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A06447 The sinners guyde A vvorke contayning the whole regiment of a Christian life, deuided into two bookes: vvherein sinners are reclaimed from the by-path of vice and destruction, and brought vnto the high-way of euerlasting happinesse. Compiled in the Spanish tongue, by the learned and reuerend diuine, F. Lewes of Granada. Since translated into Latine, Italian, and French. And nowe perused, and digested into English, by Francis Meres, Maister of Artes, and student in diuinitie.; Guía de pecadores. English Luis, de Granada, 1504-1588.; Meres, Francis, 1565-1647. 1598 (1598) STC 16918; ESTC S108893 472,071 572

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Saint Isidore doth consent vnto this He that would sayth he be certaine of the remission of his sins in the houre of death let him repent whilst he is in health and then let him lament deplore his iniquitie and wickednes But he that hath liued wickedly and repenteth at the houre of his death it is most certaine that he is in very great ieopardy For euen as his damnation is vncertaine so also his saluation is doubtfull Surely these words are very dreadfull but those more fearefull which Eusebius the Scholler of Saint Ierome writeth and which his glorious holy Maister spoke being at the poynt of death stretching him selfe vpon the earth arrayed in rugged and course Sack-cloth but because I dare not relate them with that rigour that they are written least I should minister occasion of distrust and despaire to those that be weake and faint-harted let him that pleaseth reade them he shall finde them in the fourth tome of saint Ieromes workes in a certaine Epistle of Eusebius to Byshoppe Damasus as touching the death of Saint Ierome whose beginning is To the most reuerent Father c. Where amongst other things hee sayth But some man will say That man that hath done wickedly all the time that he liued and repenting at the houre of his death he shall obtaine pardon of God Alas how vaine a supposall and how false a meditation Scarcely of an hundred thousand men whose lifes haue alwaies beene wickedly led scarcely I say one deserueth fauour at Gods hands A man altogether borne and brought vp in sin who hath neither seene nor acknowledged GOD neither is willing to heare of him neither knoweth when he sinneth nor what repentance is vnlesse perhaps he sometimes dreame of it and altogether intangled in worldly busines whom the loue of his children whō he must forsake oppresseth whom infirmitie amateth vvhom the losse and griefe of riches and temporall blessings shaketh excruciateth because he seeth that he can no longer enioy them what repentance can he bring forth acceptable to God which he at all would not bring forth nor once medle with if he had any hope of recouery Certainly I will conclude as I thinke he that whilst he is young strong feareth not to offend God in death he deserueth not to finde any fauour of God What repentance is that my beloued children which a man onely maketh for this respect because he seeth that hee can liue no longer Who if he should recouer of his sicknes would becom worser then he was before I haue knowne many peny-fathers and helhound vsurers who may rightly be termed the deuils Alcumists or the deuils Mint-maisters that haue beene sorry and penitent when they haue thought that there was no way with them but death but after that they haue beene recouered their lifes haue beene a great deale more wicked and detestable then it was before This I hold this I thinke to be true this I haue lerned by long experience that his end is not good whose life was alwayes euill who feared not to sinne but alwaies liued in the vanities of the world Hetherto Eusebius by whose words it is manifest how suspected that repentance was to this holy Doctor Ierome which was made at the houre of death of him who had continued in sinne all the time of his life Neyther heere the iudgement of S. Gregory is to be kept close as concerning this matter who vpon these words of Iob For what hope hath the hypocrite though he be n●uer so couetous if God take away his soule Will God heare his cry when trouble commeth vpon him sayth God heareth not his cry in the time of trouble who in the time of peace and prosperity hath not heard the Lord crying vnto him in his commaundements For it is written Hee that turneth away his eare from hearing the law his prayer shall be abhominable Therefore the holy man beholding how those that contemne the law and all right paths doe at the last cast conforme themselues vnto prayer sayth Will God heare his cry Those words doe iumpe with those of our Sauiour who sayth Afterward came also the foolish Virgins saying Lord Lord open to vs. And it shall be answered vnto them Verily I say vnto you I know you not Because then so much the more seuerity shall be vsed by how much the more mercy hath now beene extended and then iudgement shall be seuerely and strictly executed vpon them whom now persisting in sinne mercy patiently wayted vpon These be S. Gregories words Another Doctour of the Church sayth It is a hard thing that then that is at the poynt of death true repentance should be when it commeth so late When as anguish and payne tormenteth the body and greefe oppresseth the sences scarcely can a man thinke of any other thing Greatly suspicious ought that repentance to be which seemeth constrayned The coniecture is easie that a man should thinke that himselfe is vnwilling to doe that which he hath no ability to doe Possibility doth very well proue the willingnes If thou doost not whilst thou mayst thou manifestly shewest that thou art vnwilling to doe Another Doctour of the Church doth also subscribe to all this Seeing therefore sayth he that a fruitfull repentance is not the worke of a man but of God by his mercy he can inspire it whensoeuer he will and reward those by his mercy whom he could condemne by his iustice But because there are many things that hinder and hold backe the sicke partie and him that languisheth and faynteth through sicknes it is dangerous and neere vnto destruction to protract and defer repentance till death But a meruailous great thing is it if God at that time inspire any man with true repentance Consider I pray thee how fearefull and dreadfull these words be Who then is so bold and audacious that dare expose this great treasure to so great hazard Is there any thing more precious in this world then saluation Who therfore is so inconsiderate and vnaduized that dareth presume to say that he doth not passing ill that committeth so great treasure to such danger These be the iudgements of the holy Doctours by whom we may euidently gather how great theyr folly and madnes is without an especiall care to sayle ouer this so dangerous a Sea of which the most expert and experienced Mariners haue spoken so doubtfully and with so great feare To dye well is an Art which ought to be learned all 〈◊〉 life long For in the houre of death so many and so great are the discruciatements that cause death that scarce remayneth any time to learne to dye well ¶ The authority of Schoole Doctours concerning this matter IT remayneth now for the greater confirmation of this matter that we see what the Schoole Doctours thinke of it Among others there is one that excellently handleth this matter agreeing in all things vnto vs putting and inferring this conclusion Repentance
glory Doe not therfore run ouer these things carelesly slightly sleepingly as without aduisement thou doost read ouer many other things oftentimes passing ouer many leaues desirous to see an end before thou hast wel examined the beginning but I would that thou sitte as a Iudge in the iudgement seate of thine hart that thou heare all these words with silence quie tnes of mind These things are not to be posted ouer hastily but to be looked to heedfully discreetly because in thē are handled the whole regiment of thy life and what soeuer thereupon dooth depend Consider howe thou wouldest that all the businesses of thys worlde should bee ordered and appointed for in determining these things one mans opinion cannot suffice thee but haue an eye that they be seene to examined scanned of sundry Doctors Aduocates and Iudges least happily thou offend in them Wherefore seeing that in this case we doe not speak of earth but of heauen not of thine but of thy selfe haue an earnest care that this thing bee not considered of slothfully and negligently but with the greatest attention If thou hast erred hetherto now at the length cast with thy selfe that thou art regenerated and borne againe and beginne to enter into iudgement with thy selfe and cut off the thred of thine errors and begin by another way to vntwist this webbe O who will nowe so blesse my labours that thou maist now credite mee and harken vnto me with attentiue eares and that like a good Iudge thou mayst pronounce thy sentence and iudgement according to those things which are spoken and approued vnto thee for this thy resolution should be truelie blessed and thy labour exceeding profitable I know assuredly that I request too much and that a wryting cannot be found so effectuall and preuailing that may effect and performe this request therefore in the beginning of this my worke of what esteeme or value soeuer it bee I intreat this one thing that he who is the power and wisedom of his Father who hath the key of Dauid that he may shutte and open heauen to whom he will would be heere present and so temper these my writings that they may yeeld a perswasiue spirit lyfe to those who shall reade them But if I shall gette no fruite of thys my labour yet this shall be a recompence sufficient for mee that I haue satisfied mine owne desire delight and that once I haue filled glutted my selfe in praysing commending a thing greater then all praise as Vertue is especially seeing that of a long time I haue longed and wished to apply my minde to this studie This also I haue obserued throughout all this worke which also I haue doone in all the rest of my labours that I might fitte and apply my selfe to all sorts and estates of men spirituall and not spirituall Clergie and Laitie that as the cause and necessitie is common so also this Treatise might bee as common For the good reading this shall be confirmed in the loue of Vertue being deeplie grafted into it they shall take deepe roote in it they that be not good perhaps shall vnderstand by this what they haue lost and forgon With thys our labour good Parents may instruct and teach theyr chyldren when they are but young that they may be accustomed from theyr infancie to haue Vertue in honor reuerence and to bee studious of it seeing it is the greatest ioy that a Father hath to see his sonne whom he loueth to bee a louer of Vertue honest in very deede and beautified adorned with all kinde of Vertue This doctrine moreouer will be especially profitable to thē whose dutie it is in the Church to teach the people and to perswade them to embrace Vertue for heere are deliuered in order the chiefest instructions titles and reasons which make vs debtors vnto Vertue to the which also as to common places euery thing may bee reduced which is written of this matter And seeing that heere are handled those graces and blessings which are promised in this world to Vertue which are displaied and vnfolded in her twelue notable and famous preheminences and prerogatiues and seeing that it is true that we haue all these good things and blessings by Christ it consequently followeth that this doctrine shal bring much light to the vnderstanding of the holy Scriptures especially to those places which intreate of the misterie of Christ and the inestimable benefite of our Redemption of the which amongst others the Prophet Esay Salomon in his Canticles and such others doe write more of purpose THE ARGVMENT OF THE FIRST BOOKE THIS first Booke Christian Reader dooth containe a large exhortation to Vertue which is the watchman and keeper of the commandements of GOD in which consisteth true Vertue This Booke is deuided into three principall parts In the first part Vertue is perswaded to be embraced of vs with those reasons and common arguments which are wont chiefely to bee alledged of the holie and auncient Fathers as are those bonds by the which we are bound to our Lord GOD as well by that which hee is in himselfe as by that which he is for vs by reason of his inestimable benefits and also by the necessitie of Vertue herselfe which is prooued and layd open vnto vs by the foure last things which are Death Iudgement Heauenly-glory and Hell And these are handled in the first part In the second part the same thing is conuinced and prooued manifestly by other newe reasons as are the commodities and profits of grace which are promised in this life to the students louers of Vertue Heere the twelue particuler prerogatiues and priuiledges are rehearsed by which Vertue is famous renowned and they are handled and discoursed of seuerally and by themselues Which prerogatiues although many times they are touched of the Saints and holy Writers shewing the light the peace the true libertie and ioy of a quiet conscience and the consolations and comforts of the holy Ghost which things the righteous enioy and all those excellent benefits which are circumscribed within Vertues circumference yet neuer any man was seene or read of me who handled this matter so copiously and in that order as wee doe Therefore it hath not beene vnto mee a little trouble or a small labor to bring together into one head all these things out of diuers places of Scripture to call thē by their propper names to reduce them into order to declare and display them and to approue euery one of them seuerally by diuers testimonies of the Scriptures and of the Fathers This diligence was very necessarily bestowed that they who are not mooued to loue Vertue for the hope of the good to come because it seemes to be farre off frō them at the least that they might bee moued with the profite of that inestimable good which Vertue affoordeth in this world But because it suffiseth not to produce all the reasons which proue
the print thereof in the heeles of my feete Such one consumeth like a rotten thing and as a garment that is moth-eaten And a little after Man that is borne of a woman is of short continuance and full of trouble He shooteth forth as a flower and is cut downe he vanisheth also as a shadow and continueth not Doost thou thinke it meete to open thine eyes vpon such an one and to bring him with thee vnto iudgement Who can bring a cleane thing out of filthines All these things said holy Iob greatlie wondering at the seuerity of the diuine Iustice which he saw that God did vse vpon man being a creature so fraile and so ready to fall into all euill who drinketh in iniquity like water But if he should vse this seuerity vpon Angels who are spirituall creatures and much more perfect it were lesse to be meruailed at but that God should vse it vpon man whose passions and euill inclinations are innumerable and that by exacting so strict an account that in his whole life hee doth not winke at one idle word nor doth let passe our minute of time ill spent this doth exceede and passe all admiration For who doth not feare and exceedingly tremble when he heareth those words of the Lord Verily I say vnto you that of euery idle word that men shall speake they shall giue account thereof at the day of iudgement Goe too therefore if an account shall be giuen of those words which offend no man what shall become of vnhonest words Of vnchast thoughts of hands full of blood Of the eyes of adulterers To be briefe of all the time of thy life euill spent in the works of iniquity If this be true as it is most true what tongue what eloquence can remember so great things of the rigour and seuerity of this iudgement which shall not be much lesse then the truth of the thing Or which can be equalized with it in any manner of respect How will wretched and miserable man stand astonished and amazed when in the assemblie of so many Senatours and in the presence of such a Councell an account shall be required of a little word which he hath spoken such or such a day without purpose or fruite Who will not be amazed at this demaund Who durst haue sayde these things vnlesse Christ himselfe before had spoken them Who durst haue vttered them vnlesse he had affirmed them What King was euer found that did expostulate or was greeued with his seruants for so small a fault O the depth of Christian Religion how great is the purity which thou teachest How strict is the account which thou exactest And with how seuere a iudgment doost thou examine search out all things How great will that shame be with which wretched and miserable sinners shall be there confounded When as all their iniquities and enormities which closely they committed within the wals of their houses whilst they liued whatsoeuer also vnhonest or filthy thing euen from their birth to their death they haue polluted themselues with all the corners of their hart and euery secret shall be discouered and opened in this Court before the eyes of the whole world Who there shall haue a conscience so pure that when these things shall begin to be done will not straight-wayes change colour and tremble throughout euery part of his body For if a man doth blush and is ashamed to tell his faults secretly to an other how great will that shame be with which sinners shall be confounded in the sight of God and all the world So great shall that shame be that the wicked as the Prophet testifieth shall cry out saying to the mountaines couer vs to the hils fal on vs. But be it that these be tollerable but what wil it be whē as those most sharp keene arrowes of that finall sentence shot from Gods mouth through their harts Depart from me ye cursed into euerlasting fire which is prepared for the deuil and his Angels Alas with what dolours wil sinners be tormented hearing this sentence When we can heare but a litle portion of his words saith Iob who can vnderstand his fearful power This voyce shal be so horible of such force that the earth in the twinkling of an eye shall be opened And sodainlie they shall goe downe to the graue as the same Iob sayth those which now take the Tabret and Harpe and reioyce in the sound of the Organs and they that now spend theyr dayes in wealth This fall Saint Iohn describeth in the Reuelation in these words And after these things I saw another Angell come downe from heauen hauing great power so that the earth was lightned with his glory And hee cryed out mightily with a loud voyce saying It is fallen it is fallen Babylon the great Cittie and is become the habitation of deuils and the hold of all foule spirits and a Cage of euery vncleane and hateful Bird. And a little after the same Euangelist addeth saying Then a mighty Angell tooke vp a stone like a great Milstone cast it into the Sea saying with such violenee shall the great Cittie Babilon be cast and shall be found no more After thys manner the wicked shall be cast into that pit and darke prison full of all confusion which in this place is vnderstood by Babylon What tongue shall be able to expresse the multitude and aboundance of paynes which they shall suffer There their bodies shall burne with liuing fire that neuer shall be put out there without intermission their soules shall be gnawne of the worme of conscience which shall suffer them to take no rest there shall be continuall weeping and gnashing of teeth neuer to haue end which the holy Scriptures do so often threaten and repeate In this place of desperation those wretches being damned raging with extreame madnes shall turne their furie against God and shall rage vpon themselues eating their owne flesh tearing their owne bowels most furiously renting one anothers flesh with theyr nayles and continually blaspheming the Iudge who condemned them to these paines There euery one shall curse his miserable estate and his vnhappie birth repeating without ceasing that sorrowfull complaint and those mournfull and forsaken lamentations of Iob Let the day perrish wherein I was borne the night when it vvas said there is a man child conceiued Let that day be darknesse let not GOD regard it from aboue neyther let the light shine vpon it But let darknesse and the shadow of death staine it let the cloudes remaine vppon it and let them make it feareful as a bitter day Let darknes possesse that night let it not be ioyned vnto the dayes of the yeere nor let it come into the count of the Moneths Yea desolate be that night and let no ioy be in it Let them that curse the day being ready to renue theyr mourning curse it Let the starres of that
