THE SAFEGARD OF THE SOVLE.

DECLARING SVN­DRY SOVERAIGNE salues tending to the comfort and saluation of the same: Very neces­sarie to bee learned and obserued of all men, and at all times, but chiefely in the extremitie of Sicknes, and grieuous pangs of DEATH.

Composed by Lawrence Bankes, Preacher of the Word of God: and Parson of Staunton, in the Coun­ty of Glocester.

IOB 14. 14. All the dayes of mine appointed time will I waite, till my changing shall come.

LONDON, Printed by G. P. for Iohn Clarke, and are to bee sold vnder S. Peters Church in Cornhill. 1619.

TO THE CHRISTIAN AND GENTLE REA­der, and specially to my owne Parishioners of Drowfeild and Staunton, of whom I haue had Charge, and to whom I wish sal­uation and safety of soule in Christ Iesus.

GOod Christian Reader, I haue led my life aboue fortie yeeres in two seuerall places, to wit, in Drowfeild, in the Countie [Page] of Darby, of which Church I was Vicar fifteene yeeres; and at this present in Staun­ton in the Countie of Glo­cester, wherein I doe now liue, and haue beene resident these twenty and seuen yeres. In the former place my Charge was great and wide, and beeing occasioned often­times (as dutie required) to visit the Sicke there, and in some other places neere ad­ioyning: whereof some were Lunatike, and troubled in their passions and extremi­ties: Others, I found fearfull of Death and Damnation, and therfore to haue need of ghostly counsell and cōfort in [Page] their molestations and per­plexities: and finding not much matter of that Sub­iect in the visitation of the Sicke, contained in the Booke of Common Prayer, to com­fort and bridle their outra­gious humours and mala­dies: I bethought my selfe, it were expedient for mee to inuent and deuise, by Gods assistance, some necessarie helpe, both for mine owne vse, and for more full dis­charge of my dutie in such cases. And therefore not daring to presume of my selfe, either to pray or per­swade of the sodaine in such fearefull and lamentable ac­cidents: [Page] I presently deuised to my simple skill, to inuent and dispose partly of my selfe, and partly by collecti­on out of other Authors, such matter, and obserue such method therein, as might be to the better performance of my dutie towards God, the quieting of the afflicted soule, the comfort of my deare flock, and also some helpe to such of mine owne Calling, as were at that time as ignorant as my selfe. And hereupon I tooke mee to my pen and pa­per, and so did set down this plaine and simple Treatise in writing, which for the most part thereof hath lyen by mee [Page] many yeeres, seruing onely mine owne turne in time of neede, and as occasion was offered. And albeit I had thought neuer to haue pub­lished or committed it to the Presse in my life time; yet now being old, and not so well able to performe mine Of­fice in the Pulpit, and other­wise, as I haue beene in times past, by reason that my sight and memory, with o­ther powers of nature fayle mee; I thought good to a­uoid idlenesse, to reuiew and present this small volume to you my fore said flockes, and to offer you a little taste of my first fruits, and so to leaue be­hinde [Page] mee in writing some pledge & taken of my loue to­wards you, whereby you may the better remember mee, when the mould hath couered my body, and the Magots and Wormes consumed my fraile flesh. And if any others besides you shall be quickned and strengthened thereby in their greatest griefes, & last combates, I shall in heart bee most glad, and thinke my paines the better bestowed: And therefore haue beene bold to offer this my myte to God & your charitable ac­ceptation & allowance: Hum­bly crauing pardon, if in any point I haue giuen occasion of [Page] offence or mislike, in omitting any part of my duty therein, either towards God and your selues, or in committing any offence unto others that are more learned & iudicial them my selfe, who willingly ac­knowledge mine owne want and infirmity in these my last and declining yeeres: and therefore submit my selfe to the censure of those which are of riper wit, and profounder knowledge; for I speake not to them, but to the vnlear­ned and simple sort like my selfe. Wherefore as I haue plainly set it forth, only for the instruction and comforts of the ignorant and afflicted: [Page] So (I beseech thee gentle Rea­der) to permit it to passe with out thy curious carping, par­doning therein any fault or defect wherein I haue failed, and friendly accepting my good meaning towards the af­flicted Soule, and troubled Conscience, for whose sake I haue published it to the view of the world, which I framed first onely for the vse of mine own flock: whose safegard and saluation. I tender in my heart; & so commit them and the Reader to Christ Iesus.

Your Pastor in times past, and your well-willer euer euen vntill death, L. B.

THE SAFEGARD OF THE SOVLE:
Declaring sundry so­ueraigne salues, tending to the comfort and saluation of the same: very necessarie to bee regarded of all men, especially in the time of their Visitation and grieuous pangs of Death.

A Preparatiue for the Sicke.

BEfore I search the sinewes of the soules safe­tie, or enter in [Page 2] to the Bowels of this Booke; I haue thought good in stead of a Preface, to set down a Preparatiue or premeditation to the minde of Man, to mooue him to be carefull and vi­gilant for the safety of his soule, euen then when hee feeleth himselfe at rest, in health, & perfect remem­brance, before the weight of Christ Crosse bee laid vpon him, and before hee bee visited either in bodie or minde.

First, it is meet for euery man, be he neuer so bigge, and look he neuer so high, to perswade himselfe, that [Page 3] he hath two dayly Serui­tors or Secretaries attend­ing vpon him, from which he can neuer be freed, du­ring the date of his dayes, vntil his life be ended, and his doome take place.

The one is without thee, 1 and is named Death, the ender of thy life, and fini­sher of worldly care: This Seruitor is alwayes atten­ding, behinde thee at thy backe, and followeth thee at the heeles, euen as the shadow doth follow the body.

The other is within 2 thee, and is called Consci­ence, the very key that o­peneth [Page 4] and vnfoldeth the secrets of thy soule, and in­wardly bewrayeth all thy thoughts, words, and workes.

These two are destinate to all men, and cannot be auoided.

First, Death cannot bee escaped, for he is alwayes at thine elbow; yea, per­aduenture he is then nee­rest thee in thy bosome, hacking at thy heart, when thou thinkest least of him: for, in the middest of life, we be in death. We are no sooner borne, but, Mors est in limine, Death is at the threshold. And yet many [Page 5] one thinketh himselfe to be in health and safety, e­uen then when he beareth Death in his heart, and hell in his Conscience.

It is good therefore for euery man to bee in a rea­dinesse euery moment, lest Death cite him on the sodaine, and so hee be ta­ken tardie in his sinnes: For this Messenger hath not any respect either of person, people, or place: Hee regardeth no more the Princes Palace, then the poore mans Cotage: a blunt Messenger, and therefore goeth bluntly and boldly to worke with [Page 6] vs; his condition is, come he earely, come he late, he will giue neither day, nor houre, but speedily and readily he wil dispatch his errant, and serue such a Sub poena vpon vs, that hee wil haue our personall ap­pearance, before the eter­nall Iudge, without surety, bayle, or mayne-prize.

He will not be bribed of the Rich; he will not be in­treated of the Poore; hee weigheth not friendship; he careth not for rewards; he will pardon no person, be he neuer so mighty; he feareth no mans face, look he neuer so lofty; there is [Page 7] but a word and a blowe with him; he killeth downe right where he hitteth.

Let vs therefore keepe our selues continually in that estate wherein we de­sire to die: for although this Messenger come, and tell vs not when hee will fetch vs, whether in our nonage, middle age, olde age, or dotage; yet not­withstanding, our merci­full and good God by di­uers meanes doth warne and summon vs before, by other Messengers.

Gods sum­moners before Death, are foure.

  • First, his preach­ers exhort vs.
  • Secondly, his plagues doe threaten vs.
  • Thirdly, old age admonisheth vs.
  • Fourthly, Sick­nes calleth vs.

Finally, death arresteth vs, and taketh vs with him. And then the earth wher­of we are made, deuoureth vs, Magots breed vpon vs, corruption rotteth vs, and the Wormes eate vs. This is the life and end of all flesh good and bad. The body then putrifyeth [Page 9] and consumeth to dust: But the Spirit returneth to Eccl. 12. 7. the Lord which gaue it.

Now when Death is a­bout to doe his office, which is, to separate the Soule and the Body of Man: Then our second 2 Seruitor or Secretarie, al­though it haue been mute all our life time, and as it were a clasped Booke that is alwaies shut and too sel­dome opened; yet towards our end, it speaketh, and cryeth, yea it both barketh and biteth; for after death hath warned and summo­ned vs by sharpe taste of Sicknes, to set our house in [Page 10] order, and to prepare our selues to appeare before the celestiall Iudge: Then our Conscience (which is a continuall beholder of all our thoughts, words and workes) as a cleere light or Lanthorne be­wrayeth all our former life and conuersation: it is the very Register of God, and booke [...] Record, which discloseth all our counsels, and reuealeth the inward secrets of our hearts: for there is nothing hid, that Mar. 4. 22. shal not be opened: neither is there a secret, but that it shal come to light. Can there be any thing hid from the [Page 11] Highest? Do nor his eyes pierce our hearts? Is not he the searcher of Secrets, and Discerner of spirits? Yes verily, he that will not now beleeue it, must one day both finde it, and feele it.

The thickest Trees in Paradise could not hide our first Parents Adam and Eue from the presence of God. They both appeare at the first call, euen naked as they were; their Figge­leaues will not serue their turne; their vaine excuses will doe them no good; the more they goe about to cloke their sinne, the [Page 12] more liuely it appeareth; yea, their owne Consci­ence accuseth them, and causeth them to make con­fession of their fact, will they, nill they.

Wee cannot then hide our sinnes, because which way soeuer wee goe, our conscience accompanieth vs; it is our Porter, carr­ing with it whatsoeuer we haue done, be it good or bad; it iudgeth all our words and workes, and pronounceth inward sen­tence of vs all: it is a Worme alwayes byting, and neuer dying: it is a fire alwayes burning, and [Page 13] neuer quenching: for im­mediately after the com­mitting of sinne, the Con­science of the sinner is his Accuser, his Witnes, his Iudge, and his Hangman.

Therefore when thine owne Conscience be­wrayeth thee, and prouo­keth a feeling of sinne: thinke then with thy selfe, God speaketh vnto thee: for that inward feeling of thy sinne, is as it were the peculiar and prerogatiue Court of God, whereby he exerciseth his iurisdicti­on: Beware therefore lest thou beeing guilty, doest harden thy heart; for that [Page 14] is all one, as to kick against God, and resist the motion of his holy Spirit, when we reiect such cogitations as are prouocations and summoners vnto Repen­tance: when God there­fore by his holy Spirit knocketh at the doore of thine heart, and moueth any such motion, either to embrace this Vertue, or a­uoid that Vice, thou hadst best open vnto him at first call, and let him in: for if hee call thee now, thou canst not tell whether hee will call againe or no: and if he open thee the gate of his Grace to day, and will [Page 15] thee friendly to enter in, thou canst not tell whe­ther euer hee will open it againe, or neuer. Thy contempt and vnthankful­nesse may mooue him in his wrath to shut the doore vpon thee for euer: and then thou wilt repent, but all too late.

Remember Christs words: When the good man Luk. 13. 25 of the house is risen, and hath shut to the doore, and yee be­ginne to stand without, and to knocke at the doore, saying, Lord, Lord, open to vs, and he shall answere and say vn­to you, I know you not whence yee are: Depart from me, all 27, [Page 16] yee workers of iniquitie. There shall bee weeping and 28 gnashing of teeth, when yee shall see Abraham, and I­saac, and Iacob, and all the Prophets in the Kingdome of God, and your selues thrust out at doores.

These are words of weight, and able to pierce a stony heart, most fearfull to impenitent sinners, whē they shal behold a farre off with the rich surfetting Glutton the happy estate of the godly in Heauen in Abrahams bosome, and themselues to bee thrust out into vtter darknes, and so to take their leaue and [Page 17] last farewell of God, his Angels, and all the ioyes of Heauen for euer, neuer to meet againe, nor once to behold the faire beauty of the Lord, or of his Saints: the deepe conside­ration hereof, is able to shake the Conscience, to burst the heart of a sinner, and end his dayes, if any feeling of Gods Spirit bee in him.

It is good therefore to haue the testimonie of a cleere Conscience accom­panying thee euen to thy graue: that when thou shalt appeare before Christ his Throne of iust iudge­ment, [Page 18] it may be a witnesse with thee of thy wealth, and not to thy woe; a de­fender of thy purity, and not an Accuser of thine iniquitie: a iustifier of thy Righteousnes, and not a condemner of thy Wic­kednes.

Pray to God betime, that it may be thy Helper, as it was to Paul, and not thy2. Cor. 1. 12. Hangman, as it was to Iudas.

It is not to bee spoken what a sure and singular Treasure a good Consci­ence will be at that day; it shall stand stedfast by thy side as thy dearest friend, [Page 19] when all the world shall be set on a flaming fire, aboue thee, beneath thee, and on euery side thee: when the elements shall melt with heate: when the vngodly shall bee at their wits end: when mens hearts shall faile them: when the Sea and waters shal rore: when heauen and earth shall pe­rish: when all thy goods and gold shal be turned to drosse and Copper: when all thy Lands and riches forsake thee; yea when all thy friends and kinsfolke faile thee, as they did Iob in his greatest extremitie.

Therefore let this present [Page 20] Preparatiue be a sufficient caueat for thee, to be care­full and circumspect for the comfort of thy Con­science, and safety of thy soule. And so I will pro­ceede to the visitation of the Sicke: Wherein

First, we must note, that commonly God doth vi­sit before man, and so by Gods Visitation, occasion is giuen to man, brotherly and charitably o visit one another for their comfort.

God doth visit vs diuers waies.

1. Sometime by losse of worldly wealth, Goods, [Page 21] Lands, Offices, Dignities, &c. especially when we are too proud of them, or a­buse them: then he pulleth downe one, and setteth vp another.

2. Sometime by perse­cutions or manifold trou­bles of our deadly foes, as priuate Grudges, open Warres, Slanders, Suites in Law, &c.

3. Sometime God doth visit vs by punishing our bodies with sicknes, lame­nes, blindnes, ach, penu­ry, famine, or other cala­mities, whereby wee feele intolerable paine and tor­ment; & all this is not vn­worthily, [Page 22] but deseruedly.

4. Sometime in Minde, by taking away our senses, wit, reason, memory and vnderstanding: or by ta­king from vs our dearest and neerest friends; as our Parents, Husband, Wife, Children, Brethren, Sist­ers, &c. which vnder God are our greatest comfort in this world: and by this meanes wee are vexed in Minde, our soules are sad, and we wonderfully trou­bled, and so had neede of some comfortable coun­sell to cure vs in this case.

In Gods Visitation consider three things.
In body,
  • 1. The Sicknes.
  • 2. The Physi­cian.
  • 3. The Medi­cine.
In minde,
  • 1. Our Sicknes is sinne.
  • 2. Our Physici­an is God.
  • 3. Our Medi­cine is repen­tance, restitu­tion, almes­deeds, prayer and patience.

The first Dutie of the Pastor.

THE first Office or Du­tie of the Minister, is fatherly, and yet familiar­ly to conferre and reason with the Sick person. For as the Physicion of the bo­dy most perfectly percei­ueth the state of his Pati­ent, by questioning with him, by seeing his state, and feeling his Pulses: euen so the Physicion of the soule, if he vnderstand the mind and affection of the Sicke person, hee may the better apply his exhortation to

The Summe of this Booke.
  • [Page]The Medicine or curing of our Diseases, pertaineth to two sorts of Persons.
    • 1. The one is the Minister or Pastor, who ought willing­ly to visit.
      The duty of the Minister when he visiteth, consisteth chiefely in foure things:
      • First, in questioning with the Sick per­son, whereby he may feele how hee is inclined and affectioned toward God, and so apply a fit plaister to his sore.
      • Secondly, in faithful and zealous Prayer for the partie visited, both publike and priuate.
      • Thirdly, in godly counsell, in admonish­ing the Sicke by his wise discretion, according as he seeth occasion.
      • Fourthly, in comforting the pensiue per­son, or sobbing soule, whose Consci­ence is loden with the remembrance of sinne, and whose body is tormen­ted with griefe of sicknes.
    • 2. The other is the Person visited, who ought to giue diligent eare vnto the Mi­nister.
      The dutie of the sicke Person consisteth in three things.
      • First, in the confession of his Faith and protestation of the same, before the Minister and others standing by, that they may be witnesses with him of his Christian and godly end.
      • Secondly, in faithfull and hearty Prayer vnto God, either to recouer his health, or else a happy deliuerance out of his paine.
      • Thirdly, in bearing his sicknes patiently, without grudging or murmuring a­gainst God, who sendeth it for our amendment.
  • 1. In the first part of this Booke, I will speake of the Pastor, and his Office in visiting.
  • 2. In the second, the dutie of the People visited.

the comfort of his Con­science, and amendment of life.

Questions be of two sorts.
  • 1. Some be tem­porall.
  • 2. Others spiri­tuall.

Examples of Temporall Questions.

Quest. 1. NOW, good Brother, God blesse you. How is it with you? How doe you? &c.

Answ. Well, Sir, I thank God, but I take no rest; by reason of the extremitie of my paine in this my sick­nes, [Page 26] and lacke of sleepe, my memory and vnderstand­ing (I praise God for it) is yet perfect and good, but my body is sore visited and tormented: God of his mercy, in time when it shal please him, asswage it, and in the meane season grant mee patience to beare it.

Quest. 2. You say well, truely, and as becommeth a good Christian, and I am glad to heare such godly words proceed from you, as taste so sweetly of the Spirit of God, for they signifie how well you are affectioned & minded [Page 27] to Godward: And there­fore assure your selfe, that with the Omnipotent Phy­sician, there is no disease or pain incurable. As God doth send it for your good, no doubt: So hee can as­swage or take it quite away at his pleasure: wee are in the Lords hand, as the clay in the Potters, to doe with vs, whatsoeuer his pleasure is: for sicknes is the louing rod of our heauenly Fa­ther, wherewithall he doth chastice our sinnes, that we may the better know our owne frailety, and our du­tie towards his Maiestie; therefore you are to thinke [Page 28] that this bodily griefe of Sicknes, after a time of tryall, shall turne to your greater ioy and comfort. Tell me, truely, are you not thus perswaded?

Answ. Yes verily, I haue alwayes beene of that minde, I thanke my hea­uenly Father for it; and I pray God continue mee in the same to my liues end: for I wish not to liue lon­ger, then I may acknow­ledge my Maker to bee both an omnipotent Lord▪ and my mercifull God.

Quest. 3. I pray God preserue you, and keep you in that mind to your liues end.

Sir, I vnderstand, and partly I know of my selfe, that you are a man whom God hath blessed with a­boundance of worldly sub­stance: But because lands and goods are oftentimes the cause of much strife and vnquietnes, by reason of the inordinate couet­ousnes and greedy desire of man: it were good to set your house in order now, before your depar­ture, like a good houshol­der, which when he goeth from home any whither, he setteth all his things in or­der among his Family and people, telleth them his [Page 30] will, what is to bee done, and so commending them to God, taketh his leaue, and biddeth them farewell vntill his returne. So you beeing now taking your iourney towards Heauen a farre Country, bid adew to the world, and take your leaue thereat willingly and orderly as a good Christi­an ought to doe: That is, dispose your Temporall goods as may be most to Gods glorie, the commo­ditie and comfort of your Wife and Children, and others your friends, to whom you wish well, and to your own saluation and [Page 31] discharge before God, at whose hands you haue re­ceiued them, and to whom you must giue an account for them. So that this be­ing done, your reckoning is the sooner made, your Conscience discharged, and the world satisfied: neither need you to be fur­ther troubled with world­ly matters, if God lay his hand more heauily vpon you, but onely thinke of heauenly things. Tell me therefore haue you made your Will?

Answ. I haue made none yet, but I purpose to doe hereafter, if I feele my [Page 32] selfe farre wrong.

Quest. 4. O good Bro­ther, you must thinke that you are already far wrong, and farre from right and reason too, if you deferre the disposing of your tem­porall things vntill the last gaspe, when peraduenture both your speech and me­morie shall faile you: now you may and will not, then you would & perhaps can­not: many haue so done and repented too late, euen then when it had bin more fit to haue minded heauen­ly things onely. Therefore (I beseech you) take the good time and occasion [Page 33] which God presently offe­reth: if hee giue you life and memory this day, or this weeke, you know not whether you shall haue it the next weeke or no: if you put the good time off, which GOD hath giuen you, and deferre your bu­sinesse till this day, or that day, or vntill this friend come, or that kinsman be present; then peraduenture your friends shall come too late, and you your selfe be cut short of your pur­pose: Therefore beware in the Name of God be­time, for you know not whether God wil giue you [Page 34] the like occasion againe or no: you may purpose, but God will dispose both you and your wealth as he will: when you are once gone, your riches are none of yours, but the worlds, and are at the disposition of o­ther men, who by corruptiō may deale vnfaithfully, and so contrarie to your will, your substance which you haue swea [...] for, may come to those that neither need them, nor did euer deserue well at your hands in your life time: too many at this day know this to bee true by experience, and haue la­mented their state all too [Page 35] late, when they could not remedie it: Therefore ne­uer put that thing in doubt, which may be out of doubt.

Answ. Lord, Lord, see how forgetfull men bee of their dutie in time of their Sicknes! I beseech you Sir, beare with my weaknesse: I confesse I was out of the way in this point, but you haue brought me vnto it, and to a further considera­tion of my state: I must needs say your counsell is good and comfortable: and therefore I were a ve­ry vnreasonable person, if I should not be ordered by you to mine owne good. [Page 37] Wherefore I purpose now (God willing) to do as you haue said, with your better aduice, and others of my friends. And therefore I pray you take paines to set my minde downe in wri­ting: and so that matter beeing dispatched, I will then commend my selfe both bodie and soule vnto God the giuer of all good­nes, and the Author of life.

Heere the Minister may perswade the Testator to impart some portion of his substance to the Poore, to Schooles, exhibition of Schollers, Churches, Col­ledges, [Page 36] Bridges, High­wayes, and other publike commodities, as shal seeme to him most expedient for the time, the place, the a­bilitie, and state of the person; for hereupon in times past haue proceeded such workes of Charitie, and large liberalitie to­wards the Church and godly vses, which now is pilled, and little regarded.

Quest. 5. Here (good Brother) you are further­more deepely to consider and ponder with your selfe, how you haue come by your wealth, directly or [Page 38] vndirectly, lawfully or vn­lawfully: if honestly and according to your Vocati­on or Art, you are the more to reioyce in Con­science, & your account be­fore God is sooner made: if not, but that you haue gotten them by fraude, de­ceit, lying, forging, flatte­ring, swearing, forswea­ring of your selfe, briberie, polling and pilling of the poore, crueltie, Vsury, Ex­tortion or Oppression, ga­ming, cheating and the like, as too many doe at this day: Then you are the more deepely charged be­fore the Iudgement seat of [Page 39] God, and the testimonie of your own Conscience, and you must endeuour your selfe to make satisfaction so neere as you may: for that ancient rule of the Fa­ther is true, Non remittitur peccatum, nisi restituatur ab­latum: That is, the sinne is not pardoned, except re­stitution bee made, as Za­cheus did, who heard not that sweet sentence of Christ, This day is Saluation Luk. 19. 8. come to this house, before he had made restitution.

Tell me therefore (good Brother) are you willing to recompence euery one whom you haue wronged [Page 40] or deceiued, and to restore your euill gotten goods with iust Zacheus, to the vt­termost of your power, and validitie of your wealth?

Answ. God forbid else, for it is meet and right that all men should so doe; but I know not any whom I haue in such sort defrau­ded: if any man finde him­selfe iniured by me, I am willing euen with all my heart to satisfie him to the vttermost farthing: And therefore my desire is, that notice be giuen thereof to the whole Congregation in the Church this next Sunday, with my hearty [Page 41] request that they would commend mee to God in their faithful Prayers: And if any debt be due, either to bee payed by mee to them, or by them to mee, whereof we haue no spe­cialtie, that they would come to me, because I am now Gods Prisoner, and am not able to repaire to them. And I pray you (good Sir) publish my minde herein, and aduer­tise mee in all other things which you thinke necessa­rie for the saluation of my Soule, and my full dis­charge before God and the world.

Quest. 6. You haue well done (good Brother) and haue shewed your selfe a faithfull Steward of Gods blessings, in disposing your selfe and your substance so well towards God and the world: for here you found them, and here you must leaue them.

Furthermore, seeing all things here on earth are but fickle; as Offices, Dignities, Wife, Chil­dren, Friends, Goods, Gold and Possessions; are you not willing to forsake these worldly vanities, and transitorie trash, and to change the same for hea­uenly [Page 43] ioy and felicitie?

Answ. Yes verily; for I neuer made them my God, neither did I euer re­pose any confidence in them, but vsed them for the time, knowing alwayes that they were not mine, but lent me to vse for a sea­son; and the time beeing now expired, I willingly resigne and surrender the same to the world, and where I had them, there I leaue them; committing my selfe to the Mercy-Seat of God, and rendring him most heartie thankes for the vse and commoditie I haue reaped thereby in [Page 44] my life time, and for all o­ther his benefits, his name be praised for euer, who is the preseruer of men and louer of soules, and his holy will and pleasure bee fulfilled in mee euery way, whether it bee in life or death: God grant it may be to his glory, and then I haue my hearts desire.

Quest. 7. Your words are comfortable to mee and the hearers, and you haue hitherto playd the part of a good Christian, in re­nouncing the vanities of this wicked world, and cōmitting your selfe whol­ly both body and soule to [Page 45] Gods carefull tuition, whose armes of mercie (no doubt) are now spred wide open, readie to embrace you.

