Selected quad for the lemma: heaven_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heaven_n earth_n lord_n soul_n 10,053 5 4.7640 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A20802 The Christian armorie wherein is contained all manner of spirituall munition, fit for secure Christians to arme themselues withall against Satans assaults, and all other kind of crosses, temptations, troubles, and afflictions : contrived in two bookes, and handled pithily and plainly by way of questions and answers / by Thomas Draxe ... ; hereunto is adioined a table of all the principall heads and branches comprised in each chapter of the whole treatise. Draxe, Thomas, d. 1618. 1611 (1611) STC 7182; ESTC S782 133,281 384

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

whose seruice is perfect fréedome Secondly this bondage is greatly mitigated yea sugred and swéetned to Gods children for God doth not onely restraine and moderate the enemies malice but also sometimes greatly honour preferre and exalt them examples whereof we haue in Ioseph Jeremie Daniel Sidrack Mesheck Abednego in Hester Mardocheus and diuers others Thirdly death putteth a terme and end to this bondage if wee find not deliuerance long before and why cannot we a while expect this yeare of our absolute fréedome and euerlasting Iubiley Lastly Gods children are Christs fréemen being redeemed and ransomed by his bloud and they are free Denizens of heauen hauing euerlasting life in beginning and being by faith secured of the full possession of it and therefore though for a time they bee plunged in many euils yet they can neuer perish for they are afflicted but not forsaken tried but not tired out Q. What is the quintessence or speciall vse of all these propositions and conclusions A. First hence wee may take notice of the miserable estate of wicked worldlings and vngodly men who though they enioy outward wealth ease and liberty yet are they drudges to the world vassals and slaues vnto sinne cursed caitiffes for they are locked in golden fetters and shut vp in the prison of their own sinnefull desires which is the worst kind of bondage Secondly let vs serue the Lord our God and not Satan Sinne nor Antichrist and then we are Gods frée men no bondage can impeach or hinder our spirituall liberty and happines Thirdly farre bee it from vs to contemne or misiudge any of Gods children for their outward seruitude and bondage vnto which tyranny and iniquity of times doe or may enwrappe them but let vs pray to God to furnish them with ioy and the spirit of long suffering and in his good time to ridde and deliuer them wee must also by occasion freely and franckly contribute to their necessities for they are our owne flesh and bloud borne of the same both naturall and spirituall seede breathing of the same aire and seruants to the same God Lastly when we are thus restrained and distressed it behoueth vs timely and truely to repent vs of our sinnes for otherwise we are to expect no mitigation much lesse a spéedy deliuerance out of our misery Q. What comforts against violent nakednesse caused by flight or the enemies vnmercifulnesse A. First Christ our blessed Sauiour was stript of his raiment and hath sanctified this euill vnto vs and hath turned the shame of it into glory Secondly very many of Gods excellent seruants haue béene thus shamefully misused by their enemies Basil saith that forty Martyres were turned out naked to bee starued in the cold of the night and afterwards to bee burned Thirdly they must count it for some benefit and blessing that the enemy doth onely spoile them of their garments and not of their liues Fourthly though they endure shame and reproch of the world yet it maketh them not vnhappy for Christ suffered the shame of the crosse to make them honourable Fifthly the enemie cannot possibly disrobe dismantle and despoile them of the garments of Christ his holines and righteousnesse wherewith they are clothed and wherewith their deformities are couered Sixthly this is but a temporary and fatherly correction and can neuer separate any of Gods children from his loue Lastly it is not the gay garments but godlines not outward pompe but piety that maketh men honourable as for the proud mans honour it is in his garment and not in his person Q. What vse are we to make hereof A. First let it be a shame to vs to be called naughty rather then naked Secondly though Gods enemies rob his children of their garments let vs in our charity cloath them Lastly let vs by faith put on the Lord Iesu and then we shall neuer bee found naked for he onely is naked who hath lost Christ. Q. Why doth God suffer so many of his best beloued Saints and seruants to be massacred and murdered by the enemies sword A. First we herein must rather reuerence and admire Gods secret yet iust procéedings then curiously to diue and enquire into the ground and reason of them and wée must assure our selues that the end is good albeit our dulnes cannot so well apprehend it For Gods purposes and decrees attaine vnto their holy and appointed ends no otherwise then certaine riualets though they vanish out of our sight and are hidden vnder the earth are carried and conuey themselues into the sea Secondly by the effusion and spilling of their innocent bloud the number of true professors is both manifested multiplied and the bloudy butchers and Bonners either conuerted albeit most rarely or else conuinced and left vnexcusable Thirdly though the enemies thinke to root out the Church and the name and memory of true Christians yet God doth and will crosse and curse their designes for contrary to their expectation the Gospell is more published and proclaimed the innocency of Gods children more cléered and testified and their madnes and badnes made known vnto all the world Lastly the sufferings of the Martyrs doth procure vnto them a greater measure of glorie in heauen but tyrants heretikes persecutors runne themselues out of breath and draw vpon themselues the greater damnation Q. How are we to arme and comfort our selues against this kind of death A. First they are blessed that die in the Lord and for the Lord they are glorious in Gods sight and are arayed in long white robes Secondly they do not lose their liues but find them and incomparably better them Luk. 9. Thirdly the sword toucheth the garment of the bodie but not the soule nor their faith for God herein dealeth with his children as the Persians in punishing some noble Personage for they take away his garment and his hat and hang them vp in some place and all to beat them as though they were the man himselfe so they by Gods ouer-ruling hand doe not touch our soules and our faith but beate onely the garment of our persons Fourthly they that die for Christ receiue some what of death that it be●al not whol● vnto them Lastly their innocent bloud which the persecutors haue shed and sucked crieth like the bloud of Abel to the Heauens for vengeance against them and they with the soules in the Apocalypse that were killed for the word of God crie with a lowd voice saying How long Lord holy and true doest thou not iudge and auenge our bloud on them that dwell on the earth and this their crie the iust Lord doth néeds must heare and regard Q What vse are we to make hereof A. First we must neuer promise to our selues long prosperity or immunitie from persecution but wee must prepare and strengthen our selues against the time of triall and martyrdome and though it bee not our lot alwaies to die for the Lord Iesu and his
