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A58223 The pilgrims pass to the new Jerusalem, or, The serious Christian his enquiries after heaven with his contemplations on himself, reflecting on his happiness by creation, misery by sin, slavery by Satan, and redemption by Christ ... relating to those four last and great things of death, judgement, hell, and heaven ... / by M.R., Gent. M. R., Gent. 1659 (1659) Wing R47; ESTC R5428 94,586 254

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in Unity and Unity in Trinity There you shall see the Lamb with his train of Attendants Cherubims Seraphims Principalities Powers Thrones Dominions Archangels and Angels Patriarchs Prophets Apostles Martyrs and Confessours crying Holy holy holy Lord God of Sabbath And there shall those good Angels which were your Guardians upon earth be your everlasting Companions in Heaven In a word 't is such a home where you shall be made perfectly happy Time shall not rust or diminish your glory nor adversity with her frowns ever approach near those Mansions for you shall be ever in the Sun-shine of Gods favour and your happiness as everlasting as his that made it Oh! did we but all consider the shortness of the sweetest pleasure here in comparison of those endless and eternal joyes that the Saints shall there partake of and the shortness and smallness of the longest and greatest misery or torture that can be endured here to the Worm that never dyes to the fire that is never quencht to those everlasting torments that shall in full viols be poured upon the wicked in Hell for ever we should think less of this world and more to be happy in a better And this brings me from the first particular observable to the second From being mindful of our home to our choice of Guides to conduct us thither Choose the best guides These guides are in the Old Testament called Seers in the New Overseers and these are they whom God hath appointed to lead us the way to that home to which many Saints are already gone in Soul and many more shall in Gods due time arive and be fully glorified both in soul and body These Seers or Overseers are those that open the Scriptures and make plain the way of the Lord and cause his paths to be known to the sons of men they are also for their dignity term'd Ambassadors of Christ Christs Stewards Publishers of glad Tidings proclaimers of Salvation Fellow-workers together with Christ and Ministers of the Gospel These God hath set up as lights that by their soundness of Doctrine and Integrity of life many Souls may be recalled from darkness unto his marvellous light they are Cities set upon a Hill for men to see and Candles lighted upon candlesticks to light the Traveller the way and these by their eminency are or at least ought to be Men of excellent qualifications and rare endowments Angelicall persons men made up of Heaven and if we take such for our guides we need not fear crooked paths but may be confident of our way But because all is not Gold that glisters nor all such as they seem it behoves us to be very cautious in the choise of our guides for if the blinde lead the blinde whither will they go The way to Hell is broad and easily found 't is a pleasant way beset with Roses able to intice the foolish Traveller who is ignorant that it leads to death And on the contrary the way to heaven seems to flesh and blood very uncomfortable a narrow sharp steep and unpleasant way very intricate long tedious troublesome and hard to finde in which many a passenger hath stumbled and many a blinde guide lost his way But that we may be warned by others harms and reach that which they fell short of let 's bear with the sharpness of the way and be incouraged by the happiness of the end The advice of a late ingenuous Author to this purpose is worthy your observation Regard not saith he how difficult the passage is but whither it tends nor how delicate the journey is but where it ends If it be easie suspect it if hard endure it He that cannot excuse a bad way accuseh this own sloth and he that sticks in a bad passage can never attain a good journeyes end It cannot be denyed but that many a passenger hath suffered by bad guides such as have let them go out of their way and made them believe the pleasantest way was the best and the poor Traveller not sensible of the mistake till it hath been too late to talk of returning But of such we are cautioned to beware and though they speak never so smoothly This is the way walk in it we are to turn our deaf ear to erring Charms of such blinde guides and witless Councellours And this brings me from the second particular observable to the third from the choice of our guides to our haste in setting out and perseverance in our course Set out betimes and hold out to the end As this Exhortation is two-fold so shall be my discourse upon it I shall in the first place apply my self to young men who like my self are but newly risen or scarce set out And in the next humbly address my self to aged persons who are or at least ought to be near their journeys end And first to young men let me request you to make God and Heaven the constant objects of your thoughts the one of your fear the other of your love so walk that ye displease not the one and ye need not fear the attaining of the other Are you setting out lose no time remember that many have squandred away the morning and have not reacht their journeyes end ere night and with those foolish Virgins for their tardiness have been excommunicated that place of repose where the early Traveller safely and in good time ariv'd An hour in the morning you know is worth two at night and God is better pleased with young Zeal then decreped Holiness Josiahs forwardness makes him renown'd to posterity and young Timothy's Piety eternizes his name to future generations Are you on your way persevere in your Christian course and think upon the end whilst ye are at the beginnings and even now upon the race have an eye to the recompence so shall the splendid glory of the one faciliate the irksome tediousness of the other Every true Christian saith a learned writer is a Traveller His life his walk Christ his way and Heaven his home his walk painful his way perfect his home pleasing Let 's not therefore loiter lest we come short of home nor wander lest we come wide of home but be content to travel hard and to be sure to walk aright so shall our safe way find its end at home and our painful walk make our home welcome We are all concerned to make our best use of time lest too late we lament the abuse of it yesterday cannot be recalled to morrow cannot be assured to day therefore is onely ours which if we slight we lose which lost is lost for ever Young men remember this I mean you whose bodies are strong and healthful not beset with any sickness or besieg'd with any diseases nor loaded with those common infirmities incident to old age consider that you know not how short your time is your Sun for any thing you know may go down in the morning and your night may fall ere noon Therefore be early
to have a convoy of Angels to fetch him away and to ascend on high with such a guard of attendants in view of so many witnesses this his glory And thus did he evidence his mediatorship by the lowest humiliation of his humanity and exaltation of his divinity by the glorious miracles by the one he did do and the insufferable injuries in the other he did undergo How many glorious miracles did he work certainly if the mighty works which were done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon they had repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes Did he not seed your admiring multitudes 5000 of them at one time with five barley loaves and two fishes and twelve baskets of fragments to spare did he not turn water into wine heal the sick make the lame to walk the deaf to hear the blinde to see and the dumb to sing did he not cleanse the Leper cast out Devils raise the dead even a Lazarus that had been a four dayes prisoner in the Grave Many things of him were remarkable and suited with him as he was the Messiah as to his Birth Death and Burial he was born under Augustus Caesar at such a time when there was an universal peace o're the whole world to shew that he was the prince of peace and came to reconcile his Father to fallen man In Bethlehem the house of bread for him that was the bread of life and the life of the world In an Inne a place of common resort for all persons to shew that all persons should have free admission to him and that he was in publick to manifest himself to the world He was Crucified without the Gates of Jerusalem to shew that he died for those out of the pale of the Church on Mount Calvary a place of death to shew that he came to destroy death on a Cross to shew that that was the way to a Crown and by his sufferings on that tree of shame he purchast for us diadems of glory He was buried in a Grave cut out of a Rock to shew that he was the Stone cut out of the Mountain a Grave untoucht for a body undefil'd in a Garden where mankinde was lost for him by whom the world