that God will regard and feed thy Children who hast neglected his and suffered them to pine and perish for want of Relief No the onely means to obtain God's blessing upon thy self and thy posterity is to obey his Commandments to trust him upon his word to give liberally unto the poor for the righteous man who is merciful and lendeth not onely himself but his seed also is blessed Psal. 37. 26. He doth not say That his children shal live in a rich and pompous Estate for so they may do and yet with the rich Glutton be everlastingly condemned yea they may be wasters and prodigals who wil wickedly and riotously spend what thou hast as wickedly gotten and reserved yea it may be this Worldly Wealth which thou leavesh them may be the means of furthering and encreasing their everlasting ruine and fearful condemnation As how commonly does the leaving great Estates to children which the rich Father minds not make them so much the greater sinners and to spend their dayes in pride pleasure idleness uncleanness t●●anny oppression and in all excess of Wickedness but that they shal have Gods blessing upon that which they enjoy which whether it be less or more wil make it sufficient and so sanctifie it to their use that it shal be unto them a pledge of God's love and a pawn or earnest penny of their eternal salvation Whereas if we will not so far forth trust God as we would one another if we will give nothing for God's and for Christ's sake who have given us our selves and all we have just it is he should suffer us to beg ourselves and have our children beggars permitting none to extend mercy towards them as he hath peremptorily threatned Psalm 109. 10 to 17. As without God's special Providence Blessing and gracious Guidance thine and their Estates is subject to such innumerable casualties that our of the highest flow of plenty they may easily be brought to as great an ebb of want and penury They may be oppressed by those who are more mighty or be defrauded by those that are more crafty the States displeasure or their own faultiness may turn them out of all or in this cunning Age wherein there are none more skilful to build strongly then others are to undermine and supplant there may some crack or flaw be found in their Title and so for want of words or letters to carry it thy Children may be deprived of the benefit of thy care and providence But if God take the care and charge over them he is such a faithful and powerful Guardian and Protector that none shall be able to wrest their portion and patrimony out of his hands CHAP. LXI BUt admit wee were assured that the goods which we spare from the relief of the poor and leave to our children should prosper with them and make them great on the earth yet were there no reason why for this we should neglect these works of mercy For why shouldst thou love thy children better then thine own person and in providing for them neglect thy self Yea why shouldst thou prefer their Wealth before thine own soul and their flourishing Estate in the World which is but momentary and mutable before the fruition of those joys which are infinite and everlasting What comfort wil it be unto thee if for getting some trifles for thy posterity on Earth thou hast lost Heaven or to remember that thy children ruffle it out in worldly wealth and superfluous abundance when thou shalt be stripped of all and want a drop of cold water to cool thy scorching heat But this is the case with which I will conclude First the gain of giving is inestimable God and Christ who are owners of the whole World hath promised we shall be repaid with the increase of an hundred fold here and ten thousand thousand fold in Heaven and that our children and posterity shall reap the fruits of our benevolence And Secondly The security is beyond all exceptions for we have God's Word and Hand-writing for it even express Testimonies Precepts and Promises out of both Testaments who is so true of his word that he never failed a tittle in the performance thereof and also all-sufficient to perform Nihil promittit non reddit fidelis ille factus est debitor esto tu avarus exactor as Austin on Psal. 32. Only herein lyes the defect in this Atheistical age most men believe not that there is a God or if so they wil not or dare not trust him so far as they would do a man whom they take to be able and honest This must of necessity be the main and only reason why men are no more liberal to the poor As for instance If a man of Worship or Credit should speak or write to one of us and wish us to disburse such or such a sum of money to the poore about us and he would take it as his own Debt and not onely pay it us again but take it as a great favour We would willingly do it without any reluctancy yea rather then fail we would borrow it though we had our selves many children yea there is no man when he sows his ground thinks that it is lost and cast away or so buryed in the Earth that he shal never see it more No he lookes that that should bring him in a great deal more and pay him with overplus for all his cost and this hope makes him prodigal of his Seed so that it shal have as much by his good wil as the ground can bear or bring forth And does not this plainly prove that we wil give credit to a man's Word or Bond yea that we wil trust the very ground itself rather then take God's or Christ's Bond or the Bible-Security You know the place wel enough where God hath given his Bill to you for the re-payment of what you give to the poor Prov. 19. 17. He that giveth to the poor lendeth to the Lord and that which he hath given he will repay him again Lo brethren the bil of Gods own hand as I may call it in which he hath both acknowledged the Debt and promised payment Be it known unto all men by this present promise That I the Lord God of Heaven Earth do won and acknowledge my self to be indebted to every merciful or liberal man all those sums of money which he hath bestowed or shal bestow in relieving the distressed to be paid back unto him whensoever he shal demand it for a Bond or Bill that names no day of payment binds to pay it at demand and to this payment wel and truly to be paid I bind my self firmly by this present promise sent sealed and delivered by Solomon my known Secretary or Scribe So that not to give readily upon this consideration is to proclaim the Lord an insufficient or a dishonest Pay-Master either