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A72547 Three godly treatises [brace] 1. To comfort the sicke, 2. Against the feare of death, 3. Of the resurrection [brace] / written in French by Mr. I.D. L'Espine, preacher of the word of God in Angers ; and translated into English by S. Veghelman. L'Espine, Jean de, ca. 1506-1597. 1611 (1611) STC 15514.5; ESTC S5293 148,307 355

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is it not a perpetuall rest whereinto he himselfe is entred since the creation of the world When we do pray vnto him that his kingdome come is it not to the end that we should be in peace and rest Finally what doe wee hope for at his handes is it not that Then the rest which God hath promised vs which we demaund of him which we wait for briefe which we doe purpose as the end and conclusion of al that we doe and vndertake is giuen vs by no other meanes but by death Some seeke for it in their goods which they loue supposing there to finde it others in study others in voluptuousnesse and worldly pleasures but all that is but an abuse For it is found but in death which we ought more to loue for this reason then the world doth his pleasure the couetous man his treasure the scholler his bookes or the ambitious his humours by reason that in one houre it putteth into our hands and giues vs the enioying of goods which they cannot finde by great labour all their life time in the aforesaid things Afterwards death causeth that by it we are content satisfied and very happy Happy are those which depart in the faith of our Lord saith S. Iohn Then is this blessednes the soueraigne good whereunto we aspire and which we cannot finde in this world where we are neuer content If we haue goods we desire knowledge if we haue knowledge wee desire honours if we haue honours we desire health if we haue health we desire to be young briefely we alwaies want something which we seeke after and when we cannot get it that is a cause of grudging and discontentment Then shall we be fully satisfied as saith Dauid when by death we are come to the Kingdome of God and his glory hath appeared vnto vs. In it are all things it is the soueraigne good which in it dooth comprehend all other therefore when wee shall haue it our appetite and desire shall rest in it we shall rest there without going any further without demaunding or seeking for any thing else Then shall be accomplished that which IESSVS CHRIST hath promised to all his faithfull who beleeuing in him with an entire faith and such a one as God requires in his word will raise vp in their hearts a spring of water of life springing to life eternall We shall no more feare any thing being no more in danger we shall desire nothing hauing all in our possession we shall hope for nothing for all promises shall bee accomplished wee shall no more aske any thing for we shall haue no more neede God shall bee all in all If wee will be rich we shall then haue him that doth inrich all those that call vppon his holy name If we will be wise we shall haue the heauenly wisedome if we will be mightie we shall haue the Almightie if we desire to be good we shall haue the onely excellent good if we will be faire we shall haue the great Architect and perfect workman of all things If we will be healthfull and liue long we shall haue the eternall All our senses shall be rauished with the greatnesse of the pleasures which they shall haue and feele Our eyes seeing the great sumptuous and magnificent Pallace of our God seeing the perfect soueraign beauty of his bright shining face seeing the Sun of iustice the fountaine of water of life the tree of life the Paradice that is to say the pleasant garden of our God his faire and noble company of Angels of Apostles Patriarches Martyrs and of all the blessed spirits And if the onely sight of Iesus Christ transfigured in the mountaine was of such great power that S. Peter all other thinges forgotten in an instant was thereby transported out of himselfe and desired so to remaine perpetually what may we thinke of the ioy and pleasure that he receiues who seeth IESVS CHRIST glorified and with him his Father his holy Spirit and all the abouesaid assembly Eye hath not seene eare hath not heard heart hath neuer conceiued the good the pleasure the rest and the contentment prepared for those which God hath elected to saluation Our eares shall likewise be rauished hearing the discourses and Sermons of the incomprehensible wisedome of our God Againe the good musicke the sweet and pleasant accords of the Angels and Saints reigning with him which sing without ceasing To the holy holy holy God of battailes be honor and glory for euer and euer Salomon vpon the earth rauished the people and made them astonished at the great wisdome and knowledge that was in him So did IESVS CHRIST also when he preached What can he then now do in heauen where all the great treasures of his diuine eloquence are vnfolded and laid open When Aeschines had repeated to the Rhodians the Oration of Demosthenes for the which he was banished seeing that they maruelled at it What would you haue done said hee if you had heard him pronounce it We also that are so rauished onely with the reading of the holy Scriptures when wee shall heare Iesus Christ pronounce them and with open mouth discourse continually with vs shall we not stand stocke still before him In the like extasie as was S. Paul being rauished into the third heauens shall we not haue our eyes setled with continuall looking vpon our Master and our eares alwaies attentiue to hearken vnto him Plato gaue God thankes for three thinges for that he was a man for that he was a Grecian for that he had bene so happy as to heare Socrates And shall not we giue him thanks for that we are Christians for that we are heauenly and for that by the meanes of death wee hope once to haue facultie to heare the wisedome of God VVe haue said what wee shall see and heare what shall we tast we shall be set at the table of our Lord where we shall haue abundance of all good things It shall be all couered with meates that he hath fattened and reserued a long while since for that banquet we shall there be fed with the bread of Angels we shall be made to drink in brooks of pleasure we shall be glutted and filled with all good things we shall be alwaies at Nuptials and in an instant we shall forget all the delights of the earth hauing tasted those of heauen as did the companions of Vlysses all other meates when they had eaten Lotos so celebrated by Homer It is an other manner of Manna then that of the children Israel for they waxed weary of it and were sorry in the desert that they had lost the quailes and flesh-pots of Egypt But we in heauen at the first taste of the meates which there shall be serued vs shall loose then all the lickorishnesse of this world VVee haue heere eaten of the fruites of the tree of knowledge of good and euill against the command of the Physitian VVhereupon followed the sicknesse of all and
lye hid in him so that at the day of the separation of our soules from our bodies wee may finde it wholly in heauen waiting with assured rest and ioy the happy resurrection of this flesh in the which all corruption infirmity and ignominie being abolished and death being swallowed vp of victory wee shall liue eternally with thee in an incomprehensible happinesse in thee by the which thou shall be glorified Maintaine then thy children O Lord in this faith and hope finishing thy worke in vs vntill they be altogether with thee for to enioy the inheritance and the glory which thine onely Sonne hath by his merit purchased for them Amen Prayer LOrd Iesus Christ Creator and Redeemer of mankind who hast said I am the way the truth and the life I do beseech thee by this vnspeakable charity which thou hast shewed in yeelding thy selfe to death for vs that I may neuer stray any iot from thee who art the way nor that I doubt of thy promises seeing thou art the truth and dost accomplish that which thou promisest Cause that I may onely take pleasure in thee who art the eternall life beyond the which there is nothing to be desired neyther in heauen nor earth Thou hast taught vs the true only way to saluation because we should not abide erring like strayed sheep in the lost waies of this world shewing vs so clearly that nothing can be more that which wee ought to beleeue to do to hope and wherein we ought to yeeld settle our selues It is thou that hast giuen vs to vnderstād how cursed we are in Adam and that there is no way to escape from this perdition in the which we are all plunged but by faith in thee Thou art that faire light which doest appeare to those that walke in the desert of this life who hauing drawen vs out of the darknesse of the spirituall Egypt hast driuen away the darknesse of our vnderstandings and doest enlighten vs to the end we may tend towards the promised inheritance which is the life euerlasting into the which the mistrustfull doe not enter but those that haue assuredly relied vpon thy holy promises O what a goodnesse that thou hast vouchsafed to descend from thy Fathers bosome and from the euerlasting throne to the earth to put on our poore nature of master to become seruant to the end that by thy doctrine thou mightest doe away the darkenesse of our ignorāce to guide our feet into the way of peace to make plaine the way of saluatiō vnto vs a way made vnto vs the which if we follow we cannot stray nor wax weary seeing that thy grace power do accompanie vs therin all the daies of our life Moreouer by thy spirit thou doest strengthen vs in it and double our courage Thy word is bread which nourisheth vs therein thy promise is the staffe which vpholds vs. Thou thy selfe by thy secret and incomprehensible vertue doest beare and maintaine vs in it in an admirable manner to the end that both in faire and foule weather we may walke with all alacrity vnto thee And as in preseruing vs thou hinderest that we do not fall into the snares of Satan the world also seeing thou art the truth thou takest away all doubts scruples mistrusts which may trouble let vs or turne vs during our course thou causest vs to behold the supernall vocation the misery and vanity of the world the frailty of this present life the gate of death the most happy life which is beyond that And as thou art this true life euen in this world thou dost quickē by thy truth vs that are poore wretched and dead in sinne thou doest augment that life by the ministery and efficacie of thy holy Gospell and doest confirme it by the vse of the Sacraments which thou hast established to confirme the faith of those that are thine vntill that our corruption what we haue of mortality in vs being abolished by the resurrection we shall bee and liue euerlastingly with thee both in bodie and soule when thou shalt be all in all Life euerlasting is to know the true God and thee his Sonne which wert sent vnto vs. Now we see thee by faith in a glasse and in obscuritie but one day we shall behold thee face to face and shall be transformed into thy glory and wholly reformed vnto thy image I doe beseech thee mercifull Sauiour to increase my faith that I may be so well grounded in the doctrine of my saluation that nothing may turne mee from it increase in my heart the reuerence which I owe thee that I may neuer turne from thy obedience strengthen mee in such sort that the allurements nor threatnings doe neither intrappe nor astonish mee but that constantly I may cleaue vnto thee who art my life till death Cause that in vertue of thy holy promises and of thy Spirit I may heate my selfe more and more in thy loue and leauing behind mee the things of this world I may tend to that which is firme and perfect Increase thy grace in mee that euery day I may die in my selfe for to be quickened and guided by thy fauour fearing no other but thou God Almighty louing nothing but thee as there is nothing but thee to be loued boasting my selfe in nothing but in thy onely grace and mercy which is the glorie of all thy seruants seeking no other good but thee nor desiring any thing but thee who art the full and entire felicity of all the faithfull Amen An other LOrd Iesus who art alwaies mercifull who doest not sticke to be my Sauiour as well in aduersitie as in prosperity giue me the grace in all humble obedience to yeeld vnto thy will when it shall please thee to mingle bitternes amongst so many sweet things which thou causest me to taste in liuing vnder thy protection Thou art admirable and most good in the time of afflictions In that by such meanes thou doest heale spirituall diseases and in visiting of vs in this world thou disposest vs to meditate of a better life hauing thy selfe shewed vs the example thereof True it is that I find it verie hard to digest but thou hast beene brought to a more strange condition when for to draw me out of hell thou wentest downe into it thy selfe and for to reconcile mee to thy heauenly Father thou hast vndergone his curse by reason of my sinnes I haue so often deserued hell and the fiery torment and thou deliueredst me assuring mee that I haue part in the merits of thy death and thy obedience and that I am one of thy coheires for to reigne one day with thee in thy kingdome and at this present in the middest of so many afflictions to be neuerthelesse set in the heauenly places Hauing part in so many good things why shall I vexe my selfe for a little endurance by the meanes whereof thou wilt awake mee and make me better and draw mee so much
