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A06436 Of prayer, and meditation Wherein are conteined fovvertien deuoute meditations for the seuen daies of the weeke, bothe for the morninges, and eueninges. And in them is treyted of the consideration of the principall holie mysteries of our faithe. Written firste in the Spanishe tongue by the famous religious father. F. Lewis de Granada, prouinciall of the holie order of preachers in the prouince of Portugall.; Libro de la oraciĆ³n y meditaciĆ³n. English Luis, de Granada, 1504-1588.; Hopkins, Richard, d. 1594? 1582 (1582) STC 16907; ESTC S100761 342,485 696

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Sauiour into that place of hell which is commonly called by the Learned diuines Limbus Patrum Of the Resurrection of his holie bodie Of his appearinge first to our blessed Ladie and afterwardes to S. Marie Magdalene and to the disciples The text of the holie Euangelistes VPON the Sondaie next ensuinge after this Fridaie of the Passion Ioan. 20. verie earlie in the morninge before the breake of the daie Marie Magdalen came to the sepulcher and sawe the stone remoued from the tombe and perceaued that the bodie was not there The which when she fownde not she stoode without the sepulcher in the garden weepinge And as she wepte she bowed her selfe downe into the sepulcher and sawe two Angells in white sittinge the one at the head and the other at the feete of the place where the bodie of Iesus was laid And they said vnto her Woman why weepest thou She made answere and sayd They haue taken awaie my Lorde and I knowe not where they haue laid him When she had thus said she turned her selfe backe and sawe Iesus standinge and knewe not that is was Iesus Iesus sayd vnto her Woman why weepest thou Whom seekest thou She supposinge that he had bene the gardener of that garden sayd vnto him Sir if thou hast taken him awaie tell me where thou hast laid him and I will take him awaie Then sayd Iesus vnto her Marie And she sayd vnto him Maister Iesus sayd vnto her Towche me not but goe and tell my brethern that I ascende to my father and your father to my God and your God Marie Magdalen came forthwith awaye and tolde these thinges vnto the Disciples sayenge I haue seene our Lorde and he tolde me these and these thinges that I shoulde tell them vnto you The same daie late in the eueninge when the doores were shut where the disciples were assembled for feare of the Iewes Iesus came and stoode in the middes of them and sayed vnto them Peace be with you And when he had so said he shewed vnto them his handes and his syde Then were the disciples glad when they had seene our Lorde Then sayd Iesus againe vnto them Peace be with you As my father sent me so sende I you And when he had sayd those wordes he breathed vpon them and sayd Receaue the holie Ghost Whose synnes so euer ye shall forgeue they be forgeuē vnto them and whose synnes so euer ye shall reteyne they are reteyned At that tyme Thomas one of the twelue who was also called Didimus was not with the disciples whē Iesus came The other disciples therefore whē he came saied vnto him We haue seene our Lorde But he sayd vnto them Except I see in his handes the prynte of the nailes and put my fynger into the holes of them and put my hande into his syde I will not beleeue it And eight daies after his Disciples were againe within and Thomas with them Then came Iesus againe when the doores were shutt and standinge in the middes of them sayd Peace be with you And after he sayd vnto Thomas Put thy finger here and see my handes and bringe hither thy hande and put it into my syde and be no more incredulous but faithfull Thomas answered and sayd My Lorde and my God And Iesus sayd vnto him Thomas because thou hast seene thou beleuest Blessed are they that haue not seene and haue beleued Manie other signes did Iesus worke also in the presence of his disciples which are not written in this booke but these thinges are written that ye might beleeue that Iesus Christ is the sonne of God and that beleuinge ye might haue life by him MEDITATIONS VPON THESE POYNTES OF THE TEXT THIS is the daie that our Lorde hath made Psalm 117. let vs reioyce and be merie in it why the daye of Christes resurrectiō is speciallie called our Lordes daye Our Lorde who is the maker of all times hath made euerie daie but this daie especiallie he is sayd to haue made forsomuche as on this daye he finished the most excellente of all his workes to wit the worke of our redemption Now as this worke is called by waye of excellencie the worke of God by reason that it farre passeth all his other workes euen so also this daie is called the daie of God for that vpon this daie he finished this worke which was the most excellente of all his workes It is also sayd that our Lorde made this daye because whatsoeuer was done in it was done onely by his owne hande In other feastes and mysteries of our Sauiour there is euer some thinge that we haue done our selues because there is alwaies in them some thinge of payne which payne grewe of our sinne and therefore there is some thinge belonginge vnto vs. But this daye is not a daie of trauell nor of paine but a puttinge awaie and bannishement of all paine and a fulfillinge of all glorie The ioyefull daye of Christes Resurrection and therefore it is whollie and purelie the daie of God Who is he then that will not reioyce vpon such a daye as this is This daie all the humanitie of Christ reioyced The blessed mother of Christ reioyced the disciples of Christ reioyced heauen and earthe reioyced yea hell it selfe had his part of this ioye This daie the sonne shyned more clearly than it did anie other daie because it was meete that it shoulde serue our Lorde with his light on this daie of his reioycinge as it had serued him before with his darkenes on the daie of his Passion The heauens which before in the daie of his passion became darke because they woulde not see their creator naked doe now on this daie shyne with a singuler clearnes to see him how he cōmeth fourthe as a conqueror out of the sepulchre Let the heauens therefore reioyce and thou ô earthe take part of this ioye because this daie there shyneth a greater brightnes out of the sepulchre than from the very sonne it selfe that geueth light in the heauens A certaine holie Father geuen muche to comtemplation sayth that euerie Sondaie morninge when he rose to mattins he tooke so great ioye by callinge to minde the misterie of this daie that it seemed to him that all creatures both of heauen and earthe did singe at that howre with lowde voices and saye In thy resurrection ô Christ Alleluia The heauens and earthe reioyce Alleluia Now to vnderstande somewhat of the misterie of this daye consider first of all howe our Sauiour hauinge finished that painfull iourneye of his passion as he ascended with passinge great charitie vpon the crosse for our sakes euen so did he descende downe into hell with the like loue and charitie to finishe the worke of our reparation For as he tooke death as a meane to deliuer vs from death euen so did he likewise goe downe to hell vsinge that as a meane to deliuer such as be his from hell Now therefore let vs consider how this noble
vnto so highe a maiestie Is this the thanckfulnes that thou yeeldest for his so manifolde and so great benefits Is this the recōpence that thou makest vnto him for the pretious bloude which he hath shed for thee vpon the crosse Is this the repaiment for those lashes and buffettes which he suffered for thy sake O miserable and wretched creature that thou art Wretched vndowtedlie in consideration of that thou hast lost and more wretched in respect of the sinnes thou hast committed but most wretched and miserable if thou be so blynded that euen yet for all this thou perceaue not thyne owne perdition and damnation Consider moreouer what a wonderfull hatred almightie God beareth against sinne and what great punnishementes he hath sent to the worlde for the same that hereby thou mayest more clearlie vnderstande how great and how abhominable the wickednes thereof is as it shal be declared hereafter When thou hast considered all these thinges aforesayd the next poynte is we must thinke verie basele of our selues that thou thinke of thy selfe as basely as thou canst possibly Thinke that thow art no better than a verie waueringe reede which is blowen vp and downe with euerie light blast of wynde without weight without strengthe without firmenes without staie and without anie maner of beinge Ioan. 11. Thinke that thou art a Lazarus that hath lyen dead fowre daies together and that thou art a stinckinge and abhominable carcas so full of wormes and of so vyle a stentche and sauour that as manie as passe by thee doe stoppe their noses and shutte their eies that they maye not beholde thee Thinke with thy selfe that thou doest stincke in this wise in the sight of almightie God and of his holie angels And esteeme thy selfe as vnworthy to lift vp thy eies towardes heauen vnworthy that the earthe shoulde beare thee vnworthie that anie creature shoulde serue thee vnworthie of the verie breade that thou eatest and vnworthie euen of the light and aier that thou receauest And if thou be vnworthie hereof consider how much more vnworthie thou art to speake and talke with almightie God Luc. 15. Luc. 18. yea and farre more vnworthie of the comfortes and consolations of the holie Ghost and of the cheryshinges and delightes of the children of God Accompte thy selfe for one of the most poore and miserable creatures of all the worlde and that none doth so much abuse the benefites of almightie God Marc. 11. as thou doest Thinke that if almightie God had wrought in Tire and Sidon that is in other verie greate sinners those thinges which he hath wrought in thee they woulde haue done penance ere this euen in sackclothe and ashes Acknowledge thy selfe to be farre more wicked than thou canst imagin and that notwithstandinge thou doest sincke verie deepe into this myer and howsoeuer thou imaginest thy selfe to be at the verie bottome yet maist thou fynde euerie daye how to sincke deeper and deeper therein Crie out therefore earnestlie vnto almightie God and saie vnto him O Lorde I haue nothinge I am worthe nothinge I am nothinge and nothinge can I doe without thee Luc. 7. Cast thy selfe downe prostrate with the publike sinner at our Sauiours feete and coueringe thy face for verie shame and cōfusion looke with what shame a womā will appeare before her husbande when she hath committed treason and adulterie against him with the verie same presente thy selfe before that heauenlie spouse against whom thou hast committed so manie and so shamefull adulteries And with great sorrowe and repentance of hart desire him to pardon thy synnes and offences and that it maye please him of his infinite pittie and mercie to receiue thee againe into his howse THE FIRST TREATISE OF THE CONSIDERATION OF SYNnes Wherein this former meditation is declared more at lardge THE first table after shipwracke as S Ierome witnesseth is penance This is the first steppe of this ascendynge and the first stone of this spirituall buildinge Now to obteine this vertue of pennance besides the grace of God whose gifte true penance is it helpeth verie much to consider the multitude of our sinnes aswell present as past and withall the greiuousnes and malice of them For of this consideration proceedeth the compunction and repentance for synnes And out of this consideration proceedeth not onely the vertue of pennance but also manye other vertues yea and those verie excellent For hereof commeth the knowledge of our selues of which pointe we minde to treat in the meditation nexte followinge Of this cōsideration also commeth the contempt of our selues the feare of God the abhorringe of sinne with diuers and sundrie other like affections wherein consisteth a verie great parte of perfection Now that this exercise maie be the more profitable vnto thee thou must applie and direct the same vnto all these endes and labour to sucke all these sweite fruites out of the bitter roote of this consideration But because towardes the obteyninge of such fruites it is nedefull to haue the grace of God which is principallie geuen to such as be humble and deuoute it shal be requisite for thee to desire of our Lorde this gifte of humilitie and deuotion to the ende that recollectinge thy selfe in the inwarde parte of thy harte Esa 38. thou mayest imitate that holie kinge who said I will recite before thoe ô Lorde all the yeares of my life in the bitternes of my harte OF THE MVLTITVDE OF THE SINNES THAT THOV HAST committed in thy former life § I. NOW if thou wilte knowe the nomber of thy synnes that thou hast committed in tymes past ronneouer briefly all the commaundementes and deadly sinnes and vndowtedly thou shalt finde that there is scarsely a commaundemente that thou hast not broken nor a deadly synne wherein thou hast not offended Of breakinge the commaundementes The first commaundemente is to honor almightie God who as S. Augustine saieth is honored with those thre Theologicall vertues FAITH HOPE AND CHARITIE Faythe Now what maner of Faith had he that hath liued so loosely as if he had beleued that all those thinges which his faith teacheth him had bene starke lyes What Hope had he Hope that neither remembred the life to come neither knewe what it was to call vpon almightie God in his troubles and aduersities nor yet how to put his assured trust Charitie and affiance in him What Charitie had he that hath more loued a pointe of honor more accompted of the chaffe of his worldly lucre and commoditie and more regarded the filthines of his pleasures and delites than almightie God him selfe syth that for euerie one of these thinges he hath contemned and offended almightie God Of reuerence vnto almightie God What reuerence hath he borne to that most highe and diuine maiestie that hath bene accustomed to rente that name of so great reuerence and to teare it in peeces in swearinge Of swerynge and forswerynge and forsweringe by it
is manifest that fayth is the first beginninge and foundation of all the Christian life For fayth maketh vs to beleue that almightie God is our creator our gouernour our redeemer our sanctifier our glorifier to be short our beginninge and our last ende Fayth is that which teacheth vs Fayth bridlethe mās harte and causeth him to liue in the feare of God that there is an other lyfe after this and that there shal be a generall iudgement of all our workes and that we shall receiue either euerlastinge glorie for the good or els euerlastinge paine for the euill And it is cleare that the fayth and beliefe men haue in these thinges brideleth their hartes and causeth them to stande in awe and to liue in the feare of God For if fayth were not emonge vs as a meane to brydle and directe vs herein what trow ye would become of the lyfe of man And therefore the Prophet saied That the iust man liueth by fayth Rom. 1. Heb. 10. Galat. 3. Abac 2.4 not that fayth alone is sufficient to geue vs lyfe but because faith by meanes of the representatiō and consideration of those thinges that it teacheth vs prouoketh vs to refraine from sinne and wickednes and to followe vertue and goodnes Ephes 6.16 And this is the cause why the Apostel willeth vs to take faythe as a sheild against all the fyrie dartes of the enemie For certainlie there is no better sheild against the dartes of sinne than to calle those thinges to minde that fayth hath reuealed vnto vs against the same Wherefore that this fayth maye worke this effect in vs it is verie requisite that we doe sometimes ponder and consider in our myndes with good attention and deuotion such thinges as our fayth teacheth vs. Vnlesse we pōdre and cōsider the mysteries of our faythe our faythe is as it were a lett●e clovp and sealed For if we doe not so it seemeth that our fayth shal be vnto vs as it were a letter closed vp and sealed in which althowgh there come notable important newes of verie great sorowe or ioye yet it moueth vs not at all neither to the one nor to the other no more than if we had receyued no letter at all And the reason is because we haue not opened the letter nor considered what thinges are conteined in it Now what thinge coulde be said more aptlie or more to the purpose towchinge the fayth of the wicked and dissolute Christians For suerlie there can not be thinges of greater terrour and ioye than those are which our fayth declareth vnto vs. But the wicked Christians because they doe neuer open this letter to see what thinges be conteined in it I meane hereby because they doe neuer thinke and meditate vpon these misteries of our Christian faythe or if they thinke vpon them they passe them ouer verie lightlie and in great hast they cause not in them this manner of motion and alteration to witt of ioye or of feare Wherefore it behoueth vs sometimes to open this letter of our faythe I meane the mysteries thereof and to reade the same very leisurlie and to consider with good attention what thinges are tawght vs in the same the which is done by meanes of the exercise of consideration For it is consideration that openeth that which is locked and vnfoldeth that which is folded together and maketh that cleare vnto vs which is otherwise darke and obscure And so by illuminatinge our vnderstandinge with the greatnes of the mysteries of our fayth it inclineth our will so farfourth as appertaineth to the office of consideration to conforme our lyfe to the same This office of consideration almightie God figured verie notablie in the lawe what was signified by the cleā beaste in the lawe Leuit. 