But because you an­swere so directly, I will be bold to put moe questions vnto you.

Doe you from the bot­tom of your heart, ask for­giuenes of all those whom you haue offended in this world, by thought, word, or deede: and are you in heart sorrie for the same?

Answ. I am heartily sor­rie for my offences, both towards God and Man: I must needs confesse, I haue [Page 46] not once, but often offen­ded both; and therefore I humbly craue pardon of both whom I haue often a­bused: and I must desire you to signifie so much to the Congregation, among other remembrances of mee.

Quest. 8. Doe you your selfe for Christs sake vn­fainedly and from the bot­tome of your heart forgiue all those, that by any means haue iniured and offended you, either in speeches, thought, or actions?

Answ. I willingly and freely forgiue al the world, euen as I looke to bee for­giuen [Page 47] my selfe at the hands of my heauenly Father, whom many times and sundry waies I haue offen­ded: Or otherwise I know I could neuer with a good conscience repeat that Pe­tition of the Lords Prayer, Forgiue vs our trespasses, as Math. 6. 12 wee forgiue them that tres­passe against vs.

And furthermore our Sauiour Christ saith: If you doe not forgiue men their Math. 6. 15 trespasses, no more will your heauenly Father forgiue you your trespasses, &c. And therefore I know assuredly, if I had a stout and stonie stomake, and not a fleshy [Page 48] and tender heart, apt and prone to forgiue, I could not die in loue and chari­tie with the world, and then not in Gods fauour: For as Saint Iohn saith; If 1. Ioh. 4. 11 God haue so loued vs, wee ought also to loue one another. Which we cannot doe, ex­cept we forgiue one ano­ther, and that dayly; for in many things we offend all: Iam. 3. 2. and who knoweth how oft he offendeth? And there­fore it remaineth, seeing the case so standeth, that if wee will be beloued, wee must loue: if wee will bee forgiuen, we must forgiue: if we will be blessed, wee [Page 49] must blesse, and not curse: and if we will haue mercie, we must shew mercy. God grant vs his mercie, and giue vs grace so to do, and so to liue, that wee may make a godly and quiet end, and so die the death of the righteous.

Quest. 9. I pray God both now and euer shew the light of his countenance vpon you, and continue this good which hee hath begunne in you euen to the end: for most Christi­anly and like a good ser­uant of God, you haue ta­ken your leaue of the world, in disposing your [Page 50] selfe and yours towards God and Man: And I find you so furnished and fit for God, that you may boldly assure your selfe of his fauour & loue towards you, if you continue in so good and godly a minde to the end.

And truely I am glad, and so are all your wel-wil­lers here present this day, to heare and see in you so good fruits of a Christian, whose end is commonly according to his life.

If any other thing be in your mind that you would haue done touching world­ly matters, I pray you ad­uertise [Page 51] me thereof, and I will doe my diligence to haue your minde and will fulfilled therein, so farre forth as is requisite.

Answ. Sir, I am at a point with the world, and all worldly affaires, and I haue no more to say or to deale with such matters, but leaue them and their ap­purtenances to those that come after: And I re­nounce here (before you and the rest) all worldly wealth, pleasures, goods, lands, and liuings; I yeeld and surrender them vp to the longest liuer, and now resigne my selfe wholly [Page 52] to God that made mee and saued mee: And my heartie desire is now to dwell with the Lord, in the Land of the liuing. My faith is there fixed, and I hope assuredly to attaine vnto it, by the bloud of the In­nocent Lambe of God, Ie­sus Christ my Redeemer.

Quest. 10. The Lord in­crease your faith, and God grant you your hearts de­sire, and that Land which you long for; you are in the high-way towards it, God keepe you in it: for if you liue and die as you haue professed, assure your selfe the gate is open alrea­die, [Page 53] and you are longed and looked for: it was pre­pared for such as you are, from the beginning: and that you may be the better perswaded hereof, I will put forth vnto you a few spirituall questions; which being answered as before, you shal sufficiently satisfie me and all that heare you this day, that you are the Child of God, and an In­heritour of his heauenly Kingdome, and so we will proceed to Prayers. But I feare I am too tedious and troublesome vnto you.

Answ. No, good Sir, thinke not so hardly of me [Page 54] (I beseech you) though I be wearie of sicknes; yet I am not wearie of well-do­ing and of good counsell, I had neuer more neede of it, neither can it come in a better time, and I take great pleasure therein, be­ing now past the pleasure of the world: therefore (I pray you) in Gods name say on: for my earnest de­sire is to be prepared and made readie for the good houre that God hath ap­pointed for my deliue­rance out of this wretched world, and I looke euery moment for the comming of the Bridegroome; I am [Page 55] ready with my Lamp bur­ning, and my trust is, he is ready to let me in.

Examples of Spirituall Questions.

Quest. 1. GOd be than­ked for your good remembrance, and for your stedfast beliefe, and I pray God continue it euen to the end. But now I will (by your patience) apply the rest of my speech onely to the safety of your Soule.

Doe you not acknow­ledge your selfe to bee a sinner, and grieuously to [Page 56] haue offended God, in not liuing so well and vpright­ly in this world, as you ought to haue done?

Answ. I must needs ac­knowledge and confesse, that I am a grieuous sinner, and that I haue oftentimes and many waies disobeyed and broken the Law and will of God, both in my thoughts, words, & works.

Quest. 2. How doe you know the same?

Answ. By the Law of God. For the Law hath said, Doe this, and I haue not done it: Doe not that, and yet I haue done it: and in this sort I haue sinned [Page 57] both by omitting that which was good, and by committing that which was bad.

Quest. 3. What danger haue you incurred by this meanes, and what hath your negligence and diso­bedience herein deserued at Gods hands?

Answ. Of my selfe, I must needs say, that I haue thereby deserued at Gods hands eternall death and damnation, a curse and not a blessing: and so I am taught by the word it selfe: For it is written, Cursed is Gal. 3. 10. euery man that continueth not in all things which are [Page 58] written in the Booke of the Law, to doe them.

Quest. 4. Good Lord, if this bee true, then what a miserable case are all wee in, beeing wicked and cur­sed creatures?

Answ. Truely, our state indeede is wretched and damnable: and but that God of his infinite good­nes hath prouided a salue for this sore, we should vt­terly perish, and then were 1. Cor. 15. 19. we of all men most miserable.

Quest. 5. Do you beleeue then that there is a salue for so grieuous a wound, and a remedy for so great a mischiefe?

Answ. Yea verily, I firme­ly beleeue and know it, or else I could not with so cheerefull and patient a minde beare this crosse which God hath now laid vpon me.

Quest. 6. I pray you what remedy is there against the sting of sinne, and the curse of the Law? Is there any thing in the world, that can pacifie Gods wrath, and mooue him to such mercy, as may cause him to take away this deadly curse, and giue vs a blessing?

Answ. Yea, God bee thanked that there is: I can tell you so much, though I [Page 60] be not Booke-learned; yet I haue heard it, and I doe vndoubtedly beleeue it, be­cause Gods Word doth teach it: That when there was no means to be found for man to be saued, nei­ther in heauen nor earth, it pleased our heauenly Fa­ther, of his meere mercy to send his only begotten Sonne Rom. 8. 3. into the world, to the end that all that beleeue in him should not perish, but haue life euer­lasting. So that (that which was impossible to the Law, in as much as it was weake, be­cause of the flesh) God sending his owne Sonne, in the simi­litude of sinfull flesh, and for [Page 61] sinne, condemned sinne in the flesh.

I doe therefore beleeue, that this Sonne of God Ie­sus Christ, hath quite taken away the curse of the Law, Col. 2. 14. and nayled it vpō the Crosse.

Quest. 7. These are good words indeed, and general­ly spoken to all sinners: but how can you apply this to your selfe?

Answ. Because I know assuredly that I am Christs, and haue the testimonie of the Holy Ghost in mee, comforting mee, and bea­ring witnes to my Spirit, that I am the child of God, and therefore may [Page 62] boldly cry, Abba Father, Gal 4. 6. &c.

Quest. 8. Then I perceiue, if you bee thus faithfully minded, as you do professe, that you are not afraid to dy; neither is death so dread full vnto you▪ as it is to ma­ny in these sinfull dayes?

Answ. Although indeed death seemeth detestable to the most part of men, e­specially to impenitent sin­ners, and such as haue the wealth of the world at will: Yet notwithstanding I see no reason why any wise man should feare that which cannot be auoided; but rather (all things con­sidered [Page 63] aright) they haue cause to couet it with the holy Apostle Saint Paul, who desireth to be loosed, and Phil. 1. 23. to be with Christ, which is best of all; because death is the doore to eternall life, for we connot liue for euer, but first we must dye: And therefore the godly man (after he is mortified heere by crosses and griefe of sicknes) may cheerefully sing and say with the same Apostle: Christ is to mee Phil. 1. 21. both in life and death, ad­uantage.

And most comfortable to a good conscience is that sentence of Ecclesiastes: [Page 64] A good name is better then a Eccl. 7. 3. good oyntment, and the day of death, then the day that one is borne. The Preacher spake not this without booke, nor without reason; for then we change sicknes for health; woe for wealth; transitorie vanities, for per­petuall ioyes; and earthly trash, for heauenly trea­sure, &c.

Quest. 9. You are in the right of it, and haue hit the naile on the head in this point; keepe you there and my life for yours. But be­cause I finde you in answe­ring both wise and willing, it incourageth mee to bee [Page 65] bold in questioning. Doe you beleeue all the Articles of the Christian Faith, which the true and Catho­like Church doth hold at this day, and all other Scriptures of the Old and New Testament, to be the very and liuely Word of God, the foode of your soule, and the perfect way to eternall life; and that there is sufficient matter contained in them, to esta­blish your minde and con­science to saluation, accor­ding to the consent of Christs Apostles in the Primitiue Church?

Answ. I constantly and [Page 66] vnfainedly beleeue all this you haue said to bee true, and grounded vpon the Word of God, as vpon a sure foundation which shal neuer faile nor fall. And therefore it is called the Word of Life, the Word of Rom. 3. 16. Grace, the Word of Truth: and the power of God to Sal­uation, to euery one that belee­ueth.

Quest. 10. Doe you de­test and abhor all Idolatry, Heresies, errors, schismes, innouations and opinions, which in any point do dis­sent or disagree from this liuely Word of GOD, and the ancient Catholike [Page 67] and Primitiue Church?

Answ. As these enormi­ties of themselues are dete­stable and damnable; euen so I do from my very heart detest and abhorre them all, and most ardently I im­brace the Truth of Gods Word, with all due reue­rence to the same, as to the heauenly will of GOD therein specified, and re­uealed to vs by his Ser­uants the Patriarks, and Apostles of God, and his Sonne Christ Iesus our Sauiour the Head of the Church: And I am desi­rous to die a member of the same Church, beeing [Page 68] the bodie and Spouse of Christ.

Quest. 11. And do you e­uen in heart reioyce to liue and die in this Christian Faith, and in the vnitie of this true, ancient, Catho­lique, and Apostolique Church, militant heere on earth, which is and shall be the Communion of Saints, & the triumphant Church of God in Heauen?

Ans. I reioyce in nothing so much: for I know, that out of the Church there is no saluation or safetie. Those in old time that were found out of Noahs Arke (being a Type of the [Page 69] Church) perished by wa­ter; but they which are not of the Catholike Church of Christ, shall be tormen­ted in Hell fire, which shall neuer bee quenched.

Quest. 12. Good Lord! mee thinke it is a fearefull thing, that the wicked should enter into euerlast­ing paine, and vnquench­able fire. And the words which are vsuall in the Scriptures, are able to make any man tremble e­uen at the heart; as Hell Mat. 8. 12. fire, the bottomelesse pit, vt­ter darknes, vnquenchable fire, perpetuall paine, &c. where shall bee weeping and Mar. 9. 44. [Page 70] gnashing of teeth: where their worme dyeth not, and the fire neuer goeth out. Mee thinks this word neuer is a long one; for if there were any hope that euer the wic­ked might feele any release or easement of their paine, or that the damned might haue any end of their tor­ment; yea if it were but af­ter a thousand, or a thou­sand thousands of yeeres, there were some comfort to be expected in time to come, though it were long first; yet time would once make an end and weare it out. But these words euer­lasting, perpetuall, and neuer; [Page 71] these and such like pierce the heart, dismay the mind, and cut the throat of a sin­ner; they crucifie the guil­tie Conscience, and at one blow they kill downe right where they hit. How thinke you, are not you of the same minde?

Answ. Indeede I must needs confesse they bee words of great weight, in­tolerable and heauie to beare, especially to a Con­science clogged with sin; and words not once, but often to bee deepely consi­dered of, euen of the best of vs all; for the best are too bad, and of our selues wee [Page 72] are all sinners, and deserue such reward for our hyre as these words doe threa­ten: but they take effect onely in the Reprobate, desperate, and impenitent sinners, such as neither feare Gods Iustice, nor feele his Mercie, neither a­ny operation of his Holy Spirit: But are (for their contempt, obstinacie and impenitent hearts) giuen ouer of God into a Repro­bate sense: whose eyes are blinded, whose eares are stopped, and whose hearts are hardened, that they disdaine and reiect the Word of God, and all mo­tions [Page 73] of his Spirit, wherby they should attaine to a full measure of faith in Christ Iesus, who came into 1. Tim. 1. 15. the world to saue sinners. For we are sure, That whosoeuer Ioh 3. 15. beleeueth in him, shall not pe­rish, but haue life euer lasting. For the soules of the righ­teous Wisd. 3. 1. are in the hand of GOD, and no torment shall touch them: but they Ioh. 5. 24. shall passe from death to life: and their spirits shall returne to the Lord which gaue them. Whose hands of mercie are wide open to receiue them. For al­though it bee said: It is a Heb. 10. 31 fearefull thing to fall into the [Page 74] hands of the liuing God: Yet that is to bee vnderstood before repentance, not af­ter; for God reiecteth not penitent sinners, but if we repent and turne to God, he will turne to vs: As hee hath promised: Turne vn­to Esa. 45. 22. me, and ye shall be saued: So that there is now no condemnation to those that are in Christ Iesus: but wee may boldly triumph, and say, Death is swallowed vp 1. Cor. 15. 54, 55 into victory. O death, where is thy sting? O hell, where is thy victory?

Quest. 13. You haue well answered, and like a Di­uine: you said euen now, [Page 75] you were not Booke-lear­ned, but you may be (God be thanked) for your direct answering by the Word: I cannot but maruell how you can recite so many pla­ces of Scripture, and to so good purpose, being not learned.

Surely it seemeth you carry not your Bible vnder your arme for fashion sake, or to please men, as many doe in these dayes, but to please God, and pleasure both your selfe, & others. Therefore you haue taken a good course in this life, for the life to come. And you haue chosen the better [Page 76] part with Mary, and that which shall neuer be taken a­way Luk. 10. 42 from you: the most part in these dayes take part with Martha, and are too carefull for the things of this world, but seldome or neuer looke for the life to come: and therefore it is to bee doubted, they will come short of the reward and crowne of glorie: But I will leaue them to them­selues, and to the equity of Gods Iustice, and (with your good liking) proceed forward with you in a que­stion or two.

Quest. 14 Do you beleeue and acknowledge Iesus [Page 77] Christ, the Sonne of the li­uing God, to haue dyed and suffered his Passion for your sinnes, and that he did rise againe for your iustifi­cation, and ascended into heauen, to prepare the way for you, and all true belee­uers?

Answ. I doe assuredly beleeue all that to be true, or else I must thinke my selfe accursed, and in most miserable case, calling to minde my rude race, and my sinfull life led, euen from my Cradle.

Quest. 15. Doe you also beleeue that you can be sa­ued by no other meanes, [Page 78] but by the merit of Christ his Passion, & by the shea­ding of his innocent bloud who suffered once for all; and that the oblation of himselfe vpon the Crosse, is a sufficient sacrifice for the sins of the whole world.

Answ. I doe beleeue that Christ his Passion is a full satisfaction for my trans­gression, and his precious bloud a perfect purgation for my sinnes. Neither is Act. 4. 12. there saluation in any other: for among men there is giuen none other name vnder hea­uen wherby we must be saued: But onely the sweet name of Iesus my Sauiour.

Quest. 16. And doe you (for this his inestimable benefit, and all other his manifold graces) giue him hearty thankes? And will you daily most dutifully endeuour your selfe so to doe, so long as the breath shal remaine in your body?

Answ. I doe, and by Gods grace I will frō time to time (so long as life last­eth) doe my best to shew my selfe thankefull, as I am indeed most bounden. For I am fully perswaded, his Fatherly goodnes towards me, is so great (being a sin­full wretch, and vnworthy to gather vp the crummes [Page 80] vnder his table) that I can neuer giue him condigne thankes for the multitude of his mercies, and diuine graces bestowed vpon me, both touching my bodie and soule: but God of his infinite goodnes pardon that which is lacking in my selfe, and fulfill it in his deare Sonne Iesus Christ my Redeemer.

Quest. 17. You must ther­fore desire at the hands of God, of whom we receiue the bread wee eate, the ground we tread vpon, and the light we behold, that he would with the eyes of his mercie and compassion [Page 81] looke vpon you, increase your faith, lighten your vn­derstanding, strengthen your bodie, grant you pa­tience in this your sicknes, and mooue your minde to all thankfulnes and dutifull obedience towards his Maiestie; so that, come life, come death, you may bee perswaded in your minde, and beleeue stedfastly in your heart, that you are the Lords.

Answ. My earnest request vnto my heauenly Father is, to grant all such good gifts as you haue named: And I pray God, euen with all my heart, giue me grace [Page 82] so to beleeue, and so to do, all the daies and houres of my life. And that I may the better doe according to your friendly counsell, and performe some part of my dutie towards God and the world; I pray you, good Sir, both priuately when you are absent, pray to God for me, and ioyne with mee in prayer now before your departing, that it may please God my heauenly Father (whose rod of casti­gation I willingly suffer) to dispose of mee in this his visitation, as may make most for his glorie, and mine owne saluation, in [Page 83] Christ Iesus my Sauiour.

These and such like questi­ons may the carefull Pa­stor propound to the Sicke person, according as occa­sion shall bee offered, al­wayes helping his infirmi­tie, if hee faile in answe­ring: but he must beware that he doe not reason fur­ther then the capacitie of the sicke will admit; that so hee may rather winne by fauour, then lose by rigour. For like as too great noise hurteth the eare, too much meate hur­teth the body, too much raine hurteth the ground: euen so weake wits, and [Page 84] fearefull consciences may soone bee surcharged and oppressed with ouer-hard questions; especially when the minde is disquieted with troubles, and the body grieued with sick­nesse.

The second Dutie of the Pastor.

THe second Dutie of the Pastor, is to vse faithfull and hearty prayer for the sick: For as he is the mouth of God vnto the people: euen so hee is the mouth of the people vnto God, by his zealous sute, [Page 85] and by powring out pure prayers vnto his Maiestie in their behalfe. Therefore Saint Iames saith, Is any Iam. 5. 14. man sicke among you? Let him call for the Elders of the Church, and let them pray for him, and anoint him with oyle in the Name of the Lord, and the Prayer of Faith shall saue the sicke, and the Lord shall raise him vp: and if he haue committed sinnes, they shall bee forgiuen him. I will not take vpon me simply to prescribe any man a forme of Prayer, but as the Spirit of God shall mooue him, and according as time and occasion shall serue; so let [Page 86] him with [...] groning Spirit frame his prayers vnto him that is able to helpe, and can saue both bodie and soule. Neuerthelesse, I haue thought good to set down a forme of some, for the further instruction of the vnlearned.

But before Prayer, I think it not amisse to reade any one of these three se­lected Psalmes, as prepara­tiues to Prayer, which I haue collected & receiued at Dauids own mouth, most meete for that purpose.

The first Psalme.

OVt of the deepe hauePsal. 130. I called vnto thee, O Lord: Lord heare my voice.

O let thine eares consi­der well the voice of my complaint.

If thou (O Lord) straitly markest iniquities: O Lord, who shall stand, or who shall be able to abide it?

(For sure and certaine it Psal. 1. is) that the vngodly shall not bee able to stand in iudgement: neither the sinners in the Congregati­on of the righteous.

O Lord, rebuke me notPsal. 6. (therefore) in thine indig­nation: neither chasten me in thy displeasure.

Haue mercie vpon mee, O Lord, for I am weake: O Lord heale mee, for my bones are vexed.

My soule also is sore troubled: but Lord how long wilt thou punish me?

Turne thee (O Lord) and deliuer my soule: O saue mee for thy mercies sake.

For in death no man re­membreth thee: and who shall giue thee thankes in the pit?

I am wearie of my gro­ning, [Page 89] euery night wash I my bed: and water my couch with my teares.

My God, my God, lookePsal. 22. vpon mee, why hast thou forsaken mee: and art so farre from my health, and from the words of my complaint?

O my God, I crie in the day time, but thou hearest not: and in the night sea­son also I take no rest.

But thou art hee that tooke me out of my mo­thers wombe: thou wast my hope, when I hanged yet vpon my mothers brests.

I haue beene left vnto [Page 90] thee, euer sithence I was borne: thou art my God euen from my mothers wombe.

O go not from me then, for trouble is hard at hand: and there is none to helpe me.

I am powred out like wa­ter, all my bones are out of ioynt: my heart also in the middest of my bodie, is euen like melting Wax.

My strength is dried vp like a pot-sheard: and my tongue cleaueth to my gummes.

Turne thee (therefore)Psal. 25. vnto mee (O Lord) and haue mercie vpon me: for I [Page 91] am desolate and in misery.

The sorrowes of my heart are inlarged: O bring thou me out of al my trou­bles.

Looke vpon mine aduer­sitie and miserie: and for­giue me all my sinne.

How long wilt thou for­getPsal. 13. me (O Lord) for euer? How long wilt thou hide thy face from me?

How long shall I seeke counsel in my soule, and be so vexed in my heart?

The paines of hell camePsal. 18. about mee: the snares of death ouertooke me.

But in my trouble will I call vpon the Lord: and [Page 92] complaine vnto my God.

So shall hee heare my voice out of his holy Tem­ple: and my complaint shal come before him, it shall enter euen into his eares.

O Lord, let it be thy plea­surePsal. 40. to deliuer mee: Make haste, O Lord, to help me.

For innumerable trou­bles are come about mee, my sinnes haue taken such hold vpon mee, that I am not able to looke vp: yea, they are more in number, then the haires of my head, and my heart hath failed mee.

For thine arrowes stickePsal. 38. fast in mee: and thy hand [Page 93] presseth mee sore.

There is no health in my flesh, because of thy dis­pleasure: neither is there any rest in my bones, by reason of my sinne.

For my wickednesses are gone ouer my head: and are like a sore burthen too heauie for me to beare.

I am feeble & sore smit­ten: I haue rored for the verie disquietnesse of my heart.

Lord, thou knowest all my desire: and my groning is not hid from thee.

My heart panteth, my strength hath failed mee: and the sight of mine eyes [Page 94] is gone from mee.

Take thy plague awayPsal. 39. from mee (O Lord) I am euen consumed by the meanes of thy heauy hand.

(For) when thou with re­bukes doest chasten man for sinne, thou makest his beautie to consume away, like as it were a moth sret­ting a garment: euery man therefore is but vanitie.

O spare mee a little (O Lord) that I may recouer my strength, before I goe hence, & be no more seene.

O tarry thou the LordsPsal. 27. leisure: be strong, & he shal comfort thine heart, & put thou thy trust in the Lord. [Page 95] Glory be to the Father, &c. As it was in the &c.

The second Psalme.

O Lord God of my sal­uation,Psal. 88. I haue cryed day and night before thee: O let my prayer enter into thy presence; incline thine eare vnto my calling.

For my soule is full of trouble: and my life draw­eth nigh vnto hell.

Vp (therefore) O Lord,Psal. 44. why sleepest thou? Awake, and be not absent (from vs) for euer.

Wherefore hidest thou thy face? and forgettest [Page 96] our misery and affliction?

Rise vp for our succour: and redeeme vs for thy mercies sake.

My soule is athirst forPsal. 42. God, yea euen for the li­uing God: when shall I come to appeare before the presence of God?

O remember not the sinsPsal. 25. and offences of my youth: but according to thy mer­cie thinke vpon mee, O Lord, for thy goodnes.

For thy name sake, OPsal. 69. Lord: bee mercifull vnto my sinne, for it is great.

Hide not thy face from thy seruant: for I am in trouble, oh haste thee, [Page 97] and heare mee.

Thy rebuke hath broken my heart, I am full of hea­uinesse: I looked for some to haue pitie on mee, but there was no man, neither found I any to comfort mee.

Therefore I will cry vntoPsal. 77. God with my voice: and hee shall hearken vnto me.

When I am in heauines, I will thinke vpon God: when my heart is vexed, I wil complaine.

Will the Lord absent himselfe for euer: and will he bee no more intreated?

Is his mercy cleane gone for euer: and his promise [Page 98] come vtterly to an end for euermore?

Hath God forgotten to be gracious? and will hee shut vp his louing kindnes in displeasure?

Heare me, O Lord, hidePsal. 102. not thy face from me in the time of my trouble: In­cline thine eares vnto mee when I call, O heare mee, and that right soone.

For my dayes are consu­med away like smoke: and my bones are burnt vp as it were a fire-brand.

My heart is smitten down and withered like grasse: so that I forget to eate my bread.

For the voice of my gro­ning: my bones will scarce cleaue to my flesh.

(But) they that sow inPsal. 126. teares: shall reape in ioy.

Hee that now goeth on his way weeping, and bea­reth forth good seed: shall doubtlesse come againe with ioy, and bring his sheaues with him.

