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A52345 A treatise of the difference bbtwixt [sic] the temporal and eternal composed in Spanish by Eusebius Nieremberg ... ; translated into English by Sir Vivian Mullineaux, Knight ; and since reviewed according to the tenth and last Spanish edition.; De la diferencia entre lo temporal y eterno. English Nieremberg, Juan Eusebio, 1595-1658.; Mullineaux, Vivian, Sir. 1672 (1672) Wing N1151; ESTC R181007 420,886 606

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just Sentence of God be praised for a Conqueror over the World and the invisible Powers of Hell and how shall that Soul rejoyce when it shall see it self being freed from all danger and troubles to triumph over all its enemies What can it desire more than to be partaker of all those divine goods and even to accompany Christ in the same Throne O how chearfully do they combat upon Earth O how easily do they bear all afflictions for Christ who with a lively faith and certain hope apprehend so sublime honours Certainly with much reason may the happiness of Saints be called by the name of Glory since the honour which they receive is so transcendent What an honour shall that be when the Just in the other lise shall receive no less a recompence of his holiness than God himself The nature of honour is to be a reward of vertue and by how much greater the reward is which a powerful King bestows upon some valorous Captain by so much greater is the honour which he confers upon him What honour shall it then be when God shall give unto those who have served him not onely to tread upon the Starres to inhabit the Palaces of Heaven to be Lords of the World but transcending all that is created and finding amongst his whole riches nothing sufficient to reward them shall give them his own infinite essence to enjoy not for a day but to all eternity The highest honour which the Romans bestowed upon their greatest Captains was to grant them a day of triumph and in that permission to wear a Crown of grass or leaves which withered the day following O most honoured vertue of Christians whole triumph shall be eternal and whose never fading Crown is God himself O most happy Diadem of the Just O most precious Garland of the Saints which is of as great worth and value as is God! Sapores King of the Persians was most ambitious of honour and would therefore be called the Brother of the Sun and Moon and Friend to the Planets This vain Prince erected a most glorious Throne which he placed on high and thereon fat in great Majesty having under his feet a certain Globe of glass whereon were artificially represented the motions of the Sun the Moon and Stars and to sit crowned above this phantastical Heaven he esteemed as a great honour What shall be then the honour of the just who truly and really shall sit above the Sun the Moon and Firmament crowned by the hand of God himself If the applause of men and the good opinion which they have from others be esteemed an honour what shall be the applause of Heaven and the good opinion not onely of Saints and Angels but of God himself whose judgements cannot erre David took it for a great honour that the Daughter of his King was judged as a reward of his valour God surpasses this and honours so much the services of his Elect that he pays their merits with no less a reward than himself O happy labour of the victorious and glorious combat of the just against the vices and temptations of the World whose victory deserves so inestimable a Crown Clemens Alexandrinus reports that there were in Persia three Mountains He who came to the first heard as it were a farre off the noise and voice of them who were fighting he who attained at the second heard perfectly the cries and clamours of Souldiers engaged in the fury of a Battail but he who attained unto the third heard nothing but the joyful acclamations of a victory This happens really with the just who are likewise to pass three mystical Mountains which are Reason Grace and Glory He who arrives at the knowledge of Reason gives an alarm unto Vice which he combats and overcomes by Grace and in Glory celebrates his victory with the joy and applause of all the Inhabitants of heaven and is crowned as a Conquerour with such a Crown as we have already spoken of §. 2. Besides this he who is most known and is praised and celebrated for good and vertuous by the greatest multitude is esteemed the most glorious and honourable person But all this World is a solitude in respect of the Citizens of Heaven where innumerable Angels approve and praise the vertuous actions of the Saints and they likewise are nothing and all creatures Men and Angels but as a solitary Wilderness in respect of the Creator What comparison betwixt that honour which may be given by some particular Kingdom or by all Europe and that which shall be heaped upon the just by all the blessed Men and Angels nay even by the damned and Devils in the Day of Judgement What is the approbation of a created understanding in respect of the Divine What man so glorious upon earth whose worth and valour hath been known to all Those who were born before him could not know him no more shall many of those who are to follow him But the Predestinate in heaven shall be known by all past and to come by all the Angels and by the King of Men and Angels Humane fame is founded upon the applause of mortal men who besides being less than Angels may be deceived may lie and are most part of them sinners and wicked How farre then must that honour exceed it which is conferred upon the Just by the holy Angels and by those blessed and pure Souls who cannot be deceived themselves nor will deceive us If we esteem it more to be honoured by the Kings of the Earth by the Great men of the World and by the Learned in Universities than by the barbarous and ignorant Peasants of some poor Village how ought we then to value the honou rwhich shall be bestowed upon us by the Saints in Heaven who are the Kings and Grandees of the Court of God and are all replenished with most perfect and divine wisdom All the honour of men is ridiculous and his ambition no wiser who seeks it then as St. Anselme sayes if one worm should desire to be honoured by another Lib. de Sim. c. 65. All the Earth is but as a Village or rather as some poor Cottage in respect of Heaven Let us not therefore strive for a name upon Earth but that our names may be written in Heaven in comparison whereof it is too much to say that the Earth is a point as Seneca called it Lib. 2. de Consol and therefore Bottius proves that it is less and sayes If from this little particle of Earth you shall take what Seas Lakes and uninhabited places full of wild beasts take up you shall leave unto men but a narrow dwelling Being therefore penn'd up in so small a point of a point how canst thou think to extend thy renown and publish thy name Compare the honour of Heaven with that of Earth and thou shalt find the difference betwixt them to be as great as is their distance Of this incomparable honour in Heaven have
been some revelations of great comfort It was revealed to St. Gertrude that as often as St. Joseph was named here upon Earth all the blessed in Heaven made a low bow What greater honour can be expected what comparison can all the expressions of respect and adorations of all the men in this World have with one onely inclination and reverence expressed by one Saint of Heaven What then shall be a reverence exhibited by them altogether The Church sayes of St. Martin that at his entrance into Heaven he was received with Celestial hymns that is with songs which the blessed sung in praise of his prowess and victory If Saul thought the honour too much which was given to David by the Damsels when they celebrated his Victory in their songs What shall it be to be celebrated by all the Saints and Angels in Celestial responsories Bellar. de aeter felic lib. 4. c. 2. Cardinal Bellarmine conceives that when a Servant of God enters into Heaven he shall be received with such musick all the blessed in Heaven often repeating those words in the Gospel Well done good servant and true because thou hast been faithful in a few things thou shalt be plac'd over much Enter into thy Lords joy which words they shall repeat in Quires This shall be a Song of Victory an honour above all the honours of the Earth conferred by so great so wise so holy and so authentique persons Whereupon St. Austin said Lib. 22. de Civit. c. 30. There shall be the true glory where none shall be praised by the error or flattery of the praiser and there the true honour which shall neither be denyed to the worthy nor granted unto the unworthy § 3. Although the honour and applause which the Just receive in Heaven from the Citizens of that holy City be incomparable yet that honour and respect with which God himself shall treat them is far above it Christ our Redeemer to express it uses no meaner a similitude than that of the honour done by the Servant unto his Lord and therefore sayes that God himself shall as it were serve the Blessed in Heaven at their Table It is much amongst men to be seated at the Table of a Prince but for a King to serve his Vassal as if he himself were his Servant who ever heard it Certainly with much reason David said unto God That his Servants were too much honoured And the same David when he caused Miphiboseth although the Grandchild of a King and the Son of an excellent Prince unto whom David ought his life to sit at his Table he thought he did him a singular honour but this favour never extended to wait on him Aman Esther 6. who was the most proud and ambitious man in the world could not think of a greater honour from King Assuerus than to ride through the Streets mounted upon the Kings own horse and that the greatest man in the Kingdom should lead him by the bridle but that the King himself should perform that service never entred into his imagination The honour which God bestows upon the Just exceeds all humane imagination who not satisfied with crowning all the Blessed with his own divinity giving himself to be possessed and enjoyed by them for all eternity does also honour their victories and heroick actions with new Crowns Lib. 10. Apum Thomas de Cantiprato writes of Alexander brother to St. Matilde and Son to the King of Scots that he appeared unto a certain Monk with two Crowns and being demanded why he had them doubled he answered This which I wear upon my head is common unto me with all the blessed but that which I carry in my hand is given me for renouncing my Kingdom upon Earth But above all the Martyrs Virgins and Doctors shall appear most glorious whom God shall honour with certain particular marks of honour by which they shall be known and distinguished from the rest of the Blessed which seals and marks shall be imprinted in their Souls like the indelible characters of Baptism Confirmation and Priesthood which are to endure for all eternity Of the Doctors the Prophet Daniel sayes They shall shine like the Stars in the Firmament giving us to understand that as the Stars excel the other parts of the Firmament by the advantage of their light so the Doctors shall be known in Heaven by a more glorious splendor which they shall cast from them And if the least Saint in Heaven shall shine seaven times more than the Sun what shall that light be which shall outshine so many Suns Apoc. 21. Of the Martyrs St. John saith That they went cloathed in white carrying palms in their hands in sign of victory For as Kings are honoured by wearing Purple and holding Scepters so Conquerors by their candid Garments and Palms Apoc. 21. The same St. John also sayes of Virgins That the name of Christ and his Father shall be imprinted in their foreheads which shall be as a token to distinguish them from the rest of Saints conformable unto that of the Prophet Isaias who sayes that a more noble and excellent name shall be given to Virgins than unto the rest of the Sons of God by which name St. Augustin sayes is meant some particular Devise which shall distinguish them from the rest as the more eminent men are distinguished from others by their several Titles of honour Besides this those members of the Blessed by which they have more specially served God or suffered for him Aug. 22. de Civit. Dei. shall as St. Austin notes cast forth some particular light and splendour so as every wound which St. Stephen received from his stoning shall cast forth a particular beam of light And with what a Garment of glory shall St. Bartholmew be clad who was flead from head to foot In the like manner St. James Intercisus who was hacked in pieces member by member for the faith of Christ Even the Confessors in those Senses which they have mortified for Christ shall have a particular Enamel of light St. John the Evangelist was shewed to St. Matilde with a particular splendour and glory in his eyes for not daring to lift them up to look upon our Blessed Lady when he lived with her for the great esteem and reverence he bore unto her There is no kind of honour which shall not then be given to the heroical acts of vertue performed by the Saints in this life which shall be to be read in the particular persons of the predestinate so as there shall be no necessity of Histories Annals or Statues to make known or eternize their memories as here in worldly honours which being short transitory and of small endurance have need of something to preserve them in the memory of men For this the Romans erected Statues unto those whom they intended to honour because being mortal there should something remain after death to make their persons and services which they had done
that it may not onely be said to be joyful but joy it self The multitude of joyes in Heaven is joyned with their greatness and so great they are that the very least of them sufficient to make us forget the greatest contents of the Earth and so many they are as that though a thousand times shorter yet they would exceed all temporal pleasures though a thousand times longer but joyning the abundance of those eternal joyes with their immense greatness that eternal B iss becoms ineffable Wherefore St. Bernard sayes The reward of Saints is so great that it cannot be measured so numerous that it cannot be counted so copious that it cannot be ended and so precious that it cannot be valued Albert. Mag. in Comp. Theol. l. 7. c. 8. 1 Cor. 2. Isai 64. And Albertus Magnus to the same purpose So great are the joyes of Heaven that all the Arithmaticians of the Earth cannot number them The Geometricians cannot measure them nor the most learned men in the world explicate them because neither eye hath seen nor ear hath heard neither hath it entred into the heart of man what God hath prepared for those who love him The Saints shall rejoyce in what is above them which is the vision of God in what is below them which is the beauty of Heaven and other corporal Creatures in what is within them which is the glorification of their bodies in what is without them which is the company of Angels and men God shall feast all their spiritual senses with an unspeakable delight for he shall be their object and shall also be a mirrour to the sight musick to the ear sweetness to the taste balsam to the smell flowers to the touch There shall be the clear light of Summer the pleasantness of the Spring the abundance of Autumn and the repose of Winter §. 2. The principal joy of the Blessed is in the possession of God whom they behold clearly as he is in himself For as Honourable Profitable and Delectable according to what we have already said are not divided in Heaven so the blessed Souls have three gifts essential and inseparable from that happy state which correspond to those three kinds of blessings which the Divines call Vision Comprehension and Fruition The first consists in the clear and distinct sight of God which is given to the Just as a reward of his merits by which he receives an incomparable honour since his works and vertues are rewarded in the presence of all the Angels with no less a Crown and recompence than is God himself The second is the possession which the Soul hath of God as of his riches and inheritance And the third is the ineffable joy which accompanies this sight and possession The greatness of this joy no tongue can tell and I believe that neither the Blessed themselves who have experience of it nor the Angels of Heaven are able to declare it Yet it will not be amiss if we as much as our ignorance and rudeness is able to attain unto consider and admire it This joy hath two singular qualities by which we may in some sort conceive the immensity of it The first that it is so vigorous and powerful that it excludes all evil pain and grief This onely is so great a good that many of the Philosophers held it for the chief felicity of man Cicero de Fin. 5. Tuscul And therefore Cicero writes that Jeronymus Rhodius a famous Philosopher and a great Master to whom may be joyned Diodorus the Peripatetick speaking of the chief happiness of man taught that it consisted in being free from grief It being the opinion of those Philosophers that not to suffer pain or evil was the greatest and most supreme good But herein was their errour that they judged that to be the good it self which was but an effect and consequent of it For so powerful is that love and joy which springs from the clear vision of God that it is sufficient to convert hell into glory in so much as if to the most tormented Soul in hell were added all the torments of the rest of the Damned both Men and Devils and that God should vouchsafe him but one glympse of his knowledge that only clear vision though in the lowest degree were sufficient to free him from all those evils both of sin and pain So that his Soul being rapt by that ineffable beauty which he beheld would not be sensible of any grief at all O how potent a joy is that which cast into such an abyss of torments converts them all into consolations How mighty were that fire whereof one spark would consume the whole Ocean There is no joy in this World so intense which can suspend the grief we suffer from a finger that is in sawing off Griefs do more easily bereave us of the sense of pleasure than pleasures do of pains Yet such is the greatness of that soveraign joy in Heaven that it alone is sufficient to drown all the griefs and torments both in Earth and Hell and there is no pain in the World able to diminish the least part of it The other stupendious wonder which proceeds from the greatness of this joy is the multitude of those pleasures which as from a most fruitful root spring from it Who would not be astonisht that the happiness of the Soul should cause so many and so marvelous effects in the bodies of the Blessed So excellent is that beatifical vision which with ineffable joy possesses the spirit that it bursts forth into the body with all the evident demonstrations of beauty lustre and the other gifts of glory We see here that the heart is not able so farre to dissemble a great joy conceived as that it appears not by some signe in the body but that joy is so weak and feeble that it extends no further than to express some little chearfulness and mirth in the countenance But the beatifical Vision is so immense a joy that it wholly changes the body making it beautiful as an Angel resplendent as the Sun immortal as a Spirit and impassible as God himself working great miracles and prodigies in the body by the redundancie of that unspeakable comfort which the spirit feels O if one could place before the eyes of the World the body of some blessed Saint enendowed with the four gifts of glory full of clearness splendor and beauty casting forth a fragrancy infinitely more sweet unto the senses than that of Musk and Amber that men might see by this shadow how immense is that light and joy which thus illustrates and beautifies the flesh O mortals why do ye covet other pleasures with loss of Soul and Body and do not rather seek after these with the profit and glory of both O how different are temporal delights from eternal those especially if they be unlawful blemish and destroy the Soul and weaken and corrupt the body but these beautifie and embellish them both
Cardinal Bellarmine sayes Bellar. conc de Beat. p. 2. that the bodies of St. John Baptist and St. Paul shall shine with a most incredible beauty having their necks as it were adorned with collars of gold What sight more glorious than to behold so many Saints like so many Suns to shine with so incomparable lustre and beauty What light then will that of Heaven be proceeding from so many lights or to speak more properly from so many Suns By how much the number of Torches is greater by so much is also greater the light they produce altogether How great then shall the clarity or that holy City be where many Suns do inhabit And if by the sight of every one in particular their joy shall be more augmented by the sight of a number without number what measure can that joy have which results from so beautiful a spectacle § 2. As all the bodies of Saints are to be wholly filled with light so they are to enjoy the priviledges of light which amongst all material qualities is enobled with this prerogative that it hath no contrary and is therefore impassible And so the glorious bodies of the Saints having nothing that may oppose them are also freed from sufferance Besides nothing is more swift than light and therefore those bodies who have the greatest share of light are also the most swift in motion whereupon there is no Element so nimble and active as fire no nature so swift as that of the Sun and Stars and light it self is so quick that in an instant it illuminates the whole Sphere of its activity In like manner the glorious bodies of the Saints as they are to enjoy more light so they are to move with more speed and agility than the very Stars themselves The light is also so subtle and pure that it stops not in its passage although it meets with some bodies solid and massie The whole Sphere and body of the Air hinders not the. Sun from enlightning us below and Chrystal Diamonds Glass and other heavy bodies are penetrated by light But far greater shall be the subtility and purity of the blessed bodies unto whose passage nothing how gross or opake soever shall be an obstacle For this reason the Saints in holy Scripture are often called by the name of Light and particularly it is said that the wayes of the Just are like a shining light at midday For as the light because impassible makes his way through dirty and unclean places without defiling its purity passes with speed and penetrates other bodies that stand in its way So the Saints endowed with the light which they receive from this gift of Clarity cannot suffer from any thing having an agility to move with speed from place to place and a subtlety to penetrate wheresoever they please The goods resulting from these privileges and endowments of the glorious bodies are more in number than all the evills of this mortal life The onely gift of impassibility frees us from all those miseries which our bodies now suffer the cold of Winter the heat of Summer infirmities griefs tears and the necessity of eating which one necessity includes infinite others Let us but consider what cares and troubles men undergoe onely to sustain their lives The Labourer spends his dayes in plowing sowing and reaping The Shepheard suffers cold and heat in watching of his flock The Servant in obeying anothers will and command The Rich man in cares and fears in preserving what he possesses What dangers are past in all estates onely to be sure to eat from all which the gift of impassibility exempts the Just The care of cloathing troubles us also little less than that of feeding and that of preserving our health much more For as our necessities are doubly encreased by sickness so are our cares from all which he who is impassible is free and not onely from the griefs and pains of this life but if he should enter into hell it would not burn one hair of him The Prerogative also of the gift of agility is most great which easily appears by the troubles and inconveniences of a long journey which howsoever we are accommodated is not performed without much weariness and oftentimes with danger both of health and life A King though he pass in a Coach or Litter after the most easie and commodious way of travelling must pass over rocks hills and rivers and spend much time but with the gift of agility a Saint in the twinkling of an eye will place himself where he pleases and pass millions of leagues with as much ease and in as short a time as a furlong We admire the Story of St. Anthony of Padua who in one day passed from Italy into Portugal to free his Father condemned wrongfully to death and at that of St. Ignatius Patriarch of the Society of Jesus who in a short time transported himself from Rome to Colen and from thence to Rome without being missed less than in two hours space If to the mortal bodies of his Servants God communicates such gifts what shall he do to the glorified bodies of his Saints What an excellency of nature were it to be able in one day to visit all the great Kingdoms of the Earth and see what passed amongst them in an hour to goe to Rome the chief City of the World from thence to pass to Constantinople the head of the Eastern Empire In another hour to the Great Cair and consider there the immense multitude of the Inhabitants In another hour goe to Goa the Court of the East-Indies and behold the Riches thereof in another to Pequin the Seat of the Kings of China and contemplate the vast extent of that prodigious City in another to Meaco the Court of Japonia in another to Manila the head City of the Philippin Islands in another to Ternate in the Maluca's in another to Lima in Peru in another to Mexico in New Spain in another to Lisboa and Madrid in another to London and Paris the principal Seats of Christendom marking at ease what passed in the Courts of those great Monarchs If this were a great priviledge what shall that be of those glorious bodies who in a short space can traverse all the Heavens visit the Earth return unto the Sun and Firmament and there observe what is above the Starrs in the Empyrial Heaven Greg. li. 3. Dial. 36. St. Gregory writes in his Dialogues that a Souldier assaulting a holy personage and having his naked sword lifted up and ready to give the blow the man cried out to his Patron St. John for help who instantly withheld the Souldiers hand that he could not move it How soon did St. John hear him in Heaven who invoked him upon Earth with what speed did he descend to assist him with-holding and drying up the arm of the wicked Souldier the bodies of the Saints are to move hereafter with no less speed than their spirits do now the weight of their bodies shall
as well as Subject owe to the sin of our first Parents May you then being translated hence to the embraces of your Creator experimentally finde the true difference between things temporal and eternal in the blisful vision and fruition of our great All our all-mighty all-lovely all-glorious God who is all wonders at one sight all joyes and comforts in their sourse all blessings in their center the end of all labours the reward of all services the desire of all hearts and the accomplishment of all hopes and wishes May he then be to your Majesty all this which is here briefly expressed and infinitely more which is beyond expression And may he secure all these blessings to you for ever and crown them with his glorious Attribute of Eternity This is the no less hearty then dutiful prayer of MADAM Your Majesties Most humbly devoted In Christ Jesus J. W. A Summary of the Chapters in this Book LIB I. Cap. 1. OVr Ignorance of what are the true goods and not onely of things Eternal but Temporal pa. 1. Cap. 2. How efficacious is the Consideration of Eternity for the change of our lives p. 6. Cap. 3. The memory of Eternity is of it self more efficacious than that of Death p. 12. Cap. 4. The estate of men in this life and the miserable forgetfulness which they have of Eternity p. 18. Cap. 5. What is Eternity according to St. Gregory Nazianzen and St. Dionysius p. 25. Cap. 6. What Eternity is according to Boetius and Plotinus p. 29. Cap. 7. Wherein is declared what Eternity is according to St. Bernard p. 33. Cap. 8. What it is in Eternity to have no end p. 41. Cap. 9. How Eternity is without change p. 52. Cap. 10. How Eternity is without comparison p. 60. Cap. 11. What is Time according to Aristotle and other Philosophers and the little consistence of life p. 68. Cap. 12. How short life is for which respect all things temporal are to be despised p. 74. Cap. 13. What is Time according to St. Augustine p. 82. Cap. 14. Time it the occasion of Eternity and how a Christian ought to benefit himself by it p. 89. Cap. 15. What is Time according to Plato and Plotinus and how deceitful is all that which is temporal p. 98. LIB II. Cap. 1. Of the End of Temporal Life p. 104. Cap. 2. Remarkable Conditions of the end of Temporal Life p. 121. Cap. 3. Of that moment which is the Medium betwixt Time and Eternity which being the end of Life is therefore most terrible p. 140. Cap. 4. Wherefore the End of Life is most terrible p. 147. Cap. 5. How God even in this Life passes a most rigorous Judgement p. 174. Cap. 6. Of the End of all Time p. 181. Cap. 7. How the Elements and the Heavens are to change at the end of Time p. 185. Cap. 8. How the World ought to conclude with so dreadful an End in which a general Judgement is to pass upon all that is in it p. 205. Cap. 9. Of the last day of Time p. 213. LIB III. Cap. 1. The mutability of things temporal makes them worthy of contempt p. 228. Cap. 2. How great and desperate soever our Temporal evils are yet hope may make them tolerable p. 238. Cap. 3. We ought to consider what we may come to be p. 243. Cap. 4. The Change of humane things shews clearly their vanity and how worthy they are to be contemned p. 253. Cap. 5. The baseness and disorder of Temporal things and how great a Monster men have made the World p. 261. Cap. 6. The Littleness of things Temporal p. 269. Cap. 7. How miserable a thing is this Temporal Life p. 285. Cap. 8. How little is Man whilest he is Temporal p. 309. Cap. 9. How deceitful are all things Temporal p. 319. Cap. 10. The dangers and prejudices of things Temporal p. 326. LIB IV. Cap. 1. Of the Greatness of things Eternal p. 337. Cap. 2. The Greatness of the Eternal honour of the Just p. 347. Cap. 3. The Riches of the Eternal Kingdom of Heaven p. 359. Cap. 4. The Greatness of Eternal Pleasures p. 368. Cap. 5. How happy is the Eternal Life of the Just p. 378. Cap. 6. The Excellency and Perfection of the Bodies of the Saints in the Life Eternal p. 389. Cap. 7. How we are to seek after Heaven and to preferr it before all the goods of the Earth p. 399. Cap. 8. Of Evils Eternal and especially of the great Poverty Dishonour and Ignominy of the Damned p. 411. Cap. 9. The Punishment of the Damned from the horribleness of the place into which they are banished from Heaven and made Prisoners in Hell p. 422. Cap. 10. Of the Slavery Chastisement and Pains Eternal p. 429. Cap. 11. Of Eternal Death and Punishment of Talion in the Damned p. 450. Cap. 12. The Fruit which may be drawn from the consideration of Eternal evils p. 459. Cap. 13. The infinite guilt of Mortal Sin by which we lose the felicity of Heaven and fall into eternal evils p. 467. LIB V. Cap. 1. Notable difference betwixt the Temporal and Eternal the one being the End and the other the Means Wherein also is treated of the End for which Man was created p. 487. Cap. 2. By the knowledge of our selves may be known the use of things Temporal and the little esteem we are to make of them p. 506. Cap. 3. The value of goods Eternal is made apparent unto us by the Incarnation of the Son of God p. 515. Cap. 4. The baseness of Temporal goods may likewise appear by the Passion and Death of Christ Jesus p. 524. Cap. 5. The importance of the Eternal because God hath made himself a Means for our obtaining it and hath left his most holy Body as a Pledge of it in the Blessed Sacrament p. 540. Cap. 6. Whether Temporal things are to be demanded of God And that we onely ought to aym in our prayers at goods Eternal p. 553. Cap. 7. How happy are those who renounce Temporal goods for the securing of the Eternal p. 561. Cap. 8. Many who have despised and renounced all that is Temporal p. 569. Cap. 9. The Love which we owe unto God ought so to fill our souls that it leave no place or power to love the Temporal p. 581. Faults escaped in the Print P. 8. L. 25. more R. of more P. 46. L. 28. resting R. rosting P. 65. L. 20. knowest R. knewest p. 139. L. 23. are die R. are to die P. 198. L. 27. Borosus R. Berosus P. 200. L. 29. hard R. hardness P. 232. L. 24. Persians R. Assyrians P. 232. L. 26. Assyrians R. Persians P. 338. L. 10. intention R. intension P. 416. L. 35. the depriving R. in the depriving P. 555. L. 38. know R. knew What else may be faulty the Pen may mend Moreover P. 386. L. 35. after those words any thing to maintain it you may add if you please These representations are to be understood
comes it then that a Dwarf or Pigmey in time affrights us and an armed Giant in eternity makes us not tremble how is it that eternal hell moves us not and yet we fear a temporal pain how is it we do not penance for our sins why have we not patience in our afflictions why suffer we not all that which can be suffered in this life rather than to suffer one onely torment in eternity The pains of this valley of tears being they are to have an end are not to be feared in comparison of those which shall never have it how contentedly then ought we to suffer here a little and for a short time that we may be freed from suffering much hereafter and for ever What we have considered in evils and afflictions the same is to be considered in goods and blessings If one were to enjoy all the pleasures of the senses for a thousand miriads of years but were to pass no further we ought to change them all for one onely pleasure that would last for ever Why then exchange we not one perishing pleasure of the earth which is to last but for a moment for all those immense joyes which we are to possess in Heaven for a world without end All the temporal goods of the world might well be quitted for the securing of only one that were eternal how is it then that we secure not all the eternal by forbearing now and then one which is temporal It would infinitely exceed the Dominion of the whole world so long as the world shall last to be Lord but of one little Cottage for eternity time holds no comparison with it all that is temporal how great soever being to be esteemed vile and base and all that is eternal how small soever high and precious And that we may exaggerate this consideration as much as possible the very being of God himself if it were but for a time might be quitted for some other infinitely less excellent which were eternal And shall then the covetous man satisfie himself with those poor treasures which death may quit him of to morrow and perhaps the Theef to day despising for them the eternal treasure of Heaven For certain if God should promise as to enjoy the pleasure of one onely sense for ever in the next life we ought for it to part with all the pleasures we have in this how huge a folly is it then that promising all those immense joyes of Heaven we will not for all them together part with some of those poor ones on earth The second way by which Eternity unto whatsoever it is joyned makes the good infinitely better and the bad infinitely worse is because it collects it self wholly into every instant so that in every instant it makes us sensible of all that which it is to contain in its whole duration and being to endure for an infinity it amasses as it were into every instant a whole infinity of pleasure or pain every instant being sensible both of what it contains at present what is past and what it shall contain in future So as a Doctor sayes Les de perfec divi lib. 4. c. 3. In Eternity all the good a thing can contain successively in an infinite time is recollected into one instant and made perceptible and enjoyable all at once As if all the pleasures a most delicious Banquet could afford successively by parts and that in an infinite time should be resumed all at once and all that delight should be conferred joyntly and together for eternity certainly this would make it infinitely better and of more esteem The same thing Eternity causes in evils and pains recollecting them in a certain manner into one and making them sensible all at once and although they be not all really and actually together yet it causes them to be apprehended altogether and so produces in the Soul a grief infinite and without limit Those then are truly evils which are totally and every way evils both in extension their duration having no end and in intension their being and essence having no limit or measure What afflicted person who considers this can be impatient since all the griefs of this life have both an end and limit The greatest temporal evils are but as biting of gnats in respect of the least of those which are eternal and therefore that we may escape all the eternal it is not much to suffer one temporal Let us tremble at the consideration of those two lances of Eternity those two infinities whose wounds are mortal and pierce the damned from side to side those two unsupportable rocks which overwhelm and crush whom they fall upon into pieces All that we suffer here is to be laughed at a fillip with a finger a trifle in respect of the eternal which embraces all times and with the evils of them all falls every instant upon the head of the damned §. 2. Besides what hath been already said Goods and Evils eternal have this condition that they are not onely qualified and augmented by the future but also by what is past although temporal so as the blessed Souls in Heaven not only enjoy the glory which they have in present and that which is to come but also what is past even unto those real and true goods of this life to wit their vertues and good works with the memory of which they recreate and congratulate themselves for all eternity in so much as all goods past present and to come concur in one to fill up the measure of their joy and the goods of all times even of those of this life are amassed and heaped up in their felicity How different from this are temporal goods since even those which we possess in present suffer not themselves to be entirely enjoyed here is no good which is not alloyed by some want danger or imperfection And if for the present they afford so little content much less do they for the future since the security of what we possess is so uncertain that the fear of losing it often disseasons the present gust The same fear also robbs our remembrance of the comfort of what is past since we fear to lose that most which we have formerly taken most pleasure in enjoying On all sides then the eternal goods are much more excellent unto which we ought to aspire and strive to purchase them even at the cost of all which is temporal and in this life as much as may be to imitate the same eternity the which is to be done by the practice of those three Vertues which St. Bernard recommends unto us in these words Serm. 1. in Festo Om. Sact. With Poverty of spirit with Meekness and Contrition of heart is renewed in the Soul a similitude and image of that Eternity which embraces all times For with poverty of spirit we merit the future with meekness we possess the present and with the tears of repentance recover what is past And truely he
of thy life This is admirable counsel that since thou knowest thou art to dye and knowest not when that thou perform each action as if it were thy last and as if in ending it thou wert to expire thy self Above all let us endeavour to leave sin and evil inclinations to leave the cares of the earth and to elevate our whole heart and affections unto heaven and there to place our thoughts which are to be upright and setled in God Almighty A crooked tree when they cut it down falls that way it was inclined when it grew If one doe not bend towards heaven whilest he lives which way can he fall in death it is much to be feared into Hell CAP. III. Of that moment which is the medium betwixt Time and Eternity which being the end of Life is therefore most terrible WE ought then seriously to consider which is certainly a matter of great amazement all which is to passe in that moment of death for which the time of this life was onely bestowed upon us and upon which depends the eternity of the other O most dreadful point which art the end of Time and beginning of Eternity O most fearful instant which shuttest up the prefixed tearm of this life and determines the business of our Salvation O moment upon which depends Eternity how oughtest thou to be placed in our thoughts with profit that we may not hereafter when it is too late remember thee with repentance How many things are to pass in thee In the same instant life is to finish all our works to be examined and that sentence given which is to be executed for all eternity O last moment of Life O first of Eternity how terrible is the thought of thee since in thee not onely life is to be lost but to be accounted for and we then to enter into a Region which we know not In that moment I shall cease to live in that moment I shall behold my Judge who shall lay all my sins open before me with all their weight number and enormity In it I shall receive a strict charge of all the Divine benefits bestowed upon me and in it a judgment shall pass upon me either for my salvation or damnation eternal How wonderful is it that for so many matters and of so great importance there is no more time allotted than the space of an instant no place left for reply intercession of friends or appeal O fearful moment upon which so much depends O most important instant of Time and Eternity Admirable is the high wisdom of God which hath placed a point in the middest betwixt Time and Eternity unto which all the time of this life is to relate and upon which the whole Eternity of the other is to depend O moment which art neither Time nor Eternity but art the Horizon of both and dividest things Temporal from Eternal O narrow moment O most dilated point wherein so many things are to be concluded so strict an accompt is to be given and where so rigorous a Sentence as is to be pronounced is ever to stand in force A strange case that a business of eternity is to be resolved in a moment and no place allowed for the intercession of friends or our own diligence It will be then in vain to repair unto the Saints in Heaven or the Priests upon Earth those will not intercede for thee nor can these give thee absolution because the rigour of the Judge in that instant wherein thou expirest allows no further mercy Apoc. 20. St. John sayes that Heaven and Earth shall flye from the presence of the Judge Whither wilt thou then goe to what place canst thou repair being the person against whom the Process is commenced It is therefore said that Heaven and Earth shall flye away because neither the Saints of Heaven shall there favour thee with their intercession neither can the Priests of the Earth assist thee with the Sacraments of the Church There shall be place for nothing that may help thee What would then a sinner give for leave to make one poor Confession when it is too late that which would now serve thy turn and thou despisest thou wouldest then have done and canst not Provide thy self therefore in time whilest it may avail thee and deferre it not until that instant wherein nothing can do thee good Now thou mayest help thy self now the Saints will favour thee expect not that moment wherein thy own endeavours will be useless and wherein the Saints will not assist thee To the end we may frame a more lively conceit of what hath been said Lib. 1. Epist 10. I will relate a Story which St. Peter Damian rehearseth in an Epistle of his to Pope Alexander the second of that name whereof the Saint sayes it caused dread in him as often as it came to his mind Thus it was That two men going to fell wood in a Forest there issued forth a Serpent ugly and of a huge size with two heads and mouths of both open thrusting out their tongues with three points or small darts in each of them and seeming to cast out fire at his eyes set upon them One of the two men of more spirit and courage at the first assault of the Serpent struck it with his hatchet and cut off one of his heads but unfortunately let fall his hatchet The Serpent feeling himself wounded full of fury and rage took him at the disadvantage without his weapon and roled his train round about his body The miserable man cried out to his Companion for help or at least that he would give him his hatchet to defend himself or do some execution upon his enemy that was now dragging him towards his Den. But his Companion was so cowardly that he durst not any wayes succour him but affrighted and astonished fled away leaving that wretched man in the power of the Serpent which with great rage carried him to his Den without resistance or any succour at all notwithstanding the hideous out-cries and lamentations the poor Captive made This History is but a slight draught of what a Sinner will experience in the instant of the departure of his Soul out of this life when without any aid at all or hope of it he shall find himself at the mercy of the infernal Dragon who will use him with all violence imaginable St. Peter Damianus sayes he could not express the horror this sad accident caused in him insomuch that it made him tremble many times to consider what pass'd betwixt the Serpent and the man in that Den there being no body to afford any help to the poor fellow in that distress where neither his strength nor cries could any wayes avail him to decline the fury of that ugly Monster now ready to tear him in pieces Wherefore if to be void of all hopes of temporal life and to be in the power of a Serpent is a thing so dreadful what fright and astonishment