things which then they estimated preiudiciall to their soules as if they were the men that had not doone that they did for the loue of God but onely for feare of the extreamitie in which at that time they were which ceasing also the effect ceaseth which thereupon followed Whereby it most manifestly appeareth that this repētance is like vnto that which Saylers make who when they are in extreamity and danger of shypwrack they promise to change their lifes to embrace vertue and I know not what protestations they make but vvhen the storme is appeased and ouer-past and a wished calme commeth and they are without ieopardy byand by they returne to theyr former vomit they laugh they trifle they blaspheme carouse and sweare and become worser then they were before making no account of their vowes and protestations yea reputing them as dreames and toyes The third reason is because the custome of sinne in vvhich the sinner hath hetherto liued will almost neuer forsake a man but euen till death waiteth vpon him and followeth him no otherwise then the shadow doth the body For custome is another nature which is not ouercome without very great difficultie And so we see by experience that many at the houre of theyr deaths are so little carefull for the saluation of their soules are so couetous so drowned in carnall and wordly things such louers of this life that they would still enioy it if at any price they might buy it so captiuated in the loue of this world so enamoured with all those things that they loued in it as if they vvere not at all at this passe or in this danger Haue you not often-times seene old men so greedy and so couetous that they haue neuer intermitted one houre nor slacked any time to hourd vp the pelfe of this worlde who notwithstanding are vnmercifull and haue theyr hands shut when they should doe any good and whose affections and appetites are very fresh and liuely in prosecuting the businesse of thys world heaping vp riches without end or meane which they must leaue in the world GOD knowes to whom but to anie good worke reprobate and dull This is a punishment not the least by which God punisheth sinne permitting it to attend vpon the offender to the graue according to that of S. Gregorie God chastiseth a sinner with this kinde of punishment that he permitteth him to forget and be vnmindfull of himselfe in the houre of death because he remembred not God in his lyfe And so one negligence or obliuion is punished by another the forgetfulnes of the fault is punished with that obliuion which is both a punishment and a fault which we see and heare verified by daily experience for how often doe we heare that many haue wished to die and haue died in the armes of theyr harlots whom they tenderly loued that as in theyr life time they would not expell them out of their houses so in death they would not forsake them because by the iust iudgement of God they are become vtterly vnmindfull obliuious both of themselues and of their soules The fourth reason of the Schoole-man is founded in the qualitie of the valour of the workes which are commonly done at that houre for euery one who hath but a sparke of Diuine light seeth plainly how farre different the works that then are done are from the works which are done of a man sound and in health he acknowledgeth I say that those much lesse please God then these That gift cannot be very acceptable to God as saith a certaine holy woman which therefore is offered because the last day so enioynes it for it is not of the right nature of a gift What I pray thee is it to pardon an iniury at that houre when not to pardon it is a great reproch Doost thou thinke it praise worthy that then thou leauest thy Concubine when thou must leaue her whether thou wilt or no neither may shee stay any longer in thine house By these reasons this subtile Doctor concludeth that a man with great difficultie in that houre truely repenteth Yea he saith that a Christian who of a set purpose deferreth his repentance to the houre of death doth very highly sinne by reason of the great iniury that he offereth to his owne soule and by reason of the great danger vnto which he exposeth his saluation Now I leaue the Reader to his owne conscience and consideration that he may see whether there is any thing more to be feared then this ¶ Certaine authorities of the holy Scripture confirming the precedent sentences of the Doctors BVt because the strength and bulwarke of all this disputation consisteth in the word of God for against this there is neyther appeale nor answere heare what it teacheth vs concerning this matter Salomon in the first chapter of his Prouerbs after he had related the words by which the eternall Wisedome calleth man to repentance hee in like manner adioyneth those wordes which shee will speake to those that doe not obey her call Because saith she I haue called and yee refused I haue stretched out my hand and no man regarded But all my counsailes haue ye despised and sette my correction at naught Therefore will I also laugh at your destruction mocke you when the thing that ye feare commeth vpon you Euen when the thing that ye be afraid of falleth in suddainly like a storme and your miserie like a tempest yea when trouble and heauines commeth vpon you Then shall they call vppon mee but I will not answere they shall seeke mee early but they shall not finde mee And that because they hated knowledge and did not choose the feare of the Lord. Hetherto be the wordes of Salomon or that I may speake better of God himselfe Which Saint Gregory in his Morrall bookes doth expound to be spoken of this repentance which heere we handle What can be aunswered vnto this Are not these threatnings sufficient being from God himselfe to make thee to feare and to admonish thee that betimes thou prepare thy selfe for that houre But heare also another testimony not lesse plaine then this The Lord reasoning in the Gospell of his comming to iudgement he aduiseth and counsaileth his Disciples with great instancie that they prepare themselues against that day hauing vsed many parables and similitudes to that end that by them they might vnderstand of what great weight that matter was His words be these Blessed is that seruant whom his Lord when he commeth shall finde watching But if that euill seruant shall say in his hart My Lord will be long a comming and so beginne to finite his fellowes yea and to care and drinke with the drunken The same seruants Lord shall come in a day when he looketh not for him and in an houre that he is not ware of and shall hew him in peeces and giue him his portion with the Hipocrites It is playne and euident by
whole matter dependeth For we must know that although the Diuine mercy extendeth to the iust and vniust calling these and expecting their repentance and preseruing the other neuerthelesse the great graces the notable benefits which God promiseth to men in the Scriptures especially belong to the righteous who as they faythfully obserue the law and commandements of God so faithfully God keepeth them he keepeth his promises with them and he is a true father vnto them as they are his morigerous and obedient sonnes On the contrary part whatsoeuer threatnings curses and seuerity of Diuine iustice the holy bookes of the Bible contayne all that properly pertayneth to thee and to such like vnto thee How great therfore is thy blindnes and blockishnes who fearest not so great cominations purposely intended against thee and comfortest thy selfe with promises not made for thee O miserable man haue an eye to those things that are spoken of thee and giue to the iust that is theirs Wrath belongeth to thee therfore feare but loue to the righteous let them therfore reioyce and be glad Wilt thou that I shall proue this to be true heare what Dauid sayth The eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares open to their prayers But the face of the Lord is against them that worke euill to roote their memory from off the face of the earth Such a like speach is found in Esdras The hand of our God sayth Esdras that is the Diuine prouidence is ouer all that seeke him in truth and his wrath strength and fury ouer them who forsake him Which seeing that it is so why ô wretched man doest thou continue in thy sinne vvhy doest thou deceaue thy selfe vvhy art thou so dull vvhy errest thou thus These testimonies of Scripture are not for thee so long as thou remaynest in the state of damnation the sweetnes of the Diuine fauour and loue speaketh not to thee This is the portion of Iacob it belongeth not to Esau. This is the lot of the righteous thou who art wicked what right hast thou here Leaue of to be wicked and it shall be thine forsake thine vngodly life and the loue of God and his fatherly prouidence shall protect thee and cherrish thee Which if thou doest not thou art a tyrant and doest vsurpe the rights of other men Hope in the Lord sayth Dauid and doe good And in another place Offer the sacrifices of righteousnes and trust in the Lord. This is the best manner of hoping doe not further abuse the mercy of God in perseuering in thy sinnes and in hoping that thou shalt come to heauen It is the best hope to flye sinne and to call vpon God but if thou continuest in thy sinnes this is not to hope but to presume this is not to hope for mercy but it is to doe an euill deed and to offend that mercy For euen as the Church doth profit them nothing who depart from it that they may doe wickedly so also it is meete that the mercy of God should not profit them who continue in their sinnes This before all things the dispencers and Preachers of Gods word ought to consider who oftentimes not marking before whom they make their Sermons minister occasion to the wicked to continue and perseuere in their sinnes They should respect that euen as a sicke and a diseased body the more it eateth the greater harme it taketh so also a soule hardened in sinne the more that it deceaueth it selfe with this kinde of trust the more it is hardened and moued to perseuere in sinne In stead of a conclusion that excellent sentence of S. Augustine shall be By hoping and despairing men perish By hoping naughtily in their lifes but by despairing worser in their deaths Therfore cease my brother and forsake this presumptuous hope remember that as the Lord is mercifull so also he i● iust Therfore as thou castest one eye vpon mercy that thou mayest hope so cast the other vpon iustice that thou mayest feare For as S. Bernard sayth God hath two feete mercy and iudgement we ought to apprehend neyther of them alone or seuerally for iustice without mercy doth not so make to feare as mercy without iustice doth make men continue and perseuere in a wicked life Against them that excuse themselues saying that the way of Vertue is rough sharpe and difficult CHAP XXVIII WOrldly and carnall men are wont also to bring another excuse that they may seeme not without cause to haue left and eschewd Vertue and Religion saying that it is rough and difficult albeit they are not ignorant that this difficulty ariseth not from vertue her selfe for she is a friend vnto reason and very well agreeth with the nature of a reasonable creature but from the euill inclination of our flesh and our wicked appetities which taketh the originall from sinne Hence it is that the Apostle sayth that the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and that these two doe striue between themselues And in another place he sayth I delight in the law of God concerning the inner man But I see another law in my members rebelling against the law of my minde and leading me captiue vnto the law of sinne which is in my members By which words the Apostle meaneth that the law of God and Vertue doe very well agree with the superiour part of our soule which altogether is spirituall in which the vnderstanding and the will is but her watch and warines is hindered by the law of the members and this happeneth of the euill inclination corruption of our appetites and the passions arising from them which are aduersaries to the superiour part of the soule and to God himselfe which discord contrariety is the cause of all this difficulty For this cause many alienate themselues from Vertue albeit otherwise they highly account of it as also sicke men doe who although they desire health yet they abstayne from and abhor medicines because they suppose them to be bitter and of euill tast Wherefore if we take this errour and opinion from men I take it that we shall performe a thing not to be repented of for this is the onely stay and let that hindereth them from Vertue besides this difficulty there is nothing in Vertue which is not greatly and especially to be desired and affected ¶ How the grace giuen vs by Christ doth make the way of Vertue easie and pleasant FIrst of all in this place we must know that the chiefest cause of this errour is that men onely looke vpon this small difficulty which is found in Vertue and lift not vp theyr eyes to those Diuine helps which God sendeth to ouercome it The errour of the seruant of Elizeus was of this kinde who seeing the army of the Syrians compassing the Citty and Horses and Charets begirding the house of the Prophet saw not the army of the Lord prepared
be predestinated For if any Prince who is to be the heire of a great kingdome doth passe by any way all the inhabitants their houses being left flock to that place that they may see him and they admire that blessed according to the opinion of the world estate which doth tarry for that young man because he is borne to be the heire of a kingdome how much more then ought men to admire and wonder at this most blessed estate That is that man is borne and elected without any merrit of his not that he may be a temporall King in this world but that he may raigne in heauen with God himselfe and with his blessed Saints for euer and euer world without end Therfore by these things my brother thou mayest easily know of that great bond by which all the Elect for this benefit are bound to their Lord and Electour From the which benefit let no man thinke himselfe excluded so that he will doe his duty and will not be wanting vnto himselfe yea let him giue all dilligence that by good works as Saint Peter admonisheth hee may make his calling and election sure for we assuredly know that he that doth this shall be saued we also know that the fauour and grace of God doth neuer faile and diaspoynt any man neyther will at anie time leaue or forsake him Therefore let vs perseuere in good works in the vndoubted certainty of these two truths and let vs hope that wee are of that happy and blessed number of the Elect. THE SEAVENTH TITLE That man is bound to follow and embrace Vertue by reason of the first of these foure last things which happen vnto him which is Death CHAP. VII EVery one of the fore-sayde titles ought worthily and of right to mooue a man to serue the Lord his God to whom hee is bound by so many names and reasons But because the greater part of men is more moued by reward and hire then by the debt to iustice that is as others speake rather by profit then honesty we haue thought it a thing worth the labour if to these afore-sayd we adde the great profits and commodities which are promised to Vertue as well in this life as in the lyfe to come Heere at the first we will speake of two especially amongst the rest of the Glory which we obtaine by Vertue and of the Punishment which we auoide by it These are the two oares by the benefit of which we row and saile out of the danger of this troublesome stormy Sea these are the two spurs by which we are pricked forward to runne with celeritie to the way of this life Hence it is that certaine holy men inspired with the holy Spirit haue wished that Preachers would preach altogether or for the most part of vertues and vices of glorie and punishment of vertues and vices that they may teach how to liue well of glory and punishment that they may moue and perswade to liue well It is also the opinion of Phylosophers the common iudgement of all men that reward punishment are the two counterpoises by which the Horologe of mans life is mooued For so great is the misery of our will that no man desireth vertue being naked bare and plaine to the which punishment is not adioyned or which is not recompenced vvith some profit And because no punishment nor reward can bee thought of greater then that eternall glory euerlasting paine wee haue purposed at this present to speake of them before which wee will sette other two because they are first in order that is Death and the Generall Iudgement Because each one of them being well considered of they haue great motions to incite and stirre vs vp to Vertue and to feare vs from vice according to that saying of the Wiseman Remember the end and thou shalt neuer doe amisse By the end vnderstanding those foure that we a little before haue remembred of the which wee will entreat in order according to the tenour of our purpose Of Death therefore we wil take our beginning which is the first in the number of those last things that happen vnto man which is so much the more powerfull to moue the minde by much it is more certaine more vniuersall and more familiar common vnto him Especially if wee consider the particuler iudgement of all our life which shall bee pronounced of it which shall not be changed in that generall Iudgement for that which shall be gyuen at the houre of death that same for euer shall be ratified How seuere thys iudgement will be and how strickt the account which shall there be required I wil not that thou learne of my wordes but of an history which Iohannes Climacus remembreth of which he was an eye witnes vvhich truly is one of the terriblest and fearefullest which I remember that euer I read these are the words of Climacus I will not omit to relate the history of that solitary monastical man who dwelled in Choreb When as of a long time he had lyued verie dissolutely and loosely and had not had at all any care of his soule at the length he was taken with a disease and brought to his last home And now when as an extasie had seased vpon his body after an houre he came to himselfe againe and desired all vs that forth-with we should depart from him the entrance of his Cell beeing stopped with stones hee remained vvithin twelue yeeres not at all speaking any thing to any man neither tasting any other thing besides bread and water There sitting and beeing amazed hee onely ruminated and reuolued those things which he had seene in that seperation of his soule from his body and in these things he was alwayes of so fixed stedfast a meditation that he neuer changed his countenaunce but alwaies continuing thus amazed astonished silently he poured forth aboundance of seruent teares When he was nowe at deaths doore and death beganne to seaze on him the entrance of his Cell beeing broke open vve entred in And when as we earnestly desired some instruction and doctrine of him vve onely heard thys of him Pardon me No man can abide himselfe should be drawn to sinne if hee in deed doth soundly carry in his mind the remembrance of death We meruailously wondered at him beholding him that before was so negligent and loose to be so suddainly changed and to be made another man by this most blessed change Hetherto Climacus who was present at all these things and what he saw he testifieth in his writings So that no man ought to doubt of thys deede although it seeme to some incredible especially seeing that the witnes is true and faythfull In thys story there are many things which wee woorthily ought to feare considering the life which thys holy man ledde and much more the vision which hee sawe whence came that manner of lyuing which afterwards he obserued thorow out al
