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A85853 Funerals made cordials: in a sermon prepared and (in part) preached at the solemn interment of the corps of the Right Honorable Robert Rich, heire apparent to the Earldom of Warwick. (Who aged 23. died Febr. 16. at Whitehall, and was honorably buried March 5. 1657. at Felsted in Essex.) By John Gauden, D.D. of Bocking in Essex. Gauden, John, 1605-1662. 1658 (1658) Wing G356; Thomason E946_1; ESTC R202275 99,437 136

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by the meritorious death and passion of the Lord of life and glory the great and promised Messias thy beloved Son our blessed Saviour Jesus Christ who by suffering death hath both overcome death and satisfied thy justice for us freeing all true believing and penitent sinners from the sting curse and fear of death both temporal and eternal bringing by his glorious Gospel life and glory honour and happiness to light We beseech thee O heavenly Father for his sake who hath tasted death for us all to magnifie thy infinite mercy upon us before we go from hence and be no more seen O be better to us then ever we should be to our selves or we are utterly lost Bestow upon us all those graces and gifts which may both teach and help us to lead an holy life and die an happy death Prevent us graciously and follow us effectually with the motions and operations of thy holy Spirit which may excite and inable us speedily and throughly to mortifie the life and power of every sin in us even while it is called to day lest death and hell prevent us in our delays and presumptions Sanctifie to us all those occasions monitions and warnings by which thy providence presents the thoughts and state of death to us as the truest glass of all earthly glory that we may so lay them to heart as to die dayly to all inordinate love of our selves and of this world which at best is loss and dung in comparison of the excellency of our Lord Jesus Christ in whom thy love to us is better then life it self Thou hast by thy power given us our lives in this vain world by thy providence thou hast preserved them by thy patience thou hast spared them to this day notwithstanding we have with many sins and much unthankefulness provoked thee to our hurt yea by thy holy Word thou hast shewed and offered to us the way and reward of a better life upon our turning to thee with all our hearts from dead works to serve the living God O teach us so to number our days as to apply our hearts to true wisedom to value this pretious moment not to mispend it yea to redeem it because the days past have been evil and upon this moment depends our eternal fate O thou that hast made our moment here though it be sinful not wholly miserable but hast sweetned it with many mercies let not our eternity be miserable and sinful It is one great comfort in our mortality as to this life that we consider our sins shall not be immortal in us O let not sin die with us but before us as a work of choise and grace not of infirmity force and necessity We humbly lay hold on that eternal life which is thy gift through Jesus Christ our Lord. As we every day grow elder so Lord make us every day somewhat better as neerer to our graves so fitter for heaven teach us to live every day as if it were our last that we may never live in any such way wherein we cannot meet death comfortably make us such as thou wouldst have us while we live that we may find thee such as we would have thee when we die that when we come to die we may have nothing else to do but to resign our bodies to thy custody and our souls to thy mercy who having made this life on earth common to the bad and good the just and the unjust hast certainly prepared another state in which shall be infinite difference and everlasting distinction of recompenses to such as fear thee and such as fear thee not O enable us to do our duty and we are sure to receive thy rewards write thy name in our hearts and we need not doubt but our names are written in heaven even in thy Book of Life Sweeten the bitter thoughts of death to us by our faith and hope in the meritorious death the victorious resurrection and glorious ascension of Jesus Christ for our sakes let us find by our holiness and newness of life by our being dead with Christ and living to him that we are passed from death to life That our departure hence may be a joyful passage to a better life which consists in the vision and fruition of thy self O blessed Creator who must needs be better then all things thou hast made and as more necessary so infinitely more useful sweet and comfortable to us O that we may be willing and fitted to leave all to come to thy self that we may with all the blessed Angels and Saints for ever in heaven see love praise admire adore and enjoy thee O holy Father Son and Spirit the only true God To whom be glory and honour life and power thanks and dominion for ever Amen Februarii 17. Anno 1657. Observationes habitae In Dissectione Corporis Illustrissimi