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A14280 A divine discoverie of death directing all people to a triumphant resurrection, and euer-lasting saluation. Vaughan, Edward, preacher at St. Mary Woolnoth. 1612 (1612) STC 24596; ESTC S105922 75,056 213

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full height maturitie which the licour iuice thereof could possibly extend then presently it returnes and in very little time is withered and cleane gone Salomon likens man for his growing and decreasing vnto Lillies and roses Cant. 2.1 As an Alchymist hauing violētly exhausted the spirits and by little and little distilled the quintessences of minerals and mettals they are thenceforth good for litle or nothing but as salt hauing left the saltnesse euē so man hauing his natural vigour by little and little taken or worne away is but a dead carcasse good for nothing but for to be hid in the earth The eight reason why all men must die It is drawne from the decree of almightie God for the dissolution of the world and a finall end of all things a throwing together and as it were a folding vp of many things into one thing Esai said concerning this dissolution thus Esai 13.9 The day of the Lord commeth cruell with wrath and fierce anger to lay the land waste Mat. 24.29 the starres shall fall from heauen and the planets shall not giue their light the Sun shall be darkned in his going forth and the Moone shall not giue her light Likewise Ezechiel saith O how fearefull and how terrible that day shall be to them which pierced him through yet then whosoeuer shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saued The ninth reason why all men must die It is that there may be a generall victorie ouer death and hell For so saith S. Paul 1 Cor. 15.26 The last enemie that shall be destroyd is death God speakes to that effect by the mouth of his Prophet vnto death in the behalfe of the godly O death Hose 13.14 I will be thy death As though he had said triumphantly thou that hast bene the death of all mankind ô cruell enemie ô thou vnsatiable deuourer now I will be thy death now shalt thou be destroyed for euer now thy sting and thy strength shall vtterly be taken away 5.8.6 Againe the same Prophet saith he will destroy death for euer and God will wipe all teares and heauinesse from all faces Luk. 20.36 and S. Luke saith they can die no more The tenth reason why all men must die Hath foure speciall respects or diuine attributes The first whereof is drawne from the celestiall kingdome whence our soules came and the terrestriall tabernacles and houses of clay wherein our soules do a while liue or dwell as strangers and soiourners Men are said to be strangers either in respect of their trauell from one place vnto another or in respect of some kingdome where they dwell being borne elsewhere not yet free denized nor naturalized In both which respects Dauid saith Psa 39.12 1 Chro. 19.15 1 Cor. 5.1.2 that as our fathers were in this world strangers soiourners so Saint Paul to the like purpose saith We know that we haue a building giuen vs of God that is an house not made with hands but eternall in heauen as if he had said our certaine and most resting place is not here on earth but is in heauen As he that is in a voyage or iourney neuer cōtenteth himselfe vntill he be at home and therefore toiles and trauels with great carnestnesse to end his businesse that he may returne euen so are we in this tabernacle 2 Cor. 5.2 as Saint Paul said sighing and desiring to be clothed with our house which is from heauen The faithfull did manifestly confesse that they were strangers and pilgrimes on earth Heb. 11.13 and that they desired an heauenly countrie The second respect or attribute giuen to the children of God is Drawne from the meere merits of Christ by whom also our bodies and soules haue interest and title to the kingdome of heauen that in a more particular and proper manner then in this world as thus appeareth Christ is called our bridegroome and we his bride Mat. 25.6 Cant. 4.12 Ephe. 1.22 Coll. 1.18 inferring by a necessary consequence that where the husband is there must be the wife Againe where Christ is called the head of the Church it is to be inferred necessarily that where the head is gone before the mēbers must and shall follow after much like to that which Christ said Whersoeuer the body is Luk. 17.37 thither will the Eagles resort As an honest wife hath alwaies an vnsatiable desire and longing to be with her husbād no way cōtented with his absēce no not with loue letters nor with messēgers nor with tokēs of great price but with his corporall presence euen so the true mēber of Christ being zelously affected faithfully disposed towards her holy heauenly husband Christ Iesus Cant. 1.1 saith Let him kisse me with the kisses of his mouth As if the Church or bride of Christ had said vnto God his and her heauenly father O let me haue the fruition of his glorious presence let me be alway with him The third respect or attribute giuen vnto the children of God is Drawne from the mortall hatred malice which the deuill hath against vs exceedingly enuying our spirituall and glorious arriuall into heauen therefore layes many snares and infinite allurements to let hinder vs from our passage with whome therefore according to the will of God we must encounter vnder the conduct of our Lord Generall Christ Iesus In respect of which striuings Eph. 6.10 to 18. 2. Timo. 2.3 Phile. 1.2 conflicts and battelles we are called souldiers and warriors inferring thereby that when we haue valiantly fought the Lords battels and faithfully triumphed ouer the diuell then it followes that we shall returne to our owne home with rewards and crownes of euerlasting glotie The fourth respect or attribute giuen vnto the children of God is Drawne from the affaires wherin God our eternall king hath imployed vs for the performance of certaine religious duties whereof some are pertayning to God some to our brethren and some to our selues the which being done and duely accomplished then must we be gone In regard whereof we are called Legates Ambassadors and such like sometimes labourers sometimes pilgrimes And in our commission we haue euery man his set and limited time of dispatch Iob. 7.1 1 Pet. 2.1 which being ended the ancient of dayes the Angell of the couenant will send his Angell Gabriel or some other Dan 9.20.21.22 saying vnto vs for our returne vnto heauen as vnto the people of Israel in Babylon for their returne vnto Ierusalem Now me thinkes I heare two obiections made against me by two sorts of people The one saying This doctrine concerning the generality of death needed not it might haue bene spared and the speech spent vpō matter that we know not For by the vse of reason by common experience and by manifold examples men are induced to beleeue all this that you haue said to be true and long since generally allowed This is now a
