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A Sermon Preached at St. Dunstans January 15. 1625. The First SERMON after Our Dispersion, by the Sickness. SERMON XXI. (Book 21)
Exod. 12.30.For there was not a house where there was not one dead.
GOd intended life and immortality for man; and man by sin induc'd death upon himself at first: When man had done so, and that now man was condemned, man must die; yet yet God gave him, though not an absolute pardon, yet a long reprieve; though not a new immortality, yet a life of seven and eight hundred years upon earth: And then, misery, by sin growing upon man, and this long life which was enlarged in his favour being become a burden unto him, God abridged and con∣tracted his seven hundred to seventy, and his eight hundred to eighty years, the years of his life came to be threescore and ten; and if misery do suffer him to exceed those, even the exceeding it self is misery. Death then is from our selves, it is our own; but the executioner is from God, it is his, he gives life; no man can quicken his own soul, but any man can forfeit his own soul: And yet when he hath done so, he may not be his own executioner; for as God giveth life, so he killeth, says Moses there: not as the cause of death, for death is not his creature; but because he employs what person he will, and executes by what instrument it pleases him to chuse, age or sickness, or justice, or malice, or (in our appre∣hension) fortune. In that History from whence we deduce this Text, which was that great execution, the sodain death of all the first-born of Egypt; it is very large, and yet we may usefully, and to good purpose enlarge it, if we take into our consideration spiri∣tual death, as well as bodily: for so in our houses from whence we came hither, if we left but a servant, but a child in the cradle at home, there is one dead in that house. If we have no other house but this which we carry about us, this house of clay, this tabernacle of flesh, this body, yet if we consider the inmate, the sojourner within