Nobilissimi Viri D. ROBERTI RICH coram Medicinae Doctoribus Chirurgis infra subscriptis 1. INventi sunt Pulmones substantiâ duriores quam secundùm naturam mole longè majores quam pro ratione pectoris toti ferè scrophulosi caseosâ materiâ magna ex parte purulentâ referti Superiori parte lobi dextri lacuna reperta est pure plena ad quantitatem cochlearis unius 2. Aqua collecta in sinistra cavitate Thoracis ad fesque librae quantitatem vel circiter 3. Auricula dextra Cordis major erat sinistrâ proportione ferè quintuplici 4. Mesenterium refertum glandulis scrophulosis aliquibus magnitudinem Ovi Gallinacei aequantibus aliis minoribus materiâ quadam sebaceâ plenis cum purulentiae guttis hinc inde sparsis in aliquibus 5. In substantia Panchreatis glandulae peregrinae huic annexus tumor scrophulosus grandis ad hepar usque protensus Orisicium Venae Portae comprimens 6. Vesicula fellis exteriùs albicans flaccida aliquam quantitatem fellis dilutioris continens 7. Hepar colore Albidiori substantiâ debito majori 8. Splen satìs laudabilis nisi quòd hinc inde granulis scrophulosis refertus 9. Inte Musculos Lumbares glandulae duae ingentes scrophuloae à quinta vertebra sinistrae partis una ad Inguen usque se protendebat ex dextra parte altera non adeo longa Fran. Prujean Geor. Bates Tho. Coxe Robertus Lloyd J. Goddard Theophilus Garancieres Edward Arris Chirurgus John Soper Chirurgus I Have judged my publishing of this Funeral-Sermon upon the immature death of the Son the fittest occasion I am ever like to have while I live to present those who can look upon eminent goodness without evil eyes with a short Epitome of the Mothers worth as it was long since in way of Epitaph composed by a person whose ambition is That justice might be done to the dead as well as to the living Vicious minds and manners like dead carkasses are then best when so buried that nothing may appear to posterity of their noysome and contagious fedities But exemplary and meritorious
disarmed their revenges forced them to shed teares even over their enemies corps or graves as Alexander the Great did over Darius and Julius Caesar when he saw his potent Rival Pompey the Great 's head deformedly parted from his body by treacherous villany These glasses shewed to every man their own faces in the truest and most unflattering representations Mors sola fatetur Quantula sint hominum corpuscula Some of the ancient Philosophers professed they profited most by conversing with the dead that is with good books whose Authors were long agone dead as to their bodies but living in the noble monuments of their minds Libri animorum urnae Mentium magnarum aeterna monumenta Lipsius their writings which are the urns or repositories of souls here on earth This was very elegant and very true there being as none more durable Monuments so no better Monitors Tutors and Instructers then those that are farthest remote from all passions of fear or flattery from the vices and parties of the age in which men live Nor is the frequenting of dead mens funerals less effectual to work on living mens hearts For as some Nonconformists of old the dead never speak louder then when they are most silenced nor shine brighter then in that night of darkness which is sending them to their long homes and to make their lasting beds in the cold grave that dismal house of darkness Dead men by an holy kind of Magick which is a due meditation of them and our selves doe in a sort revive to us and walk with us yea haunt us and talk with us in a dumb but potent kind of oratory Sometimes their noble deeds and good works praise them and upbraid us who are strangers yet to their worth and enemies to their holy examples Sometimes they lift up their voice like a trumpet of terrour to us in the sad riot and debaucheries and security of of their lives and in the suddenness the despair and dreadfulness of their deaths Sometimes the solemnity of their Funerals the mementoes of their Epitaphs and those Inscriptions which give Marmora animata as it were breath to their dust and a spirit or life to their marble monuments All these summon us to serious reflections that as Pliny tells us the dead sea affords some medicinals and mummy it self is become a useful drug in medicaments so great and special good use may be made of those that are recens mortui new dead among our neighbours friends acquaintance relations superiors inferiors Nulla unquam de morte hominis cunctatio longa As no mans death should be precipitated because life is invaluable and once lost is irreparable so nor is any mans death to be taken with a careless and useless indifferencie specially when it is neer us and like Balshazzars hand on the wall by the fingers of a man pointing to us Mortuorum funera viventium monita or writing as it were either some lesson for us or terrors against us some monition or instruction One of the great Egyptian Kings Sesostris as I remember commanded this to be written on his Tomb or Urn 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Whoever