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A13071 The anatomie of mortalitie deuided into these eight heads: viz. 1 The certaitie of death. 2 The meditation on death. 3 The preparation for death. 4 The right behauiour in death. 5 The comfort at our owne death. 6 The comfort against the death of friends. 7 The cases wherein it is vnlawful, and wherin lawfull to desire death. 8 The glorious estate of the saints after this life. Written by George Strode vtter-barister of the middle Temple, for his owne priuate comfort: and now published at the request of his friends for the vse of others. Strode, George, utter-barister of the Middle Temple. 1618 (1618) STC 23364; ESTC S101243 244,731 328

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manner God hath made this generaltie of all things and hath set the same before mans mind to be considered and saith Seeke and search out the reasons and causes of all these things if thou canst when as indeed the truth of the thing is more secret and profound then the vnderstanding of man being placed in this prison of the bodie can reach and diue into Neither is the man of meanest capacitie and least vnderstanding free from miseries Wee are all like vnto sicke men which turmoile and tosse from one side of the bed vnto the other Ioh. 7.4 and yet neuer finde rest till we come to our eternall rest of which also the sinfull lusts of the flesh seeme to depriue vs. As touching the wil it is vnable till it be changed by grace to moue it selfe toward God and to will any good thing pleasing vnto him To will euill things is of nature but to will well is of grace or to will being free in respect of sinfull acts but bound in respect of good workes Ioh. 5.36 till it bee set free by Christ If he therefore shall make you free you shall bee free indeed For without me saith our Sauiour Christ Ioh. 15.3 yee can doe nothing As for the memorie Iob 13.12 Your remembrances saith Iob are like vnto ashes memorie enough for euill but not for good Heb. 2.1 to let God slip out of minde his word and benefits whereof followeth disobedience neglect of Gods worship and wicked contempt of God is a fruite and consequently of such forgetfulnesse Iudg. 3.7 Ier. 2.32 And the children of Israel did euill in the sight of the Lord and forgate the Lord their God My people haue forgotten me saith the Lord daies without number Thus men forget God the wicked wholly the godly in part Touching the earth which is the mother of vs all how many doth shee swallow vp with her downefa ls gulfes and graues Pro. 13.15.16 There are three things saith the Wiseman that are neuer satisfied yea foure say it is not enough The graue and the barren wombe the earth that is not filled with water and the fire that saith it is not enough And what doe the Seas How many doe they deuour Exod. 14.23 Act. 27.9.10 2 Cor. 11.25.26 they haue so many Rockes so many Flats and Sands so many Caribdes so many Reaches and perillous places that it is a most hard thing of all other to escape the danger of Shiprack Thrice saith the Apostle I suffered shipwracke a night and a day I haue beene in the depth in perils of waters in perils in the sea And they which are most safe in the sh●p haue but the thicknesse of a plancke betweene them and death Anacharsis the Scithian speaking of those that sailed by sea and hearing that a shippe was but foure fingers thicke Then are there saith hee but foure fingers betweene them and death And at another time he being demanded who were more in number the liuing or the dead tell me first quoth hee among whether of them you reckon them that trauell by sea His meaning was that howsoeuer they seeme to liue to moue and to haue a being yet they might with good congruitie be accounted euen for dead For nothing is so full of casualties as the sea and that in the turning of a hand They saith the Psalmist that goe downe to the sea in ships Psal 107.23.24.25.26.27 that doe businesse in great waters These see the workes of the Lord and his wonders in the deepe For hee commandeth and raiseth the stormie windes which lift vp the waues therof They mount vp to the heauen they go down again to the depths their soule is melted because of trouble They reele to and fro and stagger like a drunken man and are at their wits end So as euery one of these that passeth to the sea may say as Dauid said to Ionathan concerning Saul 1. Sam. 20.3 There is but a steppe betweene me and death That same cleere brightnesse which we call the Sun which is a Captaine generall father to all liuing things Psal 19.5.6 which is as a Bridegrome comming out of his chamber and reioyceth as a strong man to runne a race His going forth is from the end of the heauen and his circuit vnto the ends of it and there is nothing hid from the heate thereof doth sometime so scorch with his beames that all things are parched and burnt vp with the heat thereof and at another time he taketh his course so farre from vs that all things die with cold And what shall wee say of the ayre Is it not many times corrupted and doth it not ingend●r and gather clouds thicke mists pestilent sicknesses and diseases the forerunners or rather the instruments of death As for bruite beasts they yeeld no reuerence to man their Prince And not onely the Lions Beares Tygers Dragons and other great wilde beasts but the very Flyes also Gnats Snakes Adders and others of the smallest sort of liuing creatures doe wonderfully vexe disquiet and annoy man euen to death as appeareth by the ten plagues of Egypt And what meaneth so much armour as Pikes Bores Bills Swords and Gunnes with diuers other instruments of mans malice Doe not these destroy and consume many times in as great measure as doe sicknesses and diseases Histories report that by Iulius Caesar who is said to haue beene a most curteous and gentle Emperour there were slaine in seuerall battels eleuen hundred thousand men And if a man of milde and meeke spirit did this what shall we expect at the hands of most cruell men Whose mercies saith the Wiseman Prou. 10.12 are cruell Neither lands nor seas nor desert places nor the woods for in that battaile in the wood of Ephraim where Absolon was slain it is said 2. Sam. 18.8 That the wood deuoured more people that day then the sword nor priuate houses nor open streets are safe from Ambushments conspiracies theeues pyrates and slaughterers Are there not vexations innumerable persecutions infinite spoyling of fields sacking of Townes preying on men● goods firing of houses imprisonments captiuities gally-slaueries many and infinite torments inforced besides death it selfe which men doe daily suffer at the hands of cruell men And this is that ciuill and sociable creature which is called humane which is borne without clawes or hornes in token of peace and loue which he ought to embrace Also friends and maintainers of peace and Iustice are necessary instruments of the death of man O man the very store-house of calamities and yet thou canst not be humble to think on these things Neither haue we only those foresaid corporall enemies which we may see and shun if we cannot make our part good enough with them but which is more perillous we haue also ghostly enemies which see vs and wee see not them For the Diuels which are most craftie most cruell mightie and innumerable practise nothing