since he hath employed his omnipotency for our good and profit let us employ our forces and faculties for his glory and service CAP. VI. Of the End of all Time BEsides the end of the particular time of this life the universal end of all time is much to be considered that since humane ambition passes the limits of this life and desires honour and a famous memory after it Man may know that after this death there is another death to follow in which his memory shall also die and vanish away as smoke After that we have finisht the time of this life the end of all time is to succeed which is to give a period unto all which we leave behind us Let man therefore know that those things which he leaves behind for his memory after death are as vain as those which he enjoyed in life Let him raise proud Mausoleums Let him erect Statues of Marble Let him build populous Cities Let him leave a numerous Kindred Let him write learned Books Let him stamp his Name in brass and fix his Memory with a thousand nails All must have an end his Cities shall sink his Statues fall his Family and Linage perish his Books be burned his Memory be defaced and all shall end because all time must end It much imports us to perswade our selves of this truth that we may not be deceived in the things of this world That not only our pleasures and delights are to end in death but our memories at the farthest are to end with Time And since all are to conclude all are to be despised as vain and perishing Cicero although immoderately desirous of fame and honour Cieer in Ep. ad Luc. as appears by a large Epistle of his written unto a friend wherein he earnestly entreats him to write the conspiracy of Cataline which was discovered by himself in a Volume apart and that he would allow something in it unto their ancient friendships and Publish it in his life time that he might enjoy the glory of it whilest he lived yet when he came to consider that the world was to end in Time he perceived that no glory could be immortal and therefore sayes By reason of deluges and burnings of the earth In Somn. Scip. which mu●● of necessity happen within a certain time we cannot attain glory not so much as durable for any long time much less eternal In this world no memory can be immortal since Time and the World it self are mortal and the time will come when time shall be no more But this truth is like the memory of death which by how much it is more important by so much men think lest of it and practically do not believe it But God that his divine providence and care might not be wanting hath also in this taken order that a matter of so great concernment should be published with all solemnity first by his Son after by his Apostles and then by Angels Apoc. 10. And therefore St. John writes in his Apocalyps that he saw an Angel of great might and power who descended from heaven having a Cloud for his Garment and his head covered with a Rainbow his face shining as the Sun and his feet as pillars of fire with the right foot treading upon the Sea and with the left upon the Earth sending forth a great and terrible voice as the roaring of a Lyon which was answered by seaven thunders with other most dreadful noises and presently this prodigious Angel lifts up his hand towards Heaven But wherefore all this Ceremony wherefore this strange equipage wherefore this horrid voice and thunder all was to proclaim the death of Time and to perswade us more of the infallibility of it he continued it with a solemn Oath conceived in a Set form of most authentique words listing up his hand towards Heaven and swearing by him that lives for ever and ever who created Heaven and Earth and all which is in it There shall be mo more time With what could this truth be more confirmed than by the Oath of so great and powerful and an Angel The greatness and solemnity of the Oath gives us to understand the weight and gravity of the thing affirmed both in respect of it self and the importance of us to know it If the death of a Monarch or Prince of some corner of the world prognosticated by an Eclipse or Comet cause a fear and amazement in the beholders what shall the death of the whole World and with it all things temporal and of Time it self foretold by an Angel with so prodigious an apparition and so dreadful a noise produce in them who seriously consider it For us also this thought is most convenient whereby to cause in us a contempt of all things temporal Let us therefore be practically perswaded that not onely this life shall end but that there shall be also an end of Time Time shall bereave Man of this life and Time shall bereave the World of his whose end shall be no less horrible than that of Man but how much the whole World and the whole Race of mankind exceeds one particular person by so much shall the universal end surpass in terrour the particular end of this life For this cause the Prophecies which foretell the end of the World are so dreadful that if they were not dictated by the holy Spirit of God they would be thought incredible Christ therefore our Saviour having uttered some of them unto his Disciples because they seemed to exceed all that could be imagined in the conclusion confirmed them with that manner of Oath or Asseveration which he commonly used in matters of greatest importance Math. 13. Luc. 21. Amen which is By my verity or verily I say unto you that the world shall not end before all these things are fulfilled Heaven and earth shall fail but my words shall not fail Let us believe then that Time shall end and that the World shall die and that if we may so say a most horrible and disastrous death let us believe it since the Angels and the Lord of Angels have sworn it If it be so then that those memorials of men which seemed immortal must at last end since the whole Race of man is to end let us only strive to be preserved in the eternal memory of him who hath no end and let us no less despise to remain in the fading memory of men who are to die than to enjoy the pleasures of our senses which are to perish As the hoarding up of riches upon earth is but a deceit of Avarice so the desire of eternizing our memory is an errour of Ambition The covetous man must then leave his wealth when he leaves his life if the Theef in the mean time do not take it from him and fame and renown must end with the World if envy or oblivion deface it not before All that is to end is vain this World therefore and all which
is esteemed in it is vain all is vanity of vanities Let us onely aim and aspire unto the eternal because the just onely as the Prophet sayes shall remain in the eternal memory of God The memory of man is as men themselves frail and perishing What man ambitious of a perpetual memory would not rather choose to be esteemed by ten men who were to live a hundred years than by a thousand who were to die immediately after him Let us therefore desire to be in the memory of God whose life is eternity Our memory amongst men can last no longer than men themselves which shall all die like us and there can be no memory immortal amongst those who are mortal It is therefore very expedient that the end of the World should be accompanied by the universal Judgement of all men wherein shall be revealed their most secret and hidden thoughts and anions That the murtherer who hath slain his neighbour lest he should discover his wickedness may not hope that therefore it shall remain conceal'd and That no man should be bold to sin for want of witnesses since the whole World shall then know that which if any but himself had known here would have burst his heart with shame and sorrow CAP. VII How the Elements and the Heavens are to change at the end of Time LEt us now look upon the strange manner of the end of the World which being so terrible gives us to understand the vanity and deceit of all things in it and the great abuse of them by man for questionless were it not for the great malice and wickedness which raigns in the World the period of it would not be so horrible and disastrous Lib. recognit S. Clement the Roman writes that he learned of St. Peter the Apostle that God had appointed a day from all eternity wherein the Army of Vengeance should with all its forces and as we may say in ranged battail fight with the Army of Sin which day is usually called in the holy Scripture The day of the Lord in which battail the Army of Vengeance shall prevail and shall at once extirpate and make an end both of Sin and the World wherein it hath so long raigned And certainly if the terrour of that day shall equal the multitude and hainousness of sins we need not wonder at what the sacred Scripture and holy Fathers have foretold of it But as it is usual in war res to skirmish and make inrodes before the day of battel so before that dreadful day wherein all punishments are to encounter with all offences the Lord shall from divers parts send forth several calamities which shall be fore-runners of that great day of battel and shall like light Horse-men scoure the Campania which St. John in the Apocalyps signified by those Horse-men which he saw sally forth upon divers-coloured horses one red another black and the third pale so the Lord shall before that day send Plagues Famine Warres Earthquakes Droughts Inundations Deluges and if those miseries do now so much afflict us what shall they then doe when God shall add unto them his utmost force and power when all Creatures shall arm against Sinners and the Zeal of divine justice shall be their Captain-general which the Wise-man declares in these words Sap. 5. His zeal shall take up arms and shall arm the creatures to revenge him of his enemies he shall put on Justice as a breast-plate and righteous Judgement as a helmet and he shall take Equity as a buckler and shall sharpen his Wrath as a lance and the circuit of the earth shall fight for him Thunderbolts shall be sent from the clouds as from a well-shooting how and shall nit fail to hit the mark and Hail shall be sent full of stormy wrath The Waters of the sea shall threaten them the Rivers shall combat furiously a most strong Wind shall rise against them and shall divide them as a whirle-wind Very dreadful are those words although they contain but the Warre which three of the Elements are to make against Sinners but not onely Fire Air and Water but Earth also and Heaven as it appears in other places of Scripture shall fall upon them and confound them for all creatures shall express their fury in that day and shall rise against man and if the clouds shall discharge thunderbolts and stones upon their heads the Heavens shall shoot no less balls than Stars which as Christ sayes shall fall from thence If Hail no bigger than little stones falling but from the clouds destroy the fields and sometimes kills the lesser sort of cattle what shall pieces of Stars do falling from the Firmament or some upper Region It is no amplification which the Gospel uses when it sayes That men shall wither with fear of what shall fall upon the whole frame of nature for as in Man which is called the Lesser world when he is to die the humours which are as the Elements are troubled and out of order his eyes which are as the Sun and Moon are darkned his other senses which are as the lesser stars fall away his reason which is as the celestial vertues is off the hinges so in the death of the greater World before it dissolve and expire the Sun shall be turned into darkness the Moon into blood the Stars shall fall and the whole World shall tremble with a horrid noise If the Sun Moon and other celestial bodies which are held incorruptible shall suffer such changes what shall be done with those frail and corruptible Elements of Earth Air and Water If this inferiour World do as the Philosophers say depend upon the Heavens those celestial bodies being altered and broken in pieces in what estate must the lower Elements remain when the Vertues of Heaven shall faulter and the wandring Stars shall lose their way and fail to observe their order How shall the Air be troubled with violent and sudden Whirle-winds dark Tempests horrible Thunders and furious flashes of Lightning and how shall the Earth tremble with dreadful Earth-quakes opening her self with a thousand mouthes and casting forth as it were whole Volcanies of fire and sulphur and not content to overthrow the loftiest Towers shall swallow up high Mountains and bury whole Cities in her entrails How shall the Sea then rage mounting his proud waves above the clouds as if they meant to overwhelm the whole Earth and shall certainly drown a great part of it The roaring of the Ocean shall astonish those who are far distant from the Sea and inhabit in the middest of the firm land wherefore Christ our Saviour said Luc. 21. that there should be in the Earth afflictions of Nations for the confusion of the noise of the Sea What shall men do in this general perturbation of Nature they shall remain amazed and pale as death What comfort shall they have they shall stand gazing one upon another and every one shall conceive a new fear by beholding in
his neighbours face the image of his own death What fear and horrour shall then possess them when they shall hourly expect the success and dire effects portended by these monstrous prodigies All Commerce shall then cease the Market-places shall be unpeopled and the Tribunals remain solitary and silent none shall be then ambitious of honours none shall seek after pastimes and new invented pleasures nor shall the covetous wretch then busie himself with the care of his treasures none shall frequent the Palaces of Kings and Princes but through fear shall forget even to eat and drink all their care shall be employed how to escape those Deluges Earthquake and lightnings seeking for places of security which they shall not meet with Who will then value his own Descent and Linage who the nobleness of his Arms and atchievements who his Wisdom and Talents who will remember the Beauty he hath once doted upon who the sumptuous Buildings he hath reared who his acute and well-composed Writings who his Discretion and Gravity in his discourse And if we shall forget what we our selves most valued and gloried in how shall we remember that of others what remembrance shall there then be of the acts of that great Alexander Of the Learning of Aristotle and the Endowments of the most renowned men of the world Their Fame shall remain from thence forward for ever buried and shall die with the World for a whole Eternity The Mariners when in some furious Tempest they are upon the point of sinking how are they amazed at the rage of the watry Element how grieved and afflicted with the ruine which threatens them what prayers and vows do they send up to Heaven how disinteressed are they of all worldly matters since they fling their wealth and riches into the Sea for which they have run such hazard In what condition shall be then the Inhabitants of the Earth when not onely the Sea with his raging but Heaven and Earth with a thousand prodigies shall affright them when the Sun shall put on a Robe of mourning and amaze them with the horrour of his darkness when the Moon shall look like blood the Stars fall and the Earth shake them with its unquiet trembling when the Whirlwinds shall throw them off their legs and frequent and thick flashes of Lightning dazle their sight and confound their understanding what shall Sinners then do for whose sake all these fearful wonders shall happen § 2. The fear and astonishment which shall fall upon mankind when the whole power and concourse of Nature shall be armed against Sinners may be perceived by the fear which hath been caused by some particular of those changes which are foretold to happen in the end of the World altogether and every one in great excess Let us therefore by the consideration of the particular judge how dreadful shall be the conjunction of so many and so great calamities And to begin with the Earth the most dull and heavy of all the Elements Cardinal Jacobus Papiensis Jacob. Papiens In Epist writing what happened in his own time reports that in the year 1456 upon the 5th of December three hours before day the whole Kingdom of Naples trembled with that violence that some entire Towns were buried in the earth and a great part of many others were overthrown in which perished 60000 persons part swallowed by the earth and part oppressed by the ruins of buildings what security can men look for in this life when they are not secure of the earth they tread upon What firmness can there be in the World when the onely firm thing in it is unstable From whence may not death assault us if it springs from under our feet Evarg l. 6. c. 8. Vide Niceph lib. 18.3 c. 13. But it is not much that the Earthquake of a whole Kingdom should cause so great a ruine since it hath done as much in one City Evagrius writes that the night in which Mauritius the Emperour was married three hours within night the City of Antioch quaked in that manner that most of the Buildings were overthrown and 60000 persons remained buried in her ruins If the Earth was so cruel in those particular Earthquakes what was it in the time of Tiberius Plin. l. 2. c. 84. when according to Pliny twelve of the most principal Cities of Asia were overthrown and sunk into the earth Sen. nat q. l. 6. And yet more cruel was that related by Nicephorus which happened in the time of the Emperour Theodosius which lasted for 6 moneths without intermission Niceph. l. 4. c. 46. and was so universal that almost the whole circuit of the Earth trembled as extending to the Chersonesus Alexandria Bithinia Antioch Hellespont the two Phrygia's the greatest part of the East and many Nations of the West And that we may also say something of the fury of the Sea even against those who were far distant from the rage of his waves and thought themselves secure in their own houses Most horrible was that Earthquake related by S. Jerome St. Hier in vita St. Hilarion and Ammianus Marcellinus who was an eye-witness of it which happened not long after the death of the Emperour Julian wherein not onely the Earth trembled but the Sea out-past his limits as in another Deluge and turned again to involve the Earth as in the first Chaos Ships floated in Alexandria above the loftiest buildings and in other places above high hills and after that the Sea was calmed and returned into his channel many Vessels in that City as Nicephorus writes remained upon the top of-houses Niceph. l. 10. c. 35. and in other parts upon high rocks as witnesseth St. Jerome But let us hear it related by Ammianus Marcellinus Am. Marcel l. 20. whose words are these which follow Procopius the Tyrant being yet alive the 2● of July the year wherein Valentinian was first time Consul with his Brother the Elements throughout the whole compass of the Earth suddenly fell unto such distempers and disorders as neither true stories have ever mentioned nor false feigned A little before morning the Heavens being first over-cast with a dark Tempest intermixt with frequent thunders and horrid flashes of lightning the whole body of the Earth moved and the Sea being violently driven back retired in such manner as the most hidden bottom of it was discovered so as many unknown sorts of Fishes were seen stretched out upon the mud Those vast profoundities beholding then the Sun whom Nature from the beginning of the world had hid under so immense a mass of waters many Ships remained upon the Oase or floating in small gullets and Fishes were taken up with mens hands gasping upon the dry sands but in short time the waves of the Sea inraged to see themselves banisht from their natural seats lifted themselves up with great fury against the Islands and far extended Coasts of the Continent and what Cities or Buildings they encountred
hills to hide them within their Caverns But all this is rather to be imagined then expressed and the very thought of it is enough to make us tremble The creatures now groan to see themselves abused by man in contempt of his and their Creator but they shall then shake off their yoaks and shall revenge themselves of the agrievances which they suffer under him and the injuries he hath done unto the Creator of all The violences of the Elements and disturbances of Nature which have and may happen hereafter are nothing in respect of those which shall be in the last dayes the which St. Augustine sayes shall be much more horrible and dreadful than those which are past And if those single and alone were so terrible as we have already seen what shall they be when they come all together and from all parts when the whole world shall rebel against man when all shall be confusion when Summer shall be changed into Winter and Winter into Summer and no creature shall keep the prefixed law with them who have not observed the Law of their Creatour that so they may revenge both God and themselves §. 3. But that this most fearful alteration of the creatures which shall happen may be yet more apparent we will specifie some of them out of the Apocalyps of St. John Very dreadful is that which he mentions in the eighth Chapter of hail and fire with a rain of blood so general and in such abundance that it shall destroy the third part of the Earth of trees and green herbs How horrible an amazement shall so general a rain cause amongst men But it is not so to end For immediately shall appear in the Air a huge mountain of fire which shall fall all at once into the Sea and dividing it self into several bodies shall burn the third part of the Fishes the third part of Ships and of what else shall be in the Ocean The like effect shall proceed from a flame or prodigious Comet which falling into the Rivers and Fountains and there dividing it self into several parts shall turn the waters bitter as wormwood and make them so pestilential as they shall infect those who drink them and many shall die with their taste An Angel shall then smite the Sun Moon and Stars Apoc. 9. and deprive them of a third part of their light But mote horrible than all is that which follows that after so many calamities the bottomless pit which is hell shall burst open and out of his profound throat belch forth so thick a smoke as shall wholly darken the Sun and Air from which smoke shall sally forth a multitude of deformed Locusts which in great swarms shall disperse themselves over the face of the whole earth and leaving the fields herbs and what is sown fall upon such men as have been unfaithful unto God and shall for five moneths torment them with greater rage than Scorpions Some Doctors understanding those Locusts according unto the Letter Lessius de Perf. div l. 13. c. 18. Cornel. in Apoc. that they shall be a certain kind of true Locusts but of a strange figure and fierceness others that they shall be Devils of hell in the shape of Locusts and it is no marvel that in the destruction of the world Devils shall appear in visible forms since in the destruction of Babylon they appeared in divers figures of beasts as was prophesied by Isaias But after what manner soever St. John sayes that this Plague shall be so cruel Isa c. 34. 13. that men shall seek death and shall not find it and shall desire to die and death shall flye from them Many other plagues shall happen in those last dayes For as before that God drowned the Aegyptians and delivered his people he sent such plagues upon Aegypt as are recorded in Exodus so before the general destruction of Sinners in that universal Deluge and Sea of fire which shall cover the whole Earth and out of which the Saints are to escape free so much greater plagues shall proceed as the whole World is greater than Aegypt For not onely the Rivers and Fountains shall then ce turned into blood but the whole Sea shall be converted into a most black gore The Lord shall also in those days send horrible botches and sores upon men and the Sun shall scorch them in that manner as they shall lose their senses and some of the wicked shall turn against God and blaspheme as if they were already in hell The Earth also shall tremble and that not being the greatest which is recounted in the sixth Chapter of the Apocalyps yet the Apostle relates such things of it as are able to strike a fear and amazement into those who hear it His words are these There was a great Earthquake Apoc. 6. and the Sun became as sackcloth and the Moon at blood the Stars fell from Heaven as a Fig-tree cast off its green siggs when it it shaken by a violent wind The Heavens were folded up as a book or as a roll of parchment and all Mountains and Islands moved from their places I leave unto the consideration of every one what shall then become of those who remain alive in that conflict St. John sayes that Kings and Princes the Rich and Strong Slaves and Free-men shall hide themselves in Caves and Rocks and shall say unto the Mountains and Hills Fall upon us and cover us And the same S. John sayes further that there shall be yet a greater Earthquake which shall be the greatest that ever happened since the foundation of the World was laid in which the Islands shall sink and the Mountains shall be made even with the Plains Horrible lightnings and thunders shall affright the Inhabitants of the Earth and hailstones shall fall of the weight of a Talent which is of 5 Arrobas an Hebrew Talent weighing 125 Roman pounds This Plague joyned with so strange an Earth-quake how shall it astonish those who are then alive § 4. But how shall it then fare with Sinners when after all shall come that general fire so often foretold in holy Scripture which shall either fall from Heaven Vide P. Grana De novissi Alb. Mag. in comp or asseend out of Hell or according to Albertus Magnus proceed from both and shall devour and consume all it meets with Whither shall the miserable flye when that River of flames or to say better that Innundation and Deluge of fire shall so encompass them as no place of surety shall be left where nothing can avail but a holy life when all besides shall perish in that universal ruine of the whole World What shall it then profit the wordlings to have rich Vessels of gold and silver curious Embroideries precious Tapestries pleasant Gardens sumptuous Palaces and all what the world now esteems when they shall with their own eyes behold their costly Moveables burnt their rich and curious pieces of Gold melted and their
and work stupendious wonders and being of a great and generous spirit confessed his fear saying as we have it from St. Paul Heb. 12. That he was terrified and trembled Let a man now consider how memorable was that day unto the Hebrew Nation wherein they saw such Visions heard such Thunders and felt such Earthquakes as it is no wonder that the great fear which fell upon them in that day of Prodigies made them think they could not live Yet was all this nothing in respect of the terrour of that great day wherein the Lord of Angels is to demand an account of the violation of the Law For after the sending far greater plagues than those of Egypt after burning in that Deluge of fire the Sinners of the world the Saints remaining still alive that that Article of our Faith may be literally fulfill'd From thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead The Heavens shall open and over the Valley of Josaphat the Redeemer of the World attended by all the Angels of Heaven in visible forms of admirable splendour shall with a Divine Majesty descend to judge it Before the Judge shall be born his Standard Chrys Tom. 3. Serm. de Cruce which St. Chrysostome and divers other Doctors affirm shall be the very Cross on which he suffered Then shall the just such being the force and vigour of their spirits as will elevate their terrene and heavy bodies meet as the Apostle sayes their Redeemer in the Air who at his issuing forth of the Heavens shall with a voice that may be heard of all the world pronounce this his Commandment Arise ye dead and come unto Judgement Which shall be proclaimed by four Angels in the four Quarters of the World with such vehemence that the sound shall pierce unto the infernal Region from whence the Souls of the damned shall issue forth and re-enter their bodies which shall from thenceforward suffer the terrible torments of Hell The Souls also of those who died onely in Original sin shall come and possess again their bodies free from pain or torment and the Souls of the blessed filling their bodies with the four gifts of Glory shall make them more resplendent than the Sun and with the gift of agility shall joyn themselves with those just who remain alive in the Air in their passible bodies which being yet mortal and therefore not able to endure those vehement affections of the heart of joy desire reverence love and admiration of Christ shall then die and in that instant behold the Divine Essence after which their Souls shall be again immediately united to their bodies before they can be corrupted or so much as fall unto the ground and thence forward continue glorious for in the moment wherein they die they shall be purified from those noxious humours and qualities wherewith our bodies are now infected And therefore it was convenient they should first die that being so cleansed from all filth they might by the restitution of their blessed Souls receive the gifts of Glory Considering then the so different conditions of the Souls of men who can express the joy of those happy Souls when they shall take possession of their now glorious and beautiful bodies which were long since eaten by worms or wild beasts some four some five thousand years agoe turned into dust and ashes What thanks shall they give to God who after so long a separation hath restored them to their antient Companions What gratulations shall the Souls of them who lived in austerity and penance give unto their own bodies for the mortifications and rigours which they have suffered for the hair-shirts disciplines and fasts which they have observed To the contrary the Souls of the damned how shall they rage and curse their own flesh since to please and pamper it hath been the occasion of their torments and eternal unhappiness Which miserable wretches wanting the gift of agility and so not able of themselves to go unto the place of Justice shall be hurried against their wills by Devils all trembling and full of fear § 2. The Reprobates being then in the Valley of Josaphat and the Predestinate in the Air the Judge shall appear above Mount Olivet Zach. 1. unto whom the clouds shall serve as a Chariot and his most glorious body shall cast forth rayes of such incomparable splendour as the Sun shall appear but as a coal for even the Predestinate shall shine as the Sun but the light and brightness of Christ shall as far exceed them as the Sun does the least Star The which most admirable sight shall be yet more glorious by those thousand millions of excellent and heavenly spirits which shall attend him who having formed themselves acreal bodies of more or less splendour according to their Hierarchy and Order shall fill the whole space betwixt Heaven and Earth with unspeakable beauty and variety The Saviour of the World shall sit upon a Throne of great Majesty made of a clear and beautiful Cloud his countenance shall be most milde and peaceable towards the good and though the same most terrible unto the bad In the like manner out of his sacred wounds shall issue beams of light towards the just full of love and sweetness but unto sinners full of fire and wrath who shall weep bitterly for the evils which issue from them Psa 109. 1 Cor. 15. Phil. 2. So great shall be the Majesty of Christ that the miserable Damned and the Devils themselves notwithstanding all the hate they bear him shall yet prostrate themselves and adore him and to their greater confusion acknowledge him for their Lord and God And those who have most blasphemed and outraged him shall then bow before him fulfilling the promises of the eternal Father That all things should be subject unto him That he would make his enemies his footstool and That all knees should bend before him Here shall the Jews to their greater confusion behold him whom they have crucified and here shall the evil Christians see him whom they have again crucified with their sins here also shall the Sinners behold him in glory whom they have despised for the base trifles of the earth What an amazement will it be to see him King of so great Majesty who suffered so much ignominy upon the Cross and even from those whom he redeemed with his most precious blood What will they then say who in scorn crowned the sacred temples of the Lord with thorns put a Reed in his hand for a Scepter cloathed him in some old and broken Garment of purple buffeted and spit upon his blessed face And what will they then say unto whose consciences Christ hath so often proposed himself in all his bitter passion and painful death and hath wrought nothing upon them but a continuance of greater sins valuing his precious blood shed for their salvation no more than if it were the blood of a Tyger or their greatest enemy I know not how
we have placed honour makes it most ridiculous Some think they should be valued and esteemed because they are strong not remembring that a Bear a Bull or a Sumpter-mule is stronger than they Some because they are richly clad become mighty proud and puft up not being ashamed to be more esteemed for the work of a Mechanick Taylor than for their vertuous actions Others think to be honoured for their dishonours bragging of their vices murthers and adulteries Others boast of the nobility of their blood without looking upon vertue and so make that a vice which was to oblige them to noble actions converting that which was to be their honour into infamy valuing themselves more for being noble than being Christians A man is no greater than what he is in the eyes of God and the estimation which God hath of us is not for being born in a Palace but for being reborn in the water of Baptism What comparison is there betwixt being born of noble linage and being born from the side of Christ Jesus The penitent Virgin Donna Sancha Carillo so often as she assisted at Baptisms beheld Christ upon the Cross Ro. in ejus vita lib. 2. c. 1. with his side open and the Child issuing forth giving us to understand the new birth we receive from the blood of Christ in our Christianity for which God esteems men more than for being born of sinful blood This birth is of dishonour that of honour this of sin that of holiness this of the flesh which kills that of the spirit which quickneth by this we are the sons of men by that of God by the birth of the flesh we are heirs of our fathers fortunes but much more of their miseries for we are born sinners by the birth of Baptism we are the heirs of heaven and for the present we receive grace and for the future glory What an errour is it then to value our selves more for our humane birth by which we are made sinners than for our divine birth by which we are made just How foolish were he who being the Son of a King and a Bond-woman should esteem himself more for being the Son of a Slave than of a Monarch More fool is he who values more the nobility of his blood in being a Gentleman than the nobility of his soul in being a Christian Finally all honours of the earth are but such as Matathias told his Sons dung and corruption St. Anselme compares those who seek after honours to boyes who hunt after butter-flies Isaias unto spiders which disimbowel themselves in framing a web which is broken by the flies Yet for all this poorness and baseness of honours many souls have perished by them If David cursed the mountains of Gelboe because Saul and Jonathan died upon them with much more reason may we curse the high mountains of honour upon which so many Souls have been seen to perish § 2. Let us now consider what Riches are unto whom St. Gregory Nazianzen did much honour when he called them a precious dung Truely in themselves they are not much better Gold and Silver said Antoninus the Philosopher In vita sua c. 9. were nothing else than excrements and dregs of the Earth that precious Marbles were as corns and seggs in the feet and generally he sayes of the matter of all these things that they are nothing but dust and corruption Plotinus said that Gold was nothing else but a viscuous water others that it was yellow earth What are Precious stones but shining pibles some red some green c Silk but the slaverings of worms the finest Hollands and purest Linnens but threads of certain plants Other webbs of esteem are made of hair of beasts whereof if we should meet one in our meat would make us loath it and many in their cloaths are proud of them Curious Furres what are they but the skins of contemptible vermin Civet but the sweat of a Cat near his most noisom parts Amber but the uncleanness of a Whale or something which the Sea purges from it as not worthy to be preserved Musk but the putrified and congealed blood of a poor Beast What are Possessions Palaces Cities Provinces and spacious Kingdoms They are indeed onely toyes of men who though old are but Children in esteeming so much of them and this I say not comparing them with things eternal Lucian beholding them not from the Empyrial Heaven Lucian in Icaromenip but from the Sphere of the Moon said All Greece possest not above four fingers and that Peloponesus was not bigger than a Lentil seed To Seneca the whole compass of the Earth seemed but a Point and all the greatness there onely matter of sport Hom. 24. in Mat. St. Chrysostome more seriously looking upon the so much esteemed greatness of this World the brave Palaces renowned Cities large Kingdoms compares them to those little houses of sand or dirt made by Children for their entertainment which men stand by and laugh at and oftentimes if their Parents or Masters find that it hinders them from learning of their lessons they strike them down with their feet and destroy that in a moment which hath cost the boyes much time and labour So God useth to deal with those who neglecting his service employ themselves in scraping together riches enlarging their possessions building of Palaces strong Forts and walled Towns which he destroys with that ease as if they were those little houses of sand made by Children And certainly more Children are they who set their hearts upon the greatness of this short life than those who busie themselves in walls of dirt This is of St. John Chrysostome Hom. 14. de Avaritia Who in another place saith That if looking upon a Table where we behold painted a rich and powerful man and a poor and contemptible Beggar we neither envy the one nor despise the other because we know them to be shadows and no truth The same judgement we ought to make of the things themselves for all according to Scripture are little more than nothing And as in a Comedy or Farse it imports little who playes Alexander and who the Beggar since all are equal when the Play is done So are all after death If Herod offered to a dancing Girl because she pleased him the half of his Kingdom what was the whole worth And Aman who possessed great wealth confessed he valued them as nothing so long as Mardocchus did not reverence him The pleasures of our Pallat if we consider them what more vile and nasty A Capon a Hen or a Duck which is the ordinary food of rich men if we but observe their feeding nothing would be more loathsome If in your Cooking you should fling into the pot worms grubs horse-dung and other such stuff no body I believe would eat of it and what is a Hen but a vessel fill'd with such uncleanness Other meats which are most coveted by our sensual Belly-gods if they
undefiled superiour to all grief and pleasure that thou do nothing without a good end nothing feignedly or falsely and that thou regard not what another man does or has to doe Besides that all things which happen thou receive as sent from thence from whence thou thy self art derived Finally that thou attend death with a quiet and temperate minde This is from that great Philosopher CAP. X. The dangers and prejudices of things Temporal THe least evil which we receive from the goods of this world is to deceive and frustrate our hopes and he comes well off whom they forsake onely with a mock For there are many who not onely fail of what they desire but meet with what they abhorre and in place of ease and content meet with trouble and vexation and instead of life finde death and that which they most affect turns often to their destruction Absolon being very beautiful gloried in nothing more than his hair but even those became the instrument of his death and those which he daily combed as if they had been threads of gold served as a halter to hang him upon an Oak To how many have riches which they loved as their life been an occasion of death This is the calamity of the goods of the earth which the Wise-man noted when he said Eccle. 5. Another dangerous evil I beheld under the Sun riches preserved for the destruction of their owner This is the general and incurable infirmity of riches that when they are possessed with affection they turn into the ruine of their possessors either in soul or body and oftentimes in both in so much as we are not to look upon temporal goods as vain and deceitful but as Parricides and our betrayers With much reason the two great Prophets Isaias and Ezechiel compare Egypt by which is signified the world and humane prosperity unto a reed which if you lean upon it breaks and the splinters wound your hands No less brittle than a reed are temporal goods but more dangerous Besides the other faults wherewith they may be charged a very great one is the hurts they doe to life it self for whose good they are desired and are commonly not onely hurtful unto the life eternal but prejudicial even unto the temporal How many for their desire to obtain them have lost the happiness of heaven and the quiet felicity of the earth enduring before death a life of death and by their cares griefs fears troubles labours and afflictions which are caused even by the greatest abundance and felicity before they enter into the hell of the other world suffer a hell in this And therefore St. John writes in his Apocalyps Apoc. 20. that Death and Hell were cast into a lake of fire because the life of sinners of whom he speaks according to the letter is a death and hell and he sayes that this Life and this Hell shall be cast into the other hell and he who places his felicity in the goods of the earth shall pass from one death unto another and from one hell unto another Let us look upon the condition whereunto Aman was brought by his abundance of temporal fortunes into so excessive a pride that because he was denied a respect which was no wayes due unto him he lived a life of death smothering in his breast a hell of rage madness and hatred nothing in this life as he himself confest giving him ease or content What condition more like unto death and hell than this for as in hell there is a privation of all joyes and delights so oftentimes it happens in the greatest felicities upon earth The same which Aman confessed Dionysius felt when he was King of Sicily to wit that he took no content at all in the greatest delights of his Kingdom Tull. in Tuscul q. Boet. l. de consol And therefore Boetius sayes that if we could take away the veil from those who sit in Thrones are clad in Purple and compassed about with Guards of Souldiers we should see the chains in which their Souls are enthralled conformable unto which is that of Plutarch that in name onely they are Princes but in every thing else Slaves A marvelous thing it is that a man compassed about with delights pastimes and pleasures should joy in nothing and in the middest of dancing drinking feasting and dainty fair should find a hell in his heart That in hell amongst so many torments sinners should not finde comfort is no marvail at all but that in this life in the middest of felicity and affluence of all delights he should finde no satisfaction is a great mystery A great mischief than is humane prosperity that amongst all its contents it affords no room for one true one But this is Divine providence that as the Saints who despised what was temporal had in their souls in the very middest of torments a heaven of joy and pleasure as St. Lawrence who in the middest of flames found a Paradice in his heart so the Sinner who neither esteems nor loves any thing besides those of the world should also in the middest of his regalo's and delights finde a life of hell and torments anticipating that whereunto after death he is to enter and be confined So great are the cares and griefs occasioned by the goods of the earth that they oppress those who most enjoy them and shut up the door to all mirth leaving them in a sad night of sorrow This is that which was represented unto the Prophet Zacharias Zach. 5. when before that the Devils came to fetch away the Vessel wherein the woman was enclosed to be carried into a strange Region in the Land of Sanaar there to dwell for ever the mouth of it was stopt up with a talent of Lead and she imprisoned in darkness and obscurity signifying thereby that before a worldling is snatcht away by the Devils to be carried into the mournful land of hell even in this life he is hood-winked and placed in so great a darkness as he sees not one beam of the light of truth so that no content or compleat joy can ever enter into his heart § 2. The reason why the goods of this life are troublesome and incommodious even to life it self is for the many dangers they draw along with them the obligations wherein they engage us the cares which they require the fears which they cause the affronts which they occasion the straights whereunto they put us the troubles which they bring along with them the disordinate desires which accompany them and finally the evil conscience which they commonly have who most esteem them With reason did Christ our Redeemer call riches thorns because they ensnare and wound us with danger losses unquietness and fears Wherefore Job said of the rich man Job 20. Greg. l. 15. Mor. c. 12. When he shall be filled he shall be straightned he shall burn and all manner of grief shall fall upon him The which St.