hands to do with him as they would euen as Pontius Pilate deliuered Iesus into the hands of the Pharises to do with him as they would 2. Sam. 26.8.9.10 Let me smite him but once said Abishai to Dauid I will smite him no more intending by those words with one blow to kill Saule Shall I lay mine hands vpon the Lords annointed said Dauid No I will not God shall smite him There he plainly related the penall death Or his day shall come to die There he plainly related the naturall death Or he shall descend into battell There he plainly related the vnnaturall death First the Penall death is that which almightie God did vsually inflict vpon those with whom he was wrathfully displeased as appeared by the ineuitablenesse thereof It was most commonly miraculous and publikely powerful that it might be for an euerlasting remembrance among all nations Such was the punishment of Adam for the transgression of Gods commandement Gen. 3.17.18.19 as did appeare by many particular denuntiations and afterwards concluded with his death and with the death of all his posterity irrecouerable in thēselues for euer Iob to this purpose said Iob. 34.14.15 If God set his heart vpon man and gather vnto himselfe his spirit and his breath all flesh shall perish together and man shall returne to dust As if he had said If God be once wrathfully displeased with any man how shall he liue how can he or they endure the hand of him who so penally powerfully punisheth vnpenitent sinners Druine motiues or reasons why God doth so penally so miraculously and so powerfully punish some and not others with a sixefold answer thereunto The first Motiue why God punished penally First God punished penally with water when men were publikely and generally growne to be tirannous cruell and sauagely disposed one towards another as the people of the old world Thē did the windows of heauen open Gen. 6.11.12.13 Gen. 7.4.10 11 to the end and the foundations of the great deepe breake vp so that the waters preuailed exceedingly vpon the earth and couered all the hie mountains of the world Likewise the Egyptians Exod. 1.11 to 16.5 to 14.7.8.9.10.11.14 who dealt tirannously cruelly with Gods people this Maiestie taking speciall knowledge thereof did penally and powerfully punish thē with manifold plagues in their own land and afterwards with the inundations of waters wherein their king and many thousands more were miraculously drowned The second Motiue why God punished penally Secondly God punished penally with fire Gen. 19.5.15.16 to 17 when he saw that men were grown so generally and so publikely carnall sensuall fleshly vnnaturally defiling their owne bodies taking the louing admonitions and godly perswasions of his Saints but as iests and mockes as he did the Sodomites The third Motiue why God punished penally Thirdly by changing the nature and qualitie of the earth when as particular persons being in place of preheminence did offer indignity disloyaltie to such as were in authoritie as did Corah Dathan Num. 16.29.36 and Abiram with their companions whom God did penally powerfully and miraculously destroy by opening the earth to swallow them vp aliue The fourth Motiue why God punished penally Fourthly with sauage beasts whē as his holy and welbeloued people are disdained mocked and scorned 2. King 2.23.24 as two and fortie that mocked Elisha the Prophet of the Lord and were penally destroyed with Beares The fifth Motiue why God punished penally Fifthly with Angels when as men in authoritie do publikely and incorrigibly offend his holy Maiestie as did Dauid in numbring his men of warre 2. Sam. 24.1.15 and trusting in them whom God did penally and publikely punish with the death of seuenty thousand of his chosen men by the stroke of an Angell Act. 12.23 Likewise Herod the king was striken vnto death publikely by an Angel because he took that glory to himselfe which was due to God 1. King 13.1.2.3.2 King 23.17 So was Iehoram most penally and miraculously destroyed for his idolatrie according to the saying of the man of God The sixth Motiue why God punished penally Sixthly where it may be demanded why God doth punish some so penally and so miraculously and not others it is drawne from his established rule and generall order of gouerning kingdoms and nations holding it sufficient in his godly wisedome to punish publikely some in stead of many that one example so publike and so penally powerful should serue for many hundred yeares in a whole nation or kingdome When the Church began to spread through Gods mercies there were many miracles signes and wonders as that in Egypt as that in their iourney through the wildernesse and as that their conquering of Canaan and so vntill the temple of Ierusalem was built and religion established But afterwards as it drew nearer and nearer vnto Christ they grew to be fewer and fewer The first vse of this doctrine concerning the penall death Serueth to forewarne Landlords and Patrons who most tyrannously liue vpon the spoile of the poore the one fleecing the Church the other fleecing the commonweale and both robbing God of his honour so much as they may or as it doth bring them either pleasure or profite As in the old world wherein crueltie did ouerrun the whole earth so it is now in the glorious Sun-shine of the Gospell If the examples of those whom God so powerfully so penally punished will not serue it may well fall out euen in the iustice of God that for the same crueltie their oppression and grinding of the poore and selling them for old shooes that they shall be made examples for such as do come after The second vse of this doctrine concerning penall death It may well serue to forewarne dissolute and loose liuers yea all such as liue according to their own lust giuing themselues ouer according to the swing of their own nature lest they also neglecting the vse of Gods holy word and the vse of these fearefull examples do in a time when they thinke not fall into some ineuitable and damnable iudgements of God in a miraculous manner The third vse of this doctrine concerning penall death Forewarneth all such as are subiects to submit themselues vnto such as are in authoritie ouer them as vnto the diuine ordinance of God The fourth vse of this doctrine concerning penall death It may serue to admonish all sorts of people to demeane themselues reuerently and conscionably towards all the zealous professors of the Gospell The fifth vse of this doctrine concerning the penall death It admonisheth all those that are in auctoritie to submit themselues dutifully and euery way religiously towards God as they wold their subiects should do vnto them The second manner sort and kind of death to wit The naturall death is more moderate more milde and more alluding to the fauour of God then the penall death because indeede it hath reference to the promises