lookes on my Sepulchre Discite justitiam moniti ne temerite dives let him learn to be religious to fear and serve the gods The Scythians while yet Heathens and synonymous with Barbarity yet were so ingenuous to improve the Deaths of their most deserving Princes that they cut their dead bodies into little pieces which they kept about them as Jewels in precious boxes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as amulets or defensatives against vice and maladies no less then incentives to virtue and conservatives of their felicity The Ethiopians in a different manner yet to the same design were wont to put the intire bodies of their Princes exsuccated or dried by sweet spices and the Sun into glass Urns or transparent Coffins which they set in publick and most conspicuous places as Varro tells us the Romans did their Statues to be as it were the great Censors and Monitors no less then the exemplary inciters of posterity to parallel vertues 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Infinite were the inventions of ingenious Antiquity either to advance the honour of the dead or to vindicate or revenge them as much as might be done by poor mortals from mortality or at least to moderate and qualifie the impotent passions and enormous grief of Survivors Hence they not only held their Geniusses immortal which they venerated by a will-worship and is properly Superstition but they built them stately and portentous Sepulchres for their bodies in Pyramids Mausoles and the like Fabricks which were Miracles of Architecture that their dust might have as stately palaces as themselves once living enjoyed Ludos solennes Besides they instituted solemn Sacrifices and magnificent conventions mixt with activity and bravery Judg. 11. See Ludo. Caepel votum Jephtae interludes and devotion in memorial of them as Jephtah did for his daughters being sacrificed as a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 curseor Anathema so devoted to God as was not redeemable Alexander the great at the Funeral of Ephestion squandred in a profuseness of passion and prodigality fit for none but himself so many Talents as amounted to more then a million of pounds sterling Nay See Bish Vsser his Chrono Imp. Alex. M. the Roman pride and glory dared Coelum ipsum petere ambitiosà nimis stultitiâ to vye with the Gods in Heaven and by the sumptuous pomp of their Funeral Piles and the Eagles mounting from the flames of them upward to raise the vulgar credulity beyond the thoughts of their Princes mortality to the imaginations of a Deity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. vid. Lip alios Thus fearing that Heaven should not be fully planted they sent them Colonies from earth that such as had either deserved very well of mankind or were able unpunished to do much mischief by such soveraign impiety as was great but not good might fill up the lower formes of Heaven which yet wanted Gods to supply them Which fancy did not stray much from that of some Christian Fathers who conceive the fall and defalcation of Angels when they degenerated to Devils is to be repaired by substituting as many Saints or Christian Heroes into their room How the souls of all those got to Heaven whom vulgar clamours and applauses or politick Deifications or Papal Canonizations lift up thither I list not to enquire I believe many of their Spirits went no higher then their Eagles might soar I am sure popular Superstition or passion is prone to fix upon many a golden Calf this title and proclamation Exod. 32.8 These are thy Gods O Israel Nor is any thing more frequent then as Crysologus observes for the pomp of Funerals to lye and flatter Mentitur funeris pompa fallaci vanitate adulantium Multos pompa funeris ad coelum evehit quos peccati pondus
many pens illustrated by frequent Funerals meeting us every moment and at every turn yet seldom laid to heart but as a cloud it passeth over our heads without showring down any softning drops on our souls These discourses as hail on the hills rattle in every Funeral Sermon and exhortation upon our ears and heads but seldome enter and pierce into our hearts They are like Ghosts or Fantasms that appear and vanish scaring us a little but they touch us not at all notwithstanding the heapes upon heapes which are very ten and twenty years made up of our dead friends kindred and acquaintance who are no sooner removed out of our sights but they are gone out of our memories as to any pious improvement Xerxes is reported to have wept when seeing his vast Army which made a million of fighting men he considered how one century of years would mow them all down as so many flowers or spires of grass in a field The softness of Christians hearts should go beyond the savageness of such an Heathen He considered the breaking of the box but he was not sensible of those sweet resentments that savour of life unto life which a wise and gracious heart extracts out of the objects and meditations of death He beheld the carkasses of so