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A51306 The life and doctrine of ovr Savior Iesvs Christ. The first part with short reflections for the help of such as desire to use mentall prayer : also 24 intertaynments of our Blessed Saviour in the most blessed sacrament : with certaine aspirations tending to the encrease of the love of God / by H.M. ... More, Henry, 1586-1661. 1656 (1656) Wing M2665; ESTC R32119 366,740 462

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in providing such sustenance for vs of a mother and nurse in feeding vs at his owne breast of a frend i● comforting and assisting vs All these kindnesses require loving co●respondence on our part let vs ●leare ourselves of as many imperfections as ws can that we may be lesse troblesome accommodate ourselves to his will and pleasute in all things and be continually giving ourselves even to death for his sake if he so require and be sure never to be from him by any grievous offence II It is sayed in the first of king● that the soule of Ion●th●s was ioyned f●st to the soule of David and Ionathas lov●d him as he owne soule and they entred aleague and Ionathas striped himself of the coate where with he was clothed and gave it to David and thee rest of his garments vnto his sword and bow and vnto his belt Such ought to be our love towards our blessed Saviour in this most blessed Sacrament not only to be able to say with S. Paul Who shall separate vs from the Charitie of Christ Tribulation or distresse or famine or nakednes or danger or persecution or the sword But we must indeavour to have so tender a love towards him that we be as it Were one soule and one body for this is the intēt of this his loving and familiar communication of himself vnto vs for● as melted waxe if it be poured into other waxe they are throughly mingled one with the oother so he that receiveth the blessed body and blood of our Saviour is ioyned vnto him so that Christ is to be found in him and he in Christ. He being sonne to the king of heaven striped himself of his glorie to cloth vs with glorie and gave vs the rest of his garments that is his ver●uous life and example to imitate of what should not we strip ourselves to offer vnto him Specially our passions of Anger and spl●n● and revenge so contrarie to this Sacrament of l●ve and lay them at his feete never to take them vp but in his defence and purely in his cause III Our everlasting happines consisteth in our ever permanent vnion with God in celestiall blesse Of this happines this blessed Sacrament is a beginning and a pledge who would not be ever greedy to inioy it Entring into the ioy of his Lord so oft as ●e could and because knowledge is the greatest sput to love who would not be ever ●●minating and ever loving his perfections and with the Cher●bins and Seraphins saying Holy holy holy Tho● art my God my Cr●ato●r my Redeemer infinite in power in Wisedom● in goodnes in mercyes in liberaliti● in patien●e i● humilitie in all things imaginable Thou art the giver of all good gifts and founta●●e of living wat●rs the ●●tidot● against all evills my strength o Lord and my refuge with thee I w●ll dwell because thee have I choosen possesse thou I beseech thee my hart Absorbeat quaeso 〈◊〉 meam ignita ac melliflua vis amoris ●ui vt ●more amoris tui moriar qui amor● amoris mei dignatus es mori Am●n The fift seate the seate of Compassion I. THe seate of Compassion is the Cross● on which he hung At the foote wherof finding the Magdalen I will first with her bewayle my synns which have been cause of so painefull and so disgracefull a death of so happy and so worthy a person O synne what can setforth thy enor●itie more the● that to get pardon for thee and to deface thee it behoved th● sonne of God ●o suffer No blood could wash the away but the blood of this lambe of God O stayne in grayne no m●decine cure thee but the sacred flesh of this immacula●e body thus brused O venome intollerable Who will give to my head water and to my eyes a fount●ine of te●r●s and I will ●eepe 〈◊〉 ●●ment day and night the death of this King of all ●ations slaughtered for my synns a King crowned with thornes which ought every one of them to pearce my h●rt and pu●ish in me the pride and sensualiti● of which he never was guyltie O nayles in his hands and feete You have mi●taken the place where you should have been struck They are my hands and feet● which have synned this man wh●t harme hath he done I find no cause i● him O God my God wherfore h●st th●● thou forsaken him a● given him over to such a cruell death O death I will be thy d●●th I will be thy mortall bit ● Hell For ioyning myself With his powerfull grace and by the merits of this victorious death I will synne no more and die rather a thousand death then offend him II. Sorrow full 〈◊〉 my soul● vnto death And what wonder For if I follow thee from the place where thou didst make thy last supper to the ●rosse I find nothing but teares or blood nothing but tants and sc●ffs nothing but blo●●s ●nd stripes ●othing b●t wou●ds and t●rments nothing but 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 against thee my God my Saviour my love What doth this thy Prayer signifie Father if it be possibl● let this Chalicepasse from ●e O bitter Chalice Which so much sweetnes as was in thee would not alay I doe not say it could not for certainly the request thou didst make was possible to be granted but thou wouldest not Thou didst offer thyself ūto it becaus● thou wouldest Yet this doth not excuse me from compassionating thee for however there was a Kind of necessitie put vpon thee O hard necessitie O that from my eyes there could trickle downe such drops of blood as then from thy whole body O drowsie head of mine Why doe I sleepe in this occasion Behold the Trayt●ur sleepeth not What doe these clubs and s●aves and swords about this mild and innocent lambe He was dayly in the Temple among you what did you heare from him but good Their eares are stopped they hale him away by night they buffet him they misvse him they condemne him to dye as guiltie of what What ●ccus●tion bring you ●●●inst this man I am the m●lefactour I ●m ●e that ha●h synned I have done wickedly this lambe what hath he done Let this ●and I b●s●●ch thee be turned vpon me and vpon the house of my soule which hath harboured so many vnlawfull tumultuo●s and ●iotou● guests against the law of God and man III. Harken what a sound the lashes give which were loded vpon his tende● skin perhaps for houres together behold the ●urro●es which they h●ve made in his sacred flesh and hold thy eyes from weeping if thou be so stout● and thy hart from faynting if it be so hard O shame O confusion Behold the m●n Is this the man so cryed vp not long ●ince and now so much cryed downe as to be set behinde a murtherer and a th●●f● and a seditio●s fellow O sencelesse change Take him away 〈◊〉 him away cruci●ie him O cry vnmercyfull Take him into thy
court-yard and setting him vpon some stone or other pulled of his apparell againe and put a ragge of purple vpon his naked shoulders and making a wreath of thornes pressedit dovvne vpon his head instead of a Crovvne and gave him a reed to hold in his hand insteed of a scepter what soule can hold from admiring this habit of the king of glorie He sayd well of himself his kingdome was not of this world but it seemes this is the way to the kingdome of the other world not by glorie and prompe but by contempte of all earthly glorie and by suffering patiently what people in thier mad and foolish humours are apt to put vpon vs taking away our goods giving vs short and hard measure putting vs still to more paine and griefe and troble and not car●ng what they lay vpon vs so they have thier ends and make themselves merry And consequently II. Consider secondly that the souldiers were not content to put this affront vpon our Saviour but in words also and vnseemly gestures mocked him and laughed him to skorne and kneeling downe before him vpon one knee they saluted him Hayle king of the Iewes as who should say a proper king indeed and they spet vpon him and beate the reed which he held in his hand about his ●ead and boxed him Thinke what hath ever