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A04393 Moses his sight of Canaan with Simeon his dying-song. Directing how to liue holily and dye happily. By Steuen Jerome, late preacher at St. Brides. Seene and allowed. Jerome, Stephen, fl. 1604-1650. 1614 (1614) STC 14512; ESTC S100256 249,259 535

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before vs Numb 27. and haue led the way to this common Inne of death Deut. 32. we shall see the face of CHRIST wee shall looke vpon him whom our sinnes haue pierced behold his wounds in his glorified body as the Angels now behold them wee shall inseperably be vnited vnto him and so ioy in him that our ioy shall be full in those blessed mansions which hee hath gone before to prepare wee shall liue and conuerse with Abraham Isaack and Iacob and the ancient Patriarkes with Dauid Iosias Ezekias c. and all religious Kings with Samuel Esay Ieremie Iohn Baptist and all the holy Prophets with Peter Andrew Phillip and all the blessed Apostles with Matthew Marke Luke and Iohn the sincere Euangelists with Paul Steuen Peter and Iames and all the constant Martyres zealous Confessors and Professers of the Truth yea and all the rest of the faithfull whom we shall know to the increase of our ioy especially those whom wee haue here knowne and seene euen as Adam knew Eue in the Creation Gen. 2.23 Mat. 17.4 and Peter knew Moses and Elias in Christs Transfiguration a type of our Glorification whom before they had neuer seene To conclude therefore now is the time when in the Church triumphant all that haue beene within the Couenant of Grace and vnder the Gospell in the Church militant shall come to the Mount Sion and to the Citie of the liuing God the celestiall Ierusalem and to the company of innumerable Angels and to the Assembly and congregation of the first borne which are written in heauen and to God the Iudge of all and to the Spirits of iust and perfect men and to Iesus the Mediator of the new Testament Heb. 12.22.23.24 Now what great harme is there in going to our friends especially such friends as these be who in knowledge and wisedome in glory and excellencie in loue and amitie doe farre surpasse all friends vpon earth 6 Death frees from sinne and from thy soules enemies 6 Consider the fruit and happy effect of Death in freeing thee from sinne and all miseries the punishments of sinne that stroke that kils thee will kill also a monstrous Mother and a wretched Daughter Sinne and Sorrow for as Death is the death of the body so it is the disseuering of sinne from the body Sinne that brought forth Death is destroyed by Death euen as the Viper kils the damme that bred him and as Nero murthered Agrippina that bore him that which puls downe the house of the body destroyes Sinne the troublesome and vnruly Tenant that dwelt in this house Now is it not a ioy to thee to be rid by any meanes of such an vnworthy and vnwelcome guest as Sinne which is alwayes quarrelling with thy best friends as the Spirit and the Grace of GOD within thee Art thou not glad to be freed from such a Make-baite as this body of sinne this old Adam which is alwayes stirring vp ciuill broyles and combats within this little world of thy selfe alwayes plotting and contriuing the ruine and destruction of thy better part thy Soule Art thou not glad to haue such a fire quenched as thy burning lusts and rebelling concupiscences the worst burning Feuer that euer came to man Art thou not glad to be rid of a sloathfull luxurious riotous vaine wanton vicious rebellious Seruant which is alwayes grieuing and offending thee prouoking thee to euill hindering thee from good sluggish to doe well forward to all euill such a guest such a quarreller such a fire such a rebell such a seruant is thy Flesh dull and dead and lumpish slow and sluggish to euery good dutie priuate and publique prone and propense to euery sinne alwayes solliciting importuning trying and tempting thee with as great importunitie as Potiphars Wife did Ioseph to abase and abuse thy soule and body in euery filthy pollution to commit spirituall whoredome with the world and the flesh still grieuing thy God and offending his maiestie abusing his mercy crucifying Christ turning his grace into wantonnesse vexing his Spirit quenching the motions and hindering the operations of his Grace taking part with Sathan thy forraine enemie like an inmate traytor and domesticall conspirator Now Death dislodgeth this guest quels this quarreller hangs vp this Achitophel quencheth this lustfull fire executes this rebell cashiers this seruant for euen as the Iuie dyes that twines about the Oake when the Oake is cut downe so the cutting downe of the body is the curbing and curing the sinne in the body which sinne liues and dyes hath his birth and death with the subiect wherein it is resident for he that is dead is freed from sinne Rom. 6.7 Therefore Mors metuenda non est quia est finis peccatorum Ambrose Now as it frees thee from sinne so the cause ceasing the effect ceaseth also it frees thee from all the miseries that grow as fruits from this cursed Tree euen all the paynes and labours of body and vexations of spirit that are incident to this mortall condition This made the Wise-man praise those that were dead before those that are liuing Eccle. 