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A36555 The forerunner of eternity, or, Messenger of death sent to healthy, sick and dying men / by H. Drexelius. Drexel, Jeremias, 1581-1638.; Croyden, William.; Marshall, William, fl. 1617-1650. 1642 (1642) Wing D2183; ESTC R35549 116,212 389

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ever dwell with thee Oh let that voice sound in my eares To day shalt thou be with me in Paradise Lord Now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace according to thy word For mine eye● have seen thy salvation Oh loving Iesus what is thine own I beseech thee to take O Lord Iesu Make mee to be numbred with thyne Elect. O Iesus thou Son of Dauid have mercy upon mee Lord be thou my helper Make haste ô Lord Iesus to come and help me O Lord Iesus receive my spirit Amen § 29. The dying mans confidence in GOD. HEre I doe confidently with S. Bernard confesse and say let others pretend their Merits and others that they can and have borne the heat of the day yet I hold it good to keepe close to the mercy of God and to put my confidence in the Lord. And though I am conscious to my selfe that my former life hath been full of sin so that I deserve to be cast off by Gods justice yet will I never leave off to trust in his infinite goodnesse and ●hat as hitherto his al-sufficient Grace hath administred strength ●o my weaknesse so the same will ●et give me strength and power to ●eare all things patiently and wil●ingly And this my patience ●hough small and little helped by ●he assistance of his Grace whi●h doth infinitely exceed my thoughts will mitigate my pains and will bestow that eternall reward upon me in Heaven This one thing ô God will I desire of thee that thou wouldst never suffer me to fall from relying upon thy goodnesse although I know my self to be weak and undeserving Yea though I should come to that casting down and terrours that I did seem even to be utterly lost and left yet I would call to mind that Apostle of thine Saint Peter that was ready to sink at the first blast of winde and to fall from his faith and I would then even doe as hee did call upon thee and say Lord save mee and even then would I hope that thou wouldst stretch forth thy hand and helpe mee but yet if thou shouldst permit mee to be harder beset then Peter which I pray thee not to suffer ô Lord yet I neverthelesse do hope that thou wouldst looke upon mee with the eyes of thy mercy and that thou wouldst turne and behold mee as thou didst Peter when he had denied thee and that thou wouldst not suffer thy whole displeasure to arise but that thou wouldst help me and deliver my soul This I know assuredly that God will not forsake me without my fault I know that of Saint Augustine to be most true God can free and hath done for many great things without any desert of theirs because he is Good but yet he never condemn'd one without great demerits because he is just Therefore in great trust and confidence I do wholly rely upon him if for my sins he suffers me to perish yet his justice shall be glorified but I hope and certainly doe hope that his mercifull goodnesse will keep my soul that so rather his mercy may be praysed then his justice nothing can fal upō me but what God will Now whatsoever hee wils though it may seeme harsh and evill yet is truly good Whatever ô God thou wilt I will the same altogether I will ô God I will § 30. The last words of a Dying man AVgustus the Emperour when hee dyed dedicated his last wordes to his Empresse Livia Livia said hee be all thy life long mindfull of our Marriage farewell How much trulier may Christians dedicate their last speeches to their Lord and Master Iesus Christ saying O Lord Remember the time since my soul was espoused to thee in holy wedlock Dionysius the Areopagite an holy man of life being condemned to lose his head ●earing the sentence of death with a generous resolution contemning the scoff● of the multitude repeated the last words of our Saviour Father into thy hands I commend my spirit Saint Basil the Great at the close of his life when as he had furnishd all them about him with excellent admonitions spoke the same words unto Christ as the former Martyr had done Saint Bernard as if he should shew to the sick man Christ Iesus Oh thou Christian saith hee despair not of thy sicknes Christ hath told thee what thou art to say in all the hazards of death to whom to flie to to whom to call on In whom to hope even in God the Father which cannot despise the prayers of them that trust in him doe thou therefore such works in the time of thy sicknesse that thou mayest truly say In thee ô Lord have I put my trust let me not be confounded Therefore let the last words of the dying man be directed to God to him our prayers to him let goe all our desires Let all our hopes terminate in him let him receive our last sighes let the dying man say thus from his heart To thee ô Lord doe I looke up to thee I lift