will say Seeing for your sake I receaued these wounds and haue inuited you with pardon and you haue not accepted therof refusing to receaue me therfore depart from out of my sight But whither O Sauiour dost thou âast them To the euerlasting torments of Hell Hence thou mayst perceiue how much it beâooueth thee to reâard how thou liuest and with what âare and vigilancy thou art to watch âoer thy selâe at all times seeing all âhy workes both thy good bad âre to be strictly examined and iudâed THE VII MEDITATION Of Hell THE Preparatory Prayer shall be as before The CompositioÌ of place shal be to imagine in âhe harâ or center of the earth a huge âit and most darke caue full of terâible fire where neere at hand thou âayst behold what passeth amongsââhose innumerable sâules which are âhere tormented by the Diuell The Petition shal be to beseech our Sauiour that he will enkindle in thy soule a great feare and horrour of euerlasting paines that thou maist escape so hideous and so terrible a place THE 1. POINT To consider the dreadfullnes of this pit and dungeon of Hell which is all obscure full of darkenes whither neuer entrââeth any light of the Suune and the fire which is there giueth no light at all but only such as serueth for the greater paine and torment of those who there doâ suffer being swallowed vp and plunged in most grieuous paines torments Ponder how if thou canst not for the space of one only houre endure the darkenes of a dungeon if thou darest not touch for a litle while the light fire of a burning candle how shalt thou be able to lye in a bed of perpetuall flames shut vp and compassed round about vvith those Fire-brands of hell both in soule and body and that for all eternity Gather hence how great the malice and hey nousnes of one only mortall sinne is for which Almighty God being so mercyfull as he is doth punish so many soules with so grieuous torments because they refused to suffer something in this life for their sinnes hazarding thereby themselues to sustaine so long and grieuous paines in so vnfortunate accursed place THE 2. POINT To consider the company which these damned soules shall haue in that hideous dungeon For though they haue beene Emperours Kings Lords of the World yet shall not any one frend of theirs now bewayle or lament this their miserable estate not any one be found to comfort them not any vassall or faythfull seruant to attend vpon them but their mortall enemyes abhorring detesting and raging against them full of wrath impatience and enuy All these things shall cause new torments and paines vnto them the which shall be also much augmented and increased with the horrible sight of the Diâells themselues Ponder what a torment it will be vnto them to liue or rather more truely to dy amongst such cruell enemyes which long to drinke their very bloud Hovv much more excessiue will their paines and griefes be when they shall perceaue with hovv small and short labour they might haue escaped so long and so intollerable torments vvhich now they must abide without all hope of the least refreshing or ceasing and in comparison vvhereof the torments and paines of this life seeme rather painted then true torments indeed Gather hence a great feare of prouoking and enkindling Gods wrath against thee and desire to establishâfriendship in his loue charityâ louing him aboue all things maintayning true peace with all meÌ that thou mayst be deliuered from the wicked company of so many reprobate damneâ persons THE 3. POINT TO consider the grieuousnesse of payns of the senses wherwith the damned shall be tormented for as the sinner hath offended God by all his senses so shall he be punished in âhem all Ponder hovv the carnall and dishonest eyes shal be tormented with horrible and dreadfull shapes and visions The eares with wofull lamenâings howlings and blaphemies against God ' and his Saints The âmelling with the intollerable stench that shall proceed from the place it selfe from the bodyes of the damâed a torment not possible to be enâured The tast with gall and such ââke better drinkes which shal be giâen them Finally they shall haue âeaped vpon them all manner of âaynes torments as of the head âhe stomacke the sides the hart and ãâã other griefes whatsoeuer are wont ãâã torment vs heere in this life And besides this vpon euery âhe of the damned âhalbe inflicted ther particuier punishments conââary to the vices vvhereunto they âaue themselâes in their life time âhe glutton shal be tormented with hungar more then dogs The drunkard with vnsatiable thirst Thosâ that were ouer curious in trimming and setting themselues forth in âilkes fine linnen gallantry shall there be cloathed from top to toe in frying pitch and brimstome which shall intollerably torment but not consume them Hence it iâ good thou raise iâ thy selfe â great courage and vigour of mind to contemne all the pleasures delights of this life seing they are the cause of these torments standing in feare of that sentence which sayth As much as he hath gloryed himselfe and hath beene in delicacies so much giue him torment and mourning THE 4. POINT TO consider that the paine wherof we haue hitherto spoken iâ not the most terrible of those whicâ the damned are to sustaine for there is another without comparison greater which Deuines call Of losse and consisteth iâ being banished for euer from the sight of Almighty God Ponder how that this payne alone shall torment the soule more then all the rest togeather doe torment the bodyes of the damned for since God is an infinit good and thâ greatest of all goods it is manifest that to be depriued for euer therof is an infinite euill and greatest of all euills And so euery one shalâ cursâ his vnhappy state and misfortunate birth gnawing and pulling in peeceâ this owne flesh and renting his very âbowells ând raging with fury and âancour shall turne himselfe âgainst Almighty God not ceasing to cursâând blaspheme his holy Namâ because he tormenteth him and by hiâ supreme power and authority deâayneth him plunged and ouerwhelâed in that bottomles pit of fire enâlosed and shut vp on euery side and âhis not for one day moneth or yeare âr age only but for all eternity Heere mavst thou moue in thy âelfe a great affection desire to fearâ God and abhorre thy sinnes for by âhem thou hast deserued already tâ ãâã cast into these most grieuous painâ of hell where many others be for fewer and lighter sinnes then those which thou hast committed agaiâââ God Shew thy selfe therefore gratefull and serue him harââly seeing without any merit of thine he hath set thee in the way of saluatioÌ if thoâ wilt thy selfe THE VIII MEDITATION Of the glory of Heauen THE Preparatory prayer as thâ former The Composition oâ place shal be to behold vvith
that was far inferiour vnto her Gather out of this example of so rare Humility first a great desire to submit thy selfe to put thy selfe vnder the feet of all choosing rather to serue then to be serued in imitation of this Blessed Virgin who being Lady and Mistresse of all the world went to visit her seruent Secondly desire to imitate the great Charity of the Blessed Virgin reioicing at that great good and contentment which Saint Elisabeth had receaued for the fauour which Almighty God had bestowed vpon her for this is an admirable and most noble vertue to reioice and be glad at our neighbours good the contrary is the sinne of enuv a vice proper to âhe Diuell who is âlwaes sory and repââing at the good of others Be thou glad therefore and reioice because tâis Blessed Virgin our Lady is made the Mother of Almighty God congratulating her beseecâ that she will vouchsafe also to be thy mother seeing she is so humble that she will visit and conâort thee with her most sweet and graciouâ presence THE 2. POINT TO consider the entrance of the B. Virgin our Lady and of her most Holy Sonne into the house of S. Eliâabeth whome the Blessed Virgin as being most humble saluted first replenishing both her and the little infant in her wombe Saint Iohn Baptist and all the whole house withmany beauenly giftes for therby the infant was cleansed from originall sinne filled with the Holy Ghost Saint Elisabeth his mother receaued the gift of prophesy Saint Zachâry his Father the vse of his tonguâ to prayse Almighty God withall fâr âhere his diuine Maiesty and hiâ blessed Mother doe enter there cannot be wanting true âoy and perfect comfort Ponder what a holâ salutation this was and how different from those which now adayes are vsed in the world full of vanity and flattery where so much time is lost and so many sinnes and offences are committed against Almighty God Gather hence a great desire to be visited of this thy soueraigne King ând Lord that with his diuine preâence the greatnessâ of his mercies may be made manifest in thee who ãâã so vnworthy of them beseeching âim to giue thee as he did to his Preâursor Saint Iohn light and knowââdge of the high Mâstery of his Inâaânation and reioice at his sacred âââsence Intreate also the Blâssâd âirgin to obtaine for thee of beâ most Holy Sonne some of those heauenly fauours which by her only sight he bestowed in such plenty aboundance on this thrice happy babe on his parents that now and for euer thou maistimploy thy selfe in hââ prayses as they did THE 3. POINT TO consider how Saint Elizabeth vnderstanding by diuine reuelâtion the misteries of the incarnation of the Sonne of God in the sacred wombe of the most Blessed Virgin Mary she began to praise and magnify her saying Whence is this to me that the Mother of my Lord doth come vnto me But the Blessed Virgin the more she was praysed the moâe she did humble her selfe attrâbââing the glory of all to Almâghty God breaking forth into this Canticle My soule doth magnify ouâ Lord c. Ponder that as all holy and iust men doe neuer attribute any good thing whatsoeuer to their owne deâerts so out of the like affection of Humility Saint Elizabeth wondering at the graces fauours which Christ and his Mother had done vnto her cryed out Whence is it that so great a fauour hath been shewed me I being so vnworthy theroâ Desire thou lâke wise to do the same when thou shalt be honoured and praised by men humbling thy selfe the more and acknowledging that all the good thou hast wholy commeth from Almighty God and is not of thy selfe And sav with Saint Elizabeth Whence is it that God vouchsâfeth to remember me I hauing beene so vnmindfull of him How happen these thinges O Lord to me I hauing so often offended thee and been so vngratefull to thy diuine Maiesty Which thou must practise not only in wordes but also in works and deedes as the Blessed Virgin did when she serued her Cosin S. Elizabeth almost thâeâ moneths with great care and âilâgence euen in humble and base offices âxercising the selfe willingly yââ and delighâing therin aâ Christ our Sauiour his B. Mother did all their life ââme THE 4. POINT TO consider the great good which the Blessed Virgin did in the house of her Cosin how much she did profit all those that liued therein with her heauenly discourses and rare examples of Modesty Humility Charity For if her only sight and presence was cause of so many so extraordinary graces both in the Mother and the child what would as Saint Ambrose well noteth the âompany communication of so many dayes and months as she staâed with Saint Elizabeth worke and effâct in them How pious may we imagine their conuersation to haue beene hoâ singular the exaÌples of vertue how would they exhort one another to prayer and to inward communication with Almighty God Ponder that if by reason that the Arke of the Testament was three moneths in the house of Obededom God heaped vpon him and vpon all his family so great bânefits vviâh how much more reason may we iustly âelieue that this diuine Arke of the new Tâstament within which lesus Christ himselfe reposed remayning as many monethes in the house of Zachary Elizabeth would fill it with a thousand benedictions heauenly fauours Gather hence a constant and an vndoubted hope that whensoeuer thou shalt come to receaue Almighty God in the most Blessed Sacrament with a liuely faith though thou be so poore miserable as thou art he will replenish thy soule in whiâh his diuine Maiesty desireth to make his habitation and aboad vvitâ many celestiall benedictions and spirâtuall âauours THE VI. MEDITATION of the reuelation made by the Aâgell vnto S. Ioseph concerning this Mystery THE 1. POINT TO consider how noble worthy a man this Patriarcâ S Ioseph was being of a priâcely race and lineally descended of King Dauids house But that which did mâst commend and honour him was not his pedegree descent but that he was true heire of the vertues of that Holy King as of his Meeknes Iustice and Holines of life c. and finally because he was a man truely according to the hart of God And such a one doubtles it was conuenient he should be who was to be exalted to so great a dignity as to be the Spouse of the Mother of Almighty God and to whose custody was to be commended so great a treasure as was his most Holy Sonne Ponder how the Blessed Saint knew to negotiate and to help himselfe with the gifts which he had receaued daily augmenting and increasing them more and more only one thing did cause in him great sadnes and sorrow of mind to wit to see his sacred Spouse after her returnâ from Zacharies house to be great with child he
themselues with exteriour purity alone as the foolish virgins and Pharisies did but much more procuring the interiour Because all the glory of the daughter of the King which is euery pure soule as the Holy Ghost sayth is within Gather hence a desire if thou desire to ascend vp to the mount of God and enioy his blessed sight to obtayne not only corporall but also much more spirituall purity for it is not fit that the TeÌple of God should be polluted or not pure seeing therfore thou art his Temple as S. Paul sayth and the Holy Ghost hath his aboad in thee endeauour and striââ alâayes to be pure and cleane both in body and soule that in thee the beames of the diuine light may appeare and shine as in a very clean pure christall glasse for if thou loue this cleanesse and purity of hart thou shalt haue the King and Lord of heauen for thy friend and enioy his sight THE 7. BEATITVDE TO consider how God calleth the peace-makers the children of God for not only those who haue peace in their soules with Almighty God but those chieâây who also procure to haue the same with their neighbours shal be the children of God and of our Sauiour who with special prerogatiue is called the peaceable King and ordained that when he came into the world his Angells should salute men with this peace and made so much reckoning thereof that he vsually saluted his Disciples with this peace saying vnto them Peace be with you Ponder the innumerable perâecuâions afflictions which Christ Iesus our Lord sustained to make peace betweene his Eternall Father and vs purchasing for vs true peace and sheâing himselfe peaceable euen with those who did hate him Gather hence how behoofull it is for thee to haue peace with thy self and with thy neighbours Thou shalt haue it with thy selfe if thou be carefull to breake and subdue thine inordinate appetites attending to the contituall exercises of mortificationâ and vvaging continuâll vvaâre with vice for peace is gotten by warre With thy neighbours thou mayst haue peace if thou endeauour neuer to giue them occasion of offence or trouble but rather to agree make peace with euery one and so doing though shalt be the beloued child of Almighty God THE 8. BIATITVDE TO consider how Christ our Lord calleth those Blessed which suffer persecution for iustice that is for verâue and sanctity sake which perseâution is not vnderstood to be suffeâed in one or two things only but in all kind of iniuries to wit in lands liuings honour content life and death c. Ponder how our Saâioâr Christ from his very cradle till his dying day suffered for iustice and sanctity the greatest persecutions and ãâã which were euer endured and with the greatest patience that eues any had and for the most iust and innocent cause that could be to wit for reprehending vice and sinne and for the saluation of soules Gaâher hence a great desire to suffer persecution in imitation oâ Christ neyther esteem it any wonder sith his enemies persecute him that thine also persecute thee but remâebring that if it was necessary that Christ our Lord shold pass through innumerable tribulations and affâactions and so enter into his ovvnâ glory it is euident that neyther