4. and to preferre the day of death before the day of life Eccles 7. And made some of the Philosophers in their Heathenish Paradoxes affirme that it was best for a man neuer to be borne the next best to dye soone because in respect of the many miseries of this life which they saw into with their naturall eyes they thought Nature was a Mother vnto all other Creatures and a Step-dame vnto man Theophrastus therefore Iob that drunke as deepe in this cup of common afflictions incident to humane nature as euer any meere man in this respect desired death Euen as the Seruant desired the shadow and as the Hireling looked for the end of his worke Iob 7.2 7 Consider that God doth not onely deliuer thee from the euill of sinne and the euill of punishment present 7 It deliuers from the euils present and to come but by taking thee now away hee hath a purpose to free thee from future temporall euils which perhaps hee purposeth to bring vpon that place and people amongst whom thou art for indeede this is the Lords ordinary proceeding to deliuer his Seruants from the euils to come whilest the wicked are chained in earth and reserued for further plagues Thus hee tooke away good Augustine ere the Gothes and Vandals ouer-ranne Hippo where hee vvas Bishop this the Lord promised as a speciall mercy to good Iosias that before hee vvould accomplish his threat against Iudah he should be put into his graue in peace and that his eyes should not behold the euill 2 Kin. 22.20 And thus hee saith of the mercifull men and righteous that they are taken away from the euils to come that Peace shall be vpon them and they shall rest in their beds when the Witches Children the seede of Adulterers and Whores a rebellious people shall perish and consume Esay 57.1.2.3 Apply this
narrow bridge of this life to meete him to greete him and to inioy him Expostulate with thy soule how it comes to be so dull so dead so lumpish so leaden how it is that thou professest thy selfe to be a Spouse of Christ a Eph 5.21 Ose 2.19 a member of Christ b Ephe. 5.30 a branch of Christ c Ioh. 15.5 which thou must beleeue and professe if thou hast any part in him d Ioh. 1● 6 and yet hast no desire to put off the outward mantle of this bodies couering to be inseparably imbraced in the armes of this Bridegroome not to leane with Iohn but for euer to rest in his bosome to be ioyned to thy Head to be fixed in this vnion But if Christs loue and desire to dye and to dye for thee be too high a pitch for thee to soare to which yet ought to be aymed at yet imitate the desires and the patience of the Saints in this kinde so farre as the Apostle speakes of himselfe as they imitate Christ for as the examples of the wicked are recorded for our detestation 1 Cor. 6.10 so the examples of the godly are written for our comfort and consolation Iam. 5.11 Rom. 15.4 You haue heard saith Iames of the patience of Iob and what end God made with him You haue heard of the desires of Paul and Simeon of the graces that appeared in Dauid Iacob Steuen c. Ambrose Augustine c. Caluin Luther c. and vvhat ends they made vvith God Then thou vsing the same meanes that they did euen Faith and Repentance why shouldest thou demurre or be vnwilling to goe that Iourney vvhich they haue gone 17 Yet if examples and presidents of others 17 Death is the common Inne of all flesh where thou shalt be refreshed Esay 38.2 Numb 27.13 as of Christ and Christians set not an edge on thy desires to dye yet let the mutabilitie breuitie and vncertaintie of life with the certaintie of death cause thee to make a vertue of necessitie as Esay said from God to Ezekias thou must dye and as God to Moses thou shalt dye so hee saith to thee Set thine house set thine heart in order for thou canst not liue thou must dye nay thou canst not long liue and thou must soone dye certainely dye therefore it is wisedome for thee as in outward things so in this to doe that voluntarily which thou must doe necessarily and compulsorie thy life thou knowest is but a short life frayle and brittle as glasse As it is a flower for the mortalitie of it Esay 40.7 A smoake for the vanitie of it Psal 102.3 so it is a house of clay soone crusht downe Iob. 4.17 A tent or tabernacle soone pluckt vp 2 Cor. 5.1 A Shepheards Tent soone pulled downe Esay 38.12 A Shippe in the Sea Wisd 5.10 soone sliding soone ouer-throwne by the Rockes ouer-blowne by the windes nay as a Weauers Shittle Iob 7.6 for the volubilitie of it as a dreame Iob 20.8 as a shadow Iob 8.9 for the vanitie of it nay vanitie it selfe which is nothing it being in very deede nothing in respect of eternitie Learne therefore by this mirrour of dying Moses