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A13071 The anatomie of mortalitie deuided into these eight heads: viz. 1 The certaitie of death. 2 The meditation on death. 3 The preparation for death. 4 The right behauiour in death. 5 The comfort at our owne death. 6 The comfort against the death of friends. 7 The cases wherein it is vnlawful, and wherin lawfull to desire death. 8 The glorious estate of the saints after this life. Written by George Strode vtter-barister of the middle Temple, for his owne priuate comfort: and now published at the request of his friends for the vse of others. Strode, George, utter-barister of the Middle Temple. 1618 (1618) STC 23364; ESTC S101243 244,731 328

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left being obedient It was neuer beautifull and cheerefull since it waxed old in youth through manifold attaxes and disorders and at this day lyes bedrid waiting for the comming of the Son of God And we full well know and are taught by the reading of the Scripture and also by experience that men are not so long liued nor of that goodly tall proportion or strong constitution of bodie as in former ages For the world as a voice out of a bush telleth Esdras 2. Esdr 14.14 hath lost his youth and the times beginne to waxe old and we are borne weaker and more feeble then all creatures and had we not some body to receiue vs when we come into the world woe were it with vs wee might make a short and wofull stay or tragedie to bee borne to weepe to die We haue no cause to perswade vs that this is the golden age but rather that according to the dreame of Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 2. The golden head the siluer breasts the brasen thighes are long since past and wee now liue in the time of the Iron legges the feete whereof are partly yron partly clay In the fortunate Islands beyond the Atlantick seas in the vttermost borders of Ethiopia where the people that liue there are called Macrobij for their long life a man perhaps may liue a long life but what countrey may bee found where a man may auoid the sickle of Death Hence it was that Hormisda did answere the Emperour Constantine demaunding him of the bewtie of Rome stately buildings goodly Statues and sumptuous Temples if he thought that in all the world were any such Citie Surely saith Hormisda there is indeede none comparable vnto it yet hath it one thing saith hee common to all other Cities for men die heere as they die in all other places And what doth it profite to liue long and wickedly and die at length It were better like Cadmus progeny to die the same houre wee were borne What Duellum is this betweene death and nature And if God should not suffer vs to die alas what a miserable life would this be when we come to be old and full of sorrowes Eccle. 11.1 aches sicknesses diseases and griefes When our sences are gone and we haue no pleasure in any thing And when as the Psalmist saith Psal 90.10 our life is but a labour and a sorrow In which age we had need if we haue our sences then to pray hartily to the Lord. Psal 71.9.18 Cast me not off in the time of old age forsake me not when my strength faileth me And also When I am old and gray headed O God forsake me not And alas if we should not then die we would wish to die and say it were better a thousand times to die then to liue For death saith Iesus the sonne of Syrach is better then a better life Eccle. 30.17 or continuall sicknesse And therefore we reade of a certaine Isl●nd where they liue so long that they are faine to bee carried out thence that they might die And God hath prouided wonderous well for mankind that whereas any man may take our life from vs yet there is none that can take Death from vs who can stoppe the winde that it blow not Who can hinder death that it come not If Iacob counted his time but short Gen. 47.9 hauing already liued an hundred and thirty yeeres what reckoning may we make of our time which is farre shorter Gen. 5.5.27 In the time before the Floud the age of man was great Adam liued nine hundred and thirtie yeeres Noah nine hundred and fiftie Gen. 9.29 Methusalem nine hundred sixtie nine yeeres but after the Floud in Terahs dayes who was father to Abraham Gen. 11.32 Gen. 25.7 Deut. 34.7 Iosh 24.29 the age of man was a great deale shortned from nine hundred brought downe to two hundred and twentie and vnder For Terah liued two hundred and fiue yeeres Abraham his sonne not so long one hundred seuentie fiue yeeres Iacob in his time brought it to a shorter account one hundred and thirty Moses 120. and Ioshua one hundred and ten yeeres And yet are wee not truely said to liue any one of these yeeres vnlesse it be religiously and holily in Christ as a certaine worthie souldier seruing in the warres a long time vnder Adrian the Emperour yet in the end returned to his house and liued Christs souldier where and in which manner after he had liued seuen yeares he departed this life and being readie to die commanded that it should be written on his tombe Heere lyeth Similis for so was his name who was a man many yeeres and liued but seuen accounting that he liued no longer then he liued a Christian How many spend their daies in war after the flesh vnder the Emperour of the Ayre not vnder Adrian who yet I cannot say for seuen yeeres I would I could truely say seuen daies or seuen houres before their death cast away these weapons of sinne that it might be written vpon their grauestone for their Epitaph that seuen dayes or seuen houres before their last houre they not only had a being but a life in the world and not onely were but also liued Therefore it is our duetie to liue well that at the day of death we may speede well and to liue well should be the delight and sweete perfume of euery Christian Thus liue well that thou mayest die well and after death eternally speed well Psal 90.12 Yea So teach vs to number our daies saith the Prophet that we may apply our hearts vnto wisdome Where we are to obserue that he speaketh heere not of weekes or moneths or yeeres but of daies noting thereby the shortnesse of our life in this word Daies And the same phrase is vsed of all the holy men of God vpon the like occasion Iacob being asked by Pharaoh how old he was Gen. 47.8.9 tould him That few and euill were the dayes of his pilgrimage speaking of the time to note the shortnesse of the time or of his life he names not yeeres but daies and speaking of the toyles and troubles of life he calles it a pilgrimage as to be euery day hastely iourneying towards our end Iob 9.25.26 Iob 14.14 Iob in like manner numbring his dayes My dayes saith he are more swift then a post and swifter then the ships And againe he saith All the daies of my appointed time will I waite till my change come The time of Iobs attending or waiting on God for his helpe is the whole terme or acte of his life which he calleth not yeeres but dayes so hee measureth his short time by the inch of dayes rather then by the span of moneths or long ell of yeeres teaching thereby that the dayes of man are few and his life short vpon earth Our Sauiour Christ teaching vs to pray Matth. 6.11 bids vs to pray thus Giue vs this day our
daily bread as if wee should reckon the continuance of our life no longer then a day or a few daies And againe the Lord by his prophet calling vpon sinners saith To day if yee will heare his voice Psal 95.7.8.9 harden not your hearts noting thereby that if we liue this day we are not sure to liue the next Where it is said in the Prophecie of Zacharias That we should serue the Lord without feare Luke 1.74.75 in holines and righteousnes before him all the daies of our life We are to note that the Holy Ghost defines life not by yeares or Moneths or weekes but by dayes shewing thereby that our life is nothing else but a composition of a few dayes which how soone they may bee swallowed vp by that long night of death we cannot tell Psal 19.6 but it will be sooner perhaps then we are aware The Sunne arising in the East and falling in the West and all in one day sheweth our rising and falling our comming and going foorth of this world all which may bee done in a day Ier. 6.4 Woe vnto vs saith the Prophet for the day goeth away And a day consisteth but of a morning and euening and a noone Euening and morning and at noone saith the Prophet will I pray and cry aloud and hee shall heare my voice Psal 55.17 Some are taken away in the morning of their life many feele not the heate of the day he that drawes out the line of his life till the euening liues but all the day What pleasure saith one is there in this life when night and day we cannot but thinke that we must passe away It is but a carkas now which yesterday liued yesterday a man to day none The saying of Chrysostome the Lord hath promised pardon to him that repenteth but to liue till to morrow he hath not promised When Pharaoh called for Moses and Aaron to intreat the Lord for him Exod. 8.8 that hee might take away the Frogges from him and his people and Moses asking him when he should intreate for him he said to morrow So many with Pharaoh deferre matters of greatest waight and moment still till to morrow not knowing what may happen to vs before to morrow euen death it selfe for ought we know Is to morrow in thine owne power Canst thou challenge any such promise at Gods hand Happie is that man which of the safetie of his soule can say with himselfe as that olde man Messodamus did who being inuited to dinner the next day answered why inuitest thou me for to morow who of al the yeares I haue liued haue not to morrow day but haue euery houre expected death which alwayes lyes in waite for me The Rich man in the Gospell gathered much possessed much enlarged his garners and promised to himselfe securitie Luk. 12.19.20 with a retired farewell to the world Soule saith hee thou hast much goods laid vp for many yeeres take thine ease eate drinke and be merrie But God said vnto him Thou foole this night shall thy soule be taken from thee then whose shall those things be which thou hast prouided Alas this was it seemeth the first night of his rest and must it be the last too Yes Esay 57.21 Esay answereth them There is no rest to the vngodly He that hath a long iourney to goe in a short time maketh hast and he who remembreth euery day runneth away with his life cannot sit still But where men promise to themselues long life and much time there they waxe wanton and become secure and put farre away the euill day as the Prophet speaketh Amos 6.3 Therefore the Lord doth commend our life vnto vs in all these Scriptures which we haue heard and in other places in a short abstract of dayes and not in a volume of yeeres So Christ saith to Ierusalem If thou hadst knowne Luke 19.42 euen thou at least in this thy day the things which belong to thy peace but now they are hid from thine eyes not granting a longer terme then the terme of one poore day vnto her Which was to teach her and vs in her to thinke euery day to be our last day and therefore to do that this day as in our tine which we