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B15418 Meditations vppon the mysteries of our holy faith with the practise of mental praier touching the same composed in Spanish by the R.F. Luys de la Puente ... ; and translated into English by F. Rich. Gibbons ... Puente, Luis de la, 1554-1624.; Gibbons, Richard, 1550?-1632. 1610 (1610) STC 20485; ESTC S1664 417,169 706

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of his Sonne for the Seruices hee did him and the Paines that for his loue hee endured Othertimes speaking to the Sonne of God alledging vnto him the Loue that hee bare vs the Office that hee holdeth of our Redeemer and Aduocate and the greate Price that wee cost him Othersome times speaking to the Holy Ghoste begging of him the like for the Loue that hee beareth to Christ IESVS our Lord and for his merites And heere likewise we may make another Litanye of the Vertues of our Redeemer alledging his Humillitye of Hearte his Pouertye of Spirite his Meekenesse his Obedience his Patience his Mercye and his Charitye and all the rest Other Titles there are on the parte of our Necessitye and Miserye alledging before our Lord like Dauid that wee were conceiued in Sinne Psal 50.7 that wee haue terrible passions strong enemies very greate occasions and daungers and that with out him wee are able to doe nothing Psal 118 73. That wee are his Creatures made according to his owne Image and Likenesse and that for this cause the Deuill persecuteth vs to destroye vs and that therefore it belongeth to him to protect vs. And in conclusion wee may make another Catalogue of our owne Sinnes and Miseries counting them before God and exaggerating or amplifying them very much with Sorrowe of our Hearte for the more wee shall exaggerate them the more wee prouoke Gods mercye to remedye them Besides this men that are perfect may in some case alledge with Humillity their fore-passed seruices in Imitation of holy king Ezechias 4. Reg. 20 3. who asked of God prorogation or prolonginge of his Life alledging vnto him that hee had walked before him wth a perfect Hearte And the like did Christe our Lorde when after the Sermon of the supper hee praied to his Father Ioan. 17.4 as in his place shall bee seene These three kindes of Titles may bee mingled one with another Psal 24.11 after the forme that Dauid saide for thy name o Lord thou shalt be propitious to my sinne for it is much These and other such like reasons may bee alledged in Praier rather to moue our owne Heart to aske with Feruour Deuotion and Confidence then to moue God to heare vs. For our Lord much more desireth to heare vs Lib. de verbis Domini sermone 5. 29. and to giue vs the good Spirit that wee aske then wee to receiue him seeing as S. Augustine saithe God would not haue commaunded vs to aske of him if hee had not a will and a desire to giue vs what wee aske and asking of him in the manner aforesaide wee fullfill all that which the Apostle commaundeth vs when hee saieth Ad Philip 4.6.1 Ad Tim. 2.1 That our Petitions should presente themselues before God not alone but accompanied with three meruailous Actions that is to say with Praier which may raise our Spirit and the Affections thereof to the presence of God Ex D. Th. 2.2 q. 83. art 17. with Obsecrations that may alledge Titles to bee hearde and with Thankesgiuing for benefits receiued which may dispose vs to receiue those which wee aske afresh These are the principall things which mentall Praier comprehendeth Lib. de Spiritu anima cap. 70. qui ei tribuitur whose Order S. Augustine declared saying Meditatio parit scientiam scientia compunctionem compunctio deuotionem deuotio vero perficit orationem Frequent meditation engendreth science and knowledge of a mans selfe and of God knowledge engendreth affections of compunction for our sinnes and miseries compunction awaketh affections of deuotion towardes God for his greatenesse mercies and deuotion perfecteth Praier making our Spirit to joyne it selfe louingly to God to aske of him things decent fitting in such manner as is conuenient It resteth that wee explicate and declare the manner how euery one of these things is to bee donne beginning with that which is most proper and essentiall to Praier How wee are to speake vnto God in Mentall Praier §. 2. BY what hath beene saide it appeareth that the essence or nature of Mentall Praier properly consisteth in speaking within our selues to God our Lorde for two principall endes 1. The first is to praise him and blesse him for what hee is and to giue him thankes for the benefits and rewardes hee bestoweth vpon vs exercizing that soueraigne manner of Praier which S. Paule counselleth vs saying Ad Eph. 5.19 Ad Coloss 3.16 Bee filled vvith the Holy Spirit speaking to yourselues in Psalmes Hymnes and spirituall Canticles chaunting singing in your heartes to our Lorde giuing thankes al vvaies for all things in the name of our Lord IESVS Christe to God the Father In the which wordes the holy Apostle pointeth at foure diuine affections wherewith wee may speake in our heartes to God our Lorde for the ende aforesaide that is to say Psalmes Ex D. Th. lectio 7. in ad Ephes 5. Hymnes spirituall Canticles and Thankesgiuing Interiour Psalmes are Actions of the Loue of God with effectuall desires and determinations to serue and obey him offering ourselues to keepe most perfectly his Commandements and Counsailes This is that Musicke which Dauid calleth the Psalter of ten strings Psal 32.2 for as hee that plaieth on the Psalter or Harpe handleth all the ten strings thereof sometimes some of them sometimes othersome and sometimes all of them togither so in Praier making this musicke to God wee are to haue feruent desires to exercise the Vertues of Obedience Humillitye Patience and the rest now one then another sometimes alltogither as likewise stedfast purposes to keepe Gods Commaundements his Counsells laying handes now vpon one then vppon another and sometimes vpon alltogither Hymnes are Affections of the Praises of God reckoning vp all the excellencies perfections that hee hath and the workes that hee hath donne for the which hee is worthily to bee praised glorified of all creatures Sometimes I may say with the Seraphins Holy Holy Holy the Lord God of Hostes Isai 6.3 or in steede of this worde Holy I may put in other like wordes saying Good Mercifull Iust VVise and Povverfull arte thou my Lord and my God and most worthy to haue thy Sanctity and thy Greatenesse preached by the Seraphins Sometimes with the Seniours in the Apocalips Apoc. 5.12 I will say vvorthy art thou o Lambe of God vvhoe didst dye for vs to receiue Povver and Diuinitye and VVisdome and Strength and Honour and Glory and Benediction for euer and euer Amen And othersome times with the three Children of Babilon Dan. 3.57 Psal 102 1. that were in the fornace I will inuite all Ceatures to praise and glorify God And wth Dauid I will prouoke myne owne Soule and all the faculties thereof to blesse our Lord. Spirituall Canticles are Affections of Spirituall Ioy and Alacritie rejoicing that God is who hee is and for the Infinite good that hee hath in
Ecclesiasticus is very bitter to him that hath peace with Riches Eccles 41 1. and Dignities and is desirous to liue to enjoy them longer and the Sinnes hee committed in procuring and in abusing them shall augment this bitternesse Gods Iustice so ordaining it that those things which in their life were the Instruments of their vicious Delightes should in their Deathe bee their Executioners and Tormentours Then shall bee fullfilled that which is written in Iob of a Sinner His breade in his belly Iob. 20.14 which hee did eate with much Sauour suallbee turned into the gall of Aspes vvithin him the riches that hee hath deuoured he shall vomite out and God shall dravv them forth out of his belly He shall suck the Heade of the Aspes and the Vipers Tongue shall kill him that is to say his Delightes shall bee turned into Gall his Riches shall make him disgorge but hee shall neither haue Courage to dispose of them nor to leaue them vntill Deathe take them away by force the Serpents and Vipers of Hell tormenting him for hauing gotten and possessed them with Sinne. Secondly in that hower I must forcibly departe from my Parents and Brethren friends and Acquaintance and from all those that I loue whither it bee with a naturall Loue or with a Lawfull or vnlawfull Loue. D. Greg. 1. moral 13. And as wee leaue not without griefe what wee possessed with Loue and by how much the greater the Loue is wherewith it is possessed so much the greater griefe is felt in abandoning it exceeding greate will the Sorrowe bee that I shall feele to departe from so many persons and things that are so fastned to my Hearte And in these Anguishes I shall say with that other king Siccine separat amara mors Doth bitter Deathe thus separate 1. Reg 15 32. Is it possible that I should leaue those whome I so loue And shall I neuer more see them nor enjoy them O cruell Deathe how much doest thou exasperate my Hearte depriuing mee with such Sorowe of what I possessed with such Ioye 3. Lastly in that hower my Soule is to departe from my Bodye with whome it hath helde so strict and auncient Amitye and consequently it is to departe from this VVorlde and from all things therein contained without hope for euer againe to see heare taste or touche them And if the Loue I beare to my Bodye to my Life and to the other things of this visible worlde bee a disordinate Loue of force I must needes feele exceeding greate griefe to departe from them which I may easily make experience of by that sensible feeling I haue when they take from mee my VVealthe my Honour and Fame or exile mee from my Countrey and force mee to liue from my friendes like a Pilgrim among Strangers or cut of some member of my Bodye For all this together in a troope succeedeth in Deathe after another and a more painefull manner which is without hope euer to retourne againe to possesse it in this Life In euery one of these three Considerations pondering a while what is to bee noted I will enter into myselfe examine whither I carry a disordinate Loue to any of these things repeated which if I finde that I doe I will endeuour to vnroote it with the force of this consideration and with the exercize of Mortification for this is to dye in life and with proffit taking as it were by the hande Deathe Sap. 3.1 so not to feele Deathe as Religious men doe that abandon all things for Christe our Lorde whome I am to beseeche to ayde mee herein saying vnto him Colloquie O eternall God in vvhose hande the Soules of the Iust are and vnder vvhose Protection the Torment of Deathe doth not touche them take from my Soule the disordinate Loue of all visible things that in departing from them it may haue no feeling of Torment O my Soule if thou desirest that these three bitternesses of Deathe should not touche thee Loue not those things that Deathe can take from thee for if thou possesst them not vvith Loue thou shalt leaue them in Deathe vvithout Dolour or griefe I am likewise to ponder in these considerations how greate a madnesse it is to offend God and to indanger my eternall Saluation for things that I