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B07982 A direction to death: teaching man the way to die well, that being dead, he may liue euer. Made in the forme of a dialogue, for the ease and benefite of him that shall reade it. The speakers therein are Quirinus and Regulus. Perneby, William. 1599 (1599) STC 19766.7; ESTC S94700 255,346 516

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onelie begotten sonne of God And againe he that beleeueth in the Sonne hath euerlasting life and hee that obeyeth not the Sonne shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him and againe Verilie verilie I say vnto you he that heareth my words and beleeueth in him that sent me hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death to life And what is hereupon to be gathered but that the soules of the righteous at their departure from their bodies goe vnto God in heauen and not vnto fire or water in purgatorie for they goe vnto that which they had ante seperationem before their seperation and not vnto ●hat which they neuer had in expectation and what had they before their seperation but life Ioh. 5.24 He that beleeueth in him that sent me hath euerlasting life neither may haue nor shall haue but hath and where is that life but with God Colos 3.3 With thee is the well of life saith the Psalmist and your life is hid with Christ in God saith the Apostle Whither then must they go when they go but vnto God who was and is their life and with whom their life is Whether also I see not in this heir life when and while they heere liued they neuer so much as once dreamed of going into purgatorie after death but of going into heaue● some of them both write and speake We kn●w saith Paul 2. Co. 5.1 that if our earthlie house of this ●abernacle be destroied we haue a building giuen of God that is an house not made with hands but ●ternall in the heauens For therefore we sigh des●●ing to be clothed with our house which is from heauen Neuerthelesse we are bolde and loue ra●her to remoue out of the bodie and to dwell wi●h the Lord. And againe Philip. 1.21 22.23 Christ is to mee both in life and death aduantage and whether to liue in ●he flesh were profitable for me and what I do I know not for I am greatlie in doubt on both sides desiring to be loosed and to be with Christ which is best of all Newes quoth Oecolampadius to his friendes who came vnto him a little before his death I shall be shortlie with Christ my Lord. I pray thee my Lord Iesus Christ saith Luther receiue my poore soule my heauenly father though I be taken from this life and this bodie of mine is to be layd downe yet I know certainlie that I shall remaine with thee for euer neither shall any be able to pull me out of thy hand Returne ô my soule vnto thy rest quoth Babylas martir of Antioche When his head was to bee chopt off because the Lord hath blessed thee because thou hast deliuered my soule from death Ps 116.7.8 mine eies from teare and my feete from falling I shall walke before Iehouab in the land of the liuing Furthermore in a generality these are the sayings of the auncient Fathers touching this point August lib. 13. ca. 8. de ciuitat dei The souls of the godlie being seperated from their bodes are in rest and the soules of the vngodlie ●oe suffer punishment vntil the bodies of those do rise againe vnto life euerlasting and the bodies of those vnto eternal death which is also called the second death so saith Augustine I is most certaine that the soules of the right●ous being loosed from the flesh Greg. lib. 4. Dialog c. 25 are receiued into heauenly seates and that the very trueth it selfe testifieth saying where the corps is there the Eagles will resorte So saith Gregorie Of these sayings I gather what all this while I went about to gather to wit that presently vpon the departure of any out of this life their soules goe straight waies either vnto God in heauen or else vnto satan in hell For as Augustine saith August in his serm of Time the 232. serm There are but two places and as for any third place there is none at all he that reigneth not with Christ shall perish with the diuell without any doubte Againe there bee two habitations or dwelling places August de verb. apost serm 18. the one in the fire euerlasting and the other in the kingdome that neuer shall haue ende the first place the Catholike faith by Gods authoritie beleeueth to be the kingdome of heauen August lib. ● hypog the second place the same Catholike faith beleeueth to be hell where all runnagates and whosoeuer is without the faith of Christ shall taste euerlasting punishment as for any third place we vtterly know none neither shall we finde in the holy scriptures that there is any such Now for mine own part sith there it will not be found it shall not any other where bee sought For as Theodoret saith Theodoret. lib. 1. cap. 7. The Euangelists and Apostles writings and the sayings of the olde Prophets doe cleerely instruct vs what iudgement we ought to haue of the meaning and will of God Q. What then What though also you will take no further paines to seeke a third place doth it therefore follow that therefore there is none Augustine I can tell you vpon whom you so much stand is very doubtfull in the case for sometimes hee denies as you say sometime he affirmes as others pretend and sometimes againe he doubtes as himselfe declares he denies in the places by you named hee affirmes De gen contra Manich. lib. 2. c. 20. de vera falsa poenit c. 18. lib. 21. de ciuit Dei c. 23. c. 26. Non redarguo saith he quia forsan verum est I reproue it not because it may peraduenture be true that some after this life suffer temporall punishment Hee doubtes in his Enchiridion cap. 69. Item de fide operibus cap. 16. in quaestione 1. Dulcitij Tale aliquid post hanc vitam fieri incredibile non est vtrum ita sit quaeri potest It is not incredible that after this life some such thing may bee and wh●ther it bee so or no it may bee demaunded R. Whatsoeuer Augustine is I much passe not for I stand not so much vpon him but that I can follow him or reiect him Neither herein doe I him any iniurie at all For this is his owne saying August in proem lib. 3. de Trinit Be not bound vnto my writings as vnto the canonicall scriptures But when thou shalt finde in the scriptures that which thou diddest not beleeue beleeue it without any doubting or delay but when thou findest that in my writings which thou diddest not know certainelie before except thou shalt certainelie vnderstand it doe not stiffelie affirme it August epist 198. ad Fortunatum And againe We receiue not the disputations or writings of any men be they neuer so catholike or praiseworthie as we receiue the canonicall scriptures but that sauing the reuerence due vnto them we may well reproue or refuse some things in their writings
Wherefore cryest thou vnto me Exod. 14.15 When death therefore assailes me all sences external failes so as the sicke bee vtterly vnable to pray with tongue yet if through the instigation of others he be willing thereto that his will to praier is as good as if he did pray for as Dauid saith Psal 10.17 145.19 God heares the desires of the poore and he will fulfill the desires of them that feare him he also will heare their cry and will saue them And this he speakes as if the sighes sobs and grones of a repentant and beleeuing heart were praiers before God as well as the supplicatory words of a loud and mournfull crying tongue but to stay further speech of this though I might make much more you see many speake and vnderstand well to their last gaspe and they I think may vse their tongues in praier aswel as their hearts Q. There are but a few that doe so and seldome when it is that any doe so R. Yes vndoubtedly they are many that doe so and such times fall out often and neither is greatly to bee marueiled at for why As good words either of God and godlines or to God and his goodnes are sighes of a true and timely faith so often doth God enable many to the last point of their liues both to speake and to vse many good words to his glory their owne comfort and others great good If you will looke either into the Scriptures or into other histories you shall find there many good men to haue spoken to the last and to haue vsed merueilous good words at the last In the nine and fourtieth of Genesis the last words of Ia●kob were prophecies of blessings and curses vpon his children the duration of gouernement in Israel and ardent praier for his owne good Amongst all and other things by him there said these are neither least nor last Gen. 49.10 The Scepter shall not depart from Iudah and the Law-giuer from betweene his feete till Shilo come And againe O Lord I haue waited for thy saluation In the two and three and thirteth of Deuteronomie Deu 32.35 the last words of Moses were his most excellēt song conteining the benefites of God toward his people and their ingratitude towards him and Moses his blessing wherewith he blessed the children of Israel before his death the words are better for you there to reade then forme heere to repeat referring you thither therefore there to reade them heere for this time I willingly omit them In the second of Samuel and the three and twentieth Chapter the last words of Dauid were The spirit of the Lord spake by mee 2. Sam. 23.1 and his word was in my tongue the God of Israel spake vnto mee the strength of Israel said Beare rule ouer me c. In the foure and twentieth of the second booke of Chronicles the last wordes of Zacharias the sonne of Iehoiada 2. Chro. 24.22 when he was stoned were these The Lord looke vpon it and require it the last words of our Sauiour Christ when he was dying vpon the crosse as they were many admirable so they were full of spirituall grace and comfortable Mat. 27.46 First speaking to his Father he said 1. Eli Eli Luk. 23.34 Luk. 23.43 lamasabachtani My God my God why hast thou forsaken me 2. Father forgiue them they know not what they doe 2. to the theefe he said Ioh. 19.26.27 c. Verilie I say vnto thee to day shalt thou be with mee in Paradise 3. to his mother he said Woman behold thy Sonne and to Iohn Behold thy mother 4. Earnestly desiring our saluation he said I thirst 5. Hauing made perfect satisfaction vnto God for mans offence he said Luk. 23.48 It is finished Lastly when body and soule were parting hee said againe vnto God Father into thine hāds I commend my spirit Act. 7.56.59.60 the last words of Steuen were these 1. Behold I see the heauens open and the Sonne of man standing at the right hand of God 2. Lord Iesu receiue my spirit 3. Lord lay not this sinne to their charge In other writers you may see the last words of others and those very good all spoken at the last cast of life Euseb lib. 4 cap. 15. At the last and as the last thus spake Polycarpus Bishop of Smyrna Thou art a true God without lying therefore in all things I praise thee and blesse thee and glorifie thee by the eternall God and high Priest Iesus Christ thine only sonne by whom and with whome to thee and the holy spirit be all glory now and for euer And thus Ignatius Bishop of Antioch Id. lib. 3. c. 30. I care not what kinde of death I die I am the bread of the Lord must be grounde with the teeth of Lions that I may be cleane bread for Christ who is the bread of life for me And thus Ambrose Bishop of Millaine Paulinus in vita eius I haue not so lead my life among you as if I were ashamed to liue Neither doe I feare death because we haue a good Lord. Possidonius in vita Augustini And thus Augustine Bishop of Hippo. 1. He is no great man that thinkes it no great matter that trees and stones fall and mortall men die 2. Iust art thou ô Lord and righteous is thy iudgement Foxe preface to Luthers Comment vpon the Psalmes of degrees And thus Luther comparable to the chiefest as Master Foxe once said My heauenly father God and father of our Lord Iesus Christ and God of all comfort I giue thee thanks that thou hast reuealed vnto me thy sonne Iesus Christ whome I haue beleeued whome I haue professed whome I haue loued whome I haue praised whome the Bishop of Rome and the whole company of the wicked persecuteth and reuileth I pray thee my Lord Iesus Christ receiue my poore soule my heauenly Father though I be taken from this life and this bodie of mine is to be laide downe yet I know certainely that I shall remaine with thee for euer neither shall any be able to pull me out of thy hands And thus Bishop Hooper O Lord Iesus sonne of Dauid haue mercie on me and receiue my soule And thus Annas Burgius Forsake mee not O Lord least I forsake thee And thus Melancthon if it be the will of God I am willing to die and I beseech him that he will graunt me a ioyfull departure and to the like effect many others But to speake of them al were too much the examples of those good men that at the last end of their liues haue expressed their notable faith in God and his Christ are infinite and therefore too many as well for me to recite as for you to remember As these which I haue mentioned may suffice to shew what many haue done so may they well serue to signifie what all should do for good words by the good are