many Lions but he found no honey in any of them He had only the eyes of experience sense and reason but not of grace and religion which looks through the dark mist and medium of death to the prospect of a true and eternal life That great Persian Commander as the Roman Emperors after him Quos nec spectasset quisquā nec spectatuus esset Ludi Seculares Suet. in Claud. when they caused to be proclaimed at their greatest secular Interludes and most solemn Pageants which were presented but once in an hundred years Come and see those shows which no man living ever did see heretofore nor shall ever see again These men I say had the Moon and Stars of common reason and experience to shew them their own and other mens mortality but they wanted the beams of the Sun of righteousness the light of God's word in the Scriptures which every where sets so many afterisks or memorable notes of emphasis and terror upon Death In the day that thou eatest thou shalt die Gen. 2. An Oracle which presently began to be fulfilled as soon as the condition was forfeited just as the sea ebbs from the very first minute of its recess or abatement though sensim pedetentim by silent steps and almost insensible degrees according to the patience and indulgence of a long-suffering God Yet as the candle is dying or consuming as soon as it is lighted or burning and the hour-glass is emptying as soon as it is running so the life of man ran to waste and the exhaustings of death so soon as it ceased to have communion and supplies of immortal influx from the God of life When the intercourse between the spring and the current is once stopped and obstructed the constancy fulness and perennity of the stream presently decays and as it drieth up it dies A sinful man is presently surrounded with a thousand deaths every moment Mille modi mortis c. and though we can die but one death in the conquest or completion yet how many legions of deaths are ever marching in array against us both as to the menacing preparation without us and the disposition or infirmity within us which expose us to die on every side There is not only mors in urna but in olla in victu vestitu halitu death in our coffins and urns but in our cups and pots in our meats and drinks and in our bodies and bowels yea in our breath and bread which we use as the breath staff of life the short reciprocations returns of which are the constant supports of our lives and the chief antemuralia defensatives against death Thus the Philosophers discoursed when death striking upon their hard and flinty hearts Poena ad unum terror ad omnes they saw by the sparks or strictures of reason their own mortal condition But the Divine Oracles are like Thunderbolts falling here and there and neer to every one of us though their execution light not presently on our heads Heb. 9.27 yet the terror and contrition should upon our hearts because it is by an unrepealable decree appointed for all men once to die and after that the judgement Death as a great drag-net fetches all into its capacious bosome this King of terror as Job calls death is verè Rex Catholicus truely a Catholick King reigning over all Pallida mors aequo pulsat pede pauperum tabernas Regumque turres Hor. as the Apostle Paul expresses it even those that most glory in their royal priveledges and titles No Emperor hath any Empire over it nor against it any more then the Brittish King Canutus of Kent had against the seas incroaching upon his Throne Or then that cunning Prince Lewis the 11th of France who as Phil. Commines reports fenced himself Phil. de Com. Histor of France but in vain with holy reliques surrounding his body and bed to see if he could scare away death with those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holy terriculaments Kings that have a just power of life and death as to their subjects have no power over their own to prolong their lives or protract their deaths one moment Kings are conquered and cow'd by death Potentates are impotent in this conflict for they assist they very enemy and are traytors to themselves and if no other force doth the force of their own infirmities will certainly destroy them No Protectors can protect themselves or others from this civil war this intestine enemy which is unavoidable irresistable which hath all the engines for battering and arts of undermining us Non domus fundus c. neither house nor land nor father nor friend nor favour nor power nor Courts nor Crowns nor the surest defensative under heaven against men which is a valiant and faithful Army these are all as bulrushes and straws in the way of death which is the way of all the living Death in this absolute empire and unlimited soveraignty using not only jure suo its own right but jure divino God's right as the executioner of his just irrevocable and dreadful sentence upon all mankind Among whom none ever was sufficient to answer that Question Psal 89.48 What man is he that liveth and shall not see death Shall he deliver his soule from the hand of the grave Yea when the Son of the everliving God who is God co-essential and immortal with his Father appeared among men as one of us in the form of sinful flesh Death though he had no just claim against him because no guile or sin was found in him Phil. 2.8 1 Pet. 2.22 John 10.18 yet used its prerogative And though this blessed Messias could
