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

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For hee being asked whether he would die willingly aunswered I die willingly for willingly I go out of my body as out of a rotten house Furthermore both in his sicknes after his health in his health before his sickenes I would wish him to crucify his old mā acquainte himselfe with forsaking the world and the things both of and in the world in few words I would wish him to learne to die while he is like to liue For as a drie tree is sooner burnt then a greene so is he more willingly dissolued that is in spirit mortified then hee which yet with the loue of the world is intangled Chrysost Tom. 5. pag. 502. He which contemneth riches saith Chrisostome and pleasures and vaine glorie for whose sake he doth desire to liue cannot but suffer patientlie his going out of this life For as Seneca saith Hee hath contemned to die Seneca in Traged 3. Chrysost ad populum Antio which doth not couet I told you a day agoe saith Chrisostome to the people of Antioche that we feare death not because it is terrible but because neither the loue of the heauenly kingdome doth enflame vs nor the feare of hell trouble vs nor a good conscience remaine in vs will you that of this importune anxietie I relate vnto you the fourth cause not lesse true than the former wee liue not in that asperitie which is fitting Christians but this softe loose and easie life wee loue so that it is verie likely wee are delighted with these present things But if wee would passe ouer this life in fastings and watchings and a thinne diet cutting off our desires restraining our absurde pleasures suffering the troubles of vertue according to Paule chasticing our body 1. Cor. ● 27 Rom. 13.14 and bringing it into subiection taking no thought for the flesh to fulfill the lust of it quickly would wee desire the things which are to come making hast to be deliuered from our present labours c. For this mortifying of the deedes of the flesh by the operation of the spirit is a readie way to make vs willing to die and vnwilling to liue But the cockring of the flesh and the giuing our selues to delight is that which makes vs altogether vnwilling to leaue this present world and wholly desirous euer to remaine and abide in the same For this we finde by proofe that no man is more vnwilling to die than he that desires to followe the delights of the world and to fulfill the lustes of the flesh If therefore any man would be willing to die he sees what is one point of his dutie by one part of the aduise I giue him More he may see by farther aduise to bee giuen him But my meaning is not to burthen him with precepts all that I will further say is this that I would perswade him to recal into his minde some of those good lessons which all his life long either he himselfe hath read or else heard either read or preached by others For the time of sickenes is the time wherein a man is to make vse of al the good things he hath learned al his life long And he that hath not furnisht himselfe with some thing for that purpose hath not so wel prouided for himself as he ought Neither shall he be so able to stand in the euill day as otherwise he might For it is written is a good weapon to fight with against our aduersarie which then will fight hardly against vs. With it Christ himselfe repeld Satan in his conflict Matthew fourth and with it Paul willes vs to withstand him Ephesians the sixt Matth. 4.4 Ephes 6.17 Take saith he the sword of the spirit which is the word of God Happy is he which can euery way so furnish himself therewith as able he may stand in the euill day and that so as the wicked one may haue no aduantage against him But woe vnto him that being vnfurnisht therewith is not able to withstand any assaults of the wicked him hee will conquer subdue and leade captiue to the kingdome of darknes there to be tormented for euer him hee will trouble molest and afflict him hee will plague punish torment him he will so hardly intreate so cruelly handle so seuerely opresse as curse euer he shall the daie wherein he was borne the yeare in which hee liued and the verie moment of time in which he came thither But further to increase his miserie all his yelling and cursing shal be in vaine Q. God then enarme vs that wee may bee able to stand that standing wee may ouercome and ouercomming wee may bee crowned and being crowned wee may reioyce and reioicing prayse and honour and glorie Apoc. 5.13 and power bee vnto him that sitteth vpon the throne and vnto the Lambe for euermore R. Amen And whensoeuer God calles hee himselfe giue vs grace to answere him patientlie to goe to him quietly to leaue this world willingly that so dying wee may die aswell obediently as faithfully to his great glorie and our eternall felicitie Q. Amen also to this say I for this at his hands are we euer to aske that so once we may speede for of him it must bee or else it will neuer be Iames 1.17 But I will cease further to trouble you in this poynt I see by your petition you are at a conclusion But yet I will not wholly cease as I remember somtime since sayd that euen when the verie pangs of death were vpon him the religious and well minded sick man was to haue care of three things that he might die in the Lord and be blessed the first was that he might die in faith the second that he might die in obedience the third that he might render againe vnto God his soule which once he had of him and hitherto hath enioyed by him Of this third thing what I pray you might or may your reason bee R. As then it was so now it is diuerse one is because God was the first giuer of it and it is reason when a man is a dying if he hath not done it afore that he restore euery thing to the proper owner Now the proper owner of the soule is God for as hee was the first Creator thereof so was he the sole bestower Eccl. 12.7 Genesis 2.7 Another is because so Christ our sauiour did for when he was dying vpon the crosse for vs this amongst others was his saying Luk. 23. Father into thine hands I commend my spirit And it is reason that the seruant in this case should doe as his master did For euerie action of him the master is the instruction of other his seruants he also hath said First learne of me Mat. 11.27 Ioh. 13.15 secondly I haue giuen you an example that yee should doe as I haue done More ouer the first Martyr that euer was after Christs death did thus Blessed Stephen while his aduersaries the Iewes threw stones at him
second R. So I intend for the first cannot be without a second As therefore first I sayd a man is to prepare himselfe to dye because necessarilie he must dye so secondlie I sayd he must prepare himselfe thereto because continuallie he is dying Q. What whilest he liues is he dying R. Yea whilst he liues and when he flourishes For why as one sayth all his life is but a race to death Euery day death is nigher him by a daye His daye passes and his death approaches As soone as hee begins to liue so soone hee begins to dye As Paule therefore sayd of himselfe 1. Cor. 15.31 I dye daylie because either daylie hee was in daunger of death or daylie there was diminished some part of his life So the woman of Tekoah sayd of all 2. Sam. 14.14 We doe all dye and are as water spilt vpon the ground that cannot be gathered vp againe And well sayd she what she sayd because either daylie wee are in perill of death or daylie there is diminished from vs some part of our life At the end of euery daye wee haue lesse time to liue by a day Both Augustine a diuine writer and Seneca an humaine do testifie as much as is said Sayth the first Where wee begin to liue Sap. 5.13 there by and by wee begin to dye according to that of the wise man assoone as we were borne wee began to drawe to our end And saith the second We dye daylie Seneca Epist 24. for daylie is some part of our life done away and euen then also doth our life decrease when we our selues encrease Our Infancie we haue lost after that our childehoode thenceforth to yesterday our youth What time soeuer is past is perished This verie day which now we liue we diuide with death Q. But what of all this should a man therefore euer the more prepare himselfe to dye R. What else Q. And why R. because it tels him that of necessitie hee must dye For fall one day will that tree that euery day is a falling and once dye certainelie shall that man that euery day is a dying for death permittes no truce Q. All this I graunt yet I see not how the other doth thereupon followe R. You may if you will See you not how a man prepares himselfe to fight with that enemie with whom he can conclude no peace Q. Yes R. Then may you soone see how a man is to prepare himself to stand against death with which he can enter no couenant Q. Belike then death is an enimie R. 1. Cor. 15.26 So saith Paul The last enemie that shall be destroyed is death Q. No maruell then though a man bee to prepare himselfe to encounter with death For no man must be careles of his enimie His enemie is euer too carefull of him thereto But passe from this to the next if you please R. As you please for what pleaseth you shall not displease me Q. Say not so at euery time and turne R. No more I doe As you are a man that sometime may please you which displeaseth me and as I am another that may sometime displease you which for the time greatlie pleaseth me But now because it pleaseth you that I should passe from that which was last sayd to that which is yet to be said letting these things passe I wil passe As first then I said a man is to prepare himselfe to dye because necessarilie he must dye and secondly because continually he is dying So now thirdlie I say he must therefore prepare himselfe to dye because hee certainelie knoweth not either when he shal dye or where he shall dye Syr. 18. 