Selected quad for the lemma: heart_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heart_n affection_n name_n zion_n 13 3 8.8332 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A54916 Sweete thovghtes of Iesvs and Marie, or, Meditations for all the feasts of ovr B. Saviovr and his B. Mother togeither with Meditations for all the Sundayes of the yeare and our Sauiovrs Passion : for the vse of the daughters of Sion : diuided into tvvo partes / by Thomas Carre ... Carre, Thomas, 1599-1674. 1665 (1665) Wing P2276; ESTC R12859 274,501 793

There are 47 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

sprung from a sprigge of the stocke of Iesse Iesus-Christ the first begotten among manie bretheren the same according to each ones measure is bestowed vpon vs too the younger bretheren We are regenerated and borne againe by the same spirit saith S. Augustine by which Christ was borne By the same spirit according to faith is Christ formed in the hart of euerie one of the faithfull by which according to flesh he was framed in the Virgins wombe Affection O ineffable incomparable and neuer enough admired goodnesse of God! O vnspeakable and neuer enough considered dignitie of Man Man presented with the same gifts of wisdome vnderstanding c. of which the Sonne of God was possessed The Eldest brother and the younger bretheren assisted with the same helpes towards heauen The adoptiue children sharing in the same prerogatiues with the naturall Sonne hauing the same Spirit to quicken moue strengthen comfort and replenish them The same Spirit I saie to frame Christ in the harts of Christians which framed Christ Iesus in the sacred wombe of his Virgin Mother O my soule let vs neuer so farre forgett this dearenesse this dignitie this transport of loue as by a degenerous conuersation to stoope to things so farre belowe vs as are all the fugitiue toyes which the world is able to present vs. THE IX MEDITATION Of the aduantages againe of the Holy Ghosts Cominge I. POINT CONSIDER that though Mercie had abundantly prouided for mans instruction in all vertue by the incarnation and holy life of Christ c. Though wisdome had admirably inuented and goodnesse had graciously put downe the too too plentifull price of mans redemption the pretious blood of a God a most souueraigne salue to cure the most desperate leprosie yet had it all profited nothing had not the application been also made by the meanes of increated loue the holy Ghost in the Sacrifice Sacraments and suffrances of this life Affection Our cause my soule was alreadie gained by our B. Sauiours merits against the world the flesh and the diuell but the decree was not yet put in execution The purchace of our libertie was indeede made at the price of his pretious blood but we were not yet putt in possession of our right we were yet on our parts by the assistance of the holy Ghost to negotiate vpon the talents and riches left vs by the meanes of our cooperation in good workes and patient sufferance of tribulations to accomplish the things that want of the Passions of Christ as saith S. Paule All his labours and actions and passions are mine but I must also labour and suffer with him if I will raigne with him He loued me that deare louer of man and deliuered himselfe vp for me But I must also loue him which none can doe but by the assistance of the holy Ghost II. POINT CONSIDERATION Christ was borne to the world and yet it either knew him not or knowing him remained in its wonted malignitie coldenesse infidelitie He watched fasted prayed and yet few were moued therby He preached wrought cures and miracles and notwithstanding found but few followers saue some poore fisher-men and others ledd for the most part either by their owne interests or curiositie But when the holy Ghost once breathed and brought downe fire vpon them what admirable effects did they not produce Affection Come then ah come then thou holy Spirit and purge and consume the maligant humours which obstruct my hart inflame my condenesse ah helpe my infidelitie Renue and reuiue in my memorie those many long and painefull watchings and fastings and prayers preachings and passions of my sweete Sauiour that I may euer run with speede in the odours of those perfumes That I may testifie to all the world with the Apostles and primitiue Christians that it is in memorie and imitation of Iesus of Nazareth who was ignominiously crucified and by the vertue of his holy Spirit that I doe what ere I doe THE X. MEDITATION In what manner the Holy Ghost came I. POINT CONSIDER that the coming of the holy Ghost was preceded and accompaigned with a suddaine sound like to a great lowde and vehement blast of wind which came from heauen and filled the whole howse c. Thus it is that the hand of the highest is wont to worke a happie change on the harts of men He powerfully thunders downe from heauen and forces his passage through our deafe eares by frequent feruent and redoubled inspirations Rise vp thou that sleepest and rise vp from the dead and Christ will enlighten thee And he cries so lowde that howeuer we neglect we cannot deney that we heard his call Affection Noe my Soule we cannot denie it Hee hath preuented our harts with strange blessings He hath often cried out with a lowd voice and replenished the whole howse of our harts with this sound I am thy saluation I am thy exceeding great reward Life is short and vncertaine Eternity endlesse God is iust and dreadfull and who is able to liue in eternall flames And these words haue often clouen to our very hart rootes and we haue found ourselues intrenched on euery side and we haue had nothing to oppose against them but certaine slow and sleepie delayes behold I will shortly sett vpon such and such a good worke or subdue such or such a vice which raignes in me and shortly it shall be done And yet what is notorious and we cannot deney with the Iewes we striue to suppresse and stifle the grace of the holy Ghost in our hartes And yet are we still detayned by verie toyes of toyes from concluding an absolute league of perfect friendshipp with the God of our hartes who laies so close a seige to them II. POINT CONSIDER that the holy Ghost had formerly appeared to the world in diuers formes As at Christs Baptisme in the forme of a Doue to teach the followers of Christ with what innocencie and candour and with what foecunditie of good workes they are to behaue themselues At his transfiguration as a bright clowde to intimate the shewres of heauenly grace which he plentifuly powres downe vpon vs and the fatherly protection he pleaseth to take of vs. But this daie he appeares in firie tongues signifying that he comes to establish legem igneam a firie law a law of loue and charitie which were it practised according at it is taught it were able to set all the world on fire Affection Though all thy approches motions inspirations and apparitions ô diuine Spirit be worthily euer most welcome to me yet nothing comes so home to my harts desire as these flames of fire which intimate a law of loue and in that conquering name ought to subdue all hartes For what doth mans hart loue indeede but loue What chaine of gold could euer so deliciously draw vs as the chaines of humanitie and charitie where beloued force proues absolute freedome Ardeam ex te totus ignis sancte O holy fire let me be wholy burnt by
thee O fire which euer burnest and art neuer extinguished doe thou inflame me O thou light which dost euer shine and art neuer darkened doe thou enlighten me O how my verie hart desires to be inflamed by thee How sweetly dost thou heate how secreetlie dost thou shine how delightfully dost thou burne THE XI MEDITATION How we may know whether the H. Ghost liues in vs. I. POINT CONSIDER that the certaine keeping of Gods commandements giues vs a certaintie that we loue God And who loues him certainly remaynes in God and God in him And in this saith S. Iohn we know that he remaines in vs by the holy Ghost which he gaue vs. If then our owne hartes reprehend vs not of the breache of Gods commandements we may haue a wholesome cōfidence in his goodnesse and mercie yea a morall certaintie that we stand in Gods grace and fauour and that the holy Ghost doth dwell in our hartes Affection Happie is the Soule which hath this testimonie in herself for certainly it is a continuall and a most delicious feast to her hart since it becomes thereby a very Paradice in earth the throne the temple the heauen of God O what a singular superexcellent Angelicall Seraphicall honour is this To be the house of God and to haue God to be our house and harbour To remayne in god god to remaine in vs. Is not this indeede to begin to be Angells and to haue our whole cōuersation with God Yet beware my soule let him that stands looke that he fall not it is yet in earth that we possesse this in heauen where the world the flesh and the diuell continually surround vs. Their snares are layd charitie is lost in a momēt It is not enough to haue the holy Ghost for the present but we must further to be able to ouercome all our temptations begge the continuance of his presence vertue and power by our incesant and ardent prayers saying with the good Disciples mane nobiscum Domine stay with vs stay with vs ô Lord. II. POINT CONSIDER that the presence of the cause is neuer more surely knowne then by the effects And the principall effect which the increated Charitie the holy Ghost produceth in our hart is Charitie de Spiritu Sancto And Charitie saith S. Paule is patient benigne she enuieth not she dealeth not peruersely she is not puffed vp she is not ambitious She seeketh nor her owne she is not prouoked to anger thinketh not euill reioyceth not vpon iniquitie but reioyceth with the truth suffers all things beleeueth all things hopeth all things beareth all things in fine she is cheerefull longanmious milde modest c. Affection If then laying our hand vpon our owne harts we find by an impartiall Examen that we are truly patient in Crosses afflictions and difficulties be they corporall or spirituall If benigne and milde in words and behauiour not arrogating too much to ourselues or seekeing our owne aduantages If we enuie not the good of others If our hartes swell not nor peruersely oppose our neighbour but sweetly support him entertaine a good opinion of him and hope well of his proceeding we may hopefully conclude that the finger of the holy Ghost is in the worke and sweetly moues gouernes disposeth all THE XII MEDITATION The Holy Ghosts presence gathered by the effects I. POINT CONSIDER yet further the effects of the holy Ghost in the B. Apostles and Primitiue Christians And the first is that they began to speake with diuers tongues according as the holy Ghost gaue them to speake and those tongues were imployed not to boast nor vant their owne knowledge and giue themselues the glorie of it but to publish the great workes of God to all Nations and to speake intelligibly to Partians Medians c. Affection And wee too haue power ô my soule by the assistance of the holy Ghost If we be faithfull in following the blessed motions which he graciously inspires into our hartes if not to speake all tongues at least in our owne only language to make ourselues intelligible to all nations Let vs speake Gods great workes by our actions let our light so shine before men that they may see our good workes Let our ioy peace patience benignitie mildnesse modestie the fruites of the holy Ghost appeare and infallibly none will be found so great a stranger as not to vnderstand that language of heauen and together with vs glorifie our heauenly father who blessed our hartes with those good gifts with which the world is too little acquainted II. POINT CONSIDER as another effect that ioy in the holy Ghost the newe wine of the Gospell which so feruently boiled vp in the hartes of the Apostles that they seemed no more to be themselues but to be transported and translated into new men to strike the hearers with astonishment to see those poore rude fishermen simple Galileans who neuer were suspected of much learning speake so powerfully and intelligibly to the harts of all present while yet some turned it to derision others ascribed it to drunkennesse Affection O sudden and powerfull effects of the holy Ghosts working who breathes where he will and when he will and how he will which worldlings are more readie and capable to misconster and deride then to feele or vnderstand These are affects of new wine Say they Yes saith S. Augustine it is euen so indeede with this new wine and this excellent cupp are the harts of the faithfull daily inebriated Thus are they druncke who for the loue of God and their soules health flye their parents and countrie of their owne accord and abandonne the parents of their bodies euen to find out other new ones of their soules Being free they desire to liue in subiection being noble they fall in loue with abiection They preferre abstinence before the delightes of full tables watching before sweete sleepe and pouertie before riches Such effects my soule hath it pleased God of his infinite mercie to worke in our hartes So haue wee been deliciously drunke with the chaste wine of his cellers begetting virgins THE XIII MEDITATION More effects prouing the Holy Ghosts presence I. POINT CONSIDER as another effect of the holy Ghost their vndaunted courage in openly preaching the miracles Resurrection Ascension and Glorification of Iesus in the face of his prowd persequutours who had but a few weekes before put him to an ignominious death This Iesus saith S. Peter who was wickedly slaine by you hath God raised vp againe where of we are all witnesses Let all the house of Israel know most certainly that God hath made this Iesus both Lord and Christ whom you crucified And those vndaunted wordes strucke the harts of three thousand which were conuerted that day Affection Is then the sweete and mellifluous name of Iesus in our hartes and is it from that abundance that our tongue speakes Doe we make it our busines to beare out that blessed name which is the only one under
imployed all her tyme in heauenly contemplations feruent eleuations of harte and inflamed aspirations after her dearely beloued child How often said she with more then a S. Paules feruour that she desired to be dissolued and to be with Christ How often did she adiure the daughters of Sion to stay her with flowers to compasse her about with apples because she languished with loue Tell him saith she that I languish with loue Affection Thus it was my soule that this heauenly hart continually euaporated it selfe out thus while her body was detayned in earth did her soule liue in heauen and thus it is too that euery chaste turtle should behaue herselfe in the absence of her mate sometymes moaning herselfe with holy Dauid saying ay mé why is my seiourning stil prolonged Sometymes with S. Paule Christ is my life and death is my gaine Some tymes againe with the feruent S. Augustine Liue I will not dye I will I desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ That her life wasted away like incense in the flames of loue II. POINT CONSIDER that Blessed Marie hauing as truly conceiued in her hart the sacred fire which her Sonne brought downe as she had conceiued him in her Virginall wombe she continually watched it like a holy Vestall and did not onely keepe it a liue but euen added new fewell to it by euery least action of her life so that that holy flame was increased to such a degree that it was impossible for a humane hart to endure it without wasting away like incense in the thurible to imbalme the world with her heauenly odours Affection Ah my soule comme and behold this heauenly Visiō See how Moyses his burning bush whom noe fire of concupiscence could euer touch begins to melt away in the fire of loue See our sacred Salamander readie to consume in the flames which she loued wherin she liued wherwith she was ●o deliciously nourished O that this cold lūpe were better acquainted with this deare torment with this fire which burnes so delightfully At least ô thou Blessed Holocauste of Loue preuayle by thy powerfull prayers that the fire of the Holy Ghost may burne my reynes and hart that I may serue him with a chaste body and please him with a cleane hart THE II. MEDITATION For the Assumption That she dyed of Loue. I. POINT COnsider that Marie must dye then because she was a child of Adam because she was the Mother of a God who dyed because a pretious delicious death will doe her the right to deliuer her vpp to her Sonne in glorie nor is glorie to be had but by death she must dye then who brought out life But as loue brought her Iesus downe from heauen and by loue she cōceiued him so must noe other hand then that of loue which is now growen stronger then deathin her breake the band of mortalitie and restore her to her life her loue her Iesus Affection O death louingly vitall ô loue vitally mortall O death of loue the noblest of all deathes And therfor due to the most noble life that euer was amonst creatures whereof the verie Angells would desire to dye if dye they could Be ah returne returne thou Sunamitesse returne that we may haue the happinesse to looke vpō thee to craue thyne assistance in our necessities O Marie thou Mother of grace Mother of mercy protect vs against our enemyes in our life and receiue vs at the houre of our death Amen II. POINT CONSIDER that if loue gaue the blow it was the most noble death that euer creature endured If loue gaue the stroke it was the most deliciously deare and desired that euer humane hart tasted And as this death was most noble and most sweete so was it attended by the most noble compagnie All the Apostles as witnesseth the great Areopagite by Gods Prouidence and power and all the Primitiue Christians about Hierusalem being prefent at it Yea euen Millions of Angells and Christ himselfe Witnesse S. I. Damascene with many others Affection O what a mixture of delight sorrow did possesse those Apostolicall and primitiue hartes Of sorrow to see themselues readie to become Orphants hauing both the Mother and the Sōne taken from them Of delight to behold that diuin-Phenix melting away vpon her bed of hoe nour amidst the odoriferous flames of Sacred loue readie to flye into their Masters Celestiall imbracements O what Canticles of prayses did not they singe what actions of grace did they not render THE III. MEDITATION That her body was free from corruption I. POINT CONSIDER that though a death of loue or a beloued death could separate the soule from that B. Virgines body which was buried by the Apostles c. in Gethse many yet deathes corruptiō durst not at all fastē vpon that incorruptible body which had brought out life As we deney not saith S. Augustine that the Mother of God was subiect to the Law of death so haue we learnt in the Shoole of Christianitie to priuiledge her from corruption whose grace and sanctitie was such that she singularly merited to lodge God in earth Affection Noe my soule the immaculate body of this incomparable Virgine was not subiect to corruption it was not fitting that that chaste flesh which gaue flesh to clothe our humanised God should be deliuered ouer to the wormes Though death was her gaine yet had corruption bene her losse God would not permitt that holy one who was vncorrupt in her Conception in her childbirth and after her childbirth should meete with corruption in her graue That her body was assumpted vp to heauen by her Sonne II. POINT CONSIDER that scarcely had this sacred Depositum of her immaculate body remayned three dayes in the graue after her vitall death witnesse S. I. Da. till he that rose the third day by his owne power came to rayse his blessed mothers body that her body and soule being vnited againe he might inioy his whole mother and she him in his glorie Saying to her ryse make haste my friend or according to S. Augustine come from Lybanus my spouse come from Libanus come thou shalt be crowned taking her by the right hand saith he and conducting her in pompe and magnificence according to his good pleasure Affection O my soule with what heauenly acclamations with what Angelicall admirations and exaltations was this singular triumph accompaigned While euen the astonished Angells cryed out who is this who comes vp from the desert flowing with delightes and has the confidence to leane vpon her beloued our Kinge Let vs my soule earnestly begge her intercession what cannot she preuayle for whom the God of heauen so much honours THE VI. MEDITATION How inthronised I. POINT CONSIDER whither this best of Sonns could leade this best of Mothers but to the best place that euer creature was capable of euen aboue the Cherubins and Seraphins to the Throne of God S. Augustine is my warantie saying of her Thou didst passe the Angelicall
SWEETE THOVGHTES OF IESVS AND MARIE OR MEDITATIONS FOR ALL THE FEASTES OF OVR B. SAVIOVR AND HIS B. MOTHER Togeither with Meditations for all the Sundayes of the yeare And our Sauiours Passion For the vse of the daughters of Sion Diuided into tvvo partes THE FIRST PARTE By THOMAS CARRE Preist of the English Colledge of Doway ✚ IHS PRINTED AT PARIS By VINCENT DV MOVTIER M. DC LXV TO THE VERIE VENERABLE HIS MOST HONORED DEARE LADY MARIE TREDVVAY FIRST ABBESSE Of the English Monasterie of Sion of S. Augustins Order established in Paris MADAME These poore productions of myne which were bredd and brought out amidst a multitude of dayly distractions can scarce with iustice flye to any other Patronage then your La. and your vertuous children whose instant desires gaue them beeing while their pietie did not so much and so earnestly begge them as euen force them from my pouertie Howeuer were I free from that iuste tye there is yet another from which I will neuer admitt dispensation which makes these and all that 's in my power alreadie yours and theirs to witt the affection which I owe and haue vowed to your seruice that is your aduancement in vertue As issuing from that sourse they cannot doubt of acceptance What proceeds from knowen loue and respect cannot misse to meete with it mutually in well borne hartes If you find them vsefull for you I haue my designe If they leade you to a neerer approche with IESVS and MARIE and a more liuely expression of their liues in yours I haue my end and you the fruite If finally you profit by them I haue my reward What effect soeuer they may chance to haue with others please not to let them fayle to be to you certayne testimonies that my cheife desires for myselfe and you are as I haue often intimated to you that we esteeme our selues to know nothing here below but Iesus-Christ and him crucified that is that we putt downe for a most Catholike and Apostolicall truth that the life and passion of our sweete Sauiour is the most approued the most secure and best Schoole of all perfection since according to your holy Fathers excellent Sentence Summa Religionis est imitari quemcolimus the perfection end and accomplishment of Religion is the Imitation of him Iesus-Christ whom we worshippe In whom I shall euer be MADAME Your La. and your Religious daughters poore vnworthy Father and Seruant THOMAS CARRE BETHEELEM STABLE Or an entertainement of Iesus For the daughters of Sion A Preparation towards the receipt of Iesus For Chrismas Eue. MEDITATION I. I. POINT CONSIDER that when the world was most desperately lost in Paganisme Idolatrie and in the worshippe of men as Gods and in that of Diuells Yea while Iudea that choyse part of the world where onely the true God was Knowen and adored was ouergrowen with hypocrisie auarice ambition cousenage Lying and innumerable other vices While all the earth was depraued corrupted and sunke in sensualitie and all sorts of sin In a word while man enemy of his owne saluation slept so deepe that he thought not of it while he was so desperately sicke that he felt not his euil and consequently neither merited sought for nor demanded his cure then euen then the eternall God like a most pittifull father cōmiserating his miserie and deliberating as it were the remedie in the consistorie of the most holy Trinitie resolued that the diuine Word should become man and in his owne person should come to cure man Af. O the vnspeakable blindnes insensibilitie and miserie of man O the infinite Mercie of our good God which had no other motiue then his owne infinite Goodnes wherby he cryed out to miserable man conuert your selues conuert your selues Ryse from sleepe and be illuminated Why dost thou die o house of Israël Returne to me and liue 2. POINT Consider this resolution being taken of whom the diuine wisdome and prouidence makes choyse amongst all the creatures of heauen and earth for the perfecting this great worke of the saluatiō of all mankind He doth not after the manner of the world make choyse of the greatest richest and powerfullest princesse that might be found on earth or the brightest Angell of heauen but an Angell is sent from heauē into Earth to a Virgine named Marie wife to Ioseph who liued in a litle towne of Galilie called Nazareth to Marie I say an humble poore obscure vnknowen mayde and she too married to a poore Carpenter Ioseph Aff. Waigh deeply how litle esteeme the great God makes of the riches greatnes and power of this world Ther eare noe worldly creatures great in his eyes but such as are humble low and litle in their owne eyes while I was a litle one I pleased the highest Great ones he throwes downe out of heauen and out of the chaire of Moyses while such litle ones are exalted and wonders are wrought in them by the alpowerfull hand May then the loue of worldly greatnes honor riches power for euer vanish from my thoughtes And may humilitie pouertie virginitie be the deare companions of my hart Since they be the deare vertues which tooke my heauenly spouse his hart and helped to prouide a worthy tabernacle in earth for the king of heauen MEDITATION II. In those dayes there came forth an Edict from Cesar Augustus that the whole world should be inroled And Ioseph also went from Nazareth to Bethlehem to be inroled with Marie his dispoused wife who was with child I. POINT CONSIDER that as our Blessed Lady hyghly commended humilitie and obedience to vs by her reply to the Angell saying behold the handmaide of our Lord be it to me according to thy word so doth she here immediatly before his natiuitie presse the same againe by promptly complying with the commands of a mortall man Cesar cōmands and straight wayes Ioseph Marie and Iesus obeyes Ioseph obeyes Cesars seruant Marie Ioseph her spouse and Iesus being in Maries sacred wombe obeys Marie his mother most punctually She being possessed of the treasure of heauen and heauen and earthes wonderment as though she had bene altogether ignorant of Gods high counsell and of the particular effects of his prouidence giues way to this strict order without reasoning without contradiction without reserue humbly simplely and promptly accompagned with her spouse Ioseph she takes iorney to Bethleem Aff. Oh Iesus my Sauiour how Far ought miserable man subiect himselfe to thy holy commands being a poore and abiect seruant since thou being Lord and master yea Lord and master and maker of heauen and earth becomst subiect to the commands of an earthly Emperour thy creature who is in thy sight as a meere nothing by a secrete and admirable counsell of the Diuine Prouidence Ah how this ought to confound vs in the disputes and inquests we make vpon the iust commands of our lawfull Superiours While we obserue in Ioseph Marie and Iesus an example of a most humble blind and perfect obedience II.
