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A10746 The pilgrime of Loreto Performing his vow made to the glorious Virgin Mary Mother of God. Conteyning diuers deuout meditations vpon the Christian and Cath. doctrine. By Fa. Lewis Richeome of the Society of Iesus. Written in French, & translated into English by E.W.; Pélerin de Lorète. English Richeome, Louis, 1544-1625.; Walpole, Edward, 1560-1637, attributed name.; E. W. (Edward Worsley), 1605-1676, attributed name.; Weston, Edward, 1566-1635, attributed name. 1629 (1629) STC 21023; ESTC S115933 381,402 480

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nightes and men that liued in those dayes liued in darknes altogeather or at most in that small weake light of the Moon and starres of the law of Nature and Moyses Be thou therefore O day of such a Natiuity blessed aboue all the dayes of the world and be thou O chamber honoured aboue all the Princely palaces of the earth for hauing receaued into thy bosome this rysing starre O people of Sion reioyce yee in the birth of this Virgin whome your mysteryes haue so much celebrated your Prelats so much foretould your Fathers so desired as the best and most noble flower of the race of your Kinges of your Synagogue Reioyce also O yee Gentils behould the morning that endeth the night of your ignorance and bringeth you the light of heauen a Virgin that shal beare you a Redeemer a Queene that shall giue you a King that shall make you all Kinges Reioyce thou also O my soule that thy eyes doe see the place where this morning this Virgin this starre was first seene and pray her there with a deuout hart that with the aboundance of her graces she wold obtayne of this great God whome she gaue vnto the world light to vnderstand his holy lawes loue to imbrace them force to performe them as long as thou shalt walke Pilgrime vpon the earth that thou mayst prayse him eternally in heauen Hauing made his prayer he shall heare Masse and communicate with his accustomed preparation and employ all the morning in like exercises The After-dinner and euening of the foure twentith Day Of the B. Virgins Auncestours and of the vanity of worldly greatnes CHAP. XVI IN the Afternoone hauing taken some honest recreation in reading some good booke or talking with his Ghostly Father or some other of good conuersation he shall heare Euensong and the diuine Office and shall haue his meditation ready against night The B. Virgin her Auncestours which shall be of the same matter of the first gathering some new instructions and points as of the nobility of the B. Virgin hauing for her Auncestours the holy Patriarches Abraham Isaac Iacob so many Kinges Princes and Lords as are recited and named in the Ghospel of the day The vanity of worldly greatnes Of the vanity of worldly greatnes and the solidity of vertue and eternall goods setting before his eyes on the one side the long list of those Princes and that notwithstanding the house of Dauid was brought to the condition of a poore Artificer the Scepter thereof being vsurped by Herod a strāger and forrenner How god raysed the house of Dauid Considering on the other side how God would rayse this royal house of Dauid not by ordinary wayes by aboundance of honours and worldly treasures but by giuing a Virgin that should surpasse the nobility of all the Kings of the earth and who should bring forth a Sonne that should restore the Kingdome The spiritual kingdome of Dauid established by Iesus Christ and seat of his Father Dauid by a way worthy of an Almighty King changing earth to heauen tyme to eternity writing his heauenly lawes in the harts of m●n and making them to be published ouer all the world establishing with the price of his owne precious bloud an heauenly and euerlasting kingdome therin to crowne for Kings all his friends and seruants and to heape on them glory and euerlasting riches Of these and like considerations he shall take occasion to prayse our Lord so wise as to find such wayes to repaire the ruines of mankind so liberall to communicate his goods and graces to his creatures and namely to this sacred Virgin to make her Mother of his Sonne and his Sonne Redeemer of the world And hauing made his speach and conclusion of his deuotion he shall draw towardes his lodging shall finish the rest of his Iourney saying our Ladyes Litanies or other prayers to take his repose and rise the more fresh fit for his morning exercise The fiue and twentith Day A meditation of the Presentation of the B. Virgin in the Temple CHAP. XVII THIS day The B.V. presented to the Temple the Pilgrime hauing sayd his accustomed prayers at his lodging shall goe to the holy House there to performe his principall Meditation which shall be of the presentation of the holy Virgin when her father Ioachim and Anne her Mother Niceph. l. 1. cap. 7. Niss ser de human Christi S. Euod epist. ad Antioch did bring her to the Temple of Hierusalem at three yeares of age there to offer and consecrate her to God The prayer preparatory as before The first preamble shall represent S. Ioachim and S. Anne as standing at the gate of the Temple to offer their little creature this Virgin to the high Priest to be admitted receaued among the virgins consecrated to Almighty God The second preamble shall demand grace duely to vnderstand this mystery The first point shall be to consider Our Bl. Ladyes childhood wonderfull euery way that as the Conception of the B. Virgin was a worke beyond the ordinary course and law by a singular grace wherby she was so conceiued of barren and old parents and by a speciall priuiledge aboue all the children of Adam preserued from all sinne and vncleanes being all pure and heauenly as also her Natiuity was diuine correspondent to her Conception so her childhood exceeded the common course of others and was endowed with all the blessings that might