8. or after what sorte and maner he shall dye For as Sirach sayth no man hath certayne knowledge of his death Eccl. 9.12 And as Salomon sayth Man doth not know his time Act. 9.12 but as the fishes which are taken in an euill nette and as the birdes which are caught in the snare so are the children of men snared in the euill time when it falleth vpon them suddainely Q. But what ought the ignorance of a mans time to incite him to make preparation for his time R. What else both Christ and others seeme to say so For thus sayth Christ Luk. 12.40 Be ye also prepared therefore Wherefore Because the sonne of man will come at an houre when you thinke not This giueth asmuch as I seeke For Christ cōmeth aswell at the particular Iudgement of a man which is at his death as at the generall which shall be at the dissolution And yet you see his reason is from his comming at an houre when he is not thought of be ye therfore prepared for the sonne of man will come at an houre when ye think not And thus sayth Augustine Thou knowest not in what houre he may come Alwayes therefore watch that so because thou knowest not when he will come he may finde thee prepared when hee shall come It may be for this cause thou art ignorant when he will come that thou maiest be readie whensoeuer he doth come Augustine in quad Epistola The last day is vnknowne that all dayes may be obserued then are remedies prepared too late when deaths perils hang ouer the head Thus also sayth Gregorie Gregorie Lib. 12. moral To this ende our maker would haue our ende hidden and the day of our death to be vnknowne that whilest it is alwaies vnknowne it might alwaies bee thought to bee nigh at hand and that euery man by so much might be the more feruent in working by how much he is vncertaine of calling that while we are vncertaine when we must dye we might alwaies come prepared to death Brandmil Con. funebr To the like effect in like sorte sayth another Therefore to no man is the houre of death knowen that euer we might watch and be readie least being vnreadie and in ill sorte secure wee should bee found sleeping And this is his reason If men did foreknow when they should dye they would shew their diligence about that time that they might not therefore be diligent onely in that time but continually he foresheweth neither a generall houre nor a particular that in alwaies looking for him they might alwaies watch For as Theophylacte well sayth vpon the first chapter of the first of Pauls Epistles to the Thessalonians Theophylact in 1. ap 5. If man knew his last day he would indeuour himselfe to doe any mischiefe other dayes then the end of his life approaching he would be baptized Moreouer many if they knew they should dye to morrow would bethinke themselues how many waies they might molest and afflict their aduersaries as though now they did despayre of themselues and did desire to refresh themselues with their enemies bloud Which thing is not now done for the feare of death staying them the loue desire of eternall life recalling them For the houre of death is
alwaies vncertaine and vnknowne to thee That thou mayst feare be feruent liue well and flye euill As though there were foure causes which moued God to make death vncertaine 1. Feare 2. Loue. 3. Life 4. Euill Feare of him loue to his word preseruation of life in man and declining of euill Touching the. 1. Gregorie sayth in an homelie of his Our Lord would therefore haue our last houre to bee vnknowne that alwaies it might be suspected Gregorie in hom that whilst we cannot fore see it without intermission wee might make hast vnto it And hence is it that he said Watch therefore Mat. 15. cap. 13. for ye know neither the day nor the houre when the sonne of man wil ceme Touching the 2. another saith The houre of death is vncertaine that thou mightest worke the more feruentlie Were it not so thou wouldest grow slouthfull and desist from manie things which are good for others And hence it is that an Angell sayd once to a Bishop Greg. in Dialo● Doe what thou doest worke what thou workest Touching the 3. saith the same author last spoken of Therefore is the day of thy death vnknowne that thou mayest liue the more purely and warilie For as Cyprian saith What kinde of one the Lord findes thee when hee doth call such kinde of one he doth iudge thee when thou art gone But it is a foolish thing for a man to liue in that estate in which he would not dye Touching the 4. saith the foresaid writer Therefore is the day of thy death vnknowne that thou maiest eschew many euilles which of the certaintie of death would ensue For did men know they should liue long they would committe many euils purposing afterwards to repent but did they know they should dye soone they would liue so much the more vnhumanelie determining to haue some pleasure ere they were for the preuenting of these mischiefes the Lord hath made both death vncertayne and the time thereof vnknowne Thus now you see how the ignorance of death both in regard of time place and manner ought to make a man prepare himselfe to death Q. I doe so I thanke you But I pray you is there yet any thing more that may doe the like R. If you remembred but what ere while I said this question might haue been spared for I tolde you that for fiue causes a man was to prepare himselfe to die ere euer he came to die and yet wee haue spoken but of three of them Q. In deede you did so Speake therefore of the two last I praye you as you haue done of the three first R. So I meane God willing In the fourth place therefore a man is to prepare himselfe to die ere euer hee comes to die because the greatest worke a man hath to finish in this worlde is to die As after death there is no worke so greater then death there is no work hee which hath ouercome death hath ouercome all things Aristotle Of all terrible and fearefull things death is the last Q. And why should this moue a man euer the more to prepare himselfe to die R. Because as the wise man saith Syr. 5. 16. He should not doe rashly either in small things or in great Q. Why but is it a doing rashly to dye without preparation thereto R. What else For what is it not a doing rashly to set vpon any thing without aduisement Q. Yes surelie R. The like it is to die without preparation Q. As a man then prepares himselfe to the doing of any great worke so is hee to the vndergoing of death R. Right so Q. But why so R. Because death is not the least of a mans workes in this world Brandmil Con. fun though it bee the last For to die is the greatest worke a man hath to finish vpon earth Q. May you not thereto adde the greiuousest too R. If I die the matter were not great for there are more paines in death Vincent then in any worke vnder the sunne As one sayth for then so diuerse kindes of diseases are wonte to meete and so to molest euery member that sometimes there are moe diseases than members In a sicknes that was not mortall but grieuous Dauid sayd there was not one whole parte in his bodie how much more might another so say in a sickenesse that is mortall and therefore exceeding grieuous For no sickenes so grieuous as a mortall sickenes In the separation of a man from his wife there is much greefe and sorrow in the separation of the soule from the bodie there must needes be much more The coniunction of the two last is greater and of greater continuance than the coniunction of the two first and where there hath beene the longer continuance in affection there must needes be the greater grieuances vpon separation in experience we see that so much the greater the sorrow is at the parting of friends by how much the longer the continuance together hath been from the meeting of friends and by that we may gesse how great the griefe is in the parting of soule and body For soule and bodie are as two friends but what prosecute I this poynt so farre Now haue I little leysure and lesse occasion so to doe and it may be I shall haue more of both hereafter Q. I would you might and I wish you may For it will not be more yrkesome to me then to heare of these things than it is now And now by seeing my silence you may iudge of my delight But to let this passe seeing you would so faine passe what other reason haue you for the first and last place by which a man should bee moued to a preparing of himselfe to death ere euer he comes to yeeld himselfe thereto R. The fundrie preceptes of Christ and his Apostles and prophets tending to that purpose Q. Why haue either the one or the other of these giuen any precepts touching this matter R. Haue they what a question is that thus sayd I say the Prophet to Hezekiah the king Put thine house in order Esa 38.2 for thou shalt dye and not liue And what is that but to prepare to die because thou must die Thus said Christ our Sauiour to Peter and Andrew and other his Apostles and disciples Wake therefore Mat. 24.42.43 for ye know not what houre your master will come Of this be sure that if the good man of the house knew at what watch the theefe would come he would surely watch and not suffer his house to be digged through Therefore be ye also readie for in the houre that ye thinke not will the sonne of man come And what is this but to prepare to dye because you must dye for Luke the Euangelist recording the same historie saith Be yee also prepared therefore Luk. 12.40 For the sonne of man will come at an houre when yee thinke not 1. Pet. 1.1 And thus said Peter the Apostle to the
be slayne of life And as Barnard saith The head that the Angelicall spirits tremble at was pricked with thornes the face fayrer than the sonnes of men was defiled with the spittle of the Iewes the eyes which are brighter than the sinne were dimmed in death the eares which heare the Angelicall songs did heare the speaking against of sinners the mouth which teacheth the Angels was filled with viniger and gall the feete whose footestoole is adored were fastned to the crosse with a naile the hands which made the heauens were stretcht vpon the crosse and thereto fastned with nayles the body was beaten with roddes the side was thrust through with a speare and what more there remained nothing but the tongue in him that he might therewith pray for sinners and commend his mother to the disciple whom he loued What now shall I looke to goe hence in peace no no the man must not looke to speed better than the master Mat. 10.24 Saith the master himselfe The desciple is not aboue his master nor the seruant aboue his Lord. It is enough for the disciple to be as his master and the seruant as his Lord. Now for himselfe thus said the master of himselfe hauing spoken much out of the scriptures to his disciples of his passion and resurrection Luk. 24.26 Ought not Christ to haue suffered these things and to enter into his glory For all others said a seruant of his 2. Tim. 3.12 All that will liue godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution How much more some other light affliction such as is sorrow sickenes and paine all which and many moe are nothing comparable to persecution persecution is farre more grieuous than the paine which I feele or the sicknes which I abide Hauing therfore a desire to liue godly in Christ Iesus shall I not beare quietly and suffer patiently the paines of this my sicknes and disease The Apostle saith that Act. 14.22 Wee must through many tribulations enter into the kingdome of God This my sickenes is but one A weake souldiour is he that cannot beare one blow A weake christian were I if I would be daunted with one crosse though it be grieuous as no chasting for the present seemeth to be ioyous but grieuous yet is it neither tedious nor discommodious not tedious for it is but momentany Psal 30.5 As Dauid saith Heauines may endure for a night but ioy commeth in the morning Heb. 12.11 Not discommodious for it bringeth the quiet fruite of righteousnes vnto them which are thereby exercised Yea saith Paul Our light affliction which is but for a moment 2. Cor. 4.17 causeth vnto vs a farre more excellent and an eternall weight of glory And what should I either grudge or grieue at that which neither comes for my hurt when it comes neither yet will tary long after it is come A welcome guest is hee that comes but for a night and yet much enriches his host ere the morning Such a guest should sickenes be for so it deales with the host to whome it comes As Heli therefore said when hee heard hee should be punished 1. Sam. 3.18 It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth