Chapter 5

"Thy Written Word," say they, "good Lord,we never did enjoy;We ne'er refus'd, nor it abus'd;Oh, do not us destroy!"CLVIII."You ne'er abus'd, nor yet refus'dmy Written Word, you plead;That's true," quoth he, "therefore shall yeMat. 11:22.Luke 12:48.the less be punishéd.You shall not smart for any partof other men's offense,But for your own transgressi-onreceive due recompense."CLIX.Insufficiency of the light of Nature."But we were blind," say they, "in mind;too dim was Nature's Light,Our only guide, as hath been tried,1 Cor. 1:21,to bring us to the sightOf our estate degenerate,and curs'd by Adam's Fall;How we were born and lay forlornin bondage and in thrall.CLX."We did not know a Christ till now,nor how fall'n men be savéd,Else would we not, right well we wot,have so ourselves behavéd.We should have mourn'd, we should have turn'dfrom sin at thy Reproof,And been more wise through thy advice,Mat. 11:22.for our own soul's behoof.CLXI.They are answered."But Nature's light shin'd not so bright,to teach us the right way:We might have lov'd it and well improv'd it,and yet have gone astray."The Judge most High makes this Reply:"You ignorance pretend,Dimness of sight, and want of light,your course Heav'nward to bend.CLXII."How came your mind to be so blind?I once you knowledge gave,Gen. 1:27.Eccl. 7:29.Hos. 13:9.Clearness of sight and judgment right:who did the same deprave?If to your cost you have it lost,and quite defac'd the same,Your own desert hath caus'd the smart;you ought not me to blame.CLXIII."Yourselves into a pit of woe,Mat. 11:25,comparedwith20:15.your own transgression led;If I to none my Grace had shown,who had been injuréd?If to a few, and not to you,I shew'd a way of life,My Grace so free, you clearly see,gives you no ground of strife.CLXIV."'Tis vain to tell, you wot full well,if you in time had knownYour misery and remedy,your actions had it shown:Rom. 1:20,21, 22.You, sinful Crew, have not been trueunto the Light of Nature,Nor done the good you understood,nor ownéd your Creator.CLXV."He that the Light, because 'tis slight,hath uséd to despise,Rom. 2:12,15, and 1:32.Mat. 12:41.Would not the Light shining more bright,be likely for to prize.If you had lov'd, and well improv'dyour knowledge and dim sight,Herein your pain had not been vain,your plagues had been more light."CLXVI.Reprobate Infants plead for themselves.Then to the Bar all they drew nearRev. 20:12, 15,compared withRom. 5:12, 14,and 9:11, 13.Ezek. 18:2.Who died in infancy,And never had or good or badeffected pers'nally;But from the womb unto the tombwere straightway carriéd,(Or at the least ere they transgress'd)who thus began to plead:CLXVII."If for our own transgressi-on,or disobedience,We here did stand at thy left hand,just were the Recompense;But Adam's guilt our souls hath spilt,his fault is charg'd upon us;And that alone hath overthrownand utterly undone us.CLXVIII."Not we, but he ate of the Tree,whose fruit was interdicted;Yet on us all of his sad Fallthe punishment's inflicted.How could we sin that had not been,or how is his sin our,Without consent, which to preventwe never had the pow'r?CLXIX."O great Creator why was our Naturedepravéd and forlorn?Why so defil'd, and made so vil'd,whilst we were yet unborn?If it be just, and needs we musttransgressors reckon'd be,Psal. 51:5.Thy Mercy, Lord, to us afford,which sinners hath set free.CLXX."Behold we see Adam set free,and sav'd from his trespass,Whose sinful Fall hath split us all,and brought us to this pass.Canst thou deny us once to try,or Grace to us to tender,When he finds grace before thy face,who was the chief offender?"CLXXI.Their arguments taken off.Then answeréd the Judge most dread:Ezek. 18:20.Rom. 5:12, 19."God doth such doom forbid,That men should die eternallyfor what they never did.But what you call old Adam's Fall,and only his Trespass,You call amiss to call it his,both his and yours it was.CLXXII."He was design'd of all Mankindto be a public Head;1 Cor. 15:48,49.A common Root, whence all should shoot,and stood in all their stead.He stood and fell, did ill or well,not for himself alone,But for you all, who now his Falland trespass would disown.CLXXIII."If he had stood, then all his broodhad been establishédIn God's true love never to move,nor once awry to tread;Then all his Race my Father's Graceshould have enjoy'd for ever,And wicked Sprites by subtile sleightscould them have harméd never.CLXXIV.Would you have griev'd to have receiv'dthrough Adam so much good,As had been your for evermore,if he at first had stood?Would you have said, 'We ne'er obey'dnor did thy laws regard;It ill befits with benefits,us, Lord, to so reward?'CLXXV."Since then to share in his welfare,you could have been content,You may with reason share in his treason,Rom. 5:12.Psal. 51:5.Gen. 5:3.and in the punishment.Hence you were born in state forlorn,with Natures so depravéd;Death was your due because that youhad thus yourselves behavéd.CLXXVI."You think 'If we had been as he,whom God did so betrust,We to our cost would ne'er have lostall for a paltry lust.'Mat. 23:30, 31.Had you been made in Adam's stead,you would like things have wrought,And so into the self-same woe,yourselves and yours have brought.CLXXVII.The free gift."I may deny you once to try,or Grace to you to tender,Rom. 9:15, 18.Rom. 5:15.Though he finds Grace before my facewho was the chief offender;Else should my Grace cease to be Grace,for it would not be free,If to release whom I should pleaseI have no liberty.CLXXVIII."If upon one what's due to noneI frankly shall bestow,And on the rest shall not think bestcompassion's skirt to throw;Whom injure I? will you envyand grudge at others' weal?Or me accuse, who do refuseyourselves to help and heal?CLXXIX."Am I alone of what's my own,no Master or no Lord?Mat. 20:15.And if I am, how can you claimwhat I to some afford?Will you demand Grace at my hand,and challenge what is mine?Will you teach me whom to set free,and thus my Grace confine?CLXXX.Psal. 58:8.Rom. 6:23.Gal. 3:10.Rom 8:29,30 and 11:7.Rev. 21:27.Luke 12:14,8.Mat. 11:22."You sinners are, and such a shareas sinners, may expect;Such you shall have, for I do savenone but mine own Elect.Yet to compare your sin with theirwho liv'd a longer time,I do confess yours is much less,though every sin's a crime.CLXXXI.The wicked all convinced and put to silence."A crime it is, therefore in blissRom. 3:19.Mat. 22:12.you may not hope to dwell;But unto you I shall allowthe easiest room in Hell."The glorious King thus answering,they cease, and plead no longer;Their Consciences must needs confesshis Reasons are the stronger.CLXXXII.Behold the formidable estate of all theungodly as they stand hopelessand helpless before an impartialJudge, expecting their final Sentence.Thus all men's pleas the Judge with easeRev. 