the joyes shall be such as neither the eye hath seen nor the ear hath heard nor hath entred into the heart of man O baseness of temporal goods what proportion doe they hold with this greatness since they are so poor that even time from whence they have their being makes them tedious and not to be endured Who could continue a whole moneth without other diversion in hearing the choicest musick nay who could pass a day free from weariness without some change of pleasures But such is the greatness of those joyes which God hath prepared for them who love and fear him as we shall still desire them afresh and they will not cloy us in a whole Eternity §. 2. St. Anselme observes this difference betwixt the goods and evils of this life and the other Anselm lib. de simil that in this life neither of them are pure but mixt and confused The goods are imperfect and mingled with many evils and the evils short and mingled with some good But in the other life as the goods are most perfect and pure without the least touch of any ill and so can never weary us for that were an evil so to the contrary those evils of hell in which there is no good at all are horrible and above all sufferance Eternal glory therefore is great both in respect of its purity being free from any ill and in respect of its perfection being highly and excellently good David said Ps 102. That God had removed our sins from us as far as the East is distant from the West which he hath not onely verified in the guilt of sin but in the punishment which is as tar removed from the blessed as Heaven is from Earth And although the spiritual distance betwixt them be greater than the corporeal yet that we may from hence form some conception of that also we will say as much as our weakness is able to attain unto of this Clavius in Sphae 〈◊〉 1. Our famous Mathematician Christopher Clavius sayes that from the Sphere of the Moon which is the lowest Heaven unto the Earth are one hundred and twenty thousand six hundred and thirty miles and from the Heaven of the Sun four millions thirty thousand nine hundred and twenty three miles and from the Firmament or eighth Heaven one hundred sixty one millions eight hundred fourscore and four thousand nine hundred and fourty three miles Here Plato wills the Mathematicians to cease their enquiry for from hence there is no rule of measuring further but without all doubt it is much farther from thence to the Empyrial Heaven For the onely thickness of the Starry Sphere is said to contain as much as the whole space betwixt that and the Earth In so much as if a Milstone were thrown from the highest of the Firmament and should every hour fall two hundred miles it would be 90 years before it arrived at the Earth The Mathematicians also and some learned Interpreters of the holy Scripture affirm that the distance from the Earth unto the highest of the Firmament is less than that from thence to the lowest of the Empyrial Heaven and therefore conclude if one should live two thousand years and every day should travel a hundred miles he should not in all that time reach the lowest of the Firmament and if after that he should also travel other two thousand years he should not reach the highest of it and from thence four thousand years before he arrived at the lowest of the Empyrial Heaven O power of the grace of Jesus Christ which makes us in a moment dispatch so great a journey That noble Matron who was tormented and put to death in England said unto those with grief and honour that beheld her martyrdome So short is the way which brings us to heaven that within six hours I shall mount above the Sun and Moon tread the Stars under my feet and enter into the Heaven of the Blessed But there was no need of six hours one little instant brings the souls of the blessed thither which being purified from their sins and pains remain further distant from the one and the other than Heaven is from Earth Proportionable unto this distance of place is the advantage which the greatness of Heaven hath above that of Earth and the same holds in their blessings Let us mount then with this consideration thither and from that height let us disspise all this mutable World Ptolom in Praefa Almages since even the Gentils did it Wherefore Ptolome said He is higher than the world who cares not in whose hands the world is And Cicero What humane thing can seem great unto him Tull. in Som. Scip. unto whom eternity and the greatness of the other world are known All the earth seems so little unto me that I am sorry and ashamed of our Empire with which we have onely touched some little part of it All the Kingdoms of the Earth are but as a point and unto Boctius seemed but as a point of a point Bar. 3. But of Heaven Baruch could say How great is the house of God how large is the place of his possession it is great and hath no end high and immeasurable So great is the advantage of things eternal above temporal although they were not eternal O what fools then are they who for one point of Earth lose so many leagues of Heaven who for one short pleasure lose things so immense and durable O the greatness of the omnipotency and goodness of the divine liberality which hath prepared such things for the humble and little ones who serve him St. Austin whose thoughts were so sublime and whose understanding was one of the greatest in the world found himself unable to express them nay even to think of them For being desirous to write of Eternal Glory and taking pen in hand he beheld in his Chamber a great light and felt a sweetness so fragrant as almost transported him and withal heard a voice which said Austin what doest thou mean doest thou think it possible to number the drops in the Sea or to grasp the whole compass of the Earth or to make the Celestial bodies suspend their motion that which no eyes have seen wouldest thou behold that which no ear hath heard wouldest thou conceive that which no heart hath attained nor humane understanding imagined doest thou think that thou onely canst comprehend What end can that have which is infinite how can that be measured which is immense Sooner shall all those impossibilities be possible than thou understand the least part of that glory which is enjoyed by the blessed in Heaven If one who had been ever bred in an obscure dungeon and never had seen other light than that of some dimme Lamp were told that above the Earth there was a Sun which enlightned the whole world and cast his beams far above a hundred thousand leagues in Circumference all the discourses which could be made unto
and peopled with such a multitude of beautiful Citizens as are as farre above any imaginable number as the capacity of the City is above any imaginable measure Some famous Mathematicians say of die Empyrial Heaven that it is so great that if God should allow unto every one of the blessed a greater space than the whole Earth yet there would remain as much more to give unto others and that the capaciousness of this Heaven is so great that it contains more than ten thousand and fourteen millions of miles What wonder will it be to see a City so great of so precious matter The Divines confess the capaciousness of this Heaven to be immense but are more willing to admire it than bold to measure it Joan. Gailer in suo Peregrino Howsoever there wants not one who sayes that if God should make each grain of sand upon the Sea-shore as big as the whole Earth they would not fill the Concave of the Empyrial Heaven and yet this Holy City possesseth all that space and is all composed of matter far more beautiful and precious than Gold Pearl and Diamonds For certain our thoughts cannot conceive so great riches and wonders for which we ought to undergoe all the pains and necessities of this World St. Francis of Assisium being afflicted with a grievous pain of his eyes in so much as he could neither sleep Chron. Frat. Min. p. 1. c. 60. nor take any rest and at the same time molested by the Devil who filled his Cell with Rats which with their Careers and noise added much unto his pain with great patience gave thanks unto the Lord that he had so gently chastized him saying My Lord Jesus Christ I deserve greater punishment but thou like a good Shepherd suffer me not to stray from thee Being in this meditation he heard a voice which said unto him Francis if all the Earth were of Gold and all the Rivers of Balsame and all the Rocks of precious Stones wouldest thou not say that this were a great treasure Know that a treasure which exceeds Gold as farre as Gold does Dirt Balsam Water or Precious-stones Pibbles remains as a reward for thy infirmity if thou be content and bear it with patience Rejoyce Francis for this treasure is Celestial glory which is gained by tribulations Certainly we have reason to suffer here all pains and poverty whatsoever since we are to receive in glory so much the greater riches Wherefore we ought to lift up our souls and weaning our hearts from the frail felicity of these temporal goods of the Earth to say with David Glorious things are said of thee City of God So did Fulgentius who entring Rome when it was yet in its lustre and beholding the greatness beauty and marvelous Architecture of it said with admiration O Celestial Jerusalem how beautiful must thou be if Terrestrial Rome be such A shadow of this was shewed unto St. Josaphat whose History is written by St. John Damascen In vita Josaph Barl. St Josaphat being in profound prayer prostrate upon the earth was overtaken with a sweet sleep in which he saw two men of grave demeanour who carried him through many unknown Countries unto a Field full of flowers and plants of rare beauty laden with fruit never before seen The leaves of the trees moved with a soft and gentle wind yielded a pleasant sound and breathed forth a most sweet odour there were placed many Seats of Gold and precious Stones which shined with a new kind of brightness and a little Brook of Chrystal water refreshed the air and pleased the sight with a most agreable variety From thence he was brought into a most beautiful City whose Walls were of transparent Gold the Towers and Battlements were of Stones of inestimable value the Streets and places shone with Celestial beams of light And there passed up and down bright Armies of Angels and Seraphins chanting such songs as were never heard by mortal ears Amongst other he heard a voice which said This is the repose of the Just this the joy of those who have given a good account of their lives unto God But all this is no more than a dream and a shadow in comparison of the truth greatness and riches of that Celestial Court. In regard that all the Blessed together with Christ are to raign in this most rich City and Kingdom how great shall the riches be who was ever so rich as to have at the entrance of his House a massie large piece of Gold two or three yards long What riches will those be of Heaven because all the Kingdom of Heaven is to be of pure Gold all the Streets and all the Houses of that Holy City and not only Gold but more than Gold The holy Scripture to make us on one part understand the riches of this Kingdom of God and on the other part to know that they are of a higher and more excellent nature than those of the Earth expresses them with the similitude of the riches of this World as Gold Pearl and precious Stones because by these names we understand things of great wealth and value but withall sets them forth for such as are not to be found upon earth so as when it speaks of Pearls it sayes they were so great as they served for the Gates of a City when it speaks of Emeralds and Topaz's it makes them to suffice for the foundatian of high Walls and Turrets when of Gold it makes it transparent as Glass or Chrystal All this is to signifie that in Heaven there are not onely greater riches but of a more sublime and high quality than ours upon Earth And with reason is that Holy City called the Kingdom of Heaven to let us know that the same advantage that Heaven hath above Earth the same have Celestial honours riches and joyes above those which are here below If the whole Earth is no more than a point in respect of the Heavens what can those short and corruptible riches be in respect of the eternal § 3. Of those incomparable riches the Blessed are not onely to be Lords but Kings as appears in many places of holy Scripture Neither is the Celestial Treasure ●or this Kingdom of Heaven less or poorer by having so many Lords and Kings It is not like the Kingdoms on Earthy which permit but one King at once and if divided become of less power and Majesty but is of such condition that it is wholly possessed by all in general and by each one in particular like the Sun which warms all and every one and not one less because it warms many The effects of riches are much greater and more noble in Heaven than they can be upon Earth Wealth may serve us here to maintain our power honours and delights but all the Gold in the world cannot free us from weakness infamy and pain The power of a rich King can reach no further than to Command his Vassals and those
who disobey him he may either chastise with imprisonment or death and is therefore fear'd and respected by them But all this power is invalid without the assistance of his Subjects For what will it avail a Prince to command such a City to be defended if the Souldiers within have a minde to deliver it And therefore a certain Jester of Philip the Second King of Spain demanded of him If all should say No unto what your Majesty commands what was to be done giving him to understand that his power depends upon others The power of a Monarch depends not onely upon the will of his Subjects but the Walls of his Fortresses Arms Instruments of Warre and many other things so as the people depend onely upon one man which is the Prince but the Prince upon many men and matters in so much as many rich Kings have been seen without power as Craesus Andronicus and others who were not able to defend themselves with all their riches from their own Vassals Witness Domitian Commodus Heliogabolus and Julius Caesar But the power of the Blessed depends of no other power nor man Ansel de Simil. c. 52. which as St. Anselm sayes shall be so great as no force or resistance shall withstand it It a Saint have a mind to remove a Mountain from one place to another he shall do it with as much ease as we remove our eyes from one part unto another Neither is this a wonder For even the faithful in this life according to the promise of Christ have done it as is written of St. Gregorius Thaumaturgus and some others And if Angels nay Devils have this power the Blessed shall not be denyed it Concerning honour the richest Princes can onely make their Vassals to adore them upon the knee and do them other outward reverence but cannot hinder them from murmuring in their absence or from observing their actions and interpreting them as they please They have many flatterers which praise them with their tongues and scorn them in their hearts and for the most part they are farre fewer who praise than despise them for there are but few who discourse with them but many who discourse of them and therefore few who praise them in presence and many who censure them in absence Concerning pleasures it is true that Princes are not content with ordinary delights and therefore provide themselves of magnificent Shews costly Recreations exquisite Comedies pleasant Gardens Woods for hunting and are all cloathed splendidly But none of those can make a Calenture not to afflict them or that the pains of the head stomack or gout do not molest them or that cares and fears do not break their sleep No gold or money can secure the goods of this World or free them from imperfections This onely is to be had in Heaven where their power is so free from weakness that one onely Angel without Army Guns Swords 4 Reg. 19. or Lance could destroy at once 180000 men with what speed and facility do Saints succour their devotes who invoke them without impediment either from the distance of place or hinderance from the violence of Tyrants How compleat then shall be the honor of the Blessed since even the Devils shall reverence them Nay even now many who despised them living seeing the many miracles which God hath wrought by their intercession have honoured them after death The pleasures also are pure and true without mixture of pain or grief as we shall see in the proper places Besides it is to be considered that the great riches of the Saints are not like those of the Kings of the Earth drawn from the tributes imposed upon their Vassals which though just yet are not free from this ill condition that what enricheth the Prince impoverisheth the Subject The riches in Heaven have no such blemishes they are burthensome to none and what is given to the Servants of Christ who raigns in Heaven is not taken from any CAP. IV. Of the greatness of Eternal Pleasures HOnour Profit and Pleasures are distinct goods upon Earth and are rarely found together Honour is seldom a companion of profit and profit of pleasure And so the sick man drinks his Purge because it is profitable how bitter soever Besides the pleasures or the world are for the most part mixt with some shame and oftentimes with infamy They are costly and expensive we cannot entertain our pleasures without diminishing our wealth It is not so in eternal goods in which to be honest is to be profitable and to be profitable delectable Eternal honours are accompanied with immense riches and they are both attended by pleasures without end All this is signified by the Lord when he received the faithful Servant into glory when he sayes Well done good servant and true because thou hast been faithful in a few things I will place thee over many Enter into the joy of thy Lord. In these words he first honours him commending him for a good and faithful Servant then enriches him delivering many things into his hands and so admits him into the joy and pleasure of his Lord signifying by this manner of expression the greatness of this joy not saying that this joy should enter in to him but that he should enter into joy and into no other but that of his Lord. So great is the joy of that Celestial Paradise that it wholly fills and embraces the blessed Souls which enter into Heaven as into an immense Sea of pleasure and delight The joyes of the Earth enter into the hearts of those who possess them but fill them not because the capacity of mans heart is greater than they can satisfie But the joyes of Heaven receive the Blessed into themselves and fill and overflow them in all parts Their glory is like an Ocean of delights into which the Saints enter as a Sponge into the Sea which filling its whole capacity the water surrounds and compasses it all about Whereupon St. Anselme sayes Ansel ca. 71. de Simil. Joy shall be within and without Joy above and below Joy round about on every side and all parts full of joy The same immensity of joy the Lord signified when he said by Isaias Behold I create Jerusalem an exultation Isai 65. and her people a joy It is much to be noted that he sayes not I create a rejoycing for Jerusalem or in Jerusalem nor a joy in or for its people but by a particular mystery I make Jerusalem that it shall be all an exultation and its people all a joy He speaks in this manner to set forth the greatness of his copious joy with which that holy City and her Inhabitants shall be as it were encompassed and overwhelmed For as a plate of iron in the middle of a Furnace is so wholly inkindled and penetrated by fire that it seems fire it self and contains the full heat of the Furnace So a blessed Soul in Heaven is so replenished with that Celestial joy
of our bodies now to those precious gifts of glory after our resurrection We are now all rottenness unweildiness corruption uncleanness infirmities loathsomness and worms Then all shall be light incorruption splendor purity beauty and immortality Let us compare these together what difference there is betwixt a body sickly weak pale and loathsome or some eight dayes after death full of worms corruption and stench abominable with the same body being now in glory exceeding the Sun far in brightness the Heavens in beauty more odoriferous than the purest Roses or Lillies Neither do the evils or goods temporal bear any comparison with the eternal since as the Apostle sayes That which is momentary and light does cause an eternal weight of glory In the beginning of the Civil Warres with the Senate of Rome carried on against Caius and Fulvius Gracchus Val. l. c. 4. the Consul Opimius by publick Edict promised that whosoever should bring him the head of Caius Gracchus should receive for reward its weight in gold All esteemed this a recompence highly to be valued that one should receive equal weight of that precious mettal to the weight of dead flesh But God's promises far exceed this For a labour or trouble as light as a feather he gives eternal weight of glory The Apostle sayes not that God Almighty doth give onely a great weight for light merits out also adds over and above that it shall be eternal It were a great happiness if according to our penances or voluntary labours we should receive onely equal proportion of bliss yet so as it were eternal because how little soever it were it were to be purchased at a very cheap rate though it were in substance but so much for so much so that the difference were onely such in the duration thereof as if for the toyl of one dayes labour were given a whole year of rest But Almighty God giving much for a little for that which is light massie and heavy for a thing momentary an eternal reward what greater encrease or advantage can we possibly receive Se●imuleyus will be a great confusion unto us who hearing the foresaid Proclamation of the Roman Consul stuck not at any toil or danger until he had cut off the head of Gracchus greedy of the equal weight thereof in gold Let us have the like courage the Souldier had to take away the temporal life of a Man to the end we may not bereave our selves of an eternal life And since the purchase of Heaven is so cheap let us procure to augment the gain and let 's not have less desire of goods eternal than Setimuleyus had for temporals who desirous of a great reward filled with melted lead all the hollow places of the head which he had cut off Let us fill our momentary and light works with great affection and love Let us increase our desires and in any work how little soever accompany the same with a great will with a vehement desire to hoard up eternal treasures for temporal pains What an advantagious exchange will it be to buy Heaven for a draught of water for that which is but vile and lasts but a moment that which is of inestimable price and is to last for all eternity What sort of bargain would it be if one could buy a Kingdom for a straw yet so it is For that which is no more worth than a Straw we may purchase the Kingdom of Heaven Certainly all the felicity riches and earthly delights are no more than a straw compared with the glory of Heaven How fond and foolish would he be who having a Basket full of chips would not give one of them for an hundred weight of gold This is the sottishness of men that for earthly goods they will not receive those of Heaven Who is there that having offered him a precious stone for some small sand should not have so much wit as to give a thing so base and abject for a thing so noble and precious Who being offered a rich treasure for an handful of cinders would not admit of so gainful an exchange What hunger-starved man being invited to a full Table of dainty dishes upon condition he should not eat an apple paring would reject the invitation Heaven is offered us for things little and of small estimation Why do not we accept the offer Christ our Saviour called the Kingdom of Heaven a precious Margarite and a hidden Treasure for which we ought to forsake all the goods of the earth by reason they are all but dust and misery in respect of a treasure of Pearls and Diamonds St. Josaph at did very much in leaving an earthly Kingdom for a greater assurance of that of Heaven He did very much according to our deceitful apprehension and false estimation of things But if it be well considered he did very little much less than if he had given one Basketful of Earth for another of Gold a Sack full of Small-coal for a great Treasure and a Nut-shell for a great Banquet Whatever is in the Earth may well be given for the least crum of Heaven because all the greatnesses of this World are but crums nut-shells and trash compared with the least particle of heavenly bliss All the felicity upon Earth hath no substance nor weight if compared with the weight of eternal glory which is prepared for us This David did and convinced by the greatness of heavenly glory said unto our Lord I did eneline my heart to doe thy justifications The heart of man is like a just ballance that inclines that way where is the greatest weight And as in the heart of David the temporal weighed little and the eternal much so inclined by the eternal weight of glory which attends us and moved by the hope of so great a reward the fulfilling of the Law of God prevailed more with him than his own appetite and inclination §. 2. If we shall consider the labours for which eternal glory is promised us as a hire and reward the Apostle spake with great reason that all which we can suffer in the time of this life is no wayes worthy of that glory to come which is to be manifested in us To St. Austin all the torments of Hell seemed not much for the gaining of Celestial glory but for some short time And if we consider the greatness of that joy all the penances of St. Simon Stylites the fasts of St. Romualdus the poverty and nakedness of St. Francis and the scorns and affronts put upon St. Ignatius are no more than the taking up of a straw for the gaining of an earthly Empire All Stories are full for how small matters upon earth men have exposed themselves to great and almost certain dangers Because David caused it to be published in his Army that he that should first set upon the Jebuseans who were the hardiest of all his Enemies should be made General Joab doubted not to expose his life to manifest danger breaking through
the Pikes and Launces to obtain that honour at the price of his own blood Because King Saul published in the Army that he would give his Daughter in Matrimony to him that should overcome the Giant Golias there being none found that durst attempt it David slighted all danger in hopes of obtaining such a recompense What have not men attempted to gain a terrestrial reward Nothing hath seemed much unto them For the gaining then of Heaven all things ought to seem little unto a Christian Seneca wondered at what Souldiers did and suffered for so short and transitory Kingdoms as are those of the Earth and that not for themselves but for another Much more may we wonder that the sufferings and labours of this life by which we are to gain the Kingdom of Heaven not for a stranger but for our selves seem so great and grievous unto us What did not Jesbaam perform for the advancing of the Kingdom of David though he was esteemmed a poor wretch and a dastard 2 Reg. 23. 1. Paralip 11. Vid. Sanctium Tirinum 2 Reg. 23. seeing that the Kingdom of David lay at stake he took such courage that he set upon 800 men and slew them in his first fury and at another occasion he killed 300. For the same Kingdom of David Eleazar Son of Ahostes fought with such constancy and valour that he slew innumerable Philistins continuing the Battel until he was so weary that he was not able to move his arm no longer and it remained so stiff with weariness as if it had been of stone If for a Kingdom of another Man's Dominions these men were so valiant why do not we take courage and procure with great valour to make conquest of the Kingdom of Heaven though we lose all our strength and even our lives in the Conquest since in respect of it all toil and labour is nothing For the advancing then of the Kingdom of David his worthies performed such actions as if they were not authorised by holy Scripture might seem incredible But what speak I of advancing his Kingdom when only to fatisfie a gust of his and perhaps an impertinent one which was to drink of the water in the Cisterns of Bethleem the young men threw themselves into the thickest of the Enemies Squadrons and with their naked swords cutting a passage through the middest of the Army fetcht the desired waters If men undergoe such hazards for the Kingdom nay for the pleasure of another and that momentary what ought we to do for those eternal joyes which are to be our own and for the Kingdom of Heaven wherein we expect such immense honours riches and pleasures Why do we not all take heart and courage It is the Kingdom of Heaven we hope for joyes riches and honours eternal are those which are promised us All is but little what can be suffered in time to obtain the same Semma for the defence of a poor field sowed with lentils durst fight alone against an Army of the Philistians 2 Reg. 23. For the defence then of grace which is the seed of God and to assure our glory which is the fruit of the Passion of Christ it is not much if without shedding of blood we fight against our unruly appetites and conquer our corrupt nature in this life that we may render it more perfect in the other To this purpose the consideration of glory is most powerfull having still before our eyes Heaven which is promised us And let not the eternal reward proposed by Christ be less efficacious than the temporal proposed by Man This was signified by our Lord unto the Prophet Ezechiel in those four living creatures so much different in nature Ezek. 1. but all one in their employment and puesto to wit an Eagle a Lyon an Ox and a Man which he beheld in the middle of the air flying with each one four wings as swift as a flash of lightning What thing could so force the heavy nature of an Ox as to equal the flight of an Eagle or what could associate the fierce nature of a Lyon with the gentleness of a Man The same Prophet declares it saying that they carried Heaven on their heads having the Firmament above them Because if Heaven be in our thoughts it will encourage us to all things It will make material Men equal unto Angels and subject them unto reason who in their customs are brutish as wild beasts so as he who is slow and heavy as an Ox shall flye with four wings and by conquering his own nature become in his flight equal to the birds of the air and he which feeds grovling upon the earth shall elevate himself and quit his short and transitory pleasures for those which are eternal § 3. Neither is this much For so great is the good which we expect that for it to be deprived of all other goods whatsoever ought to be esteemed a happiness and to suffer all torments and afflictions as a pleasure Let us hear what St. Chrysostome sayes Chrysost Tom. 5. Hom. 19. How many labours soever thou shalt pass how many torments soever thou shalt endure all are nothing in respect of those goods to come Let us hear also what St. Vincent Martyr said unto Dacianus the President and with what joy and patience in his torments he confirmed what he had spoken When they hoisted him up on high upon the Rack and the Tyrant in a scoff demanded of him where he then was the Saint smiling and beholding Heaven whither he was going answered I am aloft and from thence can despise thee although insolent and puft up with the power thou hast upon Earth Being after menaced with more cruel torments he said Me-thinks thou dost not threaten but court me Dacianus with what I desire with all the powers and faculties of my Soul And when they tore his flesh with hooks and pincers and burnt him with lighted torches he cried out with great joy In vain thou weariest thy self Dacianus thou canst not imagine torments so horrid which I could not suffer Prison Pincers Burning-plates of iron and Death it self are unto Christians sports and recreations and not torments He who had the joyes of Heaven before his eyes scorned and laughed at the bitterest torments upon Earth Let us consider them also and we shall not shun the sufferance of any thing whereby we may gain Heaven What pity is it that a Christian for some short and sordid pleasure should lose joyes so great and eternal because he will not bear some slight injurie here should be deprived of celestial honour there for not paying what he owes and not restoring what he hath unjustly taken should forfeit the divine riches of Heaven and for one pleasant morsel which the Devil offers him should deprive himself of that great Supper whereunto God invites him Who would choose rather to feed upon bones and craps which fell from the Table than to he a Guest at the
Banquet and feed upon the choicest and most savoury dishes That which the world offers in her best pleasures is but shells offals and parings but that whereunto God invites us is a full Table wherein may be satisfied the most eager hunger of humane appetite With reason it is called in holy Scripture the great Supper and in some places the Nuptial Supper by reason of that satiety which nothing upon earth can give us It is called also a Supper and not a Dinner because after dinner we use to rise and goe about other occasions and employments but after supper there are no more labours all is rest and repose The principal dish which is served in at this great Supper is the clear vision of God and all his Divine perfections after that a thousand joyes of the Soul in all its powers and faculties then a thousand pleasures of the senses with all the endowments of a glorified Body These latter are as it were the Desert of this Divine Banquet And if the Desert be such what shall be the substance of the Feast What comparison then betwixt those great and eternal goods of Heaven and those which the World gives us Certainly they are not worthy to be called so much as the shells of happiness It is much to be reflected on that those who enjoyed not that great Supper which is a figure of glory were not deprived of it by doing any thing which was a sin in it self For one excused himself because he had bought a Farm another because he was to prove his Oxen a third because he was married none of which were sins but for the preferring those things before the Kingdom of Heaven which being an incredible madness and blindness made them not worthy to be admitted And truly all those who are wholly taken up and employed in the things of the Earth do no other than perferre the scraps and parings of a poor and rustick Dinner before the Royal Feast of a powerful King Moreover although God had not invited us most miserable and vile worms unto a Supper of so infinite sweetness but had onely promised us the crums which fell from his Table yet ought we to have preferred them before the contents and commodities of this World Let us fear least even in lawful pleasures there may be danger For as the evils of sin are the cause of damnation so the goods of the world may be the occasion of sin Let us look onely towards Heaven let us open our eyes and consider that those who were called by God to some especial vocation and did not embrace it are introduced by holy Scripture as damned and forsaken by God though their sin is not named as it appears in these three who were invited But much more to our terrour in that young man in the Gospel who having demanded of Christ our Redeemer What he should do to gain eternal life and being answered That he should keep the Commandements of the Law which he replyed he had done from his youth Yet because the Lord called him by a special vocation to a greater perfection which was to leave all and follow him he went his way sorrowful because he had much riches whereupon our Saviour pronounced that memorable and terrible Sentence That it was easier for a Camel to enter the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of Heaven signifying thereby that although he had kept the Commandments yet he was excluded Heaven For those whom our Saviour favours with particular inspirations and callings do not assure their salvation by a desire to keep the Commandments but by endeavouring to observe the Evangelical counsels quitting not onely sins and the occasions of sinning but the impediments of vertue and perfection by which they might not onely more assure Heaven but also obtain more glory and if they do it not may justly fear lest they may so much disoblige God Almighty by despising his vocation that he will not vouchsafe to grant them the efficacious helps of keeping his Commandments Little is all which can be done for the gaining of Heaven little what is suffered little what is forsaken little all the care to obtain it little what caution not to lose it little what impediments are to to be avoided little what austerities of life we undergoe to assure it And if we judge not so in this valley of tears let the Saints judge in Heaven who are of a different opinion from those upon earth D. Mig l. 3. de Vit. Isabel c. 9. St. Teresa of Jesus appearing upon an occasion to that blessed woman Isabella of St. Dominick this most observant religious woman begged pardon of the Saint for a disgust that she perswaded her self she had given her when being Prioress of Pastrana she put up a very narrow Grate where the Nuns were to hear Mass To some it seemed over-streight as also to St. Teresa and she would have taken it away but did not do it because the Prioress Isabella replyed unto her saying It was not convenient that being so nigh to Secular people they might be seen by them But the Saint being now dead and glorious Isabella of St. Dominick was much afflicted to consider that by her replyings she had displeased her holy Mother The Saint answered her saying Some things here do appear unto me far different And doubtless in Heaven things will appear far otherwayes where all care and sollicitude in not offending God will seem little and what ever negligence and hinderance in his service will appear grievous CAP. VIII Of Evils eternal and especially of the great Poverty Dishonour and Ignominy of the Damned WE have not only reason to despise the Goods of the World from the consideration of Heaven but the Evils also from that of Hell in comparison of which all temporal evils are to be esteemed as happiness and blessings and all the happiness and contents of Earth to be abhorred as evils at least if they any wayes dispose to those eternal torments and that perpetual privation of joyes without end And truly such are the two extremes which attend us after life that either of them were sufficient to make us despise all Goods and Evils temporal whatsoever But joynning the privation of the joyes of Heaven with the condemnation unto the torments of Hell 't is admirable how any can delight in the things of this life and not tremble at what may succeed By reason of this danger we ought to abhorre and spit at the pleasures and goods of this life and to admit and embrace if occasion be the greatest evils of it and to contemn both the one and the other neither loving the goods nor fearing the evils Yet certainly the goods of the World are so much more to be despised than the evils as they usually are the greater occasions of sin and so consequently of eternal damnation The holy Scriptures and Writings of Saints are full of menaces against the Rich the
instead of the burning coals of that eternal fire Neither shall they be Masters so much as of that broken pot wherein to contain a little water if it might be given them Jsai 30. For as Isaias sayes There shall not remain unto them so much as the shread of a broken pot to hold a little water from the pit nor shall there be any found to give it them That rich Glutton in the Gospel accustomed to drink in Cups of Chrystal to eat in Silver and to be cloathed in Silks and curious Linnens can tell us how far this infernal poverty extends when he demanded not wines of Candie but a little cold water and that not in Cups of Gold or Chrystal but upon the fingers end of a Leper This rich and nice Glutton came to such an extremity that he would esteem it a great felicity that they would give him but one drop of water although it were from the filthy and loathsome finger of a Leper and yet this also was wanting unto him Let the rich of the World see to what poverty they are like to come if they trust in ther riches let them know that they shall be condemned to the loss of all which is good Let them reflect upon him who was accustomed to be cloathed in precious Garments to tread upon Carpets to sleep upon Down to dwell in spacious Palaces now naked thrown upon burning coals and packt up in some narrow corner of that infernal Dungeon Let us therefore fear the riches of this World and the poverty of the other §. 4. This poverty or want of all good of the damned is accompanied with a most opprobrious infamy and dishonour when by publick sentence they shall be deprived for their enormous offences of eternal glory and reprehended in the presence of Saints and Angels by the Lord of Heaven and Earth This infamy shall be so great that St. Chrysostom speaks of it in these words A most intolerable thing is Hell Chrys in Math. 24. and most horrible are the torments yet if me should place a thousand Hells before me nothing could be so horrible unto me as to be excluded from the honour of glory to be hated of Christ and to hear from him these words I know you not This infamy we may in some sort declare under the example of a mighty King who having no Heir to succeed him in his Kingdom took up a beautiful Boy at the Church door and nourished him as his Son and in his Testament commanded that if at ripe years his conditions were vertuous and sutable to his calling he should be received as lawful King and seated in his Royal Throne but if he proved vitious and unfit for Government they should punish him with infamy and send him to the Gallies The Kingdom obeyed this Command provided him excellent Masters and Tutors but he became so untoward and ill-inclined that he would learn nothing flung away his books spent his time amongst other Boyes in making houses of dirt and other childish fooleries for which his Governors corrected and chastised him and advised him of what was fitting and most imported him but all did no good onely when they reprehended him he could weep not because he repented but because they hindred his sport and the next day did the same The more he grew in age the worse he became and although they informed him of the Kings Testament and what behooved him all was to no purpose until at last after all possible care and diligence his Tutors and the whole Kingdom weary of his ill conditions in a publick Assembly declared him unworthy to raign dispoiled him of his Royal Ornaments and condemned him with infamy unto the Gallies What greater affront and ignominy can there be than this to lose a Kingdom and to be made a Gally-slave for I do not know which of these things that young man would be more sensible of More ignominious and a more lamentable Tragedy is that of a Christian condemned to Hell who was taken by God from the gates of death adopted his Son with condition that if he kept his Commandments he should raign in Heaven and if not he should be condemned to Hell Yet he forgetting these obligations without respect of his Tutors and Masters who were the holy Angels especially his Angel Guardian who failed not to instill into him holy inspirations and other learned and spiritual men who exhorted him both by their doctrine and example what was fitting for a Child of God But he neither moved by their advices nor the chastisements of Heaven by which God overthrew his vain intentions and thwarted his unlawful pleasures onely lamented his temporal losses and not his offences and at the time of his death was sentenced to be deprived of the Kingdom of Heaven and precipitated into Hell What infamy can be greater than this of the damned Soul for if it be a great infamy to suffer death by Humane Justice for some crimes committed how great an infamy will it be to be condemned by Divine Justice for a Traitor and perfidious Rebel to God Besides this bitterness of pains the damned persons shall also be eternally branded with the infamy of their offences so as they shall be scorned and scoft at by the Devils themselves and not onely Devils but all rational creatures Men and Angels shall detest them as infamous and wicked Traitors to their King God and Redeemer Jsai 13. Facies combustae vultus eorum And as fugitive Slaves are marked and cauterized with burning irons so this infamy by some special mark of ugliness and deformity shall be stamped upon their faces and bodies so as Albertus Magnus sayes so ignominious shall be the body of a Sinner that when his Soul returns to enter it it shall be amazed to behold it so horrible and shall wish it were rather in the same state as when it was half eaten up by worms CAP. IX The Punishment of the Damned from the horribleness of the place into which they are banished from Heaven and made Prisoners in Hell ANother kind of punishment of great discomfort and affliction is that of Exile which the Damned shall suffer in the highest degree For they shall be banished into the profound bowels of the Earth a place most remote from Heaven and the most calamitous of all others where they shall neither see the Sun by day nor the Stars by night where all shall be horror and darkness and therefore it was said of that condemned person Cast him forth into utter darkness forth of the City of God forth of the Heavens forth of this World where he may never more appear into that land which is called in the Book of Job A dark land Job 10. covered with the obscurity of death a land of misery and darkness where the shadow of death and no order but everlasting horror inhabits a land according to Isaias Jsai 34. of sulphur and burning pitch a land of
is with so much impudence contempt of God and such a Luciferian pride After having heard so many examples of his chastisements executed upon sinners After having seen that the most beautiful and glorious of all the Angels and with him innumerable others were thrown from Heaven and made firebrands in Hell for one sin and that onely in thought After having seen the first man for one sin of gluttony banisht from the Paradise of pleasure into this valley of tears dispoyled of so many supernatural endowments and condemned to death After having seen the World drowned and the Cities of Pontapolis burnt with fire from Heaven After having seen those seditious against Moyses swallowed by the earth and with their Children Goods and Family sink alive into Hell After having known that so many have been damned for their offences After that the Son of God had suffered upon the Cross for our sins After all this to sin is an impudence never heard of and an intolerable contempt of the Divine Justice Besides what greater scorn and contempt of God than this that God who is worthy of all honour and love and the Devil who is our professed enemy pretending both to our Souls the one to save them the other to torment them in eternal flames yet we adhere to Satan and preferre him before Christ our Saviour and Redeemer and that so much to our prejudice as by the loss of eternal glory and captivating our selves unto eternal torments and slavery No way of injuring can be imagined more injurious than when by the interposing of some other vile and infamous he who is worthy of all love and honour is put by and slighted The manner also of sinning aggravates the sin as the sinner doth by losing thereby eternal goods Though he who sinneth lost nothing yet the offence against God were great and the affront to Reason it self not inconsiderable But well knowing the great damages and punishments likewise that attend sin and the evident hazard he runs and yet to sin is a strange temerity and impudency If we shall likewise consider When it is that we sin we shall sinde this circumstance no less to aggravate our offences than the former Because we now sin When we have seen the Son of God nailed unto the Cross that we should not sin When we have seen God so sweet unto us as to be incarnate for our good humbling himself to be made man and subjecting himself to death even the death of the Cross for our redemption having instituted the holy Sacraments for a remedy against sin especially that of his most holy Body and Blood which was a most immense expression of his love To sin after we had seen God so good unto us so obliging unto us with those not to be imagined favours is a Circumstance which ought much to be pondered in our hearts and might make us forbear the offending of so loving a Lord. And that Christian who sins after all this is to be esteemed worse than a Devil For the Devil never sinned against that God who had shed his blood for him or who had been made an Angel for him or who had pardoned so much as one sin of his When those sinned who were under the law of nature they also had not seen the Son of God die for their salvation as a Christian hath for which as St. Austin sayes There ought a new Hell to be made for him And there is no doubt but Christians will deserve new torments and greater than those who have not had the knowledge of God nor received so many benefits from him This is confirmed by what is written of St. Macarius the Abbot who finding in the Desert a dead mans head and removing it with his staffe out of the way it began to speak which he hearing demanded Who it was It answered I am a Priest of the Gentils which heretofore dwelt in this place and am now together with many of them in the middle of a burning fire so great that the flames encompass us both above and beneath And is there replyed the Saint any place of greater torment Yes said the dead Greater is that which they suffer who are below us For we who knew not God are not so severely dealt with as those who knowing have denied him or not complyed with his holy will These are below us and suffer far greater torments than we These are the Circumstances observed by Tully and are all found to aggravate the guilt of our sins Neither is that added by Aristotle wanting which is About what About what do we offend God About what happens this great presumption but about things which import not but rather endamage us About complying with a sensual gust which in the end bereaves us of health of honour of substance and even of pleasure it self suffering many dayes of grief for a moment of delight About things of the earth which are vile and transitory and about goods of the world which are false short and deceitful What would we say if for a thing of so small value as a straw one man should kill another No more than a straw are all the felicities of the world in respect of those of heaven and for a thing of so small consideration we are Traitors to God and crucifie Christ again and that a thousand times as often as we sin mortally against him Lastly Against whom we offend much aggravates our sins For besides that God is most perfect most wise beautiful immense omnipotent infinite we sin against him who infinitely loves us who suffers us who heaps his benefits and rewards upon us To do evil to those who make much of them even wilde beasts abhorre it What is it then for thee to injure him who loved thee more then himself who hath done thee all good that thou shouldest do no evil Fear then this Lord reverence his Majesty love his goodness and offend him no more This onely consideration To have sinned against so good a God was so grievous unto David that in his penitential Psalms he exclaims with tears and cries out from the bottom of his heart Against thee onely have I sinned For although he had sinned against Vrias and against all Israel by his ill example yet it seemed unto him he had onely sinned against God when he considered the infinity of his being the immenseness of that love which he had so grievously offended Sin then is on all parts most virulent on all parts spits forth venome Behold it on every side it still seems worse for being the chiefest evil it can on no part appear good all is monstrous all poison all detestable all most evil and therefore deserves all evil And it is not much that that should be chastised with eternal torments which opposes it self unto the sweetness of an infinite holiness § 4. Sin is so evil that it is every way evil It is not onely evil as it is an injury to God but it is