latter are a separation of the whole man bodie and soule from the fellowship of God The first is an entrance to death the second and third are the accomplishment of it The first is temporarie the second and third are spirituall and eternall The first is of the body onely the second and third are of both bodie and soule The first is common to all men the second and third are proper only to the Reprobates But touching the naturall and bodily death which is the proper subiect of this Diuision it is as we haue said before the seperation of the soule from the bodie with the dissolution of the bodie vntill the resurrection as a punishment ordained of God and imposed on man for sinne though to the godly the nature of it is chaunged For when God had setled Adam in Paradise a place of pleasure giuing him such libertie as these words import Thou shalt eate freely of euery tree of the garden Gen. 2.16.17 yet left hee should presumptuously equall himselfe with his Creator he gaue him this bridle to champe on But of the tree of knowledge of good and euill thou shalt not eat for in that day thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death Adam had soone forgotten this saying thou shalt die and harkened vnto that lying speech of the Serpent Yee shall not die Matth. 15.14 The man gaue eare to the woman the woman to the Serpent they eate of the forbidden tree so the blind led the blind and both fell into the ditch But now when Father Adam hath tasted of that forbidden fruite O how was he bewitched He was once in the state of grace but now of disgrace hee was once the childe of God but now in danger for ought he knoweth to be the slaue of the Serpent God did once care altogether for him but now hee must care and shift for himselfe hee was warme without apparell naked without shame satisfied without labour or paine his meat was put into his mouth But now it is come out of his nostrels and is loathsome vnto him Numb 11.20 And now hee must be pinched with cold and scorched with heate Gen. 31.40 he must trauell hard and in the sweat of his browes must eate his bread Gen. 3.19 While hee kept himselfe within his compasse hee was a happie man for which he was to thank God and now being in miserie hee is accursed and vnhappie for which hee may thanke himselfe A lamentable fall a pitifull case the wrath of God ouerrunneth the whole world as a gangrene through all Adams posteritie for his disobedience his treason hath attainted all his children his whole bloud is corrupted his fall redoundeth to all of vs that came of him Alas then how shall we doe Adam is dust hated of God and ashamed of himselfe he is accursed hee is sicke with sinne hee is dead twice dead subiect to mortalitie and subiect to eternall damnation his children bee in the same case Woe therefore bee vnto vs we are so benumbed with our sinnes that wee feele not the sting of death fixed therein the impostume of sinne lieth hidden in our hearts so pleasingly to our carnall sence as that we thinke our selues whole and sound as if we presumed we should neuer die The incredulous and rebellious broode of Adam will not acknowledge their corruption and mortalitie such and so great is their selfe-love and pride of heart Adam the Father of all Nations was once a free-man a blessed man the childe of God the mercie of God imbraced him on euery side In the earth there were blessings for him ingrauen as it were in the herbes flowers and fruits yea in the heauens and in the waters he saw innumerable tokens of Gods loue towards him But alas wretch that he was when he was in honor he forgot himself he denied God his seruice yea he obeyed his Enemie and therefore became accursed and debarred of all his former blessings He became a bondman a cursed creature the seruant of sinne and Satan ashamed of his nakednesse and trembled at Gods voice So that death and the graue haue obtained the victorie for Adam and his wife are become a cursed couple yea not onely they but all their posteritie they be the roote we be the branches If the roote bee bitter the branches must bee so also they bee the Fountaine we be springs if the fountaine be filthie so must the springs be Sinne and corruption bee the riches that wee bequeath to our children Rebellion is the inheritance that we haue purchased for them Death is the wages that we haue procured vnto them such as the father is such bee the children For wee are all of the same nature and haue eaten the same sowre grape Ezec. 18.2 The fathers haue eaten sowre grapes and the childrens teeth are set on edge By one man sinne entred into the world Rom. 5.12 and death by sinne and so death went ouer all men in whom all men haue sinned In sinning with Adam wee must all die with Adam and this is the onely difference betwixt him and vs that hee did it before vs and for vs. For if any of vs had beene in Adams stead we had done that which Adam did if not more to procure death And wee receiuing from Adam the infection of our flesh we receiued from him also the corruption of our flesh And this is the cheifest and most principall cause why all must die As the goodnesse of God hath lent vs life so our owne deserts haue wrought our death It is a true and a heauie sentence spoken to euery man Thou must die verified not in one in few in many but in all and vniuersall is this saying in respect of the elementarie creatures All must die A short clause of a long extent containing in it the estate of all mortall creatures whatsoeuer As there are certaine common principles which doe runne through all Arts so this is a generall rule that concernes euery man All must die The truth thereof is daily to be seene and all of vs hereafter shall proue the Lord knoweth how soone by his owne experience Therefore it is said in the second booke of Esdras Esd 2. v. 3.4.5.6.7 O Lord who bearest rule thou spakest at the beginning when thou diddest plant the earth and that thy selfe alone and commandedst the people and gauest a bodie vnto Adam without soule which was the workmanship of thine hands and diddest breath into him the breath of life and he was made liuing before thee and thou leddest him into Paradise which thy right hand had planted before the earth came forward and vnto him thou gauest commandement to loue thy way which he transgressed and immediately thou appointedst death to him and his generation of whom came Nations Tribes and Kindreds out of number And in another place of that book it is said And when Adam transgressed my Statutes Esd 2. v. 7.11.12 then was decreed
will haue his course they both keepe their old wont Since the first diuision of waters the Sea hath beene accustomed to ebbe and flow who hath euer hindered it And since the first corruption of Nature Death hath beene accustomed to slay and destroy who hath resisted it Other customes haue and may be abolished a King may command and it is done but what Monarch so absolute what Emperour so potent that can abrogate within his Dominions this custome of dying Nay there is no priuiledge no not spirituall neither can that grace and excellent gift of holinesse and pietie preserue a man from a naturall death viz. the first death out of no Court or Church can a man fetch a writ of protection against this Sergeant no place will preserue no person can bee priuiledged from it Esay 57.1 For heere the holy and good man the righteous and religious man is taken from the earth and dieth Iames 1.18 For if any should be spared he that is begotten againe of Gods owne will by the word of truth he that is borne againe of water and of the Spirit Iohn 3.5 and so borne not of bloud nor of the will of the flesh Ioh. 1.13 nor of the will of man but of God He that is borne a new not of mortall seed but of immortall by the word of God 1. Pet. 1.23 which liueth and endureth for euer A man I say would thinke that such if any should not die and yet behold the whole generation of Gods children they all die in their appointed time and vndergoe death not as a punishment but as a tribute as Seneca the Heathen man speakes which euery man must pay for his life The foole dies the wise-man the subiect the Soueraigne I haue said saith the Psalmist yee are gods Psal 49.10 Psal 82.6.7 and yee all are children of the most high but yee shall die as a man and yee Princes shall fall like others and so also the Prophets and holy men of God Dauid was a man after Gods owne heart and yet he died Moses saw God face to face and yet he died Zach. 1.5 The Prophets were indued with a great measure of sanctification yet the Prophet Zachary ioynes them all together in one state of mortalitie Your Fathers where are they And doe the Prophets liue for euer What say I the Prophets Nay Christ Iesus himselfe the Sonne of God the onely Sonne the Sonne in whom he was well pleased more faithfull then Abraham more righteous then Iob more wise then Salomon more mightie then Samson more holy then Dauid and all the Prophets though hee knew no sinne in himselfe yet for taking on him the burthen of our sinnes became subiect to the same condition of mortalitie with vs and he died also Examples of other times experience of our