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A80236 A commemoration sermon: or, A discourse on II Cor. V.I. Occasioned by the death of a most religious young lady Mary Hampson the onely daughter of Sir Thomas Hampson, of Taplow, in Bucks, ... who died August the 14. 1677. Together with a relation of her incomparable and exemplary life. 1678 (1678) Wing C5545A; ESTC R174182 19,868 49

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be receiv'd in a glorious Palace For one that is driven out of an earthly house to be assur'd he shall dwell in heavenly Mansions 'T is true the house must fall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it shall be dissolved but then the in-dweller shall escape and instead of a Tabernacle of clay shall enter a City of Gold and Saphirs a building of God an house not made with hands eternal in the heavens These last words are capable of a twofold interpretation and may signify either the Mansions of heaven or else our own Bodies after our glorification For as sure as our Creed is true so true it is there will be a Resurrection God hath plainly revealed it and we firmly believe it And so by faith we know that our Bodies sown in dishonour shall be raised in glory they are sown in weakness but shall be raised in power they are sown natural Bodies but shall be raised spiritual bodies This corruptable shall put on incorruption and this mortal shall put on immortality and Death shall be swallowed up in Victory 1 Cor. 15. Out of the dust of these our vile Bodies God will raise a new habitation for our Souls beautiful and glorious beyond what we can think And so the Text saith not that our Bodies shall perish for ever and be reduced to nothing but only they shall be dissolved they shall crumble into dust but God knows and takes care of the least part of it and when it is refin'd and cleansed from the infection of sins God will reunite it into a body glorious and bright as the light of Heaven the Righteous shall shine forth as the Sun in the glory of their Heavenly Father If this be the sence of the words That this building of God be meant of our glorified Bodies then this is a great and special comfort which we Christians have that God doth with our Bodies in our Death as with our Souls in our Conversion When in our sincere return to God we yield our minds and affections to him he renews and sanctifies them and makes them holy and capable of his favour and blessed enjoyment And so when we submit to our portion of dust and commit our Bodies to God he destroys their blemishes and imperfections he beautifies them and makes them impassible glorious and immortal fit to dwell in Heaven in the Society of Saints and Angells But then this building of God this Eternal house in the Heavens may be understood also of the blessed Mansions of Glory wherein holy Souls are received after their departure out of this mortal life For though it be controverted whether the Souls of the Faithful be admitted into the same glory wherein they shall enter after the great day of Judgment or whether there be other receptacles for them till the Resurrection yet it is generally agreed on by all but the late inventors of Purgatory that they are in a state of Rest in Abraham's bosom full of comfort and holy hopes and passionate longings for the time of their reunion and their consummation And we are warranted to say by the Scripture and by the Church the best interpreter of it That the Souls of the Faithful after they are delivered from the burthen of the Flesh are in joy and felicity And so saith the Apostle v. 8th We are confident and willings rather to be absent from the Body and to be present with the Lord. whether in the outward Courts or in the inner Sanctuary it matters not to know Happy are they who are present with the Lord in whatever part of his House it be There they see hear and injoy what in this World Eye hath not seen nor Ear heard nor Heart conceived They begin to drink and to plunge themselves in that Ocean of Bliss which is called Eternal Life which I cannot describe and which you could not comprehend But O blessed Mansions of the Blessed Eternal house in the Heavens Glorious building of God! how shall we understand whilst in this vale of misery the exceeding great stateliness the wonderful glories and the most pleasant deliciousness of thy pleasures and beauties There are several words in the Text which lead us very far in this blessed enquiry if our thoughts and our time were not too much confin'd But if we cast an Eye upon our dwellings here below we shall soon understand how much we should value and desire everlasting habitations above There be three places wherein we sojourn before we come to our Eternal home the first is appointed by Nature the Womb wherein we live like plants without either sense or reason The second is ordered by Providence the World wherein we live in trouble and misery exposed to many dangers and sorrows The third was built by Sin the Grave Chambers of Death and Darkness wherein we dwell with Worms Corruption the ruin and dishonour of our own Nature I say view these which are domus incolatus the house of our Pilgrimage and sojourning and compare them with that Eternal house in the Heavens wherein God dwells and whereof he is Maker then you shall in some manner understand how much Heaven excells all these earthly Prisons and shall be mov'd to say with the Psalmist How amiable are thy Dwellings thou Lord of Host My Soul longeth c. O! how great is the difference betwixt the place of our Conception and the immensity of Heavenly regions betwixt our houses of clay and the House of God! betwixt the Prisons of Death and the Land of everlasting Life But I need say no more upon this Subject here is comfort enough to them that believe the Promise of Christ when he ascended to glory John 14. 