(For) the Lord is full ofPsal. 103. compassion and mercy: long suffering, and of great goodnes.

Hee will not alwayes be childing: neither keepeth he his anger for euer.

Hee hath not dealt with vs after our sinnes: nor re­warded [Page 101] vs according to our wickednes.

For looke how high the heauen is in comparison of the earth: so great is his mercy also toward them that feare him.

Looke how wide also the East is from the West: so farre hath hee set our sinnes from vs.

Yea like as a father piti­eth his own children: euen so is the Lord mercifull vn­to them that feare him.

For he knoweth whereof wee be made: hee remem­breth that we are but dust.

The dayes of man are but as grasse: he flourisheth [Page 100] as a flower of the field.

For as soone as the winde goeth ouer it, it is gone: and the place thereof shall know it no more.

But the mercifull good­nes of the Lord endureth for euer & euer vpon them that feare him: and his righteousnesse vpon chil­drens children.

Glory be to the Father, &c.

As it was in the, &c.

The third Psalme.

BLessed is he that consi­derethPsal. 41. the poore and needy: the Lord shall de­liuer him in the time of trouble.

The Lord comfort him when hee lyeth sicke vpon his bed: make thou all his bed in his sicknes.

I said, Lord be mercifull vnto mee: heale my soule, for I haue sinned against thee.

O hide not thou thy facePsal. 27. from me: nor cast thy ser­uant away in displeasure.

Thou hast beene my suc­cour: leaue me not, neither forsake me, O God of my saluation.

Heare me (therefore) OPsal. 69. God, in the multitude of thy mercy: euen in the truth of thy saluation.

In thee (O Lord) haue IPsal. 31. [Page 103] put my trust: let me neuer be put to confusion, deliuer me in thy righteousnes.

Bow downe thine eare to me: make haste to deli­uer me.

And be thou my strong Rocke, and the house of defence: that thou mayst saue me.

Into thy hands I cōmend my spirit: for thou hast re­deemed me, O Lord, thou God of truth.

I will be glad and reioyce in thy mercy: for thou hast considered my trouble, and hast knowne my soule in aduersitie.

(And therefore) like as thePsal. 42. [Page 104] Hart desireth the water­brookes: so longeth my soule after thee, O God.

Haue mercy vpon meePsal. 51. (therefore) O God, after thy great goodnes: accor­ding to the multitude of thy mercies do away mine offences.

Wash mee throughly from my wickednes: and clense me from my sinne.

For I acknowledge my faults: and my sinne is euer before me.

Turne thy face (O Lord) from my sinnes: and put out all my misdeeds.

Make me a cleane heart, (O God:) and renue a [Page 105] right spirit within mee.

Cast me not away from thy presence: and take not thy holy Spirit from me.

O remember not our oldPsal. 79. sinnes, but haue mercy vp­on vs, and that soone: for wee are come to great mi­serie.

Heare my prayer, OPsal. 143. Lord, and consider my de­sire: Hearken vnto mee for thy truth and righteousnes sake.

And enter not into iudge­ment with thy seruant: for in thy sight shall no man li­uing be iustified.

I stretch forth my hands vnto thee: my soule gas­peth [Page 106] vnto thee, as a thirstie land.

Heare me (O Lord) and that soone, for my spirit waxeth faint: hide not thy face from me, lest I bee like vnto them that goe downe into the pit.

O remember how shortPsal. 89. my time is: wherefore hast thou made all men, for nought?

(For) what man is he that liueth, and shall not see death: and shall he deliuer his owne soule from hell?

Lord, what is man, thatPsal. 14. 4. thou hast such respect vnto him: or the sonne of man, that thou so regardest him?

Man is like a thing of nought: his time passeth a­way like a shadow.

For when thou art angry,Psal 90. all our dayes are gone: we bring our yeeres to an end, as it were a tale that is told.

The dayes of our age are threescore yeeres and ten, and though men bee so strong, that they come to fourescore yeeres: yet is their strength then but la­bour and sorrow, so soone passeth it away, and we are gone.

Teach vs (therefore O Lord) to number our daies: that wee may apply our hearts vnto wisedome.

Lord, let me know minePsal. 39. end, and the number of my dayes: that I may be certi­fied how long I haue to liue.

Behold, thou hast made my dayes as it were a span long: and mine age is euen as nothing in respect of thee, and verily euery man liuing is altogether vanity.

For man walketh in a vaine shadow, and disquie­teth himselfe in vaine: hee heapeth vp riches, and can­not tell who shall gather them.

And now (Lord) what is my hope? Truely my hope is euen in thee.

One thing haue I desiredPsal. 27. of the Lord, which I will require: euen that I may dwell in the House of the Lord all the dayes of my life, to behold the faire beauty of the Lord, and to visit his holy Temple.

(For) I should vtterly haue fainted: but that I be­leeue verily to see the goodnes of the Lord, in the Land of the liuing.

Glory be to the Father, &c.

As it was in the, &c.

When the Minister, or any other good Christian that visiteth the Sicke, hath read one of these Psalmes: [Page 110] Then let him with all du­tifull reuerence, pray and say, as hereafter followeth.

Let vs pray.
Lord haue mercy vpon vs.
Christ haue mercy vpon vs.
Lord haue mercy vpon vs.
Our Father which art in heauen, &c.

The mighty God of Ia­cob bee our defence, both now and in the houre of Death.

And let vs not bee ouer­come by any euill temptation.

O Lord saue this thy Sicke seruant.

Which putteth his full trust in thee.

Send him help, O Lord, [Page 111] from thy holy place.

And euer more most migh­tily defend him.

Let the enemy haue none aduantage of him.

Nor the wicked once ap­proch to hurt him.

Be vnto him, O Lord, a strong tower.

From the face of his enemy.

Grant that hee may dye the death of the righteous.

And be made partaker of thine inheritance.

Receiue his soule, O Lord, into thy holy hands.

And place it with thy Saints in heauen.

Lord heare our prayers.

And let our cry come vnto thee.

A pithy Prayer for a Pati­ent being pained with Sicknes.

IT is thou, O Lord, onely to whom all power and praise belongeth. It is thou that raignest in heauen in glorie, in earth in mercy, & in hel in iudgment. It is thy voice, O Lord, whereunto both the seas and windes are obedient. It is thy name, O Lord God of Hosts, that maketh all the Diuels in hell to tremble and quake: and they can doe nothing without thy permission. Thou bringest [Page 113] downe to hell, and raisest vp againe. Thou pluckest downe the mighty from their Throne, and exaltest the humble and meeke. Thou makest both poore and rich, strong & weake. Thou sendest sicknes, and restorest health againe in thy good time. Thou gi­uest life, and takest it away at thy pleasure. O Lord, whose maiestie and might no creature is able to with­stand, neither in heauen, earth, or vnder the earth: Thou that hast made the Sea and the dry land, and all things therein contai­ned: Thou that knowest [Page 114] our weaknesse, and what metall wee bee made of: haue regard vnto the work­manship of thy hands: Pierce the heauens, O Lord, and giue eare vnto our prayers, which with sorrowfull hearts, trickling teares, bowed knees, and vnfained lips we powre out before thy presence. We acknowledge (O Lord) our owne frailetie and vnwor­thinesse, and how that all men liuing are but vanitie, euen as the grasse in the field, which to day flourish­eth, and to morrow withe­reth away, as the smoke in the furnace, the bubble in [Page 115] the water, or the could that swiftly passeth away and is no more seene: So soone also fedeth away our time, and our yeeres come to an end. Thou onely (O Lord) knowest the number of our dayes, and appointest vs our bounds which we can­not passe. We confesse (O most mercifull God) that wee haue sinned against heauen, and against thee, and are no more worthy to be called thy children, no nor to tread vpon the earth, or to haue the light of the Sunne to shine vpon vs: but rather to bee burned with fire, drowned in the [Page 116] waters, swallowed vp of the earth, ouerwhelmed with mountaines, or deuoured with wilde beasts & fowles of the ayre. Our transgressi­ons and sinnes are so great, so grieuous, and many in number, wherewithall wee haue and doe dayly offend thy Maiestie, both in thought, word, and deed, that our weake conscien­ces being loden and bur­thened with the remem­brance of them, are afraid to approch into thy pre­sence, for feare of thy wrath and iust iudgement. Yet (O Lord) forsomuch as thy mercy is aboue all thy [Page 117] workes, and because thou art a gentle & pitifull God, long-suffering, and full of compassion, and wouldest not the death of a sinner, but rather that hee conuert and liue. We are there­fore the bolder not of our selues, but in the name of thy deare Son Iesus Christ (with whom thou art well pleased) to call vpon thee for mercy and comfort: That it would please thee of thy gracious goodnes to forgiue and blot out of thy remembrance all our sinnes and wickednes, and neuer hereafter to impute them vnto vs. Regard not [Page 118] (good Lord) our deserts which is death and damna­tion, but be mindfull of thy louing promises in Iesus Christ our Sauiour, who in all temptations of the Di­uell, the World, and the Flesh, is our onely Rocke, and sure stay and defence, and neuer shrinketh from those which be wrapped in woe and misery. Comfort (O Lord) this thy Seruant, vpon whom thou hast laid the scourge of sicknes, and rod of visitation, as a sure token and pledge of thy loue, and fatherly good wil towards him: for whom thou louest, those thou cor­rectest, [Page 119] not to destruction, but to amendment and sal­uation. Thou hast promi­sed, that wheresoeuer two or three are gathered to­gether in thy name, thou wilt grant their requests. We (therefore thy humble seruants) here assembled according to thy blessed commandement, doe cry and call vpon thee with fer­uant hearts, to be mercifull to this thine afflicted crea­ture, that it would please thee eyther to release his smart and pain in thy good time, and so to restore him to his former health, or else to grant him aboundantly [Page 120] the graces of thy holy Spi­rit, that with patience and meeke mind he may abide such tryall, as it shall please thy godly Maiestie to lay vpon him: That neither the tyrannie of Satan, griefe of sicknes, loue of the world, terrour of hell, infirmitie of the flesh, remembrance of sinne, or feare of death, withdraw him from thee, and thy sweet promises in his Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ, who came not for the iust, but to call sinners to repentance. So guide him (good Lord) by thy blessed Spirit in his great and last iourney, that pas­sing [Page 121] quietly all troubles of this transitorie world, and this painefull pilgrimage once ended, he may safely by thy mighty power bee conducted to the Hauen of continuall quietnes and rest, which is the Kingdom of Heauen, & there reigne with Abraham, Isaac, and Iacob, and all the holy com­pany of Angels and Saints in perpetuall ioy and safe­ty, which thou hast prepa­red and promised for all thine elect children, and faithfull seruants from the beginning of the world. Grant this (O heauenly Fa­ther) which wee haue [Page 122] prayed for, in the behalfe of this thy poore and pen­siue prisoner, and all other things necessarie for our saluation, and thy glory, through our Lord and Sa­uiour Iesus Christ: In whose holy name, wee be­seech thee from the bot­tome of our hearts, saying, Our Father which art in Heauen, &c.

A comfortable Prayer against desperation.

O God the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ, continue thy goodnes to­wards vs vnworthy wret­ches, [Page 123] which do heere with contrite hearts, and bowed knees, appeale vnto the height of thy mercy: Be­seeching thee (O Father) [...]o to remember the con­tempt and iniury thou hast receiued at our hands; but pardon our passed faults, and accept the pitifull Pas­sion of thy deare Sonne, in full satisfaction of our transgression. Let his pre­cious bloud wipe away, and wash all our filthines. Let his wounds heale the sores of our sinnes: and let the holy oblation of him­selfe, present our prayers acceptable and blamelesse [Page 124] before thy Maiestie. Let no sinne bee so great and grieuous in our eyes, that it plucke away hope of pardon: No offence so pon­derous, that it may be [...]le to ouercome thy goodnes. All haue sinned, and haue neede of thy mercy, which thou offerest aboundantly to euery one that faithfully asketh the same of thee. Our wickednes (O Lord) cannot exceed thy merits. The greater the sinner is on whom thou bestowest thy compassion; so much the greater is thy glory. And therefore thou reioy­cest more at the finding of [Page 125] one lost sheepe which hath long gone astray, then ouer ninety and nine iust per­sons which neede no re­pentance. Thou art ready to meet and embrace with the armes of thy mercy the Prodigall Sonne, when he turneth homewards to­wards thee, repenting his former folly, and humbly crauing thy mercy. There­fore there is nothing better for man, then continually to consider thy great loue and fidelitie towards him: and contrariwise, his owne infidelitie and ingratitude towards thee: for the Diuel is so enuious towards thy [Page 126] seruants, that hee omitteth no time in tempting them; yea, euen then, when they are about to repent and be­waile their sins, he causeth them to doubt of their sal­uation, to wauer in faith, and cloggeth their consci­ences with the curse of the Law, and equitie of Gods iustice in punishing their sinne, that thereby they might neuer be at quietnes or rest in themselues; but straight fall into the dun­geon of desperation. It is thou onely (O Lord) that canst heale their diseases, ease their burthen, cure their wounds, and refresh [Page 127] their hungry spirits. Wher­fore if at any time the Di­uell mooue vs to doubt or despaire of Gods good­nes and grace; yet let vs not faint in faith, or be hol­low-hearted, but rather bee bold in the bowels of Iesus Christ, and with a sure confidence approch vnto the Mercy-Seat of God the Father, who accepteth the satisfaction of his Son, and alloweth the same to be a full ransome for all our sinnes; and by this meanes we may finde fauour at the hands of our heauenly Fa­ther. Many examples wee haue to perswade vs herein.

The Woman of Canaan cryed, and her Daughter was cured. The Centuri­on beleeued, and his Ser­uant was made whole. The Father prayed, and his Sonne was clenfed of the foule spirit. The Apostles cryed out, Helpe Lord, for wee perish: and straight­way they were deliuered. Christ perceiued but the Faith of the people; and he said to the sicke of the Palsie, Be of good cheere, my sonne, thy sinnes are forgiuen thee. The Mo­ther and her companions doe but weepe, and her sonne is raised from death [Page 129] to life. Martha and Mary did but mourne, and La­zarus was reuiued. Mary the sinner sheadeth teares, and hee said vnto her, Thy sinnes be forgiuen thee. A poore blinde man cryed out, O Son of Dauid, haue mercy on me, and he recei­ued his sight. The Thiefe hanging on the Crosse, said but onely, Lord remember me: and Christ answered, This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise. O singu­lar Faith of sinners! what man hath at any time cried Iesu haue mercy on mee; but forthwith hee hath found fauour, & obtained [Page 130] grace. A sure faith procu­reth any thing at Gods hands; but he that mistrust­eth the Physician, hindreth his owne health. Our Saui­our Christ hath opened vnto vs the gate of his goodnes: therefore let not vs runne headlong to the dungeon of desperation, the dunghill of the Diuell. Hee hath stretched out his hand to vs; therefore let not vs turne away our face from him. He hath ope­ned vnto vs the Kingdome of Heauen; therefore let not vs haste to destruction, nor creepe to the lake of vnhappinesse: but let vs by [Page 131] these examples of Gods graces to others, acknow­ledge the mercies of God to bee many and maruel­lous towards man. For whose cause doth the Sun shine by day, the Moone and the Starres by night, but for man? For whose sake doth the Lord water the earth with deaw drops and showres of raine, but for man? Why blowe the Windes? Why runne the Riuers? Why spread the Springs? Why budde the Trees? Why growe the fruits of the earth? And why increase the fishes of the seas, but for the vse of [Page 132] man? He is King and Lord of all creatures vnder the cope of heauen. There is nothing that God hath not made subiect to man, one­ly hee would that man should bee obedient vnto him. Yet many times our mercifull God sendeth vs aduersitie, eyther to cleere vs of our transgressions, or to feare vs from sinne, or to minister occasion of well-doing. Thus was A­braham tryed: So was Iob proued with many mise­ries: Thus is euery one which liueth godly in Christ Iesus tryed in this world with sundry afflictions, as [Page 133] the gold in the fire: for whom the Lord loueth, those he chasteneth.

Therefore (wee beseech thee, O Lord) assist vs by thy might and mercy, that we may patiently beare all trouble, neede, pouertie, sicknes, slander, hatred, im­prisonment, griefe and an­guish of minde, temptati­ons of our deadly Enemy, losse of lands, and worldly wealth, and all other cala­mities, and discommodi­ties. Looke not on vs or our sins (O Lord) but be­hold thy Little one which was borne for vs: He was wounded for our offences, [Page 134] and by his stripes wee are healed. Hee gaue his body to be beaten, his cheekes to be striken for vs finners. He turned not away his face from them that scor­ned him, & spit vpon him. Looke (O Lord) vpon all the parts of his body, from the crowne of his head, to the sole of his foote, and no paine shall bee found like vnto his paine.

Behold (O blessed Lord) the holy head of thy deare Sonne crowned with sharp Thornes, & the bloud run­ning downe on his goodly visage.

Behold his tender body [Page 135] how it is scourged, his na­ked brest is stricken & bea­ten, his bloudy side is thrust thorow with a speare, his heart panteth, his sinewes bee stretched forth, his christall eyes da­zell and lose their sight, his princely face is wan and pale, his pleasant tongue is enflamed with paine, his inward parts waxe dry and starke, his armes both blue and blacke, his bones sore, his comely legges be fee­ble and weake, and the streames of bloud gush out of his side downe to the ground. O Lord of mercy, and God of comfort, let all [Page 136] these sufferings of thine on­ly, and deare beloued Son pacifie thy wrath, and be a sufficient recompence for all our misdemeanour to­wards thy Maiesty; defend vs outwardly by thy might, and cheere vs inwardly by thy holy Spirit, that we may both in body & soule glorifie thy Name, feare thy might, and loue thy mercy, and hereafter walke in thy wayes so long as the breath is in our bodies: And after that receiue vs body and soule into the heauenly Kingdome, for the tender Death and Pas­sion of our Lord and Saui­our [Page 137] Iesus Christ: to whom with thee and the Holy Ghost, be all honour, pow­er and praise, world with­out end.

Amen.

An effectuall Prayer for those which be Lunatike, or possessed with any euill Spirit.

O Most mighty & mer­cifull God, the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ, the Prince of power, and the God of all comfort and consolation, our strong Rocke, our sure refuge and defence against the damna­ble and dangerous assaults [Page 138] of our enemies both bodi­ly and ghostly, which hast commanded vs in our greatest perils and necessi­ties to flye vnto thee for safety, and boldly to call vpon thee for our deliuery: which also by thy diuine power, and vnsearchable wisedome hast made hea­uen and earth, & all things therein contained; as An­gels, Archangels, Men, Women, Children, the beasts of the field, the fishes in the Sea, the Fowles of the Ayre, and the Fruits of the Earth; which all were made at thy Word, and are subiect to thy power, to [Page 139] vse at thy good will & plea­sure, as seemeth best to thy Maiesty; whether it bee to honour or dishonour, sal­uation, or condemnation. We entirely beseech thee of thy goodnes (O Lord) and that with sorrowfull hearts, trickling teares, wa­tery cheekes, and groning spirits, to be mercifull vnto vs all here assembled, and to all thy people vexed with woe throughout the wide world: but especially at this present, we heartily desire thee to looke downe from heauen with the eyes of compassion and pitie vpon this thy creature and [Page 140] workmanship of thy hands, who is now grieuously vex­ed and tormented in mind. O Lord, enter not into iudgement with thy ser­uants: for then no flesh can be saued in thy sight. We acknowledge (O Lord) that wee are miserable sinners, vnworthy to lift vp our eyes to heauen, or to gather vp the crums which fall from thy table. Yet notwithstan­ding, wee humbly beseech thee (O deare Father) not to deale with vs according to our deserts, which is e­uerlasting death, vtter shame and confusion, hell fire, perpetuall paine and [Page 141] damnation: But according to thy accustomed clemen­cy, take from vs all igno­rance, hardnes of heart, des­peration, and all the wyly suggestions and grieuous temptations of Satan our old enemy. Let not the Di­uell (O Lord) nor any hel­lish hound spoile thine in­heritance, which thou hast bought with the price of the precious bloud of thy deare Sonne our Sa­uiour Iesus Christ. Thou onely (O Lord) reignest in heauen in glory, in earth in mercy, and in hell in iudgement. Thou onely art the author of life & death, [Page 142] sicknes and health, ioy and paine. It is thou which cast­est downe to hell, and rai­sest vp againe to heauen: yea, it is thou, and none o­ther which giuest thy holy Spirit to bee a comfort to thine elect people, and sometimes troublest their minds with illusions and vanities; suffering Satan the roring Lyon, and his Ministers, to haue domini­on for a time ouer them, as appeareth at this present by thy iust iudgement, de­clared and inflicted vpon this comfortlesse cay [...]ife, thy poore prisoner, and af­flicted creature, vnto the [Page 143] great anguish and torment of his soule and body, to the discomfort of his wife, friends and kinsfolke, and to the terrour and feare of all that euer heare or see him in this wofull case.

O Lord, thy iudgements are deepe, and thy counsell vnsearchable, and vnwor­thy are wee to know the counsels and secrets of the Highest: much lesse ought wee curiously to search to vnderstand the causes of this woe, and the occasion of this thy plague and grie­uous crosse laid vpon this miserable man. Notwith­standing, whether thou hast [Page 144] thus visited him for his for­mer sinnes, and by that meanes to call him to re­pentance and amendment of life: or to exercise his faith by the tryall of thy iu­stice, or for the terrour, and warning of all those that see or heare of him, that they may therby feare thy name, acknowledge thy power, auoid thy hea­uy displeasure, repent their sinfull liuing, and call to thee betimes for mercie and grace; or else to the end to shew thy great might & glory vpon him, and so to signifie vnto all people that thou art God [Page 145] alone, that rulest both hea­uen and earth, that stayest the madnes of the people, and the furiousnes of the Fiend, or for what cause so euer it bee that thou hast laid thy heauy hand of iudgement vpon him. Yet wee humbly beseech thee (O Lord God) not of our selues, or for our selues, but in the bowels of thy deare Sonne Iesus Christ, whom thou hast made the Re­demption of the world; to mitigate thy sury by tender mercy; asswage thy wrath, and stay thy heauy hand al­ready begunne and conti­nued in fraile flesh. Let [Page 146] not the Diuell nor all the powers in hell tempt him, aboue that which hee shall be able through Christ his Sauiour to beare. O Lord, restore in him of thy good­nes, whatsoeuer hath been decayed by the malice or suggestion of Satan, or by his owne frailtie and wic­ked disposition, or by any his enemies, the flesh, world, Diuell, or sinne. We confesse vnto thee, O Lord, that sinne is rife in vs, the flesh is fraile, the world is wicked, and the Diuell is most malicious. O Lord God, among these so many and mischieuous enemies, [Page 147] what shall we deuise to do? Whithershal we fly? There is no way with vs but one, wee must lift vp our eyes, our hands and our hearts vnto thee (O Lord:) Our help is from aboue, our victory proceedeth from thy grace and Throne of thy Maiestie: To heauen therefore wee lift vp both heart, hands, eyes, and all our powers; and vnto thee (O gracious Lord) we call and cry for helpe. Breake the heauens & come down (O Lord;) let our prayers pierce thine eares. Arise (O God) and scatter thine enemies and ours; stay the [Page 148] race of Satan, thon that art the glory of Sion, and strength of Israel, take from him his weapons and har­nesse, wherewith he goeth about to spoile thine Inhe­ritance: Bruze and breake the head of Leuiathan that subtill Serpent, which seeketh nothing but our destruction. Weaken his force, disperse and con­found all his politique pra­ctices, whereby hee dayly goeth about to ouerthrow thy seeble flocke. Let not this ramping and roring Lyon deuoure vs, but chain him vp, and tye him short, halter and bridle his cruell [Page 149] deuices, wherewithall hee worketh woe vnto thy ser­uants and Saints, for he can doe nothing without thy permission: thou which rulest the raging of the Sea that it cannot passe her bounds, and hast Satan fet­tered and fast bound in chaines, so that he cannot doe what hee would, but what pleaseth thee: for thy mercy hath conquered his cruelty to our great com­fort. Thou hast comman­ded vs to call vpon thee in the day of our trouble, and thou wilt deliuer vs, and we shall glorifie thee. Thou hast also promised in thy [Page 150] holy Word, to grant our godly Petitions, saying vn­to vs like a most louing Fa­ther: Aske, and you shall haue: Seeke, and you shall finde: Knocke, and it shall be opened vnto you: We aske of thee with pensiue soules, and would gladly obtaine mercy and for­giuenes of all our offences: We seeke, and would glad­ly finde that which wee haue lost by our vnthanke­fulnes and sinne: we knock at the gate of Grace, and will neuer cease knocking, vntill thou open vnto vs the bowels of compassion and pitie, and grant vs the [Page 151] feeling of thy good graces, to the full satisfaction and quieting of our troubled spirits, & carefull conscien­ces. Therefore O God the Father, God the Son, and God the holy Ghost, heare our prayers, and grant our humble requests, which with sobbing sighs & con­trite hearts cry vnto thee for succour.