alwaies vncertaine and vnknowne to thee That thou mayst feare be feruent liue well and flye euill As though there were foure causes which moued God to make death vncertaine 1. Feare 2. Loue. 3. Life 4. Euill Feare of him loue to his word preseruation of life in man and declining of euill Touching the. 1. Gregorie sayth in an homelie of his Our Lord would therefore haue our last houre to bee vnknowne that alwaies it might be suspected Gregorie in hom that whilst we cannot fore see it without intermission wee might make hast vnto it And hence is it that he said Watch therefore Mat. 15. cap. 13. for ye know neither the day nor the houre when the sonne of man wil ceme Touching the 2. another saith The houre of death is vncertaine that thou mightest worke the more feruentlie Were it not so thou wouldest grow slouthfull and desist from manie things which are good for others And hence it is that an Angell sayd once to a Bishop Greg. in Dialo● Doe what thou doest worke what thou workest Touching the 3. saith the same author last spoken of Therefore is the day of thy death vnknowne that thou mayest liue the more purely and warilie For as Cyprian saith What kinde of one the Lord findes thee when hee doth call such kinde of one he doth iudge thee when thou art gone But it is a foolish thing for a man to liue in that estate in which he would not dye Touching the 4. saith the foresaid writer Therefore is the day of thy death vnknowne that thou maiest eschew many euilles which of the certaintie of death would ensue For did men know they should liue long they would committe many euils purposing afterwards to repent but did they know they should dye soone they would liue so much the more vnhumanelie determining to haue some pleasure ere they were for the preuenting of these mischiefes the Lord hath made both death vncertayne and the time thereof vnknowne Thus now you see how the ignorance of death both in regard of time place and manner ought to make a man prepare himselfe to death Q. I doe so I thanke you But I pray you is there yet any thing more that may doe the like R. If you remembred but what ere while I said this question might haue been spared for I tolde you that for fiue causes a man was to prepare himselfe to die ere euer he came to die and yet wee haue spoken but of three of them Q. In deede you did so Speake therefore of the two last I praye you as you haue done of the three first R. So I meane God willing In the fourth place therefore a man is to prepare himselfe to die ere euer hee comes to die because the greatest worke a man hath to finish in this worlde is to die As after death there is no worke so greater then death there is no work hee which hath ouercome death hath ouercome all things Aristotle Of all terrible and fearefull things death is the last Q. And why should this moue a man euer the more to prepare himselfe to die R. Because as the wise man saith Syr. 5. 16. He should not doe rashly either in small things or in great Q. Why but is it a doing rashly to dye without preparation thereto R. What else For what is it not a doing rashly to set vpon any thing without aduisement Q. Yes surelie R. The like it is to die without preparation Q. As a man then prepares himselfe to the doing of any great worke so is hee to the vndergoing of death R. Right so Q. But why so R. Because death is not the least of a mans workes in this world Brandmil Con. fun though it bee the last For to die is the greatest worke a man hath to finish vpon earth Q. May you not thereto adde the greiuousest too R. If I die the matter were not great for there are more paines in death Vincent then in any worke vnder the sunne As one sayth for then so diuerse kindes of diseases are wonte to meete and so to molest euery member that sometimes there are moe diseases than members In a sicknes that was not mortall but grieuous Dauid sayd there was not one whole parte in his bodie how much more might another so say in a sickenesse that is mortall and therefore exceeding grieuous For no sickenes so grieuous as a mortall sickenes In the separation of a man from his wife there is much greefe and sorrow in the separation of the soule from the bodie there must needes be much more The coniunction of the two last is greater and of greater continuance than the coniunction of the two first and where there hath beene the longer continuance in affection there must needes be the greater grieuances vpon separation in experience we see that so much the greater the sorrow is at the parting of friends by how much the longer the continuance together hath been from the meeting of friends and by that we may gesse how great the griefe is in the parting of soule and body For soule and bodie are as two friends but what prosecute I this poynt so farre Now haue I little leysure and lesse occasion so to doe and it may be I shall haue more of both hereafter Q. I would you might and I wish you may For it will not be more yrkesome to me then to heare of these things than it is now And now by seeing my silence you may iudge of my delight But to let this passe seeing you would so faine passe what other reason haue you for the first and last place by which a man should bee moued to a preparing of himselfe to death ere euer he comes to yeeld himselfe thereto R. The fundrie preceptes of Christ and his Apostles and prophets tending to that purpose Q. Why haue either the one or the other of these giuen any precepts touching this matter R. Haue they what a question is that thus sayd I say the Prophet to Hezekiah the king Put thine house in order Esa 38.2 for thou shalt dye and not liue And what is that but to prepare to die because thou must die Thus said Christ our Sauiour to Peter and Andrew and other his Apostles and disciples Wake therefore Mat. 24.42.43 for ye know not what houre your master will come Of this be sure that if the good man of the house knew at what watch the theefe would come he would surely watch and not suffer his house to be digged through Therefore be ye also readie for in the houre that ye thinke not will the sonne of man come And what is this but to prepare to dye because you must dye for Luke the Euangelist recording the same historie saith Be yee also prepared therefore Luk. 12.40 For the sonne of man will come at an houre when yee thinke not 1. Pet. 1.1 And thus said Peter the Apostle to the
him he said in his pride I will make Ierusalem a common burying place of the Iewes But after that it and some other miserie had something molested him he began to leaue off his great pride and selfe will and came to himselfe by the scourge of God and then said It is meete to be subiect vnto God and that a man which is mortall should not thinke himselfe equall vnto God through pride As it fared with him so it fareth with sundrie others They neuer thinke of leauing their sinnes till their sinnes take their leaue of them By this you see that what I said I say not without reason Q. Yet is it not so strong but that a man may reason against it R. With small reason if he doth Q. Why As though a man might not repent when he will R. As though he might or may Is it in a mans owne power to become righteous when he list or is it in God alone to make him righteous when he will the Apostle I am sure saith It is neyther in him that willeth R●● 9.16 nor in him that runneth but onely in God that sheweth mercie And that as the Apostle there sayth to whome he will shew mercie And this saying of the Apostle will I beleeue sooner than the saying of any man whatsoeuer For as Isaie saith what is chaffe to wheate so say I what is the saying of a naturall man to the saying of Diuine Paul Q. You will not beleeue then that a man may repent when he will R. No more will you neyther if you bee wise For man cannot repent when he himselfe will but when God will The scriptures euery where make repentance a gifte of God and not a worke of man Paul the Apostle to his sonne Timothie saith 2. Tim. 2.25 The seruant of the Lord must not striue but must bee gentle toward all men apt to teach 26. suffering the euill men patient lie instructing them with meekenes that are contrarie minded proouing if God at any time will giue them repentance that they may know the truth Peter the Apostle to the whole councell assembled against him and his companie on this wise aunswering said Act. 5.30 The God of our fathers hath raised vp Iesus whome ye slew and hanged on a tree him hath God lift vp with his right hand to be a Prince and a Sauiour to giue repentance vnto Israel and forgiuenes of sinnes 31. They of the circumcision in Ierusalem when they had heard of Peter the cause of his going to the Gentiles both approoued it and glorified God saying 11.18 Then hath God also to the Gentiles graunted repentance vnto life And the whole companie of the afflicted Church Lamentations the fifth saith Lament 5.21 Turne thou vs vnto thee O Lord and we shall bee turned Not vnlike to that of Ephraim Ier. 31.18 Ier. 31.18 Conuert thou me and I shall bee conuerted for thou art the Lord my God Thus Peter thus Paul thus a parte of the Church thus the better part of the Church acknowledge repentance a gift of God This being so a man cannot promise it vnto himselfe when hee will but when God himselfe will For gifts goe not euer at the mindes of the receiuers but after the will of the bestowers As therefore it is vnsounde to say it is neuer too late to repent so it is absurd to say August super psal 91. a man may repent when he will Saith Augustine vpon one of the Psalmes man is apt and able to wound himselfe but he is not apt and able to heale himselfe When he will he may be sicke not when he will he may rise or can be whole Q. Sith you conclude as you doe I must confesse as you would haue me Yet me thinkes how much soeuer you carpe at this a man may repent when he will you cannot so easilie cauill at that repentance is neuer too late For why so long as life doth last hope doth also last R. Mens thoughts are not euer truths The Lord knoweth saith Dauid that the thoughts of men are but vaine Whatsoeuer you thinke I neither carpe nor cauil otherwise than Gods worde doth allow me Say not therefore you must confesse what I conclude except I conclude what euerie christian must confesse Their open confession shall goe before my priuate conclusion Neyther yet let it sticke in your stomacke that I say it is vnsound to say it is neuer too late to repent For you know it is too late to repent when a man is dead August ad Pet. diac c. 3 As a learned writer saith howsoeuer then repentance may be had yet it cannot then be done If you know it not Ignat. epist 6. you may learne it of Ignatius of Cyprian of Augustine of Hierome and almost of any among the learned Sayth Ignatius after Death there is no place or time to confesse our sinne Sayth Cyprian Cipr. tract 1. aduer Demet. after we bee once departed out of his life there is no more place of repentance there is no more effect or working of satisfaction life is heere either lost or wonne euerlasting saluation is heere prouided for by the due worshipping of God and the fruites of faith Sayth Augustine August epist 54. ad Ma●ed there is no other place to correct our manners and conditions but onely in this life For after this life euery man shall haue that that he hath purchased vnto himselfe in this world Sayth Hierome The dead hath no part in this world nor in any worke vnder the sunne c. The dead can adde nothing vnto that which they haue taken with them out of this life For they can neither doe good nor sinne neither increase in vertue nor vice And saith Olympiodorus as before I haue shewed you In what place or state soeuer a man shal be found when he dyeth in the same state and degree he shall remaine for euer Thus they all say as I say repentance may come too late Q. I confesse so much if it comes after this life but of such a repentance I speake not I speake of repentance in this life not after R. Of which soeuer you speake it will not be vtterly vntrue which I haue spoken For repentance in this life may come too late if either the repentance be vnperfect or God will not accept it Esaus repentance came too late and Iudas his repentance came too late and so many others repentance comes too late Q. Why but of the two theeues that were crucified with Christ one euen then repented when he was crucified R. Yet it neither followeth thereupon that a man may repent when he will nor that his repentance is neuer too late if it comes For that one theeues repentance was altogether miraculous and extraordinarie And you know it is not good for men to make an ordinarie rule of an extraordinarie example Of two you see there was but one that repented in
mans words were these Psal 39.4 Lord let me know mine end and the measure of my dayes what it is let me know how long I haue to liue The second these 90.12 Teach vs so to number our dayes that wee may apply our heartes vnto wisedome The third these Tob. 3.6 Deale with me as seemeth best vnto thee and commaund my spirit to bee taken from me that I may be dissolued and become earth for it is better for mee to dye than to liue For this therefore should we both labour and pray a worke of nature it is not to bee prepared for death but a worke of grace must proceed from God not from man That which proceedeth from God must by prayer be asked of God That man therefore may meditate of his death he must craue grace of God to enable him to frame himselfe to death that so he may not altogether be vnprouided for death and thus you see by what a man may be induced to thinke of his death which is the first thing that he is to regarde in his life that he be not taken vnawares by death Q. I doe so and I remayne your debt our therfore But now hauing seene what was there well worthie to bee seene I will craue that we may passe to the second that there I may also see what meete is to be seene R. Your will be done Q What therefore may be the sting of death which you sayd he was daily to take from death which was desirous in life to prepare for death R. Nothing else but sinne For as the Apostle Paul saith 1. Cor. 15.56 The sting of death is sin Q. But why is sinne compared to a sting R. For the likenes that sinne hath with a sting For as those things which haue stings do wound by their stings so doth death by sinne For death entred into the world by sinne Rom. 5.12 Had not sinne been death could neuer haue done hurt Againe as those things which haue stings can do no hurt if their stings be out for a man may cary a snake in his bosome the sting being out so no more can death if her sting be out sinne being gone death hath no more dominion Q. But how shall a man get this sting out R. By two meanes 1. by humbling himselfe in the time present for all his sinnes past partly confessing them against himselfe with the prodigall child Luk. 15.21 and partly crauing pardon of them at Gods hands with the poore Publican 2. 18.13 by turning of himselfe vnto God for the time to come euer carying as in him lies a purpose resolution and endeuour in all things to reforme both heart and life affection and action will and worke according to the direction of Gods most blessed word Q. Are you sure of what you sa yt R. I were else to blame so to say For it is written Deut. 27.18 Cursed be he that maketh the blinde goe out of his way And he maketh the blinde goe out of the way that teacheth the ignorant contrary to the right way Q. Can you make it to me to appeare R. I verily if you will see when it doth appeare Q. I pray you do it then for I will see it if you doe it R. And I will do it that you may see it For the first therefore thus saith Salomon He that hideth his sinnes shall not prosper Pro. 28.13 but he that confesseth them and forsaketh them shall haue mercie Psal 32.5 Thus also saith Dauid I acknowledged my sinne vnto thee O God neither hid I mine iniquitie For I thought I will confesse against my selfe my wickednes vnto the Lord and thou forgauest the punishment of my sinne Selah Therefore shall euery one that is godly make his prayer vnto thee in a time when thou maiest be found surely in the floud of great waters they shall not come neere him Rom. 10.13 Selah Thus also Paul Whosoeuer shall call vpon the name of the Lord shall be saued And I thinke by the vndoubted testimonie of these three that very thing doth appeare which I would haue to appeare for where two are enough three will well serue But to proceede because I must not dwell where I am Ezek. 18.21 for the second Ezekiel sayth thus If the wicked will returne from all his sinnes that hee hath committed and keepe all my statutes and doe that which is lawfull and right he shall surely liue and not dye all his transgressions that he hath committed shall not be mentioned vnto him but in his righteousnes that he hath done he shall liue Haue I any desire that the wicked should dye saith the Lord God or shall he not liue if he returne from his wayes Againe When the wicked turneth a way from his wickednes that he hath committed and doth that which is lawfull and right he shall saue his soule aliue because he considereth turneth away from all his transgressions that hee hath committed he shall surely liue and shall not dye And Daniel counselling Nebuchadnezar the king how to escape the wrath which he feared and saw threatned saith thus Dan. 4.24 Breake off thy sins by righteousnes and thine iniquities by mercie toward the poore loe let there be an healing of thine errour Besides by these meanes the Prodigall sonne tooke away the sting of his death the Publican the sting of his death and Zacheus the Tribute-taker the sting of his daeth the one had no sooner said Luk. 15.21 Father I haue sinned against heauen before thee am no more worthy to be called thy sonne but his father saith to his seruants bring forth the best robe and put it on him and put a ring on his hand and shoes on his feete and bring the fat calfe and kill him and let vs eate and be mery For this my sonne was dead and is aliue againe and he was lost but he is found againe The other had no sooner sayd 18.13 O God be mercifull to me a sinner but it was said of him this man departed to his house iustified The third had no sooner said 19.8 beholde Lord the halfe of my goods I giue to the poore If I haue taken from any man by forged cauillation I restore him fourefolde but Iesus againe said vnto him this day is saluation come into thine house for asmuch as thou also art become the sonne of Abraham By the same meanes also some others did the like By their doings others also may learne For what was effectuall in them will not be vnfrutefull in others so others be as faithfull as they For as the Apostle saith Rom. 15.4 Whatsoeuer things are written afore time are written for our learning that wee through patience and comfort of the scriptures might haue hope But it may be I haue spoken enough of this matter and you haue a good minde to heare somewhat of some other Q. You are to vse