to feare any false or abused excommunication Q. What if wee in the country or kingd●me where we dwell see the poore oppressed and innocency defaced how shall wee then keepe and preserue our selues from being scandalized A. First if we sée in a country the oppression of the poore and the defrauding of iustice we must not be astonied at the matter for the highest séeth and regardeth it Secondly if we looke for a Church or State without spot taint of error and iniustice we must seek it in ●eauen only where all things are established in an absolute and eternall order and perfection or else we must get vs into Mauqsun or Sir Thomas More his Vtopia where we shall finde such a state and policie Thirdly in this distresse wee must haue recourse vnto the magistrate his helpe and when one faileth or neglecteth vs we must séeke to another Lastly if we sée all outward meanes to faile we ought to call and cry day and night vnto our God we must make him our iudge and reuenger and wait vpon him vntill he right vs and then though hee seeme to vse long patience towards our aduersaries he will auenge vs and that quickly Q. Why doth God so sharpely censure and so roughly handle his iust and innocent children A. First no man is innocent before God for there is no man that sinneth not if God straitely marke mans iniquity who shall stand and no flesh by his owne workes can be iustified in Gods sight so that the all-piercing eye of the almighty that is tenne thousand times brighter then the sunne and clearer then crystall can if it please him find sufficient matter to condemn them in their begunne iustice and innocency wherefore we must not thinke them to be altogether vncorrupt in this wicked world as the fish that liue in the salt sea their own element nothing sauour of the saltnes of it but that they in part are tainted with the worlds corruption Secondly God will not haue his children peruerted with the worlds sinnes much lesse perish with them and therfore hee doth thus seuerely and that sundry times scourge and chastice them for he would haue them with this salt water of trouble to wash out the spots of sinne Thirdly man is no equall Iudge of mens sinnes and so of their afflictions but wee must reserue the censure and iudgement hereof to God onely for hee onely eyeth mans secret sinnes and can and doth righteously censure and punish them but man is so farre from finding out the number and nature of secret sinnes that hee in the cloudy myst of his owne ignorance can hardly discerne the quality and desert of notorious offences and those that are already brought to light but onely taketh notice of certaine outward tracks impressions and actions And therefore wee must not thus without cause complaine nor picke quarrels with God Almighty Lastly God would hereby affright the wicked if not reforme them for if iudgement begin at the house of God what shall be the end of them that obey not the Gospell and if the righteous bee scarsely saued where shall the vngodly and sinner appeare Q. What vse are we to make of Gods proceedings herein A. We blind sinners must not take vpon vs to iudge of the guilt and to determine of the circumstances of mens sinnes and of their estate before God but we must referre the iudgement hereof to Gods all-séeing eye and to his sincere iustice Secondly in such hidden and intricate causes and cases that are vnknowne vnto vs wee must shut our mouthes and suspend our iudgementes for who are we that condemne an other mans seruant for he standeth or falleth to his owne master Lastly if God seem to deale extreamly with vs we our selues then must s●● the remouall of this imputation search●● sift into our owne wayes and call t● our remembrance what duties commaunded we haue omitted and what euill things forbidden we haue committed and how that God in his strict iustice might condemne vs for the least offence and then wee shall admire God patience that hée handleth vs so gently and doth in his bottomlesse mercy passe by and pardon so many imperfections and offences in vs. Q. But forward men in religion and many noted professors by their loose life and practises of iniustice offend many simple hearted men and weake yet well affected Christians what preseruatiue is now to be vsed A. The due meditation and practise of these Canons and conclusions following as namely First many professors are not so bad as the world would make them a mole hill in them is made a mountaine and a moat is made a beame their infirmities like spots in white paper or fine linnen are soone espied and noted but prophane people are not obserued and their grosse sinnes are silenced and suppressed Secondly if any or many vnder the cloake and maske of zeale labour to couer their practises of deceit couetousnes and iniustice c we must know that the visible Church of Christ is compared to a field wherein is not onely wheate but tares to a garden wherin are both good herbes and also wéeds and to an house wherein are not only vessels of gold and siluer but also of wood and earth and therefore if wee looke that all professors should be without fault or infirmity and all should be good and none euil we must looke for them in heauen onely and not in earth where are more euill then good men Thirdly the diseases and sins of the soule are not contagious as those of the body are for the soule is not infected vnlesse it giue a consent and allowance to other mens sinnes and therefore let vs keepe our selues frée from their sins and then we néede not to bee scandalized at their euill dealings which wee cannot helpe Lastly euery man must beare his owne burden and answere for his own sinnes and therefore let vs rather correct our owne sinnes then be scandalized at other mens faults and let vs striue to bee perfect in an euill generation Q. What practises are necessary in such a case A. First we must beware that wee doe not without cause censure and condemne such and if we find them faulty and hereupon reproue them that we bée not as bad and worse our selues Secondly if many vary much from their sacred profession and bee workers of iniquity for the preuention of this offence wee must know that we are to walke rather by rule then by example rather by the Canon of Gods word then by custome Lastly it is our duty to reproue pitty and pray for such offensiue professors Q. How shall poore and weake christians confirme themselues in the faith or preserue themselues from defection when many noted and notable persons that seemed pillars reuolt from the sincere truth of Religion A. First they that fall away from the substance of true religion and