thou hast loued with so an inordinate loue much lesse the Idols which thou adoredst what doe I say that they cannot helpe thee Yea those things which thou louedst most and which were in the greatest estimation with thee these then most of all shall vexe and torment thee tell me I pray thee when thou seest thy selfe left in this danger what minde or what courage wilt thou haue Whether wilt thou goe What wilt thou doe Whom wilt thou call vnto To returne to lyfe it will be vnpossible but to depart out of life it will be intollerable to stay longer in this life it shall not be giuen vnto thee what then wilt thou doe In that day saith the Lord God by his Prophet I will euen cause the sunne to goe downe at noone and I will darken the earth in the cleere day and I will turne your feasts into mourning and all your songs into lamentation and I will make it as the mourning of an onely sonne and the end thereof as a bitter day O fearefull words ô dreadfull sentence shaking all harts In that day sayth he the sunne shal goe downe at noone for in that houre the multitude of their offences shall be set before sinners and they seeing the deuine iustice to cut off the thred of their life some of them shall be strucken with so great feare and trembling and shall be so destitute of all hope and trust that they shall suppose themselues to be reprobate and vtterly excluded from the diuine mercy Be it that as yet they are in the noone mid-day that is that they are in the course of their life which is time as yet to for sake their sinfull wayes and to lay hold on Christ yet they shall perswade themselues that this time is ouer-past and that all grace and fauour is shut vp from them The most powerfull and mightiest perturbation of the minde is feare which supposeth euery small thing to be great and alwayes dreadeth things absent as present If a small feare of any thing doth this what shall that true feare doe conceaued of so fearefull and capitall dangers Be it that yet they suruiue and that they are placed in this life in the midst of their friends neuerthelesse they suppose that they as it were experiment and feele the dolours and punishments of the damned At one and the selfe same time they thinke themselues aliue and dead and they being caught with the sorrow of present things which they are to leaue they begin to feele the future euils which they feare They iudge them blessed and happy who are left in this world and of this enuy new sorrowes arise and increase Therfore then the sunne goeth downe at noone vnto them when they casting their eyes euery way shall see euery where entrance into heauen to be shut and denied vnto them neyther any beame of light shall appeare or shine vnto them For if they looke vnto the mercy of God they shall suppose themselues vnworthy that God should haue mercy on them if they flye vnto the diuine iustice they shall suspect that all cruell tortures are prepared for them and that hetherto their day hath beene but now that the day of the Lord doth hang ouer them yea they shall thinke that euen now it beginneth If they call to minde their life past euery part of that doth reprehend them if they behold the present time they see that now they are dying if the future time which is now at hand they see the Iudge sitting vpon his tribunall and expect iudgement from him Being compassed with so many causes of feare what will they doe whether will they goe The Prophet proceedeth And I will darken the earth in the cleere day that is those things which heeretofore were wont sweetly to delight thee now they shal exceedingly torment thee and shall strike and thrust through thy soule with intollerable stings and pricks of griefe It is pleasant and delightfull to a man liuing and in health to see his children to enioy his friends to gouerne his houshold to haue much riches and to possesse with pleasure whatsoeuer the minde desireth But then all that pleasure shall be turned into sorrow For all these afore-sayde with most bitter torments shall rend and cut in peeces thy miserable conscience and they shall be sharpe speares to wound their louers It is naturall that as the possession and presence of a thing which we loue doth ioy vs and make vs merry so the absence of the same thing doth bring heauines and sorrowe Hence it is that the sonnes doe flie the presence of their dying father and the louing and religious wife being full of anguish doth hide her selfe from her husbands face least by her presence she might encrease his dolours For although the soule being by and by to be seperated from the body hath a long and dangerous iourney to goe yet the great greefe doth not permit any obseruation of the termes of humanity and ciuility neyther doth it graunt the soule euen now iourneying before her departure to bid farewell to her friends If thou my Reader at anie time shall come to this passe thou shalt surely vnderstand that I speake nothing but truth but if thou as yet neuer camst into this danger at least beleeue them which haue had experience of these things For they that saile ouer the Sea as the Wiseman sayth tell of the perils thereof If therefore they be such and so great which goe before this dolorous and lamentable seperation what manner and how great doest thou thinke that they will be which shall follow after If the preparation be so great what shall the solemnity it selfe be For straight-wayes after death the account shall follow which that most iust Iudge shall require of the soule which how mightily it is to be feared I would not haue thee to learne of the men of this world who as they dwell in Egipt that is in a Land of darkues so they liue in great blindnes and intollerable errours But in this matter aske counsaile of the Saints of God who dwell in the Land of Goshen in which alwayes the light of truth shineth and they will teach thee not onely with words but also by examples how greatly this account is to be feared Without doubt King Dauid was a most holy man neuerthelesse so great was his feare which he conceaued being mindfull of rendring this account that he sayd in his prayer to the Lord Enter not ô Lord into iudgement with thy seruant for in thy sight shal none that liueth be iustified Arsenius was a holy man who yet when he should dye began to weepe and to tremble after that manner that his Schollers who stoode about him being moued at this his trembling asked and sayd vnto him Father why weepest thou Why doest thou tremble What doest thou also feare To whom he aunswered I feare in truth and verity and this feare which now is
the iust doe so greatly feare what shall the sinner doe When as the Cedar of Libanus is shaken what will the sprigge of the wildernesse doe If the righteous scarcely shal be saued as saith S. Peter where shall the vngodly and sinner appeare Tell me I pray thee what doost thou thinke of that houre whē as thou departing out of this life shalt enter into that iudgment alone naked poore without any one that may defend and maintaine thy cause besides thy good works which thou hast doone and only thy conscience wayting vpon them that tribunall vvill be very sharpe and seuere where it is not handled of life or death temporall but eternall And if in rendring thine account thou art found wholy oppressed with debts alas how horrible wil be the dolours and vexations of thy mind O how full of confusion wilt thou be and how aboundant in vnprofitable repentance how voyd wilt thou be of all aduice and counsaile and how destistute of all comfort Truly great vvas the trouble and distraction of minde among the Princes of Iuda when as the victorious sword of Sesac King of the Egyptians did tyrannize in all the streets of Ierusalem when as by the present paine and punishment they acknowledged their passed faults and old errors But there is no comparison between that confusion and thys of the which we now speake In that houre what will sinners doe vvhether will they turne themselues vvho shall defend them Teares will not profit them there all repentance will be barraine and vnfruitfull In that houre neither prayers shall be heard neither any promises shall take place or any suretieshippe be accepted When as the last moment of life is come and the houre glasse runne out novve there is no more time left for repentance But if these foresaide things will not profit much lesse shall riches nobilitie or honours helpe for the Wise-man sayth Riches auaile not in the day of wrath but righteousnes deliuereth from death When as the vnhappy soule shall see it selfe compassed and inclosed in these streights what will it doe what will it say vvith what other words will it lament this lamentable estate then with those which the Prophet vsed in times past when he sayd The sorrowes of death compassed me and the floods of wickednesse made me afraid the sorowes of the graue haūe compassed me about the snares of death ouertooke me Woe is me poore wretch into what a laborinth haue my sinnes ledde me How suddenlie and thinking nothing lesse hath this houre entrapped me How hath it rushed vpon me I neuer dreaming of it What doe now my honours profit me vvhat doe now my dignities helpe me What doe all my friends for me vvhat profit doe now my seruaunts bring me vvhat fruite doe I now reape of all my riches goods which I was wont to possesse For no a small peece of ground of seauen foote will containe me and I must be content with a dwelling in a narrow Coffin and vvith lodging in a poore winding-sheete But that which is worst of all my riches shall remaine heere behind me which I haue scraped together with so great toyle and sweating others shall enioy them and shall spend them on their pleasures Onely my sinnes which I haue committed in gathering them waite vpon me that I may suffer deserued punishment for thē What can I make now of all my pleasures delights seeing they are all ouer-past onely theyr dreggs are my portion which are scruples bytings of conscience which like thornes doe pearce me and doe runne through my myserable hart and shall torment it with euerlasting tortures O my intollerable blockishnes ô my madnes and folly to be cursed with a thousand execrations how could it be that I vnmindfull of thys time haue not prepared my selfe to eschew these present calamities How often haue I beene admonished of this day but vvith deafe eares I ouer-passed all counsaile vvoc is me why did I not receiue instruction vvhy haue I not obeyed and harkened vnto my Teachers and to the wordes that they taught mee I lyued irreligiously in the midst of the Church and amongst Gods people I haue polluted my selfe with all kinde of sinne With these and such like lamentations sinners will deplore and bewaile theyr miserable estate and these most commonly will be their meditations considerations and confessions But least thou my brother sholdest fall into the like straights I pray thee that thou wouldest examine all these things aforesayd with diligent regard and that they being often meditated vpon thou wouldest euery where and alwayes set them before thine eyes but amongst others lay vp chiefely these three things deepely in thy minde and in a faithfull memory the first of which is that thou consider the greatnes of the punishment which thou shalt feele in the houre of death for thy multitude of sinnes by which thou hast offended the diuine goodnes the second is that thou diligently ponder with what great desire thou wilt then wish so to haue led thy life that in that houre thou mightest haue God propitious and fauourable vnto thee thirdly that thou remember how great and how seuere a repentance thou wouldest enter into if time should be graunted vnto thee Therefore liue so now as thou wouldest desire and wish that thou hadst liued in that houre THE EIGHT TITLE That man is bound to desire Vertue by reason of that second last thing that happeneth vnto him which is the last Iudgement CHAP. VIII AFter death followeth the perticuler iudgement of euery one and after that the vniuersall iudgment of all when that shall be fulfilled which the Apostle sayth Wee must all appeare before the iudgement seate of Christ that euery man may receaue the things which are done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or euill Heere we will speake of the rigour of that strict account which shall be exacted of vs in this iudgement and what will follow after the sentence of this iudgement that man may see that he not onelie is inuited vnto Vertue but rather that he is drawne and constrayned First therefore we are to consider that one thing amongst other which holy Iob wondered at that although man is so weake a creature yet God who is so great and mighty entreth with great rigour into iudgement with him Insomuch that there is no word no thought no inordinate and disordered motion which he hath not written in the booke and record of his iustice that he may exact a most strict account of it After a long discourse he at length sayth thus Wherefore hidest thou thy face and takest me for thine enemy Wilt thou breake a leafe driuen too and fro And wilt thou pursue the dry stubble For thou writest bitter things against me and makest me to possesse the iniquities of my youth Thou puttest my feete also in the stocks and lookest narrowly vnto all my paths and makest
life by grace and the blessed in the other by glory Of the fift priuiledge of Vertue which is the tranquilitie and peace of a good conscience which the righteous enioy and of the torment and inward byting with which the wicked and vngodly are tortured CHAP. XVII AFter the ioy and consolation of the holy Ghost an other ioy doth succeede which the righteous haue from the testimonie of a good conscience For the more euident vnderstanding of this priuiledge wee must know that the Diuine prouidence which bountifully prouideth that all the creatures haue those things that are necessary for their preseruation and perfection when it willeth that a reasonable creature should be perfect hath prouided most plentifully and copiously that not any of those things should be wanting which belong vnto his perfection And because the perfection of this creature consisteth in the perfection of his vnderstanding and will which are two of the chiefest and principallest faculties of our soule one of which is perfected by Science the other by Vertue God hath created vniuersall principles of all sciences in our vnderstanding whence theyr conclusions proceede and in the vvill hee hath ordained a seminary or seede plotte of all vertues for hee hath put in it a certaine naturall inclination to all good and a dread or horrour of that which is euill so that the vvill naturally reioyceth in the one and is heauy in the other murmuring against that as against a thing which it naturally abhorreth Which inclination is so naturall and so effectuall that although by chaunce it be weakened through a daily custome of ill liuing yet it cannot vtterly perrish or altogether be extinguished We haue a figure of this in the booke of Iob in each of the calamities and losses of this man of God alwayes there was a seruant remaining which brought him word of the misfortune and misery After the same manner this seruant is neuer wanting nor euer leaueth him who sinneth The Doctors doe name this seruant the Keeper or Watcher ouer the conscience which in all shypwracks escapeth safe and among all the dead it onely dieth not which ceaseth not to present before the eyes of the wicked the good which they haue omitted vvhen they sinned and the euill which they haue committed In vvhich thing the care and loue of the Diuine prouidence shineth with a wonderfull beautie by which it loueth embraceth vertue after that it hath appointed for her a perpetuall stirrer vp that she sleep not a perpetuall Preacher that neuer keepeth silence and a maister who alwaies directeth her to all good The Stoicke Philosopher Epictetus very well vnderstood this who said Our Parents deliuered vs beeing children to a Schoolemaister or Tutor which might attende vs that wee should not be hurt but God hath committed men to bee kept of their owne conscience seated within them which conscience and Keeper is not to be contemned because it both would displease God and we should become enemies to our owne conscience Euen as this conscience is as it were a Teacher and Maister of good men so on the contrary part it is a tormenter and torturer of the wicked which afflicteth and excruciateth them inwardly without intermission accuseth sinners for their sinnes committed and mingleth Wormwood with all their pleasures insomuch that scarce they bite of the Garlicke of Egypt but a teare doth fall from theyr eyes This is one of those plagues with which the Lord in Esay doth threaten that he will torment the wicked saying And I will make Babilon a possession to the Hedgehog For by the iust iudgement of God the hart of the wicked which heere is vnderstood by Babilon is giuen into the power of the Hedghog that thornie and pricking creature that is into the handes of the deuill and also into the power of the thornes and pricks of the conscience which sinnes doe bring with them which as sharpe thornes and needles doe thrust through and rent the hart of man But if thou askest mee what be these thornes I say that one is the filthines and enormity of sinne that of it owne nature is so abhominable that a certaine Phylosopher sayd If I knew that God would pardon me and that men were ignorant of it yet I should blush to sinne for the onely filthines of sinne Another thorne is when the sin bringeth with it an offence or iniurie to another man for then as it were the blood of Abel is represented to his eyes which cryeth for vengeance before the Lord there is an example of this in the bookes of the Machabees all the iniuries and all the euils which Antiochus the King had doone at Ierusalem came into his minde hee beeing now at the point of death by the which remembrance he came into such tribulation and anguish and into those floods of heauinesse and sorrow that he said And nowe doe I remember the euils that I haue doone at Ierusalem for I tooke all the vessels of gold and of siluer that were in it and sent to destroy the inhabitants of Iuda without cause I know that these troubles are come vpon mee for the same cause and beholde I must die with great sorrowe in a strange Land Infamie is another thorne which followeth sin whicha sinner knoweth of will he nill he and therefore he cannot but grieue for naturally men wish well vnto themselues are afflicted with the contrary For there is not a more grieuous punishment as a certaine Wiseman sayth then publique hate An other thorne is the necessarie feare of death the incertainty of life the feare of rendering an account and the dread horrour of euerlasting punishment Euery one of these are seuerall thornes which grieuously pierce and prick the hart of the vngodly insomuch that as often as the memory of death commeth on one side so certaine on the other so incertaine he cannot but be sadde and heauy as saith Ecclesiasticus For he seeth that day which shall auenge all his iniquitie and bring an end to his vices and pleasures Neither is there any man who can altogether cast the remembrance of this from him seeing that nothing is so naturall to a mortall man as to die Hence it is that being in any dangerous estate hee quaketh and trembleth through feare being doubtfull whether he shall die or not for the vehemencie of his owne loue and the perturbation of feare maketh him to feare a shadow and to dread where there is no such cause Therefore if in the Land destructions and common infirmities doe arise as the plague Earthquakes thunder and lightning a sinner straight-waies feareth and is troubled and is altered through the feare of an euill conscience perswading himselfe that these shall light vppon him All these thornes together pricke goare and thrust through the harts of wicked men as very largely remembreth one of Iobs friends The wicked man sayth he is continually as one