not in some sort humour and applaud you Here I end this matter desiring God to enlarge your affections more more vnto the obedience of his word An answer to the 2. obiection concerning the generalitie of death Herein I will be briefe because indeed this sort of people are lesse worthy of further instruction who hold that this so goodly a frame of the world should not or cannot be destroyed Of whom Saint Peter speaketh thus 1. Pet. 3.3 There shall come in the last dayes mockers who will walke after their owne lusts and shall say Where is the promise of his coming for since the Fathers died all things continue alike vnto this day There needeth no other answer for them then that which S. Peter maketh them in the verses following let them looke to it vpon their perill This doctrine concerning the generalitie of death serueth to reproue three sorts of people The first are those who wholly or for the most part do set their loue and liking vpon the things of this world as if they were to tarrie in it for euer or as if they were to chuse they would not change this world no not for the kingdome of heauen ioying and reioycing as Amos the Prophet said Amos. 6.13 in a thing of nought like vnto the tribes of Ruben and Gad and halfe the tribe of Manasses Num. 32.1.2 who chose the towns and lands on this side Iordan because there were goodly habitations and fertile soyle rather then the townes and lands in Canaan which for the fertilitie therof was said to flow with milke and honey and for the innumerable pleasures thereof like vnto the kingdome of heauen Saint Paul blaming such and seeking to draw them vnto better choise exhorteth saying Seeke ye the things which are aboue Col. 3.1 where Christ sits at the right hand of God and set your affections on heauenly things and not on earthly The second sort who are to be reproued by the generall doctrine of death Are they who murmure much or rather do mourne too much for the deceasse of their neare friends as though God had not done well to take one and not another to take this and not that or as if death had surprised them before their time and for euer or else that death had casually lighted on thē more then others Saint Paule comforting himselfe and others concerning this complaint 2. Cor. 5.1 sayd We haue a building giuen of God that is an house whose builder and maker is God The children of God die but one Luk. 20.36 they taste not of that second death in hell as the reprobates do This once to die is but a short interiection betweene two eternities to wit election and glorification with a kingly and a kindly passage as it were by calling and iustification vnto eternall saluation Rom. 6.9 Christ died once but in that he liueth he liueth for euer So ye likewise saith the holy Apostle are dead to sinne Rom. 6.9 but aliue to God through Iesus Christ The third sort who are to be reproued by this generall doctrine of death Are those who not minding their mortalitie nor accompts which they must make do treasure vp sinne vpon sinne being driuen as it were with the swinge of their nature set on fire of hell defile their bodies and the whole course of nature resolued with themselues to vndergo any sinne so as it may bring them either pleasure or profite Alwayes saying in their hearts and many times with their tongues If we must die for sinne as Preachers say and that as well for one sinne as for a thousand why then let vs eate and drinke and be merrie while we may Salomon out of his owne experience and specially from the holy Spirit of inspiration faith of such one a after this maner Eccles 10.9 Reioyce ô thou yong man in thy youth let thine heart cheare thee walke in the wayes of thine owne heart and in the sight of thine eyes But what followeth God will bring thee to iudgement Although his Maiestie be inclined to mercie yet when he is moued to iustice it is ineuitable it is innarrable it is intollerable To that effect said Dauid as if it were in the proper person of almightie God vnto all such desperate and gracelesse wretches that do abuse his holy patience Psal 50.17 I will set thy sinnes in order to wit thy sins in the night thy sinnes in the day thy sins in thy youth and thy sins in thine age thy sins against me and thy sinnes against thy brethren I will so muster and so ranke them together so place them by rowes and in euerie ranke and row such and so many as shall seeme to be more odious shamefull and detestable euen vnto thine owne selfe And what shall follow I will teare thee in peeces that is thy torments shall be more terrible and farre more horrible to nature then as if thou wert racked tormented peece-meale These are they who although in deed sinne is too too generall yet they rifle and runne ragingly after it in a more particular manner not minding their mortalitie or at least not regarding the accompts that they must make do maligne enuie vtterly hate yea and seeke the whole ouerthrow of vs the Preachers of his holy word and others the deare children of God who runne not into the same excesse of riot and damnable behauiour but with zeale do frequent the ministerie of his word with reuerence do keepe his Sabbaths with all care do keepe themselues vnsported of the world Therefore they esteeme them not worth their societie nor worthie to liue vpon the earth Ioh. 15.19 We are not of the world therfore the world hatethvs saith S. Iohn The manifold plagues to the Egyptians the fierie Serpēts to the Israelites and the Emerods to the Philistims were not so troublesome and tedious as these heathenish Atheists prophane Iewes are to vs. We liue not as enemies in an hostile manner among them but modestly and mildly and benignly as Christian cōforters bringing peace offering reconciliation The words of our commission are of 3. emphaticall and publicke narrations The first is Benedicite blesse ye the second is Benefacite do ye good and the third is Orate pray ye Thus are we enioyned to behaue our selues amongst many other religious duties towards God and good mē yea towards our enemies Where in so euer we do faile through frailtie it is not indifferent nor iustice for them being our enemies to iudge what we should do but rather out of charity to iudge what we would do Neither is it for them to reuenge themselues vpon vs it is his holy Maicstie to whom we must answer vpon our accompt We are whatsoeuer they say bringers of peace and we are peaceable 2. King 10.17 Come see said Iehu to Iehonadab so it were to be wished that these men would zealously and religiously