stony nature the spirituall seede were not able to take roote therein nor to fructifie no more then the bodily seede cast vpon a stone for a land vntilled The sicke being then thus resolued of the remission of all their sinnes neede not in any sort to doubt but that they are in the grace and fauour of God and that from thence they may infallibly hope for eternall life For there is nothing that can exclude vs from it but sinne only the which being not imputed vnto vs but being couered and quite blotted out what is it that can hinder or keepe backe God from vs And if by faith as hath been said we remaine conioyned and vnited inseparably with him who is a fountaine of life Ephes 3. and the scope of all good things what can we desire but we shall presently finde it in him Psal 56. What mishap or misery can wee feare being in his fauour If he be with vs who shall be against vs Then are we assured that the good will that hee beares vs shall be continued for euer and that there is no creature in the world that shall be able to turne it from vs as writeth S. Paul to the Romans I am assured that neither Death nor Life nor Angels nor Principallities nor Power nor things present nor things to come nor heigth nor depth nor any other creature shall bee able to separate vs from the loue of God which he beareth vs in Christ Iesus our Lord. And a little before this passage What shall separate vs from the loue of Christ shall it be tribulation or anguish or persecution or hunger or nakednesse or perill or sword All men then that haue beene ingrafted once by faith into the body of Iesus Christ and by consequent adopted of God and receiued into his fauour and into his house as his child neuer departs from thence afterwards But as he is assured of his election by his vocation and iustification which haue followed Rom. 5. also is he of his glorification which is the conclusion and as it were the crowne of his saluation For the gifts and the vocation of God are without repentance which the Apostle writes very plainly to the Romans Rom. 8. Those that he hath predestinate he hath also called and those that he hath called he hath also iustified and those that he hath iustified he hath also glorified And although that there are alwaies many vices and infirmities in vs and that it euen happens sometimes vnto vs to fall very heauily as it happened to Dauid S. Peter S. Paul and almost to all the Saints yea the perfectest that euer were neuer he lesse there is a point vpon the which we should be alwaies grounded and which ought greatly to comfort vs and vphold vs against all the assaults and temptations of Sathan which is that which Saint Iohn saith 1. Iohn 3. Whosoeuer is borne of God doth not sinne meaning to death for the seede of him remaines in him and hee cannot sinne because he is of God which he declares yet better else where 1. Iohn 5. All iniquity faith he is sinne but there is some sinne which is not to death we know that whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not For by that hee giueth sufficiently to vnderstand that faith and the word of God which is in the soule and in the foundation are neuer altogither drawne away and exterminate out of the hearts of the elect and that by that reason they cannot commit that sinne which S. Iohn cals to death For although that faith bee sometimes as it were buried in them hauing not any mouing nor feeling no more then a dead thing neuerthelesse it is not altogither quenched no more then a fire couered in the ashes Simil. although it neither shew his light nor heate nor likewise dead no more then a tree in winter when the sappe being drawne to the roote bringeth forth neither flowers nor leaues nor fruit that shew any life which neuerthelesse is clasped vp within and hidden in the roote There is the reason for the which Dauid speaking of the faithfull man in the 27. Psalme saith Though that he fall Psal 37. yet is he sure Not vtterly to quaile Because the Lord stretcheth out his hand At neede and doth not faile And eeke his seede I will sustaine Psal 89. For euer strong and sure So that his seate shall still remaine While heauen and earth endure If that his sonnes forsake my law And so beginne to swerue And of my iudgments haue none awe Nor will not them obserue Or if they doe not vse aright My statutes to them made And set all my commandements light And will not keepe my trade Then with my rodde will I beginne Their doings to amend And with scourging for their sinne When that they doe offend My mercy yet and my goodnesse I will not take him fro Nor handle him with craftinesse And so my truth forgoe But sure my couenant I will hold With all that I haue spoke No word the which my lips haue told Shall alter or be broke Psal 23. And finally while breath doth last Thy grace shall me defend And in the house of God will I My life for euer spend Psal 30. For why his anger but a space Doth last and slacke againe But in his fauour and his grace Alwaies doth life remaine Though gripes of griefe and pangs full sore Shall lodge with vs all night The Lord to ioy will vs restore Before the day be light Psal 65. The man is blest whom thou doest chuse Within thy courts to dwell Thy house and temple he shall vse With pleasures that excell Psal 119. Of thy goodnesse still shewd to me Thou wilt not Lord I frustrate be All these passages and others like out of the Scripture must be alleaged to the sicke to strengthen their faith on euery side and to furnish and arme it strongly against the inflamed darts and arrowes of the Diuell to the end that on which side soeuer hee may shoote them hee may not finde any place bare where hee may reach or wound him For wee must not doubt but then hee will vse all his forces and all his sleights for to shake our faith and to ouercome vs. But the meanes to defend our selues is to keepe our selues alwaies in our fortresse and neuer to depart from the promises of God whatsoeuer hee can alleadge to the contrary Let vs propound vnto him that which I say saith that Israel is saued by the Lord with an eternall saluation Isay 45. and that we shall not be confounded nor ashamed from this time forth for euermore And elsewhere Isay 51. The heauens shall vanish away like smoake and the earth shall bee worne out like a garment and the inhabitants thereof shall likewise bee abolished But my saluation shall be for euer and my iustice shall neuer faile And to the end that the demonstrations which
to clense vs from all iniquity And Dauid Psal 32. I did therefore confesse my faults And all my sinnes discouer Then thou O Lord didst me forgiue And all my sinnes passeouer After the confession and acknowledgement of our sinnes we must goe to Iesus Christ the iust who is our aduocate towards the father and the attonement for our sins and relie wholy vpon him touching the handling of our cause For hauing put it into his hands we are assured to get it And that when we shall appeare at the iudgement seate of God wee shall not be condemned what accusation or crime soeuer be alledged or produced against vs by our aduersaries He saith he that beleeueth and trusteth in mee Iohn 3. commeth not into iudgement And elswhere to comfort his disciples hee exhorts them to looke for the day of iudgement when they see it come neere to lift vp their heads on high Luc. 21. and to reioyce because their full and perfect redemption is reserued to that day And St. Paul confirmes it in the Epistle to the Romanes with a maruellous ornament and magnificence of words Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen Rom. 8. It is God that iustifieth who is he that condemneth It is Christ which died yea rather which is raised againe which is also on the right hand of God and maketh intercession for vs wherupon we must conclude that which he saith in the beginning of the chapter That then there is now no condemnation for those that are in Iesus Christ that is to say that walke not according to the flesh but according to the spirit and that as Iesus Christ their head cannot be saued but with them that are his members also cannot they be damned but he must bee also with them by reason of the inseparable vnion that is betweene the head and the members Moreouer seeing that Iesus Christ dying for vs hath suffered the paine curse that was due vnto vs by our sins by consequence satisfied to the iustice of God we must not feare that hee should againe demaund of vs the payment of these debts that are already acquitted For it should be against all order of iustice not onely diuine but also humane to demaund to be paid one onely debt twise Hauing then remitted both our selues and all our causes into the hands of our Sauiour and Aduocate Iesus Christ let vs neuer feare to sink vnder the iudgement of God where the Sonne is alwaies before the face of his Father making intercession for vs Rom. 8. Heb. 9. and bearing vs vpon his shoulders and in his bosome as in times past the high Priest bare the names of the twelue tribes of Israel to present them vnto God as often as they entred into the Sanctuary with a plate of gold vpon his forehead wherein was ingraued these words The holy one of the Lord To the end as saith Moses to render them agreeable before the Lord. Which was a figure of the which Iesus Christ our great High Priest and euerlasting Priest according to the order of Melchisedecke did exhibite and represent the truth vpon the Crosse when offering himselfe to God a sacrifice for vs he sanctified vs and made vs agreeable to God for euer We must not then feare that being in the grace and fauor of God as we are and hauing an aduocate towards him in whom hee taketh all his pleasure hee can of will euer condemne vs when wee shall appeare before him in iudgement and likewise being cloathed with these goodly long roabes whereof is spoken in th● Reuelation the which because they are dyed and cleansed in the bloud of the Lambe shall beare our iustification with them After the sicke hath beene so assured against the feare which hee may haue of his sinnes of death of the diuell and iudgement of God if you see that he is in any sort sory to leaue the world and that the honours riches pleasures ease rest and the loue that he may yet beare to weake and corruptible things doe hold him as it were pestered and doe hinder his will from departing and going willingly whither God doth call him Then you must first shew him in generall that the world is altogether laid and soaked in wickednesse 1 Ioh. 5. 1. Ioh. 2. that it passeth away with all the lustes thereof that it knoweth not God that we are no more of the world that God hath taken vs out of it to the end we be not wrapped vp with it in one and the fame condemnation that wee cannot loue the world but we must be enemies to God that the diuell is the Prince of the world and by consequent that wee cannot loue the word nor all the things of the world but we must be subiects and slaues to the Prince of darknesse that we cannot be faithfull nor members of Iesus Christ but the world must be crucified to vs Gal. 5. and wee to the world that by the example of the Apostle we ought no more to esteeme the world with all the glory and excesse thereof then doung or a withered flower that being heere as passengers and strangers we outght not there to settle our dwelling as in a permanent Citie and lodging but to lodge as in an Inne and to be alwaies readie to packe and be gone betimes that we may rid way vntill such time we attaine to the place where we pretend to soiourne for euer that is to say in heauen whither we should bee alreadie wholly transported in heart in thought in desire and in all our affection and there to haue all our conuersation as saith the Apostle Phil. 3. For being risen againe with IESVS CHRIST and vnited with him inseparably although that in bodie wee are kept off and separated yet ought wee to be conioyned and present with him in our mindes and in our soules and wholy to forget the world and the earth that wee may no more thinke vpon nor seeke after any thing but onely those that are from aboue Should not our heart bee where our treasure is and where is our treasure but in heauen where IESVS CHRIST is in glorie who hath all our life hidden in him Col. 3. and all the treasures not onely of the science and wisedome of God but also of all the giftes graces honours riches and blessings which God his Father hath communicated vnto him to impart vnto his Church heere beneath through hope and there aboue by possession when our soules going out of the filthie stinking and obscure prisons of our bodies shall like vnto that of poore Lazarus bee by the Angels conueied into Abrahams bosome there to rest and to reioyce for euer as it is written The children of thy seruants Lord Psal 102. Continually endure And in thy sight their happy seede For euer shall stand sure Although then that it bee so that wee doe nothing but languish in the world like poore men
sudden and vnexpected comming of our spouse but readie to receiue him when he shall come and to enter into his rest with him But because the loue of this life and the sweetnesse and delights of this world doe often full vs asleepe and turne from vs the remembrance of these things to awake vs we cannot doe better then to frequent the sicke folkes houses and hospitals not onely there to behold on euery side the Images and examples of the corruption and mortality of our poore nature to the end to humble our selues and to containe our selues modestly But also to exercise our charity towards those that languish and are affected in comforting them The which then to do we must first shew them that all sicknesse commeth from God and he sendeth it sometimes to chastise and to bridle vs sometimes to proue and exercise our vertue giuing vs by that meanes matter and argument to shew the affiance and trust that we haue in him to require his mercie by prayers and sighings to acknowledge and confesse our faults and offences with griefe displeasure and to bring the sicke to this point to cause him to make a true and humble confession of his sinne Secondly we must propound vnto him that it is the spring and principall cause of sicknesses as well corporall as spirituall and for to heale them they must take away the causes which ingendred them that is to say our sinnes whereof we cannot be otherwise deliuered but by the remission and pardon that God giueth vs of them by his grace prouided as saith St. Iohn that we confesse them vnto him 1. Iohn 1. and be assured that Iesus Christ is our aduocate and mediator towards him by the means of his iustice wherwith he couereth and blots them out in such sort that they come not in iudgement And because that the loue which we beare naturally doth blind vs and is cause that we neuer thinke our selues so vicious and imperfect as we are we must to take away this vaile from before the eyes of the sicke lay before him the law of God as a looking glasse wherein hee may behold his whole life and to giue him to vnderstand how by that not onely our actions but also our whole nature is condemned And for proofe and confirmation thereof alledge generally vnto him that we are all conceiued in sinne and borne the children of wrath that we are but flesh and all vanity that we are sold vnder sinne that in vs there is no goodnesse that euen all our iustice is but olde ragges and for conclusion that we are nothing at all but dust and putrifaction After that we must make vnto him a briefe discourse vpon all the commandements of God and shew vnto him by little and little that whensoeuer he shall examine himselfe he shall finde that there is not one of them but he hath very often transgressed and beginning at the first table put him in mind 1 That he hath not done his duty in seeking after God endeuoring to know him That he hath not loued him with all his heart with all his strength and with all his vnderstanding That he hath not alwaies put his whole trust in him That he hath often