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A07489 The heauenly pro:gresse. By Rich: Middleton Middleton, Richard, d. 1641. 1617 (1617) STC 17872; ESTC S114542 286,451 938

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of the wise shall neuer erre If therefore thou shalt obserue these duties vnto God thy neighbour and thy selfe thou shalt wonderfully profit in sanctification of life 7 Prayer O Lord God whose all that is that is best of all who cōmandest thy seruants to shine with vertues the true ensignes of thy house and sendest into their hearts the desire of such excellent beauty kindle I beseech thee in our hearts the flaming desires of all vertues teach vs with prayers and groanes to seeke and obtaine them at thy hands that our vnworthinesse for the worthinesse of thy Sonne our Sauiour Iesus Christ may obtaine of thee who art a most bountifull giuer these true and euer enduring treasures Teach vs the nature of vertues that wee take not vices for vertues stirre vp in vs the loue of them that we may loue them and thee the author of them strengthen our armes by the helpe of thy grace that wee by holy liues setting vpon the City of glory may through the merits of Christ be possessors of it let our life be the life of the righteous that wee may die in Christ and liue in thee for euer Amen The conclusion of the Booke IF shall be obiected that this manner of seruing of God is most troublesome and withall most impossible in repect of our many frailties miseries and also our necessary and alloweable imployments in our vocations I answere that hauing fully acquainted our selues with the seuerall rules and instructions conteined in this booke the greatest part of bodily labour in the seruice of God will easily be cut off and we shall lay for a foundation that of the Apostles that bodily exercise profiting but little 1. Tim. 4. our chiefe care must be to reuerence and loue God in our mindes holy cogitations and good desires albeit yet those duties of our bodies may not as time and place will giue leaue be vtterly neglected For it is godlinesse onely that is profitable vnto all things But besides seeing we are to giue an account vnto God for the expence of our times as the most pretious guift of God it is very necessary that euery man haue a knowledge of some profitable forme of seruing GOD that hee may thereby labour so to spend the foure and twenty houres of the day and so consequently all the daies of his life that he may assure his owne conscience this his life hath beene life indeed and not death and so may obtaine the glory of eternall life and auoide eternall death in which all they doe euer die that liue in these insinit streights of the world and doe not make vse of their most deare and pretious time to that end for which it was leut them namely to know loue feare and reuerence God to delight onely in him and the things directed vnto him Therefore experience teacheth vs that there are three considerations which do not only inuit but ought also to enforce euery man but especially great persōs who thinke thēselues most exēpted frō this kind of seruing God duly in such a streight exact manner as this is to serue God The 1. is the nobility of him which serueth The 2. is his greatnesse and goodnes whō we serue The 3. is hope of reward These 3. if we do rightly cōsider thē with many other motiues very effectuall hereunto wil casily so cōmand our affectiōs that we shal neuer omit to serue the high God in this sort 1 The nobility of him that serueth ought to mooue him to serue well For a generous minde in some sort compels a generous man to perform the taske he hath vndertakē after the most sublime excellent maner that possibly he can that especially when he hath to doe with great noble and generous persons Therefore euery man as much as is belonging to this businesse must consider what himselfe is of how great nobility and worth And thus doing wee shall finde our selues to bee of much more excellency then the heauens nay the whole frame of the world seeing wee are created after the image and similitude of God and are his Sonnes if wee serue him a right and shal be heires of his eternall Kingdome This nobility of ours ought much to incite vs rightly and duly to serue God For albeit we may omit that it is iust that the generous should vse his generosity through his fidelity to serue duly nothing else doth so much effect that generous noble persons may come nere to that most high and true nobility which they wish as to serue the most high God For thus Psal 82.1 of men they become Gods and so become farre more noble then if they were borne of the kings line For that is true liberty and nobility and that onely in which the seruice of Christ is found to bee If the Sonne doe make vs free then are wee free indeede Io. 8.36 if hee inoble vs then are wee truely inobled And surely this is not without great reason Matth. 24.47 for onely those shall be kings of heauen and rulers ouer all their Masters goods As the holy Gospell telleth vs Yea in earth shall be more eminent and high then the kings of the earth For in commanding themselues they doe also command whatsoeuer things else But al those that serue not Christ are not onely the sonnes of Satan but euen at length are made his most vile slaues in eternall darkenesse Therefore if there be any whom the former cause namely that he may obtaine most excellent liberty dominion and nobility doth not inuite to serue God surely that man ought to be terrified with the great euill which in the second place is noted namely that so hee becomes the sonne and slaue of the deuill and for this cause should striue with al his powers to serue God 2 Wee must also ponder the greatnesse and dominion and the bounty goodnesse of him for whose seruice we were created And we shall finde that the dominion which God hath ouer euery one of vs also ouer all the Kings and great Potentates and States both in heauen and earth is without al comparison greater then the dominion that all the Kings great ones of the world hath aboue one base basket of earth nor are they indeed the true Lords of so much but God is so the Lord of all them that with one only blast he can turne them vnto nothing and plunge them all into the deepe dungeon of hell except they shall serue him but if they will serue him he shall so exalt them in another life that they shall truely acknowledge that whatsoeuer they possessed here was nothing else but a base basket of earth compared vnto those worthy things which there they shall enioy There is no cause that wee should in many words extoll the greatnesse of this Lord for albeit wee should neuer cease yet should it be nothing that we had said in respect of that which the
ought to doe vnlesse withall wee know the order and manner of proceeding in it and how wee ought to doe it therefore I will onely set before your eyes certaine short methodes and formes of meditation vpon euery of the matters of meditation before named and such as are easie for euery vulgar capacity to learne and frequent 1 Concerning Death these things may bee chiefly considered and meditated 1 What great and ineuitable necessity of dying is laid vpon euery man of what condition soeuer 2 How vncertaine a thing it is to know when where and how death will seize vpon vs. 3 How that in death all things in this world euen the things that were most endeared to vs will leaue and abandon vs. Or thus 1 What are the things which do vsher vs to our death and as it were leade the dance euen all all our infirmities and weakenesses all our griefes and paines in body or minde all the potions and receits of Phisick our friends and neighbours visitations and condolements 2 What things do accompany our death euen most bitter and extreme conuulsions and torments of the body the losse of our senses depriuation of sound reason departure of the naturall heate anxieties and troublednesse of the minde strong temptations and often fearefull visions 3 What things doe follow death buriall in the earth neglect and forgetfulnesse amongst those that seemed sometimes to bee incorporated into vs rottennesse stincke and loathsomnesse and lastly the iudgement of the soule either to the ioyes of heauen or torments of hell Or thus 1 That death is the most terrible and fearefull thing of all the fearefull things that can bee conceiued 2 That it is to be feared contemned and desired feared least it take vs suddenly contemned least the conceite of it should make vs saint cowardly desired least wee should seeme to die vnwillingly 3 How iust and reasonable a thing it is that euery Christian should with all care and diligence addresse himselfe to a fit and due preparation of well dying that hee may bee assured at what time soeuer death sets vpon him yet shall it neuer take him tardy and vn-prouided 2 Of the last Iudgement these things are principally to be meditated 1 Those most fearefull signes spoken of by our Sauiour in the Gospell which shall be the forerunners of that iudgement Math. 24. the powers of heauen shall