so to spend these thy dayes of vanitie that for shortnesse of dayes in this world thou maist with Moses and all the glorious Saints of God inioy eternitie of dayes in the world to come SIMEON'S dying-Song HANDLED IN sixe Sermons LVKE 2.29 Lord now lettest thou thy Seruant depart in peace according to thy Word IT is the Position of some Plus exempla quam praecepta that Examples moue more then Rules that Practise perswades or disswades aboue Precepts eyther in Imitation or Aemulation of Vertue or Detestation of Vice and aboue others wee are pronest to write after the Copies of great men and to tread in the steps of old men Therefore the Scripture propound vnto vs the patternes of the greatest of men euen Kings who were as good as great Regis ad exemplar totus componitur orbis a 2 Sam. 15.31 Ch. 23. 1 Kin. 2.10 Dauid b 2 Chro. 31.1.2 Ezekias c Chro. 34.3.4 Iosias d Chr. 15.8 Asa e 1 King 22.41 Iehosaphat c. that wee should follow their footings so farre as they followed Christ and walked with God Of the most aged amongst men as of f Gen. 25.8 Abraham g Gen. 9.28.29 Noah h Gen. 5.27 Methushalem i Iob 42.17 Iob c. and here of old Simeon whose liues and deaths are so many pleading Orators and preaching Sermons to excite vs to Christian courses that like them wee may liue holily and dye happily and arriue at the common Hauen of all flesh peaceably and safely Now amongst the rest I haue called out and selected Simeon as a Candle set on a hill as a Beacon on fire to giue light to the world if shee will open her blinded and beetle eyes how to walke to Sion through this vaile of life euen in the darke and k Psal 22.4 shadowie night of death Simeon a fit obiect for vs to reflect the eyes of our intellectuall powers vpon in the prosecution of this sad and sable subiect of death in which consider first the Title of the Text secondly the Text it selfe For the Title Antiquitie and our Church denominates it The Song of Simeon meerely Swan-like and Cygnean Canti● Cygnea pious and propheticall I might easily runne Descant and Diuision vpon it sorting it out into his seuerall parts shewing 1. the Ditty 2. the Matter 3. the Manner 4 the Harmony 5. the Time 6. the Tune with all such obseruances in vocall Musicke substantiall and circumstantiall euen from the ground of this Scripture But my part now is rather to sigh then to sing vnlesse Dirges and Madrigals fitter for Heraclitus his part then Democritus yet I cannot but so farre condescend to this Cantion as to commend this diuine Canticle for the excellencie and to consider in it the ground of it nature and proprietie For the excellencie it is of that puritie and perfection that I wish it might be a rule and a square to our irrigular and vnlimited licentiousnesse in singing that our hearts were rightly tuned by the Spirit of God as was Simeons Redargution verse 25. that our tongues were the Pennes of this ready Writer in our Ditties Psal 45.1.2 that so wee might sing the prayses of the King but alas our Songs are commonly rather from Sodome then from Sion rather sensuall then spirituall carnall then Christian Satanicall then sacred rather to the honour of Bacchus Priapus and Venus pleasing the Flesh the World and the Diuell the vvorlds worshipped Trinitie then to the glory of the immortall and indiuisible Trinitie witnesse the vaine vile wanton vicious loose licentious venerious Songs and Sonnets of Poets and Poetasters of our times 1. Which may not onely be seene extant 2. but euen are chaunted and carolled out by
ioyes are vaine vile carnall sensuall like thy selfe like the Horse and Oxe that delights onely in a good fat pasture Exhortat though the Pinfold and the slaughter-house be the next dish but theirs are pure chaste sincere heauenly eternall like that God that sends them like that Spirit that workes them therefore get thine eyes opened to see thy miserie and ioyne thy selfe to them whom now thou despisest as Rahab and Ruth did to the true Church that thou maist finde mercy Secondly whereas Simeon is now willing to depart hauing seene Christ and so reioyceth in this expected obiect it is obseruable that the Patriarkes all of them in their times and ages expected CHRIST euer since the promise of this Messias was made vnto our Protoplasts Gen. 3.15 our first Parents Adam and Eue Simeon lookes for him here in his generation so did the Church of Ierusalem so did the rest in their generations Eue thought he was then come when shee bore Caine confessing that shee had receiued a man from the Lord Gen. 4.1 Abraham desired to see his day Iacob wayted for his saluation Gen. 48.18 Gen. 48.18 Moses desired GOD to send him to deliuer Israel out of Aegypt Exod. 4.13 Iob vvas comforted in this expected Redeemer Iob 19.25 Yea Mat. 13.17 many Prophets and righteous men desired to see the things which wee see euen the Maiestie of God clothed with flesh as a man is shod with Sandals on his feete And sure the Ancients for this cause much extenuate the