greater crosses and corrections for euery sinne séeing it is committed against an infinite Maiestie doth in it owne nature deserue death and therefore wee must the more patiently endure smaller crosses Fifthly we by impatiency highly offend our God and cause him to handle vs more roughly then he would otherwise doe Lastly if wee constantly waite Gods leasure and entreate his helpe hee will either encrease our strength or decrease our crosse he wil either amend vs by it or else end it Q. What heauenly nepenthes or doctrine haue you against the Crosse A. First it procéedeth from the speciall prouidence and heauenly disposition of God for he createth euill namely of punishment who is he then that saith and it commeth not to passe and the Lord commandeth it not Secondly the crosse is the ensigne and ornament of Gods children their cup their part and portion and the rode way to heauen Thirdly the crosse doth dead and destroy sinne in vs and mortifieth euill affections It is like lightning and thunder to purge the corrupted aire of our hearts and minds It is a file to scoure away rust from our soules a purgation to expell ill humors and like the gold smiths fire to consume the drosse of vanity in vs. Fourthly it doth exercise and cause to grow and encrease the fruits of the spirit and the precious graces of faith hope loue repentance patience for as snow and frost by containing the inward heat in the earth and increasing it causeth the séede cast into it to spring more prosperously so the gifts and graces of Gods children the more that by the crosse they séeme to be smothered and suppressed the more they breake foorth and are encreased Fifthly God will heereby trie the faith of his children towards his maiesty their loue towards their afflicted brethren and their patience towards themselues Sixthly God is with his in trouble in fire and water hee comforteth and strengthneth them he perfecteth his power in their infirmities and at length turneth their sighes into singing their mourning into mirth and their trouble into triumph Lastly the afflictions of this present life are not worthy of the glory that is to be reuealed Q. What duties are we to performe vnder the Crosse A. They either respect God or our afflicted brethren Q. What duties must wee performe towards God A. First we must submit our selues patiently vnto his discipline and correction otherwise if we striue and struggle against God we offend him and so encrease our paine and trouble no otherwise then he that strugleth with a burden on his shoulders doth the more afflict and disease himselfe Secondly we must repose our whole confidence in him and waite his leasure vntill he haue mercy on vs. Lastly when God hath deliuered vs we must returne vnto him all the glory and praise of it for this is the tribute that we owe vnto him and the impo●● that he requireth at our hands Q. What duties must we performe to our afflicted brethren A. First we must neither iudge wi●ked and vngodly men to be blessed and happy because they liue for the present in pompe pleasure and prosperity nor falsely and foolishly censure condemne the nation and generation of Gods children that sincerely serue him and are deare vnto him by reason of their presēt aduersities maladies and miseries for ordinarily the wicked in whō God hath no portion receiue all their pleasure and comfort in this life the godly here feele all their paine and suffer all their miseries that the wicked in the world to come may inherit vengeance and the godly eternall ioy and happinesse Secondly farre be it from vs to disdaine despight or despise Gods children in tribulation much lesse let vs aggraua● their afflictions but let it be our practise to cōdole with them to pity pray for and refresh reléeue them Heb. 13.3 Am. 6.6 CHAP. IIII. Of common crosses and particularly of warre forraine and domesticall Question HOw are crosses to be diuided and distinguished A. They are either such publicke and priuate euils which are common to Gods children with the wicked or such temptations crosses and troubles that are proper and peculiar to Gods seruants Q. Which are those publicke euils to which good men and euill are indifferently subiect A. Warre plague famine oppression losses pouerty cosenage or deceit it Q. With what comfortable perswasions shall wee solace and support our selues in time of warre A. Albeit hostility and warre is a sore iudgement and the sword be more grieuous thē either famine or pestilence yet Gods children want not their consolations For first the sword of the enemy commeth not by chance but by Gods direction and appointment and that not onely for the triall and exercise of Gods children but for the punishment and destruction of his enemies Secondly the enemies rage and fury is not of a boundlesse extent but limited restrained ordered by the diuine prouidence for our good Thirdly though our enraged enemies doe or may sometimes yet not without Gods permission kill our bodies yet they cannot kill our soules nor depriue them of Gods fauour and his kingdome Fourthly neither sword war nor persecution can part the godly from their indissoluble vnion with Christ nor take them out of Gods handes and protection Fiftly if our cause bée good if the defence of our selues be vndertaken by aduise and counsell and withal we call vpon God for valour wisedome and victorie the successe cannot be but good neither néed wee feare the great multitude against vs for the battell is not ours but the Lords Sixtly though God sometimes to shew his iustice that he doth not winke at sinne but punish it vseth the enemies malice in the temporall ouerthrow of his children yet he doth withall shew his mercy in rescuing and sauing many and in turning the punishment of sinne in his children into a medicine and soueraigne salue Lastly God by the euils of warre wil cause vs more to desire peace and quietnesse and when wee haue obtained it the more to estéeme it and to bée thankefull to God for it For as the nights darkenes maketh the light of the Sunne more desirable as vallies set out the mountaines the champion country commendeth the woodland so doth warre declare and make knowne the excellency of peace Q. But what if in a lawfull war and in a good quarrell we now and then bee foiled and ouerthrowne how shall wee comfort our selues and what course shall we take A. First wee must know that by reason of Achans sinne that had stollen a Babylonish garment two hundred shekels of siluer and a wedge of gold the Israelites were put to flight by th● men of Ai and the Beniamites twice ouercame the Israelites that had a good cause because they fought not in faith nor repented them of their sins as they did afterwards wherefore wée must