make that age admirable And if the holy Scripture sayth nothing thereof The son of Cresus Zoroastes Hercules S. Ambrose Plato it is because it may necessarily be presumed Some children haue beene meruailous for speaking a little after their birth others for laughing when they were borne others for hauing killed serpents S. Ambrose was honoured with a prodigious swarme of Bees that set themselues on his mouth who will not then belieue that the infancy of our B. Lady was honoured with all spirituall and rare graces and that this part of her life was agreeable proportionate to the two preceding The vertus of this virgin infant and ensuing parts thereof which were all admirable therfore heere the contemplatiue soule must represent her a little creature as a wonder of creatures a child prudent sage aduised modest deuout hauing nothing childish but body and yeares and hauing a great soule in a small body and finally a Virgin bearing in her childhood all the qualityes conditions that should make the foūdation of vertue for the most noble wise couragious and most vertuous Lady of the world And in such discourses he shall prayse the greatnes of the workeman for hauing made such a creature and shall stirre vp his loue and deuotion to the seruice of him and of this Virgin for the loue of him Why she was presented The first cause The second point shall containe two causes among many other of this oblation wherof the neerest
them behould heere one oppressed with the burden of his sinnes cryeth at thyne eares from the bottome of his hart If this thy Clemency be accustomed to preuent sinners and to receaue them into thyne armes to shew them mercy then behold one who casteth himselfe at thy feet confounded at his owne faults crying that he hath sinned against heauen Luc. 15. which he dareth not behould against thee to whome he dareth haue recourse hoping in thy mercies Heare my crye Luc. 18.15 O Father of mercies and receaue to mercy thy prodigall penitent sonne and who hast giuen me courage and strength to visit thee in this little-great house of thy Sonne Iesus Christ and kisse the walles and doores of that sacred Chamber which he and his mother haue sanctifyed a thousand wayes graunt me grace by the infinit merit of thy Sonne and of the glorious Virgin to serue thee all the dayes of my life with an entire and perfect hart And if I may be worthy to lift vp my handes to thy holy heauenly Throne for the body of thy Catholike Church For the whole Church whereof by thy grace I am a child and for those thou hast made worthy and principall members of the same I beseech thee O Lord for all the sayd Church in generall defend it increase it sanctify it according vnto thy power and mercy I beseech for him who in the same holdeth as from thee For the Pope the keyes of heauen that he may perfectly and faythfully gouerne this Common-wealth of thy house to thy honour and glory and the profit of the flocke committed to him for the Princes and Pastours who do assist him and vnder his authority haue the gouernement of souies For the Prelats that they may wisely instruct and faithfully defend their flocke and charitably feed them vnto life euerlasting For all Kinges and Christian Princes For Christiā Princes who vnder the protection of thy prouidēce do cōmand the people that as true Fathers and Protectours of the publike good they may carry the raynes and gouernement of their earthly policy which thy power hath put into their handes may vse iustly the sword which they beare for the defence of Innocency and punishment of wickednes For the most Christian King his deere Queene the Princes of the bloud and all the Royall house and Realme For the King assist them O Lord with thy fauours and graces remembring the seruices which thy holy Church hath receaued of their Ancestours and of the French nation hauing heertofore often left their houses and countrey not sparing their goods nor their bloud to go buckle with the Squadrons of the enemyes of thy name and to replant the banner of the Crosse in barbarous Countryes But specially I present my most humble vowes prayers for this noble Fleuron-de-Lys Monsieur the Dauphine thy guift For the Prince and the hope of the Crowne of France Make him great in wisedome valour piety and in all those vertues which gaue the title of Most-Christian to his Ancestours the name of Great to Charlemaine S. Lewis the place and honour of a Saint in the Church of God to his great Grād-father Lewis the IX Make him great and holy on the earth there to be a stay and bulwarke to the Catholike faith the ioy of his Father and Mother the honour of the nobility and of his house and the rest and repose of his people that he may reigne one day in heauen in the rank of thy greatest Saints Assist the sonne who hast assisted the Father so many wayes and so meruailously that France vnder him may shine in piety abound in peace florish in glory and may be thy chosen Kingdome and the French nation thy well-beloued people I beseech thee Lord for all those to whome I am bound in any title whatsoeuer For benefactours of bloud benefits friendship or otherwise and who haue hope in my prayers for my Parents my friends For friēds and enemies my enemies make them partakers of thy graces and me worthy to obtaine some thing for them O heauenly Father O mighty Sonne my soueraigne Lord and Maister equall to thy Father in power and bounty O Holy Ghost the bond of both To the B. Virgin O ineffable Trinity harken to my voice and heare my prayer O glorious Virgin the principall worke of this one and of these three most happy Mother faithfull Aduocate carry this my voice and prayer to the Sanctuary of this supreme Maiesty who hath made thee so great in heauē and earth Obtaine for me an hart and forces to serue thee as a true Pilgrime all the tyme of my mortality to praise blesse and adore his