him good So say I now I am punished It is the Lord let him doe what seemeth him good I am not too good to be smitten of him Where my betters haue not escaped his hands there is no reason that I should wish I might I daily say if daily I pray as daily and duely I should thy will be done in earth as it is in heauen Now in heauen it is done willingly readily and faithfully If therefore I will any thing doe as I say I must willingly readily and faithfully beare this burthen which the Lord hath imposed vpon me To comfort and encourage me in the bearing thereof I now haue Christ my captaine being in glory to looke vpon me and behold me for as the Apostle saith Heb. 4.15 We haue not an high Priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all things tempted in like sorte And therefore I neede not either feare or faint vnder my burthen For why he which redeemed me seeing mine affliction and misery wil no doubt both comfort me in measure sufficient and release me at time conuenient Exod. 2.25 In the second of Exodus it is said God looked vpon the children of Israel and God had respect vnto them And in the third of Exodus the Lord saith I haue surely seene the trouble of my people which are in Egypt and haue heard their cry because of their taskemasters for I know their sorrowes Therefore I am come downe to deliuer them out of the hand of the Egyptians and to bring them out of that land into a good land and a large into a land that floweth with milke and hony euen into the place of the Cananites and the Hittites and the Amorites and the Perizzites and the Hiuites and the Tebusites And therefore he saith vnto Moses Come now and I will send thee vnto Pharaoh that thou maist bring my people the children of Israel out of Egypt After the manner that he dealt with them will he also in mercy deale with me For he is euer one and the same Gal. 3.20 Malac. 3.6 Iob. 13.15 God he is and is not chaunged As ob therefore said in his affliction so say in this my visitation Loe though he slay me yet will I trust in him and I will reprooue my waies in his sight He shall be my saluation also for the hypocrite shall not come before him it is not this paine that shall part him and me it is not this sickenes that shall separate vs it is not this disease that shal daunt or dismay me Nay to say at once Rom. 8.38 Neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate me from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. Thus now you see by what meanes he that is sicke may munite his soule against the paines of his sickenes Q. I doe so I cannot deny it But what if his sickenes be mortall R. Though it be yet there these will be effectuall For they are of force not onely against the paines of some one sickenes but also against the paines of euery sickenes yea the mortall and deadly sickenes Q. I but to the paines of sickenes there may come an immoderate feare of death which will not very soone be vanquished because Death is the last enemie that shall be destroyed 1. Cor. 15.26 R. Though there so do as it is very like there will for death is the most tetrible of all things to wit in this life yet may the soule be armed as well against that as against the other Q. It may so and it is good to haue it so But how
thou wilt not direct thy will after Gods will but wilt bend Gods will to thy will that is right but thou crookest it thy wil is to be corrected by that but that is not to be buckled to thine and thou shalt haue an vpright heart Without the conforming of mans will to Gods will mans will is but a peruerse will Q. That 's sure but what may moue him to reforme that which is peruerse and to conforme it to that from which it is auerse R. The first and last meditations I haue yet spoken of Q. I pray God that all you are to speake off may effect what you and I do affect R. So pray I also there is no fault in them if they do not they are all as fruitfull as faithfull so they be faithfull that are to vse them Q. Manifest both in all as you haue done in one R. So will I in time Q Out of time you cannot doe it R. That 's so because nothing is done which is not done in time but yet there is a difference of time there is a due time and an vndue time Q. And this is now a due time for the second to succeed the first and each one to followe another R. You say well if you thinke your selfe satisfied for the first Q. I did amisse else to mooue you to the second for I am vnwilling to remaine vnsatisfied in any thing whereof I may be satisfied by you Being therfore satisfied touching the first what say you to the truth of the second hath it a promise of blessing annexed vnto it R. Hath it If I haue said it you need not to make any doubt of it I woulde not say what I cannot iustifie neither often vse I to doe it but to put you out of all doubt touching that whereof you seeme to bee in doubt consider what is written in the Reuelation of the Euangelist Iohn and then I thinke not but soone you will cause to doubt Q. Why what is it that is there writtten R. Apoc. 14.13 That Blessed are they which dye in the Lord for they rest from their labours and their workes follow them Q. And doth it thereupon followe that Death ioyned with and following after a reformed life hath the promise of blessednes annexed vnto it R. What else for first there is none die in the Lord but they which haue liued in the Lord for liuing sometime in the Lord must goe before dying any time in the Lord for as Augustine saith He hardly dies wel which alwaies liued ill Secōdly they which so dy are said to be blessed blessed are they which dy in the Lord. Thirdly that blessing then beginneth when as this life endeth For it is said therefore they are blessed which die in the Lord because they rest from their labours their workes follow them In which words there is both an expressing of the time wherein they are blessed and also of the cause wherefore they are blessed The time is the time of their death for it is said blessed are they which die in the Lord. The cause is their resting from their labour For blessed are they which die in the Lord for they rest from their labours c. In both the Euangelist speakes in the present tense hauing an eie in the last to the preterperfect For first he saith they are blessed he saith not that either they were blessed in the time past or they shall be blessed in the time to come but they are blessed in the time present as though they were in blisse euen in their death Secondly he saith they doe rest he saith not that they haue rested or that they shall rest but that they doe rest as though their death were a rest and not a distresse Thirdly he saith from their labours as though death present were a rest from labours past Q. Though the Euangelist saith so yet it followeth not but that they which dy in the Lord both were blessed and did rest before their death and shall be blessed and rest better after their death R. Neither did I yet say that any such thing will thereupon follow For the most of those that at their death are blessed in their life also were in some sorte blessed and all those that are blessed in their death shall for euer after be blessed after death Eternall life is heere in this life begunne and that sometime long before death and sometime in death but it is neuer finished or perfected till the life to come and after death There is perfection heere is but incoation there life is perfected heere it is but incepted He which heere hath it not at any time there enioyes it not On the contrarie part he which heere is entred into it shall there fully be possessed of it To conclude therfore they which are blessed in their death were also blessed in their life and shall be blessed after death with life lasting euer and enduring world without end Q. This being as you say no meruaile though the meditation of that promise be a shield of succour against deaths terrour For of my selfe I can heere collect that too much death is not to bee feared hauing so sweete a promise of rest thereto annexed R. In so doing you doe what euery christian ought to do For what should he ouer much feare death that hath herein a promise made to him of life what should he ouer much feare that which frees him from labour and brings him to rest who would not leaue an house of clay for a building giuen of God that is an house not made with hands but eternall in the heauens life rest and a building giuen of God are three things which mitigates in any the immoderat dread of death For the loue of these death should rather be loued than loathed wished than shunned craued than feared Q. You say well if euery death had the promise of these things made vnto it R. Neuer if at the matter for there is no good death which hath them not all promised vnto it Q. There is much difference betweene a good death and any death R. I denie not that But I spake not of any death but only of a good death Neither could I for that place of scripture which I produced for proofe of what I propounded saith not that all are blessed which die but that they onely are blessed which die in the Lord. Q. That a man might come to that what should he doe R. Liue well so neere as he can For as the prouerbe is Such as the life is such will the death be And as Augustine saith as you heard ere while He cannot die ill which hath liued well and hardly doth he die well which hath liued ill Q. August de doctrina chr●stiana That should not seeme to be very necessarie First because there are but few that regards it For how euer euery man desires to die well yet not many desire to liue well Balaam