happened to thee comparable to any of this that thou shouldest be impatient or stomackfull and resolve to be more conformable to our Saviours sufferings III. Consider thirdly As servants and retayners in this world thinke it an honour to go in the liverie which thier master gives and much more to be in the fashion which they see their king and master weares i so the true servants of our Saviour should be so farre from being ashamed to be put to shame that they should in thier herts reioyce in it and the way to bring our nature to it thought it be never so much repugnant is to watch vpon the occasions when a word or an accident falls out that is crosse and to take it v● as a peece of the purple garment which our Saviour wore to kisse it to imbrace it and to offer it vp vnto him as a speciall act of our service with which he is pleased to honour vs. The Prayer To out Saviour as he sits in this pittifull plight begging earnestly of him to help our infirmitie and to strengthen vs in the occasions of disgrace that by bearing it we may have more plentie of his grace one glance wherof is farre to be preferred before all the favours which the world can afford vs. And with all bevvayle thy ovvne rechlesnes in behaving thyself often in his blessed presence as if thou didst not beleeve that he were king indeed but in mockerie and lea●ne to adore him allvvayes in spiritt and truth A meditation of the Ecce homo 10. 19. Preamble Beholding Pilate going forth to the Ievves againe and our Saviour follovving him in the skornefull habit of a king of clours begge of him that thou mayest profit by this spectacle I. Consider first the speech which Pilate made to the Iewes when he brought out Saviour this time to them which was this Behold I bring him forth vnto you that you may know that I find no cause in him that is no cause to condemne him And againe Lo the man As who should say this is the man Runne over this saying againe and againe and ponder every tittle of it for it is full of mysterie Behold O what a spectacle is this Pilate in pompe and glorie our Saviour made a laughing stock what eye can behold attentively our Saviour in this case and not wish never to have vse of sight more to offend him I bring him forth whom Our Saviour ●c●us the worker of miracles the curer of all diseases the rayser of the dead the blessed ●onne of David the king of the Ievves Thou doest well Pilate to say Lo the man for no man living would have taken him to be the man And I bring him to you To put him to your mercilesse mercies who I knovv delivered him to me out of envie I find no cause in him and I bring him to let you knovv it and yet I have thus punished him O senselesse pilate O iudge without Iudgement Lo the man O endlesse obiect of beholding the man that is God and man The man in whose hand all men are reeds in whose sight all purple is but raggs all gold is thornes all worldly wealth and happines is a moc●erie to the glorie and wealth and happines wherof he is everlastingly possessed and yet behold here he stands at the stake for thee that thou mayest knovv there is no cause in him of all this but in thee and in thy offenses II. Consider secondly that Pilate had no sooner ended his speech but the Ievves cryed Crucifie him Crucifie him take him away and Crucifi him not being able to abide the sight of him that was thier Saviour Tremble at this blindnes and hardnes of hart and bevvare of the least shaddovv of the beginnings of it iremembring that saying of our Saviour That which you have done to one of my little ones you have done to me Ponder againe these words take him away and Crucifie him And begge that he may never be taken from thee but thou rather Crucified and thy synfull appetites rooted out and abolished III. Consider thirdly That Pilate overcome with the clamours and threats of the Iewes that if he quitted Iesus he should not be a frend to casar adiudged him to be crucified according to thier desire though in testimonie that he thought him Innocent he called for water and openly before them all washed his hands saying I am Innocent of the blood of this iust man looke you to it and the Ievves ansvvered his blood be vpon vs and our Children See hovv the world and passion blinds vs and leads vs to things against our conscience and though we see we have reason to think ourselves guiltie before God we smother it with some colourable reason to satisfie the world and after à sort to satisfie ourselves for a time but when the passion is over the sting breakes out and galls vs. See therfore whose frend thou wilt be Caesars or Gods and for whom thou wilt stand in occasions of apposition and difficultie Pilate washeed his hands and sayd I am Innocent of the blood c. A poore bath to wash avvay such an offense Seeke rather in a contrarie sense to the Jevves that the blood the blood of this Innocent lambe may be vpon thee and vpon all thy works to wath thee and to perfect them for with out it nothing is avayable Abhorre synne and abstaine from offending him and thou shalt have his blood vpon thee and be Innocent A meditation of the Carrying of the Crosse. Preamble Beholding our Saviour with a heavy peece of tymber vpon his shoulder in forme of a
an inch of place or minute of time because she knovves all is too little for her ovvne expressions Importunitie and compassion will overcome her therfore settle thyself to it and say who will give me as fountayne a flood of teares that I may bowayle the Sonne of God thus slayne for my synns O cruell synne that thus killest tvvo at once me and my Saviour and as for me I am worthy of a thousand deaths and will die a thousand times before I offend againe But he what hath he deserved The Magdalen did not ceafe to kisse but I must not cease to weepe that I may wash avvay that which hath thus stayned my Saviour O blessed Magdalen have compassion on me III. Joseph of Arimathia held the ri●ht hand and as he offered his ovvne nevv sepulchre to our Saviour for his buryal and the winding sheete and other necessaries so he poured forth his harth liberally to him offering himself to whatever future service to him or his sory that his sepulchre was not more rich and the sheete more white and costly to wrapp so greate a treasure No pretious stone could have been equall to his desert no gold or sylver enough to garnish it ô that my hart were not too hard or too base to lay thee in it whatever it is take possession of it and of all that belongs to it Tho● art God of my hart and my portion God for ever IV. At the left hand Nicodemus stood not having alltogeather shaken of his feares therfore he brought a mixture of myrrhe and aloes about perhaps not full a hundred pownd weight For so long as we are yet living we cannot be alltogether without feare to be cast of to the left hand and a moderate feare is profitable tovvards the buryall of our Saviour in our soules because we are earth and with the humble is his conversation Minmingle this holy feare with thy love it will serve to bind vp the spices with the body that they be not s●attered abroad with vayne complacencie in thy selfe or in this very actiō to the preiudice of charyty tovvards thy selfe and of thy neighbour who is an other receptacle for our Saviour V. Our blessed Lady having the sacred body in her lap had the wound of his side perpetually in her eye and her thoughts occupied in conte●plation hovv he was God and man immortall and yet dead extreamely deserving love and yet thus vsed Behold the teares silently trickling dovvne her cheekes some times sighing some times lifting vp her eyes and repeating our Saviours words my God my God wherfore didst thou thus forsake him father forgive them O my sonne Other motherly expressions were not wanting which she tempered with her wonted vertue and with her sonnes command Weepe not vpon me She applyed herself to the duties of his buryall and had her thoughrs vpon his resurrection c. Of the Passion of our Saviourby way of repetition I. PART I. PLace thyself in a corner of the Counsell Chamber wher Cayphas and the rest are met and first wondering with the Psalmist why they should be so fierce against a man from whom every body received