owne teach vs that all of all sorts die and are gathered to their fathers yea the dumbe and dead bodies cry this aloud vnto vs. As Basil of Seleucia saith of Noah he preached without words of Preaching for euery stroake vpon the Arke was a reall Sermon of repentance so euery corpse that wee follow and accompany to the graue preacheth really this truth vnto vs. All the worthiest of the first times and whomsoeuer else the word of God hath well reported of where are they Are they not all dead Doe they not all see corruption our Sauiour Christ excepted Are they not all gone downe into the slimie valley Haue they not long since made their bed in the darke None of them all our Sauiour Christ excepted was able to deliuer his life from the power of the graue Art thou better then Dauid and wiser then Salomon Nay art thou greater then our Father Abraham who is dead and the Prophets which are dead Whom makest thou thy selfe If thou thinkest thou shouldest not die Then surely if the holiest begotten and borne of man doe die then all must die And if holinesse must yeeld then prophanenesse cannot stand out And therfore whether holy or prophane Iew or Greeke bond or free male or female all must die If the tender harted woman that wept for Christ then the stony hearted men that scoffed at Christ If those that imbalmed him then those that buffeted him If shee that powred oyntment on his head then he that spat in his face If Iohn his beloued Apostle then Iudas that betrayed him Man is a little world the world a great man if the great man must die how shall the little one escape We must not thinke much to vndergoe that which all are enioyned vnto necessarily Equalitie is the chiefe ground-worke of equitie and who can complaine to be comprehended where all are contained For there is not a sonne of man in the cluster of mankinde but Eodem modo nodo vinctus victus is liable to that common and equal law of Death And although they die not one death for time and manner yet for the matter and end one death is infallible to all the sonnes of men Lift vp your eyes to the heauens saith the Lord and looke vpon the earth beneath Esay 51.6 for the heauens shal vanish away like smoake and the earth shall waxe old like a garment and they that dwell therein shall die in like manner But if any shall obiect that Enoch and Elias died not Gen. 23.24 Hebr. 11.6 2. King 2.11 I answere We know not I rather thinke they did and that Elias in his fiery Chariot had his body burnt and Enoch who in his yeares matched the dayes of the Sunne 365. was without paine dissolued when God tooke his soule to heauen or if they died not yet as Origen saith the generall is not therefore false because God hath dispenced in some particulers though one or two died not yet this is an vniuersall truth of all men to be receiued and duely pondered Heb. 9.21 It is appointed vnto all men that they shall once die from which there is no auoidance For the Lord of life and death hath so decreed it the decree was made in the beginning Gen. 3.19 For dust thou art and to dust thou shalt returne If it be his decree it must needs haue a certaine effect The decree is certaine the euent is ineuitable Our God saith the Psalmist Psal 115.3 is in heauen and hee doth whatsoeuer hee will Gods will is the deede as saith Saint Cyprian if he hath once willed it it is as good as wrought If he haue decreed it it is as certaine as if it were done It is heauens decree and it cannot be reuoked Dan. 6.1 I haue beene somewhat too tedious in this first Diuision which is somwhat contrarie to the common prouerbe that he should not be tedious that reades a Lecture of mortality but because this is on the one side a matter worthy to be obserued and on the otherside a matter too too much neglected I haue beene somewhat the bolder to
there is respect had amongst them and that worthily but when as the comedy shal be ended that is when the day of doome shall come when as the stage of this world shal be pulled downe that is when the earth shal be changed for the earth shal neuer be brought ad non-ens to nothing but onely the corruptiue qualities shal be consumed then there shal be no such respect of persons amongst men Yea it may be that the poore man shal be of greater respect before God then the great rich and mighty Thou camest lately into the world and hast found much that was thy good hap he came lately into the world and found little and yet his hap was not ill nay it may be better then thine And what were it to haue a purple Coate and a polluted conscience a gay gowne and a sicke heart a bed of gold and a diseased minde a full chest and an empty soule a faire face and foule affections to glister in iewels and to be filthy in manners to be in grace with men and in disgrace with God Luk. 16.15 He that hath much worlds wealth and dignity and but a small measure of grace is inferiour to him that hath a great measure of grace and but little or no worlds wealth For spirituall things among themselues admit comparison but betweene things spirituall and earthly there is none at all But tarry a while and nature will take away this ods Iob 1.21 Naked camest thou out of thy mothers wombe and naked shalt thou returne againe to the earth our common mother thou knowest not how soone If thou wert this day as faire as Absolon as sweete and louely as Ionathan as strong as Samson as glorious as Salomon in lesse then an hower Death will reprooue all these things of vanitie Eccl. 1.2 Vanitie of Vanities saith the Preacher all is vanitie A little sicknes a little head-ache one fit of an ague two spoonefull of phlegme distilling out of thy head into thy throate turneth all vpside downe and maketh a strange alteration in thee yea God in a peece of an houre can make as strange an alteration in thee 2 King 9.30 as was in Iesabel that proud painted-faced Queene of Israel who euen now looked out at the window in much brauery painted frizled and curled to please the eyes of Iehu and by and by she became as dung vpon the ground and the dogs did eate her vp And as was Goliah that mighty Giant 1 Sam. 17.51 who hauing challenged and reuiled the host of the liuing God straightway was laid vpon the ground groueling without a head There is nothing that can free any one from Death no not length of daies nor wisdome strength riches beautie nor talnesse of stature For if length of daies could then the auntient Fathers and Patriarches before the floud who liued some seuen some eight some nine hundred yeares and more as before could not haue dyed of all whom the conclusion is still after he had liued so many yeares he dyed If wisdome could then King Salomon the wisest that euer was who knew the nature of all simples from the very hysop to the cedar and therefore if any he surely could haue preserued himselfe from death And yet of him it is said in the end he dyed Iud. 15.15 If strength then Sampson who being indued with extraordinary strength at one time slew a thousand with the Iawe-bone of an Asse had not dyed If talnes of stature Saul higher then any of the people from the shoulders vpward had not dyed 1 Sam. 10.23 If riches Dines if beauty Absolon had not dyed Take a man in all his abundance of riches treasures greatnesse and pleasures flourishing in his greatest felicity brauery and prosperity yea let him be if he will another Policrates of this world what is he of himselfe but a carkasse a caitife a prey to death reioycing and laughing in this world but yet as one that laugheth in his dreame and waketh in his sorrow fraught full of feares and cares of minde not knowing to day what will happen to morrow mortall mutable miserable whose beginning is in trauell standing vncertaine his end corruption his body subiect to sicknesse his soule to temptations his good name to reproaches his honor to blastnesse his goods to losse and his flesh to rottennesse Nabuchadnezzar is but dust Alexander ashes Whereof should we be proud Certaine Philosophers earnestly beholding the Tombe of Alexander said one alas yesterday he did treasure vp gold and to day gold doth treasure vp him Another said Yesterday the world did not suffice him to day ten cubits are too much A third said Yesterday he did command others to day others