am so soone to abandon resoluing valourously with myselfe presently to auoyde any person or thing whatsoeuer that may expose mee to this perill dying to it rather then for its cause to dye to God and separating it from mee rather then it should separate mee from God Matt. 10 34. Luc. 12.51 Colloquie Seeing for this saide our Sauiour Christe that hee came to sende the sworde and Diuision vpon Earthe separating from men all Persons and Things that might hinder their Saluation O svveete Redeemer put forthvvith into my hande the svvorde of Mortification that I may separate from mee vvhatsoeuer might separate mee from thee dying to all that is created to liue to thee my Creator vvorlde vvithout ende Amen The third Pointe THirdly I am to consider the greate Affliction and Anguishe that the feare of the Account I am to make with God and of the rigorous Iudgement whereinto I am to enter will cause mee at that hower as also that I know not the Sentence that shall bee pronounced in the businesse of my Saluation VVherein I am to ponder the dreadefullnesse of this feare for three causes First for that the euill that is feared is the Supreme of all euills yea it is an eternall euill and remedilesse and I am now at the gates thereof Secondly for that the Sentence which is to bee giuen is definitiue and irreuocable and at the Instant is to bee executed without resistance Thirdly for that the cause on my side is very doubtfull because the Sinne that I committed is apparent to mee but not the true Penance that I did and my Conscience accuseth mee to haue offended the Iudge but I knowe not whither I haue appeased him Eccl. 9.1 1. Cor. 4.3 For no man knovveth vvhither hee bee vvorthy of Hatzed or Loue and though I finde no Sinnes in myselfe yet it may bee that God will finde them For all these Causes the feare will at that time bee most terrible For if those that haue a Sute in any waighty businesse wherein all their VVealthe their Honour or Life is Interessed haue very greate feare the day that they expect the Sentence how much greater feare shall I haue when I am neete the day wherein the diffinitiue Sentence is to bee giuen of my Saluation or Damnation And if the greatest Saintes are then afraide how much more shall I feare that am a miserable Sinner This Anguish and Feare vseth to bee augmented by the craft Apoc. c. 12.12 and Subtletye of the Diuell who in that hower tempteth most furiously because hee seeth hee hath but a litle time remaining and therefore hee stirreth vp greately all that may prouoke to
and humbly to subiect mee to vndergoe what penaunce soeuer that reason shall dictate and the Confessor shall impose vpon mee And dolour as an executioner is to torment mee breaking Psal 4.5 and shiuering my hearte for the offences I haue donne to my creator These foure Iudiciall actes am ●to doe within the hall of my hearte quickening them with the considerations which to this ende are ordained Iob. 23.4 35.14 Isai 43.26 and much more with the remembraunce of the presence of God the iudge of the quicke of the deade whom I am to beholde seated in the Throne of his maiestie as in the 9. Meditation hath beene declared for that the viewe of this most righteous Iudge will bee a cause to make mee doe it with greater diligence The first Pointe FIrst I am to consider D. Tho. 3. p. q. 90. act 2. that our Lord Christ would that our owne actes should bee partes of this sacrament to witte contrition confession and satisfaction which aunswere to the three sortes of sinning by thought worde and deede that I myselfe might concurre to the grace of my Iustification and that seeing I sinned with my actes with the same I might dispose myselfe to receiue my pardon And now that it hath beene the good pleasure of our Lorde to ennoble my actes making them the Instruments of his grace it is reason that I should exercise them with the greatest excellencie that I may Eccles 33 23. labouring as the VViseman saithe to bee in them superexcellent requiring of the three Persons of the Godheade particular fauour for euery one of them Of the holy Spirit to whome is attributed Charity I will begge contrition of hearte beseeching him that hee will kindle in my soule the fier of his loue from the which may proceede such a dolour as may consume all the drosse of my sinnes Of the Sōne of God who is the word of the eternal Father to whome is attribued wisdome I will begge light to knowe my sinnes and such humble wordes to cōfesse them that I may bee purified and cleansed of of them Of the eternall Father to whome is attributed Power I will begge force for the workes of satisfaction with perseueraunce vntill I haue paide all the paines that I owe for my sinnes Colloquie O most blessed Trinitie assist in my hearte in my lippes that I may vvorthily confesse all my sinnes and obtaine compleate remission of them Amen Then am I to consider all that is necessarie to exercize these three actes with greate perfection discoursing of euery one of them The Second Pointe 1. AS cōcerning the first acte Of Contrition which is sorrowe for sinnes I am to procure to haue it the most perfect that may bee not contenting myselfe with an imperfect sorrowe which they call Attrition proceeding from feare of the paines of hell but procuring the perfect sorrowe which they cal Contritiō and procedeth from the loue of God aboue all things as before hath beene saide And this sorrowe must bee the greatest that possiblie may bee because it is the measure of the grace that is giuen in this sacrament So that if the sorrowe bee imperfect and little the grace shall bee litle if it bee perfect and greate the grace shall bee greate for looke as sorrowe encreaseth so shall grace and if there bee no sorrowe no grace shall bee giuen And therefore the principall parte of this preparation consisteth in the perfectiō of sorrowe vnto the which I am to mooue myselfe with the cōsiderations that were set downe in the fift Meditation and with some similitudes deduced out of holy scripture to mooue vs vnto the teares of loue 2. Of the teares of loue Hierem. 6.26 Sometymes it telleth mee that I should weepe bitterly as a mother weepeth for the deathe of her onely begothen vpon whome shee had laied all her loue and repose so will I weepe for the spirituall deathe of my soule which is my onely one and by reason is much to bee loued yet I myselfe haue cruelly slaine her by sinne and subiected her to deathe euerlasting And seeing I haue so greate a feeling of the losse of those things that I loue a much greater feeling am I to haue of this because it is the greatest of all and herein teares are well employed For a mother let her weepe neuer so much shee shall not giue life to her sonne that is deade but I with the teares of Contrition shall obtaine life for my deade soule O infinite God Colloquie I am very much greaued for the iniurie I hune donne thee by killing vvith sinne the soule that thou gauest mee and seeing it is more thine then mine haue mercie vpon it Deliuer my soule from the svvorde of death Psalm 21.21 my only one from the dogg of Hell that I may liue to thee and confesse thy holy name amen 2 I will likewise weepe for my sinnes because with them I haue killed the only begotten Sonne Zacha. 12.10 Ad Heb. 6.6 who through excellencie meriteth this name Christ Iesus my Lord whome within myselfe I haue crucified againe and haue as much as lieth in me giuen occasion that he should die O only begoten Sonne of the Father I am exceedingly sorroufull for my sinnes Colloquie for hauing binne thereby a cause of thy death returne a Lord to liue in my soule vvith thy grace seeing thou dydst die to giue it life 3 Othersometimes it telleth mee that I should weepe like a Bride that hath by death lost her beloued spouse vpon whome depended her whole remedie and reliefe thereby remaining a widowe poore and abandoned And so will I weepe for my sinnes by the which I haue lost God the spouse of my soule and with him haue lost the iewells of his grace and Charitie and the giftes that he had giuen me remaining like a widowe not able to engender children of good workes merittes of life euerlasting but abandoned Colloquie and left dessolate without the protectiō of so sweete a spouse O if my harte vvould shiuer and breake vvith the force of dolour for hauing lost such a spouse such Ievvells and such amiable protection And yet notwithstanding if I perceiue that my harte is still hardned and melteth not with the considerations of loue Ex D. Bern. serm 16. in Cant. I will make vse of those of feare before mentioned that feare as S Barnard saieth may quickne me and open the dore to loue excitetur vt excitet Let feare be awakned that it may awake me Feare o my soule the face of the Iudge whome the powers of heauen doe feare the wrathe of the Omnipotent the face of his furie the noise of the worlde that shall perish the fire that shall burne it the voice of the Archangell and the most rigorous wordes of the finall sentence Feare the teeth of the Dragō the belly of Hell the roating of fierce beastes that stand readie to
consider that God our Lord assoone as Adam and Eua had sinned was willing to reueale vnto them the mysterye of the Incarnation for the Remedye of their Sinne and of the Punishment that therefore they had deserued to demonstrate heerein the greatenesse of his Charitye and mercye towardes men This was resplendent in that comming as a Iudge to take accoumpt of Adam and Eua for their Disobedience and to denounce vnto them the Sentence of Deathe which thereby they had incurred withall as a mercifull Father hee promiseth them not only to make himselfe man for them but also to dye to deliuer them from Deathe pretending heerein that by their Faithe in this Redeemer they should not distrust the Diuine mercye nor of the pardon of their Sinne but that they should forthwith procure it by Penance greiuing to haue offended him that had shewed them so much Loue. So that when God cast our first Parents and all their Posteritye out of the terrestriall Paradise hee then promiseth them him that shall open the Gates of the Celestiall Paradise And when hee chargeth them with Maledictions for Sinne hee offereth them of his meere Grace the Author of all Heauenly Benedictions And when they are vanquished by the Diuell hee assureth them that there shall bee borne of them a man that shall free them from his Tirannye O Father of Mercyes and God of all Consolation Colloquie I humbly thanke thee for that in the middest of thy Wrathe thou art mindefull of thy infinite mercye Abac. 3.2 And when all men by the first Adam deserued to bee accursed thou didst promise vs the second Adam by whome wee should bee blessed Shewe o● Lord this thy mercye to mee deliuering mee from the Maledictions which I deserue thorough my Sinnes replenishing mee with the Benedictions which thy Sonne gained by his Merites O Sonne of the euer liuing God Apoc. 13. Lambe that wast slaine from the beginning of the VVorlde for then was published thy Slaughter and true Life was giuen to men that sinned I humbly thanke thee for this fauour that thou diddest vs for the which I beseeche thee to applye vnto mee the f●●ite thereof that beeing free from the