was saved But this is not all he was a King and such a one you lookt for but here 's the difference you lookt for one to come in outward pomp and splendor he in meekness and humility for the glory of his kingdom consists not in outward shew but hidden splendor you lookt for a temporal Savior he an eternal you to be freed in bodies and estates he to save your souls in comparison of which the whole world is not worthy a name you to be delivered from the Roman yoke he from the Devils tyranny The weapons of his warfare were spiritual and his glory not temporal witness his progress to the Royal City for instead of Chariots and Steeds and Trains of State he hath not a beast but a borrowed one to ride upon no Crown on his head no Scepter in his hand no Cloth of State over him no precious Furniture about him no Tissue upon him no Caparisons of Gold under him No rich Carpets and curious Tapestries before him No Heralds in robes No Clarions No Trumpets to proclaim him And yet Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like this Lilly of the Vallies No Coats of Arms like his Fisher-mens No Laurels to the peoples Boughs No vests of beaten gold to their spread Clothes No Troops of Nobles to his Trains No Grandees to his Disciples which have even the Devils themselves for their subjects no Heralds to the Babes that bless him No Salve's no Jo 's no Ave's to the Hosanna's and Benisons bestowed on him He was a King as he told Pilate but 't was of another world his Throne Heaven the Angels his Courtiers and the whole Creation his Subjects his Judicatory the Courts of Conscience and Church Tribunals and at Doomsday the Clouds It was ordered by Divine Providence that you should put him to death else you should never have had the power to have done it Had he pleas'd he could have call'd Legions of Angels to his rescue one of which armed with his permission able to destroy a world In testimony of which did not the whole fabrick of heaven and earth acknowledge him whom the devils themselves beheld with terror and are you so stupied as not to take notice of him did not you see the rocks rend at his Passion and are you so senseless as to think that a stone shall bar his Resurrection did ye not hear of dead Saints walking up and down the City and do you think to hinder it in a dead Saviour Was not a whole band of you struck down with a word of his Mouth and can a watch keep him from rising up though your Souldiers be too strong for weak Disciples are they able to contend with Angels 'T was strange that he that was immortal should taste of death but impossible he should see corruption Wherefore notwithstanding all your guards he shall rise the third day all the powers of hell shall be too weak to detain him longer or hinder his return to his Fathers Bosome there to continue till the last day and then this Carpenters Son shall come in the Clouds with Power and great Glory and those silly Fishermen sit upon twelve Thorns and judge the twelve Tribes of Israel Look therefore on him now with faith whom else you shall then behold with horror and amazement and now mourn lest then too late ye repent strive to have an interest in his Blood as well as a hand in his Death And now dear Christian let me request thee seriously to look back admire and make a right use of thy Saviours sufferings behold his readiness to suffer his willingless to save the unspeakableness of his pains the greatness of his patience and the luster of his victory how ready was he to save how did his bowels yearn for lost man after the lost sheep of the house of Israel was he come and to save sinners was his errand how ready was he to lay down his life when they came with Swords and Staves to apprehend him did he not betray himself by his so ready a confession I am he How did he hasten that bitter cup and how was he straitned till he did suffer did he not forbid Saint Peter the use of his Sword though in so just a quarrel as his defence how ready was he to pardon how meek and patient in his sufferings was he not the Lamb dumb before the shearers that opened not his mouth who being revil'd revil'd not again but prayed for his enemies whilst they blasphem'd him which prayer of his was so prevalent with his father that in fifty five dayes it occasioned the conversion of eight thousand of his enemies at one time Christs sufferings did as far transcend any other as his Person but they were
whilst they were all fast bound up with a band they were secure either from cracking or bending but when once divided by one and one easily snapt asunder Whilst we are all under the bond of peace we are secured by Gods protection but when once divided at the Devils mercy Whilst we hold together we need not fear treating an enemy in the Gate but when once broke asunder with distractions a prey to them that hate us Remember that Joah and Abishai's united strengh put the Syrians and Ammonites to flight consider that ye have enemies enow abroad ye need not seek any so near home Make not those the objects of your malice that should be the bulwarks of your defence against the impetuous storms and batteries of an insnaring world a bewitching flesh and an envious Devil c. Know that there 's unity amongst wicked men for they hold together against the Righteous Simeon and Levi are Brethren in evil and shall we be at odds Nothing can be done well that 's not done in unity that 's not well done that 's done through discension The Apostle tells us That love is the fulfilling of the Law how then can the Law be fulfilled without love Those blessed Angells who wellcomed the new Born Saviour into the world with a Song did in a short sentence express both Tables They sang Glory to God on High Good will to men Peace on earth makes joy in Heaven and those that will not embrace peace on earth shall have nothing to do with the God of peace or the peace of God in Heaven You know what our Saviour said to his Disciples By this shall men know ye have an interest in me if ye love one another If ever therefore ye expect to end in peace or have peace in the end be peaceable in your Pilgrimage so shall ye in good time arive at your journeyes end and be no longer strangers abroad but Kings at home The Young mans Monitor AND Old Mans Admonisher A Meditation on Eccles 12.1 THis golden Book of Ecclesiastes was pen'd by the wisest King upon his repentance and may be fitly stil'd King Solomons Recantation which he wrote after he rose from that fall occasioned through his inordinate love of strange women and after he had with all his Wisdom found out the true Natures of all things here below then this wisest of Kings wrote this Book in the Front whereof he gives a briefe but full description of all the Glory and Pleasures of this world Vanity of vanities saith the Preacher all is vanity Saith the Preacher something must be said to that Solomon the son of David the richest wisest and mightiest Monarch that then reign'd vouchsafes to take upon him the title of Preacher though the Preacher in these dayes must not think much of the worst of titles but no more of that Solomon having thus truly weighed all the pomps and greatness of this world in the balance of his understanding and finding them too light to give satisfaction to the enjoyers thereof in the end of this Book he gives a heavenly Exhortation tending to the attainment of that true felicity as will make those eternally happy that reach it Fear God and keep his Commandments for this is the whole duty of man And for our better direction to keep Gods Commandments this last Chapter is usher'd in with a most excellent wholesome and seasonable Exhortation Remember now thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth Before I proceed further here must one Objection be remov'd Some may perhaps question the Preacher why he did not as well say Remember thy Creator in thy old age as in the dayes of thy youth I answer This memento is chiefly given to young men because they take the greatest liberty to wallow in all kinde of sensual pleasures and with the greatest eagerness to pursue the deceiving vanities of this world for now are their veins full of blood and their bones full of marrow and Repentance seems as unseasonable to them as Snow in Summer or Rain in Harvest Is not our youth say they given us to glut our selves with all kindes of pleasures and to walk in the wayes of our own hearts Shall I then sayes one grieve in my prime and repent for my crimes to hasten old age and make my smooth face full of wrinkles and bring gray hairs on my head ere I am an old man old age will fasten on me soon enough without all this let me therefore make hay while the sun shines and make the best use of my time I can to the utmost improvement of Pleasures and when I am growne so old as to be past using them I le cast them off and think of repentance and another world when 't is not possible to stay long in this These are the Common Pleas of Youth and therefore the Preacher looking upon them as the furthest from instruction and to stand in the greatest need of advice directeth his speech in a most