doubted of his promises and hath mistrusted his helpe That hee hath rather relied vpon the armes of the flesh and humane meanes which he had then vpon the succour and helpe of God That hee hath not waited for all his prosperity and aduancement from his onely fauour and blessing That he hath not alwaies called vpon him in his affairs with assurance certaine hope to be vnderstood and to obtaine That he hath not alwaies feared and reuerenced him as did appertaine to his high and soueraigne Maiestie That hee hath not alwaies giuen him thankes and blessed his name for all things and at all times as well in aduersitie as in prosperitie 2 Afterwards that thinking vpon God he hath presented him vnto himselfe sometimes vnder a humane and corporall figure That he hath not apprehended him like vnto a Spirit being immense infinite inuisible immortall impassible vnchangeable soueraigne in might goodnesse mercy iustice and verity like vnto a protector of all vertue and perfection and a spring of all life and light fountaine of all fulnesse and good the scope of beatitude and felicity beginning and end of all things who is and by his onely word causeth all creatures to subsist That he hath not serued and worshipped him in spirit and truth as he requireth and commandeth vs in his law That he hath bene more curious of ceremonies and exterior demonstrations of pietie then of piety it selfe and to make the shew of a Christian then to be one indeed And finally that he hath not alwaies thought that the true and legitimate seruice of God consisteth onely in the obedience of his holy will 3 That speaking of God it hath not bene with such respect and reuerence of his Maiestie as did appertaine that he hath not studied to sanctifie celebrate and glorifie his name as he ought That by his wicked life and conuersation he hath bene cause that he hath bene blasphemed by the ignorant and infidels That he hath not heard reade and meditated the word of God with such desire feare and zeale as was required to doe honour vnto the Lord who spake and in whose name it was denounced vnto him That he hath not alwaies spoken of the workes of God nor in them acknowledged the greatnesse of his power wisedome and goodnesse with such praise admiration and astonishment as they deserue by their amplitude and magnificence That being at the Lords table at all times when the communion hath bene celebrated in the Church it hath not bene with such humility and deuotion nor such contēplation of the mystery there set before him nor such eleuation of his heart vpwards where Iesus Christ is set at the right hand of God his father as he ought to haue done 4 That in the daies appointed to abstaine and rest from prophane and bodily worke to the end wholy to be applied to the sanctification onely of the name of God hee hath not altogether giuen himselfe to the meditation and exercises of spiritual things thinking vpon nor seeking after nothing but onely those that are aboue That he hath often bene more curious of his temporall affaires then to seeke the kingdome of God and his iustice preferring by that meanes this transitorie and corruptible life before the happy and euerlasting life and the care of his bodie before that which he should haue had of his soule and the seruice of the world and of his flesh before the seruice of God which hee ought to haue honoured aboue all things That for small and light occasions he hath dispenced with himselfe not being at the place of conuocations and Ecclesiasticall assemblies there to make a publike confession and protestation of his faith to shew his deuotion and the feare that he hath
the seruice and force of the diuell what do we feare being then children of God and consequently brothers of Iesus Christ Is it possible that he can euer denie or abandon his flesh and blood or suffer them to die hauing power to saue them Conclusion Being the children of God our Father hee loueth vs with a loue vnfained and fatherly And if as saith S. Paul during the time that we were his enemies hee had such a care ouer vs that not sparing his onely begotten Sonne he hath deliuered him ouer to death to preserue vs from it and to reconcile vs vnto himselfe now that wee are his friends and in his fauour will he not saue vs Who is that man who considering these reasons will not presently assure himselfe and doe away all feare which he had of death That which also ought to assure vs against death take away all feare which we haue of her and the dishonour of the tribulation of the horror and anguish prepared for the reprobate and damned is our calling that God of his grace hath vouchsafed to withdraw vs out of the darkenesse wherein we were and to illumine vs by his holy spirite teaching vs by his holy word wherein we ought to trust and wherein lieth our saluation and so what we ought to doe to please and obey him to the end that walking in his law and seruing him in all iustice and holinesse we might after we haue a little suffered in this world be faithfully glorified with him in the end for that which God beginneth he will accomplish and when he hath determined to call any one to him and to saue him hee neuer changeth his counsell neyther doth repent himselfe of the good that he will doe vnto him He is vnchangeable and so stedfast in his purpose and determination that that which he once willes and ordaines he doth execute without being turned from it If then we feele in our selues that God hath giuen vs the grace to heare to beleeue and to loue his word and to flye from and reiect all that which is contrary to it and to haue an affection to obserue that which he commandeth vs and a dislike if haply by infirmity or otherwise we chance to commit any thing against his law let vs not doubt but we are regenerate elected and predestinated to eternall life and consequently out of danger of death Let vs then take away all feare and let vs say with Saint Paul What shall separate vs from the loue and charity of God what shall make vs to thinke that he hath not a will to saue vs It shall not bee paine affliction hunger persecution nor any aduersity nor death nor any creature whatsoeuer shall make vs to doubt that hee doth not loue vs in the fauour of Iesus Christ and that hauing chosen called and iustified vs in him but that finally he will also glorifie vs by him The Sacraments which IESVS CHRIST hath left vs for the confirmation of our faith ought likewise to assure and strengthen vs against the feare of death First Baptisme by the which wee are buried and die with Christ that wee may rise againe with him in the which wee are washed from all our sinnes and clothed with his innocency to the end that presenting our selues to the Father so adorned and couered with the robe of our elder brother we may receiue his holy blessing and be saued from the great deluge wherein all the infidels perish as Noe was in his time by the Arke Hauing then the promises of God as we haue said before and ouer and aboue his signe by the which he is bound to render that life to vs which we haue lost by our sin wherfore doe we feare death doe we thinke that he wil reuoke or that he wil denie and disauow his signe Secondly the Lords Supper where wee take the bread and the wine for to be receiued into the Communion and participation of the body and blood of our Lord Iesus Christ and by consequent into the fruits of them that is to haue part in his obedience in his iustice in his satisfaction and redemption in the Testament and new alliance and generally in all the promises of God the which by his death haue beene ratified It remaineth now to conclude our purpose and to inferre vpon the precedent things that if we feare death it is for want of considering them or if wee doe consider them it is for want of beleeuing them for there is no man so timorous being firmely perswaded of that which is spoken but will take away all feare of death and will say with Dauid I shall not die but alwaies liue to declare perpetually the workes of the Lord and praise him And who will not scorne at it with S. Paul and insult vpon it saying O death where is thy victory where is thy sting where is thy strength where is the terrour and feare which men had of thee Iesus Christ our Sauiour perceiuing the time of his death draw neare said that in short time hee should passe from this world to goe to his Father calling death a passage which should greatly comfort vs. We haue almost all this opinion rooted in vs and it is that which doth so discourage vs that it is a dangerous passage vneasie Now for to take it from vs and to stirre vp our hearts he would needes passe it before vs and as it were sound the depth to the end that we seeing that he did not sticke at it should take courage as also we see before and after him the Prophets Apostles Martyrs and other holy personages haue done it who hauing passed it without any apprehension of danger and being escaped safe and well doe now reioyce with God that they are gotten to the land and to the port where they did aspire Shall we then be such cowards shall we be so faint-hearted and of such render and effeminate courage as to feare to goe by a place so frequent and a way so great and beaten that men go it as said some of the Auncients blindfolded Likewise we see that not one alone of those that trusted in God calling vpon his ayde that put themselues to passe it did euer miscarry when the children of Israell did feare at the passage of the redde Sea Moyses did shew vnto them that if they would trust in God they should see his glory and power which they did see passing safely through the middest of the danger whereas their enemies did remaine so shall all the faithfull through the straights of death prouided that they commend themselues to God and doe onely set their trust vpon him They being in the desarts although they were bitten by the Serpents yet were they preserued from the danger in looking vpon him that Moyses had caused to be erected although also that the cursed and enuious serpent hath tainted vs with his venome yet shall we not die if by faith we looke vpon Iesus
crowned with glory the other with perpetuall infamy For to teach vs the Resurrection it compares death to a sleepe Dan. 12. as hath beene already sayd to the end we may be certaine that as the bodies after they haue laboured shall rest by sleepe that they being awaked may with so much more alacrity returne to worke so when wee shall haue made an end of this present life our bodies shall be brought to the tombe as in a bed of rest for to rise againe from thence at the latter day and be put into their place Iob prophecying of the resurrection the which he did firmly beleeue saies Iob. 14. 19. I know that my Redeemer liueth and that he wil stand vp at the latter day vpon the earth although after my skin this body shall be deuoured by wormes yet with my flesh shall I see God I shall behold him my eyes shall looke vpō him and none other for me although my reines are consumed within me Dauid foretels the resurrection of Christ Psal 16. by whom we shall rise againe Ion. 2. Mat. 12. the which was figured by this that Ionas was three daies and three nights in the whales belly as Iesus Christ himselfe declares it The Prophet Esay in the 26. chap. speaking of the elect Isa 16. saith vnto the Lord with faith Thy dead shall liue rise again with my body Awake reioice ye habitants of the dust for thy dew is as the dew of the fields the earth shall cast forth the dead The Lord willing to assure his people Israel that deliuering thē from the captiuitie of Babylon he would bring them backe into the land which he had giuen them he said vnto them in a vision by the Prophet that as certaine as the dead shall rise so certainly will he deliuer them from the captiuitie of the Babylonians Eze. 37. for to set them in peace in their owne land Daniel saith that those that sleepe in the dust shal wake some to eternall life and others vnto perpetuall shame and infamy and those which haue bene wise Dan. 12. shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and those which doe perswade many to righteousnesse shall bee as starres for euer and euer Iesus Christ shewes the Saduces that the dead shall rise againe Mat. 22. because that God is their God Iohn 6. In St. Iohn he saith that the will of his father who sent him is that he shall lose nothing of all that he hath giuen him but that he shall raise it vp at the latter day The Apostle declares that Christ is risen againe for our iustification Then he saith that euen as we die in Adam so we shall rise againe and shall be quickened in Christ Rom. 4.5.6 1. Cor. 15. For seeing that he who is the life when he was put into the Tombe thereby made many to rise againe Iohn 19. Psal 36. Matth. 27. Thess 4. by much more reason now being risen againe and glorified will he raise vs againe In like manner he declares that hee that raised vp the Lord Iesus will raise vs againe by Iesus and will cause vs to come into his presence And euen so as God is eternall so he will cause that the bodies of his children which are his temples 1. Cor. 3.6 14. 2. Cor. 6. Iohn 5. shall be eternall Briefe the Scripture is full of testimonies of the resurrection wherefore to end I will bring in one which ought to serue in steed of all St. Iohn saith that the howre shall come wherein all those that are in the graues shall heare the voyce of the Sonne of man and those that haue done well come forth in resurrection of life but those which shall haue done euil shall come forth in resurrection of condemnation All humane wisedome which is folly before God cannot perswade themselues Mat. 24. 25. 1. Cor. 15. Phil. 7. 2. Cor. 5. Act. 2. 4. 1. Thess 1.4.8 1. Pet. 1. 1. Cor. 1. that the bodies which are returned into dust can rise againe nor those which haue bene burned whereof the ashes haue bene dispersed by the winds nor those which haue beene deuoured by birds and by beasts and digested and reduced to doung nor those which haue perished in the waters which haue bene made foode for fishes But the Lord by that which he had done before plainly sheweth that hereafter it shall be very easie for him to do what he will with our bodies for seeing he hath made all things of nothing can he not make that to returne to life Gen. 1. Psal 33. Gen 1. which hath already bene And as he made man first of the earth can hee not as well make him to rise againe from it In the beginning the earth was so obediēt vnto him Gen. 1. that when he commanded it to bring forth the bud of the hearbs that seedeth seed the fructifying tree and the liuing creature beasts wormes c. it of it selfe by and by brings forth that which before had neuer bene how much more easily by the commandement of God may it restore many which haue already bene shall be returned into it Iohn 11. We see that although that Lazarus of Bethania had already bene three daies in the earth neuerthelesse when the Lord commanded him to come out of the earth presently it was done He himselfe also rose again from the earth the third day for to assure vs that he will raise vs againe Mat. 28. Apoc. 1. for as death could not ouercome Iesus Christ but that he is risen so shall it not be able to hinder his members from rising againe Rom. 14. Gal. 1. 1. Thess 1. 4. because that he hath as much power ouer the dead as ouer the liuing If God hath raised the head it followeth that he will also raise his body which we are if we beleeue When we consider that he did hinder the so hot burning furnace from doing any hurt to any one of Sidracke Misake and Abednego Eph. 4. Dan. 3. we shall not finde it an impossible thing to God to make them rise againe which haue bene buried that they may bee reunited vnto their soules And he that shut the Lyons Iawes because they should doe no harme to Daniel Dan. 6. shall be able to raise those againe which haue beene deuoured And as he commanded the fish to cast vp Ionas Ion. 2. also can he easily cause that the sea shall obey him when he shall commaund it to cast vp his dead In briefe the faithfull cannot doubt of his resurrection knowing that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present Rom. 8. nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature can separate him frō the loue which God beareth him in IESVS CHRIST our Lord. Reue. 20. For also the sea must cast vp those dead