11. Deuter. 14. when emonge the conditions that were required in the cleane beast he assigned this for one that the beast should chewe the cudde to witt the meate that it bad eaten before Now it is certain that it was litle to the purpose whether the beast were cleane or vncleane and suerlie almightie God made litle accompt of that But his meaninge was to represent vnto vs in that cleane beast the condition office and exercise of those beastes that be spirituallie cleane to witt of the iust and righteous persons that are not content onelie to eate such thinges as appertain vnto amightie God in beleeuinge them by fayth but after they haue eaten them they doe also chewe them by meanes of cōsideration in searchinge and ponderinge the mysteries which they beleue And after they haue vnderstode the meaninge and excellencie of them they distribute and deuide this meate vnto all the spirituall members of the sowle for the sustentation and reparinge of the same Insomuch that if we marke this matter well A notable similitude we shall finde that it fareth in this case as in the seede of a tree which althowghe it doe virtuallie conteine within it the substance of the tree yet hath it neide of the vertue and influence of heauen and of the benefite and moysture of the earthe to cause the vertue that is inclosed in the seede to come forthe to light and to growe vp by litle and litle and waxe a tree Euen so in like maner we saie that althoughe fayth be the first seede and originall of all our weale yet must it neides be holpen with this benefite of consideration that by the same and by meanes of charitie the greine and fruitfull tree of good lyfe which is virtuallie conteined therein maie growe and come to light HOW CONSIDERATION HELPETH HOPE § II. Summa S. Thomae 22. quaest 17. art 5. quaest 18. artic 1. CONSIDERATION helpeth also no lesse the vertue of hope This hope is an affection of our will that hath his motive and roote in the vnderstandinge As the Apostle signifieth plainlie vnto vs saienge All thinges that are written Rom. 15.4 are written for our instruction that throughe patience and consolation which the scriptures geue vnto vs we may haue hope and affiance in almightie God For vndowtedlie the holie scripture is the fountaine The holie scripture is the founteyne of comfort from whēce the iust man gathereth the water of comfort wherewith he strengtheneth him selfe to put his hope and trust in God For first of all he seeth in the holie scriptures the greatnes of the workes and merites of our Sauiour Iesus Christ The workes and merites of our Sauiour Christe are the principall staye and foūdation of our hope in God which are the principall staie and foundation of our hope There he seeth likewise in a thowsande places the greatnes of the goodnes sweetenes and maiestie of almightie God liuelye expressed and set out to the eie and withall the mercifull louinge prouidence he hath ouer them that be his the gentlenes and benignitie wherewith he receyueth them that come vnto him and the faythfull promises and pledges he
floudes commaunde the florishinge springe to retourne againe At this tyme of the resurrection of our Sauiour the holie virgin had withdrawen her selfe into her oratorie expectinge there the comminge of this newe lighte She cried inwardly in her harte and called like a pittiefull liones the therde daie vnto her dead sonne Psalm 56. sayenge Arise vp my glorie arise my harpe and my vyole Retourne ô triumphant conqueror vnto the worlde Gather together ô good pastor thy dispersed flocke Geue eare ô my deare sonne vnto the clamours of thy heauie ād afflicted mother And seinge by these clamours thou wast moued to descende downe from heauen into the earthe let the same moue the now also to ascende vp againe from hell into the worlde In the middest of these clamours and cries of the blessed virgin beholde that poore cotage of hers was sodainly brightened all ouer with a heauenly lighte and her sonne being now gloriouslie rysen againe from deathe to lyfe presenteth him selfe to the sight of his holie mother The morninge sterre appeareth not so beautifull the brighte sonne at noone daie shineth not so cleare as did that face full of all graces and that vnspotted glasse of diuine glorie in the eies of his holie mother She beholdeth the bodie of her sweete sonne rysen vp agayne from death and glorified all the disfigures of the former deformitie beinge cleane wyped awaie the comely grace of those diuine eies retourned and his former beautie was restored againe and increased She also beholdeth those gappes of his woundes which as they were before verie swoordes of sorrowe to her heauie and tender harte so are they now become fountaines of loue Whom she sawe before to suffer betwene two thieues she seeth now accompanied with Sainctes and Angells Whom she sawe before to commende her from the crosse vnto his disciple she seeth now stretchinge forthe his louinge armes and geuinge vnto her the sweete kisse of peace Whom she helde before dead in her armes she seeth now rysen vp againe before her eies The blessed mother now holdethe him and will not leaue him she embracethe him she desireth and prayeth him most instantly not to departe awaie from her Heretofore she was made speecheles for sorrowe and knewe not what to saye But now she is become speecheles for verie ioye and cannot vtter her inwarde gladnes vnto him Now what tongue can tell or what vnderstandinge is able to comprehende the exceedinge ioye that this blessed virgin conceyued inwardlie in her minde We cannot vnderstande the thinges that doe exceede our capacitie vnlesse we compare them to other lesse thinges and frame by them as it were a ladder to ascende by degries from the lower vnto the higher and so make a coniecture of the one by the other Now that we maye vnderstande somewhat of this her exceedinge ioye consider what a greate ioye the Patriarke Iacob felte when after he had bewailed his dearly beloued sonne Iosephe with so great abundance of teares supposinge him to be dead tydinges were browghte him that he was aliue and Lorde ouer all the lande of Egipt The holie scripture saieth Genes 45. that when these newes were tolde him he cōceyued so great ioye and astonishement therewith that as a man newlie awaked out of a heauie sliepe he coulde not call his wittes perfectlie together nor yet beleue the newes that his sonnes had tolde him no more than if it had bene a verie dreame But afterwardes when he was fullie resolued that it was true the holie scripture saith that his spirite reuyued againe and that he spake these wordes folowinge It is enoughe for me if my sonne Ioseph be yet a liue I will goe and see him before I die Now then tell me I praye you if Iacob that had eleuen other sonnes in his howse conceyued yet so great a ioye in his harte to vnderstande that euen one onely whom he supposed to be dead was yet aliue what an exceedinge great ioye conceyued the blessed virgin who hauinge no more but one sonne and that one such a sonne as our blessed Sauiour was so notable and so dearly beloued as he was vnto her after she had seene him with her eies bothe dead ād buried sawe him now againe rysen vp from deathe and withall glorified and made Lorde not onely of all the lande of Egipt but also of all thinges created Is there anie vnderstandinge able to comprehende this Vndowtedly her ioye was inwardelie so great that her harte had not bene able to susteine the force thereof had it not receyued some supernaturall strēgth and comforte by speciall miracle of almightie God for that ende O blessed virgin this benefit alone maie suffice thee It is enoughe for thee that thy deare sonne is aliue and that thou hast him in thy presence and seest him before thy death so as now there remayneth nothinge els for thee to desire O Lorde how well knowest thou how to comforte them that suffer for thy sake The former paine of thy blessed mother seemeth not now to be great beinge compared with this passinge great ioye If thou ô Lorde doest comforte such as suffer for thee after this sorte blessed and happie are their persecutions and troubles seinge they shal be thus rewarded In like maner we haue to consider how our Sauiour appeared vnto his disciples and especially to S. Marie Magdalen whereof presently we doe not intreat because we woulde not make this meditation ouer longe The ende of the first seuen meditations for the seuen daies of the weke in the morninges HERE BEGINNE THE OTHER SEVEN MEDITATIONS FOR THE SAME SEVEN daies in the nightes And althowghe these Meditations be placed in the seconde place yet are they first to be vsed in the order of exercise Forsomuche as with them they must first beginne who are but newlie conuerted to the seruice of almightie God Accipite spiritum sanctum quorum remiseritis peccata remittuntur eis et quorum retinueritis detenta sunt Johan 20. vers 22. Multi 〈…〉 consi●●tes et 〈◊〉 act●s suos Act. 19. vers 18. OF SYNNES MONDAIE NIGHTE THIS daie after thou hast made the signe of the Crosse and prepared thy selfe hereunto thou must attēde to the knowledge of thy selfe ād thou must vse diligence to call to minde thy sinnes and offences And this is the waie to obteine trewe humilitie of harte and repentance which are the two first gates and foundations of a Christian life For the better performance whereof Of the multitude of the synnes of thy former life thou must thinke firs t of all vpon the multitude of the sinnes of thy former lyfe and espetially vpon those offences that thou diddest cōmit at what time thou haddest least knowledge of almightie God For if thou canst well vewe and examyne them thou shalt finde that they haue exceeded in nomber the verie heares of thy heade and that thou diddest liue at that time like an heathen that knoweth not what God is This done ronne ouer
to sleepe the thirde parte of the daie and night which is eight whole howres although there be a great sorte The thirde parte of our lyfe is consumed in sleepe that doe not content them selues therewith it followeth by this accompte that the thirde parte of our lyfe is consumed in sleepe and so consequently that duringe that time we doe not liue So that hereby thou mayst perceaue what a great parte of our short lyfe is spent in sleepe euerie daie This accompte therefore beinge thus made which vndowtedly is a very true accompt how muche is that that remaineth of a mans verie lyfe in deede euen of suche I meane as liue longest Certainlie that philosopher had verie great reason to doe as he did who beinge demaunded what he thought of the lyfe of a man tourned him selfe about before them that made the demaunde and sodeinly departed out of their sight Geuinge them thereby to vnderstand that our lyfe is no more but onely a tourne about and of shorte continuance Our lyfe is no more but as it were the shotinge of a sterre that passeth at a tryce and flassheth quickly awaie and within a litle while after euen that verie signe that was left behinde vanisheth owt of sight also For within verie fewe daies after a man is departed owt of this lyfe the verie remembrance of him dieth with his lyfe be the personage neuer so great or honorable To conclude this lyfe seemed so shorte to manie of the auncient wisemen that one of them tearmed it a dreame and an other not contented therewith called it the dreame of a shadowe seeminge to him that it was ouermuch to calle it the dreame of a true thinge in deede beinge as he thought it none other than a dreame of a vaine and friuolous thinge To compare this smalle remanente of our lyfe with the lyfe euerlastinge that is to come Eccles 18. Againe if we compare this smalle remanent of the lyfe that we here liue with the life to come how muche lesse will it yet appeare Ecclesiasticus saieth verie well If the numbre of a mans dayes be an hundred yeares it is muche Now what is all this beinge compared with the lyfe euerlastinge but as it were a droppe of water compared with all the whole Sea And the reason hereof is euident For if a sterre which is farre greater than all the whole earthe beinge compared with the rest of heauen seemeth so smalle a thinge how smalle shall this present lyfe which is so shorte seeme to be beinge compared with the lyfe to come that shall neuer haue ende And if as the astronomers affirme all the whole earthe in comparison of heauen be but as it were a litle pinnes point because the inestimable greatnes of the heauens causeth it to seeme so smalle a thinge what shall this litle puffe of our short lyfe seeme to be if it be compared with lyfe euerlastinge which is infinite Vndowtedly it will seeme nothinge at all For if a thowsande yeares in the sighte of almightie God Psal 49. be no more but as it were yesterdaie which is now past and gone what shall the lyfe of one hundered yeares seeme to be in his sight but onely a verie nothinge And thus it seemeth vnto the damned persones when they make comparison betwene this lyfe which they haue left behinde them with the eternitie of the tormentes which they shall suffer for euermore As they themselues doe confesse in the booke of wisedome in theyse woordes Sap. 5. What hath our pride auayled vs and the pompe of our riches All these thinges are past awaie as it were a shadowe that flieth and as one that rideth swyftelie in post or as the shippe that passeth by the waters and leaueth no signe where it hath gone or as an arrowe shotte at a certaine marke which so sone as the aier hath once opened and made him his waie forthwith it closeth vp againe and it is not knowen which waie it went Euen so it fareth with vs. For at that verie instant when we are borne we beginne to decaie and we leaue no memorie or signe of vertue behinde vs. Consider then how shorte all the time of this transitorie lyfe shall seeme there to all those miserable damned wretches seinge they doe playnelie confesse that they liued not at all but that so sone as they were borne forth with they beganne to fade and vanishe awaie Now if this be so what greater follie or madnes can be imagined than that a man for the enioyinge of this short dreame of so vaine pleasures and delightes shoulde goe to suffer euerlastinge damnation and tormentes in hell fier for euer and euer It is a mere follie to make so greate prouision for this shorte lyfe and not to prouide for the euerlastinge lyfe to come Furthermore if the time and space of this lyfe be so shorte and the lyfe to come so longe to witt euerlastinge what a mere follie is it to take so great labour and paines to prouide so manie thinges for this lyfe beinge so shorte and not to make anie prouision at all for the lyfe to come which is so longe that it shall neuer haue ende What a fonde parte were it for a man that mynded to liue in Spayne to spende and consume all he hath in byenge rootes and buildinge howses in the Indees and to make no prouision for the countrie whereunto he goethe to dwell and make his abode Now how muche more foolishe and madde are they that spende all their goodes and substance in makinge prouision for this present lyfe where they shall liue so shorte a time and make no prouision at all for the euerlastinge lyfe to come where they must dwell and make their abode for euermore Espetially consideringe that they haue so good meanes for their prouision there by transportinge all their goodes thither by the handes of the poore As the Wiseman witnesseth Eccles 11. sayeinge Throwe thy bread vpon the ronninge waters for a longe time after shalt thou finde it againe Of the vncertaintie of our lyfe § III. BVT althoughe our lyfe endure but a shorte space yet if this shorte space were so certaine Esay 38. that we might be assured thereof as kinge Ezechias was vnto whom almightie God graunted fyftiene yeares of lyfe our miserie were the more tollerable But trulie it is not so For as our lyfe is verie short euen so that verie tyme we haue to liue how shorte or longe so euer it be is also vncertain and doutfull For as the Wise man saieth Eccles 9. Man knoweth not the daie of his ende but lyke as fisshes when they thinke them selues in most saftie are taken with the hooke and as birdes are cawghte in a snare when they thinke nothing lesse euen so death assaulteth men in an euill season when they thinke least of it Trulie that is a verie wise and approued sentence which is commonlie saied A notable