Deathe of Sinne I may obtaine by thee Life of Grace Amen I will likewise ponder the Infinite mercye of God in not deferring this promise of our Redemption many Dayes nor yet many Howers but euen the selfe same day that Adam sinned hee came to giue him aduise both of his Transgression of his Remedye for that hee greately desireth that the Sinner allbeeit hee sinne thorough frailtye should not detaine himselfe so much as one day in his Sinne for the greate Hurt that thereof redoundeth vnto him but should presently bee conuerted and doe Penance All this I am to applye to myselfe considering that many times our Lord when I haue sinned in steede of chastizing mee with Iustice preuenteth mee with Inspirations offering mee pardon with mercye For the which I ought humbly to render vnto him many thankes procuring the selfe same day that I sinne to raize vp myselfe presently thorough Penance So that as S. Ephes 4.16 Paul saieth the Sun goe not downe without taking from mee Anger and Pride and euery other Sinne whatsoeuer The Second Pointe SEcondly I am to consider the Conuenience of the Time that God chose to execute the Decree of his Incarnation to the ende to make his infinite Mercye the more eminent Heerevpon I am to beholde in what state the Worlde stood when God came to redeeme it running thorough the Thoughtes Wordes and Deedes of men and comparing them with those of God Isa 55.9 the which as the Prophet Isaias saieth were as different as Heauen and Earthe are distant First I will lift vp my Eyes to Heauen and beholde the most B. TRINITYE in the Throne of his Glorye considering what Thoughtes hee had and what plots hee was then laying to remedye man by the meanes of the Incarnation of the Diuine Worde And as the three Persons of the Deitye when they would create Adam Cant. 1.26 saide Let vs make man to our owne Image and Likenesse so now they sayed Let vs remedye man vhome wee created repairing the Image and Likenesse that wee gaue him O how greate Pleasure had they in this Discourse What Alacritye to beholde the time arriued of executing their Determination And what Ioy had eache Person to prepare themselues for what belonged vnto them in this Worke The Father to sende his Sonne into the Worlde The Sonne to come to vnite his Diuine Person with our nature And the holy Spirit to worke this so soueraigne an Vnion I thanke thee o most blessed TRINITYE Colloquie for that thou hadst pleasure to treate of my Remedye O that I might treate with much Delight of all that belongeth to thy seruice Then will I abase my Eyes to see what then passed in the Worlde considering how it was then arriued to the Abysme of Iniquitye The Gentiles were growen to such a Heigth in their Idolatries that they caused themselues to bee adored as Gods The Iewes were full of Hypocrisies Auarices Ambitions and other innumerable Sinnes The Earthe was wholely drowned with a Deluge of Vncleane-nesses and Carnallities one Waue of Blood as saith the Prophet Oseas ouertaking another Oscae 4.2 All this was God beholding from Heauen for from him nothing is hidden and though this so greate multitude of Sinnes prouoked him to greate furye yet were they no cause to make him deferre his Determination Rather this most mercifull God Abac. 3.2 as saide the Prophet Abacuch when hee had most occasion to shewe his wrathe was then mindefull to doe vs the greatest mercye and in steede of drowning the Worlde againe with another Deluge or burning it with fier like Sodome hee would drowne it with abundance of mercies and burne it with the fier of his Loue giuing it his owne Sonne to remedye it and his Sonne comming to redeeme it Cant. 8.7 O Infinite Charitye whose Flames could not bee quenched with the many Waters of the Riuers of innumerable Sinnes but rather increased with greater Demonstrations of Loue doing the greatest of all fauours to vs that euery day made ourselues more vnworthy thereof I giue thee thankes o most louing and mercifull Lord for this Loue which thou didst shewe vs for the which I beseeche thee though I as a wicked VVretche deserue thy Indignation yet that thou as a good God cease not to fauour mee with the Greatenesse of thy Mercye This Consideration I am likewise to applye to myselfe pondering how it hath many times happened that when I was actually offending God by my Workes then was God doing mee greate Benefits and deuising yet to doe mee greater as to drawe mee out of the Worlde into Religion or such other like for the which I am to giue him many Thankes From hence I may likewise ascende to ponder how much the Infinite Mercye of
perill they might put themselues vnto of being put to deathe by Herod for asking in his Countrey and Courte for another king yet for all this they entred not hiddenly nor demaunded secretly in Corners but publikely and in his owne pallace O heroicall Confidence o couragious Portitude inspired by this newe-borne king who though he hidde from these Sages the light of the visible Starre he hid not from them the inuisible light of faithe by whose power the Sainctes ouercome kingdomes Heb. 11.33 worke Iustice and obtaine the fullfilling of all their promises Colloquie O my Soule haue a liuely Faithe in thy God for by his power thou shalt breake Walles Psal 17.30 animate thyselfe to breake thorough difficulties feare not to set vpon Daungers for he will protect thee and set thee at liberty from them From this Faithe and Fortitude of these Sages it proceeded that albeit at the hearing of this demaunde Herod was troubled and all Hierusalem with him yet they themselues were not troubled Wherein I will ponder how Herod was troubled because he was a Tirant and ambitious and so feared leaste he that was borne might depriue him of his kingdome But that which is most to be admired is that the Iewes also were troubled at that for which they should rather haue rejoiced attending more to flatter and to giue Contentment to a Tyrant king then to the king of Heauen that was promised vnto them Whereby I may learne how perillous a thing it is to entertaine strict amitye with potent and vicious Personages which are easily troubled with Passions of Hatred Anger Reuenge and Ambition for they being troubled I may also be troubled with them But if I trust in God as did the Sages I shall not be troubled though all others be troubled rather I shall say with the Prophet Dauid Psal 26.1 c. Our Lord is my Lighte my Healthe whome shall I feare Our Lord is the Protector of my life who shall make me tremble If Armyes of enemies come against me my Heart shall not feare and though they make greate warre against me I will not be dismayed but will hope in our Lord. The fourth Pointe FOurthly I am to consider how Herod hauing heard this demaunde consulted thereupon with the high Preistes and the Scribes of the People who aunswering him that this king should bee borne in Bethlehem of Iuda for that it was so foretalde by Micheas the Prophet Mich. 3.2 he saide vnto the Sages that they should there inquire seeke for the Childe whome hauing founde they should giue him aduise thereof Wherein the prouidence of God is many waies resplendent First in that he maketh vse of the wiched to fauour the intentions of those that are good as he made vse of Herod to discouer vnto the Sages the place of the birth of our Sauiour fullfilling that which is written Pro. 11.29 Rom. 8.28 and to them that loue God all things cooperate to their good Secondly it is resplendent in that by meanes of his ministers although they are wicked he discouereth the Veritye of holy Scripture to those that desier to knowe it for their proffit as in this case he consented not that the high Preistes and Teachers of the Lawe should conceale this Veritye from the Sages And if I with a good zeale desier to knowe the Will of God God will discouer it vnto me by the meanes of his ministers Mala. 2.7 of whome he saieth by a Prophet that their Lippes keepe knowledge which they holde as it were in a cheste of truste to teache the doubtefull things of the Lawe to those that demaunde them for they are the Angells and messengers of our Lord and the manifesters of his will The Prouidence of God is likewise resplendent in hauing giuen vs the diuine Scriptures wherein there is most sufficient light to knowe Christ to seeke and to finde him without hauing neede of any miraculous Starre or newe reuelation but only feruent Praier and profounde meditation according to that which our Sauiour Christ sayed vnto the Iewes Searche the Scriptures Ioan. 5.39 for you thinke in them to haue life euerlasting and the same are they that giue testimonye of me O sweete IESVS that saydest Aske Colloquie and you shall haue seeke and you shall finde illuminate me that I may seeke thee in thy sacred Scriptures so that I may finde thee and that I may searche out the eternall life contained in them in such sorte that I may obtaine it Finally the secret iudgements of God resplendent in this case may affright me and make my haire stande on ende for that the Gentiles comming from Countreys so farre distant and with so greate labour and trauell to seeke Christ the Iewes who so many yeares had expected him being so neere him yet mooued not to seeke him And though they aduised the Sages where they might finde him yet they tooke not this aduise to themselues that the veritye of that might be manifested which was afterwardes spoken by this our Lord Ioa. 6.44 No man can come vnto me vnlesse the Father that sent me drawe him But these wretches were not drawen by the Father for they delighted more in pleasing a Tyrant and deferring their going till the Sages were retourned they neuer performed it Wherefore taking warning by other mens harmes I will remoue all impediments that may any waies hinder the eternall Father from calling me by his inspirations and joyning me with Christ not deferring to another time to obey those which he shall giue me for delaye may be peraduenture the cause of my perdition O eternall Father Colloquie Psal 65.5 whose iudgements vpon the Sonnes of men are terrible but yet iust by that Loue which thou bearest to thy Sonne I beseeche thee that seeing thou hast so greate a desier that he should bee knowen and adored by all men cast me not of thorough my owne Sinne and slackenesse leauing me ouerwhelmed therein but with efficacye pull and drawe me vnto thee that I may seeke and finde him knowe and adore him worlde without ende to thy Glorye Amen The XXIII Meditation Matt. 2.9 Of the departure of the Sages from Hierusalem and their entrance into the Inne at Bethlehem and what happened there The first Pointe THe Sages hauing heard Herods aunswere departed from Hierusalem the waye of Bethlehem in quest of the newe borne king and at that very instant the Starre againe discouered it selfe vnto them at whose sight they reioiced with exceeding greate ioye Gauisi sunt gaudio magno valde Heere I am to ponder first the Care of these kings in prosecuting their intention for assoone as they had knowledge of what they desired they departed from Hierusalem and from the Courte of king Herod flying from the noise and vnquietnesse thereof whereby they teache vs how puntually we ought to applye ourselues to the businesse of our Saluation departing from the noise of the Worlde and flying to