are not sure to doe the next day as in the time that God hath taken to himselfe and from vs as being more properly his then our day Therefore boast not thy selfe saith the Wiseman of to morrow for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth Prou. 27.1 And there is one more this day of thy number spent and thou art now nearer to thy end by a day But if any man doth think that he may liue as yet many yeeres his yeares may lacke moneths his moneths may lacke weekes his weekes may lacke daies his daies may lacke houres nay his houres may lacke minutes an houre is but a short time But while one houre by continuall succession is added to another the whole course of our life is finished euery houre runneth away with some part of our life and euen then when our bodies grow and increase our liues fade and decrease yea euen this day wherein we liue wee diuide and part with death There is none saith Saint Augustine but is nearer death at the yeares end then at the beginning to morrow then to day to day then yesterday by and by then iust now and now then a little before Each part of time that we passe if time haue parts cuts off so much from our life and the remainder still decreaseth When childhood commeth on infancie dieth when adolescencie commeth childhood dieth when youth commeth adolescencie dieth when old age commeth youth dieth when death commeth all and euery age dyeth So that looke how many degrees of ages we desire to liue so many degrees of death we desire to die Aske an old man where is his infancie where his childhood where his adolescencie where his youth shall he not say true if he answere alas all these are dead and gone What speake I of ages Euery yeare moneth day houre of our life that we haue liued is dead to vs and wee are dead with them What therefore is our whole life but a long death What is euery day therof but as Petrach saith a degree of death what is euery moment thereof but a motion vnto death Againe that the daies of man are but few and his life very short experience and that which we see in daily vse doth shew besides the word of God which for this speaking of mans short time vseth to take the shortest diuision in nature to expresse it As that it is the life of yesterday as in the Psalme Psal 90.4 For a thousand yeeres in thy sight are but as yesterday when it is past a life which is gone as soone as it comes a life of few houres as a watch in the night the life of a thought wherof there may be
a thousand in an houre a life of nothing this Prophet measureth it with a short span Behold saith he Psal 39.15 thou hast made my dayes as a hand-breadth The valiant Captaine Iosua being now resolued to die Ioshua 23.14 calleth death the path that all must treade Behold saith he this day I enter into the way of all the world So holy Dauid being readie to die calleth death the way of all the earth Experience taught the very Heathen thus much 1. King 2.2 One night tarrieth for all men and wee must all tread the path of death This present transitorie life is called a pilgrimage Gen. 47.9 a path a trauell and a way because it continually plieth to an end for as they which are carried in coaches Eccle. 40 1. or saile in shippes finish their voyage Psal 1.1 though they sit still and sleepe euen so euery one of vs albeit we be busied about other matters and perceiue not how the course of our life passeth away being sometime at rest sometime idle and sometime in sport and daliance yet our life alwaies wasteth and wee in posting speed hasten toward our end The way faring man trauelleth apace and leaueth many things behinde him in his way He seeth stately towers and buildings he beholdeth and admireth them a while and so passeth from them afterward he seeth goodly fields meadowes flourishing pastures and pleasant vineyards vpon these also he looketh a while he wondereth at the sight and so passeth by then hee meeteth with fruitfull orchards greene forrests sweete riuers with siluer streames and behaueth himselfe as before At the length he meeteth with deserts hard rough and vnpleasant wayes foule and ouergrowne with thornes and bryers heere also he is inforced for a time to stay he laboureth sweateth and is grieued but when he hath trauailed a while hee ouercommeth all these difficulties and remembreth no more the former griefes but alwaies he is trauelling till hee comes to his iourneyes end euen so it fareth with vs one while wee meete in our way with pleasant and delightfull things another while with sorrowes and griefes but they all in a moment passe away Furthermore in high waies and foot-pathes this commonly we see that where one hath set his foote there soone after another taketh his steppe a third defaceth the print of his predecessors foote and then another doth the like Neither is there any who for any long time holdeth or continueth his place And is not mans life such Aske saith Basil the fields and possessions how many names they haue now changed In former ages they were said to be such a mans then his afterwards anothers now they are said to bee this mans and in short time to come they shall be called I cannot tell whose possessions and why so Because mans life is a certaine way wherein one succeedeth and expelleth another Behold the seates of States and Potentates of Emperors and Kings how many in euery age haue aspired vnto these dignities and degrees and when they haue attained them after much trauell labour and waiting in short time they are compelled to giue way to their successors before they haue well warmed their seats Yesterday one raigned to day he is dead another possesseth his roome and throne to morrow this man shall die and another shall sit in his seat None as yet could therein sit fast they all play this part as on a stage they ascend they sit they salute they descend and sodainly are gone The Apostle Paul in respect of the celeritie and swiftnesse of life compareth it to a race What is our life 1. Cor. 9.24 saith Saint Augustine but a certaine running to death Our life while it increaseth decreaseth our life is dying our death is liuing The traueller the longer he goeth on his iourney the nigher he is to his iourneyes end the children of Israel the longer they wandred from Egypt the nigher they were to the promised land so euery mortall man the longer he liueth the nigher he is to his iourneyes end Death Time and Tide stay for no man No bridle so strong that can keepe in our galopping daies He that runneth in a race neuer stayeth til he come at the end therof so euery mortall wight will he nill he neuer stayeth till death the end of his race stayeth him Iob 9.25 Iob 7.6 Iob 9.26 The mirrour of patience Iob by name compareth the race of man to the swift daies of a poste saying My dayes are swifter then a poste yea swifter then a weauers shittle they are as the motion of the swiftest shippe in the sea and as the Eagle that flieth fast to her prey 2. Pet. 1.14 The Apostle Peter compareth our time to a Tent or Tabernacle pitched in the field soone vp Psal 90.9.10 soone downe Our yeares are spent saith the Psalmist as a tale that is told yea our life is quickely cut off and wee are soone gone 1. Chro. 29.15 Dauid a little before his death offering with his Princes for the building of the Temple freely confesseth that they were strangers vpon earth as all their forefathers were their daies like a shadow and that heere was no abiding for them Isa 40.6.7 The Prophet Esay rebuking and checking mans forgetfulnesse doth crie out and say All flesh is grasse and all the goodlinesse thereof as the flower of the field the grasse withereth the flower fadeth because the Spirit of the Lord bloweth vpon it surely the people is grasse the yong grasse as the olde and flourishing as a flower Grasse growes soone and soone decayes The poore who in respect of their base condition in this world are compared to the grasse the noble and rich in respect of their fresh and flourishing shew are resembled vnto the flower to both which sorts noble and ignoble rich and poore there is no difference in death vnlesse as Ambrose saith the body of the rich being pampered with ryot and varietie of meates shall yeeld the more loathsom● smell The grasse and the flower are made by many meanes to wither and wee by many more meanes are brought to our end The flower of the field may bee by such as passe by willingly plucked vp or negligently troden on an hungrie beast may deuoure it a worme may eat it or make it to wither as it did the goard of Ionas Ion. 4.7 The winde may blow it downe the lightning may burne it the Sunne may scortch it or at least-wise the nipping winter will marre it The like may be said of vs hunger may famish vs abundance of meat and drinke may quench our naturall heate with surfetting and drunkennesse the ayre can infect vs the water can poison vs the fire can burne vs the beasts can deuoure vs wars can dispatch vs plagues can consume vs diseases can kill vs and a thousand other things can destroy vs. For Alexander the Great was poisoned by his owne Taster Antiochus of
the Poet saith Sleepe is the kinsman of death Quid est somnus saith one nisi breuis mors What is sleepe but a short death Et quid est mors nisi longus somnus What is death but a long sleepe By beds the Scripture vnderstandeth the places where the Lord bestoweth the bodies of his seruants after their death whether fire or water or the paunches of wild beasts or the chambers of the earth sea or ayre and these are called beds because they shall rest quietly in them as in their beds till the morning bell or loud trumpet of the last great day warning all flesh to rise shall raise them And therefore it is such an vsuall thing in the Scriptures so soone as men dye to say they fall asleep because therby is meant that they are laid in their beds of peace and they are called beds of rest to put difference betweene these beds of our nights sleepe and those of our sleepe in death for heere be our beds neuer so soft or well made we often take no rest by reason of some distemper in our bodies or fancies in our head but in these sleeping places Psal 4.8 which are called beds of rest wee may lay vs downe saith the Psalmist and sleepe in peace because the Lord our life being our keeper will make vs dwell in safetie Indeed in it owne nature the graue is rather an house of perdition then a bed of rest but being altered to the Iewes in promise to vs in performance by Christs graue who was buried in the earth to change the nature of it it is made to vs a chamber of rest and bed of downe These titles which are thus giuen vnto death is a sweete comfort to the children of God against the terrors of death for the graues of the righteous which by nature are the houses of destruction and chambers of feare are by Christ and the graue of Christ made vnto them chambers of safetie and beds of rest Christ by his buriall hath consecrated and perfumed our graues making them which were prisons to hell gates to heauen At night we take our chambers and lye downe in our beds so when death comes which is the