thoââ not any other shal enter into the glory which is not thine but only bâ this way of persecuion Wherfor animate thy selfe to suffer persecutioâ and affliction because our prefeâ tribulation which is momentary and light as also our life is workeâh aboue measure as the Apostle âaitâ an eternall weight of glory in vs. THE XXIII MEDITATION Of thetempest at sea THE 1. POINT TO consider that our Blessed Sauiour being entred with his Disciples into a little boat he fell a sleep forth with a great tempest arose on the sea Ponder two things first that if the ship wherein Christ sayled be tossed and couered with waues what will become of that wherein the Diuell is Pilot that is if the soule of a just and holy person be persecuted afflicted with temptations the soule of a wicked man and of a sinner what shall it endure What will become of such a one Secondly ponder how that all those that betake themselues to the seruice of God ordinarily sustayne tempests and tentations for so the Holy Ghost sayth Sonne comming to the seruice of God stand in iustice and feare and prepare thy soule to temptation Wherfore many times Almighty God permitteth great teââpeâtuous stormes of temptation and pârsecutious to be raysed against vs and he semeeth to vs as if he were a sleep neglected vs. Gather hence purposes to ãâã the fury of thy temptations for God will assist thee and relieue thee in time of thy greatest need and deliuer shee out of danger as he deliuered his Apostles when they came vnto him and craued his help and assistance THE 2. POINT TO consider how the Apostles seeing all their labour to be in vaine went presently to our Sauiour foâr help and awaking him sayd Lord saue vs we periâh Ponder how our Sauiour made as though he sleept and did not presently deliuer his Apostles albelt he saw the danger in which they were partly that they might know and vnderstand how little they could doe without his help and partly because he would they should call vpon him in time of their greatest necessity Ponder furthermore how negligent thou hast beene in stormes of temptations wherein thou hast byn often tossed and how sloathfull thou hast been in hauing speedy recourse to Christ our Lord in beseeching him to fauour and ayde thee And hence it hath come to passe that the little boat of thy soule hath beene often plunged and ouerwhelmed with the waues Gather hence purposes to run to God at all times for his help but especially in time of temptation and affliction saying vnto him O Lord deliuer me from this temptation that âauseth this tempest in my soule delyuer me from this vice from this perill and affliction For if thou call vpon him with fayth and confidence he will ayde and succour thee as he did his Apostles And will command by the vertue of his diuine word the blustering winds of thy temptations tribulations which are those that raise these stormes in thy soule to cease and be quiet presently great tranquility and peace of mind will follow THE 3. POINT TO consider how Christ our Sauiour awaking reprehended his disciples sayd vnto them Why ase you fearefull O yee of little faith as if he should say I being in your company you need not feare Ponder the loue that Christ sheweth to his Disciples and how he requireth the like loue of them againe and that they trust in him fasten the anker of their hope in him for they shal be secure in the middest of the raging and tempestuous sea of this life though the waues should riss to the very clouds Gather hence a great desire to
To whome we may imaâine that our Lord would ansâere Blessed art thou Simeon Bariona beâcause flesh and bloud hâth not reuealed it to thee but my Father which is in heauen S. Iohn like wise would enkindle in himselfe affections of loue seeing his âoueraigne Maister not only to vnite himselfe so vnto him as to permit him to leane on his breast buâ also to do him so great a fauour ãâã to enter into his soule body for morâ perfect coniunction Learne when thou commest tâ receane our Lord to bring with theâ these vertues to wit fayth purity and loue as these holy Apostles did that thou mayst reap such profit â they did follow our Lord as they did follow him â It is to be noted that in the enâ of the ââird booke a ãâã meditation are added for prepatation before ãâã thankes-giuing after we haue râceaâued this most â Sacrameat vvherâ he that is ãâã to know how ãâã prepare himselfe and to giue ãâã thanks after vnto our Lord for ãâã benefit receaued may find them THE XXXIII MEDITATION Of our Blessed Sauiours prayer in the Garden and agony there THE 2. POINT TO consider the great desire that Christ had to suffer for our sake and because the tyme seemed âong till he should be deliuered into âhe tormetÌors hands that they might âee that he did nor shrinke nor yet âây supper being ended he went into âhe garden to pray that being a place well knowne to the traytor Iudas to âhew that of his own free will he offerâed himsâlfe to prison to death it âelfe Ponder how our Lord for no âanner of afflictions or perils would ââaue his good and laudable exercise of prayeâ and meditation for supâer being ended he betooke ãâã âorth with to a solitary place to pray âefore he was to enter vpon his pasâion Be confounded because through thy tepidity and negligence for euery light occasion thou leauest thy prayer and forgettest thy laudable customs whereas thou shouldst do quite contrary because in time of greater perills afflictions and temptations we ought to haue more particuler recourse vnto Almighty God prayer being the only meanes to strengtheâ our selues in them THE 2. POINT TO consider how our Redeemer being come to the garden wenâ aside from his disciples and began ãâã wax sorrow full to be sad Ponder what is that which maâketh our Lord to grieue to be sad and afflicted he ãâã the ioy of Anâgells whom when they behold they are exceedingly reioyced thou shal find that the cause of this afflâctioâ was the feare of the ãâã and ãâã the death which he ãâã to âo staynââ the remembrancâ and liuely appââ hension of the sinnes of all men preâsent pasts and future the multitudâ and grieuousnes of them both waâs the cause of this his trouble griefâ â also the vnspekable domage which ãâã sinne commeth to men in that ãâã it they deserue to be condemned ãâã the euerlasting torments of hell ââat of all this arose his so increââble âârrow Gather hense affections of griâfe ââd sorrovv for the torments death ââhich is euen novv to come vpoÌ thv âord for thâu hast beene the cause âhis pavnes and afflâctions Endeaâour from this day forvvard to abâorre and detest and fly from sinne ââh thou seest in what case thy Lord ãâã to deliuer thee from it and from ââe eternall damnation which for thy ãâã thou dâseruest THE 3. POINT TO consider the ãâã of our Saâuiouâ in his prayer many ââmes crauing of his Eternall Father ãâã the selfe same thing to wit ââat the bitter chalice of his paââion âight passe Ponder the deuotion âwrodââeling the teares and sorrovv of thy âord how solitary destitute comârtles he is in this his so great affliction his disciples were aloofe of fast a sleep his Eternall Father gaue him no answere neither graunted him his petition his most holy Mother was also absent his enemies now ready to come vpon him notwithstanding all these afflictions discoÌforts he remained constant and perseuered in his prayer Gather hence the great esteeme shou oughtst to haue of prayer seing Christ teacheth thee that the only remedy of thy afflictions and sorrows it not talke or conuerse with men but to treat with God continue in prayer confiding that though in the beginning he deây that which thou askest yet at last he will graunt it if it be a thing conuenient for thee THE 4. POINT TO consider how the Son of God seeing his Eternall Father gaue him no answere the first nor second tyme had recourse vnto him the third tyme and repeating the same prayer with great loue and confidence said Father if thou wilt transfer this Chalice from me But yet not my will but thine be done Ponder that the cause why the Eterâall Father did defâr so long to make answere vnto the prayer of his most holy Sonne vvas to let thee know the great necessity thou and all haue of the passion and death of our Sauiour Learne not to complaine not to be weary when thou prayâst if God do not heare thee for certainely he heareth thee But if vnto Christ our Lord who deserued to be heard at the first opening of his mouth anâswere was not made till he had prayed the third time what vvonder is it if thy petitions be deferred who in regard of thy sinnes deseruest not to be heard at all Ponder secondly how Christ many times will not comfort nor remedy thy necessity in prayer that thou mayst perceiue and know the need thou hast to haue recourse vnto him with patiânce and perseuerance THE XXXIV MEDITATION Of the apparition of the Angell and the sweating of bloud THE 1. POINT TO consider how the Eternall Father seeing his most Blessed Sonne in so great affliction and anguish of mind and that according to the inferiour part he feared to suffer and dye he sent him an Angell from heauen to comfort and strengthen him and to propose vnto him the glory of God which thence wold arise the benefit which would follow to all mankind by meanes of his passion and that for humiliation and ignominy of the Crossâ his Name should be exalted and adored of all creatures Ponder how the Lord of Angells as if he had forgotten his owne soueâaigne Maiesty vouchsafeâ to receaue comfort by one of his creatures and being the Fortitude of the Father and he vvho vvith power might gouerneth and suâtaineth the world receaueth comfort and reliefe from an Angell hauing made himself by reason of humane nature which he assumpted inferiour to the Angells Gather hence that the office of the Angells is to assist vs in our prayers to comfort and animate vs and to present our prayers in the sight of God which if they be performed as they ought they haue their effâât for God doth either deliuer vs out of tribulation or giueth vs force to endure it with patience and ioy Trâst in God that thou shalt reap
thou desire to haue pardon very seriouâly âo bewayle and hartily to repent for thy sins do pennance for them THE XL. MEDITATION What happened vnto our Sauiour in Caiphas his house of the thinges he suffered that night THE 1. POINT TO consider the answere vvhich our Lord gaue vnto the demaund of Caiphas the high Priest I adiure thee by the liuing God that thou tell vs if thou be Christ the Sonne of God And our Lord although he knew right vvell the great iniuries reproaches and torments which his coÌfession would cost him yea death it selfe he plainely ansvvered and told the truth and savd what was be fitting his person The high Priest blinded with splendour of so great light and being in passion iudged that he had blasphemed and so he and all the rest of his Counsell condemned our Lord to death And hauing no respect to the innocency of his life nor to their owne state and quality treated him most vilely Ponder the meâknes wherwith our Lord suffered these affronts and iniuries and heard that vniust sentence He is guilty of death O how that immaculate lambe hearing this sentence wold offer himselfe willingly to death to giue life vnto them who gaue sentence against him and condemned him to death Gather hence desires alwaies to say of our Sauiour the contrary to that vvhich these his enemies pronounced of him to wit such innocency such a Lord such a benefactorâ such a Sauiour and Maister deserueth life Such a God and Redeemer is most vvorthy to liue and all those which condemne him or offend him or accuâfe him are worthy of euerlasting death THE 2. POINT TO consider that it being now late and tyme for the high Priest and his fellowers to rest they deliuered vp our Lord to the souldiers to watch him they to keep themselues from sleeping did deride scoffe mocke at our Lord and couering his eyes with a shamefull ragge smote his diuine face saying voto him Prophesy vnto vs O Christ who is he that strooke thee Heere thou mayst ponder Christ our Lord full of payne and affliction reiected despised and contemned of all great and little neyther was it the least cause of griefe to haue his diuine eyes couered that his enemies might the more freely strike him on the face perswading themselues that so he could not see them for it is the property of great sinners to desyre not to be seene that they may sinne more freely and without restraint But he savv them notvvithstanding with the eyes of his soule and of his God-head because he vvas God whose eyes sayth the Wiseman behold in euery place the good and the euill which euery one continually doth Hence thou mayst gather that vvhen thou sinnest forgetting that God doth see thee thou art as it were hood-winked deceauest thy selfe couering thine owne eyes vvith this false and blacke veile for Gods eyes are most cleare and open vpon thee beholding thy thoughts words and deeds Wherfore from this day forword be affrayd to offend our Lord carrying euer in thy memory this admirable saying Behold God beholdeth thee THE 3. POINT TO consider now that after this inâury those cruell fellowes deuoid of all humanity did vnto our Sauior another no lesse affront spitting in his face and couering it with their âoathsome and stinking spittle for all of them and they vvere many striuing who shold do worst did cast their spittle vpon him wonderfully defiling and obscuring that beauty which reioyceth the heauenly court company Ponder whose face it is that is âhus defiled spit vpon as if it were he most vile contemptible corner of the world and thou shalt find that it is the face of the God of Maiesty of whome the Prophet sayd Shew thy face and we shal be saued It is the face before whom the Seraphims out of due respect reuerence do couer theirs It is his face vvherevvith his diuine spittle gaue sight to the blind hearing to the deafe and speach to the dumbe It is his face whom the Angells of heauen continually beholding and adoring are neuer satiated From hence thou mayst gather abundant motiues and affections of compassion and sorrow grieuing to behold the face of such a Lord defaced and spit vpon by such and so base miscreants to see the Creator so abused by so vile creatures his diuine maiesty permitting himselfe to be obscured defiled that thou mightst become pure and cleane THE 4. POINT TO consider the iniurious disgracefull words that euen the very Kichen scullians of that pallacâ gaue vnto Christ our Lord and also how they layd load vpon him with blowes buffets spurnes asked him Ghâsse who stroke thee seeing thou sayest that thou art Christ a Prophet who gaue thee this blow on thy care who this spurne with his foot who this kick who this cuffe in the necke And laughing aloud ãâã iesting at him they manifestly declared that they held him for a faigned Christ a false Prophet Ponder the inuincible patience the inestimable meeknes the most louing hart wherwith God our Lord suffered all this as also that patience with which he supporteth thee seeing that as much as ly eth in thee thou hast far oftener scoffed at thy Redeemer âffending him with thy manifold sinnes and yet his mercy is so great that he grieueth more at thy offences at the harme which commeth to them that torment him then at the paynes which he himselfe sustayneth Gather hence affections desires to suffer something for this thy Lord vvho endureth so much for thee louing him vvith all thy hart who gaue thee such to many signes of loue ioyning with coÌtinual thanksgiuing continuall seruice for them THE XLI MEDITATION Of the presentation of our Lord before Pilate what questions he asked him THE 1. POINT TO consider how much Christ Iesus our Lord also his enemies desired the coÌmming of the morning but for very different ends Our Lord to suffer dye they to put in execution their damnable intent which was to murther him and forthwith in the morning the high Priest Caiphas and the whole Counsell assâmbled togeather calling our Lord Iesus the second tyme he asked him Art thou Christ the Son of the Blessed God but our Lord answered him not to his demand Ponder how much it importeth thee to aske our Lord this question but with a different meaning and desire from that which his enemies had âaying O my Lord if thou art Christ ãâã thou art the promised Messias if ãâã art the Sonne of the liuing God ând the splendour of the glory of ãâã Eternall Father as it is most true ãâã thou art how commeth it to âasse that thy diuine face is so disfiâured how is it defiled with spittle ãâã is it bruised with buffets And âaming hence affections of tender âue and compassion acknowledge at thy sinnes haue beene the cause âhy thy Sauiour Christ and Lord is that