up my eyes to thee I direct my prayers § 32. The conforming of our wils to Gods will is of great value especially at the end of our lives LVdovicus Blosius gives this advice for the conforming our wils to the will of God There is no exercise at our death can be more profitable th●n that every one should fully resigne himself into ●he hands of his C eatou● humbly lovingly wholly trusting and relying in his infinite mercy and goodnesse For it cannot but hee that whosoever doth thus place his confidence in God before his departure hence but that he shall partake of joy in the Caelestiall Kingdome For those that shall be for ever with the Lord shall be freed from punishm●nt In this mind died that good ●●ief on the Crosse which did no desire our Saviour to save his body but wholly desired Christ to forgive his sins and to give him the Kingdom of Heaven so fully did he resigne himself into Gods hands so wholly did he offer himself to Christ that hee should do with him as he pleased And if it so fall out that when death is at hand thy sicknesse is grievous and painfull cast that also upon God For the death of Christ wil yield us consolation in death He is gone before innumerable others are gone before why should it irk thee to follow § 33. The dying man emulates the good Thief in Golgotha LOrd Remember mee when thou commest into thy kingdome Oh happy Thiefe which didst profit more in the school of Christ in 3 houres space then the Iscariot did in three yeers thou goest before me in words and for a forme of prayer who wast to Christ in his greatest extremity a Patron and an Advocate Good God! how deep are thy judgements his friends and kinred are silent his Disciples forsake him The Angels appear not neither is his mother suffered to defend his inno●en●e and where are those eleven thousand and more fed by this crucified Lord What one out of
you see the summe and epitome of al our life Daniel Archbishop of Mentz Elector of the Sacred Roman Empire with his own hands writ these following admonitions 1 Life is short 2 Beauty deceitfull 3 Wealth uncertaine 4 Dominion hated 5 War is pernicious 6 Victory is doubtfull 7 Leagues are fraudulent 8 Old age is miserable 9 Death is felicity 10 The fame of true Wisdome is everlasting To wit of that wisdome which descends from above which establisheth Kingdomes shall never cease but is eternall §. 14. That God doth comfort those that weep HEare the voice of the Comforter and Prom●ser together Ps 50.15 Call upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee Ps 33.19 and thou shalt glorifie me And the Lord is nigh to all them that are of a troubled spirit and he will save the humble in heart Aug. in Tom. 8. in Psal 50. Most excellently Saint Augustine Feare not saith hee when thou art troubled as though the Lord was not with thee The Lord is neere to those that are of a troubled spirit Man may prepare a Crown for the Conquerour but hee knows not how to give him strength to conquer But GOD when he beholds the battaile hee strengthens his Champions for that is the voice of the Psalmist that valiant warriour If I said my foot was moved thy mercy O Lord hel●t me up Assoone therefore as thou art troubled stirre up thy faith and thou shalt know Hee will not leave thee comfortlesse But thou mayst perhaps think thy selfe forsaken because thou art not delivered when thou wouldest Hee tooke the three children out of the fire but he which tooke those three left he the Machabees Far be it to think so He delivered the one as well as the other the one corporally that his and their enemies might bee confounded thes● spiritually that the faithfull might in all ages imitate their valour God is high Every good soule is lowly if yee would that the high God should come neere unto you bee humble these are great Mysteries my Brethren God is above all Doest thou lift up thy selfe thou commest not neere him Doest thou debase thy selfe he will come down to thee Call therefore this faithfull Helper to thy succour by prayer Hee will be propitious even at the first sigh if it be from the soule God wil wipe away all tears from their eyes Apoc. 21.4 neither shall there bee any more weeping or mourning or griefe or sorrow because all these are passed away Most truly said the same Father Aug. in Psal 127 circamed How pleasant are the sighs of the soule to God they are more acceptable than the laughter of Fools or Theatres §. 