occasion to saue him when he perceiues that the said Iudge is more inclined to giue then he to aske mercy When he causes proclamation to be made That he comes not to iudge but to saue the world When he teares the writinges or Euidences which the aduersarie can produce against him Such a Iudge ô my poore sinfull soule may we now find our God to witt a Iesus a Sauiour in this acceptable tyme in this day of saluation There is now therfore noe damnation to those that are in Christ Iesus Resolution I will rise therfore out of this or that badd custome reflecting vpon it in particular which I obserue my selfe subiect to And run to my milde Iudge with an humble confidence c. THE II. MEDITATION For the same day I. POINT CONSIDER a strange and comfortable change of the hand of the highest he who formely spoke onely in qualitie of Lord and master out of the clouds and out of fire saying I am thy Lord I am thy God God is a Lord of reuenge c. Is now come downe from Maiestie as it were and comes downe to vs and speakes to vs in qualitie of man yea the mildest of men Then did his power appeare in the creation of the world and his infinite wisdome in the gouuerning of it but to vs the benignitie and humanitie of God a Sauiour is manifested He comes in our nature in qualitie of our brother that he may shew as well his brotherly as fatherly affection and pitie to the poore man created by him Aff. What doth this singular graciousnesse crye out to our hartes but consolamini consolamini be comforted be comforted my people I will not the death of a sinner but rather that he be conuerted and liue Here is now noe dreadfull Iehouah noe thunder noe lightening to terrifie thee but thy mylde Emmanuell thy God with thee a meeke tender weeping childe our flesh and our brother who is come to dwell amongst vs. Let not the ancient reproche Where is thy God be any more a corrasiue vnto thee For euen here he is in flesh like one of vs There is now noe neede vpon the hearing of his voyce to hyde thy selfe with thy first parentes nay his voyce is the scrikes of a tender babe farre more apt to begett pitie in mans harte then to strike it with dreade He cannot forbeare to loue his owne brethrē his owne flesh and bloode his owne bowells I. POINT Consider that though when I looke vpon my selfe such as I am indeed poore naked blind lame abiect and miserable I haue more cause of confusion then confidence Yea when I represent vnto my selfe the multitude and greeuousnesse of my sinnes which can neuer be better knowen thē by the gratnesse of the price which is sent downe for their redemption I find my selfe euen waighed downe to hell and am readie to despaire Yet the greatnesse of the same price too possesses my hart with stronge hopes of redemption when I obserue Wisdome it selfe imploye the bloud of the lambe the bloud of this tender babe the son of Marie and the sonne of God to make a pretious bathe for the cure of my leprosie I cannot despaire Aff. O God what is man that thou dost thus magnifie him Or the sonne of man that thou puttest thy heauenly hart vpon him Is he turned some pretious thing which formerly thou wast not acquainted with Has he gott some noblenesse of beeing which issued not from thyne owne hand Is he not still dust and ashes earth earth earth of which thou madst him Nay but deare Lord hath he not added malice to this base matter of which he was made Had not all flesh corrupted its wayes so that none did well not one Did not multitudes of crymes and abominations stand vp in thy sight and crye out for reuenge What proportion is there then bewixt the price and the thinge prized Betwixt the blood of an innocent sonne and a sinfull seruant The blood of a God and worthlesse man O too too deare price ô too plentifull Redemptiō I can find nothing here but amaysement and ô Altitudos And conclude with al the gratitude my soule can conceiue that thy friends ô God are too much honored and their Principalitie too well established by this too deare a price THE SEAVENTH MEDIT. I. POINT CONSIDER that when man was so heauie harted that he could not ascende The hart of a God was so gracious that he would descend to him The earth was too heauie to mount into heauen but heauen could find a meanes to transport it selfe as it were into earth For is not this Caue a verie heauen indeede since God here truly Keepes his residence and hath his quires of Angells singing about him Where God is there is his Court and where the Court is there are the Courtiers and where the Courtiers are there is the dutie of Courtiers exercised to witt they behold and loue they loue and behold and with prone adorations singe Sanctus Sanctus Sanctus holy holy holy This stable then is a very heauen indeede Venite adoremus Affect Yes my soule it is my verie God who lyes in this stable in this earthly Heauen the God that made me that conserues me that shall iudge me come downe first to redeeme me and in his owne person shewe me the way of saluation It is my God and if my faith be liuely I may heare a multitude of the heauenly Armie praysing God and saying Glorie in the highest to God c. Let vs take a part with them ô my soule and singe with the whole endeuour of our harte We prayse thee we blesse thee we adore thee we glorifie thee we giue thee thankes for thy great glorie O Lord God! ô Lambe of God! ô Sonne of the Father who takest away the sinnes of the world haue mercy on vs. Who takest away the sinnes of the world admitt our humble supplication Yes deare Lord For thou alone art holy thou alone art Lord thou alone art the sonne of the Almightie God Resol I will not then despaire of ouercoming this or that c. In this Lord in this sonne of the Almightie in this sauing Lambe which takes away the sinnes of the world who comfortes me though otherwise I be but earth and ashes I am able to doe all thinges c. THE SECONDE MEDITATION For the same day I. POINT CONSIDER who are the first Courtiers who are called to this heauenly Celle this earthly Heauen or Court and we shall find that it is not the learned wise and riche of the world that by Christs example we may learne still more and more to contemne the same but tbe poore humble simple vigilant shephards who are so separated from the world that they can hardly be said to haue any commerce with it at all Christe is sarce yet an houre old amongst vs and he alreadie begins to sett vpon the worke for which he was sent .. He comes for mans saluation and man
Gentil thy kingdome ô deare Sauiour is dilated ouer all the face of the earth and thy raigne shall dure for euer And therfor ô all ye nations clappe hands make iubilation to God in the voyce of exultation singe ye to our God singe ye singe ye to our Kinge singe ye because God is Kinge of all the earth singe ye wisely The Princes of the people are gathered togeither with the God of Abraham he shall raigne ouer the Gentils Thus did the kinglie Prophete teach vs Christian Gentils to singe so long agoe THE SECONDE MEDITATION Of the vocation of the Gentils in the three Kinges I. POINT CONSIDER that our pious and mercifull Lord not being the God of the Iewes onely but also of the Gentils who will all men to be saued and to come to the knowledge of the truth limites not the riches of his goodnesse within the confines of Iewrie but will haue them extended to all the world so that he calls not the Iewes onely in the persons of the shepheards but the Gentils also in the persons of the Kinges If he had promises for those he is not without blessings neither for these If he haue Angells in aboundāce to call those he wants not starrs to conduct these to his royall presence testifying by them both that he is noe acceptour of persons but loues Iewe and Gentil vnlearned and learned poore and rich and breathes by the holy Ghost where he pleaseth subduing what hartes he pleaseth to his seruice Affection Let vs then o my soule imitating Gods mercyes extende the assistance of our obsecrations prayers postulations thankes-giuinges to all men to Iewe and Gentil to such as are farre off and such as are neere hand to such as are in the Church and such as are out of it to poore and riche to kinges and Potentates be they friends or foes protectours or persecutours For this is good and acceptable before God our Sauiour For alas what doe we know that we hate not a brother while we thinke onely to hate an enemie Let vs pray I say first for our domestikes in faith that they may increase in grace ad haue the gift of perseuerance Next for those that yet beleeue not vt ex nolentibus fiant volentes that of such as will not beleeue they may by Gods grace be made beleeuers sayinge with the holy Church etiam rebelles compelle voluntates compelle euen those rebelliouswills that obstinacie and blindnesse being subdued Turke Iewe and Gentil may be but one flocke and fold How the kinges were called to Iesus II. POINT CONSIDER how the kinges came and we shall presently find that our attentions are stopt by the Euangelist with a word inciting to admiration Ecce behold saith S. Matthew there came sages from the cast to Hierusalem Nor is it without wonder indeede that wise men should leaue their countrie to come a greate iorney to a forraigne land which had nothing common with them And yet their errand seemes more strange They came c. saying where is he who is borne the kinge of the Iewes A demande which in likelyhoode might haue cost them their liues And yet their motiue seemes most strange of all for say they we haue seene his starre in the east Should wise men and Kinges leaue their Kingdomes vpon the onely sight of a starre to looke out one borne the Kinge of the Iewes and that in the midst of Iewrie where another Kinge alreadie raigned Affection O my soule what can we find here but admirations with S. Paule O the highnesse of the riches of the wisdome and knowledge of God How incomprehensible are his iudgements how inscrutable are his wayes What doe we find I say but effects of Gods great mercy strangly and strongly working For certainly their iorney their demande their motiue appeare litle lesse then madnesses in the eyes of men while yet in the eyes of God they are effectes of grace and heauenly wisdome For the starre which they saw exteriourly was seconded by the grace which they felt interiourly and thence they vndertooke the iorney the grace of the holy Ghost knowing noe sluggish delayes The grace which they felt was a powerfull and conquering grace and thence they feared not to aske for the kinge of the Iewes euen in the face of the Tyrant The starre which they saw was the light of faith and thence they giue for their reason a thinge which reason is not acquainted with an obscure yet conuinceing argument of thinges which appeare not THE THIRD MEDITATION How admirable the kinges calling was I. POINT CONSIDER againe with wonderment this strange proceeding of the kinges Abraham its true went out of his countrie too his kindred and his fathers house and he was both admirable and prayse worthy therin Howbeit this seemes farre to exceede that Abraham went out because he was commanded because he was promised to haue another certaine place appointed him because he had assurances giuen by God that he should be magnified c. But they had neither commande to goe nor place appointed whither to goe nor stayd they in any danger at home nor were they allured with any adunatagious promises abrode but contrarily they were as free to stay as goe they knew not whither they went nor whether they should find what they sought And they were withall so farre from ayming at aduantage or securitie that contrarily they ran into apparent danger and were readier to giue then to take as appeared by the presentes they brought and yet those sages came to Hierusalem vnder the guidance of one onely starre Affection Admire my soule the wonderfull effectes of the hand of the most High admire the wholy disinterressed and truly kinglie hartes of these holy kinges Who while they were noe way necessitated noe way commanded so freely vpon the sommons of one starre left their countries and all and came to him to whom none comes vnlesse first drawen by his heauenly father And yet how many starres haue we and we stirre not how many kind inuitations and we answere not How many heauenly callings toward Iesus and alas we turne a deafeeare to them But doe not so my soule doe not so the neglect of heauenly fauours iustly irritates the bountifull Benefactour If we be not able to goe before others by our good example le ts not fayle at least to follow them Run on run on by the holy example of the kinges whither diuine inspirations which continually lay seidge to our hartes as so many heauenly messengers doe leade vs. Le ts be faithfull in this behalfe and when ere the Bridegrome knockes le ts lay open our hartes and leaue them wholy at his dispose neither expecting commands nor questioning the manner how Neither ayming at gaynes nor fearing or flying labour losse nor danger All is safe and gaynfull enough where Iesus leades and Iesus is looked for That the kinges proceedinges are our lessons II. POINT CONSIDER that this proceeding of the first fruites of
the Gentils was to be a leading lesson to all their posteritie They had their starrs and so haue we They obeyed their starre and so must we if we intend happily to find out Iesus Our starrs are the light of reason hightened by the light of grace and holy inspirations vnder our Superiours directions These we are to follow nor doe we euer fayle in it but we swarue from the way or loyter in the way Had the shephards bene ledd out of their owne countrie they had bene misledd lost much labour mist of Christ As the kinges if they had stayd in their owne countries while their starre led them out of it to Bethleem had not found him There are many mansions in Gods Kingdome and he will haue vs ledd to them by the wayes he pleases to marke vs out This is his blissed pleasure which he pleases to make knowen to our hartes by frequent inspirations Affection We must not my soule expect the priuiledge of being called by name as was S. Paule whether it be to relinquish our old badd wayes and inclinations to find out Christ or to follow him being already found It is sufficient for vs to follow our owne starrs to obserue whē the spouse knockes at the doore of our hartes and to be readie to open by the assistance of his grace who stands knocking there My soule my soule is it not by his mercy who made vs that we hope to be saued Were it nor reason then we should follow his counsells which he manifests to vs by his inspirations And if it be reason to follow them by what reason doe we or can we neglect them THE IV. MEDITATION That we must cooperate with Gods grace I. POINT CONSIDER yet further that it is not enough to obserue the starre with the Kinges and to heare the knocke of the spouse but we must also with them aske seeke knocke at the gate We must not onely I say heare the knocke or touche of his holy inspirations at our hartes but we must mutually knocke at that diuine harte of his by frequent and feruent prayers crying out with the Kinge and Prophete conuert me ô Lord and I will be conuerted draw me after thee and we will run and with our Kinges all through the streetes of Hierusalem where is he who is borne the Kinge of the Iewes for we haue seene his starre we haue heard the voyce of our beloued by frequent inspirations and to what end but to leade vs to his loue Affection Yes my soule we may dissemble it but we cannot deney it euen we too haue seene his starre we haue heard his voyce and he hath said vnto our hartes I am thy saluation and he hath said it so that we haue heard it and haue taken iorney vpon it countrie parentes friendes with all the fawning allurements of the world are forsaken And what is now our expectation Is it not our Lord my soule Is not he the whole part and portion of our inheritance Is not he the whole substance we haue left vs Ah! hauinge left all by the assistance of his grace to finde him le ts make that our busines If we suffer our selues for lacke of cooperation to be frustrated of that expectation in vaine behold we the starre in vaine began we to run in vaine doe we lead a life which leades not indeede to Iesus but to death How we ought to cooperate with grace in seeking Iesus by the example of the Kinges THE II. POINT CONSIDER that the Kinges are not onely diligent and punctuall in setting vpon the search of Iesus vpon the first light of faith that appeares to them expressed by those words of the Euangelist we saw his starre in the east and we came we saw and we came noe curious disputes noe sluggish delayes noe vaine respects or interrestes retarding them but they seeke him with great patience suffering the labour and incommodities of the longe iorney of 800. myles as also with great resolution and courage not fearing to inquire for him in the midest of Hierusalem saying where is he who is borne the Kinge of the Iewes Affection Ah my soule is it not our vndertaking too and intention as well as the dutie of our whole life to seeke for Christ with them Yea and as longe as we can sitt quietly at home without trouble doe we not desire to find him and to reioyce in him But alas as soone as the labours of a longe iorney our life in our apprehension represente themselues vnto vs when once temptations and dangers and humane respects begin to stand in our way our patience fayles our courage forsakes vs we fall to sleepe or murmure our life is irk some to vs and we are almost readie to giue ouer our iorney in the mide-way Alas my soule thus it sometymes fares with vs. And why because we seeke not our new-borne Kinge with an entire but a diuided harte allowing a part of it for him and a part for the world and thence cupiditie taking off from charitie weake charitie finds not his yoake sweete and his burden light as it is indeede to true louers We will therfor continually pray that he who gaue the will to seeke him would so increase charitie that we may haue patience and courage to find him THE V. MEDITATION How longe we ought to seeke him THE I. POINT CONSIDER yet further that our kingly Guides seeke him with perseuerance to the end putting noe other limite to their inquirie but the finding him out whom they seeke for Seeke our Lord saith the royall Psalmist while he may be found seeke his face al wayes not onely in the sunshine of prosperitie and spirituall comfort but also and then especially in the darknesse of aduersitie and drinesse of spirit As well while the starre shines as disappeares While it shines and vshers their stepps they springe on with speede while it disappeares they loose not courage nor leaue off their happie enterprise but in the absence of their heauenly Guide they haue recourse to earthly ones demanding of the scribes where is he who is borne the kinge of the Iewes Affection Deare Lord if thou daignest to leade vs on in the way of thy search and thy loue by the powerfull light and heate of thy grace be thou euer blessed And if it be thy pleasure to withdrawe for a tyme the comfort of thy presence and leaue vs to tryall be thou also blessed If thou dost voutchsafe to draw vs we will run in the odour of thy parfumes and if it please thee to leaue vs in drinesse and desolation by thyne absence we will neuer cease for all that to cry out continually where is he where is he who is borne the kinge of the Iewes Hauing still recourse to Heauen and earth To earth by taking counsell of our Superiours Directours and Pastours to Heauen with an intire submission dependāce and absolute confidence that our Redeemour liues and will in due tyme deliuer
vs that the starre will appeare againe and conduct vs to the place where the child is and multiplie our ioyes as well as theirs with a huge increase of ioye gaudio magno valde Where we are to seeke Iesus II. POINT CONSIDER that the kinges find not him who is borne the king of the Iewes in Hierusalem where they sought him and where humanely speaking he was most likely to be found in Hierusalem I say that cherished citie which was preferred beforre all the Tabernacles of Iacob nor in the stately Pallaces of Kinges how euer he was the kinge of kinges and sought by kinges too but in an obscure village but in a poore groate or caue a resort for brute beastes but in a manger vpon a locke of hay betwixt an oxe and an Asse So found they the young kinge of the Iewes lodged Affection My soule is it not true that we often seeke Iesus in magnis mirabilibus supra se in great and wonderfull things which are placed aboue our reach In high contemplations and visions which we are not capable of In thinges most specious and glorious and best suteing with our owne inclinations and fancies Wheras our humble kinge Iesus is both more surely and safely found in pouertie subiection solitude and disiunction from the world in humble lodginges meane clothes poore compaignie and in the totall abandonnement of our selues and iudgementes into the hands and directions of Superiours Thus he exposed himselfe to be found by a graciousnesse which passes the comprehension of man and Angell Thus the good Kinges find him Thus seeke him my soule and we shall not fayle to find him a God to adore a kinge to protect a man to imitate imbrace and loue THE VI. MEDITATION Where or in what compagny Iesus is to be sought I. POINT CONSIDER that they found the child Iesus with Marie his mother saith the Euangelist Had they sought Marie alone without Iesus or not for Iesus they had mistaken their way indeede since that she though his mother is but otherwise his creature while they seeke the Creatour And had they sought him who was borne the king of the iewes without or otherwise then in her companie who was the Queene mother that bore him they would not so happily haue found him But in seeking the one they found both To witt they had alwayes a neere relation Noe sooner was the sonne of God determined to be the redeemour of the world but Marie is looked vpon to be the mother of that sonne and sauiour noe sooner was he conceiued of the Holy Ghost but he was conceiued and found in Maries sacred wombe noe sooner borne but found at her breastes all his life tyme he was found with her and at his death she was not separated from him Affection Let IESVS then my soule be our cheife and last ayme and end since all our actions which haue not him for their end are aymed by the marke he being that souueraigne good which our hartes incessantly seeke after Yet lets not feare withall to make Marie the meanes to haue accesse to him How euer the Kinges misse not of him it is in her armes they find him How euer the Scriptures and Prophetes and Preistes of the Law point them out the way it is by her ministerie and fauour they come to the blessed sight of him It s her priuiledge in shewing him to shew what 's her owne Shew thy selfe then to be a mother Blessed Lady let our prayer by thy meanes be admitted by him who being borne for vs voutchsafed to be thyne Shew vs shew vs thy IESVS that blessed fruite of thy womhe not after his exile onely but euen nowe especially while we liue in this heauie banishment That Iesus ought to be sought with pietie II. POINT CONSIDER that as the Kinges vndertooke their iorney with much diligence and punctualitie and pursued it with great patience and resolution so they conclude it with noe lesse pietie and religiousnesse They haue left their Kingdomes wiues and children with hopes to find a Kinge a Sauiour a God and in the end of their iorney they onely meete with to the eyes of flesh a poore stable a poore manger and a poore mayde with a poore sucking child at her breastes But to the eyes of their pietie with which they looked vppon him they discouer a Kinge a God vnder the forme of a seruant a man and falling downe they adore him Affection O happie Kinges great is your faith which leaues all the world euer after to admire it as we worthily doe this day But ô the goodnesse and mercie and power of God whose free grace it was which wrought in their hartes both the will and performance of this great acte of faith They were not the keepers of the law Prophetes as were the iewes They had not seene and heard the admirable workes and wonders of his life and passion wherby he proued himselfe both God and man as we haue and yet falling downe they adore him O my soule let neuer the excessiue and almost incredible greatnesse of the benefit discredite as it were the bountifull benefactour but by how much more his loue doth exinanite him and make him appeare lesse then himselfe in his life and passion let vs by so much more beleeue blesse loue and adore him for euer because for vs it was that he was so lowe layd for vs the cribbe the manger the hay c. THE VII MEDITATION With what puritie of intention Iesus ought to be sought THE I POINT CONSIDER that the Kinges come not onely out of their countrie accompagned with patience courage and perseuerance to find him and religiousnesse and pietie to beleeue in him but also with puritie of intention that one necessarie thinge without which the best of our actions are spoyled for his owne sake to pay him a debt of souueraigne worshippe due to himselfe alone We came say they not to find ease safetie orriches which we inioyed at home nor to seeke new kingdomes while we left our owne but onely to find the new borne kinge of the iewes to acknowledge him to be the kinge of kinges and our selues and all the kinges of the earth to be his vassals in a word we came to adore him Affection Learne my soule learne neuer to seeke God for any other motiue then himselfe Let vs alwayes seeke him to the end we may adore him that is to cast our selues at his feete acknowedging him to be all and our selues nothing at all Ah while we may doe all our workes for a kinge why will we loose them vpō any lesse worthy obiect While all our loue is but too little for him alone why wil we disperse it vpon creatures Heauen and earth can afford nothing cōtentfull to the good Prophete but God himselfe Such let our resolutions be my soule in all our patience perseuerance and actes of pietie saying with sainte Augustin Thee I will thee I seeke thee I hope for my
hart hath said to thee I haue sought thy countenance Lord thy countenance will I seeke Le ts fixe vpon this if we desire to be happie le ts ayme at noe other thinge then this this alone will abundantly suffice How being found he ought to be adored II. POINT CONSIDER how the good Kinges make their approches to Christ and fall downe before him after the true Christian way not in word and discourse but in worke and truth The Euangelists make mention of noe one word they vsed Nor was it indecde so sutable to vse words in the presēce of the eternall WORD which lay speachlesse nor doe they doubt but that he could read their hartes in presence which he had powerfully touched at so great a distance But their workes by mysterious presentes speake their hartes and errands By gold they proclame a Kinge by frank-incense they professe a God by myrre they declare a man Affect O my soule let vs diligently looke vpon these progenitours of ours these Presidentes of our faith Let vs I say looke vpon their Christian behauiour and striue to imitate them Let not so much words as hartes speake our humble sutes and true submissions Where we meete with the eternall word silenced le ts adore him in silence silence being the worshippe of iustice Let the gold of our hartie loue that burning gold of S. Iohn the Euangelist publish him the Kinge of our hartes ouer which we wish his absolute raigne Let out feruent sighes and sobbes and incessant breathinges after him be our frankincense testifying that he is the God and Authour of our beeing in whom we liue moue and are all that we are And let the myrre of our mortifications and cheerefull sufferances declare to all the world that he is the man that suffered and dyed for vs leauing vs an example of patient suffering which his blessed will is We should follow Ah! thus doe these words of workes and hart and willing suffering speake lowdest and most effectually in the eares of God THE VIII MEDITATION That the kinges historie representes ours I. POINT CONSIDER and in the three Kinges historie reade our owne in their happines obserue our owne felicitie For were we not all deade in sinne which had dispersed it selfe ouer all the veynes of mankinde were we not benighted in infidelitie and lay wounded impotent blind naked lame poore and miserable were we not borne in a forraigne land farre from Bethleem where few seeke Christ fewer knowe or care for him was not Herode the persecutor in our way who pretended to adore him but indeed hated his memorie Had we not by his gift not onely the grace to beleeue in him but the courage to be readie to suffer for him and the resolution to leaue parentes countrie and all that was deare to vs to find him in pouertie obedience chastitie in a land which we knew not Affection Le ts giue glorie to God and let the memorie of these blissings of preference take vpp the whole capacitie of our hartes We were borne in the midest of a peruerse and incredulous generation and yet we were culd out of it that we might not perish with it Not by chance nor is there any chance with God but by choyce not because we loued him first but he vs and therfor he drew vs taking mercy on vs. Not because we willed or run but because he would haue mercy vpon whom he would haue mercy Say then my soule but say it hartily and incessantly with the Psalmist I wil singe the mercies of our Lord for euer I will sound out his prayse from generation to generation and let all the world know by the odour of our life our workes and sufferings how great thinges he hath done to vs poore creatures of his which he hath not done to all nations The diuers operations of two Natures in one Person II. POINT CONSIDER the blessed comfortable mixture of the diuers operations and demonstrations of two Natures in one and the same Person As man he lyes betwixt an oxe and an asse in miserie Yet as God he forgetts not his maiestie but commands his Angells to call the shephards to adore him As man he is subiect to childish scriks and teares But as God the Angells singe his Gloria As man he seemes neglected vnknowen vnconsidered by all Iewrie But as God he strikes terrour into all the Iewes Herode and all Hierusalem with him are troubled at his birth As man the Kinges find him the Kinge of the Iewes whom they came so farre to seeke in a poore caue accompanied with a poore mayde and their eyes reade him such as they see him a poore child But looking vpon his starre their constant guide they conclude him a powerful God whom the starrs obeye and their harts instantly breath after Affection Be thou euer blessed and magnified ô my lowe and mightie my abiect and powerfull Lord. Thou art lowe to come downe to my pouertie high to rayse my thoughtes hopes towards thy riches Lowe for my instruction and humiliation high for my protection and defence Lowe to teach my proude hart that all greatnesse ought to subiect it selfe to this admirable humilitie of thyne High to be our true refuge in all our weaknesses deiections but lowe to conuince our hartes that the true highth of a Christian is to be humble and lowe with and for his Christ When I am infirme then I am powerfull saith the great S. Paule AN ENTERTAYNEMENT FOR EASTER THE I. MEDITATION The I. Christian ioy I. POINT CONSIDER that though the great God of all consolation suffers his seruants to fall into afflictions desolations and sorrowes yet they are not continuall If there be mourning at night there is ioy in the morning yea and euen in the mourning too The dolourous dayes past were spent in following our deare Sauiour who suffered death it selfe for our loue while we looked but on Or if we euen dyed with him in our pious desires and resolutions or seemed to indure worse then death it selfe by our frequent and tormenting temptations they will not proue to death but to Gods glory and our beatitude they will produce more plentifull ioyes in rysing with him For harke while the teares are yet in our eyes for him being deade an Angell assures vs he liues and liues to dye noe more but to raigne He is rysen he is not here Affection Sing then my soule Alleluya Alleluya Alleluya Christ is truly rysen That he dyed he dyed but once and for our sinnes but that he now liues he liues to God the life of glorie for euer His sufferances were but for a tyme but his life and ioyes and in him ours too are for all eternitie Alleluia Alleluia Alleluia If he seemed forsaken it was but for a moment and that for our consolation for our example to assure vs that seeme we neuer so forsaken suffering with Christ we shall ryse with Christ in newnesse of life to a
better life the life of grace the life of glorie Alleluia Alleluya Alleluia II. POINT CONSIDERATION He is rysen he is not here Noe for Magdalene and the rest of the good women who had carefully obserued where he was layd and who as earely as carefully sought to find him where they had seene him layd find indeede the monument open but misse of their Masters body nor know they where they are to find it Marie spies two Angells but misses of the Lord of Angells till she heares Marie pronounced and so see 's and knowes her deare Rabboni who sent her backe while she sought his dead body among the deade to be the first preacher to his brethren of the glorie of his liuing body among the liuing Affect See my soule what ioyes sorowes bring forth see how the returne of our deare Lord wipes away the teares from our eyes See how true it is that he foretold vs. I goe from you but to returne to you I will not leaue you orphants See the fruites of a carefull attendance and due perseuerance which meetes with more then it lookes for and finds all euen amidst doubts distrusts and seeming despaire where it feared to haue lost all It finds not Angels onely but the verie God of Angells truly pious truly good the God of all consolation who makes the weake ones of the world to confound the strong a poore desolate Marie to be first Apostle of the most important point of the faith of Christ Alleluya Alleluya Alleluya THE SECOND MEDITATION The 3. Christian ioy THE I. POINT CONSIDER that our best friend our pious Lord the dearest husband of ourhartes who out of a goodnes beyond all comparison died ignominiously these dayes past for our loue is this daye gloriously risen The newes is certaine The best beloued mother the mournefull maides the fearefull Apostles haue all seene him ●e is risen he is truly risen Alleluya O what ioy what ioy the poore innocent lambe that we saw barbarously treated and butchered and slaine to take awaye the sinnes of the world with laying downe his life is risen with peace and reconcilement to the world Alleluya Alleluya Alleluya Affection Ah my soule the spouse of thy hart who spent his harts blood for thy saluation is risen againe and appeares to manie for thy consolation which though thou seest not as they the Apostles c. did with thy bodily eyes yet faith makes thee as sure of it as they were that thy best friend thy most pious Master thy dearest spouse is risen liues and raignes If then thou hast indeed the hart of a friend the dutie and tendernesse of a child the ardent loue of a spouse reioyce my soule reioyce and with exultation pay benediction and honour and glorie and power to the tender lambe who was slaine for thy loue for euer and euer Amen The 4. Ioy. II. POINT CONSIDERATION Yes my soule the newes is most certaine He 's returned back with the woundes he receiued he carries the markes about with him certaine witnesses as well of his painefull death as his excessiue loue his glorious resurrection The incredulous Thomas hath seene him had his fingers in holes of his hands his in the hole of his side through his wounds he hath felt his bowells Affection O singularly good newes my soule ô admirable graciousnesse ô what ioy what ioy It was not iudged enough to that maker and louer and Sauiour of mankind to haue spent 33. yeares in a familiar and common manner amongst men nay to haue spent the laste droppe of his most pretious blood in the view of all the world vnlesse he returned to them againe in his glorified bodie to make good in effect that he left them not orphants but made the wounds which he had suffered for them the louing and palpable arguments of his Resurrection and presence THE THIRD MEDITATION The 5. Ioy. I. POINT CONSIDERATION Yes my soule Our harmelesse brother Ioseph liues and raignes not ouer Egipt only but euen ouer all the world Gods sweete prouidence and milde mercie hath made vse of his bretherens malice to magnifie his owne power and singular goodnes and euen to relieue their and all our miseries and wants Our innocent Isaac liues Our Ionas is come safe to the shore Our sauing Noe hath passed the floud and is secure vpon the toppe of the Mountaine Affection See my soule how graciously he hath consummated all that was foretold of him Obserue how all the tipes of the olde lawe are accomplished in him Our deare Ioseph liues and raignes and hath turned the worst of mans malice to mans aduantage Our Isaac dies not but is reserued to afford the world a frutefull progenie of the faithfull Our Ionas seemed only to be deuowred but is indeed kept safe from shipwrack to preach gods power where mans wisdome gaue all for lost Our Noe is secured from the Deluge not so much to people the world with sinners as Heauen with Saintes Liue then and raigne for euer my sweete Sauiour ouer my soule and turne all seeming disasters to the aduantage of thy glorie The 6. Ioy. II. POINT CONSIDERATION Yes my soule the tender child which was borne in Bethlehem that true Nazarite that innocent milde young-man of Galilee is become now a Lion of the Tribe of Iuda hath made a swift course and returned with victorie Vicit Leo de Tribu Iudae Yes he hath wrought wonders he hath killed death ransaked Hell subdued the world and sayes to our hartes Be confident children by sufferance I haue ouercome the world and so too you may and ought to ouercome it Affection Ah my soule if that tender heauenly babe who was no lesse then the wisedome of heauen marked thee out the waye to it by Crosses contumelies and contempts let not the wisedome of the world which is true follie point thee out an other and deceiue thee If that lambe of God by suffering death it selfe be returned a victorious Lion neuer hope for victorie ouer the world the flesh and sinne but by patient sufferance of whateuer Gods prouidence shall permitt to fall vpon thee and by dyeing to the world and all its vanities Suffer then or dye my soule that with Iesus thou maist victoriously rise to a glorious life THE FOVRTH MEDITATION That Christ being risen is to be sought I. POINT CONSIDER that our lately dead Lord is risen indeede an Angell assures vs so Surrexit he is risen nor is there anie more doubt to be made of it yet haue we assurance too by the same mouth that he his not here nor indeed can Magdalens care learne where they haue put him If we loue him then we must looke him and looke him faithfully not with despayring feare but with confidence to find him in his good tyme for we are willed not to feare nolite timere Not among the dead for we are told be is risen and dyes no more Not finally in wordly delights ease and securitie but in the