bee shaken and all the kinreds of the earth shall then mourne 2 The renouation of the world 2. Pet. 3. There shall bee a new heauen and a new earth this present world being burnt vp with fire 3 The resurrection of all the sonnes and daughters of Adam at the blast of a trumpet 4 The Maiesty of that Iudge round about whom the whole Court of heauen shall stand 5 The account that must then bee rendred of all things that are done in the flesh whether good or euill the opening of the bookes of our conscience wherby the secrets of all hearts shall bee manifested to the whole world 6 The sentencing of them that haue done good vnto eternall ioy and glory Mat. 25.41 and of them that haue done euill to infinite and eternall vengeance and torment of body and soule of which sentence euery word is aduisedly to bee pondered 7 The most certaine execution of both those sentences how and how long time to endure euen for euer and euer and beyond all times 3 How to meditate on the torments of hell In this meditation thou maist contemplate these three points first the place it selfe and the eternity of it secondly the tortures of the body in that place eternally thirdly the torments of the soule euerlasting First conceiue that hell is a certaine perpetuall prison full of fire and other innumerable torments wherewith those are affected that die in their sinnes vnrepented Or thus Hell is a certaine eternall state and condition in which all impenitent sinners are tormented with that punishment that they shall want all the things that may make for their comforts and shall suffer all the things that may increase feare and horrour so that there shall bee the want of all good things mans heart can conceiue and the presence and aboundance of all euils wherewith either man in this world or the deuils in hell are tormented and all these to bee endured not for some thousands of millions of yeares but for euer and euer Heere then consider that whatsoeuer is in hell is eternall First the damned himselfe is eternall not onely in soule but in body too so that neither himselfe nor any other can kill him nor will God bring him to nought They shall seeke death but shall not finde it They shall desire to die Apoc. 9.6 but death shall flee from them so that God shall bee so farre from fulfilling their desires that their mad desire to bee brought to nothing shall encrease their horrible torment in seeing they cannot obtaine what they so infinitely desire Secondly the place it selfe is eternall Eccles 1.4 for as the earth and heauen are eternall so is hell also Thirdly the fire is eternall and vnquenchable Esay 30. For the breath of the Lord as a Riuer of brimestone doth kindle it so that it is not extinguisht not consumed Esay 66. and yet doth euer burne Fourthly the worme neuer dyeth the worme of conscience for the rottennesse of the sin of which it is ingendred and nourished shall haue no end and the liuely apprchension of sin and the punishment of it shall neuer cease Mar. 9. neither shall the cruell biting of it whereby it wounds the conscience euer haue any end Fifthly the decree of God is vnchangeable and eternall the sentence is past From hell there is no redemption no price sufficient to ransome them Sixthly all the punishments there are eternall because the sinnes for which they are inflicted are eternall in as much as the Reprobate if hee could haue liued for euer hee would euer haue had a purpose of sinning against God Why then will wee make our selues guilty of eternall punishments Why doth not this eternall fire feare vs Why doth not this breath of God this worme this vnchangeable decree of God disturne vs And heere further meditate first the continuednesse of these torments without any interruption or diminution for a moment nay rather by how much more as their wicked liues haue beene occasions of others damnations by so much their torments increase secondly yet for all this continuance there is no habite attained in suffering to make them the lighter but rather they seeme to be new and by the impatience of the damned to waxe fresh For euen as the pride of them that hate God ascends euer more and more so their anger Psal 73. fury enuy impatience and madnesse increaseth thirdly that it is an vgly and most odious place in which no light though all bee on a fire fourthly a most narrow place in respect of the multitude that
Hallowed bee thy Name where wee may meditate first that the name of God is nothing else but his knowledge honour renowne celebration and inuocation Secondly that to sanctifie this Name is to celebrate praise magnifie and glorifie him and that Hee and his Honour and Knowledge may bee such as all the world may acknowledge it Thirdly that wee first begge this of him because wee call him Father and our selues his sonnes and it is the part of sonnes to desire their Fathers honour as nothing doth more reioyce the sons heart then the glory of their fathers so wee being the sonnes of God ought to wish nothing more then that hee may bee acknowledged and honoured for this is the first and chiefe good of which the first and second Commandements and all the first Table chiefly treates This is the first worke of a Christian to wish that Gods name may bee sanctified and his owne name may bee condemned and obscured namely that God may bee knowne such as hee is in heauen and in earth that hee may haue all honour and glory that there bee no creature in which hee bee dishonoured polluted and blasphemed but as hee is holy in himselfe so hee may be taken by all his creatures Fourthly that in doing that hee commands and forsaking that hee forbids wee sanctifie and glorifie his name for wee cannot commit any act whatsoeuer against the Law of God and chiefly against the first Table but wee speake against this demand and hinder the fulfilling of it 2 Thy Kingdome come In which meditate first that the Kingdome of God is nothing else but the Preaching of the Gospel by which the Church is gathered which God rules with his holy Spirit and the abolishing of the Kingdome of sinne and Satan as also all the meanes that conduct thereunto as on the one side the word of God the Ministery of the Gospell the holy Ghost Faith Loue Vnity c. and on the other errours abuses false doctrine heresies schismes and the like Secondly that wee begge this in the second place because sonnes desire nothing more then that their fathers Kingdome may be inlarged that they may dwell in the more safety and honour For if the fathers be aduanced vnto high honours vnder their shadow their sonnes do raigne and what dignity soeuer their fathers haue they think it their owne so the sonnes of God desire nothing more then the amplenesse of his Kingdome that they may bee safe vnder his shadow Thirdly that of all others the Christians dignity is the greatest for hee comes from Gods House hee is a King of his Kingdome Ergo when wee put our selues into the seruice of the deuill and become instruments of his wrath how much worse are wee then the prodigall sonne that kept Swine When wee commit idolatry whooredome couetousnesse gluttony drunkennesse enuy hatred rancor and malice is it not worse then to be in Sampsons case ouercome by a harlot Fourthly that those doe oppose the comming of this Kingdome which are not lead with the Spirit of God by the Word which defend the impious Traditions of men and labour to extinguish the truth of God which defend with tooth and naile Idolatry by which Satan raignes which make of this Kingdome a temporall Kingdome to serue their lusts and ambition as all wicked Magistrates and Ministers doe 3 Thy will bee done in earth as it is in heauen In this meditate first that the will of God is to know and beleeue in his Sonne Ioh. 6. 