greatnes and goodnes for euer in the Kingdome of heauen in the company of thy selfe the Angels Saints of al those for whome I am to present my humble requests This is the prayer I make to thee in thy holy Chamber departing from thence Adieu sacred Chamber Adieu noble little Palace Adieu pretty house more large then t●e whole world more rich then the Orient more pleasant then Paradise vpon earth The remembrance of thy Altars of thy pauements of thy walles and of thy wonders shall remayne alwayes planted in my hart as a liuely and pregnant memorial to stirre me vp to yield honour prayse and immortall thank● to the Sonne and the Mothet who with their honour haue made thee so honourable The After-dinner and Euening of the 30. day and the ninth of the Pilgrimes aboad How the Pilgrime departed from Loreto CHAP. XLII AFTER his spirituall refection he shall take his leaue of his friends bid them farewell thanking them and recommending himselfe to their prayers and taking necessary instructions for his returne and he shall not forget to doe some markeable Almes if he be able and hauing taken his corporall refection he shall depart in good tyme with a resolution to suffer much more for our Sauiour For in what measure he hath receaued new graces new light and forces he should also labour and do more in proofe and tryall of his loue for him in all occurrences For his Itinerarium and guide of his iourney he shall haue the Ten dayes of Lazarus The ten dayes of Lazarus which are the ten dayes iourney following whereby he shall take example and direction in the exercise of his deuotion in his way If the number of dayes be too short he shall diuide the meditation of one day into more to haue inough or shal take them els where and if he may returne in lesse tyme he may choose what will be fittest for him and leaue the rest and what is sayd of this third part of the ten dayes of Pilgrimage of lengthning or shortning the meditations according to the way may be practised in the precedent parts also THE RETVRNE OF THE PILGRIME OF LORETO Or the Ten dayes iourney of Lazarus The one and thirtith day of the
of the cleare vision and contemplation of their Creatour the cause of all beauties that are in heauen or earth and infinitly more beautifull then all other beauty put together Of the body He meditated in the second place of the glory which the bodies of the ●ust shall haue after the Resurrectiō which can not otherwise be declared but as the Apostle declareth the whole felicity That the eye hath not seene nor the eare heard nor the hart of man comprehended ● Cor. 2. what God hath prepared for those that loue h m he could say no more then in saying as he did that it is impossible to conceiue that felicty The scripture sayth that the iust shall shine like the sunne and compareth them to eagles Matt. 15. signifying the beauty agility of their body Our Sauiour to whose similitude we shall rise agayne came out of the graue that he rose out subtile impassible such in similitude shall our bodies be in such qualities shining Phil. 3.20 transparēt agile subtile penetrant and immortall heere withall euery particular part of the body shall haue a supernaturall beauty as now it hath a naturall with this difference that then all the body being transparent like christall all parts shall be visible in it as well the inward as the outward the bones the muscles the sinewes the veines the arteries the lungs the liuer the hart all shall be cleansed and cleared from all imperfectiō indewed with their proper beauty in propo●tion clearenes and colour This of Saphire that of Emeraldes one of Carbuncles another of Diamonds and aboue all shall be most adm rable those which haue beene employed in some speciall and peculiar seruice of the diuine Maiesty So the skinne of S. Bartholomew stead off for the faith shall shine with a particular beauty the armes and feete of S. Peter crucifyed the head of S. Paul cut of the tongues of true preachers the hands of Almoners the armes of the true souldiours of Iesus-Christ the eyes of chastity the hayres of virginity nothing shall be without recompence without excellency without particular glory Lazarus was plunged in this meditation and sayd O my soule if thou beest rauished meditating these beauties how great shall thy ioy be in enioying them O Lazarus what doost thou to deserue them What giuest thou to buy them What sufferest thou to gaine this honour And with what pace walkest thou to get the goale of this glory O soules redeemed with the precious bloud of Iesus thinke vpon these honours O Christian Dames who so highly esteeme the beauty of the body that not hauing it you would gladly purchase it with great summes of gold and siluer hauing it do hold it so deere tender it so carefully by art by gold by apparell by chaynes carkenets and iewels your beauty is nothing it is foule and ill fauoured in respect of this and if it were any thing you know well it shall finally perish eyther by some misfortune or by touch of sicknes or by age or surely by death Where is the beauty of Absalō of Lucrece of so many men women admired in the world Loue then the beauty of this Resurrection which shall be proper for euer vnto your bodies and to obtaine it loue now the beauty of your soules O my soule be thou amorous and in loue with this beauty O glorious Virgin O faithfull aduocate aduāced this faire and ioyfull day aboue all the thrones of the heauenly and happy spirits the wonder of all goodly creatures on earth whilst thou wert aliue the wonder of all the creatures in heauen for euer the honour of the triumphant Church the refuge of the militant the comfort of the afflicted the guide of wanderers helpe vs with thy graces and credit with him by whome thou wert this day carryed vp into heauen with the company of all the heauenly hostes Procure o most B. Virgin that we