end of life as the night is of the day we goe to the chambers of the earth and there lye downe in our beds till the day of refreshing which is the day of rising come that commeth from the Lord. This is a confutation of that phansie that hath so long deluded the simple world which is that dead bodies walke after their death and appeare vnto men For how can that be when the bodies of Gods children rest in their beds so soone as the breath departeth and the bodies of the wicked are in their prisons till the day of assise Whereof if any make a question let him open their graues and see And seeing the soule returneth not after it hath left the body how can the body walke that wanteth a soule or the soule be seene if it should walke which hath no bodie Phil. 1.23 or if death be a loosing of our soules from our bodies how can there be any death when soule and body are not parted and when the man is not dead but liueth But this phansie came from Pythagoras and is but a Philosophers dreame told by him to the world which was that the soules of men departed did enter into the bodies of other men good soules into good and bad into bad mens bodies The world then beleeued him and since that time Satan who can turne himselfe into all formes did in the dark night of Popery to deceiue that ignorant age change himselfe into the similitude of some person that was lately or had beene long dead and was beleeued by such a transformation to be the partie man or woman that hee resembled So entred the error that spirits did walke and that dead bodies came out of their graues and haunted sundry houses in the night which were not the bodies of the dead but the Diuell in those bodies or shapes as it is to be seene in Samuels counterfeit shape raised by the Witch at Endor 1. Sam. 28.14.15 And this error as it deceiued the blinde world and somewhat troubled the seeing Mat. 14.26 so is it still in the mouth and faith of credulous superstition at this day But God hauing giuen eyes to vs to see his truth Act. 12.15 and the light of iudgement to discerne it let vs not walke in so great darknesse as they that know not the truth nor whither they goe But the especiall drift of the holy Ghost in the holy Scripture by entitling death by the names of bed of peace of rest of sleepe and such like being all names of singuler commoditie and benefit is for the singuler comfort of all Gods children signifying vnto them thereby that they shal feele no bitternesse in death but rather ioy and reioyce in their deliue ance as if they were going to their beds and their liues are not lost but their bodies sleepe as in a bed most sweetely vntill the resurrection How sweete is peace to them which haue bin long troubled with warres and tedious contentions how pleasant is the bed rest and sleepe to them that haue ouerwatched themselues The Laborer is glad when his taske is done the traueller reioyceth when he commeth to the end of his iourney the Mariner is happie when after a dangerous voyage he arriueth in his harbour All men shunne paine and desire ease abhorre danger and loue securitie It were madnesse then for a godly Christian to feare so aduantagious a death and to wish for continuance of such a wretched life Tertullian hath a most excellent and elegant saying That saith he is not to be feared which sets vs free from all that is to be feared and that is death which putteth an end to all feares and miseries But the true Christian hath yet a farre greater benefit by death for it doth not only put an end to euils of paine but also to the euils of faults not onely to the punishment for sinne but to sinne it selfe Now the euils of faults are farre worse then the euils of paine yea the least sinne is more to be hated abhorred and shunned then the greatest punishment for sinne How comfortable then and welcome should death be vnto vs that endeth not only our sorrowes but also our sinnes As long as we liue heere and beare about vs these earthly and sinfull tabernacles we daily multiplie our transgressions and rebellions against our gratious God and sustaine fierie conflicts and continuall combates in our very bosomes O bondage of all bondages to be in bondage vnto sinne The Gentile that apprehended vice only as a morall euil could say that men being in bondage to their lustes were more cruelly handled by them then any slaues were by most cruell tyrants and monsters how much more then should we that feele sinne as a spirituall euill and groane
so good a Master in purenesse and newnesse of life that thou mayest be made partaker thereof Psal 37.24 and pray with the Prophet that the Lord would guide thee with his counsell and afterwards receiue thee into his glory Iohn 16.24 Aske and yee shall receiue saith our Sauiour that your ioy may be full And also labour and endeauour to bring as many as thou canst to this glory Dan. 12.3 For they that be wise saith the Prophet Daniel shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnesse as the starres for euer and euer Lift vp your heads O yee heauenly gates and be yee lift vp yee euerlasting doores that the King of glory may bring vs in Psal 24 7. I might much further amplifie and inlarge this matter but the worke growing bigger then I thought it would I forbeare but as Painters when they haue many millions and armies of men to set downe in a small mappe vse onely to draw out some number of heads of men and set them together leauing the whole number of heads and all the other parts and lineaments to the meditation of the beholders euen so am I constrained through aboundance of matter to propound only some general heads and to leaue the amplification of them to your priuate meditations and I hope wise man will not refuse precious Iewels though they bee brought in a plaine and homely receptacle Iude 1.24,25 Now vnto him saith the holy Apostle Saint Iude that is able to keepe you from falling and to preserue you faultlesse before the presence of his glorie with exceeding ioy to the onely wise God our Sauiour bee Glory and Maiestie Dominion and Power now and for euer Amen Psal 72.18,19 Blessed bee the Lord God the God of Israel who only doth wondrous things And blessed be his glorious name for euer and let the whole earth be filled with his glorie Amen Amen To the which most blessed place of glory the Lord bring euery one of our soules at the day of our death and dissolution and that for Iesus Christ his sake to whom with God the Father and God the blessed Spirit three glorious Persons but one immortall God be ascribed all honor and glorie both in heauen and earth this day and euer Amen FINIS An admonition to the Reader ALthough the Printer hath beene very carefull yet hath he sometimes failed not onely in mis-pointing or not pointing omitting or adding sometimes a letter which the Readers iudgement and diligence must helpe but in omission or alteration of words obscuring the sence in some few places which the reader shall doe well to correct before he reade the Booke as they stand here-vnder Page 2. line 5. for causes reade cases p. 9. l. 20. r. consequence for consequently p. 15. l. 11 r. vnhappines for happines p. 22. l. 22. r. Conquerer of all Asia p. 26. l. 28. r. peasant for pleasant p. 70. r. still for skill p. 77. l. 30. r. proclus for produs p. 82. l. 26. r. faltereth for flattereth p. 101. l. 2. r. vnwholesome for wholesome p. 125. l. 5 r. waining for wayings p. 133. l. 10. of the vse of reason p. 146. l. 3. r qualmes for quauers p. ibid. l. 7. r. moderately for immoderately p. 186 l. 4. for hem r. them p. 216. l. 35. for remuneration r. renumeration p. 235. l. 4. put out with you p. ib. l. 36. r. in time of need for of need p. 238. l. 7. r see for so p. ibid. l. 14. r. shall I not p. 270. l. 3. r. winne for shunne p. 284. l. 9. r. bodily for body
that now is done Then were the entrances of this world made narrow full of sorrow and trauell they are but few and euill full of perils and very painfull But as a man cannot so well iudge of a summe when it lies in the heape as when it is tolde and numbred out so if this vnited and contracted presentation of miseries bee not so palpable enough in your conceits behold to your full satisfaction I come to particulars The whole denominates the parts And doubtlesse when wee come to this precise d●stribution and narrow scrutinie to the singling out of miseries and mortalitie you will blesse your selues that there are so few Bedlam-houses and yet so many out of their wits that cannot perceiue and discerne the same And therefore let vs rippe vp the whole condition and state of mankinde and then you shall perceiue the frailties and miseries thereof since the fall of our first Parents And this principally consisteth vpon the words of the holy man Iob in the beginning of his fourteenth Chapter Iob 14.1.2 where he saith Man that is borne of a woman is of short continuance and full of miseries Hee shooteth forth as a flower and is cut downe he vanisheth also as a shadow and continueth not To the end we might want nothing in the description of humane calamities it seemeth his purpose and drift was to begin with the very matter it selfe of the which man was made For he is called Homo ab humo because he was made and created of the earth neither was he made of the best of the earth but of the slime as the Scripture doth testifie being the most filthie and abiect part of the earth amongst all bodies the most vile element amongst all elements the earth is the basest amongst all parts of the earth none is more filthy and abiect then the slime Wherefore man was made of that matter then the which nothing is more vile and base And whereas he saith that hee was borne of woman he hath in few words comprehended many miseries of humane condition For first of all our verie fashioning and breeding in the wombe is so vnpure and vncleane that it is not for chast eares to heare but to be passed ouer in silence Furthermore after that man is once conceiued doth he not endure great calamities in his mothers wombe as it were in a filthie and vncleane prison where euery moment he is in perill of his life At the last he is borne naked weake ignorant destitute of all helpe and counsell not able to goe to speake nor to helpe himselfe and all that he can doe is to crie and that is to set forth his miseries For he is borne to labour a banished man from his countrie in possibilitie to liue a few daies and those full of miserie and perill deuoid of all quietnesse and rest Behold then the very beginning from whence man hath his first originall and breeding In the next place the short time comes to be considered and for that Iob saith further that man is of short continuance and herein you may behold some other calamities of mans bodie the building being scarce finished is readie to totter and sure ere long to fall Man is scarce entred into the world when as he was admonished to remember his departure out of the same againe Man saith holy Iob being borne of a woman is of short continuance and full of miseries Euery word hath a great emphasis He is full of miseries