are Tempted and afflicted the leaues thereof shall bee the healthe of such as are Soule-sicke the odoriferous flowers thereof shall comfort such as are Young beginners in Vertue the sweete fruites thereof shall fortifye such as are Proficients and doe goe formard therein and the round cup thereof shal bee the resting place of such as are Perfect For all shall finde meditations and formes of Praying accomodated to their Estates as soone after shall bee seene And that it may appeare how the Pietie and Soueraignety of misticall Theologie is founded vpon the rigorous veritie of Scholasticall Diuinitie the third Fountaine of what I shall say shal bee the Schoole-Doctors of whome I will onely alledge the Angelicall Doctor S. Thomas for that hee alone is auaileable for ten thousand witnesses whose Doctrine is sounde secure and well approoued and with the Verities of Scholasticall Theologye hee pointeth at the profoundest conceiptes and highest sense of mysticall Diuinitie for both of them are Sisters and in both is notably excellent this glorious Doctor as was his master S. Augustine and his Companion S. Bonauenture of whose Doctrine I shall likewise make vse And because that notwithstanding I haue had so good guides yet as a man I may erre in what I shall write my will is that all whatsoeuer shall bee subject to the correction of holy mother Church which is the foundation and piller of Truthe from the which whensoeuer either thorough ignoraunce or negligence I shal departe I forth with reuoke whatsoeuer I shall haue saide VVhat Mentall Praier is § 1. MEntall Praier whereof wee heere intreate is a worke of the three interiour Faculties of the Soule Memory Vnderstanding and VVill Ex P. Ignatio in 1. exer citio primae hebdomadae Ex D. Tho. 2.2 q. 83. art 1. q. 180. art 1. 3. 4. 3. p. q. 31. exercising by Gods fauour their Actes about those mysteries and Truthes which our holy Catholike Faithe teacheth and speaking within our selues to God our Lord conuersing familiarly with him begging of him his guiftes and negotiating all what soeuer is necessary for our Saluation and perfection in such sorte that the Substance of mentall Praier consisteth principally in these foure thinges 1. The first is with the memory to bee mindefull of God our Lorde with whome wee are to speake and to negociate and to bee mindefull also of the mysterie that is to bee meditated passing breifely thorough the memorye with clearenesse and distinction that which is to be the matter of the meditation as it is taught by faithe and as it is diuided into seuerall pointes in the forme that heereafter wee shall set downe And that this memorye or recordation bee not drye it is good to joyne thereunto the Actions of Faithe beleeuing with the greatest liuelynesse that wee can the verities of that mysterie because God whoe is all Truthe hath reuealed them making of Faithe a Ladder to mount vp to perfect knowledge Cap. 7. iuxta 70 D. Hier. ibid. seeing that as Isaias saithe vnlesse you beleeue you shal not vnderstand 2. The second thing is with the vnderstanding to make seuerall discourses and considerations about that mysterie inquiring and searching out the Verities comprehended therein with all the causes proprieties effectes and circumstances that it hath pondering them very particularly In such sorte that the Vnderstanding may forme a true proper and entire conceipt of the thing that it meditateth and may remaine conuinced and perswaded to receiue and to embrace those Truthes that it hath meditated to propound them to the VVill and to moue it therby to exercize its Actions 3. The third is with Free will to drawe out sundry Affections or vertuous Actes conformable to that which the Vnderstanding hath meditated some ordained to himselfe others ordained to God our Lord as are Hatred of our selues Sorrowe for our Sinnes Confusion of our owne misery Loue of God Trust in his mercye Praises of God Thankesgiuing for benefits receiued Desire to obtaine true Vertues effectuall Purposes to doe good workes and to change and amende our Life Resignation of our selues to the VVil of God offering to doe and to suffer whatsoeuer God shall ordaine and dispose and other such like the which wee call Affections for that they are to bee donne with the Affection and Liking of the VVill moued by what the Vnderstanding hath demonstrated vnto it and in these consisteth that which wee call substantiall Deuotion from the which ariseth the spirituall peace and alacritye of the Soule And to them as saith S. 2.2 q. 82 art 3. q. 180. art 7. ad 1. Lib. 3. de fide orthodoxa cap. 24. Thomas is principally ordained meditation and contemplation and those other Actes of the Vnderstanding which are exercized in Mentall Praier for which cause S. Iohn Damascene saide of it that it is Ascensus mentis in Deum an Ascending of our Spirit to God joyning vs with him by actuall knowledge and Loue. 4. The fourth thing is to make Petitions to God our Lord holding speeche and conference with him in reason to aske of him what the VVill hath desired and the Vnderstanding hath seene and all else that wee haue neede of wherein consisteth that which wee properly call Praier which is an humble confident and feruent Petition of such things as are conuenient for vs and wee desire to obtaine of our Lorde These Petitions and colloquies or speeches are to bee directed sometimes to the eternall Father other sometimes to his onely begotten Sonne Christ IESVS and other sometimes to the whole most blessed Trinitye alledging to them Titles and Reasons that may moue them to graunte vs what wee demaund These Titles may bee taken from three partes Ex D. Th. 2.2 q. 83. art 17. some from the parte of God as hee is God to witte asking him something for his Goodnesse for the Loue that hee beareth vs for the Desire hee hath of our good for that hee Commandeth vs to aske him for the Glorye of his holy name that hee may bee praised by all his Creatures and finally there may bee made as it were a Litanye of his Perfections and Attributes saying vnto him Graunt mee o Lord what I require of thee for thy owne sake for thy Charitye for thy Mercye for thy Liberallitye for thy VVisdome for thy Omnipotencye for thy Immensitye and Eternitye c. Other Titles there are on the parte of Christ IESVS our Lord true God and man to witte by his Incarnation and Natiuitye by his Circumcision and Presentation in the Temple by his flying into Egipt by his Fastings by his Hunger Colde and Nakednesse and by all the Labour and Trauell of his Preaching Againe by the Dolours Ignominies and Torments of his Passion and Deathe alledging his Sweating of Blood his Imprisoning his Scourging his Crowne of Thornes his Nailing his Gall and Vineger and the rest Sometimes speaking to the eternall Father beseeching him to heare mee for the Loue
will consider the extreamest that may bee truely saide of Sinne which is that though the euills of paine onely which are suffered in Hell are so terrible yet it is Incomparably a greater euill then all they In such sort that if one man should suffer the paines of Hell without Sinne and another should haue but one mortall Sinne onely this last should bee more euill and miserable then the other And if all the paines of Hell deuoyde of Sinne were put on one side on the other side one mortall Sinne onely and that I must of necessity choose one of these two I saith S. Lib. de similitudinibus c. 190. Bern. sermo 35. in Cant. Anselme would choose rather to throwe myselfe into Hell then to committe onely one mortall Sinne. And with holy Eleazar I would say Praemitti velle in infernum That I would rather enter into Hell itselfe without Sinne then remaine with Sinne in the VVorlde for the Deathe of Sinne saieth the VViseman is most wicked and the worst that may be Eccle. 28 25. Colloquie Et vtilis potius Inferus quam illa The graue yea Hell itselfe as touching paine is more profitable then it O Infinite God settle this Truthe in my Hearte that I may feare Sinne much more then Hell seeing in truthe there is no vvorse hell then to bee in Sinne. O my Soule bevvaile bitterly thy Sinnes not onely for Hell vvhich thou hast deserued but much more for the greate euill thou hast committed against God Cease presently to Sinne that God may not strike thee vvith a cruell chastizement and vvith the stripe of an Enemye Ier. 30.14 permitting thee to vvaxe obdurate in thy Sinnes to chastise thee vvith neuer ending paines Concerning this last Ponderation it is to bee considered that it is not set downe because it is needefull to make this Comparison For Hell is neuer without Sinne neither can there bee any case wherein Hell may bee chosen not to committe a Sinne but onely that heereby wee may see how greate an euill Sinne is and how worthy it is to bee much more extreemely abhorred then Hell yea allbeeit there were no Hell at all VVhereupon S. Ambrose saithe Lib. 3. de offic c. 4. 5. That there is no paine more greiuous then the VVounde of Conscience nor no Iudgement more rigorous then the Domesticall where with euery one iudgeth himselfe guilty And though the Iust man saieth hee had Giges ring with the which hee might doe what hee would Inuisible yet would hee not Sinne for hee departeth not from Sinne for feare of Punishment but for the horrour of VVickednesse and Loue of Vertue That which in this meditation hath beene declared in generall shall more manifestly bee seene by that which shall bee declared particularly in the ensuing of the Last things of man and in the speciall Punishments that corresponde to the seuen deadely Sinnes Meditations of our last things to mooue vs to a Detestation of Sinnes THE meditations of the last things of man which are Deathe and the Graue Iudgement particular and Vniuersall Hell Purgatorie and Glorye are of most efficacye to moue vs to a Detestation of our Sinnes and to an effectuall Resolution neuer more to retourne vnto them Heereupon saide the Ecclesiasticus Eccles 7.40 Deut. 32 29. In all thy vvorkes remember thy last ends and thou shallt not Sinne foreuer And for the same reason saide Moyses to his People O that they vvere vvise and vnderstood and vvould prouide for their Last thinges giuing to vnderstand That our true VVisdome Vnderstanding and Prouidence consisteth in well meditating and ruminating those things which are to happen to vs in the ende of ou● Life and to bee prouided therefore And especially the meditation of Deathe as Experience teacheth vs is very proffitable for all those that walke in any of the three wayes Purgatiue Illuminatiue and Vnitiue wherein all men ought often to exercize themselues though with different endes The Principiants to purge themselues of their Sinnes before Deathe assaile them and take them vnprouided The Proficients to make hast to store vp Vertues seeing the Time of meriting is very short and Deathe cuts it of on a sodaine The Perfect to despise all things created with a Desire to vnite themselues by Loue with their Creator And therefore wee will pointe out Considerations that may proffit all but most especially those that aide to the ende of the Purgatine Life whereof