your owne skill for all my will for I may minde what is not meete and you may wish what is more conuenient Your enough is nothing too much for that which you said was both pleasurable to heare and profitable to learne And it may be my minde is little amisse For I would learne what I know not and get what I haue not For my part therefore I can be contented to proceede can you so too R. Yea verily for I am now at your direction Q. We will now then to the third thing you say he was to regarde which in prosperous time of life was desirous to prepare against perilous day of death R. As you please for that But doe you remember what it was Q. Very well I thanke you For this it was He must striue by all good meanes he may to enter into the first degree of eternall life R. You say true but what would you touching this point Q. I would first know how many degrees of life eternall there are for your naming of the first argues that there are diuers I would secondly learne what it is to enter into the first degree of eternall life For you say he must striue and striuing argues it is not common nor easie to enter into it Thirdly I would know by what meanes a man may come to enter thereinto For enter a man cannot into any thing without meanes R. And these things in some sorte will I manifest vnto you Touching the first therfore there are three degrees of life eternall The first is in this life when men being iustified and sanctified haue peace with God The second is in the ende of life when the body freed from all diseases paynes and miseries is layd to rest in the earth and the soule is receiued into heauen The third is after the daie of Iudgement when bodie and soule being reunited shall be both aduanced to eternall glorie Now to enter into the first of these 3. degrees of life eternall is to haue such peace with God through Christ as he that hath it can say with Paul I liue not but Christ liues in me The meanes to enter heereinto are three Repentance of sin Fayth in Christ and Newenes of life For none can enter heereinto but he that repents him of his sinnes beleeues in Christ and riseth to newenes of life He that repents not perisheth He that beleeueth not is condemned He that walketh not in newnes of life is yet in his sinnes Hence it is that Peter said vnto the Iewes A mende your liues and turne that your sinnes may be put away when the time of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. Act. 3.19 Hence is it that Paul said vnto the Iayler 16 31. Beleeue in the Lord Iesus Christ and thou shalt be saued and thine household Dan. 4.24 Hence is it that Daniel said to Nebuchadnezar Breake off thy sinnes by righteousnes and thine iniquities by mercie toward the poore Loe let there be an healing of thine errour Hence it is that as Peter said of Ioyning vertue with faith and with vertue knowledge 2. Pet. 1.5 and with knowledge temperance and with temperance patience and with patience godlines and with godlines brotherly kindenes and with brotherly kindenes loue if ye doe these things ye shall neuer fall So may I say of mixing repentance with faith and with faith obedience and with obedience more if ye doe these things ye shall neuer fall for as Iohn the Euangelist sayth Apoc. 20.6 Blessed and holy is hee that hath part in the first resurrection for on such the second death hath no power By which is signified that hee which will escape the second death must be made partaker of the first resurrection of which none is in deed partaker but he that is regenerated iustified and sanctified regenerated by the spirit of God iustified by the death of Christ and sanctified with the gifte of the holy ghost for none but such can say with Paule I liue not now but Christ liueth in me Q. I but others than such haue parte in the first resurrection R. In shew they may but in truth they haue not Q. How then may a man come to be able to say with Paule I liue not now but Christ liueth in me R. By three especiall graces in which the first degree of euerlasting life consisteth Q. What three are these R. The first is a sauing knowledge by which a man doth truely resolue himselfe that God the father of Christ is his father Christ his sonne his redemer and God the holy ghost his sanctifier for as Christ sayth This is life eternall to know thee the onely God Ioh. 17.3 and whome thou hast sent Iesus Christ The second is peace of conscience Pro. 15.5 Philip. 2. which as Salomon saith Is a continuall feast And as Paul saith Passeth all vnderstanding For as the same Paul saith The kingdome of God is righteousnes Rom. 14.17 peace of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost And no meruaile for the horrour of a giultie conscience is the beginning of death and destruction Syr. 25. 14. The greatest heauines is the heauines of the heart saith Syrach and the greatest trouble is the trouble of conscience say I. As Syrach also saith Giue mee any plague saue onely the plague of the heart So say I giue me any trouble saue onely the trouble of conscience For as the plague of the heart passeth all other plagues so the trouble of conscience passeth all other troubles Pro. 18.14 The spirite of a man saith Salomon will sustaine his infirmitie but a wounded spirit who can beare it As one in Plautus saith Seruus in Mustellaria There is nothing more miserable than a mans owne guiltie minde In a prouerbe it is Seneca lib. de moribus Ibidem A guiltie conscience is as good as a thousand witnesses As Seneca saith The conscience goes beyond all the euill the tongue can speake An euill conscience is often safe without daunger neuer sure without care Hmbros lib. 2. de offic Bernar. in serm Bern. 3. considerat ad Euge. But saith Ambrose The peace of conscience makes a blessed life And saith Bernard He prepares a good dwelling for God whose reason neither hath been deceiued nor wil peruerted nor memorie defiled The opinion of good men with the testimonie of conscience is euer sufficient against the mouth of them that speake euil Horat. Hor. Iudgeth it an happie thing for a man to know no euil by himselfe nor to waxe pale through some default Hugo lib. 2. de Ani-cap 9. Hugo therefore speaking in the praise of a good conscience saith A good conscience is the title of religion the temple of Salomon the field of benediction the garden of delight the declinatorie of gold the ioy of angles the arke of couenant the treasure of the king the house of God the habitation of the holy ghost the booke
sealed and shutte and to be opened in the day of iudgement But inough for this if not too much for I had almost forgotten my selfe and now if I looke not backe it may be euery one will not looke right the third grace therefore of the three I told you of is the regiment of the spirite by which the heart and life of man is ordered according to the word of God For Paul saith that They which are the children of God Rom. 8.14 are led by the spirit of God But if any man hath not the spirit of Christ the same is not his 8.9 that is not Christs By these three as I tolde you shall a man come to be able to say with Paul I liue not now but Christ liueth in mee for why to haue Christ in him is to haue Christ by his spirit to guide and gouerne him Q. But when may Christ be said to doe that R. When the thoughts wil and affections of man together with all the powers of bodie and soule are ordered by the worde of God For then is man guided by the spirit of Christ when these things forenamed are all directed by the worde of Christ Q. So may it well be because the word is the rule after which a man must direct his goings R. And so is it for that cause for when Dauid asked the question whereby A young man should cleanse his wayes Psal 119.9 he streight waye returned this answere euen by ruling himselfe according to thy worde Q. So much I acknowletdge to make no more wordes therefore about this when a man hath attained to this grace by these graces which you haue spoken of what must he nexte doe that hee maye bee so much the better prepared against death R. Hee must inure himselfe by little and little to die before euer hee comes in deede to die For the more a man in health inures himselfe to die the lesse vnwilling in sickenes hee shal be to die for death after affliction is lesser than before hence is it that Paule saith in his first epistle to the Corinthians 1. Cor. 15.31 By the reioycing which I haue in Christ Iesus our Lord I die dayly dayly because he was often in danger of death by reason of his calling and dayly because in all his dangers he inured himselfe to die from this example should all that woulde well die learne dayly to die this dayly dying is the right way to well dying for he that dies dayly when he dyes dyes happily hee neuer puts death farre from him hee neuer makes death a stranger to him he neuer thinks death altogether against him oh that men would more inure themselues to die then woulde they be more religious and lesse superstitious more vertuous and lesse vitious more bounteous and lesse couetous more appliable to good and lesse inclinable to euill and to say at once then would they haue lesser affection to liue and greater delight and desire to dye their not acquainting themselues with death makes them seldome when well prepared for death Of another minde than many and of a better then was that good man and Martyr the Martir Bilney in the daies of Queene Marie for he to the ende he might well suffer did often ere hee suffered inure himselfe to suffer oft before he was burned did he put his finger into the flame of a candle not onely to make tryal of his ability in suffering but also to arme himselfe against greater torments in death Of the like minde before death should others bee in life that so they might neuer be vnprouided against death Q. I acknowledge as much as you affirme Men should bee thus minded in life that they might neuer bee ouertaken by death But how should a man inure himselfe to dye that so hee might not be ouertaken R. How many wayes By thinking of his owne death by calling to minde his friends death by preparing of things necessarie for death by frequenting the funeralles of those that haue yeelded to death by viewing the faces of those that are at the gate of death For by all these and many more hee may gather and conclude that necessarily he must dye Q. And what then R. That asmuch as he may he is to inure himselfe thereto For who doth not buckle himselfe to that he must needs doe Q. I thinke there is none which doth not R. Neither should there bee any which should not inure himselfe to death Q. Neither doe I denie that For the duetie of all is one But when should a man inure himselfe to dye R. When not daylie hourlie continually Q. Why that R. Because death is euer vncertaine vnto him vncertaine in regard of time vncertaine in regarde of place vncertaine in regard of manner for no man knoweth either the time when he shall dye or the place where he shall dye or the manner how he shall dye The time of his death is as vncertaine as the place the place as vncertaine as the time the manner as vncertaine as either place or time He may be taken to night before to morrow at his board aswell as in his bed with that that should preserue him as with that which will destroy him He is void of securitie at each time in euery place after all sorts No time can warrant him no place can priuiledge him Nothing can preserue him Q. But what must he do nothing in the time present but inure himselfe to dye that well he may dye R. Yes Whatsoeuer good thing else hee doth he must do it in the time present he must not delay till the time to come For why this is the aduise of Salomon Eccl. 9.10 Eccl. 9.10 All that thine hand shall finde to doe doe it with all thy power That is with all speede assoone as thou canst without delay This also is the counsaile of Paul Gal. 6.10 Gal. 6.10 While we haue time let vs doe good vnto all men arguing thereby that euer we shall not haue time And as good is the counsaile of the one as the aduise of the other For as he giues twice which giues quickly so he doth a thing twice which doth it quickly Twentie to one it is but he that taketh not time while he may haue time shal misse of time when he would haue time For occasiō is bald behind The foolish virgins that would not enter when they might could not when they would Syr. 5. 6. The watch word of Syrach therefore fits one man aswell as another and each conuert asmuch as one Make no tarying to turne vnto the Lord and put not of from day to day for suddenly shall the wrath of the Lord breake forth and in thy securitie thou shalt be destroyed and thou shalt perish in the time of vengeance If it may fitte you and me and him you cause me to speake of I shall bee glad Q. If it doth not I pray God it may R. Euen so doe I.