especiall manner to them Remember now c. Young men have no more a lease of their lives then aged persons and there doth as many of them go to the grave as of older persons Death arrests some in their Cradles and many in their Infancy Childehood and Youth The dayes of man upon earth are but a shadow no certainty of any thing as of Death and nothing more uncertain then the time when and the maner how Come hither then thou darling of the world thou great favorite of flesh and blood thou whose Honors here are as blooming as the Lillies and Roses in thy youthful cheeks know Image that though thy Head be of Gold thy Body of Silver thy Feet are but of Clay If thou walk'st into the fields in the forward time of the Year thou canst not be unfurnisht of lively Emblemes of thy own Mortality how do the Lilly the Rose the Cowslip and the Gillyflower bemantle the earth as so many stars to represent Heaven glorious tapestry upon sight whereof you may easily be convinc't to believe That Solomon in all his glory was not arayed like one of these And yet how subject are they to fading pluck them and they are stubborn soon crapt assunder smell them and they wither and if the winde but blows over them they are gone and be no more And is it not so with thee doth not St. James compare our life to a vapor and that 's but short David to a span a thought a tale and those not long Isaiah to grass and the flower of the field and those you see not lasting But of all the sacred Limners in holy Scripture I finde Jobs pencil to be the freest in pourtraying man to stubble and that not standing neither to a leaf and that not fast but shaken and to a weavers shuttle and many other such transient resemblances He came something near the drawing man to the life who compared this life to a spot between two Eternities the time
the Midwife or rather the womb that brought death into the world and death must be the Grave to bury sin so the Mother is killed by the Daughter Again we may desire it as it brings us home to our Fathers house near our Head and our elder Brother so Saint Paul desir'd it Phil. 5.23 Secondly That none shall dye so but those that live so c. For as the effect follows the cause or the shadow the body so happiness is the attendant of holiness Would Balaam dye the death of the Righteous that was so far as a learned Author observes of him from living the life of the Righteous that he gave Pestilent counsel against the lives of Gods Israel and though here in a fit of compunction he seem a friend yet he was after slain by the Sword of Israel whose happiness he admires and desires to share in Carnal men care not to seek that which they would gladly finde some faint desires and short-winded wishes may be sometimes found in them but their mistake is in breaking Gods chain to sunder Holiness from Happiness Salvation from Sanctification the end from the means they would dance with the Devil and sup with Christ at night Live all their lives long in Dalilahs lap and then go to Abrahams bosom when they dye The Romanists have a saying that a man would desire to live in Italy a place of great pleasure but to dye in Spain because there the Catholick Religion as they call it is so sincerely profest And a Heathen being askt whether he would rather be Socrates a painful Philosopher or Craesus a wealthy King answer'd That for his life he would be Craesus but for the life to come Socracrates But stay not here and hereafter too you know what Father Abraham said to Dives in flames Son Remember that thou in thy life time receivedst thy good things and therefore now must look for evil That King Balaks proffers were so liberal that Balaam was loath to forgo so fat a Morsel his mouth watred and his fingers itcht to be dealing with Balak he will ask God again and again to gain such a prize and his heart again is ravisht with Israels happiness he would fain please Balak if he might not displease God in it and partake of both but as Balak had not his will so neither had Balaam either his wages or his wish God oftentimes fools wicked men of their expectations that whilst they strive to gain the happiness of both worlds at once finde neither so here I know not how fitter to compare Balaam then to a stranger travelling a far Countrey beholds the state and magnificence of the Court but no interest in the King or to a surveyor of Lands that takes an exact compass of other mens Grounds of which he shall never enjoy a foot I shall see him sayes Balaam so shall every eye and those also that pierc't him but not as Abraham saw him and rejoyced nor as Job Chap. 19.25 The pure in heart onely see him to their comfort when Balaam beholds him it shall be with terror and though when he made this prayer his soul danc't on his lips ready to flye off yet was he never nearer heaven then those Pisgah Hills Had Balaams works been answerable to his words or his worth to his wishes he might have reacht his desires But as Saul who was once among the Prophets fell after from God so Balaam is not long in these raptures and therefore for all his devotion though he were not so wicked as to kill himself is nevertheless so unfortunate as to fall by the Sword of the Israelites even among the thickest of Gods Enemies the Midianites as you may read at large in the one and thirtieth Chapter of this Book of Numbers v. 8. There is no man so much an enemy to himself but would be happy if happiness were to be gain'd with wishing for Ask the wickedst man upon earth if he does not hope to dye well he will tell you he does and so he will if a word upon his death-bed will do it A Lord have mercy upon me but alas Heaven is not to be attained on such easie tearms Cain may be distracted for his Murder Balaam and Saul may Prophesie Ahab walk in Sack-cloth Judas Preach and do miracles and all to no purpose 't was not Esau's blubber'd eyes that could recover either his Birth-right or his Fathers blessing I cannot but reprehend their folly that spend their dayes in sin and vanity and at the point of death think to turn suddain penitents as if that would do how foully are they mistaken that think so for he that lives like a devil upon earth though under an Angels vail shall never be a Saint in Heaven So I have now done with the parts propos'd what remains but that I in brief give some short directions how to lead this happy life how to reach that happy death and so I le conclude For the certain and speedy attainment of which be pleased seriously to weigh these following instructions First be conversant in the Scriptures make that your day and your night studies and take notice of the lives of all Gods Saints and endeavours to track them in those steps which brought them to glory Make Abrahams faith and Jobs patience Eliahs zeal and Hezekiahs Integrity patterns of your immitation Let Joseph be an example of unconquer'd chastity and Moses of meekness and humility Let Davids troubles teach us to depend upon Gods Providence and Pauls perseverance not to be weary of his Corrections Remember the Character which our Blessed Saviour gave of the Baptist That he was a burning and a shining light Indeed the Saints of God in all ages have serv'd as Beacons on hills to give light to a crooked and perverse generation Oh that we could but learn by their examples to adorn our profession and we shall be no losers in the end What sayes David Marke the upright man and behold the just indeed he is worth the noting for the end of that man is peace He it is that may be truly said to leave this world like a Lamb and shall for ever be owned in a better for one of Christs fold But above all look upon him that is the Author and finisher of your Faith strive to immitate the blessed steps of the holy Jesus whose feet were ever running Gods Commandements whose hands were ever busied in works of Charity his eyes ever looking for Objects of Mercy whose Soul was ever yerning with bowels of Compassion whose discourse was alwayes gracious and guile never found in his lips And that we may be the better fitted to write after such blessed copies let us set a narrow watch over our thoughts words and actions that we offend in neither but remember that he is an Almighty and Omniscient God with whom we have to do and all things naked and bare to his all-seeing eye and that we may make a happy progress in