not be forced no man taking his life from him yet he yielded to doe the lowest homage to death as a man not without great horror of that cup yea humbling himself even to the death of the crosse and to the prison of the grave for a short time that by dying he might overcome death in its own fort 1 Cor. 15. By grapling with this Dragon he pulled out his sting and made him cast forth his poyson so far as to be innoxious now and not very terrible to those that fly to this Jesus for protection and life John 11.25 who is the resurrection and the life to believers and holy livers who maketh light to grow up to the righteous out of their darkness and life out of his death To others indeed that are either Infidel Heathens or unchristian Christians which have but forms and no power of godliness on whose hearts the death of Christ hath not yet wrought as a corrasive against sin and a cordial against death to these Death still appears as a direful Comet or blazing star in his full magnitude truculent threatning formidable inevitable infinitely to be dreaded because he threatens them with a total and entire death not onely to their estates and honours pleasures power friends and bodies but as to their soules as to that after and eternal life If death prevailed so far upon the Son of God how far will its vastations reach upon those that are the children of the flesh only that is of the Devil and properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sons of death If the living Lion thus died what must become of those that are but as dead dogs A gracious Christian as Jonathan did Sauls javelin avoids the stroak of death as to the main it may graze on his body but it toucheth not his soul Col. 3.3 when his life is hidden with Christ in God A natural man though while he lived he blessed himself yet dies wholly Death like the flood prevaileth over his highest tops and mountains it gnaweth upon them as sheep Nothing is left him for ever of which it may be said In this he lives as in the houses of the Egyptians there was none in which there was not one dead yea the first born For his children they shal follow the generation of their fathers and never see light if they follow their evil steps His lands which he called after his name in a few years they are alienated his lamp quite extinct and his memorial perisheth For his fair and costly Monument Et habent sua fata Sepulchra These in revolutions of time Psal 49.19 either by the rough hand of war overturning all things or by the gentle and leisurely thawings of peace melt and moulder away till they bury themselves in their own dust which were designed as repositories and conservatories of their Masters As for their souls they never lived the life of God nor can they hope to live in light with him so that eternal death feedeth for ever upon the whole man devouring every-limb of body and faculty of soul as the Lions did the accusers of Daniel before ever they come to the ground O how sad how mad is that security among Christians which sleeps on the top of a mast in so dangerous a sea that dares to live in known and presumptuous sins amidst these infinite and hourly adventures of death playing over the head of that mine where he knows is daily sapping under him and within him nor doth a man know in what moment it may be sprung to his utter dissipation We know not at what hour of the day Mat. 24.42 43. or watch of the night this notable Thief will come to break up our house of clay and spoil us of all our goods together with our lives and he is but the Vancourrier of our Judge whose counsel is holy and wholsome advising all his disciples to watch and pray lest we be surprised at unawares by the arrests of Death and Judgment Nothing concerns a wise man or evidenceth a good man more then to be never so imployed as he shall not dare to die that like an honest and able debtor he may confidently walk at all hours of the day in every street of the City where he dwells and where he owes a debt which he is able and willing to pay whereas the lewdnesse and riot of impenitent sinners makes them like bankrupt debtors shift and shark hide and skulk up and down in by-wayes and at twilight for fear of those Creditors whom they are neither able nor willing to satisfie and yet they cannot long escape the Bayliffs and Jaylors hand nor by any artifices avoid that prison out of which is no redemption till a man hath paid the uttermost farthing that is never unlesse while we are in the way we agree with our merciful Creditor Mat. 5.29 who is ready upon our humble request to forgive us all that we owe him like that gracious and generous Master in the Gospel Mat. 18.27 6. Lay to