is called not onely the daie of Anger but also the daie of our Lorde as the Prophet Ioel tearmeth it Ioel. 1.15 why the daye of iudgemente is called the daye of our Lorde Geauinge vs thereby to vnderstāde that all other daies haue bene the daies of men in which they haue fulfilled their owne willes against the wil of god but this daie is called the daie of our Lorde because vpō this daie our Lorde will doe his will against the will of men Thou doest now sweare and forsweare and blaspheme and almightie God in this meane while holdeth his peace and sayeth nothinge vnto it but be thou well assured the daie shall come when almightie God will breake of his lōge silence of so manie daies and of so manie iniuries ād will answere for his owne honour There be but two dayes the one is the daye of our Lorde and the other is the daye of men 2. Paral. 18. So that there be no more but two daies in the worlde the one is the daie of our Lorde and the other the daie of men Man whiles his daie endureth maye doe whatsoeuer he listeth and almightie God will holde his peace and as it were wincke at all his doinges Vpon this daie the Kinge Sedechias maie commaunde the Prophet of God to be cast into a well and breade to be geuen vnto him by vnces He maie vse and abuse the Prophet at his pleasure and at all those iniuries almightie God will holde his peace But after this daie there will come an other daie and almightie God will take kinge Sedechias and depriue him of his kingedome he will destroie Ierusalem and bringe kinge Sedechias in fetters before the kinge of Babilon and there shall all his sonnes and friendes be murdered before his face There shall he commaunde his eies which were preserued to see so manie miseries to be plucked out of his head which done he shall cause him to be caried in fetters to Babilon and confyne him into a prison there to remaine all the daies of his lyfe So that as man hath libertie to doe vpon his daie whatsoeuer he listeth without anie restraint or impediment at all euen so will almightie God haue free libertie to doe vpon his daie whatsoeuer his will and pleasure shal be and no man shal be able to let or disturbe him Of the signes that shall goe before the daie of the generall Iudgemente § II. FINALLIE if thou desire to vnderstande what maner of daie this shal be consider what signes shall goe before it For by the signes thou shalt perceiue what the thinge shal be that is signified as by the eueninge and Vigile thou mayste vnderstande what the feast of the daie shal be First of all when that daie shal be no man knoweth Marc. 13. no not the Angels in heauen nor yet the sonne himselfe to reueile it to anie other but the father onely Howbeit certaine signes shall goe before it whereby men maie prognosticate not onely of the nearnes of the daie but also of the greatnes and dreadfulnes thereof Math. 24.7 For as our Sauiour saieth Before the comminge of this daie there shal be great warres and troubles in the worlde Nation shall rise against nation and kingdome against kindome And there shal be great earthquakes in manie places and pestilence and famine and terrible thinges appearinge in the aier and other great signes and wonders And which is more dreadfull than all this there shall come that great horrible persecution so oftentimes mentioned in the holie Scriptures The horrible persecution of Antichrist The Iewes shall receiue and worship Antichrist for their Messias as appeareth in Iohn 5. vers 43. ād 1. Iohn 2. vers 22. which shal be executed by the most crewell persecutor that euer the Catholike Churche hath had to witt by Antichrist who shall impugne the Catholike Churche most malitiouslie not onelie with most crewell warres and horrible tormentes but also with apparant and feyned miracles Consider now therefore with thy selfe as the blessed holie Pope S. Gregorie saieth what a terrible time that of Antichrist shal be when the godlie martir shall offer his bodie to the tormentor and the tormentor shall worke miracles before his face Math. 24. vers 21.22 Marc. 13. vers 19.20 To conclude the tribulation of these daies as our Sauiour saieth shal be so great as the like was neuer since the beginninge of the worlde Antichristes raigne and persecutiō shall not continewe but three yeares and a halfe as appeareth in Daniell 7. vers 25. Daniell 12. vers 7. 11. Apoc. 11. vers 2. 3. Apoc. 13. vers 5. Ezech. 32. nor neuer shal be insomuche that if almightie God of his great mercie did not prouide to shorten these daies all fleashe shoulde not be saued But for the electes sake the daies of Antichrist shal be shortened After these signes as this daie of the generall iudgment draweth nearer and nearer there shall appeare other signes more dreadfull than these in the Sonne in the Moone and in the Sterres Of which dreadfull signes our Lorde spake by his Prophet Ezechiel sayeinge I will cause the sterres of heauen to be darckened ouer thee and I will couer the Sonne with a clowde and the Moone shall not shewe fourthe her lighte And I will cause all the lightes of heauen to mourne and lamente ouer thee And I will sende darcknes ouer all the lande Now when these great signes and alterations shall appeare in the heauens what maie we looke for vpon the earthe which is wholly gouerned by the heauens We see in a common weale that when the heades that gouerne it are in anie tumulte all the other members and partes thereof are also in a like tumulte and vprore and the whole common-weale is tossed and tormoyled with armes and dissention Now if all this bodie of the worlde be gouerned by the vertues and influences of the heauens in case both the heauens and this bodie be altered and out of their naturall order in what ruthfull case thē shall all the members and partes be that depende of them The aier shal be full of lighteninges whyrlewindes and blasinge sterres The earthe shal be full of wyde yawninge cleiftes fearfull tremblinges and quakinges And these earthquakes as it is thought shal be so great and violent that they shal be able to ouerthrowe not onely the sumptuous pallaces highe towers and stronge Castels but euen the verie mountaines and rockes them selues shal be also shaken and ouerwhelmed by them and quite remoued out of their places But most of all other elementes the Sea shall at that tyme shewe greatest rage and furie and the waues thereof shal be so highe and so furious that it shall seeme that they will vtterlie ouerwhelme all the whole earthe Such as dwell by the Sea side shal be in great dread and terror by reason of the great rysinge of waters and such as dwell further of shal be wounderfullie afraide
farre the one exceedeth the other Now if a man to escape that tormente woulde not sticke to put him selfe to all daungers labours and paines be they neuer so great what then ought all we to doe to escape this most horrible extreme tormente of hell fyer Consider also what a terrible kinde of tormente that was which Phalaris that cruell Tyrante inuented of whom it is written that he vsed when he woulde put men to death to cause them to be inclosed within the bellie of a bull made of mettall and then caused a fier to be made vndernethe it and this cruell maner of punnishemente he deuised that the miserable man by the heate of the yron shoulde burne within the same by litle and litle and not be able to escape nor defende him selfe nor haue anie other remedie but onely to burne and rore and tumble and tosse him selfe within that strait place vntill he were dead What harte can heare of this crueltie but that his fleashe will tremble and quake onely in thinkinge of it Wherefore tell me now ô thou Christian what is all this in comparison of that most greiuous and horrible tormente which we here treate of but onely a meere dreame or shadowe Now if the verie imagination and thinkinge of these horrible paines of hell doe make vs afraide what shal it be not to thinke of them onelie but euen to suffer them in verie deede Certainlie it is so horrible a matter to suffer paines and tormentes euerlastinglye that althoughe there were but one alone emonge all the children of Adam that shoulde suffer in hell in this wise it were enoughe to make vs all to tremble and quake There was but one emonge Christes disciples that shoulde sell his master and yet when Christ saied One of yow shall betraie me Math. 26.21 all beganne to be afraide and waxe sad for that the matter was of so great importance Now then why doe not we much more tremble and quake knowinge certainlie Eccles 1.15 Math. 7.14 Esa 5.14 That the nomber of fooles is infinite and that the waie vnto life euerlastinge is verie narrowe ād strait ād that hel hath enlardged her mouthe without anie limitte to receiue the multitudes that goe into it If we beleeue not this If a Christian did cōsider the euerlastinge continuance of the horrible paynes of hell it woulde make him loke better to the dewe framinge of his lyfe where is our faith If we doe beleeue and confesse it where is our iudgemēmente and reason And if we haue both iudgement and reason why doe we not publishe and preache this matter in the open streates and market places Why goe we not into the desertes as manie of the Sainctes haue done there to doe penance for our synnes and to liue an austere lyfe emonge beastes that we maie escape these most horrible and euerlastinge tormentes How is it that we can sleepe in the night Yea how happeneth it that we be not quite out of our wittes when we doe thinke attentiuelie and consider of so straunge a perill as this is seinge lesse daungers than these haue bene able not onelie to frighte and bestraught men out of their wittes but also to bereue them of their liues This is the greatest payne that the miserable damned persons haue in hell to vnderstande that almightie God and their most greiuous tormentes shal be of one lyke continuance and therefore their miserie can haue no comfort because their paine hath no ende If the damned persons coulde be perswaded that after a hundered thowsande millions of yeares their paynes shoulde haue an ende euē that persuasion alone woulde be a great comfort vnto them For then all their tormētes albeit it were verie lōge woulde yet at the lengthe come to an ende S. Gregorie But assured they are that their paines shall haue no ende at all For as S. Gregorie saieth There the wicked haue death without anie death an ende without anie ende and a defecte without anie defecte For their death alwaies liueth their ende alwaies beginneth and their defecte neuer faileth And for this cause the Prophet saieth Psal 48.15 They are in hell as it were sheepe and death feideth vpon them The herbe that is there fed vpon is not wholie plucked vp because the roote is aliue which is the beginninge of lyfe and this causeth the herbe to springe againe that it maie still be fed vpon And therefore the pasture of those feildes is immortall forsomuch as it is alwaies eaten and alwaies reuyueth againe Now after this sorte shall death feede vpon the damned persons and as death cannot dye so shall it neuer be filled with this kinde of foode nor euer be wearie in doinge this office neither shall it euer make an ende of deuowringe this morsell For that death shall euermore haue somewhat in them to deuoure and they shall euermore minister somewhat vnto death to be deuoured so as the damned in hell shall suffer their most horrible paines and tormentes for euer and euer without anie ende SATTVRDAIE NIGHTE OF THE EVERLASTINGE GLORIE AND FELICITIE OF THE KINGDOME OF HEAVEN Corinth 2.9 THIS DAIE WHEN THOV HAST MADE THE SIGNE OF the Crosse and prepared thy selfe hereunto thou hast to meditate vpon the felicitie of eternall glorie in the kingedome of heauen THIS consideration is so profitable that if it were holpen with the lighte of a liuely faithe it were able to make all the bitter paines and labours which we shoulde take for the attaininge thereof to become sweite and pleasant For if the loue of landes and riches doe cause the paines and labours that be taken for them to seime sweite and pleasant If the loue of childrē also doe cause women to wishe for the paines of childebearinge what woulde the loue of this most excellent and passinge great felicitie doe in comparison whereof all other felicities are of non accompt If it be saied of the patriarke Iacob Genes 29.20 that his seuen years seruice feemed but shorte vnto him in respecte of the great loue he bare to Rachel what woulde the loue of that infinite bewtie worke in our hartes what woulde that euerlastinge mariage cause vs to doe if it were considered with the eies of a liuely faieth Fiue pointes to be considered in this meditation Wherefore that thou mayst vnderstande somewhat of this felicitie thou hast to consider emonge other thinges these fiue pointes that are in it to witt The excellencie and greatenes of the place The fruition of the companie of those blessed inhabitantes The vision of almightie God The glorie of the Sainctes bodies And finallie the perfect fruition of all good thinges that are there First of all therefore consider the excellencie of the place The excellencie and greatnes of the heauēs and especially the greatnes thereof which is surelye very wonderfull For when a man readeth in certaine graue awthors that euerie one of the starres of heauen is greater than all
goodnes they liue and reigne in glorie O heauenly cittie O secure dwellinge place O blissefull countrey where all delightfull thinges are to be fownde O happie people without anie grudginge O quiet neighbours where no one is subiecte to anye wante or necessitie O that the striffe and contention of this present state were at an ende O that the daies of my bannishement might be finished O how longe is the time of my peregrination prolonged When shall this daie come When shall I come and appeare before the face of my sweite Lorde and Sauiour THE SIXTE TREATISE OF THE CONSIDERATION OF the glorie of Paradise Wherein the former meditation is declared more at large ONE of the thinges wherevpon it behoueth vs most to haue our eies alwaies fixed in this vale of teares is the blessed state of glorie in the kingdome of heauen For this consideration alone were able to encourage vs to susteine willingelye all labours and paines that are to be suffered for the atteyninge of it When almightie God promised to giue to the Patriarke Abraham the lande of promise he commaunded him to walke and vewe it all rounde abowte sayeinge Arise Genes 13.17 and walke all ouer this lande both in lengthe and breadthe and consider it one euerie side For I will geue it vnto thee Arise vp therefore ô my sowle aduaunce thy selfe on highe leaue all earthlye cares and affaires here benethe and flee vp with the winges of thy spirite vnto that most excellēte noble lande of promise and cōsider with good attention the lengthe of the eternitie the lardgenes of the felicitie and the greatnes of the riches with all the rest that is therein It is writtē of the Quene of Saba 3. Reg. 10. that when she hearde of the great fame of Salomon she went to Ieruzalem to see the great and wonderfull thinges that were reported of him Consideringe therefore that the fame of that heauenly Ieruzalem and of that supreme kinge that gouerneth it is no lesse than the renowme of Salomon was ascende thou now vp on highe with thy spirite vnto this noble cittie to contemplate the wisedome of this supreme kinge the bewtie of this temple the seruice of this table the orders of them that attende vpon it the liueries that the whole familie weare and withall the policie and glorie of this noble cittie For if thou be able to consider euerie one of these thinges it maie be that thy spiritie shal be lifted vp aboue it selfe and thou shalt perceiue that there hath not bene declared vnto thee so muche as the verie least parte of this glorie But for this purpose it shal be requisite to haue a spetiall lighte of almightie God as the Apostle signifieth sayeinge I beseache the God of glorie and the father of our Lorde Iesus Christ to geue you the spirite of wisedome Ephes 1.17.18 and to lighten the eies of your hartes that you maie vnderstande how great the hope of your vocation is and the riches of that enheritance and glorie which he hath prepared for the Sainctes And althoughe in this glorie there be manie thinges to contemplate vpon yet mayst thou now espetiallie consider these fiue principall thinges that we towched before to witt Fiue principall thinges to be considered in this meditation The excellencie and greatnes of the place The fruition of the companie of those blessed inhabitantes The vision of almightie God The glorie of the Sainctes bodies And the euerlastinge continuance and eternitie of all these so great and wonderfull benefites Of the goodlines and excellencie of the place § I. FIRST of all consider the goodlie bewtie of the place which S. Iohn describeth vnto vs in a figure in his Apocalips in these wordes Apoc. 12. One of the seuen Angels spake vnto me sayeing Come and I will shewe thee the spouse of the lambe and he caried me awaie in spirite to a highe and great mountaine and shewed me the holie