command him A fourth said Yesterday he deliuered many from the graue to day he cannot free himselfe from Death A fift said Yesterday he led an armie to day an armie conducts him A sixt said Yesterday he did ouer-presse the earth to day the earth suppresseth him A seuenth said Yesterday he made many stand in awe to day not many repute of him The eight said Yesterday he was an enemie to his enemies and a friend to his friends to day he is equall yea all alike to all Then if Monarches be so momentary why should mortalls bee so proud It is true that one writeth wittily of the Grammarian of euery sonne of Adam that being able to decline all other nownes in euery case hee could decline Death in no case There was neuer Orator so eloquent that could perswade Death to spare him neuer Monarch so potent that could withstand him Nexus the faire Thersites the foule Zelyus the cruell Solyman the magnificent Crassus the rich Irus the poore Dametas the pleasant Agamemnon the Prince all fall downe at Deaths feet If he command we must away no teares no prayers no threatnings no intreatings will serue the turne so stiffe so deafe so inexorable is Death There are meanes to tame the most fierce and sauage beasts to breake the hard marble and mollifie the Adamant but not any one thing to mitigate Deathes rage Fire water the sword may bee resisted saith Saint Augustine and Kings and kingdomes may be resisted but when Death commeth who can resist it Death saith Saint Bernard pitieth not the poore regardeth not the rich feareth not the mightie spareth not any It is in mans power indeed to say vnto Death as sometime King Canutus said vnto the Sea when it began to flow Sea I command thee that thou touch not my feete but his command was bootlesse for hee had no sooner spoken the word but the surging waues dashed him so may many say vnto Death when it approacheth I command thee not to come neere mee but Death wil strike him notwithstanding And no more power hath man to keepe backe Death that it strike not then the mightiest King on earth to keepe backe the Sea that it flow not The Sea will haue his fluxe and Death
insist the longer vpon it And therefore to conclude with my Statute It is appointed c. It is therefore a care that euery one ought to haue viz. to know that they must die and that they cannot auoid it The decree is gone out against them from the highest court of Parliament of the most High What contempt were it not to take notice of it Euery one therfore ought to labour to number his daies and truely to know his mortalitie the greatest as well as the meanest the wisest as the simplest For if any one then all and if any more then other then the greatest for the greatest are most subiect to death As they challenge themselues to be the finest of the common mould so they must know that by that they are not exempted from the common law of Nature and force of Gods decree But as the finer the mettall or the purer the matter of any glasse or earthen vessell is the more subiect it is to breaking and so the daintiest bodies the soonest gone It behoueth vs all therefore to seeke for spirituall Arithmeticke thereby to number our dayes in a religious meditation of the incertainties of the time and the certaintie that that time will come Let vs therefore liue to die yea liue the life of grace that wee may liue the life of glory And then though we must go to the dead yet we shall rise from the dead and from thenceforth liue with our God out of the reach of Death for euermore The end of the first Diuision THE SECOND DIVISION ON THE MEDITATION OF DEATH THen if Death be thus certaine in the next place the law of reason aduiseth vs to thinke of the worlds vanitie to contemne it of death to expect it of iudgement to auoid it of hell to escape it and of heauen to desire it And thinke it not needlesse or superfluous to bee exhorted to this Meditation that the ignorant may learne the carelesse consider and the forgetfull remember that they all must die For as Saint Augustine saith nothing so recalleth a man from sinne as the frequent remembrance of death For the error of all men for the most part taketh his originall from hence that they forget the end of their life which they ought alwayes to haue before their eyes And of the want of this commeth pride ambition vaine-glory too much carefulnesse of the body too much carking and caring after the things of this life Hence also it commeth that we build Towers vpon the sand For if wee did consider what we shall be after a few dayes our manner of liuing would perhaps bee more humble temperate and godly for who would haue a high looke Psal 131.1 and a proud stomacke if hee did with the eyes of his minde behold what manner of one he shortly after shall be in his graue who would then worship his belly for a god Phil. 3.19 when he waigheth with himselfe that the same must in short time be wormes meate who would be so in loue with money that he would runne like a mad-man by sea and land as it were through fire and water if he vnderstood that he must leaue all behinde him If this were well thought vpon our errors would soone be corrected and our liues bettered Wish therefore rather for a good then a long life It is a thing doubtlesse worthy of euery mans best thoughts and intentions For seeing euery man must die and hath a course to finish which being finished hee must away It is speciall wisdome to learne to know the length of his dayes as it were the length of his lease for as he hath vsed himselfe in his farme he shall enter at the expiration of his time vpon a better or a worse 1. Sam. 13.14 Dauid for his learning a Prophet for his acceptation a man after Gods owne heart for his authority a King was then very studious in this knowledge when after fasting and watching he besought God to be instructed in it Lord let me know my end Psal 39.4 and the measure of my dayes what it is let me know how long I haue to liue Act. 7.22 So Moses wise in all the wisdome of Egypt and Israel accounted faithfull in the house of God Heb. 3.2 prayed yet for this point of wisdome to be informed in it Psal 90.12 and as well for himselfe as others Teach vs so to number our daies saith he that we may apply our hearts vnto wisdome like carefull schollers who forsake their meat and drinke and breake their sleepe and are often in meditation when they beate vpon some serious subiect What thinke you it will profit a man if by his skill in Arithmetike hee be able to deale with euery number and to diuide the least fractions and neuer to thinke on the numbering of his daies with the men of God and yet his dayes are few and euill What will it profit him if by Geometrie hee bee able to take the longitude of most spatious prospects and not be able to measure that which the Prophet hath measured with his spanne Psal 39.51 What will it auaile him if with the astronomer he be able to obserue and know the motions of the heauens and yet haue his heart so buried in the earth that hee cannot thinke of that which passeth away as swiftly as any motion of them all What profiteth it I say If he be able with the Philosopher to search out the causes of many effects and to know the causes of many changes as of the ebbing and flowing of the seas the increasing and wayning of the Moone and the like and be not able to know his owne changes and the causes of them Doubtlesse all this wil profit them nothing all this knowledge will be to little purpose in the end And vnlesse they think vpon death they cannot apply and fashion themselues to a godly life Yea we finde daily by experience that the forgetfulnesse of death maketh vs applie our hearts to all kinde of folly and vanity The holy men in old time were wont to keepe such an account of their dayes and so to think on death that aboue all things they might apply their hearts vnto wisdome So mindfull of these things was Saint Ierome who saith of himselfe that whether he did eate or drinke or whatsoeuer else he did he thought alwaies this sound of the last trumpet did euer ring in his eares Arise yee dead and come to iudgement Which when I consider saith he it makes me shake and quake and not dare to commit sinne which otherwise I should haue committed Likewise that ancient and reuerend father Innocentius the fourth was so carefull to auoid the vengeance to come that to stirre vp all the powers and faculties of his minde with due consideration of the vanitie of this world the vilenesse of his nature the shortnesse of his time the causes of sinne and the punishment for the same he still imagined to