should I produce more examples when these are sufficient to explaine what I propound whome these will not content little or nothing for this point will content Q. I thinke so too You shall not neede therefore about this further to trouble your selfe I nothing doubt of the truth of what you say But one thing by the way when the sicke man is come to this point that hee is resolued that for his sinnes hee is visited what by him is to bee performed that so to death hee may the better bee prepared R. Many things moe than one Q. How many R. Foure and all concerning his sinnes Q. What be they R. These which heere follow First he must make a new examination of his life and conuersation according as the Israelites did when in their affliction they said Lam. 3.40 Let vs search and try our wayes and turne againe vnto the Lord. Secondly he must make a new confession vnto God of his new and particular sinnes Iam. 5.16 as God sendes new corrections and chasticements so did Dauid when he had the hand of God very heauie vpon him for his sinnes Psal 32.5 so as his very bones and moysture consumed within him and therupon obteyned he his pardon and was healed Thirdly he must make new prayer and more earnest than euer before with sighes and groanes of the spirit for pardon of the same sinnes and for reconciliation with God in Christ thus did king Dauid in his sickenes For he made certaine psalmes either when he was sicke or else after he had been sicke As namely the sixt the two and thirtie the thirtie eight the thirtie nine all which are psalmes of repentance psalmes wherein vpon distresse of body and mind he renued his faith and repentance bewayling his sinnes and intreating the Lord for pardon of them Thus also did Hezekiah in his sickenes Esa 38. For when he lay sicke as he thought and as the Prophet told him vpon his Deathbed he wept as for some other causes so also for his sinnes and withall he prayed vnto God to cast them behinde his backe Thus also in his sickenes should he doe that is sicke for as Iames asked the question is any man afflicted so if there be Iam. 5.13 he aunswereth shewing him his dutie let him pray and in prayer what shall he aske but the free pardon and full remission of all his sinnes therefore saith Dauid wherefore Psal 32.6 for the remission of his sinnes shall euery one that is godly make his prayer vnto thee in a time when thou mayest be found that is in the time of tribulation For the Lord is nigh vnto those that are of a broken heart and a troubled spirit Yea the Lord is with them that are in tribulation and makes all their bed in their sickenes In that forme of prayer which Christ hath deliuered vnto vs one of the maynest petitions is forgiue vs our trespasses as though the heart of our prayers should be the forgiuenes of our sinnes For that petition is placed euen in the hearte of that our prayer to signifie what petition should euerly vpon our hearts As therefore he that is sicke must pray in seeking to be reconciled vnto God so in praying he must aske the pardon and forgiuenes of his sinnes For in the remission of his sins consisteth the saluation of his soule Psal 32 1. Blessed is he saith Dauid whose wickednes is forgiuen and whose sinne is couered Blessed is the man vnto whome the Lord imputeth not iniquitie And thus much for the third thing the sicke man must performe touching his sinnes Now for the fourth in the fourth place he must by all meanes auoyde all those sinnes which incense his God to wrath Psal 34.14 Esa 1.16.17 and torment himselfe with griefe For when Christ had cured him that had been diseased eighte and thirty yeares this was his saying vnto him Behold thou art made whole sinne no more least a worse thing happen vnto thee Ioh. 5.14 The same saying must the sicke take as spoken to himselfe To the sicke it was spoken when he was healed by the sicke it must be practised ere euer he will be healed If man will not care to eschew sinne the cause of sickenes there is no reason that God should care to remoue sickenes the fruite of sinne As commonly the effect followes if the cause be giuen so most what the effect ceases not till the cause be gone This is a matter so well knowne as it needes not much proofe If you of your selfe will not yeelde me it I will labour further to confirme it Q. You shall not neede to prooue it I willingly yeelde it R. Neither will I then It is good sparing of time and labour Q. Yea in things needeles as is this Psal 34.12.14 For as Dauid saith He that desireth life and loueth long dayes for to see good must eschew euill and doe good seeke peace and follow after it But you shall spare neuer the more of either for that For if you haue done with the sicke mans duety that concerneth God I will desire you to passe to that his duty which concerneth himselfe and therein to spend some time and labour R. I shall be contented with that if you haue done touching the other Q. I haue done but that one thing comes now to my minde which I thinke meet to demaunde of you ere wholly for this I dismisse you R. What is that Q. Whether the sicke doing as you say shall come to be reconciled to God as you wished R. Yes feare you not For that point the scriptures are plentifull Q. Produce some part of their store R. What may be profitable to you shall not be displeasing to me For this matter therefore thus they goe Ezek. 18. Act. 16.31 1. Cor. 11.11 Iosh 1.19 Mat. 7.7 Ezek. 18.30 Eph. 5.14 Ezek. 33.5.18.27 Ioh. 6.35.3.15.16.37 Esa 28.19 Returne and liue Beleeue and be saued Iudge your selues and ye shall not be Iudged Giue glory to the Lord and make confession vnto him Aske and it shall be giuen Seeke and ye shall finde knocke and it shall be opened vnto you Departe from your wicked waies and iniquitie shal not be your destruction Awake thou that sleepest stand vp from the dead and Christ shall giue thee life He that receiueth warning shall saue his life When the wicked turneth away from his wickednes which he hath committed and doth that which is lawfull and right he shall saue his soule aliue He that beleeueth in Christ he shall neuer hunger nor thirst nor perish but haue eternall life Whosoeuer beleeueth in him shall not be ashamed Act. 10.43 1. Cor. 11.31 To him giue all the Prophets witnes that through his name all that beleeue in him shall receiue remission of sinnes If we would iudge our selues we should not be iudged Let euery man prooue his owne worke and then shall he haue reioycing in himselfe onely
to sleepe hee that dyes knowes not when he beginnes to dye Man knowes not his end He that sleepes rests from al the care and labour he had while he waked he that dyes resteth from all the care and trouble he had while he liued Apoc. 14.13 He that sleeps liues while he sleepes Mat. 22.32 he that dyes when he is dead For the soule is immortall And God is not the God of the dead but of the liuing Yet when Abraham and Isaac and Iacob were dead God said I am the God of Abraham and the God of Isaac Exod. 3 6. and the God of Iacob He that sleepes dreames either of things pleasant or things pestilent he that dyes and is dead Luk. 16.22.23 enioyes either things ioyfull as the ioyes of heauen or things painefull as the paines of hell he that sleepes Iob. 19.25 sleepes in hope to awake againe he that dies dies in hope to rise againe And therefore the Iewes call the churchyarde the house of the liuing because they which there sleepe shall thence in the last daies rise He that sleepes is stronger when he awakes than before he that dies is better when he rises againe than euer he was before He rises in incorruption he rises in power 1. Cor. 15.42 43. Mat. 19.26 1. Cor. 15.25 He that sleepes may easily be waked he that dies may easily be raised The trumpet shal blow and the dead shall be raised vp incorruptible To come to some point now what should a man feare either the laying downe of a burthen or the taking vp of a sleepe being weary hee desires both the one and the other Being wearied with the cares and crosses of this life what should he then feare death no man feares to be cast into a sleepe neither should a sicke man feare much to die As Seneca saith Senec. in prouer Epist It is a foolish thing to be delighted with sleepe and yet to abhor death when as a continuall sleepe is the imitation of death againe Through the feare of death we make vnto our selues an vnquiet life and so great is the madnes of men that some are driuen to die by the feare of death We are to be strengthened least we too well loue our life too much hate our death And we must be perswaded when reason thereto perswades to ende our life but not to feare death A valiant and couragious man ought not to flie but to goe out of his life For himselfe and of himselfe he saith otherwhere It repenteth me not to haue liued because I haue not so liued Senec. lib. de senectyte that I should thinke my selfe borne in vaine And so depart I out of this life as if I departed out of an Inne not as if I departed out of an house for nature hath giuen vs an Inne to stay in but not an house to dwell in Thus by his example he shewed what he himselfe did and by his reason what others after his example should doe if either his example be worth the following or his reason worthie the beleeuing for his reasons sake and after his example he that is sicke and therefore not farre from death should neither immoderatly feare death nor negligently expect death How fearefull soeuer death is if it be looked vpon in the glasse of the law yet is it not so being looked on in the glasse of the Gospell In the one it hath a sting and that a sharpe one in the other it wants a sting and therefore it is no wondrous fearefull one Saith Gregory What is this mortall life but away and consider my brethren what a thing is it in the way to be wearied and to nill that the way should be ended He that trauailes desires to be at his iourneies ende what should he that liues be afraide to die death is the ende of his ●ourney Euery thing reioyces in the ende What should the sicke man feare death death vnder the Gospell to him that beleeues ●s The passage to life not to destruction For be which beleeueth in Christ dieth not Ioh. 5.24 death hath no power ouer him but he passeth from death to life The death of those that beleeue hath another Epitheton than hath the death of those that beleeue not Pretious in the sight of the Lord saith Dauid is the death of his Saints Psal 116.15 Sap. 3.19 Bern. in quadam ep●●co but horrible saith Salomon is the end of the wicked generation Pretious is the death of the Saints pretious truely as the end of their labours as the finishing of their victorie as the gate of life and the entrance to perfect securitie And againe in the same place saith he The death of the righteous is good for the rest that followes it better for the newenes of that rest best of all for the securitie that is in that rest that both followes it and is new For as the same Bernard otherwhere saith Bern. ser 25. paru serm Three things there are which makes the death of the Saints pretious 1. Rest from labour 2. Ioy of the newenes of that rest 3. Securitie of the eternitie of the same rest But on the contrary part the death of the wicked is most vile It is euill truely in the loosing of the world for without griefe they cannot be seuered from that which they loue it is worse in the seuering of the flesh For their soules are puld from their bodies by wicked spirits it is worst of all in the double suffering of the wormes and the fire For the worme euer stingeth and the fire alwaies burneth neither euer cease to torment Much what to the like effect doth Chrysostome write of the death of the one and the other Although they die at home Chrysost hom 66. in Genes de morte peccator both wife and children being present familiars and acquaintance standing by if yet they want vertue their death is but euill So although he be in a strange countrey though he lies vpon the pauement and what say I though he be in a straunge countrey although he falles into the hands of theeues although he be deuoured of beasts yet if he be indued with vertue his death shall be pretious As Anselmus writeth Anselm It hurts not those which are good whether they be murthered or taken away by sodaine death For they neuer die sodeinly which euer thought they were to die Whether therefore they be slaine with the sword or torne in peeces of beastes or burned with fire or drowned by water or hanged on a tree or haue their legges broken or die by some other misfortune yet euer is the death of his Saints pretious in the sight of the Lord according as it is At what time soeuer the righteous dieth his righteousnes shall not be taken from him And so death hurteth not but profiteth much If therefore he that is sicke or any other doth beleeue he needes not ouermuch to
thou wilt not direct thy will after Gods will but wilt bend Gods will to thy will that is right but thou crookest it thy wil is to be corrected by that but that is not to be buckled to thine and thou shalt haue an vpright heart Without the conforming of mans will to Gods will mans will is but a peruerse will Q. That 's sure but what may moue him to reforme that which is peruerse and to conforme it to that from which it is auerse R. The first and last meditations I haue yet spoken of Q. I pray God that all you are to speake off may effect what you and I do affect R. So pray I also there is no fault in them if they do not they are all as fruitfull as faithfull so they be faithfull that are to vse them Q. Manifest both in all as you haue done in one R. So will I in time Q Out of time you cannot doe it R. That 's so because nothing is done which is not done in time but yet there is a difference of time there is a due time and an vndue time Q. And this is now a due time for the second to succeed the first and each one to followe another R. You say well if you thinke your selfe satisfied for the first Q. I did amisse else to mooue you to the second for I am vnwilling to remaine vnsatisfied in any thing whereof I may be satisfied by you Being therfore satisfied touching the first what say you to the truth of the second hath it a promise of blessing annexed vnto it R. Hath it If I haue said it you need not to make any doubt of it I woulde not say what I cannot iustifie neither often vse I to doe it but to put you out of all doubt touching that whereof you seeme to bee in doubt consider what is written in the Reuelation of the Euangelist Iohn and then I thinke not but soone you will cause to doubt Q. Why what is it that is there writtten R. Apoc. 14.13 That Blessed are they which dye in the Lord for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them Q. And doth it thereupon followe that Death ioyned with and following after a reformed life hath the promise of blessednes annexed vnto it R. What else for first there is none die in the Lord but they which haue liued in the Lord for liuing sometime in the Lord must goe before dying any time in the Lord for as Augustine saith He hardly dies wel which alwaies liued ill Secōdly they which so dy are said to be blessed blessed are they which dy in the Lord. Thirdly that blessing then beginneth when as this life endeth For it is said therefore they are blessed which die in