cittie of Ieruzalem which descended from heauen and shyned with the clearenes of almightie God and the light thereof was like to the glisteringe brightnes of pretious stones This cittie had one great and highe walle in which were twelue gates and in the gates twelue Angels accordinge to the nomber of the gates The foundatiōs of the walles of this cittie were wholye wroughte with pretious stones and the twelue gates thereof were twelue pearles euerie gate made of one pearle and the streat of this cittie was of pure golde like vnto a verie cleare glasse and I sawe no temple therein because our Lorde God almightie and the lambe were the temple and the cittie had no neede of Sonne or Moone to geue light vnto it forsomuche as the clearnes of almightie God doth lighten it and the lampe that burneth there is the lambe Moreouer the Angell shewed me a floud of the water of lyfe as clear as the christal which issued out of the seat of almightie God and of the lambe Apoc. 22. In the middest of the streat and both on the one side of the floude and on the other was planted the tree of lyfe which brought forthe twelue fruites in the yeare euerie monethe his fruite and the leaues of this tree serued for the healthe of nations No maner of malediction shall euer be seene there but there shal be the seat of almightie God and of the ābe And his seruātes shall serue him and they shall see his face and haue the name of him written in their foreheaddes and they shal reigne for euer and euer worlde without ende Beholde here dear brother the bewtie of this cittie described vnto thee not that thou maist thinke that these thinges are there in such a materiall sort as the wordes doe sounde but that by meanes of these thou maist conceiue other more spirituall and more excellent thinges which are figured vnto vs by these materiall thinges The situation and greatnes of the heauenlie cittie The situation of this cittie is aboue all the heauens and the greatnes and largenes thereof exceideth all measure For if euerie one of the starres of heauen be so great as we haue before declared how great then must that heauen be that conteineth in it all the starres and all the heauens Suerlie there is no greatnes in the worlde that maie be compared vnto this For as a holie father saiethe from the west parte of Spayne vnto the vttermost borders of the Indiens a shippe maie saile if it haue a prosperous wynde in fewe daies but that region of heauen is so great that the starres which are more swifte than the sonne beames can not finishe their course in it in manie yeares The goodlie workemanshippe of the buildinge Now if thou demaunde of the workmanshippe of that buildinge there is no tonge able to expresse it For if that worke that appeareth outwardly to our mortall eies be so goodly and bewtifull what is to be supposed of all the rest that is there reserued
then vndowtedlye all the whole Christiā Religion and euen our Sauiour Christe himself and his blessed Mother and all his holie Apostles and Martirs and other of his glorious Saintes woulde consequentlie in a shorte time after be generallie contemned neglected and forgotten througheout all Christian countries And to write here freelie my minde as I thinke it woulde seeme verie meruailous vnto me if I were not fullie perswaded that the deuill is nowe more and more let lose as Saint Ihon in his reuelations hath forewarned vs he shoulde be for a shorte time towardes the ende of the worlde howe the deuill coulde preuaile so farfoorthe as to induce a whole newe late secte of heretikes that be called Puritans professinge in gaie wordes to be more pure more sincere and better professours of Christes gospell than anie other Christians either be or haue bene in anie age since the Apostles time to write of late so vnchristianlie by common consent euen in an Englishe printed booke againste obseruinge in the Churche the moste auncient yearelie solemne holie feastes of Easter In the puritans replie againste D. Vvhitgifte pag. 120. 121. 122. 163. and Pentecoste and againste all speciall meditations at anie one solemne time of the yeare more then at others of Christs Resurrection or of the Comminge of the Holie Ghoste or of the hower of our deathe because saie theie theise meditations shoulde be vsed continewallie euerie daie in the yeare and owght not to be appoynted by the gouernors of the Churche to be used at anie one speciall time more than at others Whereby euerie godlie christian reader maie easelie perceiue howe the deuill beinge no we let lose laboureth verie buselie by theise countersaite pure gospellers vnder a wylie deceitfull colour of aduauncinge continewal mediatation and memorie of the holie Misteries of the Christian Religion euerie da●e in the yeare to haue no manner of mediation or memorie of them emonge Christians anie daie at all that so by their suttle wicked doctrine a readie open waie maie be prepared in all Christiā mens Churches and mindes for Antichristes comminge But ô the wonderfull prouidence and care of our Sauiour Christe to preserue a continewal knowledge and reuerence of his holie Misteries emonge all faithfull Christians in his Catholike Churche How in all ages hathe bene preserued emonge Christians a cōtinewal knowledge and reuerence of the holie misteties of our faithe Matt. 28. Vers 20. Iohn 14.16 Iohn 16.13 1. Tim. 3.15 as hath verie manifestelie appeared in all ages since Christes Ascension vntill this our corrupte age And surelie it is a matter worthie of greate and deuoute admiration for anie good christian to consider howe the Apostles and the aunciente holie Catholike Byshops their successours beinge by our Saviour Christes owne promisse assuredlie inspired assisted and directed by the Holie Ghoste from time to time in gouernement of the Catholike Churche in all truthe haue with suche diuine wisdome disposed the whole yeare into so manie seuerall holye festiuall daies as that thereby haue bene represented and preached vnto all Christian people in all Christian Churches throughout Christendome a continewal solemne instruction memorie and reuerence of the holie Mysteries of the Christian Religion In so muche as the common Christian people by those holie festiuall daies alone albeit they wanted not also diuers other holie instructions therein in confessions and Sermons were in all ages sufficientlie instructed in the holie Mysteries of their Christian beliefe I meane they were thereby made to vnderstāde so muche of them as hauinge withall a dewe religious respecte to preserue a continewal reuerence in them to the dignitie of suche highe holie Misteries was fullie conueniente for their weake capacities and for the comfortinge and strengtheninge of their faithe and as they were bounde of necessitie to knowe As for example The principall holie festiuall daies of the yeare by the aunciente institution of the holie feastes of Aduente of oure Sauiour Christes Natiuitie and Circumcision of his Adoration by the three Kinges and of the holie solemnitie of Lente at which time the Catholike Churche teacheth all Christian people to imitate so neare as they can our Sauiours fastinge of fourtie daies in the deserte and representeth then also with sorowfull mourninge penaunce and compassion all the whole order and historie of our Sauiour Christes moste bitter Passion and deathe for the redēption of al mankinde And afterwardes the Churche solemni Zeth with greate Ioie the holie feastes of our Sauiours Resurrection from death to life of his Ascension into heauen and of the Comminge of the Holie Ghoste And then followe also the holie feastes of the blessed Trinitie and of the moste holie Sacrament commonlie called Corpus Christi daie And the holie feastes of the blessed Mother of our Sauiour And of Sainte thou Baptiste his precursor And then the holie feastes of Sainte Peter Sainte Paule and of other of our Sauiours holie Apostles and most famouse Martirs and Confessors And also the holie feastes of Sainte Michael the Archangell and of all the glorious Saintes in heauen And withall a solemne daie of deuoute memorie and generall praiers ana ●mesdedes for all faithfull Christian Sowles departed out of this transitorie life and as yet remayninge in the fier of Purgatorie to make satisfaction there for all paines dewe and prescribed for their sinnes in the mercifull iuste balance of the diuine Maiestie All which holie festiuall daies beinge so diuinelie and orderlie disposed into so manie seuerall partes of the yeare and adorned with the holie reuerē●e ceremonies appoyncted to be vsed in all Christian Churches througheout all Christendome with greate solemnitie and reuerēce vpon those holie daies haue yearelie from time to time in euerie age since the Ascension of our Sauiour Christ into heauen verie liuelie and continewallie preached represented and explaned vnto the common simple Christian people all the holie Misteries of the Christian Religion which theie had professed at their Baptisme and were taughte in the Apostles Creede to belieue And the reuerent solemnitie in euerie yeare of theise holie festiuall daies induced them vnto a continewall memorie admiration loue and reuerence of those holie Misteries and greatelie strengthened their faithe in them and caused them to haue a wonderfull feruente pietie deuotion and Zeale towardes the honor and seruice of Almightie God whereby they liued verie vertuous liues like the children of lighte as Sainte Paule termeth them Ephes 5. vers 8. and died generallie as holie faithfull Christians in the obedience loue and fauour of his diuine Maiestie But alas theise golden times be paste and ended and the deuill beinge let lose nowe more and more towardes the comminge of Antichriste and the ende of the worlde we finde by palpable experience that since the time that suche a free licentious libertie hathe been permitted vnto euerie lewde bablinge Minister to raile againste all the holie aunciente diuine ordinaunces vsed and allowed generallie so manie ages in all
Christian Churches and to terme them in blasphemous manner Antichristian inuentions and to preache openlie in pulpittes and publishe in printed bookes whatsoeuer newe hereticall opinions the ennemie of mankinde sug gesteth into their fantasticall heades the faithe of Christians is thereby generallie become so weake and inconstante and in verie manie or most persons so wholie vndermined and vtterlie ouerthrowne and their hope is so transformed into presumption and their charitie is waxen so colde and so litle pietie loue deuotion reuerence and Zeale remaine in them towardes the seruice of Almightie God and so muche Pride gluttonie incontinencie lyenge detraction disobedience with moste horrible contention schisme heresie infidelitie Atheisme and all kinde of iniquitie doe generallie abounde throughout Christendome that we haue good cause to feare leaste that terrible time approcheth nowe verie neare at hande which our Sauiour forewarned vs in the gospell to wit Luc. 18. vers 8. that at his comminge to iudge he shoulde hardelie finde faithe in the earthe Wherefore we haue nowe verie greate neede of extraordinarie spirituall helpes to strengthen our weake mindes to withstand so manie deceitfull temptations of the enemie of mankinde in this so corrupte and daungerous age And for this purpose I haue translated out of the Spanishe tongue diuers bookes of a verie holie and famous learned religious father called Lewis de Granada whose deuoute manner of writinge hath in my simple iudgemente a singular rare grace to pearce the harde harte of a dissolute sinner and to moue and dispose his minde to the abhorringe of synne to the contempte of the worlde and to the feare lone and seruice of Almightie God And I vnderstande that his bookes haue wroughte wonderfull muche good not onelie in Spaine and Portugall but also in Italie Fraunce and Germanie And I thinke there bee fewe countries in Christendome but haue his Spanishe woorkes trāslated into their tongues And it is nowe about foureteene yeares agoe since the time that Master Doctor Hardinge a man for his greate vertue learninge wisdome Zeale and sinceritie in writinge againste heresies of verie godlie and famous memorie perswaded me earnestlie to translate some of those Spanishe bookes into our Englishe tounge affirminge that more spirituall profite wolde vndoutedlie ensewe thereby to the gayninge of Christian sowles in our countrie from Schisme and Heresie and from all sinne and iniquitie than by bookes that treate of controuersies in Religion wich as experience hath nowe plainelie tried doe nothinge so well dispose the common peoples myndes to the feare loue and seruice of almightie God as bookes treatinge of deuotion and howe to leade a vertuous life doe The dewe consideration whereof hath so prouoked or rather pricked me in conscience that I haue resolued to publishe godwillinge in printe all my translations in case I shall perceiue that suche as be godlie wise and learned shall like of them And first as it were for an assaie I haue here printed his deuoute Meditations of the principall holie Misteries of the Christian Religion which booke I finde greatelie commended by diuers godlie learned men It maie be that some readers of this booke beinge not greatelie acquainted with the holie exercises of a spirituall life Obiection will imagin that the Authour dealeth to austerelie in some of theise meditations as namelie in his Meditations of synnes of the hower of death of òur dreydfull accompte at the terrible daie of iudgemente and of the moste horrible paines of hell And perhaps some politique wise men will saie that for so muche as thè common people in our countrie haue beene for the moste parte of our corrupte age altogether accustomed with hearinge and readinge of diuers other contrarie newe erronions doctrines tendinge directlie to a careles dissolute life thei be therfore nowe waxen so carnall and negligent of the saluation of their sowles that theise Meditations be to full of threateninge and terror for suche nice and lose consciences For answere to this obiection Answere it is to be noted that the Authór beinge as I am informed not onelie a greate learned and religious deuout olde father but also of greate wisdome grautie iudgemente discretion and of longe experience as well in preachinge and hearinge of Cōfessions as in diuers gouernementes in his religious order and perceyuinge verie euidentlie that farre more Christian sowles be loste in this our corrupte age with ouermuche presumptuous confidence and securetie of their saluation than with ouermuche feare of leesinge the same hathe therfore framed his manner of writinge in theise meditations chieflie againste the infinite nomber of presumptuous and careles dissolute Christiās that presume most certainlie and assuredlie to be saued and yet doe liue verie dissolutelie all their whole lyfe time without all care of keepinge gods commaundements and without all feare of their accompte at the dreadeful daie of iudgemente notwithstandinge that our Sauiour Christ himselse who shal be then our Iudge hathe by plaine and expresse wordes forewarned vs in the gospell of saînt Mathewe Matt. 19. vers 17. that if we will enter into the Kingdome of heauen we muste Kepe his commaundementes which euerie Christian maie be able to kepe beinge assisted strengthened and holpen therein with the grace of God which is neuer denied to anie that pra●eth dulie for it and also that we muste at the daie of iudgemente geue an accompte of euerye idle worde Matt. 12. vers 36. And verelie if we peruse diligentlie the holie scriptures we shall finde that not onely Enoch in the lawe of Nature Epist Iude. vers 14. and afterwardes all the Prophets but also sainte Ihon Baptiste and our Sauiour Christe himselfe vsed the same manner of preachinge that this religious godlie father dothe here And they thought it to be the verie best and rediest waie for conuersion of sinners from their sinfull dissolute lifes to shewe plainelie vnto them the damnable state they liue in and to put them in mynde of the seuere iustice of almightie God at the terrible daye of iudgemente against all suche as endeuour not to kepe his commaundementes Acts 10. vers 42. And saint Peter protesteth as it appeareth in the Actes of the Apostles that our Sauiour Christe commaunded likewise him and the reste of the Apostles to preache and testifie this poynte espetiallye that Christe is appointed to be the Iudge bothe of the quicke and the deade 1. Pet 1. vers 16. And therefore in an other place he requireth all Christians to liue in feare duringe the time of their conuersation vpon the earthe 2. Cor. 5. vers 10. 11. And sainte Paule maketh also the like solemne protestation of the terrible daie of iudgemente and what a straite accompte euerie one of vs muste make at that dreadefull time and exhorteth the Corinthians with the knowledge and consideration there of to perswade all men to liue in the feare of God And disputinge also before the President Felix of the Christian religion Act.
