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A04391 Seauen helpes to Heauen Shewing 1. How to auoid the curse. 2. How to beare the crosse. 3. How to build the conscience. 4. How with Moses to see Canaan. 5. Simeons dying song, directing to liue holily and dye happily. 6. Comforts for Christians against distresses in life, and feare of death. 7. Feruent prayers, to beare sicknesse patiently, and dye preparedly. The second edition: much enlarged by Steuen Ierome, late preacher at S. Brides. Seene and allowed.; Moses his sight of Canaan Jerome, Stephen, fl. 1604-1650. 1614 (1614) STC 14512.3; ESTC S118682 265,158 563

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vngodly see Prou. 16.8 Psal 37.16 5 All things fall out to the best to those that feare GOD yea all things and euery thing as well pouertie as riches GOD is thy Physitian thou art his Patient the Physitian knowes better then the Patient what is good for him 6 If the Lord had fore-seene that a rich estate and an higher pitch had beene good for thee thou shouldest haue had it but hee knowes what is best for thee how ere thy corrupt desires incline this way or that way The Father will not giue the Childe a Sword or Knife though hee cry for it he knowes it will hurt him How knowest thou with what heart thou shouldest haue vsed with what hand thou shouldest haue imployed thy Tallents of wealth if thou hadst them whether in the practise of sinne and workes of darknesse as dangerously to thy soule as a Childe or a mad man vse a sharpe weapon to the hurt of their owne or others bodies 7 Pouertie hinders not the acceptance of thy Prayers Teares Cryes and Sacrifices vnto thy God A wise poore man hath not so free accesse in earthly Courts to earthly Kings as silken Courtiers but The Lord heares the desires of the poore hee bends his eare vnto them Psal 10.17 For the sighes of the poore I will vp saith the Lord and helpe them Psal 12.5 The Lord turnes vnto the prayers of the desolate and despiseth them not Psal 102. verse 17. Psal 145. ver 18.19 The mighty Iehouah the King of Heauen will heare and helpe and relieue thee when the hautie and high minded and wealthy and wicked witty of the world are with their sacrifices reiected like Caines For the Lord heales those that are broken in heart and bindeth vp their sores yea the Lord relieueth the meeke but abaseth the wicked to the ground Psal 147. ver 2. v. 6. Agar e and her Childe in their pouertie and distresse in the Wildernesse after they were cast out of Abrahams house cryed to the Lord being like to perish for want of water so did the Israelites in the extremities of their thirst and Moses for them complaine vnto the Lord in a Land where no water was so did Sampson call on the Lord after his conquest of the Philistines being ready to faint for drinke and the Lord heard their distresse and granted their desires Agars eyes were opened and she saw a fountaine Moses smit the rocke and the water gushed out Sampsons Iaw-bone of an Asse sent out a spring of water many are the like examples This poore man cryed vnto the Lord and hee heard him saith Dauid so did this and this and this Oh then be thou patient and penitent and pious and thou shalt still finde God gracious in the midst of thy grieuances 8 Consider that if thou be poore in thy spirit as in thy outward estate thou art rich in Christ euen as the good Seruant is the Lords Free-man thou art the Lord of all the Creatures sublunarie in title and interest how euer the wicked to whom all things are impure as Rebels and Traytors to God vsurpe them from thee As thou hast an interest in CHRIST so to all the Creatures Christ is all in all vnto thee if thou beest naked hee is the Wedding-garment to thee if blinde his Spirit is Eye-salue if hungry hee is the Manna the bread of life the bread of Heauen if thirsty hee is the fountaine of water of liuing water if in want thou hast a Kingdome if kept bare for a time yet thou art an Heyre and a Coheyre with him though reiected of men yet elect of him Hearken my beloued Brethren hath not God chosen the poore of this world that they should be rich in faith and heyres of the Kingdome which hee promised to them that loue him Iames chap. 2.6 Let this be to thee like Sugar vnder the tongue of the Childe let it not goe but sucke comfort from it 9 Pouertie is no hinderance to thy saluation Lazarus was saued Luke 16. yea though neyther Pouertie nor Riches simply of themselues please God no more then Marriage or Virginitie but the sanctified heart in the right vse of both there being rich men in Heauen Abraham the Patriarkes Dauid Salomon Iob c. who were here rich in grace and impatient and impenitent poore men in Hell who were here as destitute of goodnesse as of goods of heauenly wisedome as of wealth of faith as of friends yet neuerthelesse there is more perill in the rich estate 1. both as riches puffe vp the heart 2. as they are weapons of tyrannie and oppression as in Ahab 3. as they are got with fraudulencie 4. kept with diffidence and anxietie 5 meanes of Idolatrie 6. Thornes to choake the