it prepares for us are eternal whose greatness though it were not otherwise to be known might in this sufficiently appear that to free us from so many evils and crown us with so many goods it was necessary that he who was eternal should make himself temporal and should execute this great and stupendious work so much to his own loss CAP. IV. The baseness of Temporal goods may likewise appear by the Passion and Death of Christ Jesus THe greatness of eternal goods and evils is by the Incarnation of the Son of God made more apparent unto us then the Sun beams since for the freeing us from the one and gaining for us the other it was necessary so great a work should be performed and that God judged not his whole omnipotency ill imployed that man might gain eternity Yet doth not this great work so forcibly demonstrate unto us the baseness of things temporal and the contempt which is due unto them as the Passion and Death of the Son of God which was another work of his love an other excess of his affection another tenderness of our Creator and a most high expression of his good will towards us wherein we shall see how worthy to be despised are all the goods of the Earth since to the end we might contemn them the Son of God would not onely deprive himself of them but to the contrary embraced all the evils and incommodities this life was capable of Behold then how the Saviour of the world disesteemed temporal things since he calls the best of them and those which men most covet but thorns and to the contrary that which the world most hates and abhorrs he qualifies with the name of blessings favouring so much the Poor who want all things that he calls them blessed and sayes Of them is the Kingdom of heaven And of the Rich who enjoy the goods of the earth he sayes It is harder for them to enter into heaven then for a Camel to pass the eye of a needle And to perswade us yet more he not onely in words but in actions chose the afflictions and despised the prosperity of this life and to that end would suffer in all things as much as could be suffered In honour by being reputed infamous In riches by being despoyled of all even to his proper garments In his pleasures by being a spectacle of sorrow and afflicted in each particular part of his most sacred body This we ought to consider seriously that we may imitate him in that contempt of all things temporal which he principally exprest in his bitter death and passion This he would have us still to keep in memory as conducing much to our spiritual profit as an example which he left us and as a testimony of the love he bore us leaving his life for us and dying for us a publick death full of so many deaths and torments Zcnophon in Cyro lib. 3. Tigranes King of Armenia together with his Queen being prisoners unto Cyrus and one day admited to dine with him Cyrus demanded of Tigranes What he would give for the liberty of his wife to whom Tigranes answered That he would not onely give his Kingdom but his life and blood The woman not long after requited this expression of her husband For being both restored to their former condition One demanded of the Queene What she thought of the Majesty and Greatness of Cyrus to whom she answered Certainly I thought not on him nor fixt mine eyes on any but him who valued me so much as he doubted not to give his life for my ransom If this Lady were so grateful onely for the expression of her husbands affections that she looked upon nothing but him and neither admired nor desired the greatness of the Persians What ought the Spouse of Christ to do who not onely sees the love and affection of the King of Heaven but his deeds not his willingness to die but his actual dying a most horrid and cruel death for her ransom and redemption Certainly she ought not to place her eyes or thoughts upon any thing but Christ crucified for her Sabinus also extolls the loyalty and love of Vlysses to his Wife Penelope in regard that Circe and Calypso promising him immortality upon condition that he should forget Penelope and remain with them he utterly refused it not to be wanting to the love and affection he owed unto his Spouse who did also repay it him with great love and affection Let a Soul consider what great love and duty it owes to its Spouse Christ Jesus who being immortal did not onely become mortal but died also a most ignominious death Let us consider whether it be reasonable it should forget such an excessive love and whether it be fit it should ever be not remembring the same and not thankful for all eternity hazarding to lose the fruits of the passion of its Redeemer and Spouse Christ Jesus Upon this let thy Soul meditate day and night and the spiritual benefits which she will reap from thence will be innumerable Albertus Magnus used to say Lud. de Ponte P. 4. in introduc That the Soul profited more by one holy thought of the Passion of Christ than by reciting every day the whole Psalter by fasting all the year in bread and water or chastizing the Body even to the effusion of blood One day amongst others when Christ appeared unto St. Gertrude to confirm her in that devotion she had to his Passion he said unto her behold Daughter if in a few hours which I hung upon the Cross I so enobled it that the whole world hath ever since had it in reverence how shall I exalt that Soul in whose heart and memory I have continued many years Certainly it cannot be exprest what favour devout Souls obtain from Heaven in thinking often upon God and those pains by which he gained tor us eternal blessings and taught us to despise things temporal and transitory But that we may yet reap more profit by the holy remembrance of our Saviours passion we are to consider that Christ took upon him all our sins and being to satisfy the Father for them would do it by the way of suffering for which it was convenient that there should be a proportion betwixt the greatness of his pains and the greatness of our sins And certainly as our sins were without bound or limit so the pains of his torments were above all comparison shewing us by the greatness of those injuries he received in his passion the greatness of those injuries we did unto God by our inordinate pleasures We may also gather by the greatness of those pains and torments which were inflicted upon him by the Jews and Hangmen the greatness of those which he inflicted upon himself for certainly those pains which he took upon himself were not inferior to those he received from others But who can explicate the pains which our Saviour wounded by the grief he conceived at
and increase Whereupon St. Austin calls it the foundation of the City of Babylon This Covetousness is seated in the affections of the soul as in its proper subject but is fed and receives nourishment from those exteriour things which we possess Wherefore wholly to extripate it two things are necessary not onely to quit this interiour thirst and gaping after riches but also that exteriour possession of them The first is to be done by the will and spirit but the second by an actual and effectual execution and forsaking them and it is for this that we are promised in this life a hundred-fold and in the next eternal felicity O how great a distance is there discovered betwixt things temporal and eternal since the onely hope of the eternal bestows more upon us even in this life then we can receive from the dominion and possession of all that is temporal Temporal goods by being enjoyed and possest are not so much as doubled but by being renounced for Christ are multiplyed a hundred-fold and hereafter conferr the Kingdom of Heaven Abundance of temporal goods as hath been already observed hinder and obstruct the pleasures and contents of this life for which we seek them and hereafter throw their possessors into hell flames so as they are not onely the occasion of eternal pain but by anticipation of many temporal inconveniences For I know not how it coms to pass the most rich are not the most contented nor yet the least necessitated It seems their goods diminish in their hands and are of less value amongst them than the poor at least ten is not worth to a rich man so much as one to a poor so as the poor who have renounced their goods for Christ finde them multiplyed a hundred-fold and the rich who forgetting their Redeemer employ themselves wholly in heaping up wealth find them as much diminished and of a hundred enjoy not one Besides the rich are so encumbered with cares dangers fears and perturbations that they know not the true contents of this life and yet run the hazard of eternal damnation in the other But to the contrary those who are poor in spirit and have forsaken their possessions for Christ are in this world filled with joy peace and comfort and in the next enjoy the Kingdom of Heaven O how happy are they who understand this and know how to change earth for heaven O how truly doth Christ call happy the poor in spirit who have left all for his sake and therefore enjoy a double happiness the one present and the other future here a hundred-fold for that which they possess not and hereafter the possession of life eternal O how happy is he who knows with the riches of the earth to purchase the treasure of glory in death and in life to receive them a hundred-fold doubled Cassian Collat. ult c. ult This according to Abbot Abraham is fully verified in religious persons who have quitted all they have upon earth to live in an estate of poverty who for one Father which they have left find a hundred in religion and for one Brother a hundred who embrace them with Christian charity for one possession a hundred possessions and for one house a hundred houses in the multitude of Monasteries founded for their Order so as there is no doubt but this reward is not onely doubled unto them a hundred-fold but multiplied to a farre greater proportion The same may be seen in other servants of God who serve him in voluntary poverty Beda de Nat. Sancti Benedic who by how much as Bede notes they have served God with more affection in renouncing their temporal goods by so much hath God stirred up the affections and liberalities of others to supply and assist them in all their wants So as they are served with the goods of all and as the Apostle sayes having nothing possess all But although this recompence should fail us yet one a hundred-fold greater then this will not fail us which is that noted by St. Jerome Lib. 3. in Math. He who for our Saviours sake leaves carnal things shall receive spirituall which in comparison and value are as if some small number were compared with a hundred We seek the goods of the earth for the ease and content of life But if this may better and with more advantage be acquired by the contempt and leaving them what can we desire more Certainly he who quits all for Christ enjoyes a hundred times more content and pleasure then he who flows in the greatest riches and abundance for according to what hath been said the goods of this life are tedious and troublesome even to life it self so the freedom from those cares and incommodities which accompany them eases the heart and makes our life more sweet and pleasant Whereupon St. Chrysostome notes That as the Children in the middest of the fiery furnace in Babylon were refresht by a cool wind and pleasant dew to those who are in poverty which the holy Scripture calls a furnace are recreated by a gentle aire from heaven and the dew of the holy Spirit and that in so high a manner as St. Bernard speaking of the Monks of Claraval sayes That they drew from their Poverty Fasts and austere Penances such joy and spiritual comfort that they were jealous and afraid least God had given them their whole and compleat reward in this world and it seemed unto them that having their heaven in this life they should lose it in that to come Whereupon it was necessary for St. Bernard to prove unto them in one of his Sermons That he did injure the grace of the holy Spirit who placed grief in what it communicated Certainly the Servants of God are highly rewarded since they receive even in this life such celestial joyes for those temporal trifles which they have quitted If one for a certain weight of Copper were to receive the like in Gold Cassian Sup. I believe he would think he had made a good bargain The like exchange they make who receive those spiritual joyes for the pleasures of the earth In Histor Cistere This is fully verified in that which happened unto Arnulphus the Cistercian who being rich noble and abounding with all which the world esteems moved by the Sermons of St. Bernard became a Monk in the Monastery of Claraval where after a holy life led in much rigour and austerity he at last became very infirm and through the great grief and pains which he suffered would often fall into faintings and sounding trances but still when he recovered from his fits would cry out It is true it is true which thou hast said O blessed Jesus And to some present who thought the extremity of pain did make him rave he would say Brethren I have spoken this in my right judgement and senses for that which our Lord promised in the Gospel That he who for his sake should leave Father Mother or Goods
should receive a hundred fold and hereafter life eternal I now find true by experience For this grief and pain which I feel is so sweet unto me out of the hope I have of eternal happiness that I would not lose these pains and this hope not onely for what I have left already but for a hundred times more And if to me who am so great a sinner those pains which I deserve are a hundred times more sweet than any former power and pleasures in the world What are they to a just man and to the zealous and devout religious By this it evidently appears that spiritual joy though but in hope affords a thousand times more pleasure and content than the possession of all the carnal and temporal delights in the world At what this Servant of God said all who were present remained astonisht that an ignorant man wholly unlettered should understand and speak of so high matters §. 2. The joy of the poor in Christ Jesus who have renounced all for his love springs from two causes First from that content which Poverty it self by its freedom from temporal troubles and the imbroilments of life brings along with it And this even the Gentils confessed And therefore Apuleius called it Merry and and chearful Poverty And Seneca would say That a Turf of earth gave a sounder sleep than Wooll dyed in Tyrian Purple And Anaxagoras taught by experience That he found more content in sleeping upon the Earth and feeding upon Hearbs than in Down Beds and delicious Banquets accompanied with an unquiet mind The second cause of this joy is not the nature of poverty but the particular grace of God who rewards them with the pleasures of heaven who have renounced those of earth and fills with spiritual riches those who have left the temporal For in truth poverty is much beloved and priviledged by Christ and therefore he rewards the poor even in this life with many particular graces and favours Besides this the many and great commodities which this contempt of earthly things brings along with it may serve as a reward equivalent to a hundred yea a thousand-fold For if all the world were given to escape the committing of one sin it were not an equal value and by Evangelical poverty and contempt of the world the sins which we avoid are innumerable For by it we not onely pluck up the root but quit the instruments of sinning Take away abundance and you take away insolence arrogance and pride which spring from it as smoke from fire you take away also the means of committing many other sins which riches feed and nourish Neither is the attaining of many vertues which accompany Poverty as Humility Modesty and Temperance of less value than the avoidance of those sins And therefore it is a great truth Homil. 8. in Ep. ad Hebr. which Saint Chrysostome notes and ponders That in Poverty we possess Vertues more easily Neither is it sleightly to be valued That the state of Poverty assists much toward our satisfaction for those sins we have committed according to what is spoken to the just man by Isaias the Prophet I have chosen thee that is I have purified thee in the furnace of poverty It is likewise a great matter to be free and uninterressed in the base and unprofitable employments of the earth whereby the poor have time to exercise vertue to converse with God and his Angels and contemplate Eternity The honour also and dignity to command these things below which is attained by the poor in spirit may well be valued at a hundred-fold For as it is a great baseness in the rich to be slaves to their avarice and to things so vile as riches So it is a great honour to the poor to exempt themselves from this slavery and servitude and to lord it over all and as the Apostle sayes by contemning all to possess all so as there is no Riches no Kingdom comparable to this of Poverty Kingdoms have their limits and boundeties which they pass not but this Kingdom of Poverty is not straightned by any bounds but for the same reason that it hath nothing hath all things for the heart cannot be said to possess any thing without being Lord of it and it cannot be Lord of it without being superiour unto it and not that unless it subject and subjugate it unto it self So as it is by so much more a possessor by how much it is more Lord and Superiour Now he who desires to be rich must needs love those things without which he cannot be rich nor can he love them without care sollicitude and slavery but he who contemns them is not onely Lord but Possessor of them And for this cause St. John Climacus said very well Grad 17. That the poor religious person who casts all his care upon God is Lord of all the world and all men are his Servants Moreover the true love of poverty doth not basely cleave unto these temporal things for all it hath or can have it respects nothing and if it want any thing it is no more troubled than if it wanted so much dung and dirt But above all rewards is that of God who is possest by poverty In Psal 118. and in St. Ambrose his opinion is that hundred-fold which is received for what we leave For as the Tribe of Levie which had no part in the distribution of the Land of Palestine received this promise from God that he would be their Share and Possession of inheritance So with much reason unto those who voluntarily refuse their parts in the goods of the earth God himself becomes their possession riches and all good even in this world and passes so much further as to give them in the other the Kingdom of Heaven Aug. Ser. 28. de Ver. Apost Whereupon St. Austin speaks in this manner Great happiness and felicity is that of a Christian who with the rich price of poverty purchases the precious reward of glory Wilt thou see how rich and precious it is The poor man buyes and obtains that by poverty which the rich man cannot with all his treasures And it was certainly a most high counsel in our Lord God and an act worthy of his divine understanding to make Poverty the price of his Glory that none might want wherewith to purchase it Wherefore many of the Saints have been so enamoured of Poverty that they have purchased it with more eagerness than the rich have fled from it and have had this advantage over them to be more voluntarily poor than the other could be rich CAP. VIII Many who have despised and renounced all that is Temporal SO evident is the baseness of temporal goods and the mischiefs they occasion in humane life so apparent that many Philosophers without the light of faith or doctrine of the Son of God were not ignorant of it and many so deeply apprehended the importance not onely of contemning but renouncing of
France There she taught her Brother how to order a Dairy milk Cows and make Cheeses and after found a way to have him received into a certain Grange of the Cistercians where he performed this office to such satisfaction of the Monks that in a short time he was admitted amongst them a Lay-Brother His Sister Matilda seeing him thus placed said one day unto him Brother certainly a great reward attends us from the Lord for having thus left our Parents and our Country for the love of him But we shall receive a far greater if for the short time of our lives we deprive our selves even of this content of seeing one another and that we so give our selves over to that Divine and Soveraign Majesty that we meet no more until we meet in Heaven where we shall see and converse one with another in true and eternal comfort Here the Brother fell a weeping apprehending this as the greatest difficulty he had hitherto encountred in the whole course of his life But at last he master'd it and they both parted never to see one another more upon earth The holy Virgin went unto a certain Town nine miles distant where she lived retired in a little Cottage and sustained her self wholly by the labour of her hands admitting neither present nor alms Her Bed was the ground or little better she eat upon her knees and in that posture spent many hours in prayer wherein she often was so rapt from her senses that she neither heard the noise of thunder nor perceived the flashes of lightning Alexander was never known whilest he lived But St. Matilda was nine years before her death and therefore attempted often to have left the place but was so strictly watched she could not She wrought many miracles both during her life and after death A certain Monk sick of an Imposthume in his breast offered up his prayers at the Tomb of Alexander and to him the Servant of God appeared more resplendent than the Sun adorned with two most beautiful Crowns The one of which he wore upon his head The other he carried in his hand And being demanded of the Monk what those two Crowns signified he answered This which I bear in my hands is given me for that temporal Kingdom which I forsook upon earth The other of my head is that which is commonly given to all the Saints of Heaven And that thou mayest give credit to what thou hast seen in this Vision thou shalt find thy self according to thy faith cured of thy infirmity In this manner God honours those who humble themselves for his glory CAP. IX The love which we owe unto God ought so to fill our Souls that it leave no place or power to love the Temporal WE have already produced sufficient motives and reasons to breed in us a contempt of the things of this world and to wean our affections from them as well for being in themselves vile transitory mutable little and dangerous as for that the Son of God hath done and suffered so much to the end we should despise them I will onely now add for the conclusion of this matter That though they were of some real worth or value as they are not yet for all this we ought not to love them since so great is that love and affection which is due from us unto God that it ought so fully to fill and possess our hearts that it leave no room for any other affection than it self For if it were commanded in the Law when men had not the obligation which we now have the Son of God not having then died for our redemption that we should love him with all our heart all our soul and all our powers how are we to love him when our debt is so much greater and that we have a further knowledge of his divine goodness If then there ought to be no place for any love but his how can we now turn our eyes unto the creature or set our hearts upon it when a million of hearts are not sufficient for our Creator There is no one Title for which God is amiable but upon that title we owe him a thousand wills a thousand loves and all what we are or can be What do we then owe him for all together Consider his benefits his love his goodness and thou shalt see that though thou hadst as many hearts as there are sands upon the Sea-shore or atoms in the Air all were not capable of that great love which is due unto him How canst thou then divide this one heart which thou hast amongst so many creatures Consider also the multitude and greatness of his divine blessings and deal but with God as one man doth with another If we say of humane benefits that gifts break rocks how comes it that divine benefits do not move a heart of flesh Prov. 22. And if as Salomon sayes Those who give gifts steal the hearts of the receivers how comes it that God robs not thee of thy soul who not onely gives thee gifts but himself for a gift Consider the benefits thou didst receive in thy Creation They were as many as thou hast members of thy body or faculties of thy soul Consider those of thy Conservation Thou hast received as many as there are distinct natures in Heaven and in Earth The Elements Stars and the whole world were created for thy preservation without which thou couldest not subsist Look upon the benefits of thy Redemption They are as many as are the evils of Hell from which they have freed thee Look upon those of thy Justification they are as many as the Sacraments which Christ hath instituted and the examples which he hath left thee Think what thou owest him for having made thee a Christian pardoned thee so often and given thee still fresh grace to renew thee All these and a thousand other benefits and obligations demand and sue for thy love And not onely these benefits from God but even those from men cry out unto thee to love him For there is no benefit which thou receivest from man but comes from God On all parts then and for all things thou art obliged to love God for it is he who does thee good in all and is worth unto thee more than all How comes it then that since he hath done all this for us we yet think not what we are to do for him nor how we shall express our thankfulness for such and so great benefits David was troubled with this care when he said What shall I return unto the Lord for all which he hath given me And yet the Lord had not then given him the Body and blood of his Son nor had his Son then been born or died for him Since then he hath done all this for us why doe we not study how we may be grateful for such infinite and unspeakable mercies But what can we return which we have not received Let us deliver him back our
brought a quintal Vi. Bonfrerium in Exod. 16. it shrunk and contracted it self into the small measure of a gomer with some it diminished and with others swelled and dilated it self into a greater proportion The corruption of it was so sodain that it lasted not one day without being wholly putrified and fill'd with worms and yet notwithstanding all these qualities the enjoying and eating of it cost much toyl and labour first in gathering then grinding then in cooking and performing many other duties requisite for the use of it After the same manner the goods of this life notwithstanding all their faults and evil conditions are not obtained nor enjoyed without much travel and vexation After this all did not enjoy that quality proper to Manna which was to taste like unto that which he that eat it most desired for sinners found this taste limited and not so full and savory as others Even so we with our vices alter and diminish the natural sweetness of the things of this life as we shall see hereafter in it's due place It is true that the appearance of it was good Sept. Interp in cap. 11. Nume species illius species chrystalli for as the 70 Interpreters say it was like Christal clear and transparent The same is the condition of the goods of this life they have the splendor and an appearance but are really more brittle then glass they are variable fading and inconstant and subject to a thousand alterations they are corruptible transitory and mortal and onely by reason of their glittering we seek after them as after things great and eternal Let us then leave the appearance and painted superficies of things and look upon the substance and truth and we shall finde that what is temporal is small and what eternal is great the temporal inconstant the eternal firm the temporal short and temporal the eternal durable and in fine eternal and this onely were enough to make it more esteemed then the temporal although the temporal in all other respects did exceed it but the one being so short and mutable and the other great firm and constant the difference betwixt them can be no less Lib. 7. moral c. 12. then as St. Gregory esteemed it who sayes Immense is that which shall follow and without limit and little is all that which ends And the same Saint notes that the small knowledge and memory of eternity is the main cause of the deceiving of Mankind who have in esteem the false goods of this life and undervalue those spiritual and eternal of the other and therefore speaks in this manner Lib. 8. moral ca. 12. The thoughts of the predestinated alwayes have their intentions placed upon eternity although they possess great felicity in this life and although they be not in danger of death yet ever look upon it as present to the contrary do obstinate souls who love this temporal life as a thing permanent because they consider not how great is the eternity of that which is to come and not considering the solidity of the eternal they judge this Banishment for their Countrey this Darkness for Light and this Race for their Station for those who know not greater matters are not able to judge of the smallest We therefore will begin to draw the Curtain and from the consideration of Eternity and the loose condition of time discover the distance betwixt the goods of heaven and those of earth from whence we shall come to handle the baseness of the temporal and greatness of the eternal Wherefore as a Philosopher said of light that there was nothing more clear nor nothing more obscure the same may be said of time and eternity which being held no less perspicuous are ill understood and are no less obscure and dark then the other But we shall endeavour to make them more intelligible being assisted by the light of Faith the doctrine of Saints and wisdom of the Philosophers CAP. II. How efficacious is the consideration of Eternity for the change of our Lives THe thought of Eternity St. Augustine calls a Great thought Augus in Psal 76. Magna cogit because the memory of it is of great joy unto the Saints and no less horror unto Sinners and unto both of much profit and concernment it causes us to do great matters and shews the smalness of the fading and transitory things of this earth I will therefore from this light begin to discover the large field of the poverty trumpery and baseness of the temporal and recommend the consideration of the eternal the which we ought still to have in our thoughts as David had perpetually in his in whom whilst he was a Sinner it caused horror and confusion and being a Saint it comforted and encouraged him to be yet more holy drawing from this meditation most spiritual and incomparable profit unto his soul and therefore in his Psalms he so often repeats the memory of it not only in the body of them but almost in every passage saying for ever or eternally or world without end there being no inscription or title which he uses more frequently then this against the end or in the end because he composed them with the consideration of eternity which follows the end of this life and for more clearness adds in some of them against the end for the Octave which according to St. Augustine signifies Eternity that being the octave after the 7 dayes of the week into which all time is to resolve which 7 dayes being past there are to be no more weeks but as St. Peter sayes one onely day of perpetual Eternity In this Eternity therefore did the Prophet employ his thoughts by day and his meditations by night this forced him to send up his voice unto Heaven and to cry out unto God this made him mute and took away his speech with men this astonished him and made his pulses fail with the consideration of it this affrighted him and mingled wormwood with the pleasures of this life this made him know the littleness of all that is temporal and made him enter within himself and examine his conscience Finally this brought him to a most miraculous change of life beginning to serve the Lord with more fervor all which effects proceeding from the thoughts of Eternity are apparent in the 76 Psalm therefore sayes he amongst other things Mine eyes prevented the watches I troubled myself and spake not immediately after he gives the reason saying I thought upon the dayes of old and had in my thoughts the years of eternity and meditated on them by night with my heart This thought was the occasion of his long watches on this he meditated before the Sun was risen and on this many hours after it was set and that with so great astonishment of what Eternity was that his spirit ●●iled him and he trembled with the lively apprehension of what it was either to perish eternally in Hell or to enjoy a blessedness for
therefore well laid of St. Augustine In Ps 45. That all which hath an end is short A hundred years of penance have an end and are therefore short a thousand years a hundred thousand Millions have their end and are therefore in the appearance of what is immense but little and in respect of Eternity no more then an instant In the same manner we are to look upon a thousand years as upon an hour and for it self a long life is no more to he desired then a short since both in respect of Eternity bear the same bulk And as in respect of a solid body a thousand superficies's bear no more proportion then one all of them together being as incapable of making up the least particle of solidity as one onely so in respect of Eternity one year is not less then a thousand nor a thousand more than one And upon all time although it were a Million of ages we are to look as upon an instant and upon all which is temporal as upon a superficies which hath onely an appearance but nothing of substance neither can all time and all temporal goods together make up one onely good of Eternity If the whole earth be but a point in respect of the Heavens which are notwithstanding of a finite and limited greatness what great matter is it if all time be but as an instant in respect of Eternity which is infinite and without limit Betwixt the Earth nay betwixt the least grain of sand and the highest Heaven there is a proportion both have quantity but betwixt a thousand years and Eternity none at all and are therefore less then a point O blindness of men who are so besotted with time that in life they desire pleasure and in death a memorial and both in death and life a fame and renown for what even for a moment for an instant Wherefore desirest thou pleasure in life which to morrow is to end Wherefore desirest thou a vain memory after death which can endure no longer than the world whose end will not be long deferred And although it should yet last for a million of ages it were but short since those also must conclude and all were but as a moment in resped of Eternity As the Immensity of God is in respect of place so is Eternity in respect of time and as in respect of the immensity of God the whole Sea is no greater than a drop of water nor an atome in the air less than the whole world so in respect of Eternity a hundred thousand years and half a quarter of an hour are the same If God then should bestow upon thee this life onely for a quarter of an hour and that thou knowest likewise that the world within an hour after thy death were to end also wouldest thou spend that short time in ostentation and setting forth thy self whereby to raise a fame that might endure that short time after thy life no certainly thou wouldest busie thy self with other thoughts thou wouldest think of providing to die well and not trouble thy self in leaving a vain fame and memory which were so small a time to over-last thee Know then that thou oughtest to do the same although thou wert certain to live a hundred years and the world to endure a hundred thousand after thee For all which hath an end is short and all time in respect of Eternity is but a day an hour a moment Remember therefore the saying of St. John who said his time was in the last hour of the world although there then wanted many years all which in respect of Eternity were but as one hour So then if thou wouldest not be sollicitous of leaving a Name behind thee if the world were to continue but an hour no more oughtest thou to be now although it were to endure for many ages If thou knewest for certain that thou had'st to live a hundred years and that during that time thou shouldest have nothing to eat or sustain thy self but what thou drewest from the store and treasure of some great King and that too in the small space of an hour wouldest thou spend that hour in walking abroad in vain conversation and entertainments certainly no thou wouldest not cease from labouring and making haste to load thy self with those treasures How art thou then so careless knowing that thy Soul is to live for an eternity and that thou hast nothing to sustain it with hereafter but what thou gainest by thy merits within the space of this short life look how short a time is allowed thee to provide for Eternity How art thou then so negligent as to pass it in vain pleasures how comest thou then to laugh and not to weep rather and tear thy flesh with rigid penance and mortifications More is an hour in respect of a hundred years than a hundred thousand are in respect of Eternity And therefore if in that hour because the time appeared but short thou wouldest not be sloathful in furnishing thy self for a hundred years much less oughtest thou to be slow in those hundred years of life to provide for Eternity Consider also what a hundred years are in respect of a million and a million of years in respect of Eternity If for a hundred years spent in torments thou wert to enjoy a million of years in pleasure and content certainly thou hadst a most advantagious bargain since thou receivest ten thousand times more than thou gavest What a purchase hast thou then if not for a hundred years of pain but for a short hour spent in the mortification of some one vain pleasure thou receivest an Eternity of glory in respect of which a million of years are but as air instant See then how short is the space of this life to gain the eternal see how short is all time to merit Eternity Well did St. Augustin say August in Psal 39. For an eternal rest thou wert in reason to undergoe an eternal labour and for an eternal felicity to endure eternal pains How then can the short labours of this life seem tedious unto thee questionless there is no just Soul in Heaven nor damned in Hell that so often as he casts his eyes upon Eternity is not astonisht that so short a thing as this life should be the Key of so long a happiness in the one or misery in the other See then how cheap thou hast an Eternity of glory the which is an infinite for a finite Weigh a thousand years weigh a thousand millions in counterpoise with Eternity they weigh nothing all is bat smoak and straw there is no comparison betwixt infinite and finite betwixt what is real and what is painted Well did Plotinus say that Time wat the Image of Eternity conformable unto which David said That man passes away in an Image as if he should have said he passes away in time The same which is said of Time may be said of Goods and Evils temporal which pass along
the goods of life being limited it bestows them with a limited and restrained hand Even life it self it gives us but by peeces and mingles as many parts of death as it gives of life The age of Infancy dies when we enter into that of Childhood that of Childhood when we become Youths that of youth when we come to the age of Manhood that when we are old and even old age it self expires when we become decrepit so that during the same life we find many deaths and yet can hardly perswade our selves that we shall die one Let us cast our eyes upon our life past let us consider what is become of our Infancy Childhood and Youth they are now dead in us In the same manner shall those ages of our life which are to come die also Neither do we onely die in the principal times of life but every hour every moment includes a kinde of death in the succession and change of things What content is there in life which quickly dies not by some succeeding sorrow what affliction of pain which is not followed by some equal or greater grief then it self why are we grieved for what is absent since it offends us being present what we desire with impatience being possest brings care and sollicitude loss grief and affliction The short time which any pleasure stayes with us it is not to be enjoyed wholly and all at once but tasted by parts so as when the second part comes we feel not the pleasure of the first lessening it self every moment and we our selves still dying with it there being no instant of life wherein death gains not ground of us The motion of the Heavens is but the swift turn of the spindle which rol's up the thread of our lives and a most fleet horse upon which death runs post after us There is no moment of life wherein death hath not equal jurisdiction and as a Philosopher saith there is no point of life which we divide not with death so as if well considered we live but one onely point and have not life but for this present instant Our years past are now vanisht and we enjoy no more of them than if we were already dead the years to come we yet live not and possess no more of them than if we were not yet born Yesterday is gone to morrow we know not what shall be of to day many hours are past and we live them not others are to come and whether we shall live them or no is uncertain so that all counts cast up we live but this present moment and in this also we are dying so that we cannot say that life is any thing but the half of an instant and an indivisible point divided betwixt it and death With reason as Zacharias said may this temporal life be called The shadow of death since under the. shadow of life death steals upon us and as at every step the body takes the shadow takes another so at every pace our life moves forward death equally advances with it And as Eternity hath this proportion that it is ever in beginning and is therefore a perpetual beginning so life is ever ending and concluding and may therefore be called a perpetual end and a continual death There is no pleasure in life which although it should last twenty continued years that can be present with us longer than an instant and that with such a counterpoise that in it death no less approaches than life is enjoyed Time is of so small a being and substance and consequently our life Phys 4. trac 7. c. 4. that as Albertus Magnus saith it hath no essence permanent and stable but only violent and successive with which not being able to detain it self in its Careere it precipitates into Eternity and like an ill mouthed horse runs headlong on and tramples under toot all it meets with and without stopping ruins what it finds before it And as we cannot perfectly enjoy the sight of some gallant Cavalier deckt with jewels and adorned with glitterring bravery who with bridle on the neck passed in a full Careere before us so are we not able perfectly to enjoy the things of this life which are still in motion and never rest one moment but run headlong on until they dash themselves in peeces upon the rock of death and perish in their end The name which the Emperour Marcus Aurelius gave unto Time Mar. Aurel Anton lib. 4. when he said that it was a furious and a raging wave did not a little express this condition of it for as such a wave sinks and overwhelms the Vessel not permitting the Merchant to enjoy the treasures with which she was laden so Time with his violence and fury ruins and drowns all that runs along in it This Philosopher considering the brevity and fleeting of Time judged a long and a short life to be the same whole opinion for our further understanding I shall here relate If some of the Gods saith he should tell thee that thou wert to die to morrow or the day after thou wouldest not except thou wert of a base and abject spirit make any account whether since the difference and distance betwixt the two dayes were so small In the same manner thou art to judge of the difference of dying to morrow and a thousand years hence Consider seriously how many Physicians who with knit brows have handled the pulses of their sick Patients are now themselves dead how many Mathematicians who gloried in foretelling the death of others how many Philosophers who have disputed subtilly of death and mortality how many famous Captains who have kill'd and destroyed a multitude of poor people how many Kings and Tyrants who with insolency have used their power over their oppressed Vassals how many Cities If I may so say have dyed as Helice Pompeios Herculanum and innumerable others Add unto these how many thou thy self hast known to die and assisted at their Exequies and that which yesterday was fish and fresh is to day laid in pickle or dust Momentary then is all time All this from this most-wise Prince CAP. XII How short Life is for which respect all things temporal are to be despised BEhold then what is Time and what thy Life and see if there can be any thing imagined more swift and more inconstant than it Compare Eternity which continues ever in the same state with Time which runs violently on and is ever changing and cousider that as Eternity gives a value and estimation un●● those things which it preserves so Time disparages and takes away the value of those that end in it The least joy of Heaven is to be esteemed as infinite because it is infinite in duration and the greatest content of the earth is to be valued as nothing because it ends and concludes in nothing The least torment in hell ought to cause an immense fear because it is to last without end and the greatest pains of this
promise thy self to live a hundred years as though this were a long life Hearken then unto holy Job who lived 240 years who knew best what it was to live both in respect of his prosperity and of his great troubles and afflictions the which make life appear longer than it is What sayes he of all his years My dayes saith he are nothing Nothing he calls them although they lasted almost three ages In other places speaking of the shortness of life and declaring it with many Comparisons and Metaphors sometimes he sayes His days were more speedy than a Messenger and that they passed as a Ship under sail or as an Eagle which stoops furiously upon his prey sometimes that They were more swift than a Weavers Shuttle in one place he compares his life unto a withered leaf born up and down by the wind or unto drie stubble in another he sayes That the life of man is like the flower which springs up to day and to morrow is trodden under foot and that it flies like a shadow without ever remaining in the same state How poor a thing then is life since holy Job calls it but a shadow though then three or four times longer than at present And it is no marvel since those whose life exceeded nine hundred years who lived before the deluge and are now most of them in hell complain as the Wise man relates it in this manner Sap. 5. What hath our pride profited us or the pomp of our riches availed us all those things are passed as a shadow or as a messenger who runs post or as a ship which breaks the unquiet waves and leaves no track or path behinde it or like the bird which flies through the air and leaves no signe after her but with the noise of her wings beats the light wind and forces her self a passage without leaving any knowledge which way she made her flight or like the arrow shot at the mark which hath scarce divided the subtil Element when it closes and joyns again in such manner as it cannot be perceived which way it went Even so we were hardly born when upon a sodain we ceased to be These were the words even of those who were damned who lived more than 800 years and if they esteemed so long a life but as a shadow and in the instant when they died judged they were scarce born how canst thou think to live long in a time wherein it is much to reach the age of 60 A life then of 800 years being no more than the flirting up and down of a little Sparrow the flight of an arrow or to say better the passage of a shadow what then are fifty years unto which perhaps thou mayst attain certainly the longest tearm whereunto humane life extends was compared by Homer but unto the leaves of a tree which at most endure but a Summers season Euripides judged that too much and said that humane felicity was to be valued but as the length of a day And Demetrius Phalareus allowed it hut a moments space Plato thought it too much to give it any being at all and therefore calls it but the dream of a waking man And St. John Chrysostome yet lessens that calling it but a dream of those who sleep It seems the Saints and Philosophers could find no Symbol no comparison sufficient to express the shortness of mans life since neither a Curriere by land nor a Ship by sea nor a Bird in the air passes with that speed All these things which we have now mentionled and others though esteemed swift yet have not such equality of motion but that they sometimes slacken their pace and sometimes stand still But the impetuous course of our life by which it hastens unto death stops not so much as whilst we sleep and therefore appeared unto Philemius so swift and rapid that he said this life was no more but to be borne and die and that at our birth we issued forth of a dark Prison and at our death entred into a more sad and dreadful Sepulcher Quit from this short life the time of sleep and thou quittest from it the third part Take from it Infancy and other accidents which hinder the seuse and fruit of living and there hardly remains the half of that nothing which thou esteemest so much That which Averroes affirmed of Time when he said Aver 4. Phy. tex 13. that Time was a being diminished in it self may be well verified of Life which is in it self so little as it is but a point in respect of Eternity and yet so many parts are taken from that point Besides all this doest thou think that this peece of life which thou now enjoyest is certain thou deceivest thy self For as the Wise man says Man does not know the day of his end and therefore as fishes when they are most secure are then taken with the angle and birds with the snare so death assails us in the evil time when we least think of it Confider then how vile are all things temporal and how frail is all the glory of the world being grounded upon so feeble a foundation The goods of the earth can be no greater than is life which gives them their value and if that be so poor and short what shall they be what can the delights of man be since his life is but a dream a shadow and as the twinkling of an eye If the most long lite be so short what can be the pleasure of that moment by which is lost eternal happiness what good can be of value which is sustained by a life so contemptible and full of misery A figure of this was the Statue of Nebuchodonosor which although made of rich mettal as of gold and silver yet was founded upon feet of clay so as a little stone falling upon it overthrew it unto the earth All the greatness and riches of the world have for foundation the life of him who enjoyes them which is so frail and slippery that not a little stone but even the grain of a grape hath been able to ruine and overthrow it With reason did David say that all which is living man is universal vanity since the brevity of his lite suffices to vilifies and make vain all the goods which he is capable of enjoying Vain are the honours vain are the applauses the riches and pleasures of life which being it self so short and frail makes all things vain which depend upon it and so becomes it self a vanity of vanities and an universal vanity What account wouldest thou make of a Tower founded upon a quick-sand or what safety wouldest thou hope for in a Ship bored with holes certainly thou oughtest to give no more esteem unto the things of this world since they are founded upon a thing so unstable as this life What can all humane glory be since life which sustains it hath according to David no more consistence than smoke or according to St.