1. I go to prepare a place for you Here is I say comfort enough against all our sorrows that when we leave the uneasy abode of this our earthly Tabernacle we shall be recieved into heavenly Palaces here are inducements enough to despise this wretched World and sigh after our better Country where we are promis'd rest and joys that shall have no End I conclude this second Point with the exhortation of St. Peter Therefore beloved seeing that ye look for such things for such a glorious house such heavenly Mansions be diligent that whenever God calls for you you may be found of him in peace without spot and blameless The last thing to be considered is the certainty of this comfort in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we know how far this our Knowledge excludes all kind of doubting We know indeed that there is a rest and glorious things prepared for the people of God we know it by the certitude of Faith all those many convincing arguments that prove the Gospel to be true and JESUS to be the Son of God makes it indubitable For this is the great Revelation which God sent his own Son to Preach proportioning the Message to the Messenger This is the redord saith St John that God hath given us Eternal Life and this life is
A Commemoration SERMON OR A DISCOURSE On II COR. V. I. Occasioned by the Death of a most Religious young Lady MARY HAMPSON The Onely Daughter of Sir Thomas Hampson of Tapplow In Bucks Kt. and Bar. Who died August the 14. 1677. Together with a RELATION of her Incomparable and Exemplary LIFE October 3. 1677. Imprimatur G. Jane LONDON Printed by T. D. for Henry Brome at the Gun at the West-end of St. Paul's 1678. TO THE Honorable and most worthy Lady THE Lady HAMPSON Madam IT is said of Jacob that when he came to be perswaded that his lost Joseph was alive and a great man in the Land of Egypt his spirit revived he banisht his Sadness and dried up his Tears and joyfully resolv'd to go down to see his Dear Son Madam you have lost a Daughter deservedly as dear and your grief is too much proportion'd to your loss But I hope you will also be comforted when you Consider that she is alive and in a Happy Condition that she dwells in place much better than Egypt and is the Favorite of a greater Monarch than ever was Pharoh I know you have resolv'd to go up and see her and if she were here I am well assur'd you could freely leave her to ascend to that blessed Place where she now expects you Your Affliction therefore is now reduc'd only to this That she is gone to Rest and Glory first whereas you thought She must have followed you This Madam is no great Evill you had shew'd her the way to God and she hath out-run you but you will soon overtake her and then forever you rejoyce and dwell together I have writ and sent your Ladiship the inclosed Papers not so much to honor the Memory of your most blessed Child as to minister what comfort I could against the grief of her Absence both to you and to your Honorable and most pious Mother Not but that both your good Meditations do far exceed mine but because in the case of Sorrow we generally want a Remembrancer and even our own Balsom applied by another hand is more healing and effectual Why I have herein closed a Sermon which was never preached nor never intended to be was partly to divert your thoughts from your Grief by a comfortable Text of Holy Scripture and partly to countenance the Method of the Oration that follows I believe a plain Relation of the Life of your Excellent Daughter might have been better The Rehearsal of her vertuous Actions was the best Praise she could receive But I wanted particulars to compleat a full History and the defects of my Memory and Information were best supplyed and concealed by the Rhetorical style of an Encomium What I have done I wish it may be acceptable and someways serviceable to your Ladiship and that you may not take it ill if an unknown hand indeavours to wipe the Tears from your eyes for though unknown yet the Author truly is and accordingly desires to subscribe himself Your Ladiships most humble and most affectionate Servant To the READER IF thou art pleased to be censorious upon the ensuing Relation do but mend the matter with thy Life and then I am sure thou wilt soon excuse and I shall freely acknowledg the faults of its Form and Method 'T is not my part I am in love withal or would have made publick but Hers who is the Occasion and the Subject of this Discourse I admir'd Her much while living for Her great and singular Goodness but yet more since She dyed and I learnt what before I knew not and what here I could not duly express 'T is not unusual to write the Lives of Persons of great worth and 't would be very usefull if they were all as exemplary as this and as faithfully related I need not therefore find Apologies for having printed this it was to spare the uneasy trouble of reading an ill hand to that worthy Lady I offer it to and for whom I chiefly designed it I intended also to disperse some Copies among my friends to whom I thought it might be acceptable and beneficial too but desired to avoid the labor and tediousness of Transcribing and withall the thing may do good and I am not accountable to thee to whom I am not known I need say the less upon this for that I would have but a few Copies come out of the Press if the Printer exceeds his Commission to oblige the Publick let him answer for it A Commemoration SERMON OR A Discourse on 2 Cor. 5. 