1. Thess 4. also our sanctification and that all sorts of men may rightly and faithfully doe their duety and obey God that all the contumacy of all men and creatures being tamed their wils may bee to his so subiect that the same thing which hee willeth hee will effect that wee also may will and doe the same Secondly that wee aske this fulfilling of his will after the comming of his Kingdome because heerein is the felicity of the Kingdome and Family that all bee obedient to the authority of the King and Father and that all things may depend vpon his will For God raignes not in vs except we obey him and so our felicity in the House of GOD consists heerein that wee are obedient vnto him Thirdly that we beg of him that hee will frustrate all our desires that are contrary to his will that hee will frame in vs new mindes and new hearts that wee aske nothing of our selues but rather that his Spirit may gouerne our desires to haue a ful consent with God that wee may haue obedience patience perseuerance in the crosse and all this so perfectly as the Angels in heauen doe performe his Will Fourthly that all free-will and power to doe any good of our selues is quite extinguished That who beleeue not in the Sonne obey not the word of God pray not for the Spirit of God are impatient vnder the Crosse doe oppose this will of God 4 Giue vs this day our dayly bread meditate herein first that this bread is nothing else but all things appertayning to the bodie and soule meat drinke clothing health defence peace good successe and all spirituall blessings secondly that we first begge this bread of God for that as sonnes doe aske bread of their fathers so doe wee the sonnes of God aske necessaries of God And the will of God cannot be done in vs except wee be nourished with the bread of God thirdly that albeit wee are commaunded to get our bread with the sweate of our browes yet wee must begge it of him because we must not ascribe it to our labour and industry that wee are nourished but to the onely blessing of God who prospers our labors which other wise would be in vaine Besides it is not by the substance of the meate that we are fedde but by the only power of God for they haue no such naturall power from heauen but God administers it from heauen as to the instrumēts of his bounty fourthly that it is our bread albeit wee begge it of God first ours because by the bounty of GOD it is made ours albeit not due vnto vs secondly ours that we might learne to temper our selues from desiring other mens bread and to be content with that which by lawfull means doth come vnto vs as out of the hand of God thirdly because albeit that it bee the blessing of God yet it is destinated vnto vs for our conseruation as necessary for vs fourthly because as the corporall food so the bread of Life the word of God is ours fiftly because we ought so to aske this bread of God that wee may haue to breake vnto others sixtly for that not for our selues but also for others we must aske it seuenthly that it is so our daily bread that without by both sorts of it daily receiued we be nourished wee come to ruine Whence consider mans misery for except nourished with foode wee cannot continue eightly that it is giuen vs for onely God can
Eare and Audition Mynde and Meditation Hart and Affection Hand and Action THE HEAUENLY PROGRESSE By Rich Middleton LONDON Printed by Nicholas Okes. 1617. ❧ TO THE truely Great and grace-full Prince CHARLES Prince of WALES SIR I Well fore-see not only how vn worthy I may be esteemed to present your Highnesse with any furtherances of piety being already so richly adorned with plenty of al rare and diuine habiliments of the soule but with all how vn-welcome I shall be to such as doate on their owne shadowes in the meane while dis-liking defacing and dis commending euen the straightest statures and beautifullest parts in others who are not of their owne hue constitution and complexion Se● For nunquam desunt qui etiam per ornamenta ferient There will neuer want some to wound a man euen through the sides of his best ornaments and graces But albeit I presume not of that happinesse of learning and iudgement Plin sccun either to act things worth the writing or write things worth the reading which is I confesse a shred of outward and temporall happinesse yet I hold it no presumption to affirme seeing herein I seek not mine owne Phil. 2.21 but that which is Iesus Christs that to goe this Heauenly Progresse and to take delight in it is the true and onely way to eteruizer he soule in blisse 1 Sa. 2.30 hauing Gods hand and seale to warrant that he will honor them that thus honor him Ioh. 17.3 For if it be life eternall to know God and whom hee hath sent Iesus Christ and consequently to know a mans selfe then this Progresse leading directly vnto both must needs be worth the going and if it be true herein as it is most true which that wise Historian spake in another case Dinothi aduers histor absurdissimum est soris multum s●ire domi prorsus ignarum esse that it is most absurd to know many forraine affaires in the meane while being ignorāt of home businesse then whosoeuer will taste the ioyes of heauen must goe this Progresse on earth for this onely teacheth him to know wel both the things at home in his owne soule and the things from home in heauen where he would haue his soule Happy is that kingdome family and soule where wisedome and youth are so one that they are neuer sundered but sweetly kisse each other age and wisedome in the meane time not sequestred from the same condition For that makes kingdomes families and soules eternal and euen this happinesse is onely acquired by timely beginning and constantly perseuering to serue God in spirit and truth and walke in this Progresse Therefore it is well obserued that in buildings God and man do hold a different course man beginning euer at the foundation but God at the roofe he stretched out the heauens before he laid the foundation of the world by his naturall workes giuing vs spirituall instruction to follow his order euer begin with care of heauenly things Seeke first the kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof Mat. 6.33 is our Sauiours direction to as many as will build mansions in heauen For as the building rests on the columns and the columns on the bases so the eternall wel-being of the soule is sustained by faith whose foundation is in heauen accompanied with the glorious fruits of the spirit as the roofe at which all true Christians must begin their spirituall building For as we serue God so he serues vs if we begin late or neuer or for fashion or for carthly rewards and respects or faintly or out of his place to serue him hee keepes the same cor●●espondency with vs giues vs our hearts desire but with-all sends leannesse into our soules a false comfort for a false worship Psal 106. ●5 a false saith for a false religion a false saluation for a false profession For he that giues God his lips in stead of his heart teacheth God to giue him stones in stead of bread and he that rankes him last and reckons him least in the duties of his life teacheth God to set him at the lower end of the table of his earthly blessings and to reiect him from the enioyment of his heauenly One example for all as a glasse to behold the truth hereof Whilst Adam serued God God serued him he consulted for a mansion for him for meat for him for a sweet companion for him vntill he rebelled against him we reade of nothing but his works for Adam as if he had been hired to worke for him but when hee once lost his innocency then God tooke from him whatsoeuer he had giuen him he lost his wisdome his peace his liberty his glory his dwelling like that man that betwixt Iericho and Ierusalem f●ll among the●ues Mat. 25.29 For from him that hath not shall bee taken away euen that hee hath God is as a father deliuering a stocke to his sonne to trade with-all if he husband it ill at first he with-draws his hands frō●error blessings And as they that try vessels first put water into them and then wine when they find them staunch so doth God with vs he that is faithfull in a little shall be made ruler ouer much and he that begins to lay his foundation in heauen shall end with a glorious crown in heauen Now your highnesse hauing most happily taken your patterne from God and begun for many yeeres to build from heauen down-wards making that the corner stone my labour in this little Pro-gresse is to bring some materials to this worke and shew a method how to bring this goodly building to perfection that seeing it is not my happinesse as Paul to plant I may bee allowed as Apollos to water those rare and admirable seeds of religion and piety already sowen in your Princely heart For nihil in te mediocre esse contentus sum Ier. to tum summu totum perfectum esse desidero Lesse then exquisite perfection in all things is lesse then I desire may be found in you Therefore as the Gardiner waters his seeds and plants till they spring and waters them againe till they be aboue ground and lastly till they bring foorth fruit on the earth the seed the water the stalke the fruit and all being from the Lord of the ha●uest so must this and such like godly books and sweet sermons be suffered to water the garden of your heart seeing they are not onely as the sweet dew of heauen dropping downe grace into the soule but also as so many little chinkes by which the heart is kept open that the beames of heauenly knowledge may enter And so much the rather is this worke now to be entred vpon because as the foundation is laid so is the building raised either soone to ruine or for euer to remaine For as the arrow is directed at the first so doth it flie all the way either home ouer short or besides the marke so that whosoeuer shall