for euer and of his people promising also neuer to change but to continue in his alliance for euer without euer departing out of his seruice nor to make any other reckoning after but only to honour him and to celebrate and sanctifie his name Although that such assemblies of the Church militant whereof hath beene seene some pictures in these latter times and should yet be seene if Antichrist and his adherents did not hinder it be the goodliest excellentest and most to bee wished for thing that can bee seene vpon the earth as saith the Prophet O God thy house I loue most deare Psal 26. To me it doth excell I haue delight and would be neare Whereas thy grace doth dwell Item else where Psal 42. Like as the heart doth breathe and bray The well-spring to obtaine So doth my soule desire alway With thee Lord to remaine My soule doth thirst and would draw neare The liuing God of might Oh when shall I come and appeare In presence of his sight Psal 92. It is a thing both good and meete To praise the highest Lord And to thy name ô thou most high To sing with one accord To shew the kindnesse of the Lord Betime eare it be light And eke declare his truth abroade When it doth draw to night All these passages and many other sufficiently shew in what estimation hee had the holy assemblies which he preferred before all other pleasure And to say true all men that know and feele in themselues what the loue the goodnesse gentlenesse mercy clemency benignity wisdome faithfulnes patience verity power greatnesse maiesty iustice liberality and other soueraigne and infinite vertues of God is they can neuer sufficiently content themselues with thinking on them with preaching and celebrating them with worshipping and admi●ing them and summoning not only the Angels all the hosts of heauen but also all the elements all the plants euen the vnreasonable creatures to magnifie his name to reioyce infinitly when they heare him exalted and glorified Although that neuerthelesse the praises that men liuing yet in the world sing vnto God cānot be so holy nor so well framed but there will be much more to be desired for being alwaies vnperfect as we are to what degree of faith or charity soeuer we haue attained besides hauing a flesh the which fights incessantly against the spirit and holds it backe and hinders it when it would lift it selfe vp to God it is impossible that we should heare the word of God with such zeale attention as might be required nor likewise that wee should make our confessions prayers and thansgiuings with such humility as we ought So it is yet that when we heare the singing of Psalmes spirituall Hymnes Canticles and Songs to eccho sound in the middest of the assembly out of the mouthes of the faithfull although they be infirme weake poore and miserable sinners we doe not let to be rauished transported out of our selues with the great ioy that we feele in our harts what may we then think of the pleasure which we hope to receiue in heauen when that our soules separated from our bodies being then mounted shall heare that sweet musicke and harmony of Angels and other happy Spirits singing with one accord the praises of God with such a melodious sound that the contentment and ioy which they shall conceiue thereby shall make them in an instant to forget not only all displeasure but also all other pleasure Like as a Tubbe of water is no more seene so soone as it is cast into the Sea nor the brightnesse of the Starres when the Sunne beginnes to shine and to cast his beames vpon the earth Moreouer when we die in the faith of our Lord we are euen at the same instant most happy that is to say that then we haue no more desires but such as are holy and which at the selfe same houre of our death are fully glutted and satisfied Which is not a small felicity that wee hauing no more flesh to contrary the spirit nor rebellious appetites to reason nor law in our members disagreeing to the law of God but that all tumults and troubles ceasing in our hearts we may haue a soule altogither spirituall calme peaceable liuing wholly to God and which may be so fastened and vnited vnto him that neither by temptations nor any occasion it can be distracted neither from his loue and seruice nor from the beholding of his face Is there any thing more pleasant to behold then a well gouerned city where all the citizens and inhabitants are of one minde and streightly bound togither by a true and firme amity that giue no way to contentions annoyances debates quarrels partialities diuisions tumults and seditions but hold togither and liue all in an amiable concord Is there likewise any thing more to be wished for then to see a house well ordered where the Father and Mother of a family with the children and seruants walke altogither in the feare and obedience of God contayne themselues within their bounds without exceeding nor yet forsaking the rule and measure which God hath giuen in his law St. Paul in many places of the Scripture propounds vnto vs the sweete harmony which is betweene all the members of mans body Rom. 12. 1. Cor. 12. and the mutuall communication which is betweene them of their faculties and powers without being enuious of the dignity the one of the other or that the other contemnes his fellow for his basenesse being desirous by this comparison to teach the Church the fraternity and iust proportion which ought to bee in the members thereof for the good and conseruation of euery one in particular and of all the body in generall which is the goodliest thing and most agreeable that is to be seene if it might bee seene amongst men It is also a very pleasant thing to heare a good lute well tuned when it is touched by a skilfull player But yet there is nothing more pleasant then a soule well tuned in all her faculties when the vnderstanding thinkes no more vpon any thing but God and our will loueth desireth nor aspires after any thing but him and finally our memory hath no other remembrance but of him as it happeneth vnto it when hauing forsaken the body it is receiued in Paradise For then it is all filled with God 1. Cor. 15. who is in her all things afterwards as saith the Apostle that is to say all her thoughts all her loue and desires all her delights all her remembrance Briefe all her good her part her wishing and contentment is in God Seeing then that by death wee attayne to a good which wee cannot finde in this world in what state soeuer wee are and what commodities soeuer wee haue for there is no King nor Prince nor Plowman nor Merchant nor Aduocate who liuing in this world doth not often complayne and who hath not great occasions to complayne many
things happening to all of them contrary to their liking desire and hope are not wee then much beholding to death when in a moment it maketh vs to enioy the soueraigne good which consisteth in the perfect rest of our mindes and in the satisfaction of all our desires the which indeede vaine men in vaine seeke for in the transitory thinges of this world There is yet an other point which ought to make vs to embrace death willingly when our houre is come which is that it putteth vs in possession of all the good thinges which Iesus Christ hath purchased for vs. For whiles we liue in this world we are saued as saith S. Paul but by hope only But when by death wee depart out of it then we shall enioy the euerlasting life and that so great good which the eye the eare the vnderstanding and the heart of man cannot conceiue nor apprehend the greatnesse of it It was a great pleasure to the children of Israel when after so long and hard a bondage in the which they had bin detained in Aegypt after so many crosses and euill encounters which they had had in the deserts of Arabia the space of forty yeares they saw that they were arriued at the riuer of Iordan and that they wanting nothing but the passage therof to enter into the possession of the land which God had promised to their Fathers and which they had so long looked for A yong man also that hath beene a long time vnder the keeping and protection of a rigorous and inhumane protector that hath vsed him hardly and hath suffered him to endure very much without administring those things that were necessary vnto him hath not he great matter of reioycing seeing the time approch in the which hee is to be emancipate and to goe out of his keeping to bee at liberty and to enioy his goods and pleasure and that without any more controulement The yong children of good house that are with a King or in the house of a Prince and great Lord vnder the hand and conduct of a seuere and sharpe Rider or Tutor who nourisheth and entertaineth them vnder a good and rigorous discipline are so glad when they are discharged of being Page and that they goe out of the feare and bondage in the which they haue beene long and stricktly detayned The young Maidens likewise that haue beene very shortly curbed in their Father and Mothers house during the time of their child-hood and youth leape for ioy when there is speech of marrying them and reioyce yet more when they are affianced but the scope of their pleasure is when they are espoused and giuen into the hands of a husband that loues them and is agreeable vnto them for by this meanes they are wholly satisfied We also that here below by the preaching of the Gospell of Iesus Christ and the faith which we haue added to his promises haue as it were affianced or betrothed him what occasion shall we haue to reioyce when our soules departing from their bodies shall flie vp into heauen to marry him and to celebrate the nuptiall feast with an alacrity and contentment that shall neuer end nor be interrupted nor troubled neither by death nor by sicknesse nor by any other accidents that may euer happen vnto vs It shall be then that our spouse comming to meete vs shall say that which is written in the booke of Canticles Come hither my loue enter into the closet of thy friend that thou and I may peaceably and without feare enioy our loues Thy winter is passed and so are likewise the Raine the Snow the Haile the Cold and Frost and all this sharpe and cruell season which thou hast beene faine to endure till now with much paine but the spring wherein thou doest now enter shall last thee for euer and likewise all the pleasures that accompany it Enter then my loue into the ioy and rest of thy Lord then shall it bee that the saying of the Prophet shall bee accomplished Psal 126. Full true it is That they which sow in teares in deede A time will come When they shall reape in mirth and ioy They went and wept In bearing of their precious seede For that their foes Full oftentimes did them annoy But their returne With ioy they shall sure see Their sheaues home bring And not impaired bee And that being out of custody and wardship and taken from vnder the hands and discipline of our Tutors wee shall bee set in full liberty and possession of the heritage which God our good Father hath promised and destinated vnto vs when hee adopted vs for his children that is to say of eternall life and of the Kingdome of heauen which is a good that here may well bee hoped for but for to speake of it or thinke it it is impossible what tongue or eloquence soeuer should bee imployed therein for the greatnesse of it passeth all humane capacity Now hauing fortified the sicke against the feare that hee may haue of death hee must also bee assured against the feare of the Diuell who holds the Empire of death Hebr. 2. For it is then as at a last assault that hee vseth all his indeauours and that hee prepares all his engins against vs to assay to carry vs away but being in the safe keeping of our Pastor who is vigilant and watchfull to keepe vs and stronger to defend vs then can be the Wolfe and the Lyon to assault vs wee ought not to feare for who can snatch vs out of his hands Iohn 10. seeing that hee and his father who is greater then all are but one in essence in power glory and maiesty VVee then are assured that as there is no subtlety that can surprise or beguile his wisedome that also there is no force sufficient to combate and resist his power Let vs then keepe our selues vnder the shaddow of his wings and assure our selues that he will keepe vs well and surely and will hinder that the Diuels nor other creatures shall be able to hurt nor offend vs as saith the Prophet Psal 91. He that within the secret place Of God most high doth dwell In shaddow of the mightiest grace At rest shall keepe him well Thou art my hope and my strong hold I to the Lord will say My God is he in him will I My whole affiance stay And after hee hath spoken of some euils from the which he doth assure the faithfull that they cannot come neare them at last he comes to the Diuels ancient and mortall enimies to mankinde and speaketh of them in this manner Vpon the Lyon thou shalt goe The Adder fell and long And treade vpon the Lyon yong With Dragons stout and strong For he that trusteth vnto me I will dispatch him quite And him defend because that he Doth know my name aright Where we see the victory which he promiseth vs ouer the Diuels And the example of the Apostles Luk. 9. vnto