in their soules as in an earthly Paradice and in an Orchard well trimmed and tilled in which he also is delighted So Saint Augustine speaketh writing vpon Genesis yea in man himselfe the ioy of a good conscience is Paradice Where-vpon the Church also in the Saints lyuing temperately godly and iustly is rightly called a Paradice abounding with the affluence of graces and chast delights In his booke also of Catechizing the ignorant hee sayth thus Thou who seekest for true rest which after this life is promised to Christians heere thou mayst also tast of it sweetly amongst the most bitter troubles of this lyfe if thou shalt loue his commaundements who hath promised it For soone thou shalt perceaue and feele that the fruites of righteousn es are more sweet then those of iniquity more truly and more pleasantly thou shalt reioyce of a good conscience amongst troubles then of an ill conscience amongst pleasures Hetherto Augustine Out of whose words thou mayst easily gather that the ioy of a good conscience is so much and so great that as honey is not onely sweete of itselfe but also it maketh that sweet which before was not sweet so a good conscience is so merry and so pleasant that it maketh all the troubles and tribulations of this world seeme pleasant and delightfull Furthermore as we haue sayd that the filthines and enormity of sinne doth torment the wicked so on the other side the beauty and dignity of Vertue doth make merry and comfort the good as in manifest words the Prophet testifieth The iudgments of the Lord which are his diuine commaundements are truth they are righteous altogether And more to be desired then gold yea then much fine gold sweeter also then honey and the honey combe But how the kingly Prophet was delighted in keeping the commaundements of the Lord he testifieth of himselfe in another Psalme saying I haue had as great delight in the way of thy testimonies as in all riches The which sentence of the father his sonne Salomon confirmeth It is ioy sayth he to the iust to doe iudgement but destruction shall be to the woorkers of iniquity Which iudgement is no other thing then Vertue her selfe and that a man should doe as he ought Which ioy although it riseth also from other causes yet especially it ariseth from the dignity and beauty of Vertue which as Plato sayth is beauty inestimable To be briefe the fruite and sweetnes of a good conscience is so great that Saint Ambrose in his bookes of Duties is not afrayd to say that in it consisteth the happines of the righteous in this life His words be So great is the renowne and splendour of honesty that the tranquility of conscience and the security of innocency make the life blessed and happy Moreouer euen as the Philosophers without the light of fayth knew the torments of an euill conscience so they knew the ioyes of a good conscience Amongst others Cicero in the bookes of his Tusculane Questions speaketh thus The age and time of man passed honestly and vertuously doth bring so great comfort that no griefe of minde doth touch them that haue so liued or if it doe it is but lightly The same man also sayth in an other place Vertue hath no larger or fayrer a Theater then the conscience Socrates being asked who could liue without perturbation He aunswered He that is guilty to himselfe of no euill Bias whē he was asked what wanted feare in this life He said A good conscience Seneca also sayth in a certaine Epistle A wise man is neuer without ioy and that proceedeth from a good conscience Out of which it is manifest how excellently these agree with that sentence of Salomon All the dayes of the afflicted are euill but a good conscience is a continuall feast A greater thing could not be spoken in so few words By which the wise-man signifieth that as they that sit at a banquet are made merry by the variety of meates and dainty cates and by the presence of their friends with whom they liue so the righteous are made merry by the testimony of a good conscience and by the sweet sauour of the diuine presence from which they haue receaued and feele in theyr soules so euident a pledge of saluation But the difference is this that the mirth of the banquets of this world are bestiall and earthly but this is celestiall and for euer that beginneth with hunger and endeth with loathing this beginneth with good life and perseuereth and endeth with glory But if the Philosophers haue had this ioy in so great price and esteeme without hope of any other thing in the lyfe to come howe much more ought Christians to exult and reioyce who knowe how great good things the Lord hath prepared for them both in this life and also in the other Furthermore although this testimonie ought not to bee without a holy and religious feare yet this feare doth not trouble or diminish that ioy but after an admirable manner dooth strengthen confirme and comfort it in whom it is By which it is insinuated vnto vs that then our hope is more lawfull and sound whē it hath this holy feare ioyned vnto it without which hope shall be no hope but false presumption Behold my brother heere is a newe priuiledge which the the righteous enioy of which the Apostle speaketh Our reioycing is this the testimonie of our conscience that in simplicitie and and godly purenesse and not in fleshly wisedome but by the grace of God we haue had our cōuersation in the world These be the things that can be spoken of this priuiledge But neither these nor many moe suffise to declare the excellencie of it to that man who hath not had experience of it himselfe For the tast of any delicious meat cannot be expressed or described with words to him sufficiently who heeretofore hath not tasted of it Seeing that without doubt thys ioy is so great that oftentimes when a godly man is much afflicted tormented and casting his eyes about no where seeth any comfort yet turning his eyes into himselfe and beholding the peace of conscience and the good testimony of it he is fully strengthened and filled full of wonderfull comfort For he vnderstandeth very well that all other things let them succeede as they will doe bring small profit but a good conscience is profitable for all things And although no man can be sure and certaine of it yet as the morning sunne when it is scarcely risen and is not yet seene enlightneth the world with the neerenesse of his brightnes so a good conscience although it be not fully plainly known yet it reioyceth and gladdeth the soule by her good testimonie This is so true that Saint Chrisostome sayth all aboundance of griefe trouble falling into a good conscience dooth no otherwise perrish and is extinguished then if a sparke of fire should
scarcelie it is knowne or noted in any man All these things doe sufficientlie declare how miserable thys seruitude is and with what a horrible punishment man is condemned for sinne seeing that for it the noblest creature is deliuered into the hands of so barbarous and cruell a Tyrant Ecclesiasticus hath expressed the nature of this beast when he beseeched the Lord that hee would put from him all wicked and vngodly desires that hee would take from him the greedines of the belly that the lust of the flesh should not take hold of him and that he might not be giuen ouer to an impudent minde As if he should say that he desired that he might not be deliuered into the hands of such a Tyrant or executioner For he supposed that such an appetite was worthy of such a name But if thou desirest to know how great the force and power of thys Tyrant is thou maist easily gather of that which he hath done and which hee daily dooth in thys world I will not send thee to the fables of Poets which tell vs how that most famous Hercules after he had conquerd all the Monsters of the world at the length beeing captiuated with the loue of a certaine lasciuious woman cast away his club and sat amongst other vvomen spynning and drawing out threds from his distaffe For so the woman that hee loued commaunded him yea if hee did it not she threatned him and checked him Thys those wise Poets fained more ingeniously then truly that they might shewe the cruell tyrannic and power of that appetite Neyther vvill I bring out of the holy Scriptures that known example of Salomon who beeing most holy and most wise yet hee was so besotted by his Concubines that his true God beeing forsaken he adored Idols and builded for them magnificent and stateli● Temples that hee might serue these impure harlots and his owne appetite although this example doth no lesse argue the tiranny of this most pestilent passion then that afore For I had rather bring those which daily are obuious to our eyes Consider I pray thee into what present danger an adulterous woman doth cast her selfe that she may satisfie her inordinate lust for it pleaseth vs to take an example from that perturbation seeing that the knowledge of the rest doe depend of the knowledge of one That woman knowes if she be found of her husband in an act so wicked and detestable that she shall be slaine without any hope of pardon shee knowes that shee shall loose together at one and the selfe same time her soule her life her honour her riches and all other blessings which she might hope for eyther in this world or in the world to come then which losse surely a greater nor a more vniuersall cannot be inuented or thought of She is not ignorant that she shall be a perpetuall reproch and scandale to her desamed children to her father and mother also to her brethren and sisters and to her whole family and that shee shall for euer be a griefe vnto them Neuerthelesse so great is the violence of this appetite or that I may speake better the power of this Tyrant that he forceth the woman to all these and easily bringeth her to so great danger and she doth willingly what so euer he commaundeth her What Barbarian or Tyrant was euer found in the world who could euer force his seruant to vndergoe so great dangers and so farre to obey him What captiuity can be found more hard or sharper In this estate all sinners liue as the Prophet witnesseth when he sayth That they dwell in darknes and in the shadow of death being bound in misery and yron That is in yron chaynes What darknes is this except that blindnes in which the wicked are conuersant as we haue shewed before seeing that they know neither themselues nor God as they ought to knowe neyther for what cause they liue neyther for what end they are created much lesse doe they know the vanity of the things they loue neyther this seruitude wherein they liue What be these bonds with which they are bound vnlesse the violence of their affections which holdeth their harts tyed with the most straight bonds of those things which they to inordinately doe desire And what is that hunger and misery which they suffer but an insatiable appetite and desire by which they are tormented about infinite things which they cannot haue Consider now therefore if any captiuity harder or sorer can be sustayned or borne But that thou mayst know this yet more plainely I will illustrate it by another example Behold Amnon King Dauids eldest sonne when as he laciuiously had beheld his sister Thamar he was so blinded with this darknes and so miserably bound with these chaines and so vehemently tormented with this hunger that he could neyther eate nor drinke nor sleepe yea he was so farre enamoured of her that he was sicke for her loue Tell me I pray thee what ones were the chaines of this perturbation or appetite with which his hart was bound when it so changed his flesh and so infected the humors of his body that a great infirmity followed vpon it But that thou mayst know that the remedy of this infirmity was not to haue obtayned that he desired marke how the same Amnon was further out of square and more greeuously afflicted and more vexed with a contrary affection after hee had satisfied his lust then he was before for the Scripture sayth And hee hated her exceedingly so that the hatred where-with he hated her was greater then the loue where-with he had loued her So that the rauishing of his sister did not free him from the passion but changed the one into another greater Is there any Tyrant to be found in the world who so often doth tosse and turmoyle his Captiues that doth commaund them to doe vndoe that forceth them to goe and returne the same way Certainely beleeue me my brother they are all such who are subiect to the like vices who are scarce Lords ouer themselues For they eate nothing they drinke nothing they thinke vpon nothing they speake nothing they dreame of nothing but of it So that neyther the feare of God nor their conscience nor heauen nor hell nor death nor iudgement nor oftentimes life it selfe and their proper honour which they so ambitiously loue and maintaine can bring them from this way or breake these bonds What shall I speake of their iealousie of their feare of their suspitions and of other externall accidents in which they are plunged night and day casting themselues headlong into most certaine danger of life and honour for this rauening and tormenting pleasure Is there any Tyrant in the world which after such a manner doth dominere and tyrannize ouer his seruant as vice rageth and raigneth ouer this mans hart For a seruant is neuer so bound to his Lord that night and day he doth wayte vpon him
this that the Lord very well knew of the counsailes inuentions and excuses of the wicked which they finde out to excuse and bolster out their bad matters and therefore he doth preuent them and shut the way before them and admonisheth them how their wickednes shall prosper with them and what euent their hope shall haue What do these things differ from thē which here we handle What other things doe we speake here but those that the Lord himselfe speaketh Thou art that euill seruant who meditatest in thine hart such like things as he did thou delayest thy repentance and thinkest that there is time enough left for thee thou eatest drinkest and perseuerest in thy sinnes Doest thou not feare these threatnings which he threatneth who is no lesse able to effect them then to speake them Who is of might to execute all things that he speaketh sooner more readily then to speake them He himselfe speaketh vnto thee he reasoneth the matter with thee he calleth thee he hath busines with thee he sayth vnto thee Watch miserable man and whilst thou hast time prepare thy selfe least thou miserably perishest in that houre of Gods iust iudgement But I seeme to bestow too much time and labour vpon a matter so manifest But what shall I doe when I see the greater part of the world couer their sinne and error vnder this cloake But that thou mayest more manifestly know the greatnes of this danger heare another testimony of the same Lord Then shall the kingdome of heauen be likened vnto tenne Virgines c. Then when shall that then be When the Iudge shall come when the houre of iudgement shall approch as well generall for all men as particuler for euery one For in this euery one shall finde his last day in this the last day of the world shal ouertake euery one because as euery one dyeth so he shall be iudged in this day as sayth Augustine At that time therfore saith our Sauiour it shall happen vnto vs as vnto the tenne Virgins fiue of which were fooles and fiue wise which taking theyr Lamps went out to meete the Bridegrome The wise whilst they had time tooke oyle in their vessels But the foolish as it oftentimes happeneth had no care nor regard of any oyle At midnight when men sleepe soundlie or when they are most negligent and voyde of care and least thinke of the day of iudgment a cry was made Behold the Bridegrome commeth goe yee out to meete him Then all those Virgins arose and prepared their Lamps And those that were ready went in with the Bridegrome to the mariage the dore was shut vp But those that were not ready at that time began to prouide and prepare themselues and at length came saying Lord Lord open to vs. But he aunswering sayd Verily I say vnto you I know you not And the Lord concluding this parable sayth Watch therfore for yee know neyther the day nor the houre As if he should say Ye haue seene how happy the euent was of these wise Virgins who were ready and how vnhappy the foolish Virgins were who wanted oyle Seeing that therefore yee know not the day nor the houre of the comming of the Bridegrome and seeing the busines of your saluation dependeth only of this preparation watch and be ye ready at all times least that day finde you vnprepared as it found these fiue Virgins and the dore be shut against you and yee be excluded from the marriage as they were excluded This is the litterall sence of this parable as a learned man doth expound this place saying Let vs take heede to our selues if it were but onely for this respect that the repentance which is deferred vnto death when that voyce is heard which sayth Behold the Bridegrome commeth is not safe yea as it is described in this ●arable it is as though it were not true At the length he speaking of the end of this similitude sayth The conclusion of this doctrine is that we may vnderstand how these fiue Virgins were reprobated and refused because they were not ready at the comming of the Bridegrome But the other fiue were admitted and let in because they had prouided Therfore it is necessary that we be alwayes prouid●d because we know not at what houre the Bridegrome will come Tell me I pray thee what could be spoken more manifestly for the illustration of our purpose Therefore I doe greatly wonder that after so cleare a testimony men dare yet trust to a hope so weake and vncertaine For before this testimony was brought forth I did not so much meruaile if they did perswade themselues the contrary or if they desired willingly to deceaue themselues But after that this heauenly Doctor and Teacher hath determined this question when as the Iudge himselfe hath manifested vnto vs the order and manner of his iudgement by so many examples who is so extreamely impudent or shamelesse without wit or reason that will thinke that it shall happen otherwise then hee hath foretold who himselfe shall pronounce the sentence ¶ Aunswers to certaine obiections BVt because thou mayest obiect against these things which we haue spoken How vvas not the theese yeelding vp the ghost saued by one onely word Wee aunswere vnto this that this worke was no lesse miraculous then the other miracles of Christ which worke and miracle was reserued to the comming of our Sauiour being the sonne of God into this world and for a testimony of his glory And therefore it was necessary that in that very houre when the Lord suffered that both things celestiall and terrestriall should be disturbed that light should be mingled with night and that the very elements should be shaken That the earth shaken in her very foundations which could scarcely support and vphold God on the Crosse should tremble and quake That the day the light being fled should assume a lamentable robe and after the manner of bewayling mourners should be cloathed with the sable habit of black heauines That the graues of the dead should be opened and that the dead should arise For all these miraculous wonderments were reserued as testimonies of the glory of his Person among the number of which was the saluation of this theefe In which worke his confession was no lesse admirable and miraculous then his saluation for his Nouell and Puny new sprung fayth acknowledged that which his Disciples gayne-sayed At that time the guilty theefe beleeued that which the elect denied The impiety of the persecutours raged the wickednes of the blasphemers exceeded the stripes and wounds shewed Christ onely to be but a man and the Apostles despayring after so many Diuine miracles onely this theefe resteth not nor stayed in the scandale of his crosse and death onely he is the witnes of his Maiesty who was a companion of his distres and heauines Seeing that therefore these wonderfull and miraculous things belong to the dignity of this Lord and to the