6:16, 17.doth answer and confute,Until that all, both great and small,are silencéd and mute.Vain hopes are cropt, all mouths are stopt,sinners have naught to say,But that 'tis just and equal mostthey should be damn'd for aye.CLXXXIII.Now what remains, but that to painsand everlasting smart,Christ should condemn the sons of men,which is their just desert?Oh rueful plights of sinful wights!Oh wretches all forlorn!'T had happy been they ne'er had seenthe sun, or not been born.CLXXXIV.Yea now it would be good they couldthemselves annihilate,And cease to be, themselves to freefrom such a fearful state.O happy Dogs, and Swine, and Frogs,yea, Serpent's generation!Who do not fear this doom to hear,and sentence of Damnation!CLXXXV.This is their state so desperate;their sins are fully known;Their vanities and villaniesPsal. 130:2, 3, 4.Eccl. 12:14.before the world are shown.As they are gross and impious,so are their numbers moreThan motes in th' Air, or than their hair,or sands upon the shore.CLXXXVI.Divine Justice offended is,and satisfaction claimeth;God's wrathful ire, kindled like fire,Mat. 25:45.against them fiercely flameth.Their Judge severe doth quite cashier,and all their pleas off take,That ne'er a man, or dare, or cana further answer make.CLXXXVII.Their mouths are shut, each man is putMat. 22:12.Rom. 2:5, 6.Luke 19:42.to silence and to shame,Nor have they aught within their thought,Christ's Justice for to blame.The Judge is just, and plague them must,nor will he Mercy shew,For Mercy's day is past awayto any of this Crew.CLXXXVIII.The Judge is strong, doers of wrongMat. 28:18.cannot his pow'r withstand;None can by flight run out of sight,nor 'scape out of his hand.Sad is their state; for Advocate,Psal. 137:7.to plead their cause, there's none;None to prevent their punishment,or mis'ry to bemoan.CLXXXIX.O dismal day! whither shall theyfor help and succor flee?To God above with hopes to moveIsa. 33:14.Psal. 11:6.Num. 25:19.their greatest Enemy?His wrath is great, whose burning heatno floods of tears can slake;His Word stands fast that they be castinto the burning Lake.CXC.Matt. 25:41,and 25:10, 11, 12.To Christ their Judge? He doth adjudgethem to the Pit of Sorrow;Nor will he hear, or cry or tear,nor respite them one morrow.To Heav'n, alas! they cannot pass,it is against them shut;To enter there (O heavy cheer)they out of hopes are put.CXCI.Luke 12:20.Psal. 49:7, 17.Deut. 32:2.Unto their Treasures, or to their Pleasures?All these have them forsaken;Had they full coffers to make large offers,their gold would not be taken.Unto the place where whilom wastheir birth and Education?Lo! Christ begins for their great sins,to fire the Earth's Foundation;CXCII.And by and by the flaming Skyshall drop like molten LeadAbout their ears, t'increase their fears,2 Pet. 3:10.and aggravate their dread.To Angel's good that ever stoodin their integrity,Should they betake themselves, and maketheir suit incessantly?CXCIII.They've neither skill, nor do they willto work them any ease;They will not mourn to see them burn,Mat. 13:41, 42.Rev. 20:13, 15.nor beg for their release.To wicked men, their bretherenin sin and wickedness,Should they make moan? Their case is one;they're in the same distress.CXCIV.Ah! cold comfort and mean support,from such like Comforters!Ah! little joy of Company,Luke 16:28.and fellow-sufferers!Such shall increase their heart's disease,and add unto their woe,Because that they brought to decaythemselves and many moe.CXCV.Unto the Saints with sad complaintsshould they themselves apply?Rev. 21:4.Psal. 58:10.They're not dejected nor aught affectedwith all their misery.Friends stand aloof and make no proofwhat Prayers or Tears can do;Your Godly friends are now more friendsto Christ than unto you.CXCVI.Where tender love men's hearts did moveunto a sympathy,And bearing part of others' smart1 Cor. 6:2.in their anxiety,Now such compassion is out of fashion,and wholly laid aside;No friends so near, but Saints to heartheir Sentence can abide.CXCVII.One natural Brother beholds anotherin his astonied fit,CompareProv. 1:28with 1 John 3: 2,and 2 Cor. 5:16.Yet sorrows not thereat a jot,nor pities him a whit.The godly Wife conceives no grief,nor can she shed a tearFor the sad state of her dear Mate,when she his doom doth hear.CXCVIII.He that was erst a Husband pierc'dwith sense of Wife's distress,Whose tender heart did bear a partof all her grievances,Shall mourn no more as heretofore,because of her ill plight,Although he see her now to bea damn'd forsaken wight.CXCIX.The tender Mother will own no otherof all her num'rous brood,But such as stand at Christ's right hand,Luke 16:25.acquitted through his Blood.The pious Father had now much ratherhis graceless Son should lieIn Hell with Devils, for all his evils,burning eternally,CC.Than God most High should injuryby sparing him sustain;Psal. 58:10.And doth rejoice to hear Christ's voice,adjudging him to pain.Thus having all, both great and small,convinc'd and silencéd,Christ did proceed their Doom to read,and thus it utteréd:CCI.The Judge pronounceth the sentence ofcondemnation."Ye sinful wights and curséd sprights,Mat. 25:41.that work iniquity,Depart together from me for everto endless Misery;Your portion take in yonder Lake,where Fire and Brimstone flameth;Suffer the smart which your desert,as its due wages claimeth."CCII.The terror of it.Oh piercing words, more sharp than swords!What! to depart from Thee,Whose face before for evermorethe best of Pleasures be!What! to depart (unto our smart),from theeEternally!To be for aye banish'd awaywith Devils' company!CCIII.What! to be sent to Punishment,and flames of burning Fire!To be surrounded, and eke confoundedwith God's revengeful Ire!What! to abide, not for a tide,these Torments, but for Ever!To be releas'd, or to be eas'd,not after years, but Never!CCIV.Oh fearful Doom! now there's no roomfor hope or help at all;Sentence is past which aye shall last;Christ will not it recall.Then might you hear them rend and tearthe Air with their out-cries;The hideous noise of their sad voiceascendeth to the Skies.CCV.They wring their hands, their caitiff-hands,Luke 13:38.Prov. 1:26.and gnash their teeth for terror;They cry, they roar for anguish sore,and gnaw their tongues for horror.But get away without delay,Christ pities not your cry;Depart to Hell, there may you yell,and roar Eternally.CCVI.It is put in Execution.That word "Depart," maugre their heart,Mat. 25:46.drives every wicked one,With mighty pow'r, the self-same hour,far from the Judge's Throne.Away they're chas'd by the strong blastof his Death-threat'ning mouth;They flee full fast, as if in haste,although they be full loath.CCVII.As chaff that's dry, as dust doth flyMat. 13:41, 42.before the Northern wind,Right so are they chaséd away,and can no Refuge find.They hasten to the Pit of Woe,guarded by Angels stout,Who to fulfil Christ's holy Will,attend this wickéd Rout;CCVIII.HELL.Whom having brought as they are taught,Mat. 25:30.Mark 9:42.Isa. 30:33.Rev. 21:8.unto the brink of Hell,(That dismal place, far from Christ's face,where Death and Darkness dwell,Where God's fierce Ire kindleth the fire,and vengeance feeds the flame,With piles of Wood and Brimstone Flood,so none can quench the same,)CCIX.Wicked men and Devils cast into it forever.With Iron bands they bind their handsMat. 22:13,and 25:46.and curséd feet together,And cast them all, both great and small,into that Lake forever,Where day and night, without respite,they wail, and cry and howl,For tort'ring pain which they sustain,in Body and in Soul.CCX.Rev. 14:10, 11.