for according to the measure his Mother sorrowes he gaue her ãâã sâlation and ioy so if thou accompâ nie Christ crucified in his paynes â Passion thou shalt also be partak of his rest shalt rise as he did to new life of glory THE 3. POINT To contemplate the most Blessed Virgin enioying those graces and ââuours which her most Blessed SoÌne had done her and what tender pleasant and louing discourses he held vvith her perchance these or such like Mother behold thy Sonne I doe not now recommend thee from the Crosse to my disciple Iohn I doe not call thee woman thou dost not hold me dead in thine armes but âehold I am aliue and risen agayne â come to bestow on thee a thouând imbraces and to shew thee the âpeciall loue affectioÌ which I beare âhee Ponder the ioy that wholy posâessed the soule of this most Blessed âady when she saw her selfe so fauoâed honoured and cherished and âvith such loue vviping avvay the âeares from her virginall eyes full of âeuotion doubtles and prostrating âer selfe vpon the ground she would âdore him and say O my Sonne ây God I giue thee infinit thankes âr that according to the multiuude of my sorrovves my consolation haue abounded And making no enâ of kissing those Blessed signes of thâ sacred wounds which yet remaynâ In his glorious body and had cause vnto him so great payne in his passâ on and seeing them now so beautâ full and shining they were a cause â great confort vnto her Gather hence desires to giââ thanks vnto this Lord for so special and singular sauours done vnto hâ Blessed Mother as to one most woâ thy thereof for disposing thy selâ to a good life holy desires workâ he will doe thee the like fauour aâ graces albeit thou be vnworthy the of THE 4. POINT TO consider how well accompaned Christ our Lord was when came to visit his beloued Mothâ with that most bright shining squâ dron and troupe of so many Saiâ which he had deliuered from Limbâ where diuers of them had for so mâ ny thousands of yeares expected enioy him in heauen Ponder how that when all those ââints saw themselues in presence of ãâã B. Virgin our Lady acknowleding her for the mother of their Reâeemer bruizer of the infernal serâents head they would kneele down âprostrate themselues vpon the groând yielding her a thousand thankes â congratulations for such a Sonne â she had there for the paines she âad taken in the worke of their Reâmption Ponder secondly how glad and âyfull the Blessed Virgin was to see âe fruit of the PassioÌ which now the âred tree of the holy Crosse began yield in so many soules ransomed ãâã with O how well imployed did â B. Lady then account all those afâtions sorrowes labours trauaills paynes which pierced her soule all life tyme seeing that which then saw enioying that which then enioyed Hence thou mayst gather deâ to associate and ioyne thy selfe âh this holy company to adore ârence this most Holy Virgin for the Mother of such a Redeemer aâ knowledging that by her meames thou take her for thy Patronesse anâ become truly deuout vnto her thoâ mayst by the grace of God be paâ taker of the glory and eternall blissâ which thou hopest to enioy in heââen THE III. MEDITATIONâ Of the apparition of Christ to S. Mâ ry Magdalen THE 1. POINT TO consider how S. Mary Mâ dalen vpon Sunday very eaâ came to the monument briâ ging with her odoriserous oyntmâ and aromaticall spices to anoynt maysters body and not finding hiâ she thought that he had been stollâ vvhich occasioned in her soule nâ griefe sorrow for before the wâ because her Lord was dead and because they had taken him a way put him she knew not where Anâ she stood at the monument coâ not depart thenâe but sayd O mayâ ãâã where art thou where shall I seeke thee my ioy my life where ãâã they put thee O Lord whither shall I goe where may I seeke thee ââome shall I aske for thee Ponder how muoh the earnest ând longing desire the âboundant âeruent teares of this holy sinner ârought in the louing breast of God âr by her tears she obtained pardon âher sinnes by teares she obtained âhe resurrection of her deceased broâher by her teares she deserued to âue Angells for her comforters yeal âd the Lord of Angells himselfe âbe the first vnto whome our Sauiâr did appeare Gather hence a great shame and âsusion for that thou so little feelest âd lamentest thy sinnes hauing by âem so often lost God and his grace ât if thou desire to find and not to âse him imitate this holy and sferâât woman not taking comfort in thing vntill thou find possessd Creatour for if thou seek in âsort thou shalt find him and he will comfort thee with ãâã sight anâ presence THE 2. POINT To consider how that our Sauiouâ seeing the holy desires of his diâciple would now without further dâ lây fulfill them appearing vnto he yet disguised so that she might ãâã know him and speaking vnto heâ ãâã a different voyce from that he vvâ wont to vse vnto her he sayd Wâ man vvhy weepest thou vvhomâ seekest thou And she answered him Because they haue taken a way mâ Lord I know not where thâ haue put him Ponder that when this sinner bâ fore wept at the feet of Christ wâ shed them with the tears of her eyâ our Lord said not to her Why wâ pest thou nor whome seekest thoâ because those teares proceeded frâ the selfe knowledge of her sinnes from a liuely fayth and loue of Lord whome she had present wâ knew and approued them but inâ gard these teares proceeded out of norance and want of fayth bewâ âing him as dead who liued and seeâung the liuing among the dead he sayth Why weepest thou whome âeekest thou For doubtlesse thou snowest not because knowing thou wouldest not lament for me in this manner neither wouldst thou seeke him as absent whome thou hast preââm with thee Gather hence desires to examine and discusse wel the cause of thy âeares because many tymes thou wile âârswade thy selfe that thou weepest âr thy sinnes and thou dost not ât for the temporal losse which they âaue caused thee And other whiles âhou wilt thinke that thou lamentest âith desire to see and enioy God yet ââou dost not but only tofly the traâell which thou endurest And in like âanner thou wilt thinke that thou âokest God his glory in very âed thou seekest thy selfe thine âne honour and commodity And ââking God in this âort with good âson he will aske thee Whom seeâ thou Seeke therefore Gâd in âth sore that he may approue thy teares and say vnto thee and vnto all Blessed are they that mourne for they shal be comforted THE 3. POINT To coÌsider the mercy of our Lorâ vvho vvould not long concealâ himselfe but
any part therof from ââe sole of the foote to the crowne ãâã the head without impurity and vncleanesse For which cause Holâ Iob said as one who had throughly entred into this consideration I hauâ said to rottenes thou art my Father and to vvormes thou art my Mother and sister Weigh hovv much the trees ãâã plants of the field doe surpasse thee ãâã this for they produce flovvers leauââ and very good fruit thou breedeâ and ingendrest infinite vermine Thâ trees plants bring forth vvine oyle and balme but thou voydest out ãâã thousand imfirmites all manneâ of vncleanes And vvhat meruaile â for according as the tree is so is thâ fruit and an euill tree like as man ãâã cannot yield good fruit Of that vvhich hath been sayd â thou mayst gather a great desire ãâã humbling thy selfe seing that thâ miseries of thy body be so great aââ so manifold beseeching our Loââ to open the eyes of thy soule thââ from this day forward thou cease ãâã seeke delights and contentments fââ thy body vvhich is so vnworthy ãâã them chastising it with rigorous pâââânce for what it hath already inâyed THE 3. POINT âO consider in what state this â thy body shal be after the seââation of thy soule hovvsoeueâââautifull fayre it was before how ââle and filthy hovv loathsome ââominable it shall then remaine Ponder that the cause of alââse domages and euills wil be thââence of thy soule and into what ãâã wretched body shall presently be ââuerted to wit into worms meate âo earth and dust to be trodden ââder euery mans feeâe Whereby ââu mayest see wherein all flesh and ãâã glory thereof doth end and what âole thou art to pamper thy body ââmilting it to run after all desires ââchasing with short and transitory ââights euerlasting torments Hence thou mayst stir vp in ãâã selfe a great desire of knovving ãâã owne misery and to set before ãâã eyes of thy soule the earth of ââich thy body was made and inâhich it is againe to be resolued And if this be the port and haueâ whereat shortly thou and all meâ are to land after the tempestuous naâigation of this sea of miseries it is a matter of no small importance for the knowledge of thy selfe to bâ mindfull of what thou art and whaâ is to become of thee at last that sâtting the eyes of due consideration vpon the feete of this thy proud and haughty Statua made of clay to wiââ thy body thou humble and submiâ thy selfe to the very ground for by âow much the higher the building iâ to be as Saint Augustine saith foâ much the lower is the fouudation to be laied THE 4. POINT TO consider that to know thy selfâ perfectly and throughly thoâ art not to rest in the knowledge oâ thy body alone but must passe fuâther to the knowledge of thy souleâ pondering first that albeit in regâââ of thy soule thou mightest greatly esteeme thy selfe it being a creatuââ wholy spirituall and like in natuââ vnto the Angells a liuely resemâblance of Almighty God an image âf the most Blessed Trinity indued âith three most perfect powers and âne essence able to vnderstand loue ând enioy infinite goodes notwithââanding thou wantest not wherin to âumble thy selfe if thou call to mind ââe foule and loathsome dungeon âherein thy soule is imprisoned the ââuse of clay wherein it is detained ââd liueth remembring the saying ãâã the Apostle What hast thou that âou hast not receaued And if thou âast receaued what dost thou glory ãâã though thou haddest not receaâed Secondly ponder that before Alâighty God created thy soule to âut and infuse it into thy body it ãâã as nothing nor was of any value ââd would instantly returne to the ââme nothing againe if Almighty âod should not continually keep ânserue it and so thou hast not ââereof to glory but in thy miseries ââd infirmities as Saint Paul said oâââmselfe seeing thou art compassed âout with innumerable remptations both within and without Reap and gather from hence desires to know and humble thy selfe and acknowledge thy selfe for lesse then nothing perceauing now vvhat thy soule is hovv little it iâ vvorth and how much reason it hath to feare The Speech or Colloquy THE Speech or Colloquy to end the Prayer is alvvayes to be dravvne out oâ the matter of the Meditation and so we are to doe in this and all the rest as aboue we haue noted in the fifteenth Aduertisment THE II. MEDITATION Of Sinnes THE preparatory Prayer shalbâ like vnto the first The Composition of place shal be to see with the eyes of thy Vnderstanding thy soule shut vp imprisoned in the obscure prison and dungeon of thy body and thy selfe banished into this vale of teareâ and misery entangled with many snarâs of sinnes and temptations The petition shal be to aske of our Lord light wherwith to know the grieuousnes of sinne to abhorre and be waile it and the terriblenes of Gods iustice in chastising it with euerlasting paine tormenâs THE 1. POINT TO consider the chastisment which Almighty God shewed vpon the Angels for one only sinne and that only in thought committed agaiâst his diuine Maiesty in matter of Presumption and Pride depriuing them in an instant of that supreme and high dignity wherein he had created them throwing them like thunderbolts from the highest heauen in the lowest hell without respect either to the beauty of their Nature or to the greatnes of their estate or that they were his creaturâ made according to his image and likenes Ponder bow great and euil Mortall sinne is seeing that only one was inough to obscure and defile so ãâã beauty of the Angels Almighty God permitting the same to the end that men should feare and tremble to liue but one houre in mortall sin knowing that if God spared not the Angells being notwithstanding so noble and excellent creatures how much lesse wil he pardon men being so vile and base as they are Hence raise in thy selfe ferueââ desires of contrition togeather with a great detestation of thy sinnes committed against Almighty God firmely purposing from this day forward rather to dye a thousand deathesâ then euer to commit one moâtall âinne for whatsoeuer can be suffered in this life is lesse without comparison then the paine due to one only sinne which was sufficient to make of a beautifull Angell a most foule vgly Diuell THE 2. POINT TO consider who was the authour of this most grieuous euill of sin and thou shalt find it to be Man ãâã vile and abiect creature who being so much obliged to serue and loue his Creatour and Lord for so many so iunumerable benefits receaued from his diuine and most liberall hand to wiâ his CreatioÌ Conseruation Vocation and Redemption forgetting all this hath only beene mindfull to despise and offend with his manifold sinnes his Lord and God Ponder whence it proceedeth that so vile a worme so wretched a creature as thou art
âound âer equall Ponder âovv pleasing it was to the most Blessed Trinity to behold a Creature so âeautifull so fayre and gracioâs in the sight of the Diuiue Maiâsty and a Creature who vvith the splendour and shining light of âer vertues was to giue a happy beginning to the Blessed day of the Eternall Weale and Redemption oâ mankind the true Sonne of Iusticâ Chriât Iesus being soone after to be borne of her and to rise out of her sâcred wombe Desire most ardently and affââtuouâly to honour and serue thiâ heauenly Lady and to haue continually in thy mouth and hart her most Holy Name For as the Name of Iesus is as aâ oyle powered out for the curing and healing of all thosâ that are stroken ând bitten by the inâernall serpent the Diuell so the Name Mary hath such a vertue and force that being called vpon with deuotion like a most soueraigâe oyle it illuminateth comforteth âealeth and reioyceth the harr of man and ouercommeth and vanquisheth the Diuells themselues who as her sworn enemies doe vtterly abhorre and detest the sweet sound of this her most sacred Name and all those that are deuoted vnto her THE 3 POINT TO consider how this most Blessed Child being borne and now three yeares of age her parents S Ioachim and Saint Anne for the fulfilling of the vow which they had made to Almighty God to offer vp vnto him âhe fruit of the benediction which hâ should bestow vpon them brought her to the Temple ioyfull and much âomfââted that she was to goe to such â place and to remaine and serue her Creatour and Lord all her life time in that holy place Yea not content with this out of her exceeding âue to Almighty God she would also be the first that euer made vow of âerpetuall Virginity and hauing made it she kept it so exactly and so perfectly that she might iustly seeme âather an Angel without a body thââender Lady in mortall flesh Ponder the great deuotion where with this Blessed Child presenâed and gaue vp her selfe to Almighty God offering herselfe wholy to his âeruice For being come to the Temâle she was first receaued by the high âriest by him placed on the lowest step of the fifteene which mounted âo the Altar from which with wonâerfully ioy alacrity and grace noâ ãâã or led in hand by any she âounted vp the rest of the fifteene âith great feruour of spirit with an ândaunted courage and resolute âind to ascend by all degrees of ãâã to the highest top of perfection Stir vp in thy selfe a feruent desire to present thy selfe to Almighty God and to offer thy selfe in like manner wholy to his seruice with a constant resolution to mount vp and increase euery day more and more in purity of soule and body and neuer to separte thy selfe from him And if his diuine Maiesty shall doe thee so much fauour as to heare thy prayers and to withdraw thee from the occasion and perils of this world to serue him in his holy Temple and house acknowledge it with much gratitude and thankes as a most euident signe of his speciall loue towards thee and a most certayne token that he hath a particular care and prouidence ouer thee as a most louing Father of his dearest child âHE 4. POINT TO consider how this most Holy Virgin