the Lord because they rest from their labours their workes follow them In which words there is both an expressing of the time wherein they are blessed and also of the cause wherefore they are blessed The time is the time of their death for it is said blessed are they which die in the Lord. The cause is their resting from their labour For blessed are they which die in the Lord for they rest from their labours c. In both the Euangelist speakes in the present tense hauing an eie in the last to the preterperfect For first he saith they are blessed he saith not that either they were blessed in the time past or they shall be blessed in the time to come but they are blessed in the time present as though they were in blisse euen in their death Secondly he saith they doe rest he saith not that they haue rested or that they shall rest but that they doe rest as though their death were a rest and not a distresse Thirdly he saith from their labours as though death present were a rest from labours past Q. Though the Euangelist saith so yet it followeth not but that they which dy in the Lord both were blessed and did rest before their death and shall be blessed and rest better after their death R. Neither did I yet say that any such thing will thereupon follow For the most of those that at their death are blessed in their life also were in some sorte blessed and all those that are blessed in their death shall for euer after be blessed after death Eternall life is heere in this life begunne and that sometime long before death and sometime in death but it is neuer finished or perfected till the life to come and after death There is perfection heere is but incoation there life is perfected heere it is but incepted He which heere hath it not at any time there enioyes it not On the contrarie part he which heere is entred into it shall there fully be possessed of it To conclude therfore they which are blessed in their death were also blessed in their life and shall be blessed after death with life lasting euer and enduring world without end Q. This being as you say no meruaile though the meditation of that promise be a shield of succour against deaths terrour For of my selfe I can heere collect that too much death is not to bee feared hauing so sweete a promise of rest thereto annexed R. In so doing you doe what euery christian ought to do For what should he ouer much feare death that hath herein a promise made to him of life what should he ouer much feare that which frees him from labour and brings him to rest who would not leaue an house of clay for a building giuen of God that is an house not made with hands but eternall in the heauens life rest and a building giuen of God are three things which mitigates in any the immoderat dread of death For the loue of these death should rather be loued than loathed wished than shunned craued than feared Q. You say well if euery death had the promise of these things made vnto it R. Neuer if at the matter for there is no good death which hath them not all promised vnto it Q. There is much difference betweene a good death and any death R. I denie not that But I spake not of any death but only of a good death Neither could I for that place of scripture which I produced for proofe of what I propounded saith not that all are blessed which die but that they onely are blessed which die in the Lord. Q. That a man might come to that what should he doe R. Liue well so neere as he can For as the prouerbe is Such as the life is such will the death be And as Augustine saith as you heard ere while He cannot die ill which hath liued well and hardly doth he die well which hath liued ill Q. August de doctrina chr●stiana That should not seeme to be very necessarie First because there are but few that regards it For how euer euery man desires to die well yet not many desire to liue well Balaam
taught him to do what he did R. No other schoolemaster than the spirit of God Q. How know you that R. By the word of God Q. Why. It saith not that the spirit did teach him R. But it implieth it and that 's as good Hicron in Ep. ad Gal. ca. 1. for as Ierome saith The Gospel is not in the words of the scripture but in the sence Q. But whether doth the word imply what you say it implieth R. Where it saith the theefe said vnto Iesus Lord Luk. 23.42 remember me when thou comest into thy kingdome Q. Why say you so R. Because the Apostle Paul teacheth me to say so Q. Where R. In the first of his Epistles to the Corinthians the twelfth Chapter and the third verse Q. What saith he there R. That No man can say 1. Cor. 12.3 that Iesus is the Lord but by the holy Ghost Q. And doe you by this prooue that the spirit of God taught the theefe to doe what hee did R. What else For. 1. in the fore place you see he called Iesus Lord. Luk. 23.42 And he said vnto Iesus Lord c. 2. in the eight to the Romans besides many other places the holy Ghost is called the spirit of God Rom. 8.9 Rom. 8.9 Now ye are not in the flesh but in the spirit because the spirit of God i the holy Ghost dwelleth in you and Rom. 8.14 As many as are led by the Spirit of God Ephes 4 30 they are the Sonnes of God And Ephesians the fourth greeue not the holy spirit of God by whom ye are sealed vnto the day of redēption Q. Well then I yeeld and seeing it is necessarie for him that would once dye wel sometime to liue well I would that all which desire to dye well would regarde much to liue well R. You do well to wish it It is a thing to be wished though it wil neuer be performed for as Seneca saith Seneca Epist 78 As it fares with a play so it fares with life It skilles not how long it be ere it be don but how wel it is done while it is in doing Q Seneca Epist 22. But as the same Seneca saith No man considereth how well he liues but how long he liues R. This their misdemeanour is more to be pittyed thē praised for as Augustine saith No man will either haue or suffer a long supper euill August in serm and what should any wishe a long life and euill If it be a great thing that we liue it is a great good to liue well Id. de doct Chir. It is better to liue well then to vnderstand soone For he which liues well deserues to vnderstand more he which liues ill shall loose euen that which he vnderstands Seneca therefore saith Seneca in Epist A wise man doth euer thinke what kinde of life his life is and not how great or how long his life is Idem in Epist 78. For it is not good to liue but to liue wel It is no great thing to liue all thy seruants and cattell do liue Socrat. insuis ex hortation He liues not in whose minde there is nothing but that he may liue eate and drinke that thou maiest liue wel Thou maiest not liue that thou maiest onely eate and drinke Q. What counsell therefore do ye giue R. The same that ere while I did viz. that he which desireth once to die well hath euer a mind to liue well Q. But it is not inough to haue a minde to liue well vnlesse he also labour to liue well R. That 's so but vnlesse he mindes well to liue well Mat. 12.34 he will neuer labour well to liue wel For as out of the abundance of the heart mouth speaketh so of the abundance of the minde the man himselfe worketh the heart maketh the tongue to speake and the minde causeth the hand to worke Q. All this is true I cannot deny it R. VVhy did you then contend so much about it Q. Because I was desirous euerie way to be resolued R. Are you so now Q. Yea for this matter R. VVhat haue you other that you put in this Q. I hope you are not ignorant of that for as yet you haue spoken but of two of the fower meditations which you said long since were much auaileable against the immoderate feare of Death R. In deede I haue yet spoken of no moe Q. That you may speak aswel of the rest that follow as you haue of those that are gone before leauing that where abouts we haue so long contended we wil proceed to the first of those which are to succeed R. And what will you with that Q. No other then with the former R. There needes not all that for I knowe no doubt touching eyther the truth or the effect thereof Q. What to you is needeles for me is needfull for I yet know no more touching this point nowe comming into hande that that which you long since taught me to know R. If you know that you know all which for our intended purpose you are to knowe for the truth and the effect of it are the things which for our purpose are needfull to bee knowen Q. And those are the thinges I am yet in doubt of R. Without cause if you be For the truth thereof it is this he that dyeth beleeuing in Christ dyeth not out of Christ but in Christ For he which beleeueth in Christ is in Christ he that is in Christ by beleeuing in Christ hath both his bodie and soule really coupled to Christ according to the tenour of the couenant of Grace so that though after Death body and soule be seuered one from another yet neither of them are seuered and disioyned from Christ For the coniunction which is once begunne in this life remaines for euer in the life to come and he that is thus conioyned to Christ what needs he doubt any thing touching the effect of the same coniunction what neede hee immoderately or inordinately feare Death Death cannot hurt him Death is but a passage to life vnto him Ioh. 5.24 He which beleeueth in him that sent me saith Christ hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from Death vnto life and saith Paul Rom. 8.1 there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus Q. I but you know when a man dyes that his soule goes from his bodie and that his body being left of his soule rottes in the earth R. What then yet is he neuer the more to feare Death for that for his coniunction with Christ still holdes though the soule goes from the body and the body rots in the earth yet are they both still in Christ both in the couenant both in the fauour of God and that asmuch as they were before death Q. But they are both seuered one from another so as neither soule with bodie nor body with Soule
hath any communion or fellowshippe R. What then that seperation for a time notwithstanding they shall againe at length be reunited and ioyned togither and then shall they haue full communion one with another world without end Q. I know they shall so in the resurrection at the last day R. Why then obiect you as you do that knowledge is to strengthen you and any that knowes it against the feare of death with that Dauid comforteth himselfe saying Psal 16.9 Mine heart is glad and my tongue reioyceth my flesh also doth rest in hope for thou wilt not leaue my Soule in graue neither wilt thou suffer thine holie one to see corruption With that Paul comforteth himselfe and others himselfe when he said Philip. 1.22 In death and life Christ is to me aduantage Others when hee prooued vnto them the resurrection of the dead with that also should you comfort your selfe and others What vse both Dauid and Paul made of it should others also make For why the thing of it selfe is one vnto all And all that beleeue shall haue much alike benefits thereby but I minde not now to speake of them neither neede I for they pertaine to another life and I now glaunce at them but as they yeeld comfort in this life Q. That comfort you speake of should mooue you more fullie to display them for those things which follow after death may in this life yeelde comfort against Death R. You heard me euen nowe professe so much and I like it well you will so soone thereupon confesse so much Q. I must confesse the truth for therefore I learne R. I am glad thereof for therefore I teach you it Q. If I should not make that vse of it both you should teach it in vaine and I learne it in vaine but that that may not betide I will marke both what you doe teach and what I may learne R. In so doing you shall do well Q. I perswade my selfe so and therefore I will doe as I say so neere as I may but now seeing you haue no mind to speake of some things after this life I would you would speake of something in this life R. So haue I alreadie Q. I deny not that in demaunding this but I now speake of a more speciall thing then those which are past R. It is verie like so but what is that that I may soone satisfie you Q. The last of your 4. meditations which you long since said were verie sufficient to comfort the Soule of man against the immoderate feare of Death R. If that be it we shall do well ynough but what would you that I should say touching it Q. First whether that the Lord hath promised his presence to his seruants as you said or not Secondly whether so much will thereupon follow as you inferred or no R. It seemes you doubt at euerie turne but it is no matter to shew you that I speake no more then I will iustifie I will shewe you both the one and the other Q. I thank you for that not because I doubt of what you say but because I would know your ground for that you say R. For the first therefore thus saith the Lord by his Prophet Dauid Psal 91.15 I will be with him in trouble Isai 43.3 and by his Prophet Esaie When thou passest through the waters I will be with thee and through the flouds that they do not ouerflow thee When thou walkest through the verie fire thou shalt not bee burnt neither shall the flame kindle vpon thee and thus by his Sonne and our Sauiour Christ Iesus Ioh. 14.18 Mat. 28.20 I will not leaue you comfortlesse I will be with you vnto the end of the world And by these is it not manifest that the Lord hath promised his presence to his Seruants in time of neede and necessitie Q. Yes it is so I neither can nor will deny it but the Lord himselfe is inuisible is he not R. Yes for as the Scripture saith No man hath seene God at any time to Moses he himselfe said Thou canst not see my face Exo. 33.20 1. Tim. 1.17 Col. 1.15 Iud. 13.22 for there shal no man see me and liue of him Manach said vnto his wife We shall surelie dye because we haue seene God When they saw as the text saith but an Angell of God Q. By what meanes therefore doth he manifest his presence that so wee may perceiue a performance of his promise R. By meanes many In number three First by moderating and lessening the paines and torments of sickenes and death as the verie words of his promise by Esaie his Prophet doe plainelie import For he saith Isai 43.3 When thou passest through the waters I will bee with thee that the flouds doe not ouerflow thee and when thou walkest through the fire thou shalt not be burnt neither shall the flame kindle vpon thee So that if the flouds do not ouerflow a man when he is in the waters nor the flame kindle vpon him when he is in the fire hee may well thinke the Lord is there present restraining both the waters from swelling and the fire from burning For naturally either of them would do the kind if he did not restraine thē so in the paines of sicknes pangs of death if a man findes his sorrowes nothing so greeuous as the afflictions of his life he may well thinke the Lord present for the paines of the one and the pangs of the other are painefull ynough of themselues and ouermuch yrkesome to many Yet this that I now say many haue true indeed found of many such there is mention made in the Acts Monuments of the Church they which haue the booke may looke into it assuredly they shall finde what I heare say neither shall they loose their time whē they haue so done or repent them of their labour in so doing For my part I must now proceed from this meanes of the Lords manifesting his presence though he be inuisible and not to bee seene visibly to the next Secondly therefore the Lord doth manifest his presence in the paines of sickenes and pangs of death by giuing in inward and vnspeakable comfort of his spirit vnto them that are afflicted with the one and distressed with the other for to many then doth he giue a greater portion of his spirit thē at many other times bypast and foregone In one place of scripture the Apostle Paul speaking of himselfe and his afflictions saith thus As the suffering of Christ abounded in vs so our consolation aboundeth through Christ 2. Cor. 15. And in another place speaking of his owne and his fellowes behauiour in their tribulations hee saith thus Wee reioyce in tribulations knowing that tribulation bringeth forth patience c. Rom. 5.3 Now there must bee some thing that must worke this ioye and comfort For as the same Apostle saith Heb. 12.11 No chastising for the present time seemeth to