so much good and they might if they would and acknovvledging that doe what they can God will at last turne thier counsels vpon themselves Qui babita● in coelis irridebit cos c. Turne thou also Cayphas his verdict vpon thyself and acknovvledge thy ovvne blindnes and backvvardnes tovvards thy ovvne good Vos neseitis quicquam For wheras it is the generall document of all spirituall men and experience teacheth that every one hath some principall bad inclination or vice to which he is most prone and which dravves vs after it into many inconveniences either we doe not search after it or knovving it we doe not prosecute the rooting of it out as it were fitting Expedit vt vnus moriatur homo infectus non tota gens pereat II. Transferre thyself from thence to the Chamber where our Saviour made his last supper and reioy cing to be rather in that companie heare our Saviour foretelling his Apostles of thier weaknes in forsaking him and in being scandalized and be not presumptuous as Perer was at that time but acknovvledge rather the contrarie that though all should stand yet I have cause to feare a fall and by experience doe find many reasons for it taking myself in so many occasions not follovving him as I ought but a longe a farre of God wot even where there is no such matter of difficultie to be striven with but doe take easy denyalls for good excuses III. Beholding him washing his disciples feete begge of him that by the example and merit of this humble action he will give thee more strength and wash avvay what ever may cleave to thee offensive or disturbing his service Ampl●us lava me ab iniquitate mea More deare lord and more for I never cease to soyle myself Fall dovvne at his feete and wash them with reares as the Magdalen and doe not cease to kisse them If thou hast any thing superfluous sayth S. Augustine give it to the poore and thou hast wip●d our Saviours feete To thee it is superfluous our Saviours feete have need of it If thou hast any quarell with any body give it into our Saviours hands to be washed avvay for if it be not washed thou shalt not have part with him for ever ●hou knovvest not what thou doest if thou doest not forgive thou wilt aftervvard knovv it to thy cost Lord not this only but if I were a thousand times ●hore offended I doe intirely offer i● into thy hands and freely doe forgive as I desire to be forgiven for I cannot answer one for a thousand that thou art able to lay against me Repitition of the mysteries of the passion of our Saviour II. PART I. VVAlking in the Garden of Gethsemanie cast thy eyes vpon our Saviours sorrovvfull hart and knocking thy breast say ô hart of myne that hast been cause of this griefe O that it were a fountaine of water breaking forth at my eyes to bevvayle the synnes which he bevvayleth sorrowfull is my soule that it is not full of sorrovves O dullnes and drovvsines Is this a time when thou beholdest thy Saviour svveating dropps of blood betrayed apprehended bound haled outraged like a rogue and a miscreant VVhere be thy resolutions to suffer prisonment and death for him VVhy doest thou not imprison thy wandering thoughts and confine them to this dolfull spectacle VVhy doest thou not die to thy desires of esteeme and case seeing him so affronted and misused II. And they brought him bound to Annas first VVhere consider that though he receive the boxe on the eare thou deservedst it and by right the fellovv might have sayed to thee Sic respondes Pontifici Is this the gratitude which thou shevvest to the Priest of the nevv Testament who shedding his ovvne blood for thee hath redeemed
what he indured for even in the garden after his prayer he was another man then when we went in Then he was sorrovvfull as he sayed vnto death and it appeared in his very countenance and cariage but novv he was couragious and ready to meete his enimies and in all the affronts and indignities which were offered him either at Cayphas or Herods or Pilats palace he did not blanche III. Yet it could not but be very irksome and paynfull to him and with whar a Crosse did they load him when he was scarce able to stand and hovv cruelly did they rend of his garments from his bleeding shoulders and streach him and vnmercifully nayle him This is the sword of which old Simeon told me so many yeares since it cannot but pearce my very hart and soule with griefe and though he sayed he would rise againe the third day and I veryly beleeve it will be so yet what hart can think of these things and not even burst with sorrovv It will be night with me till that day comes which he hath promised O light of my ●yes when shal I see thee Me thinks I still heare him crying with a lovvde voyce Father into thy hands I commend my spiritt O Father returne this happy soule so commended returne it againe with glorie that we may see his face as in mount Thabour which mount Calvarie hath so defaced I ●ommend my soule into thy hands O hands of pitty Thou hast done justice enough vpon thy Sonne restore him that we may joy togeather in the meane time I shall expect with sorrovv yet resigned to thy will as he hath taught me Not my will hut thyne be done Amen Introduction to the Mysteries of the Resurrection of our Saviour I. THe Mysteries of the Resurrection of our Saviour being full of ioyful Communication with him who is in himself the fountaine of all happines and to vs hath been and is the source and conduit● of all goodnes the affections which are properly to be raysed and somē●ed by the consideration of them be those of love and ioy and Congratulation Admiration also and prayse of his loving goodnes desire of his presence in this world and in the next horrour of being separated from him detestation of the least beginning of a gap or distance betvvixt our soules and him And in these and in the like our time is more to be bestormed then in discourse 〈◊〉 every action and word indeavouring to fall vpon some such short reflection as may ●indle in ou● hart these flames of love II. The chiefe ground wherof the Apostle doth represent vnto vs and placeth in that God who is rich in mercy his exceeding Charitie wherwith he loved vs even when we were dead by synns quickned vs togeather with Christ and raysed vs up with him and made vs sit with him in the Celestiales Chiefly therfore we are to ponder from what and to what we are raysed where we lay and where we might justly have been layed by our offenses and where he offers to seate vs if we concurre with his grace and love Hovv Rich he hath been tovvards vs in what infinite proportion his Charitie hath exceeded and doth exceed When we were dead he gave vs life when we were buryed in synns he raysed vs and hath made himself our Harbinger going before to prepare a place for vs at the right hand as his father with him III. O Iesu is it possible that I should 〈◊〉 Companion to thee in Glorie who hast been so farre from consorting with thee in thy will and commandment O vnspeakable love ô vnconceivable Goodnes I wretched synner not worthy to lift vp my eyes to heaven with thee in the heavenly places ô Charitie exceeding all thought ô Mercy with out bound or measure What can I say of myself but that I am worthy of all confusion and thou preparest Glorie for me I have nothing to say for myself but that I have synned Blessed be thy infinite Mercyes towards me and blessed be thou with the Father holy Ghost for ever and ever Amen Our Saviours going downe to limbus Patrum I. NO sooner had our Saviour given vp his blessed Ghost but troopes of Angels who wayted against that houre attended him as after his victorie in the desert and accōpanied his glorious soule towards limbus Patrū with songs and hymnes farre more full of lubilee then that which they sung at his nativitie The infernall fiends hovvled and roared at the arrivall of his forerunners commanding them to avoyde but much more at his glorious and triumphant presnce shining brighter then the sunne at noone day and more resplendent then all the heavenly hoast togeather Here they were forced to adore his glorified soule who had refused due homage at first to thier Creatour when themselves might have been in glorie by one act of humble dutie what a