at deathes doore the wicked parteth with all ioyes and there the godly receiues it The third vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue all such parents who hauing a sonne or a daughter taken from them by death in his minority they do not take to heart nor thinke the extraordinary care the greedy griping the intollerable shiftes and the manifold deuices which they vsed to get worldly wealth and preferments for him So that they euer kept from their heart or for the most part all conscionable care of trayning him vp in the feare and nurtour of the Lord so as he might be a necessary member in Church or comon wealth They consider not neither can they be made to thinke much lesse to beleeue that God tooke him away for their punishment And for this cause also God takes away another and so another of their best and dearest children leauing such parents either none at all or else such as are gracelesse and without hope to be any comfort vnto them If parents out of their naturall affection or out of Gods word would but imagine what a dolefull day what a sorrowfull sight and a galling griefe it would be vnto them to see one child after another suffer the bitter paines and pangs of death then being dead to be doubtfull of their saluation such parents might the better and the sooner see take knowledg of their sinnes towards their poore children and so by true repentance be turned vnto the Lord. The fourth vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue those who out of their ouer abounding naturall affection towards their children are neuer prepared to part with their children no not though they be to change their company for the company of God himselfe and the company of others their brothers and sisters for the company of the holy Saints and Angels in heauen And their worldly riches for the true treasures purchast by the precious bloud of Iesus Christ And this because that either they want knowledge or faith The fift vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue those who liue so securely and so carelesly as if they had made a couenant with death vntill an appointed day or as if they could keepe death away so long as they would or at least giue themselues lawfull warning Vpon these comes the day of the Lord suddenly not in respect of God but in respect of themselues being vnprouided By how much they want of that they should haue against his coming or by how little they feare death by so much the more terrible and fearefull death is vnto them The sixth vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue those who arrogate to much vnto the worthinesse of the meanes attributing that vertue vnto them which indeede is due vnto God as in the time of sicknesse to physicke surgery and such like No maruell though they languish in their diseases and no man able to helpe thē What was the ouerthrow of so many thousands of the Israelits the taking away of the Arke of God by the Philistines 1. Sam. 4.5 was it not because they relied to much vpon the arke as appeared by their shooting and loud reioycing as though heauen and earth rang together Ieremie speaketh of them at another time how they vanted and boasted of their temple saying Ier. 7.4 The temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord therefore the Lord gaue their Temple to be ransacked and ruinated by Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon Dan. 1.1.2 Ieremie likewise speaking of the pride and presumptusnesse of the Egyptians who in their strength and multitude of their men concluded most infallibly the vtter ouerthrow of the people of Israel Ier. 46 7. They come saith he like floods and riuers with raging horses swift chariots Blackemores and Libians to shoote and to beare shields yet all in vaine The seuenth vse concerning the naturall kind of death It serueth to reproue those who do derogate from the worthinesse of the meanes which God in his mercie hath ordained in his Church and common-wealth to be in him and for him or as in his stead helpers comforters vnto his people as in the time of sicknesse not to seek to the Physitiā they rather scoffe and scorne them and they deride their profession These indeed as the former are accessarie to their owne cōtinuall diseases languishing maladies and in the end to their owne death not because that they thereby do directly shorten their liues but because that they do frustrate so much as in thē lieth the holy ordināces of God which are ioyned with his decree The eight vse concerning the naturall death It serueth to reproue those who run into eminent dangers places of contagion they auoid not when they may conuemently outragious elements as fire water and such like or enterprise to performe actions which stand not either with their wits or with their abilities The 3. generall sort manner or kind of death to wit the vnnaturall death The vnnatur all death is that which is more violent more abhorring nature more crosse and contrarie to the lawes ordinances of God A kind of death which proceedeth from mans selfe or rather a death instigated by the diuell meerely derogatiue to the Maiestie of Gods gouernment dishonourable to his name by the reuealed word impeachfull to the saluation of the soules of such An vntimely and an vnseasonable death Vnder this kind of death there are 4. other inferior sorts First when a man killeth himselfe vnawares or against his will as Ahaziah king of Israel did with a fall 2. King 1.6 Secondly when a man kils himselfe wittingly and willingly 1 Sam. 31.4 2. Sam. 17.23 1. King 16.18 as Saul did with his owne sword as Achitophel hanged himselfe and as Zimry did that burnt himselfe Thirdly when a mā is killed by another vnwittingly and vnwillingly not hauing hated him before Nu. 35.22 Ios 20.1.2.3 for whose saftetie God appointed cities of refuge Fourthly when a man is wittingly and willingly killed by another 2. Sam. 3.27 2. Sam. 20.10 as Abner was by Ioab and as Amasa was The first question concerning the maner of the vnnaturall death Why it is or how it comes to passe that some vnwittingly and vnwillingly do kil and destroy themselues yea with their act and deed some hang themselues some burne themselues some drowne themselues and such like manner of vnnaturall death This kind of vnnaturall executions happeneth many times on the iust as well as on the vniust vpon the wise as vpon the foolish vpon the rich as vpon the poore The answer therefore is twofold one concerning the vngodly the other concerning the godly That which concernes the vngodly is when any such man or woman vnwittingly puts or brings himselfe into perillous places puts himselfe to death by his owne act and deed It proceedeth from the vpright iustice of God ruling and ouer-ruling man how