no heart unless harder then Adamant but must needs melt into tears at such a sight no malice except altogether implacable but would be appeas'd with such sharp and so underserved revenge I appeal to you all whether he be not an object of pitty rather then further cruelty and whether you have not greater reason to bewail his misery then increase it but this will not do No sorrows which are not mortal no sufferings which are not deadly no blood but the heart-blood can satisfie the malicious and therefore albeit crown'd with Thorns and flead with Whips they still cry Execution Execution Let him be crucified But Pilate notwithstanding these obstinate repulses again solicites them to save his life and that his arguments might be crown'd with success he changes his stile from a man of sorrows presents him as a king of sufferings that so his dignity might prevail where his miseries could not and that the majesty of the sufferer might aggravate his sufferings and their cruelty bespeaks them thus Behold your King behold a king deprived of his comforts spoiled of all his goods sold by his brethren apprehended by his subjects scourged as a villain derided as a fool Behold a King who hath no other use of majesty but to aggravate his misery Behold a King whose sufferings are as transcendent as his person Behold a King who hath suffered things bitterer then death Behold a King yea your King how he hath suffered every thing but death and shall that malice of yours pursue him even do death it self shall I crucifie your King will ye have me to bring innocent blood upon my own head as well as yours and be a sharer with you in so hateful a sin For my part I le have no hand in it and let me advise you to have none neither wherefore let me request you to desist from so bloody a design And if ye have no regard neither to his innocency sufferings nor majesty look upon your own reputations which will suffer much for putting such a person to death Do not you know I mean you that are the Doctors of the Law and the Elders of the People that the name of a King is sacred God owns it as one of his Titles and them as his Vicegerents that represent himself who is the great Monarch of Heaven and Earth and their persons as sacred as their names being subject to no Tribunal but that of Heaven no Judge but the highest Wherefore to offer violence to one that bears that Title were a piece of such unparallel'd cruelty for which your selves could produce no example nor the world a president all nations would cry shame at so horrid a fact and your own consciences would fly in your faces for committing so hainous a Crime A way then with so bloody a motion you that pretend your selves such Zealots stain not your hands with such blood nor your souls with the guilt of it left ye bring such an odium on your Nation which your selves nor posterity shall be ever able to take off But all his rhetorick will not serve turne for their guilty consciences told them that they had already done more then they could justifie Therefore the more he perswades the more they exclaim lest their King might have out-liv'd his wounds recover'd his losses and turn'd his Reed into a Scepter they earnestly importune the Judge to dispatch him Let him be be Crucified He is no King of ours If he were we should not thus prosecute him We have no King but Caesar and thou art not Caesars friend if thou let him go 'T is not his innocency nor his sorrows nor his majesty which thou so much plead'st for shall satisfie us 't is his deserved death which we sue for and nought but that shall excuse him Take thou no care if he dye unjustly the guilt shall lie on us not thee Wherefore act thou thy part perform thy office and we will ours as thou sittest in judgement to do justice express it by thy condemnation of this man Thou seest the proofs are clear and evidence perspicuous Therefore without any more delayes excuses or apologies pronounce the sentence we will see it executed Pilate finding all his reasons too short to convince unreasonable men is now brought to his last shift and that 's to make him a donative and freeman at the Petition of the People but they prefer Barrabbas a Rebel a Murderer before the Saviour of the World desire to have him Crucified who raised the dead to have the other released who destroyed the living Pilate now finding that all his projects were frustrated and no way left to save his life calls for water and washes his hands before them as innocent of his Blood but being a timerous Man affraid of the Jews lest they should mutiny or tel tales to his Master whereby he might lose either his place or Caesars favour delivers up the most unspottedperson in the world into the hands of malice to glut it self with revenge in the exercising the most exquisite torments and expatiating them to the longest thread of misery but as if all this did not adde enough to the sadness of his tragedy he must after all this dye and the worst of deaths the Cross onely inflicted on most notorious offenders and betwixt two infamous Thieves the worst sort of companions In order to which he is led forth of the holy now the bloody City Jerusalem to the place of execution bearing his own Cross his head adorn'd with his Crown of Thorns which was not at all pul'd off so it became the King of sufferings notto lay aside his imperial thorns til they were chang'd into Diadems of glory he advances Mount Calvary a place difficult in the ascent eminent apt forthe publication of shame a hil of death and dead bones where he is stript naked who cloaths the field with flowers and all the world with robes and the whole Globe with the Canopy of Heaven A gay spectacle to satisfie impious eyes who would not stay behinde but attend the hangman to see the catastrophe of this bloody tragedy he is now fastened to his Cross and heaven and earth all creatures in both vailed in blacks to lament his obsequies as if terrified at his sufferings whilst menand devils conspire to increase them that he might have no sense but that of misery How are all his senses at once tormented in him and he in all of them his eies in seeing nothing but what disconsolated and afflicted him either his enemies rejoycing at his sufferings or his friends those few poor friends he had lamenting his miseries His ears play'd upon from every side with whole volleys of fearful blasphemies If thou be the King of Israel descend from the Cross cry the Jews If thou be the Christ save thy self and us sayes one of his fellow sufferers For his smell I le not offend the nice and delicate with commemorating the noisomness of the place
the greatest threats nor the humblest intreaties shall not serve the turn The usurers gold cannot ransome him nor the mighty mans honour priviledge him those that shut up their bowels of compassion from others shall finde nothing but tyranny from him Here the luxurious Epicure that through the five Senses which are the cinque ports or rather the sinners ports of the soul did gulp down delightful sin like water shall now finde that those pleasant dayes are now blown over and that the end will prove them like the Angels book sweet in the mouth but bitter in the bowels in that he must in few moments be wafted to remorselesse flames Here the gorbellied Mammonist that piled up huge masses of refulgent earth purchased by all unconscionable courses shall have nothing left but a coffin and winding sheet and which is worst of all a guilty conscience now all his fair pretences and apologies will be but like characters drawn upon the sands or arrows shot up to heaven ward they cannot release him from Satans inexpiable Servitude Deaths warrants run very high Non omittas propter ullum libertatem attache them where ever thou findest them there are no places in the world free from the arrests of death and when once this grim Serjeant death hath arrested their bodies their souls must be presently sent to the bar of judgement for particular sentences then actum erit as one hath it the matter will be past cure now the day-book of their own consciences will be produced as a thousand witnesses against them for there the debt of sin is scored up and never to be crost till expung'd by repentance which is now too late to speak of and now shall not the Judge of all the world do right Yes surely and he will give the Devil his due as the Devil bought their souls so he must now have them The Devil is the Jaylour of Hell and thither the Judge commands them Take them Jaylour saith the Judge take them Devil and keep them till the general Judgement that then their miseries may be compleated and suffer in soul and body as they sinned in both The end comes when the earth shall tremble and the foundations of the hills shall be shaken when the Sun shall be turn'd into darkness and the Moon into blood to usher in the coming of that day at which time how wilt thou be beleagur'd with anguish and horror when thou shalt behold with thy mortal eyes the Cataracts of Heaven unsluced and hushing showers of sulphrous fires disperse themselves through all the corners of the Earth and Air the whole universe o're-canoped with a remorse lesse flame when thou shalt see the great and glorious Judge appear triumphantly in the Skies whilest mighty winged clouds with devouring flames fly before him as ushers to his powerful and terrible Majesty attended with innumerable multitudes of beautiful Angels golden wing'd Seraphims and Cherubims sounding their shrill alarms whose clamorous tonges shall affright the empty air and call and awake the drouzie Dead from their dark and duskie cabbins when thou shalt see the dissipated bones of all Mortals since the creation concatinate and knit in their proper and peculiar form amazedly start up and in numberless troops flock together all turning up their wondering eyes to gaze upon their high and mighty Creator When thousand