In Samuel Davies' sermon, the primary theological topic addressed is the inevitability of death and the eternal judgment that follows, emphasized through a pastoral reflection on mortality. Davies argues that rather than focusing on flattery or a eulogy for the deceased, he aims to awaken the living to their own mortality and the necessity of being prepared for death and judgment. He supports his points with Scripture references from Hebrews 9:27, which states it is appointed for men once to die and then face judgment, and John 5:28, which speaks to the resurrection of the dead and the distinction between eternal life and damnation. The practical significance of this message lies in its call to self-examination and readiness for the afterlife, urging listeners to recognize their ultimate fate beyond temporal concerns.
“The dead have received their just and unchangeable doom at a superior tribunal, and besides, our eulogies or censures may be often misapplied.”
“Come and learn what you must shortly be...Thus shall all your temporal purposes be broken off, all your schemes vanish like smoke.”
“No sooner did he take his last breath than his soul took wing and made its flight into the eternal realm.”
“The hour is coming in which all who are in the graves shall hear the voice of the Son of Man.”
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