and wise prouidence which will be a meanes to kéepe vs from all impatience and desire of reuenge Q. What duties are the wronged and oppressed to performe A. First if we would redresse a wrong we must forget it Secondly we must make the Iudges Iustices and Christian magistrate the reuengers of our wrongs but if they faile vs we must commit it to God to whom vengeance belongeth and he will right vs. Thirdly we must labour to be innocent as Doues we must hurt none but striue to doe good to all and the more innocent we are the more ease and peace shall we finde in our owne soules Fourthly if in a country we sée the oppression of the poore and the defrauding of iudgement and iustice we must not be astonied at the matter for on● high that is aboue the high taketh notice of it nay the highest is aboue them that is God which is in heauen and doth excell all mens greatnes far more incomparably then the greatest Monarch surpasseth the meanest vassall or subiect and he doth with infinite eyes behold and view all things Ezech. 1.18 Zach. 3.9 4.9 Lastly we must whatin vs lieth and what wee may with the testimony of a good conscience defend others frō wrong and oppression and then God will stirre vp them that shall defend vs. Q. How shall a Christian in pouerty and in want of outward necessary things resolue and comfort himselfe A. Albeit pouerty is in it selfe a vile and miserable state of life by reason of the want of necessary money and riches yet there are manifold meditatiōs wherin the child of God is to comfort himself as for example First pouerty is to Gods child not a bane but a blessing not a curse but a correction for Christ himselfe our blessed Sauiour was borne poore liued poor died poore and that to make vs rich and shall wée take that lot grieuously whereby wee may bée made conformable to Christ and grow rich in grace Secondly euery Christian is rich with Christ a Lord and possessor of heauen and earth and of all the riches therein contained and how then can hée bée poore Thirdly he that is rich in grace hath the true treasure of eternall life in his heart and therefore he cannot be poore Fourthly wée lie and liue in great 〈◊〉 and security for we are fréed and disburdened from many cares feares and dangers wée néede not feare the hurts of fire and water fained friends and fawning parasites shall not eate vs vp ill seruants shall not pilfer and purloin● from vs nor run away with our goods neither shal we stand in dāger of théeues and robbers to all which inconueniences the rich are exposed and subiect Fiftly wee want many occasions of infection and prouocations vnto euill for many men are no longer good then they are poore and therefore God denieth vs riches which wee would abuse to pride vanity couetousnes oppression and vsurie Sixtly if wee be content few things are wanting for nature is content with a little it desireth onely bread and water and he is not poore that liueth according to nature but a couetous worldling alwayes is bare and néedy and wanteth that he hath Seuenthly to a rich man all mediocrity is sufficient for hee is rich being content with his owne and he is a good scholler and proficient in Christ his schoole hauing learned with S. Paul as well to want as to abound and that which he wanteth labour virtue and learning will supply Eightly pouerty is a touchstone and discouereth who are faithful friends and who are false who are hollow and who are holy for a poore man is commonly contemned and he will soon shrink from vs that séeketh not vs but ours Ninthly God that giueth vs life which is the principall will for the necessarie sustenance of it giue vs dayly bread which is the lesse principall hee is our father and will féed vs and hee is our shepheard and will suffer vs to want nothing that is conuenient for vs. Tenthly Christ is our Lord and we are his seruants and therefore hee will not forsake vs but furnish vs with things néedfull for if he prouided for the 12. Apostles his family when he was in poore estate on the earth how much more will he prouide for vs being in glory and in the actuall possession of heauen and earth Eleuenthly Wealth is no part of that happy and glorious inheritance that Christ hath purchased for the Saints it is none of our own but another ma●● but if it were simply bonum it we● bonum commune wherof wicked 〈◊〉 ordinarily more partake then Go●● children Twelfthly it is better to be counted religious then rich and poore then pr●phane and impious for pouerty religion and blessednes may possibly happily concurre but riches cannot make the possessor blessed and riches and godlines doe but rarely consort and meet to gether in one and the same subiect person Thirteenthly riches commonly doe corrupt and effeminate the mind they like thornes choake the séede of Gods word they are the matter and fuell of riot excesse couetousnes and vanity for they doe not banish them away but beget them nor extenuate them but increase them neither doe they take away necessities but cause them and therfore we haue no such reason to lamēt the lo●● of them or to be so eagerly set vpon thē but rather to lament our sinnes the cause of all our misery Fourtéenthly what though thou now be poore yet God may hereafter enrich and aduance thee as he did Job Dauid and diuers others for he raiseth the needy out of the dust and lifteth vp the poore out of the dung that hee may set him with the princes of his people c. Lastly the poorer that we are in life the more ioyfull shall we be in death for no man liueth so poorely that would not desire to haue liued more poorely when he dieth for he must needs part with al and render an account to God how hee hath gotten kept and disposed all his goods Q What vse are wee to make of pouerty or how are wee to demeane our selues in it A. First we must remēber that heauen is our country and kingdome and that this life is but a pilgrimage and the earth a place of banishment and therfore we must not carke and care toile and moile for the things of this world but séeke the things aboue and rather labour to be rich in grace then in goods Secondly the poorer that we are let vs be so much the more humble and by praier and faith purchase and hold 〈◊〉 Christ that rich pearle and hidden treasure whereof we reade in the Gospell ● then we can neuer be poore Thirdly let vs not contemne mu●● lesse condemne any person for his pe●ry and pouerty for then we shall many times magnifie the wicked condemne the generation of Gods children wh● for the most part are