heart what little cause any mothers child of us hath to presume to sin and to procrastinate our repentance since we have no cause to presume of life till to morrow to neglect agreeing with our adversary while we are yet in the way that is under the meanes offer and capacity of reconciliation and happy accord to adventure so precious and momentary an opportunity upon which depends our everlasting fate in weal or woe Ex hoc momento pendet aeternitas never stirring up any Sympathies in our souls toward our Saviours death nor any compassions to our selves as to our own mortality never to return any holy Ecchoes or humble Amens either to the precepts or promises terrors or comforts of Gods word but as if stark deaf and quite dead so we are utterly dumb and unmoved as to all that is thundred and lightned from heaven 2 Cor. 5.20 2 Cor. 6.1 to all that Gods Embassadors those Boanerges and Barnabasses sonnes of thunder or of consolation daily cry unto us with infinite counsels and reproofs Sermons and prayers inviting and beseeching men to pity themselves to flee from the wrath that is to come to disarm Death and defeat the Devil of his expected prey There is no rock that Ministers should more avoid thenthis of giving people any encouragement to delay their repentance which no man may upon good grounds do e that hath not any assurance of his life nor any insurance against death Nor doth any thing usually more contribute to this vulgar presumption and dilatories then the courting and complementing with the dead and living too in Funeral Sermons making them rather Panegyricks and Harangues of commendation to the dead then serious summons and alarms to the living when neither the life nor the death of the interred gave any pregnant evidences of such grace and comfort as deserves either the commendation or imitation of the living No Funeral Sermons as I
alienated from his fear by the prosperity of any evil doers Psal 73.16 or adversity of well doers in this life But go into his Sanctuary with David search the Scriptures and there thou shalt see the eternal counterpoisings of these strange momentary dispensations how the wicked go away to eternal darkness Psal 97.10 11 c. Luke 12.4 and shall never see any light of comfort when his candle is once put out but to the righteous the Lord preserveth the souls of them from those that can but kill the body Rom. 2.7 yea light is sown in their darkness life in their death a crown of eternal glory will grow out of their crown of thorns rivers of everlasting refreshings shall flow out of the rock of their patience and sufferings in well doing in the midst of which fiery trials the spirit of glory rested upon them 1 Pet. 3.18 1 Pet. 4.13 14. Phil. 1.28 they are made conformable to Christ in sufferings that they may reign with him hence they enjoy a most evident sign of their adversaries condition but of their own salvation and that of God who is a righteous Judge a God of truth and faithfulness who will not forget the labour of love or suffer those to go unrewarded who suffer for righteousness sake Mat. 5.10.12 great is their reward in heaven Do not foolishly fret and envy Dives his delicates when thou seest Lazarus die on a dunghil Luke 16.19 Matth. 14.8 nor grudge Herod his throne when thou seest John Baptists head in a charger There is not a greater argument Certissimum futuri judicii praejudicium Tert. Jer. 51.56 The Lord God of recompenses shall surely require Mal. 3.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or more likely demonstration to confute Atheism to confirm faith and hope in a better and another life which the Lord God of recompenses hath certainly prepared for those that are his when he makes up his jewels Can any man be loser for Gods cause Shall not the just God do right to himself and to every man according to his own word and every mans works No man can think God is unable or unwilling to make such amends in another life as shall infinitely expiate and exceed all the seeming detriments here on the part of the godly and the increments or advantages on the part of the wicked Could he make such a world for the good and bad the just and unjust for men and beasts enemies and servants Matth. 5.45 and cannot he prepare for and bestow a better state upon his friends and children Is this mortal and momentary state worthy the name of life with which we are so taken and we are loth to leave whose welfare consists only in the using and enjoying of creatures either without life or only with life and sense or at best adorned with reason added to their life and sense Col. 2.22 but yet perishing in the use and dying as our selves Is this a life to be so desired and doted upon and must not that excel which consists in communion with and participation of the Creator who must necessarily be better then all his creatures and infinitely exceed them as much as light darkness the sea a drop or the Sun a mote or spark Is it a small matter that the spirit or soul of a good man like Lazarus's