and therefore reprehended his Nephew for spending a short time in walking for his recreation telling him that those hours might be better imployed and being present when the same Nephew caused one which in reading pronounced a word with an ill accent to repeat it again admonisht him that too much time was lost in that useless repetition Seneca esteemed time above all price and value and in this manner sayes Redeem thy self unto thy self recover and preserve that time which hitherto hath been taken surprised or slipt from thee For whom wilt thou give me that shall set a price upon time or give a value unto a day who understands himselt daily to die If therefore the Gentils who had no hope by time to purchase Eternity made so great account of it what shall we Christians unto whom it is an occasion of eternal happiness Let us therefore hear St. Bernard Serm ad Scho. There is nothing sayes he more precious than time But out alass nothing at this day is more vilified A day of salvation is past and no man reflects on it no man thinks no man complains that he hath lost a day which shall never r●●rn But as a hair from the head so a moment of time shall not perish The same Saint also grieving to see a thing so precious so much mispent speaks in this manner Let no man make a small esteem of the time which is spent in idle words Say some We may yet chat and talk untill this hour be past O wretched speech Vntil this hour be past This being the hour which the goodness of thy Creator hath bestowed upon thee that in it thou mayest do penance for thy sins obtain pardon acquire grace and merit glory O lamentable speech Whilst this hour passes this being the hour wherein thou mayst gain divine mercy and commiseration In another part he speaks much to the same purpose exhorting us to benefit our selves by the time of this life His words are these Serm. 75. in Cant. Whilest we have time let us do good unto all especially since our Lord said plainly that the night would come when no man could work Art thou perhaps to find some other time in the world to come wherein thou mayst seek God and wherein thou mayst do good This being the time wherein he hath promised to remember thee and is therefore the day of mercy because here our God and King hath long agoe wrought thy salvation in the middest of the earth goe then and expect thy salvation in the middest of hell What possibility doest thou dream of obtaining pardon in the middest of eternal flames when the time of mercy is already past No sacrifice tor sin remains tor thee being dead in sin no more shall the Son of God be crucified for thee Once he died and shall now die no more That blood which he spilt upon the earth shall not descend into hell The sinners of the earth have drunk it up There is no part left for the devils or for sinners which are the companions of devils wherewith to quench their flames Once descended thither not the blood but the soul of Christ This only visit made by the presence of the soul when the body hung without life upon the Cross was the portion of them who were in prison The blood watered the dry land the blood was poured upon the thirsty earth and did as it were inebriate it The blood wrought peace for those who were upon earth and those who are in heaven but not for those which were in hell beneath the earth Once only as we have said the soul went thither and made in part redemption speaking of the souls of the Holy Fathers who were in Limbo that even for that moment the works of charity might not be wanting but it passed no farther Now is the time acceptable now is the time fit wherein to seek God And certainly he that seeks him shall finde him if so be he seek him when and where he ought to do All this from St. Bernard § 2. Consider what an eternal repentance will follow thee if thou makest not use of this occasion of time for the purchasing of the Kingdom of Heaven especially when thou shalt see that with so little adoe thou mightest have gained that everlasting glory which to satisfie a short pleasure thou hast lost tor ever In what to fury and madness was Esau Gen. 19. when he reflected that his younger brother had gotten the Blessing of the first born by his own base selling his Birth-right for a dish of Lentils he cried out and tore himself for spite and anger Behold thy self in this mirrour who for one vile and short pleasure hast sold the Kingdom of Heaven If God had then thrown thee into hell what wouldest thou have done but lamented that with eternal tears which in so short a time was lost Cain when he perceived that he and his posterity were cursed and made infamous for not knowing how to benefit himself by that occasion Gen. 9. which was first offered unto him and made use of by his Brother what resentment had he then or ought to have had Measure by this the sense of a damned person who for not making use of the time of this lite shall see himself cursed by God for an Eternity and others far less than himself made blessed and rewarded in heaven The Sons-in-law of Loth when they saw they might have escaped the fire and that being invited they had rejected and laughed at the counsel of their Father-in-law when afterwards they perceived it to rain fire and sulphur upon them and their Cities what grief and vexation had they for refusing the benefit of so fair an occasion offered at their own doors O what sorrow what pain what madness what desperation shall seise upon a damned creature when he shall call to mind how often he hath been invited by Christ to salvation and shall now feel a tempest of fire and sulphur pouring down upon him for ever in hell King Hannon who had so good an occasion to preserve that peace whereunto he was intreated and invited by David when after he saw his Cities ruin'd the Inhabitants burnt like bricks in a furnace some thrasht to death others torn in pieces what would he have given to have made use in time of so fair an offer or of holding friendship with so great a King but what is this in respect of what a sinner shall feel when he shall see himself burnt in hell fire become an eternal enemy of the King of Heaven and deprived tor ever of raigning with his blessed Saints what despite what grief of heart shall he then have The evil Theef who was crucified with the Saviour of the world what doth he now endure for refusing that good occasion which his companion embraced what a repentance hath now the rich Glutton for not laying hold of so great an opportunity offered him at his own home
as Lazarus his demanding an alms from him by giving of which he might have redeemed his fins but he let it pass being more inhumane than his dogs who suffered not the poor Leper to depart without first licking of his sores usiug mercy with him with whom their Master used none What will he now say when all things have failed him even one drop of cold water to cool his scorched and inflamed tongue and all for denying so poor an alms as the crums which fell from his Table What madness what spite what despair do now torment him for refusing when time was so easie a means to gain his salvation wherefore although it be true that the whole time of our life is an occasion of obtaining eternal glory yet in the passage of life there are some particular actions and successes upon which our salvation doth more especially depend by which we do either disoblige God Almighty by rejecting them or by embracing them oblige him if I may so say to favour us Such a one was that of holy Joseph who rather than he would offend his Creator fled from his wanton Mistress and left his Garment in her hands This was an excellent act by which he much obliged God Almighty and deserved to receive those favours which were after bestowed upon him In the same manner Susanna layd hold on a great occasion for the saving of her soul when she chose rather to die than to consent to the filthy pleasure whereunto she was invited by those wicked Elders No opportunity ought to pass us without shewing our selves quick and active in laying hold of it greedy of pleasing God Almighty obliging him by some brave and heroical act with which occasion shall present us Wherefore the Wiseman said Be not defrauded of thy good day Eccl. 14. and let no portion of a good gift overslip thee Tully defined occaon to be a part of time fitted for the doing of something Mithridates said it was the Mother of all things which were to be done And Polibius that which ruled all humane affairs And there is no doubt but some conjunctures of times happen which present us with great occasions of merit by working excellent vertues and performing most heroical actions which if made good use of do much assure our salvation Wherefore it is by some placed amongst the signes of predestination to have performed some great and noble action of vertue Let us see what benefit some have made of occasion in temporal businesses that we may not be less careful and sollicitous in matters eternal Rachel with what diligence did she run to hide and cover the Idols which she had stoln from her Father with what diligence did Abigail goe forth to meet David omiting nothing whereby she might appease his fury and certainly it she had protracted never so little time she had run into evident danger of losing the lives of her Self her Husband and Family With what sollicitude did Abrahan pursue the five Kings which carried away Captive his Nephew Loth With what speed did Saul gather together his Army for the relief of Jabes Galaad It behooves us no less to gain Heaven Let us not be more dull and slow in gaining that then they were in getting and procuring things of the earth Let us hear with what diligence and haste the Wise-man advises us to accomplish the promise we have made unto a mortal man Prov. 6. My Son if thou shalt be surety for a friend and hast struck hands with a stranger thou hast ensnared thy self in the words of thy mouth and art taken in thy own speeches Do therefore my son what I say unto thee and deliver thy self because th●u art fallen into the hands of thy neighbour Run make haste awake thy friend give no sleep unto thy eyes nor let thy eye-lids slumber rid thy self from his hands as the mountain-goat or the bird from the hand of the hunter Those who are engaged unto the Devil by their sins let them mark with what diligence they ought to free themselves without losing time or occasion and those who are obliged unto God for his infinite benefits and have passed unto him their promises of amendment let them mark how they ought to satisfie them by making use of all means possible of being reconciled unto him let them make haste as the Wise-man sayes let them not be tepid and slow let them not give sleep unto their eyes or close their eye-lids that they may without losing the least occasion escape from hell and the slavery of Satan Pitty it is that any occasion should slip from us without benefit a lamentable misery that our lives should pass away in the things of the earth without seeking after those of heaven mans life being so short and narrow for the meriting of a thing so long and infinite as are the joyes of eternity With reason did the Apostle admonish us This I say unto you bretheren Time is short that which remains is that those who have wives be as if they had them not and those who weep as if they did not weep and those who rejoyce as if they rejoyced not and those who buy as if they possessed not and those which use this world as if they used it not because the figure of this world passes The Apostle considering the great shortness of time wills us so to settle our selves in the matters of our salvation and of the other life that we remain in those of this as strangers using them as if we used them not Let us consider then that if we suffer occasion in the short time of this life to over-slip us that all hope of remedy will fail us in the next It is not void of instruction which is feigned by the Ancients That Jupiter bestowed upon a certain person a Vessel fill'd with all sorts of goods and blessings who overjoyed with the greatness of the gift which contained all that was to be wished for and impatient of enjoying them one by one and every good in his proper time and season would needs have them all at once Whereupon he hastily and undiscreetly opened the Vessel but they were no sooner discovercel but all flew into the air and vanished and for all the diligence and haste he was able to use in shutting it he could retain none but Hope which onely remained behind But far otherwise is it with the occasion of our salvation which although it contains all happiness and blessings yet being suffercd to pass there remains not behind so much as hope but in the place of it repentance despair and eternal sorrow and so much the more in that it happens by our own faults when King Joas smote the ground thrice and was told by the Prophet Elizeus that if he had smitten it six or seaven times he had ruin'd and utterly made an end of the Syrians what grief and affliction did he conceive in his mind that having had an occasion of so
peeces and he above all remained distracted in his wits raging with despite and madness Let us now consider Antiochus in all his pomp and glory glittering in Gold and dazling the eyes of the beholders with the splendor of his Diamonds and precious Jewels mounted upon a stately Courser commanding over numerous Armies and making the very earth tremble under him Let us then behold him in his Bed pale and wan his strength and spirits spent his loathsome body flowing with worms and corruption forsaken by his own people by reason of his pestilential and poisonous stink which infected his whole Camp and finally dying mad and in a rage Who seeing such a death would with the felicity of his life who with the condition of his misery would desire his fortune See then wherein the goods of this life conclude And as the clear and sweet waters of Jordan end in the filthy mud of the dead Sea and are swallowed up in that noysome Bitumen so the greatest splendor of this life concludes in death and those loathsome diseases which usually accompany it Act. 12. Vide Josephum Behold in what a sink of filth ended the two Herods most potent Princes Ascalonita and Agrippa This who cloathed himself in Tissue and boasted a Majesty above humane dyed devoured by worms which whilst he yet lived fed upon his corrupted and apostumated flesh flowing with horrible filth and matter Neither came the other Ascalonita to finish his dayes more happily being consumed by lice that nasty vermin by little and little bereaving him both of his life and Kingdom 3 Reg. 20. King Achab Conqueror of the King of Syria and 32 other Princes dyed wounded by a chance-arrow which pierced his body and stained his Royal Charriot with his black gore which was after licked up by hungry Dogs as it he had been some savage beast 3 Reg. 22. Neither dyed his Son Joram a more fortunate death run through the heart with a sword his body left upon the field to be devoured by birds and beasts of prey wanting in his death seaven foot of earth to cover him who in life commanded a Kingdom Who could have known Caesar who had first seen him triumph over the Conquered world and then beheld him gasping for a little breath and weltring in his own bloud which flowed from three and twenty wounds opened by so many stabs Who could believe it were the same Cyrus he who subdued the Medes conquered the Assyrian and Chaldaean Empire he who amazed the world with thirty years success of continued Victories now taken prisoner and put to an ignominious death by the Command of a Woman Who could think it were the same Alexander Plut. in ejus vita who in so short time subjugated the Persians Indians and the best part of the known world and should after behold him conquered by a Calenture feeble exhausted in body dejected in spirit dried up and parched with thirst without taste in his mouth or content in his life his eyes sunk his nose sharp his tongue cleaving to his pallat not being able to pronounce one word What an amazement is it that the heat of a poor Fever should consume the mightiest power and fortune of the world and that the greatest of temporal and humane prosperities should be drowned by the overflowing of one irregular and inordinate humour How great a Monster is Humane Life since it consists of so disproportionable parts the uncertain felicity of our whose life ending in a most certain misery How prodigious were that Monster which should have one arm of a Man and the other of an Elephant one foot of a Horse and the other of a Bear Truly the parts of this life are not much more sutable Who would marry a woman though of a comely and well proportioned body who had the head of an ugly Dragon certainly although she had a great Dowry none would covet such a Bed-fellow Wherefore then do we wed our selves unto this life which although it seems to carry along with it much content and happiness yet is in effect no less a Monster since although the body appear unto us beautiful and pleasant yet the end of it is horrible and full of misery And therefore a Philosopher said well that the end of things was their head and as men were to be known and distinguished by their faces so things by their ends and therefore who will know what life is let him look upon the end And what end of life is not full of misery Let no man flatter himself with the vigour of his health with the abundance of his riches with the splendor of his authority with the greatness of his fortune for by how much he is more fortunate by so much shall he be more miserable since his whole life is to end in misery Wherefore Agesilaus hearing the King of Persia cried up for a most fortunate and happy Prince reprehended those who extolled him saying Have patience Plutar. in ejus vita for even King Priamus whose end was so lamentable was not unfortunate at the age of the King of Persia Giving us to understand that the most happy were not to be envied whilest they lived by reason of the uncertainty of that end whereunto they are subject How many as yet appear most happy whose death will shortly discover the infelicity of their lives Plutar. in Apoph Graecis Epaminondas when they asked him who was the greatest Captain Cabrias Iphicrates or himself Answered that whilest they lived no man could judge but that the last day of their lives would deliver the Sentence and give each one their due Let no man be deceived in beholding the prosperity of a rich man let him not measure his felicity by what he sees at present but by the end wherein he shall conclude not by the sumptuousness of his Palaces not by the multitude of his Servants not by the bravery of his Apparel not by the lustre of his Dignity but let him expect the end of that which he so much admires and he shall then perceive him at best to die in his Bed dejected dismayed and strugling with the pangs and anxieties of death and if so he comes off Well otherwise wise the daggers of his enemy the teeth of some wild beast or a tyle thrown upon his head by some violent wind may serve to make an end of him when he least thinks of it This reason tells us although we had no experience of it But we see it daily confirmed by the testimony of those who are already in the gates of death and no man can better judge of life than he who stands with his back towards it Mago Dionysius Carth. de noviss Art 5. a famous Captain amongst the Carthaginians and Brother to the great Hannibal being mortally wounded confessed this truth unto his Brother saying O how great a madness is it to glory in an Eminent Command The estate of the most
the place whither he is to goe How comest thou then to forget death whither thou travellest with speed and canst not though thou desirest rest one small minute by the way For time although against thy will will draw thee along with it The way of this life is not voluntary like that of Travellers but necessary like that of condemned persons from the prison unto the place of execution To death thou standest condemned whither thou art now going how canst thou laugh A Malefactor after sentence past is so surprised with the apprehension of death that he thinks of nothing but dying We are all condemned to die how come we then to rejoyce in those things which we are to leave so sodainly Who being led to the Gallows could please himself in some little flower that was given him by the way or play with the Halter which was shortly to strangle him Since then all of us even from the instant we issue out of our Mothers wombs walk condemned unto death and know not whether we shall from thence pass into hell at least we may how come we to please our selves with the flower or to say better with the hay of some short gust of our appetites since according to the Prophet all the glory of the flesh is no more than a little hay which quickly withers How come we to delight in riches which oftentimes hasten our deaths Why consider we not this when we are certain that all that we do in this life is vanity except our preparation for death In death when as there is no time nor remedy left us we shall too late perceive this truth when as all the goods of this life shall leave us by necessity which we will not now leave with merit Death is a general privation of all goods temporal an universal Pillager of all things which even despoils the body of the soul For this it is compared unto a Theef who not onely robs us of our treasure and substance but bereaves us of our lives Since therefore thou art to leave all Why doest thou load thy self in vain What Merchant knowing that so soon as he arrived unto the Ports his Ship and Goods should both be sunk would charge his Vessel with much Merchandise Arriving at death thou and all thou hast are to sink and perish why doest thou then burthen thy self with that which is not needful but rather a hinderance to thy salvation How many forbearing to throw their Goods over-board in some great Tempest have therefore both themselves and Goods been swallowed by the raging Sea How many who out of a wicked love to these Temporal riches have lost themselves in the hour of death and will not then leave their wealth when their wealth leaves them but even at that time busie their thoughts more about it than their Salvation Whereupon St. Gregory sayes That is never lost without grief which is possest with love Humbert in tract de Septemp timore Vmbertus writes of a certain man of great wealth who falling desperately sick and Plate of gold and silver to be brought before him and in this manner spake unto his Soul My Soul all this I promise thee and thou shalt enjoy it all if thou wilt not now leave my Body and greater things I will bestow upon thee rich Possessions and sumptuous Houses upon condition thou wilt yet stay with me But finding his infirmity still to encrease and no hope left of life in a great rage and fury he fell into these desperate speeches But since thou wilt not do what I desire thee nor abide with me I recommend thee unto the Devil and immediately with these words miserably expired In this story may be seen the vanity of Temporal things and the hurt he receives by them who possesses them with too much affection What greater vanity then not to profit us in a passage of the greatest necessity and importance and what greater hurt then when they cannot avail our bodies to prejudice our souls That they put an impediment to our salvation when our affections are too much set upon them were a sufficient motive not onely to contemn them but also to detest them Robertus de Licio writes that whilest he advised a sick person to make his Confession and take care of his Soul his Servants and other Domesticks went up and down the house laying hold every one of what they could the sick man taking notice of it and attending more to what They stole from him than to what He spake to him about the salvation of his Soul made deep sighs and cried out saying Wo be to me Wo be to me who have taken so much pains to gather riches and now am compelled to leave them and they snatch them from me violently before my eyes O my Riches O my Moneys O my Jewels into whose possession are you to fall and in these cries he gave up the ghost making no more account of his Soul than if he had been a Turk Vincentius Veluacensis relates also of one Vincen. in spec moral who having lent four pounds of money upon condition that at four years end they should pay him twelve he being in state of death a Priest went to him and exhorted him to confess his sins but could get no other words from the sick person than these Such a one is to pay me twelve pounds for four and having said this died immediately Much what to this purpose is a Story related by St. Bernardin of a certain Confessarius who earnestly perswading a rich man at the time of his death to a confession could get no other words from him but How sells Wool What price bears it at present and as the Priest spake unto him Sir for Gods sake leave off this discourse and have a care of your Soul the Sick man still persevered to inform himself of such things he might hope to gain by asking him Father when will the Ships come are they yet arrived for his thoughts were so wholly taken up with matters of gain and this world that he could neither speak nor think of any thing but what tended to his profit But die Priest still urging him to look to his Soul and confess all he could get from him was I cannot and in this manner died without confession This is the Salary which the goods of the earth bestow on those who serve them that if they do not leave or ruine them before their death they are then certain at least to leave them and often hazard the salvation of those that dote upon them O foolish Sons of Adam this short life Is bestowed upon us for gaining the goods of heaven which are to last eternally and we spend it in seeking those of the earth which are to perish instantly Wherefore do we not employ this short time for the purchasing eternal glory since we are to possess no more hereafter than what we provide for here Wherefore do we not
not to an ordinary River but to a River of fire for the greatness and severity of the rigour shall be repressed for 30 or 40 years during the life of a man what an infinity of wrath will it amass together and with what fury will it burst out upon the miserable Sinners in the point of death All this rigour and severity shall the wretched Caytif behold in the face of the offended Judge And therefore the Prophet Daniel saith that a River of fire issued from his Countenance and that his Throne was of flames and the wheels of it burning fire because all shall then be fire rigour and justice He sets forth unto us his Tribunal and Throne with wheels to signifie thereby the force and violence of his omnipotency in executing the severity of his justice all which shall appear in that moment when Sinners shall be brought into judgment when the Lord as David sayes shall speak unto them in his wrath and confound them in his fury The which is also declared by other Prophets in most terrible and threatning words Isai 56. Isaias saith The Lord will come cloathed in garments of vengeance and covered with a robe of zeal and will give unto his adversaries his indignation and his enemies shall have their turn And the Wise-man to declare it more fully saith His zeal that is his indignation shall take up arms and shall arm the creatures to revenge him of his enemies he shall put on justice as a brest-plate be shall take the bead-piece of righteous judgment and embrace the inexpugnable shield of equity and shall sharpen his wrath as a lance Osee 13. The Prophet Osee declares the same proposing the Judge unto us not onely as an enraged and armed man but a fierce and cruel Beast and therefore speaking in the person of God saith I will appear unto them in that instant at a Bear that hath been robbed of her whelps I will tear their entrails in pieces and will devour them as a Lyon There is no beast more fierce of nature than a Lyon or Bear which hath lost her young ones the which will furiously assault him she first meets with and yet God whose nature is infinite goodness would compare himself unto so savage and cruel beasts to express the terrour of his justice and rigour with which he is in that day to shew himself against Sinners The consideration of this wrought so much with Abbot Agathon when he was at the point of dying In vitis Pat. that he continued three dayes in admiration his eyes for fear and dread continually broad open without moving from one side to the other Certainly all comparisons and exaggerations fall short of what it shall be since that day is The day of wrath and calamity That is the day when the Lord shall speak aloud in lieu of the many dayes wherein he hath been silent That is the day of which he spake by his Prophet I held my peace and was mute but I will then cry out as a woman in labour That day shall take up all his justice and shall recompence for all his years of sufferance That day shall be purely of justice without mixture of mercy hope of compassion help favour or any other patronage but of our works This is signified in that which Daniel saith that the Throne and Tribunal of God was of flames and that there shall proceed from his face a river of fire because fire besides that it is the most active nimble and vehement of all the Elements is also the most pure not admitting the mixture of any thing The earth contains Mines of Mettals and Quarries of Stone the water suffers in her bosome variety of Fishes the Air multitudes of vapours and exhalations and other bodies but Fire endures nothing it melts the hardest mettals reduces stones into cinders consumes living creatures converts trees into it self in so much as it is not onely impatient of a companion but infuses its own qualities into what it meets withall and turns even what is contrary unto it into its own substance and nature it does not onely melt snow but makes it boyl and makes cold iron burn So shall it be in that day all shall be rigour and justice without mixture of mercy nay the very mercies which God hath used towards a Sinner shall then be an argument and food for his justice O man which hast now time consider in what condition thou shalt see thy self in that instant when neither the blood of Christ shed for thee nor the Son of God crucified nor the intercession of the most blessed Virgin nor the Prayers of Saints nor the Divine mercy it self shall avail thee but shall onely behold an incensed and revenging God whose mercies shall then onely serve to augment his justice Thou shalt then perceive that none will take thy part but all will be against thee The most holy Virgin who is the Mother of mercy the mercy of God himself and the blood of thy Redeemer will all be against thee and onely thy good works shall stand for thee This life once past thou art to expect no Patron no Protector but thy vertuous actions onely they shall accompany thee and when thy Angel Guardian Theophan an 20. Herac. Imper. ut habetur in tom 2. p. 2. Concil in notis ad vitam Theodori Papae and all the Saints thy Advocates shall leave thee they onely shall not forsake thee See that thou provide thy self for that day take care thou now benefit thy self by the blood of Christ for thy salvation if not it will onely serve for thy greater damnation The whole world was amazed at the manner of the condemnation of Pyrrhus the Heretick by Pope Theod●rus who calling a Councel at Rome and placing himself close by the body of St. Peter in the presence of the whole Assembly took the consecrated Chalice and pouring the blood of Christ into the Ink did with his own hand write the Sentence of excommunion and Anathema by which he separated Pyrrhus from the Church of Christ This dreadful manner of proceeding brought a fear upon all those who heard it Do thou then tremble unto whom it may happen that the blood of thy Redeemer shall onely serve as a Sentence of thy eternal death For so severe will the Divine justice be in that day against a Sinner that if it were needful for his condemnation to confirm the Sentence with the blood of Christ it should although once shed upon the Cross for his salvation then onely serve to his damnation and eternal reprobation If this be true as nothing can be more certain how come we to be so careless how come we to laugh and rejoyce In vitis Pat. lib. 5. With great reason an old Hermite in the Desert beholding another laugh reprehended him for it saying We are to give a strict account before the Lord of Heaven and Earth the most inflexible Judge and darest thou be
leave this life fully discover themselves as they are both in number and quality This is also signified unto us by the Prophet Daniel when he sayes That the Throne of the Tribunal of God was of flaming fire whose nature is not onely to burn but to enlighten and therefore in that Divine Judgment shall not onely be executed the rigour of his justice but the ugliness likewise of humane malice shall be discovered The Judge himself shall not onely appear severe and implacable but our sins shall be laid open before us and the sight of them shall make us quake and tremble with fear and astonishment especially when we shall perceive them to be manifest unto him who is both Judge and Party Wherefore it is said in one of the Psalms We are dismayed O Lord with thy wrath Psal 89. and troubled with thy fury and immediately giving the reason of that trouble he saith because thou hast set our wickedness before thee and placed them in thy sight The monstrousness of sin is now covered and we perceive it not and are not therefore much troubled but in that instant of death when the ugliness of it shall appear the very sight of it will wholly confound us Our sins now seem unto us but light and trivial and we see not half of them but in our leaving of this life we shall find them heavy grievous and unsupportable A great Beam whilest it floats upon the river a child may move and draw it from place to place and the half of it remains hidden and covered below the waters but draw it to land many men will not suffice to remove it and the whole bulk of it will be then clearly discovered so in the waters of this tempestuous and unstable life our faults appear not heavy and the half of them are conceal'd from us but this life once ended we shall then feel their weight discover their bulk and shall groan under so heavy and grievous a burthen These doubtless are the two swords which then shall mortally wound the conscience of a sinner First when he shall perceive the innumerable multitude of his sins and Then their monstrous deformity And to begin with their multitude how shall he remain amazed when he shall see a number of his actions to be sins which he never thought to be such and which is more when he shall find that to be a fault which he thought to be a laudable work For this it is said in one of the Psalms when I shall take time I will judge righteousness for many actions which in the eyes of men seem vertues will then be found vices in the sight of God If in humane judgments there be so great a difference that young men and those that follow the world often esteem that for a vertue which the wise and ancient repute as an errour how different shall be the divine judgment from that of men since the holy Ghost saith by his Prophet that the Judgments of God are a great Abyss and that his thoughts are as far distant from the thoughts of men as heaven is from earth And if spiritual men are so clear sighted that they condemn with truth what worldlings praise what shall be those Divine eyes which are able to perceive a stain in what appears Angelical purity And if as the Scripture sayes he found wickedness in the Angels what vice can remain hid in the Sons of men Our Lord himself saith by one of his Prophets I will search Jerusalem with a candle If so strict enquiry be to be made in the holy City of Jerusalem what shall be in Babylon If God shall use such rigour with the just how shall he dissemble with his enemies Then shall be brought to light the works which we have done and those which we have left undone the evil of that action which we have committed and the good of that which we have omitted Neither is there account to be taken onely of the evils which we do but of the good also which we do not well all will be strictly searcht and narrowly lookt into and must pass by many eyes The Devil as our accuser shall frame the Process of our whole life and shall accuse us of all he knows and if any thing shall escape his knowledge it shall not therefore be conceal'd for our own Conscience shall cry out and accuse us of it and least out Conscience might flatter us or be ignorant of some faults our Angel-Guardian who is now our Governor and Tutor shall then be the Fiscal and Accuser calling for Divine justice against us and shall discover what our own Souls are ignorant of And if the Devil our Conscience and Angel-Guardian shall fail in any thing as not knowing all the Judge himself who is both Party and Witness and whose Divine knowledge penetrates into the bottom of our wills shall there declare many things for vices which were here esteemed for vertues O strange way of Judgment where none denies and all accuse even the offender accuses himself and where all are Witnesses even the Judge and Party O dreadful Judgment where there is no Advocate and four Accusers the Devil thy Conscience thy Angel-Guardian and thy very Judge who will accuse thee of many things which thou thoughtest to have alleaged for thy defence O how great shall then be the confusion when that shall be found a sin which was thought a service who would have imagined but that Oza when he upheld the Ark in danger of falling had rather done a laudable action than an offence yet the Lord chastized it as a great sin with the punishment of a most disastrous death shewing thereby how different the Divine Judgments are from those of men Who would not have thought Davids numbring of his people to have been an act of policy and discretion yet God judged it an offence and punished it with an unexampled Pestilence which in so short a time destroyed threescore and ten thousand persons When Saul urged by his approaching enemies and the long delayes of Samuel offered sacrifice he thought he had done an act of the greatest vertue which is religion but God called it by the name of a grievous sin and for doing it reproved him and cast him off from being King Who would not have judged it for an act of magnanimity and clemency when Achab having conquered Benhadad King of Syria 3. Reg. c. 20. pardoned him his life and took him up to sit by him in his Royal Chariot But this which was so much esteemed and praised by men was so disagreeable unto God that he sent him word by his Prophet that he should dye for it and that he and his people should bear the punishment which was designed unto the Syrians and their King If then the Judgment of God in this life be so far different from that of man what shall it be in that most dreadful hour which God hath reserved for the executing of
it in this manner for to conceive it as it is in it self the understanding of Angels were not sufficient Here may be applyed that which antiquity admired in two great and famous Painters Apelles went to Rhodes to see Protogenes and not finding him at home took a Pensil and drew a most subtle line charging the Servants that they should tell their Master that he who drew that line was there to seek him When Protogenes returned they told him what had happened who took the Pensil and drew a stroke of another colour through the middle of that which Apelles had drawn and going about his business commanded his Servants that if he came again they should tell him that he whom he sought for had drawn that line through the middle of his It seemed there could not be imagined a higher favour and Courtship than that of the Eternal Father to have given his onely Son and have delivered him up to death for man but through the middle of this favour the Son drew another of most excessive fineness and subtilty which is the institution of the most blessed Sacrament the which some call an Extension of the Incarnation and is a Representation of the Passion and a Character and Memorial of the Wonders of God Here truely did the Son of God draw the stroke of his infinite love and consummated all the Divine benefits not onely giving himself for our benefit and behoof but entring into our very breasts to solicit our love and affection Anacreon writes That standing at defiance with the God of love and having resisted all his arrows the God at last when he had no more to shoot shot himself and penetrating his heart and entrails compell'd him to yield What other are the benefits of our Lord God than so many arrows of love which Man resists and not rendring himself neither at the benefit of Creation Conservation Incarnation or Passion let him at last render himself at this when God shoots himself into him and enters into his very breast and bowels to solicite his love If he resist this also what judgements expect him Whereupon St. Paul sayes that he who presumes to communicate unworthily eats and drinks the judgement of God that is swallows down the whole weight of Divine justice Consider then how dreadful it shall be unto a Sinner when he shall receive a charge not onely of his own being and his own life but also of the being and life or God of the Incarnation Passion Life and Death of Christ our Redeemer who hath so often given himself unto him in the Sacrament of his Body and Blood The Murtherer who stands charged with the life of a man although it be of some wicked person yet fears to be apprehended and brought to judgement how is it then that he who is charged with the life of God trembles not O how fearful a thing is it when a vile creature shall enter into judgement with his Creatour and shall be demanded an account of the blood of Christ whose value is infinite What account can he give of such a benefit and of all the rest which he hath received even from the greatest unto the least when Christ shall say unto him those words of St. Chrisostome Chrysost hom 24. in Math. I when thou hadst no being gave thee one inspired thee with a Soul and placed thee above all things that are upon the Earth I for thee created Heaven Air Sea Earth and all things and yet am dishonoured by thee and held more vile and base than the Devil himself and yet for all this have not ceased to do thee good and bestowed upon thee innumerable benefits For thy sake being God I was content to make my self a Servant was buffetted spit upon and condemned to a punishment of Slaves and to redeem thee from death suffered the death of the Cross In Heaven I interceded for thee and from thence sent thee the Holy Ghost I invited thee unto the Kingdom of Heaven offered my self to be thy Head thy Spouse thy Garment thy House thy Root thy Food thy Drink thy Shepheard thy Brother I chose thee for the Heir of Heaven and drew thee out of darkness unto light To such excesses of love what have we to answer but to stand astonisht and confounded that we have been so ungrateful and given occasion to the Devil of one of the greatest scorns and injuries which could be put upon our Redeemer when he shall say unto him Thou createdst man for him wast born in poverty livedst in labours and diedst in pain and torments I have done nothing for him but would have drunk his blood and sought to damn him into a thousand hells and yet for all this it is I whom he strives to please and not thee Thou doest prepare for him a Crown of eternal glory I desire to torment him in hell and yet he had rather serve me without interest than thee for thy promise of so great a reward I should have been ashamed to have created and redeemed a wretch so ungrateful unto him from whom he hath received so great benefits but since he loves me better than thee let him be mine unto whom he hath so often given up himself We are not onely to give an account of these general benefits but of those which are more particular of the good examples which we have seen of the instructions which we have heard of the inspirations which have been sent us and the Sacraments which we have received we have much to do to correspond with all these Let us therefore tremble at that strict judgement let us tremble at our selves who are so careless of that for which all the care in the world is not sufficient And if it were not for the blood of Christ what would become of us but the time of benefitting our selves by that will be then past now is the time and if we shall now despise and outrage it in what case shall we be Let us not mispend the time of this life since so severe an account will be demanded of all the benefits which we have received one of which is the Time of this temporal life and the blessings of it Let us take heed what use we make of it let us not lose it since we are to answer for every part of it Sopronin Prato spirituali ca. 59. de Beato Thalilaeo This made holy Thalileus tremble and weep bitterly who being asked the cause of his tears answered This time is bestowed upon us wherein to do penance and a most strict account will be demanded of us if we despise it It is not ours for which we are to answer we are not the Lords of time let us not therefore dispose of it for our own pleasure but for the service of God whose it is This consideration were sufficient to with-draw our affection from the goods of this life and to settle it upon those which are eternal since we are
overwhelmed and themselves compell'd to escape the burning of their Country to struggle with the water and that which way soever they turned they perceived death still to follow them and were certain to perish What shall be then the streights and exigences of that general burning when those who shall escape Earthquakes Inundations of the Sea the fury of whirlwindes and lightning from Heaven shall fall into that universal Fire that Deluge of flames which shall consume all and make an end both of men and their memories Of those who lived before the Flood and were Masters of the World for so long a time except it be of some few which the Scripture mention we know nothing Those heroical actions which certainly some of them performed and gained by them incomparable fame lye buried in the waters and there remains no more memory of those who did them than if they had never been born No more permanent shall be the fame of those which now resounds in the ears of the whole World Cyrus Alexander Hannibal Scipio Caesar Augustus Plato Aristotle Hippocrates Euclid and the rest no more World no more Fame This Fire shall end all that smoke Nor is the World without convenient proportion to end in fire which is now so full of smoke There are few comparisons as hath been said in the beginning of this work which express better what the World is than that which St. Clement the Roman learned of St. Peter the Apostle who said the World was like a house full of smoke which in such manner blinds the eyes as it differs not those within it to see things as they are and so the World with its deceits so disguises the nature of humane things as we perceive not what they are Ambition and humane honour which the World so much dotes after are no more than smoke without substance which so blinds our understandings that we know not the truth of that we so much covet It is no marvail that so much smoke comes at last to end in flames The smoke of the Mountains Vesuvius and Aetna when it ends in fire and bursts forth into those innumerous flames hath amazed the World and rivers of fire have been seen to issue from their bowels Zon. In Tito Proc. l. 2. Vesuvius is near unto Naples and the fire hath sometimes sallyed forth with that impetuous violence that as grave Authors affirm the ashes have been seen in Constantinople and Alexandria And St. Augustine writes St. Aug. l. 3. de Civit. c. 31. that the ashes of Mount Aetna overwhelmed the City of Catanea and in our time when Vesuvius burst out the very flame of it terrified places far distant and secure And now lately in the year 1638. the third of July near the Island of St. Michael one of the Terceras the fire bursting out from the bottom of the Sea 150 fathomes deep and over-coming the weight of so huge a mass of water sent up his flames unto the clouds and made many places although far distant to tremble With what fury shen shall the general Conflagration of the World burst forth that part which shall issue forth of Hell and from beneath the Earth shall fill the World with ashes before it be involved in flames and when a crack of thunder or a flash of lightning amazes us so much that fire which falls from heaven what violence and noise shall it bring along with it Lot the Nephew of Abraham being secure in conscience and promised by the Angel of God that for his sake the City of Segor should not be burnt but that he might rest safe in it was notwithstanding so affrighted with the fire which fell upon other Cities in that Valley of Pentapolis that notwithstanding he saw it not yet he held himself not late but retired unto the Mountains What counsel shall sinners take in that extremity when their own Conscience shall be their accusors and when they shall behold the World all on fire about them whither shall they flye for safety when no place will afford it Shall they climb unto the Mountains thither the flames will follow them Shall they descend into the Valleys thither the fire will pursue them Shall they shut themselves up in strong Castles and Towns but there the wrath of God will assault them and that fire will pass their Fosses consume the Bulwarks and make an end both of them and their fortunes Besides the contempt of all things which the world esteems which we may draw from this general destruction of it by fire we may also perceive the abomination of sin since God to purifie the World from that uncleanness wherewith our offences have polluted it is resolved to cleanse it with fire as he anciently washt it with the waters of the Deluge Such are our sins that for being onely committed in the World the World it self is condemned to die what shall then become of those who sinned Less de perf div l. 13. c. 10. But from this so terrible a fire the Saints then alive shall be free that it may appear it was onely prepared for Sinners and that nothing can then avail but vertue and holiness The rich man shall not be delivered by his wealth nor the mighty by his power nor the crafty by his wiles onely the just shall be freed by his vertues none shall escape the terrour of that day by fast sailing ships or speed of horses the Sea it self shall burn and the fire shall overtake the swiftest Post onely holiness and charity shall defend the Servants of Christ unto whom the tribulations of those times shall serve to purifie their Souls by suffering that in this life with reward which they should otherwise have done for a time in the other without it Albertus Magnus observes the convenience of the two Elements by which God resolved twice to destroy the World The first by water against the fire of the flesh and heat of concupiscence which so inordinately tytannized over all vertue before the general Flood The second he hath appointed to be by fire against the coldness of charity which in those last dayes shall raign in the aged and decrepit World And as in the Deluge of waters onely the chaste Noah and his Wife who were most continent in Matrimony and his Sons and Daughters who observed chastity all the time they continued in the Ark escaped drowning so in that general fire of the World onely the Just who shall be replenished with charity shall be free from burning The Deluge of waters overwhelmed not him who was not burnt with the heat of carnal love neither shall the Deluge of fire destroy them who are enflamed with divine charity CAP. VIII How the World ought to conclude with so dreadful an end in which a general Judgment is to pass of all that is in it TO be subject to an end as hath been said were sufficient to breed in us a contempt of all things temporal for what is