perceiue and know that I haue beene a true Prophet in these things which I haue admonished thee of Then thou shalt see thy selfe compassed about with dolours loaden with those things that are yrkesome vnto thee and miserablie afflicted with the presence of death wayting for the condition which straightwayes shall be awarded either that thou shalt be for euer happy or for euer vnhappy O perrilous estate ô hard and dangerous way ô sentence after which euerlasting death or euerlasting life is to be expected ô who can alter this Decree at that houre ô who shall be able to heare that sentence My brother now thou hast aduantage doe not neglect it now thou hast time make the Iudge thy friend that hee may be sauourable vnto thee Heare therefore and follow the counsell of the Prophet who saith Seeke yee the Lord whilst he may be found call vpon him whilst hee is at hande For now the Lorde is at hand to heare vs albeit wee see him not In the houre of iudgement we shall see him but hee will not heare vs vnlesse we be such as are to be heard now Against them that through the hope of the Diuine mercie doe continue and perseuere in theyr sinnes CHAP. XXVII SOme men there are that persisting and continuing in their wicked life doe cheere vp and comfort themselues in hope of Gods mercie and the merrits of Christes passion and to these as to the other their errour is to bee showen Thou sayest that the mercy of God is vnmeasurable infinite for he willingly would be crucified as a malefactour for sinners I confesse indeede that his mercy is exceeding great for it suffereth thee to vtter so lauishlie such cursed blasphemie as that thou wouldest his goodnes bounfulnes should be a fautour and a fauourer of thy wickednesse and that his Crosse which hee apprehended as a meane to destroy the kingdome of sinne should be made of thee a meane to strengthen and defence sinne and whereas thou shouldest offer a thousand lifes vnto him if thou haddest so many because he hath sacrificed his life for thee there thou takest an occasion to denie that one vnto him which thou hast yea vvhich thou hast receiued of him This grieueth thy Sauiour more then the death did which he suffered for thee for hee who neyther lamented nor deplored his own death most greeuously lamenteth and bewaileth thy sinnes in the Prophet saying The plowers plowed vpon my backe and made long furrowes Tell me I pray thee who hath taught thee thus to argue that because God is good and gracious thou shouldest conclude that it is lawful for thee to sinne and to follow wickednes The holy Ghost seemeth vnto me to conclude after another manner that because God is good and gracious he gathereth that he is worthy to be worshipped obeyed and to be loued aboue all things And because God is good it is meete that I be good also and that I should trust in him who although I be a most greeuous sinner yet is ready to receiue me into fauour if I with all my hart will be conuerted vnto him Because God is good and so good it is double wickednes to offend so great magnificent a goodnesse Therefore by how much the more thou doost exemplifie the goodnes of GOD by so much the more thou doost aggrauate thy sinne which thou committest against him And it is meet and equall that so great a sinne should be punished for it is the nature and dutie of the Diuine iustice which also thou esteemest not to be contrary but the sister and the auenger of the Diuine goodnesse that it should not leaue so enormous an iniury vnpunished Thys kinde of excuse is not newe or sprung vp of late but very old and vsuall in the world This in times past was the difference betweene the true and the false Prophets because the true did denounce the threatnings of God against the people and did exaggerate and aggrauate his iustice but the false on their owne heads did promise false peace and mercy But when the punishments of GOD did approue the veritie of the one part and the falsehood of the other the true Prophets sayde Where are now your Prophets which prophecied vnto you saying The King of Babell shall not come against you nor against this Land● Thou sayst that the mercy of God is great Thou which sayst so credite me GOD hath not opened thine eyes that thou mightest see the greatnesse of his iustice For if thou haddest thine eyes open to behold it thou wouldest say with the Prophet Who knoweth the power of thy wrath for according to thy feare is thine anger But that thou mayst be freed from this dangerous perrilour errour I pray thee let vs dispute of the matter a little and be ruled by reason Neyther thou nor I doe see the Diuine iustice as it is in it selfe that we may come to the knowledge of the measure of it Neither doe we know God himselfe in this worlde but by hys workes Therefore let vs enter into the spirituall world of the holy Scripture then let vs goe out into this corporall world wherein we liue and let vs out of them both reason what the Diuine iustice is that by this meanes we may know it Certainly this consideration will be most profitable For besides thys end which now we propose vnto our selues we shall reape also out of it another fruite for it will a fresh stirre vp in our harts the feare of the Lord which as the Doctors say is the treasure the keeper and burthen of our soules For euen as a ship is not safe without balas or lastage for it is easily tossed with euerie winde nowe no this side and now on that to the great danger of the shyp so is the soule endangered which lacketh the ballas burthen of the diuine feare This feare poyzeth the soule that the windes of worldly fauour or of diuine graces doe not tosse and pusse it vp and so ouerthrowe it Although it be defenced yet if it hath not his balas it is in ieopardy Neither onelie the Punyes and Incipients but also those that are growen old must necessarily liue in feare in Gods house Not onely the sinners and guiltie must feare who haue great cause so to doe but the righteous also are not to be freed who haue no such great cause to feare Sinners must feare because they haue offended and also the righteous least they should offend theyr faultes and misdemeanors past ought to strike feare into them but the dangers to come ought to terrifie these But if thou desirest to know how this holy feare is engendered and wrought in thee I say that it is wrought when it is infused by grace and it is preserued and increaseth by the consideration of the works of the Diuine iustice of which we begin now to speake Consider of them often and reuolue
them in thy minde by little and little thou shalt feele this feare wrought in thee ¶ Of the workes of the Diuine iustice whereof mention is made in the holy Scripture THE first worke of the Diuine iustice which the holy Scripture remembreth is the damnation of Angels The beginning of the wayes of the Lord was that terrible bloudy beast the Prince of deuils as it is written in the booke of Iob. For seeing that all the waies of the Lord are mercy and iustice vntill this first sinne the iustice of GOD was not yet reuealed which was hid in the bosome of the Lord as a sword in a scabberd This first sinne was the cause why this sword was vnsheathed Consider now how grieuous and terrible this first plague and punishment was lift vp thine eyes and thou shalt behold wonderfull things thou shalt see I say the most precious iewel of the house of God thou shalt see the chiefest beauty of heauen thou shalt see that Image in which the Diuine beauty shyned so cleerly this I say thou shalt see falling from heauen like an arrow and that for the onely thought of pride The Prince of all the Angels is made the Prince of deuils of most beautifull he is made most horrible and deformed of most glorious he is made most vilde and disgracious of one most acceptable gracious of all those creatures which God had made or euer would make he is made the greatest the most malicious enemie What astonishment thinkest thou and what admiration was this to the heauenly Spirits who know from whence and whether this so noble a creature fell With what feare did they all pronounce that of Esay Howe art thou fallen from heauen ô Lucifer sonne of the Morning Descend afterward a little lower to the earthly Paradice and there thou shalt see a case no lesse feareful vnlesse there had been a remedy vsed for this mischiefe For that the Angels should fall it was needfull that they all should actually offend But what hath the creature which is borne actually offended in why he should be borne the child of wrath It is not needfull that he should haue actuall sinne it sufficeth onely that he be borne of that man that had offended and by offending had corrupted the common roote of all mankind which was in him this I say is sufficient why he is borne in sinne The glory and Maiesty of God is so great that when as one onely creature had offended him the whole kinde deserued so seuerely to be punished For if it was not sufficient to Haman that great friend of King Assuerus that he might reuenge himselfe of Mardocheus of whom he supposed that he had receaued an iniury not only to punish Mardocheus but for the greatnes of his honour to cut off the whole nation of the Iewes for the deniall as he iudged of a small reuerence why doest thou meruaile if the glory and maiesty of God which is infinite requireth like punishment Behold therfore the first man is banished out of Paradice for a bit of an apple for which euen to this day the whole world is punished And after so many thousand yeares the sonne that is borne bringeth with him out of his mothers wombe the staine and blemish of his father and not when he can offend himselfe by reason of age but in his very natiuity he is borne the child of wrath and that as I haue sayd after so many thousand yeares After so long time this iniury could not be buried in obliuion being deuided among so many thousand thousands of men and punished with so many scourges Yea all the torments which men haue suffered from the beginning of the world to this day all the deaths which they haue vndergone and all the soules which burne and shall burne in hell euerlastingly are sparks which haue originally proceeded from that first sinne all which are arguments and testimonies of the Diuine iustice And all these things are also done and brought vpon vs after the redemption of mankind wrought and made by the blood of our Sauiour Iesus Christ Which remedy if it had not beene wrought there had been no difference betweene men and deuils for of themselues there had beene as little remedy and hope of saluation to the one as to the other What doest thou think of this punishment I thinke that it is a reasonable sound argument of the Diuine iustice But because this heauy and greeuous yoke is not taken away from the sonnes of Adam new and moe kinds of punishments haue sprung from it for other sinnes which haue beene deriued from that first All the world was drowned with the waters of the deluge The Lord rayned from heauen fire and brimstone vpon those fiue polluted and sinfull Citties The earth swallowed vp Dathan and Abiron aliue for a certaine contention that was betweene them and Moses A fire went out from the Lord and deuoured the two sonnes of Aaron Nadab and Abihu because they had not obserued the right and due ceremonies in the sacrifice neyther did the dignity of their priesthood profit them any thing nor the holines of their father nor that familiarity which theyr Vncle Moses had with the Lord. Ananias and Saphira in the new Testament because they lyed vnto S. Peter which seemed to be but a small matter fell downe dead and sodainly yeelded vp the ghost But what shall we say of the hidden and secret iudgements of God Salomon who was the wisest of all men and whom God so tenderly loued that he was sayd to be the Lords beloued by the hidden and secret iudgement of God came to that extreame abhomination and that most abhominable sinne that he fell into Idolatry What is more fearefull then this But if thou shouldest know of moe iudgements of this kinde which daily happen in the Church perhaps thou wouldest no lesse feare these then thou dreadest that Because thou shouldest see many starres falling from heauen to the earth thou shouldest see many who did eate the bread of Angels vpon the Lords table to fall and slip into such calamities that they rather desire to fill their bellies with the drasse and swash of Swine thou shouldest see many whose chastity was purer and more beautifull then a Porphirite to be blacker then a cole The causes of whose lapse were their sinnes But what greater signe of the Diuine iustice canst thou desire thē that God for the iniury done vnto him wold not be satisfied but with the death of his onely begotten sonne before he would receaue the world to his fauour What manner of words I pray thee were they which the Lord spake to the women which followed him lamenting and bewayling Daughters of Ierusalem weepe not for me but weepe for your selues and for your children For behold the dayes will come when men shall say Blessed are the barren and the wombs that neuer bare and the paps
al euils but that which followeth is much more dreadfull that is the fearefull tribunal of the Diuine iudgement the sentence that there shall be pronounced the weeping and gnashing of teeth the vtter darknes without hope of light and the gnawing worme of conscience which neuer shall dye and to conclude the fire that neuer shall be quenched Consider moreouer of the danger which vaine glory the daughter of Pride bringeth with it of which Saint Bernard thus speaketh Feare an arrow it flyeth lightly and pierceth lightly but I say vnto thee it maketh no small wound it sodainly killeth Vaine glory is this arrow If men at any time doe prayse honour thee forth-with enquire whether that be in thee which they so magnifie and extoll for if that be not in thee thou art praysed in vaine and gloriest without cause But if perhaps this be found in thee for which they prayse thee say with the Apostle By the grace of God I am that I am For thou mayst not be proud of it but rather humbled and giue the glory to God to whom thou owest all that thou art least perhaps thou makest thy selfe odious vnto God for it is not to be doubted but both the honour which is giuen vnto thee and the cause for which it is giuen are both of God and belong vnto him Therfore all the glory that thou doost arrogate vnto thy selfe thou stealest from God but what seruant can be found more vnfaithfull then he that stealeth the glory of his Lord Consider also what great folly it is that thou shouldest esteeme of thine owne power and ability according to the iudgment of men in whose will it is to encline the ballance to whether side they will for he that praysed thee ere while now disprayseth thee and he that now disprayseth thee will soone after set forth thy prayse with great honour If thou thinkest that thine honour dependeth of their tongues thou shalt finde that somtimes thou shalt be extolled to the skie and somtimes depressed euen to hell and thy glory euen beate to dust and powder euen as it shall please the mutable tongues of men Therfore neuer measure thy selfe by the prayses of men which are giuen out of thee but according to that thou art and which is in thy selfe albeit men extoll and magnifie thee yet looke thou into thy selfe what is in thee and what thy conscience telleth thee Rather beleeue thy selfe to whom thou art better known then others who see thee a farre of and iudge of thee as it were by heare-say Contemne therfore the iudgments of men and commit all thy glory to the hands of the Lord who is wise to keepe it and faithfull to restore it Ponder also with thy selfe ô thou vnhappy ambitious man into what danger thou castest thy selfe thou desiring to rule ouer others who hast not yet learned to gouerne thy selfe How canst thou giue an account for many who canst not answer for thy selfe Consider of the great danger into which thou castest thy selfe headlong by coueting to adde the sinnes of thy subiects vnto thine own and by putting thine and theyrs into thine owne reckoning Wherfore the Scripture also sayth An hard iudgement shall they haue that beare rule For he that is most low is worthy mercy but the mighty shall be mightily tormented But who can recount the multitude of troubles which they are encumbred with all vnto whom the rule of others is committed A certaine King of the Armenians very well vnderstood this who when he was to be crowned considering of the cares paines that Empire brought with it taking in his hand that princely and dignified cloth with which the Kings head was wont to be crowned and long looking vpon it sayd O noble rather then happy cloath which if any one throughly knew how stuffed it were with cares dangers he would not stoope to the ground to take it vp Acknowledge ô thou proud man that thy pride doth please no body because thou thy selfe art acceptable to no body Thou doost not please God for he is contrary vnto thee Hee resisteth the proude and giueth grace to the humble Thou doost not please the humble who without doubt doe exceedingly hate thee for they abhorre all pride and ambition Thou doost lesse please other proud men like vnto thy selfe for by reason of that that puffeth thee vp thou art hatefull vnto them for they cannot abide a greater then themselues Neyther canst thou content thy selfe in this world vnlesse thou repentest and acknowledgest thy vanity and thy folly and much lesse canst thou content and please thy selfe in the other world where for thine execrable pride thou shalt be tortured with euerlasting torments Wherfore the Lord sayth by the mouth of Saint Bernard O man if thou well knewest thy selfe thou wouldest displease thy selfe and please me but because thou doost not know thy selfe thou pleasest thy selfe and displeasest me The time will come in which thou shalt neyther please thy selfe nor me Thou shalt not please me because thou hast sinned thou shalt not please thy selfe because for euer thou shalt burne in hell Thy pride onely pleaseth the deuill who when he was a most beautifull Angell became a most terrible deuill Wherefore naturally he is delighted with those that are lyke vnto him It will helpe thee also in the way of humility if thou considerest how few thy merrits are before God and how few or none thy seruices which may be truly and purely called so because there are many vices found in them which haue a show of Vertue and also vaine glory doth corrupt oftentimes many works which are good of themselues neyther sildome is that vild in Gods eyes which shineth most gloriously in the eyes of men The iudgements of the most iust Iudge are of one sort and ours of another and are far vnlike to Gods For an humble sinner lesse displeaseth God thē a proud iust man although no man can be termed iust who is proud But if perhaps tho● shalt doe any good worke remember that it may so come 〈◊〉 passe that whatsoeuer thou hast done may proue stark naug●● Yea although thy works be good yet they are not without th●● defects so that it is more needful for thee to craue pardon the● to looke for a reward Wherfore Saint Gregory sayth If 〈◊〉 life of the righteous should straightly be examined it would 〈◊〉 hold out for currant For it may be that those things vvhich thou thinkest please God doe offend him For all our euill deeds are simply euil but our good deeds are not simply good seeing that they are mingled with many imperfections and therfore it is more agreeable to reason that thou shouldest rather suspect thy good works then that thou shouldest glory in them as holy Iob did who sayd I was afrayd of all my works knowing that thou doost not spare the offender ¶ Other remedies against Pride more particuler EVen as the knowledge