lib. 2. de art curatiua c. 1. And though that had been yet would not therefore the vse of phisicke come to bee despised and contemned For when the Samaritane bound vp the woundes of him that lay wounded betweene Hierusalem and Hierico Luk. 10.34 he powred in wine and oyle into his wounds which was a kinde of physicke and was therefore commended And therefore physicke ought not to be condemned For that surely is not to be condemned for which a man in scripture is highly commended For it is a good thing that workes commendation Rom. 13.3 Wilt thou be without feare of the power saith the Apostle doe well then so shalt thou haue praise of the same But the Samaritane as I say was therefore commended For saith the Lawier he was indeede neighbour vnto him that lay wounded Luk. 10.37 and halfe dead by the way side And therefore physicke should not in such sorte as it is be contemned For this the Samaritanes dealing with the wounded man was a right practise of physicke Valles de sacra philos cap. 88. For the wine which he powred serued to clense the wound and to ease the paine within and the oyle which hee vsed serued to supple the flesh and asswage the paine without Q. It seemes then by your speech you greatly mislike of them which in sickenes vtterly refuse and wholly despise all vse of physicke R. I doe so and not vnworthily For how can I like of those that contemne the ordinance of the almightie to the ende that men might recouer their health being sicke the Lord hath put that nature and strength into herbes and spices and roots which they haue and giuen vnto some men the knowledge of the secrets and properties thereof with which they abounde How now can men despise the vse of these things but that they therewith also despise the further enioyall of their health which by these things is to be repayred being by some of their things decayed and this to doe what other thing is it than to be guiltie of their owne blouds in the presence of the Lord Iehouah the mightie Lord of hosts for to neglect the meanes to health what other thing is it but to depriue themselues of life and what is it to depriue themselues of life but to be guiltie of their owne blouds to say in a worde therefore what now touching this poynt I thinke good to say I say whosoeuer in sickenes despiseth phisicke despiseth the lawfull meanes which God offereth of recouerie and so becometh guiltie of his owne bloud in the presence of the Lord. Q. An hard saying R. But a true saying Q. It makes well for the commendation of physicke and the aduancement of physitions R. Yet no more than is requisit For both of many are lesse regarded than they should Q. Both physicke and physicians are much beholding vnto you you pleade their cause well R. I pleade it no otherwise than I might neither are they euer the more beholding to me for this I doe no more than in conscience I am bound to doe If they are beholding to any as the truth is they are they are beholding to the Lord himselfe he it is that hath commaunded the one to be vsed and the other to be honoured The first Syrach 18. 18. Syr. 18. 11. Vse physicke ere euer thou be sicke The second Syrach 38 1. Honour the physician with that honour that is due vnto him because of necessity Q. But is there any reason of either R. Who art thou that askest a reason of Gods doing art thou voyde of reason to aske whether the author of reason doth vse reason in his doings his will is reason enough For he knoweth whereof wee stand in neede and of the first our owne neede is one good reason For Christ himselfe saith The whole haue no neede of the physician Mat. 9.13 but the sicke haue Another is the Lords ordeyning of the physicke For as Syrach saith The Lord hath created medicines of the earth Syr. 38. 4. and he that is wise will not abhorre them A third is the multiplicitie of cures that haue been done by it Exod. 15.25 Was not the water made sweet with woode that men might know the vertue thereof was not Hezekiah his bile healed with a cluster of figges that men might know the operation of them with such things doth the Lorde heale men and take away their paines The varietie of tables wherein were written the cures that were done by it which was found by hypocrites in the temple of Diana at Ephesus can giue witnes to this I say So can also the particular relation of sundrie others who through physicke haue been freed from those miseries with which some long time before they had bin perplexed but my purpose it is not to prosecute these things A fourth reason of that I say is mans necessitie for man cannot well be without physicke for now his head akes now his heart grieues now his liuer heates now his stomach cooles now his splene swelles now his reines grindes now his sight failes him now his hearing goes from him c. But for all these and many moe physicke helpes him with remedy And therefore not without reason hath the Lord commaunded physicke to be vsed To proceede where he had such reason to commaund physicke to be vsed we cannot thinke he wanted reason to commaund the physition to be honoured For for the first is the last so that wheresoeuer the first is to be vsed the second is to be regarded But you say why and wherefore and I aunswer First Syr. 38. 1. 12. Because the Lord hath created him Syrach 38. ver 1. and ver 12. And saith Paul 1. Tim. 4.4 Syr. 38.12 Euery creature of God is good and nothing ought to be refused Secondly because man himselfe hath neede of him And much is that to be esteemed which much is needed Thirdly because the houre may come wherein their enterprises shall haue good successe And that that may doe good at any time is to be despised at no time Fourthly because in the sight of great men he is had in admiration that which great men esteeme meane men should not despise The prouerbe is and with it the truth like prince like people Such as the master of the house is such soone will those of the household be But princes and great men greatly honour the physitian Ptolemeus sonne to Antiochus the first gaue vnto Aristrato cosin to the great Philosopher Aristotle a thousand talents of siluer and a cup of golde in such wise that he wan honour throughout all Asia and riches for his house and all for curing Antiochus his father of a certaine disease of the lights The Romans did erect vnto Antony Musa by birth a Grecian and by profession a physician a picture of Porphyrie in the fielde of Mars and also gaue him priuiledge of citizen of Rome and all because he cured
bodily lust in their olde crooked age couple themselues with yonkers which might right well haue bin their children and vnto whom they might also haue giuen sucke for such marriages are not blessed of God because the one marrieth for bodily lust the other for worldly couetousnes Chuse thee therefore such an husband as will loue thee and not thy goods onely as is equall to thee in condition state and age as also will tender thy children and see them brought vp in the feare of God that this may be pray alwaies vnto God that he wil blesse thee and prosper thee in all things Moreouer oh my sweete and louing wife looke well to the bringing vp of thine and my children bring them vp in instruction and information of the Lorde weed out of their mindes all kindes of vice and wickednes that their bodies may bee made the temples of the holy Ghost haue an eye vnto thy seruants giue them their couenants and suffer them not to be idle So gouerne thy house that there be found in it no vice but vertue no wickednes but godlines no sinne but honestie and christian behauiour Be thou also an example of godly life vnto thy children and seruants so mayest thou be sure to haue obedient children and faithfull seruants yea so also shalt thou be well reported of thy neighbours and beloued both of God and all good men And thus good wife adieu This is there the sicke mans exhortation to his wife and this or the like may the sicke man we speake of vse to his wife Q. This I assure you is a good one the ground of any it doth comprehend but what maner of one may hee vse to his children R. This which hereafter followeth or some other much like it in effect Oh my children God blesse you and send you many yea and those ioyfull and quiet dayes vpon earth Ye see in what case I am sore sicke and very weake abiding the good pleasure of God The end of this my life is come and I am glad of it and most heartily thanke the Lord my God for it let it not dismay you my most deare children that I shall now be taken away from you for albeit that I being your naturall father shall no more serue you nor prouide for you as hitherto I haue done yet doubte ye not but if ye goe forth as ye haue begun to feare God and to serue him he will not leaue you comfortles but in my stead he will be a father vnto you and prouide better for you than euer I was able to doe therefore if ye will haue God a mercifull and gentle Father vnto you behaue you your selues as dutifull and obedient children towards him feare him loue him honour him serue him pray vnto him call vpon his blessed name bee thankfull vnto him for his benefites and in all things seeke to please his godly maiestie Giue your mindes to the reading of the holy Scriptures and whatsoeuer you reade therein practise in your liues and conuersation be not onely hearers of the word but doers also for he that is not a forgetfull hearer but a doer of the worke shall be blessed in his deede Iam. 1.25 Moreouer auoide idlenes and too much childish pastimes let no time of your life passe away without fruite eschew all euill companie and haue nothing to doe with them that be vngodly though their words be sweet for a time their end is suddaine destruction Oh my children many thousands are cast away for that they haue not the feare of God before their eyes neither will be ruled by good counsell Therefore desire alway the fellowship of them that be good and vertuous haue all your trust and confidence in the Lord your God take nothing in hand before you haue craued his helpe by feruent prayer and after that thing done giue God most heartie thankes therefore acknowledging him the onely giuer of all good things The sabboth day and such other fruitfull dayes spend them holilie and godlily giue your selues to prayer to hearing of Sermons and to reading of the worde of God See that ye defile not the name of the Lord your God with vaine and vnlawfull oathes reuerence your elders honour your mother be obedient vnto her pray for her doe for her whatsoeuer lyeth in your power that God may blesse you and giue you long and ioyfull life vpon the earth Be no euill speakers of any man but be courteous and gentle vnto euery man Let no lightnes appeare in you neither in gesture nor countenance be true and faithfull cast away all pride and embrace humilitie auoide superfluous eating and drinking vse temperance in all your doings be not moued to anger against any man but be patient and ready to forgiue all men be mercifull to the poore helpe all men to the vttermost of your powers studie to doe good vnto all and hurt none loue all men euen your very enemies be not ouercome of euill but ouercome euill with goodnes these few lessons if ye obserue ye shall doe well As a most mercifull father God will blesse you continue his fauour toward you multiply his graces vpon you and wonderously prosper you vpon the face of the earth But these if ye neglect and despise the Lord will be angry with you set his face against you neither will he euer leaue till he haue vtterly ouerthrowne you Take heede therefore ô my good children to the commaundements of our God apply your hearts alwaies to obserue them that so it may alwaies goe well with you and the gratious fauour of God euer bee continued towards you Thus desiring the Lord to be with you to blesse and preserue you to his gracious protection I commend you Thus in generall friend mine you see what manner of admonition the sicke man we talke of may giue to the whole company of his children if God hath blessed him with many Q. I doe so and I thanke you for it But may I not in like sorte see what in particular he may say to his eldest sonne the first fruite peraduenture of his bodie assuredly the heire of all his lands R. Yes that you may So then let me For moe haue many than either one alone or none at all R. Thus then may he say vnto him of all the sonnes that God hath giuen me thou art my first borne for thee I thank him for in thee lieth the hope of my posteritie Looke therefore that thou seruest God all the dayes of thy life that thou mayest be the father of many children through the blessing of God If thou dost resemble me as in countenance and lineaments of body so likewise in manners and conditions of life it shall not repent me to haue begot such a sonne neither shall it forethinke thee to haue had such a father Take heede therefore that thou dost not degenerate and grow out of kinde Follow mee in all things as thou hast seene me follow Christ After