1. Occasioned by the Death of a most Religious young Lady MARY HAMPSON Together with a RELATION of her Incomparable and Exemplary LIFE For we know that if our Earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God an house not made with hands eternal in the heavens 2 Cor. 5. 1. AS in Navigation Geography is no less useful than Astrology in that all the measures and Dimensions of Heaven are proportion'd and related to the Earth So likewise in our Spiritual Voiage through this Life the tempestuous Sea of this World it is as necessary we should study the Map of our own Earth which we carry about us as that we should look up to that heavenly Globe whereto we are stearing our Course We must understand the Meanness and Infirmity of this our present condition as well as the Glory and the Perpetuity of our future Estate The first will make us holy in our Lives the second confident in our Deaths the Consideration of the Miseries and Uncertainties of this present Life will make us long for a better and the knowledg of a better life will teach us to despise the Vanities of this when we are fully perswaded that when this our earthly Tabernacle is dissolved we shall have a building of God an house not made with hands eternal in the Heavens In these words three things are included and may be consider'd 1. The dissolution of our Bodies if our earthly House of this Tabernacle were dissolved 2. The Comfort we have against it then we have a building of God an House not made with hands Eternal in the Heavens And 3ly The Certainty of this Comfort in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we know how far this our knowledge excludes all kind of doubting Of the first St. Paul seems here to make a Question as if it were a doubtful matter If our earthly house be dissolved saith he But this he speaks by way of Concession which is a strong Affirmative and not as a doubtful Position 'T is as if he should say As we are certain that this our earthly Tabernacle must be Dissolved so do we know with the same Assurance that we have a better and more induring Building in Heaven And indeed there is nothing so certain as the first That we must all die we are oblig'd to it by the very Constitution of our Nature our Bodies are Houses of Clay continually batter'd by Rain and rough Weather
joyn with others in that Blessed Imployment and as if her Heart had not been big enough to entertain those Holy Publick Devotions which she so dearly lov'd she had often a Book of them in her hand and one to be sure always about her How Passionately did she wish also for frequent opportunities of receiving the Blessed Sacrament and uniting her self in Heart and Mystery to her dearest Saviour as much as is possible for us in this life great was her gladness and comfort when those happy seasons return'd great was her care to put on the wedding-garment for that Heavenly Marriage-Feast Fasting Tears and Prayers were the Preparatives a most Humble Edifying and Devout Behavior were the concomitants and a great Love fervour and gratitude were the subsequent Effects of that most Solemn Act of Religion If from the Church and the Lords Table we follow her to her private Closet there we shall find her every day spend much time in Reading and Meditation and much more yet upon her knees No wonder Blessed Soul if thou wert so good when thou didst keep such Divine Company being always with God either hearing him speak or speaking to him always conversing with Heaven either in thoughts or words We may yet advance farther to her Bed-chamber There we shall see her also much upon her Knees her Cheeks bedewed with Tears her mouth filled with the Praises of God and her Heart with his Love This is the first and the last thing she doth every day Nay days thus Religiously spent cannot sufficiently express that devout affection which her Soul is possest withal she defalks as much as she can from the necessary refreshment of Nature her rest is interrupted with acts of adoration and at mid-night you may find her prostrate upon the ground watching to God while others sleep and anticipating as much as may be the State of Immortality and the Blessed imployment of Saints in Heaven No wonder now if so much Grace inspired that Soul which so much dwelt with God! No wonder if her life and example be bright and luminous as was Moses's face when she like him so long convers'd with God! and no wonder if God took her to himself betimes when she like Enoch walkt so close with him and with so Zealous an assiduity Would you think it Christians if I had not discover'd it before that I have been reading the Life of a young person of one that died under twenty would you not rather think that I have been making a Collection of all that might be praise-worthy in the Lives of many aged good Christians I profess I have read the lives of the long Liv'd Fathers of the Desert there are in them some things very extraordinary and rather to be wondred at than imitated but the Life and example of this our younger Saint is far more instructive and