and might not come in presence without all reuerence and obeysance Where are all these things become Were they a dreame or shadowe After all these things the funerall is prepared which is all that men can carry with them of their riches and kingdomes and this also they should not haue if in their life time they did not appoynt it for their dignitie and honor For the Psalmist saith Psal 49.16.17 Bee not then afraid though one be made rich or if the glorie of his house be increased for he shall carry away nothing with him when he dyeth neither shall his pompe follow him O would wee could but consider the equall necessity of dying in all and the like putrefaction in all being dead This would plant in our hearts true humility if we call to minde what we are now and what we shall be shortly We are now in our best estate but as a dunghill couered with snowe which vvhen Death shall dissolue there shall nothing be seene of all our pompe and glory but dust rottennesse and corruption The consideration of all which things as a dyall putteth vs in minde that wee must all hence when we haue runne our certaine race in an vncertaine time the course whereof because it shall be intercepted not when we please but when the Lord will it is good that we be forewarned to meditate on Death that we may be the better armed to incounter with Death when it comes When wee looke to the waters to see how swiftly they runne let vs thinke that so our life passeth when we behold the foules flying in the ayre whose passage is not seene so is the path of our life When we see the Sunne and the Moone how they hasten their course euen so doe we We can turne our selues no way but something there is which may put vs in minde of our mortality Cast your eye vpon your houreglasse and consider that as the hower so passeth our life Sit in your chaire by the fire and see much wood turned into smoake and ashes and say with the Poet. Sic in non hominem veritur omnis homo So man will sodainly become no man See in the fields some grasse comming Esa 40.6 some come already and some withered and gone and confesse with the Prophet that all flesh is grasse and all the beautie thereof as a flower of the field when the ayre moues and the winde beates in your face remember that the breath of man is in his nostrels which being stopt his breath is gone and that the strongest tenor of your life is but by a puffe of winde Standing by the riuers side Esay 2.22 confesse that as the riuer runneth and doth not returne so doth your life As the arrow which you see flye in the aire so swiftly conclude that your daies doe passe Psal 32.9 Or if we be like horse or mule without vnderstanding to consider this yet I am sure wee cannot be so sencelesse as to consider that which euery dayes light presenteth to our view And surely if we goe no further then our owne selues and consider how many diseases we continually carry about vs what aches affect our bones what heauinesse our bodies what dimnesse our eyes what deafenesse our eares what trembling our hands what rottennesse our teeth what baldnesse our heads what graynesse our haires all and euery one of these as so many loud alarums would sound vnto vs Death is neere Or if none of these did affect vs within yet how many thousand dangers doe daily threaten vs without and seeme to shew vs present death sitting on horse-back in the slipping of one foot thy life is in danger by an iron toole or weapon in thine owne or thy friends hand a mischance and that deadly may happen The wilde beastes which thou seest are armed to thy destruction If thou shut vp thy selfe in a garden well fenced where nothing appeares but sweete ayre and that which is pleasant there perhaps lurketh some dangerous or venimous Serpent Thy house subiect to continuall windes and stormes doth threaten thee with falling on thy head I speake not of poisonings treasons robberies open violence of which part doe besiege vs at home and part doe follow vs abroad Examples tending to this purpose are infinite whereof some haue beene mentioned before in the former Diuision and I will produce heere some few more thereby to put vs in minde that the same things may happen to our selues For which cause hardly should a moment of our life be spent without due consideration of our death If then we ascend the Theatre of mans life and looke about we shal see some to haue perished with sodaine death Ananias and Saphira others with griefe Ely others with ioy Rodius Diagoras others with gluttony Domitius Afer others with drunkennesse Attilla King of Hunnes others with hunger Cleanthus others with thirst Thales Milesius others in their lasciuious daliances Cornelius Gallus others with ouer-watching M. Attilius others with poyson Phocion Henry 7. Emperour in a feast by a Monke some by fire from heauen the Sodomites Anastacius the Emperour an Eutichian Heretike some by waters M. Marcellus some by Earth-quakes Ephasius Bishop of Antioch some swallowed vp quicke Corah Dathan and Abiran some stifled with smoake and vapours Catulus some with a fall by slipping of their feete Nestorius the Heretike some at the disburdening of nature Arrius the Heretike some with a sodaine fall from their horse Philip King of France others killed and torne in sunder by dogs Heraclitus Lucian the Apostata by horses Hyppolitus by Lions Lycus Emperor by Beares two and fortie children by Boares Ancaeus King of Samos by Rats Hato Bishop of Mentz and the like I speake nothing of others who haue vntimely perished some by one meanes some by another What shal I say then doe so many things within vs so many things without vs so many about vs threaten continuall death vnto vs Then wretched man thou art that doest not meditate on these things seeing thou art so neere thy death and must certainly die Herodotus writeth of Sesostris a King of the Egyptians that he was carried in a Chariot drawne with foure Kings whom he before had conquered One of the foure casting his eyes behind looked often vpon the wheeles of the Chariot was at length demanded by Sesostris what he meant to looke backe so often I see saith he that those things which were highest in the wheele became presently lowest and the lowest eft-soone became highest againe I thinke vpon the inconstancie of all things Sesostris hereupon aduising himselfe waxed more milde and deliuered the said Kings Which Historie putteth vs in minde of our mortalitie and change As a birde guideth her flight with her traine so the life of man is best directed by continuall recourse to his end Doe we not know by Scripture that death stealeth vpon vs as trauell vpon a woman or as a theefe in the night which giueth no
with his left hand hee imbraceth them Psal 41.3 yea the Lord saith the Psalmist will strengthen them vpon the bed of languishing and he will make all their beds in their sicknesse The third meanes of Gods presence is the ministerie of his good Angells whom he hath appointed as keepers and nurses for his seruants Psal 91.11 12. to hold them vp and to beare them in their armes as nurses doe their young infants and babes and to be as a strong guard vnto them against the diuell and his wicked Angels And all this is obserued especially in the time of sicknes at which time the holy Angells are not onely present with the children of God to succor thē but they are ready a●so to receiue their soules at their last gaspe and carry them into Abrahams bosome Luk. 16.22 And thus much of the first dutie of a sicke man and the meanes to arme him against the feare of Death Now followeth the second dutie concerning the body and that is that all sick persons must be carefull to preserue health and life till God doe wholy take it away Therefore we must referre our life and our death to the goodwill and pleasure of the Lord. And touching this temporall life it is a pretious iewell and as the common saying is life is very sweete being giuen