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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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be the better prepared for it when it shall come indeed But some may heere obiect say how can this be done The Apostle Saint Paul doth answere it in giuing vs direction by his owne example when he saith 1. Cor. 15.31 By our reioycing which wee haue in Christ Iesus our Lord I die daily And doutlesse this Apostle died daily not only because he was often in danger of death by reason of his calling but also because in all his dangers and troubles hee inured himselfe to die For when men doe make the right vse of their afflictions and doe with their might endeauour to beare them patiently humbling themselues as vnder the Lords chastisement and correction then they are said to begin to die well And he that would mortifie his greatest sinnes must first begin to doe it in his smallest sinnes which being once reformed he shall with more ease be able to ouercome his master sinnes For this is the way to keepe sinne from raigning in our mortall bodies So likewise he that would bee able to beare the crosse of all crosses as namely death which is the end of all crosses must first of all learne to beare small crosses as sicknesses diseases troubles losses pouertie and the like which may fitly be tearmed little deathes and the beginnings of the greater death with which little deaths we must first acquaint our selues before wee can be able to incounter with great Death For as one well saith Death after the crosse is the lesse The world is set vnto vs as a house wherein we are but tenants at will out of which the Lord by sicknesse and crosses giueth vs warning and by death determineth his will and requireth it againe at our hands and willeth vs thereby to prepare our selues for a better house and the new house for which we are to prepare our selues is most pleasant and not so fraile ruinous and weake as our worldly house for the tiles doe sometimes fall off this house the walles doe reele the roofe doth drop the pillars doe leane the foundation doth sinke And what are these but so many warnings of the Lord to vs to depart hence and prepare for a better place Therfore when thou dost perceiue thy falling haires thy watering eyes thy trembling hands thy weake knees and thy stooping bodie what are these but onely the citations of Death which seemes to warne thee to prepare to packe vp that thou maist with more ease be able to goe out of this ruinous house of thine It is a fable but it hath a good mortall A certaine man did couenant with Death that he should neuer surprize him at vnawares or sodainly before that he had first sent a messenger to him to giue him warning that shortly hee would arrest him to which Death assented that though he could not alwaies forbeare him yet before hee did strike him hee would giue him warning Vpon Deaths promise thus past this man liued secure spending his time in all maner of riot and excesse and when he thoughtfull little of Death then came Death to take him away with whom this man expostulating for breach of promise Death in discharging of his fidelitie replied that with none no not those that violate all promises had he broken promise for saith he I haue sent many messenger vnto you from time to time to giue you warning of my comming thou wast sixe yeares since taken with a grieuous Feuer within these two yeeres sore troubled with Rhumes and distillations since that taken with the cough and paine in the head then troubled with the consumption of the Lungs And did I not lately send my brother Germaine vnto thee the drousie sleeping disease veturnosum soporem in which thou didst lye for a while like a dead man All these were fore-runners of my comming to warne thee to make thy selfe ready for mee who was neere at hand Is there any amongst vs that is not sometimes admonished of Deathes approaching by some of these his Apparators that hee must shortly depart The Poet saith truely Mille modis lethi miseros mors vna fatigat A thousand kinds yet but one death Hath death to take away our breath From whence let all men learne that haue care of their saluation what they ought to doe and be warie to prepare themselues for Death before Death doth end their life Often we ought to prepare for Death and doe not at last wee die indeed and would then and cannot Therefore while our feete are at liberty and before we be bound hand and foote let vs runne the way of the Lords Commandements and while we haue tongues and before we become speechlesse let vs vse our tongues well and not suffer them to sinne Mat. 22.12.13 And while we haue hands and armes and before our armes not from our shoulders Ephes 4.28 let vs worke with our hands the things that are good and procure things honest in the sight of all men Psal 150.6 and while wee haue breath before God stop our breath let vs praise the Lord. And