full of milke and bones full of marrow such as come in no mis-fortune like other men but yet when they shall haue their eies opened to consider the necessity of it and that as he said of time hoc mometū vnde pendet aetermitas Ber. this is the thing vpon which eternall saluation rests they will submit their scepters to his seruice who hath created all creatures for their seruice to maintain their scepters and greatnesse And the rather because in maximo honore minima licentia est the greatest honors haue least liberty to sinne and except we being vn-thankfull will become like beasts which stil drinke of the riuers without euer thinking on the spring they must return God greate homage for great honors Vilissimus reputandus est Symmachus nisi praecellat scientia samlitate qui est honore praestantior He is to be reckoned most vile of all others who excells in honor except he also excell in knowledge and sanctity For as no wife man loues that hawke which catcheth him a Larke and eats him a Hen so neither doth God regard that person who costs him much as the great and noble doe and yet doth him little or no seruice at all Besides the example of Kings Princes and Nobles is of much vse to the furtherance of vertue or vice Iacobs Ewes brought foorth sported Lambs according to the colour of the rods before them and men produce works conformable to the liues of great personages but this is a great euill that good examples haue not like force to serue vs to goodnesse as bad haue to induce vs to euill For as a man strucke with the pestilence will sooner insect a thousand then so many can helpe him being insected so one vitious many may more easily infect a thousand then so many can make one vitious man good For vice is heere in her owne foule and comes vp with-out planting with no paine much more when it is well sor●●●●ied without and well laboured too but ver●●● is ●●●●anger on earth like 〈…〉 throwen into the ground which after much care and labour prospers but slowly especially in the contagion of these times which are the dregs and sink of all ages in which vertue is a prodigious mouster and piety a fowle crime or at least sottish simplicity It is hard for flockes to feede among thornes and not leaue some of their wooll behind them so is it hard for an honest man to liue amongst such corrupt and contagious persons but hee must loose some of his innocency Therfore the Lacedemoniās wisely inquired what play-fellowes their children vsed for feare of hauing them tainted with vice But aboue all others it behoues great persons most not onely to haue care that they giue no ill example but also that they take none from such as are about them for as it was wisely said of worldly Gouernors Publius that male imperando summum imperium am●●titur So by ill gouernment of the soule in taking contagious example from others and giuing ill example to others is the kingdome of heauen lost and many by their ill example drawen into the same downfall Alpho●●s●s King of Arragon was wont to say th●●●s the Marigold ●orned it selfe to the motion of the sonne so the p●●ple are turned and tramed after the manners of the Pim●e R●● 〈…〉 nemo non eadem velit Sen. If the King follow holy courses there is no man but will do the same For as from the health of the head health is deriued to euery member and from the light of the sunne light is communicated to all the world so from the Prince and Gouernour goodnesse descends vpon all the people But as the head being sicke and weake all the other members languish so the Prince beeing stained either with auarice lust cruelty pride or any intemperancy all the subiects decline from equity reason and goodnesse and accommodate themselues to the disposition of the Prince Aen. syl lib. ●●in res Alph. It is storied of the same Alphonsus that vnderstanding how Pomegranades were by art made sweet sauory and delicate meat hee made thereof this excellent application surely euen our selues by our industry and holy art of example ought to make our subiects better beeing of themselues of a fierce and froward nature And surely he spoke well of Augustus Caesar that a good Prince teacheth his people to doe well by doing well himselfe and being imperio maximus exempto est maior great in power was yet greater in holy example For as the Ewes conceiued such coloured Lambes as the rods were that lay before them Gen. 30. so such as are the Princes actions such are wont to be the peoples conceptions cogitations and issues Whence it is that a Prince should so obserue his owne Law that his subiects might be stirred vp to the same and so settle himselfe to the seruice of God and obseruation of his Iawes that all his people by his good example might be drawn to do the like But seeing that as a ship without a Pilot sailes not whither it should but dasheth it selfe on the rockes and shelues and so they who study to serue God but yet without God wanting an order therein God being the God of order walke in a Labyrinth and maze falling into doubts whilst they seeke resolution like Cleophas that talkt with Christ and yet knew not Christ like birds fluttering but yet cannot slie therefore euen the greatest and wisest stand need to furnish themselues with holy directions and to labour by all meanes for a measure of grace and the feare of God to keepe out the ouer-flowings of vngodlinesse in our age wherein vices are become good manners and de-bausht humors and prophane vanities are past into nature and turned into complexion For Gods haruest in this world is but a handfull and that little remaines of people that serue Christ in truth can fearce get breath in this corrupt ayre it is so contrary to them They are here as fishes without water as the remainders of great massacres as peeces of plankes after the wracking of a great ship such a contagion is spread amongst vs all If then where God is best known he be ill se●●ed how much more where he is not knowne indeed at all If vices be ●●e in the sanctuary how much more in the body of the Temple and dwelling of the wicked In such a deluge of iniquity wh●● hel●● is there to keepe vs from drowning but by sincere seruing of God to worke his holy sea●e into our hearts And if we doe this it will easily be seen by our liues For when the kings Porter stands at the gate and suffers none to come in without examining what hee would haue it is an euidence that the King is within But when the Porter is absent and the g●tes open to receiue all that come it is an argument of the Kings absence so in a Christian when the feare of God is present
and defend that doctrine and piety which by their places they are bound to promote and defend As it is truly saide quod latet ignotum est ignoti nulla cupido what is hidde is vnknowne and vnknown vnloued and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the sight the affection is mooued Which we find iustly to fall out in such as haue tasted of the waters of the diuine fountaine that albeit they extinguish the desire of all other things yet do they so worke that quo plas sunt potae plus sitiantur aquae the more you drinke them the more you desire them And this your Highnesse wisdome industry in holy things which all men admire in one of your yeeres honors the noblenesse of your birth largenes of your glory fortunes makes more conspicuous re-markeable to all men For as the light of a torch by how much it is placed in a higher candle-sticke by so much doth it giue light to more in the roome so vertue and goodnesse albeit the splendor thereof doe euery where spread it selfe yet doth it more largely send foorth his beames when grafted in a high eminēt person And it is by the good hand of our God vpon vs so ordered in your Princely person aboue the most of your ranke in the world that as gold and siluer are apter mettalls to ingraue pretious stones in then iron or lead so is true nobility but more truly the noblenesse of your nature a better subiect to imprint any vertue in then those of a baser lower cōdition For as waxe is apt to receiue al formes so true nobility and most the truenesse of your noble nature is a disposition fitted by the hād of God to receiue the impression of any vertue Therefore God hauing done so great things for you aboue others you must not content your selfe to haue abandoned one vice or entertained one vertue but you must empty your heart affections of all the masse of corruptions and fill the cabinet of your soule with the rich treasures and lewels of all manner of vertues For as one vn-tuned instrument destroies the whole harmony of musick so the defect of any one vertue mars the sweet harmony of the soule And as a bird is staid frō flying away with a little string yea a strong man in swimming is held back by a little twig and often drownd by a little grasse growing in the bottom of the riuer so euen the least sin hinders our passage into heauen as it did Moses from going into Canaan But especially if sinne grow into custome for they seldom euer rise that haue the mil-ston of ill customes pressing them downe Therefore those that would safely arriue at the heauenly Canaan must banish the two pests of ill customes and il companions from them For whē a man once begins to like of pleasure and to dally with sinne straight way as many vanities flocke to him as Salomon had concubines Then he runs ouer reason treads on conscience goes by the word posts to destruction as if he ran for a kingdom much like a Larke that retires and falls faster then shee mounted The Crocodiles egge they say is at first no bigger then a Goose egge but her issue growes by little and little till it become eighteen foot long so sinne at first