"Thy Written Word," say they, "good Lord,we never did enjoy;We ne'er refus'd, nor it abus'd;Oh, do not us destroy!"CLVIII."You ne'er abus'd, nor yet refus'dmy Written Word, you plead;That's true," quoth he, "therefore shall yeMat. 11:22.Luke 12:48.the less be punishéd.You shall not smart for any partof other men's offense,But for your own transgressi-onreceive due recompense."CLIX.Insufficiency of the light of Nature."But we were blind," say they, "in mind;too dim was Nature's Light,Our only guide, as hath been tried,1 Cor. 1:21,to bring us to the sightOf our estate degenerate,and curs'd by Adam's Fall;How we were born and lay forlornin bondage and in thrall.CLX."We did not know a Christ till now,nor how fall'n men be savéd,Else would we not, right well we wot,have so ourselves behavéd.We should have mourn'd, we should have turn'dfrom sin at thy Reproof,And been more wise through thy advice,Mat. 11:22.for our own soul's behoof.CLXI.They are answered."But Nature's light shin'd not so bright,to teach us the right way:We might have lov'd it and well improv'd it,and yet have gone astray."The Judge most High makes this Reply:"You ignorance pretend,Dimness of sight, and want of light,your course Heav'nward to bend.CLXII."How came your mind to be so blind?I once you knowledge gave,Gen. 1:27.Eccl. 7:29.Hos. 13:9.Clearness of sight and judgment right:who did the same deprave?If to your cost you have it lost,and quite defac'd the same,Your own desert hath caus'd the smart;you ought not me to blame.CLXIII."Yourselves into a pit of woe,Mat. 11:25,comparedwith20:15.your own transgression led;If I to none my Grace had shown,who had been injuréd?If to a few, and not to you,I shew'd a way of life,My Grace so free, you clearly see,gives you no ground of strife.CLXIV."'Tis vain to tell, you wot full well,if you in time had knownYour misery and remedy,your actions had it shown:Rom. 1:20,21, 22.You, sinful Crew, have not been trueunto the Light of Nature,Nor done the good you understood,nor ownéd your Creator.CLXV."He that the Light, because 'tis slight,hath uséd to despise,Rom. 2:12,15, and 1:32.Mat. 12:41.Would not the Light shining more bright,be likely for to prize.If you had lov'd, and well improv'dyour knowledge and dim sight,Herein your pain had not been vain,your plagues had been more light."CLXVI.Reprobate Infants plead for themselves.Then to the Bar all they drew nearRev. 20:12, 15,compared withRom. 5:12, 14,and 9:11, 13.Ezek. 18:2.Who died in infancy,And never had or good or badeffected pers'nally;But from the womb unto the tombwere straightway carriéd,(Or at the least ere they transgress'd)who thus began to plead:CLXVII."If for our own transgressi-on,or disobedience,We here did stand at thy left hand,just were the Recompense;But Adam's guilt our souls hath spilt,his fault is charg'd upon us;And that alone hath overthrownand utterly undone us.CLXVIII."Not we, but he ate of the Tree,whose fruit was interdicted;Yet on us all of his sad Fallthe punishment's inflicted.How could we sin that had not been,or how is his sin our,Without consent, which to preventwe never had the pow'r?CLXIX."O great Creator why was our Naturedepravéd and forlorn?Why so defil'd, and made so vil'd,whilst we were yet unborn?If it be just, and needs we musttransgressors reckon'd be,Psal. 51:5.Thy Mercy, Lord, to us afford,which sinners hath set free.CLXX."Behold we see Adam set free,and sav'd from his trespass,Whose sinful Fall hath split us all,and brought us to this pass.Canst thou deny us once to try,or Grace to us to tender,When he finds grace before thy face,who was the chief offender?"CLXXI.Their arguments taken off.Then answeréd the Judge most dread:Ezek. 18:20.Rom. 5:12, 19."God doth such doom forbid,That men should die eternallyfor what they never did.But what you call old Adam's Fall,and only his Trespass,You call amiss to call it his,both his and yours it was.CLXXII."He was design'd of all Mankindto be a public Head;1 Cor. 15:48,49.A common Root, whence all should shoot,and stood in all their stead.He stood and fell, did ill or well,not for himself alone,But for you all, who now his Falland trespass would disown.CLXXIII."If he had stood, then all his broodhad been establishédIn God's true love never to move,nor once awry to tread;Then all his Race my Father's Graceshould have enjoy'd for ever,And wicked Sprites by subtile sleightscould them have harméd never.CLXXIV.Would you have griev'd to have receiv'dthrough Adam so much good,As had been your for evermore,if he at first had stood?Would you have said, 'We ne'er obey'dnor did thy laws regard;It ill befits with benefits,us, Lord, to so reward?'CLXXV."Since then to share in his welfare,you could have been content,You may with reason share in his treason,Rom. 5:12.Psal. 51:5.Gen. 5:3.and in the punishment.Hence you were born in state forlorn,with Natures so depravéd;Death was your due because that youhad thus yourselves behavéd.CLXXVI."You think 'If we had been as he,whom God did so betrust,We to our cost would ne'er have lostall for a paltry lust.'Mat. 23:30, 31.Had you been made in Adam's stead,you would like things have wrought,And so into the self-same woe,yourselves and yours have brought.CLXXVII.The free gift."I may deny you once to try,or Grace to you to tender,Rom. 9:15, 18.Rom. 5:15.Though he finds Grace before my facewho was the chief offender;Else should my Grace cease to be Grace,for it would not be free,If to release whom I should pleaseI have no liberty.CLXXVIII."If upon one what's due to noneI frankly shall bestow,And on the rest shall not think bestcompassion's skirt to throw;Whom injure I? will you envyand grudge at others' weal?Or me accuse, who do refuseyourselves to help and heal?CLXXIX."Am I alone of what's my own,no Master or no Lord?Mat. 20:15.And if I am, how can you claimwhat I to some afford?Will you demand Grace at my hand,and challenge what is mine?Will you teach me whom to set free,and thus my Grace confine?CLXXX.Psal. 58:8.Rom. 6:23.Gal. 3:10.Rom 8:29,30 and 11:7.Rev. 21:27.Luke 12:14,8.Mat. 11:22."You sinners are, and such a shareas sinners, may expect;Such you shall have, for I do savenone but mine own Elect.Yet to compare your sin with theirwho liv'd a longer time,I do confess yours is much less,though every sin's a crime.CLXXXI.The wicked all convinced and put to silence."A crime it is, therefore in blissRom. 3:19.Mat. 22:12.you may not hope to dwell;But unto you I shall allowthe easiest room in Hell."The glorious King thus answering,they cease, and plead no longer;Their Consciences must needs confesshis Reasons are the stronger.CLXXXII.Behold the formidable estate of all theungodly as they stand hopelessand helpless before an impartialJudge, expecting their final Sentence.Thus all men's pleas the Judge with easeRev. 