chiefe businesse to meditate vpon the Passion of our sweete Sauiour let vs willingly conferre with others vpon the same subiect and God will infallibly make good what he hath promised by S. Matthew where two or three are gathered together in my name I am in the middest of them He will walke with vs he will speake to our hartes and replenish them with his heauenly blessings And we shall confesse with the Disciples that after Meditation of him and therby communication with him our hartes began to burne THE X. MEDITATION How we may surely know Christs Presence I. POINT CONSIDER that Christ often-tymes leaues vs to sadd thoughts doubts in the waye and we apprehend him at a great distance from vs or euen lost to vs whiles yet he walkes with vs which we may securely discerne by what followes to witt if our thoughts be fixed vpon what past in Hierusalem these dayes past If in contemplation thereof we thinke vpon and applie our selues to what 's humble abiect contemptible and hard to flesh and blood we may so I say be humbly confident that Iesus is with vs vpon the way Affection Why art thou sadd my soule and why dost thou trouble me Thy Iesus liues and forsakes thee not vnlesse thou forsakest him first He liues and raignes in thy hart howeuer by his adorable prouidence he letts thee not all times perceiue it thy eyes being held as the Disciples were that thou maist not see him He liues in thy hart I saie while thy hart how sad soeuer saith constantly Liue Iesus that is welcome be the humiliations abiections contempts and drynesses which by his permission fall vpon vs. II. POINT CONSIDER that Christ left vs not only in these dayes past a blessed example of sufferance for Christians to imitate and afterwards accompanies vs in the waye to comfort vs in the midst of our doubts and desolations but also powerfully prouokes vs to the same by vrging his owne example saying to his two Disciples and in them to vs all ought not Christ to haue suffered these things and so to enter into his glorie Affection Thus my soule doth Christ seeme to dispute and vrge to our hartes O fooles and men of slow hartes to beleeue The seruant is not greater then the Master But the Master suffered therfor the seruant ought to suffer None can haue better right to his fathers inheritance then his first begottē and onely begotten sonne but Christ the first begotten and onely begotten of his heauenly father was to suffer and so enter into his owne glorie therfor the seruant ought to suffer too whose right to glorie is but the effects and merires of Christs sufferances THE XI MEDITATION I. POINT CONSIDER that if as longe as we faile not to apply our selues to the Meditation of Christs Passion he failes not to accompanie and discourse with vs in our waye certainly this also must infallibly follow that such thoughts and such companie cannot but proue happie to vs and at Gods good tyme turne all our desolations into delights so truth foretold vs with his owne mouth you shall be sadd but your sadnes shall be turned into ioy So too in effect wee see it fared with the two Disciples who confesse that their harts burnt with loue while he spoke to them in the waye Affection Haue patience then my soule and wholy confide in him who is nothinge but goodnes and who indeede is neuer neerer to vs then when in our troubles we apprehend him furthest from vs. He loues vs that deare Spouse of ours and loues to be loued by vs and so leaues vs to increase our desire and to be more frequently called vpon He loues vs and so as saith S. Paule giues vs not only to beleeue in him but to suffer for him and with him He loues vs and death it selfe cannot diuide him from vs. He goes as he said to dye for vs and after death returnes to vs. He will not leaue vs orfants In this verie hope shall my troubled soule repose and rest II. POINT CONSIDER that if at anie tyme Christ seeme to leaue vs after he hath louingly walked along with vs opened his Scripiures to vs and inflamed our hartes it is but to make vs the more earnestly desire his presence and with the Disciples euen to force him to stay that hee may more aboundantly heape his blessings vpon their greedily longeing harts saying tarrie with vs because it drawes towards night the day being farre spent and he went in with them Affection Say then my soule and repeate it a thousand tymes but say it with faith with feruour with hope euen against hope tarrie tarrie with vs ô deare Iesu because we are sadd in thy absence because thoughts arise in our hartes because we suffer violence because we begin to be benighted and being in darkenes iustly feare the Prince thereof THE XII MEDITATION I. POINT .. CONSIDERATION Our Sauiour saith S. Iohn the dores of the Place being shutt where the Apostles were assembled together for feare of the Iewes appeared in the middest of them saying Peace be to you Consider how great a good this must needs be and how deare it ought to be to Christian harts which Christ the Prince of peace soe frequently commends vnto them Before he entered into the world peace was made all the world ouer Noe sooner was he borne into the world but presently after his fathers glorie peace was denounced to men of good will All his life longe he preached peace and promised beatitude to the peace-maker When he was to depart out of this world hee left peace as an inheritance he gaue Peace And now againe returning into the world Peace is his first prayer or sermon to his deare Apostles Pax vobis Peace be to you Affection Deare Lord make me loue what thou so much louest and laudest and so industriously commendest vnto vs. Let it in the first place possesse mine owne distracted hart calme it and reconcile it wholly to thee to the end that those mutinous subiects my vnruly passions may neuer rise vp against thy sacred orders And then let it extend it selfe to the hartes of all men that a generall peace may be concluded Saye often ô Lord to all our soules Pax vobis but say it so that we may heare it and loue it and enioy it II. POINT CONSIDERATION But what arguments doth he vse to his Apostles and in them to all Christians to induce them to what he commends so earnestly to them Marrie the most pressing conuincing ones that euer could be produced not words speaking to the eares but wounds which by the eyes spoke to their harts He shewed them saith S. Iohn his hands and his side Oh deare pressing and peircing arguments of a Gods peirced hands and side graciousty imployed to subdue the bitternesse of our disunited iarring mindes Affection Looke my soule looke vpon these conuincing arguments written in blood the blood of a God Looke vpon
those boared hands and let the sight of them tye thy hands for euer from sowing the seedes of strife and contention Looke vpon that open side see through it that diuine hart which neuer harboured anie other then thoughts of peace and not of affliction Ah! let vs not loose that sweete inheritance of peace which that dearest Master so frequently and feruently wished vs and soe dearely purchaced for vs. Behold his hands and his side THE XIII MEDITATION What this Peace is I. POINT CONSIDER what Peace it was which our Sauiour wished his Apostles and we shall find it was no other then that which he left them that which he gaue them his owne peace the peace of God which passeth all vnderstanding I leaue you my peace I giue you my peace saith he by S. Iohn before his departure My peace not that of flesh but that of the Spirit not that which is sought in sensuall ease but the peace of a good conscience which is found in the bottome of a cleane hart and is a continuall feast to the soule Affection Seeke still my soule what thou seekest and what euery man seekes for peace it is wee all seeke but seeke it not where thou art wont to seeke it where painefull experience makes vs daily feele we finde it not The world is a continuall warrefare nor can it giue what it selfe hath not The flesh is a continuall rebell and wages warre incessantly against the Spirit we can hope for no peace with it Seeke then the peace of God and the God of peace in the puritie of a good conscience and in the feare of God and much peace shall attend thee How Peace is to be found II. POINT CONSIDER that if this Peace be Gods Peace and euen the God of peace himselfe according to s. Paule where are we then to seeke it but in God and from God as he is the preacher of it so is he the giuer of it too and euen the gift it selfe If we seeke that which is his and euen himselfe from any other hand then from himselfe we willfully delude our selues Affection Yes my soule it is in God alone that we ought to seeke it out of him it is not to be found He alone is the Center of our harts He made them to and for himself and so they neuer can finde peace and rest till they returne to him Many aduenturous soules haue sought it in the varietie of the creatures but in lieu of peace thy mett with warre One of the wisest of them hath left vs this assurance that the whole collection of them is but vanitie of vanitie and affliction of Spirit THE XIV MEDITATION How it ought to be conserued I. POINT CONSIDER that the true waye to conserue a constant peace is to haue a continuall care not to violate Iustice since according to the Psalmist there is such a coniunction betweene iustice and peace that they giue each other mutuall kisses and will not be separated Iustice consists in paying euery one what is due vnto them Loue to God incomparably aboue all all things Loue to our neighbour as to ourselfe and consequently an absolute hatred against sinne whereby God and our neighbours are offended iustice violated peace banished He knew it well who said My bones haue no peace before the face of my sinnes There is no peace for the wicked man Affection Is it not true my soule are we able to denie it Did we euer finde peace or quiet in the violation of either of these duties while we offend God can we hope to haue Gods peace while we most vexe others are we not more vexed and perplexed ourselues Haue we not too often been taught this truth by sensible experience So visibly true is that which truth it selfe pronounced there is no peace for the impious person Iustice and peace will not be separated they are alwayes lodged in the same breast A second meanes how to conserue the peace of Christ is simplicitie of hart hauing our eyes still turned vpon ourselues II. POINT CONSIDER that the second meanes to conserue Christian peace is first simplicitie of hart without dissimulation fiction or fraude so that there be no iarring betwixt our harts and mouthes which proues afterwards a subiect of discord amongst kindest friends and dearest brethren Secondly simplicitie in our proceedings not troubling our selues about many thinges especially such as concerne vs not but imploying most care where we owe most dutie about our owne proper actions Thirdly simplicitie of intention referring all our thoughts words and workes to the honour of God alone Affection This simplicitie my soule is that columbine vertue so often commended and counselled by my sweete Sauiour This is that wherein who walkes he walkes in confidence and assurance This it that simple eye of the soule which giues lustre and worth to the whole bodie of our actions By this we conserue a constant peace in our owne hartes peace with our neighbours and peace with God O blessed simplicitie thou great peace-Maker be thou for euer the inseparable companion of my hart THE XV. MEDITATION A third meanes to conserue Christian peace is shutting the Dores CONSIDER that our Sauiour blessed the Apostles with the gift of peace when he found them together the dores being shut The best way to conserue the peace of our owne harts amongst our bretheren is to keepe the dores of our soules that is our senses shutt Let ts shutt our eyes least they behold vanitie which will proue affliction to our hart Let vs shutt our eyes least they looke too curiously into other mens actions which concerne vs not Let vs shutt our eares against idle fables and wordly rumors which fill our harts with vaine fancies and discompose our interiour peace Finally let vs put awatch ouer our tongue least it pernitiously bable out what the eyes and eares idly tooke in Affection If we loue peace my soule and quiet of minde let ts loue and vse the meanes to conserue it If the dores lye open infallibly it will not be longe kept the enemie will enter and disorder the howse Let vs then my soule for the loue of Christ for the loue of our neighbour and for the loue of our owne quiet keepe those knowne passages of discord continually shutt What haue we euer gained by laying them open but vexation to ourselues and others and a late repentance whereas by keeping them shutt we possesse ourselues in peace and the God of peace is in the midst of vs. Amen I. POINT CONSIDER that when our dores are thus shut vp and the world by that meanes shut out from amongst vs Iesus doth more frequently and familiarly enter into our hartes for the Euangelist goes on saying and after eight dayes againe his Disciples were within and Iesus comes the doores being shut and stood in the middest and said peace be to you c. Then he leade vs as he did Thomas into the secreetes of his heauenly
disinteressed loue for by that meanes the God of loue or God-loue Deus est Charitas the holy Ghost is sent into our hartes The 4. fruite of Christs Ascension The taking possession of our inheritance II. POINT CONSIDER that if he be gone and gone to his father and our Father that cōmon father of all of vs it is but to take and keepe possession of that common inheritance which being his owne by birth-right he purchaced for vs his coheires at a huge rate at the price of his owne pretious bloud for we haue heard himselfe say by S. Iohn let not your hart be troubled I goe to prepare you a place Affection O thrice happie Christians yea thrice and a thousand tymes happie I say did we duely ponder and rightly value our owne happines Christ was borne for vs he was giuen to vs he laboured thirtie three yeares in our behalfe he spent his pretious bloud vpon the purchace of his fathers and our fathers yea his owne heauenly Kingdome for vs and now for a happie conclusion of all he is gone to take possession of what he has purchaced for vs. Be not troubled then my soule but reioyce with a greater ioy then euer he is gone to prepare vs a place a permanent place a place of ineffable delight of eternall abode in the bosome of his father and our father We are not seruants but friends but children but coheirs with Christ We are not now pilgrimes we are gott home in him We are citizens with the Saintes and God's Domestikes THE IV. MEDITATION The 5. fruite of Christs Ascension The opening of Heauen Gates I. POINT CONSIDER that if Iesus be gone it is still to be a Iesus to vs still to aduance the worke of our redemption Heauen gates were shutt against man euer since Adams disobedience and he hauing first past the gates of death to breake vp the brazen gates of Hell is gone with with power to command the potentates of that Celestiall Citie to open them saying Lift vp your Gates ô you princes and be you lifted vp ô eternall gates and the Kinge of glorie shall enter in That strong and mightie Lord is at hand who returnes from battell with victorie Affection Take courage then my soule the passage is layd open according to Micheas his Prophesie He ascended laying open the way before them Le ts but follow our Capitaine and the place is ours Heauen is ours He hath shewed vs the way Howbeit we must walke as he walked in humilitie meeknesse obedience chastitie pouertie patience c. Nor must we imagine that malice can ascende with the Authour of goodnesse nor luxurie and lust with the Sonne of a Virgine nor vice finally with the God of vertues The 6. fruite of Christs Ascension He goes our Aduocate into Heauen and sends another into the Earth II. POINT CONSIDER that he is gone indeede for while they all looked on saith S. Luke a cloud has taken him from the Apostles eyes But he is gone vpon a most honorable and profitable imployment for man He 's gone to carie vp man to heauen and to send downe God into the Earth establishing as it were a good intelligence by a mutuall embasie betwixt heauen and Earth Man to God in heauen as Aduocate to plead for man and God to man in earth to teach him all truth to inculcate to him againe and againe what Christ had alreadie taught to inflame our hartes with the holy fire which Christ brought downe into the earth c. Affection Yes my soule he is gone to carie vp that man Christ to be Mediatour betwixt God and man and to pleade the cause of man at Gods Tribunal My sinnes are many and great great I say and many but my Mediatour is infinite I am able to pleade nothing but guiltie dread Lord guiltie But my Aduocate hath wounds to shew and bloud which cryes lowder then the bloud of Abel and claymes mercy as hauing payd more then my malice was able to contract As often as that bloud lookes redd from the side of that sonne who is sett at thy right hand I beseech thee that the spotts of my corruption may be washed away THE V. MEDITATION The 7. fruite of Christs Ascension The presenting of freed Captiues to his Father I. POINT CONSIDER that our most Blessed Sauiour came downe from heauen to to wage warre against the world the flesh and the Diuell and now he returnes with victorie ouer them all and bringes backe the spoyles to the Court of Heauen in tryumphe leading Captiuitie it selfe captiue that is the captiue soules deteyned in Lymbo Patrum which he wrested out of a stronge hand and offers them to his heauenly Father as the first fruites of his longe and painefull labours and part of the purchace of the pretious bloud he had plentifully spent Affection O what tongue of man or Angell is able to expresse or what hart to conceiue how gratefull this returne and tryumph was to heauen how agreable this present was in the Almighties sight and how all the heauenly Israell reioyced to see our heauenly litle Dauid returned with such victorie so ample spoyles If the Conuersion of one poore sinner my soule cause such ioy among the Angells what accesse of ioy must the securitie of so many Saintes who are to be their fellow citizens for euer cause in those heauenly hartes The 8. fruite of Christs Ascension The raysing our affections from the Earth II. POINT CONSIDER that our Blessed Sauiour is ascended to heauen from which he descended to carrie vp our hartes thither from whence they were fallen by sinne and to waine our affections from earth and make them wholye Spirituall according to that of the diuine Apostle if you be rysen with Christ seeke the thinges that are aboue where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God mynde the thinges which are aboue not the thinges which are vpon the earth Affection O Deare Iesus since as well thy descention as thy Ascension yea all the mysteries of thy blessed life and Passion turne all to our vtilitie and vse grant that we may make a right vse of them and wholie turne our hartes from earth to thee that though our bodies be imprisoned in it for a time yet in harte and affection we may alwayes liue aboue with thee that we may truly say with S. Paule our conuersation is in heauen THE VI. MEDITATION I. POINT CONSIDER finally that since Iesus our deare Lord and Master is returned to heauen as we are assured by faithfull witnesses who deliuer by the mouth of S. Iohn noe other thinge then what they saw with their eyes what they looked vpon and what their hands had handled of the WORD of life there is indeede nothinge left vs in earth worthie to lodge a Christian hart vpon He is our true life and what liuing is there without life He 's our treasure and where should our hartes be but where our treasure is He is our crucified
loue and is not the soule wonte to be more where it loues then where it liues Affection Ah my soule how longe shall we be heauie harted loue vanitie and seeke a lye Shall we continue still in a languishing to death rather then breath after life and for life Shall we lodge our hartes in earth while our treasure is in heauen Shall flesh and bloud force the soule from its owne nature and bent and make it liue more where it liues then where it loues O Iesu my Treasure my Loue my Life let it not be so but draw our drowsinesse after thee and we will run in the odour of thy sweete oyntements Giue vs winges deare Lord and we will flye a pace vp after thee and wholie rest and repose in thee How our Sauiour went from the Apostles II. POINT CONSIDER that as our B. Sauiours life in earth was wholy spent in testifying his loue to mankind and in heaping his fauours vpon the same so doth his last moment vpon earth leaue markes of the same goodnesse For the Euangelist represents this good father of ours with his hands lifted vp to heauen for vs and imparting a blessing to vs. To witt the Preist for euer according to the Order of Melchisedech hauing ended all the bloudie Sacryfices in one would not departe from his people till he left a blessing vpon them Affection Depart not my soule from this heauenly contemplation till thou receiuest a blessing from thy good Fathers hand Stay with the Apostles at his sacred feete till he blesse thee with them Vse a holy and humbly confident importunitie when thou apprehendest that Christ is about to withdraw himselfe and leaue thee saying with the good Patriarke Iacob I will not I will not deare Lord let thee goe till thou dost blesse me with a blessing of pardon for my sinns of peace of loue of vnion c. THE VII MEDITATION How the Apostles behaued themselues after their Masters departure I. POINT CONSIDER that when the Apostles had beheld their Master mount vp in the greatnesse of his owne power into the heauens they stoode as thinges quite deade to this world without action or motion saue onely that admiration ioy hope loue which boyled vp in their mournefull-ioyfull hartes fixed their eyes immoueably vpon the cloudes where their deare Master made his passage till two Angells were sent to call them away from that contemplation to act in Hierusalem according to their diuine Masters order and example Affection Learne hence my soule to follow thy Iesus where soeuer he goes be it to his death his Resurrection or his Ascension and where as in body we cannot le ts with the Apostles fasten our eyes and hartes vpon heauen and neuer forsake him saying euer and a none with that feruent Sainte Augustine caelum penetrabo mente my harte shall peirce the heauens and in thought I will be alwayes with thee deare Iesus For ah how sweete it is to be continually sucking delightes from those sacred and sugered breasts of thy consolation II. POINT CONSIDER that there the Apostles stayed Prisoners as it were to loue and delight till two Angells were sent to call them away from that sweete contemplation to act in Hierusalem according to their diuine Masters order and example But noe sooner were they called by those heauenly Messengers but they obeyed came downe from the mountaine turned their contemplations and admirations into adorations and actions returning into Hierusalem with great ioy to prayse blesse preache and magnifie his name in the Temple and euery where and to expect the coming of the holy Ghost according to his gracious promesse Affection It is doubtlesse a deare and laudable delight my soule to flye vp by the winges of holy contemplation to peirce the cloudes with him to strike into that Land of plentie and peace whither he is gone and to repose in him for euer Haue you found the honie of heauenly contemplation feare not to taste and take it downe yet so much onely as sufficeth least perhapps being filled you vomit it vp But doth a voyce from heauen a Superiours commande charitie to a neighbour Gods worke call you from it ah fayle not delay not to follow neuer forgetting that the God of consolation ought to be preferred before Gods consolations his good pleasure and his worke before the delightes and pleasvres he bestowes vpon vs. PREPARATIONS TO RECEIVE THE HOLY GHOST THE FIRST MEDITATION The first disposition The consideration of our owne miserie I. POINT CONSIDER as the first disposition to the receiuing of the holy Ghost our owne nakednesse miserie and nothing for if we conceiue indeede as indeede it is most true that we are nothing we haue nothing we can doe nothing but onely by the assistance and grace of God which is powred forth in our hartes by the holy Ghost which is giuen vs how is it possible that we should not make an earnest application to that good giuer of all best gifts that now that the comfort of Christs visible presence is taken from vs he would bestow vpon vs that other comforting Spirit Affection Looke downe ô thou Almightie giuer of all good giftes and behold the slaue that was redeemed by the wounds which thy Christ my Aduocate layes open before thee to plead for my pouertie Looke vpon thy Christ and take pittie on this languishing christian of thyne for whom he dyed O almighty father looke vpon this poore child of thine who lyes sicke of a palsie and is cruelly tortured send downe speedily that comforting Spirit which thou art about to send least he otherwise perish for whose safetie thy deare sonne spared not his pretious bloud The 2. disposition Humilitie II. POINT CONSIDER and le ts vse as a seconde disposition rysing out of the truth of the former as absolute a desire as we can possibly conceiue not to be knowen nor esteemed by any or at least lets desire to be knowne as we knowe our selues and as God knowes vs that is to be poore miserable sinners not as we deludingly appeare This as being a reall effect of true humilitie is the best harbinger to prepare a place for this heauenly Guest for in whom saith the holy Scripture will the Spirit of God rest but in a hart that is mylde and humble c. Affection Studie to be a louer of truth my soule not of vanitie and lyes which haue alwayes proued emptie shadowes and haue left nothing in our hands Be sincere and iust and striue to keepe iustice betwixt thy selfe and thyne owne harte betwixt what thou appearest to be and what indeede thou art and desire not that esteeme and honour by others ignorance be payd to thy corruption and sinfulnesse Haue frequently in hart and mouth to thee alone ô Lord be honour and glorie to me nothing but shame and confusion Because in thy sight I am a miserable sinner and vnworthy of all respect But thou ô Lord haue mercy THE II. MEDITATION The 3.
disposition A holy retreate I. POINT CONSIDER by the B. Apostles example that the third disposition to receiue the holy Ghost ought to be a sacred solitude or retreate from wordly affaires vaine feares fruitlesse sollicitudes which disorder and take vp the house of our hart which should be wholy kept for the intertaynement of so great a guest The world was alwayes his and our worst enemye and hates him It were not to receiue him worthily to suffer his enemye to prepossesse the place The designe of his heauenly hart is to speake to ours alone and to make vs tast how sweete our God is And farre vnfitt it were to mixe those pure delightes with the bitter-sweetes the world affords Affection Le ts then my soule striue to silence those as importune as vnprofitable noyses and rumours of the world which hinder vs to heare what Heauen speakes to our hartes The world indeede is still whispering in the cares of our hart and tells vs of I know not what delightes but ah they are not like to the Law of our Lord that deare Law of loue which the holy Ghost sweetly breathes into our soules They are not they are not like it They doe but promise feyned pleasure peace and pay certaine paines and affliction Auant therfore deluding world disband fond feares and sollicitudes and leaue the whole hart for the God of loue The 4. disposition Our owne earnest endeuour II. POINT CONSIDER for the 4. disposition that this solitude is not to be spent in an idle and sleepie expectation without any concurrence of ours but contrarily by how much the more we are remoued from the world in our thoughtes by so much more are they to be conuersant in heauen for though the holy Ghost be a free gift and could not be merited by all the endeuours of men but proceedes from the vncompelled and free goodnesse of the father and the Sonne who the Sonne by his sacred word promised by his painefull Passion merited and by his holy prayers preuayled for his coming yet we see by the example of the Apostles and Primitiue Christians that we are to make vse of our owne endeuours before we haue the happinesse to receiue him indeede as dispositions to prepare our hartes against the receipt of so great a Gueste Affection Noe my soule the God who made vs without our helpe will not saue vs without our owne concourse or cooperation He will saue vs in qualitie of such as he made vs by his gift and grace to witt reasonable and free Creatures He hath taught vs to aske to seeke to knocke nor shall we otherwise receiue or find the gate open Nay he euen reproches vs that being so longe so continually with vs our coldnesse yet asketh nothing Nor would he euer saith sweete S. Augustine so earnestly exorte vs to aske if he would not giue Let slouthfull man blush then since God is more readie to giue then we to receiue He 's more readie to grant mercye then we to be deliuered from miserie THE III. MEDITATION The 5. disposition Prayer I. POINT CONSIDER for the 5. disposition the primitiue and Apostolicall way to receiue the holy Ghost as it is deliuered in the first of the Actes All of them saith S. Luke were perseuering in prayer We find the Apostles to whom the promesse was newly made praying for the performance of it We find the Primitiue Christians and our Blessed Lady her selfe at prayer Nay euen our Aduocate while he was yet with vs told vs that he would pray to his heauenly father for vs in this behalfe good reason then that we his poore clyents should ioyne in petition with him and earnestly pray that that holy Spirit may be sent to vs. Affection Let vs then my soule incessantly both day and night aspire and breath after this holy Spirit saying with blessed S. Aug. Come ô thou holy communication of the Father and the Sonne and prepare thyne owne habitation Come and visite the darke retreaites of our distracted hartes Come ô thou clenser of sinnes and curer of wounds Come ô thou strength of the weake and support of such as are readie to fall Come ô thou teacher of the humble and destroyer of the proude Come purifie this self-loue by thy sacred fire enlighten this self-iudgement by thy cleare light and breake downe this selfe will of myne by thyne vnresistable power The 6. disposition Vnanimous perseuerance in prayer II. POINT CONSIDER that the Apostles and Primitiue Christians Prayer was accompayned with vnanimitie and perseueuerance It was not slightly and distractedly run ouer in a short tyme but they absolutly made it their busines being shutt vp togeither euen from the Ascension till Pentecoste or the coming of the holy Ghost vnanimously and instantly begging and expecting that Best gift Affection Thus my soule let vs and all that loue the eternall loue of the Father and the Sonne pray vnanimously not with diuided hartes and perseuerantly all togeither not as though we were litle concerned or that we had not all one designe since we ought all to haue but one hart And ioyne in prayer with that deare Mediatour and Aduocate of ours to his father and our father at whose right hand he is still pleading for vs his poore brethren according to flesh that he would dispatch downe that holy Spirit of theirs into our hartes to th end we may all be but one by loue and vnion with the father and Sonne and the same Spirit as they are but all one in essence and substance and that our hartes may continue the pure and chaste Temples of the holy Trinitie for euer Christian hartes thus vnited are able to make a holy force against Heauen and draw from thence the Spirit of vnion AN ENTERTAYNEMENT FOR WHITSONTIDE OR MEDITATIONS OF THE HOLY GHOST THE I. MEDITATION That of our selues without the ayde of the holy Ghost we can doe nothing I. POINT CONSIDER that Man of himselfe as of himselfe is not able to think one good thought but all our sufficiencie is from God and what God the Father by his power is able to performe what the sonne by his wisdome to inuent is not executed and applied vnto vs but by the goodnes and loue of God the holY Ghost whence s. Paule None can say Lord Iesus that is as he ought profitablY to saluation but in the holy Ghost Affection See mY soule in these diuine truths thine owne sufficiencie that is thy pouertie and meere nothing We are not able to worke one good worke nor saie one good word nor euen conceaue one good thought but all euen all our sufficiencie is from that great Giuer of all good giftes So that we may well pronounce with the holy Church without thy power ô diuine Spirit there is nothing at all sound in Man If then all our strength be from him let all our addresses be to him If we indeede acknowledge our owne impotencie let vs betake our selues to his omnipotencie If
heauen wherein we must be saued before the face of the Tirant at the perill of our liues and liberties Doe we endeauour to print in our owne hartes and the hartes of all men this sauing truth that that Iesus which died forvs rose againe ascended into Heauen and is there gloriously seated at the right hand of his heauenly father know my soule for certaine that such blessed effects issue from the presence of the Spirit of Iesus the holy Ghost and reioce in it with a chast feare II. POINT CONSIDER yet another effect of the presence of the holy Ghost which is a loue to heare the word of God and a constant adhearing to and perseuering in Apostolicall Doctrine frequent Communion and feruent and vnanimous prayer with reuerence and feare Such was the practise of the primitiue Christians who as in Acts 2. were perseuering in the Doctrine of the Apostles in the communication of the breaking of Bread and Prayer Affection Obserue my soule what the first fruites and feruour of the Spirit ledd the primitiue Christians to and neither feare nor fayle to follow them They perseuered in the doctrine of the Apostles And shall we giue eare to the new-found fancies and pious imaginations of new masters If any saith S. Paule euangelize to you were he an Angell besides that which you haue receiued be he accursed They communicated euery day and shall we be backward in it when laudable custome and conueniencie calls vs to it They continued vnanimously togeither in publike prayer And shall we run into corners and more please our selues in our deuotions of our owne inuention Noe noe it is the publike and vnanimous prayer of the faithfull that infallibly peirceth heauen and leaues our harts comfortable testimonies that the holy Ghost resides therin THE XIV MEDITATION The H. Ghosts presence knowen by the effects I. POINT CONSIDER againe as another argument of the H. Ghost the loue of vnitie of harts and communitie of our substances The multitude of beleeuers the primitiue Christians had one hart and one soule neither did anie say that ought was his owne of those things which he possessed but all things were common vnto them nor was anie needie among them From this blessed vnion and Communion did S. Augustine and the rest of the first founders of religious orders take the platforme of their proceedings These saith he were the first that heard How good and how pleasant a thing it is for brethren to dwell in one but that fraternall loue and vnion stopped not there but that exultation of Charitie descended downe to posteritie Thence it is that in religious houses to this day there is but one hart and one soule one celler one panterie one purse one comon designe to loue God aboue all things and their neighbour as themselues Affection O Blessed vnion ô happie communion which composeth euen a heauen in earth In thee noe myne and thyne is heard those cold words which are the source of all dissension In thee there is a perfect imitation of the B. Trinitie where many are one three persons and one onely God many operations but one will one and the same Spirit working them all Many Attributes but one and the same comon substance So saith S. Augustine in a Monasterie they liue so that they all seeme but to compose one man They are many bodies but not many hartes Many operations but all guided by one will Many offices but all vsing one comon substance or stocke And all this that Christians may become one by charitie as Christ and his heauenly Father are one in Deitie If we imbrace and loue this vnitie my soule we hold Charitie and the holy Gost certainly dwells in our hartes How the holy Ghost raignes in vs. I. POINT CONSIDER Finally that the holy Ghost doth not onely liue but gloriously raignes in our harts as it did in the primitiue Christians when we doe not only willingly but euen ioyfully endure contumelies contempts temptations tribulations c. for the name of Iesus yea euen glorie in them for the loue of that name for so did the Apostles Acts. 5. They went from the sight of the Counsell reioycing because they were accompted worthie to suffer reproache for the name of Iesus So the Christian Iewes suffered the losse of their Goods with ioy hoping for a better and a permanent substance And S. Paule I abound with ioy in all my tribulations I euen glorie in them Affection O my soule if we finde this ioy in the holy Ghost this omne gaudium in sufferance with Iesus Let 's reioyce reioyce and springe with ioy because our reward will be great in heauen But reioyce in our Lord the good giuer of this heauenly abundance the holy Ghost raignes in vs. Marrie if we find not this ioy this glorie in tribulation yet find patience and resignation with a desire of this reioyce notwithstanding the holy Ghost liues in vs. And he that begun this good worke will perfect it haue we a little patience and will confirme and establish it at his good pleasure cease not in the interim to emulate how euer we find not ourselues yet in tearmes to performe those better giftes what we haue we haue from God and what we haue from God comes from the order of his wise prouidence one thus and another thus according to the measure of Christs plenitude Cease not to aske to seeke to knocke Truth hath promised by the mouth of Ezechiel that what is weake he will strengthen and what is fatt and stronge he will keepe and feede c. THE XV. MEDITATION How the Holy Ghost is contristated and weakned in vs. I. POINT CONSIDER that euen as the Soule is seene often to languish in the bodie by reason of manie infirmities in such sort as though indeed it liue yet it seemes to be depriued of liuely motion sense and vigour so the soule of the soule the holy Ghost is so contristated as it were by the multitude of veniall sinnes especially if our affection be placed vpon them that it seemes to be depriued of actiuitie that is the hartes wherein it resides leaue off to be prompt feruent flourishing and fruitfull leading a drooping and drowsie life and expecting in a manner the first faire occasion to perish How doe many little sinns being neglected kill saith s. Augustine Marrie manie smalle droppes furnish a riuer and aboundance of sand though smalle graines sinke a shippe the neglect of pumping causes shippwracke as well as the billowes which ouerflowe the shippe Affection Take better grounds my soule Dispute not what 's veniall sinne S. Teresa found not herselfe safe in that practice But what euer hath any face of euill that flye And following S. Paules councell what things soeuer be true what soeuer honest what soeuer iust c. what soeuer of good fame if there be anie vertue anie prayse of discipline those things lets thinke vpon those things let 's doe Le ts not be strait harted