seems but a small matter but once enter and admit him hee will fill the house of the soule and prooue a monster And as it growes so doth the punishment too an arrow is swift the Sunne is swift but sin is swiftest of all for in a moment it is arraigned on earth iudged in heauen and condemned to hell O that I might once see great ones turne sinne but euen their great sinnes a begging for want of seruice as good seruants often goe a begging for want of maintenance But I am much afraid that as God looking downe from heauen to see if any would doe good and seeke after God said non est vnus there is not one So this kind of seruing God to shake off om sinnes and acquaint our selues with God may goe from Court to country from City to village from preacher to hearer and find none that will subscribe to it Yet is this required at all our hands vnder paine of eternall damnation For as Rebecca had not only eare-rings of gold but bracelets too so our armes must bee adorned as well as our cares we must not onely haue cares to heare well and mouthes to speake well but also hands to doe well And how can that be done if we giue our selues wholly to the pleasures of the flesh for as moist and plashy grounds bring foorth nothing but frogs so the belly and watry stomacke stuft like a tunne brings forth nothing but foggy thoughts filthy speeches and corrupt affections Therefore Physitians say that nothing is better for the body then abstinence Lawyers say nothing is beter for the wits but diuines say nothing is better for the soule The story tells vs of a bird with a mans face but so cruell to man that it will kill him yet afterwards seeing her owne face in the water like to that shee killed incontinent kils her selfe because she had killed one like her selfe What then will those men doe that haue not onely kild one like themselues but euen their owne bodies and soules by their surfettings drunkennesse vncleannesse malice pride enuy and other beastly intemperancies O why will we not liue ten yeers or twenty yeeres like Christians that we might liue not a thousand but euen millions of yeeres like Angels How long shall it bee a voice from vs a sound to you and so all the matter is ended that wee preach or write all going away like a boy in ones hand from our bookes and sermons remembring and applying nothing that is said or read as the stomacke except it haue power of retention makes no benefit of the meat so except wee lay vp these things in our hearts reading and preaching are but in vaine I will not presse your sacred Highn esse out of your Chaire of State as worthy Gregory did Basil pulling him out of his Doctors chaire from the profession of Rhetoricke to Diuinity saying Omitte ista da saluti ●peram leaue these toyes and haue care of your saluation for I know well it is your principall care to make your calling and election sure but giue mee leaue to put you in minde so to manage the things of this life which belong to profit or pleasure that you euer preserre the things of heauen and make the desire of heauē the moderator of all your pleasures and profits For the pleasures of youth are like gilded pilles very bitter like fresh riuers that euer end in the sea loosing their sweete rellish in an ocean of saltnesse True zeale cannot flourish vnder such a delicate gonernmēt nor yet the perfect knowledge of God he subiect to the paunch I know not how it comes to
consults with reason and finding that the thing is conueniēt for it it is then freely mooued to will and desire it Therefore the Philosopher said that nothing was desired that was not foreknowne Whence we collect that the knowledge of the soule which wee haue in our vnderstanding is like a light whereby the will may see what it ought to desire This therefore being presupposed we must chiefely regard that to doe well and perfectly the vnderstanding doe not erre in knowledge which bceing had presently the will is mooued to desire that which is so knowne but if the vnderstanding doe erre which often comes to passe by the malice which blindeth vs or happily it erreth not but the will through the liberty it hath to euill will not follow that it knowes to be good then man falls into all kind of mischiefe therefore omitting many things which may serue for this purpose this is chiefely to be obserued that we be most attentiue euer when we will vse the vnderstanding that when we would desire to do any good worke or to get a disposition thereunto namely to be despised of men to flee all delights of the world which godly men euer abandoned in these and the like which seeme to be grieuous vnto vs to doe or desire by and by wee must vse the helpe of the vnderstanding whereby wee consider and apprehend these things as most pretious and acceptable to God and such as doe accompany the godly men to heauen without which he is euer out of his way to that happinesse Which assoone as it knoweth to be such then the will takes courage to will and imbrace that thing and also to practise it For albeit the will as it is assisted by Gods Spirt worketh sweetly yet often the difficulty and sharpenesse of the thing so deters it that it fayleth to worke omitting the duty it is bound vnto but as we indeuour to make way vnto it by the vnderstanding as I haue said it will assume such courage and strength that the excellency of the worke being knowne albeit most painfull it will desire to do it and almost with as great facility will doe it as that thing which it naturally desireth Hee that workes after this manner shall easily become a man of singuler vertue and shall make a wonderfull repaire in his soule of the slaughter and ruine which sinne hath there made and shall also with great facility doe that which maketh men happy both in earth and heauen namely know in a great measure the wonderfull things of God and knowing to loue them and louing to reioyce in them contemning all earthly ioyes and pleasures for them 6 Instruction That God is pleased to giue to all his Saints and such as from the heart seeke to serue him such a strength of will whereby they may both desire loue refuse detest euery thing in a great measure which either helps forwards or hinders their saluation This is surely to be knowen of all as the chiefe foundation of all this discourse and of all holinesse of life conteyning a memorable Cannon of the freedome strength of will which God by his Holy Spirit hath renewed and repayred in the soules of his faithful seruants and so rowsing vp the soule from a dead sleepe and spiritual lethargie and benummednesse But here let no man deceiue himselfe as though this freedome of will were naturall and in his owne power for without the goodnesse of God 2. Cor. 3. wee cannot thinke a good thought as of our selues How much lesse can wee will or worke it But presupposing this wee say it is in mans power to desire or not to desire any thing which hee iudgeth to be desired or refused and that to this or that end as often as hee listeth as for the purpose There is no man but he may desire to be dis-reputed and dis-esteemest of men albeit thing to some men be difficult to incline vnto he may also to diuerse ends desire it and make choice of these ends as he listeth For a man may desire it thereby to obtaine the modesty of the minde which is a good end he may also affect it to the end that in something he may be like the Sonne of God which is yet a better end and he may wish it that by abiection contept he may be so disposed to God-wards that God may find in him an acceptable obedience by perfect loue charity this is the best end of all the rest Now to giue an example of refusing to will and desire a thing a man may omit and refuse and not desire to be esteemed or to be he loued before other men and that to the same ends which wee haue spoken albeit by corruption of nature he be inclined hereunto greatly to desire to be esteemed and reputed in like manner as it is in euery mans power in some degree whom Gods spirit hath sanctified to desire or not to desire any thing so is it to doe the same as often as he will bend his will and vse the holy meanes thereunto Yea euery houre as by how much oftner hee inclines and inforces his will to desire or not to desire so much sooner shall he extinguish in the soule all vitious habits and ingender those vertuous For better declaration whereof let it be remarkeable that to produce the act of willing the thing which we abhor we must consider that God is hereby serued in that we doe desire this thing and incline ourwils vnto it and as it were vse violence to the will to effect it euen as the sicke desires the bitter potion because it brings health with it which yet he naturally hateth because it is bitter But the act of not desiring that which naturally wee wish and effect is whilst considering that the thing is not acceptable● to God nor profitable for vs we incline and in some sort inforce the will that it should not effect and desire it And this shall be truly not to desire when wee inforce the will albeit there remain a certaine repugnancy of sensuality as we see it fall out in the sick man who will not eat the meat albeit hee haue an appetite to it because it is hurtfull to him and it is something profitable for him to be vnwilling to eat it albeit the inordinate appetite hee hath to that meat be not taken away So we see that we may produce the acts of vertue as often as wee will being assisted by the mighty working of Gods holy spirit But we must consider that besides the continuall care we ought to haue of exercising the will to desire the good things that are to be desired and to omit and refuse the euill whereby the euill habits being rooted vp we may plant those that are good it concernes vs much most often to vse this present instruction whereby to restraine those first motions which do much confront and impugne euen men much giuen to vertue or