euen from the sole of the foote to the crowne of the head there is no soundnesse in it Esay 1.6 but wounds and bruises and putrifying sores Not only the body but the mind also so long as it is captiued in the prison of the body Thus no place is left emptie and free from miseries Mans miseries are many and great there is no member no sence no one facultie in man so long as he is heere vpon earth which suffereth not his hell nay all the elements all liuing creatures all the Diuels yea the Angels and God himselfe doe also bend and band themselues against man for sinne To begin with the sence of feeling with how many kinds of Feauers Impostumes Vlcers Sores is the bodie afflicted The volumes of Physicke are full of diseases and of the discouery of the probable remedies for the same and yet for all this there are daily new diseases and new yet but coniectured remedies found out for many of them and Physitions know not what to make of some of them In Plinies time Physitions had found out aboue three hundred diseases and yet all were not then knowne And euery age a token of Gods wrath for the new and monstrous sinnes of men bringeth forth new and strange malad●…es and diseases which our forefathers neuer knew For remedies of some of which the Physitions had need to goe to schoole againe to learne All which doe lye lurking and lingring for ou life And amongst the remedies themselues it were to be wished that there were one to be found that were no more vehement to vexe the sicke then the disease it selfe Long fasting and extreame hunger is a bitter medicine the incision of wounds and sores the cutting off of members the searing of the flesh and sinewes the pulling out of teeth are remedies for diseases and griefes but yet such as many had rather chuse to die then to vse them Furthermore immoderate heat exceeding cold one while too much drought another while too much moisture doe offend and hurt the very sense of feeling The sense of tasting is most of al troubled with hunger and thirst and many times medicines and meates that are bitter sharpe salt and vnsauourie doe distemper it The sence of smelling is compelled to endure many times all manner of stinckes and noysome smells ill vapours and fogges As touching the sence of hearing what ill tidings to make euen the eares to tingle 1. Sam. 3.11 how many cursed speeches blaspemous oathes and iniuries doth it heare which like sharpe swords do pierce the heart Touching the sence of seeing how many things doth it behold which it would not and not see which it desireth As for thoughts how many horrible and fearefull things doth it imagine and faine Psal 94.11 Gen. 6.5 The Lord knoweth the hearts of men that they are but vaine And so it is recorded that God saw that euery imagination of the thoughts of mans heart was only euill continually Psal 19.12 What shall we say of the vnderstanding to what an innumerable sort of errors it is subiect Who can vnderstand his errors So as it seemeth to bee like to a little child to whom a uery intricate and very hard knot is deliuered to be dissolued and he endeauoureth to doe what hee can vnto it and when the knot beginneth in one part to be opened hee sheweth it and reioyceth and seeth not that the knot in the other part is more fast shut So in the like
armes the branches and so of the rest So that our infancie is but a dreame our childhood but folly our youth madnes our manhood a combate our age a sicknesse our life misery and our death sorrow How weake is infancie how ignorant is childhood how light inconstant adolescencie how intractable and confident bee yong men how grieuous and irkesome is old age What is a yong boy but as a brute beast hauing the forme only and shape of a man What is a flourishing yonker but as an vntamed horse what is an old man but a receptacle of all maladies and diseases And this age is a degree neerer to death by common course then the former ages for these yeeres take all pleasures from our life wherin affliction followeth affliction as the clouds returne after the raine Eccles 12.2 2. Sam. 19,34,35 and in these stooping yeeres euery steppe is in death and they may say with Barzilla How long haue I to liue when their houses are turned into their prisons and they haue no taste in that they eate or drinke And they hauing thus the markes of age in their face and vpon their heads yet as they that would stil be yong they cōsider not that they draw neere to their graue haue tokēs vpon thē of a blasted life in which age they can neither put off nor put on their owne clothes Yong men saith Seneca haue death behind them old men haue death before them and all men haue death not farre from them Experience plainly teacheth and all ages approue that God● plague threatneth sicknesse calleth and old age warneth death sudden●… taketh and the earth finally deuoureth Death most commonly hath three harbengers that make way against he come viz. Casualtie Sicknesse and Old-age Casualtie telleth me death is at my backe Sicknesse telleth me shee is at my heeles and Old-age telleth me shee is before my face Sicknesse is reckoned by Hugo amongst the messengers of death of which there are three Casus Infirmitas Senectus Casus nunciat mortem latentem Infirmitas apparentem Senectus praesentem Casualties shew vs death lurking for vs Sicknesse appearing vnto vs Old-age saith death is present and ready to fetch vs. The aged man holdeth his life as an Eele by the taile which he would faine hold fast but cannot because it is so slipperie and slideth from him Many times death taketh for a gage one part or other of our body as an arme or eye or legge or hand finger or tooth or some of our sences or such like for an aduertisement that hee will very shortly fetch away the rest If any man be long a dying and paying Deaths debt Nature like a rigorous creditor that will be paid at the iust day sueth out an execution against her debtor taking from one his sight from another his hearing and both from some and he that tarieth longest in the world shee foundereth maineth and vtterly disableth in his limbes So that as man in respect of himselfe is vaine and miserable so also is hee much more in regard of the qualitie and condition of his life and calling For there is no kinde of life meaning wherby life is maintained but it is mingled with frailetie and many grieuances If thou liue abroad to wit in Offices there are strifes if at home there are cares in the field labours in the sea feare in iourneying if it be void of ieopardie yet it is painefull and tedious If thou art maried then canst thou not be without cares if not maried then is thy life wearisome Hast thou children then shalt thou haue sorrow Hast thou none then is thy life vnpleasant Thy youth is wilde and foolish thy age weake and fraile and infinit are the dangers that depend thereon For one bewaileth his losses another weepeth for lacke of health liberty and necessarie liuing The workman maymeth himselfe with his owne toole while he earnestly plyeth his businesse the idle person is pined with famine the gambler breaketh his limbes with gaming the adulterer consumeth himselfe with botches and leprosie the dicer suddenly stabbed with a dagger and the Student continually wrung with the gout besides infinite more miseries incident to mans life too long heere to rehearse For there is no calling state or degree exempt or free from vanitie miserie and death All are vaine all are vexed all are tormented with worldly tempests all doe suffer the dolefull blasts of miserie and calamitie To begin with the strongest Champion the mightiest Monarch the greatest Emperour or Prince that euer liued on the earth and to come downe to the poorest wretch and meanest miser in the world you shall find that all of all sorts poore and rich master and seruant maried and vnmaried subiect and Prince to conclude the bad and the good are tormented with temptations tossed with tempests disquieted with aduersities and therefore are most fraile most miserable yea and nothing but miserie The poore man he is grieued with famine and thirst suppressed with sorrow and heauinesse and oppressed with cold and nakednesse he is dispised and contemned buffeted and scorned Luke 16.19 he lieth grouelling at the rich mans feete and dying at their heeles as they goe in the streete or at the gates and yet vnregarded Prou. 14.20 he is shunned of his brethren loathed of his friends Iam. 2.3 and hated of his neighbour And as the Apostle saith he is set vnder the rich mans foot-stoole so that none account is ma●e of him Luke 16.3 To aske for Gods sake he is oftentimes ashamed and if he will not aske he is pi●…d and therefore meere necessitie constraineth him to begge He accuseth God of vnrighteousnesse and partialitie because hee diuided not the goods of the world equally He blameth his neighbour of vnmercifulnesse and cruelty Matth. 20.11 because he releeueth not his necessitie He fretteth and fumeth hee murmureth repineth and curseth Whereupon it was truely said Eccle. 40.28.30 My sonne lead not a beggers life for better it is to die then to begge Begging is sweete in the mouth of the shamelesse but in his belly there shall burne a fire Againe on the otherside Psal 49.6 the rich man himselfe is ouerthrowne in his abundance he is puffed vp with vain-glory he putteth his trust and confidence in his wealth and substance whereupon he braggeth and boasteth Ezech. 28.5 They trust in their wealth and boast themselues in the multitude of their riches he swelleth with pride and disdaine Their heart is lifted vp saith the Prophet because of their riches Prou. 22.7 The rich saith the Wiseman ruleth ouer the poore and the borrower is seruant to the lender Yet labour in getting feare in possessing and sorrow in losing doth euer trouble and disquiet his minde And so as saith the Apostle they that will be rich fall into temptations and snares 1. Tim. 6.9.10 and into many foolish and hurtfull lusts which drowne men in perdition and destruction