worke that man or Angell is capable of since we we goe to pay to God the worshippe of Latria which is properly due to himselfe alone To receiue him into the narrow cottage of our hart whom the highest heauens cannot comprehend To eate the bread of Angells the body of the son of God This is the qualitie of the blessed worke we ayme at Affection Be wise then my soule and wisely discerning what thou goest about striue to imploy thy best and euen outmost endeuours vpon the best of workes Be iust withall and proue not a slow Creditour in paying what thou owest This God thou receiuest is the Lord of life and death and both are iustly due to him He giues himselfe all wholy to thee giue thy selfe wholy backe to him Man is but a sparing exchange for a God If thy hart be alreadie farre too straight to receiue him whom the heauens cannot conteyne let not the world at least possesse any part of it and make it yet more narrow lesse capable Striue to haue the hart of an Angell since thou eatest their foode yea a God like hart indeed since the son of a God is made thy foode THE FIRST MOTIVE Gods proper worshippe II. POINT CONSIDER that as this Sacrament and Sacrifice is the onely proper worshippe due to God so haue we noe other meanes to worshippe him according to his infinite dignitie but this Sacrament and Sacrifice wherin God the Sonne a person equall to him is offered to God the Father But the desire of our hart is to serue God in the best manner we can therfor we must needs frequently desire this Sacrament and Sacrifice Affection My soule my soule le ts not complement God with fictions and Sacryfice him with a lye If the desire of thy hart be indeede to serue him in the best manner we are able and to pay him the proper worshippe due vnto him thou hast in this Blessed Sacrament mett with the meanes to performe it What thou hast not of thyne owne he lends thee of his Hauing riches enough offered thee by him that became poore to inrich thee proue not slow in paying what thou owest If without him we confesse we cannot let vs not fayle to concurre with his blessings to the performance of our dutie And make resolutions accordingly THE II. MEDITATION THE SECOND MOTIVE Loue of vnion with God I. POINT IF we be the true children of Christ we desire truly and indeede to be true Christians and truly to loue Christ But loue leades to neerenesse familiaritie and vnion with the thing beloued therfor must we desire vnion Nor is there a more neere and deare vnion then to lodge him in our harte which is done by receiuing this Blessed Sacrament we must needes then earnestly desire often to receiue this Blessed Sacrament Affection In vaine my soule doe we vsurpe the name of Father if we haue not the hart of children In vaine pretend we to be Christians if we loue not Christ And falsely doe we seeme to haue or desire his loue whose companie we flye whose familiaritie we seeke not this our owne conscience and experience assures vs is true in all we loue saue him whom we should most of all loue For hauing alwayes the meanes at hand of a most neere and deare and blesse-full and glorious vnion if by coldnesse neglect or carelessenesse we make noe vse of it what doe we but declare to the world that we haue not indeede the hartes of children we haue not the Loue of Christians w● remayne in a lukewarme condition which God hates and reiects THE THIRD MOTIVE Gratitude II. POINT CONSIDER that if we be truly gratefull for the innumerably many and great benefits which we haue continually receiued and dayly doe receiue and expect still to receiue from the hand of God we truly desire some fitt meanes to shew our gratitude nor can we find any more worthy more acceptable more effectuall then to fall vpon the Psalmists conclusion when he was in the same care I will receiue saith he the cupp of my Sauiour That is I will offerre vp Christ to his heauenly Father I must be carefull then frequently to communicate Affection Ah my soule how long shall we remayne heauie harted how long shall we putt vniust rates vpon thinges and waigh benefits in deceiptfull ballances Are we not kindly sensible enough of the smale fauours which we receiue from mē and doe we not find our selues more then sufficiently liuely in point of requitall is it God alone who made the hart that can find noe fauour with it Must toyes from the hand of man be esteemed and extolled and must innumerable benefits from the hand of God be still vnderualued fall to the ground or be receiued as duties must we steale tyme from tyme to gratifie the one and let tyme slide idlely by lent to complie with the other could we pretend the want of abilitie our excuse were currant before men though as to God there can neuer be want where the hartes desires are admitted for payment but while we haue the most easie most acceptable most effectuall meanes and yet not make vse of it make we not our ingratitude to God euident to all men THE III. MEDITATION THE FOVRTH MOTIVE Our heauenly Fathers inuitations I. POINT CONSIDER that if we haue the true harts of children we can neuer turne a deafe eare to a louing fathers inuitations especially where they come home to our owne aduantages but our heauenly father earnestly inuites vs some tymes by promises of comfort come vnto me all you that are oppressed and I will refreshe you some tymes intices by hopes of life euerlasting he that eates my flesh c. shall liue for euer And sometymes he incites by pressing necessitie vnlesse you eate the flesh of the sonne of man c. you shall not haue life in you We must needs then be carefull to communicate frequently Affection Our hartes ake we are not able to dissemble the sense of our continuall anxietie nor yet can we preuayle with our selues to haue recourse to the milde Lambe who promises solace Our life runs dayly into decay we languish and dye nor yet can we resolue to run to the foode which giues sure hopes of life euerlasting We see our necessitie and cannot find in our hartes to fixe vpon the remedie To witt we are selfe murtherers we haue not indeede hartes of children we are deafe to his inuitations and cryes and to our owne aduantages and repose Alas what a miserable senselessenes is this solace life libertie God himselfe is presented And yet wearied dying inthraled man lookes vpon that vnspeakable benefite as a thing oblidging to losse THE FIFT MOTIVE The Saintes example I. POINT CONSIDER that if our absolute aymes and desires be to liue in euerlasting ioyes with the Saintes of God in heauen it were but fitting that we should begin now in earth to honour them to reioyce them and to ioy with them but that
thing but God can dispose man worthily to receaue God What euer is good in our hart is his gift as well as the hart it selfe It can indeede wish well and moue towards God but it is from him and by him and in him Thou must then ô God preuent dispose purifie beautifie worke all in vs because thou dost loue vs and thou dost loue vs because thou hast loued vs from all eternitie Affection What haue we then to doe deare Sauiour when we are to receaue thee but to run out before vnto thee by an humble acknowledgement of our owne insufficiencie and with frequent and feruent prayers to begge of thy goodnes to inable vs. How this great worke is to be performed we truly know not yet this we know that if the holy Ghost descend vpon vs and the vertue of the highest ouershade vs our harts will be made an agreable habitacle to thy Maiestie Cleanse vs then ô Lord and we shall be cleane and pure as thou commandest but giue ô Lord what thou commandest and command what thou wilt II. POINT CONSIDER that though none but God can dispose man worthily to receaue God yet will not God worke without our consent and cooperation to witt he disposeth euery thinge sweetly according to the nature of things he will not therfore force mans free will nor worke without it but will haue it to run with him following that Doe thou draw me and we both will run And that of S. Aug. Vnlesse thou wert an operator or woker God would not be a cooperator Hence it is said conuert yourselues to me and I will turne towards you Draw neere to God and he will draw neere to you In vaine doe we hope any thing shall be done vnlesse we contribute our owne endeuours to Gods preuenting and cooperating grace which yet runs before all or endeuours the will being prepared by our Lord. Affection O great God sith it is thy blessed will to admitt vs as Coadiutours to vse S. Paules expression in this great worke while thou needst not ours or any helpe to performe all that thou wilt in heauen and earth I resolue by the assistance of thy grace to omitt nothing which my pouertie may be able to performe I will first labour to remoue what might be noysome by ouercoming such and such imperfections to which I find my selfe more inclyned and then I will striue to adorne my soule with the vertues which I know to be most agreeable in thy sight confessing ingenuously that hauing done all we can we are but poore and vnprofitable Seruants THE IX MEDITATION The best preparation a good life I. POINT CONSIDER that properly speaking what is to be done on our parte is punctually to complie with our dutie And what is the dutie of a Christian but to liue Christianly that is to imitate him whom we worshippe Iesus Christ to endeuour continually to expresse his life in ours according to euery ones state and measure dayly to meditate his holy law of loue and faithfully to keepe his commandements To such he willingly comes with such he takes vp his Mansion Affection To haue the singular happinesse to feede of Christ my soule we must by all reason follow Christ To liue of Christ we must liue in Christ and according to Christ we must leade the life of Christ A life full of affabilitie mildnesse simplicitie humility and charitie to our heauenly Father and all our Christian brethren especially those who by one and the same holy profession are lincked togeither in vnion of hartes and designes It is not the solicitous and frightfull discussion of our hartes fuller of feare then loue one halfe houre before the tyme that will proue the best preparation to receiue so great a Maiestie Heare S. Augustine He that is not worthy dayly to receiue will not be worthy a yeare hence But a constant practise of vertue all the weeke long and a perseuerant resolution to subdue our vicious inclinations and neuer to desiste till we haue prepared in our hartes a place for our deare Lord a cleane tabernacle for the God of Iacob The necessarie preparation The state of grace II. POINT CONSIDER that the immediate and absolutely necessarie preparation is if we will not turne our souueraigne foode into poyson and eate our owne damnation to be in the state of grace that is that our consciences are neither certainly guiltie of mortall sinne nor reasonably doubtfull of the same nor that we liue in the neerest or absolute occasions therof To which we must adde if we haue the hartes of true Christians if great aduancement in vertue be our ayme if we desire not onely to haue life but to haue it more abundantly the freeing of our selues of the fantomes and fumes of mortall sinne affection to veniall sinne with our best endeuours to procure in our hartes a hunger and thirst of this sacred foode For this bread saith S. Augustine requires hunger in the interiour man Affection Alas my soule if we should euer haue bene or should be so vnhappie as to dare to approche this dreadfull table wanting the first we should but industriously labour more desparatly to loose our selues and for want of that wedding garment to be cast out into vtter darknesse A pittifull spectacle to God and Angells to see death drunke out of the fountaine of life To see poyson drawen out of that sweeter then honie combe And by wanting the second howeuer we remayne a liue we doe but languish Our sparing sowing can but hope for a poore croppe The heauenly operation is too much stratened in such narrow hartes God is not delighted where he finds so little delight Is it possible my soule that where we meete with so good measure and pressed downe and shaken togeither and runing ouer we should so sparingly measure backe againe That where God giues himselfe wholy man should render himselfe by halfes THE X. MEDITATION Not Solicitude but loue disposeth c. I. POINT CONSIDER and putt downe for certaine that vse we what care we will what solicitous examination and squeesing of cōscience we can possibly imploye yet shall we neuer appeare agreeable in our heauenly spouses sight neuer be gratefull to the God of vertues vnlesse we come adorned with his vertues especially those which he sent from heauen to witt faith hope and Charitie Heare S. Benard how much soeuer you purge your selues how much soeuer you torture and torment your selues the God of vertues will not come vnto you vnlesse you be adorned with the vertues Affection It is not by force of armes my soule by frightes and immoderate feares that this Blessed Guest ought to be receiued But firme Faith alone which with Zacheus clymes vp a loft ouer lookes all visible thinges and fixes vpon inuisible thinges can find him out Hope confidently opens the dores and charitie giues him a gratefull entertaynement louingly imbraces him and deliciously feastes with him and on him And humbly and chastly dares
we forgett him Isay who least he might haue bene forgotten by vs continues still with vs leauing vs noe lesse memoriall of himselfe then himselfe O be thou euer blessed and magnified my dearest Lord And be they euer accursed who forgett thee who art the fountaine of liuing waters flowing into life euerlasting THE XV. MEDITATION The seauenth Cause That being fedd with diuine foode we might become diuine I. POINT CONSIDER that a seauenth cause of the Institution of the Blessed Sacrament was to th end that being continually fedd and delighted with his heauenly body we might be wayned from and contemne the gliding delights of earthly ones with all their paynefull delights and concupiscences and therby leading a spirituall and heauenly not a terreane life that that of Saint Paule may indeede as it ought be verifyed of vs. I liue now not I but Christ liues in me Affection Such my soule should we be indeede persons quite wayned from the fleshpotts and vnions of Egipt since we are continually fedd with heauenly Manna With the true foode of the children of God with the foode which is truly God Our aymes are God our foster-father God our food is God And what should our thouhtes words and workes be but of God and for God Let vs then neuer proue so vnhappie as loathing this heauenly delicious and fattening foode to fall vpon windie and emptie huskes which indeede feede not fatten not saciate not The eight Cause The continuall presence of the Angells II. POINT CONSIDER as an eight cause of the Institution of the B. Sacrament the continuall presence of the B. Angells of heauen for as S Chrisostome saith Where Christe is in the Euchariste there are not wanting the frequent troopes of Angells Ambrose where this body is there the Eagles are gathered togeither fluttering about with their spirituall wings I saith he in another place the Eagles are about the Altar where the body is Affection Yes my soule we haue power by a vertuous life framed according to the life of Christ to take soretastes of heauen and to turne this base land we liue in into a heauenly Paradice The God of Angells is with vs and in vs when we please They come downe to vs and we mutually soare vp to them by our heauenly thoughtes and conuersation when we will They and we feede of one and the same foode though in a differēt manner loue and adore the same God singe the same Gloria's Alleluia's and Sanctus Sanctus Sanctus THE XVI MEDITATION Of the excellencie of the Blessed Sacrament I. POINT CONSIDER that our Sauiour Iesus Christ as a most tender gratious bountifull father made a most excellent and admirable will and testament and left vs thereby a legacie more pretious and better then heauen and earth to witt his most sacred bodie for our daylie food and his Blessed blood for our drinke Affection O sacred and soueraigne food ô most admirable mysterie ô diuine and deare inuention ô all you that loue God come come make haste and see with admiration and astonishment praise proclaime and magnifie for euer the name of our gracious God who hath daigned to worke such thinges in our days and in vs in vs poore miserable wormes of the earth II. POINT CONSIDER that though it were an ineffable dignation farr passing the inuention of men and Angells that he who was in the beginning with God and was euen God himselfe should build himselfe a cottage of our clay and become man like one of vs indeede yet doth it farre surpasse that againe to see the same not only take our humanitie but bestowe vpon vs also his diuinitie conioyned and vnited with the same humanitie to dwell in vs to take vp his delights and suppe with vs and euen to become our repast and nourishment Affection O what thought of man of Angells is in any measure able to diue into the infinite Abysse of the burning charitie which our Sauiour Iesus Christ meant to expresse in this most venerable Sacrament his pious fatherly hart could deuise nothing so sublimely and soueraignely good as himselfe and therefore himselfe hee bequeathes to leaue our harts charged with the demonstration of the greatest excesse of loue imaginable THE XVII MEDITATION I. POINT CONSIDER that though to giue all one hath be an argument of great loue yet to giue ones selfe is farr greater but incomparably the greatest of all to giue what we haue and what we are in such a manner and for such an end for we receiue him not now as a father and companion a brother a price but as our foode by which being worthily receiued we are made one with him not that wee chāge this diuine foode into our nature but we are rather changed and transformed into it euen as fire changes the nature of wood into it selfe Affection Ah whose hart is not stirred to deuotion and euen burnt vp with loue when he seriously considers with what excesse of loue and charitie with what solicitude as it were that Lord of Maiestie that powerfull King of glorie striues to gaine our hartes to his loue hartes which are but earth and ashes full of frailtie viciousnesse and indignitie and farr vnworthie to be chosen to be the habitacles and temples of the adorable Trinitié II. POINT CONSIDER how God could neither haue depressed himselfe lower or raised vs higher then that the bread of Angells should become the poore pilgrimes food then that the Creatour should be the creatures meate then that he who fills heauen and earth with the glorie of his diuine Maiestie should be receiued and handled and eaten by our miserie the highest heauens are not able to comprize his Magnitude and yet he will please to inhabite the narrow spaces of our howses of clay Affection Is it possible then may we not only saie with Salomon that God doth dwell with or amongst men but more is it possible that God hauing taken a humane nature vpon him and become man should also become mans food and dwell not only with man but euen in him there to cure our diseases languors and infirmities not with an infinitie of other meanes which his wisedome could inuēt but euen by the presence ' and application of his owne pretious body and blood III. POINT CONSIDER that Christ comes vnto vs accompayned with a thousand blessings for he brings into the soule that worthily receaues him what euer vertue he practised in his life all the fruite of his Passion Resurrection and Ascension the beatitude of his most Blessed bodie the efficacie of his most pretious blood and the merits of his most excellent soule and in a word all that euer can be desired or imagined Affection What is there then ô man which thou standest not possessed of what is it thou wantest if thou be not wanting to thy selfe in either not worthily preparing thy selfe to receiue so great a guest or hauing receiued him in not worthily entertaining him That man is euidently conuinced to be
from prayer to worke from worke againe to prayer and though the Angells of God come not to thee the God of Angells will not fayle to feede thee with thousands of deare delightes thy prayer shall be without intermission the odours of their sweetnesse shall flow from thy mouth and ●eo Gratias vpon all occasions shall continue alwayes II. POINT REPRESENT her yet further to your thoughtes out of S. Hieromes and S. Ambroses expressions of her ●he was at all tymes saith S. Hierome either reading Meditating or praying Againe in watching she was the first saith the one in speaking she was the last saith the other and most studious in reading especially the holy Scriptures concerning the coming of ●hrist which the frequently redd and imbraced In so much that when her body reposed her hart watched and euen often in her sleepe repeated what she had read or awaking from sleepe continued the same Affection Let vs by this blessed example ô my soule wholy applie our selues to read to Meditate to pray By reading we shall learne to know what we ought to doe by meditating and pondering the same we shall imprint it in our soules and inflame our hartes to the practice thereof and by prayer obteyne force to performe what we know and desire But let this reading be the word of God which will proue a light to our feete a cordiall to our hart sweeter then the honie combe Let our Meditation be his holy Law and his diuine grace our prayer And of all the Scriptures let that be most frequently in our hands mouthes and hartes which most relate to Christs coming life and Passion that we may indeede be sett vpon no other knowledge but Iesus-Christ and him crucified And in that blessed peace that verie peace le ts sleepe and repose Happie will that rest proue when our eyes are shutt with the sweet memorie of Christ and his Law in our mouth and harts THE III. MEDITATION For the Presentation I. POINT CONSIDER that allthough this blessed young Virgine was possessed and prepossessed with all the blessings of heauen and replenished with the plenitude of grace yet was not gtace idle in her or she idle in grace Grace is not giuen to worke all alone but graciously and freely to gayne our will and in it and with it to worke all So that this Blessed Virgine notwithstanding all these huge aduantages and prerogatiues of grace testified to s. Elizabeth a holy Nun that she prepared a place in her hart for God with labour continuall prayer ardent desire profound deuotion many teares and much affliction Affection Thus it is my soule that by her imitation we ought to prepare our hartes for heauen Without preuenting grace indeede we ryse in vaine it is in vaine to ryse before the light or rat he without it we should neuer ryse at all None comes to Christ vnlesse drawen by his heauenly father Yet in vaine too should the light shine if hauing light we did not walke in it If we were so drawen as we followed it not we should neuer arriue He that made vs without vs will not saue vs without vs. All our Talents are his free gifts t is true but we must negotiate with them and improue them We aske because we will we seeke because we will we knocke because we will and we are saued because we will and yet Gods grace workes both the will and performance Le ts adde then our carefull concurrence to his sweete drawghtes and be blessed for euer with that blessed amongst all women II. POINT CONSIDER that this Blessed Virgigins prayer in particular though otherwise full of grace was for grace Grace to be able to complie with those two great Christian duties The loue of God aboue all thinges and of our neighbour as our selfe wherin the whole Law and Prophetes consiste 2. Grace souueraignelie to hate and flye all that he hates whom she souueraignly loues 3. Grace to be truly humble patient mylde and to be adorned with all the vertues that so she might become wholy gracious in the diuine sight 4. Grace finally to be obedient to the high Preists commandes and ordonnances Affection Let vs poore wretches then learne of this most holy Virgine to be continually begging for Gods grace as being necessarie to euery good act and vertuous action of our whole life Say then my soule with S. Augustine Thou commandest vs ô Lord to loue thee aboue all thinges and our neighbour as our selues Giue graciously what thou commandest and commande what thou wilt Thou commandest vs continencie patience humilitie c. Giue what thou commandest and commande what thou wilt In fine say with the holy Church Let thy grace ô Lord we beseech thee both goe before and follow vs and make vs continually addicted to good workes c. THE FIRST MEDITATTION For the Announciation I. POINT CONSIDER that to this Virgine it was thus qualified that is remoued from the world and dwelling in her sacred solitude married to a holy man but to be conserued for the Sonne of the Holy of Holyes prepossessed and replenished by heauenly grace and happily concurring with it by continuall application and feruent prayer still begging more and more grace that an Angell was sent from heauen with an embasie importing greatest honour to her and ioy to all the world to witt to prepare a worthy mariagebedd for the most pure spouse to contract the Mariage betwixt a creature and her creatour and so to begin a happie league betwixt heauen and earth Affection If we desire indeede then my soule to drawe downe heauenly blessinges vpon vs if to haue foretastes of celestiall delightes if Spiritually to conceiue Iesus in our hart let vs flye the cheating corrupting world and betake our selues to the solitude of our chamber or celle There the Kinge of Heauen speakes to our hartes There we put questions and receiue answers of what we are to say and what we are to doe It s hard saith S. Augustine to see Iesus amidst a multitude Our mynde must inioy a certaine solitude That sight requires a secrete place Marie was alone when she spoke with the Angell Alone when the holy Ghost ouershaded her Alone when she conceiued the worlds Redeemour II. POINT CONSIDER the admirable contents of this heauenly embasie at which all heauen and earth may well stand amaysed since all their concernements are to be treated in it The eternall and onely begotten sonne of the eternall God is about to espouse humane nature in an hūble mayde Marie of the house and familie of Dauid The lost world wants a Sauiour and heauen is resolued to giue one Gabriel is dispatched to Nazareth to declare the mysterie and to announce the wounders to the espoused Virgine His first word presents her with plenitude of grace Hayle full of Grace Giues the reason of it Our Lord is with thee Assures her she shall coneeiue and bring forth a sonne a great Sonne a Sonne who as he is indeede
Angell receiues noe returne of answer in words he sees it in effects He obserues in her a singular bashfulnesse and modestie which is the greatest ornament of a Virgine a chast feare and trouble to heare her owne prayses a prudent and mature consideration what the words which she heard might importe and while he heares noe words he replyes to her comportments and thoughts saying feare not Marie And why Not because an Angell salutes thee and publishes thee blessed amongst all women but because thou art indeede gracious and gratefull in the sight of God and hast found loue and fauour with him For saith he thou hast found grace with God Affection Thus my soule let our christian modestie and bashfullnesse appeare before all men and they will reade in our actions without the helpe of words that religion raignes in our hartes and they will depart with edification Let vs thus feare and flye the hearing of our owne prayses come they from men or Angells and we shall infallibly find fauour in the sight of God and his loue will leaue vs noe cause to feare II. POINT CONSIDER what grace and fauour it was that the Blessed Virgine found in the sight of God and you wil find that it was a most profound humilitie Angelicall puritie prompt obedience and most feruent charitie by which she conceiued in her wombe and brought out to the world a Sonne and Sauiour Iesus according to that which the Prophete Isaye fotetold with admiration and astonishment behold a Virgine shall conceiue and bring forth à Sonne and his name shall be called ' Emmanuel which the Angell confirmes and determines to be her selfe saying behold thou shalt conceiue in thy wombe and bring forth a Sonne and thou shalt call his name Iesus Affection Doe we indeede my soule desire to conceiue Iesus spiritualy in our hart and to bring him out to the world Let vs then emulate these better giftes and striue to imitate this Blessed Virgines humilitie puritie obedience and charitie which were powerfull enough to draw God out of heauen and to lodge him in her sacred wombe without these vertues we desire and expect him in vane he that comes to subdue pride wille not lodge in a haughtie hart he that is a pure Spirit yea puritie it selfe hates and flies impuritie Practise these vertues interiourly and we shall not fayle to conceiue him let the same shine before men we bringe him out to our neighbour and he too togeither with vs will run in the odour of those heauenly vertues THE V. MEDITATION For the Announciation I. POINT CONSIDER how this our B. Virgine neither appeares distrustfull nor light of faith but behaues her selfe with all the prudence imaginable for as at the first approche of the Angell she onely ponders and giues noe answer according to that of the wise man Young man speake in thyne owne cause scarcely So at the second onsett she speakes breifly and modestly according to the same If thou be asked twice returne a shore answer or heare holding thy peace and aske So doth the Blessed Virgine saying to the Angell how should this be done because I know not man that is according to Saint Augustine and other fathers I am by vowe of Virginitie in a state of not knowing man Affection This is that blessed temper my soule which all Virgines should striue to imitate neither to be too precipitate in casting out their hartes where noe neede requires nor too bashfull in returning modest answers and in mouing iust doubts as occasion offers it selfe As againe they ought neither to be too credulous and light in beleeuing visions reuelations and fauours from heauen especially such as relate to themselués nor yet too distrustfull all thinges being maturely pondered as though Gods armes were shortened Giue God leaue to doe more then man can vnderstand And where his will appeares certaine doubt not of his powre seeme it neuer so impossible to our comprehensions II. POINT CONSIDER how now the B. Virgine hauing giuen a testimonie that she knowes both how to keepe silence and how to speake there being tymes for both that she was neither distrustfull nor light in beleeuing that though she beleeued the thing yet she was doubtfull of the manner which she modestly demanded and hauing receiued assurance by the Angell that is was to be effected by the power of the highest and the operation of the holy Ghost she presently and wholy yealded vp her selfe to that power which she knew to be omnipotent saying behold the handmayde of our Lord be it done in me according to thy word Affection Say my soule in all occurrences with this Blessed Patronesse of thyne seeme they neuer so hard to common sense be it done to me according to thy word Are heauenly mysteries poposed Giue eare to them in silence Is our answer expected let vs replye without multiplicitie of words Remayne we still doubtfull in the matter or manner demande modestly to haue the thing cleared Doe we find that the solution depends vpon the power of the Highest Le ts stoope in obedience to faith saying be it done to me according to this word thas is let that be done in me by me and with me which is agreable in the sight of the diuine Maiestie Let me be the humble matter or subiect of his diuine operations whether I vnderstand or vnderstand not because noe word is impossible to him THE VI. MEDITATION For the Announciation I. POINT CONSIDER the incomparable humilitie the firme faith the prompt obedience and admirable resignation of this heauenly Virgine The Angell declares her the Mother of God and she her selfe his humble handmayde The Angell intimates a mysterie beyond the power of man and she beleeues that God can doe more then man can comprehend The Angell seemes to deliuer impossibilities that a Virgine without the knowledge of a man should bring out a God yet perceiuing that the hand of the highest is in the worke she beleeues that all thinges are possible to God and affords prompt obedience and vnder that powerfull hand absolutly resignes herselfe to the whole without further discussion while she vnderstands not the halfe depending vp on the diuine authoritie for the rest saying behold the hand mayd of our Lord c. Affection O my soule what lessons are not here put before vs for our instruction and edification what vertues are not here practised to leade vs into an admiration of this glorious Virgine was there euer acte of faith equall to this for an humble mayde to beleeue herselfe to be the Mother of God Or a more admirably greate humilitie then for the Mother of God to declare her selfe his humble hand mayde or finally a more diuinely prompt obedience then that such a Mother was so a hand-mayde that she absolutly resigned herselfe to what euer was to be wrought in her or by her behold the handmayde of our Lord. She neither knew how nor when yet she knew well what we all ought to
be made accordingly THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER That if the approche of the iudge proue so dreadfull what will his finall doome be If we haue not courage enough to stand to behold his dreadfull face how shall we be able to stand to heare his reuengefull sentence which is without repeale And yet truth tells vs as saith S. Paul without excepting any one that we must all stand before his Tribunal And heare that dismale curse pronounced against the wicked Begone you accursed of my father into eternall fire c. Affection Heauen and earth shall passe my soule but the word of God remaynes inuiolable and vnchangable for euer We shall all heare this dismale sentence pronounced against the sinner Begone cursed of my father but whither into euerlastaing fire O horrour of an eternally damning Doome Ah who shall be the obiect of this endlesse wroth Who shall be the accursed subiects vpon whom this reuengfull sentence shall be executed This lyes hidd in the abisse of Gods iust iudgementes But who ought to be so secure as that he should not freely bestowe all his substance to buy out his pardon Who would not abandon all pleasures to auoyd this eternitie of fire who would not imbrace all paines and pressures to purchace securitie against that day of anger Yet why art thou sadd my soule and why dost thou trouble me Our God is the God of mercy and his mercy out-speakes all his workes we are yet in the tyme of mercy He wiskes not the death of a sinner but that be should be conuerted and liue Resolution THE THIRD POINTE. But when these thinges begin to come to passe look vp and lift vp your heades because your redemption is at hand CONSIDER that as the horrour of the sentēce pronounced against the wicked is most dismale so is that which the iust shall heare most comfortable and blisfull Come you blessed of my father receiue the Kingdome prepared for you c. Then shall appeare in the face of the whole world the difference there is betwixt the iuste and vniust the sainte and the sinner Then shall the iust man with excesse of ioye lift vp his longe deiected heade and see his redemption accomplished Affection O my soule what harte is yet capable to conceiue with what transports of blisse we shall be replenished vpon the hearing of this heauenly inuitation come saith our Sauiour you blessed But of whom of my heauenly father O rauishing benediction come receiue But what nothing that is light and momentanie but exceedingly aboue measure an eternall waight of glorie Come and receiue a kingdome an heauenly kingdome prepared for you purchaced by the merites of my passion Come enter into the ioy of your lord Ah my soule should we vpon the purchace of this bestowe all our tyme all our care all our substance we should then repute it as nothinge in comparison of the ineffable happinesse which we shall then be possessed of for euer and euer THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE II. SVNDAY IN ADVENT And when Iohn Baptist in prison had heard the workes of Christ c. Matt. 11. THE FIRST POINT CONSIDER that though there was none amongst the sonns of women either greater or better or dearer to the sonne of God none more innocent more austere or none imployed in a more diuine and necessarie function to witt to forerun Christ and to preach his coming to the people none hauing lesse commerce with the world yet we find him in persecution in prison in chaynes to manifeste to all men this diuine truth that all they which desire to liue piously in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution Affection Let vs then ô my soule be so farre from lookeing strangely vpon or falling out with the persecutions temptations contradictions and crosses be they of what kind soeuer which Gods sweete and euer iust prouidence permitts euen strangely sometymes to fall vpon vs that contrariwise they may euen proue matter of ioy to vs. We are not better then S. Iohn more saintly more innocent but contrarily miserable sinners and yet behold him in persecution in prison in chaynes We ayme at a pious life and Truth assures vs this is the way because thou wast aggreable to God euen there for it was necessarie that temptation should trye thee Our designe is to raigne with Christ and to raigne with him we must suffer with him Resolution Say then be thou euer blest ô lord If we haue receiued good thinges from thy bountifull hand why shoud we not suffer euill thinges Sit nomen Domini benedictum THE 2. POINTE. CONSIDER that though they can keepe his bodie captiue in chaines yet his better parte is at libertie his mynde is still free and imployed about what he was sent for He cannot now in person preach to the people and with that he has patience but he can send his Disciples to heare Christ preach and in that he fayles not There is noe restraint noe want of commoditie of tyme or place that can hinder a right harte to goe out to seeke Christ to heare him speake to it and it to him to stay with him reioyce in him and happily in fine performe its dutie Affect My soule neuer be perplexed and troubled that thou canst not actually performe what thou truly desirest It is our heart not our body which God desires Our workes without our wills may want rewards but our true desires neuer Canst thou performe what thy obligation oblidges thee to Be ware to fayle in it Art thou hindred by the malice of men by sicknesse by obediēce by charitie Neuer murmure at it None is lesse perfecte for omitting what he cannot mend for what Gods prouidence hinders for what obedience inioynes for what charitie commands Let thy heart stand right and all will goe right in all places tymes and occasions THE II. MEDITATION For the same day Art thou he who is to come or must we expect an other THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that S. Iohns Disciples were sent to Christ to know frō him selfe by word of mouth whether he were the true Messias or not but he in lieu of words makes his workes answer the question Goe saith he and relate to Iohn what you haue heard and seene The blind see the lame walke the lepers are made cleane the deafe heare the deade ryse againe to the poore the Gospell is preached c. This silent answer is more full more forcible more satisfactorie then words could euer make it according to that if you beleeue not me beleeue my workes Affect My soule let vs striue alwayes to make our workes speake who we are and what doctrine we follow Let vs doe the workes of Christ and they will declare we are Christians without the helpe of words which alone gett litle credit Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your heauenly father saith our diuine master Let our endeuours be imployed to helpe the blind the lame
in him shall not be confounded for euer Hearke how comfortably he cryes to vs loose the shakles of thy necke captiue daughter of sion Why art thou worne away with sorrow for nothing were you sold and without syluer you shall be redeemed But are our proud hearts happly raysed into mountaines of presumption vpon the view of our owne vertue Downe with them vpon the sight of a God humbled fall downe groueling vpon him and protest to him since omnipotencie is become impotent as it were and lyes at our Feete miserie rottennesse wormes meate shall not dare to aspire Resolution Humbly begge of him that all weake and lowlie soules may be filled with the multitudes of the blissings he bringes downe for man and that all swollen hearts may share in the same and learne of him who is myld and humble of heart That both of them may meete with the ioyes of these blessed tymes and find rest to their soules ✚ IHS THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE FOVRTH SVNDAY IN ADVENT Prepare the wayes of our Lord. THE WORDS OF THE GOSPELL THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER how this voyce of one crying in the Deserte this holy Euangellicall preacher S. Iohn teacheth vs how worthily to prepare our selues against the coming of his and our diuine Master saying prepare the way of our Lord. And how doth he teach vs First by his example by an absolute retreate from the world to liue in a vaste wildernesse by austeritie in meate drinke and clothes secondly by his preaching the penance which he had first practised admirable humilitie and contempt of honour publikly professing himselfe to be nothing Affection None my soule is duely prepared to receiue our diuine Sauiour who doth not first renounce the world at least in affection if not in effect and exercise acts of a penitentiall life Vnlesse we doe pennance we shall all perish togeither None is fit y prepared to receiue the humble sonne of the hūble mother but he that feares not to make publike professiō of humilitie and contempt of honours with S. Iohn saying I am not Christ I am not Elias I am not the Prophete whom you seeke nay contrarily my soule we for our parts are poore miserable sinners We are not worthy that thou ô Sauiour of the world shouldst enter vndter our roofes THE SECONDE POINTE. The voyce of God was made vpon Iohn the sonne of Zacharie in the Deserte CONSIDER that it was in the Deserte that the word of God descended vpon this great Prophete that is there it was that he was replenished with diuine inspirations sacred conferences and heauenly doctrines And there it is too that we ought to heare our lord as he doth promise by O see I will leade her the sinfull soule into the wildernesse and I will speake to her heart Affection If we desire in good earnest my soule to be instructed from heauen and to haue diuinelie sweete conferences with our heauenly spouse our hearts must turne deserts that is things forsaken by the world and freely forsaking it that in solitude and silence we may truly say speake ô lord for thy seruant heares say to my soule I am thy saluation but say it so that I may heare it That good God ceases not amidst the multituds of our follics and vanities to speake to vs but it reaches but to our eares onely the noyse of the world hinders our heart to heare those heauenly inuitations come my loue my doue my spouse and thence it is we answer not as we ought my beloued is myne and I am his THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY OF ADVENT Make his pathes straight Luc. 3. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that the great kinge of heauen is daigning to come to vs and it is butt fitting that we prepare his way by making his wayes right and straight that nothing may hinder his gracious accesse to our hearts nothing doth more hinder his coming to vs then our duplicitie and crookednesse of hart our indirectnesse of intention for a double tongued mouth he doth detest but loues to meete with the simplicitie of a doue I know saith Dauid my God that thou prouest the hearts and louest simplicitie Who walkes simply walkes confidently and our lord protects him and directs his wayes Affection It is the great kinge of heauen my soule who by an excesse of goodnesse is readie to come into the earth to comfort vs to instruct vs to redeeme vs. Not now in Maiestie to fright vs but in humilitie in simplicitie in abiection in the forme of a seruant to teach vs in his owne person to be simple and right and fearing God Let euerie mountaine and hill then be humbled all lightnesse of harte be subdued all harshnesse be banished all duplicitie be corrected The humble mylde and simple lambe will onely lodge in an humble mylde and simple breast THE SECONDE POINTE. Who art thou the Gospell CONSIDFR that howeuer this question was put by the Pharisies to S. Iohn captiously it may be or out of some curiositie yet may it be profitably proposed to each one of vs for our spirituall aduantage Who art thou A Christian or one honored with the name of Christ Further who art thou An English Christian Catholike that is one who is not onelie honored with the name of Christ but also blessed for being called to suffer for that name But who art thou finally Not onely a Christian an English Catholike Christian but euen one by a singular dignation called to be the spouse of Christ Affection Good god my soule what titles of honour and dearenesse has not heauen bestowed vpon vs which haue not bene granted to thousands of others But alas may not these honours rather cause feare then ioy for as gifts are increased doe not also our accompts ryse higher By the title of Christian we are bound to be imitatours of Christ and to expresse his life in ours By English Catholikes we are pointed out as the peculiar champions of Christs truth And by spouses we ought to be intirely and without reserue his Alas haue our liues bene answearable therto Haue we not fayld in such and such thinges c. with firme resolution of amendement THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE FIRST SVNDAY AFTER THE EPIPHANIE Iesus remayned in Ierusalem and his parents knew it not Luc. 2. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that as it happened here to Marie and Iosephe so it chanceth often not onely to sinners by mortall sinne but euen to most vertuous and deuoute soules that Iesus some tyme seemes to be lost while he absents himselfe without their knowledge that is while he withdrawes for a tyme the delicious consolations of his presence to trye whether their loue be chaste that is free from selfe interest in that they loue not for any temporall commoditie or any spirituall solace but for his owne infinite goodnesse alone Nor can they oftentymes whithout much patience labour and sorrowe find him againe Affection Here in it is my soule that