as though that they which die naturally in their beds or they themselues which liue in the good appearance of the world were not as guiltie of condemnation for euery small sinne which they commit without faith in Iesus Christ as they who are hanged burned beheadded or pressed or as those vpon whom the tower of Siloam fell Here I conclude asking pardon of the learned wherein soeuer I haue erred or haue wanted in the disconise of the common lawes of this land Knewing the profunditie thereof to be passing the reach of all men and withall acknowledging it to be a meere subiect out of my element and therefore as a man hauing spoken nothing in effect of that which it deferueth I am cōtent to be condēned without replication vpō a nihil dicit if reason require it The third instruction concerning the timelinesse of death Not withstanding there are such variable and sundry sorts or manners of death as hath bene formerly enlarged and howsoeuer almightie God hath bene occasioned in his iustice to punish sinne yet none of the generation of mankinde departs this life before his appointed day so that no man by diligence can lengthen his life nor any man by negligence shorten his life The holy Prophet Dauid hauing Saul his enemie in his hand would not be perswaded to lay his hands on him but said His day shall come to die 1 Sam. 26.8.9 I will not smite him As if he had spoken more plainely It is not for me to kill him for God hath appointed him his time in which he shall die To this purpose said the iust man Iob by way of two interrogations Iob. 7.1 Is there not an appointed time for man vpon the earth And are not his dayes determined Iob. 14.5 The number of his moneths are with thee thou hast appointed him his bounds ouer which he shall not passe As if it were to say Certainely there is an appointed time for mans departure out of this world euen by the diuine ordinance sacred decree of the Almightie which cannot be shortened nor lengthned no not so much time more as to go ouer a meere or baulke nor so much time lesse as to come vnto it Againe he saith verie emphatically and affirmatiuely beleeuing in the promise of God therin after this manner I will waite my appointed time as though he had said Iob. 14.14 My God hath determined and set downe the day and houre of my dissolution it is hid from me I will therefore attend I will be looking for it from day to day Salomon after his conuersion amongst many excellent most diuine instructions he particulateth this secret decree of God most plainly after this manner Eccl. 3.12 To all things there is an appointed time And from this generall he descendeth into a more particular thus There is a time to be borne and a time to die to wit as there is a most certaine time inclosed in euery womans wombe in which she shall bring forth into the world euen so there is a certaine and an appointed time in which he that is borne of a woman shall go out of the world Saint Paul said to the Athenians Act. 17.26 God hath assigned the times that were ordained before and the bounds of their habitation By that saying the time of mans departure is decreed and vnreapeable why because there is no alteration nor change in Gods diuine Maiestie that which he is he was the same he will be for euer Iehoida said 2 King 11.15 He that comes within the ranges let him die the death euen so it may be said Whosoeuer comes within the compasse of the time which God hath decreed let him die without delay there is no hope nor helpe for him there will be no partiality or fauourable respects The liues of the 10. Gen. 5.3 to the end Fathers were twise exactly reckoned and their death once for diuers causes but specially that thereby euerie man thenceforth might be able to know the age of the old world before the floud The ages of these holy men being computated and layd together do amount iustly to 1656. yeares In which obseruance or sure rule for numeration and multiplication the holy Ghost deliuereth plainely that God doth strictly seuerely recken the liues of all men yea from their verie beginning to the verie day of their death Saint Iohn and other the Euāgelists affirme out of their owne knowledge that the Iewes vsed all cunning meanes practised diuers wayes to apprehend our Lord and Sauiour but all was in vaine something or other went betweene and why his houre was not yet come Ioh. 8.30 the time which his holy Father had decreed was not when they would To this effect Moses by a large measure of inspiration spake of an holy woman the wife of the Patriarch Abraham who had a particular and gracious respect before God specially for the time of her life the time of her death Gen. 23.1.2 When Sarah saith he was 127. yeares old so long liued shee then Sarah died That is as much to say Shee liued iust so long indeede and no whit longer when her appointed time was come then she died and not before Likewise Moses doth computate the age of Abraham her husband and saith Gen. 25.7 This is the age of Abrahams life which he liued 175. yeares Then Abraham yeelded the spirit died in a good age As if he had said This 175. yeares was the full time in which God had appointed him to liue When as Moses himselfe was to depart this life almightie God called him saying Thy dayes are come Deu. 31.14 thou must die to wit my decree is certaine towards thee my louing and my faithfull seruant as towards all the generation of mankinde As in an hoast of men furiously in fight so in the world some shall die now because God hath so appointed and some shall not die then because God hath not so appointed To which effect he spake by the mouth of his Prophet Eze. 9.4.5.6 Set a marke vpon the foreheads of thē that mourne And cōcerning others he said vnto him Go and smite destroy vtterly the old and the young Gen. 4.15 So likewise God was said to set a marke vpō Caine but touch no man vpon whom the marke is set shewing therein that euen amongst furious and outragious men in martiall affaires and in the determinations of malicious men life and death is euen then particularly in Gods hands and also the verie time thereof Here arise two necessary questions One why hath God so exactly determined the time of death the other why God doth conceale the time The first whereof is Why hath God so exactly determined the verie time of euery mans departure out of this world so that no man can go beyond it nor come short of it Why did he not rather resolue vpon this Let euery man shift for himselfe and