corrasive was this to them VVhat a document to vs VVhat comfort to the iust that had been confined so long to darknes novv to see so much light approching II. But he appearing in the midst of them and saluting them with the like salutation as aftervvards his Apostles Pax vobis what exultation VVhat Jubilee was there VVhat wellcomes on all sides VVhat congratulations tovvards him in regard of his victorie Tovvards themselves in regard of thier speedy releasement And if he appeared vnto them with his glorious body also as many affirme what admiration VVhat acts of compassion VVhat wondering that he would retaine the marks of his wounds What are these wounds in the midst of thy hands sayd Zacharie the Proph●t and he ansvvered these I received in the house of them that loved me And David remembred that prophecying he had sayed they have digged into my hands and feete and have numbred all my bones S. Ihon Baptist most ioyfull of any repeated his wonted saying Behold the lambe of God behold who taketh away the synne of the world and hath born the smart of it vpon his ovvne shoulders And all generally from Adam to the good thiefe extolled his mercies and novv not only vnderstood of what they had beē a figure but gave him the ioy of having fullfilled all to his greater glorie III. Our Saviour also tooke particular content to see them all at once who had been subservient to the mysteries which he had accomplished and congratulated the iust for concurring with his graces tovvards the preserving of thier iustice and with the penitent for having recourse to his mercyes with those who had suffered persecution torments and death for his love and lavv for thier fidelitie and constancie giving them all novv with more feeling to vnderstand hovv wei bestovved was all that which they had done or suffered in the world and hovv greate mercy it was that they persevered to the end among so many millions who fayled and that they were not overvvhelmed in the deluge of synne but preserved in that of his sacred blood
must be God himself the measure of our love to love him without measure God of his love inspire our thoughts to conceive worthy things of him and inflame our harts in the love of them that hovvever weake our love may be it may increase to that measure which his immeasurable goodnes hath designed Amen An act of humble acknowledgment of our owne weakenes I. O My God what am I or what is thy love● Thy infinite love my God tovvards man what is it That I sylly worme of the earth so easily venture not only to lift vp my head to behold it and ponder it and esteeme it for to this end thou hast shevved it vnto vs that we should behold it and love it but dare scanne in my thoughts and vndertake to discypher the greate greatenes of it in these fevv words the broken of●alls of my shallovv conceits Or is thy love peradventure a thing which can be comprehended by man or declared by the highest Angel or defined by any but thyself for thy love is thyself and the greate greatenes of it is the immense Immensitie of thy loving self by which thou dilatest thyself tovvards vs and in vs thy creatures and through the infinite length bleadth depth and heigth of thy inflamed charlti● comprehendest vs all in the bovvels of thy love loving vs before we were that we might be and ever loving vs while we are that we may never leave to be but ever live in love with thee II. Who therfore can reach so farre as that infinite length or who is there that can measure that breadth which is immeasurable Who can sound the depth or take the height of thy infinite love but thy only self who art sole equall and sole equally infinite to thyself And yet thou wilt have vs measure it in our thoughts and sound it in our harts and stretch ourselves to that length and dilate ourselves to that b●eadth and lift vp ourselves to that heigth and drovvne ourselves in that depth of thy love that finding hovv farre we are from the true measure of it we may reach if not as farre and as wide and as high and as deepe as it deserveth yet so farre in all these kinds as by thy grace our harts will serve vs which is acceptable in thy sight though too small a measure in regard of thy infinite deserts III. O Imalnes of our measure O greatnes of thy deservings VVho hast moved heaven and earth for our sakes and searched all the corners of thy infinite treasure and poured forth thy riches to the bottome to help vs to reclayme vs to winne vs to thy love And when thou hadst as it were spent all that thou hadst to gayne our affection forall that we see or heare of or can imagine are thy love-gifts as I may tearme them to dravv vs to thyself thou sparedst not thy ovvne bovvels but gavest thyself vnto vs and in that loving and free manner that there was not any part of the breath of thy sacred body which thou didst not dedicate to our service nor one drop of thy pretious blood which thou didst not shed for vs but for the greater satisfaction of our vnbeleeving minds and the more effectually to move our stony harts even after thy death thou wouldst have thy side opened with that cruel speare that we might see with our eyes that there was no more blood left when after the blood spent there issued water IV. O sacred bath rempered for my soares soseen the hardnes of my hart alay the immoderate heate which I find tovvards temporall occasions moysten the droughth of my faint desires cure the blindnes of my eyes that at least through this gap layed so wide open I may discover some parcell of thy love and inamoured with it may be dravvne further and further into the depth that being wholy absorpt in it I may leese myself while I go about to measure and never find myself againe but wholy drovvned in thee who art my God and my only love Amen The length of the love of God is the Eternitie of his love I. THe length of the charitie of allmightie God is the Eternitie of his love If we cast our eyes vpon that beginning of his Eternitie which hath no beginning even then before we were and when he only was he loved vs as novv he loveth and determined then to give vs all that good which we find he hath since performed or hath for hereafter layed vp in store for vs in that Eternitie before all time before all thought and to which no thought of creature can arrive when he was delighting himself with his only self and with the infinite riches which he hath within himself the Father with the Sonne and the Father and the Sonne with the holy Ghost then he vouchsafed to think of vs to love vs to ordayne all things for vs and to desire our love Then when not only he had no need of vs but when he had no other reason to think of vs but his ovvne sole infinite goodnes He disposed all things sweetly to the end in time to gayne that which in Eternitie he desired to wit our love and beholding vs with in himself and seeing that we were all good and all very good because we were all in him he would in time appointed that we shoul have part of that good in ourselves by him which we had from all Eternitie in him And therfore he made vs out of himself that acknovvledging from whence we derived all the good we have we should seeke not only in duty or gratitude to returne all to him who best deserved it but also by nature we should be eve● ●orne tovvards him as every thing naturally is ever bent tovvards that from which it hath its beeing II. If againe we cast our thoughts vpon the end of his loving eternitie which hath no end we shall find his love not contayned with in the short limitts of a month or a yeare or ten thousand yeares but that he loveth vs to the end with out end and desireth nothing more then that we should live and love him world with out end And as in his Eternitie with out beginning he disposed all things sweetely for our good and saluation with out any desert of ours so in this Eternitie with our ending he reacheth strongly striving against all our deserts to bring our love to that perfection that his and ours may have no end If the least of those iniuries which we offer to God thousands perhaps in a day were done by man to another man it were enough insteed of further love to inflame a mortall and as much as lyeth in him an Eternall aversion But that which seemeth impossible to man is possible to God who with infinite charitie doth dayly and hoverly and every moment put vp infi●●te disgracefull actions and remayneth ever strong in love rill our dying day when if we