15. That our death may be as advantageous as our Birth EPaminondas the Theban being at point of death said Val Max. l. 3. c. 2. l. 2. c. 6 I● was not so much to bee accounted the period of his life as the beginning For now fellow souldiers may your Epaminondas be said to be born because he so dyes For whether is better to be pampered under griefe in this life or by death to enter into immortality There are a people neer Thrace Herodo● lib. 5. Hist Valer. l. 2. c. 1. Quintil. l. 5. institut called the Trausi which agree with the Thracians in al customs save in this particular That the neighbours when an Infant is born doe with great lamentations rehearse the great calamity the Infant must suffer on the stage of his life And they celebrate the Funerals of their Neighbours with great rejoycing in regard they are by death freed from all the miseries incidēt to this life This Nation of some in this very respect hath bin reputed wise and discreet because they celebrate Birth-dayes with teares and Obits with joy The Getes and Causians are said to doe the same Stobaus in Encomio Mortis and to speak truth let but the seeming pleasures which this life promiseth be but exempt which force and inveigle men to many hazards and inconveniences by their allurements and then our end is to bee judged more happy than our beginning Death is not to be accounted an evill Plin. in praf l. 7. Hist but the conclusion of all evils Plinius Secundus saith There have beene some who have judged it best not to have beene born and next to that an carly Death So Silenus when hee was taken by Midas being asked what was best for man was a good space silent but at last answered thus It is the best not be at all and next to that to be but for a moment I cannot omit that fare and seldome heard of passage pleasant to be related of one Ludovicus Cortusius a Counsellour living in Padua who in his Will at his death forbade all mourning for him at his Buriall and willed that all the Musicians and Minstrels should bee present some to goe before and fifty to follow the Clergymen and the Corps and allowed by Will to each of them for their attendance halfe a Ducat and willed further that his coffin should be carried by twelve beautifull Virgins cloathed in a fresh greene habit and that they should sing melodiously as they passed along and gave to all of them such large Legacies that they served for their Dowry and was attended by an hundred torches and in this manner was sumptuously interr'd in the Church of Saint Sophia in Padua with all the Clergy accompanying his buriall the Black Friers onely excepted whom hee debard by his Testament lest they by their fable weeds might move in some persons mourning or heavinesse so that his Funeral was celebrated with as much mirth as a marriage This merry conceited man dyed in the year of our Saviour 1418 Iuly the seventeenth De modo bene viv Serm 70. Idem de transit mal Saint Bernard spoke worth●ly saying Let those mourne for their dead which believe not the Resurrection those are to bee lamented who after their death are punished in Hell by Devils not those who are placed in Heaven with the blessed spirits Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints Precious indeed as the period of their labours as the consummation of victory as the gate to life and the entrance into perfect rest and securitie Well spoke that wise Hebrew Eccles 7.4 Better is the day of our death then the day of our birth §. 16. That Death is every where THose Wretches who seeke by what means they shall die to whom death is more welcome then life may vex and distract themselves with griefe and anxious sollicitudes and disturbing encumbrances they may sharpen their swords prepare poysons catch at Gibbets looke out for steep Rocks to fall downe from as though the loving yoke and society betwixt the soule and body could not be parted without such exquisite preparation Death is alwayes laying his snares in all places to catch us wheresoever man passeth Death is alwayes
or councell love and prayers God I beseech who art the fountain of all goodnesse and the deep Sea of love requite your love into your bosomes God hath always used to be kind and good to them who do comm●t ●hemselves wholly to his fatherly providence Obedience is a singular vertue and indeed such an one as all others have resplendency from it Patience is that one thing that is necessary for sick men Humility is an excellent jewell and con●empt of a mans own self Poverty is acceptable to Christ but the Queen of graces is Charity Yet amongst all these me thinks a sure confidence in God is of singular efficacie and a plenary resignation of a mans self unto the Divine Providence which Gods Word so highly commends which the Kingly Prophet so often speaks of which last of all Christ himself by so many arguments taken from the Flowers and the Fowles doth endeavour to perswade to None can ever know the streng h of this confidence nor that tranquillity which follows no nor can believe it but he who at all times in everything little or great fully hath believed in and trusted himselfe into Gods hand And I am perswaded that never was there man who did so referre himself wholly to God who hath not found singular and secret comfort within himself by it Let us trust to and rely on God And give our selves wholly to be disposed of by his infinite wisdom Hee will provide for us he will take care for us You see now how I am cited to appear at Gods Tribunall and must now give an