then other workes but much more glorious and pretious Yet doth such coldnesse bring no small benefit to such as are fraile for neither doth the greatnesse of the worke inuite them seeing they perceiue it not nor yet the taste of the thing adde any strength vnto them and from the one and the other of these it commeth to passe that in their labours their strength is defectiue Therefore it is 2. fit that we indeauour to apply some remedies to this soare hauing already seene the causes of this coldnesse The first remedy and most common to cure this malady is to prouide that the corrupt appetite as in the 4. Instruction may be healed and by and by those who before felt that coldnesse shall perceiue their former workes which they iudged to be admirable to bee indeed very abiect if they bee compared to the loue of God This doth the Apostle whose palate was most sound teach vs saving If I speake with the tongue of men and Angels 1. Cor 13. it I giue all my goods to the poore if I giue my body to be burned and haue not loue it profits mee nothing and yet must not these bee iudged to bee of small moment But besides after all these speaking of sublime workes hee affirmes them all to be of lesse value then loue The same hath the Sonne of GOD himselfe taught as wee haue already said Therefore it is manifest that loue is the chiefest of all workes and duties seeing without it all other things are nothing And without any further proofe this ought to suffice vs that the eternall wisdome of God which cannot lie hath willed chosen and commanded vs to doe this before all other things that can bee done in heauen or earth Nothwithstanding 2. There is another remedy more singular which will make vs something feele the inexplicable greatnesse of this worke of the loue of God and the meanes hereof is that wee vnite and most strongly glue our wills to that will which is of infinit excellency and that we ioyne them in that manner that it be caried to nothing else but vnto that which that infinit will would haue it for then shal our wills be of much value when our owne will being abandoned they haue the wills of that infinit will which is God himselfe for he euermore willleth loueth and reioiceth for the infinit good which he himselfe hath Besides for many causes God would haue vs to desire that which hee so greatly desireth 1 For his onely goodnesse whereby hee vouchsafeth to sublimate our wills vnto so great nobility that they should be in his sight of great worth 2 Seeing he hath created vs to so great a good it is iust that wee doe him some seruice but what duty can we doe him seeing his Maiesty hath no need of our seruice although it were the greatest that can bee imagined Wee say therefore that least wee should be idle seeing God hath no neede of any thing nor can haue more good then now hee hath it is very iust that we as the obsequious and dutifull seruants of so great a Lord all our liues long be herein imploied to reioyce at the good and glory of God himselfe and indeed euery one may easily see that it is most iust and of great weight that all things as well in heauen as earth omitting all other things should euermore be herein exercised to reioyce at the good and glory wherwith God is infinitly filled 3 That for which God would aboue all other things haue our wills vnited vnto him is for that being yet on the earth we should begin to seeke that infinit will from the fulfilling wherof all the blessednesse which wee haue or hope for in the heauens is deriued vnto him that is lead with this loue For it is true that learned Diuines do say that gloria nihil aliud est quam gratia consummata glorie is nothing die but grace consummate to possesse charitie here in a measure is to bee glorified there in abundance and so it is begun here but perfected hereafter But it is to our purpose to shew how this glory which is heauenly may be perfected by this loue wherein the excellency of this loue will appeare Therefore wee must consider which is also againe and againe to be read and pondered that all our ioy proceeds from the fulfilling of our owne wiss and by how much more our will desireth any thing and by how much more perfectly it fulfils that which it desireth by so much doth it obtaine a greater ioy To these things let vs consider that the blessednesse or perfect ioy in heauen proceeds from the vision beholding of God who in the same moment wherein he is seene infuseth into all that see him a most perfect knowledge that he is most worthy to haue all the good and infinit glory which he hath For assoone as they see him they become all prudent and wise so that euery one may see what is conuenient for him to which knowledge of God is ioyned the loue of God aboue all created things together with an ineffable desire that hee may possesse all the good and glory which he is worthy of which desire and most intense and inlarged will of euery man this cleere vision of God doth succeed whereby they know and see apparantly that the same their desire is farre more perfectly fulfilled then they are able to comprehend For they see and vnderstand God himselfe whom they so much loue beautified with so great good and glory that for the infinities of it they are not able perfectly to vnderstand nor yet are able to come to die defects or increase of the glory And againe that so much is euery ones ioy the greater by how much his desire is greater and more perfectly fulfilled And here is opened the largenesse of the glory of the blessed seeing their desire in such a sublime manner is fulfilled as that nothing can bee more excellent besides that desire is of the infinit good of GOD himselfe whom they doe more loue and desire then they doe the glorie which properly belongs to themselues Blessed is the man who on earth shall with an intimous will loue and contemplate the being glory of God seeing he shall thereby obtaine that hee may see his owne desire in as high a manner to bee fulfilled in heauen Who is he that can imagine how much of his glory the Lord without any diminution of glory in himselfe shall giue vnto him who dwelling on earth wisheth nothing else but the glory and greatnesse which that Maiesty possesseth all these things doc those words of Paul well declare Eye hath not seene 1. Cor. 2. nor eare heard nor hath it entred into the heart of man which God hath prepared for them that loue him And this hee saith because no man can conceiue how intimously those that loue GOD here doe wish and will in heauen that good which God possesseth and in what
a high manner this their desire it fulfilled and how much ioy they haue of the one and the other Therefore it is manifest of what great excellency this worke of the loue of GOD is seeing neither tongue nor pen is able to expresse it 3 Now hauing seene the remedite for this coldnesse of the loue of God what this loue of God is what is the beginning progresse and end of it It is fit that wee know how much and how often we must be imploied in this loue And surely so farre as briefly can be gathered wee must know that wee must euer or at the least by infinit turnes euen in the same houre if it bee possible exercise our selues in this loue yet that wee may bee able the more liuely to feele how wee ought continually thus to loue wee must obserue that if the exchange be commendable whereby one takes vpon him the labour of one houre or giues some small mony for the redemption of a thousand men captined by the Moores without all companion he shall and ought to thinke his time better bestowed that himselfe or any other man should sustaine death yea manie deaths that some other man for a most small time may loue God if that loue cannot be had without suffring of the same death or deathes euen for that small space of time and that is so true that it not onely hath place when he who for that smal space of time loueth God by that loue obtayning heauens glory but also if we were certaine that hee might by diuerse other seruices towards God in that small space of time obtaine the said glory which hence is manifest For that short loue hath in it greater good then the euill of of him that is suffred with much griefe who doth also wish death a thousand times Besides it shall yet incomparably