we can carry nothing but our good works and let us not add unto our evil ones that of vain-glory in seeking to leave behind us a vain Fame and Renown Plin. l. 56. c. 13. What remains unto King Porsenna of that heavy burthen wherewith he grieved and afflicted his whole Kingdom in rearing him a Sepulchre of that rare and sumptuous workmanship but a testimony of his pride and folly In like manner the Monument of the Emperour Adrian which was the Beauty and Glory of Rome shall be then changed into a scorn Lastly St. Thomas teaches us that Temporal things on which we place our affections because some last a longer and some a shorter time after death shall all enter with us into Divine judgement Let us take heed therefore whereon we set our hearts since the accomplishing of what we wish may be a punishment of our desires Those things of the Earth which we most love and desire should continue if they be taken from us it is a chastisement of our earthly affection and if we be permitted to enjoy them let us fear that they be not the temporal Reward of some good Work which may either diminish or deprive us of the Eternal Besides this because not onely the Soul of man hath offended but the whole man both in Soul and Body it was fit that both Soul and Body should be judged and appear before the Tribunal of Christ and that in publique because none should presume to sin in secret since his sins are to be revealed and made known to all past present and to come A terrible case it is that this passage of Divine judgement which according as we have said out of holy Job appears unto the Saints more terrible than to suffer all the pains of Hell is twice to be acted and this so bitter trance to be again repeated the second time being unto sinners of greater horrour and confusion than the first CAP. IX Of the last day of Time THat we may now come to handle the manner of this universal Judgement which is to pass upon time and men we are to suppose that this fire which is to precede the coming of Christ is at his descent to continue in assistance of his Divine justice and after his return unto Heaven attended by all the just to remain until it hath purged and purified these inferiour Elements the which is noted by Albertus Magnus Albert. Magn. in comp Theol. lib. 7. c. 15. Less de perf div lib. 13. c. 30. 23. and collected from divers places of the Divine Scriptures We are also to suppose that this coming of Christ is to be with greater terrour and Majesty than hath been yet manifested by any of the Divine persons either in himself or any of his Creatures If an Angel which represented God and was onely to promulgate the Law came with that terrour and Majesty unto Mount Sinay as made the Hebrew people though purified and prepared for his coming to quake and tremble what shall the Lord of the Law doe when he himself comes to take an account of the Law and to revenge the breach of it With what terrour and Majesty shall he appear unto men plunged in sin and unprepared for his reception who are then to be all present and judged in that last day of time The day in which the Law was given was very memorable unto the Hebrews And this day where an account of the Law is to be given will be horrible and ought perpetually to remain in the memory of all mankind But before we declare what shall pass in this let us say something of what hath already passed in that that from the horrour of the first appearance we may gather something of what shall happen in the second and from the Majesty wherewith an Angel appeared when he gave the Law collect something of the Majesty of the Lord of Angels when he judges the Law Fifty dayes after the departure of the Sons of Israel out of Egypt after so many plagues and punishments poured upon that Kingdom after the burying of the unbelieving Egyptians who pursued them in the bottom of the Red Sea and that the Hebrews having escaped their enemies were lodged round about Mount Sinay Deut. 33. Vid. Barrad l. 6. itin c. 5. Ps 65. Deut. 33. There was seen to come in the Air from far that is from Mount Seir in Idumea a Lord of great power attended with an infinite multitude of Angels In so much as David sings that ten thousand compassed about his Chariot And Moses speaking of many thousands which attended him says also that he carried in his right hand the Law of God all of flaming fire and yet he who came in this height of Majesty waited on with those Celestial Spirits was not God Act. 7. but as we learn from St. Stephen onely an Angel and believed to be St. Michael who because he came in the Name of God the holy Scriptures calls the Lord. This Angel thus accompanied came seated on a dark condensed Cloud which cast forth frequent flashes of Lightning and resounded with dreadful cracks of Thunder Deut. 33. from Mount Seir unto Mount Haran in the Land of the Ishmaelites and from thence with the same Majesty passed through the Air unto Mount Sinay where the Children of Israel lay encamped who at the dawning of the day astonisht with that fearful noyse stood quaking and trembling in their Tents No sooner was the Angel arrived unto Mount Sinay which as the Apostle says Heb. 42. was covered with rain whirlwinds storms and tempests but he descended in flames which raught betwixt Heaven and Earth from whence issued forth a smoke black and thick as from a furnace during which time a Trumpet was heard to sound with that piercing vehemence that as it encreased in loudness so fear encreased in the amazed Israelites who now stood quaking at the foot of the Mountain but were by the Angel so much would he be respected commanded by the mouth of M●ses not to approach it lest they died After which the Angel began with a dreadful voice to proclaim the Law which was pronounced with so much life and vigour that not withstanding the horrid noyse of Thunder the flashes of lightning and the shrill and penetrating sound of the Trumpet still continued yet all the Hebrews who with their Tents overspread those vast deserts and many thousands of Egyptians who were converted and followed them heard conceived and understood it clearly and distinctly Nay so piercing was the voyce that it entred and imprinted it self in their very bowels speaking unto every one of them as if it had spoken to him only which caused so great a fear and reverence in the people that they thought they could not live if the Angel continued speaking and therefore besought it as a grace that he would speak unto them by the way of Moses lest they should die Nay Moses himself accustomed to see
their Angel guardians shall assist by giving testimony how often they have disswaded them from their evil courses and how rebellious and refractory they have still been to their holy inspirations The Saints also shall accuse them that they have laughed at their good counsels and shall set forth the dangers whereunto they them-themselves have been subject by their ill example The just Judge shall then immediately pronounce Sentence in favour of the good in these words of love and mercy Come you blessed of my Father possess the Kingdom which was prepared for you from the creation of the world O what joy shall then fill the Saints Abul in Mat. Jansen Sot Les l. 13. c. 22. alii Isai 30. and what spight and envy shall burst the hearts of Sinners but more when they shall hear the contrary Sentence pronounced against themselves Christ speaking unto them with that severity which was signified by the Prophet Isaiah when he said His lips were filled with indignation and his tongue was a devouring fire More terrible than fire shall be those words of the Son of God unto those miserable wretches when they shall hear him say Depart from me ye cursed into eternal fire prepared for Satan and his Angels With this Sentence they shall remain for ever overthrown and covered with eternal sorrow and confusion Ananias and Saphira were struck dead only with the hearing the angry voice of St. Peter What shall the Reprobate be in hearing the incensed voice of Christ This may appear by what happened unto St. Catharine of Sienna who being reprehended by St. Paul In vita ejus c. 24. who appeared unto her onely because she did not better employ some little parcel of time said that she had rather be disgraced before the whole World than once more to suffer what she did by that reprehension But what is this in respect of that reprehension of the Son of God in the day of vengeance for if when he was led himself to be judged he with two onely words I am overthrew the astonisht multitude of Souldiers to the ground how shall he speak when he comes to judge In vita PP l. 5. apud Rosul In the book of the lives of the Fathers composed by Severus Sulpitius and Cassianus it is written of a certain young man desirous to become a Monk whom his Mother by many reasons which she alleadged pretended to disswade but all in vain for he would by no means alter his intention defending himself still from her importunity with this answer I will save my soul I will assure my salvation it is that which most imports nic She perceiving that her modest requests prevailed nothing gave him leave to do as he pleased and he according to his resolution entred into Religion but soon began to flag and fall from his fervour and to live with much carelesness and negligence Not long after his Mother died and he himself fell into a grievous infirmity and being one day in a Trance was rapt in spirit before the Judgement Seat of God He there found his Mother and divers others expecting his condemnation She turning her eyes and seeing her Son amongst those who were to be damned seemed to remain astonisht and spake unto him in this manner Why how now Son is all come to end in this where are those words thou saidest unto me I will save nay soul was it for this thou didst enter into Religion The poor man being confounded and amazed knew not what to answer but soon after when he returned unto himself and the Lord was pleased that he recovered and escaped his infirmity and considering that this was a divine admonition he gave so great a turn that the rest of his life was wholly tears and repentance and when many wisht him that he would moderate and remit something of that rigour which might be prejudicial unto his health he would not admit of their advices but still answered I who could not endure the reprehension of my Mother how shall I in the day of judgement endure that of Christ and his Angels Let us often think of this and let not onely the angry voice of our Saviour make us tremble Raph. Columb Ser. 2. Domin in Quadr. but that terrible Sentence which shall separate the wicked from his presence Raphael Columba writes of Philip the second King of Spain that being at Mass he heard two of his Grandees who were near him in discourse about some worldly business which he then took no notice of but Mass being ended he called them with great gravity and said unto them onely these few words You two appear no more in my presence which were of that weight that the one of them died of grief and the other ever after remained stupified and amazed What shall it then be to hear the King of Heaven and Earth say Depart ye cursed and if the words of the Son of God be so much to be feared what shall be his works of justice At that instant the fire of that general burning shall invest those miserable creatures Less l. 13. c. 23. the Earth shall open and Hell shall enlarge his throat to swallow them for all eternity accomplishing the malediction of Christ and of the Psalm which saith Psal 54. Let death come upon them and let them sink alive into hell And in another place Coals of fire shall fall upon them Ps 139. and thou shalt cast them into the fire and they shall not subsist in their miseries And in another Psalm Psal 10. Snares fire and sulphur shall rain upon sinners Finally that shall be executed which was spoken by St. John That the Devil Death and Hell and all Apcc. 20. who were not written in the Book of life were cast into the lake of fire and brimstone where they shall be eternally tormented with Antichrist and his false Prophets And this is the second death bitter and eternal which comprehends both the Souls and the Bodies of them who have died the spiritual death of sin and the corporal death which is the effect of it The Just shall then rejoyce according to David Psal 57. beholding the vengeance which the Divine Justice shall take upon sinners and sing another song like that of Moses Exod. 15. when the Aegyptians were drowned in the red sea and that Song of the Lamb related by St. John Apoc. 15. Great and marvelous are thy works O Lord God omnipotent just and righteous are thy wayes King of all Eternity who will not fear thee O Lord and magnifie thy name With those and thousand other Songs of joy and jubilee they shall ascend above the Stars in a most glorious triumph until they arrive in the Empyrial Heaven where they shall be placed in thrones of glory which they shall enjoy for an eternity of eternities In the mean time the earth which was polluted for having sustained the Bodies of the damned shall be
so in the World there is no other thing as St. John saith Ep. 1 c. 2. but the Concupiscence of the flesh the Concupiscence of the eyes and the Pride of life that is Lust and exorbitancy in pleasures Covetousness and gaping after riches Ambition and desire of honours Of those three Monsters is composed the Monster of Monsters which we call the World the which hath also his seaven heads and ten horns to wit the Seaven deadly Sins by which are impugned the ten Commandments and the observation of the whole Law of God Let us also consider the mysterious disposition of the parts of this Beast The feet are said to be of a Bear the body of a Leopard and the head of a Lion because all the inventions additions stratagems and designs of the World are founded upon the pleasure and delights of the appetite which are natural and upon this foundation our malice has builded riches and honours which are not natural but humane inventions Riches are the body of the World and upon them is raised Pride as the head of that body Besides Riches are most conveniently placed in the middle between Pleasure and Honours as being necessary for the supportation of both without which neither can be maintained Avarice therefore forms the body of this Beast that it may equally nourish Pleasure and Ambition Let us then propose unto our selves the Image of this World under the form of this Monster and Chimaera as well to demonstrate the confusion and turmoyl of it as to signifie unto us that the whole substance and being of it consists meerly in the imagination and apparence For such a Monster composed of the several parts of divers Beasts which hath no being or foundation in reason but is onely framed by the fancy the Philosophers call a Chimaera and such truly are the things of this World inconstant confused and troubled and have no substance or being in themselves but are onely deceit and apparence Some seem great and are but little others cozen us more appear to be goods and are really evils To understand this better and know the vanity of the World we are to suppose that humane malice hath corrupted and poisoned it by inventing new gusts and pleasures unto which we have added by our imagination what they wanted of being and reality and by diverting things from those proper ends for which they were ordained have made them all vain and the World a Monster of many heads for the head of things is as Philo calls it the end and the things of the World having left their utmost and true end which is one God and disordered themselves by the many ends of particular vices have made that Beast which is said not to have one but many heads which makes it so monstrous and deformed Men follow not in the use of things their proper end which is to please and serve God but aim at the serving of their passions and satisfie their appetites which as they are divers so they have divers ends and respects from whence results the monstrosity of so many heads and faces From the multitude then of ends follows this deformity which includes and is alwayes accompanied with vanity For the world following this vanity of adulterate ends contrary to reason and nature leaves the true and lawful end which is the service of God and that which leaves its proper end becomes useless and vain If you should blind the eyes of some excellent Marks-man his art and skill were lost and his Bow would become unprofitable because he remained deprived of that by which he was to attain his end So all things being created to this end that man by them might serve God this end wanting they became vain and useless By this example may be clearly seen how vain is the World since it doth not direct those things it enjoyes for the service of the universal Creatour but for other vain and imaginary ends by which it becomes wholly it self a vanity The multitude of Gold Silver Plate Jewels precious Furniture and other Ornaments which we glory in are they perhaps for the service of God Let St. Alexius tell us whether he chose them as means to that end and if they be not for the service of the Lord of all what are they all but vanity Abundance of Delights Masques Dances Feasts Entertainments are they perhaps to please God Let St. Bruno tell us and if they be not for that purpose what are they all but vanity Majesty ostentation of Titles and Honours are they perhaps for the service of God Let St. Josaphat tell us who fled from his Temporal Kingdom that he might better apply himself unto the service of the King of Heaven Vain is all the greatness of the Earth if that of Heaven be not gained by it The most precious thing failing which is the right end all besides becomes vain frivolous and of no esteem §. 2. This deviation and wandering of worldly things from their proper and due end is sufficient to declare their vanity and disorder But there is yet another errour in them which makes them appear much more vain which is that they not onely goe astray from their first and great end which is the service of God but also fail and hold no proportion with that second end which humane vices propose unto them here That which our appetite pretends in Riches Pomp and Honours which it hath invented is the felicity of this life and to that they are so little proper as they have rather disposed things for our misery and torment and therefore vain are all our fancies and inventions To maintain and uphold our honour what Lawes Rights and irregular Customs hath the World invented to the great danger of our lives and the hinderance of our pleasures It hath made honour so brittle that with one word whosoever list may take it from us which is the occasion that many live dishonoured and if they will recover it it must cost their lives fortunes or quiet What greater madness than that the thing which they have made of the greatest esteem in the World should be subject to such an inconvenience and of so cursed a condition that it is very easie to lose and most difficult to regain that any one may bereave us of it and he which hath taken it from us cannot restore it that it is in another mans hand to destroy it and not in our own to repair it What law in the World more unjust that if an infamous person give thee the lye thou remainest dishonoured although he lied that gave it and that honour which he by one word hath taken from thee thou canst not recover by another What greater folly than to fight for honour and maintain truth by quarrelling as if he were the most honourable person and spake the truest which were the strongest especially being so prejudicial to the most vertuous for it commonly happens that those who have the
with which the rich man remained amazed and was taught that to give himself over to gluttony and the immoderate pleasure of his taste was no less hurtful for him than to feed on poisonful creatures or to have to do with Lions Serpents and Tygers And it is certain that Lions and the most furious beasts have not kill'd so many as have died by surfeits and pleasing too much their pallats CAP. VI. Of the littleness of things Temporal SEtting aside how vain the things of this World are let us particularly consider how little they are and we shall perceive that though their vanity which swells and blows them up seems to extend them yet they are in themselves poor short and little especially if we compare them with things eternal Beginning therefore with that temporal good which seems to have the greatest bulk and makes the greatest noise to wit Honour Fame and Renown we shall see how narrow it is Men desire that their fame should ring through the whole World and that all should know their names and if they did what are all in respect of those in the other World since the whole Earth in respect of the Heavens is but a point But who is he that can be known of all who live Millions of men there are in the World who know not whether there be an Emperour of Germany or a King of Spain Let no man then afflict himself for this vain honour for even in his own Country all shall not know him Many thousand years are past and no man knew thee and of those who shall be born hereafter few shall remember thee and although thou remainest in the memory of those yet they also in the end must die and with them thine and their own memory must perish and thou shalt as before thou wert continue a whole eternity without being known or celebrated by any And even now whilest thou livest there are not many who know thee and of those most of them so bad that thou oughtest to be ashamed that such mouthes should praise thee who speak ill even of one another Wherefore then doest thou torment thy self for a thing so short so vile and so vain All these things are so certain that even the Gentils acknowledged them Hear onely one who was placed in the highest degree of glory and dignity in the whole World Marc. Anton. l. 3. p. 200. since he was Lord of it the Emperour Marcus Antoninus who speaks in this manner Perhaps thou art sollicitous of honour Behold how quickly oblivion blots out all things Behold a Chaos of eternity both before and after How vain is the noise of fame how great inconstancie and uncertainty of humane judgements and opinions in how narrow a compass are all things inclosed The World is but a point and of it how small a corner is inhabited and who and how many are those in it who are to praise thee And a little after he adds He who desires fame and honour after death thinks not that he who is to remember him shall shortly die also and in the same manner he who is to succeed after him untill that all memory which is to be propagated by mortal men be blotted out But suppose that those who are to remember thee were immortal what could it import thee being dead nay even alive what could it profit thee to be praised all that is fair is fair of it self and is perfected within it self and to be praised is no part of the beauty He therefore who is celebrated is for that reason neither better nor worse These Antidotes are drawn by the Pagan Prince against the poison of ambition Why therefore should we Christians esteem any honour but that of God What shall I say of the vanity of those titles which many have assumed against all reason and justice onely to make themselves known in the World Let us judge how it will fare with us of Europe by those who have taken titles upon them in Asia For if the fame of those in Asia arrive not to the knowledge of us in Europe no more shall ours in Europe to theirs in Asia The name of Echebar was thought by his Subjects to be eternal and that all the World did not only know Jarricus in Thesau Indic but fear him But ask here in Europe who he was and no man hath heard of him and demand now of the most learned and few shall resolve you unless perchance he find here in my writing that he raigned in Mogor How few have heard of the name of Vencatapadino Ragiu he imagined that there was no man in the World who knew him not The same thought had his Servants and called him The Lord of Kings and supreme Emperour The titles which he arrogated to himself and put in his Edicts were these The Spouse of good fortune King of great Provinces King of the greatest Kings and God of Kings Lord of all the Horsemen Master of those who cannot speak Emperour of three Emperours Conquerour of all he sees and Preserver of all he conquers Formidable unto the eight Regions of the World Lord of the Provinces which he overcomes Destroyer of the Mahometan Armies Disposer of the riches of Zeilan He who cut off the head of the invincible Viravalano Lord of the East South North and West and of the Sea Hunter of Elephants He that lives and glories in his military valour These titles of honour are enjoyed by the most excellent in warlike forces Vencatapadino Ragiu which rules and governs this World How many can tell me before I declare it here that he was the King of Narsinga If then these warlike and potent Princes are not known in Europe No more shall Charles the Fift and the Grand Captain and many other Excellent men in arms and litterature which have flourished in these parts be known in Asia and Africa If we shall reflect upon the truth of those titles which many arrogate unto themselves we shall perceive them all to be vain How many are called Highness and Excellence who are of a base and abject spirit and continue in mortal sin which is the meanest and lowest thing in the World How many are called Screnissimi who have their understanding darkened and their will perverted Others call themselves most Magnificent with as much reason as Nero might be called most Clement This vanity hath proceeded so far that men have not feared to usurp those titles which only belong to God and have thereupon raised great warres and slain innumerable people Wherefore St. John said that the Beast which rose out of the Sea had upon his head names of Blasphemy and afterwards that the purple Beast was full of names of Blasphemy in regard of the blood that hath been spilt in the World for those vain titles and some of them contrary unto the essence of God as the calling of Rome Eternal and deifying her Emperours which was no better than blasphemy The things wherein
at least mortifie our affections for what is promised us hereafter and because it is most agreeable to God and profitable for our selves as may appear by this story related by Glycas Glycas ex eo Rad. in Aula Sancta cap. 12. A certain Anchorite had lived forty years in the desert retired wholly from the world and applying himself with great observance of his profession to the salvation of his Soul A desire at last entred into his minde to know who in the world was equal to himself in mortification Whereupon he besought God to reveal it unto him and it pleased his Divine Majesty to grant his request and it was answered him from heaven that the Emperour Theod●sius notwithstanding that he was Master of the greatest glory of the World yet was neither inferiour unto him in humility nor in overcoming himself The Hermite with this answer moved by God repaired unto the Court where he found easie access unto the courteous and religious Emperour unto whom the Servants of God and such as were famous for sanctity of life were alwayes welcome Not long after he found means to speak unto him and know his holy exercises At first he onely acquainted him with common vertues That he gave large Alms That he wore hair-cloth That he fasted often That he observed conjugal chastity and That he caused justice to be exactly observed These vertues seemed well unto the Hermit especially in such a person but yet judged all this to be short of himself who had done those things with greater perfection For he had renounced all and given all he possessed for Christ which was more than to give almes he never knew woman in his life which was more than to observe conjugal chastity he never did injury or injustice unto any which was more than to cause it to be kept to others his hair-cloth and fasts from all sorts of dainties were continual which was more than to abstain some dayes from flesh Wherefore altogether unsatisfied he further importuned the Emperour beseeching him to conceal nothing from him That it was the Divine will that he should acquaint him with what he did and that therefore he was sent unto him from God The Emperour thus urged said unto him Know then that when I assist at the horse-courses and spectacles in the Circus where my presence is required I so withdraw my minde from those vanities that though my eyes be open I see them not The Hermit remained astonisht at so particular a mortification in so great an Emperour and perceived that Scepters and Purple could not hinder a devout Prince from mortification of his affections and meriting much with God Almighty Theodosius further added Know also that I sustain my self by my labour for I transcribe certain parchments into a fair hand which being sold the price payes for my food With this example of poverty amongst so much riches and temperance in the middest of so great dainties the Hermit was wholly amazed and learned that abstinence from ease and pleasures of this life was that which made this religious Prince so gracious and acceptable unto our Lord. Finally so perverse are the delights of the World that though lawful yet they hinder much our spiritual proficiency and if unlawful are the total ruine of our Souls § 4. What shall we then say of the Royal and Imperial dignity which seems in humane judgement to embrace all the happiness of the World Honours Riches Pleasures all are contained in it But how small is a Kingdom since the whole Earth in respect of the Heavens is no bigger than a point and certainly neither Honours Riches or Pleasures are greater or more secure than we have described them Let us hear St. Chrysostome speak of the Emperours of his time Hom. 66. ad pop Look not upon the Crown saith he but upon that tempest of cares which accompany it Fix not thy eyes upon the purple but upon the mind of the King more sad and dark than the purple it self The Diadem doth not more encompass his head than cares and suspicions his soul Look not at the Squadions of his Guard but at the Armies of molestations which attend him for nothing can be so full of cares as the Palaces of Kings Every day they expect not one death but many nor can it be said how often in the night their hearts tremble with some sodain fright and their souls almost seem to forsake their bodies and this in the time of peace But when a warre is kindled what life so miserable as theirs how many dangers happen unto them even from their Friends and Subjects The floor of the Royal Palace is drowned in the blood of their Kindred If I shall mention those which have happened heretofore and now of late thou wilt easily know them This suspecting his Wife tied her naked in the mountains and left her to be devoured by wild beasts after she had been a Mother of divers Kings What a life had that man it being impossible he should execute such a revenge unless his sick heart had been eaten and consumed with jealousie This put to death his onely Son This killed himself being taken by the Tyrant This murthered his Nephew after he had made him his companion in the Empire This his Brother who died by poison and his innocent Son ended his life onely for what he might have been Of those Princes which followed one of them was with his Slaves and Chariots miserably burnt alive and it is not possible for words to express the calamities which he was forced to endure And he which now raigns hath he not since he was crowned suffered many troubles dangers griefs and treasons but in Heaven it is not so After this manner St. Chrysostome paints forth the greatest fortune of the World the Imperial Majesty which must needs be little since it is so unhappy that it suffers not to enjoy those frail goods of the earth in security but makes the possessors oftentimes perish before them But it is far otherwise in Heaven the Palace and House of God where the just without mixture or counterpoise of misery are to enjoy those goods eternal as we shall see in its proper place Lastly let us learn from hence not to admire the greatness of this World nor to desire the benefit of it Which lesson was well taught by St. Spiridion unto his Disciple who accompanying him one time unto the Court of the Emperour suffered himself to be transported with those things which he beheld The greatness and lustre of the Court The rich Garments Jewels Pearls and precious Stones dazled the eyes of the raw and unexperienced youth but above all the sight of the Emperour seated in his Imperial Throne with so much splendour and greatness almost drew him besides himself St. Spiridion willing one day to correct his errour asked him as if he had not known it Which of those were the Emperour His Disciple not reaching his intention
day known and practised they were ignorant Nothing is now secure since poison hath been given even in the shaking of hands when men were to be reconciled and made friends Onely in the sense of hearing it hath not yet found a door to enter all the rest of the senses it hath mastered with the smell of a Rose with the sight of a Letter with the touch of a Thread with the taste of a Grape death hath found an entrance There is nothing brings more misery upon man than his passions with which he pardons not himself The proud man grieves and consumes for the felicity of another The envious dies to see a happy man live The covetous man loses his sleep for what he hath no need of The impatient man tears his bowels for that which imports not and The cholerick man ruins himself for what no way concerns him How many for not conquering one passion have lost their fortunes their quiet and their lives both temporal and eternal Witness Aman who desirng more reverence than was due to him lost his honour wealth and life and ended on a Gibbet The ambition of Absolon rested not until it left him hang'd in a tree by the hair of his head In the same manner the disordinate love of Amnon which made him first sick and pale and distempered him more than a burning fever at last cost him his life Unto many their unmortified passions have been like cruel Hangmen which have sodainly bereaved them of their lives Dubravius l. 2. hist Bohem an 1418. Dubravius writes that Wenceslaus King of Bohemia entred into so great fury against a Courtier of his for not giving him timely advice of an Uproar raised by Lisca in Prague that he was like to have kill'd him with his own hands but being witheld from defiling his Royal Majesty with the blood of his Vassal he fell into an Apoplexie and died immediately Aurel. Vict. in Epitome vitae Nervae The death of Nerva was likewise upon a sodain anger And Pliny writes of Diodorus Cromus that he sodainly died of shame for that he was not able to answer a question proposed by Estibon Through Fear Grief Joy and Love many have died I will onely relate here a lamentable story written by Paulus Jovius Jovius l. 39. hist sui temporis A certain married man had lived long in adultery with so great scandal that the Bishop of the City excommunicated both him and his Paramour if they accompanied any more together The man was so besotted with his passion that contemning the Command of the Bishop he went secretly one day to see his Mistress who having repented of what was past entertained him with harsh language reprehended his impudency and commanded him to depart her presence and never more to see her But he still continuing in his madness began to call her ungrateful and unworthy and in a rage clasping his hands together and lifting up his eyes towards heaven as if it were to complain of her unkindness fell down stark dead and in a moment lost both his life temporal and eternal and his body was not suffered to be interred in hallowed earth If then our disordered passions be so hurtful unto our own lives how dangerous and prejudicial are they unto the lives of others Certainly if all other misfortunes were wanting those were sufficient which are caused by humane-passions There is much to be suffered from the conditions of men ill language displeasing correspondencies wilful injuries and perverse dispositions All man is misery and cause of miseries Who is so happy to content all and be envied of none who is so general a well-doer that no body complains of him who so liberal that finds not some ungrateful who so esteemed that some murmurers do not despise him The Athenians found fault with their Simonides because he talked too loud The Thebans accused Panniculus that he spit too much The Lacedaemonians noted in Lycurgus that he went hanging down his head The Romans thought Scipio slept too much and that he snorted too high The Vticans were scandalized at Cato's eating too fast on both sides at once They held Pompey for rude and ill-bred because he scratched his head with one finger The Carthaginians spake ill of Hannibal because he went open-breasted with his stomack bare Others laughed at Julius Caesar because he was ill girt There is none so upright in whom envy or extravagant conditions will not find something to reprehend The greatest miseries are those which men by their unbridled affections bring upon themselves Whence proceeded that notable saying of Ecclesiastes Eccl. c. 4. which far exceeded all that hath been spoken by Philosophers concerning humane misery I praised saith he the dead before the living I judged him more happy than either who was not born nor had seen the evils which are done under the Sun For there is nothing which offends humane nature more than the follies and impertinencies of men and the hatreds injustices violences and inhumanities caused by their irregular passions Whereupon some Philosophers seeing humane nature governed by passion and not by reason wholly abhorred it Amongst whom Timon of Athens was the principal beginner and most earnest Professor of that Sect for he did not only call himself the capital Enemy of Mankind but confirmed his words by his actions for he neither conversed nor dwelt with men but lived in the Desert amongst wild beasts remote from Neighbourhood or Towns neither would he be visited by any nor discourse with any but an Athenian Captain called Alcibiades and that not for friendship or affection but because he hoped and foresaw as indeed it happened afterwards that he would one day be the ruine of his Country and the destruction of a multitude of men Neither was he onely content with this aversion from men but studied and invented all ways possible to destroy them He caused Gallowses to be made in his Gardens wherein such as were desperate and weary of life might conveniently hang themselves and having occasion some years after to make use of his Garden for the enlarging of his House he would not pull down his Gallowses until he had called the people together to hear his Oration assuring them that he had something new and of importance to speak unto them The people who having been long acquainted with his humour expecting something that was extraordinary willingly assembled to hear him to whom he spake in this manner O Athenians you are not ignorant that many have made themselves away in my Gardens I have now occasion to dispose of them otherwise and therefore fore thought good to tell you that if any of you have a mind to hang your selves that you do it quickly And so without more words with this loving offer concluded his Speech and returned to his own house where he ended his life in the same opinion ever philosophying of the misery of man And when the pangs of death came upon
him abhorring mankinde even unto the last gasp he commanded that his body should not be interr'd in the earth as in the common Element wherein usually were buried the bodies of others afraid lest his bones should lye near or be touched by men though dead but that they should make his Sepulcher upon the brink of the Sea that tho fury of the waves might hinder the approach of all others and that they should grave upon it this Epitaph which is related by Plutarch After my miserable life they buried me in this deep water Reader desire not to know my name The Gods confound thee This Philosopher wanted faith and charity not distinguishing betwixt the Malice of man and his Nature having reason to abhorre that and to love this Yet by these extravagant demonstrations he gave us to understand how monstrous are our passions and how worthy of hate when they are not ordered and governed by reason And certainly all Christians ought to desire the destruction of the pomp and pride of men as Timon did of their persons their superfluous gallantry their unlawful pleasures their ostentation of riches their vain titles of honour their raging envy their disordered choler their unjust revenges their unbridled passions Those ought to die and be destroyed that the men may live § 6. So many are the miseries of life that they cannot all be numbered Death which is called by Aristotle The greatest of evils is by many esteemed a lesser evil than life the many evils in this surpassing the greatness of the evil in that and therefore many have thought it better to suffer the greatest which is death than to suffer so many though lesser which are in life For this reason one calls Death The last and greatest Physician because though in it self it be the greatest evil yet it cures all others and therefore prescribes the hopes of it as an efficacious remedy and comfort in the afflictions of life But because this comfort is not relished by all the fear of death being so natural and the dangers and many waves unto it accounted amongst the many miseries of life therefore some prime Philosophers could find out no other remedy for evils than to despair of their remedy Wherefore Seneca when a great Earthquake happened in his time in Campania wherein Pompeios a famous City and divers other Towns were sunk and many people lost and the rest of the Inhabitants distracted with fear and and grief fled from their Country as if they had been banisht he advised them to return home and assured them that there was no remedy for the evils of this life and that the dangers of death were unavoidable And truly if well considered what security can there be in life when the Earth which is the Mother of the living is unfaithful to them and sprouts out miseries and deaths even of whole Cities what can be secure in the World if the World it self be not and the most solid parts of it shake If that which is onely immoveable and fixt for to sustain the living tremble with Earthquakes if what is proper to the Earth which is to be firm be unstable and betray us where shall our fears find a refuge When the roof of the house shakes we may flie into the fields but when the world shakes whither shall we goe What comfort can we have when fear cannot find a gate to flie out at Cities resist Enemies with the strength of their walls Tempests finde a sheltet in the Haven The covering of Houses defend us from rains and snows In the time of plague we may change places but from the whole Earth who can flie and therefore from dangers For this reason Seneca said Not to have a remedy may serve us as a comfort in our evils for Fear is foolish without Hope Reason banishes fear in those who are wise and in those who are not despair of remedy gives a kind of security at least takes away fear He that will fear nothing let him think that all things are to be feared See what slight things endanger us even those which sustain life lay ambushes for us Meat and drink without which we cannot live take away our lives It is not wisdom therefore to fear swallowing by an Earthquake and not to fear the falling of a tile In death all sorts of dyings are equal What imports it whether one single stone kills thee or a whole Mountain oppress thee death consists in the souls leaving of the bodies which often happens by slight accidents But Christians in all the dangers and miseries of humane life have other comforts to lay hold on which are a good conscience hope of glory conformity unto the Divine will and the imitation and example of Jesus Christ From these four he shall in life have merit in death security in both comfort and in eternity a reward Justus Lipsius being much oppressed with his last infirmity whereof he died some who were present endeavoured to comfort him with some philosophical reasons and sentences of the Stoicks wherein that most learned man was much studied as appears in his Book of the Introduction to Stoical learning unto whom he answered in this most Christian manner Vain are all those consolations and pointing unto an Image of Christ crucified said This is the true comfort and true patience And presently with a sigh which rose from the bottom of his heart said My Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ give me Christian patience This comfort we ought to have who were redeemed by so loving a Lord That considering our sins are greater than the pains of this life and that the Son of God hath suffered farre greater who wanted all sin he hath deserved to convert the miseries of this life which are occasioned by sin into instruments of satisfaction for our sins drawing health out of infirmity and an antidote out of poison We may also draw from what is said how unjust was the complaint of Theophrastus that nature had given a longer life unto many birds and beasts than unto man If our life were less troublesome he had some reason but it being so fraught with miseries he might rather think that life the happiest which was shortest Wherefore as St. Jerome said to Heliodorus it is better to die young and die well than to die old and die ill This voyage being of necessity the felicity of it consists not in being long but being prosperous and that we at last arrive in the desired Port. St. Austin sayes August in Johan that to die is to be eased of those heavy burthens which we bear in this life and that the happiness is not to leave it late in the evening of our age but that when we die they charge us not with a greater load Let a man live ten years or let him live a thousand death as St. Jerome saith gives him the title of happy or unfortunate If he live a thousand years in sorrow it is a great unhappiness
but greater if he live them ill though with content and therefore supposing so many miseries we cannot complain of God for having given us a short life but of our selves for having made it a bad one Ambr. Ser. quadrages Finally as St. Ambrose sayes Our life being compassed with so many miseries as that death seems rather a shelter for evils than a punishment God was pleased that it should be short that the vexations and misfortunes of it which cannot be counterpoised with any joyes of the earth might be more supportable At least if this life with so many miseries do not displease us yet let the eternal with all her felicities content us better and let us not endeavour less for the immortal life of heaven than we doe for this mortal one of earth And therefore as St. Austin sayes Augus trac 5. in Johan hom 57. If thou run a hundred miles for this life how many oughtest thou to run for the eternal and if thou make such speed to obtain a few dayes and uncertain how oughtest thou to run for life eternal CAP. VIII How little is man whilest he is temporal IF we consider the greatest thing in nature which is Man we shall see how little he is whilest he is temporal What is man saith Seneca a frail vessel broken with the least motion a most weak body naked by nature and unarmed necessitous of Mothers help subject to the injuries of fortune impatient of cold and labour composed of things infirm and fluid and those very things without which we cannot live as smell taste watching meat and drink are mortal unto us The wise Solon did not answer more favourably when they demanded of him Anton. in Mel. Stob. Ser. 96. what was Man He is saith he a corruption in his birth a beast in his life and food for worms when he is dead Aristotle being asked the same question answered That Man was an Idea of weakness Dionys Rikel de noviss arti 15. a spoil of time a game of fortune an image of inconstancy a ballance of envy and calamity and the rest is of flegme and choler Secundus the Philosopher being also demanded the same by Adrian the Emperour answered That Man was an incorporated understanding a phantasm of time a looker upon life a slave of death a travelling passenger a guest of place a toyling soul a habitation for a short time And St. Bernard saith That Man in this time of mortality is but a beast of carriage And the same Saint in another place sayes What is Man but a vessel of dung and in his meditations he adds If thou markest what he voids at his mouth and nose and at the other sinks of his body thou hast not in all thy life beheld a more noisome dunghill In the same part he saith Man is no other thing but unclean seed a sack of dung a food for worms Innocen de Contempla mundi lib. 1. c. 1. More fully Innocent the Pope I have considered saith he with tears what Man was made of what he is and what he shall be He was made of earth and conceived in sin and born for punishment He does things evil which are not lawful things filthy which are not decent and things vain which are not expedient He shall be the food of fire meat for worms and a mass of corruption O vile indignity of humane condition O unworthy condition of humane baseness Behold the plants and trees They produce flowers and leaves and fruit and thou nothing but nits lice and worms They furnish us with oyl wine and balsom thou affords nothing but flegme dung and urine Those send forth a fragrant odour and thou abominable stink Such as is the tree such is the fruit A good tree cannot bring forth bad fruit and what is man but a tree reverst This is the saying of this holy Pope And such is man even in his youth and best time But if he reach old age which is esteemed as a felicity the same Innocentius adds His heart is afflicted his head shakes his spirits languish his breath smells his face wrinkles his stature bends his eyes wax dimme his joynts quake his nose runs his hands tremble his hair falls his teeth rot his ears grow deaf Neither is he more changed in body than in mind An old man is easily displeased hardly pacified believes quickly long before disabused is greedy covetous peevish froward still complaining quick in talking slow in hearing admires what 's past contemns what 's present sighs grieves languishes and is alwayes infirm It may also appear what Man is by the stuff whereof he is made The first man God made of Clay mixing together the vilest and grossest Elements The rest of men who have succeeded have been made of a matter more loathsome and unclean and worse is that wherewith they are nourisht in their Mothers wombs and their birth is accompanied with shame grief and pollution which Pliny considering speaks in this manner It is a compassion nay a shame to think of the original of the proudest of living creatures which is man who often is abortive by the smell of a newly extinguisht candle From such beginnings sprung our Tyrants from hence the butcherly minde of those cruel Hangmen Thou which gloriest in the strength of body thou which embracest the gifts of fortune and thinkest not thy self her Servant but her Son and Darling thou who settest thy mind wholly upon victories thou who pufft up with success holdest thy self a God see how thou mightest have perished even before thou wert with so little a thing as a snuff of a candle and mayest yet with a smaller matter prickt with the little tooth of an Adder or like Anacreon the Poet choked with the stone of a grape or like Fabius the Roman Senatour suffocated with a hair in a draught of milk Thus farre Pliny who not onely admired the baseness of the nature of man but the easiness of his end Consider also wherein Man ends Man whilest he lives saith Pope Innocent engenders lice and vermin Lib. 3. c. 1. when he is dead grubs and worms whilest he lives affords nothing but dung and vomits when he is dead stink and rottenness alive he feeds but one man but dead a multitude of worms What thing more noisome than a humane Carcase what more horrible than a dead Man he whose embraces were most acceptable when he was alive even his sight is troublesome when he is dead What do riches banquets or delights profit us they shall not free us from death they shall not defend us from the worms they shall not take away our stink and ill savour He who even now was seated in a glorious Throne is now flung into an obscure Tomb he who lately feasted in a sumptuous Sala is now feasted upon by worms in a dark Sepulcher All this is from this contemplative Pope Bernard c. 3. Meditat. St. Bernard also considering this