spent the yeares of her childhood in the Temple Doubtles she was a most absolute patterne of holynes and of all kind of vertues to the rest of the Virgins liuing in place with her so carefull so solicitous âeruânt she was in the seruice of God ând in obseruing all points of his âoly Law the first no doubt in the âigill of the âight in Humility and âll humble offices the most humble ãâã puritââhe most pure in euery verâue the mâst pârââct Ponder the great admiration ând astoâishment which the dayly âânuersation anâ verâuous exercises âf this most Blessed Child did cause ãâã her companiâns and in those who âid treate and conuerse with her beâolding such eminent verâuâ âanâity in so âender yeares Ponder ãâã with what ãâã and diligencâ ãâã spent a great part of the day in âscendiâg the mââsticall ladder of the âoly ãâã Iacob wâich reached ââom the eaââh vnto the heauens thâââgrees wheââof are Râading Mediââtion Prayer anâ Contemplation which holy âxercises she there holy imployed âer sâlfe being ãâã visited bâ the Blessed Angells âscending and asenoing by this âauenly laâder yea and by the ãâã of Angells standing and viewing her from the top thereof iâ which as in many other notable thinges she seemed rather an Angell sent from heauen then a Virgin heer borne on earth Stir vpin thy selfe a great desire to imitate this tender and B. Virgin in those excellent vertues which she did exercise in the Temple which among others were Silence Solitarines Quiet of body mind Prayer and Contemplation Be ashamed to see thy selfe far from imitating her in any sort whatsoeur so remisse ââouthfull in the seruice of God and in all vertuouâ exercises THE III. MEDITATION Of the betrothing of the Blessed Virgiâ to Saint Ioseph THE 1. POINT TO consider the desires which the Blessed Virgin had being in the Temple to liue all thâ dayes of her life in subiection and obedience vnderstanding by instincâ âf the Holy Ghost how dangerous ãâã thing liberty is for all especially âor women wherefore she besought âim very earnestly that if through âny occasion she were to depart out âis House and Holy Temple she âight notwithstanding haue whome ãâã obey and serue Ponder how few there be âho desire that which this Blessed âirgin desired or that demaund of âlinighty God that which she deâaunded to wit the vertue of Obeâience and Humility choosing raââer to serue and obey then to be a âistresse commander ouer others âherefore when the diuine prouiâânce ordayned that she should ââme from vnder the Obedience of ãâã Superiour in the Temple he ãâã her vender S. Ioseph whome ãâã was alwayes after to obey reueââce and respect And this she vnâârstood to be the will of God when was made her husband to wit ãâã it was to the end she should perââme those offices of Obedience toârds him Desire therefore and purpose to be duely respect and obedient to thy Superiour whomsoeuer he bâ that God shall giue thee learning of this most Holy Virgin true humility and obedience who being Queeââ of heauen Mother of God obeyed and serued not only her Superioââ in the Temple from three yeares oâ age till she was thirteene but manâ yeares after S. Ioseph her Spoâse that walking the path which she diâ and following her footsteps thoâ mayst ariue whither she did that ãâã âo see and enioy God for euer in ãâã and endles blisse THE 2. POINT TO consider how little more theâ ten yeares being past that the ãâã Virgin liued encloâed recollectââ In tâe Temple her parents beiââ noâ dead the high Priest thougââ good for the
hauing no part therin But as hâ was a iust man and liued in feare of Almighty God he would âot speake of it to any body but âhought secreetly to abandone and âeaue her But far greater was the âffiction of the Blessed Virgin his Esâouse who could not but preceiue âis intention of forsaking her and âasting her off and be much grieued âo see him so sad troubled in mind âhome she so deerly loued and much âeâpected for his holines of life and ânowing on the other side her selfe âo be free from any fault whereof she âas suspected by him she liued in coÌâânuall paine griefe Out of which thou maist gaââer that albeit one be very holy ânuerse alwaies with holy persons âet in this life he shall not want cause ãâã humiliation affliction by which âlmighty God will try his vertue ãâã loue towardes him as they were ãâã wanting to our Blessed Lady and Ioseph THE 2. POINT âO consider the secret iudgements of Almighty God in not reueaâg this Mistery of the Incarnation âhis only begotten Sonne to S. Ioseph as he had reuealed it to Zachary and to Saint Elizabeth And the cause was thereby to take occasion to exercise the vertues of the Blessed Viâgin her Holy Spouse Ponder the great good which is contained in Humility and affliction for they are as it were the precuâsours of great consolation and comfort as we may see in thiâ present passage Almighty God ordaining that the Blessed Virgin should suffââ this humiliation and infamy to diâpose her thereby and to make ãâã more fit for those fauours whicâ soone after she was to receaue in Betââ leem Hence thou maist gather ãâã though thou couldest cleare ãâã selfe when thou art accused anâ shew thy innocency yet oftentimââ thou must haue patience and ãâã vpon God his diuine prouideââ suffer for his loue some infamy ãâã shame And if this be to be ãâã when thou art innocent with ãâã much more patience oughtest ãâã to endure the ãâã when thou ãâã and blame worthy following the example of the Blessed Virgin who though she were innocent did not seeke to excuse herselfe but imbracing humility and silence chose rather to be esteemed naught then to discouer those hidden Misteries that most excellent treasure which Almighty God had committed vnto her putting her honour into his hands âeaching thee therby how thou oughtest to exercise thy selfe in all humility silence THE 3. POINT TO consider that though Almighty God concealed that Mistery vnto S Ioseph for a time knowing that he could not find out thâ cause of her being with child vnââsse he should reueale it vnto him âhe determined so to doe thereby to âdefend the honour of the most Blesâed Virgin sending an Angell vnto S. âoseph to free him from all scruple âând suspition and to reueale vnto âim the most âidden ineffable Miâtery of our Redemption Ponder how with this reuelation Almighty God conuerted the griefe and sorrow of this Holy Patriarch into exceeding great ioy and comfort And it is credible that he did goe and prostrate himselfe at the âeete of the Blessed Virgin crauing humbly pardon for the suspition for the errour which he had committed acquainting her with the Mistery which the Aâgell had reuealed vnto him Hence thou âaist gather two thinges First that although truth sometimes lye hidden for a while yet iâ shal be at length discouered and knowne Secondly that when at any time thoâ shalt be suspected or accused of some fault vnderseruedly thoâ oughtest to humble and not alwaies to defend or excuse thy selfe vnlessâ thou shouldest sometimes be bound in conscience for the honour of God or good of thy Neighbour And perswade thy selfe certainly that neuer any thing was lost by putting thy ârust and confidence in Almighty God as wee see the Blessed Virgiâ receaued greater honour by concealing the Mistery then she should hauâ done if otherwise she had disclosed it THE 4. POINT TO consider the faithfullnes of the diuine prouidence in comming then to remedy the affliction of his friendes when they are brought into greatest extremity applying diuine when human meanes doe faile as heere he did reuealing this secrete Mystery to Saint Ioseph and giuing him to vnderstand that the Blessed Virgin had conceiued by vertue of the Holy Ghost and that she should bring forth a Sonne of whome he was to haue a teÌder care whose name he was to call IESVS which is aâ much to say as Sauiour Ponder the singular ioy and content which this Holy Patriarch receaued at the hearing of these so happy tidinges how thankefull he was to Almighty Goâ for hauing giuen him an Espouse so Holy and of so great worth and dignity committed to his charge the care of his only begotten Sonne But aboâe all this what and how great was the spirituall comfort of the most Blessed Virgin seing her Spouse whome she loued so tenderly and whose affliction trouble she had felt so much taken so heauily now to be so full of ioy coÌfort What thanks praises did she giue vnto Almighty God for so great a benefit as was the declaring of her innocency assisting her in so great a tribulation Gather hence how much it importâ thee to rely vpoÌ the prouidence of Almighty God to haue great security confidence in the middest of thy afflictions seeing it is most certaine that his diuine Maiesty at fit due time will come and remedy all things set thee free from all trouble molestation to thy great comfort ând consolatioâ THE VII MEDITATION Of the expectation of our Blessed Lady her deliuery THE 1. POINT TO Consider that as our Blessed Lady was a Virgin in conceiuing the Sonne of Almighty God so likewise did she know she should so remaine in bringing forth the same Sonne for the experience of what had passed assured her of what was to come Ponder the spirituall ioy whicâ she conceaued in her soule breakinâ forth into these or such like wordes of admiration and thaâkes giuing Is it possible that I haue conceaued in my wombe that very Sonne Almighty God whome the Eternall Father containeth in himselfe I giue thee most huÌble thanks most mighty Lord for that thou hast chosen me thy hand maid for thy Mother O that the houre of thy birth were now come that I might see thee before me that I might haue thee in my armes that I might nourish thee at my breasts and with my milke Gather hence stir vp in thy selfe the like desires and in imitation of this Blessed Virgin say Is it possible O Lord that I being who I am so vile and so wretched a creature thou hast neuertheles chose me to be thy Sonne to receaue and enclose thee in my breast to hold thee in my handes to kisse and imbrace thee a thousand times and leauing many others who would haue bin more thankefull vnto thee and serued thee much better then
store Ponder the great pouerty of our B. Lord and of his Disciples ãâã the small care they had of their owne comfort and corporall sustenance seeing for thirteen persons others which might ioyne themselues vnto them they had only fiue loaues and those also made of barley vvhich was the most vnsauory bread that then was in vse and peculiar vnto poore people hauing fed in the desert that vngratefull Nation vvith bread from heauen whereas him selfe his Blessed Apostles were fed with barly bread Purpose firmely to choose for thy selfe such thinges as Christ our Lord did choose for himselfe intreating thy body with like seuerity and rigour where with he treated his being ashamed from this day forward of thy ouer much solicitude in seâking after supersluitieâ and dainties in meate and drinke otherwise then is pleasing to our Lord who reproueth these things THE 3. POINT TO consider how that our Sauiour and Lord of all things taking the bread into his holy and povverfull hands blessed it and gaue it vertue to be multiplied and become better so that though euery one did eat therof it was not consumed but rather did multiply increase Ponder first the omnipotency of God which so easily could conuert a few vnsaucry loaues into thousands those most sauory toothsome bread Ponder secondly the prouidence of God resplendent and manifest in this miracle For wheras those vvhich did eate of this bread were many thousands of different ages complexions yet all of them eating thereof of the selfe same kind of bread were notwithstanding satisfyed as well content with a small portion as with a great quantity therof Gather hence a great desire wholy to rely trust on the omnipotent hand of God for they can neuer want but will increase and prosper alwaies whose Lord God is Christ our Saâiour THE 4. POINT TO consider how this heauenly bâaquet being ended our Saâiour commanded his Apostls to gather vp the leauings they therefore gathered them and filled twelue baskets with the fragments of those fiue barly loaues which remained after all had eaten Ponder the goodnes bountifulnes of our Lord in rewarding the liberality and free hart wher with his Discipls offered him their fiue loaues for he restored them twelue baskets full of most delicate hrââd that they might vnderstand that as they were twelue so he would that the baskets of the remnant should be twelue as it were to bestow vpon euery one of them a whole basket full for the smal part which each of them had renouâced in the fiue loaues they had before presented him Gather hence a desire to be mercifull and bountifull towardes the poore of Christ because all those who offer him any thing for his seruice he rendreth them much more then they gaue him as it is manifest in the mercy he âvsed with that widdow which âed Elias the Prophet who for a little meale which she had freely libârally bestowed vpon him in the name of God multiplyed the same making it to Iuffice for many dayes And for one glasse of bad wine which was giuen vâto Christ our Lord at the marriage wherennto he was inuited he bountifully rendred six vessells full of most excellent wine And if this our Lord dealt so liberally in this life with sinners giuing â hundred sold for one what will be giue in the eternall to the iust Good measure sayth S. Luke and pressed downe and shaken togeather and running ouer shal be giuen in their bosome infinitely surpassing that which is or can be done for him in this life THE XXVII MEDITATION Of the Transfiguration of our Lârd THE 1. POINT TO consider that when Christ our Lord transfigured himselfe and vouchsafed as it were to make a heauen heere vpon earth manifesting his glory and heauenly beauty vnto men he retyred himselfe vnto an high mountayne taking with him only three of his best beloued and most familiar disciples toâ place where no body but only they might enioy those diuine comfoââs fauours which in the night of his transfiguration he was to impart vâto them Whereas to shew himselfe disfigured in Mount Caluary there to suffer a most painefull and oppâobrious death he would it should be at midday in the fight of the whole world Ponder how that God doth not bestow these graces fauours such as was to be preseÌt at the glory of hiâ transfiguration vpon all those that are iust and holy but only vpon the most feruorous and his best beloued and peraduenture he tooke not the rest with him not because they were lesse seruent in his loue neither were they so but because Iudas was amongst them who deserued not to enjoy so great a fauour neither wold he exclude him alone not to defame him Whence thou maist gather how much it importeth thee to be feruorous in the lone of God and how much harme one bad member doth vnto a whole community of good men being the cause why they are depriued of such sauours and benefitâ which Almighty God would do theÌ if such a one were not in their house company THE 2. POINT TO consider how that Christ our Lord transfigured himsâlfe in praver permitting the glory of his soule which was hidden âhen and restrained to communicate it selfe to the body though for all small time Ponder how that thy sinnes were the cause why that most holy body of thy redeemer was deprtued all the time he liued in this world of that glory which he made known in this his transfiguratioÌ as also why it as passible and mortall albeit now he admitted that glory it was but for a very short space choosing rather to prosecute the worke of our Redeâption and to suffer and dye with great âgnominy and shame for men then here to haue rest enioy his glory Gather hence two things firsts desire and loâe rather of paynes and tranells and to suffer with Christ in mount Caluary then to enioy the quiet of mount Tbabor Secondly how it importeth thee to be a great louer of prayer and to profit therein if thou desire to be transfigured into the image of the Sonne of God for by prayer our life is tranâformed changed from terrene and worldly into a celestiall and diuine consolatiâion THE 3. POINT TO consider how our B. Sauiour being in so great glory and Maiesty there appeared Moyses Elias and spake of his death that he was to suffer in Hierusalem Ponder how that the reason why Christ our Lord made choice of those two Prophets before many others and to honour himselfe and them by this communication was because they were eminent in sanctity and zealous of the obseruance of the Law and withall very much giuen to fasting prayer Gather from hence two things first a great desire of those vertues which these Saints had thereby to be So inward familiar with our Lord as they were Secondly how our Sauiour in the middest of