be a greater good if we shal consider that for this short time of loue shall be rendered an increase of grace and further also an augmentation of perpetuall loue together with Celestiall glory And how great a good that is hee shall know who vnderstands what is the greatnesse of diuine loue And this being knowne it will yet more cleerely appeace that wee ought euermore or by inumerable vicissitudes to performe this so sublime a duty of loue that doing here that which is our duety wee may increase in strength to doe the same in heauen where those that ●aue obtained glorie doe so much more excellently loue by how much more they haue loued when they were on earth But if we ought by these inumerable turnes wee ought to loue this our most glorious God because the act of this loue is of inestimable goodnesse then let vs turne our selues to consider our owne negligence and mallice● and behold how bitterly wee ought to lament euery moment of our liues which hath passed without this loue Againe how much more grieuously wee ought to bewaile al those things which haue disioyned vs from this loue and such are all our sinnes by which we become capitall enemies and most contrarious to this loue and at the best brings a shiuering coldnesse and sluggishnesse ouer our hearts to so great a good and withall let vs consider of what great reprehension he is worthy that doth not intimously from the heart reioyce at euery thing which may promote vs to so great a good such as iniuries contempts persecutions and the like are And on the other side if wee doe not mightily lament as often as wee finde any impediment to so great a good such as humaine fauours and all other complacency and temporall delectations are Surely so reprooueable is it that we do not ioy or grieue at the things wee haue spoken by how much it is more better to suffer death a thousand times then the iniuries and persecutions which mans malice was wont to inferre or the sorrowes which wee can feele whilest wee flee the fauours of men and other things which were wont to be delight-some to vs. Againe that in so excellent a iouruey nothing may hinder vs wee must obserue that if sometimes for the debility of bodie or because wee haue not attained so great vertue in the soule as is necessarie to the suffring of aduersities it is necessary then that wee flee persecutions and the societies of such as affect vs with iniuries or to procure I some delicate and sauory things that wee may doe that with an actuall intention of greater euils and often lamenting for that in fleeing from aduersities we should depart frō that which is good which may promote vs to so great a good as is the loue of God and that taking vp these pleasant things wee should omit those bitter things vnto which by the malice of our negligence we are obliged And wee must doe this with an humble Prayer vnto GOD supplicating his goodnesse to strengthen verthe both in body and soule whereby hauing receiued power to resist our frailty for which by the defect of our power it was necessary for vs to flee persecutions or to take vp things pleasant vnto vs wee may bee without any impediment disposed to that same heauenly loue of him and his glory And that wee may the more cleerely know how worthy these our negligences are of reprehension whereby wee fall from this pretious loue it will be to good purpose to obserue that which wee haue written before of the hatred of our selues which is the foundation and primary disposition to this loue of God And because wee haue no balances on earth wherewith continually to weigh the same wee must aske of God that he would prouide vs from heauen and God graunt that our liues may neuer bee weary of the consideration hereof From all these is to be obserued what great madnesse it is not to procure that great glory in heauen seeing the sublimity of that glory doth necessarily follow low the seriousnesse of that loue and although the greatnesse of that glory were not much to bee regarded which is ordained for vs yet are wee much obliged to regarde that we may obtaine the greatnesse of the loue that being made glorious we may euer loue him who is most worthy of all to bee most highly loued But that we may see how we may be able often to loue chiefely when the taste in sweetnesse forsakes vs which of it selfe was wont to stir vs vp we must take a helpe from the sixth Instruction seeing God giues grace to the will to incline to this or that as often as the seruant of God shall prepare himself therunto frō al which the seruant of Christ may obserue what an infinit and irrecouerable losse we receiue when wee omit to loue God in euery moment of time wherein wee may loue him And if it bee to bee lamented whilest by neglecting of great dignities or earthly riches one receiues a great losse How much more lamentable is it seeing the losse is farre greater to omit euen for a
enemies of thy faith in mercy bestow vpon them all necessaries for the quiet and comfortable passage or this mortall life I bring before thee O Lord my Parents my Brethren my kindred my friēds humbly praying thee to giue vnto them all things which thou shalt know to bee agreeable to thy will and profitable to their saluation I bring also into thy presence all captiues imprisonned sicke tempted troubled agonizing and wounded soules and all such as are in any extreame and grieuous necessity that out of thy goodnesse they may receiue liberty health victory consolation a happie death and a full remedy and recouery of all their necessities and wants Yea I humbly intreat thee O most mercifull Father for all my enemies that in all things thou wouldest be good vnto them and that for the infamy which they haue east vpon mee thou wouldest giue vnto them honour for detraction a good fame for hatred loue and for all the euils practised against me all temporall things profitable for this life and in fine eternall saluation And now O my God and onely refuge I come vnto thee for my selfe and will declare before thee my owne necessities and miseries not that thou maist know them for all things are open and manifest vnto thy eyes but that whilst with mourning and griefe I pronounce them I may kindle in my selfe the desires of thy mercy and may draw from thee the remedies of my griese I haue sinned O Lord beyond the number of the sand of the sea my iniquities are multiplied against mee and I am not worthy so much as to behold the heauens because of the multitude of my sinnes against thee Yet in confidence of thy sonnes merits whose bloud was a sufficient ransom for the sinnes of the whole world I begge for his sake remission of all my sinnes and to be clensed from all mine iniquities Graunt vnto mee a sauing faith to hold fast on thy promises a true repentance that for the loue of thee I may detest all sinne and a safe protection that I be neuer intangled in the snares of Sathan Giue me true mortification of my judgement will affections and sences least being deceiued by these which are euer prone vnto euill I bee drawne from those things which are pleasing vnto thee Giue me a true contempt of earthly things that I may neither seeke for honours nor hunt after dignities nor desire riches or pleasures but that I may place all my honour all my treasures all my delights in thee who art the fountaine of all good things Deliuer mee from all temptations and guiles of my inuisible enemies but chiefely from them that come vnder the vizard of good least seeking after that which is good I should be pulled away from the true good Grant O my Lord God that that faith which thou hast giuen me may euermore bee preserued and increased in mee Lighten my minde with a supernaturall light that it may know the diuine mysteries and that it may more perfectly vnderstand those things which I beleeue concerning thee and thy Sonne Grant me a firme hope whereby I may altogether forget my selfe and may place all my cares in the bosome of thy prouidence and that I may conside that I shall onely out of thy mercy obtaine eternall life and all things necessary to the attayning therof giue mee perfect charity whereby I may most ardently loue thee and my neighbours giue mee a true resignation of my self and agreeable to thy will Cheere vp my minde with the presence of thy goodnesse pacifie my soule and conscience with thy peace inkindle me with the zeale of thy glory and saluation of my brethren powre into me the affection of compassion whereby I may compassionate and condole the miseries of others and according to my weakenesse helpe them Perfect in me O my Creator my vnderstanding with prudence and discretion that in all things I may hold a meane giue mee a docible heart that I may not frowardly persist in my owne sence and opinion Stirre vp in mee a true feruour and heate that I may not slackly and coldly but most diligently serue thee and adorne me with the virtue of attentiō circumspection that I may take heed of the euils of my soule which euery where daily lie in waite for me and that I may doe nothing by my negligence which may bee