arrogant clay an insolent dust and a sparkle which in a moment is extinguished a flame which quickly dies a light which vanishes into air a dead leaf withered hay faded grass a nature which consumes it self to day threatens and to morrow dies to day abounds in wealth and is to morrow in his grave to day hath his brows circled with a diadem and to morrow is with worms he is to day and to morrow ceases to be triumphs and rejoyces to day and to morrow is lamented immeasurably insolent in prosperity and in adversity admits no comfort who knows not himself yet is curious in searching what is above him is ignorant of what is present and scoffs at what 's to come he who is mortal by nature and out of pride thinks himself eternal he who is an open house of perturbations a game of divers infirmities a concourse of daily calamities and a receptacle of all sorrow O how great is the Tragedy of our baseness and how many things have I said But it cannot better be declared than by the voice of the Prophet In vain doth man who lives trouble himself For truly the things of this life which shine and glister most are of less profit than a putrified Carcase This is of St. John Chrysostome in which he clearly sets forth the misery of Man the shortness of his life and the vanity of things temporal § 3. And that the perfect knowledge of our selves may not be wanting unto us Man is not onely thus vile and base whilest he lives and much more being dead but even his Soul whilest it remains in his Body is not of much greater esteem For although the Soul be of it self of a most noble substance yet our vices do so much vilifie it that they make it more abominable than the Body And without doubt the Soul when it is dead in mortal sin is more corrupt and stinking in the sight of the Angels than a Body dead eight days agoe for if that Body be full of worms this is full of devils and vices And even whilest the Soul lives and is free from any mortal sin yet by committing those which are but venial it becomes full of imperfections and although it be not dead yet it is more weak feeble and languishing than a sick Body and if a man knew himself well he would be more affrighted at the misery of his Soul than at that of his Flesh The devout Father Alfonso Roderiguez a most excellent Master in matters of spirit writes of a holy Woman who desired light from God to know in what condition she was and saw in her self such ugliness and deformity that she was not able to suffer it and therefore besought God again saying Not so much O Lord for I shall faint and be dismaid Father Master John d'Avila saith that he knew a person who often had importuned God to discover unto him what he was It pleased God to open his eyes but a very little and yet that little had like to have cost him dear for he beheld himself so ugly and abominable that he cried out aloud Lord of thy mercy take from before mine eyes this mirrour I desire not any more to behold my figure Donna Sancha Carillo that most fervent servant of Christ after she had led a most perfect and admirable life besought our Lord to give her a sight of her Soul that seeing the filthiness of her sins she might be further moved to abhorre them Our Lord was pleased to grant her request and shewed it her in this form One night as she sat alone in her Sala the door open there passed before her an ancient Hermite his hair all gray and in his hand a staffe to support him She amazed at the sight of such a man in such a habit at so unseasonable an hour was a little surprised with fear yet recollecting her self said unto him Father what seek ye for here to whom he answered Lift up my Cloak and you shall see She did so and beheld a little Girle sickly pale and weak with the face all covered over with flies She took it in her armes and demanded of him Father what is this Doest thou not remember replyed the Hermite when thou earnestly desired'st of our Lord that he would give thee a view of thy Soul Behold the figure of it after this manner it is This said the Apparition vanished and she remained so confused and affrighted that it seemed unto her accordingly as she after confessed that all her bones were displaced with such grief and pain as had it not been for the great favour and mercy of God it had been impossible for her to endure it She passed that night almost overwhelmed with the waves of her sad and troubled thoughts The manner of that Girle so feeble and discoloured afflicted her extremely contemplating it as the image of her Soul especially when she reflected on the face covered with those impertinent and troublesome little creatures her grief was doubled and it seemed unto her as if it had smelt like something that was dead or some old sore which made her send up a thousand sighs unto heaven and to desire a remedy and mercy from our Lord. No sooner did the day so much desired by her appear but she repaired instantly unto her Confessor a person of great vertue and learning and desired him with many tears to explicate unto her the meaning of that Vision and to tell her whether those little creatures did signifie any grievous and hidden sins which her soul knew not of The Confessor took some short time to recommend his answer unto our Saviour which done he returned and said unto her Madam trouble not your self but render hearty thanks unto God for the favour which he hath done you and know that the feebleness which appeared in the Image of your Soul was an effect of venial sins which weaken but kill not cool but extinguish not the charity in our Souls for if they had been mortal sins the Girle would have been dead for those deprive the Soul wholly of life those which be venial onely take away our fervour and promptness in the service of God and the perfect accomplishing of his holy Law If then the Souls of so great Servants of God are so full of miseries wherein can miserable man boast since he is so both in soul and body CAP. IX How deceitful are all things Temporal FRom what hath hitherto been said may be collected how great a lie and cozenage is all that which passes in time and that the things of the earth besides that they are base inconstant and transitory are also deceitful and full of danger This is signified unto us in the Apocalyps by the Harlot by which was denoted humane prosperity who sat upon that monstrous Beast which is the World And amongst other Ornaments as the Scripture sayes she was adorned with gilded gold which gives us to understand her falshood Since it was
dangers no man would take thee up though he should finde thee in the Streets And Dionysius to express the anxieties of the life of Kings said it was like that of condemned persons which every hour expect death This is signified by the Cup of Gold which the Woman that is Prosperity who sat upon the Monster with seaven heads that is the World held in her hand which although it made a fair shew yet was full of abomination because there is none who speaks not ill of his own condition and many who seem most fortunate abhorre their own lot although it appear glorious unto others Salomon was the King who most enjoyed the goods of this life for he resolved to satiate himself with delights even until he surfeited He had a thousand Wives whereof 700 Queens and 300 Concubins he had sumptuous Buildings and Palaces Gardens Orchards Houses of Pleasure Woods Groves Fish-ponds excellent Musick Men and Women Singers the greatest and best ordered Court in the World his Service and Vessels of gold and silver so sumptuous as it caused admiration in the Queen of Saba His Cavalry consisted of 40000 horse with furniture sutable in perpetual pay The Treasure which his Father David left him was according to Budaeus ten times greater than that of Darius King of Persia Finally he arrived unto that point of happiness and felicity in all kindes that he himself admired it and acknowledged himself for the most fortunate Prince in the world and said Eccl. 2. Who shall feed like me and who shall abound in all delights and pleasures as I doe Yet in all this prosperity than which greater cannot be imagined by man when he seriously cast his eyes upon it he said All was vanity and affliction of spirit and was so discontented with his life that he confessed it was tedious unto him and that he detested the care he had taken about it and envying the poor Laborer judged it was better for one to eat of what he got by the sweat of his brows If then such exccess of fortune felicity wealth honour and pleasure deceived so wise a King as Salomon who will not he deceived what shall we expect from some little part of felicity when this flood of fortune could not bestow a contented and quiet life What greater argument of the scarcity and littleness of temporal goods when all are not sufficient to fill a humane heart But as they are not the things which they seem so they afford not what we expect and therefore no man is content with what he has that still appearing better which is anothers And this proceeds from the deceit of humane things that obtaining what we desire and not finding that satisfaction which we expected we envy the condition of others thinking we should there meet with that content which is not to be had at home which seeking with much trouble we at last come to know our errour and find their condition worse than our own This is well exprest by Antiquity in a fiction it made full of doctrine wherein it feigned that the Cretans presented a Petition to Jupiter that since he was born in their Country he would be pleased to exempt them from the trouble and labours endured by others Jupiter answered that this was a Priviledge of those who were in heaven and could not be granted to them who lived upon earth Whereupon they framed a second Supplication that it might be lawful for them to change and truck their labours and cares one with another This was granted Whereupon the next Fair-day every one trussing up his own troubles in a Fardel and loading himself brought them to the Market-place but began before they bargained to search and look into those of others and finding them more heavy and grievous than their own every one returned to his house as wise as he came The remedy of afflictions is not to flye from them but to turn unto God since they happen unto us for our forsaking of him And it was a most high counsel of the Divine Providence that no man should want afflictions that so he might know his sins and hoping onely for ease and comfort in the next life and in God he might acknowledge and onely serve him Wherefore the Prophet Osee saith that God deals with us Osee 2. as a Husband with a Wife who had forsaken him and sought after strange Lovers who sowed thorns in her paths that being wounded she might say I will return unto my first Spouse so God sows Gall and Wormwood in the goods of this life that the Soul being afflicted may repent and turn unto him Another argument of the great deceit of temporal things is this that the more we possess them the more we covet them and alter the experience of their little substance and power to satisfie our hearts yet still we desire and gape after them It is evident that this is a great cozenage and a certain kind of witchcraft by which they snatch away humane affections at such a time as they should most avoid them Nothing satisfies and yet we desire that which does not satisfie How vain then are they since when we possess them they content us not yet we still desire more All the power and felicity of his Kingdom nor the greatness of his Palaces nor being Lord of so many Cities and Fields could content Achab unless he enjoyed the little Vineyard of his poor neighbour which being denied he fell sick with grief and melancholly flung himself upon his bed and for meer rage and madness forbore to eat O goods of the earth where is your greatness since the wealth of a rich Kingdome could not fill the heart of one man but left it empty to desire more and the want of one onely thing had more power to afflict him than so many goods joyned together to content him All things are as vain as this since they cannot give us that for which we seek them Eccl. 5. and therefore Ecclesiastes said The Covetous man shall not be filled with coin and he who loves riches shall not enjoy the fruit of them And this is vanity Finally from ail which is spoken either in this or the former Books may be drawn that consolation of in the Emperour Marous Aurclius in his Philosophy Lib. 2. in fine p. 185. where he sayes The time of humane life is a moment the nature slippery the senses darkned the temperature of the whole body easily corrupted the Soul wandring the fortune what it shall be hard to conjecture the fame uncertain and to be short those things which belong unto the body have the nature of a river and those which belong unto the mind are as smoke or a dream Life is a warre and a peregrination fame after death is forgotten What is there then that can guide unto security There is nothing but Philosophy which consists in this that thou conserve a mind without wound or stain entire and
one day Whereupon St. Austin sayes Such is the beauty of righteousness Augus de libero arb 3. such the joy of that eternal light of that immutable truth and wisdom that although we were not to continue in it above one day yet for so short a time a thousand years in this life replenished with delights and abundance of all goods temporal were justly to be despised For it was not spoken amiss that Better is one day in thy Courts above a thousand So that whereas it is commonly said that for eternal joyes we ought to leave the temporal and frail goods of the earth which are short and transitory St. Austin sayes that if those of heaven were short and these of earth Eternal yet we ought to forsake these for those This is confirmed by that which is written by Thomas de Cantiprato and others Lib. 2. c. 57. N. 67. That the Devil being demanded by an Exorcist what he would suffer to see God answered That he would suffer all that the damned in hell Men and Devils were to suffer until the day of Judgement onely that he might enjoy the sight of him but for some short time How can we then complain of the short troubles of this life which are to be recompenced with the clear vision of God for ever when his professed Enemy would suffer so much onely to enjoy it for an insant Cato having onely read that discourse of Socrates concerning immortality thought it nothing to part with this life and tear his bowels in pieces that he might enjoy that eternal liberty of the Soul freed from the incumbrances and oppressions of the Body Jo. Herol in Promp Exem Heroldus writes that Frier Jordan General of the holy Order of the preaching Friers exorcizing a possest person the Devil amongst other answers to his demands told him That he had never seen the face of God but onely during the twinkling of an eye and that to see it so much longer he would willingly suffer all the pains of his companions until the day of Judgement Frier Jordan remained astonished at this answer and recalling himself a little he said unto him Thou hast said well But declare me his beauty by some similitude or representation Thou hast moved a foolish question replied the Spirit for there is no expressing of it But to give some satisfaction to thy desire I say that if the beauties of all Creatures Heavens Earth Flowers Pearls and all other things that can give any delight to the sight were all comprised in one onely thing if every one of the Stars yielded as much light as the Sun and the Sun shined as bright as all they together all this united so together would be in respect of the beauty of God Almighty as a dark pitchy night in respect of the clearest and brightest day Where by the way it is to be observed that the Devils never saw God clearly as the Angels in glory now behold him but onely by the excellency of their nature attained to some particular and advantagious knowledge of his beauty and divine perfections and joy which resulted from that knowledge And if to enjoy that once again for so short a time they would endure those torments for so long a space what shall it be to behold him clearly in his glory Certainly to be rosted pluckt in pieces with pincers to be burnt alive for a thousand years were well employed to enjoy that felicity but for a day What shall it be to possess it for an eternity when the joy also of each day shall be equivalent to many years Joh. Major Ex. 14. Ex Coll. Psal 89. Wherefore Johannes Major reports that a certain Monk being at Mattins with the other Religious of his Monastery and coming to that verse of the Psalm where it is said A thousand years in the presence of God are but as yesterday which is already past began to imagine with himself how it might be possible and remaining in the Quire as his manner was after the end of Mattins to perfect his devotions he humbly besought the Lord to grant him the true understanding of that place which he had no sooner done but he perceived a little Bird in the Quire that with flying up and down before him by little and little with her most melodious singing insensibly drew him forth of the Church into a Wood not farre off where pearching her self upon a bough she for some short time as it seem'd to him continued her musick to the unspeakable delight of the Monk and then flew away leaving him by her absence no less sad and pensive But seeing she came no more he returned back thinking he had left his Monastery the same morning immediately after Mattins and that it was now about the third hour but coming to the Convent which was near the Wood he found the Gate by which he was accustomed to enter to be mured up and another opened in some other part where calling upon the Porter he was demanded Who he was From whence he came and What was his business He answered that he was the Sacristan of the Church and that having that morning gone abroad after Mattins he found all things at his return changed The Porter demanded of him the name of the Abbot the Prior the Procurator He named them all and wondered he was neither understood nor permitted to enter and why they feigned not to know those Religious whom he mentioned and desired to be brought to the Abbot but coming into his presence neither the Abbot knew him nor he the Abbot whereat the good Monk being much astonished knew not what to say or do The Abbot asked him his name and that of his Abbot and turning the Annals of the Monastery found it was more than three hundred years since the death of those persons which he named Whereupon the Monk making a relation of what had happened unto him concerning the Psalm they acknowledged him and admitted him as a Brother into their profession where having received the Sacraments of the Church he with much peace ended his dayes in our Lord. If the pleasure of one sense did so ravish the Soul of this Servant of God what shall it be when not onely the hearing but the light smell taste the whole body and soul shall be drowned in joyes proportionable to the senses of the one and power of the other If the musick of a little Bird did so transport him what shall the musick of Angels what shall the clear vision of God what shall God himself doe when he makes oftentation if so may say of his omnipotency For as Assuerus who raigned from India to Aethiopia over 170 Provinces made a great Feast for all his Princes which lasted 181 dayes So shall this King of Heaven and Earth make his great Supper of glory which shall last for all eternity for the setting forth of his Majesty and for the honour and entertainment of his Servants where
to the Common-wealth known to posterity But in Heaven there is no need of this artifice because those who are there honoured are immortal and shall have in themselves some character engraved as an evident and clear testimony of their noble Victories and Atchievements The honour of the Just in Heaven depends not like that of the Earth upon accidents and reports nor is exposed to dangers or measured by the discourse of others but in it self contains its own glory and dignity Cuiac ad tit de dignit The dignities in the Roma Empire as may be gathered from the Civil Law were four expressed by these four Titles Perfectissimus Clariffimus Spectabilis Illustris most Perfect most Clear Specious and Illustrious These Honours were onely in name and reputation not in substance and truth For He was often called most perfect who was indiscreet foolish passionate and imperfect He most clear who had neither clearness nor serenitity of understanding but was infected with dark and obscure vices Those specious and beautiful from whom a man would flye twenty leagues rather than behold them and those illustrious who were enveloped in the darkness of vice and ignorance without the least light of vertue That we may therefore see the difference betwixt the honours of Heaven and those of the Earth which are as farre distant from one another as truth from falsehood we must know that in Heaven the Blessed are not onely called most Perfect but really are so both in soul and body without the least imperfection or defect are not onely called most Clear but are so each one being adorned with that gift of brightness that they shall cast out beams more clear than the Sun and if the Sun be the most bright thing in nature what shall they be who seaventimes out-shine it Nor shall they be onely said to be spectabilis or specious and worthy to be looked upon but their beauty and comeliness shall be such as shall not onely draw the eyes of all to behold them but shall stirre up their affections to love and admire them In the like manner they shall not be titularly but really Illustrious for every one with his own light shall be sufficient to illustrate and enlighten many Worlds If one onely false title of those which are truely enjoyed by the Blessed were capable of making the Roman Empire to respect and honour the possessor what shall the truth and substance of them all do in Heaven 1 Mac. 2. With reason did Mathathias call the glory of this World dung and filth because all honours and dignities of the Earth in respect of those in Heaven are base vile and despicable What greater honour than to be Friends of God Sons Heirs and Kings in the Realm of Heaven Apoc. 4. St. John in his Apocalyps sets forth this honour of the blessed in the 24 Elders who were placed about the Throne of God and in that Honour and Majesty as every one was seared in his presence and that upon a Throne cloathed in white and lucid Garments in signe of their perpetual joy and crowned with a crown of Gold in respect of their dignities To be covered in the presence of Kings is the greatest honour they conferre upon the chiefest Grandees but God causes his Servants to be crowned and seated upon Thrones before him and our Saviour in the Day of Judgement makes his Disciples his fellow Judges §. 4. Certainly greater honour cannot be imagined than that of the Predestinate For if we look upon him who honours It is God If with what With no less joy than his own Divinity and other most sublime gifts If before whom Before the whole Theater of Heaven now and in the Day of Judgement before Heaven Earth Angels Men and Devils If the continuance For all eternity If the titles which he gives them it is the truth and substance of the things not the empty word and vain name By all this may appear the cause why eternal happiness being a mass and an assembly of all goods imaginable yet is called by way of excellence by the name of Glory because that although it contain all pleasures contents joyes riches and what can be defired yet it seems the Glory and honour which God bestows upon the Just exceeds all the other The honour which God gives in Heaven to glorious Souls may be seen by that which he gives to their worm-eaten bones upon Earth whereof St. Chrysostom speaks these words Where is now the Sepulcher of the great Alexander In 2. ad Corinth Hom. 26. shew it me I beseech thee and tell me the day whereon he died The Sepulchers of the Servants of Christ are so famous that they possess the most Royal and Imperial City of the World and the day whereon they died is known and observed as festival by all The Sepulcher of Alexander is unknown even to his own Countrymen but that of these is known to the very Barbarians Besides the Sepulchers of the Servants of Christ excell in splendor and magnificence the Palaces of Kings not onely in respect of the beauty and sumptuousness of their buildings wherein they also exceed but which is much more in the reverence and joy of those who repair unto them For even he who is clothed in Purple frequents their Tombs and humbly kisses them and laying aside his Majesty and Pomp supplicates their prayers and assistance with God Almighty he who wears the Diadem taking a Fisherman and a Maker of Tents for his Patrons and Protectors What miracles hath not God wrought by the Reliques of his Servants and what prodigies have not been effected by their bodies St. Chrysostome writes of St. Juventius Chrysost in Serm. de Juven Max. Sever. in Ep. ad Socrum and St. Maximus that their bodies after death cast forth such beams of light that the eyes of those who were present were not able to suffer them Sulpicius Severus writes of St. Martin that his dead body remained in a manner glorified that his flesh was pure as Chrystal and white as milk What wonders did God work by the bodies of St. Edward the King and St. Francis Xavier preserving them incorrupted for so many years and if he do those great things with their Bodies who are under the Earth what will he do with their Souls which are above the Heavens and what with them both when their glorious Bodies shall arise and after the Day of Judgement united to their Souls enter in triumph into the holy and eternal City of God CAP. III. Of the Riches of the eternal Kingdom of Heaven THe Riches in Heaven are no less than the Honours though those as hath been said are inestimable There can be no greater riches than to want nothing which is good nor to need any thing which can be desired and in that blessed life no good shall fall nor no desire be unsatisfied And if as the Philosophers say he is not rich who possesseth much
but he who desires nothing There being in Heaven no desire unaccomplished there must needs be great riches It was also a position of the Stoicks That he was not poor who wanted but he who was necessitated Since then in the Celestial Kingdom there is necessity of nothing most rich is he who enters into it By reason of these Divine Riches Christ our Saviour when he speaks in his Parables of the Kingdom of Heaven doth often express it under Names and Enigma's of things that are rich sometimes calling it the Hidden Treasure and sometimes the Precious Pearl and other times the Lost Drachma For if Divine happiness consist in the eternal possession of God what riches may be compared with his who enjoyes him and what inheritance to that of the Kingdom of Heaven What Jewel more precious than the Divinity and what Gold more pure than the Creator of Gold and all things precious who gives himself for a Possession and Riches unto the Saints to the end they should abhorre those Riches which are temporal if by them the eternal are endangered Let not therefore those who are to die to morrow afflict themselves for that which may perish sooner than they Let them not toyl to enjoy that which they are shortly to leave nor let them with more fervour pray for those things which are transitory than those which are eternal preferring the Creature before the Creator not seeking God for what he is but for what he gives Wherefore St. Austin sayes Aug. in Psal 52. God will be served gratis will be beloved without interest that is purely for himself and not for any thing without himself and therefore he who in invokes God to make him rich does not invoke God but that which he desires should come unto him for what is invocation but calling something unto him wherefore when thou shalt say My God give me riches thou dost not desire that God but riches should come unto thee for if thou hadst invoked God he would have come unto thee and been thy riches but thou desiredst to have thy Coffers full and thy heart empty and God fills not Chests but breasts § 2. Besides the possession of God it imports us much to frame a conception of this Kingdom of Heaven which is that of the Just where they shall reign with Christ eternally whose riches must needs be immense since they are to be Kings of so great and ample a Kingdom The place then which the Blessed are to inhabit is called she Kingdom of Heaven because it is a most large Region and much greater than can perhaps fall under the capacity of our understanding And if the Earth compared with Heaven be but a point and yet contain so many Kingdoms what shall that be which is but one Kingdom and yet extended over the whole Heavens How poor and narrow a heart must that Christian have who confines his love to things present sweating and toyling for a small part of the goods of this World which it self is so little why does he content himself with some poor patch of the Earth when he may be Lord of the whole Heavens Although this Kingdom of God be so great and spacious yet it is not dispeopled but as full of Inhabitants of all Nations and conditions as if it were a City or some particular House There as the Apostle said are many thousands of Angels an infinite number of the Just even as many as have died since Abel and thither also shall repair all who are to die unto the end of the World and after judgement shall there remain for ever invested in their glorious bodies There shall inhabit the Angelical Spirits distinguished with great decency into their Nine Orders unto whom shall correspond Nine others of the Saints Patriarchs Prophets Apostles Martyrs Confessors Pastors Doctors Priests and Levites Monks and Hermits Virgins and other holy Women This populous City shall not be inhabited with mean and base People but with Citizens so noble rich just and discreet that all of them shall be most holy and wise Kings How happy shall it be to live with such persons The Queen of Saba onely to see Salomon came from the end of the Earth and to see Titus Livius Nations and Provinces far distant came to Rome To behold a King issue out of his Palace all the People flock together What shall it then be not onely to see but to live and raign with so many Angels and converse with so many eminent and holy Men If onely to see St. Anthony in the Desert men left their Houses and Countries what joy shall it be to discourse and converse with so many Saints in Heaven If there should now descend from thence one of the Prophets or Apostles with what earnestness and admiration would every one strive to see and hear him In the other World we shall hear and see them all St. Romane at the sight of one Angel when he was a Gentile left the world and his life to become a Christian How admirable shall it then be to see thousand of thousands in all their beauty and greatness and so many glorious bodies of Saints in all their lustre If one Sun be sufficient to clear up the whole World here below what joy shall it be to behold those innumerable Sum in that Region of light From this multitude of Inhabitants the place of glory is not only called the Kingdom of Heaven but the City of God It is called a Kingdom for its immense greatness and a City for its great beauty and population It is not like other Kingdoms and Provinces which contain huge Deserts inaccessible Mountains and thick Woods nor is it devided into many Cities and Villages distant one from another but this Kingdom of God although a most spacious Region is all one beautiful City Who would not wonder if all Spain or Italy were but one City and that as beautiful as Rome in the time of Augustus Caesar who found it of Brick and left it of Marble What a sight were that of Chaldaea if it were all a Babylon or that of Syria if all a Jerusalem What shall then be the Celestial City of Saints whose greatness possesses the whole Heavens and is as the holy Scripture describes it to exaggerate the riches of the Saints all of Gold and precious Stones The Gates pf this City were as St. John sayes one entire Pearl and the foundations of the Walls Jasper Saphire Calcedon Emerald Topaz Jacinth Amethist and other most precious Stones The Streets of fine Gold so pure as it seemed Chrystal joyning in one substance the firmness of Gold and transparency of Chryftal and the beauty both of one and the other If all Rome were of Saphire how would it amaze the world how marvelous then will the holy City be which though extended over so many millions of leagues is all of Gold Pearl and precious Stones or to say better of a matter of farre more value
his Body cast forth a most fragrant perfume If this be in corruptible flesh what shall be in the immortal Bodies of the Saints The taste also in that blessed Country shall not want the delight of its proper object For although the Saints shall not there feed which were to necessitate that happy state unto something besides it self yet the tongue and pallat shall be satiated with most pleasant and savoury relishes so as with great decency and cleanliness they shall have the delight of meat without the trouble of eating by reason of the great delicacy of this Celestial taste The glory of the Saints is often signified in holy Scripture under the names of a Supper Banquet Manna Aug. lib. de spiritu vita Laur. Justin de Dis Mon. ca. 23. St. Austin sayes it cannot be explicated how great shall be the delight and sweetness of the taste which shall eternally be found in Heaven And St. Laurentius Justinianus affirms that an admirable sweetness of all that can be delightful to the taste shall satisfie the pallat with a most agreeable satiety If Esau sold his Birthright for a dish of Lentil pottage well may we mortifie our taste here upon earth that we may enjoy that perfect and incomparable one in Heaven The touch also shall there receive a most delightful entertainment All they tread upon shall seem unto the Just to be flowers and the whole disposition of their Bodies shall be ordered with a most sweet and exquisite temperature For as the greatest penances of the Saints were exercised in this sense by the afflictions endured in their Bodies so it is reason that this sense should then receive a particular reward And as the torments of the damned in hell are most expressed in that sense so the Bodies of the Blessed in Heaven are in that sense to receive a special joy and refreshment And as the heat of that infernal fire without light is to penetrate even to the entrals of those miserable persons so the candor and brightness of the celestial light is to penetrate the bodies of the Blessed and fill them with an incomparable delight and sweetness All then what we are to do is to live in that true and perfect life all is to be joy in that eternal happiness Therefore as St. Anselme sayes Ansel de Simil. c. 59. the eyes nose mouth hands even to the bowels and marrow of the bones and all and every part of the body in general and particular shall be sensible of a most admirable pleasure and content Joan. de Tamba Trac de Deliciis sensibilibus Paradisi Et Nich. de Nise de quat Noviss 3. Myst 4. Consi The Humanity of Christ our Redeemer is to be the principal and chief joy of all the Senses and therefore John Tambescensis and Nicholas of Nise say that as the intellectual knowledge of the Divinity of Christ is the joy and essential reward of the Soul so the sensitive knowledge of the Humanity of Christ is the chief good and essential joy of the Senses and the utmost end and felicity whereunto they can aspire This it seems was meant by our Saviour in St. John when speaking unto the Father he said This is life eternal that is essential blessedness as Nicholas de Nise interprets it that they know thee the only true God in which is included the essential glory of the Soul and him whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ in which is noted the essential blessedness of the Senses in so much as onely in the Humanity of our Saviour the appetite of the Senses shall be so perfectly satisfied as they shall have no more to desire but in it shall receive all joy pleasure and fulness of delight for the eyes shall be the sight of him who is above all beauty for the ears one onely word of his shall sound more sweetly than all the harmonious musick of the Celestial spirits for the smell the fragrancy that shall issue from his most holy Body shall exceed the perfume of spices for the taste and touch to kiss his feet and sacred wounds shall be beyond all sweetness It is much also to be noted that the blessed Souls shall be crowned with some particular joyes which the very Angels are not capable of For first it is they onely who are to enjoy the Crowns of Doctors Virgins and Martyrs since no Angel can have the glory to have shed his blood and died for Christ neither to have overcome the flesh and by combats and wrastlings subjected it unto reason Wherefore Saint Bernard said The chastity of men was more glorious than that of Angels Secondly men shall have the glory of their bodies and joy of their senses which the Angels cannot For as they want the enemy of the Spirit which is the Flesh so they must want the glory of the victory Neither shall they have this great joy of mankind in being redeemed by Christ from sin and as many damnations into hell as they have committed mortal sins and to see themselves now freed and secure from that horrid evil and so many enemies of the Soul which they never had which must needs produce a most unspeakable joy Cap. VI. The excellency and perfection of the Bodies of the Saints in the life eternal WE will not forbear also to consider what man shall be when he is eternal when being raised again at the great day he shall enter Soul and Body into Heaven Let us run over if you please all those kinds of goods which expect us in that Land of promise When God promised Abraham the Country of Palestine he commanded him to look upon it and travel and compass it from side to side Gen. 13. Lift up thine eyes saith the Lord and from the place where thou standest look towards the North and towards the South and towards the East and towards the West All the land which thou seest I will give unto thee and thy seed for ever And immediately after Arise and walk the land in length and breadth for I will certainly give it thee We may take these words as spoken unto our selves since they seem to promise us the Kingdom of Heaven for no man shall enter into that which he docs not desire and no man can desire that as he ought to do which he has not walked over in his consideration for that which is not known is hardly desired And therefore we ought often to contemplate the greatness of this Land the length of its eternity and the breadth and largeness of its felicity which is so far extended that it fills not onely the Soul but the Body with happiness and glory that glory of the Soul redounding unto the Body and perfecting it with those four most excellent gifts and replenishing it with all felicity which can be imagined or desired If Moses seeing an Angel in a corporal figure onely upon the back part and but in passage received so great a glory from
no wayes hinder them they shall therefore in the same manner walk or stay upon Water Air Heavens as upon Earth It was miraculous in St. Quirinus Martyr St. Maurus and St. Francis of Paula that they walked upon waters passed rapid rivers and seas without Vessels but the glorious bodies shall not onely be able to traverse the seas mount into the air but enter into flames secure and without hurt It is said of S. Francis of Assisium that in the fervour of his prayers and contemplations he was seen lifted up into the air and the great Servant of God Father Diego Martines of the Society of Jesus was lifted up in prayer above the highest trees and Towers and hanging in the air persisted in his devotion If God vouchsafe so great favours to his servants in this valley of tears what priviledges will he deny to the Citizens of Heaven To this so notable gift of Agility shall be annexed that of Penetration by which their glorious bodies shall have their way free and pervious through all places no impediment shall stop their motion and for them shall be no prison or enclosure They shall with greater ease pass through the middle of a rock than an arrow through the air It shall be the same thing for them to mount unto the Moon where they shall meet no solid body to oppose them as to pierce unto the center through rocks mettals and the gross body of the earth We wonder to hear that the Zahories see those things which are hid under the earth Let us admire that which is certain that the Saints cannot onely see but enter into the profundity of the earth and tell what minerals and other secrets are contained in its entrails Metaphrastes writes that a certain Goth a Souldier of the Garrison of Edessa fell passionately in love with a Maid of the same City and sinding no other way to enjoy her demanded her in marriage but the Mother and Kindred gave no ear to the treaty trusting little to a Barbarian and a Stranger who carrying her into a Country far distant as his was might there use her at his pleasure The Souldier notwithstanding persisting still in his suit with many promises of good entertainment gained at last the consent of the Maid and her Friends onely the Mother would not be satisfied before they had entred all together into the Temple of the holy Martyrs St. Samona Curia and Abiba and that there the Souldier had renewed his promises by solemn oath and called the holy Martyrs as witnesses which done the Maid was delivered unto him whom he not much after carried into his own Country where he was formerly married and had his Wife yet living There better to conceal his wickedness he fell into a greater and like a wild beast without pity enclosed the poor woman alive in a Sepulcher and there left her She thus betrayed had recourse unto the Saints whom she with tears invoked as witnesses of the Souldiers treachery and breach of faith At the instant the holy Martyrs appeared in a glorious equipage and casting her into a gentle sleep conveyed her the Sepulcher still remaining lockt without hurt into her own Country where they left her The Barbarian ignorant of what had happened and perswading himself she was long fince dead returned a second time to Edessa where convinced of the crime he satisfied it with his life If the Saints then have power to make the persons of others pass through distinct bodies much more are they able to make their own to penetrate them without impediment Finally the Servants of Christ shall be there so replenished with all goods both of soul and body that there shall be nothing more for them to desire And every one even during this life hoping for those eternal goods may say with St. Austin What wouldest thou my Body what is' t thou defirest my Soul There ye shall find all which you desire If you are pleased with beauty there the Just shine as the Sun and if with any pure delight there not one but a whole sea of pleasure which God keeps in store for the Blessed shall quench your thirst Let men then raise their desires unto that place where only they can be accomplished Let them not gape after things of the earth which cannot satisfie them but let them look after those in Heaven which are onely great onely eternal and can onely fill the capacity of mans heart CAP. VII How we are to seek after Heaven and to preferre it before all the goods of the Earth LEt a Christian compare the miseries of this life with the felicities of the other the weakness of our nature in this mortal estate with the vigour and priviledges of that immortal which expects us and let him excite and stir up himself to gain a glory eternal by troubles short and temporary Justinus lib. 1. Cyrus when he intended to invade the Medes commanded his Persians upon a certain day to meet him with each one a sharp Hatchet They obeying he willed them to cut down a great Wood which performed with much toyl and diligence he invited them for the next day unto a sumptuous Banquet and in the height of their mirth demanded of them whether they liked better the first dayes labour or that dayes feast The answer was ready all cried out That dayes entertainment With this he engaged them to make warr upon the Medes assuring them that after a short trouble in subduing an effeminate Nation they should enjoy incomparable pleasure and be Masters of inestimable riches This served him to make the Persians follow him and conquer the Kingdom of the Medes If this motive were sufficient to make a barbarous people preferre a doubtful reward before a certain and hazardous labour why should not a certain reward and infinitely greater than the labour suffice us Christians Let us compare that Celestial Supper of the other life with the troubles of this The greatness of the Kingdom of Heaven with the littleness of our services The joyes above with the goods below and our labours will seem feasts our services repose and the felicity of earth misery and baseness What is the honour of this life which is in it self false given by lying men short and limited in respect of that honour the Just receive in Heaven which is true given by God eternal extended through the Heavens and manifested to all that are in them Men and Angels What are the riches of the Earth which often fail are ever full of dingers and cares and never free their owners from necessity in comparison of those which have no end and give all security and abundance What are their short pleasures which prejudice the health consume the substance and make infamous those who seek them in respect of those immense joyes of glory which with delight joyn honour and profit What is this life of misery to that full of blessings and happiness and what those evil qualities
would he be unto so merciful a benefactor He hath done no less for us but much more For if he hath not drawn us out of Hell he hath not thrown us into it as we deserved which is the greater favour Tell me if a Creditor should cast that Debtor into prison who owed him a thousand Duckets and after the enduring of much affliction at last release him or should suffer another who owed him fifty thousand Duckets to goe up and down free without touching a thread of his garment Whether of the Debtors received the greater benefit I believe thou wilt say the latter More then are we endebted unto God Almighty and therefore ought to serve him better Consider how a man would live who should be restored to life after he had been in Hell Thou shouldst live better since thou art more indebted to Almighty God Lib. 4. Dialog cap. 36. St. Gregory writes of one who though he had not been released out of Hell but onely was upon the point of damnation yet led afterwards such a life that the change was admirable The Saint sayes that a Monk called Peter who before he retired to the desert was in a trance for some time as dead and being restored to his senses made this relation That he had had a sight of Hell and that he had seen in it great chastisements and innumerable places full of fire and that he knew some who had been very powerful in the World hanging in the midst of the flames and himself being now at the brink to be cast into the same he saw on the sudden a bright shining Angel who withheld him faying Return to thy body and confider well with what care and diligence it suits with thy profession to lead thy life from hence forwards So it was that being returned to his body he treated it with such austerity of penance watches and fasts that although he should not have spoken a word his manner of life did publish sufficiently what he had seen Secondly we are taught to exercise an invincible patience in suffering the afflictions and troubles of this life that by enduring these thankfully we may escape those of the other He who shall consider the eternity of those torments which he deserves will not grumble at the pains of this short life how bitter soever There is no state or condition upon earth how necesitous how poor how miserable soever which the damned would not endure and think it an infinite happiness if they might change with it Neither is there any course of life so austere which he who had once experienced those burning flames if he might live again would not make more rigorous He who hath once deserved eternal torments let him never murmure at temporal evils let his mouth be ever stopt from complaining of the crosses or petty injuries offered him in this life who hath committed offences worthy the pains of the other From this consideration there was nothing which the Saints would not willingly suffer no penance which they would not undergoe Apoc. 14. Wherefore St. John the Evangelist after he had spoken of the smoke which ascended from the torments of the damned for a world of worlds and and that they did not rest by day nor night presently adds Here is the patience of the Saints because seeing that all the troubles of this life were temporal and the torments of the other eternal nothing that they endured seemed much unto them Chrysost To. 5. Epist 5. ad Theod. So did St. John Chrsostome and advises us to do the like bearing with patience all temporal pains whatsoever with the consideration of the eternal From the consideration of little thing saith he let us frame a conjecture of the great If thou goe into a Bath and shalt find it excessive hot think on Hell If thou art tormented with the heat think on Hell If thou art tormented with the heat of some violent Fever pass unto the consideration of those eternal flames which burn without end and think that if a Bath or Calenture so afflict thee how shalt thou endure that River of fire Homil. 2. in 1. Ep. ad Thess And further the same Saint When thou shalt see any thing great in this present life think presently of the Kingdom of Heaven and so thou shalt not value it much and when thou shalt see any thing terrible think on Hell and thou wilt laugh at it When the concupiscence or desire of any temporal thing shall afflict thee think that the delight of sin is of no estimation and that the pleasure of it is nothing For if the fear of Lawes which are enacted upon earth be of that force that they are able to deterre us from evil actions much more will the thought of things to come and that immortal chastisement of eternal pain If the fear of an Earthly King divert us from many evils how much more shall the fear of a King eternal If the fight of a dead man detain us much more shall the thought of hell and that eternal death If we often think of hell we shall never fall into it We ought also often to call to minde the evils of the next life that we may more despise the pleasures of this because temporal felicity uses often to end in eternal miserie All that is precious in the world honour wealth fame pleasure all the splendour of the Earth is but smoke and a shadow if we compare the small duration of them with the eternity of those torments in the other world Put all the Silver in the world together in one heap all the Gold all the Precious-stones Diamonds Emeralds with all other the richest Jewels all the Triumphs of the Romans all the Dainties of the Assytians c. all would deserve to be of no other value than dirt ignominy and gall if to be possessed with hazard of falling at last into the pit of Hell Let us call to mind that sentence of our blessed Saviour What will it avail a man to gain the whole world if he lose his soul If they should make us Lords and Masters I say not of great wealth but of the whole world we should not admit of it with the least hazard of being damned for ever Let one enjoy all the contents and regalo's imaginable let him be raised up to the highest pitch of honour let him triumph with all the greatness of the world All this is but a dream if after this mortal life he finds himself at length plunged into hell-fire Whosoever should consider the lamentable day in which two Sons and three Daughters and his Wife the Emperess were put to death in presence of the Emperor Mauritius and afterwards himself was bereaved of life by command of a dastardly Coward and vicious fellow no doubt but he would esteem as very vain and of no worth all the twenty years of his Raign in his powerful Empire and Majesty though his punishment was not