to all kinde of sinne and wickednesse but not applyed our selues at all to wisdome godlinesse vertue and true piety Democritus was wont to walke amongst the graues that he might become a right Philosopher for true philosophie saith Plato is the meditation on death and thou which art instructed in the true Christian Philosophie how canst thou behold the bones of the dead but thou must needs fall into this patheticall meditation with thy selfe Behold these legges that haue made so many iourneyes this head which is the receptacle of wisdome remembreth so many things must shortly be as this bare skull and dry bones are I will therefore betimes bid worldly vanities adieu betake my selfe to repentance and newnesse of life and spend the rest of my dayes in the seruice of my God and continuall meditation on my ende As the last day of our life leaueth vs so shall that last day the day of Christs comming finde vs. How good were it therefore before we run into desperate arrerages to cast vp our bils of accompt and the rather because we shall be warned out of our office we know not how soone Luke 16.2 Some Emperors amongst the heathen as bookes say were wont to be crowned ouer the graues and sepulchers of dead men to teach them by the certaine but vnknowne end of their short life to vse their great roomes as men that must one day be as they are whose graues they tread vpon The old Saints who liued in a continuall meditation of their short and vncertaine time were wont alwayes like wise merchants to think of their returne homeward and therfore tooke vp their treasure by bils of payment not where they were but where they would be and meant to make their long aboade that is meant to be for euer And the Philosophers who saw not beyond the clouds of humane reason whē they perceiued how much men did decline by course of yeares wast of time were wont to say that the life of a wise man was nothing else but a continuall meditation on death the remembrance whereof made the world which wee for want of this meditation so willingly embrace vile and contemptible vnto them and auayled greatly to guide them in all godlines So a Christian mans life is or should be nothing els but a continuall meditation on death All that is within vs and without vs are so many remembrances of Death all things crye out vnto vs that we must hence Ioh. 8.23 as Christ cryed I am not of this world The apparrell which we weare vpon our backs Ioh. 17.14 the meate disgested and egested and returning to putrefaction the graues shrouding so many corpes vnder our feete time the mother of all things and the changeable state of times euen winter and sommer cold and heat seede time and haruest all doe crie vnto vs that wee shall weare away and dy and corrupt As they who were liuing are now dead and lye in the dust first we wax dry then old then cold then sicke then dead So that euery thing doth serue to put vs in minde that our bodies which wee beare about vs are mortall for even on our table we haue moments of Death for we eate not the creatures till they be dead our garments are either the skinnes or excrements of dead beasts we often follow the dead corps to the graue and often walke ouer their bodies and in Churches Church-yards especially men that doe vse to walke there shall doe well to remember that they treade vpon the dead and others shortly must tread vpon them Moreouer in great Citties wee haue almost euery day Death rung in our eares the deadly bell telleth vs that dust wee are and to dust wee must goe againe To this perhaps the old Oracle hath reference of whom the Philosopher Zeno being desirous to chuse the most honest and best rule for the direction of this life demaunded as the manner then was his opinion therein and receiued this answer That if he would frame the course of his life aright he should vse the commerce society of the dead And the Church-yards which are the howses of Christians and as it were the chambers or beds to sleepe in they are the places to which wee may resort to be put in minde of our mortalitie and future mutability But we Christians haue in stead of commerce and societie with the dead Luk. 16.29 Moses and the Prophets to put vs in minde of our death and if we will not heare them Ezeck 3.7 neither will we be perswaded though one rise from the dead to tell vs of our death Adam knew all the beasts called them by their names but his owne name he forgot Adam of earth What bad memories haue wee that forget our owne names and our selues that we are the sonnes of men corruptible and mortall Proud man I say forgets this sentence that earth is his natiue wombe when he was borne and that being dead the earth is his tombe When we looke to the earth it should put vs in minde that earth we were earth we are and earth we shall be the earth prouides for our necessity and feeds vs with her fruits neither in life nor death doth she forsake vs while we liue she suffers vs to make long furrowes on her back and when we dy her bowels are digged vp and she receiueth vs into her bosome here now a pit is digged seuen or eight foote long and so as it may serue for Alexander the great whom liuing the world could not containe And how loftie soeuer men looke death onely shewes how little their bodies are which so small a peece of earth will containe whom before nothing would content and therein the dead carkasse is content to dwell whom at his comming the wormes doe welcome and the bones of other dead men are constrained to giue place And in this house of obliuion and silence the carcasse being woond in a sheete and bound hand and foote is shut vp though it neede not to haue so great labour bestowed vpon it for it would not run away out of that prison though the hands and feete were loose And now if we doe but consider a little of the tombes of noble men and Princes whose glory and maiestie wee haue seene when they liued here on earth and doe behold the skill and sillie formes and shapes which they now haue shall wee not cry out as men amased Is this that glory that highnesse and excellencie Whether now are the degrees of their waiting seruants gone Whe●e are their ornaments and iewels Where is their pompe their delicacy and nicenesse All these things are vanished away like the smoake and nothing is now left but dust horror and rottennesse such is mans body now become yea though it were the body of an Emperor King or Monarch where is now that maiestie that excellencie and authoritie which it had before time when men trembled to behold it
with his left hand hee imbraceth them Psal 41.3 yea the Lord saith the Psalmist will strengthen them vpon the bed of languishing and he will make all their beds in their sicknesse The third meanes of Gods presence is the ministerie of his good Angells whom he hath appointed as keepers and nurses for his seruants Psal 91.11 12. to hold them vp and to beare them in their armes as nurses doe their young infants and babes and to be as a strong guard vnto them against the diuell and his wicked Angels And all this is obserued especially in the time of sicknes at which time the holy Angells are not onely present with the children of God to succor thē but they are ready a●so to receiue their soules at their last gaspe and carry them into Abrahams bosome Luk. 16.22 And thus much of the first dutie of a sicke man and the meanes to arme him against the feare of Death Now followeth the second dutie concerning the body and that is that all sick persons must be carefull to preserue health and life till God doe wholy take it away Therefore we must referre our life and our death to the goodwill and pleasure of the Lord. And touching this temporall life it is a pretious iewell and as the common saying is life is very sweete being giuen to man to this end that he might haue some space of time wherein he might prepare himselfe for his happie end and vse all good meanes to attaine vnto eternall life In the preseruation of life two things must be considered the meanes and the right vse of the meanes The meanes is good and wholesome physick which must be esteemed as an ordinance and blessing of God We read that King Asa is blamed for seeking to the Physitians in the extremitie of his sicknes 2 Cor. 16.12 Whereupon a question may rise whether it be lawfull when necessitie of sicknes constraineth to fly to the remedies of Physick whereunto the answere is easie Asa is not here blamed for seeking the ordinary meanes of physick but because he sought not the Lord in his disease but onely to the Physitians Iam 5.14 Is any sicke amongst you saith Saint Iames let him call for the elders of the Chu ch and let them pray ouer him and that is in the very first place bfore all other helpe be sought Wh●re the diuine ends th●re the Physitian must begin and it is a very preposterous course that the Diuine should there begin where the Physitian makes an end for vntill helpe be had for the soule and sinne which is the roote of sicknesse be cured Physick for the body is nothing worth therefore it is a thing much to be misliked that in all places almost the Physitian is first sent for and comes in the beginning of the sicknes the Minister cōes when a man is halfe dead and is then sent for oftentimes when the sick partie lyes drawing on and gasping for breath as though Ministers of the Gospell in these dayes were able to worke miracles The art of Physick therefore nor the Physitian is here disallowed but ouer much confidence in Physick and in the Physitian without relying vpon God the soueraigne Physitian without whose blessing no Physick nor potion can be auaileable to the curing of any maladie or disease neither can the Physitian any wayes profit the sick and diseased patient except the Lord in mercy giueth a powerfull working and operation to the medicine against the disease to predominate ouer it for the curing of the same The doctrine then from hence is that the helps of physick are not to be despised not too much to be depended on but our chiefest hope is to bee fixed vpon God who as hee onely puts the soule into the body so he onely can take it away againe when it pleaseth him Yea these ordinary meanes which God hath appoynted are not to be contemned or neglected lest we seeme thereby to tempt God especially in dangerous diseases Eccle. 38.1.2.3.4.56.78.9.12.13.14 Hereof Iesus the son of Sirach saith Honor a Physitian with the honor due vnto him for the vses which you may haue of him for the Lord created him for of the most high commeth healing and he shall receiue honor of the King the skill of the Physitian shall lift vp his head and in the sight of great men he shall be in admiration The Lord hath created medicines out of the earth and he that is wise will not abhorre them Was not the water made sweete with wood that the vertue thereof might be knowne and he hath giuen men skill that he might be honored in his meruellous workes With such doth he heale men and taketh away their paines of such doth the Apothecary make a confection and of his workes there is no end and from him is peace ouer all the earth My sonne in thy sicknes be not negligent but pray vnto the Lord he will make thee whole then giue place to the Physitian for the Lord hath created him let him not goe from thee for thou hast neede of him There is a time when in their hands there is good successe for they shall also pray vnto the Lord that he would prosper that which they giue for ease remedy to prolong life And hereof also Iesus the son of God saith they that bee whole neede not the Physitian but they that are sicke which speach of our blessed Sauiour commendeth that art Matth. 9.12 and the good seruice done thereby This commenda●ion a●so the Prince of Poets giueth to the Physitian The Physitian alone saith hee is to be equalled with many other in honor Gen. 17.12 Againe whereas God did not command circumcision of children before the eight day hee followed a rule of physick obserued in all ages that the life of the childe is very vncertaine till the first seuen dayes be expired And vpon the very same ground the Heathen men vsed not to name their children before the eight day 2. Sam. 12.18 And that Physi●k may be wel applied to the maintenance of health speciall care must be had for the choosing of such Physitians as are knowne to be well learned and men of experience as also of a good conscience of sound religion in the profession of the Gospell of Christ and of vpright life and conuersation Now touching the manner of vsing the means these rules must be followed First of all he that is to take physick must not onely prepare his bodie as Physitians doe commonly prescribe but he must also prepare his soule by humbling himselfe vnder the mercifull hand of God in his sicknesse for his sinnes and making earnest prayers vnto him for pardon before any medicine come in his body The second rule is 1. Tim. 4.5 that when wee haue prepared our selues and are about to vse the physick we must sanctifie it as wee doe our meate and drinke by the word of God and prayer The