answer for the vse of means to preserue life Is the practise of holy men who were moued by the Spirit of inspiratiō as of Dauid the King and Prophet who although he had the word and promise of Almightie God for victorie against the Philistins yet he knowing the right rule of Gods will in his word and promise determined with himselfe to vse warlike meanes and therefore came vpon them valiantly with an alarum from the mulberrie trees 2 Sam. 5.25.24 So did Gedeon politickly and valiantly come vpon the Midianites with his 300. men only Iudg 7.16.17.18 hauing in sted of swords staues pitchers and lamps Ichoiada the priest though he did know that his cause and his butines was the Lords yet he gaue commandement vnto the Captaines to vse speares and shields which he gaue them 2 King 11.10.11 As the seruants of Benadab the King said to their maister when they were ouercome by the King of Israel We haue heard that the Kings of Israel are mercifull 1 King 20.31 we pray thee let vs put on sackcloth about our loynes and ropes about our necks and let vs go to the King of Israel it may be he will saue thy life So likewise we must all conclude and agree for the vse of all kind sorts manners of good meanes who can tell whether the Lord our King and our God will saue vs in the vse of meanes or not As Daniel said to his keeper Da. 1.12 Proue vs ten dayes let vs haue pulse to eate water to drinke so in like maner let vs say to our selues and to whom else soeuer Proue the meanes trie what God vouchsaseth to do thereby Although Saint Paul knew that neither he nor any one of his company should perish in that dangerous voiage yet he said vnto the mariners Except these tarie in the ship Act. 27.23 to 52. they cannot be saued as if he had said We and they haue one meanes of life let vs vse it and God will giue good issue thereunto Saint Paul also knew by the Spirit of inspiration and by the reueiled word of God that no man should die before his day yet he commanded Timotheus to vse wine for his stomacke sake and his often infirmities 1 Tim. 5.23 As the Gibeonites being leaft-handed vsed to sling stones whereby they became so skilfull that they could sling at an haire and not faile Iud. 20.16 euen so Gods people are to be so skilfull in the vse of meanes frō the least to the greatest that they may preserue life The third answer for the vse and meanes to preserue life Is proued by the practise also of holy women as that vertuous woman of Tekoha 2 Sam. 14.14 who importunately intreated King Dauid for the life of Absalon his sonne The Shunamitish woman being of great estimation and hauing her onely sonne dead 2 King 18.19.20 most labouriously vsed the helpe of Elisha the Prophet if it were possible to haue him restored to life As the inhabitants of Gibea though they were leaft-handed Iudg. 20.16 could sling a stone at an haires breadth and faile not euen so must Gods children labor to be skilfull in the vse of al good meanes for the preseruation of life The fourth answer for the vse of meanes to preserue life Is the practise of almightie God himself who vsually doth annexe the vse of meanes with his decree concerning the time as well for the destroying of life as for the preseruing of life whereby the one be not shorter nor the other longer Sometimes he vseth weake or small meanes to bring mightie things to passe and that for the manifestation of his mercy and readinesse for the chearing vp of such as were weake and miserable 2 Cro. 14.11 as Asa the King of Iudah said in his prayers vnto God being miserably distressed It is nothing with thee to helpe with many or with no power Likewise Gedeon with his 300 mē presumed vpon the promise of God Iudg. 7.16.12.18 to giue the onset to many royall armies at one time of the Midianites Ifrael had victory against the Philistims 1 Sam. 13.19 without speare or shield Sometimes God vseth base or as it may be said by a phrase of speech foolish meanes that thereby he might confound the wisedome of the wise So did he command Iosua to compasse the great and inuincible citie Ierico seuen times Iosua 16.11 to 8. sounding out their rams hornes and with the same to throw downe the wals and to open their gates of iron brasse Somtimes he vseth miraculous means 1 Sam. 14.15 There was feare in the hoast of the Philistims amongst all the peope the garrison also and they that went out to spoyle were afraid themselues the earth trembled for it was stinken with feare by God He vseth miraculous meanes for the manifestation of his inexpugnable power as at the winning of that royall citie of Gibeon Iosua 10.11.12 whereat fine Kings and their armies were discomfited in one day Iosua being the Lord Generall of Israel whereof some with the sword some with stones from heauen Sometimes his Maiesty vseth physical means as that plaister of figs which Hezechiah 2 King 20.7 was commanded to take for his plague sore Sometimes he worketh the good of his people euen by no means as he himselfe said by the Prophet Hosea I will not saue them by bow Hos 1.7 not by sword nor by battell nor by horses nor by horsemen but I will saue them by the Lord their God As if he had said Naturall worldly men shall not impute the deliuerance of my people vnto possible meanes on earth but it shall be done beyond all expectation cleane contrarie to the vse of reason besides the capacity of the most wise in the world The fifth answer for the vse of meanes to preserue life There is in euerie man both good bad by the instinct of nature an intollerable affected pronenesse to vse all sorts and all kinds of meanes for the preseruation of life drawne originally from a naturall manner of feare such as was in Adam who hauing in his owne conscience deserued death Gen. 3.8.9.10 fled and hid himselfe So Caine hauing murthered his brother durst not for feare of punishment acknowledge his offence and when sentēce was pronounced against him Gen. 4.13.14 he feared death exceedingly which made him to expostulate with God in a most desperate manner Act. 27.1 to 21. Saint Paul his company in that most dangerous voyage were maruellous fearefull which made them to labour and to vse all meanes possibles for their liues The heathen sailers with Ionas to Tarshis in that great outragious tempest Ion. 1.1 to 8. spared not their best commodities but threw them into the sea to lighten the ship and laboured innarrably and all with the feare of death So in like manner holy men such as were indeed the