which is the thinge that is of chiefest force to susteine the burthen of the lawe of God Ecclesiast 35. And therefore Ecclesiasticus saith He that keapeth the lawe multiplieth praier For whereas he seeth by experience that none can kepe the lawe of God by the obseruation whereof euerlasting glorie is obteined without the grace of God he helpeth him selfe by praier to obtein grace by meanes wheeof he maie be able to kepe the lawe of God The lawe commaundeth vs to be chast But besides this the holie Ghost addeth and saith by the wise man Vnderstanding that none could be chast Sap. 8. vnles thou o Lord diddest geue him grace for the same and it was a great grace to knowe of whose gifte this was I went vnto oure Lord and I demaunded of him this grace with all my hart Whereby thow maist see accordinge as we declared in the beginninge that the walle hath neede of a forewalle or bulwarke and the vessell hath neide of a cubbord to kepe it in and some vertues haue neede of other vertues to defend and garde one an other Now if this be true that thou arte bounde to kepe the lawe of God and not to commit anie deadlie sinne it is good reason that thou do seeke out all such meanes as maie helpe thee to kepe the same lawe and to preserue thee without deadlie sinne The which meanes although generally they be but of counsell yet sometimes they maie be of precept when the necessitie of exercisinge them as we haue said is so great that without the vse of those meanes the verie commaundementes them selues cannot be kepte and fulfilled as all the learned diuines do affirme Howbeit euerie christian that hath an earnest desier of his saluation owght not to expecte and delaie the seekinge for these remedies vntil the verie last and extreme danger when the knyfe is alreadie at his throte but he owght to make good prouision and to furnishe him selfe before hand by meanes of these for sayd spirituall exercises that he maie liue the more safe and secure from the perill of breakinge Gods commaundementes Againe I confesse that these meanes as we haue said do apperteine to the religious and to the laie people after a diuers sort and that praier and consideration it selfe which is one of these meanes must be vsed of them in diuers degrees For the religious person must exercise the same as a thinge appertening to his office and dewtie of his professiō because he walketh towardes perfection but the laie person must exercise it as a meane whereby he maie the better fulfill his bounden duetie of keping the commaundementes of almightie God And therefore the laye person must take so much of this medecine to witt of praier meditation c. as maie suffice to cure his disease and so much muste he take of these meanes as maie suffise to obtein his ende It is sufficient for the laye person to withdrawe him selfe sometimes for to enter and take an inwarde vewe within him selfe and then by meanes of these or anie other spirituall exercises and praiers to attende vnto the reparinge of his conscience and to the reformation of his life for considering that this is the greatest of all our busines it is requisite that this be not the last of our cares OF THE MATTER OF CONSIDERATION § XII HAVING now spoken both of the profit and necessitie of consideration and our hartes being nowe well affected herewith towardes this vertue lett vs beginne to treate of the matter of consideration which consisteth of certein godlie and deuout considerations which are of greatest force to induce vs to the loue and feare of God to the abhorring of sinne and contempt of the world For which purpose there be no considerations better nor of greater force and efficacie then those that are taken out of the principalle articles and misteries of our faith as the bitter passion and death of our Sauiour the remembrance of the terrible daie of iudgement of the horrible tormentes of hell of the glorie of heauen of the benefites of almightie God of our synnes and of our life and death For euerie one of these pointes beinge well weied and considered be able to prouoke our hartes verie much to all the effectes aboue mentioned These verie pointes S. Bonauenture hath treated in a boke that he intituled FASCICVLARIVS and hath diuided them into the seuen daies of the weke And thus he did that a man might haue euerie daie newe foode for his sowle and newe prouocations vnto vertue and so auoide the tediousnes that he should otherwise haue in thinking alwaies vpon one same matter And for this cause it seemed good vnto me to followe the same diuision which this renowmed and blessed holie father hath made who of all others hath treated most largelie of these matters And if there be anie that shall not well like of this diuision but will followe some other he is at free libertie so to doe and hath also examples to followe therein For it importeth not much what order and diuision he folow in the same And suerlie that is the best order The worde of god and the consideration of heauenlie matters be the foode of our soule to be vsed in these matters that each man fyndeth to be best for him selfe and wherein he taketh most profit and commoditie Moreouer I thowghte it expediente considering that the foode and sustenance of our sowle is the worde of God and the consideration of heauenly matters for therewith is our sowle susteined in the spirituall life which consisteth in the loue and feare of God that like as we geue ordinarily to our bodie his refection twise euerie daie to preserue it from feintinge in this life euen so we should also geue to our sowle her ordinarie refection twise euerie daie that she faile not in her life howbeit this is not a thinge of bounden dewtie nor of precept but onely of holesome councell espetially cōsideringe that the Sainctes haue vsed this exercise more often tymes For we reade Daniel 6. that the prophet Daniell with drew him selfe to this exercise three tymes in the daie Psalm 118. and the prophet Dauid also vsed to praise God seuen tymes in the daie After whose vertuous example our holie mother the Catholike Church hath instituted the seuen Canonicall howers of dailie seruice Here be two kindes of meditations assigned the one for the morninge and the other for the eueninge And for this cause haue we here assigned two kindes of meditations The one for the morninge which treateth of the most bitter passion of our redeemer and the other for the euening or night which treateth of the other pointes and matters here before mentioned But if anie man shall haue such want of tyme or of deuotion that he can not withdrawe him selfe vnto this exercise twise in the daie let him yet finde the meanes to withdrawe him selfe thereunto at the least once in the daie
tounge how is it that thou arte become domme What harte is not broken What hardnes is not mollified What eies can absteine from teares and lamentation beholdinge such a pittiefull and dolefull sight as this is O my most sweere sauiour and redeemer when I open myne eies and doe beholde this dolorous Image which is here set before me how is it that my harte doth not euen cleaue and rente in sunder for verie anguishe and griefe I see the most tender head of my Lorde and sauiour pearced with crewell thornes at whose presence the powers of heauen do tremble and quake I see his diuine face spitted vpon and buffeted I see the lighte of his goodlie brighte forehead obscured I see his cleare eies dimmed or rather blinded with showers of bloude I see the streames of bloude tricklinge downe from his head which faulle ouer ouer his eies and stayne the bewtie of his diuine face How happeneth it o Lord that the cruell whippinges thou diddest suffer before and the death that ensueth and the great quantitie of bloude that was so cruellie shed did not suffice but that the sharpe thornes also shoulde now perforce let out the bloude of thy head which the whippes and scourges before had pardoned If thou diddest receaue those reproches and buffettes to make satisfaction by them for such blowes and buffettes as I through my sinnes haue laid vpō thee haddest thou not receaued enowghe of them all the nighte before If thy death alone was sufficiente to redeeme vs what neded so manie kindes of most shamefull villanies and reproches To what ende were all these newe inuentions and strange deuises of contemptes and mockeries Who hath euer harde or red of such a kinde of crowne or of such maner of tormentes Out of what harte came this newe inuention into the worlde that one punnishement shoulde serue in such wise as both to tormente a man and withall to dishonor him Were not those cruell tormentes sufficiente that had bene vsed in all former ages but that they must also inuent these newe and strange punnishementes at the time of thy most bitter passion I see well ô Lorde that these so manifolde iniuries were not necessarie for my redemption for euen one onelye droppe of thy most pretious bloude was sufficient for the same The causes why out sauiour woulde suffer so manyfolde paynes and iniuries for our redemption howbeit it was verie conueniente that they shoulde be so manie and so greate that thou mightest thereby declare vnto me the greatnes of thy loue and by meanes of them lincke me vnto thee with chaynes and fetters of perpetuall bonde and dewtie and confounde the gaye braueries and fonde showes of my pride and vanities and teache me thereby to despise the pompe and glorie of the worlde Wherefore ô my soule that thou maist conceaue and haue somme feelinge of this so dolefull passage set first before thyne eies the former shape of this Lorde and withall the excellencie of his vertues and then incontinentlie tourne thy selfe and beholde him in such pitiefull forte as he is here represented vnto vs. Consider therefore the greatnes of his former beawtie the modestie of his eies the sweetenes of his wordes his awthoritie his meeknes his mylde behauiour and that goodlie countenance of his so full of grauitie and reuerence Beholde how humble he was towardes his disciples how faire spoken towardes his ennemies How stowte towardes the prowde How sweete towardes the meike and how mercifull towardes all sortes of persons Consider how mylde he hath alwaies bene in sufferinge how wise in answeringe how pittiefull in his iudgemētes how mercifull in receauinge sinners and how free and bountiefull in perdoninge theire offences When thou hast thus beholden our Sauiour and delighted thy selfe with beholdinge such a perfect forme tourne thyne eies and beholde him in this pitiefull plighte wherein he is here set out to the worlde clad in most scornefull wise with an olde purple garmente holdinge a reede in his hande in steede of a royall scepter Beholde that horrible and paynefull diademe of thorne on his head those hollowe and wanne eies and that dead countenance Beholde that strange forme of his wholie disfigured and begored with bloude and defyled with the spittle which they had besmered all ouer his face Beholde him in all partes both inwardelie and outwardelie his harte pearced with sorrowes his bodie full of woundes forsaken of his owne disciples persecuted of the Iewes scorned of the souldiers contemned of the Busshoppes baselie reiected of the wicked kinge accused vniustely and vtterlie destitute of the fauour of all men And thinke vpon this not as a thinge past but as a thinge presente not as thowghe it were an other mans payne but as thowghe it were thyne owne Imagine thy selfe to be in the place of him that suffereth and thinke with thy selfe what a terrible paine it woulde be vnto thee if in so sensible and tender a parte as the head is they shoulde fasten a nōber of thornes yea and those verie sharpe which shoulde pearce euen to the sculle But what speake I of thornes If it were but one onelie pricke of a pynne thou couldest hardlie abyde the paine of it And therefore thou maist well thinke what a sore greuous paine that most tender and delicate head of our sauiour felte at that time with this strange kinde of tormente Wherefore o brightnes of the glorie of the father who hath thus cruelly delte with thee O vnspotted glasse of the maiestie of almightie God who hath thus wholie bespotted thee O Riuer that flowest out of the paradice of delightes and with thy streames reioycest the Citie of God who hath troubled these so cleare and sweete waters It is my sinnes o Lorde that haue so troubled them Our synnes were the onelie cause of all our sauiours paynes and my iniquities haue made them so muddie Alas poore wretche and miserable caityffe that I am Woo is me how haue my sinnes bespotted myne owne soule seinge the sinnes of others haue here so fowlye bespotted and troubled the verie cleare fountaine of all bewtie My sinnes ô Lorde are the thornes that pricke thee my folies are the purple that scorne thee my hipochresie ād fayned holines are the ceremonies wherewith they despise thee my gaie garmentes and vanities are the crowne wherewith they crowne thee So that I ô Lorde am thy tormentor and I am the verie cause of thy paines and greiffes 2. Pa●●l 29. The kinge Ezechias purified the temple that had bene prophaned by wicked persons and commaunded that all the filthe that was therein shoulde be cast into the riuer of Cedron I O Lorde am this liuely temple that is prophaned by the diuells and defyled with infinite sinnes and thou art the cleare riuer of Cedron that doest with thy ronninge streames susteine all the bewtie of heauen In this riuer o Lorde are all my sinnes drowned In this riuer are my iniquities washed awaie in somuch