of confidence in him whose power they knew howbeit tho he reproches them with their weaknesse in faith yet graciously he ryseth vp commands the windes and the sea and causes a great calme bringes safetie to them and makes his power be admired by all that behold that the winds and sea doe obeye his commandes Affection Though he somtymes reprehends then my soule fayle not to confide in him our fayth is indeede weake and needs spurringe on If he now and then delayes his succour for a tyme expect him with patience coming he will come and not delay for euer He is the great Master and best knowes the tymes and momentes in his good tyme he will deliuer vs. If we seeme to be in danger for a while it is to redouble our ioyes when we shall see his great power in commanding the windes and seas and a sweete calme and constant tranquillitie of mynd shall follow THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE FIFTH SVNDAY AFTER THE EPIPHANIE The Kingdome of heauen is ressembled to a man that sowed good seede in his fielde Matt. 13. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that the Kingdome of heauen or rather the Kinge of heauen our Sauiour Iesus Christ is compared to a good seeds man for he it is indeede who sowed the seeds of heauen in the hartes of his faithfull as well by baptismall grace which of sterille and vnprofitable that we were makes vs the fruitfull field of Christ as by his holy word and heauenly inspirations by which that field is continually watered and brings out pure wheate fitt for the heauenly granaries if through want of vigilancie we permitt it not to be ouersowen by the enemye Affection By that excellent heauenly seede of baptismall grace my soule we were made the sonns of God the heyres of God the brothers of Christ the coheires of Christ This is a grace of preference and is not giuen to all Let our acknowledgements be for euer as peculiar as is the fauour we were without our owne labour made the domestikes of that royall house before we had yet the sense to know it And haue we not since had the knowledge of his blessed will and pleasure by his holy word and frequent inspiratiōs Iet not that holy seede my soule be destroyed in vs by our sloth and negligence THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER that like as the field of mans harte hade for euer remayned barren had not this good seede bene sowed in it so would this good seede produce noe fruite without mans cooperatiō It is by the grace of God we are that which we are as well as S. Paule yet was not Gods grace voyde in him but he laboured more abundantly and so ought we because he that made vs without vs saith S. Augustine will not saue vs without our owne consent and concurrence It is man that must worke his owne saluation yet not he principally but Gods grace with him which makes him freely and profitably worke what ere he workes Affection Alas my soule it was Gods free mercy which raysed vs from our losse Without his grace we had remayned vnprofitable for euer It was Gods meere mercy that we were not consumed It was in vaine to haue hoped to haue rysen before that light which is Christ Iesus And in vaine too will that heauenly light haue shined vpon vs vnlesse we putt our hand to the worke and walke in the light while we haue it for howeuer it is most true that God workes in vs both the will and performance it is true too that we are saued because we will nor vnlesse we will shall we euer be saued Compelle then ô deare Lord our rebellious wills by thy victorious grace to the due obseruance of thy lawe and good pleasure THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Didst thou not sowe good seede in thy field Whence then hath it cockle THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that the seede which the good seeds-man did sowe in the field of mans soule was charitie that heauenly roote whence all the vertues haue as well their origine as perfection whose fruites are ioy peace patience benignitie goodnesse longanimitie myldnesse faith modestie continencie chastitie and all the rest of the vertues of all which charitie is the fruitfull mother But the enemye man to witt the sinner and the Diuell ouersowed cockle that is cupiditie whose accursed fruites are vncleanesse brawles dissensions diuisions enmities contentions banketings drunknes and the like Affection O my soule what pittie it is that such faire fruites should be stifled by such vnhappie cockle O how delicious a thinge is the Kingdome and harte where charitie raignes There is found a heauen before heauen a heauen in earth And what a Hell it is contrarily euen in this world to liue among the horride fruites of the Diuells ouersowing to witt cupiditie the professed enemye of charitie which is still accompaigned with diuisions dissensions brawles and all the poysonous broode of vice Let vs therfor imploy our vtmost endeuours to roote out those mortall weedes which so much hinder the growth of charitie THE SECONDE POINTE. When men were a sleepe his Gods enemye came and ouersowed cockle CONSIDER when it was that the cockle was ouersowen and the holy Gospell tells vs that it was when men were a sleape that is when we waxe lukewarme neither hote nor cold in the seruice of God which is a disposition that God hates when we grow negligent how thinges passe in our hartes when we are not faithfull in complying with our vocation but carelesly forgett the happie state wherin we are placed when we become too confident of our owne mistaken strēgth which is true weaknesse wherupon is begotten in vs a certaine slumbering obliuion contempt and auersion from heauenly thinges Thus doe we fall into a deadly sleepe and the Diuell the while who sleepes not but incessantly roues about seeking whom he may deuoure easily ouersowes the soule with his hatefull cockle Affection Thus it is my soule that we sleepe out our sleepe and at our wakening we find all in disorder the field of our harte being ouersowen with weeds Had we bene watchfull and stoode vpon our garde this disaster had neuer befallen vs. While we negligently sleepe and fayle in pointe of our dutie to God his grace failes vs but the Diuells malice neuer fayles and thence we fall Ah saith our B. Sauiour if the Master of the house knew at what tyme the theife would come he would watch and not suffer himselfe to be robbd And should we doe lesse to preuent the death of our soules What therfor I say to you I say to all the world watch because the theife Sabalus or the Diuell will otherwise surprise vs while we least suspect it THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE SIXTH SVNDAY AFTER THE EPIPHANIE The Kingdome of heauen is like to a mustard-seede Matt. 13. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that here the wisdome of heauen compares the Kingdome of heauen that is the Church or the
faithfull who are to raigne in that Kingdome to a mustardseede which is saith he the least or the least kinde of all the seedes What are we to learne hereby but that to be truly of the number of the faithfull to be fitt to raigne for euer in that celestiall Kingdome we ought to be litle and euen the least that may be in our owne esteeme and in our owne desires of being esteemed by others for knowing indeede our owne weaknesse miserie and nothing with what iustice would we haue others who know vs not to esteeme vs some thinge contrarie to our owne certaine knowledge and truth Affection Marke my soule how our humble Sauiour seemes to labour to imprint deeply into our soules that great litle vertue of humilitie which S. Paule qualifies Christs owne proper vertue virtus Christi This he doth by word and worke at all tymes and places in his birth life and death He neuer taught any other greatnesse in earth then to be litle He amongst you saith he who desires to be the greatest let him be the least Vnlesse you become like these litle ones pointing to the children you can not enter into the Kingdome of Heauen You must belike grains of mustard seed saith he here O saith S. Augustine so great a thinge it is to become litle that had not the great God of heauen taught it vs by his owne example we should neuer haue learnt it THE SECONDE POINTE. But when it is growne it is greater then all hearbes and becomes a tree CONSIDER that from the smale beginings of Christ and his fruitefull spouse the Catholike Church which appeared so abiect and contemptible in the eyes of the world that it was deamed a scandall to the Iewes a follie to the Gentils grew so great in the tract of tyme that noe woode brought out so faire a tree for its flowers for it fruite for its large branches which extend themselues all the world ouer So that as farre as the sunne spreads its light the light of the Gospell is spredd the faithfull preach and dye for Gods truth Affection Dost thou desire to be great indeede my soule begin from being the least So did thy Sauiour Christ and his Church wherof thou haste the happinesse to be a member Was there a mother to be choysen for the sonne of God The Highest looked downe vpon the litlenesse of Marie and was pleased in her Is that sonne to be lodged in earth A litle caue is prepared for his Louure Is he to subdue the world to his heauenly fathers seruice He exinanites himselfe and becomes a litle child Must this heauenly child haue Apostles to send to conuert the world He makes choyce of a litle troupe of sillie fishermen And yet by these and by this conquering litlenesse the world is vanquished Proud Philosophers fall into their netts Royall Diademes fall at their feete The ignominie of the Crosse turnes honorable and is planted ouer all the face of the earth O may these examples of prosperous litlenesse confound our pride and conuert vs. THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY So that the foules of the aire come and dwelle in it CONSIDER that as this tree sprunge frō this smale graine or mustardseede affords a place as well of repose as repaste to the smale innocent birds of the aire not to the great ones which being more earthly feede on carion and liue by rapine So doth the goodly large spredd Tree of the Catholike Church giue as well shelter as nourishement to those birds of Paradice the faithful of Christ who hauing their thoughts continually aboue affecte noe more vpon earth but a meere liuelyhoode wheras those that are great in their owne eyes and heauie harted are drouned in earth and earthly cogitations and can neuer be saciated Affection There is noe place my soule vpon this tree of the Gospell for those rauinous birds and soules of earth who can neuer be glutted with the base pleasures and grosse fare of the oynions and garlike and flesh potts in this Egipt of ours who by how much more they abound by so much more they starue while those other birds of Paradice feede deliciously and lodge securely vnder the sweete shade of the glorious tree of the Catholike Church whose fruite is sweete to their throte There those chaste turtles intertayne themselues with their belowed mates and singe one to one dilectus meus mihi ego illi my beloued is myne and I am his THE SECONDE POINTE. The Kingdome of heauen is like to a mustardseede CONSIDER that the Kingdome of heauen which by some Fathers is said to be the word of God in the holy scriptures is compared to a mustard seede and that most fitly Looke vpon a graine of mustarde slightlie and you shall neither find sauer nor taste in it so is fares also with the word of God which looked vpon curserily without due reflection makes smale impression in mans harte Marrie let that smale graine be brused and a strange firie vertue is felt which affects the braines and drawes teares from the eyes And doth not the word of God being diligently pondered blesse the hart with a strange sweetnesse aboue that of honie and the honie combe And is it not according to the Prophete vehemently burning and delightfully inflaming and drawing teares of heauenly delight from our eyes Affection Thus it happened to the two good Disciples in their way to Emaus where Iesus discoursed with them of which they said to each other did not our harts ardently burne when he Christ spoke to vs in the way and opened the scriptures to vs Thus fared it with him who hauing stript himselfe of his clothes said pointing at the bible it was this booke that robbed me And thus it will fare with vs my soule if we doe not onely reade but seriousy ponder and ruminate the word of God for it was in the meditation of it that the deuoute Dauid testified his harte was sett on fire MEDITATIONS FOR SEPTVAGESIME SVNDAY THE FIRST MEDITATION Of the great and wonderfull benefite of mans vocation to the knowledge of God THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER how the Almightie God that great Master of the familie of the whole vniuerse began earely in the morning to call workemen into his vineyard that is from all eternitie before tyme yet was being moued thervnto by noe other motiue then his owne immense goodnes and most iust will According to that of Ieremie In euerlasting charitie hane I loued thee and therfor haue I drawen thee taking compassion And S. Iohn not as though we haue loued him but because he hath loued vs and againe because he loued vs first Affection We were nothing my soule from all eternitie and in tyme so many thousands of yeares run ouer and still we lay in our nothinge There was nothinge then to moue that excesse of goodnesse to take me into consideration and call me to his seruice because I was nothinge at all Nothing
of my future merits which he foresaw in his prescience could moue him neither for these were his owne free mercyes gifts and graces non ex operibus Not to vs then ô Lord not to vs but to thyne owne name giue glorie It was thy charitie moued thee to thinke vpon vs. Thy all powerfull will drew vs out of nothing thy owne graces made vs gratefull to thy heauenly eyes For of him and in him and by him are all things To him be glorie for euer Amen Must we conclude with S. Paule THE SECONDE POINTE. He sent them into the vineyard CONSIDER how that great God who out of his infinite goodnesse and chartie had thoughtes of mercy for me from all eternitie did in tyme as his prouidence had appointed rayse me out of the abisse of nothinge and gaue me this noble beeing capable to knowe feare loue and serue him in his vineyard and to gayne the day pennie that is eternall felicitie Affection O my soule what a fauour of preference is it to haue had a light sent from heauen to witt the light of faith which was not granted to all men therby to haue accesse to the great God who inhabites an inaccessible light whom none knowes but feares nor knowes and feares as being infinitly powerfull but he also ought to loue because he is infinitly good or good nesse it selfe serue as being his creature whose seruice is true libertie whom to serue is truly to raigne Let vs therfor my soule know that this is our whole businesse here belowe to feare loue and serue that good God who without hauing any neede of vs made vs to inioy himselfe eternally THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Hauing made couenant with the workemen for a penie a day c. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER further how graciously that Almightie maker of all thinges dealt with man in this proceding who though he had absolute power ouer all his creatures by right of creation and might ther-for most iustly haue exacted all their labours as they had all their abilities and euen all that they are from his free gift yet would not his goodnesse make vse of his prerogatiue with man by exacting all his labours as due to him from his slaues but pleased to couenante with him for a reward or hire as with a free man Affection All is thyne all is thyne indeede my deare Lord my God and my Creatour absolutly and without reserue as issuing freely out from the drayneles sourse of thy bountie Let all be thyne too by my free choyce and surrender all my words all my thoughtes all my workes and by how much more all being thyne owne by iustice thou yet daignest to spurre on my slowenesse by hope of rewards by so much more feruently make me spring after thee for pure lou'es sake because thou art infinitly good and louely and vnspeakably worthy of the loue of all men and Angells THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME DAY THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that English Catholikes are not onely called to the Knowledge of God and to worke in his vineyard but further to a higher degree of honour to be the speciall champions of his truth To you saith S. Paule in the way of congratulation to his deare Philipians it is giuen for Christ not onely to beleeue in him but also to suffer for him Thus doe Monarkes vse to honour their commanders when out of the confidence they haue of their fidelitie worth and valour putt them in the greatest places and occasions of danger Affection Let vs not therfor my soule here after looke vpon persecutions tribulations and temptations as afflictions but speciall fauours from heauen and esteeme them all ioy with sainte Iames since S. Chrystome and Theophilacte assure vs that the gift of suffering for Christ is greater then the gift of raysing the deade and working of wonderfull miracles for by this last say they I become a debter to God but by that other God becomes my debter O admirable thinge It s he who giues me the grace to suffer and yet by this he himselfe be comes my debter Let vs therfor say with that admirable seruant of Christ S. Teresa aut pati aut mori lets either suffer or dye that is the sure and royall roade which our Capitaine Christ tooke to his owne Kingdome THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR SEXAGESIME SVNDAY The sower went out to sowe his seede Luc 8. And it fell by the way side THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that though the seede which was sowen was noe lesse then the word of God as our Sauiour himselfe declares to his Disciples saying the seede is the word of God in that his diuine commentarie yet three partes of it by the peruersitie of man falls fruitlesse vpon the ground to witt one parte of that good seede fell by the way side that is vpon harts which lye open exposed as a through-fare to all the rumours follies and vanities of the world whence it s troden as it were vnder foote and so neuer getts tyme to take any roote at all Affection Is it not true my soule that it often happens that when the word of God is either proposed to the eare of our body by the preacher or to the eares of our harte by diuine inspirations we haue noe eares to heare or els that hearing we heare not that is we vnderstand not because our hartes are alreadie prepossessed and wholy taken vp by wordly dreames and imaginations so that there is noe place left for the word of God O what pittie it is to let that seede of heauen sent vs to produce the fruites of eternall glorie be negligently lost Le ts therfor emptie our harts of such pernicious toyes that we may truly say speake ô Lord because thy seruant heareth THE SECONDE POINTE And other some fell vpon the Rocke CONSIDER that an other parte of that good seede fell vpon the rocke which hauing the superficies or out-side of some good earth is capable to receiue the seede and to make it sprout out too but yet so hastily that it takes noe firme roote and thence as soone withers as appeares So it fares with those who heare and receiue the word of God with ioy and are often thetby moued to compunction and teares yet their harts being rockie it makes noe great impression therin and thence vpon the first temptation or difficultie they easily forgett that they were moued at all Affection Doe we happly my soule perceiue our hartes so hardened that they are litle apte to conceiue this good seede Despaire not for all that Gods word is a hammer that is able to split rockes in peeces His grace is powerfull enough to make the soyle fertile be it neuer sostonie and barren Pray hard then that these harts of rockes may be turned into harts of flesh supple and apte to receiue good seede saying with S. Augustine giue me ô Lord that conquering grace which is repulsed by noe hard harte
because therfor it is giuen that the hardnesse of the harte may be taken away THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY And other fell among thornes and the thorues grew and choked them THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER finally that another parte of the feede fell among the thornes which stisles the young and tender grouth therof and that happens not as in that seede which falling vpon the high way was troden vnder foote and could take noe roote nor as that which fell vpon the rocke which for want of earth could take noe deepe roote but hauing earth enough to take a deepe roote and produce fruite it was choked as our Sauiour himselfe interpreetes the parabole in the same Gospell by wordly cares and solicitudes and deceiptfull riches Affection Accursed cares which make vs carelesse of that which most concerns vs and stifles the word and law of God in our harts Accursed riches which render our soules poore and barren The riches which as fooles conceiue doe tickle them with delight Wisdome assures vs to be thornes which pricke wound and kill Who would euer haue beleeued me saith the great S. Gregorie if I should haue interpreted riches to be thornes since these wound those delight And yet thornes they are saith truth it selfe since the thoughtes of thē doe teare our myndes in peeces with their sharpe pointes and when they waigh vs downe to sinne they drawe bloode THE SECONDE POINTE. And other some fell vpon good ground and they yealded fruite CONSIDER that the good ground which fayles not to yeald fruite is the well disposed harte of man which by the preuention of Gods grace hath nothing opposite to that good seede To witt it neither lyes open to the curiosities and thronges of the world but is shutt vp within it selfe Nor is rockie and stuborne but supple mylde and docile Nor lastly is it ouerspred with thornes that is with riches honour and pleasures but contrarily possessed with the contempt of them they being indeede the chokers of all the seed of heauen and the sourses of all mans miserie Affection Giue me then ô Lord in lieu of all riches honours and pleasures a docile hart a good soyle prepared by thyne owne holie hand that thy sacred word and heauenlie inspirations may find noe opposition therin but yeald fruite an hundred fold Let it be hedged in by thy feare that it lye not open to vanities Let these hard flintes of myne be so moystened with thy melliflous word that they may flowe with milke and home Finally let those thornes of riches be rooted out of my harte that it may not stifle but nourishe thy good seede THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR QVINQVAGESIME SVNDAY Iesus said to the twelue Apostles behold we goe vp to Ierusalem and all things shall be consummate which were written by the Prophetes of the son of man Luc 18. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER how fitly the wisdome of the Church applyes this Gospell intimating Christs B. passion to this tyme wherin we are disposing our selves to enter into the rigour of a penitentiall life therby to applie to our soules the merites of the said passion Fitly I say since it seemes to say to all Christian hartes with the great S. Paule thinke diligently vpon him who sustayned of sinners such contradiction against himselfe that you be not wearied fainting in your minds for you haue not yet resisted to blood as he did in fighting against sinne Forgett not then in the tyme of your pennance the consolation which speaketh to you as it were to children my sonne neglect not the discipline of our Lord neither be thou wearied whilst thou art rebuked of him for whom our Lord loueth he chastiseth and he scourgeth euerie child which he receiueth Affection The soldier saith the deuoute S. Bernarde feeles not his owne wounds while he lookes vpon the wounds of his Kinge Noe my soule there is nothing that can so sweeten that sharpest sufferances as fixedly to behold the sufferances of the sonne of the Kinge of glorie and that not for his which were none but for thy crymes for thy loue for thy redemption Looke vpon him then in thy pressures be they of body or of mynde and thou shalt like them thou shalt loue them thou shalt be delighted in them What can be so deare to a loueing harte as to be like its beloued cost that ressemblance what it will it shall fall far short of the delight it bringes with it THE SECONDE POINTE He Christ shall be deliuered to the Gentils and shall be mocked and scourged and spitt vpon c. and then shall be killed and the third day shall ryse againe CONSIDER this description or prediction and blush to be found a fainte and delicate soldier vnder so generous and patiently suffering a Capitaine Ponder it well and be more and more confirmed in the faith of Christ and the truth of Christian Religion against Iewe Turke or Athist for what he here fortells and afterwarde performes was longe before foretold by the Prophetes which could neuer haue bene so punctually performed had not their pens bene guided by the finger of the holy Ghost Sopho He shall be deliuered vp to the Gentils to witt Pilate and his soldiers to be mocked Dauid speaking in the person of the Messias I was whippt all the day longe Isaye I turned not my face from those that spitt vpon me wisdome Let vs condemne him to a most infamous death Sopho. expect me in the day of my resurrection speaking in the person of Christ Affection Consider I say my soule againe and againe what thy Lord and master thy Christ thy God suffers for thee for thee a poore miserable lost seruant and be ashamed to be so backward to suffer any thinge for those many crymes of thyne Let vs looke vpon that Authour of faith and consummatour of all his heauenly fathers commands and of all that was foretold of him by the Prophetes and crye out with Dauid ô Lord thy testimonies are made exceeding credible they are too too cleare for any euer to be able to doubt of them THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE FIRST SVNDAY IN LENT BY WHOM WAS IESVS TEMPTED Iesus is ledd by the spirit that is the holy Ghost that he might be tempted by the Diuell Matth. 4. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that as all Christs actions and passions all his words and workes were for our example instruction and consolation so was this in particular by a speciall graciousnesse for the instruction and comfort of his tempted seruantes He had taught vs by his holy word that the life of man was a perpetuall warrefare or temptation vpon earth and by his singular goodnesse that he pleased to be with vs in temptation for it was euen he the true sonne of God the wisdome of heauen the onely beloued of his heauenly father who was ledd out by the holy Ghost to be tempted to comfort and instruct vs in our temptations in his owne sacred person Affection Let
not temptation then ô my soule be looked vpon hereafter as an occasion of sollicitude vexation and desolation but rather as a profitable exercise of vertue humilitie and ioy according to that of blessed S. Iames esteeme it all joy when you fall into many and diuersitie of temptations The seruant is not greater then the master it s he that hath giuen vs an example and his will is that we should follow it that by this meanes his vertue humitie may be obteyned and the necessitie of a continuall dependance of his assistance may be learnt THE SECONDE POINTE. WHEN WAS IESVS TEMPTED When he had fasted fortie dayes and fortie nightes c. the tempter approched c. Matt. 4. CONSIDER that Iesus in whom there neither was nor could be any guilt of sinne was then tempted when he was imployed in most holy workes and holy circumstances to witt in fasting prayer watching and that too euen in solitude in the wildernesse in that sacred retreate of his To teache vs that we neuer ought to esteeme our selues secure from the diuells assaults be we neuer so well imployed and in the best circumstances imaginable Affection Let vs not fayle my soule to fast watch and pray with as much retirement from the world as we are able as being the best meanes to strengthen vs against temptation but let vs not amidst those holy exercises promesse our selues securitie peace or truce The Diuell sleepes not but roues about seeking whom he may deuoure And most assaults those whom he finds best imployed in the Quire at their Meditation in frequenting the holy communion as hauing least hopes to bring such pious soules to his seruitude yet be not perplexed my soule he durst aduenture vpon Christ himselfe but he putt him to confusion as we shall also doe by fixing a firme faith in his singular mercy and goodnes who put him to slight THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME DAY How was Iesus tempted If thou be the sonne of God command that these stones be made breade Matth. 4. CONSIDER that the Diuell tempted Iesus in three kinds of temptations most dangerous and detestable First with mouinge his heauenly father to worke miracles as though he had noe other meanes to feede his people then by turning stones into breade secondly by despaire in castinge himselfe downe head longe Thirdly by riches and honours boldly promising to giue all wheras indeede he could performe nothing at all of his proude promesse Affection Let vs then my soule in imitation of our deare Sauiours sufferances and remptations and with an absolute submission to his good pleasure in what ere he may permitt to fall vpon vs let vs I say comfortably and couragiously say with the Psalmist trye me ô Lord and proue me My drosse must be burnt away to be come pure Gold fitr for the Tabernacle whether it be with vaine suggestions of desiring to know more then we ougt to know or with the ambition of the honours and riches of this world or finally by representations of the most horride despaire in Gods mercy c. Or the most base impurities imaginable desiring onely to heare with S. Paule my grace is sufficient for thee with resolutiō to begge it earnestly and without intermission THE SECONDE POINTE How did Iesus ouercome the Diuell Not in bread alone doth man liue c. Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God c. Auant Satan the Lord thy God thou shalt adore Matth. 4. CONSIDER how our sweete Sauiour hath not onely giuen vs an example of humble patient suffering of the Diuels assaults in almost all manner of temptations in all tymes places and circumstances but he doth also in his owne words teach vs how to make resistance and how to ouer come It is not in bread alone that man liues thou shall not tempt the Lord ihy God ¿ but thou shalt adore him Affection It is not then my soule in confidence of our owne vertue strength which alone will be found verie weaknesse that we are to incounter with and vanquish the Diuell but in the onely power and mercy of God by putting on a firme faith that we serue a Master who is able if he please to secure vs and confound him But if his blessed will be to leaue vs to that hard tryall his blessed name be praysed for euer the seruant may well follow the master hauing alwayes in our mynds for our stronge defence the diuels assaults Thou shalt adore thy Lord thy God and serue him alone THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE SECONDE SVNDAY IN LENT He brought them to wit Peter Iames and Iohn into a high mountaine and was transfigured before them Matth. 17. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that as all who are alreadie saued from the begining of the world or shall be saued to the end therof were to be saued by faith in Christ it was most necessarie that the said faith should be most firmely established His humanitie was alreadie made too too credible by his natiuitie by his teares by his bloode in his circumcision by his suffering of heate and cold c. It onelie rested then that his diuinitie should be made good by some conuincing arguments And to demonstrate this he ascends into the Mount Thabor with Peter Iames and Iohn and is transfigured in their sight that is he takes another forme vpon him his face appearing as resplendant as the sunne to giue them and vs a scantling or foretaste of his glorie Affection Must we not needs confesse then ô my soule that the good Master of the vineyard leaues nothinge vndone to his vineyard which might conduce to its aduantage We haue found him man he hath conuersed amongst vs like one of vs. We haue heard his cryes we haue seene his teares we haue beheld his blood But now we see the face of the same man as bright as the sunne transporting the harts of the three Apostles with heauenly rauishments We must needs then with the Apostles firmely beleeue in hart and professe with our mouthes that he is truly the sonne of the liuing God whom we hartily adore THE SECONDE POINTE CONSIDER that the prouidence and goodnesse of God euidences this most important truth of Christs diuinitie beyond all exception by causing it to be testified by all kinds of most reprochlesse witnesses By the whole old lawe in the person of Moyses the Law-giuer By the prophecies in Elias that diuine Prophete By the new lawe or Gospell in Peter Iames and Iohn finally by God almightie himselfe by a voyce out of à bright cloud which ouershawed them the Apostles saying with much terrour to them who fall downe vpon their faces This is my beloued sonne in whom I am well pleased Affection If according to S. Paule My soule in the mouth of two or three witnesses euery truth shall stand how firmely and inuiolably ought this truth to stande engrauen in all Christian hartes which hath such clouds of witnesses to attest it where young and
old heauen and earth God and man conspire togeither to putt vs out of all doubt that our Iesus is the beloued sonne of God the Father in whom he is well pleased And therfor with our whole soule we ioyne with the whole Court of heauen and adore that onely begotten who dyed for vs and esteemed it noe stelth to be equall to his heauenly father THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY And his face did shine as the sunne and his garments became white as snowe Matt. 17. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that Peter Iames and Iohn vpon the onely aspect of the transcendant splendour and beautie of Iesus his body and garments are so transported with ioy that they take a present resolution to build tabernacles vpon the toppe of Thabor and to remayne there because Peter out of the deepe sense of the heauenly delight which he felt professed freely to that diuine Master of theirs that it is good for them to be there Affection O my soule if litle glimpses of glorie be so delightfull what will the whole light of glorie proue If a litle exteriour glorie of the body be so precious what will the essentiall glorie of both body and soule be experienced If momentes of ioyes were powerfull enough to begett an absolute contempt of all other thinges in those Apostolicall hartes what should not firme hopes of eternities worke in ours If God blesse vs with heauenly gustes at our prayers c. Let vs humble our selues and be thankfull for them as being the seede of glorie But we must not be too greedie of them nor resolue to dwell in them Iesus must passe from Thabor ouer Caluarie before he enter into his owne Kingdome and so must we Christians too THE SECONDE POINTE. He spoke with Moyses and Elias of an excesse CONSIDER that while Peter Iames and Iohn like men are so transported with a smale foretaste of glorie that they wishe noe better then to liue vpon the toppe of that pleasant hill Our deare Lord and Master whose thoughts are alwayes vpon that which tends to the accomplishment of his heauenly fathers will is thinking and discoursing with Moyses and Elias of his paineful death and passion Affection We are but pilgrims in this world my soule not inhabitants We haue noe permanent citie here but we are makeing home to an euerlasting one where we are fellow citizens with the Saints and God's domestikes nor can we follow a surer guide then our Sauiour Iesus His way is through sufferances contradictions ad Crosses in euery kind And is it not our perfection to expresse his life in ours that by suffering with him we may raigne with him Good it is indeede to haue gusts and foretastes of the consolations of God! but farre better to follow the God of consolation amidst his desolations sufferances and abandonnements who ioy being proposed vnto him sustayned the Crosse contemning confusion Say then with S. Teresa aut pati aut mori either let sufer or dye THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE THIRD SVNDAY IN LENT And Iesus was casting out a Diuell and he was dumbe Luc. 11. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that the Diuells dominion was spredd in a manner ouer all the face of the earth Altars were erected Idolls sett vp Idolatrie or the worshippe of the Diuell raigned in euery place so that his pride growen greater then his power he durst attempt vpon the sonne of God as in the first sunday in Lent but in steed of victorie he mett with confusion He was ouerthrowen with the sword of the word of God without any other armes But now Iesus to comply with and exercise the Office of a Sauiour being sent to free the world out of the Diuells tyrannie setts vpon him by his power and authoritie and by absolute commande chaceth him out of the possessed body Affection O blessed fruites of the coming of our Sauiour Iesus Christ Poore man was kept à slaue vnder the Diuells tyrannie nor was there any power in earth to free him but Iesus our Helper in opportunities that is seasonably as he iudges fitting in tribulation in temptation c. came graciously to his ayde he assaults that stronge one forceth him by his flight to acknowledge the power of his Master who begins sake his raigne and abate his pride nor doth he this in his owne person onely but euen leaues the like power in his holie Church He graciously teaches vs by his example how we are to behaue our selues in temptation and shewes vs in what power we ought to subdue that fierce foe Blessed and magnified be he for euer who hath left such power to the sonns of man THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER that though the Diuells taking possession of mans body be not verie comon yet his possession of mans soule is but too ordinarie And how euer we perceiue it but a litle yet it is farre more dangerous and most absolutly true Neuer are we so vnhappie to committ mortall sinne but the Diuell takes full possession of our soules grace departs the holy Ghost is turned out of dores the Diuell becomes our Master and we his miserable seruantes and slaues ouer whom he exercises à tyrannicall dominion We become blind to good walke in darknesse not discouering what is fitting to be done and dumbe too as to the making profession of what we know to be right Affection O my soule this is the possession indeede which we ought most to feare and dispossession which we ought most earnestly to seeke for because we haue left him who is able to throw both body and soule into Hell fire because our strength hath left vs we are sicke of a deade palsie and sore tormented by the Diuell Let vs neuer cease from sighets and sobbs and lamentations while we rcmayne in this sadd captiuitie Gods grace alone is able to deliuer vs. Let vs begge it incessantly like poore lost slaues knowing that there is noe meanes to flye from him but to him from him offended to him appeased saying haue mercy vpon me ô God according to thy great mercy and according to the multitude of thy commiserations because my miserie is exceeding great and needes noe lesse a cure THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Euery Kingdome deuided against it selfe shall be made desolate and a house shall fall vpon a house Luc. 111. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that though we had not had truth it selfe which none dare contradicte to assure vs of this so necessarie a lesson yet common experience makes it but too sure to verie ordinarie capacities The internall diuisions and broyles of England France Spayne Italie and Flanders to goe noe further haue oft hazarded their vtter ruine And the vnhappie misintelligences of communities and particular families haue not onely disordered them and depriued them of the blissings of peace and quiete but haue euen exposed them to publicke scandall and desolation it selfe Affection How deare then my soule ought vnanimitie and vnion of harts to be to vs