obtaine grace holily to liue vpon earth to the imitation of thy selfe and happily to dye to thy example and one day to enioy eternally the riches of the triumphant Resurrection in the Kingdome of thy Sonne Iesus 1. An exhortation to a sick person in agony of death 2. The affliction of Lazarus 3. His arriuall at his Fathers house 4. His farewell to his Father and to the world CHAP. XXV THVS Lazarus ended his prayer Theodosius and Vincent ended then also and had felt great inward ioy therein The steward came early to their chamber hauing made ready their breakfast but they would eate nothing saying it was to soone They desired him humbly to salute in their behalfe Monsieur the Marquesse the Abbot the Vicount the Baron his children and to assure them that they would pray to God for their prosperity The steward had closely put into Lazarus bagge ten Crownes wrapped in a paper with these words of the Marquesse owne writing Pray to God for the Marques which Lazarus found at night in his fathers house He imbraced the Steward with many thankes after they had sayd their Pilgrims prayers they went out of the Castle and hauing beene a while silent they began to talke Lazarus praised much the prudence and liberality of the Marques and of his brother the sincere and harty loue of his children full of humility and courtesy the true markes of true nobility as contrariwise pride and disdaine is a true token of a base and rude mynd he commended also greatly the modesty diligence of all the officers and seruants and tooke this for a sure signe of the Marquesse his vertue for commonly like maister like men and the subiects doe for the most part frame themselues after the fashions of their Lord. Theodosius sayd that he noted at supper a meruailous contentment of all in the answere that was made to Syre Cime and that he did neuer better perceiue the leuity obstinacy of heresy then in that man who sought nothing but to talke and shew himselfe though he shewed himselfe alwayes void of good learning Pride the Father of heresy Whereupon Lazarus sayd Pride is the Father of heresy and vanity is her Mistresse and therefore you may not meruaile to see an Heretike both proud and vayne togeather Wherefore then quoth Vincent doth not the Marquesse his nephew shew himselfe like his maister Because sayth Lazarus he is not so much an Heretike as bred and brought vp in heresy neuer hauing beene Catholike knowing nothing but what they haue giuen him to vnderstand without contradictiō it is well to be hoped that as he is of a noble tractable nature and of a goodly spirit that as soone as he shall haue free liberty to conferre with some learned man or cast his eyes vpon some learned booke he will discouer the deceits of these impostures which his maister hath commended vnto him for rules and maximes of his Religion will imbrace the truth of the Catholike fayth Surely sayd Vincent I longed much
THE PILGRIME OF LORETO PERFORMING HIS VOW MADE TO THE GLORIOVS VIRGIN MARY MOTHER OF GOD. Conteyning diuers deuout Meditations vpon the Christian Cath. Doctrine By Fa. Lewis Richeome of the Society of IESVS Written in French translated into English by E.W. PRINTED At Paris Anno Dom. M.DC.XXIX TO THE MOST HIGH AND EXCELLENT PRINCESSE MARY BY GODS SINGVLAR PROVIDENCE QVEENE OF GREAT BRITAINE FRANCE AND IRELAND c. MADAME This Pilgrime being drawn with a great desire to present himselfe and his seruice to your Maiesty was driuen backe by a double feare the one of offending with his ouer-boldnes in presenting himselfe poore Pilgrime to so great a Princesse the other least the very name of Pilgrime might debar him of all accesse and Audience Yet at last he resumed his first resolution considering that he was to appeare before a Queene not so Great as Gracious as all that conuerse in your Royall Court do try and testify You are the daughter of that great and Gracious King who heertofore hath with gracious acceptāce intertained this same Pilgrim in Frāce presented vnto him by that eloquent learned and Religious Frenchman F. Lewis Richeome Accept then MADAME in England what your renowned Father imbraced in France He desireth only to be graced and honoured with your Maiestyes Name and to shroud himselfe vnder the winges of your Princely protection and to be admitted your Maiesties poore beadesman For the bare Name of Pilgrime though it may chance to breed some iealousy at the first yet whosoeuer shall but search him and examine his instructions and directions find nothing but of deuotion meditation prayer and particulerly for your Maiesty he may hope rather to be admitted for his innocency and loyall Intention then excluded for the only name of Pilgrime which Name though now strange hath heertofore beene so vsuall and esteemed in our Court S. Helene and Country as Kinges and Queenes haue not only vndertaken it but gloried therein Canutus And so great sayth an ancient Authour 900. yeares since was the deuotion of Englishmen in that tyme Ceadwalla after all the Country was conuerted and christened that not only the Noble men and the meaner sort Clerickes and Layickes but the Kinges the Kinges children leauing their kingdomes and the wealth of the world Marcelli● in vita S. Switb●r●● haue out of their great deuotion chosen for a tyme to go Pilgrims for Christ on earth This Pilgrime was presented to your Maiestyes Father in France of purpose to offer his prayers for the then Daulphin now King the benefit and fruit whereof he hath found and felt in good successe of his affaires and for all the Royall house Realme of France wherein your Maiesty had a part he commeth now wholy and particulerly to do the like for both your Maiesties that God by the intercession of his Blessed Mother would blesse your Royall persons your people and kingdome with all earthly and heauenly benedictions And namely that hauing vnited you