6:16, 17.doth answer and confute,Until that all, both great and small,are silencéd and mute.Vain hopes are cropt, all mouths are stopt,sinners have naught to say,But that 'tis just and equal mostthey should be damn'd for aye.CLXXXIII.Now what remains, but that to painsand everlasting smart,Christ should condemn the sons of men,which is their just desert?Oh rueful plights of sinful wights!Oh wretches all forlorn!'T had happy been they ne'er had seenthe sun, or not been born.CLXXXIV.Yea now it would be good they couldthemselves annihilate,And cease to be, themselves to freefrom such a fearful state.O happy Dogs, and Swine, and Frogs,yea, Serpent's generation!Who do not fear this doom to hear,and sentence of Damnation!CLXXXV.This is their state so desperate;their sins are fully known;Their vanities and villaniesPsal. 130:2, 3, 4.Eccl. 12:14.before the world are shown.As they are gross and impious,so are their numbers moreThan motes in th' Air, or than their hair,or sands upon the shore.CLXXXVI.Divine Justice offended is,and satisfaction claimeth;God's wrathful ire, kindled like fire,Mat. 25:45.against them fiercely flameth.Their Judge severe doth quite cashier,and all their pleas off take,That ne'er a man, or dare, or cana further answer make.CLXXXVII.Their mouths are shut, each man is putMat. 22:12.Rom. 2:5, 6.Luke 19:42.to silence and to shame,Nor have they aught within their thought,Christ's Justice for to blame.The Judge is just, and plague them must,nor will he Mercy shew,For Mercy's day is past awayto any of this Crew.CLXXXVIII.The Judge is strong, doers of wrongMat. 28:18.cannot his pow'r withstand;None can by flight run out of sight,nor 'scape out of his hand.Sad is their state; for Advocate,Psal. 137:7.to plead their cause, there's none;None to prevent their punishment,or mis'ry to bemoan.CLXXXIX.O dismal day! whither shall theyfor help and succor flee?To God above with hopes to moveIsa. 33:14.Psal. 11:6.Num. 25:19.their greatest Enemy?His wrath is great, whose burning heatno floods of tears can slake;His Word stands fast that they be castinto the burning Lake.CXC.Matt. 25:41,and 25:10, 11, 12.To Christ their Judge? He doth adjudgethem to the Pit of Sorrow;Nor will he hear, or cry or tear,nor respite them one morrow.To Heav'n, alas! they cannot pass,it is against them shut;To enter there (O heavy cheer)they out of hopes are put.CXCI.Luke 12:20.Psal. 49:7, 17.Deut. 32:2.Unto their Treasures, or to their Pleasures?All these have them forsaken;Had they full coffers to make large offers,their gold would not be taken.Unto the place where whilom wastheir birth and Education?Lo! Christ begins for their great sins,to fire the Earth's Foundation;CXCII.And by and by the flaming Skyshall drop like molten LeadAbout their ears, t'increase their fears,2 Pet. 3:10.and aggravate their dread.To Angel's good that ever stoodin their integrity,Should they betake themselves, and maketheir suit incessantly?CXCIII.They've neither skill, nor do they willto work them any ease;They will not mourn to see them burn,Mat. 13:41, 42.Rev. 20:13, 15.nor beg for their release.To wicked men, their bretherenin sin and wickedness,Should they make moan? Their case is one;they're in the same distress.CXCIV.Ah! cold comfort and mean support,from such like Comforters!Ah! little joy of Company,Luke 16:28.and fellow-sufferers!Such shall increase their heart's disease,and add unto their woe,Because that they brought to decaythemselves and many moe.CXCV.Unto the Saints with sad complaintsshould they themselves apply?Rev. 21:4.Psal. 58:10.They're not dejected nor aught affectedwith all their misery.Friends stand aloof and make no proofwhat Prayers or Tears can do;Your Godly friends are now more friendsto Christ than unto you.CXCVI.Where tender love men's hearts did moveunto a sympathy,And bearing part of others' smart1 Cor. 6:2.in their anxiety,Now such compassion is out of fashion,and wholly laid aside;No friends so near, but Saints to heartheir Sentence can abide.CXCVII.One natural Brother beholds anotherin his astonied fit,CompareProv. 1:28with 1 John 3: 2,and 2 Cor. 5:16.Yet sorrows not thereat a jot,nor pities him a whit.The godly Wife conceives no grief,nor can she shed a tearFor the sad state of her dear Mate,when she his doom doth hear.CXCVIII.He that was erst a Husband pierc'dwith sense of Wife's distress,Whose tender heart did bear a partof all her grievances,Shall mourn no more as heretofore,because of her ill plight,Although he see her now to bea damn'd forsaken wight.CXCIX.The tender Mother will own no otherof all her num'rous brood,But such as stand at Christ's right hand,Luke 16:25.acquitted through his Blood.The pious Father had now much ratherhis graceless Son should lieIn Hell with Devils, for all his evils,burning eternally,CC.Than God most High should injuryby sparing him sustain;Psal. 58:10.And doth rejoice to hear Christ's voice,adjudging him to pain.Thus having all, both great and small,convinc'd and silencéd,Christ did proceed their Doom to read,and thus it utteréd:CCI.The Judge pronounceth the sentence ofcondemnation."Ye sinful wights and curséd sprights,Mat. 25:41.that work iniquity,Depart together from me for everto endless Misery;Your portion take in yonder Lake,where Fire and Brimstone flameth;Suffer the smart which your desert,as its due wages claimeth."CCII.The terror of it.Oh piercing words, more sharp than swords!What! to depart from Thee,Whose face before for evermorethe best of Pleasures be!What! to depart (unto our smart),from theeEternally!To be for aye banish'd awaywith Devils' company!CCIII.What! to be sent to Punishment,and flames of burning Fire!To be surrounded, and eke confoundedwith God's revengeful Ire!What! to abide, not for a tide,these Torments, but for Ever!To be releas'd, or to be eas'd,not after years, but Never!CCIV.Oh fearful Doom! now there's no roomfor hope or help at all;Sentence is past which aye shall last;Christ will not it recall.Then might you hear them rend and tearthe Air with their out-cries;The hideous noise of their sad voiceascendeth to the Skies.CCV.They wring their hands, their caitiff-hands,Luke 13:38.Prov. 1:26.and gnash their teeth for terror;They cry, they roar for anguish sore,and gnaw their tongues for horror.But get away without delay,Christ pities not your cry;Depart to Hell, there may you yell,and roar Eternally.CCVI.It is put in Execution.That word "Depart," maugre their heart,Mat. 25:46.drives every wicked one,With mighty pow'r, the self-same hour,far from the Judge's Throne.Away they're chas'd by the strong blastof his Death-threat'ning mouth;They flee full fast, as if in haste,although they be full loath.CCVII.As chaff that's dry, as dust doth flyMat. 13:41, 42.before the Northern wind,Right so are they chaséd away,and can no Refuge find.They hasten to the Pit of Woe,guarded by Angels stout,Who to fulfil Christ's holy Will,attend this wickéd Rout;CCVIII.HELL.Whom having brought as they are taught,Mat. 25:30.Mark 9:42.Isa. 30:33.Rev. 21:8.unto the brink of Hell,(That dismal place, far from Christ's face,where Death and Darkness dwell,Where God's fierce Ire kindleth the fire,and vengeance feeds the flame,With piles of Wood and Brimstone Flood,so none can quench the same,)CCIX.Wicked men and Devils cast into it forever.With Iron bands they bind their handsMat. 22:13,and 25:46.and curséd feet together,And cast them all, both great and small,into that Lake forever,Where day and night, without respite,they wail, and cry and howl,For tort'ring pain which they sustain,in Body and in Soul.CCX.Rev. 14:10, 11.