pleasure which lurk●th vnder necessity craueth that t●ou wouldest satisfie and fulfill her desire and it so much the sooner deceau●th by how much it more couertly insinuateth it selfe vnder the c●lour of honest necessity and hideth from thee her inordinary Therefore very especiall warines and wisedome is here to be vsed to bridle the appetite of pleasure and to subiect and subingate the sensuality vnder the rule of reason If therefore thou desirest that thy flesh should be a seruant and a subiect vnder the soueranity of thy soule looke that thy soule be subiect vnto God for it is requisite that thy soule be gouerned of God that it may in like manner rule ouer the flesh And by this admirable amiable order man shall be reformed that is that GOD may rule ouer his reason the reason may gouerne the soule and the soule the body and so man shall be wholy reformed But the body striueth and strugleth against the gouernment of the soule if the soule be not subiect vnder the rule of reason and if the reason be not conformable to the diuine will When thou art tempted of Gluttony thinke and consider that thou enioyest a very short delight which soone passeth away and that the pleasure of the taste is like a dreame of the night vanishing away and flying frō the eyes and consider that thys pleasure when it is past leaueth the soule heauy in the conscience but if that pleasure be conquered the soule reioyceth frolicketh and the conscience is quiet and ful of peace according to that most excellent and egregious sentence of that wise man If thou shalt do any honest thing with paines taking the paines passeth but the honestie remaineth if thou doost any filthy or vnhonest thing with pleasure taking the filthines and dishonestie remaineth but the pleasure passeth away Remedies against anger hatred and enmities which arise of anger and wrath CHAP. IX ANger is an inordinate desire to be reuenged of him whom we suppose to haue wronged vs. Against this pestilent vice the Apostle sheweth vnto vs an antidote saying Let all bitternes and anger and wrath crying and euill speaking bee put away from you with all maliciousnes Be ye curteous one to another and tender-harted forgiuing one another euen as God for Christes sake forgaue you Of thys sinne the Lord speaketh in Matthew But I say vnto you whosoeuer is angry with his brother vnaduisedly shall bee culpable of iudgement And whosoeuer saith vnto his brother R●c● shall be worthy to be punished by the Counsell And vvhosoeuer shall say foole shall be woorthy to bee punished with hell fire Therefore when this outragious vice doth solicite and disquiet thy minde repell it by these considerations following First consider that brute beastes doe liue peaceably vvith those that are of the same kinde Elephants accompany with Elephants in like maner Kine and Sheepe feed rogether in their heards and flocks Byrds of a feather flie together Cranes on the day time flie together and at night one plaieth the Sentinell for the other The same thing also doe Storkes Harts Delphins and many other creatures The concord and order of Ants and Bees is knowen vnto euery body And amongst wilde beastes there is a certaine peace and agreement The fiercenes of Lyons is not exercised against them of the same kinde the Boare is not spightfull and hurtfull to the Boare the Linx vvarreth not with the Linx nor the Dragon with the Dragon VVhat need we many words the wicked spirits themselues vvho are the authors of all our discord obserue the league between them selues and by common consent do exercise their tyrannie Onely men to whom curtesie and peace are very necessary most conducent nourish deadly discords and cruell variance These things are worthy of great consideration Neyther is it lesse to be considered of that nature hath giuen weapons to all liuing creatures to fight hoofes to horses horns to Bulls tusks to Boares a sting to Bees clawes and beakes to birds yea to Gnats and fleas nature hath giuen weapons to bite and sting by which they fetch out blood But thou ô man because thou art created to peace and concord are created vnarmed and naked that thou maist not haue any thing to hurt or offend another Therefore consider howe vnnaturall it is that thou shouldest reuenge and hurt him of whom thou art offended especially by seeking for weapons which are without thee which nature hath denied vnto thee Remember that anger and desire of reuenge is proper vnto wilde beasts of whose anger thus speaketh a certaine wise man O man why doost thou degenerate from the nobility of thine estate and condition by following the nature of Lyons Serpents and other fierce and cruell beasts Aelianus writeth of a certaine Lyon who beeing wounded in hunting with a launce more then a yeere after espied him a farre of that had wounded him passing that way in the company of the King of Iuba and many other men the Lyon forth-with knew him and rushing violently through the ranckes of the men they with all theyr forces resisting him he rested not till he came vnto him who had hurt him whom presently he rent and tare in peeces The same thing we haue seene done of a certaine Bull against them of whom he was smitten and hurt Wrathfull and angry men are the imitators of these fierce and cruell beasts who whē they might mitigate theyr wrath by reason and discretion as it becommeth men they had rather follow their beastly force furie glorying in their ignobler part which is common vnto them with beasts when as they should vse diuine reason in vvhich they pertake with Angels If thou shalt say that it is an hard thing for thee to mitigate and asswage thine angry hart I answere that thou oughtest in like manner to consider that it was much more difficult that the sonne of GOD should suffer for the loue of thee What wast thou when hee shed his blood for thee wa st not thou his enemie Doost thou not see with what great clemency and gentlenes he suffereth thee sinning daily and with what great benignity and goodnes he receaueth thee turning vnto him Peraduenture thou wilt say that thine enemy is not woorthy to haue his fault forgiuen Tell me deseruest thou or art thou worthy that God should pardon thee Wouldest thou that God shold pardon thee and wilt thou vse extreamitie against thy neighbour If thine enemy be not worthy that hee should haue pardon yet thou art worthy to pardon him and Christ most worthy for whose loue thou oughtest to forgiue him Further obserue that all the time that thou burnest with hatred and rancour against thy neighbour thou art not worthy to offer any sacrifice to the Lord gratefull acceptable vnto him which our Sauiour intimateth when he saith If then thou bring thy gift to the altar there remembrest that thy brother hath ought against thee
displeased count on 〈◊〉 to the slaunderer and that thou with griefe hearest them● which thing also Salomon teacheth more plainly when he saith As the North-winde driueth away the raine so doth an angry countenaunce the slaundering tongue For as S. Ierome sayth An arrow shot from a bow sticketh not in the harde Rocke but with violence reboundeth backe againe and hurteth him that shot it But if thys Buzzer and Detractor be thy subiect or thine inferious without offence thou mayest commaund him to holde his peace for thou art bound to doe so but if thou caust not commaund him silence at least discreetly with some other discourse breake of the course of his speech or show him that countenaunce whereby he may be ashamed to proceed any further Therefore being modestly admonished he will eyther hold his peace or alte r his speech Otherwise if thou entertainest his talke with a merry and cheerefull countenaunce thou ministrest occasion vnto him to persist in his purpose and so thou doost no lesse off●nd in hearing thē he in speaking For euen as he dooth ill that fireth an house so also he doth ill that when he may quench the fire will not but comming to the flame warmeth himselfe by it Amongst all the kindes of murmuring and detraction that is the worst when as any one detracteth from the estimation of a iust and a righteous man for he by this maner of reproching gyueth occasion to the weake and faint-harted to becom more slow in goodnes neyther to goe forward with so great zeale as they were wont Which albeit he offend not the stronger yet it cannot be denied but that he much wrongeth the weake and vnperfect Least that this kinde of scandall seeme small in thine eyes remember the words of the Lord Whosoeuer shall offende one of these little ones which beleeue in me it were better for him that a Mil-stone were hanged about his necke and that hee were drowned in the depth of the sea Wherefore my brother thinke it a kinde of sacriledge to sharpe and whet thy tongue against them who serue the Lord God for albeit it be true that the detractor speaketh of them yet for the title onely which they haue and the office that they beare they are worthy of honour especially seeing that GOD h●th ●ayde o● them Hee ●ha● toucheth you toucheth the apple of 〈◊〉 eye Whatsoeuer we haue hetherto spoken of murmurers detractors and backbyters it is to be vnderstood also of iesten flowters and deriders and much more of them then of the other for this vice hath all the euills and mischiefes in it which before we haue numbred vp and besides those it hath another blemish annexed to it that is pryde arrogancie and contempt of thy neighbour therefore we must eschew and auoyde thys vice more warily then the other as the Lord hath commaunded in his Law when he sayd There shall not bee a tale-carrier or a backebyting whisperer among my people Therefore it is not needfull further to enlarge the vildnes and filthines of thys sinne but let these things suffice which hetherto we haue spoken ¶ Of rash iudgement and the precepts of the Church TO the two precedent sinnes a third is ioyned being very neere vnto them which is to iudge rashly for detracters and slaunderers not o●●ly speake euill of matters past and euident but also of those that are iudged of them and which breed any suspition in them For that they may not want matter of detraction they minister matter vnto themselues interpreting by their peruerse iudgement and peeuish suspition the matter to the worst sence which they ought to haue interpreted to a good meaning Which kinde of iudgement is against the commaundement of the Lord Iudge not that yee be not iudged and condemne not that yee be not condemned With these sinnes which are against God those are numbred which are cōmitted against these foure precepts of the Church which are commended vnto vs vnder commaundement as On the Sabaoth dayes and on certaine other dayes it is thought good by the Church to heare Diuine seruice and sermons to receaue the holy Sacrament of the blessed body and blood of our Sauiour Christ to fast on dayes appoynted and faithfully to pay Tithes For as much as man is bound both by the law of God and man to heare Diuine seruice and sermons he ought not onely to be present in body but also in spirit and to gather vp his spirits that he may heare with vnderstanding and carry away that that may fr●ctifie in him and nourish him vnto eternall life keeping silence and hauing his hart lifted vp to God considering of the high misteries reuealed in his word with great feruency and deuotion praying together with the congregation and attentiuely hearing that which is deliuered vnto him They who haue families children men-seruants and maydes they ought to be carefull that they come to Church and that they spend the Sabaoth daies holily In which thing many Housholders are faulty and worthy of great reprehension who shall render an account to God for this negligence These are the sinnes which men are wont to fall into more vsually and commonly and all these we ought to eschew with great diligence By this meanes we shall remaine in innocency and we shall keepe our garments white and cleane which Salomon commaundeth At all times sayth he let thy garments be white and let not oyle be lacking vpon thine head Which is the vnction of Diuine grace which yeeldeth light and courage in euery matter and teacheth vs all good for this is the fruite of this heauenly oyle ¶ Of other kinde of sinnes which because they seeme small therfore the world maketh no account to commit them ALbeit these sinnes aforesayd are more principall from which we ought to flie with speciall care and diligence yet the raynes it not to be giuen to other sinnes which seeme lesse vnto vs and which we make no scruple to commit yea I beseech thee by the bowels of Gods mercy that thou beest not of their number who when they heare that one sinne is not so great as another forth-with runne into it without any scruple or regard Remember that saying of the Wise-man Hee that contemneth small things shall fall by little and little into greater Remember that Prouerb For the want of a naile the Iron shooe falleth off and for the want of a shooe the Horse falleth and he perisheth that fitteth on him The houses that ruine threatneth through age ●irst giue a token of their decay by the fall of some stone or ●mall peece of timber and the ruine daily increasing at length ●hey come topsey turuey downe Very well sayth Saint Augu●●ne Contemne not sinnes because they be little but feare them because they be many For many times many little beasts kill Are not the co●●es of sand very small and little but if plenty of them
temperance that it neither be nourished too delicately nor be killed through hunger That wee neither vvithdraw necessary things from it neyther that we giue it that which is superfluous that we carry it about chastised but not almost dead that through too much weakenes it faint not in the way nor that through too much aboūdance it grow restie iadish and cast the ryder It is wisedom moderately to labor exercise least through the grieuousnes of the burden the spirit whose turne all exercises ought to serue be oppressed that so we apply our selues to outward things that we lose not the inward and so intend the loue of our neighbour that we doe not lose the diuine loue For if the Apostles themselues who had great measure of Gods Spirit and great strength sufficient to carry out all matters did disburthen themselves of matters of lesser moment that they might not faile nor faint in greater no man ought so to presume of his owne strength that hee should thinke himselfe sufficient for all things seeing that many times commeth to passe which is wont to be sayd A minde that in all things maketh assayes Performeth particulers by delayes And that he that followeth two Hares catcheth neyther It is wisedome to obserue the crafts and subtill deceits of the old enemy to obserue his out-roades and in-roades and all his stratagems not to beleeue euery spirit neither to be deceaued by any apparence and glozing of that which seemes good For often-times the Angell of sathan transformeth himselfe into an Angell of light and alwayes endeuoureth to deceaue the good by some semblance and show of good Therefore in no danger we ought to be more carefull of our selues then in that which is offered vnto vs vnder the vizard and disguise of Vertue For by thys kinde of deceit imposture they for the most part are tempted who are accustomed to worke well and to bring forth good fruites To conclude it is wisedome to knowe howe to march forward and how to retire to know when it is expedient to ouercome and when to be ouercome and especially to be able to contemne the iudgement of the world the censures of the vulgar sort and to passe by with a deafe eare the barkings of most vild dogges who alwayes barke and bawle without a cause to remember that of Paule If I yet pleased men I should not be the seruaunt of Christ. Surely thys is most true that a man cannot doe any thing more foolishly then to suffer himselfe to bee ruled and gouerned by a beast of so many heads as the common people is which haue neyther iudgement nor knowledge in those things which they speake It is a very good thing and very meete to giue no offence to any body to feare that which is to be feared and not to be carried about with euery winde for to finde a meane in these extreames is the part and duty of singuler wisedome ¶ Of the wisedome which concerneth the practise and effecting of things WIsedome is also necessary in acting and effecting matters least we fall into errors which afterwards are not amended but with great difficulty whereby oftentimes the peace of the conscience is lost and the order of life is disturbed In which matter these counsailes that follow may bring vs some helpe Of the first of which the Wise-man sayth Let thine eyes behold that thing that is right and let thine eye lids looke straight before thee By which words the Wise-man counsayleth vs that we should doe nothing inconsideratly vnaduisedly but that we should long deliberate and act things by nature and ripe deliberation For which purpose fiue aduices are necessarily required First that we commend our businesses to the Lord God Secondly that we consider with great diligence and with equall iudgement expend not onely the substance of the worke but also all the circumstances of it for if one of them alone be wanting it is sufficient to subuert all the purposed worke For although all the worke be well finished with all the circumstances of it yet if onely it be not done in due time that is sufficient that the worke may be dispraysed and reprehended Thirdly that we consult with others of those things which are to be done but let such counsaylers be few in number and those very choyce For although it is behoofefull to heare the censures and opinions of all that the busines may be better examined yet let the conclusion and determination of the thing be in few mens powers least it proue faulty Fourthly it is very necessary that a certaine time be graunted for our deliberation whereby both by the diuturnity of time and experience of conuersation those may be knowne whose aduises we vse whether they be good or bad and so their sentences and opinions may be prooued For oftentimes men in the beginning of their conuersation doe seeme to be that which afterwards they are not found to be ●o also their aduices at the first seemed profitable but afterward● being better examined they are refused and reiected Fiftly and lastly the foure stepdames of wisedome are diligently to be eschewed and auoyded which are Praecipitation Passion Obstinacy in selfe opinion vaine Foolishnes For Praecipitation and headlong rashnes deliberateth not Passion blindeth Obstinacy shutteth the gate to good counsailes and vaine Foolishnes whatsoeuer deliberation it entreth into destroyeth and contaminateth it It belongeth also to this vertue to flye extremities and to keepe a meane For vertue and truth refuse extreames and doe fixe their seates in a meane All things are neuer to be reprehended together all things are neuer to be allowed together we must neuer deny all things neuer beleeue all things neuer distrust all things we must neuer condemne many for the fault of few nor iustifie all for the holines of some But in all things it behooueth vs to follow the rule and prescript of reason and beware that we be not drawne by the violence of our perturbations to extreames And it is a rule of wisedome in iudging of things not to respect eyther the ●ntiquity or the newnes of them that by it they should eyther be approued or disproued for there are many euill things which a long time haue beene vsed and there be many good things lately found out so that antiquity is neyther sufficient to iustifie that which is euill nor newnes to condemne that which is good but in all things iudgement ought to be taken from the price and valour of things not from the ●eares For from antiquity to sinne there commeth no other ●hing but that it is lesse curable neyther doth newnes take any ●hing from vertue but that it is lesse knowne It is another rule of wisedome not to be deceaued in figures ●nd apparences of things so that forth-with me pronounce ●ur opinion of them for all is not gold that glittereth nor all ●ood that hath the