in the sacred bandes of holy Matrimony and lincked your hearts with so fast Loue and Affection as all your Subiects do ioy to see and heare that he would also blesse you with the happy fruit thereof and make his Maiesty a ioyfull Father and You a Mother of many goodly and Godly Princes who may longe sway the Scepter of great Britaine after you may imitate in vertue and sanctity S. Edward and S. Lewis your Maiesties glorious predecessours and in wisedome and valour your Maiesties noble Father of famous memory Neither doe I see MADAME why this Pilgrime should feare to come to any Court or company seeing he cōmeth euery where but among his fellowes for though all be not Pilgrimes of Loreto neither is this booke only or principally to direct such yet whilest we liue in this world we are though as Kinges Queenes and Emperours all Pilgrimes as a great King sayd of himselfe Aduena peregrinus sum ego Psal 38. Who though they haue thousandes of Castles and Citties yet haue they not heere any one Ciuitatem permanentem which shall not be taken from them before they dye or they taken from it by death but futuram inquirimus hauing no mansion-house or byding place in this world we goe seeking one in Heauen where be multae mansiones Which this Pilgrimage vnder the shadow of his other Pilgrimage doth exactly teach vs to do exhorting vs with S. Peter 1. Pet. 2. as strangers and Pilgrimes to abstaine from carnall desires which fight against the soule and to seeke the spirituall and eternall the increase whereof will make your Maiesty greater before God and man For the honours and glory of this mortal life your Maiesty hath as much as your heart can reasonably desire You haue for your Ancestours great Emperours and Kings of Hungary and Bohemia for your Progenitors the great Dukes of Tuscany for your Father Great Henry of France and for your husband the King of Great Britaine all Great Being placed in the top of these honours there is no roome for more nor cause to desire any greater fortunes but only those which may and alwayes should increase in vs in this life and prouide matter for a Crowne of glory in the next These MADAME are holy vertues which adorne noble deuout soules as silke siluer gold pearles and precious stones doe the body these are the ornaments which haue aduanced meane women aboue Queenes Queenes aboue thēselues as they did Hester who though she were exceeding beautifull yet her humility modesty charity wisedome other diuine qualities of her soule made her more admired in her life thē the beauty of her body or the Diademe of her head and after her death hath left her Name grauen in the memory of all following ages These goodly ornaments I say togeather with the corporall guifts which the hand of God hath liberally cast vpon You wonne the harts of those who knew you in France and were the titles wherby you were iudged to be a Princesse worthy of a Kingdome and a fit Consort for so great a King To conclude these are the treasures which only You shall carry with You departing this life to raigne for euer in the other with the Blessed The other guifts as beauty riches honour Iewelles the Crowne it selfe and all other earthly treasures the spoyle of tyme do passe from their being to their buriall as a shadow that vanisheth as a Post that gallopeth away as a Ship on the sea as a Bird in the ayre who leaue no path nor trace behind them as dust or a lock of woll hoysted with the wind as the froth and fome of the Sea broken with a storme as smoke dispersed in the ayre and as the memory of a guest which stayeth but one night Thus sayd Salomon out of his owne experience and we see as much euery day by ours Sap. 5. How vaine then O most Christian Queene is all this world
ordered that this Name may be a defence to vs against our enemies a solace of our sorrowes in this mortall pilgrimage the oyle and remedy of our woundes and in the end our life and saluation The Pilgrime hauing thus prayed shall heare Masse at his tyme shall finish his accustomed deuotions of the morning The After-dinner and Euening of the nine and twentith Day A Meditation Of the Adoration of the three Kinges CHAP. XXXV IN the euening after Euensong the Pilgrime after the two precedent mysteries shall meditate of the Adoration of the Kings those notable first Pilgrimes of the Paynims come out of the East by the inspiration of God to adore the King of the Iewes at the place where they should find him borne of whose birth they had a reuelation in their Cōntry without knowing in particuler where it should happen For ground of this meditation he shall consider how these Magi were men skillfull and learned in humane The learned amōg the Persians were called Magi and diuine things whether they were of Persia or Arabia or of any other country of the East where they called such people Magi as many Writers tell vs. And though these were men curious yet no coniurers according to S. Agustine They were also Kings as the preparations and presents they brought did declare for meane personages had no meanes to come so farre to offer gold incense and myrrh and therefore also they were Magi Tert. l ● Iud. Plin. l. 30. c. 1. 