of the wicked Barbarians as we may reade in the Acts of the Apostles Act. 28.3 4.5.6 This rash censuring and iudging was also the sinne of the wicked Iewes as we may reade in the Gospell of Saint Luke Luke 13.1.2.3.4.5 wherein they did vtter a secret corruption naturally ingendered in all men that is very sharpely to see into the sinnes of others and seuerely to censure them but in the meane time to flatter themselues and be blind-fold in seeing their owne for these men thought because the like iudgements did not fall on themselues that therefore they were safe enough and not so great sinners but rather highly in the fauour of God euen as many in the world doe now adaies falsely imagine and suppose that they are alwayes the worst sort of people whom God doth most strike and presse with his punishing hand hauing forgotten that God doth not keepe an ordinary rate heere below to punish euery man as he is worst or to cocker and fauour him as he is best but onely taketh some example as hee thinketh good for the instruction and aduertisement of others and to be as it were looking-glasses wherein euery man may see his owne face yea and his owne cause handled and that God is a seuere reuenger of sinne that all men may learne by the example of some to tremble and beware lest they bee constrained in their owne turnes to know and feele the punishment they haue deserued Whereupon our Sauiour Christ is iustly occasioned to correct their erroneous and sinister iudgement and to teach them that they must not reioyce at the iust punishment of others For this is the propertie of the wicked as appeareth in the book of the Lamentations where it is said All mine enemies haue heard of my trouble Lam. 1.21 they are glad that thou hast done it but he that is glad saith the Wise-man at calamities Prou. 17.5 shall not be vnpunished but he should rather be instructed thereby to repent And to all such barbarous vnchristian and vncharitable censurers of the children of God the Lord by his Prophet saith Loe I begin to bring euill vpon the Citie which is called by my name Ier. 25.29 and should yee be vtterly vnpunished Ier. 49.12 Yee shall not be vnpunished And againe Behold they whose iudgement was not to drinke of the cup haue assuredly drunken and art thou he thou he that shalt goe altogether vnpunished Thou shalt not goe vnpunished 1. Pet. 4.17.18 but shalt surely drinke of it And the Apostle saith The time is come that iudgement must begin at the house of God And if it first begin at vs what shall the end be of them that obay not the Gospell of God Therefore iudge not thus rashly of those that are thus grieuously handled in this manner but think thy selfe as bad a sinner if not worse and that the like defects may befall thee and thinke some great temptation befell them and that thy selfe shouldest be worse if the like temptation should befall thee and giue God thankes that as yet the like hath not happened vnto thee The fift obiection is this When a man is most neere death then the deuill is most busie in temptation and the more man is assaulted by Sathan the more dangerous is his case and therefore it may seeme that the day of death is the worst day of all Answ The condition of Gods children in earth is twofold some are not tempted and othersome are Some are not tempted I say as Simeon Luk. 2.29,30 who as we read in the Gospel of S. Luke when he had seene his Sauiour Christ brake foorth into these words Lord now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace according to thy word for mine eyes haue seene thy saluation foresignifying no doubt that hee should end his dayes in all maner of peace And as Abraham Gen. 15.15 For thou shalt goe as God said vnto him vnto thy fathers in peace and be buried in a good old age And as Iosiah that good king Behold therefore saith the Lord vnto him I wil gather thee vnto thy fathers 2. Kings 22.20 and thou shalt be gathered vnto thy graue in peace and thine eyes shall not see all the euill which I will bring vpon this place And as for them that are tempted as diuers of Gods children are subiect thereunto though their case be very troublesome yet their saluation is not the further off for God is then more specially present by the vnspeakable comfort of his holy Spirit and when we are most weake he is most strong in vs because his maner is to shew his power in our weaknesse An example whereof we haue in the Apostle S. Paul who was greatly assaulted and tempted by Sathan And lest I should saith he be exalted aboue measure 2. Cor. 12.7,8,9 through the abundance of the reuelation there was giuen to me a thorne in the flesh the messenger of Sathan to buffet me lest I should bee exalted aboue measure For this thing I besought the Lord thrice that it might depart from me and hee said vnto mee my grace is sufficient for thee for my strength is made perfect in weaknesse And for this cause euen in the time of death the deuill receiueth the greatest foile when he lookes for the greatest victory The sixt and last obiection is this that violent and sudden death is a grieuous curse and of all euils which befall in this life none is so terrible therefore it may seeme that the day of such a kind of death is most miserable I answere It is true indeed that such death as is sudden is a curse and grieuous iudgement of God and therfore not without good cause feared of men in this world Yet all things considered we ought to be more afraid of an impenitent and euill life then of sudden death For though it be euill as death it selfe in it owne nature is yet wee must not thinke it to be simply euill because it is not euill to all men nor in all respects euill I say it is not euill to all men considering that no kind of death is euill or a curs● vnto them that are ingrafted in Christ for that they are free in him from the whole curse of the lawe Reu. 14.13 Blessed are they saith the Sonne of God that die in the Lord for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them Whereby it is signified that they which depart this life being members of Christ Iesus of what death soeuer they die yea though their death be neuer so sudden and violent doe enter into euerlasting ioy and felicitie Psal 116.15 Againe Precious in the sight of the Lord saith the Psalmist is the death of his Saints Their death therefore be it neuer so sudden or otherwise must needes be precious yea though death commeth vpon the children of God neuer so sharpely Prou. 14.32 and suddenly yet the righteous
him to be released and if your selfe belong to God it is best for you also at this time to loose him best I say in the wisdome of God and to some end although not so in your owne reason which seeth not so farre and in all respects best Now thinke with your selfe thus much if you had done good to one and pleasured him much and all the friends he hath or any of them should crie out for it would it not grieue you surely it would grieue you so much the more by how much that vnthankefull dislike should be more vehement and last long So it is with God and therefore see what you doe and whom you moue to anger The Apostles words are plaine All things worke for the best vnto them that feare God if you beleue it and also thinke of your dead friend and your selfe God the holy Ghost who cannot lye concludeth that the same was best both for him and you which now is come to passe When good is done we should not grieue and when the best is done much lesse should we grieue for God calleth him out of this life when he is at his best if he be good that hee turne not to euill if euill that hee waxe not worse Away then with sorrow and sowre lookes and let the Lord for his mercie receiue your thankes from faithfull content and not murmuring and repining from vnbridled affections not onely good is done but the best euen the very best by the best that onely knowes what is best and it should appease and satisfie you God is no lyer neither can he be deceiued but if one houres life might haue been better either for him or you then is not the best done and then the Apostles words are not true but that were wicked once to imagine so Therefore no longer life would haue profited him or you but the very best is done blessed therefore be God for his goodnesse euer Fourthly I consider what the same Apostle saith in another place I desire to be loosed and to be with Christ Phil. 1.23 which is best of all And I aske of you whether your selfe do not the like as you are able if you doe not you are yet ouer earthly and further in loue with this wicked and sinfull world then you should be If you doe it why then grieue you that your friend hath obtained that which you desire this will seeme rather enuie then loue in you to conceiue dislike for ones well doing What againe if your friend wish as the Apostle doth long before he obtained his request and now the Lord hath granted what he so heartily wished this is mercie to be reioyced for and not any miserie to bee wept for A true friend acknowledgeth a debt for the pleasuring of his friend and is not mooued with anger or griefe for the same stay then your teares if you will bee iudged a friend and neither grudge to God the companie of his child nor to the child the presence of his God because this is wicked Thinke of the glorie company immortalitie and ioy and comfort with the blessed Trinity and all the hoste of heauen that now your friend enioyeth thinke of the woes and miseries in this wretched vale of teares from which he is freed and then iudge you if the Apostle say not true that it is best to be loosed and to be with Christ If this best bee now at this instant fallen to your good friend by Gods good mercie blesse God for it and comfort your self that your friend enioyeth such endlesse ioy and comfort and thereby shall you shew your selfe a friend indeed and all that are godly and wise cannot but thinke well of you Againe the Apostle saith 2. Cor. 5.6.8 That we know that whilest wee are at home in the bodie we are absent from the Lord therefore we loue rather to remoue out of the bodie and to dwell with the Lord. From which absence from God your friend is freed and by presence and dwelling with God he