at this time wee entreate The seuenth Meditation of the Properties of Deathe IN this meditation wee will consider some Properties of Deathe and what endes our Lorde pretended in them for our Proffit reducing them to three which are the most Principall The first Pointe THe first Propertye of Deathe is to bee most Certaine Ad Heb. 9.27 from the which none can escape in the time that God hath determined 1. VVherein wee are to ponder first That God our Lord from all eternitye hath determined the yeares of our Life Psal 38.6 and assigned the moneth the Day and Hower wherein euery one is to dye so that it is Impossible sayeth Iob to passe one minute thereof Iob. 14.5 neither is there any King nor Monarke that can adde to himselfe nor to any other one moment of Life aboue that which God hath determined So that as I entred into the VVorlde the same Daye that God would and not before so shall I departe out of the VVorlde the same Daye that God will and not afterwardes That by this I may Vnderstand that what daye soeuer I liue I receiue it of Grace and that those I haue liued haue beene of grace for our Lord might haue assigned mee a shorter time of Life as hee assigned to others that died in their Mothers wombe or in their Infancye And seeing my Life so dependeth vpon God there is just cause why I should spend all the time thereof in his Seruice that gaue it mee holding it for a greate Ingratitude to employe one onely moment to offend him 2. Secondly I am to consider that God our Lord in this his Decree shortned or inlarged the dayes that some men according to their naturall Complezion might haue liued for the secret endes of his soueraigne Prouidence For to some either for their owne praiers or for the praiers of other Sainctes hee inlarged the dayes of their Life as to king Ezechias hee added fifteene yeares 4. Reg. 20.6 because with Teares hee required it And the like hath succeeded to the Deade who miraculously haue beene raized to Life To some others hee shortneth the dayes of their life for one of two endes either for their Saluation Sap. 4.11 cutting them off as the VViseman saithe in their youth lest Malice should chaunge their vnderstanding or lest fiction might deceiue their Soule Or contrarily to punish their grieuous Sinnes and to stop their passages that they might not make an addition of greater Psal 54.24 VVhereupon Dauid fayed
bee declared in the twentie and fourth meditation meditating vpon the Deathe of the Couetous Riche man and of poore Lazarus which is a liuely Stampe of that which here hath beene meditated The tenth Meditation of that which hapeneth to the Bodye after Deathe and of the Graue ONE of the principall Vtillities that wee ought to collect out of the Meditations of Deaine is that noble exercize of Vertue much like vnto it VVhat mortification is which wee call Mortification which is nothing else but the Deathe of our Passions and disordinate Affections depriuing them of the life they haue in vs endeuouring to represse and burye them vntill they bee turned into dust nothing as Dauid saide Psal 17.38 I vvill pursevve myne Enemies and ouertake them and I vvill not returne vntill they faile I will bruize them vntill I ouerthrowe them and put them vnder my feete Lib. 6. de bono mor tis cap. 3 For this cause saide S. Ambrose That the Iust mans Life is an Imitation of Deathe for his continuall Studye is to kill the carnall Life that hee feeleth in himselfe depriuing himselfe of all those things that his fleshe and his owne will doe most disordinately couet suppressing the desires that sproute out vntill hee remaine as Deade to all that is Sinne according to that of S. Paule Ad Rom. 6.11 Ad Colos 2.20 3.5 Bee you as deade to sinne but aliue to God and seeing you are deade with Christ from the elements of this worlde touche not nor handle not that which shall bee to your destruction but mortifye your members that are vpon the Earthe that is the workes of earthly Life Vncleanenesse Concupiscence Auarice and the rest The practise of this mortisication like vnto Deathe wee will set downe in this meditation whose ende shall bee the Imitation of Deathe itselfe And And all beeit therein wee proceede by the affections of Feare which are most proper to the purgatiue waye yet of themselues those of Loue are most effectuall Cantic 8 6. of which it is saide That it is strong as Deathe and harde as Hel. For that it killeth burieth and defeateth all that is contrarye to its beloued as hereafter wee shall see By the waye also In the 6. part meditation 10. 11 in this meditation wee will put in practize a very proffitable manner of meditating spiritualizing the exteriour things that are perceiued by the Senses applying them to the Interiour and collecting out of them rules and aduises of perfection The first Pointe 1. THe first pointe shall bee to cōsider what my bodye shall bee after it is deade abandoned by the Soule pondering especially three miseries First that it looseth the vse of its members and Senses without euer more beeing able to see heare or speake nor to mooue to one side nor other nor to enjoy the goods of this mortall life Now noe beautifull things nor sweete musicke nor pleasing odours nor sauourye meates nor things that are loft doe any wise affect it all this is to it as if it were not For it hath lost the Instruments which it had whereby to enjoye it and all that it hath enjoyed serueth it to litle proffit The second miserye is to remaine discoloured disfigured deformed horrible stiffe starke and stinking walking with greate haste to corruption In such sorte that it who a litle before recreated the eye with its beautye now puts horror in it with its deformitye From whence proceedeth the third miserye that all leaue it alone in the Chamber in possession of those that are to shrowde it in a sheete and euen those of the house and the dearest friendes holde it for a kinde of pietie to dispatche quickely and to carry it out of doares 2. From this Cōsideration I will collect how assured a thing it is in my life time to doe by degrees somewhat of that which shall afterwardes bee dōne perforce without proffit carying myselfe as deade to the VVorlde to all that is flesh blood procuring to Imitate Deathe in three other things like to the aforenamed mortifying my Senses and depriuing myselfe of the Delightes thereof not onely of the vnlawfull but euen of some lawfull and not necessarye So that like a deade man I am to haue neither feete nor handes nor eyes nor eares nor taste nor tongue for any thing that is Sinne or is against the perfection I professe And for this reason the beautifull and pleasing things of this Life are to bee to mee as if they were not putting them veder my feete Homil. 13. in Euangel beholding as S. Gregor saithe not what they are now but what they shall quickely bee for attyre fleshe in clothe of Golde and in silke neuer so much nor so gaiely yet still it is fleshe Isai 40.6 And what is fleshe but grasse and what is the glorye thereof but the flower of the fielde that withereth with a blaste Finally I am to followe Vertue with a generous minde that like as a deade man complaines not that all flye from him and forsake him so it should bee nothing to mee that the VVorlde for sakes mee flyes from mee and abhorres mee like one deade and crucified rather I am to holde for a happinesse that of the Prophet Dauid Psal 30.12 Those that savve mee fled forth from mee I am forgotten from the hearte as one deade I am made as a vessel destroyed because I haue heard the reprehension of many that abyde round about Colloquie O that I vvere deade in Hearte that I might not porceiue that men vsed mee like one deade Ad Ga lat 6.14 O that I vvere so deade and crucified to all that is in the VVorlde that the VVorlde also holde mee for crucified and deade Graunt mee o svvete IESVS that by the Lavve of thy grace I may die to the Lavve of Sinne Ad Gal. 2.20 to liue to God delighting to bee nailed vvith thee on thy very Crosse so that novv not I may liue but thou in mee vvorlde vvithout ende Amen The second Pointe THe second pointe is to consider the clothing the bed and the Lodging that is prepared for my deade bodye The Clothing for the most parte is in a manner the worst of the house and very slender for it is nothing more but a poore Sheete for a Shrowde without any other more precious Ornaments of silke or of Golde and if they put any of this vpon mee to carry mee to buriall they take it againe from mee before they put mee in the Graue The Bed is the harde Earthe and as the Prophet Isay saithe the mattresses shall bee mothes Isai 14.11 the Couerlets wormes and the Courtaines and Pillowes the bones of other deade And after this fashion shall bee the House and the Lodging for it is nothing but a straight pit of seuen foote long that is built in halfe an hower for the other sumptuous buildings of sepulchres serue
the wretched bodye for nothing that is not capable to enjoye them Out of all this I will collect greate confusion and shame for my vanitye and Sensuallitye wherewith I desire curiousnesse of apparell softenesse of bed and widenesse of habitation animating myselfe to mortifye my superfluities heerein and to beare patiently whatsoeuer wantes seeing what I now haue how litle soeuer it bee is very much The vovves of Religion are an Imitatiō of Deathe 1. and very large compared with that which attends mee But particularly if I am a Religious man or desire to bee perfect I may drawe from hence greate motiues to bee so in excellency procuring to make my Life a continuall Meditation and Imitation of Deathe in three things proper to this estate First in nakednesse of all these things to which perfect Pouertye obligeth mee So that as a deade man looseth the Dominion of all his Riches and they passe to his Heires or to the Poore hee not feeling that they leaue him the worst clothing or interre him in some contemptible place so I will not content myselfe with leauing all that I possessed giuing it to the poore to followe naked IESVS but I will also beare willingly the want of things necessarye and will like best that they giue mee the worst either of apparell bedding lodging or house without murmuring thereat any more then a man that is deade Iob. 1.21 for if I came naked out of my mothers wombe am naked to returne againe it is no greate matter to liue naked in this sorte conforming the midle of the life to the entrance egresse thereof 2. Secondly I will Imitate Deathe in the renuntiation fall those sensuall Pleasures whereunto perfect Chastitie obligeth mee So that as in Deathe matrimonies are dissolued the care of wife children and familye ceaseth and there is made a generall diuorce of all earthly things and of the delightes of the fleshe So I with the vowe of Chastitie shall delight to bee as it were deade to all these things and to the cares thereof as if there were none in the worlde for mee or I were not aliue for them 3. Thirdly I will Imitate the Deade in perfect Obedience for as the deade bodye suffers itselfe to bee tossed and carried wheresoeuer they will and to bee handled as they list without resistance repugnancye or complainte neither hauing will to choose the