seede of the Word 7. Snares of the Diuell to fetter the soule 8. barres out of Gods kingdome Therefore as some Philosophers cast away their wealth into the water because it hindered their Philosophicall studies so it were good for rich men according to Christs desire commaund and Injunction to cast their wealths on the watry faces of the poore to make them friends of the vnrighteous Mammon c. least they incurre the vvoes denounced Iames 5.3.2.3 Luke 6.24 But there are no such baites and snares and traps in Pouertie if the rich yong man in Mathewes Gospell had beene poore perhaps hee had followed CHRIST vvith as great facilitie and felicitie as Peter Andrew Iames and Iohn those poore Fishermen if his Cable had beene vntwisted it had gone thorow the Needles eye Oh how comfortable may this crosse be to thee that it cannot of it selfe crosse thee of Heauen nor curse thee in Hell 10 Besides the poorer thou art the fewer Tallents thou hast receiued the lesse that is committed to thy disposing the easier shall be thy reckoning and thy accounts when thou shalt be demaunded an account of thy Stewardship and the vse of thy tallents at the Lords great Audit when hee comes to Iudgement Luke 16.2 11 Euen for the things of this life though it appeare not so to carnall reason yet the Lord hath a care of thee and will administer vnto thee things needfull though not superfluous For thy heauenly Father like an earthly father may see his childe need but not bleed for the Lord will not famish the soule of the righteous Prou. 10.3 Though hee suffer thee to want for a time yet hee will helpe in due season hee brings the needy out of the dust the poore out of the dung and Ioseph out of prison Dauid neuer saw the righteous forsaken nor their seede begging their bread The Lord will replenish the soules of the Priests with fatnesse and his people shall be satisfied with goodnesse Ier. 31.14 Iob 5 16.19.20.21.22 Therefore cast thy care vpon God hee careth for thee How carefull was CHRIST for the two poore
marryed couple in turning their water into wine Iohn 2.6.7.8 The like care the Lord hath ouer euery poore marryed couple that haue small meanes great charge for The eyes of the Lord are vpon them that feare him and that put their trust in hit mercy to deliuer their soules from death and to feede them in the time of dearth Psal 33.17.18 Thus hee fed Iacob and his Children when there was a dearth in Canaan hee sent Ioseph before into Aegypt in his speciall prouidence to prouide for them So God fed his Israell like Sheepe in the wildernesse with Angels food and water from the Rocke Thus Christ fed his fainting auditors in the Desart with bread and Fishes as he did his Disciples vpon the shore with the same dyet Yea hee still feedes all his hee feedes euen the wicked hee giues a soppe to Iudas nay hee feedes the Eagles Crowes and Rauens Birds and Beasts Nay hee clothes the Lillies and will hee not feede and clothes thee and thine oh thou of little faith Ponder well Christs seauen arguments in the sixt of Mathew against thy diffidence if thou couldest but rest in him and relie vpon him by faith though the Lyons should want and suffer hunger though the Lyons and and Buls of Basan the great ones of the world should be famished as were some in the siege of Samaria and Ierusalem yet thou shouldest want nothing that is good If thou hast faith but as a graine of Mustard-seede in truth and sinceritie which extends to thy body as well as thy soule ere thou shouldest perish the very Heauens should raine Manna as it did on the Israelites the Rocke should giue her water yea the law-bones of Beasts should afford thee moysture as to Sampson the very Rauens nay the Angels should feede thee as they did Elias the very Fishes of the Sea should afford thee siluer as they did Peter Mat. 17.27 12 Mans life doth not consist in abundance of earthly things Luke 12.15 Man liues not by bread onely Mat. 4. God can blesse a small pittance and portion vnto thee hee can multiply a few Loaues and Fishes to the feeding of thousands hee can increase the little Oyle in the Cruize and the Meale in the Barrell to the poore widdowes to the sustentation of their families and the paying of their Creditors to whom they are indebted 2 Kings 4.2.3 Hee can make Daniel and his three Companions prosper looke and like as vvell with pease and pulse to eate and water to drinke nay to be fayrer and better liking for three yeeres together then those Children that eate meate of the Kings portion and dranke of the Kings Wine Dan. 1.12.13 ●4 15 As it is all one for the Lord to saue with many or with few 1 Sam. 14.6 to ouerthrow whole Armies with a few Water-lappers with a Warriour and his Armour-bearer by a Boy or a Shepheard yea to slay a thousand with the law of an Asse in the hand of a strong man so it is all one vvith him to feede and to foster thee with this portion or that with course meates or cates to sustaine and maintaine thee and thine vvith great meanes weake meanes small meanes no meanes or contrarie to all meanes how many if we beleeue Histories and