edifying than all theirs She liv'd under no other ingagement than her Baptismal Vows she converst freely with others and as to the actions of a civil Life she willingly complyed with Innocent Customs there was in her nothing extraordinary but an extraordinary goodness and piety And yet it may pass for a thing very singular and hardly to be match't that where there was so great a Vertue such an elevation of mind there should be no contempt of others no Pride no desire to be observ'd nothing but lowliness and the greatest sincerity she did as St. Gregory tells of his Sister 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Seek to approve herself only to him who sees in Secret and she could have wish'd no man had took notice of what she did for God alone Euge bone serve well done good and faithful Servant was all the commendation she aimed at and if notwithstanding her Light did shine before men it was that only God might be glorified Great things have been written of the zeal of retutning Penitents but so much fervour with so little Guilt such an active Piety with so much innocence hath seldom been seen her Vertue might have been a rich Ornament for gray hairs but that she should thus intirely devote herself to God in the prime of her age when she might have injoy'd all Humane pleasures and was as likely to live long as any one alive is much to be admir'd and remembred But as she was soon ripe and come to perfection so God soon took her from among the chaff Mat. 3. 12. and gather'd her with his wheat into his garner She went out into her Lords Vinyard and there began to work from break a day therefore he would not suffer her after such early diligence to bear also the brunt and the heat of the day he paid her her wages before Noon and dismist her to rest she started for the Race as soon as she had enter'd it and she ran with great speed and therefore soon ended her course and betimes received the Crown How she finisht her Christian Course will easily be guest by what I have already said of its beginning and progress it could not be with her as with many remiss Christians who when they approach the confines of Death begin to mend their pace and to be very serious and active but she that had liv'd always as if she had been dying could not but die as she had liv'd Her Body being much a stranger to her and her Soul familiar with God and always delighted with Spiritual Pleasures she therefore took little Notice of her natural pains and decays and her infirmities could not oblige her to omit any thing of her wonted Devotions insomuch that but little before her last Agony she was two hours upon her knees taking her farewel of the World and making her approaches to God in that Devout Humble posture she went an even constant pace and died to God as she had liv'd to him And now to her I may apply Philo's Observation he finds that Abraham is the first in Scripture called an old man Gen. 25. 8. not but that the Patriarchs before him lived much longer but because saith he Age should be reckon'd by Wisdom and Piety not by years by this account we may find also that this yong Lady lived long and died full of years as the Patriach did her time which she did spend so Religiously to gain blissful Eternity cannot be said to have been short And what shall we now mourn because she is gone from us or shall we Joy because she is with God shall we mourn because her Absence is a grievous loss or rejoyce because her Presence hath been a great and pleasant advantage doubtless a mixture of those two passions may here find a place Sed salva pietate fidei gaudia praeferamus said St. Paulinus but without prejudice to Human affection the joys of Religion should prevail over the Sorrows of Nature Ps 116. 15. precious in the Sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints that which God is delighted with should not be altogether afflictive to us St. Chrysost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we should not prosecute with sadness and tears the death of Holy Persons but rather with Hymns and Acclamations cum Canticis Psallentium vocibus as it was the manner of ancient Christians and even the Decree of a great Council 3 d. Toled Rejoycing with them that Rejoyce congratuling their great Happiness because if we follow their Examples we shall with them be numbred with the Saints of God in Glory Everlasting FINIS
Our Souls dwell in a Tabernacle an earthly Tabernacle and sure such an Abode cannot be of long continuance A Tabernacle hath a Roof but it hath no Foundation it is an Ambulatory house which may be remov'd at pleasure Just so are our Bodies they have a roof they are overlaid with a thin skin but they have no Foundation they stand up on the sand any forcible thrust any Accident may overthrow them We are not only certain that the time of our Dissolution will come but we are uncertain of every moment Our earthly house is very weak we are sure it must fall but if it were never thrown down till it fell of it self we might hope to foresee its approaching Ruine But every blast of Winde every hail-stone or bigger drop of Rain may crush it into the flatness of a Grave Tres sunt Mortis nuncii Death is said to have Three Messengers either of which may come and tell us every moment That we must leave all and remove from hence Accidents Infirmities and Old Age. There is no man in whatever condition he be but may at any time be called or forc'd away by some one or