winding sheete nor the graue nor any thing else taking onely what others giue him So I in all that is not Sinne will permitte myselfe to bee gouerned by my Prelates and Superiors obeying to all that they shall commaunde mee high or lowe sweete or sowre easy or vneasye without replying contradicting or repugning to any thing without any selfe will to choose this or that but as one deade to my owne will I will followe the will of others taking with humillitye whatsoeuer they giue mee These are the purposes that I am to drawe out of this consideration of Deathe encouraging myselfe to put them in practize seeing it is not much for fiftye yeares which perhaps shall not bee fifty dayes to anticipate Deathe in this manner for the assurance of eternall life whereby fiftye thousand millions of yeares I shall possesse the riches of God I shall enjoy his pleasures and I shall haue perfect Libertye free from all miserye O happye Deathe to the which succeedeth so happye a life Colloqui● O svvete IESVS vvhose life vvas a continuall Deathe to giue vs example of a holy and perfect life Graunt mee that in Imitation of thee I may liue and dye naked of all terrent things mortified to all Delightes and obedient to all humane Creature for thy Loue holde mee allvvaies as deade to all that is visible Ad Colos 3.3 that my life may bee hidden vvith thee in God vvorlde vvithout ende Amen The third Pointe 1. THe third Pointe is to consider the Iourney of the bodye towardes the graue pondering first that I shall bee caried in a coffin or vpon a beere on other mens shoulders to Churche and that hee who but a while before walked the Streetes looking on euery side entred into the Churche registring all that passed goeth now vpon other mens feete blinde deafe dumbe being the motiue of Lamentatiō fo● his miserye And therefore to suppresse the liuelinesse of my fleshe I will endeuour when I rise out of my bed to remember that some one daye others shall raise mee neuer more to retourne to it And when I goe downe the staires of my house I will say A day will come wherein others will carry mee downe these staires neuer more to get vp And when I goe in the streete or enter into the Churche I will Imagine that shortely I shall bee caried thorough that streete and I shall enter into that Churche neuer more to come out Then will I consider with what companye I am carried to my Graue some singing others weeping and many following mee with piety to honour mee and yet how litle it will auaile my bodye whither they doe it much or litle honour much lesse my Soule if it bee in Hell rather this honour would torment it the more if it knewe it Then will I consider how they cast mee into the graue and couer mee with Earthe laying a Stone vpon mee where my Bodye shall bee eaten with wormes and turned to Dust and sodainely I shall bee forgotten of all as if I had neuer beene in the VVorlde And though there doe remaine of mee very greate and honorable memorye litle shall it auaile my Soule if it enjoye not God as it litle auailed Aristotle or Alexander the greate to bee magnified in the worlde beeing in Hell in terrible Torments for as a holy Sainct saieth VVoe to thee Aristotle that art praised where thou art not and art tormented where thou art Out of these Considerations I will collect some vnbeguilings perswading myselfe to make no account of the vaine honours of this Life but to humble myselfe and in myne owne estimation to put myselfe vnder the feete of all Psal 21.7 like a worme of dust that of all is trodden vpon and cast out as also not to contemne the poore and litle ones seeing in deathe I shall soone bee equall with them and speaking to my Soule Colloquie I will say vnto her Consider wel what vvill be the ende of this fleshe that thou hast Consider vvhome thou cherishest vvhome thou adornest and vpon vvhome thou doest builde these Castles in the aire for all is but like a litle dust raised by the vvinde Psal 1.4 from the face of the Earthe vvhich prosently retourneth to fall thereinto Bee ashamed to subiect thyselfe to so vile fleshe endeuour rather to subiect it like a Slaue vnto thee that it may aide thee to negotiate Life euerlasting O eternall God cleare the eyes of my poore Soule vvith thy Soueraigne Light that it may beholde the vvretched ende of its miserable
may bee vnderstood that all these blessings proceeded from the fatherly loue that God bare them in respect of his sonne And for that his benediction is effectuall and performeth presently what it promiseth with this sweete worde hee wil replenish them with a newe and extraordinarye alacritie Possidete paratum vobis regnum a constitutione mundi THirdy hee saieth vnto them possesse you the kingdome prepared for you from the foundation of the vvorlde In which wordes I am to ponder what kingdome this is how long time agoe since it was prepared that it is prepared for the Righteous and that to them is giuen the possession thereof in all which is resplendent the infinite Charitie of our caelestiall Father For first hee would that the inheritance and eldership of his Children should bee a kingdome so soveraigne that for excellencie thereof it meriteth the name of a kingdome for it is no terrene but a caelestiall kingdome whose riches are infinite and the pleasures thereof so inestimable that they make blessed their possessors This kingdome was prepared for them from all eternitie predestinating them of his mere mercye to raigne with him And from the foundation of the worlde hee created the Heauen called Empyreall that it might bee a royall Cittye and habitation of these blessed kings And with greate tendernes hee addeth that worde Vobis for you as who should saye This kingdome was not prepared principally for the Angells and for want of them for you entring in place of those that lost the seates of this kingdome But it was prepared equally for all the iust Angells ad men and for you for your soules and for your bodyes Come then to take peaceable possession of this kingdome so noble and so auncient out of the which you shall never bee eiected enter into the ioyes of my Father which shall never bee taken from you Apocal. 3.21 Colloquie sit downe to raigne with mee in my throne as I am seated with my eternall Father in his O most loving Father I giue thee thankes for this so soveraigne kingdome vvhich thou hast prepared for thy elect to shevve in them the infinite Riches of thy Grace and Charitye Graunt mee o Lord that I may in such manner prepare my soule that thou maist raigne therein by thy grace and aftervvardes carry it to possesse this eternall kingdome of thy Glorye Amen Esurivi enim dedistis mihi manducare c. THen declareth the iudge the reason of his sentence and the merites for which hee ge●eth them his kingdome saying I vvas an hungred and you gaue mee to eate I vvas a thirst and you gaue mee to drinke I vvas a straunger and you tooke mee in naked and you couered mee sicke and you visited mee I vvas in Prison and you came to mee to set mee at libertye And the iust admiring that for so little workes hee should giue them a kingdome so greate and that hee should so much esteeme these workes of mercye as if they had beene donne to his owne Person shall aske him not so much with wordes as with affections and inward feelings of greate admiration saying Lord when did wee see thee hungrye and Thirstye and gaue thee to eate and to drinke Or when did wee see the a straunger naked sicke or in prison and vsed towarde thee such mercye Then our Lord will aunswer them Amen I say vnto you as long as you did it to one of these my leasle Bretheren you did it to mee Colloquie for I was in them and though but little ones I yet esteeme my selfe to holde them for my Bretheren O happy poore that are accounted as his Bretheren by the Iudge that shall Iudge them and by the eternall king that shall revvarde them vvho likevvise revvardeth others for doing them good O happy vvorkes of Mercye vvhose principall obiect 〈◊〉 Christe and vvhose Revvarde is his kingdome O blessed are the mercifull seeing in this daye they shall obtaine so greate mercye Lastly I wil ponder that albeeit Christe our Lord in the Gospell alledgeth onely for the reason of his sentence the workes of mercye to wardes our Neighbours yet hee will also declare the other good workes of obedience and mortification necessarye to enter into Heauen And as the voice of God is of infinite Vertue hee will to every one mentally declare in such sorte that all may vnderstand the speciall workes for the which hee giveth him his kingdome To the Martyr hee will saye Come thou blessed of my Father to possesse the kingdome prepared for thee because thou shedst thy blood formee And to the Virgin hee will say Come thou blessed of my Father for the Virginitie which thou preservedst with puritie of Bodye and soule And to the Religious man Come thou blessed of my Father for thou lestst all things to followe mee And in this manner I may runne thorough all the other Estates of the iust O what Content will all receiue with the sweete voice of this comfortable sentence Psalm 50.10 Ioan. 10.3 with the which God will giue to their eares compleate Ioy and alacritie and the Bones that were humbled shall reioice Happy the sheepe that in this life heare the voice of their shephearde and followe his steppes for on this day being placed on his right hande they shall heare the voice that calleth them to the eternall pastures O soveraigne shepheard Colloquie ayde mee vvith thy abundaunt grace that I may bee vvorthy to heare so favourable a sentence Amen The second Pointe SEcondly I am to consider that towardes the wicked the Iudge wil turne his Angrye Countenance and with a dreadefull voice wil say vnto them Departe from mee you cursed into fier everlasting vvhich is prepared for the deuil and his Angells for I vvas an hūgred and you gaue mee not to eate etc. This sentence like the former wee may ponder by the wordes for that heerein are declared all the kindes of Paines that are in Hell of the which wee shall heereafter make a large consideration Discedite a me 1. THe first worde is Departe from mee In the which hee condemneth them to that eternall paine Paena Damni Payne of losse or danatiō which they call of losse or dānation which is a perpetuall Banishment from Heauen and a depriving them of the sight of God for ever And the more to wound them shewing himselfe so glorious vnto them hee sayeth Departe from mee that am your God your first beginning and last ende Departe from mee that am your Redeemer from ●nee that made myselfe man for your sakes and receiued these woundes for your remedye from mee that invited you with pardon and you would not accept it Therefore departe for ever from my freindship from my protection from my kingdome from my Paradise from my cleare sight and from the copious River of my Delightes And for that whosoever is separated from Christ is also separated from those that goe with Christe in saying to them Departe from