O Lord haue mercy vp­on vs, haue mercy vpon vs, most mercifull Father: and for thy Sonne Iesus Christs sake, destroy not this afflicted creature in thy fury: suffer not this troubled and tormented [Page 152] person to perish euerlast­ingly. Take away from him (good Lord) this euill spi­rit, and vilde affection, wherewithall he is grieued and turmoiled: and indue him with thy holy Spirit, which may comfort his af­flicted Spirit, and frame his disposition heereafter to leade a godly conuersati­on, and a quiet life: So that after the tryall and sharpe taste of this thy fearefull iudgement, he may make a godly and quiet end, and be deliuered from euerlast­ing damnation and destru­ction. O Lord, the mo and the greater his sinnes be; so [Page 153] much the more shall thy might and mercy appeare in his deliuerance and re­stauration. Thy mercy (O Lord) is aboue all thy workes, and thy power is wonderfull and inuincible. Thou diddest commandMat. 3. 28. the Diuels which were ve­ry fierce in two persons (yea and so terrible, that no man might goe by that way where they were) to goe out of them into the Herd of Swine, insomuch that they were quiet at thy com­mandement, where before they were bound with chaines and fetters, and no man could tame them, but [Page 154] night and day they cryed in the Mountaines, and in the Graues, and strooke themselues with stones. Thou diddest also deliuerMat. 9. 32. a man which was dumbe, and possessed with a Diuel, so that the people maruel­led thereat. Thou (O Lord) with the eyes of compassi­on and pitie diddest looke vpon the Woman of Ca­naan, who cryed, saying, Haue mercy on mee, OMat. 15. 22 Lord, the sonne of Dauid: my Daughter is miserably vexed with a Diuell: and her Daughter was made whole the same houre. Thou also haddest mercie [Page 155] on the man that kneeledMat. 17. 14 downe to thee, and said: Master, haue on pitie myMar. 9. 18. Sonne, for hee is Lunatike and sore vexed: for often­times hee falleth into the water, and oftentimes into the fire; and wheresoeuer the dumbe spirit taketh him, hee teareth him, and hee fometh, and gnasheth with his teeth, and pineth away: and as soone as the spirit saw thee (O Lord) he tare him, and he fell down to the ground, wallowing and foming. But thou (in­continently) diddest re­buke the vnclean spirit, and saidst vnto him; thou dumb [Page 156] and deafe spirit, I charge thee come out of him, and enter no more into him: and presently he departed, and tooke his vltimum vale of him.

And many other times (O Lord) thou hast shewed as well thy might as mer­cie, in deliuering the halt, the maymed, the dumbe, the blinde, the furious, the sicke, the Lepers, and the lunatike, and those which were possessed with Di­uels, by the ministery of thy Apostles and true Disci­ples. And thou hast more­ouer commanded vs, say­ing: Go into al the world, [Page 157] preach the Gospell, heale the Sicke, comfort the Weake, raise the Dead, clense the Lepers, and cast out Diuels. Grant vnto vs thy deare children, and faithfull seruants, who are most earnest suters vn­to thee at this present, that we may in like maner finde fauour in thy sight, so farre forth, as we may obtain our request at thy gracious hands, and haue our Petiti­ons heard, and that by the power of thy Word, hear­ty Prayer, and a true Faith in Christ Iesus, thou wilt put Satan to flight, destroy his Kingdome, and vtterly [Page 158] extinguish all his suggesti­ons, and dangerous temp­tations: and so restore vn­to this afflicted person heere present, his former health, senses, and vnder­standing, for thy deare Son Iesus Christ his sake. Cre­ate (O Lord) a new heart, and reuiue thy holy Spirit in him, that he do not blas­pheme thy holy name; but rather take thy visitation patiently, and bee content to submit himselfe to thy good will and pleasure: So that come life, come death, come sicknes, come health, come ioy, come pain, both he and wee and the whole [Page 159] world may magnifie and extoll thy blessed Name in all actions: and as our bounden duty is, dayly and hourely giue thee honour and praise for thy great goodnes and mercies to­wards vs, through our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ.

Amen.

A fruit full Prayer in time of any common sicknes or Plague.

O Lord God of Hosts, most mighty and ter­rible, our guide and graci­ous Gouernour, whose iudgements and mercy are [Page 160] dayly and diuersly shewed vnto vs heere on earth, whose praise the Angels and Saints aboue extol and magnifie; whose power the Diuels themselues are for­ced to acknowledge and feare, & whose voice both windes and raging Seas do obey: Thou most mighty and eternall God, from whom proceedeth blessing, and cursing; mercy, and iudgement; health, and sicknes: Mercy to the pe­nitent and godly, iudge­ment without mercy to the Reprobate and wicked. Thou it is which renuest thy plagues against man [Page 161] when hee offendeth, whose vengeance from heauen is so sodaine and fearefull to­wards the rebellious and disobedient, that for one sinne in Dauid, thou did­dest destroy with the loth­some disease of the Pesti­lence, many thousands of his people: Cast thine eyes of mercy vpon vs (O thou preseruer of men) which languish in this Land with the same diseases and sick­nes: Where not Dauid one­ly hath offended in trust­ing to his strength, but eue­ry Congregation, and eue­ry houshold hath not one way, but many wayes pro­uoked [Page 162] thee to plague so vn­godly and vngracious a people: and now that the doore of thy store-house is open, and thy plagues ap­peare: wee see we haue of­fended, and wee sorrow at the sight of our sinnes.

Now wee consider wee haue offended grieuously, we haue done amisse, wee haue dealt wickedly, wee haue liued vngodly, wee haue swarued from the way of Truth without any god­ly feare, or remorse of con­science: Thy benefits of peace, health, and wealth, haue brought too too ma­ny of vs to such securitie [Page 163] and contempt of Religion, that we abuse thy blessings as fast as thou powrest them vpon vs: Our thoughts, words, and workes are vaine, carnall and diuelish: The fruits of the flesh haue ouergrowne the force of the Spirit; Faith faileth, sinne hath gotten the vpper hand, and our reason is so ouer-ruled with affections, that few are found settled in a dutifull forme of vp­right and spirituall obedi­ence. Wherefore we con­fesse, thou mightest iustly forsake vs, as wee forsake thee, and not only proceed to sting the whole body of [Page 164] this Land with sundry Plagues and Diseases; but also for our sins condemne vs most iustly to eternall death: whose consciences are so guilty, that they con­demne our selues. And yet for all this, thy mercy is vn­measurable towards the humble and penitent, though once thou spakest to Ieremy against thine owne people being diso­bedient to thee, saying: Though Moses and SamuelIer. 15. 1. stood before mee, yet haue I no heart (or affection) vn­to this people: Cast them out of my sight, and let them de­part, some vnto Death, some [Page 165] to the Sword, some to Famine, and some to Captiuitie. This people was in a pitiful case, and we are more miserable and sinfull, and haue defer­ued a more heauy hand of thy iudgement to bee laid vpon vs. Notwithstanding (O Lord) wee humbly be­seech thee to deale with vs in mercy, stay thy hand, and bid thine Angell cease from punishing: Looke with a cheerefull counte­nance vpon thy people: Blesse vs (O heauenly Fa­ther) within and without: Be thou our guard, thy Word our guide, thy Spi­rit our comfort, and thy [Page 166] Sonne our Sauiour. Stay by vs continually, hold vs vp by thy right hand strongly, and direct vs by thy counsell wisely. So shall we be inwardly comforted, though the world con­spire, Satan rore, the wic­ked rise vp against vs; yea, though the earth bee mo­ued, the pillars of heauen shake, the Sea rage, plagues fall, & all creatures frowne: Yet shall not wee eyther feare, tremble, or bee dis­mayed with any boisterous blast of aduersitie, so long as we trust in thee, leane to thee, serue thee, and rest vpon thee, as our strong [Page 167] Rocke: for thou art migh­ty in the heate of iudge­ment, and yet mercifull in the middest of miseries. Haue pitie therefore vpon vs most miserable sinners, mitigate thy fury, asswage our pain, release our smart, and pardon our passed faults. Wee confesse (O deare Father) that wee of our selues are the cause of our owne woe, and prouo­kers of this thy plague and grieuous punishmēt which is fallen vpon vs most wor­thily. Yea, our owne dete­stable deeds committed a­gainst thy sacred will, our obstinate pride, in time of [Page 168] plenty, our securitie in time of health; our vnthankeful­nes towards thy goodnes, in time of prosperitie; our contempt of thy Word dayly read and preached vnto vs, did threaten long before this thy rodde and scourge of sicknes, or some greater iudgement.

Our continuall transgres­sions; as our Idlenes, Wan­tonnesse, Whoredome, Drunkennesse, Gaming, Swearing, Swilling, Slan­dering, Stealing, Fighting, Quarrelling, Polling, Pil­ling, Vsurie, Extortion and Oppression of the poore; our Bribery, Couetousnes, [Page 169] Defrauding of the Wid­dow and Fatherlesse, with a huge heape moe of such like vices, haue beene the causes of this our miserie and smart, which now wee feele to our torment and griefe, and haue mooued thee the holy One of Israel to powre out the fearefull cup of thy wrath and ven­geance vpon vs, which thy iustice doth craue, and wee dayly deserue. Neuerthe­lesse (deare Father of mer­cie) though wee haue through our sinnes shewed our selues enemies vnto thee, and vessels of thy wrath, and vnworthy to [Page 170] pray vnto thee with our lying lips, and polluted mouthes, much lesse to ob­tain our suites at thy hands. Yet (most mercifull Father) we beseech thee be fauou­rable vnto vs, in shewing thy mercy vnto vs that are miserable: For, if thou O Lord, doest strictly marke what is done amisse among men, and wilt retaine our iniquitie: O Lord, who shall then be able to abide it, or to stand in thy sight? Verily no flesh, no not the iustest man that liueth this day vpon the face of the earth.

Therefore (O Lord) wee [Page 171] returne to thee with our hearts, and come home with the Prodigall Sonne, although late at night, re­penting the rude race wee haue runned, and being heartily sorrie for the lewd life we haue led: we pro­strate our selues, and fall downe flat to the ground before the Throne of thy Grace; beseeching thee as our tender and pitifull Fa­ther, to embrace vs with the armes of mercy and compassion, to turne away thy face from our lothsome sinnes, and blot out of thy remembrance our former offences. Reuiue (O Lord) [Page 172] our sorrowfull & penitent spirits after the time of our try all; comfort our carefull and contrite hearts, for giue vs our trespasses: Turne to vs in thy mercy, which re­turne to thee from sinne; direct our wayes hereafter in the workes of thy com­mandements; increase our Faith, and make these thy iudgements and grie­uous plagues, which thou hast worthily inflicted vp­on vs for our wickednes, be a caueat and warning blow vnto vs hereafter, that wee neuer fall againe to our former folly, nor heape vpon our owne heads thy [Page 173] wrath and vengeance, lest a worse thing happen vnto vs: but that this our cha­sticement may worke in our mindes true and vn­fained repentance: So that when thy heauenly hand shall slake from the execu­tion of thy iust iudgement, when thy wrath is appea­sed, and wee safely deliue­red, acquitted, and dis­charged of this misery wherein we are now wrap­ped, we may indeed amend that which is amisse in vs, tread Satan vnder our feet, contemne the world, mor­tifie the lusts of the flesh, crucifie the whole body of [Page 174] sinne, and as new-borne Babes shew our selues hereafter more thankefull for thy benefits powred vp­on vs in most plentifull manner: as for our health, wealth, tranquillitie and li­bertie; the preaching of thy Gospell; the true know­ledge of thy will reuealed in thy Word; the outward peace of our bodies, and the inward comfort of our soules: All which graces, with many moe, wee haue enioyed a long time in more ample manner, then any other People or Nati­on vnder heauen. O Lord, wee humbly beseech thee, [Page 175] continue thy good bles­sings towards vs thine vn­worthy & vnthankefull ser­uants; & grant that thy ho­ly Name may be so glori­fied hereafter, in all our thoughts, words, and workes, during this transi­torie life; that in the end when thou hast wrought thy will with vs, we may raigne with thee and al the holy company of heauen in the life euerlasting. Grant also (deare Father) relaxa­tion, and release of thy plagues and punishments vnto this thine afflicted towne of and to all other countries, townes, [Page 176] houses, and people which be in the like calamity and distresse, for the loue and precious Passion of Iesus Christ our Lord and Sa­uiour, in whose blessed name wee bow the knees both of our soules and bo­dies, and humbly prostrate our selues heere before the Throne of thy glorious Maiesty, praying vnto thee as he hath taught vs, and saying, Our Father, which art in Heauen, &c.

The third Dutie of the Pastor.

THe third thing pertai­ning to a good Pastor, is his godly counsell or ad­monition: as for example,

Good Brother, you must now in this time of Gods visitation, call to minde your former life: The more vicious and faultie you haue beene, the deeper you ought to sigh and grone in spirit for your offences: and whereinsoeuer you haue displeased God, consider, that amendment of life to come, and repentance for [Page 178] your sinnes past, is the way and meanes to become friends with him, and to be at peace in your owne conscience. But this re­pentance may not bee in mouth outwardly, but inwardly in simplicitie of heart, continually detesting that which is euill, and ar­dently louing that which is good and acceptable to God: And so though vn­worthy of your selfe, you may be accepted of God, by faith in his beloued Sonne, with whom the Fa­ther is well pleased; but with vs and our vnrighte­ousnes, he cannot bee but [Page 179] highly displeased: it is good therefore to acknow­ledge and confesse your sinne to God, and to sub­mit your selfe to his Maie­stie, by true conuersion and sorrow of heart, with an inward griefe and lothing of those sinnes, which be­fore you tooke pleasure in; and crauing of mercy and pardon at his hands whom you haue so often offen­ded. So did Dauid the King; so did the poore Publican knocke at the doore of his heart, and be­ing pressed and ouerwhel­med with sorrow, he cryed: Lord be mercifull vnto me a Luk. 18. 13. [Page 180] sinner. So we, spare vs, O Lord, spare thy people. And this must be done in time, euen now presently: For now is that acceptable time. 2. Cor. 6. 2. Now is the Day of saluation, Now is the Day of hearing.

Christ lamented the state of Ierusalem, because shee knew not the times of her visitation. Therfore (good brother) apply this plaister to your sore: you are now visited of God by sicknesse, it is now your time to call your sins to remembrance, defer it not, but watch for your saluation offered: they say, warned men may liue. Ierusalem warnes you, sick­nes [Page 181] warnes you, your gray head warnes you, your friends warne you, I warne you, and God warnes you in his Word to repent, to renounce this world, to watch for your deliuery, to look for your redemption, and to haue your conuersa­tion in heauen, from whence Phil. 3. 20. you looke for a Sauiour, euen the Lord Iesus Christ.

The fiue foolish Virgins would not watch, but slept and slumbred, and there­fore had heauen gates shut vp against them. The dores were opened, but they were not ready with their Lamps burning, but were [Page 182] taken napping in their se­curity and sinne.

Therefore, they may now knock, and thumpe, and cry, and call as loud as they can, and yet they shall ne­uer be heard, it is but lip-la­bour, all is in vaine. The time was, but it neuer shall be againe: Mercy was offered, which being refused, Iu­stice must take place. Such examples are set downe for our instruction; and happy is that man which can take heede by other mens harmes. If Gods iudge­ment cannot feare vs to forsake sinne, yet his mercy should moue vs, and leade [Page 183] vs by the hand to warch and be carefull for our sal­uation: for God pitieth vs, his Angels fauour vs, his benefits prouoke vs, yea all his creatures, Sunne, Moone and Starres, Hea­uen & earth do admonish vs, and should prouoke vs to beware, to watch and ward for our saluation: They cry continually, Re­pent and amend. The short­nes of our time may moue vs hereunto. Wee see by dayly experience, to day a man, to morrow none, he that liueth the longest, his race is soone finished & ended: and that made Iob to say, [Page 184] Man hath but a short time to Iob 14. 1. liue, and in that time he is subiect to many miseries, as pouerty, slaunders, per­secutions, blindnesse, lame­nesse, oldnesse, coldnesse, trouble and sicknesse: All these molestations and thousands mo warne vs, by course to beware that wee runne right. Let vs there­fore (good Brother) tuck vp our garments, and pre­pare our selues for the life to come; for the time of our departing is at hand. That little time that remaineth, let vs bestow it in the ser­uice of God, and not of the deuill: Let vs not walke [Page 185] with the wicked in the wide way that leadeth to dam­nation, but rather keepe company with the seruants of God, and walke in the narrow way with them; though it be painefull and cumbersome for a while, yet it is comfortable in the end; when wee shall haue our recompence with the righteous, then shall death bee welcome to vs, which now is shunned of the most; then the Day of Iudgement shall lighten our hearts, when it shall load the conscience of the impenitent sinner; we may then with comfort lift vp [Page 186] our heads and heartes, when the vngodly may hang them downe, and be ashamed to looke either God or man in the face. I would to God all men would remember this day of reckoning and reward; then if loue of saluation could not make vs do well, yet feare of damnation would somewhat bridle and stay vs from doing e­uill. It would mooue the rich to pitty the poore, the Vsurer and Extortioner to restore their euill gotten goods with iust Zacheus: the Land-lord not to cut his Tenants throat, by ma­king [Page 187] him and al he hath, his bondslaues: for those wick­ed worldings which will not now bee drawne to re­pentance by hearing, shall then bee tormented both body and soule by feeling, when they shall bee taken tardie in their sinnes, ap­prehended, accused, indi­ted, and arraigned at the Barre of Gods Tribunall Iudgement Seat; where the vngodly shall not bee able to stand, much lesse to answere their crime, when Gods sword is drawne rea­dy to strike and take ven­geance; at that day no in­treaty will take place, nor [Page 188] prayer bee heard either of men or Angels in their be­halfe: for all the creatures of God shall refuse to doe them seruice at their death, because they refused to do God seruice in their life; and for that occasion they shall heare & see all things cry vengeance vpon them: nothing in heauen or earth to minister comfort, but ra­ther cause of griefe and horror: let this geere en­ter into your braine be­time (good brother) and let it pearce your heart now in your life time; for af­ter death you shall haue no time to repent and turne to [Page 189] God, neither is there then any mercy to be hoped for at his hands, but a fearefull looking for the sentence of Gods iust iudgement: Goe Math. 25. 41. yee cursed into euerlasting fire, &c. Then they may yell, houle and cry, and yet neuer finde grace, after Gods curse hath once ta­ken place: All their mirth shall then bee turned to mourning, their honour to shame, their pleasure to paine, their wealth to woe, and their delicate fare on earth, to the bitter torments of hell, where they shall re­maine for euer in darke­nesse and perpetuall paine.

This shall be the portion of the vngodly: whereas contrariwise the righteous shal be shrouded vnder the wings of Gods mercy, and safely preserued from those tortures by the bloud of the Lambe: the Angels shall gard them, the Saints shall imbrace them, the heauens receiue them, and the plea­sures of the Celestiall Para­dise shall replenish them with vnspeakable ioy & con­tinuall comfort: therefore let vs prepare our selues for that Day of reward: per­haps it is neerer then wee are aware: let vs haue con­tinually in our mindes the [Page 191] ioyes of heauen, and the paines of hell: let the one mooue vs to loue God, the other to feare him, lest wee be damned with the wick­ed. Let vs turne to the Lord betime: Let vs promise, & perform; for many promise in their woe, that which they soone forget whē they wax wanton. They are then secure, they dreame of a dry Summer, as the rich Cormorant did, which for­getting God, and wallow­ing in worldly wealth, cast away all care of doing his duty, and said, Soule, thou Luk. 12. 19 hast much goods laid vp for many yeeres, liue at ease, eate, [Page 192] drinke, and take thy pastime. Oh, iolly Gentleman, this fellow is now in his ruffe: but behold a cooling card! the Lord answered againe, and that speedily and rea­dlly, O foole, this night will they setch away thy soule from thee: whose then shal thy goods bee that thou hast prouided?

It is wisedome therefore for man to prouide for God, & then God will pro­uide for him. Therefore (good brother) I beseech you in the bowels of Iesus Christ, repent, and correct your selfe betime, reforme your manners and behaui­our by the rule of Gods [Page 193] Law, that you may auoid the curse thereof, and bee preserued and saued: that when Iesus Christ shall come to his Iudgement from the highest heauens, in power and Maiesty, ac­companied with his holy Angels and Saints, you may meete him with a ioy­full heart, and obtaine the crowne of glory and victo­ry, which is the reward of Gods children: and so reigne with that righteous Iudge, in perpetuall peace. continuall comfort, and endlesse ioy: which God grant to you and mee, and all that loue his comming, Amen.

And that wee may the better performe the Pre­mises, let vs in all our acti­ons set these foure things before our eyes, that is, the Day of Death, the Day of Doome, that Condemnati­on of the wicked, and the Saluation of the godly.

To the wicked and dam­ned sort, death is misera­ble, Gods Iudgements ter­rible, and their paine into­lerable: To the godly and such as shal be saued, death is pleasant, iudgement comfortable, and their ioy perpetuall: therefore it is better betime to repent & reforme our selues with the [Page 195] godly, then to driue off from day to day, with the wicked, which neither by Gods mercy nor iudge­ment will bee drawne to a­mendment, but neglect all meanes and occasions: and there is no better time, nor fitter occasion to prepare our selues to our end, then when we feele Gods heauy hand laid vpon vs by any kinde of crosse, sicknesse, or other visitation; for ther­by God giueth vs friendly warning to make our selues in a readinesse, and to giue ouer the world: and happy man is hee (whosoeuer hee bee) which forsaketh sinne, [Page 196] before sinne forsake him, and that giueth ouer the world, before the world giue him ouer: for when wee haue discharged our selues of this world, and this world shall be dischar­ged of vs, then we haue the greatest account of all to reckon for: Therefore (my deare brother) that fearest God and beleeuest in him, while thou art now chasti­sed with sicknes and paine, and perceiuest death to ap­proach, bestur your selfe betime, follow Christ at foote, prostrate your selfe before him, fall downe flat on the earth, deny your [Page 197] selfe, acknowledge your sin, trust in him, neuer giue o­uer, cry and call aloud, Mi­serere mei, Domine, miserere mei: i. Haue mercy on me, O Lord, haue mercy on mee, Cry with the Cana­nite: O sonne of Dauid, haue Mat. 15. 22 mercy on me: and at length he will looke back, take pit­ty vpon you, forgiue you your sinnes, and receiue you to his mercy.

Let the innocent Lamb of God be an example vn­to you herein: for Christ himselfe in his extreme a­gony, when his sweat was like drops of bloud trick ling downe to the ground, [Page 198] yet hee prayed earnestly to haue his Fathers Will ful­filled. So must you do, that is now weake and feeble in body bee feruent in spirit, renounce the wicked world, with all the vanities there­in, tread them vnder your feete, Sursum cor, Lift vpCol. 3. 1, 2 your heart to God, medi­tate vpon heauenly things, for it is high time: Be­hold, the Sonne of GOD your mercifull Redeemer, that sweat water and bloud for your sinnes, behold him sitting on the right hand of his Father, making interces­sion for you, ioyne your selfe to him, pray vnto God [Page 199] feruently in his name, and say as he himselfe did in the anguish of his Spirit heere on earth; Father, into thy Luk. 23. 46 hands I commend my Spirit. Thou hast redeemed mee, O Lord God of truth, Lord haue mercy vpon me, and forgiue me my sins. Sweet Iesu, receiue my soule into thy Kingdome, &c.

I beseech you (gentle Brother) thinke vpon my words in my absence, and continue in this minde, ha­uing a firme faith in Christ Iesus, euen to your end.

And withall, take in good part this my friendly ad­monition: Let it worke in [Page 200] your heart true repen­tance to saluation, and if you doubt any thing tou­ching your beliefe, life or Religion, or any other pri­uate causes that may in some sort trouble your con­science: I pray you let mee resolue you, and I will doe my endeuour to satisfie you therein, so far forth as may tend to your saluation and comfort, which I hear­tily wish in Christ Iesus: And so for this time I leaue you, committing you to the tuition of him that is a­ble to saue you.

The fourth duety of the Pastor.

THe fourth duety of the Pastour is, to comfort the sick in all their distresse, danger and feare, with sen­tences, examples, and per­swasions out of the Word of God, especially toward their end.

We feare chiefely two things,
  • 1 Death in this life.
  • 2. Damnation after death

I purpose not to speake [Page 202] much of eyther, for if I did, I should but make the vo­lume of this book to large, and so cause the Printer to waste paper, to his further charges, and my greater paines, and yet say nothing but that which is set downe already by those that are better learned then my self, and haue troden the way before mee. Therefore ha­uing partly touched the same in my Questions, I wil only adde these few lines following, touching both for example sake.

It is an old rule in Phy­sick: Take away the cause, and the effect is taken away [Page 203] with it. Vnderstand there­fore (good Brother) that the causes why men so much feare death, be ma­ny, according to the mul­titude of men and their manners.

The first cause is, for that 1 by death they lose many commodities and plea­sures, which in their life time they did long enioy, and haue great delight therein; as wife, children, parents, friends, lands, li­uings, possessions, sumptu­ous houses, buildings, worldly honours, offices & dignities. All these and such like, be call-backs, and [Page 204] dayly coueted while life lasteth, and yet dreadfull death dispatcheth vs of all these delights euen at a blow: this is the feare of worldlings.

Secondly, we feare death, 2 because of weakenesse, dis­eases and bitter torments, which are the forerunners, warners, and messengers of death: This is the feare of the flesh.

The third cause why men 3 feare death, is, incredulity or lack of faith in Christ. This is the feare of consci­ence, and proceedeth of ig­norance, or lack of know­ledge in the Scriptures, [Page 205] whereof our faith is groun­ded.

The fourth cause why 4 we feare death, is, the dan­ger of eternall damnation both of body and soule in hell fire. This is the inward feare of the spirit.

But to bee short, one comfortable blast of Gods spirit, will extinguish and driue all these terrours quite away from vs, euen as the winde doth driue away the thick clowds or mists, which do separate vs from the light and sight of the Sunne.