to man to this end that he might haue some space of time wherein he might prepare himselfe for his happie end and vse all good meanes to attaine vnto eternall life In the preseruation of life two things must be considered the meanes and the right vse of the meanes The meanes is good and wholesome physick which must be esteemed as an ordinance and blessing of God We read that King Asa is blamed for seeking to the Physitians in the extremitie of his sicknes 2 Cor. 16.12 Whereupon a question may rise whether it be lawfull when necessitie of sicknes constraineth to fly to the remedies of Physick whereunto the answere is easie Asa is not here blamed for seeking the ordinary meanes of physick but because he sought not the Lord in his disease but onely to the Physitians Iam 5.14 Is any sicke amongst you saith Saint Iames let him call for the elders of the Chu ch and let them pray ouer him and that is in the very first place bfore all other helpe be sought Wh●re the diuine ends th●re the Physitian must begin and it is a very preposterous course that the Diuine should there begin where the Physitian makes an end for vntill helpe be had for the soule and sinne which is the roote of sicknesse be cured Physick for the body is nothing worth therefore it is a thing much to be misliked that in all places almost the Physitian is first sent for and comes in the beginning of the sicknes the Minister cōes when a man is halfe dead and is then sent for oftentimes when the sick partie lyes drawing on and gasping for breath as though Ministers of the Gospell in these dayes were able to worke miracles The art of Physick therefore nor the Physitian is here disallowed but ouer much confidence in Physick and in the Physitian without relying vpon God the soueraigne Physitian without whose blessing no Physick nor potion can be auaileable to the curing of any maladie or disease neither can the Physitian any wayes profit the sick and diseased patient except the Lord in mercy giueth a powerfull working and operation to the medicine against the disease to predominate ouer it for the curing of the same The doctrine then from hence is that the helps of physick are not to be despised not too much to be depended on but our chiefest hope is to bee fixed vpon God who as hee onely puts the soule into the body so he onely can take it away againe when it pleaseth him Yea these ordinary meanes which God hath appoynted are not to be contemned or neglected lest we seeme thereby to tempt God especially in dangerous diseases Eccle. 38.1.2.3.4.56.78.9.12.13.14 Hereof Iesus the son of Sirach saith Honor a Physitian with the honor due vnto him for the vses which you may haue of him for the Lord created him for of the most high commeth healing and he shall receiue honor of the King the skill of the Physitian shall lift vp his head and in the sight of great men he shall be in admiration The Lord hath created medicines out of the earth and he that is wise will not abhorre them Was not the water made sweete with wood that the vertue thereof might be knowne and he hath giuen men skill that he might be honored in his meruellous workes With such doth he heale men and taketh away their paines of such doth the Apothecary make a confection and of his workes there is no end and from him is peace ouer all the earth My sonne in thy sicknes be not negligent but pray vnto the Lord he will make thee whole then giue place to the Physitian for the Lord hath created him let him not goe from thee for thou hast neede of him There is a time when in their hands there is good successe for they shall also pray vnto the Lord that he would prosper that which they giue for ease remedy to prolong life And hereof also Iesus the son of God saith they that bee whole neede not the Physitian but they that are sicke which speach of our blessed Sauiour commendeth that art Matth. 9.12 and the good seruice done thereby This commenda●ion a●so the Prince of Poets giueth to the Physitian The Physitian alone saith hee is to be equalled with many other in honor Gen. 17.12 Againe whereas God did not command circumcision of children before the eight day hee followed a rule of physick obserued in all ages that the life of the childe is very vncertaine till the first seuen dayes be expired And vpon the very same ground the Heathen men vsed not to name their children before the eight day 2. Sam. 12.18 And that Physi●k may be wel applied to the maintenance of health speciall care must be had for the choosing of such Physitians as are knowne to be well learned and men of experience as also of a good conscience of sound religion in the profession of the Gospell of Christ and of vpright life and conuersation Now touching the manner of vsing the means these rules must be followed First of all he that is to take physick must not onely prepare his bodie as Physitians doe commonly prescribe but he must also prepare his soule by humbling himselfe vnder the mercifull hand of God in his sicknesse for his sinnes and making earnest prayers vnto him for pardon before any medicine come in his body The second rule is 1. Tim. 4.5 that when wee haue prepared our selues and are about to vse the physick we must sanctifie it as wee doe our meate and drinke by the word of God and prayer The
what can come in the whole earth or in hell so that I may enioy Iesus Christ in the end One seeing a martyr so merry and iocund in going to his death Luk. 22.44 did aske him why he was so merry at his death seeing Christ himselfe swet water and bloud before his Passion Christ said the martyr sustained in his bodie all the sorrowes and conflicts with hell and death due vnto vs for our sinnes by whose sorrowes and sufferings saith he we are deliuered from all the sorrowes and feares of hell death and damnation For so plenteous was the passion and redemption of Christ as that faint and cold sweat that is vpon vs in the agonie of our death the same he hath sanctified by the warme and bloudy sweat of his agony and making the graue a quiet withdrawing chamber for our bodies and death which before was so terrible to body soule is now by his meanes become the very doore and entrance into the kingdome of glory And hereof Blessed Hillary who from the fourteenth yeere of his age serued the Lord in singlenes of heart and in sinceritie of life to his liues end spake these words vpon his death-bed Goe forth my soule goe forth why art thou afraid Thou hast serued Christ these seuenty yeeres and art thou now afraid to depart Bishop Ridley the night before he did suffer at his last supper inuited his hostesse the rest at the table with him to his mariage for said he tomorrow I must be married shewing thereby how ioyfull he was to die and how little he feared seeing that hee well knew hee was to goe to Christ his Sauiour So by these examples wee see what great troubles the Saints and seruants and martyrs of God endured and how ioyfull they were as at a royal feast in all those troubles and sufferings of Christ that they might enter vpon that comfortable death of the righteous They were so farre from fearing death as worldlings feare it that they ran gladly vnto it in hope of the Resurrection and reioyced in the welcome day of death as in a day of the greatest good that could befall them Why then should we feare death at all to whom many things happen far more bitter and heauie then death it selfe and yet nothing so bitter and heauie as happened to these Martyrs and Saints of God Therefore when thou commest to die set before thine eyes Christ thy Sauiour in the middest of all his torments vpon the Crosse his body whipped head thorned face spitted vpon his cheekes buffeted his sides goared his bloud spilt his heart pierced and his soule tormented replenished on the crosse with a threefold plenitude as true God true man God and man gloria gratia poena full of glorie and all magnificence because true God full of grace and mercy because God and man and full of paine and miserie because perfect man a paine continuing long various in afflicting and bitter in suffering One saith hee continued in his torments twentie houres at the least others say he was so long in paine on the crosse as Adam was in Paradise with pleasure for it was conuenient that at what time the doore of life was shut against the sinner in the same moment the gate of Paradise should be open to the penitent and at what houre the first Adam brought death into the world by sinne in the same the second Adam should destroy death in the world by the Crosse Others report that Christ slept not for fifteene nights before his Passion in remembrance of the paine yea from the first houre of his birth to the last minute of his death hee did cary the crosse of our redemption In the beholding of which spectacle to thy endlesse ioy and comfort thou shalt see Paradise in the middest of hell God the Father reconciled vnto thee God the Sonne and thy Sauiour reaching forth his hand toward thee for to succour thee and to receiue thy soule vnto himselfe and God the holy Ghost ready to embrace thee and thou shalt see the Crosse of Christ Gen. 28.12 as Iacobs Ladder set vpon the earth and the toppe of it reaching heauen and the Angels of God ascending and descending on it to cary and aduance thy soule to eternall life and glory Then seeing wee are thus graced by God both in our life and at our death be not thou afraid to die And sure it is the will of God Matth. 