reverence him with an infinite honour is a thing so highly repugnant to his Majesty and benefits that he apprehends it more in the nature of evil than all the good works of the world in the nature of good and if God were capable of grief would more afflict him than all the pious actions of the Saints content him Certainly amongst men the honour which is given to one who deserves it takes not so much as a contempt done unto him who merits it not A King values not much the honour which is given him by his Vassals because he takes it not for a courtesie but a duty but to be outraged and scorned by one especially whom he had favoured with his benefits sticks near unto his heart for not onely Kings but all men think honour due unto them and disrespect an injurie And as fire being inordinately applyed to the hand makes it sensible of a greater grief that it can receive delight by being sound because excessive heat is repugnant and a natural temper due unto it so disrespects and affronts offered to a noble personage which are repugnant to his worth grieves him more than he can be pleased with all the honours and respects due unto him There is no resentment amongst men so quick as that of dishonour nor any thing which causes more grief and vexation If some person of quality should have his hat pluckt off from his head in scorn and receive a dozen of bastonadoes from some base fellow that affront would not be recompensed although a thousand should put off their caps to him and kiss his hand By this may in some sort appear the stupendious irreverence and incivility towards God in a mortal sin in so much as St. Paul calls it kicking or spurning the Son of God And therefore it is no marvel if one onely grievous offence over-weigh all the service and honours done by the Saints and holy Angels and that all that they have or can do cannot in rigour satisfie for one mortal sin This is the reason why it was necessary that God should become man being the Divine Justice could not be appeased with less than the satisfaction of a Divine person Let those therefore cease to marvel that a momentary sin should be punisht with eternal torments who see that for sin God was made man and died for man And certainly it is a far greater wonder that God should die for the sin of another than that man should for his own sin suffer an eternal punishment And if the malice of sin be so exorbitant that nothing could satisfie for it less than God it is nothing strange that that which hath no limit nor bound in evil should have no limit in punishment but should exceed all time and be eternal And if a treason committed against a temporal Prince be chastised with loss of life and goods of the Traitor and with the punishment also of his posterity which in as much as concerns the Prince is eternal Why should not the offence of a vile worm against his Creator be tormented with eternal pains The greatness of honour decreases and grows less according to the height and dignity of the person honoured so as that honour which done to an ordinary person would seem excessive given unto a Prince is nothing And to the contrary the greatness of an injury rises and grows higher according to the worth of him who is injured so as God who is infinite being the person offended deserves that the injury done unto him should be chastised with an infinite punishment at least in time or that he who satisfies for it should be a person of infinite worth and perfection From hence it follows that the guilt of mortal sin being so horrid there can be no satisfaction of a pure creature sufficient to expiate it nor any merit which can deserve the pardon Let us grant that Adam had never offended nor contaminated the whole race of mankind with his sin Let us grant that there had never been a sin of David St. Paul St. Austin St. Mary Magdalene or any other Man or Angel whatsoever and that there had been but one onely mortal sin the least of all others committed by a man in a wilderness without witness by night and that onely in thought yet such were the grievousness of this one sin that for it no punishment of the creatures were sufficient to satisfie the Divine Justice If God should ruine Heaven throw down the Stars drie up the Sea confound the Elements and strike whole mankinde with thunder all would not give an equal satisfaction to the Divine Justice for this one sin For this destruction of Heaven and Earth and Man were but of things finite and limited and the injured person is God who is infinite and betwixt finit and infinite there is no proportion In like manner no merit of meer creatures were sufficient to deserve pardon for it If all mankind should cloath themselves in sackcloth and fast with bread and water If all the Martyrs should offer up their torments and all the Confessours their penances and the very Mother of God all her vertues and should dissolve her self into tears all were not enough to deserve the pardon of that one sin Onely the Son of God could be sufficient satisfaction Let men consider this let them weigh the grievousness of a sin against God and let them tremble at the very thought that possibly they may commit it §. 3. The offence which is done to God Almighty by a mortal sin is in it self and in its own substance most grievous as we have already observed yet there are certain Circumstances which do much encrease the good or evil of that action whereunto they are annexed And that of sin is so accursed and abominable on all parts that not one or two but all circumstances joyned together concurre to make the insolence and malice of it most insupportable We will therefore consider them Tull. in Rhet● S. The. 1.2 q. 7. ar 3. one by one Tully whom St. Thomas and the rest of Divines follow makes them seaven which contribute much to the qualification of a moral action The first Who it is that doth it The second What it is he doth The third Where he does it The fourth With what helps The fifth Wherefore The sixth After what manner and The seaventh When he does it Aristot Eth. 3. Unto these seaven Aristotle adds another About what it is These circumstances are in absolute actions which have no relation to another For in actions which have a respect to a third person another circumstance ought much to be considered which is Against whom it is Let us now see how in all those circumstances sin is most abhominable and accursed For if we consider Who it is that sins it is a most vile and wretched man who presumes to lift up his hands against his Creator And what is Man but a Vessel of dung a Sink of
corruption and by birth a Slave of the Devil and yet he dares offend his Maker An offence against God were most grievous though from another God if it were possible infinite and equal to himself but that his creature should be so audacious against his omnipotent Lord is beyond amazement But What is that which a sinner does when he offends It is according to St. Anselm an endeavour to pluck the Crown from the head of God and place it upon his own It is according to St. Bernard to desire to murther his God It is according to the Apostle St. Paul to kick and spurn against the Son of God It is to crucifie again the Lord of life If any of these things were attempted against a Majesty upon earth it were enough to make the offenders flesh to be pluckt off with pincers to have him torn in pieces with four horses to pull down his house and sow the place with salt and make his whole Linage infamous If such an offence committed by one man against another betwixt whom the difference is not great being both equal in nature be so hainous what shall it deserve being committed against God the Lord and Creator of all whose immense greatness is infinitely distant from the nature of his creature O good God who is able to explicate what a sinner does against thee and himself he despises thy Majesty razes out thy Law from his heart laughs at thy Justice scorns thy threats despises thy promises makes a solemn renunciation of thy glory thou hast promised him and all to bind himself an eternal slave unto Satan desiring rather to please thine enemy than thee who art his Father his Friend and all his good desiring rather to die eternally by displeasing thee than to enjoy heaven for ever by serving thee Let us now see Where and in What place a sinner presumes to sin and be a Traitor unto his God It is even in his own world in his own house and knowing that his Creator looks upon him he offends him If a sin were committed where God could not see it it were yet an enormous fault but to injury his Creator before his face what an unspeakable impudence If he who sins could go into another world where God did not inhabit and there in secret under the earth should sin after such a manner as onely himself should know it yet it were a temerarious boldness but to sin in his own house which is this world what hell doth it not deserve For a man onely to lay his hand upon his sword in the Palace of a King is capital and deserves death For a sinner then by his sins to spurn and crucifie the Son of God in the house of his Father and before his face what understanding can conceive the greatness of such a malice And therefore David with reason dissolved himself into tears because he had sinned in the presence of God and with a grief which pierced his heart cried out I have done evil before thee Besides this we not onely sin against God in his own house but even in his armes whilest we are upheld by his omnipotency If there were a Son so wicked who whilest he was cherished in his Mothers bosom should strike and buffet her and endeavour to kill her with his poniard every one would think that Child some Devil incarnate How then dares man offend God who sustains preserves and hath redeemed him Certainly that Christian ought to be esteemed worse than a Devil The hainousness of this malice in sin is much augmented by the Helpes which a sinner uses to effect it For he turns those very divine benefits which he hath received from God against him who gave them The sense which men usually have of ingratitude is most apprehensive If to forget a benefit be ingratitude to despise it is an injurie but to use it against the Benefactor I know not how to call it This does he who sins making use of those creatures which God created for his service to offend him and convert his divine benefits into arms against God himself What could we say if a King to honour his Souldier should make him a Knight arm him with his own arms and should girt his sword about him with his own hands and that the Souldier so soon as he was possest of the sword should draw it against the King and murther him This wickedness which seems impossible amongst men is ordinary in man towards God who being honoured so many wayes by his Creator and enriched by so many benefits for as much as in him lies bereaves God of his honour and according to St. Bernard desires to bereave him of his life His understanding which he receiv'd from God he uses in finding out a way to execute his sin with his hands he performs it and with all his power offends him who gave them Besides the impudence of man arrives at that height that he makes God himself assist him to sin This is that which our Lord much complains of when he sayes by his Prophet You made me serve you in your wickedness because God concurring to every action and natural motion of man who without his concurrence could neither move hand nor foot nor tongue man disposing his tongue to murmur and his hand to steal makes use of the concourse of God against God himself Who is so pitiless and inhumane to enforce the Father to assist in the murther of his onely Son compelling the Fathers hand to execute the stroke which is to pierce the heart of his onely begotten Equivalent to this is done by a sinner making God to concurre to an action by which man sinning crucifies again the Son of God What cruelty is this in a sinner who for this onely impiety deserves a thousand deaths But if we shall consider Why man does this it is a circumstance which will amaze us at the malice of sin Why does a sinner give this disgust unto his God Wherefore does he despise his Creator Wherefore is he a Traitor unto the Lord of the World Wherefore does he kick and spurn at Jesus Christ Wherefore does he abhorre his Redeemer Wherefore crucifies he the Son of God What reason hath he for so monstrous a wickedness Is it perchance because the world should not be ruin'd Is it perchance because his salvation stands upon it Is it perhaps to make himself a God Is it perhaps in respect or for love of another God No it is none of these but only for a base and filthy pleasure for a foolish fancy of man because he will and no more O horrid insolence O mad fury of men which without a cause so grievously offend their Creator How is it that the Heavens resolve not into thunderbolts and throw a thousand deaths upon them who do and dare by their sins irritate and offend so good and gracious a God The Manner also of our sinning would astonish any who should seriously consider it It
the bowels for all eternity all that our imagination can frame reaches not so immense an evil If we cannot therefore finde the depth of the malice of sin by way of Affimation let us try what may be done by the other way of Negation But this will also fail us For the evil of plagues famine and death are not it A mortal sin is more then these The evils of poverty dishonour and torments are not it It is more then these The torments of hell are not it It is above hell and all the pains of it Think with thy self that all the atoms which are to be found in the air all the sands in the sea all the leaves on the trees all the grass in the fields all the starrs in the heavens think I say that they are foul and ugly bodies all most deformed Monsters and frame to thy self a Monster and ugly Creature which should be made of all these will this equalize the foulness of a mortal sin It is not this ugly Monster nor this foul deformed Creature but it is a foulness and ugliness that doth far surpass all these and all horrid shapes and figures imaginable And let not this seem strange unto thee For not onely the evil of a Mortal sin but even that of a Venial is greater than all the evils of Hell or the evils within or without it all tht monstrousuess all the deformity of all things that are or can be contracted into one do not equal it Sin is more than all And therefore as St. Dionysius said of God That he was above what was good or what was fair because his goodness and beauty were of a superiour kind So it may be said of sin It is neither deformity abomination horror or malice but is something more than all these Let a sinner therefore know himself and that he is by sin above all that is ugly foul or monstrous For as he that hath whiteness is as white as that which makes him so so he that is in sin is as horrible and ill as sin it self Let him then reflect whether he is to sink charged with such a guilt and how much he ought to abhorr and loath himself Certainly if he should sink into Hell he would there finde no torment worse then himself If he should return into the Abyss of nothing he would be there better then in that Abyss of malice which is in sin Let him then reflect whether so unworthy and vile a wretch ought to have the same use of the creatures as if he were in the state of innocency and without this blemish of sin Let him consider if a person so infamous so abhominable as himself ought to use the things of this world for his delight honour pomp and ostentation The Emperour Marcus Aurelius Lord of the world and possessor of the greatest honours it could give him though a Gentil yet thought himself so worthy of contempt that he writes in this manner Treat thy self O soul with ignominy Anton. lib. 2. and despise thy self For thou hast no title to honour It is a prodigious thing that he who hath committed a mortal sin should desire honour and respect That he should complain of the troubles of this life and desire to be cherished and made much of That he who is the shame and infamy of the world should gape after glory That he who is a Traytor to his God should wish to be honoured and respected He who hath deserved hell for an eternitie why should he grumble at a short sickness or the necessities of this life which if he make the right use of may serve as a means of his salvation Let him therefore who hath sinned know that he is not to make the same use of the creatures as if he were innocent he is not to aim at other honour then that of God he is not to seek after ease and the Commodities of life but the securitie of his salvation not to thirst after the pleasures of the world but to perform strict penances for his sins past O if one knew himself perfectly with what different eyes would he behold the things of the world he would look upon them as things not appertaining to him at all and if he did not despise them at least he would make no account of them The Son of God onely because he took upon him the form of a sinner would not use the goods of this life but rather imbraced all that was troublesome painful and bitter in it why should he then who is really and in substance a sinner seek honours and delights Let him know the means of his salvation since Christ himself hath taught them to wit Penance Mortification and the Cross If Christ because he bore the sins of others used not temporal goods and the Commodities of life why should man who is loaden with his own sins complain he wants the pleasures and conveniences of it Why should he gape after the goods of the earth who is infected with a greater evil then that of hell The admirable man blessed Francis Borgia the great despiser of himself and the world out of this consideration was most content in the tribulations and want of all things temporal and the least comfort in his greatest necessities seemed too much for him All men wondered to see him so poor and the incommodities he suffered in his travail when he visited the Colledges of the Society in Spain Amongst the rest a certain Gentleman amazed at his great pains and sufferance said unto him Father how is it possible that having been so great a Lord you can endure the troubles and inconveniences of the wayes To whom the servant of God answered Sir do not pity me for I alwayes send before me a Harbinger who provides plentifully for all things necessary This Harbinger was the Knowledge of himself which in his greatest necessities made what he had appear too plentiful § 3. Besides this he who hath sinned ought to Consider that he hath need of Gods holy hand to draw him out of that misery or if he be already by repentance freed to preserve him from falling again into it That the means to obtain this is not the pride of the world the riches of the earth or the pleasures of the flesh but fasting sackcloth humiliation and penance Let him remember that of himself he is nothing and to that nothing hath added sin that being nothing he can do nothing that is good and that by sin he hath disobliged him who only could assist him in doing good Man is of himself nothing but a Lye and Sin two horrid and profound Abysses Let him imitate David who said I cried unto thee O Lord from the deeps what other deeps then those two of Nothing and of Sin which have no bottom Let him then who hath once offended his Creator know himself and where he remains Let him pray sigh and crie from his nothing and from the depth of his
miserie that he may be heard of his God And certainly for him who is in the condition of a penitent and to demand mercy it is not seemly to use superfluities to imploy himself in vanities to take delight in the world enjoy the Creatures and seek after greatness And although it were lawful in the integrity of nature when man was free from the corruption of sin to use the Creatures with more libertie yet being now fallen it is no wayes tolerable but let him look upon himself as one guilty who hath offended his God and is in fine a miserable man The Philosophers who considered nature not as it was by sin but as it ought to be in it self measured there vertues by that rule and therefore knew not the vertue of humility nor used that of penance And the vertues of Magnanimity Constancy and Magnificence they extended so far that many actions which the Stoicks and Peripateticks called vertuous may be esteemed vicious But the horribleness of sin and the weakness of humane nature being now discovered the estate of things is changed and humilitie ought still to reign both in our souls and bodies and many acts of other vertues esteemed by them are to be corrected We are to choose different Mediums for the advancing our End from those of the Philosophers both because the ends we aym at are not the same and because we know our selves to be in a far other condition then they imagined The End proposed by the Philosophers was meerly natural to wit the Happiness and felicity of this life The estate of humane nature they conceived to be free and uncontaminated by sin and that it had suffcient force of it self to do good In all this they were deceived and it is not therefore strange if for the obtaining of their ends they taught wayes distinct from those of Christians who know their end to be supernatural to wit the happiness not of this but of the other life who know also their estate of nature not to be free and entire as it was at first but corrupted and defaced by sin and that of it self it hath neither force nor efficacy to execute any thing that is good unless assisted by the grace and mercy of God It is therefore no marvail if Chrisitians who know themselves their end and condition make use of such Vetues and Mediums as the Philosophers knew not Neither is it much that the Philosophers took some vertuous acts for vices since they mistook many vices for vertues Aristotle the Prince of natural and moral Philosophers knew not Humility voluntary Povertie and Penance to be vertues but rather condemned the last to be a kind of insensibility and one of those vices contrary to the vertue of temperance The Stoicks also held Pity and Commiseration for a vice But since the Gospel of Christ these are become the most necessary and recommended vertues and the most apt and ready means for the obtaining of our salvation These three vertues in which consists the contempt of all things temporal Aristotle knew not because he knew not himself By Humilitie Honours are despised by Poverty Riches and by Penance the Pleasures and Regaloes of the world And therefore he who will make the right and profitable use of things temporal for the gaining of eternity must as a sinner humble himself and do penance must not employ himself and the time of his life in gathering and heaping up riches which are so farre from being goods that to innumerable persons they have shut up the gates of the true and real goods which are onely the eternal unto which we are wholly to aspire not trusting in our own forces but in the mercy and passion of Jesus Christ CAP. III. The value of goods eternal is made apparent unto us by the Incarnation of the Son of God BUt above all which hath been said the incomparable difference betwixt things Temporal and Eternal is made most apparent unto us by the Incarnation and passion of Jesus Christ The gaining of eternity is a matter of so high concernement that the Son of God to the end we might obtain it was incarnate and made man and that we might despise things temporal is also of so great importance that for it it was convenient that Christ our Redeemer should suffer and die I know not what can raise in us a higher conception of the greatness of the one and baseness of the other then these high and stupendious acts of God Almighty And therefore though briefly we will say something of them both beginning with that admirable and great mystery of the Incarnation Great is all that which is eternal and so much imports us that rather than we should lose it God wrought a work of that height and love as amazed the Angels In which we will consider four things The greatness of the work The manner of putting it in execution The evils from which it frees us and The good we gain by it For the first which is the Greatness of the work we are to suppose the estate of man as he then stood which was the most miserable infamous and wretched condition that could be imagined He was become a slave so the Devil polluted with sin condemned unto eternal punnishment enemy to God and without hope of remedy For even the highest Seraphins could not imagin that without prejudice to the Justice of God it was possible for man to be redeemed from that miserable and ignominious estate For although all the men in the world should suffer a thousand deaths and all the orders of holy Angels in heaven should offer themselves in sacrifice and should suffer eternal torments in hell all would not satisfy for one mortal sin All created remedies were then impossible and although God should have created some more excellent and holy creature than the most high Seraphins yet that and they were insufficient to appease the divine justice incensed against man what remedy then where none was to be had what hope when all was despaire Certainly from what was or could be created it was impossible and from the Creator it was not known to be possible and if it was known to be possible who could hope that the offended party ty should satisfie for the offence committed against himself that the Creditor should pay what the debtor ought What hope then of remedy when all hope failed both from Heaven and Earth The onely remedy and that onely known to God was that God without prejudice to his justice might cover man with his mercy but that much to the cost of God himself and the greatest work whereunto his power and wisdome could extend But who could think he would imploy so great a work for his Enemy that he would let up the rest of his omnipotency for him who was a Traytor to his Lord Onely this way remained for God to make himself man the most great and stupendious work possible or imaginable But who could believe
for himself in the Incarnation and Passion for th● salvation of man was a high expression of his love but yet it was God who was served and who made use of one of the divine persons for the end which he pretends of his glory but that man should make use of God for his own glorie is beyond what we can think What a wonder is it that Christ should equal himself with Water Oyle and Balsome For as we use Water in Baptisme to justify our selves in Confirmation of Balsom to sanctify and fortify our selves of Oyle in extream Unction to purifie our selves so in this Sacrament we may use Christ for the acquiring of greater grace and increase of holiness A great matter then is the salvation of man since for this purpose God who is his End was content to be his Means I know not how the incomprehensible goodness and charitie of God can extend beyond this Let man therefore reflect how much it imports him to be saved Let him not stick at any thing that may further it Let him leave no stone unremoved let him leave no meanes unattempted since God himself becomes a Means of his salvation and to that end subjects himself to the disposition and will of a Creature Let nothing which is temporal divert him since God was not diverted by what was eternal If therefore to quit thy honours deny thy pleasures distribute thy riches unto the Poor be a means to save thee stick not at it since God stuck not at the greatness of his being which is above all but gave himself for thee The blessed Sacrament was also left us as a Pledge of future glory and eternal happiness For when Christ our Redeemer preached unto the world the contempt of temporal goods for the gaining of the eternal and pronounced that comfortable sentence Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the Kingdom of heaven not saying Theirs shall be but Theirs is giving it them in present It was convenient that since they could not then enter into the possession of those heavenly joyes which they had purchased with all they had upon earth that some equivalent pledge should now be given them in the time of their forbearance This pledge is the most blessed Body of our Redeemer Christ Jesus Son of the living God which is of greater worth and value then the heavens themselves Well may we then despise the fading goods of this life when we receive in hand such a pledge of the eternal Well may we renounce the perishing riches and the pleasures of nature when the treasure of grace is bestowed upon us The blessed Sacrament is also out Viaticum here upon earth Whereby we are given to understand that this life is but a pilgrimage wherein we travel towards eternity and that therefore we are not to stay and rest in what is temporal And because we are neither to enjoy the goods of this temporal life nor yet to enter upon those of the future to the end we may better suffer the renuntiation of the one and sustain the hopes of the other this blessed Sacrament is given us as a Viaticum so as the soul wandring in this valley of tears wherein she is not to please or detain her self in the delights of the world since her journey is for heaven might have somthing to comfort her in this absence from her Celestial Country Let us then consider the value of the End whereunto we travel since the journey is defrayd with so precious a Viaticum and that the pleasures of this world are so prejudicial unto our Salvation that this Pledge is given us from heaven to the end we should not so much as taste them The Israelites in their peregrinaon in the wilderness had Manna for their Viaticum which supplyed all their necessities for it not onely served to sustain their bodies but whilest they fed upon it they were not subject to infirmities neither did their garments decay with wearing insomuch as having it they had all things All this is but a shadow of our Divine Viaticum having which we need nothing and being provided of so Celestial a good may well spare what is temporal §. 2. A most principal end also of the institution of this most admirable Sacrament is to be a memorial of the Passion of the Son of God which being so efficacious a motive unto the contempt of things temporal as we have already said our Saviour hath almost in all the things of nature left us a draught of it For this reason in the holy Shrowd Paleot adm Hist de Christi stigmat Adricom 2. par descr Hiero. n. 44. Lansp hom 19. de Passione Andrad in descrip Terraesanctae Petrus de P. A. Consil Reg. Francis lib. 5. in Const in lib. inscrip Fraustus Annus wherein his wounded body was wrapt when they took him from the Cross there remained miraculously imprinted the signes of his Passion For this when loaden with his Cross the pious Veronica presented him with her Vail he returned it enriched with the Portraicture of his sacred countenance And as Lanspergius notes the fingers of the armed Souldier who gave him the blow were imprinted in the same Vail For this when he fell prostrate in the Garden and in a sweat of blood prayed unto his Father he left ingraved upon the stone whereon he prayed the print of his feet knees and hands And not farr from thence is found another stone where after he was apprehended the Souldiers throwing him down upon the ground he left imprinted the end of his toes his hands and knees which stone as Borcardus notes is so hard as 't is not possible to raze or cut any thing out of it even with iron instruments and this to the end the memory of his ineffable meekness and partience should be perpetual In like manner where he past the brook of Cedron he left another mark of his sacred feet as likewise of the rope wherewith they carried him tied So firmly would our Saviour have the memory of his Passion fixt in our hearts that he hath left the signes of it in the very rocks There hath been also seen an Oriental Jasper accidentally found whereon the dolorous countenance of our Saviour hath been exactly formed And blessed Aloysius de Gonzaga walking upon the Sea-shore found with great content of his spirit a pibble whereon were distinctly figured the five wounds of Christ our Redeemer And not onely in stones but in several other peeces of nature Anast Sinaita in Hexamer as St. Anastatius Sinaita observes he hath left us no obscure remembrances of his Cross and Passion In the flower Granadilla are perfectly represented the Nails Pillar and Crown of thorns In dividing the fruit of the tree Musa appears in some of them the Image of a Cross in others of Christ crucified and in Gant they hold in great esteem the root of a beautiful flower brought from Jerusalem wherein is also lively represented a
1. Tertullian said The greatness of some goods were intolerable the which according to the Prophet Isaias is verified in this Divine good and benefit which we were not able to support Wherefore it is called in holy Scripture The good or the good thing of God because it is a good and a benefit which more clearly than the Sun discovers the infinite and ineffable goodness of God to the astonishment and amazement of a humane heart and therefore the Prophet Oseas sayes Osee 3. They shall be astonished at the Lord and at his Good because his Divine benefit amazes and astonishes the Soul of man to see how good the Lord is and how great the good which he communicates unto us All which tends to no other end than to make us despise the goods of the Earth and to esteem onely those of Heaven which we attain unto by this Divine mysterie For this therefore did Christ our Redeemer institute this most blessed Sacrament that by it we might withdraw our hearts from things temporal and settle our affections upon those which are eternal for which it is most particularly efficacious as those who worthily receive it have full experience §. 3. Wherefore let that Soul who goes to communicate consider Who it is that enters into him and Who he is himself who entertains so great a Guest Let him call to mind with what reverence the blessed Virgin received the Eternal Word when he entred into her holy Womb and let him know it is the same Word which a Christian receives into his entrails in this Divine Sacrament Let him therefore endeavour to approach this holy Table with all reverence love and gratitude which ought if possible to be greater than that of the blessed Mother For then the obligation of Mankind was not so great as now it is For neither she nor we were then indebted unto him for his dying upon the Cross Let him consider that he receives the same Christ who sits at the right hand of God the Father That it is he who is the supreme Lord of Heaven and Earth He whom the Angels adore He who created and redeemed us and is to judge the living and the dead He who is of infinite wisdom power beauty and goodness If a Soul should behold him as when St. Paul beheld him and was struck blind with his light and splendour how would he fear and reverence him Let him know that he is not now less glorious in the Host and that he is to approach him with as much reverence as if he saw him in his Throne of glory With much reason did St. Teresa of Jesus say unto a devout Soul unto whom she appeared after death That we upon earth ought to behave our selves unto the blessed Sacrament as the blessed in Heaven do towards the Divine Essence loving and adoring it with all our power and forces Consider also that he who comes in person to thee is that self same Lord that required so much reverence that he struck Oza dead because he did but touch with his hand the Ark of his Testament and slew 50000 Bethshamits for their looking on it And thou not onely seest and touchest but receivest him into thy very bowells See then with what reverence thou oughtest to approach him The Angels and Seraphins tremble before his greatness and the Just are afraid Do thou then tremble fear and adore him S. John standing but near unto an Angel remained without force astonisht at the greatness of his Beauty and Majesty and thou art not to receive an Angel but the Lord of Angels into thy entrails It adds much to the endearment of this great benefit of our Saviour that it is not onely great by the greatness of that which is bestowed but by the meaneness of him who receives it For what art thou but a most vile creature composed of clay and dirt full of misery ignorance weakness and malice If the Centurion held himself unworthy to receive Christ under his roof and St. Peter when our Saviour was in this mortal life deemed himself not worthy to be in his presence saying Depart from me O Lord for I am a sinful man and St. John Baptist thought himself not worthy to unloose the latchet of his shoe How much more oughtest thou to judge thy self unworthy to receive him into thy bowels being now in his glory seated at the right hand of God the Father The Angels in heaven are not pure in his sight What purity shouldest thou have to entertain him in thy breast If a mighty King should visit a poor Beggar in his Cottage what honour what respects would it conferre upon him Behold God who is the King of Kings and Lord of Lords comes to visit thee not in thy house but within thy self Seaven years did Salomon spend in building a Temple wherein to place the Ark of the Testament Why doest thou not spend some time in making thy self a Temple of God himself Noah was a hundred years in preparing a Vessel wherein to save those who were to escape the Deluge Why doest thou not spare some dayes or hours to make thy self a Sacristy for the Saviour of the World Behold thy own unworthiness and what thou goest a-about Moyses when he was to make an Ark for the Tables of the Law not onely made choice of precious wood but covered it all with gold Thou miserable and vile Worm why doest thou not prepare and adorn thy self to receive the Lord of the Law Consider also what is the end for which thy Saviour comes unto thee It is by communicating his grace to make thee partaker of his Divinity He comes to cure thy sores and infirmities he comes to give remedy to thy necessities he comes to unite himself unto thee he comes to Deifie thee Behold then the infinity of his Divine goodness who thus melts himself in communication with his Creatures Behold what is here given thee and for what it is given thee God gives himself unto thee that thou mayest be all divine and nothing left in thee of earth In other benefits God bestows his particular gifts upon thee but here he gives thee himself that thou mightest also give thy self unto him and be wholly his If from the Incarnation of the Son of God we gather the great love he bore unto mankind passing for his sake from that height of greatness unto that depth of humiliation as to inclose himself in the Womb of a Virgin Behold how in this he loves thee since to sustain thee in the life of grace he hath made himself the true food of thy Soul and comes from the right hand of the eternal Father to enclose himself in thy most impure breast Jesus Christ comes also to make thee one body with himself that thou mayest after an admirable manner be united unto him and made partaker not onely of his spirit but of his bloud That which this Consideration ought to work in the breast of a
obtaining of things eternal without respect to any temporal or earthly commodity are as a sweet savour unto the Lord like that Rod of perfume so much celebrated in the Canticles Cant. 3. composed of incense myrrhe and spices which ascended streight unto heaven Whereupon St. Gregory sayes that prayer is called that little Rod of sweet smoke because whilest it onely supplicates for eternal blessings it mounts directly to heaven without inclining unto any thing that is earthly Well may it be seen how little our Saviour is pleased with earthly petitions by that answer he gave unto the Wife of Zebedeus when she desired that her two Sons might have the honour to sit one at the right hand of his Throne and the other at the left Our Saviour answered They know not what they asked because as St. Chysostome sayes Their petition was for the things temporal and not spiritual and eternal Certainly a fool he is who when he may have heaven for asking trifles away his time in demanding things of the earth A fool he is who when he needs but to demand eternal glory busies himself in praying for temporal honours A fool he is who having but to ask grace from God loses his time in asking favours from men Certainly he knows not what he prayes for who prayes to be rich He knows not what he prayes for who prayes for great Places and Commands Finally who prayes for honours accommodations pleasures or any thing that ends in time knows not what he prayes for because he knows not how little is all that which time consumes §. 2. Paludanus observes three errors in the Petition of the mother of St. James and St. John The first Palud Enarr 1. de S. Jacobo that she did not observe a due order in the petition The second that it was not clear and free from affections of flesh and blood And the third that the subject of it was vain and unprofitable All these errors are sound when not attending unto the eternal we petition for what is temporal For of the first who sees not that he who demands temporal things violates and perverts all order for what more disorderly proceeding than to demand little when we may obtain much to sue for that whereof we have no need and to neglect that which is extreamly necessary The necessities of the body hold no comparison with those of the soul The soul hath more necessity of divine grace than the body of food The soul hath more enemies and stands therefore in more need of the favour and assistance of heaven Gelas contra Pelag. Epis 5. lib. 6. It is against her that the infernal powers have conspired and therefore it is she who stands in most necessity of divine succour Gelasius the Pope speaking of our first Parents saith That when they were in the state of innocency replenished with all those gifts of graces wherewith God had enriched them and that they had not those adversaries which now we have for neither the world nor the flesh were then their enemies Yet because they did not pray for the divine assistance and favour that they fell into sin Having received saith this great Pope such abundance of grace yet because they did not pray as their is no mention that they did they were not secure How needfull is it then for us to pray who want that original justice have our nature weakned and corrupted by sin our flesh rebellious against the soul the World with all its instruments of vanity and deceit and so many occasions and dangers of sinning our enemies and the devil himself irritated by those singular favours exprest towards our nature by the Son of God more fierce against us then before So as it is not possible to declare the great need we have of divine grace And now to forget this great necessity and to forbear crying unto heaven for a remedy from whence we can onely hope it how great a folly and disorder is it If a man in the Dog-dayes were exposed naked in some Desert against the scorching beams of the Sun and ready to perish for thirst and should meet one who were furnished with plenty of cool water would he not ask some to refresh him or if he forbore to ask it would he demand a warm Jacket which were onely useful in Winter and in Summer a burthen and a trouble Certainly a greater madness and disorder cannot be imagined And yet ours is far worse if we demand temporal goods which can onely hinder and entangle us and neglect to pray for the water of divine grace without which we are certain to perish But even in temporal things themselves we know not what order to observe in our demands because we are ignorant which are most convenient for us Who knows whether it be better for him to be sick or in health since it may so happen that being in health he may fall into some grievous sin and be damned and being sick he may repent and be saved Who knows whether poverty or wealth may be more convenient for him since being in abundance he may forget God and being in necessity of all things he may have recourse unto his holy service Who knows whether it be better for him to be honoured or suffer confusion since honour may puff him up in vanity and humiliation may make him prudent and wary No man knows what is good or evil for him That which we desire is oftentimes our ruin and destruction and those evils which we weep for as often turn into our greatest happiness How can there then be any order in our prayers for temporal things whereof we are totally ignorant whether they are good or hurtful The second great errour in our prayers for temporal things is the disordinate affection and want of pure intention which accompanies such petitions whereas our prayers ought onely to proceed from a pure and mortified mind wholly intent upon the service of God To signify this The fire which was to burn the incense was fetcht from the Altar of Holocausts and that our prayers may be acceptable and of a sweet savour unto God they are to spring from an enflamed heart Sacrificed unto his divine Majesty in a true Holocaust of our whole will and affections And he who demands any temporal things from God Almighty after another manner may justly fear least they may be granted for his greater punnishment Therefore St. Thomas sayes St. Tho. 2.2 q. 83. art 19. that our Lord God grants unto sinners what they desire with an evil affection for a Chastizement of their desires So he granted Quails unto the murmuring Isrealites who died with the morsel in their mouths We ought therefore to be cautious in our prayers and tremble at our own desires since their success may prove so dangerous unto us And I wonder not at all that he who desires the goods of this world is often punished in the grant of his petition since
bis life shall lose it and he who hates it in this world shall gain it for ever Hence it comes that we are now no more to look upon our selves as upon a thing of our own but onely Gods depending both in our spiritual and corporal being from that infinite Ocean of being and perfection Hence the Soul finding it self now free and unfetter'd flyes unto God with all its forces and affections not finding any thing to love and please it but in him in whom the beauty and perfections of all creatures are contained with infinite advantages When one hath once arrived unto this estate how dissonant and various soever his works be the end which he pretends is still the same and he ever obtains what he pretends if shutting his eyes to all creatures as if they were not he looks at nothing but God and how to please his Divine goodness and that onely for it self It may be that looking at the particular ends of each work our actions may be in several conditions sometimes they are in beginning sometimes in the middest sometimes in the end and oftentimes by impediments and cross accidents which happen they acquire not what they aim at but look upon the intention of him who works and they are still in their end For in what condition soever the work be he who does it with this intention onely to please God is ever in his end which no bad success or contradiction can hinder According to this which hath been said it is a great matter by Divine light to have arrived at this knowledge That all goods and gifts descend from above and that there is an infinite power goodness wisdom mercy and beauty from whence these properties which are here below participated by the creatures with such limitation are derived It is a great matter to have discovered the Sun by his rayes and guiding our selves by the stream to have arrived at the Fountains head or to have found the Centre where the multiplicity of created perfections meet and unite in one There our love shall rest as having nothing further to seek And this is to love God with all the heart all the soul all the mind● and all the powers And as those who arrive at this happy state have no other care no other thought than to doe the will of God here upon earth with the same perfection it is done in heaven So they have no other desires than by leaving earth to enter heaven there by sulfilling wholly the Divine will to supply what was defective upon earth Nothing detains them here but the will of God they have nothing begun which is not ended they are ever prepared all their business is dispatched like those servants who are alwayes expecting their Lord and still ready to open the door when he shall call Let us then prepare our selves by withdrawing our love from all which is temporal and created and placing it upon our Creator who is eternal let us love him not with a delicate and an effeminate love but with a strong and manly affection such a one as will support any weight overcome any difficulty and despise any interest rather than be separated from our beloved break his Laws or offend him though never so lightly Let this Love be strong as death that it may look death in the face and not flye from it which when it suffers it conquers Let thy fire be so enkindled that if whole rivers of tribulations fall upon it they may be but like drops of water falling upon a forge which the flame drinks up and consumes and is not quenched but quickned by them Be above thy self and above all that is below And if the world offer thee all it is Mistress of to despoil thee of this love tread it under thy feet and despise it as nothing To this love it belongs To accommodate ones self to poverty Not to repine at hunger nakedness cold or heat who as companions goe along with it To suffer injuries meekly To bear sickness and infirmities patiently Not to be dismayed in persecutions To endure temptations with longanimity To bear the burthens of our neighbours chearfully Not to be tired with their thwart conditions Not to be angry at their neglects nor overcome by their ingratitude In spiritual drynesses not to leave our ordinary devotions and in consolations and spiritual gusts not to forbear our obligations Finally that we may say with St. Paul Rom. 8. Who shall separate us from the charity of Christ tribulation or distress or famine or nakedness or danger or persecution or the sword I am sure that neither death nor life nor Angels nor Principalities nor Powers neither things present nor things to come neither might nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. FINIS
world are not to affright us since they are to cease and determine By how much Eternity enobles and adds unto the greatness of those things which are eternal by so much doth Time vilifie and debase those things which are temporal and therefore as all which is eternal although it were little in it self ought to be esteemed as infinite so all which is temporal although it were infinite yet is to be esteemed as nothing because it is to end in nothing If a man were Lord of infinite worlds and possest infinite riches if they were at last to end and he to leave them they were to be valued as nothing and if all things temporal have this evil property to sail and perish they ought to have no more esteem then if they were not with good reason then is life it self to be valued as nothing since nothing is more frail nothing more perishing and in conclusion is little more than if it had no being at all Possessions Inheritances Riches Titles and other goods of fortune remain when man is gone but not his Life A little excess of cold or heat makes and end of that a sharp winde the infectious breath of a sick person a drop of poison makes it vanish in so much as no glass is so frail as it Glass without violence may last long but the life of man ends of it self glass may with care be preserved for many ages but nothing can preserve the life of man it consumes it self All this was well understood by King David who was the most powerful and happy Prince the Hebrews ever had as ruling over both the Kingdoms of Judah and Israel with all which was promised by God unto the Israelites but not until his time possessed his Dominions besides extending over many other Provinces See 1. Paralip 29. what he left him towards the building of the Temple onely so as gold rowld up and down his House and Court and he left at his death mighty treasures unto his Son Salomon Yet this so fortunate a Prince considering that his greatness was to have an end valued it as nothing and not onely esteemed his Kingdoms and treasures as a vanity but even his life it self Wherefore he sayes Thou hast put O Lord a measure unto my dayes and my substance is as nothing all my Rents all my Kingdoms all my Trophies all my Treasures all which I possess although so powerful a King all is nothing And presently adds Doubtless all is vanity all what living man is Psal 38. all his whole life is vanity and nothing that belongs to him so frail as himself Of so mean value are the things of this world although we were to enjoy them for many ages but being to end so quickly and perhaps more sodainly than we can imagine what account is to be made of them O if we could but frame a true conception of the shortness of this life how should we despise the pleasures of it This is a matter of such importance that God commanded the principal his Prophets that he should goe into the Streets and Market-places and proclaim aloud How frail and short was the life of man For the Prophet Isaiah being about to prophesie of the most high and hidden mysterie which ever God revealed unto man which is the incarnation of the eternal Word was suddenly commanded by the Lord to lift up his voice and to crie aloud unto whom the Prophet replied What is it O Lord that I must crie aloud The Lord said That all flesh is grass and all the glory of it at the flowers of the field For as the grass which is cut in the morning withers before night and as the flower is quickly faded so is the life of all flesh the beauty and splendour of it passing and withering in a day Upon which place saith St. Hierome Hieronin Comment He who shall look upon the frailty of our flesh and that every moment of an hour we increase and decrease without ever remaining in the same state and that even what we now speak dictate or write flyes away with some part of our life will not doubt to say his flesh is grass and the glory of it as the flower of the field And presently after He that was yesterday an Infant is now a Boy and will suddenly be a Youth and even until old age runs changing through uncertain conditions of lite and perceaves himself first to be an old man before he begins to admire that he is not still a Boy In another place the same Saint meditating upon the death of Nepotianus who died in the flower of his age breaks out into these complaints In Epitaph Nepot O miserable condition of humane nature Vain is all that we live without Christ all flesh is hay and all the glory of it as the flower of the field Where is now that comely visage where is now the dignity of the whole body with which as with a fair garment the beauty of the Soul was once cloathed Ay pitty the Lilly is withered by a Southern blast and the purple of the Violet turned into paleness And immediately adds Why do we not therefore consider what in time must become of us and what will we or will not cannot be far off for should our life exceed the terme of 900 years and that the dayes Mathusalam were bestowed upon us yet all this length of life once past and pass it must were nothing and betwixt him who lives but ten years and him who lives a thousand the end of life and the unavoidable necessity of death once come all is the same save onely he who lives longer departs heavier loaden with his sins This frailty therefore and brevity of humane life being so certain and evident yet our Lord would have his Prophet publish it together with the most hidden and unknown mysterie of his incarnation and the manner of the worlds redemption which even the most high Scraphins did not conceive possible and all because men will not suffer themselves to be perswaded of this truth nor practically apprehend the shortness of their life Nay seeing death seiseth upon others yet they will not believe that it shall happen unto themselves and although they hear of it hourly yet it appears unto them as a hidden mysterie which they cannot understand God therefore commanded the Prophet Isaiah that he should proclaim and publish it with a loud voice as a thing new and of great importance that it might so penetrate and link into the hearts of men Let us therefore receive this truth from God himself All flesh is grass All age is short All time flyes All life vanishes and a great multitude of years are but a great nothing Let us also hear how true this is from those who lived the longest Jux Isi l. de vita mor. Pat. c. 24. and have had the greatest experience of what it is to live Perhaps thou mayst