while we haue eares Eccl. 12.4 before these daughters of singing bee abased let vs lift vp our eares to heare the word of God and not to vanitie Gal. 6 10. All we therefore saith the Apostle haue opportunitie to doe good vnto all men especially to them that are of the houshold of faith All this is a good preparation for death and by our patience in suffering afflictions it will make Death when it comes the easier for vs and the lesse able to afflict vs. For he that dyeth saith one before hee die shall not dye when he doth die In a temporall building the stones must be broken cut hewen and squared ere they be fit to make vp the worke The corne must bee cut downe bound vp carried into the barne threshed winnowed clensed and grinded before it be ready for good bread And the whirlewinde must first blow 2. King 2.11 before Eliah be rapt vp into heauen And wee must be cut hewen and squared with a number of Deathes messengers before wee can bee made fit for the Lords building We must be tossed with the winde and weather before wee can arriue in the hauen of heauen The very victualls which wee eate must first from life be brought to the fire and bee cleane altered in losing their propertie from the fire to the table from the table to the mouth so to the stomacke and there be concocted and disgested before they can nourish and worke their perfection in vs. Euen so Gods children must be mangled and defaced in this world which is the mill to grinde vs the kitchin to receiue vs and the fire to boyle roast and bake vs to alter the propertie from that wee were at the first that we thereby may bee made fitte to be brought to the Lords table For as raw flesh is wholesome meate for men so vnmortified men bee no creatures fit for God By
decree of God is vnchangeable Esay 46.10 His counsell saith the Prophet shall stand and he will doe all his pleasure Secondly it is an article of our faith grounded on the word of God and from thence saith the Article he shall come to iudge both the quicke and the dead Eccles 12.14 Thirdly the Scripture saith That God shall bring euery work vnto iudgement with euery secret thing whether it be good or euill But all this is not done heere for heere many matters are cloaked and carried in a mist that deserue iudgement and merit condemnation Therefore that God may be iust in his sayings there must be a sessions of gaole-deliuery which the Scriptures cal the iudgement of the last day Fourthly the godly doe heere groane vnder many miseries the vngodly wallow in many delights and pleasures The rich liue delicately and Lazarus is in paine therefore it is necessary as it is certaine that a day should come wherein the Lord may make knowne his righteousnesse and magnifie his iustice before his most glorious throne that they who haue liued merily and dishonored God might liue in torments of fire and they whose life hath beene miserable seruing the Lord might be comforted for euer Some haue off●nded deepely and haue not beene touched by the Magistrate some haue suffered great rebuke and sometimes death who haue done good and deserued not only fauour but recompence and therefore a day must come and is appointed wherein the Lord that is iust 2. Thess 1.6.7.8 will recompence tribulation to all that haue troubled the righteous and rest to them that were troubled On the otherside would it not bee hard for the godly who haue here endured the crosse for the ioy that was set before them if there should not come a time of refreshing from God And would it not too much obdurate the wicked who drinke iniquitie as water if they should escape all punishments and vengeance here and also after death Fiftly this is shadowed out in that Housholder Mat. 20.8.10 Matth. 25.19 who whē euening was come called the labourers and gaue euery man his hire and peny And if a wise master will recken with his seruants shal we thinke that Wisedome it selfe will not one day recken with impeniten sinners and call them before him for his money that is pretious graces of wit learning authority wealth and other outward and inward ornaments of life which they haue consumed on their lusts Sixtly euery mans conscience doth by a trembling feare as in Felix at one time or another Acts 24.26 iustifie this point of a iudgement to come And therefore as the Floud of waters once drowned the world Gen. 7.1.7 except a few who were sau●d in the Arke so it is certaine that the floud and tempest of the last day with fire shal consume it and all therein 2. Pet. 2.5 except such as Christ hath or then will gather into the little Arke of his Church In the euening of the world and when there shall be no more time he wil cal the labourers before him giuing them the peny or pay of euerlasting life but for the idle and loyterers he will put them out of the vineyard Matth. 