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A50876 A sermon at the funeral of Mrs. Elizabeth Fisher, sister to the Honourable Sir William Dawes, Bar. D.D. and wife to the Reverend Dr. Peter Fisher preach'd at Bennington in Hertfordshire, June the 2d, 1698 / by William Milner ... Milner, William, Vicar of Shephall in Hertfordshire. 1698 (1698) Wing M2084; ESTC R15588 15,425 28

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least to make them neither afraid nor unwilling to die And 3. Lastly I add That whatsoever we know concerning this matter is principally if not wholly owing to Revelation and therefore it becomes none of us to pretend to be wise above what is written We should not exercise our selves with curious perplex'd and useless inquiries but rest contented with what we find plainly deliver'd in Holy Scripture striving always so to order our whole Conversations as that we may be found worthy to be receiv'd when we depart hence into those Mansions our Blessed Lord is gone before to prepare for us These things being thus premis'd let us proceed to consider wherein the Text has plac'd the Blessedness of departed Holy Spirits Now this it tells us lies in these two things They are Blessed 1. Because they rest from their Labours 2. Because their works follow or accompany them into their future State 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The meaning and importance of which things must be the subject of the following Discourse 1. They are Blessed in that they rest from their Labours i. e. They are compleatly deliver'd from all the Troubles and Sorrows all the Evils and Calamities Infirmities and Miseries of this frail Mortal State I say all which either have their Foundation in the very texture and constitution of the Human Body or proceed from the Folly and Frenzie the Envy or Malice of Others In this Vale of Tears and Misery Good Men as well as others are liable to Pain and Sickness to Difficulties and Dangers to Poverty Reproach and Persecution and all the sad effects of their own infirm crazie Bodies and the inordinate Appetites and Passions of others Nay the Sons of Violence too often make them the Marks of their Displeasure and Vengeance for no other reason but because their Works are Righteous And is it not a blessed thing to be deliver'd from such a deplorable and wretched State Why this is the happy state of such who die in the Lord. They are safe out of the reach of all these their Enemies No Smart or Anguish can afflict them No Wrath or Malice overtake them To allude to that of Moses concerning the Egyptians Exod. 14.13 when good Men shall have once past through this Red-Sea they may stand still upon the Shore and look back with Pleasure and Triumph upon all these their Enemies saying we shall see them again no more for ever As Job has it Chap. 3. v. 18.19 In the grave the Wicked cease from troubling and there the weary are at rest There the Prisoners rest together they hear not the voice of the Oppressor the small and great are there upon the same level none greater than other and the servant is free from his master So that the words of Solomon if understood with reference to departed Saints are strictly true That the day of a mans death is better than the day of his birth Eccles 7.1 The day of his Birth being the beginning of a life attended with continual Care and Sorrow the day of his Death being his Birth-day into a Blessed Immortal Life of uninterrupted Peace and Pleasure This for the First 2. The Second thing wherein the Text places the Blessedness of those who die in the Lord is this They are blessed because their Works accompany or follow them By which we are to understand these Two things I. The Grateful and Pleasant Remembrance II. The Glorious and happy Fruits and Effects or the Reward of their Good Works follows them 1. The Grateful Remembrance of their good Works follows them Now that this is a real Foundation and Ground of Peace and Blessedness to Holy Spirits in their state of separation from their Bodies may be reasonably inferr'd from the Consideration of our selves how it is with us here in our state of Discipline and Trial. For if good Men reflecting upon the course of their past Lives and finding that they have behav'd themselves piously with regard to God and Inoffensively and Charitably towards Men do from this Testimony of their Consciences receive a very sensible and inward Pleasure a Pleasure greater than the World can give which none can comprehend but such as have felt it What an Unspeakable Transporting Inconceiveable Pleasure may we reasonably suppose will spring up in departed Holy Souls when all the good Works of their whole Lives shall be had in remembrance and set in order before them and represented at one view with greater force and advantage than we can suppose they are in this Earthly State How will such Blessed Spirits upon such recollection even melt away and be dissolv'd and swallow'd up in the greatest Transports and highest Extasies of Complacency and Delight 2. The Fruits and Effects or Reward of their good Works accompanies or follows them into their future State But Blessed God! What Tongue can describe what Heart conceive the good things which thou hast prepared for all those who Die in thy Fear and Favour 'T is impossible for us fully to represent the Happiness and Glory of the Saints in their future State yet to excite our Love to God and to quicken our desires after the Enjoyment of Him it can neither be useless nor unseasonable to point at some few things which are the happy Effects and Reward of the Good Works of Holy Men in the other Life And therefore 1. Good Men are compleatly deliver'd from Sin as well as Sorrow and Trouble They are no longer liable to Temptation or Danger from any of the Enemies of God's Glory and their own Salvation Whil'st they are here upon Earth the Devil and his Agents lie in wait to Ensnare them and even their own Flesh which encompasses them about sollicits them to a multitude of Sins and Follies They daily find a Law in their Members warring against the Law of their Minds the Flesh lusting against the Spirit the Animal and Carnal strugling with the Rational and Spiritual Powers which Conflict is the ground and occasion of much Dejection and Disquietness of Soul filling even good Men with many Misgivings and Fears and Perplexities concerning their present Sincerity and future Happiness How in the bitterness of their Souls do they lament their evil Propensities and Inclinations their Slips and Failings their Mistakes and sometimes more notorious Transgressions They find no rest by reason of their Spiritual Enemies and their Hearts too often fail them But it is not thus with the Dead with them who Die in the Lord. He that is once entred into his Rest Heb. 4.10 Rom. 6.7 ceases from his own Works the works of Sin and the Flesh He that is dead is freed from Sin from the fear and danger and possibility of offending God No subtile malicious Serpent can insinuate himself into the Paradise of Holy Souls this Earth is the Scene of Satans Temptation and the place of Tryal Or if we may suppose that the Evil Spirit should creep in amongst them yet he will find nothing