20.22 that you should drinke of the cup that he hath filled for you and therefore pray that you may suppe it vp with patience and receiue great comfort thereby Againe there be three things that make death tollerable to euery godly Christian The first is the necessitie of dying the second the facilitie of dying the third the felicitie of dying For the first that which cannot be auoided by any power must be endured with all patience Eccles 8.8 There is no man saith the Preacher hath power ouer the spirit to retaine it neither hath he power in the day of death The first age had it and therein may pleade antiquitie the second age felt it and may pleade continuance the last age hath it and may plead propertie in all flesh till sinne and time shall be no more Call it then no new thing that is so ancient nor a strange thing that is so vsuall neither call it an euill properly thine which is so cōmon to all the world Wilt thou feare that to be done which is alwayes in doing I meane thy dying and dost thou feare to die in thy last day when by little and little thou dyest euery day Oh well said the Apostle Saint Paul 1. Cor. 15.31 I protest by our reioycing which I haue in Christ Iesus our Lord I dye daily Then I may well say yee are alwayes dying and death is still in doing Remember my iudgement saith Iesus the sonne of Syrach for thine also shall be so yesterday for me Eccles 38.22 and to day for thee Salomon saith All things haue heere their time you to day and I to morrow and so the end of Adams line is soone runne out Death is the Empresse and Lady of all the world it seaseth vpon all flesh without surrender of any till the day of restauration no place no presence no time can backe it there is no priuiledge against the graue Eccles 41.4 there is no inquisition in the graue there is no pitie to bee shewed by the graue there is no pleading with the graue For there is no worke saith the Preacher nor deuise nor knowledge Eccles 9.10 nor wisdome in the graue whither thou goest And therefore antiquitie neuer made altar to Death or deuotion to the graue because it was implacable euer found to be cruell and neuer felt to be kinde And heere from the necessitie of dying wee come to the facilitie of dying which maketh it lesse fearefull and more tollerable for that the sence of
branches Fourthly of the foundation and the building Fiftly and specially of the head members Concerning which vnion Cyril hath made this resemblance that as two peeces of waxe moulten vp together do make vp one lumpe so Christs flesh with our flesh ioyned together make vp one body which is his Church And this coniunction and vnion which wee haue in Christ is also set downe in that heauenly prayer which our Sauiour Christ made vnto God his Father at his last farewell out of this world immediately before his passion and suffering Iohn 17. where hee prayeth at large for the accomplishment of this vnion in vs with him And if our Sauiour-Christ himselfe did pray vnto his Father for the ful accomplishment of this vnion that wee might be where he is for to behold his glorie then it is lawfull for vs to desire the same And this is true loue indeed vnto Christ our head to desire to bee with him for the propertie of true loue is an ardent and burning desire to obtaine that which is beloued And as a woman that loueth her husband vnfainedly cannot be content with any loue token shee receyueth from him in his absence but longeth and wisheth and desireth more and more till shee receyue himselfe euen so the Soule which is wounded with the loue of Iesus her mercifull husband hath continuall desire to be with him I grant euery token sent from him brings comfort but no contentment till she enioy him If the loue of men compelled the Apostle to say to the Corinthians 2 Cor. 12 14 It is not yours but you I seeke How much more should the loue of God compell vs to say to our Lord Iesus It is not thy gift but thy selfe O Lord that I long for for thou art the portion of my soule seeing I am nothing without thee let mee tast the benefit of being thine I desire thee not thine for thy selfe not for thy gifts I desire thee onely nothing for thee Psal 73.25 nothing with thee nothing besides thee The godly Christian hath some liuely foretast sweetnes of this blessed and happy coniunction and vnion with Christ and therefore it is a griefe vnto him to be holder from him and a ioy to remoue vnto him But certainely he shall neuer goe out of this earthly body with ioy who liues not in this fraile body with grief for his absence from him If thou desirest that which thou hast not which is heauen then shedde thou teares here on earth that thou mayest obtaine it And hereof comes these and such like complaints As the hart panteth after the water bro●kes so panteth my soule after thee O God my soule thirsteth for God for the liuing God when shall I come and appeare before God In this case Saint Paul desired death in respect of himselfe For to me sayeth he to liue is Christ and to die is gain But if I liue in my flesh this is the fruit of my labour Phil 1.21,22,23 yet what I shall choose I wotte not for I am in a straight betweene two hauing a desire to depart and to be with Christ which is farre better for me For the Apostle to haue a desire is more then simplie to desire for it witnesseth two things first a vehement secondly a perpetuall desire to passe to Christ his head and this is a setled desire which is a gift of Gods grace peculiar onely to the elect of God In this case is also Simon desired death for when the holy Ghost reuealed to him that he should not see death before he had seen the Lord Christ after that hee had seene him in the Temple He tooke him vp in his armes and blessed God and sayde Luk. 2,28 29,30 Lord now lettest thou thy seruant depart in peace c. Wherefore hidest thou thy face saith Augustine to God happily thou wilt say No man shall see mee and liue Oh then Lord that I were dead so I might see thee Oh let mee see thee that I may dy euen heere I will not liue Dye I would yea I desire to be loosed to be with Christ I refuse to liue that I may liue with Chris●… And in this respect all the godly may desire death Though he tarrie Heb. 2,3 Heb. 10.37 Revel 22.20 wait for yet a very little while and he that shall come will come and will not tarry For hee which testifieth these thinges sayth Surely I come quickely Amen Amen Euen so come Lord Iesus THE EIGHTH DIVISION OF THE GLORIOVS ESTATE OF Gods Children after DEATH TOuching the glorious estate of the children of God after death which way shall I beginne to expresse the same when as the blessed Apostle sayeth Eye hath not seene Eare hath not heard neyther hath it entred into the heart of man 1 Cor. 2.9 the things which God hath prepared for them that loue him I remember what is registred of a certaine Painter who being to expresse the sorrow of a weeping Father hauing spent his skill before in setting forth of the sayde passions of his children did thinke it best to present him vpon his Table to the beholders