see no more such effect we say it is dead In which respect charitie or the love of God being the life inherent in our soules S. Gregorie sayth that the proofe of charitie is the exhibition of the worke and our Saviour himself He that bath my commandments and doth keepe them he it is that loveth me our Saviour in nature of a Phisitian cometh to vs to strengthen this life by the cordiall compound of his owne pretious body and blood delivere● vnto vs vnder the shapes of bread and wine that by the devout receiving we may both breath out the superfluous and corrupted humours remayning after our purgation and cure and with more rigour apply ourselves to the exercises of Christian dutie to which by his charitable assistance we must concurre first by giving time to the working of this heavenly receite by some little recollection and not instantly ingulfe ourselves in our wonted worldly affayres and secondly by renewing our good purposes in his presence and begging of him that he will blesse them and those most in which we feare we shall have most difficultie to accomplish towards which also we may justly expect he will suggest some speciall remedie to a willing mind Intertaynment of our Saviour as he is our Redeemer I. THe word Redeemer doth import that the redeemed being once e●ther free or in the power of one cometh to be subiect to another and is bought out of that subiection so was man by his creation wholy Gods and being left free as to his will he fell by synne voūltarily into the possessiō and powre of the divel and as his captive and prisoner was loded with a thousand miseries and egged on dayly from one synne to another till dying in synne he should be eternally condemned to the prison and paynes of hell fire and no power vnder God being able to rescue him the Sonne of God our Saviour offered to pay his ransome and to give him againe his freedome wherby he might remaine in Gods possession perpetually by his owne free choyce as well as he was by nature and come to inioy the happines which God had layed vp for him The price where with he was ransomed was the body and blood and life of our Saviour layed downe for vs vpon the crosse i this very body and blood and life himself doth here present vs in the Sacrament that we may make a gratefull oblation of it to our heavenly Father as the price of our redemption in particular and represent vnto him with ioy and thanksgiving our freedome to serve him pro●essing that we will never give way to any other to possesse vs. II. This benefit of our redemption will appeare in a better light if we consider the miserie of the slaverie in which we were or are by synne And first by synne from reasonable creatures we turne vnreasonable and the longer we continue in synne the more vnreasonnable we become not vnlike the man mentioned in the Ghospell whose habitation was not among men but in the fields and dens among beasts and beastly company ●aked having lost all shame and could not be held within any compasse but ranged about breaking through all bonds of the law of God and man and being possessed by a legion of Divels did not vnderstand that they were his masters who did egg him on to his owne destruction in so much that he cut his owne flesh and did make nothing of it and when our Saviour or any good body came neere him he raged the more crying out with a lowde voyce what have you to doe with me or I with you VVhich state of a synner however while one is in it he doth not heed it in itself notwithstanding is extreame miserable and men of reason see it to be so And how much this man did afterwards acknowledge himself obliged to our Saviour when being delivered from this legion of Divells he quietly sat at his feete clothed and well in his wits much more ought we to thank our Saviour for our redemption our spirituall slaverie being infinitely more preiudiciall and more to be lamented III. Our Saviour in S. Luke asketh this question who among you having a servant ploughing or keeping cattle will say to him returning from the field go sit downe and sayth not rather make ready for me and serve me and afterwards thou shalt eate and drink This is the practise among men one to another but our Saviour more indulgent to vs not weighing that we are indeed but his slaves bought at so deere a rate as his most pretious blood and from so base and vnworthy a slaverie as is that of synne and so iniurious to himself doth notwithstanding coming from our owne worldly occasions no● much thinking of his service in them invite vs to his owne table that is to his owne most pretious body and blood intreating vs to pattake of so heavenly a banket at which the Angels doe reioyce and doth not passe for many a spo● dust that stick vpon vs though we have washed away the dirt and filth it were our dutie to be as cleane as out of the font of baptisme but ô the weakenes of man O the goodnes of God Who notwithstanding our vnworthynes when least vnworthy doth extend his kindnes vnto vs so farre beyond all humane kindnes or capacitie He out of whome he had cast the legion desired to be with him still in his companie and he did not admit of him but bad him go home and recount how mercyfull God had been to him How much more ought we to retire ourselves for a while into the closeth of our hart and reckon vp the mercyes of God towards vs and put this in the head of them that notwithstanding so lately voluntarie slaves to his enimies he doth vs this greate mercy and favour to admit of vs not only to his presence but to his table Intertaynment of our Saviour as Judge I. THe coming of a Judge to a citty or house is generally not without some apprehension and feare in the parties to whom he comes for if they be gylty they have reason to feare if they be not giltie they know not how the Judge may be informed concerning them That our Saviour is our Judge is vndoubted the Father hath given judgement to the Son●e sayth our Saviour of himself yet at this his coming vnto vs in the blessed Sacrament we have not so much cause of feare first because his rigorous judgement is reserved till after this life in which respect himself sayth God did not send his Sonne into the world to judge the world but that the world should be saved by him Secondly there is no danger that he should be misinformed of vs. Thirdly when he comes to judge he comes in majestie with the attendance of all his heavenly courte here he comes disguised of set purpose because we should know that he comes in a familiar way to doe vs honour and
6. Intertaynment of our Saviour as he is a spirituall banket I. MEate and drink is for necessarie sustenance a banket is moreover for pleasure and contentment not only of the taste but generally all other delights concurre in it Now if the wiseman ●ould say of the Manna in the old law that it had in it all delight and the siveetnes of every thing that we taste doubtlesse if we apply ourselves vnto it we shall find also in this heavenly Sacrament where of that was a figure all sort of spirituall delights And first occurs the exquisitenes of the food it being the bread of Angels and sen● vs downe as farre as from heaven prepared to our hand without other labour on our part then as in all bankers to dresse ourselves handsomly that we be not found to appeare at so greate a table and in such companie without our nup●iall or wedding ga●●ent that is without Charitie the love of God and our neighbour or puritie of hart from mortall breach of his commandments though we be otherwise poore and lame and weake he doth not disdayne our companie but gives vs a most harty welcome Come vnto me all yee that labour and to whom it is paynefull to serve me and are burdened with evill customes and passions and I will refresh you O sweete and frendly word in the eare of a sy●●er that thou my Lord God doest invite this poore and needy Creature to the feeding vpon thy sacred body The heavens are not pure enough and thou sayest