is now blessed a true cause and a great cause as hath beene said of good content Then doe not you prouoke the Lord with vnthankfull teares sighes and groanes but stay that course which offendeth greatly and tread the steppes of all such as vpon the like occasion haue walked rightly by their discreet mourning Who are euer patient and moderate in sorrow repressing and ruling their affections and gaue them not a loose reine and so ought you Againe in the first Epistle to the Thessalonians it is said I would not haue you ignorant brethren concerning them that sleepe that yee sorrow not 1. Thess 4.13 as they which haue no hope Reade the place and examine your owne course whether you hope or no. First that your friend is well and then that Almightie God will supply his want to you some other way for both these are necessarie our friends are our comforts if they be good But if I tie God to them and thinke all is gone when they are gone where is my hope what pleasure to God so to trust in him that I trust more in my friends and cry out when they goe how shall I doe how shall I liue what ioy can I now haue Is this hope is this trust is this faith fie that euer affections and passions should carie any good child of God so far from his dutie and from true knowledge I say againe our friends are our comfort while the Lord lendeth them and when our friend returneth to his earth yet the Lord is in heauen where he euer was if I haue lost my father to be my father mother sister friend yea all in all to me whatsoeuer I want Therefore while he liueth which is and shall bee for euer I cannot be friendlesse though my friends die or depart from me but that either for one he will raise me vp another or himselfe supplie the place which is best of all Mourne not then I pray you as one without hope but hearken vnto the Apostle and shew foorth your faith hope and obedience vnto God to the glorie of God and your owne praise Againe wee read in the booke of Leuiticus Leuit. 10.3 that the sonnes of Aaron Nadab and Abihu were slaine by the Lord in his anger for their sinnefull presumption in offering vp strange fire which the Lord commanded them not which was a fearefull sight and spectacle to the fathers eyes to see two sonnes at once and in such sort dead Yet what did Aaron I pray you marke the text I will saith the Lord bee sanctified in them that come nigh me and before all the people I will be glorified And Aaron saith the holy Ghost there held his peace And what an example is this if any thing may mooue you to stay your affections for the death of your friends Againe it is said in the booke of the Reuelation And I heard a voyce from heauen Reu. 14.13
saying vnto me Write Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth yea saith the Spirit that they may rest from their labours and their workes follow them Your friend is dead in the Lord and therefore blessed will you then weepe and lament for him his workes follow him and the Lord in mercie hath crowned his obedience according to his promise and will you looke awry at it God forbid Againe consider with your selfe that your friends walk with God and are gone to their heauenly Father in peace they are gathered vnto their people they are not dead but sleepe and their flesh resteth in hope they are gone the way of all flesh and doe now behold the face of God in heauen and what cause of sorrow is this to any friend that loueth them If your friend were discharged and released out of prison and miserie and preferred to the palace of an earthly prince and to his Court to his great and exceeding ioy and content would you shewe your loue and contentment toward him in bewailing the same how much lesse then should you lament his preferment into Gods euerlasting Court and kingdome to his vnspeakable ioy and comfort Thus may you gather many places of holy Scripture and on this sort meditate on them For sweet is the word of God against all sorrowes and griefes and by name against this But it may happily be obiected it is your child that is dead and it died before it could well be baptized this grieueth me more then otherwise it would and so you feare your childs estate Answ God forbid that we should either speake or think so seeing the Lord neuer said so but contrariwise the Scripture witnesseth that they are in the Couenant of God and so in state of saluation so soone as they are borne and Baptisme doth not make them Christians that were none before but is the Sacrament the seale the signe the badge of them that are Christians before Besides it is not the want of the Sacrament that depriueth a man of Gods fauour for the children of the Israelites were not circumcised all those fortie yeeres which they liued in the wildernesse the reason whereof was because they were euer to remoue and iourney whensoeuer the pillar of the cloud that was their guide ascended and went forward Numb 9.18 c. so that they were alwaies to attend vpon the cloude both night and day not knowing when it would remooue and therefore could not circumcise their children in the wildernesse as yee may read Iosh 5.2 c. but it is the contemning or despising of the Sacrament that depriueth men of Gods fauour when they make no more account of it then Esau did of his birth-right Gen. 25.32 then Ahaz did of the Lords helpe Esay 7. and it is also the neglecting of it when God offereth time and opportunitie that we might haue it Againe the Lord neuer said that whosoeuer died vncircumcised or vnbaptized should be wiped out of the booke of life but hee hath said Gen. 17.12.14 that whosoeuer contemneth or carelesly neglecteth the Sacraments shal be cut off from among his people And so read you the notes vpon that seuenteenth chapter of Genesis and I hope they shall content you for this matter God is not tyed to the Sacrament nor euer was The contempt hurteth but not the want when it is against your will Obiect Happily your child was of ripe yeeres and withall so toward that it could not be but that he should come to some great place and preferment if he had liued both for the good of himself and his friends and that he in his youth and the flower of his age should thus bee taken away is a great losse say you Answer True it is that the losse is great in respect of the world but what is that if we consider God God is also able to supplie all that some other way if we take it well This is apparant that what good or preferment could haue come to him any way or to his friends if he had liued the Lord for some purpose as yet happily hidden hath preuented but yet his arme is not shortened as I said to doe vs good some other way but it might perhaps prooue otherwise contrarie to our expectation if he had liued longer and then it would haue beene a great griefe vnto vs. But admit that it would haue beene as you hope if he had liued longer yet he is more highly preferred euen to the highest heauens and to the presence of God and this no earthly preferment can match And except we be wholy earthly our selues we cannot but sauour this and not let his youth grieue vs for no youth nor age is too good for God when he is pleased to take them A foole or a child seeing a goodly cluster of grapes thinketh it pitie to put them into the presse to deface them but he that is wise knoweth that thereby the liquour which is in them is preserued and that this timely gathering is a meanes to keepe them from corruption So we thinke sometime Oh it is great pitie such a one should die so soone so towardly a youth so good a creature can hardly be spared but God in his wisedome knoweth it to be good And if he cut off the life of that good and godly king Iosiah as it were in the middle of the stemme 2. Kings 22.20 doubtlesse it is for this cause that his eies may not see the manifold euils to come If you will be ruled to weigh things with reason you may well see mercie euen in this timely death for many are the perils both of bodie and soule that young men auoid when they are taken hence false doctrine heresies errours and many grieuous sinnes wounding the very conscience with a biting worme that euer gnaweth publike calamities and ruine of state many priuate miseries great and grieuous which no man can thinke of beforehand more bitter to good men then any death from all which this happie deliuerance in time of youth doth free your child and set him safe that you shall neuer mourne with him nor for him that way And herein we haue Dauid an example of godly fortitude who hauing a child sicke did while it liued afflict his soule besought God for the child and fasted and wen● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and lay all night vpon the earth and would not be comforted Thus while there was hope of remedie he gaue way to the sorrow of his heart 2. Sam. 12.16 but when Dauid perceiued that the child was dead then he arose from the earth and washed and anointed himselfe and changed his apparell and came into the house of the Lord and worshipped and after came to his owne house and bad that they should set bread before him and he did eate His sorrow ended when he once saw there was no hope of enioying any longer the companie of his child Now this course seemed vnto
cherished so long Wilt thou make thy selfe hatefull by making opposition against his loue Wilt thou malitiously oppose thy selfe against the worke of his care while in fatherly loue he is desirous to keepe thee in safety Wilt thou striue more then all the World besides to worke thy owne decay The Angels in heauen vnderstanding the care of God for thee doe willingly pitch their tents about thee and refuse not for thy safety to beare thee in their hands and keepe thee in thy wayes the Diuels of Hell by Gods prouidence are kept off from thee as with a strong hedge which they can neyther clime ouer nor breake through whereby to impeach thy safety Iob. 5.23 And while the Creator of all things remayneth thy keeper the creatures are in league with thee and thou liuest in peace amongst them and while the worke of God that preserueth thy life hath this power amongst all Creatures that the creatures of heauen will not attempt thy hurt the creatures of the earth do not nor dare attempt it and the creatures of Hell cannot Wilt thou alone seeke vnmercifully to crosse the care of God in working thine owne woe Thou art then worthy whom the heauenly Creatures should abhorre whome the earthly creatures should forsake and the hellish Creatures embrace receyuing thee into their Company with this greeting This is he whom God would haue kept but against the loue of the Angels of heauen against the peace of the Creatures of the earth and beyond the power and malice of vs the Angels of darknesse hee hath destroyed himselfe Besides it is God that hath assigned to euery one of vs the measure of our time hee hath appointed to vs the number of our dayes our life did not beginne till hee appointed the first day of it and so long it must last vntill he say this is the last day of it No man did set downe for himselfe when hee would come into the world nor no man may set downe