other of these Senectus praesentem Old-Age sets us on the brink of our Grave and makes our Death present to us Infirmitas apparentem Sickness and Infirmities are the Prelude of our Mortality and the Fore-runner of a likely approaching Death Casus latentem but Accidents threaten us continually with an unseen and unexpected End and the number of the casual Deaths is great and we know not how it shall be with us Christians This should be seriously thought on for 't would be of great use in the whole mannagement of our Lives Meditatio mortis est vita perfecta Greg. Mag. The frequent Meditation of Death is the best Instrument of Holy-Living It would prevent and cure very many Sins and Follies if we had it oftner in our minds That our Earthly house of this Tabernacle must be dissolved that our Strength and Beauty must be laid in the Dust and that our long dwelling must be in the dark Chambers of the Grave Who would bestow their Cares and Revenues in the beautifying of a ruinous house whose rotten foundation doth sink continually and were it not that men will not be serious how could they spend their whole Time and Estates in adorring and pleasing their Bodies whose origine is from the Earth whose matter is but Clay whose End is Corruption which sink and decay every day and cannot be kept from Dissolution It is writen of John the Charitable Patriarch of Alexandria that he built to himself a fine Monument but left it unfinish't and commanded that his Servants should daily put him in mind to finish what he had began that so being frequently remembred of perfecting his Tomb he might think to fit himself for it and always have Death in his thoughts Happy were it if we also could find out some Art daily to put us in mind of our latter end We cannot all build a Sepulcher as the Patriarch no but we all carry the Corps that must be laid in This our earthly house must be dissolved and every thing whereby 't is now preserv'd is near a kin to Death We have many Remembrancers of our frailty if we would listen to their voice and mind their motions and truly 't is more a wonder that our bodies weak as they are should indure so long than that they should at last be dissolved for being made of so many various parts and joyned together with so small Ligaments and the whole being but dirt 't is next to a Miracle they should tumble up and down so long and not fall to pieces Eliphas in Job 4. 19. gives us this Description of mens frailness and their stupidity that they dwell in houses of clay whose foundation is in the dust and are crushed before the Moth they are destroyed saith he from morning to evening they perish for ever without any regarding it doth not their excellency which is in them go away they dye even without wisdom Sure if such men as are sensual proud and covetuous would now and then walk in a charnel-house and there take an account of those grandeurs and pleasures which are the worshipped Idols of the world it is not to be thought but that it would alay the heat of their unruly passions abate their sinful desires and reduce them to some Sobriety There is much to be learn't from that voice which the Prophet was bid to cry a loud Isa 40. 6. All flesh is grass and all the goodliness thereof is as the flower of the field For as the strongest stalk and fairest colour of flowers keeps them not from fading and being soon dried up and withered so the strength and beauty and all the accomplishments of men are no security against the dismal change of Death still they return to their first dust we must be as water spilt on the ground which is not gather'd up again Nay that our hearts might not be lifted up by any of those outward ornaments we observe in Scripture that several persons who had been allow'd the largest Portion of those natural endowments died soonest and in the worst manner The strongest Sampson the fair Absalom the swift Asael the wise Achitophel they all came to an unnatural end they were thrown in the dust by violence and force So true it is of all men even the strongest what we read Job 14. 1. Man that is born of a Woman is of few days and full of trouble he cometh forth as a flower and is cut down he flees also as a shadow and continueth not I conclude this first point by applying to this matter the dissolution of our bodies St. Peters exhortation in another case 2. Pet. 3. 11. Seeing then that all these things must be dissolved all these members and comely parts of our bodies what manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation and Godliness Having now consider'd the sad Ruin and Fall of this our earthly House let us see in the second place what comfort we have against it How will it be with us after the Dissolution of our fleshly Tabernacle when this our prison our vessel of clay is fallen to peices then evadit intus reclusa columba our Soul flies away and goeth to rest there is a building of God a blessed receptacle fitted to receive it We are not left to the uncertainties of the Emperor animula vagula blandula c. Dear soul where art thou a going to wander in unknown places No our Blessed Lord Christ by the Gospel hath brought to light both life and immortality and praised be his goodness We know that when our earthly house of this Tabernacle is dissolved we have a building of God an house not made with hands Eternal in the Heavens There cannot be a greater comfort for a man forc't out of a poor Cottage than to be promis'd he shall