〈◊〉 l. 1. de 〈◊〉 for the Roialty could not there be without this Magia in the East none might be Kings but Magi and learned folkes as amongst other authors one of our Doctours do note And they are by the Euangelist rather called Magi then Kings for before God the name of Sage is more honorable then the name of King This ground being layd the first point of the meditation shall be to contemplate these holy Kings cōming out of the East into strange coūtry moued heerunto first by the inspiration of God as Abraham left his coūtry to come into Canaan secondly by the Prophesies as well of Balaam their Ancestor who prophesied of a starre that should arise out of Iacob as of the Sybills who had most playnly written Num. 24. that there must be borne a King of the Iewes Ci ero 2 ●●uin Sueton. in O●tau c. 94. in Vespas who should rule all the world It was also about that tyme a common bruit ouer all the East as profane Authors themselues doe testifie Cicero Suetonius and others Thirdly they were moued and forcibly driuen to vndertake this voiage by the visiō of the extraordinary starre which did appeare to them in the East whereof they had heard the foresayd Prophesy of Balaam had long expected according to our Doctors as a signe of this King borne They came then to Hierusalem as to the chiefe and Metropolitane Citty of Iudea there to learne this newes Num. 24. they aske for him that is borne King of the Iewes The earthly King entred into a rage and fury enquireth also with them Chrysos Hier. in Matth. not to adore with them but to kill him if he could he assembleth the Doctours he demandeth of them who should answer the truth he did all prudently sauing what was the principall for he enquireth exactly after the truth but will not imbrace the truth They al tell that this King must be borne at Bethleem he exorteth them to go and to aduertise him when they had found him he feygned that he would be good to destroy goodnes it selfe They goe on and are guided by the new Starre which had brought them from the East which lead them euen to the house where the King they sought was they find him they prostrate themselues before him they adore him they behould a little Child they belieue a great King a small port and a great Maiesty a mortall infant an immortall God and by their presents of Gold Incense and Myrrh they do homage as to a King adore him as God and confesse him to be Man And in this comming and adoration was accomplished what Isay prophesied Isa 60. Arise Hierusalem and be thou enlightned for thy light is come the glory of thy Lord hath appeared vpon thee and the Gentils shall walke in thy light and Kings in the brightnes of thy birth Psalm 71. And King Dauid The Kings of Tharsis and the Ilands shall offer guifts the Kings of Arabia and Saba shall bring their presents he shal liue and the Gold of Arabia shall be brought vnto him Then O Christians soule instructed in the house of God adore this King seeing these poore Paynims cōming out of the darkenes of their Paganisme Vide S. Chrys hom 14. in 1. Cor. 10. are come to adore worship him after so many wonders wrought seeing they did adore him being a child adore him prostrating thy selfe before him and offering thy selfe as they did and after offer thy presents for first he regardeth the hart and then thy guifts so he cast his eye vpon Abell Gen. 4.4 and after vpon his Sacrifice adore him with fit and conuenient presents with the Gold of Charity with Incense of deuotion with Myrrhe of Purity offer him thyne vnderstanding thy will and thy memory thy spirit humbled thy will ordered thy flesh mortified to confesse loue and serue him as thy true God and true Redeemer The second point of the Meditation A demonstration of the Power of Iesus in the adoration of the Kings CHAP. XXXVI THE second point shall be to consider how the Sonne of God did heerin an act of an Almighty King although he appeared low and humble The Kings of the earth when they are crowned and take possession of their kingdomes are visited by diuers Embassadours and honoured by forren Princes Here our Sauiour entring into possession of his spirituall kingdome is not only honoured by Embassadours but adored by the Kings thēselues comming vnto him in person Meruailous coniūctions Of which worke the contemplatiue soule shall take occasion to consider the meruailous conioyning of things most different which our Sauiour made in all the parts of his life And euen as he had maried into one person two naturs infinitly distant the natures of God and man to be a mediator God and man betwixt God mē so hath he alwayes ioyned diuine actiōs to humane and testified the truth of these two natures by the diuersity and encounters of workes directly opposite In his Incarnation it was an act of great humility abasement that God was made man yet was it a most high worke that this man was borne without man by the power of the Holy Ghost of a Virgin In his Natiuity was seene the Son of God borne in a stable hauing lesse then the least among men but the same is song by the Angels and adored aboue by the immortall spirits
that with a deliberate purpose despise the riches of the earth This doctrine is very high and altogether a paradoxe to worldly men who call rich men happy and care litle for the Kingdome of heauen The 2. Happy are the meeke 2. The meeke shall possesse the earth of the liuing Psal 2● 141.6 Orig hom 26 in Num. Bas in Psal 33. for they shall possesse the earth This is the earth of the lyuing This is also a paradoxe to the world who esteemeth aboue all other those that haue their choller and their hand ready at commaundement and know how to be reuenged of their enemies children and heires of the earth but of the earth of the dead not of the liuing The 3. Happy are those that weep for they shall be comforted The world loueth better to laugh in this life although they should be comfortlesse euer after thē to bewayle their sinnes heere and after to enioy the euerlasting comfort of heauen The 4. Happy are they that hunger thirst after iustice for they shall be filled the hunger and thirst of this world is hungerly to seeke and desire the transitory goods and honours that fill but satisfy not The 5. happy are the merciful for they shall obtaine mercy The worldlings are counted magnanimous if they be vnmercifull and fierce rather seeking to make others miserable for their particular profit than to shew themselues mercif●l vnto them in their necessity for Gods sake The 6. Happy are they that are cleane of hart for they shall see God the eye of the