that liue in exile with barbarous and inhumane people ought not we to bee glad when God calles vs to establish vs in our countrie or with our brethren that is to say the Patriarches Prophets Apostles Martyrs and all the happie spirits that we may together enioy in peace the glory honour rest and all that great and perfect felicity which he hath promised and prepared in his Kingdome for all his elect It is maruell that men and euen the faithfull that are instructed not onely by the word of God but also by so many experiences which they see euery day that all the brightnesse and glory of the world are but vanities and illusions and dreames that passe doe neuerthelesse suffer themselues to be so bewitched by flatteries and wantonnesse that at last they become altogether sencelesse beastes like the companions of Vlysses by the charmes and enchantments of Circes For must not their iudgement be much corrupted and altogether peruerted to grieue at their departure out of this world to go vp into heauen and to preferre changeable vncertaine transitorie and corruptible things which cause infinite paines to follow purchase them and as many cares to keepe them and yet more sorrow and griefe when they are lost before the goods which God promiseth in his Kingdome which are certaine vnchangeable incorruptible euerlasting and assured and which can bring nothing to those that enioy them but a true entire and perfect contentment Wherein as did our first parents for an Apple we forsake a Paradise not earthly but heauenly that is to say all the delightes and greatest pleasures that can be imagined for a messe of pottage wee sell our birth-right aod goods appertayning thereunto as did Esau we make more account of the garlike and onions of Egypt then the holy Land with all the plentie and blessings thereof Briefe wee had rather as did the prodigall child liue amongst hogs vpon chaffe and wash then bee nourished and sustayned in our fathers house with the breade of Angels and finally that after the example of Lots wife we mourne for the losse of the infamous pleasures of our Sodome with the which we had rather perish then by forsaking them to be saued the which bewayling we may say with the Prophet O folke vnwise and people rude Psal 94. Some knowledge now discerne Ye fooles among the multitude At length beginne to learne For what maketh you so much to esteeme the world and that which is therein but a damnable desire the which blindes vs in such sort that it maketh vs oft times to take the light for darknesse and to the contrary darknesse for light the bitter for the sweete and the sweete for the bitter To the end then that we be not deceiued in our iudgements wee must ground them not vpon the outward appearance nor vpon the common errour of men which being sensuall doe not approoue nor reiect the thinges that are present before them but according as they are pleasant or contrarie to their sence and appetite But wee must iudge all thinges as saith the Apostle by the word of God which is an infallible rule to discerne the true from the false And not in our iudgements to follow our reason or carnall prudence which is enemie to GOD and iustifieth ordinarily that which hee condemnes and to the contrarie condemnes that which hee iustifieth Now let vs then see what the word of God teacheth vs touching the world and the thinges that are of the world Loue not the world saith Saint Iohn nor the thinges that are of the world for if any man loue the world the charitie of the Father is not in him for that which is in the world to wit the desires of the flesh the desires of the eyes and the ouerweaning of life is not of God but of the world There is then that which the holy Apostle teacheth vs of the world that wee must not loue it if wee will that God loue vs. And Salomon when hee speakes of it sayeth that after hee had long and diligently considered all the state of this world the varietie and inconstancie of mens mindes the diuersitie of studies whereunto they apply themselues the mutabilitie and sodaine changing of their counsels the little iudgement that they haue to praise or reuile to extoll or disprayse to loue or hate to pursue or disdayne the things which are set before them hee hath obserued not onely by reason but also by experience that the desires of most men are but folly and vanitie the which they worship being induced thereunto by their appetites the which because they are blind and doe not suffer themselues to be led by any good reason are easily transported euery where where their pleasure and the diuell driues them whereof commeth that some pursue ambitiously the honors and greatnesse of the world that for to attayne thereunto they violate all rights and lawes forget all piety and humanity mingle and confound all things cherish and fauour the wicked with whom they league themselues hate and reiect the good and vertuous make warre against the countrey wherein they were borne nourished and brought vp take the liberty from it if they can by a cruell tyrannie which they vse therein bring it to a miserable bondage as did Iulius Caesar and before and after him many others doth not that euidently shew that there is nothing truer then that which Iesus Christ said of such ambitious men to wit that that which is great and much esteemed of men Luk. 16. is for the most part abhominable before God And how should they be agreeable seeing the most part beleeue neither in him not in Iesus Christ as it is written in St. Iohn Iohn 5. How can you beleeue seeing you receiue glory the one of the other and seek not after the glory which cōmeth from God alone And elsewhere the Pharisees chiefe men of Ierusalem condemning themselues said Iohn 9. Is there any one of al the Princes that haue beleeued in him to wit Iesus Christ Mat. 11. And in St. Mathew O Father Lord of heauen and earth I giue thee thanks that thou hast hidden these things from the wise and vnderstanding hast reuealed them to the little ones We ought not then to grieue to forsake the honors and greatnesse of this world which ordinarily maketh vs to forget God and our selues and which turne vs from the study and exercise of vertue which induce vs to seeke our owne glory rather then Gods which maketh vs to disdaine our neighbours and to forget that wee are but dust and ashes and which finally brings vs to worship the Diuell and make vs insensible as saith the Prophet Thus man to honor God hath cald Psal 49. Yet doth he not consider But like brute beast so doth he liue Which turne to dust and powder And a little before where hee yet speakes more expresly of the foolish purposes and imaginations of the
an appetite and in glutting vs they leaue vs hungrie they quench our thirst and yet wee are alwaies drie insomuch that in contenting and satisfying our appetites they leaue vs a desire to remaine alwaies in that estate which maketh that wee are neuer wearie They are then the true pleasures which wee ought alwaies to desire and seeke after and not the worldly pleasures that are all itchie and scabbie Simil. For as those that are scabbie take pleasure and feele some ease whiles they doe scratch their scabbes the which neuerthelesse lasteth but a little being presently followed with a paine that smarteth afterward Also the voluptuous men haue neuer any pleasure but it is intermingled with a thousand sorrowes Simil. And their pleasure is like vnto that which those feele that are tickled the which hath I cannot tell what kinde of paine and toyle which maketh him to forget and hate it There is yet a griefe that may much torment the sicke and which must be taken away to wit for their wiues and children from the presence and companie of whom they feare to bee separated by death Now the consolation which ought to be giuen them the remedy which ought to be applied thereunto is to alledge vnto them the promises which God maketh to widowes that he takes them into his protection and promiseth to haue a particular care ouer them and to defend maintaine them against those that shall oppresse them and to doe a horrible vengeance for the outrages and iniuries that shall be done vnto them Item it must be alledged vnto them that although they be forsaken of their mortall husband whom they had espoused notwithstanding that there remaineth another immortall for them to wit Iesus Christ who will neuer forsake them no more then all the rest of the faithfull who altogether relie vpon him and that leauing them in the keeping of such an executor they can want nothing you must also shew them that going out of this world it is as if they and their wiues vndertooke a iourney together whither the one goeth first and the other followeth soone after And finally that as in the beginning of their mariage it hath not grieued him to forsake father and mother to cleaue to his wife that now also it should not bee grieuous to him to leaue his wife for to returne to God who ought to be dearer to vs then fathers mothers wiues children or any thing else As for the children you must set before them that faire promise which God made to them and to their children and which hee hath sealed and ratified in the Baptisme of the one and the other to wit that he will be their God and to their seede after them for that ought to assure them that the same fauors that God hath done for them shall be continued to their posteritie as he promiseth expresly in Exodus that he will shew mercy to a thousand generations in those that loue him and feare him and are curious in keeping of his commaundements What then can those children want who being imitators of the faith and godlinesse of their fathers are assured by the promise of God to be alwaies enuironed and couered with his grace goodnesse which grace is the spring head from whence all happinesse and prosperity floweth vpon vs Moses saith that man liueth not by bread onely Deut. 6. but of euery word proceeding from the mouth of God which is not to be referred to the nourishment onely but to all the other commodities of mans life The fathers that shall leaue this word with their childrē ought not to be in care for the nourishment nor the apparrel nor all the entertainment of their children for they are certaine by the word of God that in seeking his kingdome and his iustice hee will accommodate them with all things necessarie for this present life for being their Pastor as he hath bene to their fathers can he euer forget them or leaue the care that he hath of his sheepe Dauid saith speaking of the prouidence of God and exhorting euery one to relie vpon it as he did Psal 23. The Lord is onely my support And hee that doth mee feede How can I then lacke any thing Whereof I stand in neede Item else where where he compareth the condition of the wicked with that of the good he speaketh thus of the good Psal 37. They shall not bee discouraged When some are hard bested When other shall bee hungerbit They shall be clad and fed For whosoeuer wicked is And enemie to the Lord Shall quaile yea melt euen as lambs grease Or smoake that flieth abroad And going on Behold the wicked 〈…〉 much And neuer payeth againe Psal 37. Whereas the iust by liberall gifts Makes many glad and faine For they whom God doth blesse shall haue The land for heritage And they whom hee doth curse likewise Shall perish in his rage And a little after I haue bene yong but now am old Psal 37. Yet did I neue see The iust man left nor yet his seede To beg for misery But giues alwaies most liberally And lends whereas is neede His children and posteritie Receiue of God their meede Let him then that is sicke leaue his childrē in Gods keeping For he cannot giue them a better nor a more faithfull executor and you must not feare prouided that they containe thēselues in his obediēce that they walke in his feare that they goe alwaies before him with a roundnes simplicity of heart that any mishap befal them Now hitherto we haue treated and spoken of the things which are fitting to be propounded to the sick as wel to instruct the as to comfort and exhort them to do their dutie and also the meanes that they must follow to arme themselues against the temptations wherewith they may be assayled in their sicknesses It remaines to make the summe of all these discourses to the end the Reader may comprehend and note briefely all that is therein handled and serue himselfe therewith in the comforting of those that are sicke as hee shall finde to bee expedient for them Eccles 7. Salomon saith that it is better to goe into the house of mourning then into the house of banquetting because that there is the end of all men and the liuing puts that in his heart To teach that the principall studie and exercise whereto man ought to apply himselfe during this life is the meditation of the frailtie misery breuitie inconstancie and vncertainty thereof And to present his end before him it is death which alwaies followeth vs step by step and wee know not the howre nor the day when it must call vs like vnto an husher before our Iudge to giue him an account of all our life It is then good that we haue alwaies our memory present and keeping our selues readie and that holding our lampes burning and lightned in our hands we bee not surprised with the