thousands shal minister unto him ten thousand times ten thousand stand before him the Thrones set for judgement and the Books opened and nothing remain but a fearful expectation and looking for of judgement and fiery indignation which shall devour the adversaries Then will thy Conscience recommemorate a fresh thy past committed sins and with the coroding sting of guilt stab through thy perplexed soul Then indeed to be nothing were something but that will not be for Justice must now exact to the utmost farthing 'T will be too late to wish the mountains to fall upon thee for they themselves would if possible for fear shrink into their center Alas it cannot then be available to wooe the Waters to swallow thee for they would be glad to exclaim their liquid substance and be reduc't to a nullity What will it boot thee to intreat the Earth to entomb thee in her darkish womb when she her self will struggle to remove her local residence and to fly from the presence of the great Judge The Air cannot muffle thee in her foggy vastity that will be clearly refin'd there 's celestial flames uncontaminated with humane pollution so that thou must be forc't to appear before a most severe Judge carrying in thy own conscience thy Indictment ready written and a perfect Register of all thy misdeeds When thou shalt see him that was once a Saviour now a Judge whose Knowledge is infallible whose Power is infringible and his Justice inflexible of exceeding dreadful Majesty clothed in glorious apparel and his body shining through it like sparkling diamonds his eyes like burning lamps his face like flashing lightning his arms and legs like inflamed brass his voice like the shout of a multitude or of many waters prepared for thy idle words evil deeds time mispent and talent ill govern'd to pass the sentence upon thee against whom thou hast transgressed and he thy umpire whom by many offences thou hast made thine enemy And in order to a full and clear accomplishment of Justice a final separation shall be made no hypocrite shall closely lurk here among the Saints the Gold shall be taken from the Dross and the Silver from the Tin the Tares from the Wheat and the Corn from the Chaff the Sheep from the Goats the Vile from the Precious and the Elect from the Reprobates and plac't on each side the Judge those on the left hand to be doom'd to everlasting punishment and those on the right to life eternal How will it then perplex thy afflicted soul to see those on the Judges right hand whom thou contemnest as inferiour to the dogs of thy flock who shall now be one of that Jury that shall confirm thy condemnation and applaud the sentence of the Judge here shall be a general Audit the Widows tears and the Orphans cryes shall be here regarded what wouldst thou now give for a good conscience that were a jewel of price then Christian graces shall be more precious then natural gifts There the foolish and dumb may be more happy then the wise and eloquent there the ignorant Rustick may be preferred before the knowing Philosopher and the mean Beggar before the mighty Prince and the simple and ignorant before the witty and subtle There simple obedience shall be found better then cunning hypocrisie a clear conscience more pleasant then profound Philosophy zealous prayers of more worth then fine tales and good works more acceptable then sweet words then shall the poor and meek triumph and the proud shake and tremble then shall the memory of misery be sweet because they are past and the thoughts of pleasure be
THE PILGRIMS PASS To the New JERUSALEM OR The serious CHRISTIAN his Enquiries after HEAVEN With his Contemplations on himself reflecting on his Happiness by CREATION Misery by SIN Slavery by SATAN and Redemption by CHRIST Together with Observations on the Vanity and Inconstancy of worldly Glory And Considerations on the Saint and Sinner as to their disagreeing conditions and dispositions here their various Entertainments of Death and different Rewards after Death Relating to those four last and great things of Death Judgement Hell and Heaven Seasonable for these Times By M. R. Gent. Phil. 3.14 I press towards the mark c. 1 Cor. 9.24 So run that ye may obtain London Printed by R. W. for the Author and are to be sold by John Andrews at the White Lion near Pye-Corner and by William Lugger at the Sign of the Kings Head over against the Shire-Hall in the City of Hereford 1659. To all those that love the Peace of Zion and welfare of Jerusalem Grace and Peace be multiplied FRIENDS THe Life of a Christian is not onely Speculative but Active speculation and action like the Soul and Body attend each other in performing the Duties of Christianity The most Wise God hath ordered and determined a set time for Man upon earth to fit and prepare himself for an everlasting condition how then are we all concern'd to redeem that short time we have allowed us which we know not how soon may be taken from us to enter into a strict examination of our wayes knowing that one day all our thoughts words and actions even our most retired and secret sins shall be exposed to the view both of Men and Angels O Time one of the most glorious things that ever God made how many blessed and glorious Spirits are now in Heaven for making a right use of thee And how many damned Ghosts are now in Hell for abusing thee who would now give a thousand worlds had they so many to dispose of for to have that opportunity we now enjoy to improve thee For mine own part I am but a yong Man who came into the world but as yesterday ere to morrow for ought I know may be taken hence For how many dayes are alloted me upon Earth none but the Ancient of days know wherefore during my continuance in this Tabernacle I desire to walk circumspectly that when my Lord shall come to call me to a reckoning I may like a good steward be found faithful of the charge committed to me You know his doom that hid his Talent in a Napkin It was in this consideration that I did now put Pen to Paper and raised my contemplations above the things of this world to those of a better in order to the gaining and attaining a right and title to that glorious undefiled and unfading Inheritance purchaste for Believers in the highest Heavens Let not any taxe me of Ambition for exposing my Lines to Publike view and my self to open Censure 'T was not to get me a Name but to further the weak Christian in his approaches towards Heaven Neither let any contemn the Work of this Author for the Author of this Work but remember that God can by weal means perform great matters Ravens those unclean Birds by the Law were Caterers to Elijah in his extremity at the Brook Cherith brought him bread and meat to sustain him he neither scorn'd those strange kinde of Purveyors or the Viands which they brought but admired the hand that sent it The Gifts and Graces of Gods Spirit are not to be slighted where ever found I speak not this by way of Ostentation but with a desire that my Readers would judiciously read ere they rashly censure and instead of carping at my failings correct their own that Love which covers a multitude of faults may cast the favourablest construction on mine 'T is Charity to judge well of others and Piety to look well to our selves If any thing of worth appear in me more then in the meanest person upon earth attribute it to him who is the giver of every good and perfect gift What have we that we have not received And let me further request you that after the clashing of Armor thunderings of Canons sound of Drums and the alarm of Trumpets you would in this your day enquire after your everlasting Peace and contest no longer about Niceties Circumstances and Shadows not worth contending for but for that one thing necessary which will reward your labours with no less then a Crown Our present division is a sad Omen of our future miseries and our ●…y unity would abundantly faciliate our desired felicity I wish we did all practise what we all profess Faith and Love we should all procure what we all desire Truth and Peace were we all united in the Tri-une-God we should not be thus divided one from another The Lord in his good time compose all our Differences that Malice Errour and Debate may return to the cursed Womb whence they deriv'd and all our Strife may end in this to excel each other in the power of Godliness and Christian Love For my Conclusion let me request you to vouchsafe a serious perusal of this small Manual and the Lord make it in some measure beneficial to you for next the Glory of God your good is chiefly aimed at by the Author And if this finde civil entetainment I shall if God prolong my life to finish what I have begun present you with something else In the mean time accept this as the earnest of his Love who subscribes himself Your Servant in our Immanuel M. R. The Contents of the following Book 1. ABrahams Profession and the Pilgrims Condition Or the inquiring Sojourner Directed A Meditation on Gen. 23.4 2. The Young Mans Monitor and Olds Mans Admonisher A Meditation on Eccles 12.1 3. Sin the cause of Sorrow and Death the effect of Sin A Meditation on 2 Sam. 24.14 4. Balaam's happy Wish and unhappy End A Meditation on Numb 23.10 5. The meritorious Ransom or the unparalleld Sufferings of the Son of God for the sons of Men. A Meditation on 1 Tim. 1.15 6. Observations on the Vanity and Inconstancy of worldly Glory 7. Considerations on the Saint and Sinner as to their disagreeing conditions and dispositions here their various entertainments of Death and different Rewards after Death reflecting on the Temporizing Professor illustrated and interlaced with the Historical Examples of Dying men 8. Godliness bearing its Rewards with it both here and here after and Sins pursuit of the Sinner to the other world Of the last Judgement and those succeding Events that ensue thereupon A Meditation on 1 Tim. 4.8 To his Judicious Friend the Author TO praise thy Work I need not though Divine It is enough I tell the world 't was thine Good Wine needs not a Bash the more I look The more I love the more I like thy Book So grave so wise in Youth Nature did place An August in thy Pen