First therefore, for the 1 losse of the world, and all [Page 206] the drosse therein, it is in­deede no losse, but gaine to those that by death enioy the company of God & his Angels in heauen, where they shall be immortall and incorruptible; freed from all carnall desires and diseases of the body, and deliuered from all sorrow and trouble of minde: no losse therefore to the godly that haue gai­ned Christ, but to the wick­ed worldlings that haue lost their riches and plea­sures here, & in stead therof possesse perpetuall paines elsewhere, to them it shall bee said: Looke how much pleasure they haue had, and [Page 207] giue them so much torment.

Secondly, touching the 2 feare of sicknesse, the more paine wee suffer heere, the more like wee are to our Master Christ, & the grea­ter shall bee our reward in heauen: In the meane time, let vs be of good comfort, for he that smiteth, healeth, and hee that sendeth trou­ble, sendeth strength.

Thirdly, against incre­dulity 3 or distrust, wee must desire of God to increase our faith, that wee may be­leeue the Scriptures, and take pleasure therein: for ignorance will not excuse vs, now that the candle is [Page 208] lighted and not hid vnder a bushell, but openly reuei­led to the wide world, and that to the comfort and sal­uation of euery one that beleeueth: for the know­ledge of Gods Law, and the Gospell, are necessary to our saluation: the rea­sons be diuers.

The one doth feare vs.

The other doth comfort vs.

The Law vttereth sinne.

The Gospell forgiueth it.

The Law maketh weake.

The Gospell maketh strong.

The Law killeth.

The Gospell quicken­eth.

The Law throweth down to hell.

The Gospel lifteth vp to heauen.

Fourthly, against the 4 feare of damnation, when Satan layeth the Law hard to our charge, threatning thereby death and damna­tion: Let vs answere him with the Gospell, which bringeth life and saluation. Let vs haue a grounded and stedfast faith fixed in Christ Iesus our Sauiour, who hath vanquished and destroyed all our deadly e­nemies, as the flesh, the [Page 210] world, damnation, punish­ment, dangers, sin, death, deuill and hell.

Be at vtter defiance with them all, & say boldly with the Apostle S. Paul, It is Rom. 8. 33. God that iustifieth, who then can condemne? and againe, God shall shortly tread downe Rō. 16. 20. Satan vnder your feete, &c.

If you beleeue this, and apply it right to your soule, you may then cheerefully dye, and on your dying day sing and say that merry note, to your great comfort and ioy, viz. I desire to bee Phil. 1. 23. loosed, and to be with Christ.

This was the marke that the blessed Apostle Saint [Page 211] Paul did ayme at, all his life long; and therefore re­ioycing in heart, hee saith, towards the end of his course,

I am now ready to be offe­red, 2 Tim. 4. 6 and the time of my depar­ture is at hand. I haue fought 7 a good battell, I haue finished my course, I haue kept the 8 faith: from henceforth there remaineth for me a crowne of righteousnesse, which the Lord a iust Iudge shall giue me at that day, not onely vn­to mee, but to all those that loue his comming. This made Stephen that faithfull witnesse of his Master Christ, (seeing the glory of [Page 212] God) constantly to call vp­on him, and say in his grea­test torment of body, Lord Act 7. 59. Iesu, receiue my spirit. These men and many mo such like, haue willingly yeelded their necks to the block, their bodies to torment, & their soules to God, and boldly to depart out of the miseries of this world, em­bracing the counsell of the wise man: who saith, Feare Eccl. 4. 1, 3 not the iudgment of death, re­mēber them that haue bin be­fore thee, and that come after: this is the ordinance of the Lord ouer all flesh.

And why wouldest thou be against the pleasure of the [Page 213] most Highest? whether it be tenne, or an hundreth, or a thousand yeeres, there is no defence for life against the graue. No striuing against the streame, no resisting a­gainst death.

But (alas) what meaneth this? There is nothing that men so often behold as death, and nothing that men so soone forget as death. As men ought not to bee carelesse of their fi­nall end: so they ought not to feare death, especially if they haue liued in the feare of God; for seeing all must dye, wherefore should the godly be afraid of Bugges? [Page 214] what a foole is he that will feare his owne shadow? what good will it doe vs, either to complaine or la­ment for that thing which by no meanes wee can e­scape?

Tell me, if thou canst, with all thy skill, what man is he aliue, that breatheth vpon the earth, that shall liue vn­till hee bee an hundreth yeeres old? or, what one canst thou name for thy life, with whom thou hast beene acquainted an hun­dreth yeeres sithens? crack me this Nut, reade me this Riddle, Et eris mihi magnus Apollo: that is, I wil account [Page 215] thee as a God for thy skill. Seeing then that our life is both short and vncertaine, and that these things are generall to all, and not to thee or to me alone; Why should we not in good fel­lowship taste of the same sawce, and drinke of the same cup one after ano­ther, and that without feare or grudging, as all our pre­decessors haue done? Let vs yeeld our pampred bo­dies to the earth, and our sinfull soules to the tryall of iustice: for so haue the god­ly alwayes done, they ac­count the world to be but a Race, a Vale of miseries, [Page 216] and a paineful Pilgrimage, and therefore they couet to haue the course of this life finished, they waite conti­nually for the good houre, looking after death for a ioyfull resurrection. And of this hope they haue the sweete and comfortable Testimony of Gods Spirit within them, as a gage or pledge of their saluation, which will neuer forsake them, vntill it haue presen­ted them before the Ma­iesty of God, as heires and coheires with Iesus Christ of his heauenly Kingdome, purchased for vs with his owne bloud, wherein our [Page 217] soules and filthy bodies are sprinkled and thorowly washed. What a comfort is this to a Christian heart? What neede a man thus minded to feare death after this life, any more then the laboring man (after he hath toyled sore al the day long) neede to feare sleepe and his quiet rest at night? No, no, hee may rather with a cheerefull conscience wish for death, because as Christ saith, He shall passe frō death Ion. 5. 24. to life.

Let vs therefore (good Christian Brother) so liue with Christ, that we may dye in him; and let vs so [Page 218] glorifie him in this life by our godly conuersation, that wee may bee glorified of him in the life to come, to our comfort and saluati­on. The best remedy to a­uoid this friuolous feare of death, is to repent our for­mer sinnes, and hereafter to apply our selues to liue in his true seruice and feare.

So that first wee may fi­nish 1 our life heere, and dye well.

Secondly, that wee may receiue at Gods hands in 2 the resurrection of the iust, a comfortable and merci­full iudgement.

Thirdly, that we may a­uoid 3 the horrible paines of hell which are intolerable.

Fourthly and finally, that 4 we may be partakers of the life euerlasting, and vn­speakeable ioyes of hea­uen: which God vouchsafe to grant vnto vs for his Christs sake, our Redee­mer and mercifull Sauiour,

Amen.

Consolation against dam­nation.

IT is most certaine (good Brother) that when wee lye sick in the pangs of death, then presently our [Page 220] sinnes committed against the holy Will and Com­mandement of God, doe present themselues vnto vs, rushing in vpon vs with great violence: Then wee can behold nothing but Gods Iudgement aboue vs, hell beneath vs, damna­tion before vs, and our sins within vs; then there is no­thing but feare, trembling, and horror on euery side vs. All our enemies are now gathered together to assault vs with sorrow and heauines: now we had need of a strong faith and a good courage in this case: for no doubt, our old enemy [Page 221] Satan will now play his part in tempting of vs; hee will with boldnesse present vnto vs all the sinnes wee haue committed all our life time, hee will heape toge­ther whole VVain-loads of our trespasses in great a­bundance, to the end, to dash vs out of counte­nance with God, and to make vs doubt of Gods mercy, and so to fall to des­peration; heere now wee stand in more need of god­ly counsell and comfort, then euer we did in all our life time: wee are now put to our plunge, and forced to seeke shifts, for Satan [Page 222] will then presse silly soules with feare and perplexity, that they cannot tell how to winde themselues out of his clawes, he will make of euery mole-hill, a moun­taine; of a Flye, an Ele­phant; and of euery light sinne, a deepe wound in our conscience, which breedeth such hurly-burly within vs, that we can be at no rest with our selues: when it it is day, we wish for night, and when it is night, we would haue it day our meat doth vs no good, our sleepe is vnsound, our heart cannot bee merry, sorrow ouerwhelmeth vs, all com­fort [Page 223] forsaketh vs, there is no ioy nor pleasure in the world that can delight vs. And thus the Deuil, which before allured vs vnto sin, writeth vp all in his booke, and in the time of danger, or towards our death, when hee commeth to ac­cuse, hee will bring the whole reconing, and then turne all our former plea­sure into present paine; then the pearcing sting and wofull worme of our con­science pricketh and biteth vs in such fearefull sort, that many men haue beene for­ced euen openly with trem­bling flesh and sorrowfull [Page 224] soules to cry out of their sins: now thē being broght to this wofull case, what is to be done? The next way is, to seeke for remedy; when wee lack our bodily health, and are pained with sicknesse, we straight­way post, yea we runne and we ride with all speede vn­to a Physician, we let for no labour, we spare no cost to procure medicines, and re­medies for our earthly bo­dies: why doe wee not then with like diligence seek out remedies against the noy­some diseases and infecti­ons of the soule, being much more grieuous and [Page 225] more dangerous then these of the body?

Now therefore (deare Brother) to apply these words to the comfort of your carefull conscience, and wearisome body, be­ing afflicted inwardly, and pained outwardly: Are you desirous of saluation? would you willingly dye in Gods fauour? would you bee receyued into his hea­uenly Tabernacle? do you desire to bee blessed with old Iacob? And do you co­uet to be a Citizen of the heauenly Ierusalem? then giue eare and take good heed vnto such cōfortable [Page 226] counsell, as by Gods gift and grace I shall minister vnto you.

First, prostrate your selfe before the diuine Maiesty of God: Let your sinne be a griefe vnto you, but let it not grieue you to confesse it: for of all other things, our sinnes doe bite the soa­rest, and pearce our soules the deepest, because they are aggrauated with all the threatnings of Gods ven­geance, which maketh vs loth to haue them search­ed or knowne to the world, or any way touched by the Word; we had rather haue them plaistred with sweete [Page 227] promises, and bathed in the mercies of God, where­as it is more safe to haue them pricked and made manifest by the rigour of the Law, although it bring both shame and blame.

Therefore (my good Brother) if you bee asha­med of your selfe, and of your sinne (as all men may be) yet for all that, be nei­ther abashed or ashamed to acknowledge it and craue pardon. If you see no worthinesse in your self, but the world accusing you without, and your owne conscience within, yet des­paire not vtterly, but lift vp [Page 229] your eyes to heauen, and there behold Iesus Christ your Sauiour, sitting on the right hand of God, as a Mediatour, making inter­cession for you to his hea­uenly Father: he was a Sauiour on earth, so he re­mainethHeb. 13. 8. in heauen. Iesus Christ yesterday, and to day, the same also is for euer.

Yesterday, he called to sin­ners, & said: Come vnto me, Mat. 11. 28. all yee that are weary and la­den, & I wil ease you. And to day hee cryeth and calleth in like maner, and will do to the worlds end: Yesterday he said, I came not to call the Mat. 9. 12 iust, but sinners to repentance. [Page 228] And to day hee saith the same. Yesterday he forgaueMat. 18. 27 ten thousand Talents to one debter; his arme is not shortned to day, he is the same God he was. Yester­day he forgaue the prodi­gall sonne, his sinne in lea­ding a lasciuious and lewde life, and to day he doth the like to many moe.

Yesterday hee forgaue Peter his periury, Paul his blasphemy, the sonnes of Zebede their pride, Mary Magdalene her whoore­dome. As hee was a merci­full Christ yesterday, so he is to day, and will bee to morrow. Yesterday hee [Page 230] came to saue sinners, and to day he comes to saue, & to morrow he will come, and for euer hee will not reiect them, if they repent.

Therefore, Satan, what canst thou say, or alledge a­gainst mee? or how darest thou presume to charge me or any one of Gods Elect? If God will saue, thou canst not condemne: If Christ will shew mercy, I defie thy cruelty.

It may bee, thou wilt ob­iect against mee, and say, These are particular exam­ples, and they became holy men afterward. This ma­keth nothing for you, but [Page 231] against you: you are no such man, neither are you to expect such mercy. But I say vnto thy teeth, Satan, Thou art and hast beene a lyar from the beginning. Gods VVord and his pro­mise are stablished in Hea­uen. And this one sentence is sufficient to comfort me, and conuince thee: Iesus Christ yesterday, to day, and the same also for euer: Al­wayes one and the same, he cannot deny himselfe: he is mercy it selfe; by nature mercifull; by office merci­full; in his life mercifull; in his death mercifull. Hee is no changeling: I may [Page 232] change, the world may change, but he is immuta­ble, and cannot change. He still continueth alwayes alike mighty, alwayes alike liberall, alwayes alike mer­cifull: A Sauiour yesterday, a Sauiour to day, & a Saui­our to morrow, & so to the worlds end, & after. There­fore auoid and away Satan, tempt mee no longer, doe not threaten mee damnati­on. For I know and be­leeue assuredly, that there is Rom. 8. 1. no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus. O how sweet is this blessed name Iesus, which signifieth a Sa­uiour, to the pensiue soule [Page 233] of a sinner! O how much and how deepely are wee bound to God our heauen­ly Father, for our saluation wrought by this his deare and onely Sonne, in whom he acknowledgeth himselfe to be fully satisfied and ap­peasedMat. 3. 1 [...]. for our sinnes! This testimony proceeding from Heauen, is so certaine, that all the Diuels in hell, and enemies in earth, shall neuer be able to withstand it; for no creature but Christ alone, hath power to remit sinnes. He it is alone, that hath taken vpon him our Esay 53. 4. sinnes, and borne our paines. They that are strong, need not Mat. 9. 12, 13. [Page 234] the Physician, but they that are sicke. Christ came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance. Our names are Luk. 10. 20 written in heauen, and re­corded for euer in the Book of Life. For God so loued the Ioh. 3. 16, world, that he hath giuen vs his onely begotten Sonne, that whosoeuer beleeueth in him, should not perish, but haue euerlasting life. For God sent 17 not his Sonne into the world, that hee should condemne the world, but that the world through him might be saued. These are comfortable words to all those that are clogged in conscience: these are generall words vt­tered [Page 235] to the wide world, by him that came to saue the world; by him that hath promised & will performe; by him that calleth all, and exempteth none, as appea­reth by that generall Sen­tence, which cannot too often be recited: Come vn­to Mat. 2. 28. me, all yee that are weary and laden, and I will ease you. This comfortable call and cheerefull cry of Christ, should bee printed in our hearts, & ring in our eares as an alarum night and day, they should awake vs out of the sleepe of sinne, and mooue vs to come at the first bidding. You see how [Page 236] friendly and fatherly wee are called, no place or coun­trie is excepted, no time prohibited, no sinner reie­cted, but to all hee calleth, and dayly hee calleth, Come, Come.

This word may serue for the first Call in this world, and warne vs of the last Call in the day of Iudge­ment; for the Iudge shall then rehearse the same, Come, ye blessed. If you will obey the first Call here, you shall heare the second Call hereafter to your great ioy and comfort. VVe are all heere laden with sinne, we are all weary of the burden, [Page 237] it is too heauy for the best to beare. Therefore let vs come to Christ our Lord and Master for ease, hee hath already borne the bur­then of our sinnes vpon his owne shoulders, and nailed them fast vpon his Crosse. VVhen we are most loden, then lifts he for life: when we are most in misery, then hee is most mercifull and mighty: when we are falne flat to the earth, & brought low to hell gate, then hee stretcheth out his long and large arme of mercy, and plucketh vs out of all dan­ger, deliuereth vs from the dunghill and danger of the [Page 238] Diuell, and so leadeth vs ready by the hand to his Fathers Kingdome. Thus he doth to all (there is no respect of persons) bondGal. 3. 28. and free, Iew and Gentile. He refuseth not Publicans, as Zacheus: no not VVhore­mongersLuk. 19. 5. and murtherers, as Dauid: not Drunkards, as Noah and Lot: not great sinners, as Mary Magdalen: not the Thiefe, hanging on his right hand: not perse­cutors, as Paul: no, not swea­rers & forswearers of them­selues, as Peter: but most tenderly and louingly hee accepteth their repentance, embraceth them with the [Page 239] armes of his mercie, and forgiueth them their sinnes.

Now therefore (good Brother) in the time of this your tryall and Visitation, I would wish you to apply these comfortable senten­ces and examples to your selfe, for the better safety of your owne soule. Are you iniured by your enemies? Come to Christ, he is able to redresse it. Are you false­ly accused or slandered? You are the more like to your Master Christ Iesus: for hee was so handled be­fore you. Are you troubled by mighty men? Come to Christ: for he pulleth down [Page 240] the mighty from their seat. Are you forsaken of your friends? Come to Christ, for he forsaketh none, ex­cept they first forsake him. Art thou tormented with bodily sicknes? Come to Christ, for he smiteth and healeth. Art thou in dan­ger of death? Come to Christ, for hee is the life that shall neuer haue end. Doe you feare hell & dam­nation? Come to Christ, who hath deliuered you from hell, and wrought your saluation: who defy­ing the Diuell, hath said by his Apostle: O death, where 1. Cor. 15. 55, is thy sting? O hell, where is [Page 241] thy victory? Let vs clap our hands, reioyce at heart, and say, Thankes be vnto God, 57 which hath giuen vs victorie, through our Lord Iesus Christ. VVe may now bold­ly say with iust Iob, the faith­full seruant of God, I am Iob 19. 25, sure that my Redeemer liueth, and hee shall stand the last on the earth. And though after 26, my skin, wormes destroy this body, yet shall I see God in my flesh. Whom I my selfe shall 27 see, and mine eyes shall be­hold, and none other for mee, though my reines are consu­med within me.

So that neither death, nor dānation is terrible to [Page 242] those that behold Christ a­right with the eyes of their Faith. A sure faith obtai­neth any thing at Gods hands: as for example: TheMat. 15. 22 woman of Canaan cryed, O sonne of Dauid, haue mer­cie on me, and her Daughter was healed.

The Publican cryed, God Luk. 18. 13 be mercifull vnto me a sinner, and he went home iustified. The Centurion beleeued, and Mat. 8. 13. his sonne was restored. The Mar. 5. 23. Master of the Synagogue prayeth, and his Daughter was reuiued.

The Apostles cry, Saue Mat. 8. 25. vs, O Lord, wee perish: and they are saued euery one. [Page 243] Not one person can perish,Mat. 10. 33 no, nor one hayre of his head, without Gods diuine prouidence and permission. For although our heauenly Father try vs by troubles in this world, as the gold is tried in the fire; yet after the time of tryall hee is ne­uer the further off. But the more grieuous our sicknes is, the greater our afflicti­ons be, and the more heauy our hearts waxe, the more we ought to reioyce, see­ing our reward is great inMat. 5. 12. heauen, as Christ hath said, whom wee ought to follow with our crosse on our backs here on earth, if wee [Page 244] meane to raigne with him in heauen.

Therefore (good Bro­ther) in your griefe and a­gony, hold vp your hands, and lift vp your heart to heauen, despayre not at all, feare not too much, but be of good comfort. And as Saint Augustine faith;Aug. sent. de Poenit. Ille solus diffidat qui tantum penare potest, quantum Deus bonus est: that is, let that man onely distrust or des­payre, whose sinne excee­deth Gods goodnes. But the Diuell himselfe, and all our iniquitie is lesse then Gods mercie: and there­fore the greatest sinners in [Page 245] the world, ought not to des­payre, if they repent, seeing his mercy is aboue all his workes: for of his mercie there is neither number, nor measure, nor end. The mercy of the Lord embra­ceth vs on euery side. The sentence of Ezechiel is sure and sealed vp in Heauen: That God will not haue the Ezec. 18. 32. death and damnation of a sin­ner, but rather his life and conuersion. Wherefore wilt thou perish, O Israel? And wherefore wilt thou des­payre, O sinful flesh? Come to God: Come to his belo­ued Sonne Christ Iesus: the Master calleth thee, he offe­reth [Page 246] thee his mercy; hee promiseth thee forgiuenes: Come thou early, come thou late, if thou come at all, (whether it be at noone day, or at night) thou shalt haue thy penny, as well as hee that came in the mor­ning. The thiefe on Christs right hand was called the last houre, and came, and cryed to Christ, that hee Luk. 23. 42 would remember him. He knocked so hard at the doore of Gods mercy, that Christ promised him that day, to haue the doore of Paradise opened vnto him, and to enter in with him­selfe. This gate shall bee [Page 247] open to vs, if we doe as hee did. For it is shut to no man but of himself; neither is it open to any, but by Christ Iesus. If wee beleeue in this Christ Iesus, that he is a Sauiour, and that hee dyed for our sinnes, and did rise againe for our iustifica­tion, we need not to dread either death or damnation, the gates of hell shall not preuaile against vs: because Christ is our foundation, our corner-stone to leane vnto, our buckler & shield to defend vs from our ene­mies, our head, our good Shepheard, the Bishop of our soules, our only Master, [Page 248] and mercifull Redeemer. Let vs therefore be of good cheere: Let vs trust in his mercy, whose merits haue purchased our saluation with God the Father: And so we may with safety of our soules depart from worldly troubles, to heauenly rest; from death, to life; from damnation, to saluation; which God of his goodnes vouchsafe to giue vs in Christ Iesus our Sauiour: to whom with the Father and the Holy Ghost, be all ho­nour, power, and praise, world without end.

Amen.

THE SECOND PART OF THIS Booke pertaining to the SICKE.

THe first dutie of the sicke person, visited by God, is to confesse his Faith, and to make open protestation of the same before his Pastor, and the rest that stand by at his end, that they may be [Page 250] witnesses with him, and te­stifie after God hath receiued his soule into eternall rest, that hee liued and dyed the Child of God, the true Seruant of Iesus Christ his Sauiour, and as becommeth a charita­ble Christian, and one of the houshold of Faith.

The confession of the Faith.

I beleeue in God the Father Almightie, &c.

The summe of this Beliefe confessed.

I Am fully perswaded, and vndoubtedly I doe confesse and acknowledge [Page 251] before God, and all you heere present, that euery point and Article of this my beliefe, is true and ne­cessarie vnto saluation: for without Faith wee cannotHeb. 11. 6. please God, or bee saued. And therefore I stedfastly beleeue in my heart, that this in very deede is the true, ancient, Catholike and Apostolike faith, which all good Christians ought to hold, to the hazard both of liuing and life, if cause require.

Of this our be­liefe there be 4. prin­cipall parts.

  • The first concer­neth GOD the Father.
  • The second, God the Sonne.
  • The third, God the holy Ghost.
  • The fourth, the holy Church, or congregation of God.

Of which faith, I make protestation, as followeth.

I constantly beleeue in heart, that which I now out­wardly confesse with my mouth: (viz.) That there is but one true, almightie, euerlasting, liuing, iust and mercifull God; of incom­prehensible [Page 253] glory, maiestie and might, inuisible, infi­nite and immortall. And yet in this Godhead are in­cluded three distinct per­sons; the Father, the Sonne, and the Holy Ghost, vnited together in Deitie and sub­stance inseparably: of like equalitie in will, might, and glory: without beginning, without ending: frō whom (as from a most cleere foun­taine) all vertue and good­nes proceedeth to man, and euery liuing creature: By whom we liue, mooue, and Act. 17. 28. are. In whom alone we are blessed, and without whom we are accursed, miserable, [Page 254] and wretched. Which in­comprehensible, and inuisi­ble God hath reueiled him­selfe vnto man many waies:

1. Miraculously by his workes.

2. Outwardly by his Word: And

3. Inwardly by his holy Spirit.

First, I will confesse my beliefe touching the Fa­ther; Then I will proceede to the Sonne; and finally to the Holy Ghost: not that I preferre one person be­fore another; but because naturally man doth best ap­prehend and conceiue this order: namely, that the Fa­ther [Page 255] should bee set before the Sonne, and the Father and the Sonne together, before him that procee­deth from them both. And yet, neuerthelesse, all the three persons bee but one God, equall and co­eternall.

First, therefore, I doe be­leeue 1 in God the Father, the first Person in Trini­tie; who by his vnsearch­able wisedome, and infi­nite power, hath mightily made me and all mankind; yea, heauen, earth, the Sea, and all things therein con­tained: as the light of the Firmament, the Sunne, [Page 256] Moone, and Starres, the Fowles of the Ayre, the Beasts of the Field, the fruits of the Earth, and the fishes of the Sea. All these of his great goodnes hee hath made, blessed, and increased for man to doe him seruice, and that in most wonderfull and plen­tifull manner. Yea, they were all created before man was made, to the end that Man at his first entry into the world, should come (as it were) into a house ready furnished, and so take full and quiet pos­session of all Gods crea­tures, and become Lord [Page 257] and Ruler ouer them: and they all from time to time to be seruiceable vnto him as to their King. Onely he would that man should be obedient, and shew him­selfe thankefull vnto his God for these his bles­sings. In performing wch dutie, I for mine own part haue too often failed; God graunt that I may hereafter both know his will, and by the fruits of Faith shew my selfe more dutifull towards his Ma­iestie, euen to my liues end.