come vnto me all II. Besides this exquisitenes of the food and companie and harty welcome if we attend we may find that which will please the eye of our soule very much to wit the death and passion of our blessed Saviour to put vs in mind VVherof this holy Sacrament and sacrifice is instituted and as it were to Act it before vs. And what can be more comfortable to a synner then to see before his eyes the price of his redemption layed downe to receive into his breast the forgiver of his synnes the sacred body and blood by which they are more and more dayly washed away If we doe vnderstand what synne is and how much it doth import vs to be cleare of it we cannot but take greate contentment thus to receive our Saviour the lamb of God who taketh away the synns of the world Reioyce ô my soule and give thanks to God for so noble a gift and such singular comfort left thee in this vale of teares for as often as thou recordest this mysteric and receivest the body of Christ so oft doest thou work the work of thy redemption and art made partaker of all the merits of Christ. Thom. à Kemp. l. 4. c. 2. n. 6. III. As to our tast and other senses if we consider the refreshment which we receive by this holy Sacrament we shall find that the effect of it is to cure the pala●e of our soule to take away our false appetites which egge vs to feed vpon things that are hurtefull and poysonsome to breed satisfaction and contentment in our devotions and spirituall exercises and a right temper of body and ●oule in which our health doth consiste By often receiving devoutly we shall come not to thirst so much after vanities nor to be altered vpon every sugges●ion or temptation as being strengthened with this fruite of the Tree of life And as by the practise of vertue we shall find the sweetnes of it so the same sweetnes will diffuse itself to others by good example and the house will befilled with the odour of the oyntment that is we ourselves and others will be pleased with it O admirable ād hidden grace of the Sacrament which is knowne only to Christs faythfull people In this Sacrament spirituall grace is given the strength of our soule is repayred the beauty therof lost by synne is restored The grace is sometimes so greate that from the fullnes of devotion ●ot the mind only but our weake body also doth feel● more strength bestowed vpon it Thomas à Kempis lib. 4. cap. 1. num 11. IV. VVho could by contemplation rayse vp his soule so high would not fayle to heare the musick also of the Angels singing glorie to God in this blessed mysterie for that the Angels doe assist in multitudes both at the consecration and receiving there is no doubt Holy Fathers confessing it and many visions confirming it and seeing in his life time in the desert after his temp●ation they came and ministred to him now in glorie they certaynly never leave him and attending him they cease not to sing his prayses and also thy happines who hast the favour to intertayne so greate a Lord to lodge so greate a Guest to have so pleasant a companion so faythfull a frend so noble and so beautifull a spouse ô happy soule which hast been made worthy devoutly to receive him and receiving to be replenished with spirituall ioy Thom à Kemp. l. 4. c. 3. n. 4. Intertaynment of our Saviour with the blessed Virgen and S. Ioseph I. THe time which our Saviour lived with our blessed Lady and S. Ioseph may be distinguished into three parts the time of his Childhood the time of his youth till mans estate and the time after of his preaching In the time of his infancie and Childhood though he were in most things like other children yet some rayes of his divinitie at times appearing did not fayle to put them in mind that he was more then a Child he carying himself with more discretion and more pliablenes then vsually infants and Children doe never froward never vntoward modest in his sports moderate in his desires so that besides the naturall love which parents have to thier little babes they had a particular sweetnes and contentment in that he was such a babe so qualifyed above all others and accordingly when they beheld him or tooke him into thier armes or provided necessaries for him they did it not only with extraordinarie love but with loving reverence and respect thier minds being elevated to a higher pitch by the continuance of his divine comportment and never having any the least cause of distaste by him This is he whom we receive into our breasts and as so qualified he doth commend himself vnto vs he having as it were lessened himself into this forme to the end we should take him between our a●mes and imbrace him and reverently kisse his fee●e and hands assuming the affections of father and mother so farre as to exp●●sse the ●tmost of our tender love towards him in regard that for vs he would become an infant first and then in this blessed Sacrament be as tractable to vs as a little infant in whom is all that a fatherly or motherly hart can desi●e II. VVhen his Child-hood was past we cannot but think they tooke so much the more soq●d comfort in him by how much they observed in all his
this time forvvard thou shalt be taking men and having brought thier ship to land leaving all things they follovved him Miserable creatures who fall out of the net in which our Sa●iour hath taken them more miserable those who teare it Happy they who are called and imployed to assist that it be not torne They will be filled with heavenly graces and though they be often ready in a manner to sink vnder the burden they will be relieved in time so that they shall suffer no prejudice Fall downe before our Saviour with admiration and thanks and acknowledgment of thy vnworthynes Peeter doth not aske to be forfaken but that he may not with the successe be puffed vp with pride Leave all things rather then leave thy Saviour c. Second Application to the most blessed Sacrament I. OSonne of the highest o depth of mercy and love I a synfull man and thou not only to receive me into thy ship but into thyself for so are thy words he that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood remayneth in me and I in him O deepth vnsearcheable the life of the fish is to be in water it thinks it death to be in the net and struggles to get out But here is a net out of which no man that is wise will be because the more he is in it the more water he hath and the more scope to doe whatever is fitting to be done His precious wounds are as so many messhes which captivate vs to Christ yet doe let in vnto vs the fountaines of living vvater promised to the devout Samaritan fresh sweete pleasant springing vp to life everlasting in which we may live and drink when ever we will Lord give me the right tast of this vvater that I may not go other where and thirst when I have done I am not worthy to approch vnto thee because I am a synfull man but thou hast ordayned this sea of vvater to the end that plunged in it we should both be cleansed and refreshed and live eternally in thee O that we did knovv how greate a gift this is fall dovvne at his knees and aske he is not sparing of his gifts who so freely and bountifully giveth his owne self vnto thee II. O prodigious bounty O wonderfull dulnes of such as hearing and knowing that Iesus comes thus dovvne from heaven for our reliefe doe not make hast vnto him How insensible are we of our dangers and our diseases we have but one soule which ought to be more deere vnto vs the any Sonne to his father it lyeth gasping oftimes for life and here is life which offereth itself and we are slow in accepting it VVhen a sick person begins to have no heate in his fecte we say he begins to die what are the feete of our soule but our affections If these be not warmed with this fire of love which is our Saviour what can we thinke of ourselves Lord come dovvne before my soule dye O stupiditie of mankind can this Lord of Lords come dovvne lower then he hath done he came into a Virgins wombe into the Crib vnto the Crosse into the jawes of death and yet here he comes lower then in all these into thy bosome into thy breast Go and beleeve and obey readyly his commands and his Angels will meete thee and bring thee the ioyfull