iubily which was in his âart for that the day of thy redemption did now approach Ponder how Almighty God difâoâeth and prepareth himselfe with âreat longing and ioy of mind to ândergoe afflictions and paines for âhee whereas when any thing is to be âone for his seruice or to be suffered âor his loue thou art presently affilâted and discomforted and flyest away Ponder furthermore how that â the iniuries persecutions ignominies and reproaches which our Lord receaued in Hierusalem vvere not able to diminish his great loue charity towards vs. Gather hence an inflamed loue and desire to suffer something for thy Lord thy eternall louer seeing that all the times thou hast offended him with thy so grieuous sins which haue not beene few haue not beene able to extinguish in his diuine breast the loue be beareth thee and his desire to doe thee good and to saue thee THE 2. POINT TO consider the humility and pouerty of the Sonne of God who as alvvaies before vvas vvont to make his iourney on foot so this day being to enter in triumph into Hierâsâlem he chose not to go in coach orin a chariot but vpon a âilly aâre vvhich also vvas another mans and albeit he entred with so great humility yet all the people receaued him with exceeding ioy solemnity and triumph Ponder that the cause why our Lord would this day be so magnified receaued with so great honour applause of all hauing euer fled such honours before was that his reproaches ignominies might be the greater his dishonour the more notorioâs Gather hence a great desire to condemne and abhorre all worldly pompâs and honours and to loue âmbrace the pouerty humility and meekenes of thy Sauiour because if these be the armes ensignes of thy King and God they ought also to be theirs who esteeme themselues his vassals and seruauts THE 3. POINT TO consider how our B. Saâiour and Lord of the Angels being mouâted vpon the asse innumerable people by dinine inspiration came to ceceaue him with boughes palmes in their hands with voices of laud and praise said Hosanna to the Son of God Blessed is he that commeth in the name of God Hosanna in the highest Ponder how the Eternall Father did honour his most B. Sonne not only when he entred first into the world and was borne poore in Betaleem sending âosts of Angells to solemnize his entrance and to bring those happy tidinges of glory to God and peace to men But this day also when he entred humble and meeke a multitude of people came to solemnize and celebrate his entrance into Hierusalem and his departure out of the world giuing God many thankes and praises for so great a benefit Gather hence a desire to imitate the great deuotion where with this people receaueth their God and be ashamed that thou commest so often to receiue thy Lord and God in the most Blessed Sacrament with so great vndeuotion coldnes THE 4. POINT TO consider the deuotion loâe where with all did spread their clothes and garments on the ground to adorne the way by which our Sauiour passed accounting it a great happines to cast themselues and âhatsoeuer they had at the feet of his our Lord that he might dispose of it all according to his most holy will acknowledging that vnto hims as to the owner and Lord of all all subiection seruice was most due Ponder the little regard and esteem which is to be had of the glory of this world seeing it receaued our Sauiour to day with so great honour within few dayes after it held him for worse then Barabbas and sought his death crying out against him Crucify Crucify him And whome to day it extolled termed the Son of Daâuid that is the Holy of Holyes and the most holy amongst Saints toâmorrow it reckoneth the most vile of all men and treateth him as a maâlefactour loading his sacred shoulders with a heauy Crosse on which he was to be crucifyed and dye Gather hence great compassion and griese to see the Lord of Angells so much neglected and despised by men and to seeke their honour at so great charge and cost of his Dâsire thou to serue and honour hiâ much more heereafter and say ãâã him Behold O my King my Loââ I cast at thy most holy feet not onlâ all my goods and wealth but my honour also my content my life my selfe and all tread vpoâ me and do with me what thou wilt for thou art my God my King and Lord the head of Angelâ and men better and exalted aboue them all THE XXX MEDITATION Of the supper which Christ our Lord made which his Disciples THE 1. POINT TO consider how Christ our Sauiour sent Saint Peter S Iohn his Apostles to prepare for the legall supper of the Lambe and how that forth with the Goodman of the house to whome they were sent inspired by the Holy Ghost gaue them the best best accoÌmodated roome of the whole house Ponder the fauour which Alâmighty God vouchsafeth to doe theâ in pdrticuler wheÌ he entred into thy house that is into thy soule to celebrate therein his feast and Pasch and make thee thereby partaker of the merits of his most precious bloud passion Gather hence great sorrow and repentance for that thou âast bebaued thy selfe so ill towardes so louing a Lord seeing not once but many times thou hast shut the dore of thy soule vpon him shutting it against his diâine inspirations thou hast opened it to the persâasions of thy enemy the Diuell whome thou hast receaued and entertained as if he not God had beene the owner and Lord of thy soule And therfore that which thou ougntest to do is to offer him not only the best roome in thy house that is thy soule but also to giue it him wholy for it is all wholy his And would to God it were better then it is that it might please his diuine Maiesty to âome dwell in it for euer THE 2. POINT TO consider how that Christ our Lord the day being come wheÌ the Paschal lambe was to be eaten wold fullfill that ceremnny of the Law for the accomplishing of the shadows and figures of the old law be sacrificed as the true Lambe which taketh away the sinnes of the world at the same time and in the same place that the mysticall Lambe was wont to be sacrificed Wherefore our Lord being at the table with his disciples and all things being prepared and ready he said vnto them With desire I haue desired to eate this pasch with you to giue you to vnderstand how much I loue you as if he should say Very long haue I greatly desired this day and this houre wherein you shall see nothing in me but ignominies reproaches blowes stripes woundes c. Ponder the great and earnest desire which God had to suffer and to giue his life for thee longing to be plunged
the like comfort and benefiâ by thy paines afflâctions if in them thou haue recourse to prayer as our B. Sauiour had in his THE 2. POINT TO consider how the Sonne of God praying with more force earnestnesse the anguish sorrow feare of death and the manifold torments which he was to suffer did so wonderfully increase that his sweat became as drops of bloud âtickling downe vpon the earth Ponder first the greatnes of the torments which our Sauiour suffered for if the only representation of them wrought so strange an effect in him who is the vertue and fortitâde of God what may we thinke it was to endure them Ponder secondly the example which our Lord giueth thee to striue strongly with thy passions and bad inclinations withstanding them all valiantly euen to the shedding of thy bloud if it be needfull for the ouercomming of them Gather hence desires to fight against them propâsing to thy selfe all those things which may terrify thee or cause thee any way to shrinke in the way of vertue or in the accomplishment of the diuine will whether ât be feare of pouerty dishonor sicknes griefe torment or vvhatsoeuer other difficulty that thus preparing thy selfe thou maist preuaile and get victory ouer them THE 3. POINT To consider the immensity of the loue of Christ our Lord and the great liberality vvhich he shevveth thee in shedding voluntarily his precious bloud for thy sake not staying till the tormentors should doe it vvith their stripes thornes nailes Ponder hovv great the agony sorrovv of our Lord was though the apprehension of all the torments vvhich he vvas to suffer in euery part of his body sith it vvas of force to make a bloudy svveat to fall dovvne from his face necke breast shoulders leauing him vvholy bathed and embrued in his ovvne bloud Gather from hence desires that all the parts of thy body might become as so many tongues to praise magnify the loue and mercies of thy Lord or so many eyes to weep tears of bloud for thy sinnes or so many hands to chastise reuenge thee on thy flesh by rigourous and sharp pennance it hauing beene the cause why thy Sauiour suffered so much especially at that time all at once and vpoÌ a heap all that he was to sustaine after at seuerall times THE 4. POINT TO consider the vigour and force which the most holy flesh of Christ receaued by praver to encouÌter with the many griefs torments of his passion it being strengthned to vndergo that which before it did naturally fly from abhorre Ponder that the causes of courage and strength of mind and body which our Lord shewed hââre were tvvo First because he saw that by his death and passion he was to heale al the mortal soares wounds of the mysticall body of the Church which are the faithfull Secondly to giue vigour force courage to his elect to vanquish and subdue their spirituall and corporall enemies vâdergoing for him and for his honour and glory afflâctions persecuâions reproaches torments Crosses and death as Saint Peter and S Paul S. Andrew S. Steuen S. Laurence many others did imitating like faithfull souldiers their valiant Captaine who went before and gaue them a liuely example of suffering patiently constantly Gather hence a desire to arme thy selfe like a true souldier of Christ with the armour of prayer which is the aâmour of light that in all thy labours and afflâctions thou mayst fight and get the victory ouer thine enimes the world the flesh and the âiuell THE XXXV MEDITATION Of the comming of Iudas of the inturies done vnto our Sauiour THE 1. POINT TO consider how that our Saulour hauing ended his prayer that salfe traitor âained friend Iudas approached with a great multitude of armed men making himselfe the leader and Captaine of them to apprehend Christ our Lord. Ponder the extremity of euills wherinto this wretch is falleÌ because he did not resist his couetousnes at the beginning and vvhat may be expected from thee if thou resist not that which thou feelest in thy selfe especially hauing got so good meanes of vertue as he had for thou dost not learne in such a schoole thou seest not such miracles neither conuersest with such a Mayster nor with such school-fellowes Yet all this was not âhough to restraine this accursed conpânion and keep him from falling like another Lucifer from the highest degree in the Church to the deepest bottome of all wickednes to wit to become the head conspirer of the death of Christ. Gather out of all this a great feare of the iudgements of God beseeching him not to leaue thee least thy impiety proceed so far as to work thine owne ruine by the benefits which he bestoweth vpon thee THE 2. POINT TO consider that the signe vvhich this traytor had giuen to the Ministers of Sathan to betray his Mayster was this Whomesoeuer I shall kisse that is he hold him fast Ponder that the enemies of the authour of life could entrap him by no other wile then by shew of loue And âe accepted this cruell kisse that with the swetâes thereof and of his meeknes he might soften the rebellious and obstinate hart of Iudas From thence thou maist gather a great confidence in the mercy of this our Lord that he will not refuse nor disdaiâe thy kisse nor of those sinners which desire to reconcile thâselues to him renew their friendship with him which they haue lost seeing he did not reiect the kiââe of him who so cruelly betrayed him sold him as Iudas did THE 3. POINT TO consider how Christ our Lord encountred those impiouâ officers of iniustice and demanding of them Whome seeke yee they answered him Iesus of ãâã and âur Lord said vnto them I am ãâã Ponder first that word of Christ whome seeke yee as if he should say âake heed you seek a iust innocÌetââan who doth good to al ãâã no man You seeke him who descended from heauen to earth for your eternall weale and saluation and you seeke him to depriue him of his life Gather from hence desires to seeke this thy Lord but after a far different manner to wit for thy saluation and remedy for his honour and glory thou mayst be assured that seeking him after this manner thoâ shalt find him Ponder secondly that word I am he A vvord which vnto his good Disciples vvas alvvayes a great comfort in their trauailes and afflictions but vâto the bad it is of so great feruour and dread that it alone did fell them flat to the grouÌd neither could they haue risen agayne if the same our Lord who ouerthrew them with one only word had not giuen them leaue to rise Gather hence desires to seeke God and note by the way that vnto the good who seeke him in prayer he is a Father and protectour he is their repose and ioy But vnto the euill vvho seeke him to offend him and
piety that thou mayst be assured of the Kingdome of heauen for there is no greater wisedome then to reioyce in contempt for the loue of God nor greater folly then to seeke to be honoured without him THE 4. POINT TO consider hovv that amongst so many garments which our Lord changed that night of his Passion his Eternall Father neuer permitted his enemies to inuest him with a blacke one it being the vse and custome among the Iewes that he who went to the tribunal to be arraygned should be clad in blacke which was a signe of a condemned person but would that it should be white in token of ânnocency or ruddy in token of âoue Ponder how that garment which was giuen vnto Christ our Lord in âerision was a figure of the witnesse ând purity of his most blessed soule ând of the innocency of his life as his enemies themselues were faine to confesse saying I haue fouÌd no cause in this man of those thinges wherein you accuse him Gather hence desires that our Lord wold inuest adorne thy soule with the white garment of innocency thy body with his reproaches that in all thou mayst imitate him and so thou shalt become more white purer then snow THE XLIII MEDITATION How Barabbas was compared and preferred before Christ THE 1. POINT TO consider that Pilate defirous to deliuer Christ from death and being to release some one condemned person in honour of the Pasch sayd vnto the Iewes Whom will you that I release Barabbas ãâã Iesus that is called Christ for Barabbas being so seditious wicked a fellow he made no doubt but thââ rather then he should goe vnpunished they would release our Sauiour Iesus Christ. Ponder the vvonderfull humiliation of Christ our Lord who being so great so wise so holy and so great a benefactour of all is novv ballanced and compared with Barabbas an infamous companion a theef a murderer a seditious publik malefactour Gather hence desires not to disdayne grudge or repine when an inferiour and worse then thy selfe is preferred before thee and more honoured and respected if account be made of him and not of thee if another be imployed in offices and busines of thee no mention be made nor thou regarded seeing thy Lord thy God endured all this much more THE 2. POINT TO consider how the vngratefull people and those blind passionate Scribes Pharisies out of malice brake into open iniustice how in their sight Barabbas his life notwithstanding all his murders robberies abhominations weighed more was thought more profitable then the innocency of Christ our Redeemer for all his vertues and miracles Wherefore they besought the iudge to release the man-killer and wicked villaine to murder crucify the author of life Ponder how mutable men are easy to be deceaued for they who a few dayes before vvith common consent festiuall acclamations called Christ their King now with a different note tumultuous clamour say Make Iesus away and release vs Barabbas Gather hence confusion for thy pride endeauour from this day forward to humble aud submit thy selfe seeing that our Lord is held for lesse then the lewdest fellow in the world And heere thou mayst see litterally fullfilled that which our Lord sayd by his Prophet I am a vvorme and no man â reproach of men and outcast of the