Secondly, I beleeue in God the Son, the second [Page 258] Person in Trinitie, who of his great goodnes hath mercifully redeemed mee and all mankinde, fromGal. 3. 13. Tit. 2. 14. Apoc. 5. 9. the thraldome of Satan, Death, and Sinne, and from the torment of Hell fire due to the same, being of my selfe condemned thereunto by Gods iust iudgement, through diso­bedience and transgressi­on. Yet I firmely beleeue that I am acquitted, dis­charged, and fully ranso­med from the same, by my sweet Sauior Iesus Christ, that did sweat water and bloud for my sinne; who willingly of his owne ac­cord [Page 259] came down from the seate of his Maiesty in the highest heauens, into the vile and stinking bowels of the earth, where he for my sake, and all his elect, did not abhorre to take flesh of the pure Virgin Mary, and became man, and in the same flesh, suffered most bitter paine and tor­ment, being condemned by an earthly iudge, to the most shamefull death of the Crosse, and so was buried, and descended in­to Hell, rising againe for our iustification, and as­cending into heauen, for our glorification, and to [Page 260] open vs the gate of salua­tion, which before was barred, and fast shut vp a­gainst vs. And my be­liefe is, that as before hee came as a Lambe in humi­litie and mercie to seeke and saue sinners: So hee shall come againe as a Ly­on in the end of the world, in great glory & Maiesty,Mat. 25. 31 accompanied with An­gels and heauenly Souldi­ers, as a righteous Iudge of the quicke and dead; separating the Sheep from the Goates, adiudging the one as hirelings of Hell, and the other as inheritors of Heauen. And this (a­mong [Page 261] many others) is a singular comfort to me, to know assuredly that no o­ther shall bee my iudge, but he that is the Sauiour of my soule, and suffered for my sinnes. So that in all my perplexitie, perill, and danger, I set this Iesus a Sauiour before mine eyes, as a shield, a buckler, and sure wall between me and my spirituall soe the Diuel, and all his tyranny, assuring my selfe by this confidence, that neither he by his cruelty, nor all the Armie of hell can euer hurt or harme me, or any of Gods Elect.

Thirdly, I beleeue in 3 God the holy Ghost, the third Person in Trini­tie; who by his grace lo­uingly preserueth and sanctifieth mee and all the Elect people of God, who dayly gouerneth and di­recteth mee in all my wayes and godly actions, who sealeth vp my saluati­on, by the stedfast hope that I haue in Christ Iesus, assuring me inwardly, that all his benefits are mine, and by that meanes ma­keth me apply the same to the comfort of my soule, who also mortifieth sinne in me, who openeth and [Page 263] expoundeth vnto mee the diuine mysteries of God, and moueth me to leade a godly life.

This is that blessed wind which bloweth where it listeth, euen the Spirit of God, which of carnall, ma­keth vs spirituall; of cruell, meeke; of malicious, cha­ritable; of couetous, libe­rall; of dissolute, tempe­rate; of foolish, wise; of earthly, heauenly; of the bondslaues of Satan, the deare sonnes of GOD, whereby wee may boldly cry, Abba Father. I be­leeue that this holy Ghost is the earnest penny here [Page 264] on earth, of my saluation in heauen, and that hee will neuer forsake mee, no not in the houre of death and my greatest danger: but that hee will comfort me continually in all woe and temptations: so that although I bee tryed by the touchstone of afflicti­on, grieued with extreme paine of bodie, or torinen­ted with inward vexation of minde; yet I shall not be ouercome, neither shall my crosse be greater then I shal be able to beare and endure. For I know assu­redly, that this holy Ghost wil mercifully preserue me [Page 265] both in body and soule vn­to the comming of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ to iudgment, at the dreadfull day of doome, and there present me holy and without blame, before his Throne of grace, (al­though of my selfe vnwor­thy,) yet this sweet Com­forterRom. 8. 15, 16. doth, of his especiall grace, beare witnes with my spirit and conscience, and that in most comfor­table manner, that I am of the number of those which shall be saued, and that I shall stand in the last day on the right hand of Christ, and heare that [Page 266] cheerefull sentence to my great ioy and comfort▪ Come, ye blessed of my Fa­ther, Mat. 25. 34 possesse the Kingdome prepared for you from the be­ginning of the world. You haue beene long Pilgrims on earth, but now you shal bee Citizens in heauen: you haue mourned a long time, but now you shall laugh for euer. I will wipe away all teares from your eyes. Enter at last (now that the heate of the day is past) into your Masters ioy.

All these three persons before rehearsed, I be­leeue to bee one God in [Page 267] essence, whose seate is in the heauens aboue, and whose footstoole is the earth beneath. Vnto whom all the Powers, Angels, and Saints in heauen are subiect, and doe their day­ly seruice in setting forth his praises, casting downe their crownes at his foote, and ascribing all honour and glory to the crowned King that sitteth vpon the Throne, and reigneth for euermore; and also to the Lambe his beloued sonne and our Sauiour. God grant that wee may doe him like seruice here on earth.

Fourthly, and finally, I 4 doe beleeue the holy Ca­tholike Church, which is Gods Elect people, or the Congregation of the faithfull, and is called the Kingdome of Christ Iesus. Of this Kingdome, ChristApoc. 21. onely is Prince; of this bo­dy, Christ onely is Head; and of this Spouse, Christ onely is the Bridegroome. This Church is called the Temple of the Holy Ghost, a spirituall House, a holy Nation, a Royall Priesthood, the Citizens of Heauen, the Pillar of Truth, the Arke of Noah, the Cōmunion of Saints: [Page 269] Agreeing at this day in all points of Scripture, Faith and Religion, with the Primitiue Church of God: Firmely holding, and boldly confessing one God, one Faith, one Bap­tisme, one Lord and Saui­our of all, Iesus Christ: being the sheepe of Gods pasture, to whom belong­eth one fould, and one Shepheard, which here on earth is called the militant Church, and in Heauen the triumphant Church of God. Out of which Arke all perish, and out of which Church there is no salua­tion: but whosoeuer is not [Page 270] found therein, he is, with­out all doubt, damned. Of this Catholike Church of God, I beleeue, and am fully resolued that I am a member, and that GOD hath a care of me, and will preserue mee safe, vntill I haue the fruition of his heauenly Ierusalem.

This Church is knit to­gether, and vnited by faith, through the operati­on of the Holy Ghost, as members of one bodie.

This Church hath the pure Word of God truely and sincerely preached, and the Sacraments duely and faithfully administred [Page 271] among them: These sheep heare the voice of the true Shepheard Christ Iesus, and hee knoweth them, and Ioh. 10. 3. they follow him, and hee will giue vnto them eter­nall life, and they shall ne­uer perish, neither shall a­ny plucke them out of his hand; nay, the gates ofMat. 16. 18 hell shall not preuaile nor ouercome this Church. They which bee of this Church, shall haue remis­sion of their sinnes, conti­nuall peace and ioy: They shall shine and glister as the Stars of Heauen: they shall bee clad with white garments, and follow the [Page 272] Lambe whithersoeuer he goeth: they shall haue gol­den crownes clapped on their heads, and shall see God face to face, and haue fellowship with his Saints who continually sing prai­fes to the eternall King, which was, and is, and is to come. And I beleeue, that they which continue in this Church on earth, shall after the Resurrecti­on & general Iudgement, obtaine euerlasting life, and rest from their labors; which life and perpetuall peace God grant mee and all his children. And from this Church I pray God [Page 273] I neuer at any time swarue or decline, either in faith, doctrine, life, or Religion; but that I may dye & liue therin. And I humbly be­seech God, euen wth al my heart, to kindle & increase this Faith in me; that this hope being stedfastly fixed in my heart, I may to­wards mine end cry and call with the Saints of God, and with a goodApoc. 22. 20. conscience, Come, Lord Ie­su, come quickly, and hasten thy Kingdome, that wee may raigne with thee in perpetuall ioy in the life euerlasting.

Amen.

The protestation of the Sicke.

I A wretched sinner, re­deemed 1 with the preci­ous bloud of my Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ, do protest here before you all, that with a free and franke heart I doe pardon and forgiue all people, which by any manner of meanes haue spoken, thought, or wrought mee iniury, either in word, wri­ting, or deed whatsoeuer: Desiring, that as I know assuredly in my heart and conscience, that I am re­conciled [Page 275] to God: So in like manner I may bee re­conciled to the world. And therefore I most heartily pray as wel all you that bee heere present be­fore me, as others that be absent, to forgiue mee wherein soeuer I haue of­fended you, being most willing to part out of this world in the fauour of God and good men.

I protest and acknow­ledge, 2 that I haue beene a grieuous and horrible sin­ner all my dayes, both in thought, word, and deede: And that I haue not liued so vpright and holy before [Page 276] my Lord God and the world, as I ought to haue done. I acknowledge my offences to be mo in num­ber then the Starres of Heauen, or the sands in the Sea: for my negligence in not doing that which is good, and my dayly trans­gressions, in committing the things which are euill, are infinite. I acknowledge that all my life hath been such, as looking my selfe now at last in the glasse of my conscience, I find daily confusion, and my minde and body so blemished with spots of vncleannes and filthinesse, that I may [Page 277] be ashamed to looke God in the face, or once to lift vp mine eyes towards Heauen. Therefore I fall downe to the earth with the poore Publican, and with lowly spirit, and humble minde, I aske mer­cie and forgiuenes of my Lord God, being sorry in my heart, that euer I offen­ded this my deare Fa­ther, and beeing fully pur­posed with my selfe (if God restore my former health) neuer so grieuously to offend him againe; but to auoid Vice, & embrace Vertue: yea, to hate and abhorre the sinne, which [Page 278] before I loued, and whol­ly to conforme my selfe to the will of God in his Word.

I doe protest, that al­beit3▪ I haue thus grieuous­ly and many wayes offen­ded God; yet I doe not despayre nor distrust the louing mercy of my sweet Sauiour and Redeemer Ie­sus Christ. But I hope, by the merit of his death and Passion (and not mine own merits which are no­thing but a loathsome life) to be partaker of the hea­uenly inheritance.

I protest furthermore, 4 that I do beleeue, that this [Page 279] holy Passion of Iesus Christ is a sure Rocke, Re­fuge, and defence where­vnto I may boldly trust and stay my selfe. And therefore in all aduersitie and trouble, I set the same against my inuisible ene­mies, as a strong Tower, bulwarke, or spirituall har­nesse, wherewithall the faithfull Souldiour and Seruant of Christ ought to bee armed: Assuring my selfe, that the punish­ment of all my sinnes is thereby fully discharged, the ransome paid, and the obligation, whereby I was tyed to the Law, cancel­led: [Page 280] and that the vertue of this Passion of Christ per­taineth not onely to o­thers, but also to me.

I protest before the om­nipotent God, and before all his holy. Angels and Saints, that I couet & de­sire to end my life in that faith, which becommeth a true Christian, and the Child of God: That is, I beleeue all the Canonicall Scriptures mentioned in the Old and New Testa­ment, and set downe by the holy Prophets of God, and the Apostles of his Sonne Christ, as the Pen­men and writers; but in­stinct [Page 281] and prompted by the holy Ghost, the finger of God, as the Author and Inditer: which haue been from time to time, and in all ages, receiued and be­leeued of the true Catho­like Church and Congre­gation of Iesus Christ: So that, if through the tentation or suggestion of the Diuell, or being op­pressed with the violence or smart of sicknesse, I should thinke, speake, or doe any thing contrarie to this my confession and protestation made, I doe now beforehand vtterly debarre, and reuoke the [Page 282] same, and doe witnesse and confesse before God and you, that by no means I will willingly consent or yeeld my selfe in the know­ledge and vnderstanding of my heart, to any such thoughts, words, or workes.

Finally, I protest, that I 6 reioyce in Spirit, for the sweet mercy and merits which I feele inwardly to bee offered mee, by the death of Christ Iesus. And I doe giue most hearty thankes vnto God the Fa­ther my Creator, for his graces offerd vnto me in his deare Sonne my Saui­our; [Page 283] by whose vnspeake­able goodnes, I trust, I shall dye the Seruant of God: and into whose ho­ly hands and tuition, I commend my body and soule, both now and in the houre of my death.

Amen.

The second dutie of the sicke Person.

THe second thing that is requisite in a sicke person, is faithfull & hear­tie Prayer to God, either for his speedy deliue­rance out of all woe and wretchednesse: or else for constancie in his con­flict, [Page 284] and patience in his paine.

A godly metion or Medita­tation before Prayer: In which, we craue for Grace, Faith, and Pati­ence.

O Lord, I am very sick, my body is weake, my strength faileth me, my sinnewes shrink, my hands and my feete waxe feeble, mine eyes dazell and lose their sight, all things are vnsauourie to me, my flesh putrifyeth, my breath stin­keth, my heart panteth, and my life draweth to an [Page 285] end. I perceiue there is but one way with me: The Lord bee mercifull vnto mee, and bee my guide in this my last iourney: goe I must, death is at doore with his dart readie to strike, hee stealeth neerer and neerer towards mee: he is euen now at my bed­side ready to worke his feate; I cannot preuent him, neither can I auoid or flye from him. There­fore (O Lord) I make haste to runne to thee for succour, which art the true Physician both of bodie and soule. Heale mee (O Lord) and I shal be whole; [Page 286] preserue mee, and I shall be safe vnder thy protecti­on: for thou beeing my defence and shield, I need not to feare the force of any foe. But who am I (O mercifull God) that beg­geth so boldly at the doore of thy mercy? I am a sinner, and in sinne I was begotten of my Fa­ther, and conceiued of my Mother. I confesse my wretchednesse, and my vn­cleannesse is too manifest, both to thee, and the world, it troubleth my minde, and woundeth my guilty conscience: woe is mee therefore. Yet spare [Page 287] me (O Lord) I humbly beseech thee, destroy me not in thine anger, but chastice me in lenitie. And albeit I am a grieuous sin­ner; yet I perswade my self I am thy sonne, and that thou canst not but haue a fatherly care ouer me, for my elder Brothers sake, Christ Iesus thy beloued. Wherefore arise and help me (O Lord) arise, I say, and cast me not away for euer: forgiue mee all my sinnes, and raise thy poore Seruant out of the dung­hill, that being released by thee from paine & griefe, and also deliuered from [Page 288] eternall death, I may pray vnto thee faithfully during my life: and after death obtaine of thee euerlasting life, which thou hast pre­pared for me, by the death and Passion of thy deare Sonne Iesus Christ my Lord and Sauiour, in whom thou art well plea­sed, and by whose stripes I am cured, and trust to be saued, whose holy name bee blessed and praised, now and for euer.

Amen.

A fruitfull Prayer for the assistance of God, in the extremitie of sicknes.

O Deare Father of Hea­uen, and Gouernour of the wide world, and the worker of our wealth: whose goodnes is vn­speakeable, and vvhose wifedome is incompara­ble: whose mercy reach­eth vnto the Clouds, and vnto whose power all crea­tures are subiect. Thou God of the quicke and the dead, which hast placed me heere on earth, as a pil­grime [Page 290] or tenant at will, to remoue at thy pleasure, and hast appointed mee and all men liuing our bounds which we cannot passe: Haue respect vnto the worke of thy hands, bow downe thine eyes of compassion (O Lord) visit and comfort the pensiue soule of thy poore priso­ner. Open thy gracious eares, and heare my peti­tion, thou which art the Sauiour of my soule; grant mee pardon of my sinne, and patience in my paine, that I neuer blaspheme thy holy name, but suffer this thy scourge and punish­ment [Page 291] meekely, as becom­meth a good Christian and seruant of God: So that in this conflict of sick­nes, when my flesh consu­meth away, my limmes waxe lame, my sight fai­leth, my heart fainteth, and all my sences become nummed; yea, when life & death struggle and warre within me for superioritie, and I lye linked in woe, in the paine and pangs of death; receiuing no food, taking no rest, but being past all recouerie of health to the iudgement of man; Then looke vpon me with the eyes of mercy, O thou [Page 292] glory of Sion: Thou Comfort of Israel, and beauty of Ierusalem. Then let thy strength help my weakenesse, and thy mercy cure my misery. Then de­liuer poore Ioseph thy Ser­uant out of Prison: De­fend thy deare darling from the deuouring Dog: Stop the mouth, and wea­ken the force of the ro­ring Lyon, and all his di­uelish practises, that they neuer preuaile against me. O Lord haue mercy vpon me, & establish my heart, that I neuer faint in this my last and bitter death. Remember (O Lord) what [Page 293] metall I am made of, that I am but sraile flesh and filthy earth. Let it bee thy pleasure therefore (O gra­cious God) to forgiue me my sinnes; to remit and vtterly blot out of thy rec­koning Booke the tenne thousand Talents, which I owe thee. I acknowledge the debt, cancell therefore the Obligation: for seeing I am not able to pay the debt, I must needs craue a generall pardon, or else perish for euer.

Spare mee therefore (deare Father) and com­fort the soule of thy Ser­uant, which repenteth his [Page 294] former folly, and hum­bleth himselfe here before thy Maiestie. O Lord, let not the terrour of Hell, the feare of death, the vexati­on of minde, the bitter torment of sicknes, the losse of life or worldly wealth withdraw my soule from thee: But as thou did­dest create it, and breathe it into my body: Euen so vouchsafe of thy great goodnes, to preserue it du­ring life, and after death receiue it with the soules of the righteous into thine owne hands and custody, and place it in perpetu­all felicitie: So that at [Page 295] the generall Iudgement, and the glorious Resur­rection of all flesh, I may both body and soule rise to life euerlasting, and praise thee continually with the Angels & Saints in Heauen, through Iesus Christ our Sauiour: to whom with thee and the holy Ghost, be all honour, and glory, world without end.

Amen.

A pithy & profitable Prayer when wee are in danger of death: wherein we commit our selues to God, renounce the world, craue pardon for our sinnes, and for­giue our enemies.

O Lord, my good and gracious God, the Creator of Heauen and earth, King of Kings, and Lord of Lords, which hast made me of nothing to thine owne likenes, and redeemed me with thine owne bloud: whom I a wretched sinner am vn­worthy to name, to call [Page 297] vpon, or once to thinke in my heart: Here I pro­strate and submit my selfe before thy diuine Maie­stie, and acknowledge my grieuous sinnes, which I haue committed against thee, in thought, word, and deede: humbly cra­uing pardon thereof at thy fatherly hands. And I doe also for mine owne part, most willingly for­giue all men that haue of­fended mee, euen as I looke to bee forgiuen of thee my louing and mer­cifull God, whose wrath & iust iudgement I haue too often and that deseruedly [Page 298] prouoked against me. But neuerthelesse, howsoeuer I haue liued hitherto in my fraile flesh, and in this body of sinne: yet I trust that thou, of thy graci­ous goodnesse, wilt grant me a happy end: for I vt­terly renounce the world, and the vanities thereof, which all my life time hi­therto, I haue too much coueted and delighted in; onely I am now carefull for my soule, that it may be saued: and my earnest desire is, that I may dwell with the Lord in the land of the liuing, which I trust to obtaine by the bloud [Page 299] of the innocent Lambe of God Iesus Christ, and so to be partaker of the hea­uenly ioyes, and Commu­nion of Saints in the tri­umphant Church of God. In the meane time, vvhi­lest I remain in this earth­ly Tabernacle, I beseech thee (O Lord) to increase my faith, comfort my sil­ly soule, lighten my vn­derstanding, strengthen my feeble body, and grant me patience in my paine, that my faith neuer faile. And I willingly surrender my body and soule to thy carefull disposition, and as willingly leaue my goods [Page 300] to the world where I had them: Rendring to thee most hearty thanks for the vse I haue had of them hi­therto, and for all other thy greater benefits, and spirituall blessings; as my Election, Creation, Salua­tion, Sanctification, Pre­seruation, and hope of Glo­rification in thy heauenly habitation. O Lord, thy holy Name bee praised therefore, and thy blessed will be fulfilled in me eue­ry way; whether it bee by life, or by death; let it be to thy glory, and then I haue my hearts desire: for I am in thy hands, as the [Page 301] Clay is in the Potters; therefore doe with me as best pleaseth thee. Make me (O Lord) a fit sacrifice for thy selfe, by punishing my fleshly body, and par­doning my sinfull soule. Grant mee perfect re­membrance of the houre of my death & last gaspe, that I may thankefully take this thy fatherly visitation, and willingly beare my crosse, after thy deare Son Iesus Christ my Sauiour. O Lord, prepare me for the good houre which thou hast appointed for the de­liuerie of my soule out of this wretched world: [Page 302] settle my thoughts, and fixe my faith on the life to come, that I neuer shrinke from thee and thy sauing health, what paine or tor­ment soeuer thou inflictest vpon mee here on earth: yet (deare Father) let hea­uen be my reward in the end. Finally, so dispose of me, good Lord, as may be most meete for thy glory, and mine own saluation in Christ Iesus my mercifull Redeemer and Sauiour: to whom with thee and the holy Ghost, be all honour, power, and praise, world without end.

Amen.

A Prayer to be said in the pangs of Death.

O Infinite Deitie and vnmeasurable good­nes! O blessed and glori­ous Trinitie! O perfect loue and charitie, haue mercy on mee, and open the bowels of compassion vpon mee a wretched sin­ner, wrapped in woe, and ouerwhelmed with an­guish of soule, and vexati­on of spirit. Into thy hands (O Lord) I wholly commit and resigne my selfe: make haste (O Lord) to deliuer mee, for it is [Page 304] high time. My flesh trem­bleth, my bones are bru­sed, mine eyes wax dimme, my strength faileth, my heart panteth, and my sor­row and paine euery way increaseth. O mercifull Creator, shew mercy to thy creature. In thee (O Lord) alone is all my trust. In my misery and smart I haue no other to make my mone vnto, but onely to thee, O thou preseruer of men. Therefore forsake me not vtterly, but stand by me, and with comfort relieue me in this my ex­tremitie and last combate. Stretch out thine arme (O [Page 305] Lord) and hold thy hands of pitie ouer me that lyeth here in woe and misery. O Iesu, O sweet Iesu, mer­cie. O Sonne of Dauid, haue mercie vpon me: O Father of Heauen, help me: O holy Spirit of God, confirme & comfort me. O God the Father, God the Sonne, and God the Holy Ghost, three persons and one God, haue mer­cie vpon me.

O Iesus, my sweet Saui­our, receiue my silly soule into thy holy hands. Place it (O LORD) for thy mercie sake, with thine owne selfe in thy heauenly [Page 306] Kingdome, among thine holy Angels and Saints. O my good God, and my heauenly Father, pitie my case, ease my paine, com­fort my soule, and be mer­cifull vnto me. Lord shew the light of thy louing countenance vpon mee: And in the houre of my death strengthen my faith; So that my body retur­ning to the earth from whence it came, my soule may ascend to thee which gaue it: and at the day of doome, & generall iudge­ment, when they shall both meete againe, they may rise to life euerlasting, tho­row [Page 307] our Lord and Saui­our Iesus Christ.

Amen.

Short Petitions collected for the Sicke: Partly out of other Authors.

BEhold (O gracious Fa­ther) 1 the body of thy deare Sonne all to rent and torne: and remember (I most humbly beseech thee) of how small & base substance I am. Behold, O good God, the grieuous paine & Passion of Christ my Redeemer: and for­giue the sinnes of me thine vnworthy and vnprofita­ble Seruant, which am [Page 308] therby redeemed. O Lord looke downe from Hea­uen, incline thine eares vnto my prayers, confort my sobbing soule, cheere my carefull conscience, increase my faith, forgiue me my sinnes, and haue mercy vpon me, through Iesus Christ my Sauiour. Amen.

O Lord, I beseech thee, 2 mercifully heare my pray­ers, and spare mee which doe confesse my sinnes to thee, that I, whose consci­ence by sin is accused, by thy mercifull pardon may be absolued, through Ie­sus Christ our Lord. Amen.

O GOD the Father, 3 which made mee, blesse mee: O God the Sonne, which redeemed me, pre­serue mee: O God the ho­ly Ghost, which sanctifieth me, confirme and streng­then me. The blessing, defence, and sauing health of the Almighty God, the Father, the Sonne, and the holy Ghost, preserue mee from all euill, and bring mee to euerlasting life, through Iesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

Glory be to thee O Fa­ther 4 my Maker: Glory be to thee O Sonne my Re­deemer: and glory bee to [Page 310] thee, O holy Ghost my Comforter; from age to age; from posteritie, to po­steritie; both here and in the world to come: and let all people say, Amen.

The peace of our Lord 5 Iesus Christ, and the power of his Passion, the prayers of his Elect, the Communion of Saints, the sword of the Spirit, and the shield of Faith, bee betwixt mee and all mine enemies, bodily and ghost­ly, publike and priuate, vi­sible and inuisible, both now and in the very houre of my death. Amen.

O Lord, into thy hands 6 [Page 311] I commend my Spirit. Thou hast redeemed mee (O Lord) thou God of Truth. Lord Iesu, at thy pleasure, and at the time which may be acceptable vnto thee; receiue my spi­rit into thy heauenly King­dome.

Amen.

The third Dutie of the Sicke.

THe third and last duty of the sicke person, is to be patient in his sicknes or any other aduersitie, willingly to beare the bur­then of Christs Crosse, & so to follow him: for the [Page 312] better performance wher­of, I haue thought good to annex to the premisses, this short Treatise of Pati­ence: wherein I will ob­serue this order:

First, I will perswade by 1 Precepts to suffer aduersi­tie, and all kinde of cala­mitie.

Secondly, I wil produce 2 out of the Scriptures, some speciall and particular ex­amples, which may pro­uoke vs both to suffer af­fliction, and to be patient therein.

Thirdly, I will shew 3 some Reasons to allure vs thereunto.

1. Precepts perswading.

FIrst, it is an old saying; Patience in aduersitie is a goodly vertue: and truely so it is: and Patience is a rare vertue, and so it may well bee; because it is so seldome seene, and neuer so seldome as in these our dayes, wherein wee haue many motions to euill; but few or none to that which is good.