Ecclesiasticall histories The paines and pangs which the body doth endure before the soule be sundred may be likened vnto the paines and pangs of a woman in her trauell with child of whō the holy Prophet speakes Her hands saith he on her loynes Iere. 30.6 Esai 13.7.8 her face turned to palenesse her heart weakened and melting with feare and anguish Yea the paines and pangs of death do well resemble the paines and torments of hell and therefore the first second death is but one selfesame with this difference onely the one is naturall and temporarie the other is supernaturall and euerlasting The feare of this death made our blessed Sauiour Iesus Christ as he was a man to importune the Maiestie of his Father with teares that it might passe from him Mat. 26.39.40.41.42.43 being brought vnto it through the agonie thereof he was enforced to call and to crie vnto God his Father as if in part he had despaired O my Father why hast thou forsakē me The like obliuion and desperate speeches are heard seene in the time of deaths torments euen from many of Gods deare children and canonized Saints Saint Paul saith that death hath a sting thereby inferring that death is venimous as all creatures which haue stings are noysome and hurtfull either more or lesse but death is like vnto the diuell himselfe stinging and poysonful therfore called a serpent the most noisome and the most pestiferous creature of all others Againe Saint Paul calleth death an enemie inferring thereby as out of the naturall disposition of a naturall enemie the greatest mischiefe that possibly he can deuise to the poore body of man specially being godly The torments of death must needes be held innarrable if we do but consider the combate and conflict that is betweene the soule and the body the one affecting cleane contrarie to the other and in nature quite opposite Which opposition and conflict may well be resembled vnto that dangerous tempest on the sea of Tarshish which was raised purposely by God himselfe for the arresting of Ionas who was as he thought secure The winds were sent into the seas which being an element light laboured vehemētly according to the nature therof to ascend and the seas being an element heauy laboured mightily according to the quality thereof to descend so that the seas being violently kept vp by the winds and the winds being violently kept downe by the seas made such a storme such an outragious tempest as if heauen and earth had ratled and rang together or as if the shippe had bene still a rushing and a riuing in peeces vpon the rocks euen so is the soule and body of him who is in the hands of death The soule according to the nature and quality thereof being a spirituall an heauenly and holy creature of the Almightie vseth and enforceth all meanes thither to ascend but the body being of a cleane contrary disposition massie heauy and earthy according to the qualitie thereof in sort and kind labors thither to descend The one being of a cleane contrarie disposition to the other they become hindrances to the passage one of another meanes one against another of greater enduring passions And to conclude briefly the torments of death are as the hewing of Agag in peeces 1 Sam 15.33 Psal 50.22 as the irefull execution of God whereof Dauid speaks Although this tormēting be the decree of the Almighty for the subduing of mans body and for the depriuation of his life yet it is euident that the variety and sundrie manners sorts and kinds of death whereunto his Maiestie hath left himselfe at large is the cause that many wicked men so well as the godly do depart this life with litle pangs or paines And at other times out of his Maiesties roiall and extraordinary fauor through Iesus Christ the paines and pangs of death in many of the godly are mitigated and diminished as may appeare out of manifold sentences and examples of Scripture For it is all one with him in regard of his power and mercie to abate or to annihilate the qualitie and the quantity of executing creatures or things appointed for torments as it is for him to increase and to multiply the same As the sauage and hungrie lions were so asswaged in their natures so mitigated Dani. 6.20.21.22.3.20.21.22 that they became as playfellowes vnto Daniel the fierie fornace being seuen times hotter then ordinary was vnto him and his companions but as a place of recreation So no doubt were the fiery tormēts vnto the Saints of God who were cruelly executed in Queene Maries dayes After another sort most powerfully doth his Maiestie multiplie or increase the qualitie of bread and water for the good of the poore who otherwise could not possibly liue and abateth the extremitie of their cold in the winter Remember the augmentation of the 7. Mar. 8.8 Dan. 1.15 loues and few fishes so that more was taken vp then was layd downe and remember Daniels pu●●● And albeit I should absolutely grant that there is no mitigation of paines in death for any and that it must needes be concluded that the verie Saints and seruants of God shall suffer the most grieuous torments of naturall death equally with the reprobates which cannot be truly agreeed vnto and which God forbid yet considering that the guiltinesse of sin is cleane taken away in Iesus Christ that these torments of death are but as it were momentanie or as the twinckling of an eye in comparison of the euerlasting torments of the reprobates what man or woman hauing any hope thereof hauing any feeling of faith or hauing any one motion of Gods spirit but would most willingly endure the torments of bodily death were they yet greater yea before it come to cōmemorate and withall to celebrate the remembrance of death by which there is an end of all sorrowes and the possessing of all ioyes and immortall happinesse If the person dead or dying be an husband Then the matrimoniall association which by Gods ordinance was made singularly and plurally two in one and one in two the better to be helpfull one vnto another is now by death dasht as it were into powder and violently parted a sunder and seuered one from another for euer into two distinct places which deuision to the husband or wife is so naturally grieuous as it is for one limbe being cut off from another as Ruth doth impart out of her most singular affection to Nahomie her mother in law in these words Ruth 1.17 The Lord do so to me and more also if ought but death part thee me euen so is the loue of a wife fearing God towards her husband that she concludeth in her heart from the first houre vnto the last that nothing shal infringe her faith towards him but death which when it cometh exceedingly moueth her to mourne This also appeares vpon the wofull and lamentable experience