experience both in sieges of Cities by land and in stormes and extremities by Sea haue beene preserued for a long time euen with such meates as nice and daintie stomackes would lothe and detest vnlesse hunger were the Cooke as the flesh of Horses milke of Mares Frogs Mice Rats nay greene Hearbes Plants Grasse and Leather of shooes What small portion of bread hath glewed and holden the life and spirit together for many dayes together yea euen Tobacco it selfe that much vsed abused Plant I haue wondered to heare Marriners relate It were much that a Daughter should nourish her Father by opportunities to visit him in prison such a time by yeelding her onely breasts to be suckt by him that the expectations of all those that commanded hee should be famished to death were frustrate if the Authors may be credited vnlesse that Gods helpe were able to blesse small meanes aboue humane hopes Euen the crummes will suffice Lazarus neyther doe I thinke that hee dyed of famine but eyther naturally or by the violence of his diseases I am perswaded God prouided both crummes and crusts for him else-where if there were such a Lazarus historically as the most thinke and not Parabolically as Salmeron and others discusse so will the Lord prouide for thee 13 The best of Gods Children haue beene as poore as thou now art euen Christ the Son of God by nature heyre of the earth and of the nations whose al things are was here on earth poore So was Iob Iob 1.15.16 so Elias 1 Kin. 17.11 begging a piece of bread the Apostle Paul and Peter and the rest of the Disciples poore Fishermen wanting siluer and gold Acts 3.6 So were there in euery place poore Saints as in Macedonia in Ierusa●em and else-where in the Apostles Ministerie 1 Cor. 4.11 So from time to time the most excellent of the Saints such as wa●ted for the comming of Christ that they might receiue a better resurrection vvere without house and harbour meanes and munition Tossed to and fro wandring vp and downe in sheepe skins and g●ate skins being destitute afflicted tormented Heb. 10.24 Heb. 11 35.36.37 To which besides these before and in the Apostles times wee might adde those and many millions recorded by Eusebius the Tripartite Historie and the Centuries of such that were in the same case in the persecution eyther of heathenish or hereticall Emperours chiefely by Ar●ians amongst whom were Athaenasius and Chrysostome in their time as also those that were spoyled by the Gothes and Vandals What neede I mention Dauid that was almost famished till hee ate the Shew-bread so the stocke of Dauid Ioseph and Mary the mother of Christ whose offerings of Turtle-Doues for want of better sacrifices shewed they were not rich yet the Lord supplied their wants to carry Christ into Aegypt by sending the Wise-men of the East with gold vnto them Mat. 2. euen as the Lord will supply thy wants vpon the like occasions for his glory and thy good or if thou liue poorely or dye in debt as many of the Lords seruants haue done yet if thou haue Christ and the riches of his mercies by faith thou art rich enough liuing and dying Obiect But this perhaps troubles thee that thou hast beene in a good estate and art now declining and at the lowest ebbe Ans Since this is a burthen it is a miserie to haue beene happy yet euen the very Philosophers as Seneca and others besides Petrarcke haue prescribed comforts in this crosse but the word hath balme plenty for this sore the Saints haue tryed the like as did Iob whose
repentance Dan. 4.24 Turne to the Lord with all thine heart in fasting weeping and mourning Ioel 2.12 Turne from the wickednesse thou hast committed with the Niniuites Ionah 3.7.8 Wash thee and make thee cleane Esay 1.16 Cleanse thy heart from euill thoughts Ier. 4.14 Leaue thy formalitie in Religion and worship the Lord in truth and spirit Iohn 4.24 Get faith and learne to liue by faith Hab. 2.4 and to dye by faith Be a Nathaniel in thy dealings with men let thy heart be vpright as thy hand Ioh. 1.47 Remember the poore and needy then the Lord will remember thee in the day of thy sicknesse Christ will visite thee as hee did Iairus Daughter and Peters wiues Mother he shall be thy Physitian when the simples of Nature and the arme of Flesh faile his Angels shall pitch their tents about thee and carry thy flitting soule as they did Lazarus his into the seates of the blessed Make vse of this and the LORD giue thee vnderstanding in all things 16 As the examples of the Saints of God that hauing liued conscionably and dyed comfortably must comfort thee in this houre so their willingnesse to dye must encourage thee willingly to drinke of that cup which the Lord offers thee without resisting or relucting Looke vpon old Simeon singing that Swan-like song prophecying his death Lord now le●t●st thou thy Seruant depart in peace Luke 2.29 But especially of Saint Paul vveary of this mortalitie desirou● to be disburdened of the burthen of his corruptions to be deliuered from the body of sinne Rom. 7. to be present with the Lord to be dissolued and to be with CHRIST 2 Cor. 5. Phil. 1. But the