Israelites a dying looked vpon the brasen Serpent which was erected by the appointment of God that so they might bee healed from the stinging of fiery Serpents so others a dying must with the eye of a true and liuelie faith looke vpon Christ exalted and crucified on the Crosse that so they may bee saued from their sinnes and the wrath of God due vnto them for the same For the brasen Serpent was a figure of Christ Ioh. 3.14 and Christ as Paul saith is to the godlie both in life and death aduantage Philip. 1.21 In either whosoeuer beleeueth in him shall not perish but haue eternall life Ioh. 3.15 For God so loued the world that he hath giuen his onely begotten Sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life for God sent not his Sonne into the world that he should condemne the world but that the world through him might be saued Q. Is it not inough that in times past the sicke man hath beleeued though in the agonie of death he doth not beleeue R. No marrie First by the Euangelist the Lord saith Be thou faithfull vnto the death Apoc. 2.10 I will giue thee the Crowne of life Secondly by his Sonne hee saith Mat. 10.22 He that endureth to the end hee shal be saued by neither he saith be faithfull a while and it is well but be faithfull to the death and endure to the end arguing by both that it is not inough to beginne well and then giue ouer but that hauing begun they must neuer bee wearie but continue to the end In vaine is good done Greg 1. moral if it be left before the life be ended because he runs in vaine which giues ouer before he comes at the mark There is no ioy of a ship that perisheth in the hauen neither yet of a man that beleeueth not in death Blessed are they saith the Spirit which dye in the Lord Apoc. 14.13 they therefore which would be blessed after their death must labour to die in the Lord at their death now they die in the Lord which are ingraffed in Christ by faith and rest and stay onely on him and reioice to be with him they therefore which wil die in the Lord must till their death continue in faith for the Lord faithes time is this liues time so that faith doth want of her time if she hath not all of this lifes time when this life is once past the time of faith is ouerpast faith exceedes not this life neither should she faile during this life As in the agonie of death the diuel is most busie to bring vnto death so thē should faith most striue to helpe vnto life for thus well it is written The iust man shall liue by his faith Abac. 2.4 1. the iust in this life shall liue after this life by his faith in God and his Christ had and held during the terme of this life for except he beleeues in this life during the time of this life he shall not liue with God after this life by this you may easily tell whether it bee inough yea or no to haue beleeued in God and his Christ before death though he doth not beleeue at all in death Q. I may so but yet I cannot tell how any shall shew that then he doth beleeue R. Neither neede you to seeke that it is inough for you to know how hee that doth beleeue shall shew that he doth beleeue Q. To come to that knowing asketh great cunning for euerie one that saith hee doth beleeue doth not shew indeede that hee doth beleeue R. But euery one that doth indeed beleeue may shew that he doth beleeue Q. I denie not that if he be in health but I aske how he that is sicke and in the agonie of death shall then shew that he doth beleeue R. And that I answere hee may diuerse waies doe first by praying vnto God secondlie by speaking well either of him or of his religion Q. Why but may a man pray when he is a dying R. I thinke not but oft times he may so I am sure Iaakob the Patriarke did so Christ our Sauiour did so also Steuen the Protomartir did Gen. 47.31 when death had seised vpon the body of Iaakob he raised vp himselfe and turning his face towards the beds head he leaned on the toppe of his staffe by reason of his feeblenes and then he praied vnto God and this his praier is counted a fruit of his faith Heb. 11.22 When Christ was in his agonie in the garden he praied Heb. 11.22 Mat. 26.39.27.48 Luk. 23.34.46 Mat. 26.37 and vpon the crosse againe he praied thrice vpon the one and thrice within the other In the garden once he said ô my Father if it bee possible let this cup passe from me neuerthelesse not as I wil but as thou wilt Another time he said O my Father if this cup cannot passe away from me but that I must drinke it thy will be done Againe he praied the third time saying the same words Vpon the crosse the first time he said Mat. 27.46 Eli Eli Lamasabachtani that is my God my God why hast thou forsaken me the second time he said Luk. 23.34 Father forgiue them for they know not what they doe the third time he said Father into thine hands I commend my Spirit When Steuen was a stoning hee called vpon the Lord and that twice once for himselfe and once for his enemies for himselfe he said Act. 7.69 Lord Iesus receiue my spirit for his enimies hee said Lord lay not this sinne to their charge And this his calling vpon the Lord there is attributed to his being full of the holy Ghost by all this I gather that the sicke man beleeuing when he is dying may also pray when he is dying It is well knowne what the good thiefe vpon the crosse did euen when death was seising vpon him and life leauing him and by that as by the former it may bee collected what by a sicke man dying may be practised for his crucifying death might be as hard a death as some sicke mans death if not harder the thiefe then praied Lord remember mee when thou comest into thy kingdome and so also the sicke man may nay ought asmuch as euer he ought for saith God call vpon mee in the time of tribulation and anguish and that 's a time of both and saith Iames Iam. 5.13 Is any man sicke let him pray And then I thinke a man is sicke if euer he be sicke no sicknes or affliction to the agonie of death Q. Alas Alas when sence failes tongue falters and death nippes how would you haue a man to pray R. With heart if not with tongue in affection if not in action for praier stands not in the enuntiation of words but in the affection of hearts when Moses spake neuer a word vnto God God said vnto Moses
euer to bee spoken so long as a word by them can bee spoken Q What if through the extremitie of their paines and the idlenes of their braines such wordes cannot or will not be spoken shal we think them to be euer the more faithles and vngodly R. Truely no God forbid wee should many good men are silent long before their death many againe through the extremitie of their disease speake hardly and badly at their death though therefore their words neither be as they should be nor as wee would wish them to bee yet must we neither iudge of them by their words nor condemne them for their words not iudge least we our selues come to bee iudged for with what measure wee mete vnto others with the like wil others mete vnto vs as therefore wee would not be iudged of others for any infirmitie in our selues so must wee not iudge others for any infirmity espied in them iudgement is Gods and to him we must leaue it as Paul saith We must iudge nothing before the time 1. Cor. 4.5 vntill the Lord come who will lighten things hid in darknes and make the counsels of the harts manifest that euery man may haue the praise of God Not condemne least therefore we chance to bee condemned euill words at the time of death may proceed of other causes then want either of faith or religion the disease may cause much and in euery disease men are not euer alike affected the more violent the disease is whereof a man dies the more vnseemely are his gestures when he dies of violent sicknesses the companions are often fransies and other vnseemely motions As therefore it is follie to attribute that to one thing which is to bee attributed to another so it is to condemne a man for wordes which come not from him but from the disease that doth possesse him Q. When we see any then at the point of death vsing worse wordes than they should or we would what will you that we doe R. Other thinges than either iudge or condemne Q. That 's like in deed because you dislike them but what are those other thinges you speake of R. First perswade him as you may can to vse better for it is written Leuit. 19.17 Thou shalt plainlie rebuke thy neighbour and suffer him not to sinne Secondly pray for him as you ought that the spirit of God may put better words in his mouth For no man can say 1. Cor. 12.3 Luk. 11.13 Iesus is the Lord but by the Spirit and this spirit is obtained by praier Thirdly looke vpon your owne present loue towards him and for that practise the two former last named but absteine from the two other afore mentioned for as the Apostle saith Loue thinketh not euil 1. Cor. 13.5 but loue beleueeth all things hopeth all things endureth all things and therefore it thinketh not that he is altogether faithles that vseth a word fruitles but beleeueth that he is and hopeth that he may be the childe of God a few bad words notwithstanding Rom. 7.20 For sure it is not he that speaketh them but the sinne that dwelleth in him Fourthly and lastly looke vpon the sickmans life bypast and gone and if that hath beene as it ought to be neuer feare euil nor yet suspect amisse For as that auncient and learned father Augustine saith August de ciuitat dei lib. 1. That is not to bee thought an euill death afore which there hath gone a good life for there is nothing which makes an euill death but that which followeth death Now because thats vnknowen to vs Id. lib. 5. de baptismo ca. 27. because that many that seeme to bee without are within many that seeme to be within are without wee must learne to hope the best and leaue to iudge the worst Q. God graunt that so wee may for prone inough we are of our selues to iudge amisse R. That makes not but that we must restraine our selues Q. Neither doe I say otherwise for that cause I wisht as I did R. And nothing amisse for our nature as it is is to be corrected and not to be followed and that which euen now you vsed is a meane to haue that I speake of practised Q. Therefore I vsed it but to let this point goe and to meddle no further with censuring whether men die in faith or out of faith may it please you to say some thing of the next which is their dying in obedience R. I haue said somewhat thereof already Q. That 's little to that I would haue you say R. Why what would you haue mee to say Q. What it is to die in obedience R. That is soone said Q. The sooner the better R. To die in obedience is to bee willing readie and desirous to goe out of this world whensoeuer it shall please God to call and that without murmuring or repenting Q. No marueile though you say a man in his sicknes is to take care for it It is not easy how shall a sicke man compasse it R. By practising the former For to him that beleeueth all things are possible Mark 9.23 and therfore this easie not impossible Q. Possible peraduenture supernaturally but not portable voluntarily R. Yes no doubt for that faith which makes all thinges possible beyonde nature makes all things portable against wil. Q. That may be and I verily thinke is but that a man should be willing readie and desirous to goe out of this world without murmuring grudging or repining whensoeuer wheresoeuer and howsoeuer it shall please God to call him is very hard rare and difficulte R. Not a whit If a man hath faith Ioh. 5.4 but as a graine of mustard seede for this is the victory that ouercommeth the world as Iohn saith Euen your faith What therefore should a beleeuing man be vnwilling to vndergoe what necessarily he must vndergoe Q. No hee should not that I graunt but what may perswade him that hee shall not this I aske R. And that I answere the very last thing I spake of for voluntarilie that is to be suffered which necessarily must be suffered Q. What then R. Therefore death voluntarily is to bee suffered Q. Wherefore that R. Because death necessarily is to be suffered Heb. 9.26 for as the Apostle saith It is appointed of God that all men shall once die Q. But how shall any of them be perswaded willingly to die R. I haue already tolde you by this very necessitie of once dying Q. All men know they shall once die yet no man almost is euer the willinger to die R. The greater is their sinne and the more is their shame by how much the more certainly they know they shall die by so much the more willingly they should die this knowledge should worke that willingnes Q. I deny not but it should I see not that it doth R. Somewhere you may see it though euery where you cannot see it knowledge is
for Christ He hath left him an example 1. Pet. 2.21 that he should follow his steppes It is more for his profit so to doe than he is aware Who would be an enemie to his owne good he cannot cease to sinne except he die why should he be vnwilling to escape so great an euill he shall neuer come to the true life where felicity both ioyfull and eternall is except he die why should he neglect to attaine so great a good he shall neuer haue the fruition of Gods maiestie and the blessed company of heauenly spirits except he die why should he not pray daily to be deliuered from this present euill world vppon condition he might once come to enioy the most glorious presence of the almighty The very heathens which knew not God aright but only dreamed of the immortalitie of the soule as those that look'te for a better life after this though they knew not what that life was or might be both wished death ere it came and died valiantly and ioyfully when it came and shall he being a Christian one which knoweth both God and his word and hath the promise of ioy hope and comfort after this life both abhor death ere it comes and refuse to vndergoe it when it comes oh fie for shame that it should be so If an Ethnicke said thus Cic. lib. 1. quest Tuscul Oh immortall God how is that pleasant and ioyfull iourney to be wished for which being once done and past there remaineth no sorow no care no pensiuenes ô that goodly and pleasaunt daie when it shall be my hap to leaue this filthy and troublesome world and come to their companies that inhabit the heauens Id. de senectute If God would suffer me that I being of this age might become an infant and sucking childe againe I would vtterly refuse it neither would I by any meanes call the race that I haue runne backe againe that I might againe be young For what pleasure and commoditie hath this life yea rather what displeasure incommodity paine trauell and trouble hath it not but let it be graunted that it hath pleasures certes yet hath it either saciety or measure And nature in this world hath giuen vs a place to tarrie in for a while but not to dwell and continue in for euer What should a Christian say to him should death be much better and lesse bitter than to an heathen Of him therefore should death be better accepted than of any heathen But it is a world to see the world the heathen writers in their monuments call death a chaunging for a better life a quiet sleep are-mouing frō mortalitie to immortalitie from trouble to quietnes from the shadow of a life vnto a very perfit and vncounterfet life from sorrow to ioy from euill to good and hauen of rest a solace of the minde and end of all euill and wickednesse and a beginning of all true ioy felicitie and pleasure and therefore they were vnwilling to liue The Christian professours acknowledge all this and more too and yet they are vnwilling to die What must follow heereupon but that they must therfore be their iudges It is said that one once hauing read a little booke of Platoes touching the immortalitie of the soule did therefore make a way himselfe being thereto incensed by too great a loue to eternitie a better life How much more should he that hath read the whole booke of God touching the happie estate of soule and bodie after death be willing well to welcome death when God doth impose and lay the same vpon him 1. In Gods booke of life there are better reasons found to perswade by thereto than in Platoes booke of the immoratlitie of the soules there are any to enforce the making away of a mans owne life 2. God hath more authoritie ouer the soule of man to recommaund it againe to himselfe at his pleasure than man hath ouer his life to deceiue himselfe of it when he will God is the first giuer and therefore should be the first receiuer Man is the sole recaller therefore should be the safe keeper But not longer than the first doner is content he should enioy such a gift All good men haue euer desired to depart with it when God was purposed to recall it And what should not he that is sicke doe the like either his sicknesse hath made him good or it ought to haue made him good For sickenesse is euer sent for good and Gods great mercy it is that he warnes with sickenesse ere euer he strikes with death If it hath made him good why is hee vnwilling to lay downe his life when God doth call for his life if it hath found him good why would he longer detaine it life than he may If it be to make him good why doth he hinder the working of it be he good or hath he a minde to be good it is not his part to be vnwilling to die So farre from being vnwilling to die haue sundrie of the godliest wights that euer were in the world been as earnestly they haue longed wished desired and prayed for death That Princely Prophet Dauid cryeth out and saith Woe is me and sorie am I for it Psal 120.5 that I must yet longer abide in this world like as the hart desireth the water broookes Psalm 42.1 so longeth my soule after God My soule is a thirst for God yea euen for the liuing God when shall I come to appeare before the presence of God Psalm 84 1 And againe O how amiable are thy dwellings thou Lord of hostes my soule hath a desire and longing to enter into the courts of the Lord my heart and my flesh reioyce in the liuing God Blessed are they that dwell in thy house they shall alway bee praysing thee One day in thy courts is better than a thousand I had rather be a doore keeper in the house of my God than to dwell in the tents of vngodlinesse In another Psalme he prayeth after this manner Psal 142 7● Deliuer my soule out of prison that it may come and praise thy name That good olde man Tobit Tobit 3.6 made thus his prayer vnto God and said O Lord deale with me according to thy will and 〈…〉 commaunde my spirit to be receiued in peace For more expedient were it for me to die than to liue How desirous of death the holy Apostle Paul was these his wordes doe manifest Christ is to me life Philip. 