presently without deferring till the next day 9 That he hath not loued the truth in his wordes and deedes saying and speaking nothing foolishly and slightly nor shewing a grauity and sincerity in all his speeches workes fashions and countenances that might be worthy of a true man in deede That in him there hath beene much hypocrisie colouring and disguising whether it were to exalt and magnifie his vertues or to palliate and excuse his vices with some false pretence That hee hath not beene so couragious nor so constant to confesse and defend the truth against the blasphemers and enimies thereof and to the contrary to combate against errours and lyes as he ought That through enuie and malice hee hath detracted and spoken euill of his neighbours and falsly to accuse their actions which might haue beene excused and by his exceptions vsed meanes to obscure the brightnesse and the glory of their vertues That hee hath taken pleasure to heare flatterers and these that indeauoured to make him beleeue that hee was more vertuous and lesse vicious then his conscience it selfe in secret did witnesse vnto him 10 That in fine to close vp his confession you must shew vnto him that all his nature as also the nature of all men vpon the earth is vicious and that of it selfe it cannot bring forth nothing but bad fruits no more then a bad tree to wit all euill thoughts all disordinate affections all noysome and dishonest speeches and all workes contrary to the will of God leauing and omitting on the other side all that which is conformable and commanded by him Now after hauing shewed him his faults to make him the better to feele them and thereby to conceiue the more displeasure for them they must bee exaggerated vnto him by the circumstances of the person of the place and of the time that hee did them And when you see him humbled and beaten downe with the feeling of them you must raise him againe and comfort him in shewing him the remission of his sinnes and for to assure him thereof intirely You must deduce and discourse particularly the reasons contayned in the Treatise and going on take away the feare that hee may haue of Death of the Diuell and of the Iudgement of God and finally the griefe for the world and those thinges which hee leaueth therein by the hope and desire which ought to bee laid before him of the neare enioying of heauenly and incorruptible goods and that done to kneele downe and pray to GOD for him and all that are in the company in this manner Prayer O GOD and Father of all consolation who hast promised to heare the prayers and graunt the requests of all those that call vpon thee in verity and not to reiect any one that presents and prostrates themselues before thee with a sorrowfull soule and a contrite heart subdued and deiected with the remembrance and feeling of his sinnes wee beseech thee altogither that in the name and for the loue of thy sonne Iesus Christ our only Sauiour and Mediatour thou wouldest please to stretch forth thy mercy ouer all vs that are here assembled in thy name and singularly vpon our brother whom thou hast pleased to visit and afflict with sicknesse and by it to couer forget remit and quite blot out all his faults whereby hee may haue offended thee in all his life And we pray thee to doe him yet this fauour to seale in his heart by thy holy Spirit the remission which thou giuest him of all his sinnes to the end he may feele peace in his conscience and that with ioy and full assurance he may prepare himselfe to appeare before thee when it shall please thee to call him out of this world Assuring himselfe that there is no condemnation neither for him nor for all those that by a true faith are ancred vnited and incorporated into thy sonne IESVS CHRIST That his Sinnes Death the Diuell nor any creature can separate him from thy loue nor cast him out of thy fauor and that thy throne is not a throne of rigour and iustice but a hauen of health a shelter and saueguard for all the faithfull Doe him this good good God to fortifie and strengthen him in the faith of all these things in such sort that hee may couer himselfe with them as with a Target and may by that meanes bee strengthened and made inuincible against all the temptations wherewith hee may bee assailed and that leauing and casting behinde him all other trust he may make no reckoning nor relie vpon any thing else but vpon the onely iustice obedience and sacrifice of thy sonne to assure himselfe against thy iudgement Wee beseech thee moreouer to giue him the grace with all his heart to pardon his neighbours all the faults by the which they may haue offended him To the end that being conioyned and vnited in true charity to all the members of the body of thy Church hee may bee so likewise with the head and with thee Lord. Finally wee beseech thee that it would please thee to giue vs the grace so well to behold in the person and sicknesse of our brother how vncertaine and short the course of our life is that wee may looke about vs betimes and that withdrawing our hearts from the vanities of this world wee may employ that little time that wee haue here to liue to learne thy wisedome that is to say firmely to beleeue and to trust to thy promises quickly to obey to that which thou commandest and carefully to shunne and auoid that which thou forbiddest FINIS COMFORT FOR THOSE THAT ARE SICKE DRAWEN OVT OF THE HOLY SCRIPTVRES TO PREPARE them to die MORE A short Catechisme which is not only to instruct the Sicke but also to refresh his memory with the great mysterie of our Redemption MATTHEW 24. The negligent seruant that makes not himselfe ready shall bee surprised and hewen in peeces and haue his portion with the Hypocrites there shall bee weeping and gnashing of teeth Death is the end and beginning of life PRINTED 1611. Ecclesiasticus 18. Take physicke before sicknesse and examine thy selfe before iudgment and thou shalt finde pardon in the presence of God Reuelation 3. If thou doest not watch I will come vnto thee as a theefe and thou shalt not know at what houre I will come vnto thee Reuelation 16. Happy is hee that watcheth and keepeth his garments to the end that hee walke not naked and that his shame bee not seene Matthew 24. Luke 12. Bee ready for the sonne of man will come in an houre that you thinke not To the faithfull Reader Health FRiendly Reader take in good part this present comfort the which I haue here written for the good and profit of euery one that hath the feare of God to make vse of it at his neede when it shall please the Lord to call him But be aduertised that thou maist vse it well that these three letters B.S.N. the first signifieth
Gen. 1. hee did not make you to destroy you for he is the Sauiour of all men 1. Tim. 2. and desires not the death of a sinner but that hee turne and liue Wherefore I pronounce vnto you in the name of God Mat. 9. Marc. 2. that by his great goodnesse and mercy hee hath giuen you a pardon and full remission of all your sinnes Luc. 5. Titus 3. through the onely merite of his sonne IESVS CHRIST our Lord in the shedding of his most precious bloud Tim. 1. Act. 4. Reuel 1. 1. Iohn 2. for hee is the propitiation not onely for your sinnes but for the sinnes of the whole world Mat. 17. B. S. N. Iesus Christ saith with his owne mouth that all things are possible to him that beleeueth Beleeue then without doubting at all Rom. 1. Phil. 2. 1. Pet. 1. that Iesus Christ putting on our flesh made himselfe perfect man whereby hee died for you hauing borne all your sinnes in his bodie to abolish and blot them out Present vnto God the precious death of his Sonne Iesus Christ and by the merite of that death and passion aske him forgiuenesse and mercie saying from the bottome of your heart in all humilitie and repentance LOrd God Almightie be mercifull to mee poore miserable sinner for the loue of thy Sonne IESVS CHRIST my Lord and Sauiour Rom. 3. Iohn 14. and through the merite of his death and passion that it may please thee to receiue my soule Mat. 26. the which I recommend into thy hands B. S. N. Put your firme confidence in God for seeing hee is with you Rom. 8. no man will bee against you Iesus Christ who is the imaculate Lambe hath ouercome all for you Isa 61. Heb. 7.8.9 hee hath offered himselfe once for you and by that onely oblation hath quite done away all your sinnes he hath done away your folly vnrighteousnesse abhomination and obligation with this good Lord IESVS CHRIST God the Father hath giuen you all things B. S. N. Strengthen your selfe in IESVS CHRIST Rom. 8. who calleth and inuiteth you by his Prophets Apostles and Euangelists to addresse your selfe directly vnto him saying All that are thirstie Isa 55. Mat. 11. come to the great fountaine Isa 55. Mat. 11. Come to me all yee that are heauy laden and I will refresh you B. S. N. Beleeue stedfastly that IESVS CHRIST hath discharged you of all your sinnes 1. Iohn 5. and hath reconciled you to God his Father vnto whom in all humility and repentance say from the bottome of your heart Rom. 3. Iohn 14. LOrd God Almighty be mercifull vnto mee poore miserable sinner for the loue of thy Sonne IESVS CHRIST my Lord and Sauiour and by the merit of his death and passion Mat. 26. Psa 30. that it would please thee to receiue my soule the which I commend into thy hands B.S.N. Bee in hope for for a certayne hee will receiue your soule as his owne for the loue of Iesus Christ his Sonne our Lord Marke 16. Deut. 18. Psal 2. Isa 53. Genes 3. 22. Mat. 9. who is the Sauiour and Redeemer of all those that beleeue in him Moyses and all the Prophets haue testified that all people shall receiue saluation and blessing through Iesus Christ The Apostles and Euangelists testifie that Iesus Christ is not come to call the iust Iohn 10. Luke 22. but sinners to repentance and to giue his soule for the redemption of many for hee hath shedde his bloud for the remission of sinnes Beleeue then and doubt not at all for IESVS CHRIST hath made the purgation of all your sinnes Heb. 1. hauing promised that all those that beleeue in him and in his Father that sent him shall haue eternall life Iohn 5. and shall not come to iudgement but shall passe from death to life Got to then B. S. N. Take courage in Iesus Christ for hee hath loued you Isa 53. Reuel 1. and washed you from all your sinnes in his bloud Rom. 5. haue this firme faith to fight valiantly against the aduersarie haue no other buckler to defend you but that precious bloud of Iesus Christ who by vertue of his death and passion hath reconciled you to God his Father vnto whom from the bottome of your heart in all humilitie and repentance present this prayer LOrd God Almighty be mercifull vnto mee poore miserable sinner Rom. 3. Iohn 14. for the loue of thy Sonne Iesus Christ my Lord and Sauiour and by the merit of his death and passion that it may please thee to receiue my soule the which I recommend into thy hands Math. 26. Psal 30. B. S. N. Haue this hope and stedfast saith that this good God full of mercy will receiue your soule as his into his handes for the loue of his Sonne Iesus Christ Iohn 10. Act. 4. for there is no other name vnder Heauen giuen to men whereby wee must be saued and there is no saluation in any other but in IESVS CHRIST Then arme your selfe well with Iesus Christ For hee hath done all for you he hath accomplished the law for you Rom. 8. Rom. 10. he hath ouercome all for you Go to then B. S. N. Reioyce in God be alwaies stedfast in this liuely saith follow and imitate the holy Patriarkes Heb. 11. Prophets and Apostles who are all saued in this faith who do all assure you that the aduersarie cannot in any wise hurt you for your cause is gotten through IESVS CHRIST Iohn 5. 1. Iohn 2. who is your Iudge and your aduocate likewise wherefore say alwaies in this firme faith Although I should walke in the middest of the shadow of death yet would I dread none euill Psal 22. for thou Lord God art with mee B. S. N. Also bee neuer wearie with saying from the bottome of your heart in all humilitie and repentance LORD God Almightie bee mercifull vnto mee poore miserable sinner for the loue of thy Sonne IESVS CHRIST my Lord and Sauiour Rom. 9. Iohn 14. and by the merite of his death and passion may it please thee to receiue my soule Mat. 26. Psalm 36. the which I recommend into thy hands So be it A singular Prayer for a bodie greatly afflicted with sicknesse who is more likely to die then to liue With a little Catechisme made expresly to instruct the sicke and to make him by faith behold the mysterie of our redemption ECCLESIASTICVS 18. Before sicknesse take Phisicke and before iudgement examine thy selfe and in the presence of God thou shalt find propitiation NOw the Lord doth admonish vs to pray continually Mat. 26. principally when wee are touched with his correction Wherefore all such parents and faithfull friends as visite the sicke bodie ought not onely to visite and solicite the bodie Mat. 6. but also seeke after and desire the spirituall Phisicke for their soules Which ought
full of infirmities without vertue without vnderstanding without the vse of reason and speech and without wit and he must be fifteene yeares olde before he is capable to know onely what estate is fittest for him wherin oftentimes he deceiues himselfe chusing that whereunto he is least fit Is he come into his youth he is rash aduenturous foolish passionate voluptuous prodigall drunkard gamester quarrelsome whereby it hapneth oft that in this age hee falleth into great inconueniences and dangers to be imprisoned to be hanged to lose his goods and euen to bring his parents with sorrow to the graue When this great heate by little and little begins to coole and diminish and that hee waxeth a perfite man then he must labour night and day for to entertaine his house nourish his children and prouide for them for time to come he is besieged now with desire and coueteousnesse then with feare lest his children should remaine vnprouided for lest they should behaue themselues ill and lest they should doe some dishonour to their house The age of vertue and perfection declining behold in our sight old age comes creeping on in the which man is sickly vnwieldy cold and forsaken and as among the seasons of the yeare the last is Winter and the most troublesome so amongest all the ages of man is the olde age That which I haue said is not the hundreth part of all the euils whereunto the sicke man is subiect and neuerthelesse that little which wee haue spoken of it is sufficient to shew that in all estates and in all ages it is miserable and as said Menander life and misery are two twinnes for they are borne grow they are nourished and liue alwaies together the which nature teacheth vs in two things First in that the little children comming into the world they alwaies crie as presaging the euill which they are to endure if they liue long Secondly in that coming forth of their mothers belly they are all bathed in bloud and are more like vnto a dead man whose throate had bene lately cut by murtherers then to any thing else Two ancient Philosophers considering these things said the one That God did loue those which hee takes out of this world in their childhood the other That it were good neuer to be borne or else to die presently Surely it is a wonderfull thing and which sheweth well that we haue want of vnderstanding that although life were neuer so vglie and disfig●●ed and that in all her partes there were neither grace nor beauty that could commend it we neuerthelesse should be so in loue with it that we alwaies desire to keepe it and neuer to change But we are much abused for it is more vncertaine then it is miserable for to shew vs the vncertainty of it the Auncients called it a shaddow and a dreame which are the two things in the world the most vaine and least setled in our estate Pythagoras being once demaunded what humane life was spake neuer a word for his custome was to answere and instruct more by signes then by wordes but went into a chamber and came forth againe presently signifying that the life of man is but an entring in and going out And IESVS CHRIST exhorting vs to watch grounds himselfe vpon nothing else but vpon the inconstancie and vncertaintie of this life Watch saith