for the chastesinge of men settinge before them his own diuine Image to witt the face of his own most deerelie beloued sonne so euill vsed and disfigured to the end that where as they had bene so manie tymes admonished and rebuked by the mowthes of his Prophettes and yet woulde not forsake theire wickednes they might at the least be moued for verie compassion to forsake the same beholdinge that diuine forme of our Sauiour Christ in such pittiefull wise disfigured for theire synnes So that before he laid his handes vpon men but now he came to laie them vpon him selfe which trulie was the last refuge that coulde be deuised to withdrawe men from sinne And therefore as it hath bene at all times accompted a verie great wickednes to offende almightie God so now after that he hath taken such a shape vpon him to destroye sinne it is not onelye a great wickednes but also a verie great ingratitude and horrible crueltie to offende him with anie deadlye sinne If thou wilt continewe in the contemplatiō of this pointe besides that thou mayst learne hereby to abhorre sinne thou mayst also take great cowrage to put thy whole trust and affyance in almightie God by consideringe this verie dolefull forme of our sauiour Christ the which as it is of great sorce to moue the hartes of men euen so hath it no lesse force but rather farre greater to moue the harte of almightie God And therefore thou must thinke that what dolefull forme our Sauiour toke at that tyme vpon him in the sight of the furious people the verie same he presenteth now before the diuine eyes of his most pittiefull and mercifull louinge father so freshe and in such bleadinge wise as it was that verie same daie Now what image and forme can there be of greater efficacie to pacifie the eies of the heauenlie father than the pale and wanne countenance so pittiefullie disfigured of his onelie begotten sonne This is the golden propiciatorie this is the rainbowe of diuers colours placed emonge the clowdes of heauen with the sight whereof almightie God is pacified With this were his eies fed with this was his iustice satisfied here was his honor restored Here was such seruice done vnto him as was answerable and seemlie vnto his diuine maiestie Tell me now then ô thou weake and mistrustfull man if the shape and forme of our sauiour Christ was such at that tyme that it was able as the Iudge verelie beleued to mitigate the cruell eies of such ennemies how much more able is it to pacifie the eies of the most mercifull heauenlie father espetiallie consideringe that whatsoeuer our sauiour there suffered was for his honor and vnder his obedience Compare then eies with eies person with person and thou shalt see how much thou art more assured of the mercie of the heauenlye father by presentinge vnto him this dolefull forme of our Sauiour Christ than Pilate was of the mercie of the Iewes when he showed our Sauiour thus pittiefully disfigured vnto them Wherefore in all thy praiers and temptations take this Lorde for thy sheilde and buckeler set him betweene thee and almightie God and presente him before his diuine maiestie sayenge ECCE HOMO Beholde the man I haue here o almightie God the man whom thou hast so manie yeares sowght for to be a meane betwene thee and sinners I haue here the man whose iustice is such that it answereth thy godnes in euerie poynte I haue here the man who is so much punnished as our sinnes and offences required Wherefore o most mercifull louinge Lorde looke mercifully vpon vs I most humblie beseach thee And that thou mayst so doe fixe thyne eies vpon the face of thy Christ And thou o our sweete Sauiour and mediator cease not to presente thy selfe before the eies of thy father for vs. And forsomuch as thy loue towardes vs was so great that thou wouldest offer vp thy bodie to the tormentors to be tormented for our sakes vouchsaffe o Lorde with the same loue to present it vnto the heauenlie father beseachinge him that it maie please him for thy sake to pardon vs all our sinnes and offences HOW OVR SAVIOVR CARIED THE CROSSE VPON HIS SHOVLDERS Christo ig●●●ur pas●a in carna et vos eadem cogitationa arma●●ini 1 Patr. 〈…〉 § III. NOW when Pilate sawe that all those extreme punnishementes that had bene so cruelly executed vpon that most innocent lambe were not able to asswage the furie of his ennemies he entered forthwith into the iudgemēt hall and sat him downe in his tribunall seate to geue finall sentence in that cause The Crosse was in the meane tyme prepared and made redie at the gate and that dreadfull banner was hoysed vp on highe in the aier whiche threatened the terror of a most cruell death to our Sauiour Now when that sentence was geuen and published althowghe it was of it selfe both vniust and cruell yet did his ennemies adde an other further crueltie vnto it to wit they laid vpon those tender shoulders that were so pittiefullie rent and torne with vnmercifull whippes and scourges the heauie tree of the crosse All which notwithstandinge our most mercifull Lorde and sauiour refused not to carrie that heauie burthen where vpon were laied all our sinnes but embraced the same with an vnspekeable great charitie and obedience for the verie loue he bare vnto vs. And so went on his waie as an other true Isaac Genes 22. with the crosse on his shoulders to the place of his sacrifice The cariadge was deuided betwene two The sonne caried the woode and the bodie that shoulde be sacrificed These two vertues loue and iustice did put the sonne of God vpon the crosse and the father caried the fier and the knife wherewith the sacrifice shoulde be made For truelie it was the fier of loue which he bare towardes mankynde and the sharpe knyfe of the diuine iustice that put the sonne of God vpon the crosse These two vertues contended together within the heauenlie fathers breste each one demaundinge his right Loue requested him to pardon mankinde and iustice required that sinners might be punnished Wherevpon to the ende that men might be pardoned and sinne punnished a mean was founde that an innocent to witt the sonne of God shoulde die for all mankynde This was the fier and knife that the Patriarke Abraham caried in his handes to sacrifice his sonne For it was the loue of our saluation and the zeale of iustice that cause the heauenlie father to offer his owne most deerlie beloued sonne to the crosse Now goeth the sweete innocent Iesus forwardes on his waie with that so heauie dolorous burthen vpon his weake and torne shoulders great multitudes of people folowinge after him and manie a pittiefull and sorowfull womā accompanienge him with grieuous teares and lamentations What stonie harte had bene able to abstaine from most bitter weepinge beholdinge the kinge of angells to goe thus faintlie with such a great
discources and preachinge of the gospell Now shall I no more wype of the sweate from thy face which was so oftentymes sonneburned and tyred with painfull trauels and Iourneis Now shall I see thee no more sittinge and eatinge at my table and ministringe foode to my soule with thy diuine presence Now Alas this glorie is finished this daye is this ioye ended and my solitarines beginneth presently O My deare sonne why speakest thou not vnto me O tonge of heauen that hast comforted so manie with thy wordes and geuen speache and life to so manie persons who hath put thee to such a great silence that thou speakest not to thy louinge mother How is it that thou hast not at the least left me some legacie wherewithall I might comfort my selfe Well I will take it by thy licence This Royall crowne shal be my legacie Of these nayles and of this speare will I be thy heyre These so pretious Iewells will I kepe alwaies in my harte There shall thy nailes be knocked in There shall thy crowne thy scourges and thy crosse be kepte and preserued This is the inheritance which I haue chosen to enioye all the daies of my life O how litle while doe the ioyes of the earthe endure And how soore doth that greife smarte which commethe after muche prosperitie O Bethelem ô Ierusalem how farre doe these daies differ from those which I haue had in you What a cleare night was that and what an obscure daie is this What a great ioye and riches and I then and what a greate greife and penurie haue I now The losse of so great a treasure can not be litle O blessed Angell where are now those great praises of thy olde salutation It was not in vayne that I was in such a great trouble and feare at that tyme. For after great praises there must needes followe either some great faulle or some greate crosse and tribulation Our Lorde will not haue his giftes to be in vaine Idle and without exercise He neuer geueth honor without charge nor superioritie without seruitude nor great abondance of grace but to make vs able to suffer great trouble and persecution Then thou diddest calle me Full of grace Luc. 1. and now am I full of sorrowe Then thou diddest calle me Blessed emonge all women and now am I the most afflicted of all women Then thou diddest saie our Lorde is with thee now he is also with me howbeit not aliue but dead as I now holde him here in myne armes O my sweete redeemer and sauiour was it anie offence in me to holde thee in my armes with so great ioye when thou wast but newely borne that I shoulde now come to holde thee in them so soore tormented Was it anie faulte in me to take so great pleasure in geuinge thee the sweete milke of my brestes that now thou shouldest geue me to drinke of such a bitter cuppe Was it anie fault in me to beholde my selfe in thy face as in a bright glasse that thou hast thus ordeined that I shoulde now see thee thus cruellie rente and tormented Was it anie offence in me to loue thee so entierly that thou shouldest now cause my loue to become my tormentor And that I shoulde now suffer so much the greater greife be how much I loued thee more entierlie O heauenly father ô louer of men which art mercifull towardes them and rigorous towardes thyne onelie and deerlie beloued sonne Thou knowest how great the waues and tempesteous sourges are which lye beatinge at this presente against my dolefull harte Thou knowest that this harte of myne hath abidden so manie deathes as there haue bene whippes and strookes geauen vnto this holie bodie of thy sweete sonne Howbeit althoughe I be the most afflicted of all creatures yet doe I geue thee infinite thankes for this greate sorrowe and greife that I sustaine It is a sufficient comfort vnto me to vnderstande that it is thy blessed will that it shoulde so be Anie thinge that commeth from thy handes I must needes take in good worth thoughe it were a sharpe knyfe and woulde thrust it euen into my bowells I geue thee most humble and hartie thankes both for my prosperitie and aduersitie and as well and euen in as equall wise for the one as for the other And for the vse and commoditie of thy benefittes which I haue hitherto enioyed I blesse thee And I am nothinge discontented that thou doest now take them awaye from me I mislyke not of that but I doe rather restore to thee the thinge againe that was committed to my custodie and doe yeelde vnto thee most humble and hartie thankes Both for the one and the other the angelles blesse thee and with them my teares also blesse thee for euermore Howbeit I beseach thee ô my most louinge and mercifull father if it maye stande with thy blessed will and pleasure that the martirdome which I haue alreadie suffered for these thirtie and three yeares maie content thee Luc. 2. Thou knowest ô Lorde that from the daie that holie Simeon signefied this martirdome vnto me all my pleasures haue bene mingled with bitter gaule And from that tyme hitherto I haue had that sorrowfull daie euer lyenge ouerth-warte my heauye harte In the middest of my Ioyes I haue bene alwaies assaulted with the remembrance of this dolorous sorrowe and I neuer had anie Ioye so pure but that it was myngled with the terrible sorrowes and feares of this daie I knowe well that all this was directed by thy diuine prouidence and that it was thy blessed will that from that tyme I shoulde haue knowledge of this misterie to the ende that as the sonne caried the crosse euermore before his eies euen from the verie daie of his conception so shoulde his mother carie it also Our Lorde will haue them that be his seruātes euer to suffer and be afflicted in this life For thy will and pleasure is that those that be thyne shoulde alwaies suffer and be afflicted in this transitorie life And thou wilt not that our ioyes shoulde be great or perpetuall in this vale of teares though they be such as we take in thee Wherefore ô my kinge vouchsaffe now I beseach thee if it maie so stande with thy blessed will that this maie be the verie last of my martirdomes if not thy holie will be fulfilled both in this and in all other thinges If thou thinke one martirdome be to litle for a poore seelie woman thou knowest verie well ô Lorde that I haue bene so oftentimes a Martir as there haue bene woundes and strookes geuen to the most blessed bodie of my sauiour His martirdomes are now al ended but myne in beholdinge him thus cruellie tormented doe beginne a freshe Commaunde deathe to retourne againe to take the spoyle which he hath left behinde him and let him carie the mother also with the sonne to the graue O happie sepulchre that succiedest me in myne office The crowne that
triumphant conqueror goeth downe into hell clothed with brightnes and strēgthe whose entrie Eusebius Emisenus describeth in these wordes O beawtifull light which shininge from the highest parte of heauen diddest geaue light with a suddaine and vnwonted brightnes to them that were in darckenes and in the shadowe of deathe For at the verie instant that our Sauiour descended thither immediatlie that euerlastinge darke night shyned verie brightlie and the noyse of them that there lamented ceassed forthwith and all that cruell route of tormentors trembled Exod. 25. to beholde our Sauiour Christ present There were the princes of Edom troubled and the mightie of Moab quaked for feare and the inhabitantes of the lande of Canaan were sore amased and astonied Incontinently all those infernall tormētors beganne in the middest of theire obscure darkenes to murmure emōge themselues and to saye Who is this that is so terrible so mightie and withall so bright There was neuer seene anie man like vnto this in oure quarters There was neuer the like person sent into these dennes from the beginninge of the worlde vnto this daie What he loketh as one that woulde rather assault vs than paie here anie dette and as one that woulde soner geue vs an ouerthrowe than be punnished as a sinner He seemeth to be a Iudge and no guiltie person He cōmeth with great might to fight and not to suffer anie payne Where stoode our garde and the porters of our gates when this conqueror brake our stronge inclosures and entered thus perforce vpon vs What maie he be that is of such a mightie puissance If he were faultie he woulde not haue bene so hardie And if he had broughte with him anie obscuritie of synne he coulde neuer haue thus geuen light to our darkenes with his brightnes If he be God what hath he to doe in hell If he be a man how is it that he is so bolde If he be God what hath he to doe in the sepulchre If he be a man how happeneth it that he hath spoyled our stronge prison of Limbus O Crosse that hast after this maner defeyted our hopes and bene the cause of this our great losse Genes 3. and dammage Vpon a tree we gayned all our riches and now vpon a tree we lose them all againe Suche wordes as these murmured those infernall feindes emonge themselues at what time the noble triumphant conqueror our Sauiour Christe entered therein to deliuer his prisoners There stoode all the soules of the iust gathered together that had from the beginninge of the worlde vntill that howre departed out of this lyfe There might yee haue seene one Prophet sawed a sonder an other stoned an other hauinge his necke brokē with a barre of yron and others that had with other kyndes of death glorified almightie God O gloriouse companie O most noble treasure of heauen O most magnificent and riche parte of the triumphe of our Sauiour Christe There were those two first persons to wit Adam and Eue who in the beginninge peopled and increased the worlde whiche two as they were the first in synne so were they the first also in faith and hope Genes 6. There was that holie olde man Noë who by buyldinge of the great Arke preserued seede that the worlde might be replenished and peopled againe after the ceasinge of the waters of the floude There was the Patriarke Abraham the first father of the beleeuynge people who deserued before all others to receiue