as for the time of death and the warning that God giueth vs of it we must refer it wholy to his heauenly disposition Q. Is it lawfull for a Christian to pray against sudden death A. Yes when he hath liberty so to doe or whiles hee hath time and memory Q. But sudden death cannot preiudice his saluation there is no expresse forme of prayer against sudden death in all the scripture why then should any Christian man pray against it A. First because sudden death more often befalleth to the wicked then to the good Secondly because fewnes of daies and suddennes of death is wished to the wicked in way of imprecation and therfore we may pray for some warning of death approching that the wicked and prophane doe not rashly censure iudge and condemn vs as though wee died accursed and out of Gods fauour Thirdly wee cannot otherwise by our good confession and prayer glorifie God before men in our death nor giue at all a good example of dying well to our family or others Lastly if we being of ability die intestate and without making a will the poore may be defr●uded of all comfort and much contention may possibly arise about the distribution and disposall of our lands and worldly goods amongst our wiues children and kinsfolke Q. What shall wee iudge of Gods children that doe perish by the enemies sword and by consequence are this way cruelly and suddenly massacred A. It hath beene the lotte of Gods Saints in the old and new Testament and in all ages sithence thus to end their liues and they blessed yea blessed with a further addition of glory because they died for Gods cause Secondly this kind of death cannot kill the soule nor separate soule or body from Gods fauour and loue Thirdly they had no special promise to die quietly in their beds or in their friends hands and as for their enemies they haue preuented themselus frō hauing any further power ouer Gods children for they haue done their worst Finally non nocet bonis si subito occidantur vel si subita morte pereunt Nō enim subito moriuntur qui semper cogitauerunt se morituros that is It disparageth not good men if they be suddenly slain or if they suddenly die For they die not suddenly who alwaies thought that they should die Lastly right many haue béene by the sword not knighted in earth but martyred here and crowned in heauen this besides the pregnant testimonies of sacred scriptures the experience of all times and ages euinceth and verifieth Q. How shall wee arme and resolue our selues against the feare of perishing by the enemies sword or any such kind of violent death A. First it skilleth and mattereth not whether a burning feauer the pestilence or the sword kill vs or whether the prison be set or broken open Secondly we are not so much to feare the hand as the wound but death doth not so much wound as cure and salue the godly from their sinnes and miseries Thirdly wee may hereby bee preuented of a more lingring and fearefull death as to die by famine and by r●cking flaying c. Lastly wee must remember that it is the lot of Gods children oftentimes this way to die and that no kind of death naturall or violent can separate them or vs from the loue wherewith God loueth vs in Christ. CHAP. XI The third supposed euill of death in that it depriueth vs of most worthy and excellently deseruing Princes Magistrates Ministers patrons friends kinsfolks c. Question HOw shall wee comfort our selues against the vntimely death of any worth● Christian whether Magistrate Minister kinsman speciall friend or any priuate Christian A. By marking and meditating vpon these or the like propositions and grounds following First no man dieth before his time for it is appointed for all men once to die and this time not man but God hath in his eternall certainty appointed Secondly they are loosed from the bonds of sinne and this earthly misery and how can this be out of time Thirdly they as well as any others owed a death vnto God and were at Gods call to make present paiment now this death is due euery day how then demanded before the day Fourthly these worthy instruments in Church and commonwealth these pillars in Gods house these noble Cedars in Libanon these starres in the firmament these Phen●ces and déere saints and seruants of God were fitter for heauen then earth and therefore partly because we were vnworthy of them and vnthankfull to God for them partly because they should not see the euils to come and partly that they should not be changed and infected with the worlds wickednes God hath iustly depriued vs of them but crowned them with the crowne of euerlasting glory Fifthly a long life is a long labour and a suspension as it were of their life from immortality and hee that liueth long what hath he but increase of sins manifold cares griping griefes and distastefull discontentments and will he count these his gaines gettings winnings and aduantages Sixthly they die not suddenly that soone haue growne old and haue spéedily sailed ouer the troublesome and tempestuous sea of this world into the blessed Canaan Lastly if God sée vs truly humbled for the losse of these glorious lights and earnestly to sorrow for our sinnes and vnthankfulnes that haue bereaued vs of them God can and wil raise vp a new succession in their stead he can cause Iosua to succéed Moses and Iehoshaphat to succéed Aza Salomon to follow next after Dauid Elizeus to execute the office of Elias his predecessor can as he did cause very many worthy and vigilant Bishops and faithful Pastors to succéed the Apostles and therefore in this though we ought to be humbled yet we must hope well and know that Gods arme is not shortned nor his power abridged Q. What vse are we to make of vntimely death either in regard of others or else in respect of our selues A. First in regard of others we must lament and bewaile our sinnes and vnworthinesse whereby we haue depriued our selues of them and that we did not more praise God nor better serue him when we enioyed them Secondly we must not enuie at but congratulate their aduancement and euerlasting happinesse sed eodem animo ferenda mors quo nostram expectamus that is we must so take their death as our owne Thirdly it is our duty to pray vnto God to raise vp new in their place and if their equals or those that doe in some good measure resemble them doe succéed it is our duty more to esteeme them and haue them in the higher account nam bona nostra carendo magis quam fruendo cognos●imus that is we know good things more by wanting of them then by enioying of them Fourthly in regard of our selues if we as we ought purpose to doe well let vs doe it quickly lest we be preuented and if