is to be feared that they haue no care of inward defects which are not seene although they are most diligent in outward which are publique and openly discerned Furthermore the exteriour vertues as they are more manifest vnto men so also they are better known and had in greater esteeme as are Abstinence Watching Discipline corporall austeritie But the interiour vertues Hope Charity Humility Discretion the Feare of God and the Contempt of the world are more occult and hid and therefore albeit they be in greater honour with God yet they are not so valued in mans iudgement And therefore our Sauiour sayth Yee are they that iustifie your selues before men but God knoweth your harts Not dissonant to this is that of Paule Hee is not a Iewe which is a Iew outward Neyther is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh But he is a Iew which is one inwardly and the circumcision of the hart which consisteth in the spirit and not in the letter is circumcision whose praise is not of men but of God Seeing therefore that those externall are in so great estimation among men and are so admired of all and the appetite of selfe honour and excellencie is so subtill and the most powerfull of all the appetites it is to be feared least that affection draw a man rather to loue and seeke after those vertues by which greater honour is expected then those by which lesser yea perhaps among men none For to the loue of these the spirit inuiteth but to the loue of the other the spirit and the flesh inuite together which is exceeding vehement and most vnpatient in her desires Which seeing that it is so not without cause it is to be feared least these two affections should ouer-come that one and should carry the victory from it To thys mischiefe the light of this doctrine opposeth it selfe which defendeth and patronizeth a iuster cause and notwithstanding these commaundeth place to be giuen to this which deserueth more admonishing vs that we loue that and embrace it with greater feruency which is more profitable and more necessary ¶ The third instruction BY that also wee gather that as often as it happeneth that these vertues doe so concurre at one and the selfe same time that we cannot entertaine and content them altogether then according to the rule of Gods precepts the lesser must giue place to the greater Otherwise order will be inuerted and disturbed This Saint Bernard teacheth in his booke of the precept and the dispensation Furthermore sayth he many things are inuented and ordayned not because we may not liue otherwise but because so to liue is more expedient neyther are they deuised for any other end then for the preseruing and good of charity So long therfore as they respect and ayme at charity they stand firme and vnmoueable and may not be changed without offence no not of the inuenters and ordayners But if contrarily at any time they seeme contrary vnto charity they are to be changed and altered but onely of those to whom it is giuen to see this and to whom this busines is committed to be ouer-seene and not of euery ouer-weening Disciplinarian and giddy-braind humorist seemeth it not most meete and requisite that those things that were inuented for Charity should also for charity when it seemeth conuenient be eyther omitted or intermitted or be changed into some other thing more commodious For otherwise without doubt it is most vniust if ordinances and constitutions onely deuised for charity should be held and maintayned against charity Therefore let them be held assuredly and firmely immutable yea amongst Prelates which are grounded vpon necessary considerations but so farre forth as they serue vnto charity Hetherto are the words of Saint Bernard ¶ The fourth instruction TWo kinds of iustice and righteousnes are gathered out of this same Doctrine one is true the other false True righteousnes and iustice comprehendeth together both things internall and externall which are required to the preseruing of them That which is false and counterfeit obserueth some externall without internall without the loue and feare of God without humility without deuotion and without other internall vertues Like to this was the righteousnes of the Phariseis of whom the Lord speaketh in Mathew Woe sayth hee vnto you Scribes and Phariseis hipocrits for ye tythe Mint and Annise and Cummin and haue left the waightier matters of the law iudgement mercy and fayth these ought ye to haue done and not to leaue the other vndone Ye blind guides which straine out a gnat and swallow a Camell Woe vnto you Scribes and Phariseis hypocrits for ye make cleane the vtter side of the cup and of the platter but within they are full of bribery and excesse And a little after Woe vnto you Scribes and Phariseis hypocrits for ye are like vnto paynted Sepulchers which indeede appeare beautifull outward but are within full of dead mens bones and of all filthines Of the same kind is that righteousnes which so often is reprehended of God in the Scriptures by the Prophets for whom the mouth of one speaketh This people honoureth me with their mouth and glorifieth me with their lips but their hart is farre from me and the feare which they haue vnto me proceedeth of a commaundement that is taught of men but they haue despised my law And in another place Why offer ye so many sacrifices vnto me sayth the Lord I am full of the burnt offerings of vveathers and of the fatnes of fed beasts I haue no pleasure in the blood of bullocks lambs and goates Offer me no moe oblations for it is but lost labour Incense is an abhominable thing vnto me I may not away with your new moones your Sabaoths and solemne meetings your solemne assemblies are wicked I hate your new moones and appointed feasts euen from my very hart they make me weary I cannot abide them What meaneth this vvhat doth God condemne that he appoynted and expresly commaunded especially seeing that they be the acts of the noblest vertue which we call Religion whose proper function and duty is to worship God with the seruice of adoration and Religion No certainly but he condemneth the men that contenting themselues with those externall ceremonies had no regard nor care of true righteousnes and the feare of the Lord as forth-with he declareth saying Wash you make you cleane put away your euill thoughts out of my sight cease from doing of euill learne to doe well apply your selues to equity deliuer the oppressed helpe the fatherles to his right let the widdowes complaine come before you And then goe to sayth the Lord let vs talke together though your sinnes be as red as scarlet they shall be as white as snow and though they were like purple they shall be as white as wooll In another place he repeateth the same thing and that with greater vehemency He that slayeth sayth he an Oxe for me
and put of from day to day the amendment of their lifes and the embracing of Vertue ibidem The matters handled in this Chapter Diuers refuges and euasions of sinners ibidem Against them that deferre their repentance 266 The state of the question handled in this Chapter 267 The iust iudgement of God 268 Causes from whence the difficulty of conuersion ariseth ibidem The first cause is an euill habit and a naughty custome of a life wickedly and vngraciously led ibidem The second cause is the power of the deuill 269 The third cause by reason God is farre of from a soule polluted with the filth of sinne ibidem The fourth cause is the corruption of the powers of our soule ibidem Whether now or hereafter it is more easie to turne vnto God ibidem The force of euill custome 272 The Allegory of Lazarus being foure dayes dead 273 The losse of tyme ibid. The sinnes which we commit we shall heereafter deplore and lament in vaine 274 The reliques of sinne remayne after the sinne is committed 27● How absurd a thing it is to reserue repentance for old age ibidem The greatnes of the satisfaction that God requireth of sinners 276 Deferring of repentance is a certaine infidelity ibidem Repentance is not to be deferred in regard of benefits receaued at Gods hand ibidem Repentance is not be deferred in regard of predestination 277. We offer the best part of our life to the world the worst to God ibid. What we owe vnto God in respect of our redemption 278 An excellent exposition of a place in the twelueth of Ecclesiastes ibidem The conclusion of the first obiection 279 The 26. Chapter Against them that deferre theyr repentance to the houre of death 280 The matters handled in this Chapter It is dangerous to dispute of finall repentance ibidem Authorities of certayne Fathers concerning finall repentance 281 To be conuerted what it is ibidem To dye well is an Art which ought to be learned all the life long 285 The authority of Schoole Doctors concerning finall repentance 286 The conclusion of Scotus that repentance made at the poynt of death and in extreamity is sildome true which he proueth by foure reasons or arguments ibidem The first reason of the Shoole-man is the great perturbations which arise out of the greatnes of griefes sicknes and the presence of death ibidem The euill disposition and temperature of the body is an impediment of contemplation 287 The second reason of the Schoole-man is that such repentance seemeth to be brought forth not of will but of compulsion whereas repentance ought to be voluntary ibidem The third reason of the Schoole-man is drawne from the custome of sinning 289 His fourth reason is founded in the quality of the valour of the workes which are commonly done at the houre of death 290 Certayne authorities of the holy Scripture confirming the precedent sentences of the Doctors 291 Aunswers to certayne obiections 294 Many miraculous and wonderfull things reserued to the comming of Christ among which the sauing of the theefe on the Crosse was one ibidem The iudgments of God 295 An obiection of the repentance of the Niniuites with an aunswere to it page 296 The conclusion of the former disputation ibidem The 27. chapter Against them that through the hope of the diuine mercy doe continue perseuere in theyr sinnes page 298. The matters handled in this Chapter The difference betweene the true Prophets and the false 299 Whence the Diuine iustice is knowne 300 All men ought to feare ibidem Whence feare is engendered 301 Of the works of the Diuine iustice whereof mention is made in the holy Scripture ibidem The beginning of the wayes of the Lord. ibid. The fall of deuills ibid. The fall of Adam ibidem The hidden and secrete iudgements of God page 103 Of the workes of the Diuine iustice which are seene in thys world 304 The great infidelity of men 305 What it is to trust in God 312 The conclusion of all those things which haue been spoken in thys chapter ibidem The promises of God belong to the righteous and the threatnings to the vnrighteous ibidem The 28. chapter Against them that excuse themselues saying that the way of Vertue is rough sharpe and difficult page 314 The matters handled in this Chapter Vertue is a friend vnto reason ibidem How the grace giuen vs by Christ doth make the way of Vertue easie pleasant 315 From whence the difficulty of Vertue ariseth 317 An answer to certaine obiections 319 For what end the reliques of sinnes and euill appetites remaine in vs. ibid. Another obiection with the answer 320 Spirituall circumcision 321 The commaundements of God are not impossible 322 How charity maketh the way easie and pleasant which leadeth vnto heauen 323 The cheerefulnes of Saint Laurence in his martirdome page 324 Those things which are vncleane to the world are cleane to the righteous ibidem Of other things which make the way of saluation easie and sweet 325. The way of the wicked is hard and difficult 326 All the precedent matters are proued by examples to be true 328 The great changes and alterations which the hande of the highest worketh 329 Th● disciples of Christ were on a suddaine made learned ibidem The conuersion of Saint Cyprian 330 The conuersion of Saint Augustine 331 The 29. Chapter Against them that feare to enter into the way of Vertue for the loue of thys world page 335. The matters handled in this Chapter What euills are in the world ibidem How short the felicity of this world is 336 No felicity of the world is lasting ibidem Of the great miseries that are mingled with worldly felicities 337 Some myseries are common both to the good and bad some proper onely to the wicked 338 Euils of God page 339 Punishments are inflicted vpon the wicked by the Ministers of God 340 The euils that passions and affections bring ibidem Of the multitude of the snares and dangers of thys world ibidem Of the blindnes and darknes of thys world page 342 The blindnes of men 342 Of the multitude of sinnes that are in thys world page 343 How deceaucable the felitie of the world is 345 The conclusion of all thys aforesayd 348 What the world is ibidem The world is a hell 349 That true rest and tranquility is found in God alone 349 Obiectiue beatitude ibidem Onely God can satisfie the hart of man page 350 The nature of the Sea-mans Needle ibidem Saint Gregory deplored the losse of his quiet and sweet solitary life 351. Those things which haue beene spoken are prooued by examples ibid. No man happy in thys world 353 The world is an hypocrite 354 The conclusion of the first Booke 356 In Vertue all perfections are found 357 Vertue is loued in an enemy ibidem THE SECOND BOOKE THE Prologue of the second Booke page 365 Matters handled in the Prologue The deuision of the second booke into two
parts ibidem ¶ The Chapters of the second Booke In the second booke doctrine appertayning vnto Vertue is handled and diuers instructions are sette down which teach how a man at the length may come vnto Vertue 366 The first Chapter The first aduice and instruction which is very necessary for that man that desireth to serue God ibidem The second Chapter Of the second instruction and aduice which that man must follow who will come to the seruice of God 367 Matters handled in this Chapter Euill custome page 368 The world ibidem The deuill ibidem Moe for vs then against vs. 369 The first part of the second Booke VVhich entreateth of vices and theyr remedies 370 The thyrd Chapter Of the firme and resolute purpose which a Christian ought to haue that he may not doe any thing hereafter which is sinne ibidem The matters handled in this Chapter A firme resolution is to be planted in the soule ibidem The proposition of the second Booke page 374 The fourth chapter Of the remedies against Pride 375 The matters handled in this Chapter The definition of Pryde 376 The saying of Tigranes King of the Armenians concerning a diademe page 379 Other remedies against Pride more particuler 381 The fift chapter Of the remedies against Couetousnes 384 The matters handled in this Chapter Christ an example of pouertie ibidem How vnworthy and how vild a thing it is to lose thy soule for gold 385 Riches bring many euills and inconueniences with them ibidem Riches doe not satisfie the appetite 386 Riches are not safe ibidem Riches profit nothing in death 387 Riches are remedies and releefes of mans misery and not instruments of pleasure page 388 Rich men may be saued 389 That no man ought to detaine goods that are not his owne theyr Lord Maister being eyther against it or not knowing of it ibid. Hyrelings are not to be defrauded of theyr wages 390 Wills and testaments are speedily to be discharged ibidem It is a ioyfull and a pleasant thing not to be endangered or indebted to others 391 The sixt chapter Remedies against Luxurie page 391 The matters handled in this Chapter The combat of Chastity is difficult ibidem Luxurie polluteth the liuely Temple of God page 392 The beginning of Luxury is pleasant but the end is bitter ibidem Mischiefes ioyned to this vice 393 The chast begin an Angels life in thys life 394 Other kinde of remedies against Luxurie page 395 The outward sences are to be kept page 396 The presence of God of thy Angell and of the deuill is to bee thought vpon ibidem It is dangerous for a man alone to speake with a woman alone 397 The seauenth Chapter Remedies agaynst enuy page 398 The matters handled in this Chapter Enuy is familiar with euery age and person ibidem Enuious men are like vnto the deuill 400 We must not enuy the vertues of our neighbour ibidem By charity other mens good things are made ours 401 The mischiefes of enuy ibidem Enuy is a iust sinne and how it is meant ibidem An obiection with the aunswer 402 The eight Chapter Of the remedies against Gluttony 403 The matters handled in this Chapter Gluttony the cause of death ibidem The Abstinence of Christ. ibidem The Abstinence of the holy Fathers 404 The delight of gluttony is very short ibidem We must be wary in the refection of our bodies 405 How man is reformed 406 The ninth Chapter Remedies agaynst anger hatred and emnities which arise of anger and wrath 406 The matters handled in this Chapter Man is more wrathfull then beasts 407 Man hath no weapons giuen him of nature ibidem The anger of a certaine Lyon out of Elianus ibidem We must forbeare and pardon after the example of Christ. 408 An angry man is without the grace and fauour of God ibidem How we must reuenge 409 Selfe-loue is to be pulled vp by the rootes 410 We must doe nothing in our anger ibidem The counsaile of Athenodorus the Philosopher vnto Augustus the Emperour how to auoyde anger ibidem In the time of anger we must decree of nothing ibidem Another aduice how to auoyde anger 411 The tenth Chapter Remedies agaynst Idlenes 411 The matters handled in this Chapter The labours of Christ. 412 The labours of the Saints ibidem Nothing created to be idle ibidem Great repentance is required for sinnes 413 The saying of a godly man as concerning time mispent ibidem Without perseuerance there is no saluation 414 Very good and wholesome counsaile ibidem After victory a new warre approcheth ibidem How temptation is to be turned into good 415 The eleuenth Chapter Of other kindes of sinnes vvhich a good Christian ought to eschew 416 The matters handled in this Chapter We must not sweare by the life of another 417 Of murmuring detraction and rash iudgement ibidem Three euils spring from murmuring 418 The first euill is detraction and back-biting ibidem The second euill is that it hurts three the speaker the hearer and him whom the words are spoken of ibidem The third euill it maketh the murmurer execrable and infamous among men 419 The greatest soueraignty is to be able to rule thy tongue 420 Murmurers and detracters are not to be heard ibidem How a back-biter and a detracter is to be reproued 421 Scandall that comes by detraction ibidem Agaynst Iesters and Iibers 422 Of rash iudgement and of the precepts of the Church ibidem Foure precepts of the Church ibidem Housholders ought to looke that their families keepe the Sabaoth 423 Of other kind of sins which because they seeme small therefore the world maketh no account to commit them ibidem The hurt that the sinnes bring to the soule which we make so small account of 424 In what things these sinnes are committed ibidem The twelueth Chapter Of other shorter remedies against all kind of sinnes but most especially against the seauen capitall sinnes 424 The matters handled in this Chapter Pride obiecteth True humility answereth 426 Vayne-glory obiecteth The feare of the Lord answereth ibidem Counterfeit Religion obiecteth True Religion answereth 427 Disobedience obiecteth Blessed subiection answereth ibidem Enuy obiecteth Congratulation for thy brothers good answereth ibidem Hatred obiecteth True Charity answereth 428 Detraction obiecteth The liberty of iust and vpright correction aunswereth ibidem Anger obiecteth Patience answereth 429 Frowardnes and malapertnes obiecteth Meekenes and gentlenes aunswereth 430 Swelling loftines obiecteth Humble satisfaction which would content all answereth ibidem Sorrowfulnes obiecteth Spirituall ioy answereth ibidem Drowsines and Idlenes obiecteth The exercise of Vertue answereth 431 Dissolute wandering obiecteth Firme stability answereth ibidem Desperation obiecteth The assurance of Hope answereth 432 Couetousnes obiecteth The contempt of the world answereth 433 Gluttony obiecteth Temperance answereth ibidem Vayne foolish mirth obiecteth Moderate sadnes answereth ibidem Many words and much babling obiecteth Discrete taciturnity aunswereth 434 Luxury obiecteth Vndefiled Chastity answereth ibidem Spirituall fornication