for himselfe when or how hee will leaue the vvorld The soule of man sayth the Orator before her departure from the body doth oftentimes diuine but then it destroyes not it selfe for God sent vs into the world giuing vs life and God must call vs out by taking our life It is the saying of Iob Is there not an appointed time to man vpon earth Iob. 7.1 and are not his dayes as the dayes of an hireling The beginning and end of mans time is appointed by God he cannot lengthen it when the end commeth nor ought to shorten it before the time come Saint Ambrose sayth we are bound to maintaine our bodies and forbidden to kill our soules and bodies they are married together by God himselfe and those whom God hath ioyned together let no man be so bold to put in sunder Cogimur diligere vt sponsus sponsam Adam Euam sayth S. Barnard Wee must bee so farre from hating our owne flesh as that wee are commaunded to cherish it to loue it entirely as the husband ought to loue his wife Adam his Eue. Wee may imploy it in labour but we must not slay it and the more wee shall imploy it the lesse hurtfull and dangerous it will proue vnto vs. His dayes are as the dayes of an Hireling an Hireling is entertained for so many dayes longer then his couenant he may not stay and a shorter time hee may not stay Such is the life of man he is Gods hireling for so many dayes years he hath hired him in this world as in Gods Vineyard to worke in some honest calling When wee haue serued out our time here wee may stay no longer and till wee haue serued out our time here we may not depart Thou wilt therefore be found to bee a fugitiue seruant from God if thou depart his seruice before the time be full out that belongeth to God and not to thee to set downe The Prophet Dauid sayeth of God in one of the Psalmes Psal 68.20 To the Lord God belong the issues of death To God it belongeth and not to man to set downe who shall dye when and by what meanes he shall dye Sometime he vseth the hand of the Magistrate sometime the hand of the violent and so endeth one mans life as wee thinke by the counsell and worke of another man But neuer did hee giue licence to any man to kill himselfe he hath forbidden murther by his commandement Thou shalt not kill Exod. 20,13 Hee condemned it in Cain from the beginning of the World to whom hauing slaine Abel he said Gen. 4,10 What hast thou done the voyce of thy brothers bloud cryes to mee from the ground Now therefore thou art cursed from the earth which hath opened her mouth to receiue thy brothers bloud from thine hand And after the floud when he began again to replenish the earth with Inhabitants he made a Lawe against murder to restraine both man and beast from committing it saying Gen 9.5 I will surely require your bloud wherin your liues are at the hand of euery beast will I require it and at the hand of man euen at the handes of a mans brother will I require the life of man Who so sheddeth mans bloud by man shall his bloud bee shedde for in the Image of God hath he made man So offensiue unto God it is for a man without warrant and authority to kill any because man was made in the Image of God a creature of vnderstanding endued with excellent vertues of knowledge and righteousnesse with resemblance in these vertues vnto God himselfe in making of whom it pleased God to shew his excellent power his wisedome and his mercy Man is Microcosmos sayth one an abridgement of the world hee hath Heauen resembling his soule earth his heart placed in the middest as a Center the Lyuer is like the Sea whence flow the liuely springs of bloud the braine like the Sunne giues the light of vnderstanding and the sences are set round about like the Starres the heart in man is like the roote of a tree the Organe or Lung-pipe that comes of the left cell of the heart is like the stocke of the tree which diuides it selfe into two parts and thence spreades abroad as it were sprayes and boughes into all the bodie euen to the arteries of the head the head is called the Tower of the mind the throne of reason the house of vvisedome the treasure of memory the Capitoll of iudgement the shoppe of affections And concerning man sayeth another God hath made such diuers and contrary elements to meete together in one and the selfe same body and accord in one fire and water ayre and earth heate and colde and all in one and the selfe same place yet hath so tempered them together as that one is the defence and maintenance of another Nay more then this sayth Saint Bernard mirabilis societas in man hee hath made a wonderfull society for in him Heauen
with whom all things are possible as our Sauiour Christ saith in the Gospell Againe we may roue at the glorious estate of the children of God after death by that high price which was set on thē Our Sauiour Iesus Christ the Sonne and only Son of God not by adoption but by nature louing and best beloued bought them not with money but with bloud not with the bloud of Goats and Rammes but with his owne bloud and not with the bloud of his head hands or feete but with his owne heart bloud And as he prayed soundly for them himselfe in his last prayer which he made vnto his heauenly Father a little before his suffering as appeareth in the Euangelist Saint Iohn Iohn 17.1 so hath he prised them vnto his friends and children and none can enter into them but by many tribulations Acts 7.59 For we must through much tribulation enter into the kingdome of God They did cost Paul a beheading Peter a crucifying Stephen a stoning millions of Martyrs racking burning torturing tormenting and a thousand other kinds of deathes and our deere Sauiour Christ himselfe a suffering Ought not Christ to haue suffered these things Luke 24.26 and so to enter into his glorie 1. Cor. 10.13 God who is faithfull and true as the Apostle speaketh hath not deceiued his Sonne nor ouer-sold his ioyes vnto his Saints and children and therfore vnspeakable are those ioyes which Christ hath purchased and his children obtained through a world of miseries Againe wee haue a resemblance of these ioyes in Christs transfiguration vpon the Mount Luk. 9.28.29.30.31.32.33 when as the fashion of his countenance was altered and his rayment was white and glistering whereby wee learne what glory our bodies shall haue in the day of the resurrection whē as the blessed Apostle Saint Paul telleth vs that as we haue borne the image of the earthly we shall also beare the image of the heauenly 1. Cor. 15.49 and be like the Sonne of God in glory Againe we may make coniecture of these ioyes by reflecting our eyes vpon those innumerable perils which wee haue heere escaped For if such as are deliuered from the dangers of the sea doe wonderfully reioyce when they come safe on shore much greater then is the ioy of those who hauing beene tossed in the waues of this troublesome world troubled with sinnes with Satan with frailties of the flesh with the feare of hell whose dangers saith Gregorie appeare by the multitude of those that perish are now arriued at heauen for their hauen and are wholly freed from all their calamities and miseries And as Saint Augustine wel speaketh the more dangers escaped the more ioyes encreased as the most doubtfull battell maketh the most ioyfull victorie Againe we doe reade in the booke of Hester Hester 6.6.7.8.9.10.11 that when Haman was by King Ahashuerosh willed to speak what shal be done to the mā whom the King would honor he supposing that the King had no meaning to honor any but himselfe said this Let them bring forth for him royall apparell which the King vseth to weare and the horse that the King vseth to ride on and that the Crowne Royall may be set vpon his head and that his apparell and horse bee deliuered to one of the Kings most noble Princes that they may array the man withall whom the King delighteth to honor and bring him on horse-back thorow the streetes of the Citie and proclaime before him Thus shall it be done to the man whom the King will honor Then the King said to Haman Make haste c. Euen so shall it be done vnto them whom the King of kings and Lord of lords will honor after death First there shal be put vpon them royal apparel Reu. 3.4 5. euen long white roabes which are such as Iesus Christ the King of glory himselfe is described to weare Secondly they shal sit vpon Iesus Christ his owne horse Reu. 19.11 which is said in the booke of the Reuelation to be a white horse for Iohn there saith I saw heauen opened and behold a white horse and hee that sate vpon him was called faithfull and true To him therefore saith the Sonne of God that ouercommeth Reu. 3.21 will I grant to fit with me in my throne euen as I also ouercame and am set on my fathers throne Thirdly the Crowne royall shall bee set vpon their heads Be thou faithfull vnto death saith the Sonne of God and I will giue thee a crowne of life Reu. 2.10 And this is that most excellent glorie which the Saints haue in heauen shadowed out vnto vs by a kingly crowne which of all earthly things is most glorious Fourthly this glorie shal be furthered by the hands of the king of heauens most noble Princes Mat. 24.31 He shall send his Angels with a great sound of a trumpet and they shall gather his elect from the foure windes from one end of heauen to the other Fiftly and lastly the Saints shal be entred into the ful fruition of their inheritance with such ioy and triumph in the glorious assembly of all the Saints and holy Angels as the like was neuer seene in the world no not in Ierusalem that day when king Solomon sate downe in his father Dauids throne 1. King 1.40 But all that is nothing comparable to this ioy triumph and glorie of Gods Saints And it shal be as it were proclaimed before them Thus shall it bee done vnto them whom the King of glory will honour And this honour saith the Psalmist Psal 149.9 haue all his Saints There is no king on the earth can produce so ancient right to his Crown as the Christian effectually called can to these ioyes of heauen no mā on the earth can be acknowledged his fathers heire vpō such sufficient warrāt as the godly Christian No freeholder so surely infeoffed in his lands hauing so many confirmations of his right as hath the iustified Christian who vpō his gift hath receiued the earnest the pledge the seale and the witnesse of the great king of glorie Wee doe reade in the first booke of the Kings that when the queene of Sheba heard of the fame of Salomon 1. King 10.11 concerning the name of the Lord she came from a very farre Countrey to proue him with hard questions and she communed with him of all that was in her heart and Salomon told her all her questions and there was not any thing hid from the king which he told her not And when shee had seene all Salomons wisedome and the house which he had built and the meat of his table and the si●ting of his seruants and the attendance of his ministers and their apparell and his Cup-bearers and his ascent by which he went vp into the house of the Lord. It is there said that there was no more spirit in her And she said to the king it was a true report that I