hee for you know not at what houre the Lorde will come And who is that man in how good disposition and happinesse soeuer hee bee that can promise himselfe to continue in it but a day Those in Samaria doubted of nothing when in an instant they were destroyed by the ruines of the Tower of Syloe In the time of the flood they did build and made marriages and banquets when suddenly contrary to the expectation and opinion of all the world the raine fell in cleere weather which raine did ouerflow the whole earth The rich man wherof mention is made in the twelfth of LVKE though hee was very secure who hauing so much wealth that hee knew not where or whord it made acount to giue himselfe to pleasure and to liue after that time at his ease when while hee was standing vpon these termes beholde the Sericant of GOD comes and arrests him to appeare the same day to giue vp an account vnto him of all the precious things and goods which hee had left and which hee had gathered with such great labour But it is labour lost to goe about to prooue a thing so manifest and which we experiment and see daily For in this world there is nothing more ordinary nor more frequent then that which Ouid saith that the life of man and all humane things are hanged and doe hold but by a little threed Let vs behold then seeing on the one side the great euils whereof it is full and on the other side the inconstancy of the good which it hath if we haue great occasion to desire of God that he would prolong it vnto vs or to complaine or discontent our selues at death when it taketh it away from vs Wee haue vnderstood the euils from the which death doth deliuer vs Let vs now come to consider the good which it bringeth vnto vs from thence we shall yet better know that we ought not onely not to feare shune and auoid it but also desire it with all affection For one of the goods only which we enioy by deathes meanes is greater then all those which we can haue in the world liuing in it for euer By it first we rest as saith St. Iohn in his Apocalyps And after that we haue endured and are almost consumed with innumerable troubles and labours dying our spirit goeth into heauen our bodie into the earth as into a bed there for to rest and refresh it selfe The poore artificers are so glad when euening drawes neere and that it is almost night that they may be paid for their labor and goe home to rest themselues or when after they haue laboured the sixe daies in the weeke that Sunday comes when they hope to recreate themselues and recouer the force and vigour as well of their bodies as of their mindes we ought not to be lesse ioyfull when the time of our death draweth neere which wee ought to waight for and desire as a holy day in the which wee hope to rest and by the pleasure which therein we take presently forget all the sorrowes and troubles which wee haue had in this world The end of all that we doe and of that which we purpose is it not our rest Why doe we gather goods with a thousand troubles and as many dangers why doe wee studie why doe wee fight why doe we labour why doe we all other things Is it not by that meanes to come to ease and to a rest which we pretend and seeke as a soueraigne good What is the principall reward which God doth promise to his people and to all those that serue him faithfully
death to those that were not succoured and warranted by Iesus Christ But in the kingdom of God and of Paradise we shall eate of the fruit of the tree of life which shall alwaies keepe vs yong and fresh and which more is will make vs incorruptible and immortall There is that which wee shall taste VVhat shall we smell A hall of perfumes the garments of the bride and the bridegroome perfumed with all odoriferous and fragrant things It shall be then that the Church shall triumph that the vine being blossomed shall giue such a pleasant odour that the whole heauens shall bee filled with it There shall be no stinke for there shall be no corruption wee shall there plainly smell the sweetenesse of the Sacrifice which Iesus Christ made for vs on earth so great and pleasant that the Father for the pleasure which he tooke to smell it was reconciled with the world and his anger towards vs hath bene appeased What a pleasant Sacrifice and precious Incense is also the praises of the Saints who with one accord doe glorifie God and sanctifie his holy name Moreouer what an odour giues that faire flower sprong from the root and sappe of Iesse now that it is in it force strength To conclude we cannot misse there to smell good odours for our Winter shall then be past we shal be in a perpetuall springtime wherin all things shal grow and flourish for the delectation and pleasures of the Church For to satisfie our desire and content the lust of our selues we shall touch no more neither shall we be touched of any thing that may hurt vs. VVe shall be gathered vp by IESVS CHRIST our Lord and Sauiour who will come at the entrance to receiue vs saying Come hither faithfull seruant thou hast serued me faithfully in the world while thou hast beene in the world enter now into the ioy and rest of thy Lord. He will kisse and embrace vs and will keepe vs neere to his person without suffering vs to depart or go farre from it Now if the greatest good that vnto the which all others are referred be this felicitie which doth consist in a possession and enioying of all good to the contentment of our will and of all our sences with what a desire should wee waite for death by the which we attaine it Moreouer death doth deliuer vs out of all dangers In this world night and day within and without we are alwaies in feare of perill Our life is a cruell and bloody warre we haue a great many enemies that kill vs continually and doe assay by all meanes to destroy vs the diuels watch for vs and cease not compassing about like deuouring Lyons and rauening Wolues to see whether they cannot surprise vs and carry vs away the world sometimes by enticings and allurements sometime by threates and violence endeuours to trie and turne vs out of the right way Our flesh on an other side doth flatter and tickle vs and the better to vndermine vs with great cunning doth propound and lay before vs things wherin wee haue most delight It weepeth also sometimes to stirre vs vp to pittie it all to the intent to winne vs and cause vs in all points to yeeld vnto it and that it may maister vs. Now if we consider our infirmitie our stupiditie and negligence the little warinesse and watchfulnesse that is in vs wee may iudge in what danger we liue It is impossible that we should liue in this world among so many that are infected and that with so great a contagion without falling often into sicknesse Is it possible that wee should so often grapple with such strong and mighty enemies without being sometimes staggered and ouerthrowne Is it possible that we should go in such durty and muddy waies without being durtied We see it in good Saints of old time who could not gouerne themselues so well but the serpent who alwaies dogs vs at the heeles hath reached them with his venome but that they haue fallen in diuers faults some in incredulity others in Idolatry others in adultery others in excesse and drunkennesse others in murthers there is none of them but had his fall yea sometimes so great heauie that they had bene altogether bruised if God had not vpheld them with his hand Ought not we then follow the example of St. Paul and as he did crie Who shall deliuer vs from these dangers wherein we liue whiles our soule is in this miserable mortall body Let vs confesse that it is our gaine and profit for to die that by death we may be fully deliuered from all mortal things Againe death puts vs in full possession of all the promises of God and of those goods which Iesus Christ hath purchased for vs that we hope for of him He in dying hath freed vs and purchased our liberty and neuerthelesse wee see our selues still in great seruitude We are Kings Lords Iudges heires of God coheires with Iesus Christ the Prince of heauen and earth yet it seemes not so whiles we liue in this world for there wee are beaten and vsed like seruants like children vnder age we haue as yet no vse nor managing of our goods Kings and great Lords though we bee we are often in such necessitie that we haue neither bread to eate nor water to drinke nor wooll to couer vs. Moreouer IESVS CHRIST hath purchased for vs the grace of God a perfect Iustice life eternall an immortall incorruption glorie and vertue to our bodies and to our soules an assured peace and quietnesse a ioy and a contentment but this good hath not yet bene deliuered vnto vs for often times wee experiment the wrath and iudgement of God Wee feele the concupiscences and vicious desires of our flesh In our bodies there is corruption mortality and weaknesse and in our spirit troubles anguish and as it were a studious and intestine warre betweene our good and bad desires which fight the one against the other and because these euils are more grieuous so are the abouesaid goods more great more to be desired If then although they be already purchased for vs and that they bee ours we neuerthelesse cannot come to the possession of them but by death are not we for this reason much bound vnto it Ought not we to loue and desire it The children of Israel being arriued at the riuer of Iordane seeing on the other side thereof the fruitfull land which God had promised them and that being passed they should beginne to enioy it and to rest had they not great cause to reioyce and to passe the riuer with great alacrity And why not we when we shal come nere vnto death that is to say to the passage beyond the which is our country our house or City our friends kinsfolks our rest our ioy and our pleasure The child who during the time of his minority hath alwaies liued in feare base seruitude doth he not reioyce
when he seeth the day comming wherin he doth hope to haue liberty and quietly to enioy his goods So ought euery faithfull man seeing the day of his death draw neere in the which he shall be put in possession of all the goods which God hath giuen him and the gift wholly resigned When a man that hath vndertaken some long and tedious iourney hauing trauelled many daies and being wearied on the way seeth the gate of the town whither he goes doth he not reioyce and as it were leape for ioy Doth he not giue God thankes going into the towne that it hath pleased him to conduct and bring him safely thither Now euer since wee were borne we haue alwaies bene in this world as strangers we haue done nothing else but trauell in this low place as in great desert we haue heere wearied o●●elues then seeing death neere vnto vs that is to say the gate whereby wee must enter into the kingdome of our God and the staires whereby wee must ascend vnto his holy mountaine haue wee not occasion to consolate our selues and to leape for ioy considering that we are almost arriued at the place where we hope to rest perpetually If poore Adam being driuē out of the earthly Paradise after he had tasted of the miseries whereinto hee had precipitate himselfe by his sinne had beene called thither againe and set in his first estate what occasion should he haue had to reioyce And we also who after so many and diuers afflictions are called out by God by the means of death into no earthly but heauenly Paradise not Adams but Gods where there is no sin where there is no Serpent where there is no forbidding briefe where there is no feare nor shame When Noah after the flood and falling of the waters which had broken and torne all began to see the firme land he did reioyce and for ioy sacrificed to God for a thanksgiuing although it was accursed and brought forth thornes and thistles as before VVhat more great occasion shall wee haue when after the great flouds and desolations which wee haue seene in this world 〈◊〉 shall beginne to see and salute the land of the liuing the blessed land the land that was promised to the good the land flowing with Milke and Honey and all sweete and sauory things When Ioseph after hee had a long time beene prisoner in great calamitie suddenly without thinking thereone was raised to such dignitie that hee was next the King in Egypt making lawes and ordinances for to dispose the State and Kingdome had not hee matter of consolation VVee haue no lesse but much more when after our prisons captiuities seruitudes banishmentes and so many other afflictions which wee suffer in this world wee by death are in a moment lifted vp from the dunghill into heauen there to reigne with IESVS CHRIST and to bee partakers of his glory of his honour of his faith of his rest and of his table VVas it not a great ioy to the Iewes who had beene captiue three score yeares in Babylon amongest the Idolaters in great miserie depriued of the vse and commoditie of spirituall thinges as to assemble together to prayse God and to heare his word and to doe other thinges appertayning to the office of a Christian weeping sometimes when they were by themselues and hanging vp their Harpes and Instruments through griefe that they could not serue God according to their desires nor sing his prayses among the strangers for to haue the Kings letters to returne into their countrey build their Temple and there according to their ancient manner in all liberty serue praise and worship their God It is lesse to vs when after a long and redious captiuitie that we haue endured in this world conuersing with Idolaters vnbeleeuers blasphemers despisers of God and of his word we are deliuered and haue our pasport to goe into this celestiall Ierusalem and into the holy Temple of our God there for to praise him perpetually and in beholding his goodnesse to glorifie and sanctifie his holy name Death is also to be desired by reason that with our sorrowes it also ends our mourning we in this world are alwaies sad heauie and malancoly In it we weepe we sigh and alwaies weare the blacke weede But when by death wee goe forth of it to goe into the house of our Bridegroome wee put off and leaue the mourning weed for to take our goodly and sumptuous abiliments With goodly Robes rich and imbrodered Before the Kings she shall in state be led Saith our diuine Poet Esay and euerlasting ioy shall be powred on those which haue bene the faithfull sereants of God and then shall be accomplished that which hath bene promised them You that doe weepe in this world are happie for you shall laugh there shall be no more griefe nor complayning nor teares for God at our comming into his kingdome will wipe them away from our eyes we shall be comforted and we shall rest in Abrahams bosome as did Lazarus there shall be no other question but of singing and saying euery one to our soules Go to praise God in all things oh my soule And all my parts without let or controlle Praise his most good holy and blessed name Say to the Harpe and other instruments Go to awake that you may now be set vp againe in the estate to serue God and praise him for his goodnesse say to all the Church Giue vnto God praise and renowne For hee 's louing and kinde And which is more his gracious loue Shall dure world without end Say to all creattures blesse the Lord in all his works praise and exalt his name Blesse God ye Angels of heauen Sunne Moone Fire Ayre Water Earth Trees and Beasts A maide that hath long time bene betrothed desires that the day of her mariage were come and when it is come shee reioyceth seeing that shee shall soone be brought to her husbands house to dwell perpetually with him wee ought also to comfort our selues when the time drawes neere that our Lord must come and wee ought to attend him waking as did the fiue wife Virgines that so soone as hee shall bee come wee may goe in to the wedding with him and that the gate be not shutte against vs as it was against the fiue foolish becaue they were fallen asleepe An other reason why death is to bee wished for is that it causeth vs to see our friend and Sauiour IESVS CHRIST of whom we haue as yet seene but the picture The Prophets and Apostles haue described him vnto vs so faire of such a comely stature so courteous so vertuous so loyall so eloquent so louely so noble so rich so louing of vs that for our saluation hee did abandon his owne life which ought more to moue vs then any other thing Where is that maid who hauing heard of so many perfections to be in her friend would not burne and be altogether transported with desire and affection to