helpe for Preachers and Masters of perfection The first part of Sinnes and Last things of man with Meanes of praier to purifie the heart from vices The second part of the Mysteries of the Incarnation and Childhoode of IESVS Christ our Lord vntill his Baptisme The third part of the Principall mysteries of his life Diuinitye and Miracles vnto the ende of his preaching The fourth part of all the Mysteries of the Passion The fifth part of the Mysteries of the Resurrection Apparitions Ascēsion till the comming of the holie Ghost publishing of the Gospell The sixt part of the Mysteries of the Diuinitye Trinity Perfections of God of the Benefits naturall supernaturall that proceede from him Accordinge to the order of the historie there goe inserted also meditations of all the Life of our LADYE and of some Saincts of whome the Gospell and the booke of the Actes of the Apostles make mention of which and of those that be vpon the Gospells of the Sundayes holie dayes thoroughout the yeare there be Tables in the ende of the whole worke TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL VERTVOVS AND DEVOVTE LADY THE LADY LVYSA DE CARVAIAL THIS child borne in Spaine your natiue soile fertile of such worthie wights Vertuous Imps being clod in English attyre though not in Courtlike fasshion as too too delicate for his graue education religious pretense but in ordinarie sute yet well beseeming his intention in no point disagreeing from his parentage hath ben so bold incouraged by me his foster-father as to present himself Right Vertuouse Madame to your worshipfull seruice not doubting but that at your deuoute hands he shall receaue such intertainment as the place from whence he had his beginning his parents Allies so addicted to your self your noble familie and his owne merites doe worthilie deserue To all which yf I should adde my commendation of him or my diligence such as it is and your self may easilie perceaue in setting him forwards directing him to your presence although it may seeme to manie as to my self it doth that it were in a manner to cast water into the sea yet considering that to so kind noble a hart as yours is and so giuen to pietie and deuotion my good will to pleasure and serue yow in this sort cannot be but acceptable I doe in the best wise that I am able commend vnto your worshipfull custodie and protection this gracious infant to be cherished of yow as he is worthie And so desiring Madame to be remembred in your best deuotions I wish yow all heartie contentment in him that is our true contentment Yours Madame in Christ IESVS to commaund RICH. GIBBONS THE SECOND PART OF MEDITATIONS APPERtaining to the Illuminatiue waye vpon the Mysteries of the Incarnation and Childehood of our Lord and Sauiour Christ IESVS vntill his Baptisme VVith these are inserted Meditations of the life of our blessed LADIE vntill the same time THE INTRODVCTION Of the perfect Imitation of our Sauiour Christ which is the ende of these Meditations THE Meditations pertaining to the Illuminatiue waye whereof in this second parte wee begin to intreate haue for their subiect the Mysteries of the life of our Sauiour Christe from the time of his Incarnation vntill his Deathe vpon the Crosse The which as it appeareth by what hath beene saide in the Introduction of this booke in the fourthe Paragraphe are diuided into three partes Some of his Incarnation and Childhood Othersome of his Preaching and Others of his Passion and Deathe after the which ensueth the Glorified life which pertaineth to the Vnitiue waye albeit vnto this also are much accordant the mysteries of the Passion wherein our Sauiour Christe discouered the finenesse of his loue as hereafter shall bee declared All these mysteries the diuine wisdome ordained to the ende that with a pleasing variety they might bee the spirituall sustentation of those soules that trauaile to perfection into the which soules this soueraigne King entereth in the wineseller of his precious wines Cant. 2.4 And from these mysteries as from celestial vessells hee draweth the feruorous wine of Loue and of other most ardent affections wherewith hee cheareth sustaineth and maketh them drunken ordering Charity in them with that order wherwith our Lord himselfe exercised his actes vnto the which hee inuiteth and exhort●h vs saying I came into my garden Cant. 5.1 I reaped my myrrhe with myne aromaticall spices I eate my honycombe with my honye I dranke my wine with my milke eate o friendes and drinke and bee inebriated my beloued Which is to say By my Incarnation I came into the Garden of my Churche and in entring into the worlde I cut the Myrrhe of many bitternesses and mortifications that I suffered in my Infancye with the Aromaticall spices of most odoriferous vertues I preached my doctrine and practized it with as much pleasure as hee that eateth the hony-combe with his hony I became so drunken with the wine of my loue that I remained naked and deade vpon a Crosse beeing as much pleased with drinking the chalice of my Passion as hee is that drinketh wine with his milke Therefore ô my frindes my beloued prepare the garden of your soules for in them I desire to woorke other three like effectes you yourselues also working them thorough my grace to imitate my lyfe First of all Cut Myrrhe and the Aromaticall Spices of Vertues that may mortifye your Passions and preserue you from the Corruption of your Sinnes imitating herein my Puritye Then eate my hony-combe with his honye meditating vpon the excellent Doctrine that I preached figured by the Waxe of the hony-combe that giueth light But you are not to eate it alone but with the imitation of the Heroicall Vertues included therein figured by the honye that nourisheth with it sweetenesse And finally drinke and bee drunke with the Wine of my perfect Loue mingled with the milke that I will giue you of my diuine Consolations with the which you shall so easily renounce the Affections of all earthly things that you shall if neede bee remaine naked vpon another Crosse to imitate my nakednesse and to loue mee as I loued you These are the three principall Exercices of Charitye well ordered in her three Estates of Beginning Augmentation and Perfection And these same in that forme and degree prescribed are the principall endes wherevnto are ordained the Meditations of the Childhood Preaching and Passion of our Sauiour Christe whereof the three partes that followe doe entreate Among the which those of this second parte which are of his Childhood haue this Excellencye that thei moue vs to loue him with more tendernesse and to imitate him with more sweetenesse for that as in making himselfe a Childe for vs hee accomodated himselfe as the Prophet Isa●as saieth to eate the Isai 7.15 foode proper to Children which is milke and Honye so also to those that meditate the mysteries of his Infancye specially to
Principian●s hee vseth to giue more aboundantly the milke and Honye of diuine consolations to weane them from terrene and to animate them to the imitation of his Heroicall Vertues To attaine to these endes wee are to procure by the meanes of these Meditations to knowe Christ IESVS our Lorde true God and man with so certaine proper entire and perfect a knowledge that it may arriue to vnderstand and penetrate the infinite dignitie of his Person and the inestimable riches treasures of his grace with greate esteeme and valuation thereof For in this knowledge as is testified by our Sauiour himselfe consisteth Life euerlasting Ioan. 17.3 Psal 38 4. and from it as from seede proceede the meanes to obtaine it and with the breathe thereof is inkindled in meditation the fier of Charitye which inflameth vs in his Loue Sermone de perfecta forma hominis Christiani from which springeth fortitude of hearte to imitate his Life with so greate perfection that according to that of S. Gregory Nyssenus a Christian may bee called alter Christus Another Christ in Humillity Patience and all the other Vertues as wee say of a Wiseman that hee is another Salomon The manner of meditating vpon these Mysteries Ex Patre Ignatio in primo exerci●io secundae tertiae hebdomadae to effectuate what wee pretende must bee to carrye our eyes fixed vpon foure things and to ponder them with attention The first is to beholde the Persons that are interposed in the Mysterye with the Excellencyes and interiour affections that are in them The Second is to consider the Wordes they speake and the ende wherefore and the manner wherewith they speake them The thirde is to beholde their Workes and the Vertues resplendent in those Workes The fourth is to consider what things they suffer with all their Circumstances pondering the endes thereof and motiues therevnto Out of all these foure things I am allwayes to drawe some proffit to my selfe animating my selfe to imitate what may bee imitated In the introductiō §. 1. and 2. with those other Affections and Colloquyes that wee spake of in the beginning of this Booke All this is to bee donne in euery Pointe that the meditation shall haue following the Order of the Historye as in the Progresse thereof shall bee seene And for that among the Persons that are touched in many of these mysteries especially in those of this second parte the most principall is our blessed LADIE the VIRGIN wee must most principally attende to drawe out of these meditations the knowledge and Loue of her and the imitation of her Heroicall Vertues ascending from the imitation of the mother to the imitation of her Sonne 1. Cor. 11.1 seeing shee may say vnto vs much better then Sainct Paule Bee yee folowers of mee as I also of Christ To dispose vs the better to the pretense and estimation of the ende that hath beene spoken of the meditation folowing of Vocation to imitate our Lord IESVS Christ will help very much as a foundation of these meditations imagining him in the likenesse of a most excellent King elected by God Ex Patre Ignatio in principio secundae hebdomadae that should raise vp men to make warre vpon his enemies inuiting his vassalls to followe him and promising them that if they accompany him in the fight they shall enioye with him the spoiles of the victorye The fundamentall Meditation of the infinite Excellencye of the celestiall King Christ IESVS our Lord and of the Vocation that hee maketh inuiting all men to followe him The first Pointe FIrst The Excellēcyes of our Sauiour Christe as hee is a King Psal 2.6 I am to consider that our Lord Christe is a most excellent king elected by the eternal Father to rule and gouerne men commaunding all to obey him as their proper king and lawfull Lord according to that which hee himselfe saide by the Prophet Dauid I am appointed king by him ouer Sion his holy hil preaching his precept Vpon this truthe I am to ponder first the infinite Charity of the eternall Father in the election of this soueraigne king for that beeing resolued to giue men a king hee made choice of the best that hee could giue vs whoe on the one side should bee true man as concerning our nature that hee might bee before vs with his example and entreate vs with Meekenesse and Compassion and on the other side should bee true God and his onely begotten sonne that by his infinite power hee might remedye Sermon 1. de Natiuitate and aide vs. For as Sainct Leo the Pope saith If hee had beene man onely hee could not haue remedied vs and if hee had beene God onely hee could not haue giuen vs Example From hence I will ascende to consider the excellencyes of this king in whome concurre all the Quallities that may bee in a most perfect king as is manifest by those Psalm 44 3. c. Iere. 23 5● Zachar. 