"Thy Written Word," say they, "good Lord,we never did enjoy;We ne'er refus'd, nor it abus'd;Oh, do not us destroy!"CLVIII."You ne'er abus'd, nor yet refus'dmy Written Word, you plead;That's true," quoth he, "therefore shall yeMat. 11:22.Luke 12:48.the less be punishéd.You shall not smart for any partof other men's offense,But for your own transgressi-onreceive due recompense."CLIX.Insufficiency of the light of Nature."But we were blind," say they, "in mind;too dim was Nature's Light,Our only guide, as hath been tried,1 Cor. 1:21,to bring us to the sightOf our estate degenerate,and curs'd by Adam's Fall;How we were born and lay forlornin bondage and in thrall.CLX."We did not know a Christ till now,nor how fall'n men be savéd,Else would we not, right well we wot,have so ourselves behavéd.We should have mourn'd, we should have turn'dfrom sin at thy Reproof,And been more wise through thy advice,Mat. 11:22.for our own soul's behoof.CLXI.They are answered."But Nature's light shin'd not so bright,to teach us the right way:We might have lov'd it and well improv'd it,and yet have gone astray."The Judge most High makes this Reply:"You ignorance pretend,Dimness of sight, and want of light,your course Heav'nward to bend.CLXII."How came your mind to be so blind?I once you knowledge gave,Gen. 1:27.Eccl. 7:29.Hos. 13:9.Clearness of sight and judgment right:who did the same deprave?If to your cost you have it lost,and quite defac'd the same,Your own desert hath caus'd the smart;you ought not me to blame.CLXIII."Yourselves into a pit of woe,Mat. 11:25,comparedwith20:15.your own transgression led;If I to none my Grace had shown,who had been injuréd?If to a few, and not to you,I shew'd a way of life,My Grace so free, you clearly see,gives you no ground of strife.CLXIV."'Tis vain to tell, you wot full well,if you in time had knownYour misery and remedy,your actions had it shown:Rom. 1:20,21, 22.You, sinful Crew, have not been trueunto the Light of Nature,Nor done the good you understood,nor ownéd your Creator.CLXV."He that the Light, because 'tis slight,hath uséd to despise,Rom. 2:12,15, and 1:32.Mat. 12:41.Would not the Light shining more bright,be likely for to prize.If you had lov'd, and well improv'dyour knowledge and dim sight,Herein your pain had not been vain,your plagues had been more light."CLXVI.Reprobate Infants plead for themselves.Then to the Bar all they drew nearRev. 20:12, 15,compared withRom. 5:12, 14,and 9:11, 13.Ezek. 18:2.Who died in infancy,And never had or good or badeffected pers'nally;But from the womb unto the tombwere straightway carriéd,(Or at the least ere they transgress'd)who thus began to plead:CLXVII."If for our own transgressi-on,or disobedience,We here did stand at thy left hand,just were the Recompense;But Adam's guilt our souls hath spilt,his fault is charg'd upon us;And that alone hath overthrownand utterly undone us.CLXVIII."Not we, but he ate of the Tree,whose fruit was interdicted;Yet on us all of his sad Fallthe punishment's inflicted.How could we sin that had not been,or how is his sin our,Without consent, which to preventwe never had the pow'r?CLXIX."O great Creator why was our Naturedepravéd and forlorn?Why so defil'd, and made so vil'd,whilst we were yet unborn?If it be just, and needs we musttransgressors reckon'd be,Psal. 51:5.Thy Mercy, Lord, to us afford,which sinners hath set free.CLXX."Behold we see Adam set free,and sav'd from his trespass,Whose sinful Fall hath split us all,and brought us to this pass.Canst thou deny us once to try,or Grace to us to tender,When he finds grace before thy face,who was the chief offender?"CLXXI.Their arguments taken off.Then answeréd the Judge most dread:Ezek. 18:20.Rom. 5:12, 19."God doth such doom forbid,That men should die eternallyfor what they never did.But what you call old Adam's Fall,and only his Trespass,You call amiss to call it his,both his and yours it was.CLXXII."He was design'd of all Mankindto be a public Head;1 Cor. 15:48,49.A common Root, whence all should shoot,and stood in all their stead.He stood and fell, did ill or well,not for himself alone,But for you all, who now his Falland trespass would disown.CLXXIII."If he had stood, then all his broodhad been establishédIn God's true love never to move,nor once awry to tread;Then all his Race my Father's Graceshould have enjoy'd for ever,And wicked Sprites by subtile sleightscould them have harméd never.CLXXIV.Would you have griev'd to have receiv'dthrough Adam so much good,As had been your for evermore,if he at first had stood?Would you have said, 'We ne'er obey'dnor did thy laws regard;It ill befits with benefits,us, Lord, to so reward?'CLXXV."Since then to share in his welfare,you could have been content,You may with reason share in his treason,Rom. 5:12.Psal. 51:5.Gen. 5:3.and in the punishment.Hence you were born in state forlorn,with Natures so depravéd;Death was your due because that youhad thus yourselves behavéd.CLXXVI."You think 'If we had been as he,whom God did so betrust,We to our cost would ne'er have lostall for a paltry lust.'Mat. 23:30, 31.Had you been made in Adam's stead,you would like things have wrought,And so into the self-same woe,yourselves and yours have brought.CLXXVII.The free gift."I may deny you once to try,or Grace to you to tender,Rom. 9:15, 18.Rom. 5:15.Though he finds Grace before my facewho was the chief offender;Else should my Grace cease to be Grace,for it would not be free,If to release whom I should pleaseI have no liberty.CLXXVIII."If upon one what's due to noneI frankly shall bestow,And on the rest shall not think bestcompassion's skirt to throw;Whom injure I? will you envyand grudge at others' weal?Or me accuse, who do refuseyourselves to help and heal?CLXXIX."Am I alone of what's my own,no Master or no Lord?Mat. 20:15.And if I am, how can you claimwhat I to some afford?Will you demand Grace at my hand,and challenge what is mine?Will you teach me whom to set free,and thus my Grace confine?CLXXX.Psal. 58:8.Rom. 6:23.Gal. 3:10.Rom 8:29,30 and 11:7.Rev. 21:27.Luke 12:14,8.Mat. 11:22."You sinners are, and such a shareas sinners, may expect;Such you shall have, for I do savenone but mine own Elect.Yet to compare your sin with theirwho liv'd a longer time,I do confess yours is much less,though every sin's a crime.CLXXXI.The wicked all convinced and put to silence."A crime it is, therefore in blissRom. 3:19.Mat. 22:12.you may not hope to dwell;But unto you I shall allowthe easiest room in Hell."The glorious King thus answering,they cease, and plead no longer;Their Consciences must needs confesshis Reasons are the stronger.CLXXXII.Behold the formidable estate of all theungodly as they stand hopelessand helpless before an impartialJudge, expecting their final Sentence.Thus all men's pleas the Judge with easeRev. 