We offer wrong, we will take none: Wee giue shrewde words to others, wee can brooke none to­wards our selues: Wee [Page 314] haue Eagles eyes to espy a mote in our Brothers eye, but like blinde buzzards, wee see none at all in our owne: We complaine of euery griefe in our selues, bee it neuer so little: wee pitie none in others, bee it neuer so great. And there­fore we had need both of Precepts to perswade, and Examples to prouoke: but I feare, neither the one nor the other will preuaile or take place in vs. And why? Mens hearts are steeped in bitter gall: their hands are cruell; their feete swift to shead bloud; their braine busie to inuent mischiefe: [Page 315] And to speake the truth without flattery; Loue is lost, Charitie is cold, Faith is not to be found, Pietie maketh mone, being pin­ched by aduersitie, and patience is gone, beeing forced by extremity. Wel, what is to bee done in this wofull case? Wee must comfort our selues with sentences and examples, which are written for our instruction in holy Scrip­tures.

Indeede, this I must needs confesse, that no kinde of crosse, bee it of minde or body, is simply on our parts to be wished, [Page 316] because it is grieuous to flesh and bloud, and not delightfull to the minde of man. And yet notwith­standing, such crosses and calamities are dayly to be expected of the godly, and when they come, patiently to be suffered, without ei­ther murmuring or grud­ging against God that sendeth them, or against man that offereth them. Alwayes perswading our selues, that they come not vnto vs by chance or for­tune, but by Gods diuine prouidence and permissi­on, who will not suffer one hayre of our heads to pe­rish, [Page 317] neither permit vs to be 1. Cor. 10. 13. tempted aboue our strength. And therefore we may as­sure our selues, in all our af­flictions and tryals, that GOD hath some good worke in hand; the end whereof shall, at last turne to our great ioy and com­fort.

For we must weigh and consider with our selues, that God our heauenly Father sendeth vs sundry crosses, for sundry causes.

Sometime to set forth 1 his glory, might, and Ma­iestie, that hee may bee knowne to be a God.

Sometime to punish 2 [Page 318] our former sinnes, and thereby to call vs to re­pentance.

Sometime to keepe vs, 3 lest we fall into sinne, and so forget God: and this is good for vs.

Sometime to try our 4 faith and patience, whe­ther we be true or falsehar­ted: whether wee will cleaue vnto him, or shrink from him. And therefore in the middest of our ad­uersities our Sauior Christ doth comfort vs, saying: By your patience possesse your Luke 21. 19. soules: that is, Be of good comfort, faint not, but liue cheerefully vnder the [Page 319] crosse; let patience bee a plaister for euery wound, and a soueraigne salue for euery fore. It seemeth that the Apostle Saint Paul was of the same minde, in his experienced griefe; where he saith, Wee reioyce in tri­bulations; Rom. 5. 3. knowing that tri­bulation bringeth forth pa­tience; and patience, experi­ence; and experience, loue. And therefore in his grea­test perils by Land and by Sea, at home, and abroad; yea, euen when hee was whipped, beaten, stoned, and cast into Prison, he reioyced greatly. So the2. Cor. 11. 24. Apostles being beaten, re­ioyce [Page 320] that they were counted worthy to suffer rebuke for Christs name, Act. 5. 41.

Therefore, Cast not away Heb. 10. 35, your confidence which hath great recompence of reward. 36, For yee haue neede of pati­ence, that after ye haue done the will of God, ye might re­ceiue the Promise. For yet a 37 little while, and he that shall come, will come, and will not tarry. Christ neuer com­meth empty-handed: Come he soone, come he late, he bringeth his Fa­thers blessing with him for all his louing children, which patiently beare the rod of his correction. And [Page 321] therefore happy is that ser­uant, whose manners his Master amendeth, while hee remaineth in this life, that hee may be blessed in the life to come. For our God is a plentifull rewar­der of the patient: if thou sustaine iniury, he is a re­uenger of wrong: if thou sustaine losse, he is a resto­rer of right: if thou su­staine sicknes, he is a skil­full Physician: if thou suf­fer death, he can raise thee vp to life. Yea, this pati­ence is such a Noble Ver­tue, that it fenceth our Faith; preserueth Peace; increaseth Loue; helpeth [Page 322] Humilitie; moueth Re­pentance; ruleth the Flesh; reuiueth the Spirit; bride­leth the Tongue; refrai­neth the hand; comfor­teth the poore, and stayeth the rich: of enemies it maketh friends, it hea­peth vp coales vpon their heads, & conuerteth their hatred into loue. For we reade of cruell and wicked Tyrants, who beholding the force of patience in the godly, haue presently tur­ned to God, and forsaken their crueltie.

Lactantius maketh men­tion of one Tyrant, which persecuted three Christi­ans; [Page 323] who when he beheld and saw their constancie and patience, that they feared no punishment, but meekly suffred torment; he presently vowed & said, Et ego Christianus ero: that is, I will become a Christian also. In like manner: Ne­buchadnezzar seeing the Faith, Constancie, and Pa­tience of Shadrach, Me­shach and Abednego in the fierie furnace, that they would not bee forced to worship his feigned and false god Bel, hee was so­dainely moued to blesse and praise the liuing God, and say: Blessed bee the God Dan. 3. 28. [Page 324] of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego, who hath sent his Angell, and deliuered his Seruants, that put their trust in him, and haue changed the Kings commandement, and yeelded their bodies, ra­ther then they would serue or worship any god, saue their owne God.

Thus also the Vulgar sort, when they see men torne in pieces with diuers kinde of torments; as Whipping, Racking, Hanging, Burning, &c. willingly to take their death, yea, and to wearie their Tormentors and Hangmen, with their in­uincible [Page 325] patience, they are of the same minde that some were, who behold­ing our Sauiour Christs end, said, Verily, this was Mat. 27. 54. the Sonne of God. So, they seeing the patience & con­stancie of these men, are moued in their conscience to think (as well they may) that neither the consent of so many men; neither the patience and constancie of those that dye, is in vaine; and that they were neuer able to ouercome such paine, except God himselfe were with them: for Trai­tors, Murtherers, Theeues and Malefactors, neither [Page 326] can, nor will abide such torment, if by any meanes they may escape it. But they cry, they mourne, they fret, they fume, they sweare, they rage, they blaspheme God, and reuile men: They despayre, and are swallowed vp of sor­row. Contrariwise, the godly endure all aduersi­tie patiently, and that with boldnes; contemning the punishment & threatnings of cruell tyrants, resigning and committing them­selues to God; who in the middest of our misery, sheweth most mercie. Therefore the more wee [Page 327] are tryed by aduersitie, the purer we are. The more the Gold is beaten, the better it is: The more the iron is rubbed with the fyle, the brighter it is: The more the corneis threshed and fanned, the cleerer it is: So the more that God tryeth vs in the furnace of tribulation, the more hee loueth vs, and the more we glorifie him.

A Vessell, if it be foule, must bee scowred before Wine be put in it: and be that will make his ground fruitfull, must first pull vp the weedes, before hee sowe good seede: Euen so [Page 328] by these sharpe medicines of Gods correction must the body be purged, that the mind may bring forth her due fruit in feare and reuerence.

The good Corne for a time lyeth vnder the Chaffe, Flowers grow a­mong weedes, and the sweet Rose that smelleth, commeth vp with the sharpe Thorne that prick­eth: So the godly for a time are kept vnder, and vexed with the wicked, and oftentimes God doth more punish them with pouertie, paine, and sick­nes, then he doth the wic­ked [Page 329] weeds of the world: but all this is for out good, to make vs more obedient in dutie towards his Maie­stie. And therfore all these crosses and losses, are pati­ently of our parts to bee suffred, as infallible tokens of Gods loue.

Let no man therefore cast downe his heart in sicknes, or any other afflic­tion: for hee that smiteth, healeth; & he that sendeth trouble, giueth strength; and against euery extre­mitie God hath prepared a remedy, that fearefull man should not distrust Gods carefull prouidence; [Page 330] but haue his soule settled in him that can both bind and loose, saue & destroy: that can send health after sicknes; life after death; and ioy after paine.

Sicknes, sores, afflicti­ons, aduersities, vexation and troubles, all these are no nouelties to the godly. Our forefathers the Patri­arkes and Prophets had good experience hereof, and wee must taste of the same sawce, if wee meane to enioy the same reward with them in Heauen. For all that will liue godly in 2. Tim. 3. 12. Christ Iesus, must suffer per­secution. So likewise Saint [Page 331] Iames aduiseth vs, saying, Be patient therefore, my Bre­thren, Iam. 5. 7. vnto the comming of the Lord. Behold, the Hus­bandman waiteth for the precious fruit of the earth, and hath long patience for it, vntill he receiue the former and the later raine. Be ye also 8, patient, and settle your hearts: for the comming of the Lord draweth neere. Take, my Brethren, the Pro­phets 9 for an ensample of suf­fering aduersitie, and of long patience, which haue spoken in the Name of the Lord, &c.

Two Examples prouoking.

VVOrks are of more worth thē words, and the life of any person, especially of a Preacher, is more regarded then his Doctrine: the reason is, be­cause mē are more moued by Examples which they see with their eyes, then by naked and bare Precepts, which they heare with their eares: For wee count words, bee they neuer so good, but a lip-labour, or as a blast of winde, that entreth in at the one eare, and passeth out at the o­ther. [Page 333] When the old Crab said to the yong, daughter, goe forward (for the na­ture of the Crab is to goe backward:) The yong an­swered againe, I prae, se­quar: that is, Goe you be­fore (you are my elder) and I will follow after. As the old Cock crowes, the yong learnes: and all the world is bent to follow the examples of their elders or betters. Therefore we cōmonly say, Such a Ma­ster, such a Man: Such a Fa­ther, such a Sonne: Such a Mother, sach a Daughter: A good Iack makes a good Gill: a good Husband, a good wife: [Page 334] a good Father, a good Sonne: a good Mother, a good Daugh­ter. A vicious Father can­not make a vertuous Son: a sluttish Mother can ne­uer make a cleanly Daugh­ter: a rude Mistresse shall hardly make a mannerly Maid: neither can a negli­gent or ignorant Schoole­master make a diligent or learned Scholler. I will not deny, but words may somtimes perswade a man to beare the burthen of aduersitie, and to be pati­ent therein: but examples of others doe more moue vs.

We reade in prophane [Page 335] Histories of diuers, which for their constancy in their profession, and for their patience in affliction, haue willingly suffered many torments.

Some haue beene bur­ned by Arrians.

Some stripped naked, to the shame of the world.

Some hewed in pieces and cast to Hogges.

But my purpose is not to name or recite any out of prophane Authors. We haue Christians good store (God bee thanked) that haue in their life time both learned, and borne the burthen of Christs [Page 336] Crosse, which haue be­gunne with Christs crosse from the A. B. C. continued vnder it all their life long, and ended with it at their death.

Among infinite exam­ples, I will rehearse but some speciall persons, whereof I haue warrant in the Word.

First, I will begin with 1 old Abraham, the father of the faithfull. When Abra­ham, that good old man, was commanded by Gods owne mouth to offer vp his onely Sonne Isaac, his greatest ioy vnder God in this world: for so sayth the [Page 337] Text; Take thine onely Son, Gen. 22. 2. whom thou louest, and there­fore his present death must needs be the fathers griefe: It is a wonder to see how faithfully and patiently he went about that woful worke: Hee riseth vp early, saddled his Asse, and went to the place appointed: hee doth neither stagger nor study at the matter; nei­ther doth he murmure or grudge against God, say­ing, Is this Gods promise, that said hee would blesse all Nations in my seede? Hath he giuen me a sonne past expectation in my old dayes; and shall I now go [Page 338] cut his throate with mine owne hands? I would to God I had neuer begotten him. How can God ful­fill his promise to mee? No, no, wee must debarre all Howes? and Cans? if we haue to deale with him, with whom nothing is vn­possible. Neither must we match mans reason, with Gods wisedome. And therefore Abraham makes no doubt, but regarding Gods will, maketh haste with his sonne, to the place appointed, without stay or delay. And there he binds his obedient sonne, hand and foote, stretching forth [Page 339] his owne hand with the knife to cut his throate: But that good God, who is alwayes at hand in our extremities, sent forth his Angell to restraine that bloudy fact; who called vnto him from heauen, saying; Abraham, Abra­ham: 11, Stay thy hand, lay not thine hand vpon the Child for any worlds good. For now 12, I know that thou fearest God. And therefore hee cryed vnto him the second time from Heauen, and said, By my selfe I haue sworne 15, 16 (saith the Lord) I wil mul­tiply thy seede as the Starres of Heauen, and as the sand [Page 340] which is vpon the Sea shore, &c. Let old Abraham therefore, for his faith and patience, be set in the fore­front to leade the way.

Well, who shall bee [...]. next? Surely some of his seede, but they are innu­merable as the Starres of Heauen; and therefore I must skip a great number, or else weary my selfe in writing, and you in rea­ding or hearing. Oh, re­member now another old Abraham, or at leastwise one of his seede; whose pietie and patience, nei­ther man, nor the Diuell could moue, do what they [Page 341] could. And who is that, I pray you? Wee will fol­low him by Gods grace, if wee may but know his name.

It is iust Iob, one that fea­red Iob 1. 1. God, and eschewed euill. Whose mouth is able to vtter the suffering and pa­tience of Iob, the mirrour of meekenes, who hath the name at this day, and shall haue to the end of the world, of patient Iob? Neither hath he his name for nought, for he well de­serueth it: who being sud­denly cast downe from the highest top of earthly felicitie, to the very dust [Page 342] and bottome of calamity: when God had taken away his Oxen and Asses, a great part of his wealth: when he had burnt vp his Sheepe and Seruants with celestiall fire: when he had taken away his Camels by the Chaldeans, and his children by sodaine death: when the Messengers came hastily with these heauy newes, and that, thicke and threefold, one in the necke of another; so that this godly man could not haue any time to breathe himselfe in, God heaping losse vpon losse, and sorrow vpon sor­row; [Page 343] and that in fearfull manner:

Notwithstanding all these calamities: What doth this Man of God? What bee his words? or what answere giueth he to the Messengers in this his misery? Doth he despayre of Gods goodnes? Doth hee grudge at his losses? Doth he fret and fume in himselfe? Doth he chide the Messengers for bring­ing so bad tidings? Doth hee rage, or blaspheme God? No, no: Iob did no­thing, spake nothing, ima­gined nothing, vnfitting or vnseemely a patient and [Page 344] perfect person. In all this Iob 1. 22. did not Iob sinne, nei­ther doth he charge God foo­lishly, as the wicked doe: But hee humbled himselfe, fell downe to the earth, and worshipped. And then hee cryed, and said: The Lord hath giuen, and the Lord hath taken it: Blessed be the Name of the Lord. Thus this innocent and iust man is content to sucke vp his owne sorrow in silence; confessing God to be gra­cious, albeit he had laid his heauy hand vpon him and his: for after all losses and crosses, Iob himselfe was smitten with sore [Page 345] Byles, from the sole of his foote, vnto his crowne: Hee sate in sorrow vpon the dunghill: his Wife al­soIob 2. 7, rebuking him, who8, should haue relieued him. Neuerthelesse, Iob regar­ded9, not her words, but re­maineth righteous, and saith, Thou speakest like a 10 foolish woman. What? Shall we receiue good at the hand of God, and not receiue euill? As though he should say, Shall wee taste of the sweet, and not of the sowre?

Shall wee alwayes bee merry, and neuer sorrie? alwayes laugh, and neuer [Page 346] weepe? Should wee al­wayes liue in health, and neuer bee sicke? Alwayes haue plenty, and neuer feele penury? Then should we be like Angels in hea­uen, free from all aduer­sities; and not like men on earth, subiect to many mi­series.

Behold heere a plaine picture of patience; take him for an ensample of suffering aduersitie, and of long patience. His suffe­ring was intolerable; his patience vnspeakable; and, except Christs, incompa­rable. Let no man there­fore excuse himselfe, and [Page 347] say, I cannot be quiet, I cannot forgiue, I cannot be patient; The iniury of­fered is so great: Such slanderous words, & hard dealing, is able to prouoke any man to impatiencie, if he were a Saint. Soft a little (good Brother) stay thy selfe: Remember iust Iob, let him bee an en­sample to thee. I pray thee, had not hee an oc­casion of impatiencie? Yes truely, and of vtter blasphemie, had not Gods grace preuented mans strength. Iob had the whole world, Sun, Moone, and Starres against him: [Page 348] heauen and earth against him. For first and for­most, God himself seemed for a season to forsake him, and to haue no care of him. The Diuell in the meane season neuer cea­sed to tempt him, and that in sundry sorts. His Wife that lay in his bo­some, and should haue bound vp his head, and comforted him; shee dis­dained him, and vpbrai­ded him euen with his good deeds. Shee coun­selled him to renounce God, and to blaspheme him euen to his face.

What should I speake [Page 349] more of this man? With­in him, he had heauinesse of heart; without him, his kindred and friends dis­couraging him; on euery side him, signes of sorrow. His Goods were spoiled, his Cattell destroyed, his Children sodainely killed, his owne body pitifully plagued, and no whole part of him from top to toe free from filthy sores and Byles: which way so euer hee turned him, hee could finde no rest, but wallowed in woe, and lay in extreme misery: Not on soft Downe, but on the stinking dunghill, [Page 350] tossing and tumbling his loathsome and blistered body in the ashes, scraw­ling and scraping his scur­uy and scabbed skin with potsheards. O miserable man! O meeke minde! O wofull wight! O rufull and pitifull sight! And O spite­ful Serpent, what hast thou done? whom hast thou stinged, and so dolefully wounded? Doest thou know whom? Couldest thou finde no other to spit thy spitefull poyson a­gainst, but iust Iob; and ho­nest man, an vpright man both in the sight of God, and man; the singular Ser­uant [Page 351] of God, and the pa­tientest man that euer the earth did beare?

O cruell and cursed Wife, where is thy natu­rall affection towards so louing and godly a Hus­band? And O vnnaturall Cousins, & fained friends, where is your comfort and compassion towards your poore afflicted Kinsman? But O iust Iob! O constant creature! O perfect pi­cture of long patience! In all this did not Iob sinne with his lips, but manfully brideled his affections, committing himselfe and his crosse, to him that sent [Page 352] it, and suffered it. And so ought wee to doe in all extremities, & miseries, be it of body or minde, losse of goods, losse of friends, losse of lands, or losse of life; which is so deare and sweet to some, that I feare, they neuer looke for any other life; they are so wed­ded to the world, and the vanitie thereof, as it may easily appeare by their im­patiencie, if God deale with them, as he did with his Seruant Iob: that is, if hee doe but once touch their goods or bodies ne­uer so little.

VVe reade also of god­ly 3 [Page 353] Tobias, notwithstandingTob. 1. 3. his innocent life, his truth, almes-deeds, iustice and friendly goodwill in bury­ing the dead, with perill of his owne life: Yet for all that, he was led captiue to Niniue, where hee was sought to bee slaine, and had all his goods confis­cate and spoiled: So that in heauinesse of heart, and sorrow of soule, hee was forced to weepe. Yet forTob. 2. 7. all this, he continued con­stant in his goodnes, made graues, buried the dead, if not by day, yet by night; patiently suffering the mockes and taunts of his [Page 354] spitefull neighbours, and nothing fearing death, in so good a cause; but meekely abode the repro­ches of his owne Wife, who cast him in the teeth, saying, Where are thine almes, and thy righteousnes? This moued Tobias noTob. 3. 1. deale, but hee praised God, and gaue himselfe to Prayer, confessed his sinnes, and most worthily in all these assaults, acknowledgeth Gods iustice, his mercy, and truth.

There bee infinite o­thers, Men, Women, Old and Yong; of all sorts, and of all ages and de­grees, [Page 355] which being simple and silly sheepe (and yet the faithfull seruants of GOD) haue had their bloud sought and suckt; whose milde mindes, the wicked haue vexed; whose godly conuersation, they haue falsely slandered; whose liues they long lay in wait for; and whose bodies in the end, they haue most maliciously murthered, racked and tormented, and that with­out all mercy, and mea­sure: As Abel, Esau, Ie­remie, &c.

But I will not trouble the gentle Reader, nor [Page 356] weary the attentiue Hea­rer, with many mo exam­ples. I will therefore passe ouer the Old Testament, and come to the New, and there among many, set downe one or two, for our further instruction.

And here I may not 4 forget, neither omit the pietie and patience of Saint Stephen, whose ex­ample of suffering, may bee a glasse to looke our selues in.

This holy man, and Martyr of God, when he should bee slaine of the Iewes, and cruelly stoned to death, what doth he? [Page 357] Doth hee reuile his ene­mies? Doth hee vvith­stand his persecutors? or doth hee blaspheme his Maker? No, no, He pati­ently taketh his Martyr­dome. He doth not curse or desire vengeance from heauen to light vpon his Aduersaries: but most humbly falleth downe vp­on his knees, praying for his persecutors, and say­ing, Lord, lay not this sinne Act. 7. 60. to their charge.

Behold heere an exam­ple of a witnesse, and true Professor of Christ Iesus; a Martyr of such mode­stie and meekenesse, as [Page 358] seldome or neuer hath bin seene.

This Disciple had both learned and recorded his Masters lesson: Resist not Mat. 5. euill, but loue your enemies: Blesse them that curse you: Doe good to them that hate you, and pray for them that persecute you. See how neere this man followeth his Masters manners. Christ cryeth in the mid­dest of his enemies: Fa­ther, forgiue them, they wot not what they doe. Stephen cryeth in the middest of his Stoners, Lord, lay not this sinne to their charge.

Christ said in his Passi­on, [Page 359] Father, into thy hands I commend my Spirit. Ste­phen Act 7. 59. said in his stoning, Lord Iesu, receiue my Spirit. Christ beeing crucified, meekely gaue vp the Ghost: Stephen being sto­ned, 60 sweetly fell on sleepe. Here the man followed the Master at heeles, yea, euen to death. Well, in the extremitie of their suf­ferings, they both haue pa­tience; they both pray; they both forgiue; they both resigne themselues and their soules, to him that smiteth and healeth. I say no more, but God grant wee may tread in [Page 360] Stephens steps, and doe as he did, and then wee shall haue that hee had, that is, in the end of our suffering heere on earth, wee shall haue heauen opened vnto vs, see the glory of God, and Act. 7. 55. Iesus standing at the right hand of God.

But what should I stand 5 longer to repeat the ex­amples of men, who are mortall? if I should pro­ceede, I should be weary in writing, and you in rea­ding the examples of those which were neuer weary of suffering. There re­maineth one Prophet: VVhat, did I say a Pro­phet? [Page 361] Yea, and more then a Prophet, of whom all the Prophets haue pro­phesied: The Prince of Prophets, the Prince of Peace, and the Prince of Patience: VVho as he is most commendable, euen so he is incomparable. I neede not to name him, he was named of the An­gell in his mothers womb, before he was borne into this sinfull world. You know whom I meane: the King of Glory, the Head of the Church, the Saui­our of the VVorld, Christ Iesus the innocent Lambe of God, who patiently [Page 362] suffered death for our sins: Of whom S. Peter repor­teth, saying, Christ suffered 1. Pet. 2. 21 for vs, leauing vs an exam­ple, that we should follow his steps: VVho being his Fa­thers best Beloued, in whom Mat. 3. 17. his soule was well pleased, yet suffered hee continuall crosses. He that did many good deeds, suffered many euill. He suffered the Di­uell to tempt him, his owne Disciple to betray him, the Iewes to deride him, the malicious to blas­pheme him, and his ene­mies to slander him.

Againe, beeing spitted vpon, beaten backe and [Page 363] side, buffeted on his face with fists, whipped on his bare body, cloathed in purple, crowned vvith thorne, &c. hee behaued himselfe as meekely as the Innocent Lamb, or shiftles sheepe vnder the hand of the shearer. His aduersa­ries cry alowd: Cruoifie him, Crucifie him: Christ crieth as fast, Forgiue them, forgiue them. They cry a­gainst him: Hee prayeth for them. Hee that might haue commanded all the Angels and Saints in hea­uen, and haue had them at a beck to reuenge his quarrell, and defend his [Page 364] innocencie; was so farre from requiting wrong, that hee sharpely rebuked the rash enterprise of Pe­ter, that drew his sword, and gaue but one blowe; and hee healeth the partie whom he neuer wounded. Hee cured the vnthanke­full▪ he gaue place to those that laid in wait for him; and refused not to kisse the venemous lips of Iudas that betrayed him. Hee despised no mans person, were hee neuer so poore; he refused no mans house, were it neuer so homely; and yet for all this, his doc­trine was contemned, and [Page 365] his person persecuted. He that giueth victorie to those that ouercome, was beaten on the face vvith rods. He that gaue hea­uenly and wholesome meate to others, had bit­ter gall offred to himselfe: He that gaue the water of life, had vineger giuen to drinke: He that was Inno­cencie it selfe, was coun­ted among the wicked: Hee that healed others, was wounded himselfe: Hee that was the Truth, was condemned by false witnes: And he that must iudge all men, was iudged of man.

And when his blame­lesse and innocent life drew neere to an end, and he ready to suffer a most shameful and bitter death, the death of the Crosse; How meekely he tooke it: how modestly hee answe­reth: how patiently hee suffereth: how feruently he prayeth; and how freely he forgiueth: it is a matter worthy to be noted, and printed in the perpetuall memory of man, and to be an example to all posteri­ties.

Art thou a Christian or follower of Christ in his crosse? Art thou slande­red [Page 367] and handled as hee was? Then follow him, looke vpon him, and take him for an ensample of suf­fering aduersitie, and of long patience. Hee was not crowned before hee was crucified, and thou must not be crowned be­fore the victory. If the world be iniurious to thee, Christ is a rewarder, cleaue to him, forsake thy sinne, and take vp his crosse and follow him. Forsake the world, and feare neither the Diuell, nor affliction; set Christ naked, whipped, crow­ned and crucified continu­ally [Page 368] before thine eyes. See how hee was bought and sold, hated, slandered, and reiected of his owne.