1.21 23. and death is to me aduantage And therefore againe he saith I desire to be loosed and to be with Christ What should I speake of that auncient and godly father Simeon whose historie is knowne laid down in the second of Luke how did he desire to die as soone as he had seene Christ in the flesh and know him to be the Sauiour of the world Was not this thereupon his present saying Lord now lettest thou thy
to be a liuing man for so Christ feared it when he sweat water and blood in the garden herevpon said My soule is heauie vnto death Mat. 26.38 Secondly as it is an hurt to the church or common wealth for often by death the church and commonwealth are depriued of those which either were then indeed or might haue been in time a great help stay and comfort to either Q. Otherwise than thus would you not haue him to feare it R. No. Q. And why R. For many causes First because it is vnto him an abolishing of sinne For he that is dead Rom. 6.7 is freed from sinne he then ceaseth to offend God any more as hee hath done Secondly because it is a bettring of his bodies condition for whereas before it was sensible and so perplexed with many miseries it is by death made insensible and therefore freed from all calamities whereas before in life it was both an actiue and passiue instrument for sinne it is then after death neither of both Thirdlie because it is the way for his soule to come to rest life and glorie For they that die in the Lord rest from their labours enioy life and remaine in glory Rest from their labors Apoc. 14.13 Enioy life Mat. 22.32 remaine in glorie Rom. 2.7.10 Dan. 12.3 And they that come to these things must die ere they come at them As one saith There is no other way to come to heauen by but death Q. And what conclude you thereupon R. That which I should viz. that hee which hath faith in Christ should not so feare death as therefore he should be vnwilling to leaue this life Cyprian in serm de mortalitate For as Cyprian saith It is his part to feare death which hath no will to goe to Christ It is his to haue no will to goe to Christ which beleeueth not he shall beginne to raigne with Christ God saith he hath promised to thee departing out of this world immortalitie and eternitie and doest thou doubt this is not to haue known God at al this is with the sinne of incredulitie to offend Christ the maister of all beleeuers this is being set in the Church not to haue faith in the house of faith Let him bee afraide to die who not being borne anew by water and the spirit is mancipated to the fire of hell let him be afraide to die which is not marked with the crosse and passion of Christ let him bee afraide to die which from this death must passe to the second death let him be afraide to die whom the eternall flame shall torment with euerlasting paine so soone as hee departes this world let him be afraide to die vpon whom this by his long stay heere is bestowed that during his abode heere his punishment is deferred but let him neuer bee afraide to die that knowes himselfe to be heere a Pilgrime and stranger that beleeues the resurrection of the bodie and the life euerlasting that loues the Lord with all his heart As the forenamed writer saith What stranger is he that hastens not to returne into his countrey Wee make account that Paradise is our countrey now we haue begun to haue the Patriarkes our Parents Why do we not make hast and runne that wee may both see our countrey and salute our parents A great number of our deare friendes doth there expect vs a mightie traine and troupe of parēts brethren and children now sure of their owne immortalitie and yet carefull for our safety doth wish vs to come vnto their sight and companie what ioy is it in common both to them and to vs What pleasure there without feare of dying and with certaintie of liuing How great and perpetuall felicitie Againe who would be afraide to dye that beleeues the resurrection of the dead For as one saith The most sure trust of christians is the promised resurrection of the dead from aboue And no meruaile when Christ himselfe saith This is the will of him that sent me Ioh. 6.40 that euery man which seeth the Sonne and beleeueth in him should haue euerlasting life and I will raise him vp at the last day And againe I am the resurrection and the life he that beleeueth in me although he were dead yet shall he liue and whosoeuer liueth and beleeueth in me shall neuer dye Lastly who would be afraide to dye that loues God sincerely For it is the propertie of him that loues to adioyne himselfe to the thing he loues and to wish that he might enioy it and to grieue at that which doth hinder his enioying of it It is a token therefore that he loues not God as he should that is either afraide or vnwilling to dye for other way to come to God to heauen to immortalitie than by death there is none he that dyeth not commeth to neither And who if hee might would not come to all Except the wheat corne fall into the ground and dye it bideth alone so except a man fall into the earth and dye he bideth alone Eccl. 4.10 and woe saith Salomon to him that is alone but if the wheate corne die it bringeth forth much fruite so if a faithful man dye he attaineth to much fruite He commeth as I said to God to heauen to immortalitie And who would not if he might come to all these None surely that is wise that is godly that is faithfull and beleeuing for to come to God is to come to the fountaine of liuing waters which who so commeth to shall neuer more thirst to come to heauen is to come to the hauen of euerlasting happines which who so commeth to shall neuer more faint to come to immortalitie is to come to eternall life which who so commeth to shall neuer more dye none therefore that is wise that is godly that is faithful that is beleeuing should be afraide and vnwilling to dye for dye any when he wil that is so qualified death shall not hurt him death shall haue no power ouer him death shal be game not losse vnto him Q. I but whensoeuer he shal dye death will be painefull vnto him R. And what then Let him be neuer the more vnwilling to die for that for why the Apostle saith Act. 14.20 By many tribulations we must enter into the kingdome of God By many and therefore he must be willing to haue the paines of death some we must enter into the kingdome of God and therefore neuer be vnwilling to die for the paines of death for as the same Apostle saith Rom. 8.18 All the afflictions of this life are not worthie of the glorie which shal be shewed vnto vs and therefore the few afflictions in death are vnworthie thereof The paines that are suffered are but temporal but the ioyes which are to bee enioyed are eternall and who wil not be content to suffer a short paine for a long pleasure He is not worthie of any sweete which came away with
this world may easilie be gathered by this his praier which he made to God his father at his way going Father into thine handes I commend my spirit Luk. 23.46 for why should he commend his spirit into his handes except he knew it were then to goe into his hands and thereupon also it may soone and readily be collected where the soules of the righteous after their departure are and shall be for where the head is there the members must be If the head therefore bee with God and so hath been euer since his departure out of this world the members shall also bee after their departure and so shall continue for euer Q. Yea in time peraduenture but not presentlie R. Yes presently without any peraduenture for as Christ said to the thiefe vpon the crosse This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise so Paul said to the Philippians Luk. 23.43 Phillip 1.21 22. Christ is to me both in life and death aduantage desiring to be dissolued and to be with Christ Q. It is true that Christ said as you say to the theefe and that Paul so said vnto the Philippians but what you would will not thereupon presently follow for Christ said to the theefe this day shalt thou be with me in paradise to wit in hope but not in deed for henceforth thou shalt hope to come thither and Paul said to the Philippians I desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ according to his petition but not according to Christes execution for it followeth not because Paul desired to bee with Christ that therefore presentlie after his dissolution he was with Christ R. All followes that I would haue to follow for all that yet you say for these toyish distinctions haue nothing in them because they haue not in scripture any thing for them Where is it there said the theefe according to hope should bee in paradise also where is it there said that Christ did not execute Paules petition when once he came to his finall dissolution hope hath respect to the time that is peraduēture long yet to come Christ speakes to the theefe as it were in the time present to day thou shalt be with me in paradise as heri yesterday is an aduerbe of the time past and cras to morow an aduerbe of time to come so hodie to day as I guesse is an aduerbe of the time present as I take it therefore your distinguishing inter spem rem is but tri●●ing circa spem rem and so nihil omnino ad rem that is nothing at all to the matter for this day th●● shalt bee with mee in Paradise is as much as this assoone as life is gone out of thy bodie whatsoeuer becommeth of thy bodie thy soule shall goe with mee into the kingdome of heauen that so where I thy master am thou my seruant maiest be And whatsoeuer you say touching Pauls desiring to bee dissolued and to bee with Christ yet I am sure Paul himself saith the contrary for Paul saith that when the time of his departing came there was no distance of time betweene his dissolution and his acceptation In his second epistle to Timothie his sonne in the faith when hee was neere his end this was his saying I haue fought the good fight 2. Tim. 4.7.8 and haue finished my course I haue kept the faith from henceforth is laid vp for me the crowne of righteousnes which the Lord the righteous iudge shall giue me at that day not to me onlie but vnto all them also that loue his appearing Q. If this be as you say and seeme to proue what shall become of purgatorie R. Euen what will or else what should for what should become of that which is not Q. Is not say not so for so saying you may haue more tongues on your toppe then you are aware of R. As Pilate said touching the superscription set vpon Christs head Ioh. 19.22 What I haue written that I haue written so say I touching purgatorie what I haue spoken that I haue spoken Otherwise then I haue said will not be said how many tongues soeuer I may haue on my toppe for saying so yet still and euer I must say so for out of this life there is no purgatorie and in this life the true and onelie purgatory by which and in which our sinnes must be cleansed is the sweete pretious and euer vertuous bloud of Christ 1. Ioh. 1.7 For the bloud of Iesus Christ as Iohn saith cleanseth vs from all sinne Q. What then doe you thinke that presentlie after the seperation of soule from bodie by death that the soules of all men goe either to heauen or to hell R. I doe more then thinke it for I constantlie beleeue it Q. What ground haue you for it R. As much as neede to be for any matter of faith Q. What Scriptures R. Yea and Fathers also Q. Faine would I see that R. Soone may you see it if wel you listen to it The petition of old Tobit doth prooue so much Tob. 3.6 for this it was Commaund O Lord that I may be dissolued out of this distresse and goe into the euerlasting place and what may this euerlasting place be but the kingdome of heauen It can no waies be vnderstood of purgatorie for purgatorie is not an euerlasting place as Fisher sometime Bishop of Rochester saith in his booke against Luther Among the old Doctours and Fathers of the Church there was either no talke at all or verie little of purgatorie Tobit 1.3 besides Tobit was a right good man as his historie doth declare and therefore not to goe into purgatorie for by the new deuised doctrine of the purgatorie proctours no such persons are to come there They themselues exempte martirs out of purgatorie Aret. prob part 1. loc de purgat Luc. 16.22 the historie of Lazarus and Diues doth proue so much for this it is It was so that the begger died and was caried by the Angels into Abrahams bosome The rich man also died and was buried and being in hell in torments he lift vp his eies and saw Abraham a farre off and Lazarus in his bosome and what may the inference hereupon be but that which I say this heere upon I am sure is the saying of Iustine Iustin q. 60 to Orthod this is a plain and a manifest doctrine of Lazarus and Diues by which is taught that after the departing of the soule from the bodie men cannot by any meanes or prouisions or by any pollicies bring profit or commoditie to them the sayings of Christ Iohn the third and Iohn the fift doe proue so much for these they are Ioh. 3.18 Hee that beleeueth in him ●hat is Gods owne beloued sonne whom he sent into the world not to condemne the world but to saue it shal not be condemned but he that beleeueth not is condemned alreadie because hee beleeueth not in the name of the