Polygamie and multiplicitie of wiues of the Patriarkes as of Iacob c. as also in taking their Maides as Concubines which they say was done non propter libidinem sed propter prolem not for lust but for multiplying a holy seede euery one in their dayes desiring to propagate the promised Seede of the woman In which wee see Gods great mercy to vs now vnder the Gospell Vse Of Consolation more then to those vnder the Law for then came into the world the great Physitian of the world to cure the great Patient which was the world which so long did languish when we stood in most need of him The former ages had but a glimpse of this light of the world they saw him but darkely and obscurely tanquam inspeculo tanquā in aenigmate as it were in a cloud in a glasse in Leuiticall shadowes but wee see him clearely euen fully as the Sunne at noone day perspicuously in the Gospell euen as the Wisemen saw him in the Stable as Simeon and Anna in the Temple Visio beatifica wee haue an happier vision of him then they euen as the Angels more then wee hee came indeede to the beleeuers comfortably powerfully Typically but wee receiue him as Simeon did personally hee came to Adam with the promise in the time of despayre to Abraham with supply in time of Sacrifice to Isaac with reliefe in time of famine in time of exile with honour to Ioseph in time of persecution vvith comfort to Elias in time of battell with an hand on Gideons hilt with an eye to the stone from Dauids sling in time of inuasion with triumph to Ezekias alwayes hopefully helpfully to his Church For which cause hee is called The Starre of Iacob The Lyon of Iudah The Rod of Isaack c. Typically hee came in Circumcision Rom. 3. in the Paschall Lambe Iohn 1. in Manna Iohn 6. in the brazen Serpent Iohn 3. in the Arke and on the Altar c. Hee came figuratiuely as our rest in Noah our increase in Ioseph our loue in Dauid our peace in Salomon our saluation in Ioshuah c. But now hee is come to vs personally Vbi venit ple●itudo temporis venit ille qui liberauit no● à tempore in the assuming our nature in the fulunesse of time saith Paul Gal. 4.4 to free vs from all time saith Bernard Note his mercy hee came to vs voluntarily non compulsu Patris sed consensu sui not by compulsion from his Father but by his owne consent Non ex necessitate mandantis Chrysost sedex voluntate venientis saith Chrisostome Yea Vltro venit sponte Gregory se videndum attulit occidendum obtulit Greg. Of his owne accord yeelding himselfe to be seene of men to be slaine for men Yea Basil Propria benignitas inuitatuit misericordia traxit veritas compulit His benignitie to vs inuited him his mercy drew him his truth compelled him Basil Here is his Mercy for our Consolation Oh let vs walke worthy of this grace and Vse 2 Mercy for an vse of Instruction Of Instruction let vs runne after the sweetnesse of his odours let vs follow his footings since hee came to leade vs let vs worke out our saluation with feare and trembling since hee came to saue vs 1 Tim. 4.9 Luke 19.10 Let vs returne to the Bishop of our soules since hee came to finde vs Luk. 19.10 as lost sheepe let vs be no more the slaues of the Diuell since hee came to dissolue the workes of the Diuell 1 Iohn 3. let vs entertaine him as did Zacheus and retayne him Luke 11. Gen. 28. as did Iacob when hee would not let him goe till hee blest him let vs feast him as did Mathew wash his feete with our teares Luke 7. as did his Mary seeke him sorrowing as did his Mother prepare for him an vpper lodging to eate his Passeouer in as did his Disciples 1 Cor. 6.16 euen our bodies and soules the Temples of his Spirit let vs walke nearer to Sion in this our light since the Sun is come so neere vs nay euen to vs then the Patriarkes did in their darkenesse vnder the vayle and cloud of the Law Vse 3 Redargution Let vs now come to the tryall and bring our practise to the Touch-stone and wee shall be found as vnworthy of Christs reuelation to vs as vnthankefull for his manifestation amongst vs Luke 10. as the very Iewes themselues nay let vs compare our selues with them and wee shall iustifie them as they did Sodome Euer since CHRIST dwelt amongst the sonnes of men the kinde of his vsage hath beene too vnkinde the course of his entertainment hath beene too course the forme and manner of his welcome deformed and vnmannerly the world hath beene still so weake through ignorance as not to know or so wicked through ingratitude as not to acknowledge or so corrupt by nature as not to welcome the Word incarnate the Lord of Nature For euen in his birth at Bethlem howsoeuer hee had the hearts and admirations of some few some handfuls as of Anna Simeon Zachary Elizabeth c. As also after of his Disciples of Nathaniel Nicodemus Ioseph Mary Martha Lazarus some healed Patients conuert sinners penitent Publicanes and such like yet the grossest and the greatest part despised and dispited him Looke vpon him from the wombe to the earth from the Cradle to the