best president that wee haue in life and death as the best comfort is the practise of Christ who although hee feared death as man desiring conditionally the passing of that bitter cup yet neuerthelesse wee shall see in him a great alacritie chearefulnesse propensitie and willingnesse to dye for besides his often conference with his Disciples about his death the frequent nomination of it vpon all occasions which shewes how vehemently hee was affected towards it the tongue speaking from the hearts abundance all his words and acts declare it for to shew his desire to dye hee counts it but a Baptisme or as it were a sprinkling of cooling water Mat. 20.22 nay it is meate and drinke to him to doe his Fathers will which was that hee should dye hee counts it a Iourney to goe which hee was willing to vnder-goe nay hee was euen payned vntill it was past when it came to the push that his houre was come hee seekes death as it seekes him hee goes forth to meete and welcome it as his friend as Abraham and Lot to meete and entertaine the Angels hee offers himselfe to the instruments of his death his backe to the smiters and finally his soule is not taken from him compulsorie but as hee commended it so hee resigned and gaue it vp to his Father willingly hee gaue vp the ghost hauing power to lay downe his life sending out his spirit as Noah did the Doue out of the Arke which after three dayes returned againe to quicken the body from heauen from whence also Lazarus his soule returned after foure dayes Now apply this to thine owne particular art not thou a Christian so denominated of CHRIST then euery one of Christs actions ought to be thy instruction chiefely in his death all whose dying gestures are worthy to be writ in thy heart in letters of Gold Did hee then vnder-goe such an extraordinary vnnaturall painefull shamefull cursed death the worst that euer was for therefore Christ dyed the worst death that euer was both for the ignominie of it and the exquisite tortures in it that a Christian should not feare any death since euery death is sanctified vnto him in the death of Christ Did Christ not onely indure his pangs and paines in death so patiently as a Lambe before the shearer but was euen desirous of this bitter pill for the ioy that was set before him and the loue hee bore to redeeme thy enthralled soule and art thou scrupulous and timerous of a naturall and an ordinary passage from life to life through this dead Sea Wilt thou mutter and murmure and shew thy selfe refractory to come to the Kings Court when thou art so gently summoned by such a sweet messenger as a lingring sickenesse Hast thou so little longing to goe to him by the rupture of a weake thread of life who was so desirous to come to thee from heauen to earth from the earth to the Crosse from the Crosse to the Graue euen through a red Sea of blood thorow Pikes and Speares and nayles and thornes being dieted in this his bloody march with the bread of affliction and the water of teares with gall vinegar oh hast thou so little delight in him so little desire towards him so small liking of him so little loue to him that thou list not step ouer the 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 member of Christ a branch of Christ which thou must beleeue and professe if thou hast any part in him 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 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 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 Ez●kias thou must dye and as God to Moses thou
aboue as Adam and so Eue their nine hundred and thirtie Seth nine hundred twelue Enos nine hundred and fiue Caynan his sonne nine hundred and tenne Malalehel nine hundred sixtie and two Iayred nine hundred sixtie and fiue Methusalem nine hundred sixtie and nine Noah nine hundred and fiue c. but wee hardly attaine to our nintie but if a man liue past nintie to nintie and seauen or nintie and eight with Liuia and Perpenna or to nintie and nine with Statilia if hee passe his Climactericall of sixtie and three wee count him an old man but if hee attaine to his hundred as did Valerius Coruinus and Metellus Abbot Paconius and Titus Pauls Scholler wee account him very aged but if hee exceede his hundred as Heroditus writes of some of the Aegyptians and some of Masinissa the Numedian King to an hundred and foure as did Hipocrates or an hundred and fiue with Xen●philus or an hundred and seauen with Terentia or an hundred and eight with Homer or an hundred and tenne with Guarinus and Helias the Abbot or an hundred and twelue vvith Cyrus a Bishop but chiefely to an hundred and twentie with Romualdus the Hermite we admire and wonder at him as much as former times wondred at their Hermites And vvell wee may since our life seemes to be but the Epitome and Comp●ndium of former yeeres so short so momentanie that as the Scripture compares it to a flower to grasse to smoake to clay to dust and chaffe which the vvinde scatters to a bubble a blast a breath a vapour a dreame a shadow a Weauers shittle and such fading things so Antiquitie hath called it a