were so amaz'd at the proposal of those terrors for it that he breaks out into the discontented expressions of the Text And David said unto Gad I am in a great strait Had it not been for Sin Death had never fetcht his circuits through the world Neither Adam or any of his sons had never come under his power 'T was Sin that brought in those terrible Harbengers of Death those various kindes of sicknesses to afflict mankinde For as the shadow follows the body so plagues attend Sin and had the cause been wanting which is Sin the effects had never been which is Misery There had been no sweeping away of mankinde by Sword or Famine Famine should never have conquered his thousands or the Sword his ten thousands There should have been no wasting Consumption no grievous Gout nor groaning Stone or tormenting Collick no burning Feaver or quaking Ague nor trembling Palsie or loathsome Jaundies nor a thousand other Infirmities and Casualties which now attend frail man to his Grave But this is not all for Death eternal also is the reward of Sin which is the second Death Rev. 20.14 and may well be term'd a death and no death being a privation from all that 's good or to a life desirable and a constancy in suffering that which is evil even intollerable torments that shall never know either end or measure impossible for life to suffer did not an infinite Justice keep the tortured from dying for there the best company shall be Devils and the best musick Blasphemy The ear shall be entertained with the grievous screeches of parties condemned and hideous howlings of woful Devils the eye with no better prospect then damned Ghosts the taste with no greater dainties then grievous hunger the smell with no choiser odours then sulphurous brimstone and the feeling with those terrible extreams of burning and gnashing of Teeth In a word 't is a death because they are excommunicated from such glory as the wit of man is not able to express and 't is a life too or rather a living death because they are alive to endure such hellish torments as the learnedst pen is not ab●e to delineate nor the eloquentest tongue to describe the rarest wit to imagine or the knowingest mortal to define Ever to be dying yet never dye This this shall be the unrepentant sinners portion Matth. 25.41 Rev 20 10. To conclude since the effects of sin reach not onely to heap plagues upon the sinner here but also everlasting torments upon soul and body hereafter ●hat manner of persons ought we to he in all holy conversation My advice is that we shun th●t cause which brings such sad effects avoid sin that we never partake of those plagues as the rewards of it And in order hereunto that we set a narrow watch over our thoughts words and actions that we give not way to the least temptation but kills this cockatrice in the egge destroy sin in the birth get the mastery of every corruption and bid defiance to the destructive alurements of our immortal enemy And because all of us brought such a load of gilt with us into the world as without an infinite mercy would sink us into that place whence is no redemption and being not of our selves not able so much as to think a good thought let 's make our addresses to that all sufficient Saviour who for our sakes wrought glorious salvation conquered Death Sin and Satan foiled the powers of darkness and led the devils in Triumph as his Captives Hos 13.14 1 Cor. 15.57 Let 's endeavour to have an interest in him that his merits may be imputed unto us and we may be cloathed with the long white robes of his righteousness Rev. 4.4 That at the great day of Audit we may hold up our heads with joy before that bar whence the wicked shall be sentenc't and rejoyce that all straits are at an end and all our miseries out of date that our sins and death are laid in one grave ever to be forgotten and forgiven and are now ready to take livery and seizin of that glorious incorruptible and unfading Inheritance which the Lion of the Tribe of Judah the Captain of the Lords host and of our salvation hath purchast for us and be ever enjoying that glory which Moses so earnestly desired onely to behold and eternally chant forth Halle lujahs to the Trinity in Unity and Unity in Trinity to whom be ascrib'd by Men and by Angels here and hereafter all Honour and Glory Thanksgiving and Obedience World without End Balaams happy Wish ANDVnhappy End A Meditation on Numb 23.10 Let me dye the death of the Righteous and let my latter end be like hi● THese words were utter'd by Balaam the son of Beor of Mesopotamia the notedst Conjuror of those times whom Balak King of Moab sent for to curse Israel and being come for that purpose from the Mountains of the East to the high places of Baal beholds a glimpse of Heavens Glory and Israels happiness discovers better wages then Balak could give him greater preferment then Balak could exalt him to and infinitely more honour then was at Balaks disposal Balaam being in an extasie and as it were ravisht with the glory which he sees turns his prophesie into a prayer and his prayer is this Let me dye the death of the righteous and let my latter end be like his Were these the words of a Sorcerer a better mouth might have spoke it we may well admire that so sweet a saying should proceed from so foul a mouth that such a flower of Paradise should grow on such a Dunghil that a stranger and an enemy to the God of Israel and the People of Israel should so excellently set forth the glory of the one and the happiness of the other and that he should have so much of heaven in so short a prayer Let me dye c. 'T was our Saviours question Matth. 7.16 Do men gather Grapes of Thorns or Figs of Thistles Here 's a Thorn brings forth Grapes an Inchanter with the expressions of a Prophet How can we sufsiciently admire the wisdome and power of God in making wicked men to sound forth his praises even the Devil himself to set forth the glory of the Father and proclaim the divinity of the Son Hard hearted Pharaoh must confess his power the Magicians his works and Balaam shall be sensible of his glory witness his Petition Let me dye c. A foul breath may make a Trumpet sound sweetly a crackt Bell may toll in others to Church a stinking carcase may have a honey-comb in it and a Sorcerer may speak good Divinity I am sure Balaam did and a prayer as excellent Let me dye the death of the righteous and let my latter end be like his Hence observe that we are not to judge of any man by his words or pass our verdict by the out-side for many cry Templum Domini with their mouths that have the Devil in
our Christian course let 's trample on the vanities of this world and have our conversation in Heaven whilst we are on Earth Put a right value on the things of this world and whilst we are in this make sure of a better that when this fabrick shall be on a flame we may finde a place of refuge in those glorious and everlasting Habitations and that we by no means put off our Repentance from day to day but take time by the fore-top for we know not what a day may bring forth There are many now in Hell yelling forth their too late Lamentations that would have repented had they had a morrow let us be ever contemplating of our last end and of that great account we must all one day make and account every day as our last that when death comes we may be so prepar'd for his approach as to entertain him as a friend not dread him as an enemy 'T was a good prayer of Davids Psal 9.20 Let the Nations know themselves to be but men Oh that we did but seriously take this into our consideration and rightly understand our frame whereof we are made and remember that we are but dust and what is dust but the slave of the beesom and the sport of the winde That the luxurious person would consider that he is the fouler dust by so much as he is stain'd and have beheld before never such a wonder in the world The Child of a Virgin and God a child saith the Evangelical Prophesie never such a Jubile in the World as a Christ and a Saviour sayes the Angellical History what was foretold by Isa's Pen is fulfilled