soule is the intentiō cleane hart this is the eye which shall see God the obiect of eternal felicity whereof the foule and vncleane soule is vncapable The 7. Happy are the peace-makers for they shal be called the children of God The louers of peace concord shall carry this goodly title honoured with the marke of their Father who is God of peace as contrariwise they that make onely account of warre to sow discord and dissention shall be called the children of the Diuel The 8. Happy and those that suffer persecution for iustice for to them appertaineth the Kingdome of heauen This last clause encountreth right with the iudgment of men who put their felicity in the friendship fauours and countenance of men and accounteth him accursed that suffereth persecutiō Iesus-Christ therfore opening his mouth hath controled the false opinion of the world and sheweth how honourable a thing it is to suffer for the honour of God and that by his practise fortifyed the proofe of this his paradoxe hauing himselfe chosen labours persecutions the death of the Crosse the toppe height of all persecution heere Lazarus concluded in these words O sweete Iesus excellent teacher of truth and truth it self The praier giue me the grace well to vnderstand thy doctrine and holily to practise it to be poore in spirit and rich in thy blessings and aboue all for thy loue to suffer the wants and persecutions of this life and with thee to be partaker of that hire which thy doctrine promiseth in the other Thus prayed Lazarus Theodosius and Vincent met in many points of their meditation and all did conceiue A sermon of Perfection that this sermon was a lesson of Apostolicall perfectiō contein●ng the doctrine of most high Christian vertues the recompence that shall be rendred to euery one according to the measure of their merit This done they prepared thēselues to confession for to receiue for they vnderstood by the Porter that the good man had faculty of the Bishop to administer the Sacraments when occasion should be offered Math. 16.21 Rom. 2.6 He came to visite them in the morning and giuing them the good morrow he inuited them to Masse which he beganne hauing heard their confessions they receiued an admirable comfort to see this heauenly old man celebrate the Sacrifice and yet more in receiuing the body of our Sauiour 1. The description of the world 2. Her lawes 3. Her fayth 4. The good mingled with the wicked in this life 5. Horrible sights 6. To serue God is a thing honourable CHAP. XVII THEIR deuotion ended the Hermite brought them to the chamber to take a litle refection for the necessity of their iourny Lazarus for himselfe and his companions sayd my good Father we cannot eat nor drinke hartily except first we may enioy the performance of your promise may see that Citty neerer which yersterday you shewed vs a farre off and made vs wonder at the meruailous qualities you recounted thereof it is to early to eat yet neyther can we haue a better breakfast at your hand than the hearing of such a lesson I remember well my promise quoth the Hermite I will acquit my self but it shall be in walking with you for I will be your companion some peece of the way you shall be so much the forwarder on your iourny giuing his benediction he deuided the egs which he caused to be sodden in the shell and to giue them example began himselfe first When they had done which was soone well saith he let vs now go on Gods name The porter gaue him in his hād his staffe of pear-tree to rest himself on shutting the doore after him he went out with them the sunne being about an houre high The Pilgrims were very aager and attentiue to heare the exposition of the allegory which the good Hermit began in this sort The description of the world S. Aug. 14 de ciuit c. 26. The Citty which I haue described vnto you my good friends is the world the assemby and Citty of the diuell foūded in the midst of the earth for those wicked persons who make this Citty whersoeuer they be they are in the midst of the earth euery part of the earth being his midst as euery line of a Globe in the midst of his circumferēce The situation is a ma●ith ground a place of durt myre ill assured as her hopes base and vncertaine It is neere to the sea neere I say in qualities tossed with a thousand windes and tempests full of daungers of vices and sinnes as the sea is of rockes sandes monsters and such like S. Aug. in Psal 142. The founder is Self-loue the eldest sonne of rebellion Two loues saith one Saint built two Citties Sel-floue built that of the Diuell to the contempt of God The Loue of God built the Citty of God vnto the contempt of our selues and this is founded in heauen in the midst of the Kingdome of God Hee of it is that Abell the first member of that Citty built nothing vpon the earth Why Abell built no citty but Cain because he was a Pilgrime Cain the first reprobate and cittizen of Satans Citty and of the world built a towne therin This citty is a refuge of rebellion a den of rake-hels enemies to God and preuaricatours of his law Insteed of walles it hath deep ditchs and great rampires