view with his face couered that so hee might haue that griefe to bee imagined by them which he found himselfe vnable to set out at the full The like must I doe in this case for the glory of that glorious estate which the children of God shall hereafter enioy I must commend to you with a kind of silent admiration that so you may with your silence suppose that to be infinite which you see that I will not aduenture to expresse What hand can measure the bounds of infinite What mind can number the years of eternitie what hand what mind can measure can number the vnmeasurable measure innumerable number of the ioyes of Heauen O that I had the tongues of the glorious Angels in some sort for your sakes to vtter or rather that you had the harts of the glorified Saints in some little small measure to conceiue of some part of this glory But this glorious Sunne doth so dazell my weake eyes this bottomlesse depth so ouerwhelme my shallow heart and the surpassing greatnesse of these ioye do euery way so ouercharge me that I must needes stand a while silent amazed and astonished at the serious consideration of the exceeding aboundant excellency of this glory which requires rather the tongues and pennes of Angelles then of men to describe and expresse the the same yea rather it cannot bee perfectly described and expressed by Angels themselues And therefore I must be content then darkely to shaddow it out sith liuely representation of it is meerely impossible This I may say in a word that looke what difference there is in proportion betwixt the cope of heauen and the earth which respectiuely to it is but as a pricke in the middest of a center the same much more there is betwixt the glorie of all the Kingdoms of
the world vnited together if it were possible into one and that which the Apostle calleth the glory which shall bee shewed hereafter Better it is with a kinde of silent astonishment to admire it then to take on vs eyther to discribe it or to comprehend it in particular Yet giue me leaue to set before you for the furtherance of your priuate meditations a little shadow or glympse thereof euen as it were but the backe-parts thereof which Moses was permitted to see betwixt which and it notwithstanding there is as much difference Exod. 33.23 as betweene one droppe of water and the maine Ocean sea A word fitly spoken sayth the Wiseman is like apples of gold and pictures of siluer Prou. 25.11 Wee reade in the booke of Deutronomy that when Moses went vp from the playnes of Moab vnto the mountaine of Nebo Deut. 34.1.2.3.4 to the toppe of Pisgah that is ouer against Iericho that there the Lord shewed him all the land of Gilead vnto Dan and all Nepthacy and all the land of Ephraim and Manasses and all the land of Iudah vnto the vtmost sea and the South and the playne of the land of Iericho the Citie of Palme trees vnto Zoar. And this is the land which I sware sayth the Lord vnto Abraham and vnto Isaacke and vnto Iacob saying I will giue vnto thy seed and I haue caused thee to see it with thine eyes And this was that earthly Canaan euen that promised land which is so much commended in the holy Scriptures Euen so if we will take a little paines to goe vp to the mountaine of the Lorde which the Prophet Esay speaketh of Esa 2.2 then there in in some small measure may we take a sight and view not of the glory of the earthly Canaan but of the glory of the heauenly Canaan and where the Deuill as it is sayd in the Gospell tooke Iesus vp into an exceeding high mountaine Mat. 4.8 and shewed him all the Kingdomes of the world and the glory of them Here vpon this mountaine of the Lord there is shewed vnto vs the Kingdome of God and the glory of the same All which the Lord will giue vs being the right owner thereof if we feare serue and worship him and wee neede not with Moses to clime vp to any earthly mountaine to see and behold the Kingdom of God and the glory therof Deut. 30.12.13.14 It is not in heauen sayth Moses in another case that thou shouldest say Who shall goe vp to heauen for vs and bring it vnto vs that wee may heare it and doe it neyther is it beyond the sea that thou shouldest say Who shall goe ouer the Sea for vs and bring it vnto vs that we may heare it and doe it But the word is verie nigh vnto thee in thy mouth and in thine heart and there we may behold this glory Search the Scriptures sayth our Sauiour Christ in the Gospell of Saint Iohn for in them yee thinke to haue eternall life and they are they which testifie of mee Iohn 5.39 And we may adde further also that they are they which testifie of this glorious estate of the children of God after death Ioseph gaue his brethren prouision for the way but the full sackes were kept in store vntill they came to their Fathers house God giues vs here a taste and assay of his goodnesse but the maine sea of his bounty and store is hoorded vp in the kingdom of heauen It is an vsuall thing in the Scripture to represent spirituall and heauenly things by bodily and earthly things that therein as in glasses we may behold heauenly thinges although obscurely which notwithstanding we cannot otherwise perceiue and see immediatly being too glorious and vehement obiects for our eyes Therefore as we can not behold the light of the Sunne in the Sunne but by reflection thereof in the Moone in the Starres in the water or other bright body or else by refraction thereof in the mistie ayre so the soule while it is in the body heareth seeth vnderstandeth imagineth with the body and in a bodily manner and therefore is not capable of such hearing seeing vnderstanding imagining as it shall bee when it is separate from the body hence it is that the Apostle sayth 1. Cor. 13.12 Wee now see through a glasse darkely Wee conceyue of heauen by a Citty whose walles pauements and mansions are of gold pearle Christall Emeralds as it is described in the booke of the Reuelation Reuel 21.10 which wee shall afterwards heare more at large And to beginne first of all with the comfortes and benefites of this life euen they although miserable doe argue that a far better estate is reserued for vs in heauen We see that God euen here vpon earth notwithstanding our manifold sinnes wherby we dayly offend him and which may iustly cause him as the Prophet speaketh Ier. 5.25 to withhold good things from vs yet he in great mercy vouchsafeth vs many pleasures and furnisheth vs not onely with matters of necessity who dayly sayeth the Psalmist Psal 68.19 loadeth vs with benefites but also of delights There is a whole Psalme spent onely in this matter which is the 104. Psalme Psal 104. a Psalme worthy to bee written in letters of gold and as Moses speaketh in Deuteronomy Deut. 11.20 vpon the dore postes of thine house and vpon the gates yea vpon the Table of thine heart as the Wise-man speaketh Pro. 7.3 for the admirable excellency thereof God causeth sayth Saint Ciprian the Sunne to rise and set in order the seasons to obey vs the elements to serue vs the windes to blow the spring to flow the corn to grow Ps 147.18 the fruites to shew the gardens and orchardes to fructifie the woods to rastle with leaues the meadowes to shine with varietie of grasse and flowers And Chrysostowe very excellently handling the same point with Cyprian further shewes that God hath in a sorte made the night more beautifull then the day by infinite varietie of bright and glittering starres and that hee hath beene more mindfull and mercifull then man would haue bin of himselfe who through the greedinesse of the World would haue ouertoyled himselfe but that God made the night of purpose for his repose and rest In a word hee sayes and that truly euen of these earthly benefites and commodities that although we were neuer so vertuous nay if wee should dye a thousand deathes wee should not be worthie of them And the very heathen Poet considering this could not choose but breake out into an admiration saying O how many things hath God created for mans delight heaped ioyes vpon him with a bountifull hand Nay the Prophet Dauid considering this could not chuse but breake out into this wonderful admiration Psal 144.3 Lord what is man that thou takest knowledge of him or the son of man that thou makest accoūt of him And al this hath