6:16, 17.doth answer and confute,Until that all, both great and small,are silencéd and mute.Vain hopes are cropt, all mouths are stopt,sinners have naught to say,But that 'tis just and equal mostthey should be damn'd for aye.CLXXXIII.Now what remains, but that to painsand everlasting smart,Christ should condemn the sons of men,which is their just desert?Oh rueful plights of sinful wights!Oh wretches all forlorn!'T had happy been they ne'er had seenthe sun, or not been born.CLXXXIV.Yea now it would be good they couldthemselves annihilate,And cease to be, themselves to freefrom such a fearful state.O happy Dogs, and Swine, and Frogs,yea, Serpent's generation!Who do not fear this doom to hear,and sentence of Damnation!CLXXXV.This is their state so desperate;their sins are fully known;Their vanities and villaniesPsal. 130:2, 3, 4.Eccl. 12:14.before the world are shown.As they are gross and impious,so are their numbers moreThan motes in th' Air, or than their hair,or sands upon the shore.CLXXXVI.Divine Justice offended is,and satisfaction claimeth;God's wrathful ire, kindled like fire,Mat. 25:45.against them fiercely flameth.Their Judge severe doth quite cashier,and all their pleas off take,That ne'er a man, or dare, or cana further answer make.CLXXXVII.Their mouths are shut, each man is putMat. 22:12.Rom. 2:5, 6.Luke 19:42.to silence and to shame,Nor have they aught within their thought,Christ's Justice for to blame.The Judge is just, and plague them must,nor will he Mercy shew,For Mercy's day is past awayto any of this Crew.CLXXXVIII.The Judge is strong, doers of wrongMat. 28:18.cannot his pow'r withstand;None can by flight run out of sight,nor 'scape out of his hand.Sad is their state; for Advocate,Psal. 137:7.to plead their cause, there's none;None to prevent their punishment,or mis'ry to bemoan.CLXXXIX.O dismal day! whither shall theyfor help and succor flee?To God above with hopes to moveIsa. 33:14.Psal. 11:6.Num. 25:19.their greatest Enemy?His wrath is great, whose burning heatno floods of tears can slake;His Word stands fast that they be castinto the burning Lake.CXC.Matt. 25:41,and 25:10, 11, 12.To Christ their Judge? He doth adjudgethem to the Pit of Sorrow;Nor will he hear, or cry or tear,nor respite them one morrow.To Heav'n, alas! they cannot pass,it is against them shut;To enter there (O heavy cheer)they out of hopes are put.CXCI.Luke 12:20.Psal. 49:7, 17.Deut. 32:2.Unto their Treasures, or to their Pleasures?All these have them forsaken;Had they full coffers to make large offers,their gold would not be taken.Unto the place where whilom wastheir birth and Education?Lo! Christ begins for their great sins,to fire the Earth's Foundation;CXCII.And by and by the flaming Skyshall drop like molten LeadAbout their ears, t'increase their fears,2 Pet. 3:10.and aggravate their dread.To Angel's good that ever stoodin their integrity,Should they betake themselves, and maketheir suit incessantly?CXCIII.They've neither skill, nor do they willto work them any ease;They will not mourn to see them burn,Mat. 13:41, 42.Rev. 20:13, 15.nor beg for their release.To wicked men, their bretherenin sin and wickedness,Should they make moan? Their case is one;they're in the same distress.CXCIV.Ah! cold comfort and mean support,from such like Comforters!Ah! little joy of Company,Luke 16:28.and fellow-sufferers!Such shall increase their heart's disease,and add unto their woe,Because that they brought to decaythemselves and many moe.CXCV.Unto the Saints with sad complaintsshould they themselves apply?Rev. 21:4.Psal. 58:10.They're not dejected nor aught affectedwith all their misery.Friends stand aloof and make no proofwhat Prayers or Tears can do;Your Godly friends are now more friendsto Christ than unto you.CXCVI.Where tender love men's hearts did moveunto a sympathy,And bearing part of others' smart1 Cor. 6:2.in their anxiety,Now such compassion is out of fashion,and wholly laid aside;No friends so near, but Saints to heartheir Sentence can abide.CXCVII.One natural Brother beholds anotherin his astonied fit,CompareProv. 1:28with 1 John 3: 2,and 2 Cor. 5:16.Yet sorrows not thereat a jot,nor pities him a whit.The godly Wife conceives no grief,nor can she shed a tearFor the sad state of her dear Mate,when she his doom doth hear.CXCVIII.He that was erst a Husband pierc'dwith sense of Wife's distress,Whose tender heart did bear a partof all her grievances,Shall mourn no more as heretofore,because of her ill plight,Although he see her now to bea damn'd forsaken wight.CXCIX.The tender Mother will own no otherof all her num'rous brood,But such as stand at Christ's right hand,Luke 16:25.acquitted through his Blood.The pious Father had now much ratherhis graceless Son should lieIn Hell with Devils, for all his evils,burning eternally,CC.Than God most High should injuryby sparing him sustain;Psal. 58:10.And doth rejoice to hear Christ's voice,adjudging him to pain.Thus having all, both great and small,convinc'd and silencéd,Christ did proceed their Doom to read,and thus it utteréd:CCI.The Judge pronounceth the sentence ofcondemnation."Ye sinful wights and curséd sprights,Mat. 25:41.that work iniquity,Depart together from me for everto endless Misery;Your portion take in yonder Lake,where Fire and Brimstone flameth;Suffer the smart which your desert,as its due wages claimeth."CCII.The terror of it.Oh piercing words, more sharp than swords!What! to depart from Thee,Whose face before for evermorethe best of Pleasures be!What! to depart (unto our smart),from theeEternally!To be for aye banish'd awaywith Devils' company!CCIII.What! to be sent to Punishment,and flames of burning Fire!To be surrounded, and eke confoundedwith God's revengeful Ire!What! to abide, not for a tide,these Torments, but for Ever!To be releas'd, or to be eas'd,not after years, but Never!CCIV.Oh fearful Doom! now there's no roomfor hope or help at all;Sentence is past which aye shall last;Christ will not it recall.Then might you hear them rend and tearthe Air with their out-cries;The hideous noise of their sad voiceascendeth to the Skies.CCV.They wring their hands, their caitiff-hands,Luke 13:38.Prov. 1:26.and gnash their teeth for terror;They cry, they roar for anguish sore,and gnaw their tongues for horror.But get away without delay,Christ pities not your cry;Depart to Hell, there may you yell,and roar Eternally.CCVI.It is put in Execution.That word "Depart," maugre their heart,Mat. 25:46.drives every wicked one,With mighty pow'r, the self-same hour,far from the Judge's Throne.Away they're chas'd by the strong blastof his Death-threat'ning mouth;They flee full fast, as if in haste,although they be full loath.CCVII.As chaff that's dry, as dust doth flyMat. 13:41, 42.before the Northern wind,Right so are they chaséd away,and can no Refuge find.They hasten to the Pit of Woe,guarded by Angels stout,Who to fulfil Christ's holy Will,attend this wickéd Rout;CCVIII.HELL.Whom having brought as they are taught,Mat. 25:30.Mark 9:42.Isa. 30:33.Rev. 21:8.unto the brink of Hell,(That dismal place, far from Christ's face,where Death and Darkness dwell,Where God's fierce Ire kindleth the fire,and vengeance feeds the flame,With piles of Wood and Brimstone Flood,so none can quench the same,)CCIX.Wicked men and Devils cast into it forever.With Iron bands they bind their handsMat. 22:13,and 25:46.and curséd feet together,And cast them all, both great and small,into that Lake forever,Where day and night, without respite,they wail, and cry and howl,For tort'ring pain which they sustain,in Body and in Soul.CCX.Rev. 14:10, 11.