account for 60 yeers carriage All mine deeds words thoughts are manifest and open to that Judge No●hing ah nothing can be hid from him all the Acts of my passed life shall now be sentenced O how I tremble For it is a fearfull thing to stand before his Tribunall Yet in this great streight I have something to comfort me although I be an unjust and naughty servant yet I have a good Lord nay infinitely good which though I have bin sinfull yet I am his servant so commending my selfe in●o his hands and my soul to his mercy I bid adiew to you all wishing you al to have a care to your lives here that wee may once againe meet in the Kingdome of Glory Farewell § 24. What a dying man should always speak and meditate in his heart IN thy sicknesse ô good Christian being asked how thou doest how thou feelest thy selfe c. take heed to thy answers that thou utterest let them be such as these As God pleaseth as it seemeth good to the Lord so is come to passe according to Gods good will and pleasure I am well that is best so God sees it good Let his will be done in earth as it is in heaven and that ô sick man and dying man that thou mayest have this familiarly in thy mouth and heart use these three short Prayers 1 The Lord be blessed for ever and ever 2 Have mercy upon mee ô Lord after thy great goodnesse according to the multitude of thy mercies though I be lesse then the least of all thy mercies 3 O my Lord and my God I offer my self to thy good will and pleasure Thy will 〈◊〉 Lord be done Amen Some in the time of their sicknesse have had these prayers set before their faces in great Characters lying in their beds that night and day they might the more readily remember and use them Our Prayers are our Fore-runners to God let us our selves learn of our Harbingers the right way that so we may follow read●ly whensoever the Lord Eternall shall call us hence § 25. Things to be specially observed by a dying man 1 LEt h●m not rely upon but renounce his owne merits let him cast himselfe and all his sins into the boundlesse Ocean of Gods infinite mercy and compassion 2 Let him be sure to stand fast in the bosome of the holy Catholike Church and let him receive the blessed Sacrament seasonably it being his viaticum and the food of his soul 3 Let him withdraw all his affections and love from fading and transitory things and let his heart be united to God his heavenly Father Let him long for the promised Canaan that there hee may for ever offer prayse to God his Creatour 4 Let him offer up himselfe a lively sacrifice to the glory of God for his most blessed will to bear out of true love all the bitternesse and anguishment and all the pangs of death though for a long time and though hee might live longer yet for the love of God he refers himself to his wise disposing either for life or death 5 Let him never forget the bitter passion and death of Jesus Christ Let him not rest till hee be united to Christ in his death and let him in the depth of all his sufferings imitate our Saviour to commend his soul into his fathers hands that so as hee is made conformable to Christ in his death hee may be likewise in his Resurrection But above all it is most safe for the dying man that what hee would have to be his last words and actions that hee begin to doe them in the state of his health § 26. What a dying man must doe LVdovicus Blosius a man of a most holy life who refused an Archbishoprick when it was offered him by Charles the fi●th Emperour whose life may be seen by his works amongst many other worthy pieces hee gives a dying man these Instructions following Being asked what a dying man should doe if hee had liv'd long in grievous sinnes answered though I should have lived forty yeers in my sinnes and now my death approaching if I shall truly acknowledge them and be heartily sorry for them from the bottome of my heart and resolve against them all for time to come if I have but so much time to put my self into Gods hands and truly turn to him without all hypocrisie and dissembling I shall depart hence holy and innocent and shall finde God a mercifull Father unto me and adds a short sweet Prayer for a sick man O Lord I am that miserable wretch whom Thou of thy Fatherly goodnesse hast created and by the most shamefull death of thy onely begotten Son hast redeemed from the power of the Enemy Thou Lord Thou onely shalt rule in me save me therefore ô Lord for thy infinite mercy throu●h Jesus Christ in whom I do believe to have immortality and glory Amen These are Abridgments to die well hee who knows how to be ready for death comprizeth all § 27. Refreshments for a sick man GO my people enter in●o your chambers shut the dores to you hide your selves for a while for a moment untill my indignation be passed over Isa 26.20 In my anger have I hid my face from you for a moment but in everlasting mercies will I have compassion on you saith the Lord your Redeemer Isay 54.8 Why art thou so heavy ô my soule and