these times R. Much. The one was a good time the other was a bad time That was a good time wherein the one theefe reprooued the other but that was a bad time wherein they both reuiled and rayled on the sonne of God Q. It seemes all was at one time For it was all at their and Christs death R. One generall time if you will but not one particular Mat 27.45 For there was three howres distance betweene Christ his crucifying and his dying Lu. 23.44 At the sixt houre he was crucified at the ninth he died And in three houres space many things happened Q. But what happened in these three houres R. The rayling of both the theeues on Christ Iesus and the repenting of one of them In the beginning of the three hoth might raile as Mathew seemes to speake before the ending of the three the one did repent as Luke assuredly doth recorde Q. Be it so what inferre you thereupon R. That which before I defended and you denied Q. Why that R. Because he which you say died in the Lord did sometime also ere he died liue to the Lord. Q. How doth that appeare R. Aswell as any thing may appeare For the same scripture which speaketh of his dying in the Lord speaketh also of his liuing to the Lord. Q. Why what saith the scripture thereof R. More than that which you haue heard yet somewhat you haue heard Q. Haue I heard any thing that makes for this purpose R. I that I hope you haue Q. What was that R. That when one of the euil doers which were hanged rayled on Christ Iesus saying If thou be the Christ saue thy selfe and vs. Luk. 23.39 The other answered and rebuked him saying fearest thou not God seeing thou art in the same condemnation we are indeede righteously heere for we receiue things worthie of that we haue done but this man hath done nothing amisse Q. And what is there more which I haue not heard but may heare R. That which followeth what you haue heard And he the same that before reprooued his fellow said vnto Iesus Lord Luk. 23.42 remember me when thou comest into thy kingdome Q. And what doe these things prooue that the same theefe which once died in the Lord did some time ere he died liue to the Lord R. What more manifest for what is it to liue to the Lord but to liue according to the will of the Lord and he that thus liued ere he died as you haue heard how did he not liue according to the will of the Lord in three things doth the will of the Lord consist 1. In this that a man turnes from his wicked waies to him For as by his prophet Ezekiel he saith Ezek. 18.23 Is it my will that the wicked should die saith the Lord God or rather that hee may returne from his waies and liue As I liue saith the Lord God I will not or I desire not the death of the wicked but that the wicked turne from his way and liue 2. In this that a man exercises himselfe in liuing godlily For by his blessed Apostle he saith 1. Pet. 2.15 So is the will of God that by well doing ye may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men 3. In this that a man continues in well doing to his liues end For saith the beloued Sonne of God Ioh. 6.39 This is the fathers will that hath sent me that of all which he hath giuen me I should loose nothing Now perseuerance in doing good is that which makes that a man is not lost because it is said Mat. 10.22 He that endureth to the end he shall be saued Saith Hierome It is not the point of vertue to haue begunne but to haue continued and perfected what was begunne And saith Remigius Rewarde is giuen not to those that beginne but to those that perseuer For as Isidore saith Then doth our conuersation please God when we finish the good which we beginne by holding out to the ende In which of these three did not he we speake of according to the will of the Lord in the first the second or the third in neither Not in the first for there he turned from his wicked waies he had been a theefe now he was none he had been an euill doer now he was none he had been a reuiler of the sonne of God now he was none Not in the second for there after that once he was conuerted he exercised himselfe in doing of good He sorowed for his sinnes he confessed them he prayed for pardon of them he suffered quietly some punishment due to them he reprooued his fellow theefe for continuing in them he iustified Christ the Messias from the guiltines either of them or the like vnto them the text which recordes the historie of him prooues asmuch as I say One of the euill doers which were hanged railed on Christ Iesus saying Luk. 23.39 If thou be the Christ saue thy selfe and vs. But the other aunswered and rebuked him saying fearest thou not God seeing thou art in the same condemnation There is a shew of his owne conuersion his fellowes corruption We are indeede righteously heere There is his confessiō with a continuatiō of his fellowes corruption For we receiue things worthie of that we haue done There is his patient suffering of punishment with a reasō of his fellowes corruption But this man hath done nothing amisse There is his iustifying of Christ And he said vnto Iesus Lord There is his acknowledgment of Christs power Remember me when thou comest into thy kingdome There is his prayer for his sinnes remission and his soules saluation Neither yet in the third for there he perseuered as long as life lasted After once he put his hand to the plough he neuer look't backe In what hee sometime ere his death liued in that he once at the ende of his life died In faith and hope and loue he liued for the time after his conuersion that he liued and in faith hope and loue hee died when the time wa this life ended In asmuch then as in his life from his conuersion to his death he liued according to the will of the Lord it is thereby certaine that ere he once died in the Lord he sometime liued to the Lord. And so at length that is manifested which long I haue laboured to manifest Q. In deede the certaintie of the theefes liuing sometime to the Lord once dying to the Lord is thereby manifested but the necessitie of euery ones liuing so that faine would die so is neuer the more prooued R. In that you are deceiued For the action of one man that is good is the instruction of euery one that would be good Whatsoeuer good the theefe did he thought duety for him to doe and other than duety the like no man can thinke because he that taught him to doe what he did teacheth no man but what is dutie Q. Why who
like Also he doth thereby cut off much hatred and contention which otherwise might or would arise For the making of a will is the staying of many suits in lawes By it many a question is decided some doubts are resolued all hatred is preuented except more fault be in those that remaine aliue than in him that is departed and gone Moreouer he doth thereby procure himselfe the more quiet in minde the greater libertie to attend vpon God and his pleasure the best oportunitie that may be to frame himselfe to another world Still and still therefore I commend the making of will before a man dies but euer and euer I condemne the leauing of all at sixe and seauen when hee dies For thereupon comes much strife and debate great questions and braulings at the law immortal hatred and disdaine and that among those which in former times liued in great peace and good loue Oftimes also all these proue so extreme as euery man besides that hath any sparke of wit or loue to peace saith It is great pitie that such a man died without a will that the least things as he did that he did not set all things at a stay You will not beleeue what ado heere is thereupon in the countrie No peace among his children no loue betweene his freinds no quiet to any of his neighbours c. Q. But one thing heare you ere you goe further doe you condemne this leauing off all at sixe and seauen as you said in all cases R. Yea surely vnles others are imagined than are alreadie by some pretended Q. Why what doe some pretend for their not making of a will R. First the hiding of their substance Secondly the concealement of their decayed estate Thirdly the hastning of their owne deaths Fourthly the quieting of their kinsefolkes mindes Q. And are none of these sufficient stoppes to stay a man from making of a will R. Truly no. Q. It may be your simple word will not be taken of euery one for a sure warrant R. I can then shew reason of my assertion Q. So do then and the better they may credit you R. That I will to whether any will credit me the more therefore yea or no. The first thing then pretended is no sufficient stoppe to stay a man from making of a will because it argues small thankefulnes to God for his blessings For what should a man be ashamed of the good gifts of God giuen vnto him It is his part rather to manifest them that so God may be the more glorified for giuing them than to conceale them 1. Cor. 4.7 For what hath he which hee hath not receiued and if hee hath not what hee receiued not why doth hee conceale them as if hee receiued them not It is the receiuers duty to acknowledge the giuers bountie No more is the second because it argues too much pride And what should dust and ashes be then proud when he is to returne to dust and ashes It is his duty rather to acknowledge the dealing of the Lord with him that others may take heed by him how they abuse the good gifts of GOD bestowed on them than to conceale it As it is God that maketh rich so it is God that maketh poore for he setteth vp one and pulleth downe another and what should vaine man desire to appeare better than God himselfe will haue him to be he that will obtayne mercy must not conceale his owne miserie Neither yet is the third because it argues too great loue of life too much feare of death And what shuld a mā too much loue that which once hee must lay down or too greatly feare that which one day he must vndergo It is his duty rather to submit himselfe vnder the mighty hand a God according to his prayer thy kingdome come thy wil be done c than otherwise The dayes of man are numbred his time appointed which he cannot ouer-passe though therefore he makes a thousand willes if it were possible for one man to make so many yet shall he die neuer the sooner God prolongs not the dayes of a man for the want of a will For they die aswel which neuer makes any as they which make many neither doth he shorten them because he hath made any for some haue made many and yet liue at this d y. But to let this passe of as little force is the fourth as the first or as any that yet haue followed And the reason is because it argues too fond a liking of kinsefolkes aboue the duty that is owing vnto God And what should a man so foolishly loue his kinred as for loue of them hee will omit the performance of the dutie which hee oweth vnto God It is his part rather to doe that which may please God than that which may please his friends Gal. 1.10 Saith Paul If I should yet please men I were not the seruant of Christ And saith Christ himselfe Mar. 10.37 He that loueth father or mother more than mee is not worthie of me and hee that loueth sonne or daughter more then me is not worthie of mee How they will bee worthie of Christ that are so foolishly affected to their kinred as for affection to them they will not doe what God hath enioyned them they had best to looke least for neglect thereof they in the end speed otherwise than they will like While they are a looking to that I will looke to that they say And me thinke without further looking I may well say that their pretence of not making a will is meerely false For the making of a will is the quieting of their kinsfolkes mindes for when their kinsfolkes see and know that there is a will made their mindes are quieted and all strife that might for want thereof after rise betweene them is wholy staid and precided So that still it is good for the sicke for the procuring of order in his house after his death to take care for the making of a will in his life and not to stay himselfe therefro for any of these vaine pretences named they all being alreadie sufficiently proued insufficient Q. Seeing you stand so stiffely for the making of a will making it rather a matter of necessitie than indifference what rules touching the making of his will would you wish the sicke to obserue R. These which the lawiers say testatours should obserue Q. What are those R. Aske the lawiers Q I am not with them nor amongst them except you be one R. Why you know I am none Q. It may bee notwithstanding you haue hearde what they say R. In some sorte I may not that denie Q. What then haue you hearde R. First that he which is to make a will must looke to him selfe whether hee be testable or not that is such an one as may make a will Secondly that hee must looke to the things which he will demise whether they be such as he may demise yea or no.