we haue begun to doe some worthy acts as Dauid did when he made preparation for the building of the Temple c. God the righteous Iudge will regard and reward not onely our action but our affection and our desire as well as our déed Lastly let vs laying aside all other works intend and study this one thing which is to die well for this is instar omnium that is this instead of all for according to the antient Prouerbe All is well that ends well Q. How shall we comfort our selues when death hath depriued vs of very good benefactors friends fauorites A First you haue not lost them but sent them before to God for death hath not consumed them but eternity shall receiue them Secondly they liue in their better part for though death hath taken away his body yet not his friendship past nor our friends who are forth comming and whom we shall see know and conuerse with after the day of iudgement 1. Cor. 13.12 Thirdly their vertues are immortall and for thy practise and imitation and the remembrance of them is swéete delightsome and comfortable vnto vs. Fourthly it may be when we enioied them we did not as our duty required honour reuerence and esteeme or them Fifthly if our friends be remooued hence and translated into heauen we must labour by our godlinesse humility and weldoing to gain get new friends Lastly if all our chiefe friends and benofactors on earth be flowen vp into heauen it must abundantly suffice and content vs that the whole holy and vndiuideable Trinity God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost are our friends fauorites benefactors vpholders for they are all in all and therefore let vs as well trust in God when our friends faile as when they abound CHAP. XII Particular comforts for them that haue sustained particular losses by the death of kinsfolks c. Question HOw shall a Christian man comfort and resolue himselfe that hath by death parted with a vertuous and kind wife A. Indéed thy losse is great and it is as it were the cutting away of one halfe of thée but thou must remember that she was borne mortal and that frō Adam to the worlds end all must die and therefore thou must take it patiently Secondly all things come to passe by Gods prouidence and appointment who turneth all things to the best to them that loue him Thirdly God will hereby either correct thy vnthankfulnesse or try thy patience Fourthly if she had liued longer she might perhaps haue growne worse and haue béen a crosse and vexation vnto thée Fifthly thou art hereby fréed from ielosie suspition to which good women are sometimes subiect Sixthly God can make thée a gainer by thy losse and procure thee a second as good as shee as when Michal was taken away from Dauid God afterwards prouided for him faire and wise Abigail Seuenthly if thou vnder God wast an instrument to make her good thou maiest make the second good by thy instruction and holy example for though thy wife be gone yet thou the workman art aliue Eighthly thanke God that thou so long time and to thy great contentment didst inioy so good a wife and therefore now thou must be content to receiue some chastisement from God as well as good things in former times Lastly preserue and honour her memory after her death and speake well of her and if thou bee inclined to match againe pray vnto God that thy second choice may bee matchable to thy first and God will heare thy praier Q What comfortable meditations and directions can you bring forth for a Christian wife that hath lost a good and a godly husband A. First she is wedded to Christ and therefore she is no widow nor can want any necessary help and protection Apoc. 12.1 Apoc. 19 7. Secondly death hath not parted husband and wife for euer but for a time for they shall one day if they both feared God sée and know one the other albeit all respects of marriage shall then wholly cease Thirdly God hath a speciall care of widowes as may appeare by miracles done in their behalfe and for their reléefe in the old and new Testament and he laieth a strait charge vpon Magistrates Rulers and Iudges to sée them righted and prouided for Fourthly if she truly feare God and intend a second marriage he that prouided her a good husband before can prouide her a second as good as he prouided faire vertuous and wise Abigail for Dauid Lastly it may be either she did not respect him according to his worth and therefore God hath iustly corrected her vnthankfulnes or else she too much doated vpon him and was too fond of him and therefore God by his death will heale this sinne in her and cause her to depend vpon him onely when the staffe of her outward state is taken away Q. Let vs heare some comforts for parents that by death are bereaued of godly and dutifull children A. First we must alwaies remember that sinne hath deserued death and that God hereupon in the time appointed inposeth death vpon young as well as the aged and his decrée cannot bee preuented or resisted Secondly herein the Saints of God beare their parts with thée and therefore thou must endure these common euils with the greater patience Thirdly children and young men are but as flowers in God his garden and we must suffer God the soueraigne Lord of it and them to crop and gather them when he will Fourthly the yonger that they died they were the lesse defiled with corruption and they departed being not laden with the burthen of many sinnes which longer continuance of time would haue drawne them into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fifthly if there be a decay mortality and change in Okes and Cedars much more in man that hath rebelled against his Creator Sixthly it may be that when wee inioyed them that either wee were too tender and fond ouer them and so would haue corrupted them or else were not contented with them nor thankfull to God for them and therefore God to remedy and correct both these extremities hath bereaued vs of them Seuenthly if our children led a godly life and so died then they are in safetie and forth comming their life is not vanished but changed and though we haue lost them yet God hath found them and at the generall resurrection we shall finde them know and acknowledge them wherefore let vs in the meane time rest content and comfort our selues in this blessed expectation and therefore wee must be so farre from murmuring and repining against God for depriuing vs of them that we must blesse and praise God for their perfection and glorification Lastly by their death wee are fréed from infinite feares of their mis-doing and from many carking cares of prouiding for their outward estate and maintenance but if our children proue vntoward and vngodly then our losse is the lesse to