which rayseth a litle with Gods blessing vpon it to great matters at least to sufficiencie and content This was the Legacie B. S. Augustine left his children vnitie of hartes and communitie of the same purse Noe myne and thyne the true cause of deuision This was the Apostles inheritance giuen them by the holy Ghost one hart and one soule This was the songe which the Royall Psalmist sung with such ioy and found so good and delicious the vnanimous cohabitation of brethren which like a precious oyntement conueyes it selfe through all the parts of the body Powre then ô Lord the loue of brotherlinesse and peace into our harts that being annointed with the dewe of thy spirituall vnction we may be ouerioyed with the grace of thy benediction THE SECONDE POINTE. Who is not with me is against me and who gathers not with me doth disperse Luke 11. CONSIDER that the sonne of God hath said it whose words can neuer passe Who is not with me is against me there is noe meane noe third way Noe man can serue two Masters God and Mammon There is nothing that raignes in mans hart but either cupiditie or charitie What is giuen to cupiditie is giuen to that badd master the Diuell But what is done for charitie is done for the best of Masters our good God and so we go● happilie with him and gather with him If our harts say liue Iesus and our actions be done actually or vertually for his sake we aduance in vertue and treasure vp for heauen If we fayle of this we walke not with God we disperse the Deuill getts a share more or lesse according to the greatnesse or litlenesse of our actions Affection Let vs not goe on biasing my soule and halting on both sides If one onely God be our all let all our thoughtes words and workes be directed to his honour If it were he not Baal or any strange Gods which created conserued and redeemed vs with his owne pretious bloode let him not them souueraignely raigne ouer vs. The bedd of our hart is to narrow for two let our lawfull spouse the Master of it wholie possesse it What euer we doe and not for that for which diuine wisdome ordered it to be done that is Gods honour though in its owne nature it be good yet for want of its right end it falls short Concludes S. Augustine THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE THIRD SVNDAY IN LENT Iesus went beyond the sea of Galilee and a great Multitude followed him THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that we neuer walke more safely then when we follow Iesus Neuer are we more sure then in his blessed hands Neuer better prouided for then when distrusting in our owne prouidence ●e let pure loue to him which is alwayes accompaigned with Prudence leade vs after him to conuerse with him to receiue the heauenly dewe of his diuine word and to admire the wonders of his admirable workes euen with the neglect of the whole world beside as did this pious multitude Affection Let then my soule our first and principall care be imployed to followe Christ to seeke his Kindome or raigne ouer our owne harts and the harts of all men and his iustice by giuing beleefe to his words and reposing confidence in his gracious prouidence without permitting our thoughts to be afflicted with an anxious sollicitude for temporall thinges which infallibly shall be giuen vs or as it were shall be cast in to the bargaine Our heauenly father better knowes then we our selues what is necessarie for vs as well for our bodys as our soules He may leaue vs till we begin to be hungrie of both foodes but expect him and absolutly depend vpon him and that pious father of ours will not see vs fayle in the way THE SECONDE POINTE I haue compassion of the multitude CONSIDER that when the pious multitude had once giuen this ample testimonie by following him three dayes in the wildernesse of their loue and perseuerance heauenly wisdome found it seasonable to giue them also a testimonie of his power and goodnesse in one and the same miracle of his power in making fiue loafes and two fishes extende to the feeding and saciating of fiue thousand persons and of his goodnesse by applying the effects of that power to solace and nourish that hungrie multitude saying with compassion misereor super turbam that is my verie bowells are moued with pittie in pointe of the multitude of those that follow me Affection O my most gracious Lord how easily is thy paternall harte inclyned to pittie The pen of the holy Ghost may seeme to haue laboured to make it euident to our hartes I will not leaue you orphants If I come not presently expect me for coming I will come Can a mother forgett the child of her owne body And tho she could yet I am your foster-father and cannot forgett you Ah my soule what expressions can be deuised more tender Our Lord is indeede pittifull and mercifull patient and exceeding mercifull We haue reason to admire his power to dreade his iustice to venerate his sanctitie to magnifie all his Attributes yet nothing nothing comes so home to our vses as his goodnesse nothing sutes so well with our miserie as his boundlesse mercy THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Euery one tooke as much as they would and they were filled Iohn 6. CONSIDER rhat our almightie Master is equally powerfull to worke his owne designe and our full satisfaction as well in litle as in great matters If a world be to be made he rayseth it out of nothinge If thousands be to be fedd in the wildernesse fiue loaues and a few smale fishes is Matter enough for him to worke vpon and to increase that smale prouision into such a plentifull store that he affords euery one of them as much as they will and they are all filled and saciated Affection Yes my soule our great Gods will and power are wholy equall all that he will he can it is he who wrought all that he would in heauen and earth nor can any resist his diuine will He needes noe matter to worke vpon he requires noe length of tyme to wotke in he has done in a moment he feeds whom he will with what he will and whom he feeds he fills he saciates Alas the world my soule with its fattest feasts doth not saciate vs. Vnlesse what we eate issue from thy holy hand and come with thy benediction vpon it great God we doe but languish and fayle in the way But if the litle we haue be accompayned with thy blessing it feeds it fattens it delights it saciates THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER that though this multitude had iuste reason as well to magnifie his wonderfull power as to loue and imbrace his bountifull goodnesse in the stupendious multiplication of a few loaues c. Yet was but that a poore shadowe of Gods fauours to vs Christians as their obligations also were incomparably lesse hen ours There fiue loaues
fedd fiue thousand but with vs in the blessed Sacrament one bread of life descending from heauen feeds fiue thousand millions They receiued onely bodily foode and but once we the true foode of the soule which giues grace and strength and leades to eternall life and that too as often as we please Affection Crye out then my soule and let all Christian hartes crye out thou art great ô Lord thou art great thou art great and wonderfully laudable and thy greatnesse hath noe bounds nor end Thy friends ô God are too too much honored their dominion and raigne in thee are exceedingly confirmed and firmely established Thou giuest foode in due tyme to euery creature Thou feedst the multitude which followes thee with breade of miracle and thy Christian children with the breade of Angells O res mirabilis ô wonder of wonders A poore and abiect seruant eates his Lord and Master THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR PASSION SVNDAY Which of you shall argue me of sinne Io. 8. CONSIDER the incomparable innocencie of our Sauiour Iesus Christ who could stand vp vndauntedly amongst all the Princes of the Scribes and Pharisies his mortall enemyes and prouoke their malice to argue or conuince him of sinne Who will or can conuince me me of sinne They can carpe his best actions they can reuile him they can calumniate him they can horribly blaspheame him saying he has a Diuell in him but the most impudent among them aduentured not to fixe any stayne of sinne vpon him nor would he suffer it as being altogeither inconsistant with his diuinitie There is noe guile framed in thy sacred mouth Affection Noe my deare Lord those fatt bulls may beseedge thee and many dogs may compasse thée about but they shall not be able to teare thy inuiolable innocencie They shall find noe guile in thy sacred mouth nor blemish in thy actions We alas are they that haue sinned we that haue done vniustly we that haue committed iniquitie We dare not pretend to innocencie but at least sweete Iesus giue vs thy holy grace humbly to acknowledge our faults neuer laying claime to that which we haue noe right to And if calumnies be putt vpon vs falsely giue vs courage to neglect them by thy example vnlesse they be such as dishonour our ministerie or office by which we are made lesse able to performe our duties in which case giue vs grace to deney them with simplicitie and modestie without rendering euill for euill leauing the rest to Gods sweete prouidence THE SECONDE POINTE Doe not we say well that thou art a Samaritane and hast a Diuell Io. 8. CONSIDER the strange peruersitie and obstinacie of the Iewes who while they could find nothinge to reprehend in his doctrine nothinge in the truth of his words nothing in point of his life and manners they fall to iniuries and those most outragious ones saying with approbation of their rashe iudgement Did not we say well that he is a Samaritane a base fellow and has a Diuell The first accusation he past ouer in silence for he was indeede the true Samaritane that is the keeper and sauer of man But the seconde which was a most horride blasphemie he would not let passe but replyd to it in short with all the mildnesse and modestie that might be saying I haue noe Diuell Affection Detest my soule such a damnable peruersitie which while it finds nothing in words or actions reprehensible falls to iniurious languadge and obserue that as the Iewes malice mounts higher so our Sauiours mildenesse doth transcende They most horribly blaspheame by vniting in his person God and the Diuell two of the most absolute extreames He onely repulses that iniurie by a most milde and short replye I haue noe Diuell Let vs thus proceede my soule when our most innocent words or workes are mistaken or carped at let vs pay a mylde replye to truth without wrangling For the rest our innocencie will afford ioy enough to our harts THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY If I tell you the truth why doe not you beleeue me Io. 8. CONSIDER that our Sauiour was not onely truth it selfe which could neither deceiue nor be deceiued which the Iewes might in some sorte be ignorant of but he had vsed all the meanes possible to make it appeare to them by effectes He had cured their blind their deafe their dumbe and lame He had appeared in glorie and had the testimonie of heauen and earth that he was the sonne of God He had shewen his power ouer the Diuells There was noe guile found in his mouth nor offence in his actions as his mortall enemyes being prouoked made good by their silence and yet they beleeue him not Affection May not then one say ô Lord what couldst thou haue further done for thy vineyard for thy deare people of thy holy Land which thou didst not Thy testimonies were but too too credible thy miracles were innumerable visible vndenyable From thy diuine mouth flowed honie and milke thy actions were wholie laudable But their malice their auarice their ambition hardene their harts and blinded their vnderstandings Let vs say they circumnent that iust man he is vnprofitable to vs and contrarie to our workes He is the heire le ts kill him and the inheritance is ours Hence it is my soule that the good seede of Gods truth plainely proposed and inculcated to our harts are stifled in vs by our inordinate desires of honours pleasures profitt THE SECOND POINT If I say the truth why doe you not beleeue me CONSIDER that though the Iewes appeare and are indeede hugely blame-worthy yet I feare if the proceedings of many of vs Christians be well looked into we shall be found noe lesse guiltie They sawe the miracles yet their malice at least made them conceiue that they were done by the power of the Diuell but we beleeue without all doubt that they were done in digito Dei They sawe the innocencie of his life yet misdoubted hypocrycie We beleeue him to be that most innocent person in whose mouth there is noe guile They were in doubt of his Deitie We beleeue firmely that he is the true sonne of God Affection And yet my soule while we confesse all this to be so true that we dare not misdoubt any part of it doe not our actions often tymes belye our beleife and Gods truthes are blaspheamed therby We beleeue his almightie power by which he workes wonders at his pleasure and doth all that he will in heauen and in earth and yet being men of litle faith we doubt of his fatherly prouidence in the tyme of necessitie We well know the innocencie of his life and that it ought to be the rule of ours and yet our liues are so vicious and deceiptfull that we quite swarue from that holie rule we cannot be knowne by it We willingly professe that Ch. Iesus is our Lord and our God and yet we appeare in the eyes of his enemyes so poore seruants of his that
our fayling strength Howbeit be Gods mercy euer blessed we are not as sheepe without a Pastour but we haue the good Pastour to protect vs. Let vs attentiuly heare his voyce know him and his wayes and wholy depende vpon him and his preists of whom he hath said Who heares you heares me THE SECONDE POINTE. A good Pastour giues his life for his flocke Io. 10. CONSIDER that this Pastour of ours is the good Pastour indeede that is good by excellencie or infinitly good which he makes manifest not by words onely but by many effects what was cast away he brings againe what was broken he binds vp what was weake he strengthens and the sheepe which was lost he seekes and finds and graciously brings home vpon his owne shoulders Nay more the labour of thirtie odd yeares imployd about the care of his flocke had seemed but litle to his loue had he not in the end layed downe his life for the same Affection Ah my soule Let vs blesse him and magnifie his free mercys for euer and euer Without this good Pastour we were all lost eternally It was Gods mercy alone that we perished not all togeither and were consumed for he looked downe from heauen to see whether there were any that vnderstood and sought him among the children of men and he found that all had declined and were become vnprofitable none doing good noe not one And yet while we serued him so poorely there was noe hope of saluation without his helpe nor pardon nor life for vs but that which he purchaced by his owne pretious death Let me euer loue thee thou dearest pastour and purchacer of my soule THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that this good shephard this heauenly Pastour of our soules doth conduct protect and feede vs not after an ordinarie manner but according to his diuine superadmirable and astonishing wayes peculiar and proper to his diuine goodnesse and wisdome alone not onely with the plentuous dugges of his heauenly consolations and foretastes of beatitude but euen with that supersubstantiall foode his owne pretious body and bloud Affection Awake my soule awake and diligently obserue what deare obligations we haue to this good pastour of ours he did not onely come downe from heauen to comfort and instruct vs with his personall presence enduring all the incommodities to which we are subiect in this our banishment but he putts downe his bloude for the price of our Redemption and as though that were not yet enough to testifie the excesse of his tendernesse to his deare flocke by a heauenly inuention and euen a miracle of loue he so leaues vs as yet he remaynes with vs and makes his owne pretious body and bloude the permanent foode of our soules THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER that this good this ineffably good Pastour of ours doth not onely feed vs by this admirable meanes which the Angells could neuer haue dreamt on but will also daigne to be fedd by vs in his poore members our necessitous Christian brethren I was hungrie and you gaue me to eate I was thirstie and you gaue me to drinke Yes saith our deare Pastour verily I say to you as longe as you did it to one of these my least brethren you did it to me Affection Our good Pastour my soule knew that well-borne harts were not willing to receiue and returne nothing but were still greedie to inquire out the meanes wherby they might make mutuall returnes of loue and therfor he himselfe suggests the wayes by which he would haue it done saying as it were to our hartes I your pastour and maker who can otherwise neede nothing that 's yours am notwithstanding hungrie thirstie naked and imprisoned in my poore members your brethren in them I begge breade c. at your dores assuring you that what you giue to them in my name and for my loue you giue to me O what a comforte it is to a truly louing harte to haue so easie a way to render loue for loue THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE THIRD SVNDAY AFTER EASTER For a litle tyme you shall not see me and shortly after you shall see me againe S. Io. 16. CONSIDER that we are all pilgrimes trauelling towards our heauenly home and we shall not misse to meete with all kinds of weather Now heate now cold now faire and soone after fowle Sometymes our Sauiour dilates our harts with the aboundance of his consolations and we prosperously spring on in the wayes of his commandements and sometymes againe he retires and hydes him selfe from vs leauing vs to desolations and sorrowes and we become troubled and all our former force and courage seeme to haue forsaken vs. Affection Thus it is my soule that the diuine wisdome deales with his seruants He doth nourish cherish and comfort vs least we might fayle in the way He doth afflict and leaue vs least out of confidence of our owne strength we might erre from the way He giues vs consolations to testifie to our harte that he loues vs. He leaues vs to desolations to trye and make appeare whether we loue him But whether he comfort vs or permitt afflictions to fall vpon vs let vs still venerate his orders and gracious conduct because he it is indeede who is alwayes our refuge THE SECONDE POINTE You shall lament and weepe But the world shall reioyce Ioh. 6. CONSIDER that sorrowes and ioyes goe here belowe by turnes and tymes And still the best parte in apparence is alloted to those whom God least loues the world shall reioyce And the worst as he alwayes tooke it to himselfe so he leaues it to his dearest friends You saith he to his deare Apostles you shall lament and weepe but your sorrowes shall be turned into ioyes Wheras the worldlings ioyes and parte shall be with the Hypocrites who haue receiued their reward Affection Let vs not my soule either admire or enuie the seeming prosperitie of the wicked Their ioyes are but for moments and those too mixt with painefull pleasures They themselues confesse it we are wearied in the way of iniquitie and perdition and haue walked hard wayes while the iust whom we had in derision and in a parable of reproche are counted among the children of God and their parte and portion amongst the saintes There are we my soule to inioye our permanent possession There are our teares to be wiped away for euer and payd with the inioyment of an eternall inheritance which neither eye hath seene nor eare hath heard nor hath entered into the mynde of man THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Now indeede you haue sorrowe CONSIDER that the sorrowes which we suffer are in this present moment now saith our Sauiour you haue sorrow Now not the next moment for any thinge we know thinges may alter to the better God may assiste death may end all nor ought a wise man to esteeme any thinge longe which shall haue end But put case our sorrowes and
afflictions should neither be lessened nor taken away for the space of a longe life Yet what is the longest of liues compared to eternitie but a verie moment Affection It is not my soule for this present tyme for transitorie momentes that we liue and labour Our ayme is eternitie Nor are our sorrowes equall to the paines due to our sinnes nor beare they any proportion to the endlesse ioy we hope for and yet S. Paule assures vs that our tribulations which are for the present momentary and light worke a boue measure exceedingly an eternall waight of glorie in vs. Let vs then couragiously looke ouer the thinges we see or feele which are but temporall to consider what we see not but by ourpatience hope for an eternall waight of glorie THE SECONDE POINTE. I will see you againe and your harte shall reioyce and noe man shall take your ioy from you CONSIDER that though our good God may sometymes seeme to leaue vs yet he neuer forsakes vs but returnes againe to see vs to reioyce our hartes and double and trible our ioyes not those of the wicked which are alwayes attended and vshered out by sorrow but those of the true Disciples of Christ Gaudia Domini ioyes in Christ of Christ and for Christ and to giue vs assurance that it shall not be in the power of man to robbe vs of these Christian ioyes which are properly ours and none shall take your ioyes from you Affection Noe my soule our mercifull Lord forsakes vs not vnlesse we first forsake him he goes but comes againe to visite vs and by such his accesses he giues accession of ioyes to our hartes which he so fixes by his grace that they are not taken from vs nether in this world nor the next to witt they are not placed vpon transitorie thinges which passe but vpon Christ and are locked vp in our harts whither the tyrants sword cannot reach He may take our liues away but cannot our ioyes which liue in death and suruiue it Such were S. Paules ioyes with which he abounded in the midst of all his tribulations Such the Apostles who came reioycing from before the counsell Such S. Laurence whose ioyes burnt higher then the Tyrants tormenting flames Such finally are those of our Lord and Master who ioy being proposed to him sustayned the Crosse This my soule is our ioy which none can take from vs. THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE FOVRTH SVNDAY AFTER EASTER I goe to him who sent me Io. 16. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that if we were truly wained from the world from selfe loue and selfe consolation we should be so farre from hauing our harts filled with sorrow vpon the hearing of the words of Christ I goe to him who sent me that contrarily our harts would be replenished with ioy That deare Lord of ours had perfectly accomplished his heauenly Fathers will in the worke of mans saluation by puttinge downe that deare price of his redemption What then ought to be more delightfull to the redeemed slaue then to see his gracious Redeemour returne into the possession of his owne right to see him exalted to see him glorifyed Affection Returne then ô my dearest Redeemour into thy rest into thy heauenly Fathers bosome into that glorie thou hadst common with him by thyne eternall birth-right before the world was yet made for it is but iust that the innocent lambe which was slayne should receiue power and diuinitie and wisdome and strength honour glorie and benediction c. Be it euer farre from vs my soule to preferre the delightes of his presence and the ioyes we take while we are drawen on by the odour of his oyntments before the accomplishment of his blessed pleasure in what euer desolation and the aduancement of his glorie THE SECONDE POINTE. It is expedient for you that I goe Io. 16. CONSIDER that tho not so much the consolations of God as the God of all consolations and the pure loue of him for his owne infinite goodnesse sake ought to be the cheife Christian motiue in all our actions yet our mercifull God who best knew that man is all earthly earth and ledd by selfe interest sutes his motiues to what we are alwayes mixing the sweetes of consolations and our aduantage to moue vs to the loue we otherwise owe him And therfor to solace the Apostles sadnesse he sayth I tell you the truth it is expedient that is aduantagious or profitable for you that I goe for if I goe not the holy Ghost shall not come to you Affection Let vs putt downe my soule for a most sure maxime in point of our spirituall progresse that he is not Gods best seruant who seekes his will of God in the continuall inioyment of consolations in our prayers c. But he that desires that Gods will may be done in him by an absolute resignation in what drinesse and abandonmēts so euer Let vs learne thē to leaue God for God as here we haue occasion and vndoubtedly the holy Ghost will come and inhabite our disinteressed harts and blesse them with more solide and substantiall aduantages THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY But if I goe I will send him to you Io. 16. CONSIDER that wheras the holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the sonne it was but conuenient that the sonne should first be seated at the right hand of his heauenly Father in the Throne of his glorie according to that the holy Ghost was not yet giuen because Iesus was not yet glorified before the holy Ghost was sent that he might be ioyntly sent from them both to poore man as that best guift descending from aboue consubstantiall coequall coeternall with themselues and well becoming their infinite Maiestie and the excessiue loue of our deare Sauiour by the merits of whose death that perfect present was purchaced Affection It is but iust my soule that our eldest brother be first repossessed of his owne glorie which was his from all eternitie before the younger and adoptiue children lay claime to their share which is but his deare purchace and free guift who for a sure pledge of it sends vs one equall to himselfe to confirme in vs the hopes therof Happie thrice happie we Christians to haue so powerfull a Mediatour in the Court of heauen to preuayle with his Almightie Father for the sending of the holy Ghost to comfort instruct and confirme vs in all truth taking vp his residence in the Temples of our hartes THE SECONDE POINTE. He the holy Ghost shall teach you all truth Io 16. CONSIDER that as the donation and mission of the holy Ghost were the effects and fruites of the passion ascension and noble tryumphe of Christ wherin he ledd captiuitie it selfe captiue and in all of them glorified his heauenly Father so is that holy spirit sent to glorifie the sonn by teaching clearing and confirminge in the harts of the Apostles all that their diuine master had taught them belowe and making these heauenly
they were taught by experience to distruste in their owne endeuours and to expect Christs orders and tymes with absolute dependance of his good pleasure they were so farre from labouring in vaine that they presently inclosed a huge multitude of fishes and were in a manner agreably oppressed with plentie Affection We must not fayle to labour my soule and to vse our vttermost endeuours for this the God who indowed vs with witt and industrie requires at our hands howeuer they may not alwayes be answered with wished successe But this done le ts stay Gods order and pleasure and as absolutly depende vpon his prouidence and goodnesse as though we had vsed noe endeuours at all which without Gods assistance would proue vneffectuall to our purpose Neither he who plantes is any thinge nor he who waters but God who giues increase THE SECONDE POINTE. Peter fell downe at Iesus his knees saying goe forth from me ô Lord for I am a sinfull man CONSIDER that Peter was so farre from ascribing the taking that vnexpected multitude of fish at one draught either to his owne skill or euen to the great credit he had with Christ by whose power indeede that wonder was wrought that contrarily he enters vpon it into himselfe by reflection what he is and what God is and humbly falls downe at Iesus his feete giuing all the glorie to him and acknowledging himselfe to be a poore sinner vnworthy of his presence Affection Let vs my soule in all our achiuements and progresse in spitit learne a Christian behauiour of this humble sainte and neuer ascribe any thinge to our selues but to the good giuer of all good gifts saying with the Psalmist not to vs ô Lord not to vs but giue glorie to thyne owne name for if we began well it was by the fauour of his preuenting grace if we aduanced it was by the conduct of his concomitante grace if we made any considerable progresse it was he that wrought it in vs who workes as well the will as the performāce according to his good pleasure we being otherwise noe better then poore sinfull men We are onely my soule the happie free or voluntarie instruments which his mercy makes merite to receiue afterwards a crowne of iustice at his heauenly hands THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE FIFT SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY Matt. 5. Vnlesse your iustice abound more then that of the Scribes and Pharisies you shall not enter into the Kingdome of heauen CONSIDER that the Scribes and Pharisies fasted often to witt twice a weeke prayed much payd the tythes of all they possessed gaue almes liberally were verie conuersant in holy scriptures and like great Rabbys interpreted them to the people and yet Truth it selfe Iesus Christ who can neither deceiue nor be deceiued threatens vs Christians that vnlesse our iustice vertue and perfection be greater then theirs we shall not enter into the Kingdome of heauen Affection Alas my deare Lord if this be put downe for an absolute and irreuocable Doome pronounced by thy holy mouth that vnlesse the iustice of vs Christians doe abounde more then that of the scribes c. We shall not enter into the Kingdome of heauen what will become of vs when we fall short euen of what they performe for are not our prayers cold and full of distractions Our workes of mercy as well corporall as spirituall verie fewe our fastes rather suffered then performed with feruour And yet vnlesse our iustice surpasse theirs there are noe hopes of heauen for vs. THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER that Christian iustice and perfection doth not indeede consiste in exteriour actions though otherwise good of their owne natures but take their worth and excellencie from the interiour intention because all the beautie of the kinges daughter the soule issues from the interiour If the intention the eye of the the soule be simple the whole body of the actions proceeding from thence will be beautifull and agreeable Nor are againe euery well meant action Christian perfection but onely wayes to it perfection consisting absolutly in the loue of God and our neighbour Affection We are not then my soule so much to looke what we doe as how it is done Nor how good the action is in it selfe as from what harte it proceedeth with what puritie of intention it is done God is not delighted with the sacryfice of our lipps but of our hartes and those too sett vpon that one necessarie thinge charitie from which all our actions ought to issue and to her finally to tende because true Christian perfection and the plenitude of the lawe is loue THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Thou shalt not kill was it said of old But I Christ say vnto you that he who is angrie against his brother shall be coulpable of iudgement CONSIDER how sweete this lawe of loue is wherin Christian iustice consists and how deare it ought to be to vs all since it prouides for all our aduantages It setts not onely our life in assurance by saying thou shall not kill but euen striues to make our otherwise miserable liues delightfull to vs by forbidding anger taunting and deridinge words and all manner of vnderualuing one an other intimated by the words Raca and foole Affection O how happie how happie were we Christians my soule did we liue according to the prescript of this heauenly sweete lawe O what a heauen should we finde in earth were our actions framed according to the directions and precepts of our diuine Law-giuer Our liues our honours our goodes and all were in an vndoubted safetie and our soules would inioy a perpetuall saboath while noe detractions ruinating neighbours fame would be heard noe carying of ill reports to one another which is destructiue to brotherly charitie would be vsed noe contumelies contempts and tauntes would be practised Labour the due obseruance of this lawe my soule and so blesse thy selfe with two heauens Consider how agreeable this brotherly charitie must needes be to our sweete Sauiour since he doth not onely prouide safetie and delight of our life while we obserue his holy Lawe according to that how goode and delightfull it is for brethren to liue vnanimously togeither but euen in case of transgression therof for our perfect reconcilement to our brother and him if thou offerest thy gift at the Altar and there thou remembrest that thy brother hath any thinge against thee leaue there thy offering c. and goe first to be reconciled to thy brother and then coming thou shalt offerre thy gift Affection O most delicious and heauenly Law O admirable goodnesse of God to poore man Who so closely lincked his interests with ours that if we be not right amongst our selues we are not right with him If we haue not peace with our brethren we haue not peace with him If any man say I loue God and hates his brother he is a lier saith the beloued Apostle Learne then to loue my soule whom thy exemplar Christ so much loues
with him in the Apocalipse that we are rich and inriched and want nothinge since indeede we are misers and miserable and poore and blind and naked Let vs render humble thankes that he permitts vs with so much goodnesse to make vse of what is his and by the good management therof to treasure vp for eternitie THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER that since we are not masters but Bailifes onely and as such lyable to render accompt how much it behoues vs to sitt downe and obserue how we manage all the parts of our farme And first how are the goods of our bodyes imployed as our health our strength our beautie our fiue senses 2. how those of our mynde as our vnderstanding our will our memorie 3. how those of fortune as our moneys our Lands c. Are not the first happly rather imployed to offend then please our good Land-Lord Are not the seconde in lieu of conuersing aboue with the Angells dissipated vpon vaine curiosities and follies And are not the third in steede of the purchace of heauen mispent vpon iniquitie Affection Alas my soule how often hath that actiuitie strength and bodiln beautie while they made me gratefull in the eyes of men rendered me disloyall and disagreeable in the eyes of God vpon what vnworthy obiects haue myne eyes bene frequently fixed What vanities c. haue not myne eares bene filled with How ignobly haue those noble endowments of the soule wherby we approche neere to the dignitie of an Angell bene imployed vpon earth and earthlinesse how prodigally haue we not spent our meanes to buy vanitie and sinne which was lent vs to feede the poore Let 's after this manner cast vp our accompts and we shall find a strange waste we haue made of our Masters goods THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY What heare I this of thee to witt that thou haste wasted my goods Luc. 16. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER how often our good Land-Lord cryes out to our eares and hartes by his word his preacher and priuate inspirations reproching vs with the wasting of his goods to make vs beware before we come to the rendering of the accompt indeede graciously seeming as it were vnwilling to surprise vs saying what is this I heare of thee nay which I see in thee with an all-seeing eye which cannot be deceiued Affection Alas my soule deney it we can not Our owne conscience is as an hundred witnesses to vs. Such and such reflecting in particular wastes I haue longe made The desires and delightes of my harte which should haue bene Gods part I haue dissipated vpon imaginations and lyes while thy word ô God stroue to breake through my deafenesse saying Why doe you fall in loue with vanitie and pursue a lye Thy blessed inspirations were redoubled againe and againe reproching my disloyaltie in such and such things c. and I answered those heauenly inuitations from tyme to tyme with a cold and vngratefull cras cras to morrow and to morrow which were extended into monthes and yeares I doubted not but that thy diuine eyes wete still fixed vpon me and yet I feared not while thou lookedst on to mispend and dissipate what I knew was thyne THE SECONDE POINTE. Render an accompt of thy Bailifeshippe CONSIDER that at length our lease which is but for life with our life is expired and infallibly we shall heare render an accompt of thy Bailifshippe The noyse of our vnrulie passions would not permit vs to heare Gods word his cryes were made to deafe eares his diuine inspirations the seedes of beatitude fell vpon rockie or high wayes that is hartes layd open to wordly vanities where they tooke noe roote and behold now after so much pretious tyme mispent we haue but a moment left to make our accompt in vpon which an eternitie of blisle or woe depends Affection That dayes and weekes and monthes and yeares my soule doe passe is a thinge we all doe see and know nor doth tyme past euer returne againe nor can we know how much more is to follow Onely this we know that in this course of tyme euery one shall meete with his last moment and in it as sure as God's in heauen we shall be obliged to render accompt of all the momentes of our life of all in one What would we not then doe my soule to cleare our accompt And what should we not now doe to preuent so dreadfull an expectation Ponder it well and make resolutions accordingly THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE NINGTH SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY Iesus drawing neere Ierusalem and beholding it wept vpon it S. Luc. 9. CONSIDER the greate difference there is betwixt the iudgements of men and those of God Neuer did Ierusalem seeme to be in a more happie state and more iustly to reioyce then when they receiued their Kinge Iesus-Christ withioyfull acclamations and Hosannas yet neuer drew it neerer to its ruine by putting Christ to an infamous death They spredd palmes and oliue branches out of tryumph he teares out of compassion Affection Learne by this my soule to know what rate we ought to putt vpon the ioyes and iollities of this world which are but ordinarily the forerunners of ruine to our soules and haue true sorrowes following them in at the heeles Nay though we receiue Iesus-Christ himselfe into the cities of our soules with more glorious Hosannas and spreading of branches then with serious discernements of the dreade Maiestie we receiue and the true fruites of charitie we are but preparing for Not this man Iesus but Barrabas or tolle tolle crucifige THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER that the Ierusalem indeede vpon which our Saviour wept is our owne vngratefull soules which often turne the abundance of Christs singular fauours to our greater condemnation The greater benefits we receiue the greater gratitude we owe and the greater punishment shall we vndergoe if we answer not to them accordingly What ought he to haue done to his vinyarde his beloued Iewes which he did not doe by being borne and liuing among them by his preaching by his multiplyed miracles And what fauours and graces haue not we too receiued from his holy hand Affection O daugthers of Ierusalem inhabitantes of Sion forgett not to make continuall reflection in what highth of honour you are placed Gods free mercy did not onely extend it selfe to call you to be Christian Catholikes but euen to that which is more noble and deare to be peculiar spouses of Christ whose worke it is to cōuerse with him day and night You haue not onely heard his wotd and heard of his miracles as did the Iewes but your harts by a conquering grace was wrought to beleeue them Beware you neuer permitt ingratitude to drye vp those fountaines of mercy Remember that it was said to the fairest among women If thou know not thy selfe goe forth and follow thy fellowes c. THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY If thou hadst knowne in this thy day CONSIDER that happly we