people And for such he is novv reputed of those vvho ought to honour respect him aboue all men Angells THE 3. POINT TO consider that the more the President Pilate desired to deliuer Christ our Lord the more the Iewes were earnest to haue Barabbas released Ponder how often the like iudgement strife and controuersy passeth betweene thy flesh thy spirit the one making choice of Christ and the other of âarabbas the one of God the other of a creature the one seeketh after the vayne perishing glory of men the other seeketh the glory of God which is perpetuall euerlasting Finally the one enquireth after corruptible transitory thinges the other after things permaneÌt which endure for euer Whence thou mayst gather great sorrow for hauing left Christ thy only and chiefest good for so vile and contemptible a thing as Barrabbas I meane for hauing so often câosen regarded more a creature â little sensible delight and vayne honour then Christ Iesus our Lord In whome be all the goods treasures of the wisdome and infinite knovvledge of God hidden Be confounded in consideration of this thou miserable wreth as thou art THE 4. POINT TO consider how Pilaâe did testify vnto the people the innocency of Christ saying I find no cause in him why he should deserue death but the outragious people raising their voices cryed aloud saying Crucify him crucify him Ponder hovv much those redoubled often repeated clamours grieued our Lord seeing that they did not only seeke his death but that he should dye so cruell a death as the death of the Crosse. Gather hence sorrow for that thy sinnes haue put our Lord to so great straites for they alone vvere those that importuned and cryed out that he should be crucified Wherefore it behooueth thee to abhorre them detest so cruell and bloudy beasts which with so great cruelty murdered our Sauiour THE XLIIII MEDITATION Of the stripes which our Lord receaued at the pillar THE 1. POINT TO consider how the Present Pilate seeing that his former proiect and deuise did not succeed and that all the people began to be in an vproare he tooke another meanes and counsell to appease the fury of those cruell enemies vvhich was to giue sentence against the Lord of Angells that he should be whipped Ponder how vniust cruell reproachfull this sentence was which the President gaue agaynst our Lord notwithstanding he knew very well and was sure of his innocency But our Lord Iesus lifting his eyes to his Eternall Father sayd these wordes of the prophet I am ready O my Lord for scourges desirous to pay the thinges that I tooke not And without appellation or making any other meanes to quit himselfe he accepted that bloudy sentence offering most willingly his sacred body to be scourged in satisfaction of our sinnes Gather hence desires not to complaine vvhen by thy Superiours equalls or inferiours thou shalt be reprehended and chastized although thou be without fault seeing God most free from all fault is not only reprehended but also cruelly whipped and handled like a theefe vvith so horrible a punishment and yet not complayning but as if he vvere âumbe not once opening his mouth THE 2. POINT TO consider how the sentence of his whipping being pronounced those cruell Butchers layd hand on the Lord of heauen the creatour of the world glory of Angells âed him into the court to the place of punishment where with barbarous inhumanity and fury they stripped him naked couered him vvith stripes from top to toe as if he had beene
a slaue Ponder how much our Lord vvho inuesteth the heauens vvith cloudes beautifyeth the fields vvith flowers couereth the trees with leaus the birdes vvith feathers the beastes with woll and haire would be abashed beholding himselfe so naked poore vvithout any thing to couer himselfe vvithall and thât before such a multitude of people that were there present hauing none to take compassion on him nor so much at to cast a cloake ouer him to couer his nakednes Gather hence affection of pitty and compassion seeing thy God and Lord in such extreme need abandoned naked exposed to all ignominy shame compassed about with his enemies vvho desired to drinke his bloud THE 3. POINT TO consider how those cruell and barbarous tormeÌtors hauing that t hast most delicate body now naked amongst them bound him hand foot fast to a pillar that they might beate him more freely at their pleasure Ponder the great barbarousnes and cruelty wherwith theâ began to lay on load with thonges roddes on that most tender backe of thy Saâiour heaping stripes vpon stripes and woundes vpon woundes vnâill that most sacred body all bruized torne and flayed the bloud bursting out and trickling downe drop after drop on euery side became so diââigured and imbrued with bloud that his owne mother could hardly haue knowne him From hence thou mayst gatheâ a great detestation of thy sinnes for they vvere the cause of so outragious a punishment and a great desire to chastise them with rigorous pennance discipline THE 4. POINT TO consider how the torturers being weary of scourging that innocent body of Christ our Lord already spent with stripes which a mounted as some Saints affirme to abouâ fiue thousand they vnloosed him but he not being able to stand on hiâ feete fell downe vpon the cake of hiâ owne bloud that lay at the foot of the pillar Ponder the solicitude and desolation of Christ our only good who had not there any friend or aâquaintance to help him vp but his only enemies who did tread kick spurnâ him that gathering forces out of feeblenes he might get vp agayne Neyther was there any who would go aduertise the most Blessed Virgin of the extrâme need nakednes of her beloued Sonne that she might with speed come to couer him with her veile who so often had vvrapped him in clothes when he was a child Gather hence a great confidence of the remission of thy sinnes seeing this Lord endureth so much to deliuer thee from them and an earnest desire to rest cleaue fast to the feet of Christ kissing sometimes in spirit deuotion the ground embrued vvith his most sacred bloud other times that holy pillar bathed and enameled with the precious bloud of this holy Lambe which was shed to make thee strong as a piller in the Church of God that is to make thee haue a couragious inuincible hart to withstand thyne enemies thy pâssions temptations THE XLV MEDITATION Of the purple Garment and Crownâ of Thornes THE 1. POINT TO consider how those cruell soldiers hauing mode an end of whipping him they iâuented anothet punishment to affâict him withall wherfore approaching vnto our Lord Christ they cloathed him with an old scarlet cloake which was a wearing for Kings but they put it on him in derision scorne to giuâ the people to vnderstand that being â wile base fellow he vvould hauâ made himselfe a King Ponder how Christ our Lord would be thus made a King in mockery to declare vnto the vvorld thaâ all the honours Kingdomes of thiâ life are but mockeries that therefore little reckoning is to be made of theÌ as our Lord himselfe did so little esteeme them so that which the world accounteth an honor in others he would vndergo therby to be disgraced abased by the same vvorld which scoffed mocked at him Gather hence great compassion at the extreme dishonour which thy Lord God suffered for this his humiliation being made the scorne mocking stocke of the people And humbly beseech him that thou mayst not make so light of him as to contemne him through thy sins as those souldiers did but rather serue loue him desiring that he would vouchsafe to inuest honour thee with this his precious costly liuery that following him albeit the world despise thee therefore thou maist deserue to see enioy him clad with the rich precious robes of grace glory THE 2. POINT TO consider how those cruell enemies forthwith brought a cruell crown of sea-rushes which were certaine sharp and long thornes fastened it on his sacred tender head by which on the one side he sustained intolerable payne on the other extreme disgrace Ponder how that this crowne was not of gold nor siluer not of pearles nor precious stones of roseâ nor odoriferous flowres albeit this Lord right well deserued it being âhe true King of heauen and earth but that which insteed of these they gaue him was of strong boisterouâ bâambles and thornes which pierceâ his delicate head our Lord permitting this because thou hast often bound and crovvned thy head vvitâ roses flovvres of pleasures delights Gather hence how great thâ bounty charity of God is toward men seeing that when they are busiâed in preparing for him so cruell anâ terrible a crowne therewith to affliââ and torment him be prepareth for them a crowne of glory in heauen to reward them And seeing God teacheth thee by his example that by the crowne of thornes the crowne of glory in heauen is gayned and that the crowne of affliction which pricketh in this world is better then that of pleasures and delights which torment in the life to come Procure to crowne thy selfe and make choice of the first as S. Catherine of Siena did to auoid the second THE 3. POINT To consider how that to increase his confusion and reproach they after this put into the right haÌd of thy soueraigne King and Lord a Reed ânsteed of a Kingly scepter smote his head there withall to the end that âhe world might know that his Kingdome was hollow vayne and without substance he voyd of iudgement and vvit making himselfe a King Ponder how our Lord Iesus did not refuse to take the reed into âis hand but rather willingly accepted it held it fast as an instrument of his contempt From hence thou mayst gather how much it importeth thee to resist and reiect honour selfe estimation to imbrace humility submission of mind in regard that by this way meanes our soueraygne King entred into his Kingdome by the same no other thou must enter into the Kingdome of heauen which is not thine but anothers to giue thee if thou desire it THE 4. POINT TO coÌsider how those fierce people more cruell then Tygers not contenting themselues with the former iniuries which they had done to that meeke
ãâã thy selfe poorely apparelled and to want necessiâies seeing so rare an example as Christ our Lord hath giuen thee of sâfferances nakednâsse pouerty in all his life and specially in his death for his nakednes must be thy garment his dishonour thy liuery his pouerây thy riches his conâusion thy glory and his death thy life of grace glory THE 2. POINT TO consider how Christ our Lord being now naked the souldiers âaying the Crosse on the ground they commanded him to lye downe vpon it on his backe that he might be nayled to it so he did Ponder first the most excellent obedience of thy Sauiour which shined most in hearing and obaying in whatsoeuer hard difficult matters those cruell tormentors proposed vnto him giuing thee an example to subiect thy selfe to euery humane creature for his loue where there is no sinne Ponder secondly âow our Sauiour lying vpon that bed of the Crosse which thy sinnes had prepared for him lifted vp his eyes to heauen and rendred thankes to his Eternall Father for hauing brought him to that point wherein he beheld himselfe so poore so dishonoured and misused for his loue Gather hence whân thou shalâ see thy selfe in adâersity and distresâe to be resigned to the diuine vvill in thâ giuing Almighty God due thanks for them for once giuing thanks to God in aduersity is more worth and of mâre merit then many tymes iâ prosperity THE 3. POINT To consider how Christ our Lord was mayled on the Crosse the âxâessiue paines which he felt when those rough and boisterous nailâ eâtred breaking the veynes piercing ãâã sinewes and renting thâ most tender parts of the most delicatâ body of all bodyes enduring with great patience and loue to see himselfe so loaden with painââ ful of vââpeakable sorrowes Ponder how our Lord permitted the nayles to pierce his sacâed hands and diuine feet to shew theâ that he should haue thee alwayes imprinted in his hands feet so great was the loue and holy zeale whicââe had of the saluation of soules and of thine in particuler Gather hence deâires of thy he owne saluation and of thy neighbours setting light by whatsoâuer difficultyes paynes and trauells which to deliuer them out of siâne may befall thee that by this meanes as a souldier of this spirituall warfare thou mayst imitate in some âort thy Captaine Iesus who vvith so great loue gaue his life for them hanging on the Crosse. THE 4. POINT TO consider that after Christ our Lord was nayled to the Crosse his enemies lifted it vp on high with that true lambe of God vpon it who taketh away the sinnes of the world letting it fall downe voilently into the pit which they had made for the purpose Ponder the paine confusion and shame vvhich Christ our Lord had when he savv himselfe on high naked in the middest of an open field full of innumerable people and as another Noe exposed shamefuâ to the sight of all without any thing to couer his nakednes withall noâ hauing any to affoard him any thing but many who were ready to take from him all that might be giuen him Gather hence a great shame confusion at the small griefe sense feeling thou hast of the paynes of our Lord not shedding so much as onâ teare of compassion wheras he powreth out all his bloud And seeing the insensible creatures which want both reason and feeling made so wonderfull demonstration of sorrow at the death of this our Lord that they were âorne and rent in pieces for euery griefe it is good reason that thou who art his creature and the cause âhy he endured that which he did shouldst acknowledge be thankeâull for it and haue a speciall and inâard feeling thereof seeing he suffeâed it in benefit of thee THE XLIX MEDITATION Of the seauen wordes which our Lord spake hanging on the Crosse. THE I. WORD TO consider the great charity of our Lord which waâ such that before he vvould comfort his Mother before he vvould prouidâ for his friends before he would coÌmend his spirit to his Father he promideth his enemies of remedy Wherfore the first word he spake on thâ Crosse was to excuse his enâmiââ who crucified blasphemed murdered him Ponder how Christ Iesus our Lord being full of grieâous dâlors paines in euery part of his body noâ finding any place of rest in that harâ bed of the Crosse euen then did lifâ vp his diuine eyes to heauen shedâding teares of most tender loue anâ compassion opening his diuiâ mouth not to commaund that firââ should câme from heauen as Eliââ prayed but to beseech his Eternall Father to pardon those which were there and the sinne they committed in crucifying him Gather hence how exactly our Lord God fulfilleth the precept he bath giuen thee To loue thyne enemyes to pray for them that persecure thee that by this example thou mayst learne and know to doe the like THE 2. WORD TO consider how that the second Word which thy Redeemer spake from the chayre of the Crosse was to pardon the Theefe graunt him heauen Because he confessed his fault and declared the innocency of Christ our Lord and freely and plainely âalling him King craued fauour aâ his hands saying Lord remember âe when thou shalt come into thy Kingdome And so our Lord Iesus âid honouring this thâeâe before his âternall Father aâ he conâessed him âeforâ men ânduing him with so exceeding great graces priuiledes that being the last ãâã made him of all mortall men the first who departing this life should presently reâeaue the reward of glory Ponder that if God rewarded him with so great liberality who did only follovv him not fully three houres hovv will he reward those who shall serue and follow him vvith perfection all the houres dayes of their life And if our Lord shewed himselfe so gratefull to this sinner who had iniuried him innumerable tymes for one only time that he confessed and honoured him what manner of gratitude will he shew to him who shall spend his vvhole life in seruing and honouring him Gather hence desires to serue him alwayes that securely vvitâ confidence thou mayst haue accâssâ vnto him and aske him thââ vvhich this good theese did aske him saying Remember me o Lord that is remember not my sinnes nor the robberies which I haue done but that am a frayle man and infirme that am thy creature made to thy imagâ likenesse wherefore I beseâh the to remember me THE â WORD TO consider that the third word which Christ our Lord spake froÌ the Altar of the Crosse was to recommend his B. Mother to Saint Iohn S. Iohn vnto his Mother And from that houre the disciple tooke her to his owne and loued her with speciall loue Ponder the exceeding great griefe vvith vvhich this vvord of recommandation pierced the hart of the Blessed Virgin for she throughly weighed the inequality of the change which