the testament of God and the signe and separation of his familye from others by the marke of Circumcision in their fleashe Genes 22. There was his obedient sonne Isacke who in caryenge vpon his shoulders the woode wherewith he shoulde be sacrificed represented the sacrifice ād redēption of the worlde Genes 27. There was Iacob the holie father of the twelue trybes who by puttinge vpon him an others apparell and straunge garmentes gayned his fathers blessinge which figured the misterie of the humanitie and incarnation of the euerlastinge worde Luc. 2. There was the holie S. Iohn Baptist also as a guest and newe inhabitor of that lande and likewise the blessed olde man Simeon who woulde not depart out of this worlde vntill he had seene with his eies the redeemer of the worlde and receyued him in his armes and songe like a swanne before his death that sweete songe Nunc dimittis c. Luc. 15. There had the poore seelie Lazarus mentioned in the gospell his place also who by meanes of his soores and patience deserued to be partaker of that so noble companie and hope All this quyer and assemblie of holie soules were there mourninge and sighinge for this daie And in the middest of them as maister of the chappell was that holie kinge and Prophet Dauid who without ceassinge repeted his auncient lamentation As the hart longethe after the fountaines of waters Psalm 41. euen so doth my soule longe after thee my God My teares were bread vnto me daie and night whiles they saie vnto my soule where is thy God O holie kinge Dauid if this be the cause of thy lamentation now maist thou cease from singinge this songe for here thy God is now present and and here is thy Sauiour whom thou maist now enioye Chaunge this songe therefore and singe that other songe which thou diddest singe longe before in spirite Psal 84. Thou hast blessed thy lande ô Lorde thou hast deliuered Iacob out of captiuitie Thou hast pardoned the iniquitie of thy people and hast dissembled the multitude of theire sinnes And thou holie Ieremie that wast stoned to death for the same Lorde shut vp now thy booke of lamentations which thou diddest wryte when thou beheldest the destruction of Ierusalem and the ruine of the temple of God For euen within these three daies thou shalt see an other temple builded vp farre more beawtyfull than that was and thou shalt see an other more goodlie Ierusalem renewed through out the worlde Now when those blessed fathers sawe their darkenes chaunged to a goodlie bright light The greate ioye of the olde fathers in Limbo patrū at the descendinge of our Sauiour thither to deliuer them frō thence Exod. 14. Exod. 15. when they sawe the tyme of their bannishemēt expired and their glorie now begonne what tonge is able to expresse the passinge inwarde ioye that they felt O how glad were they to see themselues now deliuered out of the captiuitie of Egipt and their enemies drowned in the redde Sea How hartelie did they singe altogether and saie Let vs singe vnto our Lorde for he hath gloriouslie triumphed He hath ouerthrowen both the horse and the horsemen into the sea With what inwarde affection trowe ye did the first father of all mankinde prostrate him selfe before the feete of his sonne and Sauiour and saie vnto him Thou art now come my dearlie beloued Lorde whome I haue so longe tyme loked for to redeeme my synne Thou art come to fulfill
before the generall daie of iudgemente Secondly consider what fearefull and terrible signes shall goe before this daie For as our Sauiour saieth Before the comminge of this daie there shal be signes in the Sonne in the Moone and in the Sterres and in all creatures both of heauen and earthe For they shall all haue as it were a certayne feelinge and vnderstandinge of their ende Luc. 21.25 before they come to their ende in deede And shall tremble and quake and beginne to falle before they falle in deede But as for men they shall saieth he goe vp and downe drie and withered Luc. 21.26 in great anguishe and feare of death hearinge the terrible roringes of the Sea and seinge the great outragious stormes and tempestes that shall then be stirringe And by those dreadfull signes they shall coniecture what great calamities and miseries are threatened to the worlde And in this wise shall they goe wholy amased and astonied their faces pale and wāne theyr hartes dead before deathe come and as persons condemned before the sentence be geuen For they shall measure the perilles and daungers to come by the greate feare and terrour they be presentelie in And euerie one shal be so throughlie occupied with his owne affaires that none shall thinke of others no not so much as the father of the sonne or the sonne of the father No man shall haue to doe for anie other man because no man shal be sufficient for himselfe alone The Sibilles doe affirme that at that time the beastes shall goe bellowinge and roringe throughe the feildes and cities and that the trees shall sweate bloude and that the Sea shall cast vp the fisshes on the drie grounde But if this seeme incredible to anie man let him consider that there is much more spoken in the gospell For it is a greater matter for men to be dried vp Luc. 21. than for the sea to be dried vp And it is a greater matter that the vertues of the heauens shoulde be moued than that all creatures in the earthe shoulde be altered Thirdlie consider that vniuersall floude of fier Of the cōminge of the floude of fier before the Iudge and of the dreadfull sownde of the trompette at the generall Iudgment Nahum 1. that shall come before the iudge and that dreadfull sownde of the trompett which the Archangell shall blowe to sommon and calle all the generatiōs of the worlde to assemble together in one place and to be present at their generall and vniuersall iudgemente And aboue all this consider with what a dreadfull maiestie the Iudge shall come Whos 's comminge is described by the Prophet Nahum in these wordes Our Lorde shall come like a tempest and furious whyrlewinde and the clowdes are the dust of his feete He shal take indignation against the Sea and it shall waxe drie and all the riuers of the earthe shal be dried vp The hill Basan and Carmelus shal be withered and the floure of the mounte Libanus shall fade and falle awaye The mountaines shall qwake before him and the hilles shall melte The earth shall tremble at his presence and the worlde and all the inhabitantes thereof Who shall stande before the face of his indignation And who shall abide the fearcenes of his furie His wrathe shal be poured out like a fire and the verie rockes shall become dust before him Of the straite accompte that shall then be required of euerie mā Iob. 4. Iob. 31. After this consider what a strait accompte shal be there required of euerie man Verelie saieth Iob no man can be iustified if he be compared with almightie God and if he contende with him in iudgment of a thousande thinges that he shall charge him withall he shall not be able to answere vnto one Now then what shall euerie wicked person thinke at that tyme when almightie God shall enter with him in this examination How almightie God shall then accuse the wicked within their owne consciences ād shal there within his owne cōsciēce saie thus vnto him Come hither thou wicked and naughtie man What hast thou seene in me that thou shouldest thus despise me and goe to myne enemies syde I haue raised thee from the dust of the earthe and created thee after myne owne image and likenes I haue geuen thee vertue and strengthe wherewith thou mightest haue obteined my glorie But thou despisinge the benefites and commaundementes of lyfe which I haue geuen thee wouldest rather followe the lies of the deceiuer than the holesome counsell of thy Lorde and creator To deliuer thee from this foule falle I went downe from heauen into earth where I suffered the greast paynes tormentes and reproches that euer were suffered in the worlde For thee haue I fasted for thee haue I traueyled from place to place for thee haue I watched laboured and sweate droppes of bloude for thee haue I suffered persecutions scourginges blasphemies reproches buffettinges dishonours tormentes and euen deathe it selfe vpon the crosse To be shorte for thee I was borne in much pouertie for thee I liued in great paine for thee I died with intollerable tormentes and greifes Witnes hereof are this crosse and nailes which thou here now seest Witnes hereof are these woundes both of my handes and feete which are here to be seene in my bodie Witnes hereof are heauen and earthe before whom I suffered Witnes hereof are the sonne and moone which were eclipsed at the same howre Now what hast thou done with this thy sowle which I with the sheedinge of myne owne bloude purchased to be mine In whose seruice hast thou emploied that which I bought so dearly O foolishe wicked and adulterous generation why wouldest thou rather serue thy enemie with paine than me thy creator and redeemer with ioye Be yee astonied ô ye heauens at this straunge case and let your gates falle downe at the straungnes hereof Ierem. 2. For two abhominations hath my people committed They haue forsaken me that am the fountaine of liuely water and refused me for an other Barrabas I called yow verie oftentimes and ye woulde not answere me I knocked at your gates and ye woulde not awake I stretched out my handes on the crosse and ye woulde not beholde them Ye haue despised my counsels with all my promises and threatninges Wherefore speake ye now ô ye Angels be you iudges betwene me and my viniarde what coulde I haue done more for it than I haue done Now what answere can the wicked make hereunto Let the wicked prouide what answere to make here vnto now whiles they haue tyme in this worlde Such as be scoffers at holie and diuine thinges Such as be mockers of vertue Such as be despisers of simplicitie Such as make more accompte of the lawes and statutes of the worlde than of the lawes of almightie God Such as haue bene deaffe to heare the callinges of God vnsensible to vnderstande his inspirations rebellious against his commaundementes obdurate and
she that was more afflicted in this worlde thā anie other mere creature is now seene there exalted aboue al creatures enioyinge for euer that cheifeste goodnes and sayeinge Cant. 3.4 I haue founde him whom my sowle loueth I will holde him and will not let him goe And if this be so great a ioye The sacred humanitie of Christe what a ioye shall that be to beholde the most sacred humanitie of our sauiour Christ and the glorie and bewtie of that bodie which was so fowlie disfigured for our sakes vpon the crosse S. Bernarde It shal be vndowtedlie as S. Bernarde saithe a thinge full of all sweitnes and delighte when men shall there see and beholde a man the creator of men and Lorde of all thinges created We are wonte to esteime it for a singular honour to our whole familie to see some one of our kinred to be made a Cardinall or a Pope Now how farre greater honour shall this be vnto vs to see that Lorde who is of our fleashe and bloude sittinge at the righte hande of the father and made kinge both of heauen and earthe With what a passinge great ioye shall men stande emonge the Angels It shal be a greate ioye to men in heauen to see the Lorde and creator of all thinges to be not an Angell but a man when they shall see that the Lorde of the whole howse and the vniuersall creator of all thinges is not an Angell but a man For if the members doe accompte that to be an honour vnto them that is done to their head by reason of the great vnion that is betwene them and it what shall it be there where there is suche a strayte vnion betwene the mēbers and the head What shall it be els but that euerie one of the sainctes shall accompte the glorie of their Lorde as their owne peculiar glorie This ioye shal be so passinge great that no wordes are able to expresse it accordinge to the worthines thereof Now who shal be so happie as to be thowghte worthie to enioye so great a blysse and felicitie Cant. 8. O that thou were as my brother suckinge the brestes of my mother that I mighte finde thee without and kisse thee with the lippes of deuotion and embrace thee with the armes of loue O most sweete louinge Lorde When shall this ioyefull daie come When shall I appeare before thy face When shall I be filled with thy excellente bewtie When shall I see that countenance of thyne wherevpon the Angels are desirous to beholde Of the thirde ioye that the sowle shall haue in the kingdome of heauen which is the enioyinge of the cleare vision of almightie God § III. In the cleare vision of almightie God consistethe the essentiall glorie of the Sianctes NOW what a ioye shall it be aboue all this to haue a cleare sighte of that diuine face in the sighte of whō consisteth the essentiall glorie of the Sainctes All the thinges we haue hitherto spoken of are certainly great motiues towardes the accomplishemente of glorie but they all are litle in comparison of the cleare vision of almightie God Of Issachar it is written That he sawe that rest was good Gen. 49.15 and that the lande was best and therefore he put his shoulders to labour and made him selfe subiecte to tribute The rest and glorie of the Sainctes is good but the lande that bringeth forthe this rest is best in the superlatiue degrie For this lande is the face and bewtie of almightie God of the vision and beholdinge of whom proceedeth the rest and glorie of the Sainctes This cleare vision of almightie God is the thinge that of it selfe alone is able to geue perfecte rest vnto our sowles The harte of man can neuer be fullie satisfied and filled but onelie with the vision of almightie God For all the sweetnes and pleasantnes of creatures well maie it geue delighte to the harte of man but it can neuer wholye satisfie and fill it Now if all these good thinges before reheresed shall so much delighte vs how much then shall that good thinge delighte vs that conteineth in it selfe the perfection and somme of all good thinges And if the onely sighte and beholdinge of creatures be so glorious what a glorie shall it be to beholde that diuine face that most brighte lighte and that most excellente bewtie of almightie God in whom all bewties doe shyne What a glorious sighte shall it be to beholde that essence so wonderfull so simple and so communicable and with one sighte to beholde in the same the misterie of the most blessed Trinitie The glorie of the father the wisedome of the sonne and the goodnes and loue of the holie Ghost There shall we see God and in God bothe our selues S. Fulgentius and all thinges S. Fulgentius saithe that like as he that hath a glasse before him seeth the glasse and him selfe in the glasse and all other thinges that are before the glasse euen so when we shall haue that vnspotted glasse of the maiestie of almightie God present before vs we shall see him and our selues in him and withal whatsoeuer is without him accordinge to the knowledge greater or lesse that we shall haue of him The vnderstandinge There shall the appetite of our vnderstandinge rest and shall not desire to knowe anie thinge els because it shall haue before it all that can be knowen There shall the appetite of our will rest in louinge that vniuersall good thinge in whom are all good thinges The will and out of whom there be no more good thinges to be enioyed There shall our desire rest The desire and be fullie satisfied with the morsel of that supreme ioye which shal in such wise fill the mouthe of our harte that there shal be nothinge els for it to desire There shall those three Theologicall vertues How faithe hope and charitie shal be rewarded in heauen to witt Faithe Hope and Charitie wherewith almightie God is here honored be perfectly rewarded when vnto faithe shal be there geuen for a rewarde the cleare vision of almightie God vnto hope the possession of him and vnto charitie imperfect charitie in all her perfection There shall the electe see loue enioye and prayse almightie God There shall they be filled without gluttinge and be hōgrie without necessitie There is the place where that songe is alwayes songe that S. Iohn hearde in his reuelations which songe he tearmeth Apoc. 14.3 Quasi canticum nouum As it were a newe songe For that althowghe the songe be alwayes after one maner forsomuche as it is one cōmon prayse answerable to one common glorie which all that blessed companie enioyeth yet is it alwaies newe as concerninge the taste and delighte it hath For loke what taste it had at the beginninge the same verie tast also shall it haue for euer and euer without ende The ioye of the Sainctes in heauen shall neuer diminishe