lesse acceptable and pleasing vnto thee Perfect in me O Lord my will by the power of thy righteousnesse wherby I may willingly submit vnto thy will and may giue vnto euery one that which is his due Subiect me to thy selfe by the power of Religion and giue mee the vertue and guift of prater that in all things I may seeke thy praise giue thee that worship which is due to thy great name Giue mee a heart penitent for my sinnes pious towards my parents deuoute towards my betters subiect to my gouernours thankefull to my benefactors affable to my friends simple in deeds and true in words Such a heart I say as may imitate the heart of thy deare Sonne and may euer offer vp vnto thee an acceptable sacrifice Perfect O my good Father the irascible part of my soule with the vertue of fortitude so that in all aduersities I may carry my selfe as becommeth mee and pressed with the burden of afflictions I may neuer be exorbitant from that which is right in thy eyes Giue me a minde in magnanimity conspicuous in things of my duety and thy seruice through security ioyfull contemning the goods of this world for thy sake susteyning all acerbities and sorrowes albeit many and long enduring and perseuering constantly in that which I haue well begun For it is the voice of thy Sonne that not he who hath begun and left off from his enterprise but hee that continues to the end shal be saued Perfect in me O my God my concupiscible faculty with the beauty of temperance whereby I may both flee all filthy things and follow after honest and holy things and in the care for my body may onely haue respect to my necessity Cloathe mee O Lord with abstinence and sobriety that I may hold all due measure in eating and drinking with chastity and shame fastnes that I may keepe my body which is thy Temple immaculate and cleane in his duty before thee With meekenesse and clemency that by thy helpe I may restraine all indignation and anger Cast not this my petition O my God out of thy sight but giue me that most excellent grace of humility that I may bee made the true disciple of Christ thy Sonne and my Lord and may account my selfe as indeed I am the most vile of all others and may truely contemne all the spend our and glory of this world giue mee in my actions modesty in my tongue silence and prudence in the vse of all things moderation and victory and conquest ouer all kind of curiosities that there may be nothing in mee that may displease
of omission and commission 4. Sorrow and detestation for our sinnes and a purpose of amendment 5. A due censuring and castigation of our selues for them 1. Our examination must begin with thanksgiuing for all his innumerable benefits This gratefull commemoration of benefits and humble confession of sinnes accusing our selues vehemently before God doth strongly impell and enforce our repentance for them Bas and obteine remission from God Hee that affirmes all our praiers should begin with thanksgiuing giues vs this counsell whensoeuer thou determinest to pray leaue thy wife thy children yea euen leaue thy selfe and depart farre from the earth and ouercome euen the heauens and leaue also all created natures as well which may as those which cannot bee seene and begin from the glorification of him who made all things Say vnto him I thanke thee O Lord for thy incredible clemency and thy wonderfull facility in bearing the sinnes of men who doest dayly susteine me with singular patience euery moment sinning against thee and giues vs all space and time and meanes to repent Euen for this cause O Lord thou holdest thy peace and bearest with vs that we might giue thee thankes who gouernest and moderatest the saluation of mankind sometimes by threatning sometimes by gently exhorting and who first by thy Prophets after by the cōming of thy Christ hast visited vs. For thou hast made vs and not we our selues thou art our God alone But if all prayer must begin with thanksgiuing much more this in which we would begge such light as might bring vs to the knowledge of ●our selues and obteine the remission of all our sinnes A generall thanksgiuing vnder one name comprising all the benefits of GOD is not very profitable a speciall repeating all his benefits is impossible for who can recount all his benefits Therefore a middle course is to bee holden and both certaine generall benefits and some particular of that day are to bee called to minde and thankes to bee giuen vnto God for them the remembrance whereof will something dispose vs to sorrow and repentance Thus then thou shalt say 1. O Lord my God I giue thee infinit thankes because thou hast from all eternity seene and loued mee and as by thy infinit mercy I hope hast effectually elected me to glory and by conuenient meanes hast predestinated mee thereunto 2. Because thou hast created me of nothing and made mee in thine owne image and hast inriched and indowed mee with infinit guifts both in soule and body 3. Because thou preseruest both my selfe and all other things with so long a continuance for my sake without whose actuall assistance wee had presently beene brought to nothing nor could wee haue lasted for one moment of time 4. Because thou gouernest and rulest mee and all things for my sake and disposest all things which belong vnto me with a most effectuall and sweete prouidence 5. Because thou hast redeemed me with thy most pretious bloud and by thy merits and passion hast deliuered mee from the slauery of Sathan 6. Because thou hast giuen thy selfe vnto me for a teacher a phisition a father and an example of holy life 7. Because amongst those little numbers of thy poore flocke thou hast called mee to the profession of the Gospell and to the knowledge and obedience of thy Maiesty 8. Because by thy holy Word thy Sacraments thy Inspirations examples of holy men godly bookes and many other holy meanes thou hast helped me to liue well yet dost helpe me 9. Because thou hast aduanced mee from the miserable estate of an enemy and as I hope in thy mercy to the dignity of a friend and with thy sauing grace hast iustified me and remitted all my sinnes 10. Because thou hast deliuered me frō innumerable daungers of loosing thy grace and fauour and dost not cease to deliuer me 11. Because thou hast inriched me with many both inward and outward graces gifts as well of nature as of grace 12. Because thou hast as I assuredly hope effectually prepared for mee from before the foundations of the world according to the good pleasure of thy will a sure degree of glory happinesse 13. Because thou hast this day admitted mee to pray and speake vnto thee fed me with the pretious delicates of thy flesh and bloud and hast continued mee in thy obedience 14. Because thou dost follow mee with other infinit benefits and ceasest not still to follow me through my whole life and for euer 15. Because thou hast ministred vnto me health and all such things as may serue to further mee in the obedience of thy Law 2 Thus hauing giuen thanks thou must then aske of GOD grace to know discusse and looke into thy selfe for the heart of man is wicked aboue measure and insearchable and who doth know it And seeing in the same place the demaund is thus answered I the Lord search the heart and prooue the reines Ier. 17. wee must aske of him who can doe it that hee would place our hearts neere vnto vs display the frauds and dissimulations of it and open the veine of the knowledge of our selues This praier must bee short that there may bee time also for the other points of the examen Therefore thus thou maist say in thy affection and minde Thou Oh most bountifull I beseech thee vnto all these thy benefits adde this one more to send mee light from thy glorious Throne and giue mee of thy abundant grace that I may know my manifold sinnes and so repent truly for the sins I haue committed against thee 3 Wee then come to the inquisition of our sins which for better vnderstanding we may distribute into thoughts affections words and workes namely what we are to discusse in these 3. Hugo lib. Med. The affections cogitations workes One saith that in our affections we must consider that they be right i. that they bee directed vnto that which they ought to be And secondly that they be sincere i. directed as they ought to be For to loue that thing which a man ought not to loue is euill and so to loue as a man ought not is also euill Therfore it is a good affection when it is vnto that which it ought to be vnto and also as it ought to be Amnon loued his sister and it was in affection vnto that which it should be 2. Sam. 13. but because he loued her wickedly therefore it was not as it ought to be Therefore the affection may bee to that which it ought to be and yet not as it ought to be But it can neuer be as it ought to be except it be vnto that which it ought to be in that to which it ought to be it is a right affection and how and as it ought to be it is a sincere affection 2. In the cogitations wee must consider that they be 1. Cleane and 2. ordered they are cleane when they are neither ingendred of ill affections