"Thy Written Word," say they, "good Lord,

we never did enjoy;

We ne'er refus'd, nor it abus'd;

Oh, do not us destroy!"

CLVIII.

"You ne'er abus'd, nor yet refus'd

my Written Word, you plead;

That's true," quoth he, "therefore shall ye

Mat. 11:22.Luke 12:48.

the less be punishéd.

You shall not smart for any part

of other men's offense,

But for your own transgressi-on

receive due recompense."

CLIX.

Insufficiency of the light of Nature.

"But we were blind," say they, "in mind;

too dim was Nature's Light,

Our only guide, as hath been tried,

1 Cor. 1:21,

to bring us to the sight

Of our estate degenerate,

and curs'd by Adam's Fall;

How we were born and lay forlorn

in bondage and in thrall.

CLX.

"We did not know a Christ till now,

nor how fall'n men be savéd,

Else would we not, right well we wot,

have so ourselves behavéd.

We should have mourn'd, we should have turn'd

from sin at thy Reproof,

And been more wise through thy advice,

Mat. 11:22.

for our own soul's behoof.

CLXI.

They are answered.

"But Nature's light shin'd not so bright,

to teach us the right way:

We might have lov'd it and well improv'd it,

and yet have gone astray."

The Judge most High makes this Reply:

"You ignorance pretend,

Dimness of sight, and want of light,

your course Heav'nward to bend.

CLXII.

"How came your mind to be so blind?

I once you knowledge gave,

Gen. 1:27.Eccl. 7:29.Hos. 13:9.

Clearness of sight and judgment right:

who did the same deprave?

If to your cost you have it lost,

and quite defac'd the same,

Your own desert hath caus'd the smart;

you ought not me to blame.

CLXIII.

"Yourselves into a pit of woe,

Mat. 11:25,comparedwith20:15.

your own transgression led;

If I to none my Grace had shown,

who had been injuréd?

If to a few, and not to you,

I shew'd a way of life,

My Grace so free, you clearly see,

gives you no ground of strife.

CLXIV.

"'Tis vain to tell, you wot full well,

if you in time had known

Your misery and remedy,

your actions had it shown:

Rom. 1:20,21, 22.

You, sinful Crew, have not been true

unto the Light of Nature,

Nor done the good you understood,

nor ownéd your Creator.

CLXV.

"He that the Light, because 'tis slight,

hath uséd to despise,

Rom. 2:12,15, and 1:32.Mat. 12:41.

Would not the Light shining more bright,

be likely for to prize.

If you had lov'd, and well improv'd

your knowledge and dim sight,

Herein your pain had not been vain,

your plagues had been more light."

CLXVI.

Reprobate Infants plead for themselves.

Then to the Bar all they drew near

Rev. 20:12, 15,compared withRom. 5:12, 14,and 9:11, 13.Ezek. 18:2.

Who died in infancy,

And never had or good or bad

effected pers'nally;

But from the womb unto the tomb

were straightway carriéd,

(Or at the least ere they transgress'd)

who thus began to plead:

CLXVII.

"If for our own transgressi-on,

or disobedience,

We here did stand at thy left hand,

just were the Recompense;

But Adam's guilt our souls hath spilt,

his fault is charg'd upon us;

And that alone hath overthrown

and utterly undone us.

CLXVIII.

"Not we, but he ate of the Tree,

whose fruit was interdicted;

Yet on us all of his sad Fall

the punishment's inflicted.

How could we sin that had not been,

or how is his sin our,

Without consent, which to prevent

we never had the pow'r?

CLXIX.

"O great Creator why was our Nature

depravéd and forlorn?

Why so defil'd, and made so vil'd,

whilst we were yet unborn?

If it be just, and needs we must

transgressors reckon'd be,

Psal. 51:5.

Thy Mercy, Lord, to us afford,

which sinners hath set free.

CLXX.

"Behold we see Adam set free,

and sav'd from his trespass,

Whose sinful Fall hath split us all,

and brought us to this pass.

Canst thou deny us once to try,

or Grace to us to tender,

When he finds grace before thy face,

who was the chief offender?"

CLXXI.

Their arguments taken off.

Then answeréd the Judge most dread:

Ezek. 18:20.Rom. 5:12, 19.

"God doth such doom forbid,

That men should die eternally

for what they never did.

But what you call old Adam's Fall,

and only his Trespass,

You call amiss to call it his,

both his and yours it was.

CLXXII.

"He was design'd of all Mankind

to be a public Head;

1 Cor. 15:48,49.

A common Root, whence all should shoot,

and stood in all their stead.

He stood and fell, did ill or well,

not for himself alone,

But for you all, who now his Fall

and trespass would disown.

CLXXIII.

"If he had stood, then all his brood

had been establishéd

In God's true love never to move,

nor once awry to tread;

Then all his Race my Father's Grace

should have enjoy'd for ever,

And wicked Sprites by subtile sleights

could them have harméd never.

CLXXIV.

Would you have griev'd to have receiv'd

through Adam so much good,

As had been your for evermore,

if he at first had stood?

Would you have said, 'We ne'er obey'd

nor did thy laws regard;

It ill befits with benefits,

us, Lord, to so reward?'

CLXXV.

"Since then to share in his welfare,

you could have been content,

You may with reason share in his treason,

Rom. 5:12.Psal. 51:5.Gen. 5:3.

and in the punishment.

Hence you were born in state forlorn,

with Natures so depravéd;

Death was your due because that you

had thus yourselves behavéd.

CLXXVI.

"You think 'If we had been as he,

whom God did so betrust,

We to our cost would ne'er have lost

all for a paltry lust.'

Mat. 23:30, 31.

Had you been made in Adam's stead,

you would like things have wrought,

And so into the self-same woe,

yourselves and yours have brought.

CLXXVII.

The free gift.

"I may deny you once to try,

or Grace to you to tender,

Rom. 9:15, 18.Rom. 5:15.

Though he finds Grace before my face

who was the chief offender;

Else should my Grace cease to be Grace,

for it would not be free,

If to release whom I should please

I have no liberty.

CLXXVIII.

"If upon one what's due to none

I frankly shall bestow,

And on the rest shall not think best

compassion's skirt to throw;

Whom injure I? will you envy

and grudge at others' weal?

Or me accuse, who do refuse

yourselves to help and heal?

CLXXIX.

"Am I alone of what's my own,

no Master or no Lord?

Mat. 20:15.

And if I am, how can you claim

what I to some afford?

Will you demand Grace at my hand,

and challenge what is mine?

Will you teach me whom to set free,

and thus my Grace confine?

CLXXX.

Psal. 58:8.Rom. 6:23.Gal. 3:10.Rom 8:29,30 and 11:7.Rev. 21:27.Luke 12:14,8.Mat. 11:22.

"You sinners are, and such a share

as sinners, may expect;

Such you shall have, for I do save

none but mine own Elect.

Yet to compare your sin with their

who liv'd a longer time,

I do confess yours is much less,

though every sin's a crime.

CLXXXI.

The wicked all convinced and put to silence.

"A crime it is, therefore in bliss

Rom. 3:19.Mat. 22:12.

you may not hope to dwell;

But unto you I shall allow

the easiest room in Hell."

The glorious King thus answering,

they cease, and plead no longer;

Their Consciences must needs confess

his Reasons are the stronger.

CLXXXII.

Behold the formidable estate of all theungodly as they stand hopelessand helpless before an impartialJudge, expecting their final Sentence.

Thus all men's pleas the Judge with ease

Rev. 6:16, 17.

doth answer and confute,

Until that all, both great and small,

are silencéd and mute.

Vain hopes are cropt, all mouths are stopt,

sinners have naught to say,

But that 'tis just and equal most

they should be damn'd for aye.

CLXXXIII.

Now what remains, but that to pains

and everlasting smart,

Christ should condemn the sons of men,

which is their just desert?

Oh rueful plights of sinful wights!

Oh wretches all forlorn!

'T had happy been they ne'er had seen

the sun, or not been born.

CLXXXIV.

Yea now it would be good they could

themselves annihilate,

And cease to be, themselves to free

from such a fearful state.

O happy Dogs, and Swine, and Frogs,

yea, Serpent's generation!

Who do not fear this doom to hear,

and sentence of Damnation!

CLXXXV.

This is their state so desperate;

their sins are fully known;

Their vanities and villanies

Psal. 130:2, 3, 4.Eccl. 12:14.

before the world are shown.

As they are gross and impious,

so are their numbers more

Than motes in th' Air, or than their hair,

or sands upon the shore.