1. POINT To consider the desolation and sorrow wherewith the two disciples going to a towne called Emmaus talked and reasoned with themselus of the paines and Passion of Christ our Lord who approaching went with them and vouchsafed to accompany them in this voyage but their eyes were held they might not knovv him meaning to discouer vnto them in the end of the iorney his glorious Resurrection Ponder the loue of Christ towordes these two disciples sith the small slânder faith they had of his Resurrection was not a cause to with dravv him from their company beâcause he is infinitly delighted to ãâã with them who speake and discoursâ of holy thinges vvho sayth Wherâ there be two or three gathered in my name there am I in the middest of them Gather hence how fit and beseeming a thing it is euer to talke of God and to entertayne thy selfe in like discourses with thy companions especially in tyme of affliction sith our Lord is at hand to comfort them conuerting their sorrow and deâolation into ioy and content And contrary wise hovv ill it is to speake of prophane and bad matters because such do banish exclude Christ Ieâus from their company he flyeth from them THE 2. POINT To consider how Christ our Lord encountred these his two seruantâ ãâã a pilgrimes weed as if he had âot known sayd vnto them What ãâã these communications that yoââonferre one with another walking ãâã are sad Ponder that our Lord is not ânly glad and recreated for that haâ ãâã endured so much as he hath yea ãâã death it selfe being so reproachfull and ignominious but desireââ that all should heare it recounted anâ spoken off And therefore he asked hiâ disciples which he as an eye vvitâ nesse knew right well of what they only by hear saâ treated off for theiâ feare cowardlines had caused theâ to fly Gather hence confusion and shame considering hovv forgetful thou att of vvhat our Lord suffered for thee whereas thou hauing donâ sustayned so little for him noâ withstanding most mindfull therof expecting that he reward crownâ thy flender seruice desirous to bâ esteemed as one who hath trauelled and endured much for the loue oâ God yea art discontented to be oâ therwise reputed THE 3. POINT To consider how our Lord haâ uing heard them forthwith beâ gan to rid deliuer them from theââ ignorance and reprehending theâ for their incredulity and hardnes oâ hart proued vnto them by authoritâ out of the Prophets hovv Chriââ oughâ to haâe suffered so to enter into his glory Ponder that if it were necessaây that Iesus Christ should suffer such so grieuous iniuries reproaches thereby to enter into glory which was his by inheritance as being the âaturall Sonne of God how will it be possible that thou who art a seruant ãâã spendst all thy life in coâtentmeÌts pleasures vanities shouldst enter into glory which is not thine but that it must cost thee a Crosse mortificatiââs and afflictions for costing God ãâã this âhouldst thou enioy it at free âost that is for nothing From hence thou mayst gather âesires to imitate in some thing thy Captaine Iesââ with a great feare least âhy want of fayth be a iust cause why âhou deseruest to be reprehended of âs diuine maiesty and held as foolish ând slow of hart to belieue vnderâând his diuine Misteryes THE 4. POINT To consider that as these holy pilgrimes drew neere to the tovvne vvhither they vvent our Lord made femblance to goe further but they with much instance and intreaty forced him saving Tarry because it iâ towards night and the day is novâ far spent Ponder that howsoeuer Chriââ our Lord made semblance to go further his intention and desire was tâ remaine vvith them to impart vntâ thâegrave e that toothsome repast to opeâ their eyes and manifest himselfe vnââ to them as he did in this occasion râfreshing feeding them with his ââcred body for his delights are to bâ and conuerse vvith the children ãâã men Hence thou maist gather coâfusion and shame that thy delighâ are not to be with God nor to draâneere and conuerse with him but withdravv thy selfe from him ãâã to discourse and treat of him but the vayne transitory and periââââ thinges of this world not reflecâââ hovv that the day of thy life passeth on and hasteneth to an end the night of thy death approcheth wherin thou art to giue an account to God of all THE VI. MEDITATION Of his apparition to the Apostles upoâ Easter-day THE 1. POINT To consider hovv Christ our Lord appeared to his Apostles being gathered togeather vâon the day of his Resurrection Ponder the great care our Saâiour hath to visit his beloued disâiples forgetting the small âidelity âhey shewed him in his Passion when â leauing him in the handes of his ââemies they all fled and forsooke âim Gather hence desires of gratiâde to this Lord vvho many times âoardeth thee spiritually that which did to his Apostles visibly corâally for albeit thou hast beene so vngratefull and dislovall vnto him shonned forsaken fled from him many tymes he neuertheles omiteth not oftentimeâ to visit âhee with his diuine inspirations giuing himselfe also vnto thee with great lone corporally as often as thou commeââo receaue him in the most B. Sacrâment THE 2. POINT To consider how our Lord entred in to his disciples hauing the dores of the house shut wherâ they vvere retyred for feaâe of thâ Iewes our Lord entring in far betteâ then the Sunne entreth through thâ chinks of the windows to awakâ thâ sleepy to rid the fearefull of theiâ dread Ponder that the causes why ouâ Lord entred to visit his disciples thâ dore being shut amongst otherâ were these The first was to manifeâ vnto them that his body being glorifyed he could enter and penetraâ by the grace of subtility whitheâ foeâeâ he would without any obstâcle or let at all The second to maâ knoâne vnto them the efficacy of his ãâã The third that which maâeth most for thy purpose is to teach thee that Gods ' holv will pleasure is thou shouldst keep shut âhe gates and windows of thy harâ which are thy senses that theeues may not enter therat which are the âiuells to robbe spoyle the fruit of a good conscience Gather hence liuely effâctuâll desires from this day forwardes to be very vigilant and circumspect ââer the guard and custody of thy âoule powers senses not permitâing them to wander without bridle ãâã pursuit of creatures And so doing ââe Lord and owner thereof will entââ to replenish her with true ioy âomfort THE 3. POINT âo consider how our Lord the disciples being thus gathered toâather came with a cherfull counâance and placing himselfe in the âiddest of them which is the place him who maketh peace to infiââte thereby that for this effect he had come into the world that this vvas which
belieued Ponder that albeit our Lord âpproued the confession of S. âhoâas yet wold he not call him Blessâââhe did S Peter when he confessed âim for the Sonne of God and the âeason was because he had been flow ãâã belieuing wherefore insteâd of âraysing him he repreâended him ââying Because thou hast seene me Thomas thou hast belieued as who âould say Thankes be to thy hands ãâã eyes which I haue giuen thee to âelieue that I am thy Lord and thy âod Endeauour to gather hence anâ earnest desire to see Christ thy Lord if not corporall as the disciples saw enoyed him with their corporaâ eyes at least spiritually sith those who belieue his Resurrection not hauing seene him Almighty God calleth Blessed THE VIII MEDITATIONâ Of his apparition to the Apostles vpoâ Ascension day THE 1. POINT TO consider how our Sauiouâ appearing to his disciples tolââhem that the same day he waâ to go to his Father that if they lââued him they shold verily be glad ãâã regard that it was expedient for theâ that he went to heauen Ponder how desirous the discââples were not to loose the corp orââ presence of their Maister seeing it ãâã necessary vvith these and other likâ speaches to aduertise them that was not only expedient for his ãâã to ascend to heaueÌ but also that it imported them much thereby to make mere perfect their faith to raise their hope to purify their charity For if I go not to my Father our Lord sayd vnto theÌ the Holy Ghost shall not come to you Gather hence that if to loue the corporall presence of their Lord and Mayster with a loue somewhat lesse pure in part interessed would haue hindred the comming of the Holy Ghost to the discipls how much more will it hinder thee to loue thy selfe or any other creature with an inordinate loue THE 2. POINT TO consider that our Lord sayd vnto his discipls to comfort them Reioyce my beloued disciples at my departure because I goe to prepare you a place Ponder how that thy Redeeââer directeth lik wise the same speech âo thee as to his Apostles Reioyce âecause I goe to heauen that novv from this day forward thou mayst âaue entrance therin reioyce for that I ascend and goe before to open for thee those celestiall ãâã by which thou albeit a wretched sinnefull creature mayst haue franke and free entrance vvhich beforâ I ascended was not graunted to the iust and holy Reioyce because I ascend to day ãâã that thou mayst ascend to morrow ãâã be seated by me in the place assigned thee by my Father Hence thou mayst receâueâ meruailous great ioy and content for that thy Lord and thy God ascendethâ into heauen because for him principally it vvas created Craue of him his diuine grace that by meaneââ of a good vertuous life thou maisâ deserue to see and enioy him in his glory THE â POINT TO consider hovv our Lord hauing comforted his disciples said vnto them Tarry in the Citty tilâ you be endued vvith povver from aboue Ponder that word Tarry that is they should abide rest and stay vvhereby he meant to signify thaâ they were to expect him with patience and perseuerance vvith repose of body and mynd Secondly God commanded them to keep in the Citty to giue them to vnderstand that this fauour was not done to them alone but was also ordayned for the good of the vniuersall world Gather hence desires to expect the coÌming of this diuine spirit vvith repose and quietnes because God desireth that his though they liue in the middest of the streets and noyse of the world may haue their mind quiet and peaceable that they may pray and attend to him with such spirit and recollection as his diuine maiesty requireth to thee shal be necessary THE 4. POINT TO consider how Christ our Lord commanded his disciples forthâith to betake themselues to mount ãâã because from thence he vvas âascend to heauen Ponder how these holy disciâles vvould call to mind that the ãâã which their Lord and Mayster had chosen to suffer iniuries reproathes on the Crosse he now chose to mount thence vp to Heauen there to enioy the immeasurable greatnes of his glory that the way to ascend to heauen is the mount Oliuet or of oliues which signifyeth charity and mercy Gather hence desires to be charitable mercifull towards thy neighbours to extoll magnify thâ wisdome prouidence of God who is able to make that which is the beginning of thy humiliation contempt to be the origen cause oâ thy exaltation prayse as may bâ seene in Ioseph whose calamity iâââamy imprisonment God vsed as meanes to mak him soueraigne Lorâ King of Aegipt THE IX MEDITATION Of the ascension of Christ our Lord. THE 1. POINT TO consider that fourty dayes being past after the resurrection of Christ our Lord in which he had treated and conuersed with his the houre of his glorious asâension being come hauing all his disciples present he tooke his leaue of them with manifold signes and demonstrations of loue and as a most louing Father who departeth lifting vp his hands he blessed them and so departed from them Ponder how great the griefe feeling of these most louing children would be for the departure of their Father when they should see that Lord to leaue them for whom they had left all thinges It is to be belieued that then some would cast themselues at his feet others would kisse his most sacred hands others would âang vpon his necke and all would say Hovv O Lord dost âhou go and leaue vs thus alone and orphanes in the middest of so many enemies What shal children do without their Father disciples without their Maister sheep without a Sheepheard feeble and vveake souldiers without their Captaine But our Lord comforted them promising them the fauour and ayd of the Holy Ghost and his perpetuall assistance and prouidence vvhich neuer should fayle them Gather hence desires that this Lord before he depart to heauen vouchsafe to giue thee his benediction taking hold spiritually of his hands casting thy selfe at his feet hanging on his necke thou shalt ãâã an other Iacob say vnto him I vvill not let thee goe o Lord vnles thouâ blesse me for thereon my whole remedy and euerlasting blisse dependeth THE 2. POINT TO consider how that glorious boâdy of Christ our Lord hauing imâparted his benediction to his in theiâ presence ascended to heauen the disciples remayning in suspence and astonished to behold their Elias mount vp to heauen whereas they could not follow their Lord with their bodies they followed him with their eyes harts Ponder the great admiration of the Angells and men which were there assembled seeing that sacred humanity of Christ our Lord to mount aboue all celestiall spirits towards that Citty and to be seated at the right hand of the Father vvho had been so much debased
plight in which thou seest âm and his vnspeakable charity giâth testimony of him that he is the ânne of the liuing God For no oââr then he could haue vndergone so âny torments for the sinnes which neuer committed And adoring ãâã with all thy hart thou shalt say âou o Lord art my Christ my ââd my Sauiour my Redeemer he who thirty and three yeares âst so great and earnest desire and âging to see this day of payne and âction once come to deliuer me from the eternall affliction and payne THE 2. POINT TO consider hovv the high Priest hearing the answere vvhich our Lord gaue afterward to his demauÌd he and all the rest that were present being vnworthy to heare that which they deserued not to vnderstand they treated him as a slaue And thinking any punishment that they coulâ inflict vpon him by their lavv to little they yielded him vp to the seâcular power of the president Pilate that he might sentence tormeÌt hiâ more cruelly Ponder the prouidence aâ vvisedome of our Lord God vvââ would that the Iewes and Gentiâ should concurre to the death of hiâ who dyed for the saluation of all ãâã his death is our life his condemâtion our saluation Gather hence compassion griefe to behold thy Lord ãâã God hated of all as well of these his owne nation as of strangers ãâã lament for that many Christians the like through their sins if those who haue obligation to serue honour him do this what wonder is it iâ the Turkes Gentills who know him not do offend him THE 3. POINT TO consider the presentation and accusation of Christ before Pilate as if he had beene a malefactour and a seditious person being accused as one vvho prohibited Tribute to be giuen to Caesar making himselfe the Messias promised of God Ponder how Christ our Lord in all these accusations and calumniations ansvvered not a vvord in his âvvne defence shevving heerin his great meeknes and patience and declaring in fact how earnest a desire he had to dy for our saluation seeing he would not by speaking for himselfe cause his death to be one iote deâayed From hence thou mayst gather âhat the strongest armour to resist ây enemyes in the midst of the temâests of aduersity and persecution ãâã confidence in God such as our Lord had whose name is Admirable for he is not only admirable in perfections miracles but also in humiliations and afflictions Admirable in meeknes admirable in patience in suffering admirable in silence giuing thee example how thou oughtst to keep silence and not excuse thy selfe when thou art reprehended for thy misdeeds sins albeit thou find not thy selfe in conscience guilty of any thing THE 4. POINT TO consider hovv Pilate hauing heard all these accusations entred vvith Christ our Lord into the Pallace to examine enquyre of him concerning all that vvhich vvas layd to his charge hauing heard all his diuine answers from the mouth of God in whome neuer was found deceit perceiuing his vprightnes integrity iudged him to be an innocent man Ponder the desire our Lord had that that miserable iudge would open the eyes of his soule to receauâ the beame of his diuine light But thâ vn happy wretch