heere a poore life but great good shall we haue if we feare God and depart from all sinne and doe well Well the blessing of God be with you Tob. 4. For I must ere it be long away from you Farewell Thus I thinke I haue shewed you as much as hitherto you haue desired of me Q. You haue so and I hartily thanke you therefore For thereby I learne how to instruct and admonish them that are with me and vnder me but I haue not yet done For how euer death be the last ende of this life yet it is not the least thing to be regarded in this life as before you haue signified My request now therefore is to know how the sicke man in the agony of death is to behaue himselfe for no doubt he must aswell care to order himselfe aright in death as to prepare himselfe aright to death R. I will satisfie you in your petition because you please me in your reason For to a good death there is aswell required a good disposition in death as a right preparation to death In the very agony of death therefore the first thing the sicke man is to haue care of is that as he hath liued in faith so he may also die in faith For such as he dieth such shall he be iudged And such as the last day of this life doth leaue him such shall the last day of the world finde him Eccles 11.3 As Salomon saith In the place that the tree falleth there it shall be The second that as he hath spent the former part of his life so hee may also spend the latter for obedience is better than sacrifice and without obedience his death cannot be acceptable to God because he seemes to goe vnto God of feare and constraint as a slaue to a maister and not of loue and good will as a childe to his father The third that as in the beginning he receiued his soule of God so now in the ende he renders it againe to God For as he was the first giuer so he is the best keeper Q. I hope you wil heere deigne me the same libertie that hitherto you haue that so it shall be as lawfull for me to question with you about these things as before it hath been about others R. I should else do little for you For whom at all times I would doe asmuch gladly as I might fitly Q. By how much the more you are at all times readie to doe for me by so much the more I am alwaies bound to thinke my selfe beholding to you All this is courtesie in you no desert in me R. Let such words passe least time ouerpasse leauing what you could say goe to what you would say Q. I will then Touching the first thing therefore you spake of what is it to die in faith R. It is with all thy heart wholy to relie a mans selfe vpon Gods special loue and fauour and mercie in Christ according as it is reuealed in the volume of the booke of God Q. But why is the sicke man in the agonie of death to looke to this R. Because that is the most speciall time of all his time for him to put his faith in practise Q. Why that R. Because then all things in and of the world doe faile and forsake him His friends his riches his pleasures his outward senses yea and his temporall life too do then all at once leaue and forsake him What helpe soeuer in times past they yeelded him yet then they faile him and yeelde him no helpe at all Q. And what can faith then doe for him that so much you wish him to establish it in him R. It can make him go wholy out of himselfe and to despaire of comfort and saluation in respect of any earthly thing and cause him with all the power and strength of his heart to rest on the pure mercie of almightie God Q. Hath it euer effected so much in any R. Yea that it hath in many Q. Where haue you an instance thereof R. In the first booke of Samuel the thirtieth Chapter and the sixt verse Q. Why what is there said R. 1. Sam. 30.6 That Dauid comforted himselfe in the Lord his God Q. What doth that make to the purpose you speake of R. As much as may bee For the time when Dauid did this was then when the people intending to stone him there was nothing before his eyes to bee seene but present Death Q. And what made him then to doe it R. The application of the mercifull promise of God to his miserable and distressed soule For thus he saith vnto God and of his promise in one place Psal 119.49 50. Remember thy promise made to thy seruant wherein thou hast caused me to trust it is my comfort in trouble for thy promise hath quickned mee And thus of himselfe in another place and the comfort hee found in his trouble My soule she failed and my heart also Psal 73.26 but God is the strength of my heart and my portion for euer Q. But doth it hereupon follow that it will effect as much in some other R. What else for wherefore else is this written of Dauid but for our instruction what agrees to and with the generall will not I hope disagree to and with the particular But for the generall Paul saith Whatsoeuer things are written aforetime are written for our learning Rom. 15.4 That wee through patience and comfort of the scriptures might haue hope And therefore for this particular you may soone know what I might say For written you see it is and therefore for our learning written it is Q. But it may be we may learne some other thing thence than this R. Though that may be yet it followeth not therefore that this is not thence to bee learned I stand not against other things but for this Q. What reason haue you therefore R. More then that which is shewed I haue the efficacie of faith For if faith bee faith worketh Saith Iames the Apostle Faith without workes Iam. 2.26 August in serm 22. is dead and saith Augustine that learned Clerke Faith is called Faith of that which is done two syllables doe sound when faith is named the first is of that which is done the second is of God I aske thee therefore whether thou doest beleeue thou sayest I beleeue Doe what thou saiest and it is faith and saith our Sauiour Christ Mar. 16.17 These tokens shal follow them that beleeue In my name they shall cast out diuels and shall speak with new tongues and shall take away Serpents And if they shall drinke any deadly thing it shall not hurt them they shall lay their hands on the sicke and they shall recouer Q. But faith may then worke some other thing then that which you speake of R. But this is then the proper worke of faith and that then is the due time for that worke Nom. 21.9 As the
no sowre the labourer workes ere he receiues his wages the Souldier fightes ere he winnes the victorie the gamester runnes ere hee enioyes the price 2. Tim. 2.11 And the christian must die with Christ ere euer he shall liue with Christ yea hee must suffer with Christ ere euer he shall raigne with Christ As he that will haue the meare must cracke the shell so hee that will haue the life after death must abide the death that goes before life As for the paines thereof they are neither greatly to be dreaded nor impatiently to be suffered not to be dreaded because they cannot hurt Rom. 8.28 For to them that loue God as they do which beleeue in God all things worke togither for the best not vnwillingly to be suffered because they bring much good For these light afflictions which are but for a moment 2. Cor. 4.17 cause vnto him that suffers them a farre most excellent and an eternall weight of glory while he lookes not on the things which are seene but on the things which are not seene for the things which are seene are temporal but the things which are not seene are eternall Who now that is wise will not willingly suffer the one that he may enioy the other there is no comparison betweene glasse and gold and verie vnwise is he that wil not doe away the first for the last if hee may euen so there is heere no comparison betweene the paines of death which are to be suffered and the ioyes of heauen which are to be expected So that altogether foolish is hee which will not willingly abide the one that happily hee may attaine the other the paines that ordinarily are suffered in death naturall are nothing to the paines that are suffered in death violent and vnnaturall yet diuerse godlie men haue suffered them willingly that they might after in heauen liue happily Why then should not he that is godly suffer willingly the paines of death naturall that so hee may come to the fruition of ioy celestial for my part I see smal reason to the contrary Q. What then R. Let him then that is vnwilling to die naturally because death is painefull consider of the great and intolerable paines which they haue suffered which died violently and vnnaturally and see if that will not animate him to die willinglie and incite him to beare the paines of death couragiously Q. Shall he find those that haue died violently to haue suffered so great paines R. What else Q. Where shall he find that R. Both in the Scriptures and otherwhere Q. What shall hee find in the Scriptures touching this matter R. That the prophet Isaiah for the hope of euerlasting life suffred his body to be cut asunder with a woodden saw that Ieremiah was stoned to death that Amos after diuerse other greeuous torments was thrust into the temples of the head with a great naile of iron and so shortlie after died Mat. 14 that Iohn Baptist was cast into prison and beheaded that Iames the brother of Iohn was slaine with the sworde Act. 12. that Steuen was stoned vnto death and last of all that Christ our Sauiour was crucified Mat. 27. and nailed to the crosse on which he died Q. And what otherwhere R. That some good men were deuoured of wilde beastes Actes and Monum some burnt with fire vnto ashes some broiled vnto death vpon hote coales some slaine with the sword some hanged vpon gibbets some pearced to death with arrowes some beaten to death with stones some boiled some rent in peeces with hote burning iron hookes some racked some drowned