God tooke him as he did Enocke for feare lest by the malice and corruption of this age he should change When the fruit is ripe must it not be gathered for feare lest it should rot on the tree Others say hee died in the prime of his age by so much the happier is he for as said Anacharsis that shippe is happiest which arriueth first at the port Moreouer there is no certaine time determined for all men to die but as we see in fruit time some are gathered sooner then the others so is it amongst men There are some also that say we must honour the dead by mourning for them falling into the superstition of the Iewes who holding this opinion did hire certaine singers musitians to sing pittifull funeral songs for the death of their friēds which Iesus Christ did reproue in the house of the Prince of the Synagogue not without cause for it is not good in praise of a body to mourne for it complaints teares are rather signes of miserie then any thing els We do not now weep for the holy Martyrs which yet we should doe if in teares there did consist any honor but we honor them by a remembrance of them with blessing thankesgiuing and by paine and study we endeauour to follow them If likewise wee haue a friend whom we will honor after his death it must not be with teares and lamentations but rather by an honorable mention which we are to make of him and of his vertues and by a desire which we haue to imitate and follow his good and laudable fashion It is time to conclude this present Treatise and to resolue the precedent reasons that wee must neither feare nor flie from death but rather loue and desire it more then life and preferre the day of our death before the day of our birth for by our birth we come to paine and affliction and dying we goe to God and to a perpetuall rest Which the Greeks haue very fitly shewed vs for in their language the day of our natiuity is called Genethlia that is to say in the same language Genesis ton athlon and in our French tongue beginning of troubles and death is called Thanatos which is as much as to say according to the interpretation of Themiste Now vp to God Let vs then strictly examin them iudge of them that wee may take away the feare of the one the excessiue loue of the other God through his holy spirit giue vs the grace to do it So be it Prayers and Meditations touching Life and Death THE life of Christians ought to be occupied in considering the things that follow and to put them in practise to wit to haue alwaies in remembrance the benefits which they haue receiued at the hands of God to giue him thanks for them without ceasing both wih heart and mouth to loue him who is the goodnesse it selfe to feare and worship him seeing he is the Almightie and onely wise to be stirred vp by the loue which they beare to God also to loue their neighbours The loue of God drawes vs from the loue of corruptible things lifts vs vp to heauen and inflames our hearts to a holinesse of life The loue of our neighbour turnes vs from all troublesomenesse in will or in deed doth stirre vs vp to integrity and well doing An other LET vs often thinke what we are The principall part of vs is the Soule the which is endued with vnderstanding with reason and with iudgement to know the soueraigne good which is God to loue him to adhere and vnite our selues vnto him that we may haue part of his immortality and happinesse Now we forsake and contemne this great good for to grouell vpon the earth and to goe downe into the pit of carnall desires applying the vigour of our vnderstanding and iudgement to things that are not worth the paines that we employ in them We burie our selues quicke by manner of speaking of heauenly we become earthly and of men created for eternall life we endeuour as much as in vs lieth to set our selues in the ranke of brute beasts God doth not forsake vs neuerthelesse although that our ingratitude hath well deserued it but calles vs vnto him by his word presents vnto vs infinite testimonies of his grace continues it daily he supports exhorts counsels chides and fatherly chastiseth vs Neuerthelesse we continue blinde deafe and negligent despising his goodnesse or vse it not as we should or indeed abusing it which is worse we loue vaine and transitory things better and haue our mindes too much fixed and setled vpon them God stretcheth forth his hand to conduct vs we draw back ours and flie when he calleth vs. If he put vs into the way of saluation we grudge and repine for the worlde we looke behinde vs deferring and remitting our desire to dwel til to morrow Let vs awake then let vs not alwayes stick in the mire let vs strengthē ourselues in the vertue of him that supports succours vs let vs a little vndertake to despise corruptible things and to desire those that are truly good and euerlasting When God calleth vs let vs hearken if he guides vs let vs follow him that we may come to his house let vs receiue his good things and himselfe too for he giues himselfe vnto vs in the person of his Sonne He shewes vs the meanes to get to heauen let vs then desire of him to giue vs the will and the courage by faith repentance charity and hope to ayme thither and that he would maintaine his grace in vs vntill the end to sigh in this mortall life and to waite through the assurance of his mercy for our departure out of this world and our last day which shall be the beginning of our true life Prayers and Meditations HOW great are the illusions and impostures of the enemy of our saluation He sheweth vs a farre off things that are ridiculous and vaine and perswades vs that it is all good and happinesse he scares vs with things that we ought not to feare makes vs to flie from those things which we ought to embrace Hee calleth inticeth and flattereth vs by the intermission of our desires if that will not serue he roares and stormes and endeuours to astonish vs within and without O eternall light and veritie O Lord and mercifull Father disperse those clouds of ignorance and errour illuminate our vnderstandings and doe not suffer vs to come neer to that which thou hast commanded vs to flie from and which is hurtfull and pernicious vnto vs let vs not desire but what is truly to be desired to wit thy selfe who art the spring-head of all goodnesse of our life and of eternall happinesse All flesh is grasse and the glory of man is like the flower of the field cause then that we may seeke for our firmenesse and contentment in the grace which thy Sonne hath brought vs let our life
the more to thee But seeing thou knowest mee better then I know my selfe if it be thy pleasure to put me to any triall giue me necessary force patience to glorifie thee conuerting all the euill that may happen vnto mee to good and saluation And if in supporting my weaknesse thy goodnesse is pleased to aduertise mee by some light affliction cause that this thy well willing may draw mee more and more to loue and honour thee to giue thee thanks for the care which thou hast of thy poore little seruant and by that meanes to dispose me to weight for thee at my death that after it I may finde the life which thou hast purchased for me by thy death and therein with thee to haue part in ioy and rest for euer Amen An other LOrd God heauenly Father when I consider in how many sorts I haue sinned before thy face and against thy high maiesty I haue horrour in my selfe in thinking that I haue so often turned from thee Propitious and fauourable Father I detest my ingratitude seeing in what seruitude of sinne I haue bene too often precipitate selling as much as in me lay the precious liberty which thy Son had purchased for mee I condemne my folly I altogether dislike of my selfe I see nothing but death and mishap hanging ouer my head and my conscience rising for a Iudge witnesse of my iniquities But when on the other side I enter into a contemplation of thy infinite mercy the which surmoūteth all thy works and in the which if so I dare to speake thou surmountest thy selfe my soule is comforted And indeed why should I make my selfe beleeue that I cannot find grace before him that summons and so often and gently calles the sinners to repentance protesting expresly that hee desires not the death of a sinner but rather that he turne from his wickednesse and liue Moreouer thy onely Sonne hath so well assured vs that we shall finde fauour in thy sight by the sweete wordes which he himselfe hath vttered as that of the lost sheepe and of the prodigall sonne the image of whom I acknowledge my selfe to bee that I should be most vnthankfull incredulous and wicked to goe backe to be ashamed of thy presence although I am wretched seeing thou dost so stretch forth thy hand vnto mee and draw mee to thee with such a pitifull affection I haue very vildly forsaken thee O benigne Father I haue vnhappily let slip thy graces and adhering to the desires of my flesh and straying from thy obedience I haue wrapped my selfe in the base seruitude of sinne I am fallen into extreme misery I know not whither to retire vnlesse it be towards thee whom I haue abandoned Let thy mercy receiue this poore supplication whom thou hast supported during his errours I am vnworthy to lift vp mine eyes vnto thee or to call thee Father But I pray thee bow downe thine eyes to mee seeing thou wilt haue it so and that without that I am in the power of thine enemies The sight of thy face will reuiue me and bring me againe to thee Seeing I haue some displeasure in my selfe I know thou lookest vpon me that thou hast giuen mee eyes to see the danger wherein I was thou hast sought found me in death and in the world hast through thy mercy giuen mee a desire to enter into thy house I dare not desire that thou shoudest kisse and embrace mee nor that thou shouldst weepe for ioy that thou hast found thy poore seruant and slaue I do not demaund the pretious ornaments wherewith thou doest honour thy great seruants and most affectionate children It is inough for me to bee in the troope of the least of thy house amiddest the greatest sinners that haue obtained pardon of thee and that haue some shelter in thy Pallace where there are so many dwellings That euen in thy house I may bee as little as thou shalt please prouided that thou wilt auouch me thine for euer O mercifull Father I beseech thee that for the loue of thy welbeloued Sonne my onely Sauiour thou wouldest giue mee thy holy Spirit which may I purifie my heart and strengthen mee in such sort that I may alwaies dwell in thy house there to serue thee in holinesse and iustice all the daies of my life Amen Prayers WHat doe we in this world but heape sinnes vpon sinnes so that the morrow is alwaies worse then the day before and we doe not cease drawing thy indignation vpon vs But being out of this world in thy heritage we shall be altogether assured of our perfect eternall felicity the miseries of the bodies shall be abolished the vices filthinesse of the soule shall he done to nothing O heauenly Father increase our faith in vs for feare lest we should doubt of things so certaine imprint thy grace and thy loue in our hearts which may lift vs vp to thee and strengthen vs in thy feare And because thou hast lodged vs in this world there for to remaine as long as it shall please thee without declaring vnto vs the day of our departure the which thou alone knowest I doe beseech thee to take mee out of it when thou shalt know the time to hee come and then to doe me that good that I may acknowledge the same that in the meane while I may fit my selfe thereunto as thou hast appointed by thy holy name Amen An other THis bodie is the prison of the Soule yea a darke prison narrow and fearefull wee are as it were banished men in this world our life is but woe and misery to the contrary Lord it is in thy heauenly kingdome that we finde our liberty our countrey and our perfect contentment Awake our soules by thy word to the remembrance and apprehension of such a good imprint in our hearts the loue and the desire of the euerlasting good things and onely to bee wished for giue vnto our consciences some taste of that ioy wherewith the happie soules which are in heauen are filled that I may hold as doung and filth all that which the worldlings find so faire and couet so much which so obstinately they retaine and doe adore with such feruency Cause that finding taste but in thy verity and grace I may waite for calling vpon thee the day of my perfect deliuerance through IESVS CHRIST thy Sonne to whom with thee and the holy Spirit be glory euerlasting Amen Another LOrd Iesus the onely saluation of the liuing life euerlasting of the dead I submit my selfe to thy holy will whether it be thy pleasure yet to suffer my soule to bee some space within this body for to serue thee or that it please thee to take it out of prison being assured that what thou keepest cannot perish I am content with all my heart that my body returne into the earth from whence it was taken beleeuing the last resurrection which shall make it immortall incorruptible and full of