no religion to abuse all for to preuaile in their intentions to oppresse vertue and authorize vice and namely pleasure couetice and ambition to loue and sow discord to promise rest and honour and to yield at last nothing but wind and smoke Her faith is to betray her friends and most cruelly to handle and destroy her most faithfull seruants which commonly are three great and ancient families of the same bloud with those three sortes of courtiers of Merefolly whome you saw yesterdaye And to the end that this towne doe not rebell being oppressed and offended with his cruelties An encharmed drinke he hath dressed a feast of purpose where he giueth them a certaine drinke wherby the guests are so well charmed that they lose the remembrance of all that is past and belieue that all that were killed died in their bed and that they are happy and haue alwaies a good opinion of their maister if by good chāce they be not vncharmed by seeing the perfidiousnesse folly of men which trust vnto him and serue him with so great loue for such wages Those whome you saw euen now compasse about this house like mad men are not men but wicked spirits in the shape of men who reioycing in any tragedy acted to their desire came to see if peraduenture they could entrappe any one to cary him to the towne and to make him slaue to their great maister by the means of their gouernour Now there be neere vnto this Citty some good men that enter therinto somtimes but as strangers and forennners and as neither he nor his Citty doth trust them so do they trust it as little and it falleth out well for them For if they should be made Denizens or take any right of burgesse amongst them they must needs vndergo the same fortune with the naturall Cittizens Our King hath purposed a lōg time to raze it down to the ground and to cut in peeces these rake-hels but by reason of those good and faythfull seruants of his Maiesty he hath deferred and temporized hitherto chusing rather like a good Prince to pardon many enemies in respect of some friends than to hurt his friends in chastising his enemies Perea●t amici modo pereant in●mici vox Tyranni which is the humour of a tyrant Behold my good Brother out of what Citty you are come if it may be called a Citty and not rather a labyrinth or enclosure of many parkes filled with lions serpents foxes rhinocerots basiliskes and other sauage and cruell beastes Heere Theodosius and Vincent remēbred againe the dream of Lazarus al three did highly prayse God of this great fauour in hauing pulled them out of so dangerous a place and they tooke a singular pleasure in the narration of the good man but they did not vnderstand what Citty he had described neyther did they remember that euer they set foote i● any that was of such situation figure and quality neither in Aegypt Palestine nor in Christendome Lazarus suspected that it was a Parable and a mysticall description allegorizing some spirituall Citty and they requested him more plainly to expresse what Citty it was Theodosius and Vincent who had almost taken all his wordes according to the letter made yet more instance but the Hermit for feare of holding then too long and the better to prepare their hart and eare aduised thē to eate somthing first and rest a while and that the houre of his prayer approched promising for the rest to satisfy their demand in the morning if they desired they tooke a small refection which serued for their supper and after they went altogether to say Letanies in the Chappell whence the good Hermite brought them to a litle place neere his Cell where there was a table and certaine mats layd vpon bordes to rest vpon so he left them with his blessing and retired himselfe to his Cell to his accustomed deuotions charging his man to haue ready early in the morning all thinges necessary for the Altar The Pilgrims examined their conscience tooke for subiect of their meditation the sermon of the 8. Beatitudes as they are called which our Sauiour made in the mountaine to his Apostles The six and thirtith day and the sixt of his Returne The Hermits prayer CHAP. XV. THE Hermit watched all night in prayer and demaunded of God the grace happily to shut vp the last period of his mortall Pilgrimage and to fauour his Pilgrimes whome of his good assistance he had sent vnto him that they might performe their course like true Pilgrims and come at last to their heauenly home and coūtry He prayed also in generall that it would please him The Hermits praier to cast forth the beames of his mercy ouer so many poore mortall creatures who allured with the baytes of the world and caryed with the wind of her vanities posted vnto euerlasting perdition O Lord sayth he what is this mortall world and how great is the blindenesse of man The shortnes of this life who suffereth himselfe to be seduced by such a cosener taking at his handes straw for gold and shadowes for truth I haue liued 80. yeares vpon the earth alas what is become of these yeares and all that hath beene done since the Creation of the world They came from nothing and to nothing they are vanished againe and nothing can I make account of but of a few houres employed in the seruice of thy Maiesty if I haue employed any well what is life but a passing shadow and the pleasures and presents of the world but deceitfull vanities In such prayers desires passed the good man al that night talking to God in the closet of his hart without sound of tongue Lazarus and his compainions were vp soone after mydnight and in great silence began their Meditation A Meditation vpon the eight Beatitudes CHAP XVI EVERY one remembred the history of the Gospell which sayth Iesus seeing the multitude ascended vp into a mountaine Matt. 5 2● and when he was set his Disciples came vnto him opening his mouth he taught c. They noted in these words the signification of some great and high doctrine pronounced in a choice place in a mountaine as a singular and high Law giuen by our Sauiour sitting and opening his mouth as the Doctour of doctours who hauing hertofore opened the mouth of his Angels and Prophets openeth now his owne and speaketh in person not to the cōmon sort but to those whome he had ordained of the priuy Councell to his prouidence the pillers of perfection and the noble foundations of his Church and that which they had noted in generall in this Preface they did obserue in euery one of the eight clauses which make this sermon The first saith Happy are the poore of spirit 1. The poore of spirit Louers of pouerty The humble for theirs is the Kingdome of heauen The poore not by fortune but by will and vow the humble and