and Stephens Luke 16. is presently attended and received by many blessed Angels which light on it as a swarm of bees to conduct it joyfully to its blessed God and Saviour so that as soon as it parts out of the body it enjoys spiritual Angelical and celestial joys But the souls of the wicked loth to leave their carkasses and lingring as it were about their corps are presently beset with so many evil spirits or spiteful divels who like wasps and hornets fall upon it as it were to bite and sting and vex it with such resentments and terrors as they either feel or fear to which the soul is first self-condemned and presently selfe-tormented being its own Hell or Tormentor now as it was its own betrayer or tempter heretofore 10. These and the like serious reflexions may justly be laid to heart by all such as are yet but in the outward court of reason on the bare forms of religion and even by others who are come or seem so at least into the holy place to clearer perceptions of piety carrying sincere purposes in their souls and professing to live in communion with God and Christ I am to speak to the hearts of these also How come they to live still incumbred with so many strange opinions passions lusts and affections which seem very weak partial preposterous disorderly earthly and uncharitable Is this to live as in the prospect of death in the confines of heaven in the aim at eternal life yet so eager solicitous impatient disquieted and concerned for these momentary and transeunt enjoyments of life as if these were the main interests they were to carry on in life or to provide for against death Art thou a Kings son and embracest dunghils Lam. 4.5 talkest so much of heaven and graspest only earth Art thou among Gods Nazarites Lam. 4.7 who profess to be separate from sinners crucified to the world whose heart and conversation should be whiter then milk purer then snow beautiful as the rubies and more polished then Saphirs as Jeremiah laments and yet is thy visage blacker then a coal thy sin cleaveth to thy bones such an hidebound Christian and politick professor so carking and caring so getting and griping so sharking and shifting to and fro in thy judgement and way of religion that thou seemest more to regard the wind and weathercock of civil interests favours and advantages then the constant rule and compass of Gods word shifting thy sails to every point as may most fit thy worldly occasions rather then thy conscience and eternal concernments Whence is it that thou a profest pilgrim and stranger in this world art so great an agitator and so passionately engaged in secular sidings whence is this strange Metamorphosis or change of Christianity from the primitive beauty and Scriptural garb or fashion used by the Confessors Martyrs Apostles by Christ himself and his best followers in all ages when hands and eyes heads and hearts lives and conversations of Christians were all lifted up toward heaven and set upon heavenly things how are they now become dross so groveling to the earth joyning Christ with Belial and God with Mammon 2 Cor. 6.15 1 Thes 2.5 Col. 3.5 Rom. 2.22 Prov. 3.9 Mal. 3.8 professions of light with operations of darkness making Christian liberty a cloke for all licentiousness and malice for all filthy lucre and even sacrilegious covetousness which is worse then Idolatry for the Idolater honours a false god with his substance but a Sacrilegious Christian robs the true God to increase his private substance This temper is far from the mortifying
make up compleat authority the want of which as we have no cause much to rejoyce in or little to lament so posterity both in Church and State will unfeignedly deplore 3. Yea when any men or women that are eminently good and gracious wise and worthy are taken away either immaturely in their strength or very many of them in a little times these are Gods warnings which are to be laid to heart for the death of the righteous poor or rich is pretious in the fight of the Lord and should be so in the sense of all good men they many times portend some great evil to come when God pulls off his chief Jewels it is a sign he means shortly to strip and undress a Church or Nation of their ornaments and defences When men take off the principal and noblest parts of a fair ship the main-masts rudders prow and upper decks it argues that they intend to break it quite in pieces or to take it much lower and abase it So is it when God pulls up those repagula sluces and banks which either keep off inundations of judgements or dayly discharge the superfluities of epidemick sins by their prayers and tears for the sins of the people When Lot is out of Sodom and Noah shipped in Gods Ark then fire and flood is to be expected 4. When our Parents Fathers or Mothers are taken away though in a good old age as Jacob yet they may frigidam suffundere cast cold water by their deaths upon the varieties heats luxuries and confidences of their young heirs and successors who are prone to live as if they could never die out