and conscience make his last Will and Testament and bequeath his goods lands liuing to his wife children kinsfolke friends and to the poore as the law of God and man requireth Q. What duties is hee bound to performe towards himselfe A. He must by faith in the Lord Iesu arme himselfe against satans assaults and against the feare of death and the last iudgement and he must not so much feare death as looke on euerlasting life Secondly touching the body he must be carefull to vse physicke and all other good meanes to preserue and continue life and health vntill it shall please God to take it away Lastly hee must continually resigne himselfe and commend his soule and spirit into Gods blessed hands Q. Jf all these duties be performed in good conscience what good wil come thereof A. First God will honour such as feare and honour him he I say will honour them as well in life as in death 1. Sam. 2.30 Secondly he will make the name and memory of them pretious after death for the iust shall be had in an euerlasting remembrance Q What is a right dispotion in death A. A religious and an holy behauiour of a mans selfe especially towards God Q Is it necessary A. Yes for first now it is the very time to practise it Secondly without this disposition and behauiour our death cannot be pleasant and acceptable in Gods sight Q. What are the parts of it A. Thrée namely to die in faith to die in obedience and to resigne or surrender vp our soules into Gods hands Q What is it to die in faith A. To take notice of and lay hold of Gods gracious promises in Christ touching remission of sinnes and euerlasting life and wholly to rely vpon them as they are reuealed and set forth in the scriptures Q. What benefit shall a man haue who dieth in true faith A. He shall be able to kéepe himselfe safe and sound against the temptations and pangs of death and shall forthwith after he hath giuen vp the Ghost bee made partaker of eternall life and happinesse Q. How is our faith to be expressed A Two maner of waies the one inward the other outward First inwardly by déepe sighes sobs and groanes after a mans redemption Secondly and that outwardly by praier thanksgiuing and good exhortations and often communications touching God and godlinesse Q. What is it to die in obedience A. It is willingly and gladly to submit our selues to Gods will in bearing the crosse Mat. 27. and without murmuring or grudging to goe to God who in death respecteth vs and will vndoubtedly receiue vs. Q. What are they to be compared vnto that die vnwillingly A. They if they belong to God doe as if a prisoner should delight in his prison and dungeon and would not goe forth to a glorious palace and perfect liberty when he lawfully might either forgetting the slauery and defilements which he leaueth or the good things to which he goeth Q. How is this duty to bee performed A. By learning to die daily and not through any impatiency or through the tediousnes of trouble to wish death as Elias did for then we discouer pride and disobedience in that we will not wait on Gods leasure but follow our owne corrupt affections Q. How shall we learne to die daily A. By taking vp Christ his crosse daily and if we doe with patience and méeknes buckle with affliction For euery affliction is a petty death and if we can endure to vndergo this petty death we shall the more comfortably vndergoe the great death of all which is the disiunction or dissolution of the soule from the body Q What is it to surrender our soules into Gods hands A. To yéeld them vp into his hands as vnto a faithfull creator in certaine hope of our present glorification Q. What generall comforts are there against death A. First the sting thereof is taken away by Christ his death and the power abolished death to the godly is like a drone Bée that kéepeth a buzzing and humming but hath lost her sting and cannot hurt Secondly death is to Gods children a gaile deliuery from all sinne and the miseries of this life and a passage vnto the euident and manifest sight and presence of God Thirdly in death God is not only present with his children by his spirit to instruct comfort and assist them but also sendeth his holy Angels to attend vpon them and to saue them from the violence and vexation of euill spirits and to carry their soules into heauen forthwith after that they are separated from their bodies Lastly by death the soules of the godly shall bee made infinitely more holy and happy glad and glorious then euer they were when they were inclosed in the sinfull subiect prison of the body and as for their bodies they after that they haue slept a while in the earth shall be raised vp againe immortall incorruptible and farre more bright and beautifull then they had euer béen if man had neuer sinned Q. What is the quintessence of these conclusions A. First we are taught hereby not to feare to depart out of the ruinous house of our bodies whensoeuer God doth call vs knowing that a better life shall follow after death for they only are blessed that die in the Lord and of this point wee must much thinke and study Secondly we are aduertised hereby not to be cast downe nor discouraged at bodily diseases dolours deformities for the resurrection shall put an end hereunto Lastly we must not vnmeasurably mourne for those that sléepe in the Lord seeing their soules which are the better part of them liue with God and their bodies being bought with a price namely the precious bloud of Christ and being made the temples of the holy Ghost shall at the last day rise againe in glory and incorruption CHAP. XIIII Of certaine particular euils defects and deformities in the body and also crosses in the outward state Question OF how many sorts are these particular euils A. Of two sorts to wit ordinary and extraordinary Q. What are the ordinary euils A. They are either such as are in and about the body or that haue a mans outward state for their obiect Q. What are those euils and defects that are in and about the body A. Deformity lamenes blindnes deafnes dumbnes c. Q. How shall we comfort our selues against the lothsome deformity of the body A. By marking and meditating vpon these conclusions following First bodily deformity doth nothing preiudice the estate of Gods Saints before God as the examples of Iob Dauid Mephibosheth Ezechias Aza Lazarus c. and of innumerable besides 〈◊〉 demonstrate Secondly they endure but for a time and at the furthest end and determine with this life Thirdly though the bodies of Gods Saints be for the time neuer so lothsome and deformed yet are their sinnes couered by the roiall roabes of Christ his