ingratitude for his manifolde benefites With this kinde of complaynte the Prophet Esaie beginneth the first wordes of his prophecie callinge heauen and earthe to witnes against the ingratitude and vnthankfulnes of the wicked Hearken saieth he ô heauen and thou earthe geue eare vnto my wordes for our Lorde hath spoken it I haue nourished children and exalted them and they haue despised me The oxe knoweth his owner and the Asse his masters maunger but Israell hath not knowen me neither woulde my people vnderstande me Now what thinge is more straunge than that men shoulde not acknowledge that thinge which the verie bruite beastes doe acknowledge And as S. Ierome saieth vpon this place S. Ierome The Prophete woulde not compare men with other lyuinge beastes that are more quicke of sense Ingrateful and vnthankefull persons are more brutishe than the most brutishe beastes that are as with the dogge that for a litle peece of bread defendeth his masters howse but euen with the Oxe and Asse which are more heauie and rude geauinge vs hereby to vnderstande that ingratefull and vnthankefull persons are not to be likened to euerie kinde of beastes but that they be much more brutishe thā the most brutishe beastes that are Now what punishement trowe ye doth so great beastlines deserue Almightie God hath prepared many punishements for ingratefull persons The ordinarie punishemente of ingraful persons but the most iust and ordinarie punishement is to spoile them of all those benefites they haue receyued because they woulde not geue thākes to the geuer of them as of duetie they ought to haue done S. Bernarde For as S. Bernarde saiethe Ingratitude is as it were a burninge winde that drieth vp the riuer of Gods mercie the fountain of his clemencie and the flowinge streame of his grace Now as vnthankfulnes is the cause of so great euils The consideration of Gods benefites moueth vs to loue God euen so contrariewise thankefulnes is the beginninge of verie great graces and especially of three The first is the loue God For as Aristotle saieth goodnes is amiable of it selfe and euerie man is naturallie most inclined to loue his owne proper weale Seinge therefore that men be naturally such louers of them selues and of their owne proper commoditie when they see plainlie that all that they haue cōmeth of the gracious goodnes of that cheifest benefactor forthewith they be moued to loue and wishe well vnto him whom they perceiue and acknowledge to haue bestowed so great benefites vpon them And hereof it commeth that emonge the considerations that doe most helpe vs to attayne vnto the loue of God one of the most principall is the consideration of the benefites of almightie God For euerie one of these benefites is as it were a fyerbrande that quickeneth and enkendeleth more and more the flame of this loue and so consequently to consider many of these benefites is to ioyne manie fyerbrandes together whereby the flame of this fyer is enkendeled more and more in vs. This consideration helpeth also to stirre vp a desire in a man to serue almightie God when he considereth the great bownden duetie The consideration of Gods benefites stirreth vp a desire in a man to serue God that he oweth vnto him vnto whō he is so much indetted For if the verie birdes ād bruite beastes be moued herewith to answere vnto the voice of him that calleth them and doe obeye as though they were reasonable creatures vnto all such thinges as are commaunded them how much greater prouocations haue we to doe the like vnto almightie God that haue receiued farre more than they and be able to vnderstande farre better then they what greate and inestimable benefites we haue receyued of God This consideration is also profitable to stirre and prouoke in our sowles a sorowe and repentance for our synnes The consideration of Gods benefites stirreth vp a sorowe ād repentaunce in vs for our synnes For when a man considereth and weigheth deepely on the one syde the multitude of benefites he hath receyued of almightie God and on the other syde the great nomber of offences he hath committed against him how can he chuse but be ashamed of him selfe How can it be but that he must needes be confounded and discerne muche better the blacke by comparinge it with the white I meane hereby he shall much better discerne the greatnes of his owne wickednes by cōparinge the same with the greatnes of Gods passinge great goodnes who hathe continued so longe time in doinge good vnto him that contrariewise hath continued euermore for his parte in heapinge synne vpon synne against almightie God For these three endes therefore owght a man to cōsider the benefites of almightie God and withall in the consideration of them to geue him most humble thankes for the same So that when he setteth him selfe to meditate vpon the benefites of almightie God he must then be carefull to haue his recourses vnto these three poyntes in their due places applyenge his harte sometimes to loue him who hath bene so greately beneficiall vnto him some times to desire to serue him sometimes agayne to be sorowfull and repentant for his sinnes yea and sometimes also to offer vnto him sacrifice of praise and thankes geuinge for his so manifolde benefittes These sacrifices are signified by those calues of our lippes Osea 14.3 which the Prophet woulde haue vs to offer vnto almightie God for the benefites that we haue receyued of him True it is that the benefites of almightie God be innumerable but we will treate here onely of fiue kindes of benefittes which are of all others the most cheife and principall and whereunto all the other maie be reduced These fiue are the benefites of creation conseruation redemption vocation and finally the particuler and secrete benefites that euerie particuler person maie recognise and acknowledge in him selfe And it is not required of a man to thinke vpon all these benefites at one time but it shall suffice to thinke vpon one or twoe or three of them and to consider and pondre them well and diligentlie in his minde The exercises of meditation are not to be vsed as a taske but to be taken moderatlie as a daylie foode for the sowle For the exercises of meditation are not to be taken in lumpes as a taske that must be fullie wrought and finished within a certaine time but as a daily foode and sustenance which the more moderatly and temperatlie it is taken and the better it is digested the more profitable and holsome it is to a man Of the benefite of creation § I. TO beginne now with the benefite of creation that thou mayst the better vnderstāde somewhat of the greatnes of this benefite thou shalt doe well to consider firste verie deepely with thy selfe what thou wast before thou were created This is one of the principall aduises that the masters of the spirituall lyfe doe vse to geue in this behalfe as
fiue kindes to witt to the benefites of creation conseruation redemption vocation and to the secrete benefites that euerie one hath receyued particulerly in him selfe As concerninge the first benefite which is of creation The benefite of creation Consider first with great attention what thou wast before thou were created and what almightie God hath done for thee and bestowed vpon thee before thou diddest merite or deserue anie thinge at all to witt he gaue thee thy bodie with all thy members and senses and thy sowle which is of so great excellencie created after his owne image and likenes for so highe and excellent an ende as to haue the fruition of almightie God And withall he gaue thee those three noble powers also of thy sowle which be Vnderstandinge Memorie and Will And cōsider well with thy selfe that to geue thee this sowle was to geue thee all thinges For it is cleare that there is no perfection nor habilitie in any of all the inferior creatures but that man hath the same in him in a farre more highe and greater perfection and by meanes of the vertue and habilitie of his sowle he is able to attaine vnto it Whereby it appeareth that by geuinge vnto vs this thinge alone to witt our sowle he gaue vs therewith at once all thinges together As concerninge the benefite of conseruation The benefite of conseruation consider how all thy whole beinge dependethe of the prouidence of almightie God How thou art not able to liue one momente nor to steppe so much as one steppe were it not by meanes of him Consider also how he hath created all thinges in this worlde for thy vse ād seruice insomuche as he hath appointed euen the verie Angels of heauen for thy garde and defence Consider moreouer how he hath geuen thee healthe strengthe lyfe sustenaunce with all other temporall helpes and succours And aboue all this consider well the manifolde great miseries and calamities into which thou seest other men falle euerie daye and how thou thy selfe mightest also haue fallen into the same had it not bene that almightie God of his greate mercie preserued thee As concerninge the benefite of redemption thou mayst consider therein two thinges The benefite of redemption First how manie and how great benefites almightie God hath geuen vs by meanes of the benefite of redemption And secondlie how manie and how great miseries he hath suffered in his most holie bodie and sowle to purchase these benefites vnto vs. As concerninge the benefite of vocation consider first of all The benefite of vocation what a great benefite it was of almightie God to make thee a Christian to calle thee to the Catholike faith by meanes of the holie Sacramente of Baptisme and to make thee also partaker of the other sacramētes And then if after this callinge of thee thou hast fallen into deadlie synne and thereby loste thyne innocencie in case now our Lorde haue raised thee vp from synne and receyued thee againe into his grace and fauour and set thee in the state of saluation how canste thou be able to geue him sufficient praises and thāckes for this so inestimable a benefite What a great mercie was it to expecte thee so longe time to suffer thee to committe so manie synnes and in the meane time to sende thee so manie diuine inspirations and not to shorten the daies of thy lyfe as he hath done to diuerse and sundrie others that were in the verie same state and laste of all to calle thee with so mightie a grace that thou mightest ryse vp againe from death to lyfe and open thyne eies to beholde the eternall lighte What a great mercie was it also after that thou wast conuerted to geue thee grace not to returne vnto deadlie synne againe but to stande and vanquishe thyne enemie and to perseuere in good lyfe This is that morninge and eueninge dewe that almightie God promised by the Prophet Ioel sayeinge And yee sonnes of Sion reioyce Ioell 2.23 and be glad in our Lorde God for he hath geuen you a teacher of iustice and he shall cause the morninge and eueninge dewe to rayne and poure downe vpon you Meaninge hereby that almightie God geueth vs firste his preuentinge grace 1. Grace preuentinge wherewith we beginne to sowe the seede of vertues and afterwardes he geueth vs his grace subsequent 2. Grace subsequente and finall and final which bringeth this seede to his full rypenes and happie ende These are the publike and knowen benefites Of secrete benefites But besides these there be other secrete benefites which no man knoweth but he onely that hathe receiued them Agayne there be other benefites also so secrete that euen he himselfe that hathe receiued them knoweth not of them and he onely knoweth them that is the geuer of them How manie times hast thou deserued in this worlde either throughe thy pride negligence or vnthankfulnes that almightie God shoulde haue withdrawen his grace from thee we falle frō God eyther throughe our pride negligēce or vnthankefulnes and vtterlie forsaken thee as he hath done to manie others for some one of these causes for whosoeuer they be that doe falle from God they falle by some of these meanes and yet hath not almightie God dealte thus with thee How manie euilles and occasions of euilles hath our Lorde prevented and turned awaye by his prouidence in ouerthrowinge the snares of the deuill thine enemye and stoppinge him of his passage and not permittinge him to execute his wylie practises and deceites vpon thee How oftentimes hath he done for euerie one of vs as he saiede he did for S. Peter Luc. 22. Beholde saiede our Sauiour how Satan goeth busilie aboute to sift you as corne in the barne but I haue praied for thee that thy faith faile not Now who knoweth these secretes Benefites positiue but onely almightie God The positiue benefites be such as a man maie sometimes vnderstāde and knowe them but those benefites that are called priuatiue Benefites priuatiue which consiste not in doinge benefites vnto vs but in deliueringe vs from hidden and secrete euilles that were comminge towarde vs who is able to vnderstande Wherefore as well for these benefites as for the others it is reason we shoulde alwaies shewe our selues thankefull to our Lorde and vnderstande how farre in arrerages we be in our reckeninge with him and how much more we be indetted vnto him than we are able to paie consideringe we are not able so much as to vnderstande what they are THE SEVENTHE TREATISE OF THE CONSIDERATION OF the benefites of almightie God Wherein the former meditation is declared more at large ONE of the greatest complaintes that almightie God maketh against men and wherewith he will most charge them at the daie of their accompte Almightie God will charge vs at the daye of our accompte with our vnthankefulnes and ingratitude for his manifolde benefites Esa 1. is their vnthankfulnes and