of this world when yet they see their roots die sure the branches cannot be everlasting It was a notable Instance of filial sympathy which a son of the Duke of Montpensier shewed who coming to his fathers monument in Italy at Puzzolo where he had in the French wars died being killed by ill air and inconveniencies the young Gentleman could not bear the memory of his dead father but amidst infinite passions and tears dies upon his fathers Tomb Guicciardin Hist lib. 5. p. 261. as Guicciardin reports of certainty Yea although estates honours and inheritances do descend upon men by the death of any yet they may lay this to heart that the more talents thou hast the greater account thou must give to God Luke 12.48 It is not considerable as to true internal and eternal comfort what lands moneys honours and titles a man hath but how wisely and nobly how piously and charitably he useth all things The accession of estate is but more fewel cast upon a fire that will at last consume riotous and inordinate livers A man needs not much to be holy and happy for a man may maintain all the vertues at a cheaper rate then any one vice nothing of competency is too little for a virtuous mind and nothing of plenty is sufficient to a vain and vicious spender As dumbness had been a mercy to swearers to profane and filthy speakers so had poverty been riches to many a riotous liver whose making was his marring Luke 15.13 as the Prodigals having his portion in his own hand utterly undid him The more honour and estate any one is master of the more he had need be master of himself of his lusts and passions for riotous expenses will end with Dives his gluttony in eternal poverty and such extream necessities as shall everlastingly want a drop of comfort there being no hope that God will bestow upon those men or women the blessings of eternity which have been such debauched abusers of these blessings which are momentary such as have not been faithful stewards to Gods glory and the worlds good in the little comparatively of this worlds unrighteous mammon as our Saviour tells us how can they expect Buke 16.11 when they come to die that they should be trusted with eternal riches or honours which are the rewards of well doing and recompenses of comely suffering 5. If an excellent wife or husband are parted by death who long lived or were likely to live as turtles in a peaceful sweetness and unspotted society being of one mind and one heart in the Lord joying each others joyes and grieving one anothers griefs who had nothing to envy or desire beyond that love and content which they mutually enjoyed save only the love of God and the fruition of their blessed Saviour in the Kingdom of heaven A blessed pair who so lived that they were dayly ready and preparing to die having nothing to give them any regret at death but only the leaving each other in such a solitude for a season as none but God could supply I need not tell these how they ought to lay to heart eithers death in point of humanity the care must be not to lay it too much to heart 1 Thes 4.13 not to sorrow as meer men and women without hope lest they be swallowed up with too much grief A moderate mourning in such occasions is neither uncomly nor unholy nor unwholesome but as the overflowings of land-floods is beneficial to low grounds when they seasonably abate and leave them dry for if waters stay too long on the richest bottomes they make them cold squallid course and barren Non amissi sed ' praemissi the like effects follow moderate and excessive sorrows upon any worldly occasion whatsoever They must consider each other not as lost but as gone a little before in the same way to happiness 6. So in the loss of children dear by nature deserving by duty especially if our only child more if in the prime and pregnancy of their age most if the hopes and honour of their families the props and pillars of their houses these wounds in the delights of our eyes are prone to go too deep to our hearts to fester and gangrene to something of irreligous discontent and sowrness toward God as if like Jonah Jonah 4.9 we did well to be angry with God and frown upon heaven for the loss of a gourd which had its being from God as St. Austin says of his pregnant son who died at 14. but its sin and mortality from thy self nor can any parents tell how sharp a thorn that child might prove in their eyes and hearts afterward which now seems so fair sweet and lovely a flower to their eyes In such cases not only the highest cordials of divine comforts and Christian hopes but the strictest charms of Gods commands must be applied lest we turn Gods physick into our poyson and by a sullen stubbornness turn a fathers cqastisement to the sharp punishment of an enemy remember God is so much beforehand with us by his bounty that his withdrawings can never be an injury to us He as the spring and occan hath more right in any streams then the channel through which they pass as all runs to him so they come from him So that after Job's example