The Iewes cry, Away with him, let him bee cruci­fied: that is, let him bee tormented and hanged. What euill hath hee done, saith the Iudge? I finde no fault in the man. He hath committed nothing wor­thy of death, I take him to bee an innocent or sim­ple man; Let vs therefore whip him, and send him packing. O no (say they) if thou let him goe, thou art not Caesars friend. The Iudge seeming still to fa­uour [Page 369] his innocencie, ma­keth another offer: You haue (saith he) a custome to let one prisoner loose vnto you: We haue one Barabbas who is in for a Bird, and fast in hold; a Thiefe, a Murtherer, and a seditious fellow: yee shall hang him, and save Christ aliue. Ah no (say they) Barabbas is a good fellow: Deliuer him, and Crucifie Christ.

Well, if there bee no remedy (saith Pilate) I will Mat. 27. 24 wash my hands here before you all, in witnes that I am innocent from the shedding of the bloud of this Iust [Page 370] Man. This protestation of the Iudge, and cleering of Christ, might haue bri­dled them and their affe­cted crueltie. But alas, they were as the world is now, and euer will be, peruerse and wilfull. No reason could rule them, no coun­sell could moue them, no words could perswade them. They runne head­long on their owne de­struction, saying, His bloud Mat. 27. 25 be vpon vs, and on our chil­dren.

The more that Pilate seemed to fauour him, the more they seeke meanes to murder him. To be short, [Page 371] they haue their desire, they preuaile in their suite, The Sonne of Man is deliuered vp into the hands of sinners; the Sheep to the Wolfe; the Lambe to the Lyon: the wicked worke their will with him, there is no way but one with them: suffer he must, die he must, and he is content to sub­mit himselfe with all mo­destie that may be. It is no asking any reason or cause wherefore. Vnreaso­nable men can yeeld no reason of any thing they doe, but that which is ty­rannicall; Sic volo, sic iubeo, &c. that is, So we will, and [Page 372] so we command: let will in place of reason stand. If hee Ioh. 18. 30. were not an euill doer, wee would not haue deliuered him vnto thee. Well, well, be­hold the end of this dea­ling: In the meane season, they take him, they blind­fold him, they bob him and box him about the eares, they spet in his face, they wagge their heads, they make mowes and iest at him, they make them­selues sport with him, tos­sing him to and fro, as it were a Tennis ball.

All these reproches he patiently abideth: he run­neth not from them: he of­freth [Page 373] no strokes: he giueth them not one foule word. At last, when his enemies had euen wearied them­selues in their wickednes, they proceede forward, they cause him to carrie his owne crosse on his weake and feeble body to be hanged on. After sen­tence of condemnation, he is brought to the place of execution. He is crow­ned with Thorne, which was himself the Crowned King of the Heauen, which came to crush the sharpe and bitter thornes of our sinnes, and crowneth Mar­tyrs with eternall Glory. [Page 374] Hee is fast bound hand and foote, which freeth o­thers from their fetters. He is pearced heart and head, which healeth the sinnes of the people, and saueth their soules from destruction.

I would aske one que­stion of thee (gentle Rea­der:) What could these villanous Iewes, & sworne enemies of our Sauiour Christ Iesus haue done more against him, if hee had beene the vilest crea­ture vpon the earth; the arrantest thiefe in the world; or the greatest di­uell in Hell? I admonish [Page 375] thee therefore (good Bro­ther) apply Christs suffe­ring to thy soule, and fol­low his patience.

Now what saith Christ to this geare? or what dooth Hee to his Tor­mentors? Doth hee goe roundly to worke with them? or doth he handle them in their kinde? that is, Doth he cause the earth to open her mouth and swallow them vp aliue, as vnworthy men to liue any longer therein? Or doth hee command fire from Heauen to destroy them as they well deserued? Or doth hee of himselfe con­demne [Page 376] them presently to hell fire, as he could if he would?

No verily, no such mat­ter, hee suffereth them thus farre forth: He bles­seth, and yet curseth not: he seeketh still to saue, and not to destroy.

O mercifull Christ! O Prince of Peace, and pat­terne of patience! VVhat man is hee this day that beareth breath in his body (if he be flesh and bloud) that is able to suffer such torment, without offering any stroke or one froward word? Christ doth nei­ther, which might and [Page 377] could haue done both: but he came to suffer, and not to smite: for his death gaue life to his enemies; yea, they that shed the bloud of Christ, were sa­ued by the bloud of Christ. Such was his loue, such was his patience, that he suffered all these things for our sake. His Righte­ousnes couered our filthi­nesse; his labour, lightned our loade; his shame, was our ioy; and his damna­tion, was our Saluation.

But O stiffenecked Iewes! O cruell Crucifiers! O corrupt Iudge! O wicked world, that wrought this [Page 378] woe vpon him, that suffe­red for thy sinne! Is this thy thankefulnesse for so great a benefit? Is this thy reward for the worke of Saluation?

Tell mee one thing, but tell me truely. Hast thou any reason to wound him, that healed thee; to binde him, that loosed thee; to condemne him, that sa­ued thee; to deride him, that redeemed thee; and to hang him that helped thee? Let Heauen, let Earth, let Hell it selfe cry out against this crueltie. O wicked Nation! O proud Citie Ierusalem, and O in­nocent [Page 379] Christ! his death declared his innocencie. The earth trembled there­at: the Elements were troubled: the Starres were abashed: yea, all the pow­ers of Heauen were mo­ued: the Moone gaue no light. the Sunne shined not: but darknes closed vp the light of the day, lest the Sunne should bee for­ced to behold the bloudy and cruell fact of the Iewes. The Temple rent in twaine: the stones claue in sunder: the Graues ope­ned, and the dead bodies did rise: insomuch that the beholders of his Passion, [Page 380] and some of those which consented to his death, and wished that his bloud might light vpon them, and their children, are now so wounded in heart, and pricked in conscience, that they now change their minde, sing a new song, and confesse indeed hee was the Sonne of God. They now become blanke, which before were so bold. They now accuse them­selues, which before con­demned Christ. They now wish him aline againe with a wring by the eare, which before crucified him. They now lament, [Page 381] which before laughed. They now mourne, which before mocked. They now knocke their brests full of heauines, with teares in their eyes, water on their cheekes, and sorrow in their hearts, which before shaked their heads, spet in his face, called him wretch, and cryed fie vpon him. I will say no more, eyther of Christ, either of any Prophet before him, or Martyr that shall come af­ter, as of late there haue been many: but conclude all that haue beene, are, or shall bee, in one round Ring, seemely Circle, and [Page 382] sure Seale. viz. Qui patitur, vincit: that is, That man whatsoeuer he be, that suf­fereth aduersitie patient­ly, in the end hee ouer­commeth and getteth the victory.

Three Reasons alluring.

THe precepts going before, and the ex­amples propounded, may of themselues seeme rea­sonable to perswade most men (if they be not void of reason) to suffer aduer­sitie, and to be patient. For the Lord himselfe is patient, Psal. 145. 8 and mercifull, slow to anger, [Page 383] and of great goodnes. Hee beareth with our sinnes, and patiently expecteth our amendment. And therefore wee must beare one with another. The Husband must beare with his Wife as with the wea­ker vessell; the Master with his seruants; and the Cre­ditor must haue patience with his Debter, &c.

But the greatest reason to mooue a man to suffer aduersitie, and to bee pati­ent therein, is the reward after suffering; for being made like to Christ by suf­fering, we shall in the end bee made partakers with [Page 384] him in glory: Who, after his patient suffering, was so exalted of his Father, that hee hath giuen him a name Phil 2. 9, 10. aboue euery name, that at the name of Iesus, should e­uery knee bow, both of things in heauen, and things in earth, and things vnder the carth. If therefore we suf­fer Rom. 8. 17. with Christ, we shall also reigne with him.

Art thou desirous to liue for euer? and to reigne with Christ in eternall glory? Then arme thy selfe with patience to suf­fer aduersitie heere on earth, that thou maist haue place in Heauen. [Page 385] Take counsell of Saint Paul, who saith: Let vs by Heb. 12. 1, 2. patience runne in the race which is set before vs, loo­king to Iesus the Captaine, and finisher of our Faith; which for the ioy that was set before him, suffered the Crosse, contemned the shame, and sitteth on the right hand of the Throne of God.

Behold heere a reward after the race, & a crowne after the conflict. The con­sideration whereof moued all the Martyrs and holy men of GOD to beare Christs Crosse, were it ne­uer so grieuous and hea­uy for the time, & to suf­fer [Page 386] mocks, stripes, bands, rackings, famine, impri­sonments and death: and so must we doe: the whole course of our life heere on earth sheweth the same.

Troubles try our pati­ence, and tame the flesh, lest wee should bee condem­ned with the wicked world; and therefore wee begin our life with teares, before we be able to speake; we leade it in sorrow & care, and we part from it with great griefe: or otherwise wee should put too much confidence in our quiet e­state, as Dauid testifieth: I Psal. 30. 6. said in my prosperitie, I shall [Page 387] neuer bee mooued. And therefore, lest wee should bee too proud in our pro­speritie, the Lord often­times bridleth our appe­tites by losses and crosses, and so sheweth his loue by afflicting vs for our good. As for example, if for Gods cause, or his Truth, we be shriuen of all our riches heere on earth, our portion shall bee the greater in Heauen. If wee bee thrust out of our hou­ses, or offices, we shall bee receiued into the Family of God. If we be contem­ned among men, wee shall be highly esteemed with [Page 388] God. If we be cast downe in the world, our seates shal be the higher in Gods Kingdome. If we be mur­thered, and so lose our life, this shall bee a meanes to bring vs to eternall life. For if there were no griefe in pouertie; no torment in sicknes; no sorrow in slan­der, nor horrour in death, what tryall could there be of Gods people? None at all. Therefore in our greatest extremitie, let vs say, Fiat voluntas Domini, that is, The wil of the Lord be fulfilled in mee; come life, come death; come sicknes, come health; come [Page 389] prosperitie, or aduersitie. And let that man neuer boast himselfe to be an A­bel, whom the malice of Cain hath not afflicted: Nor a Iacob, whom an Esau hath not hated: nor a faithfull Mardocheus, whom a spitefull Haman hath not slandered: nor a Paul, whom a Nero hath not persecuted: nor a Christian, whom a Iudas hath not betrayed.

Where the good are, there must of necessitie be some bad to try them. The Wheate is tryed by the Fanne; the Iron by the file, and the gold by the [Page 390] fire: euen so is a Christian knowne by affliction: and being so tryed, he cannot lose his reward. It is great in heauen, and not for gotten on earth. For we see dayly, that ioy follow­eth sorrow; life, death; glory, miserty; and prospe­ritie, pouertie. Patient Iob had his substance dou­bled. The holy Patriarks, Prophets and Martyrs of Christ, which suffered sundry sorrowes heere on earth, are now crowned Kings in Heauen. And so shall we, if we runne their race: for many runne, but it is the wrong way, that [Page 391] leadeth to destruction: But wee must so runne, that wee 1. Cor. 9. 24. may obtaine, and in the end get the wager. The Mer­chant resuseth no perill by Sea; the Husbandman no labour by Land; the Cap­taine no wound in warres: and they doe it for a tem­porall reward: How much more ought wee patiently to indure any losse of goods, torment of body, or griefe of minde, for e­uerlasting life, and heauen­ly ioy?

The Wise man consi­dering this, affirmeth, that the day of death, is better Eccl. 7 3. then the day of birth.

[...] [Page 391] [...] [Page 392] Saint Paul was of the same minde, when he said, I de­sire Phil. 1. 23. to be loosed, & to be with Christ, which is best of al: for then shall Christ our Saui­our wipe away all teares Apoc. 4. 21 from our eyes, and sorrow from our hearts. We shall neede to suffer no more, our troubles are at an end. Neither shall there bee any more death, neither griefe, neither crying, neither paine. Our paines here haue endured but a time, the pleasures there shall be perpetuall. What is he therefore in the vniuer­sall world, but would wil­lingly hazard life and li­uing; [Page 393] yea, and yeeld his soule to God, his body to the blocke, and his flesh to the fire, for such cele­stiall ioyes as are prepared for those that fight Gods battell heere on earth?

Therefore (my deare Brethren) to conclude; Let vs runne our race, and passe our painefull pilgri­mage in this transitorie world, so godly and pati­ently, by the example of the Prophets, of Christ and his Apostles, that in the end of the course, when death shall shut vp the eyes of our bodies, we may with a firme faith and [Page 394] good conscience, say with Saint Paul: I have fought a 2. Tim. 4. good fight: I haue finished 7 my course: I haue kept the 8 Faith. For henceforth there is laid vp for me a crowne of righteousnes, which the Lord a righteous Iudge shall giue me at that day: and not to me onely, but to all them that loue his appearing.

Then in the end of our race we shall haue rest and ioy, yea perfect, complete, and full ioy: Ioy aboue vs, ioy beneath vs: ioy before vs, ioy behinde vs: ioy on our right hand, ioy on our left hand: ioy within vs, ioy without vs: and ioy on [Page 395] euery side vs. Vnto the which ioy he vouchsafe to bring vs, which dearely hath bought it for vs, not with siluer and gold (for it cost a great price) but with the sheading of his preci­ous bloud, euen Iesus Christ the righteous: vnto whom with the Father, and the holy Ghost, three per­sons, and one euerlasting, iust, and mercifull God, be all honour, power, and glory both now and euer.

Amen.

A generall and fruitfull Prayer for all Christians, to bee reuerently said at all times, Morning, Euen­ing, Night, or Day.

O God our Maker, thou most mighty and ho­ly IEHOVAH, in thy name, and to thine ho­nour and glory, we begin, continue, and end these our Prayers. And we offer this our dutifull seruice vn­to thy diuine Maiestie, as to our Soueraigne Lord, and mighty Creator of Heauen and Earth, and of all things therein contai­ned. [Page 397] O sweet Lord Iesus Christ, wee offer vnto thee our selues, body and soule, and all the powers & parts thereof within vs, and without; for by right they are all thine, because thou hast dearely bought and paid for the same, with the peerelesse price of thy pre­cious bloud. And wee most humbly beseech thee, O holy Ghost our Com­forter, to giue vs grace and strength to doe thy will in all things, and to offer these our prayers with cleannesse of heart, vp­rightnes of action, and in the vnity of thy true [Page 398] Church, and Catholike Faith; that so they may ascend into thy sight as a sweet sacrifice of incense, for our health, help, and o­ther things necessarie for our bodies and soules; for the true mortification of our flesh, and the right di­rection of our whole life, that hereafter it may bee pleasing and acceptable vnto thee; and so by faith in Iesus Christ, bring vs to euerlasting blisse. And we offer the same for the health and help of all o­ther persons, that thy bles­sed will is to haue prayed for, within the Church, [Page 399] and without, in speciall, and in generall. And for whom and whatsoeuer else thy wisedome know­eth necessary, and our frailetie cannot aske, that may be most conuenient for vs to receiue, and best becommeth thee to giue. That it may please thee of thy gracious goodnes, to grant vnto vs true and vn­fained repentance for our former sinfull life; patience in all our temptations and tribulations, ghostly and bodily: protection and defence against our ene­mies, visible and inuisible: constancie and perseue­rance [Page 400] in all vertue & good­nes: help and reliefe in all our needs and necessities: succour and comfort, in all our woe and distresse: ease and deliuerie out of all our troubles, calamities, & af­flictions, that we are in, or may any way happen vnto vs. O most tender God, & deare Father, we beseech thee also of thy mercy and forgiuenes of sinnes, for our selues, and all others: and mitigation of thy iu­stice towards vs, now and in the houre of our death and last iudgement parti­cular and generall. Open vnto vs (O Lord) we most [Page 401] humbly beseech thee, the plentifull streame and fountaine of the bloud of CHRIST IESVS which for our sake, and for our saluation, issued most aboundantly out of his grieuous wounds han­ging on the Crosse: Drowne vs in them: hide vs in them: wash vs in them: write & print them deepely in our hearts, that all our sinnes may bee so bathed in his bloud, buri­ed in his death, and hid in his wounds, that they neuer more be seene to our confusion in this world, or to our condemnation in [Page 402] the world to come: But put them al into his most dear­ly beloued wounds, and cast them into the bot­tomelesse depth of his mercie and merits. We call and cry dayly vpon thee for thy fatherly assi­stance, that we may con­quer al our enemies. Heare vs therefore (O Lord) in that mercie which hath no measure, and looke not vpon vs with the eyes of Iustice; neither draw a­gainst vs the sword of iudgement; for then wee are vtterly lost, and perish for euer: But subdue all power of Satan and sinne [Page 403] in vs; and giue vs strength to resist; patience, to en­dure; and constancie, to perseuer. And if men as­sault or tempt vs to any e­uill, good Lord, giue vs wisedom to discern them; feare to follow them; and zeale to defie them. And rule thou euer as Lord and King ouer vs, and ouer all that wee haue: ouer body and soule; ouer heart and minde; ouer worke and word: for Iesus Christ his sake, we heartily craue it, euen in fauour at thy Fa­therly hands. And fur­thermore, wee commend vnto thee (O Lord) in [Page 404] these our Prayers, the whole Catholike Church. Renue in it (wee beseech thee) puritie and sinceritie of life and conuersation, from the which in these euill and latter dayes it is vtterly declined and wan­ting, in all sorts of persons, as well Ecclesiasticall, as Ciuill. And grant vnto e­uery member therof from the highest to the lowest; from the Prince vnto the People, that they may cor­rect and amend in them­selues, that which is amisse. Nourish and keep among them, vnitie, peace, & mu­tuall charitie, to loue thee [Page 405] aboue all, and their neigh­bours as themselues. Make their hearts so meeke and gentle (good Lord) by thy working power, that they may gladly, and vnfained­ly, freely and frankely, heartily and wholly, for­giue all men that haue ha­ted or hurted them by word or by deede. Such as doe erre and goe astray in the path of Perdition, call back and bring againe into the way of Saluation, and vnderstanding. Extin­guish all Sects, Schismes, Innouations, Diuisions, O­pinions & Heresies, wher­by, and wherewithall thy [Page 406] Church in these euill and latter dayes hath beene wonderfully molested and troubled, and as it were e­uen rent and shaken in pie­ces: and conuert all those to the knowledge of thy true, ancient, Catholike, Apostolike, holy and Chri­stian Faith, which as yet goe astray and wander out of the right way. O Lord, of thy gracious goodnes fetch them home, as sheep of thy pasture, to thine owne Fold and Family: preserue and keepe them euer safe in the lap and vnitie of thy Catholike Church: And grant vn­to [Page 407] them true vnderstand­ing to know thee; dili­gence, to seeke thee; wise­dome, to finde thee; con­uersation, to please thee; and euermore faithfully to serue thee vnto their liues end. Comfort and lift vp (O Lord) all those that are troubled & vexed in minde, or in body: and teach them to see their owne happinesse, through tentations and troubles, and that the readiest way to Heauen, is euen to goe thither by Hell, and that euery paine heere, is as it were a preuention of the paines of Hell, and eue­ry [Page 408] ease in paine a foretaste of the ease and ioyes of Heauen.

And finally, grant that wee may all with quiet mindes, and good con­science, patiently passe the time of this our pain­full pilgrimage heere on earth, peaceably spend and end our dayes in thy seruice; and so at the last come to thy heauenly Kingdome, & life euerlast­ing thorough Iesus Christ the Author of life: In whose holy name wee are bold to lift vp our hearts, hands, and voices, praying vnto thee, as hee hath [Page 409] taught vs, saying, Our Fa­ther, which, &c.

All glory and praise bee onely giuen vnto God.

A Prayer for Morning.

MOst gracious God, and deare Father, we yeeld vnto thee from the bottome of our hearts most humble thankes, in that it hath pleased thee not onely to defend and preserue vs this night from all our enemies both ghostly and bodily: but also of thy fatherly pitie to giue vnto these our earthly and languishing bo­dies such sufficient sleepe and rest, as hath satisfied the ear­nest desire of our weake and feeble nature. And as thou of [Page 410] thy mercy hast safely brought vs to the beginning of this present day, and shewed vs the light thereof: so we hum­bly beseech thee (O God) grant that our soules may bee spiritually lightened with the brightnes of thy Word and sacred mysteries, whereby we may walk in the steps of Chri­stianitie, and leade a life agree­able to our vocation in Christ Iesus our Lord. Assist vs also with thy grace and holy Spi­rit, O God, that wee may ne­uer shrinke from thee for any earthly torments, but dili­gently apply our selues to the performance of thy will, and giue our selues wholly there­vnto, hauing a strong and stedfast faith in the truth of thy promises. Indue vs with [Page 411] wisedome from aboue, that we may dayly increase in the fulnesse of our Sauiour Christ. Behold vs with the eye of thy mercie, and vouch safe to de­fend vs that commit our selues wholly vnto thee both now and euermore. Giue vnto vs a heart alwayes affected to ho­nour thee, a minde euer medi­tating of thy righteousnesse, and a spirit burning with zeale of thy worship, that wee may warily stand vpon our guard, and neuer yeeld to the treacherie of the Aduersarie: Blesse and prosper our enter­prises (O Lord) that whatso­euer we take in hand, we may by thy direction bring it to good successe, and euermore praise thy holy Name for thy gracious assistance, and singu­lar [Page 412] goodnes: grant this, O Fa­ther, for Iesus Christ his sake, our onely Sauiour and redee­mer.

An Euening Prayer.

GOod God, the Creator and Maker of all man­kinde, seeing it hath pleased thee, of thy diuine prouidence, to ordaine the night as a meane to deliuer vs from the trauels of the day, and to minister ease and gladnes to the wea­ried limmes of our bodies, to the great comfort and refresh­ing of the same, by the fruitiō of quiet sleepe and rest, accor­ding to humane nature, wee beseech thee therefore (O Lord) of thy vnspeakeable goodnesse and mercie, to bee [Page 413] our watchman and defender this night, that wee bee not o­uercome by fantasies, dreames, or other illusions: but that through thy permission, wee may take such quiet rest, and voluntarie sleepe, as nature re­quireth, & though our grosse sences are at such times stop­ped; yet vouchsafe euer to grant vs the assistance of thy grace and holy Spirit, that our soules may respect the com­ming of thy Sonne our Saui­our Iesus Christ, that at what time soeuer he calleth, we may bee sound watchfull, and con­tinually ready to performe his will: that after this life en­ded, wee may eternally rest in glory: and as the brightnesse of the Sunne doth in the mor­ning disperse the darke clouds [Page 414] and thicke mists from the face of the earth, whereby the same was before couered with dark­nesse: so wee humbly beseech thee, vouchsafe to disperse and bury our sinnes (in the bloud and obedience of thy deare Sonne) which doe as it were shadow vs from the bright beames of thy fauourable countenance, and euermore assist vs with thy gracious goodnes, that our sleepe may be so healthfull vnto vs, that wee with willing mindes a­rising in the morning, may vt­terly shake off all manner of drowsinesse, and make haste to exercise our selues in such Christian labours, as thy di­uine prouidence hath ordai­ned vs vnto, to the aduance­ment and renowne of thy ho­ly [Page 415] name, credit of thy Church, comfort and reliefe of our Christian Brethren, and our euerlasting saluation. In mercy grant this (O Lord, we be­seech thee) for Iesus Christ his sake, our onely Redeemer and Sauiour: vnto whom with thee and the holy Ghost, be all power and do­minion for euer,

Amen.

A Table of the princi­pall matters contained in this Booke.

  • A Preparatiue for the Sicke. fol. 1.
  • God doth visit vs diuers wayes. fol. 20.
  • In Gods visitation, consi­der three things. fol. 23.
  • The first Dutie of the Pa­stor. fol. 24.
  • Examples of Temporall Questions. fol. 25.
  • Examples of Spirituall Questions. fol. 55.
  • The second Dutie of the Pastor. fol. 84.
  • [Page]The first Psalme. fol. 87.
  • The second Psalme. fol. 95.
  • The third Psalme. fol. 100.
  • A pithy Prayer for a Pati­ent, being pained with Sick­nesse. fol. 112.
  • A comfortable Prayer a­gainst Desperation. fol. 122.
  • An effectuall Prayer for those which be Lunaticke, or possessed with any euill spi­rit. fol. 137.
  • A fruitfull Prayer in time of any common sicknesse or Plague. fol. 159.
  • The third Dutie of the Pastor. fol. 177.
  • The fourth Dutie of the Pastor. fol. 201.
  • Consolation against Dam­nation. [Page] fol. 219.
  • The summe of the Beliefe confessed. fol. 250.
  • The Protestation of the Sicke. fol. 274.
  • The second Dutie of the sicke Person. fol. 283.
  • A godly motion, or Medi­tation before Prayer: In which, wee craue for Grace, Faith, & Patience. fol. 284.
  • A fruitfull Prayer for the assistance of God, in the ex­tremitie of sicknes. fol. 289.
  • A pithy and profitable Prayer when we are in dan­ger of Death: wherein wee commit our selues to God, re­nounce the world, craue par­don for our sinnes, and for­giue [Page] fol. 296.
  • A Prayer to be said in the pangs of Death. fol. 303.
  • Short Petitions collected for the Sicke. fol. 307.
  • The third Dutie of the Sicke. fol. 311.
  • Precepts perswading. fol. 313.
  • Two Examples prouoking. fol. 332.
  • Three reasons alluring. fol. 382.
  • A generall and fruitfull Prayer for all Christians, to be reuerently said at altimes, Morning, Euening, Night, or Day. fol. 396.
  • A Morning Prayer. f. 409.
  • Euening Prayer. fol. 412.

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