in Gabriels Tongue which speaks comfort not to some Persons but to all People all else Persons and People had been eternally lost To you he is born to you men he is to us Angels he is not We that stood have not the need they that fell have not the grace of Salvation nor shall any means be ever us'd for their restauration as being included under the eternal decree of Gods everlasting displeasure This day it seems then he had a day for his incarnation or Nativity though this profane age deny it him by his birth made a blessed day Proclaim'd by one Angel a joyful feast observ'd by many for a feast of joy By many Angels that day and by all Saints since in all ages as the Birth-day of no petty Prince but the great Soveraign and Saviour of the World who was annointed and appointed for that purpose This is a true saying and worthy of all acceptation that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners And now having a Saviour and such a Saviour for my subject I shall bend my inquiries after his Person Names and Offices his Actions and Passions the end of both Parallel his Divinity with his Humanity his first with his second coming and so conclude First then for the object or person here spoken of who it is who is this that comes sayes Isay 'T is he that was from eternity before the Mountains were brought forth or the foundations of the world were laid God from everlasting and world without end The second person of the glorious Trinity his Name Jesus because a Saviour and Christ the Lord because the annointed of God the one answering his Divinity the other his Humanity and both his Office design'd he was of old for mans Redemption promised and prophesied of long before he came as the Womans Seed Abrahams Son Davids Throne Balaams Scepter Isay's Immanuel Micahs Ruler and Judahs Lion whom Abraham saw afar of and Balaam beheld but not nigh In a word he was the Light of the Gentiles because to them he manifested himself by a star or rather by an Angel as some think in a Pillar of fire and the glory of his people Israel because to them he was proclaime'd by Angels Thus you have now seen who it is that is here spoken of I now come to the act that he is here said to do He came he bow'd the heavens and came down exchanged his Fathers Bosom for the Virgins womb and became Immanuel God with us The express Immage of his Father takes the form of a Servant He who in the beginning of time made man in his own image is in the fulness of time made after our likeness the Word flesh the Ancient of Dayes a little Child the Highest Majesty cloathed in the lowest Misery the most High God a Servant and the Lord of Glory a Man of Sorrows Admire we may but Apprehend we cannot the matchless Humility and unparallel'd Condescentions of our Blessed Saviour that he that was so great that the Heavens could not contain him should be so little as to be circumscrib'd in the Womb of a Virgin That he that was so rich that all the Gold and the Silver was his and the Cattel upon a thousand hills should be so poor as to be destitute of a penny to pay Caesar tribute without being beholding to a fishes mouth That he that was so powerful as to command the Devils to their Chains should be so meek as to suffer himself to be led like a Lamb to the slaughter Yet thus he suffer'd it to be to fulfill all Righteousness and nothing did he think too much either to do or suffer for mans Redemption Man had finn'd against an infinite Majesty and satisfaction was to be made to an offended Deity and that satisfaction to be as infinite as the nature of the transgression was which satisfaction could be given no other way but by suffering that suffering no less then the utmost of an inraged and incensed malice that malice as general as men and devils the punishment great the punishers many Heaven Earth and Hell an angry God an incenst World and an inraged Hell and he that was to indure all this to be innocent No man so pure no angel so powerful to undergo all this God could not dye nor men or Angels bear such a burden therefore it must be a God-man a God and Man united in one Person the one to bear the other to suffer and such a one was our Blessed Saviour whose spotless innocency and unconquered Patience in in his expresless pains represents the refulgent Rayes of a Divine Power that kept frail Humanity from sinking to desperation under so great a pressure all must needs acknowledge that the miseries he indured were unspeakable and his patience infinitely beyond a president If we take but a strict survey of the means and miseries that attend his Birth the inexpressable grievances of his life and the sadness of his death we shall in each of these finde him demonstrated a man of Sufferings He was born in little obscure Bethlehem not in great and glorious Jerusalem and not in a Palace there though the City of David but an Inne a place of common resort Not in the guest Chamber or choicest Room in the Inne but in a Stable a place of
himself on sinners as he did on Pharaoh Herod c. In the next place let 's acknowledge his Justice Remember that he is a jealous God a perfect hater of sin and will bring every work to judgement And last of all that we take notice of our own Mortality and let the thoughts of that debar us from sinning we know not whether we shall live to see another day and shall we be found sinning on our last Let the uncertainty of that which will certainly once come put us in a posture of preparation for its coming and since that upon this moment depends our either everlasting woe or welfare let 's lose no time For as the Poet no less sweetly then discreetly sung who knows o're night that he next morn shall breath Therefore take Davids early in the morning not the Devils stay till to morrow think not to be accepted in thy makers presence one day if thou crammest the devil with thy sap of strength full gorge him with the purest fruits of thy sinewy virility if at last when thou art not able to do God or the devil service thou comest limping on Times tottering Crutches to present unto him the offall husks and morosity of thy doting decrept age Think every day thy last and spend it as if it were so for we know that God will bring us to judgement yet we know not when nor in what year nor in what moneth of the year nor in what week of the moneth nor in what day of the week nor in what hour of the day nor in what minute of the hour nor in what moment of that minute for he will come like a thief in the night suddenly before with a wink thou canst lock up thine eye or within thy brain create the nimblest thought the apprehension of which must needs stir us up to live in Gods fear so shall we dye in his favour and rest in his peace and rise in his power and reign with him in his glory world without end Godliness bearing its Rewards with it both here and hereafter and Sins pursuit of the Sinner to the other World Of the last Judgment and those succeeding Events that ensue thereupon A Meditation on 1 Tim. 4.8 HAppinesse is the mark and center which every man aims at the next thing that is sought after being is being happy where David begins his Psalms we all hope to end and that 's with blessedness and no way to reach that but holiness That holinesse is the way to happinesse or that the godly man is the truly happy man I have already sufficiently manifested in my last Discourse and therefore shall be the more sparing here in my Allegations for I would not take the pains o're again to prove what is proved already but happinesse is such a subject that I could willingly dwell upon and fill a large Volumn with a discourse upon it desiring that my portion may rest here but I am confin'd to such narrow limits both of time and paper that I cannot insist long on any one particular I shall therefore briefly strike at that which is here chiefly intended and before I have worn my Readers patieence quite out shall draw to a conclusion That the godly man is the happy and onely happy man will be further manifested in the end after the end of all things but first in this life we will prove him happy here as well as hereafter in this world as well as the world to come though not so happy here as there Neither prosperity nor adversity can come amisse to him though the times vary his happinesse is still the same like his God that changes not all things still work together for good to him and albeit he hath no perogative above the sinner from those two beds of mankinde of sicknesse and the grave his priviledge lies another way No Kings except such hath like perogative to the Saints God is their Father Christ their Brother the Holy Ghost their Comforter Angels their Guardians Saints their Associates Death their desire the Grave their rest the Bar their joy God their portion the Trinity their propriety Heaven their home Eternity their term before death their perogative is much at it more after it most but from death and diseases none by death they have from it not Put the case that God permits wicked men to ride over him and men and devils to use their utmost extremity to him which is to put his dayes to