some cruellie murthered in prison some torne in sūder by horses some dismembred by trees some one waies made away some another many an one very badly very beastly and very cruelly Q When this is found what shall he therevpon finde R. That willingly he is to die though in much paine he doth die Q. Why that R. Because willingly they suffered a violent and vnnaturall death Q. That yet appeares not R. In the forenamed places it may and doth soone appeare for many whē they were offered life refused and accepted death Q. Not because they were willing then to die but because they could not as they would longer liue R. As much and more for the first cause as for and then the last Q. Though that be graunted yet is not the other proued R. What other Q. That willinglie he is to die that dies naturally because willingly they died that died violentlie R. What more or better prooued What better instruction may thence be taken what better collection may thence be drawne If they so suffered that otherwhere they might be crowned Why should not others in like sort suffer that otherwhere they may bee blessed Q. I denie not but they should yet I say not that therefore they should R. And in so saying you say not as you ought if any death be to be suffered willinglie a naturall death is much more a naturall death is sometime better if not most what then some other oft times there are therein fewer paines then in some other and what shoulde a man bee vnwilling to die for a fewe paines No Souldiour is vnwilling to fight for a few blowes no fields-man vnwilling to plow for a few blastes no trauailer vnwilling to goe on his iourney for a few showers neither should any christian bee vnwilling to die for a few paines either they are not so many for number or so mightie for measure as they might be or as they haue deserued they should bee and what should he suffer then vnwillingly when as they are neither many nor mighty 2. Tim. 2.5 No man is crowned saith Paul except he striue lawfully Neither say I is any man blessed except he suffers patiently what therefore should he be vnwilling to die that knowes of necessitie he must die and would gladlie bee blessed when he doth die though hee dies neuer so painefully when he doth die yet let him die willinglie that hee may die blessedly as Paul said of his preaching If I doe it willinglie I haue a reward 1. Cor. 9.17 so say I of his dying if he doth it willingly he hath a rewarde Apoc. 14.13 Wis 3.1 Blessed are they which die in the Lord. The soules of the righteous are in the hands of God and no torment shall touch them Though they suffer paine before men yet is their hopeful of immortalitie They are punished but in few things yet in many things shall they bee well rewarded In the time of their vision they shall shine and runne through as the sparkes among the stubble they shall iudge the nations and haue dominion ouer the people and their Lord shall raigne for euer And when so great a reward as this now mentioned is not onely propounded but promised what should hee die vnwillinglie that must die necessarilie the hope of reward should moue much the Apostle Paul was willing
but when that which is perfect is come then that which is in part shal be abolished Now we see through a glasse darkely but then we shall see face to face now I know in part but then shall I know euen as I am knowen and vpon this saying of the Apostle What may a man better inferre then this knowing one another while they are heere they shall not be ignorant one of another when they are gone hence for mine owne part I neither see how this can be infringed nor how a better thing may be inferred but to eche forward thus againe I say where the knowledge of the greater and the better cannot bee denied there I would thinke the knowledge of the lesse must needes be graunted but there the knowledge of the greater and the better cannot bee denied 1. Ion. 3.2 For there we shall know and see Christ as he is Heb. 1.3 which is the wisedome image and brightnes of the heauenly father There therefore the knowledge of the godlie among themselues must needs be graunted for what shall they know their head which is Christ and shall they not know themselues which are members of that head In that I take it there is smal likely-hoode and lesse reason of my minde I am sure are others no meane persons for account in the Church of God Amongst others the principall I will now stand vpon is that ancient and learned father Gregorie who in his dialogues hath this saying Greg. lib. dialog 1.33 There is a certaine thing in Gods elect and chosen people which is to bee marueiled at for they being in heauen doe not onelie know them whom they knew in this world but they know also the good people whom they neuer saw euen as perfectly as though they had afore both seene and knowne them for when they in that euerlasting inheritance shall see the auncient Fathers they shall not be vnknowne to them in sight whom they alwaies knew in worke for when they all with a like cleannesse doe behold God what is it that they should not there know where they know him that knoweth all thinges The next out of whom I will alledge any thing is Brandmiller a Minister and citizen of Basil Brandmil conc funer Conc. 10. who in one of his funerall Sermons hath this memorable saying It is certaine that in the life eternal we shall know those with whom in this life wee haue beene conuersant our parents our children our kinred and acquaintance yea and also all the Patriarches and Prophets Adam Abraham Moses Dauid Esaie Iohn the Baptist Zacharie Elizabeth Marie the mother of our Lord Christ Peter Paul and others as the Apostles in mount Thabor both saw and knew Moses and Elias whē they there talked with Christ though they themselues still were but in their mortall and corruptible bodies For in the life euerlasting we shall not be stockes wanting all sence and vnderstanding as some affirme which say that after this life we shall not one mutuallie know another If we shall know God which we must because it is said Ioh. 17.3 this is life eternall to know thee to be the onelie verie God and whom thou hast sent Iesus Christ much more shall we know men As also blessed Gregorie reasoneth in the fourth booke of his dialogues where he saith Because there all in a common cleannes do behold God there is not any thing there whereof they should bee ignorant where they know him that knoweth all things Did not the rich man of whom mention is made Luk. 16. know Lazarus after his death whom before hee had knowne in his life time and also Abraham whom neuer he had seene before did not the disciples also according to their old manner know Christ after his resurrection Furthermore if there shal be loue in the life to come there shall also be knowledge for knowledge causeth loue and loue commeth of knowledge there is no loue or desire of a thing vnknowne but there shal be loue most perfect in the life to come 1. Cor. 13.8 loue neuer falleth away ergo there shall also be knowledge besides all this in the holie Scripture the place and estate of the blessed is called heauenlie Ierusalem and the Citie of the liuing God but what Citie should that bee if therein the citizens should not mutually one know another by the testimonie of these two as I take it and the reasons out of Scripture before propounded there is now at length as much proued as was by mee sometime since promised If further manifestation thereof bee required more is yet at hand to be adioyned many of the better sort among the heathens were so well beaten to the beliefe thereof as they not onely thereupon hartilie desired death ere it came but also tooke it ioyfully and patiently when it came they desired it that so they might goe the sooner vnto the blessed company of immortall Gods they quietlie and ioyfullie suffered it that so much the more certainlie they might see and know not onelie the gods but also all those noble good and vertuous persons that euer liued in this world aswell such as they neuer knew as also those whome in this world they did most perfectly know As Tullie therefore relateth the matter this was the saying of Cato the elder I haue a great desire to see your fathers Cic. lib. de Sene. whom I honoured and loued but I wish not onely to talke with them whom I haue knowne in this world but with them also of whom I haue heard and read yea and I my selfe written If I were once againe going thitherward J would neuer haue mind to returne hither againe and againe this was his saying Oh that noble and pleasant day when it shal be my chance to come vnto that heauenlie companie and blessed fellowship and depart from this troublous and stinking world for then shall I goe not onelie vnto those men of whom I spake vnto you before but also vnto my Cato which was as worthie a man as euer liued and as noble Moreouer as the same author reporteth these were the sayings of Socrates when hee went to his death It is a most blessed and goodlie thing for them to come togither which haue liued iustlie and faithfully Cic. lib. ● Tuscul q. O what a great pleasure thinke it you to bee friendly to talke with Orpheus Museus Homerus Hesiodus and such like verily I would die full oft if it were possible to get those things I speake of And as ere while you heard this was the saying of Cercidas when one asked him whether he would die willinglie Elianus de varia hist lib. 13. being fallen into a most dangerous and desperate disease Why should I not for after my death I shall see the best learned in all kind of sciences among the Philosophers Pythagoras among the Historians Herateus among the Poets Homer among the Muses Olympus which through their monumentes of learning haue