righteousnesse and the soule in the meane time is most holy perfect beautifull Fourthly at the general resurrection this vile body of ours shall be made conformable to Christs glorious body it shall be no more mortall but immortall no more vise but honourable no more weake but alwaies strong no more heauie but light and nimble no more sinfull but holy and in a word no more earthly and néeding these outward meanes and helps of meat drinke apparell rest sléepe physicke recreation marriage c. but they shall be alwaies spirituall i. immediately supported by Gods omnipotent power and absolutely subiect and obedient to the spirit Fifthly God doth not hate the deformity of the body but of the soule by reason of sinne contracted and committed by it and in it Lastly we must remember that our bodies are earthly and mortall and not heauenly and eternall and therefore we must not be discontent if rottennes enter into them onely let vs prouide that as the outward man dieth so the inward man may be renewed daily Q. What comforts against lamenesse A. First lamenesse is naturall and is caused by sicknes old age or otherwise and therefore it is to be endured with the greater patience Secondly the children of God as Mephibosheth Aza the créeple whereof we reade in the fifth of S. Iohns Gospell and a daughter of Abraham haue béen are and shall be subiect hereunto as much as the prophane and irreligious Thirdly though the bodies of Gods Saints for their correction trial and exercise be subiect hereunto yet are their soules holy sound and nothing impeached by the lame body Psal. 92. Fourthly death and the last iudgement which is the time of the restitution of all things will put an end to it and the body shall rise againe in farre greater integritie then euer it appeared in when it was in the best plight Fifthly physicke or surgery may possibly in time recouer the body and therefore the meanes are not to be neglected Lastly let our faith hope be in God and our soules purified in obeying the truth through the spirit and lamenesse shall not hurt vs. Q. Wherein shall a blind man comfort and solace himselfe A. In many things First that blindnes is a great part of innocency for the eies since Adams fall are the windowes of concupiscence and the porters to let in all vices from which enticements vnto euill and blind are fréed Secondly the blind sée nothing to distaste their stomackes to offend their eies or to grieue their minds whereas iust Lot endued with the sense of seeing vexed his righteous soule from day to day in séeing the vnlawfull deeds of the Sodomites c. And so it fareth with Gods children that are blind who sée not the euill obiects nor wickednes of the world Thirdly blindnes is naturall and contracted by old age sicknes and the like infirmities and therefore Isaac Bartimaeus and the blind man in the ninth of Iohns Gospell and diuers Saints of God in all generations haue borne their parts herein therefore this correction is so much the more patiently to be borne Fourthly though the godly haue no bodily eies to behold the heauens the earth and the creatures which eies the beasts birds and creeping creatures haue common with them yet they haue spirituall and Angelical eies whereby they behold God their Creator and looke vpon Christ sitting on the right hand of God his Father in heauen Fifthly the eies are not simply necessary for godlinesse for God requireth the heart and vnderstanding and yet notwithstanding they shall be restored yea and glorified at the generall resurrection Wherefore let vs cléere the eies of our vnderstanding and cast out of them all beames of selfe conceit and all dust of error And because our memories are then most sharpe and retentiue hauing no outward obiect to blunt their edge let vs apply them to the learning of the best things and with patience wait the time of the restitution of all things Q Propound some comfortable meditations for a deafe man A. First the deafe person cannot be infected with lies and errors he cannot be deceiued and gulled by flatterers nor bee possessed with the ingredients of griefe he cannot be prouoked to wrath he séeth nothing to disturbe and disquiet him and that which most contenteth him he cannot heare Gods blessed name blasphemed Secondly by reading the scriptures sermons treatises catechismes he heareth God speake vnto him for God hath no néed of eares but only requireth a deuout mind Thirdly that which he formerly learned the holy Ghost bringeth to his remembrance Lastly his perfect hearing shall if not before be restored vnto him at the day of iudgement and his deafenesse in the mean time cannot separate him from Gods loue Q What vse must a man make of his deafnesse A. First whiles we inioy the benefit of our hearing let vs attend to Gods voice in the scriptures preached vs and let vs treasure vp the word of God in our hearts to bestead vs in time of néed Lastly though we cannot heare nor discerne the notes of musicke and the sounds of men and birds yet we haue the vse of our eies to behold the creatures and God the Author of them Comforts for a dumbe man A. Men by reason of this want and affliction are kept from many sinnes euils dangers which many that cannot temper and gouerne their tongue runne into for they cannot lie slander deceiue they cannot blaspheme God nor stirre vp the coales of con●ention the séeds whereof an euill tongue doth cherish Secondly they are not vndone by their rash vntemperate words much lesse are they in danger to lose their liues as many lewd and slanderous speakers are Thirdly it is a labour to speake truly and in silence there is rest Fourthly if thou hast lost an il tongue thou art a great gainer by it Fifthly if thou canst not speake with thy tongue then speake to God in thy heart for God can and doth heare as well when thou art silent as when thou speakest Lastly if thou doe but groane sigh and cry vnto God he heareth thée and that thou shalt féele and finde For as he that heareth God speake and answer is not deafe so likewise he whom God heareth is not dumbe CHAP. XV. Of ordinary particular euils from without vs whether at home or abroad The crosses of euill and bad husbands wiues parents children masters seruants and of a shrewd mother in law Question HOw are good women to comfort themselues when they are matched with euill husbands A. First they are not alone For Abigail was crossed by Nabal her husband and many innocent wiues in Moses time by reason of the crueltie and vnreasonablenes of their husbands were diuorced from them Secondly if their husbands in the flesh be euill and shrewd yet Christ their spirituall husband will alwaies intreat them kindly and louingly visit them