a shameful and a painful period for the shame Christ hath taken that away and for the pain that will soon end in endlesse pleasures what unhappinesse in this when all they do or can do is but to open the prison-doors of his body to let out his soul to fly to rest from the labour of the servant to the joy of the master from the work to the reward and from the crosse to the crown there to solace it self in those rivers of pleasures at Gods right hand whilest his precious ashes are preserved as in a safe store-house till the last trumpet shall shall alarm it to give its beloved companion the meeting to be made eternally happy together never to part more a Saint at his death is assured that a few moments will bring his departing soul to endlesse happinesse and that Angels att●nd him to do their office of wafting it into Abrahams bosom And now judge Reader whether I may not upon good consideration say that godlinesse is gain I know there are some and they such whose hopes extend not further then this life that invert this saying and tell us that gain is godliness and no happinesse without gain their sordid gain and albeit it I have sufficiently exploded this errour in my last Discourse I shall now notwithstanding more fully if that may be give a confutation in this as ye will the more clearly apprehend if ye minde the conclusion The longest day with have a night and the longest life will have an end Let the sinner live as long as he can a miserable period will at last be put to his sinful dayes and that period will decide this controversie Those who in their life were the Diana's of the people that seem'd the most high and happy will at their death but more clearly afterward appear most miserable as they have spent their dayes in the unprofitable works of darknesse so they shall finde but an unprofitable reward for their works they shall for their pains meet with such pains as shall never have a period The Devil comes now to expect his due that as he was their slave for a time upon earth they may eternally be his vassals in a worse place that as they did the works of darknesse and workt for the Prince of darknesse now receive their portion in utter darknesse There 's no denying or forswearing of bargains no talk of circumventing this experienced Politician the richest presents nor the loudest cryes nor the saddest tears nor
shall be prickt with burning forks gluttons tormented with grievous hunger Epicures and voluptuous persons boyl in burning pitch and stinking brimstone the proud shall have shame and the coverous miserable penuty then thou wilt be convinc't to believe what before thou wouldst never credit that there is a Hell for sinners as well as an Earth for men a Firmament for stars a Heaven for Saints and a God in Heaven Then thou wilt wish if wishing would do it that thou hadst been created a loathsom toad that thy miseries might have closed up with thy life rather then to be dying perpetually and never dye for when thou hast languisht in unexpressible agonies tortures gnashings and horrid howlings ten thousand millions of years thou shalt not reach a conclusion 'T is a sad but certain truth that the damned in hell after ten thousand thousand millions of ages they have suffered such torments as none but one of those miserable tortur'd wretches are able to express shall be as far from an end as they were at the beginning That adjunct Eternal intimates such infinitness as neither thought can attract or supposition apprehend And further to amplifie it with the words of a worthy Authour Thóugh all the men that ever have or shall be created were Briarius-like hundred handed and should all at once take pens in their hundred hands and should do nothing else in ten thousand millions of years but sum up in figures as many hundred thousands as they could yet never could they reduce to a total or ●onfine within number this tri-syllable word ETERNALL The darkest Dungeon of Hell shall be the Reprobates everlasting Goal as the chains shall never be loosened or fil'd off so neither shall they change their dolefull habitation but the same prison and wrack the same place as well as degrees of torment shall shackle them to all eternity they shall not change their Tophet nor alter their bed of flames The bodies of the damned those deform'd ●ages of more deform'd souls shall never be blest with a dissolution Divine wrath shall make the bodies of the Reprobate like those stones which Naturalists speak of that alwayes burn they shall be butts for the arrows of Gods displeasure everlastingly to shoot at the smoak of the lake shall not smother them nor the flames of hell consume ●hem nor the least member twin'd into ●●nders by everlasting burnings Their souls wax old but never die yet perpetually dying there they burn without consuming there they mourn without compassion here are torments without end and beyond imagination here fearful Dives that denied Lazarus a bit of bread now begs a drop of water which is denied him when whole rivers are not sufficient to extinguish his heat Mercy smiles not on these dismal Mansions the damned finde there 's a God to punish that will see execution everlastingly performed but none to pitty or ease those executions O the misery of the damned how intollerable how incomprehensible how unmeasurable Who can tell how hot Gods wrath is when turn'd into a flame or can any weigh the torments of the damned to say they rise to such a height As they are unsupportable so they shall be innumerable and inconceiveable God will then draw his arrow to the head and screw his wrath to an unconfin'd degree What shall limit or be a bank to the inundations of Gods everlasting displeasure Who knows how many drams of poison God will put into the cup of trembling which the wicked must be drinking of for evermore But not to undertake to express those inexpressible miseries or to be endlesse in this endlesse Subject I le leave these tortur'd wretches in the embraces of eternal flames wishing my self nor Readers may ever give a probatum est to those torments and return to the Bar and observe the sentence not of Malediction but Absolution not a go but come not cursed but blessed and possess the Kingdom and now those Saints which before saw but in part and knew but in part shall see and know God and be known of him when faith shall be turned into vision and hope into fruition Augustin wisht he might have seen three things before he died Rome in its glory Paul in the Pulpit and Christ in the flesh the Saints shall see a better sight they shall see not Rome but Heaven in its glory they shall see not Paul in the Pulpit but on the Throne and shall sit with him they shall see Christs flesh not vail'd with disgrace but in its spiritual embroidery as one hath it not a crucified but a glorified body They shall see the King in his beauty Isa 33.17 They shall know what those unseen things are what those fruitions of glory which free grace hath stretcht out to eternity that unshaken and unshaking crown what that everlasting joy they shall there partake of that unfading happiness they are to flourish in to all eternity that eternal house for the security of it 2 Cor. 5.1 the eternal glory for the renown of it 2 Tim. 2.10 that eternal inheritance for the riches of it Heb. 9.15 that eternal redemption for the love of it Heb. 9.12 that eternal salvation for the seasonabless of it Heb. 5.9 those glorious beatitudes which are reserv'd for believers entertainment which shall never receive either damp or death those rivers of pleasure that run at Gods right hand for evermore they shall to their everlasting comfort finde that no sorrow or benight heaven no grief shall thrust into the Brides chamber nor shall any trouble overshadow the everlasting festival of the glorified ones they shall weep no more as one excellently hath it unless it be for joy that they shall weep no more for grief all cause of grief is far remov'd from that presence they that enjoy it enjoy with it an absolute enfranchizement from all incumbrances and inconveniences They are free from want and free from war and free from death and free from devils they are free from want they can want nothing there except it be want it self they may finde the want of evil but never feel the evil of want evil is but the want of good and the want of evil is but the absence of want God is good and no want of good can be in God and what want can be endured in the presence of God where no evil is but all good nor are they free from want onely but wars too with all the mischiefs that are concommitant and all the miseries that are consequent The Kingdom of glory can never be turn'd into an Aceldama no forreign enemy can invade it nor home-bred enemy infest the happiness of it Moses and Aaron shall never be confronted there by any gain-saying Corahs or mutinous Abirams or complying Dathans or any of their confederates King David shall there be free from the pride of all ambitious Absolons from the presumption of all seditious Sheba's and from the wicked counsels of all contriving Achitophels No cursing Shimei's