by and by be dead Sodayne death wee know seiseth vpon many Q. I many in regarde of themselues but not many in regarde of others for moe dye deliberately vpon their beds than sodainly at their boards R. The greater is the mercie of God towardes vs that it is not so Lam. 3.22 Dan. 9.7 For his mercie it is that we all dye not suddenly we haue deserued worse and therefore that Q. I denie not that R. Presume not then vpon the other Q. Neither will I for the workes of God are merueilous and his iudgements past finding out Rom. 11.33 But I will enquire when a man is to prepare himselfe to death Whether in sickenes or in health or in both R. And I will answere in both and neither in health alone nor in sickenes alone Q. And why that R. Because there is a twofould preparing to dye a preparing in health and a preparing in sickenes a preparing in health because then we are verie vnsure to liue For the healthiest man in the world cannot promise himselfe one howre of life Much lesse can he saie To day or to morrow I will goe into such a citie Iam. 4.13 and continue there a yeare and buy and sell and get gaine A preparing in sickenes because then wee are all like to die There is but a step between the sicke man and death As one sayth of men and young men so say I of sickemen and sound men Bern. de Conuers Cler. c. 14. To sicke men death is at the gate to sound mē death is lying in wayte Both in health therefore and also in sickenes he that knowes he must dye must prepare himselfe to dye Q. What needes he prepare in health will it not serue well enough in sickenes R. Truelie no. For first the time of sickenes is not the fittest for such a purpose First because all the sences are then occupied about the paines of the disease And Augustine saith Scarcelie will hee come to true satisfaction Aug. ser 36. whome sickenes doth vrge and paine terrifie especially when the children whome he vnlawfully loued are present and his wife and the worlde do call him vnto them Secondly because then the diuell is most busie to draw a man from all goodnes as knowing that if then he hold him he shall for euer keepe him Olympiodorus in the 9. chapter of Ecclesiastes For as Olimpiodorus saith Such as the day of death doth leaue him such shall and will the day of iudgement finde him And you know it was said to the serpent which was more subtill than any beast of the fielde touching himselfe and the womans seede Gen. 3.15 He shal breake thine head and thou shalt bruise his heele Which as one saith is as much as thou shalt lye in waite against the latter part of his life And well may it be so for that auncient writer Gregorie saith Greg. lib. 6. moral The auncient enemie of mankinde in the time of death is mad through the violence of crueltie to snatch vp the soules of sinners and whome he deceiued while they liued by his flatteries them he tormenteth when they dye by his crueltie Secondly in the time of health it is verie needfull because as in sommer the lillie hath a worme in the roote that doth consume it so in health man hath a worme that doth dissolue him Wheresoeuer he goes hee carries death with him As the lillie that flourishes in the morning is not sure to stand till the euening so man that triumphes in the health of his youth is not sure to liue to the infirmitie of his age Absolon dyes in his health aswell as Dauid in his sickenes And the prouerbe is When health is highest death is nighest Many euen now as it were are aliue and merrie yet in a moment they are dead and gone Sometime death warnes ere she strikes and sometimes againe she strikes ere euer she warnes As therefore it is euill to delay till sickenes so it is good to prepare in health The wise man saith Syr. 18. 20. Humble thy selfe before thou bee sicke and whilest thou mayest yet sinne shew thy conuersion In health the wit of man is greater and the feare of death lesser than in sickenes In health therfore also to prepare for death the time is somewhat fitter Q. Why but it is neuer to late to repent For a man may repent when he will R. The proposition is true if a man doth truely repent But the prouerbe is It is scarse true which is not due It is sicke like him that vseth it As you hearde before out of Augustine August serm 36. He whome sickenes constraineth and punishment affrighteth hardlie to true repentance atteyneth Q. But are you of that minde R. Of what other minde should I be Q. If so you are and other you cannot be of what reason haue you for being of that R. Reason enough and forcible enough to content any man reasonable First repentance should be voluntarie as all other obedience to God should bee But repentance in sickenes is vsually constrayned The feare of death hell and iudgement doth enforce it Zeale loue and religion doe not then alwaies effect it And there is a learned writer that saith Enforced seruices are not pleasing vnto God Greg. Secondly in true and sound repentance men that repent Ambros do forsake their sinnes For as Ambrose sayth True repentance it is to sease from sinne Hugo lib. 3. de Mist ecle And as Hugo saith Repentance is called as it were a punishment because the man himselfe that repenteth doth by his repenting punish in himselfe what wickedly he hath committed For the three things which are in the smiting of the breast to wit the breast the hand and the sound doe signifie that repentance is of those things which we haue offended in by heart voice and worke But in this repentance both raysed by sickenes and neuer vsed but in sickenes the sinnes forsake the men for therefore then many forsake their sinnes because their sinnes forsake them and not because they forsake their sinnes For why their minde is toward them asmuch as euer though their might serues not to follow them so well as euer The historie of Andronicus and the lion of both which it is written This lion is this mans hoste and this man is this lions physitian or chirurgian doth argue that in sickenes the lion the Prince of Beastes doth leaue his crueltie and experience doth testifie that in sickenes man the Lord of lions and other creatures doth lay downe his iniquitie but as the one did leaue his crueltie to the ende he might be cured of his maladie so doth the other lay downe his iniquitie to the ende he may bee freed from his miserie The truth of what I saie is apparant in Antiochus the proud 2. Machab. 2.11 2. Machab. 9.5 For before that a paine of the bowels that was remediles came vpon
feare death For what should a man feare that which doth good and not hurte brings profit and not disprofite is beneficial and commodious not vnprofitable and noxious Q. Nothing at all in my minde But what is death so R. Why else say I so Q. Because it pleaseth you to say so R. What must I speake what pleaseth mee Q. You should not R. Neither will I so neere as I can but that will I speake which may please God and pleasure man Q. Because you say then Death doth good and not hurt brings profite and not disprofite is commodious and not noxious to whome is it commodious R. To whom not It is commodious to him that suffers it and it is commodious to him that sees it suffered Q. But not to euerie one of those that suffer it or see it suffered R. Neither did I yet say so It is commodious to euerie one that suffers it either in faith or for faith or both It is commodious also to euerie one that sees it suffered so hee makes right vse of the seeing it suffered For the first these sayings of Scripture make som what 2. Cor. 4.12 Tob. 3.6 Ro● 8.28 Syr. 41.2 Rom. 8.38 Death worketh in vs. It t s better for ● to dye then to liue to them that loue God a thinges worke together for the best O Dear how acceptable is thy Iudgement vnto the need full and vnto him whose strength fayleth and that is now in the last age and is vexed with a● things Gregor super Mat. 10. in testimo illis For the other this of Gregory makes much The Death of the righteous to the good is an helpe to the euill a testimonie that thence the wicked may perish without excuse whence the godlie doe take example that they may liue Q. What good brings Death to him that suffers it as you haue sayd R. The goods thereof they are vnspeakeable for multitude they exceede number for greatnes they passe vnderstanding for goodnes they excell all that men heere enioy or may enioy Q. I would I might heare somwhat of thē that so both I others might be benefited by them R. Sith so you will I say so you shall First Death killes his familiar enemie Gal. 5. 