solitary and monasticall lyues A wonderfull and excellent saying of Petrus Damianus of the oureof death Nothing auaileth in death but vertue Prou. 11. Ecclesiast 1. Apoc. 14. Iob. 11. In the 10. booke of his Morals Cap. 21. Prou. 14. The righteous feareth not in the houre of death Paulinus in the life of Ambrose In death prosperity doth nothing profit nor aduersity hurt A similitude Apoc 22 Math 19 Vertue hath one inconuenience Math 13 Esay 14 Psalm 144. ● Kings 1. Psalm 34 Prou 20 Cant 8 Ecclesi 32. Prou. 18. Diuers refuges of sinners Againt thē that defer their repentance August in the 8 booke of his confessions the 5. chap. The st●te of the question Gregory in an homily Luke 12. Apoc. ● The iust iudgement of God Ecclesi 5. Causes frō whence the difficulty of conuersion ariseth Ierome vnto Celantia Chap. 4. Bernard Luke 11 Esay 62 Osea 7 and the 9. Apoc 11 A similitude A similitude Whether now● or hereafter it is more easie to turne vnto God A similitude Ecclus 10 The force of euillcustome A similitude The Allegory of Lazarus foure dayes dead The losse of time A similitude See August his tenne strings The sinnes which wee nowe commit wee heereafter shal deplore lament in vaine Psal. 6. A similitude The reliques of sinne remaine after the sinne How absurd a thing it is to reserue thy repētance for old age A similitude Seneca in his book of the shortnes of life The greatnes of the satisfaction Deferring of repentance a certaine infidelity Greg. in his Morals Repentance is not to be deferred in regard of benefits receaued at Gods hand Ecclesi 18. Not to be deferred in regard of predestination We offer the best part to the world the worst to God Seneca in his 109. Epi. Mal. 1. Deut. 25. What we owe vnto God in respect of our redemtion Eccles. 12. An excellent exposition of this place of Eccles. The conclusion of the first obiection Ecclus 25 Ecclus 17. Iohn 5. Psalm 95 It is dangerous to dispute of finall repentance Ezech. 35 Augustine of true and false repentance ca 17 In the same place To be conuerted what it is In his exhortation to repentāce which forthwith foloweth in his second booke of repentance The iudgement of Isidore In the ninth tome of Plantynes edition a little before the end Greg in his 18 book of his Morals chap. 5. Iob. 27. Prou. 28. Math. 25. The conclusion of the Schoole man The first reason of the Schoole man The euill disposition and temperature of the body is an impediment of cōtemplation The 2 reason of the Schole-man Aug. in hys booke of true false repentance chap 17. 2 Kings 16 2 Kings 19 3 Kings 2. A similitude The thyrd reason of the Schole-man The fourth reason of the School-man Prou ● Math 24 Math. 25. August in an Epistle to Dios. Many miraculous and wonderful things reserued to the comming of Christ. Euseb. Emiss of the good theefe A similitude 2 Cor. 11. Psal. 62. The iudgements of God A similitude Eccles. 3. An obiection of the repentance of the Niniuites Heb 12 2 Macha 9 Hester 4 Deut 32 Esay 55 Psalm 129 The difference between the true Prophets and the false Ierem 37 Psalm 90 Whence the Diuine iustice is knowne A similitude All men ought to feare Whence feare is in-gendered The beginning of the wayes of the Lord. The fall of deuills Esay 14 The fall of Adam Gen. 7. Gen. 19. Numb 16. Leuit. 10 Acts 5. The hidden and secret iudgements of God Luke 23. The great infidelity of men 2 Kings 2. Ierem 5 Chap 8 In the foresaid chap. Esay 61 2 Reg 24 Ecclus 23 Psalm 69 Saint Augustine Psalm 147 Luke 13 Math 7 1 Pet 3. Eccles 1 Math 26 A similitude 1 Tim. 2. What it is to trust in God Ecclesi 5. The promises of God belong to the righteous and the thretnings to the vnrighteous Psal. 11. Esd. 8. Psal. 37. Psal. 4. August in his 11. homily among his 50. Bernard in his 56. Sermon amongst his small ones Vertue a friend vnto reason Gal 5. Rom 7. 4 Kings 6. Psal. 119. Psalm 19 Math 1 Esay 40 Esay 10 Frō whence the difficultie of vertue ariseth Ezech 11. Rom 4. Esay 41 For what end the reliques of sins euill appetites remaine in vs. Psalm 27 Another obiection with the answer Deut. 30. Spirituall circumcisiō Deut. 10. Augustine A similitude Esay 26. The commaundements of God are not impossible Deut. 30. 2 Iohn 5. August of holy widdowhood In the 13. book of his cōfessions Rom. 8. Petrus Rauennas vppon that Thou shalt loue the Lord thy God c. Those things which are vncleane to the world are cleane to the righteous Exod. 8. Acts 5 Bernard in his small Sermons chap. 30. A similitude Prou 4 The way of the wicked hard and difficult Psalm 119 Psalm 17 Psalm 119 Math 11 Osea 11 Exod 3 2 Cor 4 Esay 40 The great changes ●lterations which the hand of the highest worketh The disciples of Christ were on a suddaine made learned Cyprian in his 2 book and 2 Epist. Augustine in the 8 book of his Confessions Chap. 11. Chap. 11. In the 9 book of his Confessions chap. 1. What euils are in the world No felicitie of the world lasting Eccles 11 Wisdom 5 Esay 29 Baruch 3 Some miseries are cōmon both to the good and euill some proper onely to the wicked Wisdom 5 Euils of GOD. Gene 4 Deut 7. Punishmēts inflicted vpon the wicked by the Ministers of God The euils that passions bring Psal. 11. Athanasius in the life of Saint Anthony Prou. 6. Ecclesi 13. The blindnes of men See Cyprian in his 2 booke and 2 Epistle Psal. 14. Hosea 4. Ierem 9 Psalm 55 Gene 25 What the world is Psalm 55. S. Bernard The world a hell Obiectiue beatitude A similitude Onely God can satisfie the hart of man The nature of the Seamans needle Psal. 45. S. Gregory deplored the losse of his quiet sweet solitary life Aug. of the manners of the Church 1. booke 3. chap. No man happy in this world Eccle 1 Psalm 4. Psalm 31. The world an hypocrite S. Augustine In vertue all perfections are found Plato Prou 3. Psal. 112. Psal. 9. Cicero in Loeli A similitude Vertue is loued in an enemy Rom. 8. Gen. 31. Psalm 119. In the same Psalm Wisdom 8. Cyprian in his 2 book and 2 Epist. Baruch 3 Ierem 9 Euill cu●to●e A similitude The world The deuill Ecclesiast 2 Moe for vs then against vs. A firme resolution is to be planted in the soule A similitude Iorome in the life of Paule the Hermite A similitude The proposition of this Booke Ezech ● A similitude 1 Iohn 2 Tob 4. August to a certaine Earle Bernard in a certaine Sermon Bernard in a Sermon 1 Cor 15. Wisdom 6. A saying of Tigranes King of the Armenians 1 Peter 5. Greg. in the 9. book of his Morals Chap. 11 Iob 9. See Bernard
vnto thousands to them that loue me and keepe my commaundements An example of this we haue in Dauid for God would not cast off his sonnes in so many ages although their sinnes had oftentimes deserued it And that onely in respect of Dauid their Father The same thing the Lord sheweth in Abraham when he directed his seruant in his way and prospered his busines when his maister had commaunded him that he should fetch a wife for his sonne Isaack Neyther onely is he good and gracious to the seruant for the deserts of the maister but that which is much more for the loue of a good seruant God hath a care of an ill Maister So he blessed the house of Putiphar the Egiptian as the Scripture sayth for Iosephs sake and encreased all his substance as well in his houses as in his fields notwithstanding that Putiphar Iosephs maister was an Idolater What bountifulnes what prouidence can be greater then that Who is so mad that will not serue a Lord so liberall so faythfull and so louing towards all them that waite and attend vpon him and not onely towards themselues but also towards all things that is theirs ¶ Of the names that are attributed vnto the Lord in the holie Scripture by reason of this prouidence BEcause this diuine prouidence doth extend it selfe to many and wonderfull effects therfore God hath in the holy Scriptures diuers names Hee is most vsually and solemnly called a Father as in like manner God in most places of the Gospell calleth vs his most louing sonnes And not onely in the Gospell but also in many places of the old Testament For so the Prophet sayth in his Psalmes As a Father hath compassion on his children so hath the Lord compassion on them that feare him for he knoweth whereof we be made he remembreth that we are but dust Because it seemed but a small thing to another Prophet that he should be called a Father seeing that his loue and prouidence doth exceede the loue of all fathers he sayth Doubtlesse thou art our Father though Abraham be ignorant of vs and Israell know vs not As if he should say Those that are fathers according the flesh are not worthy that name if they be compared with thee But because in the loue of parents the loue of the mother is commonly wont to be the more vehement and tenderer the Lord is not content with the name of Father but will also be called a Mother and more then a Mother as he himselfe sayth in Esay in most sweet words Can a woman forget her child and not haue compassion on the sonne of her wombe Though they should forget yet will I not forget thee Behold I haue grauen thee vpon the palme of mine hands thy wals are euer in my sight What words can be spoken with a more tender loue Who will be so blind or so blockish who vnderstanding this will not reioyce Who will not be reuiued Who will not lift vp his head hearing that he hath such a pledge of the loue and of the diuine prouidence For he that considereth that it is God that speaketh this whose truth is for euerlasting neyther doth he euer deceaue whose riches haue no end and whose power is infinite whom shall he feare What shall he not hope for How shall he not reioyce at those words When he heareth this assurance of his estate this prouidence and this certaine demonstration of loue What I will yet speake more For the Lord is not content to haue compared his loue to the common loue of mothers but hee chooseth one among all other which excelleth al others in loue that is the Eagle with whose loue he compareth his loue and prouidence saying As an Eagle prouoking her young ones to flye fluttereth ouer her birds stretcheth out her wings taketh them and beareth them on her wings This same thing the same Prophet also testifieth in words more cleare before the people being now ready to enter into the Land of promise The Lord thy God hath borne thee sayth hee as a man doth beare his sonne in all the way which yee haue gone vntill yee came vnto this place And as he himselfe doth take vpon him the name of a Father and of a Mother so hee giueth vnto vs the name of most beloued sonnes as Ieremy testifieth Is Ephraim sayth hee my deere sonne or pleasant child Yet since I spake to him I still remembred him therefore my bowels are troubled for him I will surely haue compassion vpon him sayth the Lord. Euery one of these words because it is God that spake them are worthy that they should be well considered of for they are very forcible to mollifie our harts with diuine loue seeing that he hath loued vs being vnhappy and miserable creatures so tenderly and doth cherish vs so louingly By the same reason of the diuine prouidence God after that he had taken vpon him the name of a Father hee would also be called a Pastour or Sheepheard as wee may see in the Gospell That he might declare how farre this pastorall loue and sheepheardly care doth extend it selfe hee sayde I am the good sheepheard and know my sheepe and am knowne of mine O Lord how doost thou know them with what eyes doost thou behold them As the Father knoweth me sayth he so know I the Father Which is with the same eyes that my Father beholdeth me I behold the Father and with the same I looke vpon my sheepe O blessed eyes ô happy aspect O supreame prouidence What greater glory what greater treasure what greater riches can be desired of any one then with such eyes to be beheld of the sonne of God that is with the same eyes that the Father beholdeth him For although this comparison in euery poynt is not equall for the naturall sonne deserueth more then the adoptiue yet great is that glory that it is worthy to be compared with this Yet what ones and how great the workes and benefits of this prouidence are God by his Prophet Ezechiell doth most plentifully teach in these words Behold I will search my sheepe and seeke them out As a sheepheard searcheth out his flocke when he hath beene among his sheepe that are scattered so will I seeke out my sheep and will deliuer them out of all places where they haue beene scattered in the cloudy and darke day And I will bring them out from the people and gather them from the Countries and will bring them to their owne Land and feede them vpon the mountaines of Israel by the riuers and in all the inhabited places of the Countrey I will feede them in a good pasture and vpon the high mountaines of Israel shall their fold be there shall they lye in a good fold and in fat pasture shall they feede vpon the mountaines of Israel I will feede my sheepe and bring them to their rest sayth the Lord God I will seeke
that which was lost and bring againe that which was driuen away and will binde vp that which was broken and will strengthen the weake but I will destroy the fat and the strong and I will feede them with iudgment And a little after And I will make with them a couenant of peace and will cause the euill beasts to cease out of this Land and they shall dwel safely in the wildernes and sleepe in the woods And I will set them as a blessing euen round about my mountaine and I will cause raine to come downe in due season and there shall be raine of blessing Tell me I pray thee what could our good sheepheard promise more Or how could he describe this his meaning with words more sweet more louing or more elegant For it is certaine that God speaketh heere not of a materiall flocke but of a spirituall which are men where-vpon concluding this chapter he sayth And yee my sheepe the sheepe of my pasture are men Neyther promiseth he grosse or aboundance of temporall blessings which are common to good and euill but aboundance of spirituall graces and of speciall prouidence with which the Lord doth gouerne and rule this spirituall flock as a shepheard so sayth Esay He shall feede his flocke like a sheepheard he shall gather the Lambs with his arme and carry them in his bosome and shall guide them with young What I pray thee can be spoken more louingly or more cherishingly Of the offices and benefits of a sheepheard that whole Psalme speaketh whose beginning is The Lord doth guide me for which S. Ierome translateth The Lord is my sheepheard After this beginning he proceedeth to remember all the duties of a sheepheard which in this place we will not set downe because they are in euery place found and this psalme may be reade of any one Neyther heere in like maner will I remember that as he is called a sheepheard because he doth feede so is he called a King because he doth gouerne and defend a Maister because he teacheth a Phisition because he healeth a Carier because he beareth vs in his armes a Watcher because he watcheth for our defence of which names the Scriptures are full Among all these names there is none more louing which also demonstrateth this prouidence then the name of a Bride-grome by which name in the Canticles and in other places of Scripture he is called By thys sweet and louing word hee inuiteth the soule of a sinner to call vpon him Call mee and still cry vnto me sayth he by the Prophet Thou art my Father and the guide of my youth and virginity The which name is greatly honoured of the Apostle For after those words with which he that was first formed spake to his wife Eue Therefore shall a man leaue his Father and his Mother and shall cleaue to his wife they shall be one flesh the Apostle addeth This is a great secrete but I speake concerning Christ and concerning the Church Which is his Bride as is euery soule of man placed in the state of grace What therefore is not to be hoped of him who hath such a name as this is especially seeing that it is vndoubtedlie true that this name is not giuen vnto him in vaine or vvithout reason But why in searching the Scriptures doe we seeke for thys name or that when as all names which promise any good doe agree to this Lorde especially seeing that whosoeuer loueth him or whosoeuer seeketh him may finde in him all good that he desireth Thys is that which Saint Ambrose saith in a certaine Sermon Christ is all vnto vs If thou desirest to heale thy woūds he is a Phisition if thou beest ouer-heated with feauers he is a fountaine to coole thee if thou beest burdened with vnrighteousnes hee is righteousnesse if thou neede helpe hee is strength if thou fearest death he is life if thou desirest heauen he is the way if thou hatest darknes he is light if thou seekest for meat he is foode See I pray thee my brother with hovve many names and titles Christ is noted and set out vnto vs who notwithstanding is one in himselfe and most simple For although he is one in himselfe yet he is all things in vs that for the releeuing of all our necessities which are innumerable There should be no end if I would recite all the authorities of the Scripture which pertaine to this matter yet I haue brought a fewe of many to the comfort of them who waite attend vpon God and that we might prouoke and allure those to his obedience which doe not serue him for it is certaine that there is no greater treasure vnder heauen then this For euen as he that hath warred in any voyage vnder an earthly King and hath gotten Letters in which great rewards are promised vnto him he keepeth them with great care he often looketh vppon them he is reioyced at them they comfort his heauy hart in tribulation and at length he commeth to the King with them desiring that was promised to him so the seruants of GOD doe keepe all these words and diuine Charters and Letter-pattents in their harts which are more certaine then the Letters of all Kings which are vpon the earth In these is theyr trust vvith these they are comforted in their labors for these they are confident in dangers and in tribulations they adde consolation vnto them to these they runne in all theyr needes these doe inflame their mindes with the loue of this Lord and binde them vnto him to lay and pay out sustaine all things for his worshyp seruice seeing that he himselfe so faythfully doth promise himselfe wholy for our vse who is all things in all In thys appeareth one of the principall foundations of a Christian life to haue knowne by experience this truth Tell me I pray thee can any thing be imagined richer precioser better or more to be desired then he Can any one think of a greater good in this life then to haue GOD a Sheepheard a Phisitian a Maister a Supporter or Caryer a strong vvall a defence a garde and to conclude a Bridegrome and all in all What can any one haue in the world that he can giue to his friend to be compared to the least of these benefits Great cause therefore haue they to reioyce and be glad who possesse so great a good neyther onely to reioyce but also to comfort themselues and to cheere vp their drooping spyrits to glory in him aboue all things Be glad yee righteous and reioyce in the Lord sayth that royall Singer and be ioyfull all yee that are vpright in hart As if he should say Let others reioyce in the riches and honours of the world others in noblenes of birth others in the friendship and fauours of Princes others in the excellencie of theyr dignities but reioyce and glory ye in deed truth in