parents soules and bodies Gen. 4.10 As the bloud of Abel did call and crie from earth to heauen for vengeance against his brother Caine 2. Kin. 1.12.13 to 15. and as Eliah called cried that fire might come from heauen to the earth vpon all the captaines of Ahaziah euen so is there an interchangeable entercourse from heauen to earth frō earth to heauen of Gods irefull plagues to fall vpon such children The holy man Dauid although he vnlawfully longed to drinke of the water at Bethlehem yet vpon better consideration he wold none of it when the three Worthies brought it vnto him but poured it for an oblation to the Lord and said Let not my Lord God suffer me to do this 2 Sam 23.15.16 Be it farre from me that I do this is not this the bloud of these men which went in ieopardie of their liues 1. Chron. 11 17.18.19 shall I drinke the bloud of these mens liues So that by this it appeareth were there no other proofe how dangerously ill gottē goods are kept how more dangerously they are to be spent and how damnably such children do liue in this world indeed as it were without God yea the very damned in hell shall rise in iudgement against thē Luk. 16.27 For the gluttō in torments was perplexed with griefe for the state of his brethren which liued in sin would not haue them come to that place to aggrauate his torments Whereas these vngracious children haue no remorse or sorrow for their distressed parents which died in sinne and liue in death And what may not be said of another sort of gracelesse children who after the deceasse of their godly religious parents are so far from mourning after them or for them as that they indeed do ioy and reioyce in their hearts at their departure If they sorrow any thing at all it is for that they died not sooner according as many times they wished for their lands and goods sake Shall they escape for their wickednes No the Maiestie of our eternall Father will shorten their dayes diminish their store and from their gracelesse stocke shall spring vngracious impes to requite disobediēce seuen fold into their bosomes Mat. 7. For the measure saith our Lord which you mete to others shall be heaped vpon you againe When good king Iosiah was dead we reade not that his sonne Iehohaz mourned for him or followed his good examples either in the continuance of religion administration of iustice or godly conuersation Wherefore his dayes were shortned his life miserable and his kingdome was left to the disposition of his enemie His posteritie was yet more miserable for his sonne being dead was not lamented Ier. 22.18.19 neither did any mourne for him saying Ah Lord or ah his glory he shall be buried as an asse euen drawne and cast forth without the gates of Ierusalem This serueth necessarily to instigate and to call vpon all suruiuors of their parents and friends carefully to commemorate the heauy hand of God vpō themselues for that priuate depriuation of friends if they were godly with the acknowledgement of their owne sinnes chiefly in the omission of many reuerent duties towards them and specially in thankfulnesse vnto God for those helpes which they receiued from them It serues for the accomplishment of other holy duties towards the dead in taking care in making conscience to do good vnto those whom their friends being dead entirely loued whiles they liued Whereof we haue a famous example in Dauid toward his faithful friend Ionathan who was dead Is there any man 2. Sam. 9.1 to 8. said he of the house of Saul that I may shew mercie vnto him for Ionathans sake to whom was brought Mephiboseth Ionathans son Dauid said vnto him Feare not for I will surely shew thee kindnesse for Ionathan thy fathers sake who is dead and I will restore thee all the fields of Saul thy father and thou shalt eate at my table continually Againe he said 2. Sam. 10.1 I will shew kindnesse vnto Hanun as his father shewed kindnesse vno me There was a solēne law in Israel which was to be performed to the widow of him which was dead if she had no son to comfort her which law Christian commemoration for the dead was memorably performed by Boaz towards Ruth Ruth 4.10.21 If the person dead were wicked in his life and at his death then there is more cause of mourning and lamentation and calling earnestly vnto God by his kindred and by his allied friends for the auoiding of Gods iudgements which they most iustly haue deserued in that they did not more carefully and more conscionably instruct such a man or such a woman vnto a better life whereby he or she might haue made a better death According to which purpose Saint Iames speaketh after this maner Iam. 5. v. 19.20 If any of you haue erred frō the truth and some man hath conuerted him let him know that he which hath conuerted the sinner from going astray out of his way shall saue a soule from death and shall hide a multitude of sinnes If the partie dead or dying be publicke spirituall or temporall and iust Then consider the present euill that hath happened to particular persons to priuate families to publike congregations and to whole kindomes after the deceasse of such a man or such a woman Which is drawne from that good which almightie God vouchsafeth for the time present wherein they liued who being dead it incontinently ceasseth As Salomon saith By the blessing of the righteous Pro. 11.11 cities are exalted to wit the whole inhabitants of that towne and countrie where a righteous person liueth shall fare and prosper the better and shall haue the iudgements of God which they haue deserued withholden from them And it is certaine Iosua 7.1 to 6. as for the sinnes of one many haue bene in the anger of God destroid and brought to nothing so for the true godlinesse of one or more 2. Sam. 24.15 many hundreds and thousands haue bene most miraculously preserued God promised Abraham that if in all Sodome and Gomorrah there were found but ten righteous persons Gen. 18.24 to 33.19.18 to 26 he would spare all the rest for their sakes The same was experimented in Zoar at Lots request for all the people therein were miraculously preserued from the fire which abundantly fell from heauen round about them There was three yeares dearth in all the land of Israel for Sauls sinnes onely in slaying the Gibeonits 2. Sam. 21.1 to 11. Dauid the King did therfore importune the Gibeonits for their fauour vnto God in their behalfe which being obtayned the plague ceassed On the contrarie so long as Ioseph liued King Pharao and all his subiects prospered but when Ioseph died Exo. 1.6.7.8 to the end 9.1.33 Exo. 9.27.28 2 King 24.2 to the end Dan. 11.1.2 then their plagues reuiued and fell thicke