although he began to haue a desire to know the truth yet he did not expect answere because he deserued not to heare it from the mouth of the true God Gather from hence desires to know the truth and that God as the Father and author thereof will reach it thee beleeuing that his life is truth his miracls truth his SacrameÌts truth truth all that he taught preached Wherfore seeing this is the most certayne truth although the defence thereof cost thee thy life as it cost thy God his life be glad to loose it for him neyther loosing it shalt thou loose it but gayne it euerlastingly THE XLII MEDITATION Of the presentation of Christ our Lord before Herod THE 1. POINT TO consider how Pilate vnderstanding that our Sauiour was borne in Galilee and vnder Heârods iurisdiction who was come to Hierusalem in those days to celebrate the feast of the Paschall Lambe sent him vnto him that he might iudge discusse the processe of that prisoner whome he held as his subiect Ponder the paines and ignominy our God endured betweene Pilats house and King Herods pallace those his cruell enemies carrying him with great violence tumult and noyse through the middest of the market place streets of Hierusalem that he might be seene noted of all esteemed guilty Haue compassion to see the Son of God haled to so many Tribunalls and Iudges euery one vvorse then the other his diuine maiesty ordayning it so that he might haue abundant matter wherein to shew his inuincible patience humility and longanimity giuing thee an example that thou mayst know wherein to imitate him and follovv his vertues THE 2. POINT TO consider how glad King Herod was when he saw our Sauiour because he had heard many thinges of him the wonders he wrought the miracles he did so desired that he would do some before him Ponder how Christ our Lord to eschew death or any other torment would not do any miracle before Herod also because he knew that he was moued to desire it through pride and vaine curiosity not of a desire of his own spirituall benefit neyther would our Lord speake one word in defence of himselfe or to that he asked him all which redounded to hiâ greater reproach Gather from hence a desire that God would vouchsafe to graunt thee the vertue of silence make answere for thee in all thy doubts difficulties for the benefit of thy soule thou being full of darknes ignorance of thy selfe art not able to giue any answere to the purpose nor to rid thy selfe of the questions impugnations of others THE 3. POINT TO consider how that Herod seeing our Lord not to yield to his desire nor to satisfy his curious leuity did contemne him and with all those of his court held him for a simple foolish fellow and therefore not so much worthy of death as to be mocked scorned at so in derision mockage put on him a vvhite homely garment Ponder hovv Christ our Lord ãâã heere mocked disgraced by the King and all his Courtiers who made a foole of him stood plucking him pinching him iesting at him in most rude vnciuill manner And when they had done the King sent him backe to the President Pilate as if he should haue sayd vnto him Loe I send you backe this foole idiot From whence thou mayst gather desirs to accompany in spirit thy true King Lord vvho suffered all these opprobrious things with admirable patience teaching thee to make small reckoning of the iudgements opinions of this world which are meer folly what people say or do desire to suffer for iustice
vnto our Lord after they haue receaued it For the excellency and soueraingty of this diuine Sacrament in which is contained God himselfe requireth that the disposition and preparation therto be made with all care possible And therefore one of the best preparations wherewith all may come to receaue aboundant grace will be retiring themselues first to consider well some one point of the sixe which are set downe in the two ensuing meditations vvhich are of the Feare and Loue of God because these two vertues vnite the soule with God are the two armes vvherewith she is to imbrace her spouse and which do instruct and teach her what God is and what she is For Feare causeth in the soule humility and reuerence Loue confidence deuotion Feare discouereth the greatnes of God and thy basenes Loue his goodnes and clemency Feare his iustice and our sinnes Loue the mercy and confidence we ought to haue of the pardon of them If therfore loue and feare worke so great good in the soule thou must endeauour by all meanes that these sayd considerations may ingender and produce in thine these two pearles But because our corrupt Nature so much affecteth variety that though the consideration be most excâllent yet is it presently most weary of it I will put in these two Meditations six points as I haue sayd which may serue for preparations to six CoÌmunions for new meat sharpneth stirreth vp the appetite of man exciteth in him a new hunger desire to vnite himselfe with God for all these sauces and seasonings of considerations are necessary to make him eat the bread of Angels who hath set his affection on the delights food of beasts After these shall follow six Meditations which containe eighteen points or considerations wherein the seruant of God may find sufficient matter for so many coÌmunions to render due thanks after he hath receaued out of which he may reape the fruit and profit he desireth THE I. MEDITATION Of Feare THE 1. POINT TO consider the immensity and maiesty of that Lord which really truly is contained in the most B. Sacrament for he is the very same who with his only will hath created conserueth gouerneth heauen earth with it alone can anihilate destroy it all Ponder the admiration and astonishment which it caused to King Salomon to see that the greatnes of God came to liue in that holy TeÌple vvhich he had built for him being notwithstanding the most solemne the most sumptuous and most magnificent that was in the world With hovv much more reason oughtest thou to maruell feare and tremble being but a poore Emment and silly vvorme to goe to receaue into thy house of base clay that immense and diuine maiesty Creatour conseruer and gouerner of the world whome the Apostle S. Saul calleth the brightnes of the glory of God being so ill prepared as thou art thy brest also hauing beene not the Temple of the Holy Ghost as in reason it ought to be but rather a denne of dragons receptacle of serpents basiliskes Gather hence a great feare of the iustice of God with a detestation of thy manifold sins for thou being so vile a creature and vnworthy to haue in thee so great a good thou fearest not to enclose retaine harbour in thy strait and narrovv brest this omnipotent Lord God whom the heauens cannot comprehend THE 2. POINT TO consider who thou art who he is whom thou goest to receaue and thou shalt find that an abhominable sinner goeth to receaue his Sanctifier a vile creature his Ceatour a wretched slaue his Lord finally a miserable caâiffe the supreme omnipotent God at whose beauty the Sunne Moone do meruaile whose maiesty heauen and earth do reuerence by whose bounty the society of all the Blessed is maintayned Ponder how being so vile base as thou art thou art notvvithstanding admitted to receaue a God so high hovv being so little canst thou entertayne so soueraigne a maiesty The Creatour of the heauens the King of Angells men before whose greatnes the strongest pillars of heauen do tremble and the most high Seraphims shrink in their wings for very feare and reuerence and if all thinges created be in the sight of this great God as if they vvere not vvhat I pray thee vvilt thou be in his diuine presence to receaue him The Church singeth and much admireth that this great Lord vnto vvhome heauen and earth is a straite place disdained not to enter into the wombe of a Virgin Measure her purity with thy impurity her grace with thy deformity her innocency with thy malice and thou shalt find far greater reason to wonder at thy boldnes in harbouring the Sonne of God of the most B. Virgin whome she conceaued and conserued in her breast with so great humility Gather hence great feare least this soueraigne King and Lord command his seruants to bind thee hand and foot for that thou commest not with the garment of due innocency and purity to this holy table and celestiall banquet cast thee into the vtter darkenes of hell there to receaue thy deserued punishment THE â POINT TO consider the great iustice of our Lord and how much he abhorreth sinne those which full often thou hast committed against his diuine Maiesty for which thou deseruedst many yeares ago to haue been burning in hell fire and as if thou wert very iust and holy with so little feare thou presumest to entertayne into thy house the terrible Iudge searcher of thy life manners not remembring the menaces threats of the Apostle against sinners who vnworthily as thou dare eat drinke the sacred body and bloud of our Lord. Ponder that if S. Iohn Baptist so pure a creature sanctified in his Mothers wombe said that he was not worthy to loose the lachet of the shoe of our Lord how shalt thou be worthy to receââe him In like manner iâ S Peter Prince of the Apostles and heâd of the Church being astonished at the power Maiesty of Christ âel downe at his knees saying Go forth from me because I am a sinnefull man how darest thou come to put thy mouth to his diuine side sustaine thy self with that precious wine that springeth Virgins From hence thou mayst gather a great feare reuerence before thou commest presumest to receaue the maiesty of this soueraigne God and an humble acknowledgement of thy basenes a deep sorrow for thy sins perfectly imitating that sinner the Publican to obtaine pardon therof who knocking his brest said God be mercifull to me a sinner THE II. MEDITATION Of Loue. THE 1. POINT TO consider that as great as God is in Maiesty in iustice and in detestation of sin as hath been said in the precedent Meditation so great he is in goodnes in mercy in loue towards sinners which causeth him to present himselfe in human flesh in the most B. Sacrament
is the cause why he permitteth himselfe to be once many times sold scorned crucifyed nayled betweene theeues for such are they vvho receaue him vnworthily Ponder how far the goodnes of God reached and how much the beames of his diuine and inflamed loue extended it selfe sith it made that generous and magnificent Lyon vvho vvith his roaring terrified the world to put on such meeknes that he hath couched himselfe vpon the Altar and is become a meeke Lambe that thou mighâst eat him And this same Lord being he who commaunded that no sinner should dare to approach vnto him vnder payne of malediction his loue hath now so disposed and so changed him and he is become so desirous that al men approach vnto him to giue himselfe entierly to all that he doth not only call and inuite them but also eateth vvith them yea and his loue doth proceede so far as that he doth not only eate vvith them but commandeth them also to eate him giuing them his sacred body and bloud to eate From hence thou mayst gather feruent desires to loue him vvho hath loued thee so much to haue confidence in him vvho hath beene so liberall with thee to haue accesse vnto him who is so good so communicatiue of himselfe saying vvith the holy Prophet What shall I render to our Lord for so many fauours and benefits which he hath rendred to me and especially for this I am to receaue now but now I know that it is my hart which he desireth and this will I intierly offer vp vnto him as his diuine Maiesty willeth commandeth me THE 2. POINT TO consider hovv that Father of mercy who vouchsafed to be chastized in his owne flesh for thy loue âo shed his most precious bloud dye vpon a Crosse for thee this very same is there glorious and him thou goest to receaue The same that dyed for thee is there aliue to giue thee life making himselfe as he himselfe said thy meate that by vertue of this âacred food thou mayst come to transforme thy selfe spiritually into God to put in his liuery Ponder the great desire this our Lord hath of thy weale and remedy âith he stood not vpon his owne cost and charges nor regarded the losse of his honour life and liuing so that he might feed cherish thee vvith this diuine food Giuing it vnto thee not only to see adore and kisse as to the theepheardes and Kinges but that thou mayst receaue him also haue him in thy breast as his holy chast Espouse had Gather from hence desires to consecrate thy selfe wholy vnto this Lord endeauouring to be like vnto him in life manners seeing he said Be holy because I am holy to thee in particuler he sayth Learne of me that is to be humble as Christ chast and pure as Christ patient and obedient as Christ and by this meanes thou shalt goe clad with his garmenâ liuery THE 3. POINT TO coÌsider that God loued sinners so much as that he was not only content to take flesh in likenesse of a sinner but vouchsafed also therby to communicate vnto thee his riches and treasures to remaine in this most Blessed Sacrament vnder that sacred veile in that humble curâayne of that sacred host and this not for a small tyme but euen to the consummation of the world Ponder hovv the loue that brought him into the world mâ him put himselfe into the handes oâ sinners this very same is that which maketh him to come the second and infinite tymes into the world and to shew himselfe so inamoured as it were and so much in loue vvith them that he sayd that all this delights âoyes and affections are to be and conuerse vvith sinners And yet he far more affectionatly declareth and specifieth his loue saying that He who toucheth them toucheth the apple of his eye and veynes of his âart From hence thou mayst gather desires to haue accesse vnto him and to set thy loue and affection entierly vpon this Lord. And although thy grieuous sinnes on the one side detayne and terrify thee not withstanding let his great loue and clemency on the other side preuaile and moue thee âimitating the prodigall Sonne who albeit he saw his owne basenes and misery yet the goodnes and loue of his Father encouraged him to goe vnto him and to cast himselfe at his feet do thou also as he did seeing thou hast imitated him that sinned imitate him that repented and thy heauenly Father will runne out to receaue thee and as to a beloued child will fall vpon thy necke in token of his singular loue vnto thee HEERE FOLLOW SIX MEDITATIONS Of the most Blessed Sacrament to giue thankes vnto our Lord ofter Communion and to meditate vpon the Feasts Octaues therof AN ADVERTISMENT THERE is wont to be much negligence distraction in some after they haue receaued the âost Blessed Sacrament they reap âhall fruit and profit thereby beâse they are not prepared vvith âe pious consideration to render due thankes vnto our Lord or because they alwayes meditate one and the selfe same thing Wherfore to remedy this negligence and to repayre this domage it wil be good that he vvho is Priest be prepared before Masse and others before Communion with one or more points of the six ensuing Meditations that variety may take a way wearisomnes which deprineth both of gust profit And heereby they may drâsse this diuine meat in sundry manners sith it hath no lesse properties in it then had that celestiall Manna vvhich gauâ such tast as euere appetite desired Sâ this diuine Manna is of such vertuâ and substance that euery one maâ apply it as he liketh best and it wiâ sauour vnto him of vvhatsoeuer hââart shall desire for whatsoeuer is iâ ãâã is profitable to be eaten and pleâ sing to the tast as the diuine Espouâ doth note Saint Ambrose othâ holy Fathers say Christ is all thinâ vnto vs If thou be sicke of an aguâ he is a Phiâââian if thou feare dearâ he is ãâã if thou fly darknes hâ light if thou seeke sustenance he is food if thou be cold he is fire if thou haue want he is rich Let the conclusion be âaith this holy Doctor that we proue and tast of this soueraigne food because our Lord who is in it is most sweet pleasing to the palate of the soule If therfore whatsoeuer may be and thou canst desire thou findest hast in Christ coÌsideâ him euery tyme thou communicatest according to these or the like attributes that thou mayst reape the fruit thou desirest know how to render due thankes vnto our Lord because that time is more fit for mentall prayer then to read vocall prayers or to say beads Wherfore before thou enter into the Meditation or coÌsideratioÌ of any of the eÌsuyng points to illuminate thine vnderstanding stir vp deuotion thou mayst first euerv tyme thou communicatest