his hands full and is iustified The Pharisie preaches his owne iustice innocencie and vertues and yet returnes humbled The Publican is so farre from pretending iustice innocencie or vertue that he pleads onely his pouertie and sinfulnesse and relyes wholy on Gods mercy and he returnes home exalted Affection Let vs my soule haue as high conceipts as we will of our owne aduancement in vertue and good actions pride will neuer preuayle with God nay it will insensibly leade vs into confusion God alwayes disperses the proude in the conceipt of his hart and exaltes the humble Those he sends away with emptie handes these he replenishes with good thinges For loe the poore vnderualued despised Publican who found none of his owne iustice but his true pouertie and miserie to pleade his cause returnes iustified while the Pharisie is sent away with confusion THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE XI SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY And they bringe to him Christ one deaf and dumme Matt. 7. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER in this deafe and dumme man cured by our Sauiour in his passing by sidon c. the miserable condition of a poore soule which happens often to be both deafe and dumme too The greatest commerce that poore man hath with heauen is either by speaking or hearing I will speake to our Lord though I be but dust and ashes Abraham speake ô Lord for thy seruantheares Psal When the soule falls then into such a lythergie that it neither lists to speake to God by prayer nor to heare God speake to it by his preachers alas in what a lamentable state it is Affection Ah my soule if thou be'st so vnhappie to fall into so dangerous a desease that thou hast neither list to pray nor gust in prayer nor yet inclination to heare or reade the word of God wherby the soule should be strengthend and nourished fayle not to testifie to thy brethren by sighes and sobbs and teares that thou lyest sicke of the palsie and art sore tormented Procure at least some good soule to goe thy errand for thee and signifie to our mercyfull Sauiour in what a sadd condition thou art as did the good Centurion for his seruant Thus doe and confidently hope for assistance in Gods good tyme. THE SECONDE POINTE They besought him Christ that he would impose his hand vpon him CONSIDER that we are taught by these good people how we ought to behaue our selues towards our distressed brother They did not onely bringe him to our Sauiours presence but they sue for him and preuayle with that God of pittie to touch him with his holie hand and soone after to cure him Affection O my soule how our deare Lord loues that brotherly loue They noe sooner bring this distressed brother of theirs and interceede for him but that mercifull hart is touched with compassion and blesses them and him with the effects of their labours and prayers for his eares were opened and he spoke right Let vs hence learne neuer to feare to leaue the dearest deuotious we haue to afforde offices of brotherly charitie to our afflicted brother What we doe to them in qualitie of brothers of Christ we doe to Christ THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY And taking him from the multitude apart c. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that Christ tooke the Dumme man apart from the multitude before he perfectly cured him to teach vs that there is noe better way to cure our neighbours or our selues in case of our spirituall deafnesse and dumnesse then to quitt the multitude and to betake vs to some holy retreate There will Christ speake loude enough to be heard by the deafest eares there will he make the tongues of the dumme speake loude enough too to be heard by him there will the cure be absolutly wrought the eares being immediatly opened and the string of the tongue being loosed Affection I will leade her the faithfull soule into the wildernesse and I will speake to her harte The wildernesse my soule where our deafenesse ought to be cured is our chamber or Celle There the world is silent and breakes not our heades with its idle tumults and rumours but leaues God his turne to speake There he breakes through our deafnesse saying not to our eares but to our hartes I not the world am thy saluation and sayes it so that we heare it There it is too that he makes our dumnesse speake vnto him saying O deare Lord thou haste made me to thy selfe and for thy selfe and thence it is that wander where I will I am at vnrest and euen wearied out till I returne to thee Thou hast made my soule capable of thy immensitie and noe lesse thinge then thy selfe can or shall euer saciate that large capacitie Da mihi te redde mihi te For this will I day lie crye Thou art my harts repose Darke night 's my day in thee In solitude my God's A multitude to me THE SECONDE POINTE He doth all thinges well making the deafe to heare and the dumme to speake CONSIDER the exceeding gratitude of those good people for a temporall benefit and that done not to themselues neither but to their neighbour while we hardly take notice of so many spirituall ones done to our selues euery day They though otherwise commanded to tell noe body cannot conteyne themselues but they crye it out to euery body with ioy and wonderment freely publishing that he doth all thinges well making the deafe to heare and the dumme to speake Affection O my Lord my life and my dearest delight what is any man able to say of thee bearing any proportion to the multitude of thy mercys shewed to man shall we therfor be silent ô noe for woe be to them who are silent in thy prayse since euen they who speake most therof may be acounted to be but euen dumbe I am my deare Lord thy redeemed slaue thou haste thundered through my deafenesse and broken my bonds asunder Let my harte and my tongue praise thee and let all my bowells say ô Lord who is like to thee say therfor my soule if I forgett thee let my right hand be forgotten let my tongue cleaue to my iawes if I doe not remember thee and place thee in the begininge of all my ioyes THE FiRST MEDITATION FOR THE XII SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY Blessed are the eyes which see what you see Luc. 10. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER how great a Blessing it was indeede for a companie of poore fisher men to behold God incarnated fimiliarly to conuerse with him to discourse with him in a friendly manner to sitt at table and eate and drinke with him to be the hearers of the sacred words which streamed from his diuine lipps to be companions of his labours c. To see him in earth a milde Emmanuel whom the Cherubins and Seraphins adore with trembling in heauen Affection Certes my soule this was a great blessing and a thinge ardently breathed after by the Patriarkes and Prophetes who cryed out come
which we haue set vp in our owne hartes is not equally adored by others Is pride there then her sister enuie is not farre absent and thence we are greeued at our neighbours good and excellencie And if pride and enuie the Diuells eldest daughters be present hatred their youngest sister is at hand to wishe euill and doe mischeife To these are our intentious suted and duplicitie vsed to couer all deformities Vse diligence my soule to subdue all sinne yet let our most vigilant care be imployed to stifle this hellish broode by earnestly begging of the diuine mercy that humilitie and charitie those heauen-bred sisters may quite destroye Pride enuie and hatred in our hartes THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY As he saw them he said goe shew your selues to the priests c. and as they went they were made cleane THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that with what euer care and diligence we seeke for Iesus at what distance soeuer we stand a loofe from him out of a sense of our owne vnworthynesse how loude soeuer we crye and how humbly soeuer we disclose our sores it often happens that we are not presently cured but are sent to the preistes to discerne betwixt leper and leper and by that meanes we are made cleane It is happinesse enough for a poore sinner that he is graciously looked vpon by a Sauiour and told by him what he is to doe for his cure Affection Beware my soule of euer prouing so audacious as to prescribe to Iesus either the manner or tyme of thy cure be it of what corporall or spirituall desease soeuer Feare not to begge of the diuine goodnesse what we find we want especially thinges appertayning to our eternitie But hauing performed rhat dutie le ts humbly and willingly leaue the rest to Gods sweete disposition The diuine S. Paule blushed to find himselfe subiect to the stinges of the flesh and he frequently petitioned to heauen for the cure Yet his answer from God was not his deliuerie but my grace is sufficient for thee Which he receiued with so much resignation and satisfaction that he did not onely suffer his infirmities willingly but pleased himselfe in them but euen gloried in them because he found indeede that vertue was perfected in infirmitie and by that meanes Christs vertue humilitie did inhabite his chaste soule THE SECONDE POINTE. Iesus said were not ten made cleane and where are the nine CONSIDER that though ingratitude is alwayes odious to God and man yet is it neuer more sensible then when many benefits are done freely to many and that without any preceedente desertes especially when it is found in those who by preference were loued and caressed before and aboue all the rest So it happens in this dayes Gospell Ten were cured and one onely returned to giue thankes Ten were cured wherof nine were Iewes his choysen people amongst whom he was borne with whom he conuersed to whom he preached before whom he wrought so many miracles while yet one onely stranger a poore Samaritane comes backe with his mouth and harte full of thankes giuing Affection May we not feare my soule that this sadde reproche of ingratitude may be more iustly made by Iesus Christ to Christian hartes then to those aboue mentioned to whom he saith were not ten made cleane and where are the nine There was none that returned and gaue glorie to God but this stranger Where are the nine to witt the Iewes whom I mome fauoured Where are the nine to witt the preists and religious who haue yet shared more deeply in my fauours Answer my soule and tell where they are They are the first in dignitie And will they proue the last in their acknewledgements They are a regall preistoode citizens of the faintes and Gods domestikes And shall the gratitude of strangers teare heauen out of their handes The vnlearned cryes out the great S. Augustine snatch heauen away from vs while we with our learning walowe in flesh and bloode THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE XIV SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY Noe man can scrue two Masters Matt. 6. FIRST POINT CONSIDER that as it is impossible for a man to serue two Masters so it is most vniust to serue any more then one We are wholie his by creation his by conseruation and wholy and absolutely his by redemption wherin he bought vs his slaues at the price of his pretious bloode To whom then can any of our seruices be due but to him alone who purchaced vs at so deare a rate Affection O God I am thy seruant I am thy seruant and the sonne of thy handmayde the Catholike Church It was thy selfe and noe other who broke my bands in sunder It was thy selfe who tore in peeces the handwriting of our condemnation and nayled it to the crosse It was not with corruptible thinges neither as gold and siluer that thou paydst my ransome but with the immaculate blood of the tender lambe who dyed for vs. I will therfor sacryfice my selfe and all my seruices in a holocauste of prayses to thee Let my harte prayse the let my tongue prayse thee let all that is within mee say ô my deare Lord and master who is like to thee THE SECONDE POINTE. Noe man can serue two masters CONSIDER that our Sauiour by the impossibilitie of seruing two inferres the necessitie of seruing one master onely and by that one againe he leads vs to his diuiue vnitie by which alone we can be made eternally happie with him according to that of S. Iohn Father as thou art in me and I in thee so let my seruants be but one in vs. And if one Master and one seruant by meanes of this diuine vnitie one seruice one intention of seruing him alone of louinge him alone of adoringe him alone as being truly his Vassalls Affection O my deare Rabbony let the intention of all my poore seruices be for thee alone that I may therby run on a pace towards thy holy vnitie that so my beloued may be myne and I wholy his and that I may esteeme it my onely happinesse to adheare to my God and to loue that one necessarie thinge the God of my harte and my parte for euer whom to serue is truly to raigne O Iesu bannish from my hart all the loues which deuide it betwixt thee and the world that it may serue and loue thee absolutlie in all tymes and places THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY Be not carefull what you should eate or what garment you should putt on c. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER how our B. Sauiour labours as it were by force of arguments to free vs from immoderate care and sollicitude about our meate drinke and clothes And thus he vrges Your life and your body which you haue by my free gift are of more worth then meate and clothes if then I giue you what is greater why should you doubt of receiuing what is lesse Againe the foules of the ayre and the
flowres of the field are prouided with feathers to clothe them and fitting nourishment to releiue them much more man then concludes our Sauiour who is the Lord and Master of them all Affection Let a diligent and moderate care my soule be vsed in all thinges but let inordinate care and sollicitude be banished from that Christiā harte which should be wholie free to seeke Christ his iustice and his Kingdome Those other thinges may be sought too but with moderation with iudifferencie without distrust of that great prouidence which doth furnish necessaries for farre lesse cansiderable thinges Let them be sought as thinges to be vsed in the way not to be inioyed not to take vp our thoughtes and ingage our hartes which must be reserued as a place for our Lord and a tabernacle for the God of Iacob THE SECONDE POINTE. For your father knoweth that you neede all these thinges CONSIDER that our Saniour goes still on to breake downe our sollicitude and selfe confidence that our cheife dependance may be of his diuine prouidence not in our owne First by reason of the litle power we haue being not able to adde one inch to our stature secondly because by that strange sollicitude we should be like the heathens who seeke the same thinges Thirdly because therby we forgett our owne happie condition of being children to an almightie Father who knowes that we neede all these thinges Affection To depende vpon our selues my soule is to depende vpon miserie and pouertie and to fayle in our expectation and hope in our Lord and pray to him and thou shalt be fedd in his riches There is noe want to those that loue him We haue a good father who is all-seeing and knowes what we wāt who is all-powerfull and able to giue it Let vs be good children then and intirely confide in his fatherly prouidence he loues vs nor doth he loue and forsake Nay saith that deare father of ours I will not leaue you orphants THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE XV. SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY Iesus went into a citie called Naim c. And behold a deade man was caried forth Luc 7. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that though God is iustly admirable and ought most iustly to be admired in all his workes yet it happens almost generally by mans stupiditie and dulnesse that he is more admired magnified and praysed for things lesse admirable while greater thinges are past ouer with litle consideration One younge man is here restored to life and the whole multitu de who accompaigned the corps magnified God publishing that a greate prophete was rysen amongst them and that God had visited his people Thousands are daylie restored to the life of the soule by verrue of the Sacramentes of Baptisme and pennance and litle notice is taken of it Affection Aye me my soule we are but litle ones and thence we speake as litle ones we vnderstand as litle ones we thinke as litle ones our thoughtes reach litle further then our eyes are able to see and by them we frame our iudgements not by the light of faith And thence it is that we more magnifie God for some temporall blessing as deliuerie from sicknesse danger or death then for multitudes of mercy which we daylie experience And more admire and loue him vpon the deliuerie of one body from a temporall death then a thousand thousand soules by his grace from an eternall death THE SECONDE POINTE. Behold a deade man was caried forth the onely sonne of his mother CONSIDER that as gray heires length of yeares and frequent infirmities doe daylie and hourely threaten the old man that he cannot liue longe so frequent experience ought to assure vs that young men may and often doe dye soone yea in the verie flowre of their age as did he here being the onely sonne of his mother whose corps was caried forth Wherin all her hopes of a successour fayled and howeuer he might haue fedd himselfe with the expectation of a rich inheritance all that falls to him from his poore mournefull mother mounts to noe more then her comfortlesse teares which fall fruitlessly to the grounde Affection For an old man to promise himselfe longe life is a thinge worthy to be laughed at so farre hath old age robbd him of all rationall hopes And for a younge man be he neuer so younge to giue himselfe assurance of a longe life deserues to be wept at Let noe man thinke he can make a league with death Youth is noe proofe against it Nay it is euen farre more subiect to innumerable dismall occasions therof as daily experience puts vs out of doubt What are we to doe then my soule but to banish all assurance of life from our thoughtes and so to liue as though we were euery houre to dye hearing continually with S. Hierome the trumpet sounding Arise ô yee deade and come to iudgement THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Behold a deade man was caried forth c. accompaigned with a great multitude c. CONSIDER that a day will come God onely knowes how soone when the soule which now animates this body shall be driuen out and the poore senselesse lumpe shall be left to be brought forth as this young mans was to be accompaigned to the graue by some number of friends who happly may bestowe some fewe teares or smale commendation vpon it before they throw that vselesse and loathsome masse into the ground which some tymes had bene ouerualued at an vniust rate both by our sel-and others as now it too plainely appeares Affection This day my soule will as surely arriue as it is sure that man is but man that is a subiect of corruption and death to witt it is decreed in the supreame Court that men shall once dye That is the immortall soule shall be separated from this body of earth which did ouerloade itt and incline it to earthlinesse This masse of corruption was it which we so pampered so cherished so adorned so admired and loued to heare admired by others And loe now a tender mother will giue noe longer lodging to it tho it be all that 's left of her onely child but brings it forth to be cast into the earth THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER that we reade in the Gospell of three sorts of deade bodyes restored to life by our Sauiour which perfectly represent three kinds of soules deade by sinne That of the Archsynagogues daughter who was truly deade but was not yet caried forth Representing a soule who consented to mortall sinne in thought without any exteriour action That of the widowes onely sonne who was deade and caried forth expressing one who did not onely consent in thought but performed it in effect Finally that of Lazarus who was foure dayes deade and began to be corrupted pointing out the soule which is not onely deade by sinne but euen deade and buried in the badd custome of sinning All which not-withstanding our Sauiour was mercyfull and powerfull enough to
rayse to life Affection Haue we then my soule pleased our selues in thought and consented to what wisdome prohibiteth Hope in gods mercy and by his assistance this death will rather proue a sleepe then death it selfe the Mayde is not deade but she sleepes Or haue we bene vnhappie enough to haue committed in worke what pleased vs in thought all hope is not yet past the deade man is not yet buried God has power enough to say Younge man I say to thee ryse Or are we happly so extreamely miserable as not onely to haue offended in thought and worke but euen to be deade buried and corrupted in a longe and dissolute custome of sinning Enter not yet into despaire neither Lazarus who stunc ke in his graue is raysed to life God neither wants goodnesse nor power to pardon so we haue resolution by his grace to quitte our ill wayes c. Resolution Le ts run ouer our life in the bitternesse of our harte humble our selues vnder the powerfull hand of God and incessantly begge for pardon for what is past and grace for the tyme to come THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE XVI SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY And they the Parisies obserued him Luc. 14. CONSIDER that the Parisies inuited our Sauiour Iesus Chr. to dinner not so much out of respect to him as with a malicious intention to prie into his actions and to obserue his words and comportements to censure him Whence we may gather that it is not the spirite of a Christian but the proude and malicious humour of a Pharisie to leaue the care of our selfe as being in selfe conceipt aboue the pitch of other men to obserue the words and actions of our neighbour which concerne vs not especially those which are the worst or by our malice we turne to the worst Affection Let vs not trouble our selues my soule with what concerns vs not Euery one stands or falls to himselfe Euery one shall be iudged according to his owne not his brothers workes It behoues vs then to haue compassion of him and to pray for him not to censure him Nay rather let vs turne our zeale where it ought to be imployed to weepe vpon our selues and our owne deffaults That poore sinner whom we reprehend is a sainte for any thinge we know in the sight of God THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER that though our B. Sauiour who sees into the hartes of men knew well enough with what a blacke designe he was inuited by the Pharisies yet he disdaygned not for all that to goe among them to doe the worke of his heauenly father by miracles to proue who he was by wisdome to confound their craft and by patience and myldnesse to subdue their malice Affection Let vs neuer my soule cease to doe God's worke and our dutie to glorifie his name vpon the apprehension or euen knowledge we haue that the peruersitie of others may but make an ill vse of it By saying and doing what belonges to vs we saue our owne soules which is our greatest dutie And with all we giue good example and sowe seeds of vertue for others In God's good tyme they will sproute vp and produce wished effects God is a hammer which teares rockes a sunder Let vs neuer fayle to sowe and water leauing the increase to his blessed prouidence THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY When shou are inuited to a mariage sitt not downe in the first place CONSIDER that we are all inuited to the mariage of the Lambe and the way to arriue happily at it is the imitation of his wordes and workes by whose goodnesse we are inuited to it Pride was the great sinne he came to decrye Affecte not saith he the first place but learne of me who am mylde and humble of harte All his life from the crybbe to the Crosse was humble and abiecte He was discribed by his Prophete to be the last of men Finally he humbled himselfe being made obedient euen to death and the death of the Crosse Affection This is the way to heauen my soule which Christ marked out to vs nor is there any other who takes not this way runs quite countre The abiect way of the Crosse is the way to the crowne of glorie Pride can neuer ascende with humbled Christ Our ambitionating of the first place in earth will neuer bring vs euen to the last in heauen O let vs learne then my soule this deare lesson humilitie of him who by word and worke shewed himselfe mylde and humble of harte and we shall infallibly find rest and peace to our soules here belowe and eternall repose with him aboue in glorie THE SECONDE POINTE. Sit downe in the lowest place c. He that humbles himselfe shall be exalted CONSIDER that if we did well ponder our owne miserie we should neede noe other motiue to chuse the lowest place Our owne sinnes we well know but of other mens we are alwayes ignorant We are nothing but by Gods conseruation we haue nothing but by his gift we can doe nothing but by his assistance This alone I say should be sufficent to humble vs and neuer suffer vs to preferre our selues before any Howbeit our good God giues vs yet another motiue which is our owne interest exaltation and true honour And for this we haue the word of Truth that can neuer fayle He that humbles himselfe shall be exalted Affection O my soule that either the knowledge of our owne miserie and nothing or the comforts of Gods sure promises of exaltation and glorie would once make vs effectually imbrace that dea re vertue of Christs humilitie So should we alwayes inioye a calme and permanent peace so should we easily appease our angrie neighbours wroth against vs. So should the holy Ghost repose vpon vs and multiplie his holy grace in vs which in his good tyme he would crowne with exaltation and glorie THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE XVII SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY The Pharisies came to Iesus faying Master which is the greatest commandement of the lawe Matt. 22. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that the Pharisies come togeither to Iesus which was the true way to their eternall happinesse But as they come Pharisies so they returne Pharisies that is full of pride and presumption They call him Master but it is not to become his true Disciples but to tempt him and to pose him A learned Doctour among them askes him which is the great commandement in the Lawe while yet he is ignorant in the lesser to witt that he who comes to God ought to beleeue that he is which they did not So that they were rather mockers then Masters or euen good schollers Affection Let vs approche to God my soule as S. Paule taught vs with a true harte in fulnesse of faith not as the Pharisies did with pride and presumption Let vs come to him in simplicitie and humilitie of mynde as poore ignorant schollers to learne his blessed will not as greate Masters puffed vp with our owne
knowledge to tempt and teache him Le ts first beleeue in him that he is the sonne of the liuing God because without faith it is impossible to please him and learne of him to be mylde and humble of harte and so we shall finde rest to our soules which in high and proude questions can neuer be found THE SECONDE POINTE. Thou shalt loue thy Lord thy God from thy whole harte with thy whole soule and with thy whole mynde This is the greatest and first commandement CONSIDER that this commandement of the loue of God aboue all thinges is most iustly called the first and greatest The first because it ought to possesse the first place in our harte The first againe because it ought to be in mans soule what the first … oouer is in the heauens which giues first motion to all the rest And it is the greatest because its whole ayme is summum bonum the souueraigne Good the greatest too because it comprises all Gods Lawe and all the vertues in a most eminent manner Affection O my soule how sweete how heauenly sweete is this lawe of loue which either finds all thinges easie or makes them such How gracious is this diuine Law giuer who deliuers vs so sweete a Lawe What is man ô Lord thou shouldst so magnifie him and place thy heauenly harte vpon him What is man to thee I say that thou shouldst commande him to loue thee yea and to be angrie and threaten to lay huge punishments vpon him if he loue thee not Alas is it not of it selfe punishment great enough if he doe not loue Alas should poore subiects who holde all of the Kinges of the earth neede any such threates to induce them to loue them THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy hart c. THE FIRST POINT CONSIDER in what manner and with what measure we ought to loue our Lord God And we are told by S. Bernard that the measure of louing God is to loue him without measure from our whole harte saith our blessed Sauiour by placing all our affections vpon him With our whole soule not permitting any of the passions to contest with it With our whole mynd by making choyce of the best meanes imaginable to accomplish his blessed will in the most perfect manner that man is capable off here belowe Affection This is the onely thinge my soule wherin there can be noe excesse He is infinitly more louely then we are able to be louinge O what a happinesse it is to be oppressed with the abundance of goodnesse Le ts dilate our narrow hartes dare as much as we are able breath after him incessantly and yet humbly acknowledge that we fall infinitly shorte of what is due saying with S. Augustine let me loue thee ô Lord as much as I wishe and as much as I ought wherin that I may not fayle proue as the Authour of the precept so the giuer of the grace to performe it giue what thou commandst ô Lord and command what thou wilt THE SECONDE POINTE. And the seeonde commandement is like to this Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe CONSIDER that our B. Sauiour had noe sooner established that right of loue which is indispensably due to his heauenly Father but he falls vpon the dutie of his adoptiue brethren to one another which he also places in loue saying thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe With this difference notwithstanding that the measure of the loue of God is to loue him without measure and the measure of the loue of our neighbour is to loue him as our selues that ought to be exhibited to God because he is infinitly Good this to our neighbour be he good or badd because it was commanded vs by an infinite Goodnesse Affection O deare God how good thou art to men of right hartes O diuine wisdome how wisely and sweetly thou disposest of all thinges My soule if man had bene left to wishe what he would what other lawe could he haue wished then what he has a lawe of loue Wherin God and mans interests are so wouen togeither that the one will not be admitted without the other In vaine doe we professe to loue God if we hate our neighbour whom he commands vs to loue Nay saith the louing S. Augustine this must be putt downe for a certaine truth that there is noe surer way to attaine to Gods fauour then the loue of man to man Ama fac quod vis THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE XVIII SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY Iesus c. said to the sicke of the palsey haue a good harte sonne thy sinns are forgiuen thee Matt. 9. CONSIDER that Gods goodnesse and bountie is so greate that he often giues vs not onely what we aske but euen other thinges which we aske not which are farre greater and better The poore sicke of the palsey aymed onely at a temporall blessing the cure of his infirmitie and behold he meetes with farre more the remission of his sinnes from the mouth of truth saying haue a good harte sonne thy sinnes are forgiuen thee Affection Such is the goodnesse of our good and bountifull God my soule that when we haue an humble recourse to him in simplicitie of harte he grantes vs often not onely what we desire but what he sees we most neede As at other tymes in exercising his mercy he refuses vs what we desire to grante vs thinges more conducing to our eternall good being still equally good as well in what he giues as what he denyes If we pray then day and night and be not heard as it happened to our blessed Sauiour himselfe let vs rest assured that what we asked was not for our aduantage acquiescing therin to Gods wise prouidence and desiring aboue all thinges to heare sonne thy sinnes are forgiuen thee THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER that this wise Physitian of ours doth not onely shew his goodnesse and liberalitie in the care of the poore mans corporall and spirituall infirmities but manifestes his wisdome also in the manner of the cure to witt he first takes away the cause which is sinne By sinne it was saith the great Apostle that death and consequently all deseases leading to death gott first footing in the world and this woefull cause being once remoued from the soule he proceeds to the cure of the bodie Arise take vpp thy bedd and goe into thy house Affection Let vs learne then my soule of wisdome it selfe to be wise when we endeuour the cure of our deseased soule Le ts obserue the causes and occasions wherin we find our selues It is still in such and such circumstances I finde my fall It is in such companies I continually meete with the desease or death of my soule Let vs in tyme iudge our selues that we may not be more rigourously iudged That eye of scandall must necessarily be plucked out and throwne away without the reach of danger which who loueth shall perish in
it That hand which drawes vs into sinne must be cutt off its mercy to our selues not crueltie Better it is saith Truth it selfe that one of thy limmes perish rather then that thy whole bodie goe into Hell fire THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Certaine Scribes say within themselues he blaspheameth THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that as charitie and goodnesse makes the best of all thinges by a friendly interpretation so pride and malice turns all to the worst Our B. Sauiour graciously daignes as well to cure the infirmities of the sicke man's body as the wounds of his soule and the Scribes with their wordly wisdome crye out he blaspheames Wheras lesse learning then they proudly pretended to might easily haue fitted them with a better consequence To witt none can forgiue sinns but God alone But this man Iesus forgiues sinns therfor he is God the sonne of God the Messias whom we expect Affection It is the venimous propertie of the spider my soule to turne all into poison while the gentile honie bee makes honie of all shee meetes with Le ts not iudge and we shall not be iudged for in varie deede if we obserue it well we condemne our selues in the verie thinge wherin we iudge another while we doe our selues the same thinge Let vs learne hereby to be slow in censuring for we seldome fully vnderstand the businesse as also to haue patience to haue our best actions censured by others who vnderstand them not since we best know how subiect we are to offend in many thinges THE SECONDE POINTE. The multitudes seeing it c. glorified God who gaue such power to men THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that while the proude and malicious Scribes turne Christ's best actions to their owne perdition the simple multitudes turne them to their aduantage and Gods glorie They both heare and see the same things To witt thy sinnes are forgiuen thee arise take vpp thy bedd and goe into thy house The Scribes find blaspheamie in it the simple people contrarily Gods power and wisdome which they acknowledge with admiring reuerence and glorifie him who gaue such power to men Affection The high conceipts we haue my soule of our owne knowledge was neuer the way to know God He is high indeede but he graciously lookes downe vpon lowe thinges while high hartes he places a faire off It is not my soule it is not the viuacitie of vnderstanding but the simplicitie of beleeuinge which saues the most parte of men saith holy S. Augustine as here we see it happens with the vnlearned multitude The myndes of men haue noe sure accesse to wisdome and saluation vnlesse humble faith first prepare them to reason and true knowledge which pride is not capable of THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE XIX SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY A Kinge made a mariage to his sonne and sent his seruantes to call them that were inuited to the mariage Matt. 22. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that the Kinge who made this mariage was the Kinge of heauen who decreed in his high counsell from all eternitie that his onely begotten sonne should espouse mans nature and become like to one of vs. His seruants who were sent to inuite were the Patriarkes and Prophetes first Then the sonne himselfe who spoke by his owne mouthe and after that the Apostles and Disciples who were sent into all the earth to preach The inuited were men dispersed ouer all the world Affection O the infinite goodnesse of God who while he inioyed himselfe in his blessed eternitie in selfe beatitude without any want or possibilitie of want of any thinge could euer be ours who I say had thoughts of loue for vs while we yet were not to make vs bee and so to bee as euen to be capable of himselfe and of the happinesse he inioyed from all eternitie And wheras he had but one onely sonne he would not haue him alone but sent him downe to make men his adop tiue brethren to share with him in that eternall kingdome of his He sent I say a sonne to inuite seruants to that same sonns mariage Banket which is to be made in heauen and to continue for all eternitie THE SECONDE POINTE CONSIDER how vngratefull man dealt with those who were sent to inuite him a thinge so honorable to him to the mariage of a kinges onely sonne and so aduantagious withall to witt not onely to feaste with him but to be coheires with him of his Kingdome He did not onely refuse to come but euen layed violent hands of those who were sent to inuite yea of them you kill and crucifie and of them you scourge in your Synagogues and persecute from citie to citie Nay mans malice went yet further the Kings onely sonne is sent and of him they say this is the heyre let vs kill him and the inheritance will be ours Affection Admire my soule to see Gods free mercy so continually resisted by mans miserie his longanimitie bountie and benignitie by mans obstinacie ingratitude and rebellion This we easily grant in the Iewes but alas Let vs looke but diligently into our owne hartes and we shall finde the like come home to our owne dores for doe we heare the teachers of Gods word as God himselfe who sayes who heares you heares me Or rather tho we kill them not are we not deafe to their counsells and euen contemne them Nay doe we not alas doe we not by our crymes crucisie the sonne of God againe and againe and make him a mockerie to his enemyes THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY When the Kinge heard that his inuitation and fauours were despised and his seruants murdered he was wroth and sending his hosts destroyed those murderers THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that as God is most gracious and bountifull in the generall distribution of his blissings and heauenly guifts so is he most exacte and rigorous in punishing the contempt and neglect of them He made his goodnesse and bountie appeare in this that while there was nothinge to moue him to inuite man to his sonns mariage and in that to the possession of an eternall Kingdome with him but his owne infinite goodnesse noe accessions of power or greatnesse by poore man since to infinite nothing can be added Noe foresight of the merits of his workes seeing he knew that noe workes were euer or could be truly good but by his gracious assistance he pleased yet to inuite him But when he sees nothing but hatred returned for his loue he makes his rigour appeare in sending his hostes to distroye those murderers Affection Not to vs then ô Lord not to vs but to thy holy name to thy free goodnesse to thyne infinite goodnesse let glorie be giuen Thou didst not looke vpon vs and loue vs because we were in our selues louely but because thyne owne mercifull lookes made vs so Without that gracious aspect we had remayned in our nothinge without that being otherwise made we had bene but vnprofitable sinfull lost seruantes