tidings of health and thou wilt know that that houre most of all will be the time in which thy feaverish distempers will leave thee III. Be not still asking with Nicodemus in the cold night of thy tepiditie hovv can these things be done But buyld vpon the testimony of our Saviour who speakes vvhat he knovves will be done vpon his word this is my body God so loved the vvorld as to give his only Sonne this sonne hath no lesse love to the world then his father He giveth himself and is dayly giving in this admirable manner no● contenting himself to be once only for three and thirtie yeares and vpward vpon earth he will be with vs to the worlds end really present among vs that after-ages need not envy those yeares of his visible appearance having the selfsame Sonne of God here present vnder these visible shapes more vniversally through the whole world and more for our present vse and necessities Exalt him as Moyses did the serpent in the desert Behold him with a devou● and loving eye and he will preserve thee Cast out all earthy conceites and tumultuous busineses from the temple of thy hart and make it as it ought to be specially in this coniuncture of time a house of prayer a house of thanksgiving a house of prayse and of magnifying thy loving Saviour who hath done so greate things for thee and this greatest of all that he vouchsafeth to be within thee O invisible creatour of the world how wonderfully doest thou deale with vs how sweetly and graciously with thy elect offering thyself vnto them to be received in this Sacrament His fervourin preaching and divers cures I. ANd they enter into Capharnaum and forth with vpon the Sabboth going into the Synagog he taught them and they were astonied at his doctrine for he taught as having power and not as the Scribes And there was in the Synnagog a man possessed with a vncleane spirit who cryed out what to vs and to thee Iesus of Nazareth art thou come to destroy vs I know who thou art the holy of God And Iesus threatened him saying hold thy peace and go out of the man And the uncleane spirit tearing him and crying out with a lowde voyce went out and did not hurt him And they all marvelled and questioned among themselves what thing is this What is this new doctrine For with power he commandeth the vncleane spirits and they obey And the bruit● of him went forth presently through the whole country we have no lesse reason to admire and rejoyce and magnifie his name and his power which he retaynes over all evill spirits and his wonderfull wholsome doctrine and to begge he will ever exercise the same power over them to restrayne thier malice and over vs by the force and vertue of his doctrine to over-power all that may contradict it in vs for we find a law within vs striving against the law of our mind which is reason and vertue and captivating vs vnder the law of synne vnhappy that we are who shall deliver vs But the grace of God by Iesus Christ. This law as it were teareth vs in peeces yet doth not hurt vs vnlesse we voluntarily consent vnto it for it is left in vs not to damnation but for exercise and reward if we fight couragiously II. Going forth of the Synagog they came into the house of Andrew and Simon Simons wifes Mother lay sick of a greate fever and they besought him for her and taking her by the hand he commanded the fever away and it left her and she presently rising ministred vnto them
III. And here most of all must we take our Saviour as he is and as he is pleased to present himself vnto vs vnder the shapes of bread and wine and whatever wind of contradiction rise from our sense or from our weake ynderstanding say vnto it Peace be still and beleeve the power of the mighty hand of God who wi●h a word made all things and the infinity of his love who as he gave himself to be rudely handled by the Iewes gives himself here to be lovingly handled by vs vnworthy creatures not valuing that he is sometimes also misused by vs wherin his love is the more manifest and more to be valued by vs. Present him thy hart and soule as a pillow to rest on and attend him resting Afford him the curtesie which the spouse in the canticles received doe not rayse him nor cause him to awake till he wil● himself He sleepes but his hart watcheth over thee Let not thy eyes go of from him least through thy negligent attendance thou receive not with him the fruite which he bestoweth vpon the watchfull I rose sayth the spouse to open to my beloved I opened the bolt of my doore for my beloved but he was gone a side and passed away my soule was melted when he spake I sought and did not find him I called and he did not answer me Be devour and quiet and Iesus will stay with thee He rayseth the daughter of Iayrus and cureth the woman of her bloody issue I. THere cometh one of the rulers of the Synagog named Iayrus and seeing him faleth at his feete and besought him much saying my daughter is at the point of death come and lay thy hand vpon her that she may be saved and live And he went with him and a greate multitude followed and thronged him In diseases and death of our soule what expressions ought not we to vse These bring vs truly to the last cast for after our temporall death there is another death to be feared farre more grievous because ever and never dying In these occasions therfore bestirre thyself fall at our Saviours feete beseech him follow him thou seest his readynes to concurre with thy indeavours and to go along with thee feare not that the multitude feare not that the greatnes of thy synnes will divert him from thy help if thou prostrate thyself with a syncere hart and beseech pardon as thou oughtest II. And a woman who was in an issue of blood twelve yeares and had suffered much from many physitians and ha● bestowed all that she had neither was any thing better but rather worse when she heard of Iesus came behind him in the presse and touched the hemme of his garment for she sayed if I shall touch but his garment I shall be safe and forthwith the fountaine of her blood was dryed vp and she felt in her body that she was healed of that maladie Search into the causes of thy long diseases consider how thou spendest thy time and thy spirituall and temporall substance and vpon whome and why thou goest rather backward then forward come with humilitie and confidence to the Sacraments Let the very name of Iesus give the assurance of remedie specially if thou touch with reverence the garment with which he is pleased to cover his sacred body in the holy ●ucharist which are the resemblances of bread and wine in which he gives vs his sacred flesh and blood and doest not come rudely and disorderly vpon him as the multitude for when Christ remaynes in vs he cooleth the raging law of concupiscence he strengthens devotion and quailes the vnbridled motions of our mind And Iesus turning sayed who hath touched my garments His disciples sayed thou seest the multitude thronging thee and sayest who touched me But the woman fearing and ●remkling fell downe before him and told him the truth and he sayed daughter thy faith hath made shee whole go in peace See how he takes notice of the reverent and not of the rude and how greate a grace it was that she who was ashamed to be seen was not ashamed to confesse her imperfections hide not thy falts acknowledge that which he knowes allready III. As he was speaking they come to the ruler of the Synagog saying thy daughter is dead why doest thou troble the Master any further But Iesus sayth to him feare not only beleeve And be admitted not any to follow him but Peeter Iames and Ihon And seeing folk weeping and wayling sayth why weepe you so She is not dead but sleepeth and they derided him but he having put forth all but the Father and Mother and them that were with him taking her by the hand sayth wench I say to thee rise and forthwith she rose vp and walked and they were greatly astonished and he commanded them earnestly that no body should know it and bad that some thing should be given her to ●ate and the fame of it was spread through the whole countrey God so disposing that the more we are carefull that the good which we doe should be secret God should be more glorifyed by it She