7.23 and out of Christ and send them with sinners to the place prepared for them as they haue liued without the Church or idle in it so when the labourers receiue their peny th●y shall heare this sentence Depart from mee yee that worke iniquitie I know you not Thus it is proued not onely to be certaine but necessarie that there should bee a iudgement which we are to vnderstand know and wisely prouide for But some will say seeing men come to their account at their death what needeth any other day of audit or hearing to whom I answere That men at their death receiue but priuate iudgement but heere they shall receiue publike sentence then they are iudged in their soules onely heere they shall be in soule and body This first is but a close sessions the other is an open and solemne assise In the first much of their shame is hid heere they shal be ashamed to the full and vtterly confounded If our owne lawes doe not condemne and execute malefactors in prison but in open place and manner for their greater shame it is great reason that wicked sinners should not priuately in the graues as in prison be iudged and led to execution but be brought to the publike skaffold and barre of solemne sessions there to receiue their shame and sentence together and not to be executed by a close death in the gaole but be brought forth to suffer vpon the high stage of the world in the sight of Saints and Angels where all eyes may see and behold them And that this day cannot be farre off it may appeare both according to the prophecies of holy Fathers as also the truth of the Scriptures Augustine in his booke on Genesis saith against the Maniches That the world should last sixe ages The first from Aadam to Noah the second from Noah to Abraham the third from Abraham to Dauid the fourth frō Dauid to the Transmigration to Babylon the fift from the Transmigration to the comming of our Sauiour Christ in the flesh and the sixt from the comming of our Sauiour in the flesh to his comming againe to Iudgement So that according to this Prophecie we liue in the last age 1. Iohn 2.18 which last age is called by Saint Iohn the last houre And how long this last houre shall continue Reue. 1.11 he onely that is Alpha and Omega the first and the last knoweth The Hebrewes they boast of the Prophecie of Eliah a great man in those dayes who prophecied that the world should last sixe thousand yeeres two thousand before the Law two thousand vnder the Law two thousand from Christs comming in the flesh to his comming againe vnto Iudgement If this Prophecie bee true then cannot the world last foure hundred yeeres But leauing men and comming to the Scriptures which cannot erre Saint Paul saith 1. Cor. 10.11 That wee are they vpon whom the ends of the world are come If therefore the end of the world were come vpon them that liued aboue one thousand and fiue hundred yeeres agoe then surely Doomes day cannot now be farre off Saint Iames saith Iam. 5.9 Behold the Iudge standeth before the dore Saint Iohn Baptist preached repentance to the Iewes saying Matth. 3.2 Repent for the kingdome of heauen is at hand Saint Peter sa●th 1. Pet. 4.7 The end of all things is at hand Though no man can shew the fingers of this hand The Apostle Saint Iude saith Iude 1.14.15 And Enoch the seuenth also from Adam prophecied of these saying Behold the Lord commeth with ten thousand of his Saints to execute iudgement vpon all and to conuince all that are vngodly among them of all their vngodly deeds which they haue vngodly committed and
of a good life but vsed the meanes of flight onely to preuent violent and hastie death till the houre appointed should come that they were to giue their spirit in peace into the hands of him that made it and because such vntimely death was enemy to the good they had to doe and course they were to finish therefore they went aside by flying for some time and till the time of their departure come that they might doe the good to which they were appointed and finish the course for which they were sent For if a remouing or flying for thine ease in this respect may be effected by shifting thy place that may both be desired and vsed without sinne Isaak sent his sonne Iacob away from his brother Esau when Esau in his anger had sworne to slay him Dauid fled from the hand and iauelin of Saul and shifted for himselfe by remouing from place to place and conuayed all his fathers house into the land of Moab from Sauls reach The Lord Iesus oftentimes withdrew himselfe from the rage of the Iewes and he gaue his Disciples a rule for times of persecution saying When they persecute you in this city Mat. 10.23 flie into another And many honest men haue remooued their habitations to auoide euill neighbours and free themselues from beeing troubled by hem But where it is againe alledged that Christ himselfe prayed against the cup of death for the further satisfying of this point I answere further two wayes First that hee prayed without sinne against it seeing that in his supplication of teares and much feare hee submitted to his Fathers will alwayes