winged woman fruitfull of sinnes yet swift Ambrose saith it is like the glory of the world which the Tempter shewed CHRIST in the twinckling of an eye like the Vision which Esdras saw vanishing in a moment Esdras 1.8 like Ierusalems Temple that was soone destroyed for as one stone was not left vpon another in that materiall Temple so shortly one bone will not be left vpon another in the temple of the best compacted body liuing which saith Inchinus is nothing else but Carne●-glacies fleshie Ice or Icie flesh soone thawed and dissolued a clayie frame saith Pontanus standing on the pillers of a little breath ready euery day it is so ruinous to fall in manus Domini into the Lords hands of whom wee haue it as tennants at will The largest limits of our Lease being but a day for so Dauid and Moses when they play the holy Geometricians and Arithmetitians in measuring and numbring their time goe not by yeeres and moneths but by dayes yea and to some it is but a short Winters day to the longest that liued a Summers day in which hee that hath the most prosperous Sunshine may be compared to those Flyes that breede in the Sunne neare the Riuer Hipanis which appeare in the Morne are in their full strength at Noone and dye at Night Whence came the Prouerbe Hominem esse Ephimeron that man is a continuer for a day beyond which determined day hee cannot here abide Other things are continued long by extrinsecall meanes or intrinsecall qualities vvithin themselues some by their extreame cold as all sorts of Mettals some by their exceeding heate as Pepper Ginger and the like some by motion as Water and Wine that by motion are kept from putrifaction some by continuation of the parts with the whole as the Sea that corrupts not in the whole but in the parts as may be seene and felt in the creekes in Essex that come from the Sea but man being made mortall and so hauing that Epithite more fitly appropriated to him then any other creature neither by his naturall composition can nor in the wise Gods disposition must continue long vpon the earth neyther can any Physicall meanes preserue him vnlesse a Metaphysicall power doe vphold him and cause him to hold out to his old yeeres as Simeon here did Is Death so certaine and Life so short then let vs learne to bestow it well so long as God lends it Absolon after a long time knew not how to pacifie and appease his Father we haue but a short time allotted to pacifie and appease our displeased GOD therefore let vs speedily labour our reconciliation let vs worke out our saluation with feare and trembling As Abigall speedily met Dauid and appeased his wrath 1 Sam. 25. and as Dauid speedily met the Lord by repentance after his numbring the people 2 Sam. 24.10 and as Peter went out presently and wept bitterly after the denying his Master Mat. 26. So let vs who in the whole course of our life haue as much displeased as wee haue dishonoured our GOD instantly haue recourse to the throne of grace that the Lord may smell the sweet sacrifice of our broken hearts ere wrath goe from the Almightie to our destruction Oh our dayes are few and our sinnes many wee haue beene barren in good fruitfull in euill plentifull in sinning penurious in sorrowing If Dauids sinnes were moe then the hayres of his head ours are moe then the sands in the Sea and if hee washt his couch vvith teares vvee had neede wash our soules with flouds of vvaters turning like Niobe into fountaines and like that old conuert Pelagia be Pelagus lachrymarum a Sea of sorrow as wee haue beene vncleane sinckes of sinne nay if wee should now for euer shake hands with sinne and haue no more commerce with the flesh and the world but liue retyredly mortifiedly piously and penitently as the old Hermites pretended and if we should liue Noahs and N●stors yeeres and euery day weepe as much as Mary Magdalene did at her spirituall marriage vvith Christ as much for our selues as the Daughters of Ierusalem did for Christ nay if we should weepe out our eyes like some penitents that Cassianus mentions remembring with Ezekias our former vanities in the bitternesse of our soules it were not a sufficient recompence for our fore-past rebellions nor a satisfactorie sacrifice for our former sinnes But what shall wee say to those that in this short life make a long and a continuated custome of sinne neuer redeeming the time or thinking of their few and euill dayes or of the reckoning they must make when they are expired but passing their time in iollitie singing to the Tabret and the Harpe letting the reynes loose to all licentiousnes making their bellies their God planting here their Turkish Heauen of Wine and Women wallowing like Swine in all lusts like Sardanapalus amongst his wantons seruing no other God then Mammon or Goddesses then Venus making Dogs and Horses or such base Creatures their beloued Idols They thinke no more of death then the stiffe-necked Iewes that made a league with the graue and a Couenant vvith Hell such as some lazy Pastors make vvith their people that if these will neuer trouble them they would neuer thinke of these