rose and walked because a sonle raysed from sy●ne must be stirre itself that it fall not into a relapse but be dispersing noysome thoughts and dispositions by vertuous actions it must also cast of the multitude of worldly occasions and weepe and wayle those losses only which most of all deserve the name of losses converse with a few and good exercise the fayth of Peeter the hope of Iames the love of Ihon finally frequent the Sacraments to the end to get strength and vigour after so dangerous infirmities He cureth the sickman at the Poole I. IN Heerusalem there was a Poole having five porches in these lay a greate multitude of sick persons blind lame withered expecting the stirring of the water and an Angel of out Lord descended at a certaine time into the poole and the water was stirred and he that had gone downe first into the poole after the stirring of the water was made whole of whatever infirmiti● he was holden God in all ages and all times even among the faithfull provideth certaine places where constantly mirac●es are wrought for the increase of the devotion of the faithfull and to confirme thier fayth of the omnipotent power of God who as he created all with a word can in an instant restore all things to thier perfection yet will not doe it with out our particular concurrence and according to the times and wayes which in his wisdome he hath ordayned But for our spirituall diseases he hath left in all places present remedie with out expecting times and seasons for the holy baptisme may in necessitie be administred by any body and for the Sacrament of penance there be in all places those who are appointed nor for one only or for the first or second but for all and the sooner the infirme come vnto it the better
weeping and the Iew●s who were come with her weeping he groned in spirit and trobled himself and sayed where have you layed him They say to him Lord come and see And Iesus wept The Iewes therfore sayed behold how he loved him But certayne of them sayed could not he that opened the eyes of the blind man make that this man should not dye Observe that teares doe move our Saviour to compassion we shall not want them if vve seriously consider where our soules are layed and are like to be layed by synne Come often and see most men miscary because they doe not attend to this thoughts of the vvorld carry their minds another way and in the meane time they fall into the lapse and heed it not How grievous a thing must synne needs be which caused our Saviour himself to grone and weepe And not only to vveepe but to sweate drops of blood and yeald a whole floud of it from his sacred syde to vvash vs from it And how greate a token is it that he loved vs seeing he would vndertake so hard a taske for vs He could have made that we should not synne at all But in this vve must submit to his infinite wisedome who thought it more reason that we should be left to our choyce that by striving to doe well and overcoming our contrarie inclinations our reward might be the greater after the victorie II. Iesus againe groning in himself sayth Take away the stone Martha sayed to him Lord now he stinketh for he is 〈◊〉 of fou●e dayes Iesus sayed to her did I not say to thee that if thou beleeve thou shalt see the glorie of God They tooke therfore the stone away The very loathsomnes of our synn● is too too oft a hindrance of our remedie we are loth to discover them we are loth others should know how imperfect vve a●e or have been Yet the only remedie is to discover them to those who have power to rayse vs It is to corrupt nature a hard and heavy stone yet it must be removed before vve can come to life If thou accuse thyself though thou be dead thou vvilt revive he desi●es to see by this whether thou be indeed dead to synne Beleeve this and thou shalt see the glorie of God III. And Iesus lif●ing vp his eyes sayed Father I give thee thanks that thou hast heard me And I did know that thou doest allwayes heare me but for the people have I sayed it that they may beleeve that thou hast sent me when he had sayd this he cryed out with a lowde voyce Lazarus come forth and fortwith he that had been dead came forth bound feete and hands with winding bands and his face was tyed with a napkin Iesus sayed to them loose him and let him go Synne whē it is growne into custome binds vs hand and foote and fa●e that we can neither see our owne heavy case nor move of ourselves towards any thing that conduceth to our good God doth thunder out his iudgements with a lowde voyce to move vs to come forth He could have bidden those vvho were nigh to take ●he body of Lazarus forth of the grave but to signifie that we must cooperate to our owne rising from synne he cryeth out to him to come forth VVhat doest thou lye in the darkenes of thy conscience sayth S. Ambrose and in the filth of thy synne as in a prison of malefactours Come forth Confesse thy synne that thou may be iustified By true confession thou wilt be loosed and let go otherwise thou vvilt remaine still bound Glorifie God that hath bestowed this benefit vpon thee and bevvare for hereafter The thirteenth Application to the most Blessed Sacrament I. IF at any time perfection be to be desired most of all vvhen vve are to aproch to the most bl●ssed Sacrament for so it is written Be you holy because I am holy and though it be not necessarie for the perfect receiving of our Saviour in the Sacrament to sell all that we have and give to the poore it is sitting not withstanding that vve should for some convenient time lay aside all worldly busines and retire our thoughts vvholy to the due entertaynment of this Guest vvho made himself poore for our sake and here desires a lodging in our breast The Almes which he most destreth is our hart though remporall almes be also a good preparation vvhich vve must give him not with sadne● as the yong man nor so much only as of necessitie vve must give or els not be his at all but vve must give it freely and cheerfully For God loveth a cheerfull giver such as S. Peter professed himself to be when he sayed Behold we have left all and followed thee what therfore shall we have And what answer can we expect from him Who is able to make all grace abound in vs but that if we sow in blessing in blessing also we shall reape for he is not closhanded Be●old his sacred wounds and how out of them he is ready to distill vpon thee an hundred fold for one Behold so shall he be blessed who seeketh God with his whole hart II. It is not enough to leave all we must follow him that is imitate his vertues VVhat be the vertues which here in this Sacrament he doth practise to the end of the world for our sake Humilitie in laying a side his glorie and coming to vs in this humble and tractable disguise Secondly pati●nce in bearing with many indignities offered by such as receive him either with little respect or vnworthily Thirdly Charitie in affoording himself to all rich and poore sick and whole that he may gaine all Fourthly Liberalitie not contenting himself with what he had done and suffered for vs while he lived openly vpon earth but continually renewing the same sacrifice and affoording vs the same supercelestiall food of life and fountaine of all graces Perseverance to the end of the world according to what he sayed before his Ascension Behold I am with you every day to the end of the world Sonne patience and humilitie in adversitie doth please me more then much comfort and devotion in prosperitie III. O most sweete and most loving Lord whome now I desire devoutly to receive thou k●owest my infirmitie and in how many evills I lye vvallowing Behold whome thou lovest is infirme And though as I hope thi● infirmitie is not to death yet so long as it hangs vpon me I am straightened having a desire to be freed from it as a thing to my thinking much more better But I must refere myself to thee vvho doest best know what is for thy glorie for I remember thou didst say to thy Apostle My grace sufficeth thee for power is prefected in infirmitie that is thy power is more illustrious by the infirmitie of our flesh whilst thou preservest vs that vve may not fall I can not say to thee Lord if thou hadst been here