1. P● 12.11 Rom. 6.7 to witte his bodie or fleshe with all her lustes fighting against the soule For be that is dead is freed from sinne And what a benefite this is that saying of a learned writer sheweth which thus soundeth Seneca There is no pestilence more forceable to doe an hurt then a familiar enemie A familiar enemie betrayeth Christ into the hands of sinners Secondly Death opens a doore to his poore prisoner out of a filthie prison in which he was held bound and captiue that is Death giues libertie to his Soule to depart from the bodie in which it was deteyned from the presence of God as in a prison For many haue thought the body of man to be as a prison to the Soule of man Pythagoras seeing one of his schollers verie busie about trimming vp of his bodie said this man ceases not to make vnto himself a more troublesome prison What a benefite this is it may appeare by Dauids praier Psal 142.7 and our experience Dauids praier Psal 142.1 Bring my soule out of prison that I may praise thy name Our experience is that prisoners hate little more then lockes and boltes because they must stay them from going out Thirdlie Death deliuers him from the carryage of a coffin full of filthines and vncleannes that is his bodie Plato in Cratylo sayeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. Corpus a bodye Plato in Cratylo dicitur quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is said to be ac 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. Sepulchrum A graue Sepulchro quid faedius and what more vncleane then a graue Mat. 23.27 Whited tombes sayeth Christ appeare beautifull outward but are within full of dead mens bones of all filthines such like are the fine and faire bodies of men A corruptible bodie sayth Salomon is heauie vnto the soule Sap. 9 1● the earthlie mansion keepeth downe the mind that is full of cares And what a benefite this is it may appeare not onelie by Paules speach in one place but also by his great outcry in another For thus he saith in one place Whiles we are at home in the bodie we are absent from the Lord 2. Cor. 5.6 And thus he crieth out in another O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from this bodie of death And a miserable thing it is to be absent from the Lord Rom. 7.4 and to be troubled with the bodie of Death When Paul sayth the Ephesians were without God in the world he reckened vp one of the euils the Ephesians were infected with Ephe. 2.12 ere euer the bright light of the glorious Gospell of Christ Iesus did shine vnto them and vpon them but when he said If God be with vs who can be against vs he spake of one of the greatest blessings that is Rom. 8.31 writing therefore to the Philippians he not onelie desireth to bee with Christ but also sayth that so to be is best of all I am greatlie in doubt on both sides desiring to be loosed and to be with Christ Phil. 1.23 which is best of all This therfore was Dauids complaint As the Hart brayeth for the riuers of waters Psal 42.1 so panteth my Soule after thee ô God my Soule thirsteth for God euen for the liuing God Psal 42.2 when shall I come and appere before the presence of God And this otherwhere the saying of the Psalmist It is good for me to drawe neere vnto God 73.28 What shoulde be others thereupon I leaue it to others to discerne My meaning is to proceed to another cōmodity that death brings with it to whom it comes and that is this It puts an end to the painefull Pilgrimage he was going on in this world For what is this mortall life but a way Basil hom 1. in psal 1. and that for the hast that euerie thing generate makes to the end What a commoditie this is may many waies appeare but especiallie by that of Salomon Eccl. 7.3 The day of Death is better then the day that one is borne And that of Syrach Death is better then a bitter life If it were requisite Syr. 30. 17. that eyther of these were better proued proofe might soone be produced For the first there is one that sayeth For two causes the day of death is better to the seruants of God then the day of byrth Perald tom 1. pag. 134. One is because Death is the egresse from miserie whereas the birth is the ingresse to miserie sayeth a wise man though Death be not good yet is it the end of all euils Seneca saith Death is the remedy of all euils The second is because Death is the gate
Gen. 15. Gen. 15.3 Though God said to Abraham I am thy buckler and thine exceeding great reward Yet Abraham againe said vnto him beholde to mee thou hast giuen no seede wherefore loe a seruant of my house shall be mine heire This was Abrahams resolution till God shewed him his determination hee thought the right of inheritance he hauing no issue did appertaine to the chiefe in his house but God determining to shew him both who should be his heire and any mans right heire said vnto him touching Eliezer of Damascus the steward of Abrahams house This man shall not he thine heire but one that shall come out of thine owne bowels he shall be thine heire i. the sonne which shall come out of thine owne loynes he shall be thine heire Rom. 8.17 Rom. 8. If ye be sonnes saith God by the mouth of Paul then are ye also heires which words importe that none should be heires but sonnes if there be sonnes for they are not then yee may be heires but then are ye also heires as if sonnes ought to be heires if they be to conclude therefore Paul saith 1. Tim. 5.8 He that prouideth not for his own namely for them of his householde is worse than an infidell as though this by nature were instilled into very infidels that in their liues and at their deaths they would prouide for their owne and them of their householdes ere euer they prouided for any other besides their owne and their households And therefore should not be estranged from christians If nature works so much in infidels grace should not worke lesse in christians Grace is better than nature and therefore the operation should not be worse Q. It seemes you count it an exceeding fault for a man by will to alienate his goods or lands wholly and finally from his children and ofspring if he hath any R. Neither doe I in this case any thing without reason for when God by his lawe hath appoynted who shall bee heires what shall man at his pleasure appoynt new heires as if his wisedome were better than Gods I am sure there is no reason for it neither will the verie lawe of nature permit or approue it There is one that saith Plato de Repub. li. 2. Aristot pol. lib. 5. c. 8. Dorbel 4.145 qu. 2. de Testam A testament made against the equitie of the law of nature the law of God or the law positiue is to be broken and whether a will that doth appoint other to bee heires than God in his law doth appoynt be a will against the equitie of the one lawe or the other I leaue to other men to iudge Q. Then may you soone be gone for some say the father may appoynt another if the sonne hath promerited it R. Diuerse men diuerse minds I know some say so and I deny not but the case may sometime be such as the father may so deale Reuben was the eldest sonne of Israel 1. Chro. 5.1 but he had defiled his fathers bed therefore his birth-right was giuen vnto the sonnes of Ioseph the sonne of Israel so that the genealogie is not reckened after his birth right When Iaakob called all his sonnes together to tell them what should come to them in the last dayes thus he sayd to Reuben his eldest sonne Thou art my might and the beginning of my strength Gen. 49.3.4 the excellencie of dignitie the excellencie of power thou wast light as water thou shalt not be excellent because thou wentest vp to thy fathers bed then diddest thou defile my bed thy dignitie is gone But ordinarilie it falls not so out though often Parents take occasion to deale hardly with their children And I speake not now of extraordinarie chances but of ordinarie euents and therefore your then you may be soone gone comes not in so happilie as you would R. Neither care I whether it doth or no. I am not conceited my desire is but to be resolued with or for that I thinke you will not be offended R. Ofte and often that hath beene manifested but to the matter againe controuerted Though the sonne in the fathers iudgement hath promerited wholly to bee disinherited yet so much against the sonne the father in his sickenes vpon his death bed should not be incensed as therefore of his fatherly benediction he should vtterly be depriued The Father should rather remember the loue hee beares to his sonne and the obedience hee owes to his God than thus seeke to reuenge the misdemeanour of his sonne against him the fault that is in his sonne at that time hee should forgiue and forget The time of death is no time for reuenge as he would then be forgiuen so should he willingly forgiue because of his owne trespasse against his father God almightie he would be loath to be disinherited of his kingdome so because of his sonnes trespasse against him he should be vnwilling to disposses him of that which otherwise if his trespasse had beene away should haue descended vnto him What though the sonne forgets he is a sonne yet must not therefore the father forget that he is a father The historie of Dauid and Absolom teaches no such matter For though Absolom was as vngratious a sonne to Dauid as a sonne almost might be yet was not therefore Dauid as vnkinde a father as a father could be When Absolom followed him ouer Iordane with a purpose to disposses him of his kingdome 2. Sam. 18.5 Dauid yet said vnto Ioab and Abishai and Ittai Entreate the young man gently for my sake And when Ahimanz and Cushi brought him tydings the first question he asked them was this is the young man Absolom safe To which when Cushi answered the enemies of my Lord the king and all that rise against thee to doe thee hurt be as that young man is Dauid the king was moued and went vp to the chamber ouer the gate and wept and as he went he thus said O my sonne Absalom my sonne my sonne Absolom would God I had dyed for thee ô Absalom my sonne my sonne By this history Parents may learne not to be too vnkinde to their children how euer their children be vnkinde to them especially at their farewell to them and to the world for alas what pleasure may it doe them when they are gone so to haue dealt with them ere they did goe What a perpetuall blot to their names in so doing shall they leaue behinde them What an euill example shall they giue to other What a torment shall they fixe in the heart and conscience of their distressed children For these and other considerations I could wish that Parents would not be merciles to their children when they come to dye how euer they seemed mindles of them while they did liue It is hard to dye with an hard minde toward them A father pittieth his childe a father prouideth for his childe What fathers are they that neither pitie them hauing done