CLXXXVI.

Divine Justice offended is,

and satisfaction claimeth;

God's wrathful ire, kindled like fire,

Mat. 25:45.

against them fiercely flameth.

Their Judge severe doth quite cashier,

and all their pleas off take,

That ne'er a man, or dare, or can

a further answer make.

CLXXXVII.

Their mouths are shut, each man is put

Mat. 22:12.Rom. 2:5, 6.Luke 19:42.

to silence and to shame,

Nor have they aught within their thought,

Christ's Justice for to blame.

The Judge is just, and plague them must,

nor will he Mercy shew,

For Mercy's day is past away

to any of this Crew.

CLXXXVIII.

The Judge is strong, doers of wrong

Mat. 28:18.

cannot his pow'r withstand;

None can by flight run out of sight,

nor 'scape out of his hand.

Sad is their state; for Advocate,

Psal. 137:7.

to plead their cause, there's none;

None to prevent their punishment,

or mis'ry to bemoan.

CLXXXIX.

O dismal day! whither shall they

for help and succor flee?

To God above with hopes to move

Isa. 33:14.Psal. 11:6.Num. 25:19.

their greatest Enemy?

His wrath is great, whose burning heat

no floods of tears can slake;

His Word stands fast that they be cast

into the burning Lake.

CXC.

Matt. 25:41,and 25:10, 11, 12.

To Christ their Judge? He doth adjudge

them to the Pit of Sorrow;

Nor will he hear, or cry or tear,

nor respite them one morrow.

To Heav'n, alas! they cannot pass,

it is against them shut;

To enter there (O heavy cheer)

they out of hopes are put.

CXCI.

Luke 12:20.Psal. 49:7, 17.Deut. 32:2.

Unto their Treasures, or to their Pleasures?

All these have them forsaken;

Had they full coffers to make large offers,

their gold would not be taken.

Unto the place where whilom was

their birth and Education?

Lo! Christ begins for their great sins,

to fire the Earth's Foundation;

CXCII.

And by and by the flaming Sky

shall drop like molten Lead

About their ears, t'increase their fears,

2 Pet. 3:10.

and aggravate their dread.

To Angel's good that ever stood

in their integrity,

Should they betake themselves, and make

their suit incessantly?

CXCIII.

They've neither skill, nor do they will

to work them any ease;

They will not mourn to see them burn,

Mat. 13:41, 42.Rev. 20:13, 15.

nor beg for their release.

To wicked men, their bretheren

in sin and wickedness,

Should they make moan? Their case is one;

they're in the same distress.

CXCIV.

Ah! cold comfort and mean support,

from such like Comforters!

Ah! little joy of Company,

Luke 16:28.

and fellow-sufferers!

Such shall increase their heart's disease,

and add unto their woe,

Because that they brought to decay

themselves and many moe.

CXCV.

Unto the Saints with sad complaints

should they themselves apply?

Rev. 21:4.Psal. 58:10.

They're not dejected nor aught affected

with all their misery.

Friends stand aloof and make no proof

what Prayers or Tears can do;

Your Godly friends are now more friends

to Christ than unto you.

CXCVI.

Where tender love men's hearts did move

unto a sympathy,

And bearing part of others' smart

1 Cor. 6:2.

in their anxiety,

Now such compassion is out of fashion,

and wholly laid aside;

No friends so near, but Saints to hear

their Sentence can abide.

CXCVII.

One natural Brother beholds another

in his astonied fit,

CompareProv. 1:28with 1 John 3: 2,and 2 Cor. 5:16.

Yet sorrows not thereat a jot,

nor pities him a whit.

The godly Wife conceives no grief,

nor can she shed a tear

For the sad state of her dear Mate,

when she his doom doth hear.

CXCVIII.

He that was erst a Husband pierc'd

with sense of Wife's distress,

Whose tender heart did bear a part

of all her grievances,

Shall mourn no more as heretofore,

because of her ill plight,

Although he see her now to be

a damn'd forsaken wight.

CXCIX.

The tender Mother will own no other

of all her num'rous brood,

But such as stand at Christ's right hand,

Luke 16:25.

acquitted through his Blood.

The pious Father had now much rather

his graceless Son should lie

In Hell with Devils, for all his evils,

burning eternally,

CC.

Than God most High should injury

by sparing him sustain;

Psal. 58:10.

And doth rejoice to hear Christ's voice,

adjudging him to pain.

Thus having all, both great and small,

convinc'd and silencéd,

Christ did proceed their Doom to read,

and thus it utteréd:

CCI.

The Judge pronounceth the sentence ofcondemnation.

"Ye sinful wights and curséd sprights,

Mat. 25:41.

that work iniquity,Depart together from me for everto endless Misery;Your portion take in yonder Lake,where Fire and Brimstone flameth;Suffer the smart which your desert,as its due wages claimeth."

that work iniquity,

Depart together from me for ever

to endless Misery;

Your portion take in yonder Lake,

where Fire and Brimstone flameth;

Suffer the smart which your desert,

as its due wages claimeth."

CCII.

The terror of it.

Oh piercing words, more sharp than swords!

What! to depart from Thee,

Whose face before for evermore

the best of Pleasures be!

What! to depart (unto our smart),

from theeEternally!

To be for aye banish'd away

with Devils' company!

CCIII.

What! to be sent to Punishment,

and flames of burning Fire!

To be surrounded, and eke confounded

with God's revengeful Ire!

What! to abide, not for a tide,

these Torments, but for Ever!

To be releas'd, or to be eas'd,

not after years, but Never!

CCIV.

Oh fearful Doom! now there's no room

for hope or help at all;

Sentence is past which aye shall last;

Christ will not it recall.

Then might you hear them rend and tear

the Air with their out-cries;

The hideous noise of their sad voice

ascendeth to the Skies.

CCV.

They wring their hands, their caitiff-hands,

Luke 13:38.Prov. 1:26.

and gnash their teeth for terror;

They cry, they roar for anguish sore,

and gnaw their tongues for horror.

But get away without delay,

Christ pities not your cry;

Depart to Hell, there may you yell,

and roar Eternally.

CCVI.

It is put in Execution.

That word "Depart," maugre their heart,

Mat. 25:46.

drives every wicked one,

With mighty pow'r, the self-same hour,

far from the Judge's Throne.

Away they're chas'd by the strong blast

of his Death-threat'ning mouth;

They flee full fast, as if in haste,

although they be full loath.

CCVII.

As chaff that's dry, as dust doth fly

Mat. 13:41, 42.

before the Northern wind,

Right so are they chaséd away,

and can no Refuge find.

They hasten to the Pit of Woe,

guarded by Angels stout,

Who to fulfil Christ's holy Will,

attend this wickéd Rout;

CCVIII.

HELL.

Whom having brought as they are taught,

Mat. 25:30.Mark 9:42.Isa. 30:33.Rev. 21:8.

unto the brink of Hell,

(That dismal place, far from Christ's face,

where Death and Darkness dwell,

Where God's fierce Ire kindleth the fire,

and vengeance feeds the flame,

With piles of Wood and Brimstone Flood,

so none can quench the same,)

CCIX.

Wicked men and Devils cast into it forever.

With Iron bands they bind their hands

Mat. 22:13,and 25:46.

and curséd feet together,

And cast them all, both great and small,

into that Lake forever,

Where day and night, without respite,

they wail, and cry and howl,

For tort'ring pain which they sustain,

in Body and in Soul.

CCX.

Rev. 14:10, 11.


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