who could profit thee nothing could bring nothing tothyne immensitie since indeede thou art thence conuinced to be our God because thou standest in neede of nothinge that is ours Howbeit if in lieu of gratitude we render nothing but ingratitude coldnesse and neglect we may iustly feare my soule that he will turne his loue into wroth and destroye vs disloyall wretches THE SECONDE POINTE. Many be called but few elect CONSIDER that this short sentence from the mouth of Truth it selfe ought most iustly to sticke to the verie rootes of our harte and continually to mynde vs that we are to worke our saluation with feare and trembling since God workes in vs both the velle and perficere the will and performance according to his good pleasure Many are called for the sound of the Apostles went out into all the earth and yet it is sayd who beleeueth our hearinge Many are called and giue credit to their calling too yet complie so ill with their vocation that Gods name is blasphemed in them Many againe are called and begin to run yet they perseuere not to be end they comprehend not Affection When I duely reflect dreade Lord vpon this doubtfull doome which issued from thy sacred mouth whence neuer any thinge issues but infallible truth in what a doubtfull perplexitie ought I not to stand Many are called and of those I haue had the happinesse to be one But few elected and who is wise enough to know that he is of that number What are we then to doe my soule but to be carefull to giue eare to the diuine call to lay faste hold vpon discipline least we might perish in a iust way to make sure our vocation by good workes and incessantly to pray for perseuerance to the end that we may so run as to comprehend THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE XX. SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY There was a certaine Lord or Prince whose sonne was sicke in Capharnaum Iohn 4. CONSIDER that as noe greenesse of yeares in our infancie nor vigour in youth nor strength in our more riper age can exempt vs from the assaults of infirmities sicknesse and death so can noe dignitie highth of power or principalitie free vs from the same Well may Potentates Lord it ouer townes and nations but against the deseases which growe upon them and the approches of death the most powerfull haue noe warrantie but all conditions of men are equally lyable to sicknesse and death the iuste punishments of sinne Affection My soule howeuer the greate power we may seeme to haue and the highth of dignitie wherin we are placed makes vs oft forgett that we are the banished sonns of Eue condemned to dye before we attayne to the vse of the light yet wholsome sicknesse makes vs all equally know that man be he neuer so powerfull is but man that is a poore creature borne of a woman liuing a short tyme replenished with many miseries The sicknesses the death the forgotten dust of all your Alexanders and Caesars crye out this truth that all men without exception are doomed to dye Make a vertue of necessitie my soule by willingly accepting Gods iust iudgementes herein which none euer yet or to the end of the world euer shall be able to auoyde THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER that it oft happens with vs as it did with this afflicted … ce that that which we apprehend to be most disaduantagious and disasterous to vs proues the verie meanes which Gods sweete prouidence makes vse of to worke both our temporall and eternall felicitie For who I pray amongst vs doth looke vpon sicknesse with a good eye And yet had not this younge Princes sicknesse made his life be despaired of by his father he had happlie neuer thought of Christ neuer approched to him neuer sued for his sonns cure and so as well the father as the sonne had bene left to perish in their infidelitie Affection O happie affliction my soule which giues vs vnderstanding to knowe our selues O happie corporall infirmitie which brings forth the life of the soule Were we not some tymes thus lost to our owne apprehension we should forgett our selues and be lost for euer The deuoute Psalmist experienced this truth when he said it is good for me that thou didst humble me because before I was humbled I offended But being once humbled by aduersities I learnt thy iustifications I learnt that euery punishment was the punishment of sinne So that sinne brought out paine paine moued the harte to pennance and pennance couered the multitudes of sinne And thence bonum est mihi quia humiliasti me THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY The Prince saide come downe with me before my sonne dye THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that this good Prince in being refused what in formall tearmes he demanded obteyned more then he either as yet wished for or euen thought of He stoode absolutly perswaded that vnlesse our Sauiour descended and went with him to his sicke sonne the cure could not be wrought His demande therfore was that Christ would come downe with him But our Sauiour though he went not wrought the cure notwithstanding at the same tyme and at that distance and thence powerfully perswaded him that he was God indeede who could doe equally all that he would as well in absence as presence Affection Learne hence my soule neuer to prescribe to God either the tyme the place or meanes how he is to performe what we demande of his mercy Leaue that vast power to worke as it pleases with out limiting the same to our narrow conceipts It reacheth from the one pole to the other and sweetly disposeth all thinges bene omnia fecit Haue patience my soule whether in his wisdome our great God refuse vs either absolutly what we desire or at least in the way we desire it and we shall find in the close that he did all graciously and to the best aduantage of the faithfull soule Ah should he grant vs all our owne desires we were lost for euer THE SECONDE POINTE. Goe saith our Sauiour thy sonne liueth The man beleeued the word which was said to him and went home CONSIDER the great fruites and comforts which accrued to this good Prince and all his by his simple faith obedience and good example He beleeued our Sauiours words and presently departed And loe he had not yet recouered his owne house but his seruantes came out to meete him and ioyfully assured him of his sonns perfect health He examined the tyme of his recouerie and found it to be the verie houre in which our Sauiour said goe thy sonne liueth whence he and his whole familie beleeued Affection Let vs humbly my soule giue credit to euery word of God whether it be written or spoken to our hartes by his frequent inspirations without disputing how it should come to passe or by what meanes it should be accomplished hope in his fidelitie and goodnesse leauing the rest to his sweete prouidence In his good tyme and euen
to our selues too to be dying or deade in spirit whilst in truth and in the neuer fayling sight of God we are in perfect health and doe but onely slumber and a litle forgett our selues Or els if being truly deade through infirmitie we presently run to Iesus for succour while we are in his hands in whom all thinges doe liue he being indeede resurrection and life we cannot be said so much to be deade as to sleepe for a while till he interpose his powerfull hand to rayse vs to our spirituall life againe Affection Alas my soule the litle skill we haue to discerne betweene suggestion deliberation and consent causes in vs more doubts then deathes more fearfull apprehensions then true crymes Be our harte brim-full of disloyall and abominable representations they are but yet suggestions none can auoyde them they want deliberation they want consent the mayde is not yet deade this infirmitie is not to death but to Gods glorie But doth suggestion begett pleasure and pleasure procure deliberate consent through infirmitie and ignorance yet is she not irrecouerably or finally deade nor is this varie death to death since presently she has recourse to Christ for helpe who interposeth his hand and suffers her not to be brused in her fall but teacheth her therby her owne weaknesse and miserie his power and mercy by which alone she sees she is able to stand THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY And behold a woman who was troubled with an issue of bloud twelue yeares came behind him THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER with what dispositions this poore woman came to our Sauiour And first tho we may easily conceiue that twelue yeares sufferance of that wasting desease had brought her lowe enough yet she with as much courage of mynde as weaknesse of body pressed through the thronge to gettneere Christ Secondly she approched with as much modestie humilitie and vnderualuing of her selfe as high conceipt of his power and Maiestie before whose face she would not presume to present her selfe but onely came behind him to touch him c. Affection O my soule let vs place the example of this poore woman before our eyes And let vs but vse the same care courage modestie abiect conceipt of our selues and high esteeme of God for the cure of our spiritual infirmities be they not of twelue yeares grouth onely but euen farr more inueterate and we may certainly harbour in our soules many comfortable hopes that our care courage modestie abiect conceipt of our selues and high esteeme of God will be agreeable in his diuine sight thar he will looke vpon them with pittie and say to vs as he did to her take a good harte daughter thy faith hath made the safe and the woman became whole from that houre THE SECONDE POINTE. She said within her selfe if I shall touch onely his garment I shall be safe CONSIDER further two other dispositions which this good woman brought with her To witt a huge esteeme of Christ his power and an vnspeakable confidence in his goodnesse The first plainely appeares in that she dares venture her cure in the onely touching not of himselfe but euen of any thinge which toucheth him to witt the verie hemme of his garments And the seconde is manifested in these few confident words If I shall touch onely the hemme of his garment I shall be safe Affection Alas my soule when we compare our cold confidence to the great faith of this good woman we may well say we beleeue ô Lord yet helpe our incredulitie and increase this deade faith of ours For loe she neither couets to speake to Christ nor to haue him speake to her neither to touch him nor to be touched by him but onely in silence to touche the hemme of his garment and she is presently cured O conquering modestie O soule speaking silence Thou haste a more facile accesse to him who heares hartes then the lowdest importunities of those too sollicitous and perplexed soules who seeme to endeuour as it were by force of armes to obteyne their requestes My soule le ts onely humbly hope in our Lord and he will giue vs the desires of our harte THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE XXIV SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY When you shall see the abomination of desolation which according to Daniel shall appeare in the Temple c. Matt. 24. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that by the abomination of desolation which Daniel foretold was meant the deplorable destruction of Ierusalem by Titus and Vespasianus and by that againe the dismale conflagration of the vniuersall world in the last day when Christ shall come to iudge the same in great power and maiestie But by these two againe the day of the accursed eternitie is pointed out where there shall be weeping wayling and gnashing of teeth for euer The first is past with extreame horrour and disaster to the incredulous Iewe the seconde shall passe with vtter consternation both to Iewe and gentile but the third shall proue the abomination and desolation indeede among the damned and shall neuer passe Affection Great my soule astonishing greate was the desolation of those accursed Iewes when they sawe the Temple of God that wonder of the world vtterly destroyed and beheld Ierusalem that lady of all nations buried in her owne ruines her inhabitants famished and buchered finally her matrons deuowring the fruite of their owne wombes Greater yet will it be when we shall behold not Ierusalem alone but the whole world on fire at the day of Doome when the powers of heauen shall quake with reuerentiall feare and men shall wither away with dreade But greatest of all when we behold the day of the cursed eternitie which shall neuer haue end I conceiue in mynde a thousand yeares I adde to those a thousand thousand yeares yea as many thousands and millions as piles of grasse on the earth or sands in the sea And yet I haue nothing comparable to eternitie O Eternitie Eternitie Alas how rarely thou are considered by miserable man THE SECONDE POINTE. When you shall see the abomination of desolation standing in the holy place to witt in the Temple c. CONSIDER that the abomination of desolation which Daniel foretold was in particular the idolatrous erecting of the statues of Caesar and Adrian the Emperours in the Temple of Ierusalem But the abomination of desolation wherin we are all more concerned as being of farre more danger to each of vs is that of the sinners setting vp the Idoles of pride couetousnesse luxurie in the liuing Temples of God to witt in the hart wherin the holy Ghost should inhabite and raigne Affection O my soule what a strange peruersitie is this so to prophane the liuing Temple of the Almightie Mans harte was made by God capable of God for God in whom a lone it is able to find rest while the holy Ghost doth inhabite it as his Temple But alas what agreement hath the Temple of God with the base Idolls we sett vp There
i' st your sute to liue I 'am endlesse life and endlesse life doe giue O then quitt vncoulth wayes hope not in lyes To find out truth nor th' life that neuer dyes In fading moments Ah you seeke in vaine To find true life in th'land where death doth raigne THE COMMVNICATION OF THE diuine goodnesse by imparting of his Glorie OVR sea of goodnesse still streames on there is Noe end in it we tend to endlesse blisse Those guifts of nature grace and all the rest Are gu'in to bringe vs to eternall rest Our joyes were great at the coming of that guest Our hearts reioyc'd to lodge him in our breast But ah he will not haue vs end our storie Till he conduct vs to the state of glorie So saith our faith to this our hopes are raysd With this excesse our charitie's amays'd That goodnesse free from want our dust should choose To place it's loue vpon and kindly loose Himselfe on man Ble'st prodigalitie By th' guifts of his diuine Hypostasie To be himselfe companion in his way To call him backe by grace in case he stray To feede and fatten him with his owne bloode O that this happinesse were vnderstoode To proue in death bis sauing sacryfice And endlesly to be himselfe his price So saith his word I 'le be my selfe thy hyre What more then this can vastest heart desire AN APOSTROPHIE TO THE DAMES OF SION O Then deare Dames let th' loue I dayly find Mongst you increase and all your hearts cobind In one loue-knott vse all your wit and Arte To haue but all one comon soule one heart This God command's this Austine doth aduise Doe this alone deare soules it will suffice FINIS SINE FINE GLORIA TIBI DOMINE MEDITATIONS Vpon our blessed Sauiours Passion THE FIRST MEDITATION Of the last supper THE FIRST POINT CONSIDER that now the blessed tyme of grace and mercy drawing neere wherin our sweete sauiour Iesus-Christ had determined to pay mans ransome not with the corruptible price of gold and siluer but euen with the effusion of his owne pretious bloude he graciously daigned in testimonie of true loue to feaste with his beloued Apostles before his departure See him louingly accompanie them into the roome where they were to suppe and let vs take the humble boldnesse to follow him inn and to receiue some of his last words I haue had an ardent desire saith he to eate this pascall lambe with you it being the consummation of all the ancient sacrifices and the last I shall eate And say to him cordially Affection That in verie decede we find our selues exceeding hungerie but that we neither doe nor indeede can possibly find any meate which feeds and saciates vs saue himselfe or from his table The rest doe but puffe vp and swell they doe not solidly feed and fatten so that by how much more we eate by so much the more doe we languish and pine away Tell him that verily you are not worthy you know it well you confesse it to the whole world but thar it is he alone who makes vnworthy creatures worthy who makes sinners iust and that for your part you relie not vpon your owne merites which are none without his mercys but run intirely to his free mercy Tell him that euen your dogges eate the crums which fall from their masters tables and in that confidence you approche or els with an humble and contrite hart fall downe at his sacred feete with the mournfull Magdalaine and make lamentations teares and grones more fully speake your hart The seconde Pointe Consider with what compassion and mildnesse our blessed sauiour begins to comfort his disciples whyle he obserues them sorrowfull and sadd vpon the apprehensiō of his departure which he fore told them saying my deare Disciles be not sorrowfull let not your harts be troubled I vvill not leaue you Orphantes t is for your sakes that I goe But seeing them yet some weeping some sighing his fatherly bowells were wholie moued to compassion and he spoke to them in these sweete tearmes my tenderly beloued sons my deare Disciples be not terrified bee not troubled behold I am vvith you till the end of the vvorld Affect This sweet sauiour shall be my comfort in all my desolations that though thou seemest to absēt thy selfe yet wilt thou not leaue me an Orphā whether it be that thou goest from me by permitting me to fall into some temptations or spirituall drynesse for my greater trial and merite or it be that thou often lettest me fall into little faultes that I may better learne to run back to thee my louing father this shall still be my consolation that thou dearely sweete and loueing Lord ar● still with me till the end of the world THE II. MEDITATION Of Christs humilitie and loue shevven at his last supper Cons 1 COnsider what is done at that his last supper looke about and you shall see him rise vp from the table to giue by his owne example and in his owne person that first and most necessarie lesson humilitie the ground of our christian building and euen of all christian discipline as S. Augustine esteemes it You shall see the master become all his seruants seruant the vertue of the highest lowe laid at his creatures foule feete him in whose name all knees are bowed kneeling to wash to drye to kisse his seruants feete in fine the king of glorie so farre as I may say forgett his glorie as humbly officiously and louingly to fall downe euen at a disloyal Iudas loathsome feete Affect Ah my soule what is this we behold are wee deceaud or is it the king of heauen we see at the traiterous Iudas his feete shall we euer then haue the hart and courage to swell againe after this wonderfull humiliation If God indured this for me shall not I endure this or that reflecting vpon some difficultie we haue to stoope for him nay for my selfe for myne owne aduantage and eternall good or if this cannot moue me what will be euer able to moue my proud hart O my sweet sauiour euen for thy felfes sake bestow vpon me some scrappe of this wholesome dishe and grant me in euerie occurrence of difficultie submission or humiliation to haue this thy blessed example liuely placed before myne eyes Consid 2. Consider that notwithstanding that Christ knew by certaine knowledge that his heauenlie father had giuen all power and authoritie into his hands that he came from him and went to him rhat is that he was indued with fulnes of knowledge issuing from him by his eternall generation and returning to him to take possession of his owne right yet disdained hee not for our example to rise from supper to putt off his vpper garment to take a linen and girt about him to putt water into a basine to washe his disciples feete to wipe them with the Iinen which he had put before him Affect O God I haue nothing to saie but am lost in astonishement and
then to bee esteemed as a naturall foole And this he would vndergoe for loue of vs and can we proue so vnkind as not to requite him in what we are able shall not the white habites we weare for his sake be deare vnto vs in memorie of his white garment shall wee not willingly indure the gibes and scornes of others while our owne conscience assures vs we doe well c. Cons 2. Consider what a contemptible conceipt the wicked Iewes had of our sweete Sauiour not only equalising a wicked rogue with him but without all hesitation and delay preferring him before him straight answering Pilat non hunc sed Barrabam We demande pardon not for this man but for Barabbas O strange blindnes ô vn happie choice non hunc sed Barrabam not a louing Sauiour but a damnable villaine not the mildest of creatures an innocent noe but a nocent a rogue a theefe See the iudgment of the world and learne hence what credit you are to giue to it the treasure of heauen once before sold for 30. pence now esteemed at lesse then nothing the price of a Rogue for harke they persist in their vngracious choice crying out with one voice tolle tolle Crucifige Crucifige Away with him away with him Crucifie him Crucifie him Affect Haue we not good reason then alwaies to suspect yea neuer to trust the worlds opinion for verily one is exceeding blind that cannot discerne the sonne by his splendant rayes Well could I curse their sinfull and foule mouthes their hellish harts their blind choice but woe is me the conscience of a like contempt stopps my mouth for haue we not my soule in earnest haue we not or at least haue not our actions often said non hunc sed Barabbam while this or that fond affection this or that light and momentarie delight hath been deliberately preferred before Gods pleasure or at least these imbraced that neglected ay mee therefore THE XIII MEDITATION Hovv Iesus vvas vvhipped at Pilates Cons 1. ANd now see Barbarous furie armed with authoritie Pilat giues him ouer into their hands to be scourged into the hands of vile desperate slaues what vsage may you easily thinke he had Marrie they binde him with cordes to a pillar though he had neuer yet made resistance no not so much as in one high word or distempered looke they bind him with cords I saie haueing already stripped him quite naked I leaue it to your consideration how much contrary to his virginall bashfullnes so hard that they force blood to spring out at his fingers ends ô God! what a pittifull paine must this needes be in so delicate a complection Affect And all this for his too much loue to vs vngratfull vs ô my soule t was our loue that tied him so fast to loose the tye of our sins no other cord could haue held him that was only stronge enough to tye Omnipotencie And shall not the same cord be stronge enough to tye vs to him to tye our hands from sinning so that we may answere our passions our vnlawfull desires I cannot I cannot the loue of my sweete spouse hath tyed my hands I cannot In fine shall not this confounding manner of suffering make such and such acts of humiliation seeme farre more tollerable when I consider that the innocent sonne of God indured worse for my loue Cons 2. See now alas how vnhumanly they teare his delicate and sacred bodie not leauing a place whole for a new wound see how the blood streames downe nay the skin falls off nay yet more peeces of his blessed flesh dropp downe ah pittifull sight quo nate Dei quó tua flagrauit charitas ah sonne of God how high did thy Charitie flame out behold your spouse with compassion in his wedding garment died in rich scarlet die nor was it anie meruaile sith as S. Bonauenture saith he receaued more then 5000. woundes verè vermis erat non homo opprobrium hominum abjectio plebis He was truly a worme and not a man the reproche of men and the scorne of the people Affect Looke Angels looke is this your King looke Queene of heauen is this thy child looke my soule looke is this thy spouse that euen now was so diuinely faire I I t is euen he true said the Prophet vidimus eum reputauimus quasi leprosum We saw him we sawe him and we reputed him as a leaprous person Ah me what cruell hart vsed my loue thus ah let vs run to imbrace him for t is euen he Le ts wash his deformed face with our teares ò sweete Iesus ô loueinge Lord ô deare spouse my sick hart can indure no longer to see thee thus abused THE XIV MEDITATION Hovv Iesus vvas crovvned vvith thornes c. Cons 1. COnsider how scarcely yet the torne Iesus in that his extreame wearines had sought out and put on his garments till behold a new torment a new contempt is inuented for him so without end are his sufferings And what ah goe out yee true daughters of Sion and see your true Salomon in the diademe in which his mother crowned him in a diademe of thornes sharp thornes peircing skin and skull euen to the braines as S. Bernard saith in a thousand places saith S. Anselme iudge what an vnheard of paine this must needes be And see yet to add scorne to his torment they put a reede into his hand for a Scepter nay with it they beate the sharpe thornes deepor in-to his head Affect V●ere langores nostros ipse tulit infirmitates nostras ipse portauit Truly he suffered our languours and tooke our infirmities vpon him Ours euen ours O my soule things that he was not subiect vnto but by his owne will Ah my hart see how heapes of gorie blood stand vpon his heade and temples see that fairest face of men or Angells all disfigured and this for loue of vs Come come all yee soules that are moued by loue come and see a louers extasie he hath giuen vs this sure argument of loue let vs not loose our affections vpon anie lesse then himselfe And thou my poore soule die rather then be so vngratefull as euer to lett this bloodie Picture which diuine loue made so be painted for loue of vs be blotted out of our hartes Cons Vpon the Ecce homo behold the man Consider that when Pilate could neither find cause of death in him nor meanes to saue his life so farre was the implacable rage of the people causeleslie insensed against him he brings him out with a crowne of thornes vpon his head and a purple garment vpon him hopeing by the aspect of a most miserable and despicable person to incline the most barbarous hart to pittie and compassion saying Ecce homo behold the man as who should say looke vpon one so disfigured that you can hardly find man in him and know him to be what indeede he is were you not told he is a man
truthes by their ministerie tho otherwise as farre aboue the reach of reason as contrarie to the bent of flesh and bloode powerfully spread themselues all the world ouer and become the familiar and fattening foode not of wise onely but euen Idiotes and children too wherby they are made more learned then the proudest Phylosofer that euer liued Affection O the admirable goodnesse of the Father sonne and holy Ghost who so graciously reueales the mysteries of Heauen to vs litle ones in earth The Father sent vs his onely sonne to purchace vs that singular fauour at the price of his pretious bloode which he willingly and ioyfully vndertooke to teache vs the secreetes of heauen And the holy Ghoste sent from them both so absolutly confirmes our hartes in the beliefe therof that poore illiterate pesants doe not onely knowe more then greatest Phylosofers but are readie to laye downe their liues in confirmation of that truth THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE FIFT SVNDAY AFTER EASTER Vntill now you haue not asked anything Io. 16. THE FIRST POINT CONSIDER that the poore beggar needes noe other inuitation to aske then the knowledge and sense of his owne pouertie and want whence the rich of this world doe as litle vse as litle neede to intreate the beggar to aske an almes of him But the riches of heauen by an ineffable bountie and graciousnesse importunes vs vs as it were to importune him saying vntill now you haue not asked any thing aske and you shall receiue Affection Alas my soule me thinkes the longe and certaine knowledge we haue of our owne miserie and want and the daylie temptations we suffer and relapses we fall into should sufficiently inuite vs to haue frequent recourse to a bountifull giuer but now at least being incited by the reproches he makes vs for not asking let vs hourely run to those ouerflowing breasts of mercy and grace least we may seeme gratis to loose our selues Let vs my soule aske seeke knocke that holy violence is gratefull to God with as much importunitie as we truly find necessitie THE SECONDE POINTE. Amen Amen I say to you if you aske the father any thinge in my name he will giue it you Io. 16. WHOM WE ARE TO ASKE CONSIDER how stronge hopes we ought to conceiue of obteyning our demande where the promesse is made in so great a latitude and where such a sonne the wisdome of heauen confidently sends vs to such a Father the eternall sourse of all goodnesse plentie and happinesse which can neuer be drayned to his Father and our Father as we are taught by his sacred mouthe to beleeue and say Our Father which are in heauen c. Affection O daughter of Sion ah my poore soule why wilt thou wilfully perish where such large and louing offers of grace and abundance is made to thee What confidence may we not iustly haue of obteyning all things necessarie when we are sent to the Father of mercys and the God of all consolation by his onely deare sonne who in obedience to his diuine will putt downe that plentifull price of his pretious bloud for the loue of vs Be my faylings neuer so frequent be my sinns in what number they will at least from hence forth I will not forgett to call thee with Ieremie Thou art my Father the guide of my Virginitie THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Aske the Father in my name Io. 16. THE FIRST POINTE. HOW WE OVGHT TO ASKE CONSIDER that our blessed Sauiour in these few words instructs vs not onely of whom we are to aske to witt of his Father but how or in what manner to witt in his name If we aske of a Father and that of an all-knowing all-seeing Father it ought to be done with the reuerence humilitie obedience loue and confidence of a child If in the name of a sonne it ought to be done as that sonne vsed to doe it saying with an absolute resignation Father if it may be if it be agreable to thy diuine will if it be expedient for my eternall good grant this or this c. If otherwise not my will but thyne be done Affection Let vs then my soule in all our necessities and difficulties addresse our selues to that omnipotent Father of mercyes and all consolation for none comes to the sonne vnlesse the father drawe them But let it be in the name of his sonne Iesus since there is noe other name vnder heauen giuen to men wherin they must be saued Let vs then humbly intreate that heauenly father in the name and by the merites of that most dearely beloued sonne be it for thinges necessarie for the bodie or soule but let it still be done with perfect resignation to his blessed will and pleasure saying as we were taught by him Father if it may be let this or this be done or this or this be taken away Howbeit not my will but thy holy will be done THE SECONDE POINTE FOR THE SAME DAY What we are to aske CONSIDER that what we ought to aske is to result out of the same words of our Sauiour Aske of my Father in my name We must aske then of a louing Father we must therfor demande thinges sutable to his loue his goodnesse will not giue vs a stone in lieu of breade nor a serpent in steede of a fish he will not giue vs poyson because our follie likes it We must aske of a Father who is the Kinge of heauen we must not then aske earthly trash which is vnworthy of his bestowing Finally we must aske in the name of a Sauiour nothing therfor which is against our Saluation Affection Run then my soule to that almightie Father in the name of that best beloued sonne But be not peremptorie in our demands wisdome better knowes what it best for vs. If we aske of a louing father le ts aske with loue not with feare If we aske of an Almightie father who has Kingdomes to giue aske not for cottages trifles vnworthy of his giuing If in the name of a Sauiour things then which most conduce to our saluation things which he himselfe taught vs to aske that his name may be sanctified in all nations that he may absolutly raigne ouer all hartes that his holy will may be punctually performed here belowe as in the Court of heauen c. Let vs aske that my soule and we shall neuer be confounded THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE THIRD SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY And there approched publicans and sinners vnto him to heare him Luc. 15. CONSIDER the great mercy and myldnesse of Iesus who did not onely graciously permitt publicans and publike sinners to approch to him to heare his diuine word c. but he euen proued by the parable of the lost sheepe which men are wont to seeke with so much care their Apologist or Aduocate against the vncharitable murmurings of the proud and vnm ercifull Scribes and Pharisies who looked vpon them and him with disdaigne Affection Base
pharisaicall pride be thou euer farre banished from Christian hartes who art still imployed to misconstrue mens best actions and maliciously to turne them to their disaduantage for what indeede was more sutable to a Sauiour who was not sent to call the iust but the sinners as himselfe testifies then to admitte them into his diuine companie and mildly to couerse with them to teach them the wayes of life And what againe more cōfortable to the poore sinner then to meete with so milde a Sauiour Certes such graciousnesse must needs melte well-borne hartes into teares and make them pronounce with much hope be mercyfull ô God to me a sinner THE SECOND POINT FOR THE SAME DAY The Pharisies and Scribes murmured saying this man receiueth sinners and eateth with them CONSIDER that a quite contrarie spirit appeares in these Doctors of the lawe from that of the great Lawgiuer Christ He comes from heauen not to call the iuste but the sinner to pennance They looke vpon them with indignation and murmure against them He admitts them not onely into his presence and feeds them with his holy worde but euen familiarises himselfe and feeds with them They keepe a loofe off from them proudly pretending feare to be defiled by them while they feare not to be vncharitably censuring both them and him Affection Neuer apprehend it to be pure zeale and true pietie but wicked Pharisaicall pride to haue our eyes open to pointe out such and such for sinners to prie into their actions to imploy our tongue to censure them and to murmure against them This is not the lesson which our mercyfull and mylde Master left vs but that which he reprehended in the Pharisies Noe but contrarily he willed such as were without sinne to throw the first stone at the sinner True iustice saith S. Gregorie begetts compassion in our hartes false iustice breeds detestation THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Who among you c. doth not leaue the 99. and goe after one that is lost to find it THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER how our sweete Sauiour to animate poore sinners to pennance doth not onely admitt them into his companie eate with them and pleade their cause against the Scribes and Pharisies but doth further make appeare vnto them by a familiar example common to them and all the world of a shepharde that leauing ninetie-nine that is the whole heard seemes to imploy his greatest care to finde out the poore sheepe which had strayd from the rest he makes appeare I say that this proceeding of his is so litle lyable to censure that contrarily it is h●ld most laudable and is ordinarily vsed by euery one Affection Take courage then my soule and all Christian soules and approche confidently to our good Iesus He comes not now a Iudge but a Sauiour a companion an Aduocate to pleade the poore sinners cause against the proude God sent not his sonne into the world to iudge the world but that the world may be saued by him He leaues the ninetie-nine iuste that is the whole troupes of the Angells to seeke after poore man who had strayed who had prodigall-like deboistly spent his substance in a forraine land and without so strange a mercy had bene lost for euer THE SECONDE POINTE. And when he hath found it layeth it vpon his shoulders c. CONSIDER againe in this parable of our blessed Sauiours that the poore shephard did not onely willingly leaue the ninetie-nine to imploye as it were his whole selfe and his care to find out that one which was lost but hauing found it vsed all sweetnesse towards it not driuing or chaceing it home but louingly loading it vpon his owne shoulders and being returned home with it by calling all his friends to reioyce with him Affection This deare Sauiour of ours ô my soule this carefull shepharde imployd himselfe wholie for our aduantage to find vs out who had strayed into a land of vtter disproportion from him and that not for a fewe dayes weekes or monthes but euen for the space of thirtie three yeares sweetly inuiting all that labour and are oppressed to come to him and he would refreshe them He freely conuersed with sinners pleaded their cause and eate with them Nay more he loaded all our sinnes vpon his owne shoulders and therfor he may most truly be said not onely to haue ioyfully and mercifully brought backe the lost sheepe alone vpon his owne backe but euen all that had otherwise perished eternally THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE FOVRTH SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY The multitude pressed our Sauiour I. Christ to heare his worde Luc. 5. CONSIDER by how many wayes our Sauiour Iesus preaches to our soules and how by the example of the pious multitude we ought diligently to heare it Sometymes he speakes priuatly to our hartes by his holy inspirations Sometymes againe both to our eares and hartes by our Superiours Pastours Confessours and spirituall bookes Finally by the good examples of others by infirmities afflictions c. Affection Turne not my soule a deafe eare to those heauenly exhortations and inuitations Let not that golden shewre of graces which streames downe from aboue fall fruitlessly to the ground through our deffault They are the Euangelicall pearles which ought to be prised aboue all our substance These the manna which ought to be gathered before the sun sett These the seedes of glorie which are to produce in our soules the fruites of eternall felicitie THE SECONDE POINTE. We haue laboured all the night and yet haue taken nothinge CONSIDER that we often labour much and aduance but litle which happens either because we labour by night that is without the light of Gods grace being benighted by sinne Or that we depende more vpon our owne industrie then Gods gracious assistance or finally because we labour for thinges which are not worth the labour which are not permanent which vanish away like a shadowe Such are all earthly things when they are sought for themselues not directed and vsed to Gods glorie Affection It s in vaine my soule to ryse before the light If sinne haue benighted vs grace must leade vs or els we wander in darknesse and walke further from our fathers house Begge it then earnestly incessantly haue present recourse to the Sacraments to those streames of grace It is refused to none who seeke it as they ought Distruste in our owne force which infallibly will fayle vs. Aske for things which are worthy of Gods giuing such as tende to our saluation and his glorie not transitorie toyes which he leaues to his enemys and refuses to his friends in exercising mercy towards them THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY When they had done as our Sauiour ordered them they inclosed a verie great multitude of fishes and their net was broken THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that Peter and the rest who had laboured all night and caught nothinge while they wholy depended vpon their owne industrie and skill in fishing as soone as