Mat. 26.39.42 Neuerthelesse said he not as I will but as thou wilt And againe O my Father if this cup may not passe away from me except I drinke it thy will be done Also death was not to him as it is to vs for to vs the sting of it is conquered and the force broken but to him it was in full power he felt the sting of it and wrastled with the force of it in soule and bodie Secondly I say as was said before that it was not meerly a bodily death though vnsubdued saue where himselfe subdued it that he trembled at but by the burthen of our sinnes which he was to vndergoe in which hee beheld the whole There he saw his Fathers countenance turned against him and there knew that he must beare his wrath because he bare our sinnes And besides Christ feared death beeing cloathed with our flesh to shew that he tooke our infirmities Isay 53.4,5,6 and bore our sorrowes and was perfect man And so death may in some case be feared and at sometime prayed against but euer vnder the correction of Gods will For the rod of death turned into a serpent made Moises feare Exod. 4.3 and the best haue moderately declined and shrunke at the stroke of death when it came in some tempest and who doth not dread all Gods terrors whereof death is one and feare that which is the punishment of sinne and curse of sinners and decline that which is the ruine and destruction of humane nature and shrinke at that which hath made the strongest the wisest the greatest the richest to fall downe flat before it Therefore the feare of death thus reproued is not the naturall feare of it which is in all but the seruile feare of it proper to euill doers and common to those who can haue no hope in death because they neuer cared to liue till they were compelled to die The fourth obiection is that those who haue beene reputed to be of the better sort of men haue oftentimes miserable ends for some end their dayes despayring some rauing and blaspheming some strangely tormented It may therefore seeme that the day of death is the day of greatest woe and miserie To this I answer first of all generally that wee must not iudge of the estate of any man before God by outward things whether they be blessings or iudgements whether they fall in life or in death For as the Preacher saith Eccles 9.1.2 No man knoweth either loue or hatred by all things that are before them all things come alike to all and the same condition is to the iust and to the wicked and to the good and pure and to the polluted and to him that sacrificeth and to him that sacrificeth not as is the good so is the sinner he that sweareth as he that feareth an oath Againe the Preacher saith Eccles 8.14 There is a vanity that is done vpon the earth that there be iust men to whom it hapneth according to the work of the wicked and there be wicked men to whom it happeneth according to the worke of the righteous Secondly I answere to the particulars which be alleaged in this manner First for despaire it is true that not onely wicked and loose persons despaire in death but also godly and penitent sinners who often in their sicknesse testifie of themselues that beeing aliue and lying in their beds they feele themselues to bee as it were in hell and to apprehend the very pangs and torments of it and I doubt not for all this but that the child of God which is most deare vnto him may through the gulfe of desperation attaine to euerlasting life and happinesse Which appeares to bee so by Gods dealing in the matter of our saluation For all the workes of God are done in and by their contraries In the creation all things were made not of something but of nothing cleane contrary to the course of nature In the worke of redemption God giues life not by life but by death And if we consider aright of Christ vpon the Crosse wee shall see our paradise out of paradise in the midst of hell for out of his own cursed death hee brings vs a blessed life and eternall happinesse Likewise in our effectuall vocation when it pleaseth God to conuert and turne men vnto him he doth it by the meanes of the preaching of the Gospel which in reason should driue men from God for it is as contrary to the nature of man as fire to water and light to darknesse For the Apostle saith 1. Cor. 1.21.22.23.52 After that in the wisdome of God the world by wisedome knew not God it pleased God by the foolishnesse of preaching to saue them that beleeue For the Iewes require a signe and the Greekes seeke after wisdome but we preach Christ crucified vnto the Iewes a stumbling block and vnto the Greekes foolishnesse And yet for all this though it be thus against the nature and disposition of man it preuailes with him at length and turnes him vnto his God it hee belong vnto him Furthermore when God will send his owne seruants vnto heauen he sends some of them a contrary way euen as it were by the gates of hell For our way to heauen is by compasse euen as the Lord led the Israelites out of Egypt into the Land