9.9 that are attributed vnto him by the Prophets But principally I will pōder his infinite Wisdome whereby hee knoweth our necessities and miseries his Omnipotencye to remedye them his Mercye in beeing compassionate of them his Bountye and Charitye in desiring to remedye them his Prouidence in being carefull for our Good his Meekenesse and Affabillitye in entreating vs as Bretheren his Liberallitye and Magnificence in sharing among vs his riches and giuing vs all that hee hath euen vnto his very bodye and blood his Iustice and Prudence in Gouernment directing vs with greate Integritye and Vprightnesse and finally his Eternitye with perpetuall Constancye in his coelestiall Empire which shal neuer haue an ende And to make mee more entirely affectionate herein I will make a comparison betweene earthly kings and this heauenly king Isai 10.13 for they impose tributes and taxations vpon their vassalls and exact them with rigour this quitteth all those and louingly payeth their debtes they impouerish their vassalls to inrich themselues this impouerisheth himselfe to inriche them with his Pouertye 2. ad Cor. 8.9 they erre oftentimes in their gouernment thorough ignorance passion or malice this neuer erreth because hee is infinitely Wise Iust Good Math. 11.23.4 29. They impose very heauy Lawes vpon their subjectes yet excuse themselues to fullfill them this imposeth Lawes very sweete and by his owne example animateth men to fullfill them Finally those are tēporall kings that ende with Deathe Dani. 2.32 their Empires bee they of golde or siluer of brasse or of iron shall perish because they are founded vpon feete of Clay but this king is eternall and his kingdome shall neuer haue ende because it is founded vpon God From these three considerations and from euery one of them I am to extract seuerall affections of Praise Ioy and Thankesgiuing with greate Resolutions and Offers to doe much in the seruice of this Soueraigne king sometimes to this purpose I will speake to the
sinfull men that sinned in Adam contracting from him the foule spot of Originall sinne and afterwarde thorough their owne Will fell into most greivous and actuall Sinnes by the which they made themselues most vnwoorthy to bee loued deserued to bee very much abhorred In so much that God not only loued men when they were not and so consequently were neither Freindes nor Enemyes but hee loued them also when they were Enemyes Rebells and Vnthankefull for other innumerable Benefits that hee had donne them to discouer heerein the infinite Treasures of his Mercye and Charitye Thirdly I will make comparison betweene that which God doeth in Heauen and that which men doe vpon Earthe pondering how God loueth the Worlde that abhorreth him and how the Worlde abhorreth God that loueth it The Worlde employeth itselfe in offending God and God desireth to employ himselfe in benefitting the Worlde admiring therefore with myselfe at the abhominable Wickednesse of the Worlde and at the infinite Bountye and Charitye of God O God of infinite maiesty Colloquie why daignest thou to loue a Worlde of infinite Basenesse Thou knowing what the Worlde is why doest thou not abhorre it why doest thou not sinck and anthilate it Blessed bee thy immense Charitye in whose bosome is contained the Loue of so vngratefull a Creature Domonstrate it o Lord towards mee in making mee to loue thee as thou louest mee and to serue thee as thou doest merit These three things I am to applye to myselfe putting myselfe in the place of the worlde who vngratefully and forgetfully haue abhorred and offended God and yet for all this God hath not omitted to loue mee desiring to doe mee good that I might heartely loue him The Second Pointe SEcondly Vt Filium suumvnigenitum daret I am to consider the infinite Greatenesse of the Gift that God gaue to the Worlde which was his only begotten Sonne Wherein I am first to ponder that the Loue of God is not a Loue of Wordes only and faire compliment but a Loue of Deede and of Action doing good to those whome hee loueth and the more hee loueth the greater Benefits hee bestoweth vpon the beloued From hence it is that to demonstrate the infinite Greatenesse of his Loue hee gaue vs the most precious thing that hee could giue vs which was his only begotten Sonne of equall dignitye with his Father and one and the same God with him willing that hee should become man like vs Coloss 2.9 that within one man might dwell the fullnesse of God of the which all might participate And for this cause Christ our Sauiour desiring to endeare the greatenesse of the diuine Loue saide So God loued the wo lde Ioan. 3.16 that hee gaue his only-begotten Sonne as who-should say Hee could not loue it more then to giue his Sonne and that not any Sonne but his naturall sole and only begotten Sonne And in steede of this Worde Hee loued hee might haue put some other like Wordes saying So God esteemed the Worlde so hee honored it so hee glorifyed and exalted it so hee inriched and protected it that hee gaue his only-begotten Sonne and this freely and of meere Grace for there was none that could merit so infinite a Gift Then will I ponder vpon whome this so precious Gift was bestowed which was vpon a Worlde peruerse ingratefull and forgetfull vpon a Worlde so bestiall that this greate and onely-begotten Sonne of God comming to liue therein Mundus eum non cognouit Ioan. 1.10 The Worlde knewe him not neither esteemed nor reuerenced him as it ought neither knewe it how to bee thankefull vnto him for the greate Honour and Benefit which from him it receiued And so comparing what God doeth for men which is to giue them his Sonne and what men doe against God which is to offende him and to bee vngratefull for his Gift I will greately admire the infinite Charity of God desiring earnestly to loue him for this fauour endeavouring actually to demonstrate my Loue that as God gaue mee the only Sonne that hee had so I may giue him the onely Soule and the onely Hearte that I haue employing my Memory Vnderstanding and Will with all my Senses and Faculties to loue and serue such a Father that gaue such a Sonne to such a Worlde O eternall Father Colloquie I giue thee all the thankes that I can for the infinite Loue that thou hast borne vs giuing vs the most beloued and precious thing thas thou hadst I desire lo loue thee as thou louedst mee giuing thee the most precious thing that is within mee Receiue my Hearte in pledge of this Loue that from this day forward I may not only loue thee in Wordes 1 Ioan. 13 18. and in Tongue but in Deede and in Truthe seeking allwayes thy Glorye without mixture of any thing that is prophane Amen The third Pointe THirdly I am to consider the ende wherefore God gaue vnto the Worlde this his only-begotten Sonne Vt omnis qui credit in ipsum non pereaet sed habeat vitam aeternam Ioan. 12.47 and what infinite Benefits redounde vnto men by this Gifte Wherein I am to ponder how the Sonne of God came into the Worlde as hee giueth testimonye of himselfe Vt saluificem Mundum to saue the Worlde with a most perfect Saluation the which consisteth in two things First in taking from it all things that are the cause that it should perish and bee condemned pardoning it of it Sinnes deliuering it from the Slauery of the Deuill and from the eternall Prison of Hell and from all other miseries that are annexed to Sinne and are the cause of returning vnto it Secondly in giuing vnto it the Life of Grace with all the supernaturall Vertues that accompanye it and finally Life euerlasting And in these two things are included innumerable others which heereafter wee shall haue occasion to speake of And finally to seale vp the Greatenesse of this Benefit God willeth that it should extende itselfe to all the men of the Worlde of what Estate and Condition soeuer without excluding for his parte any that will beleeue in him with a liuely Faithe who shall not perishe but shall all of them obtaine Life euerlasting Now this beeing so to mee also this Benefit is extended and I may applye all these wordes to myselfe saying with all truthe so God loued mee that hee gaue mee his onely-begotten Sonne that beleeuing in him with a liuely Faithe I may not perish but obtaine Life euerlasting O only-begotten Sonne of the Father Colloquie what thankes shall I giue thee for hauing come into the VVorlde to free vs from so many euills and to heape vpon vs so many Benefits Thou pardonest our Sinnes dispoylest Hell openest the Gates of Paradise Vanquishest the Deuill Triumphest ouer the VVorlde Tamest our Flesh Cuttest of our Perills Comfortest our Heauinesses Quickenest our VVorkes Augmentest our Merits Giuest vs Perseuerance in thy Grace and finally Crownest
with her Soueraigne Prudence and Vertue and full of Ioye for hauing fullfilled what allmighty God gaue him in charge for these two things are matter of speciall Ioye to the Angells and to the Righteous for there is no Ioye equall to the accomplishing the Will of God and to see it accomplished by others for therein Psal 29.6 according to that of the Prophet Dauid consisteth our Life Secondly I am to consider how the Angell departed presently to Heauen without staying any moment more to giue vs to vnderstand that the Angells hauing fullfilled that ministery which allmighty God incharged them with on Earthe make no tariaunce there but forthwith retourne to their Center which is Heauen Instructing vs especially such as bee Religious that hauing fullfilled our Ministeries with our neighbours wee make no causelesse tariaunce among them but that forthwith wee retire ourselues to our Oratorye which is our Heauen to repose ourselues with God And as wee after our humane fashion imagine that the Angell entring into Heauen gaue account to allmighty God of his Embassage and presented himselfe readye to serue againe in whatsoeuer hee should bee commaunded so wee hauing fullfilled our Obligations are to present ourselues before God ready to accomplish whatsoeuer hee shall anewe impose vpon vs or giue vs in charge according to that of holy Iob Iob 38.35 Shalt thou peraduenture send lightenings and will they goe and returning shall they saye to thee heere wee are O eternall and omnipotent king Colloquie make mee like one of these caelestiall lightenings resplendent with thy light inflamed with the fier of thy Loue quicke in obeying thy holy VVill and thankefull in retourning to giue the thankes for the accomplishment thereof I may likewise piously contemplate how the Angell S. Gabriell beeing entred into heauen preached to his companions the excellent Humillitye Wisdome and Sanctitye of the blessed VIRGIN all of them beeing full of alacritye for that God had founde vpon earthe a Person that was as pleasing and acceptable vnto him as the inhabitantes of heauen for it is the Propertye of the Saintes to rejoice that there are many others that supplye what they want in louing and seruing with greate feruour our Lord God to whome bee Honour and Glorye worlde without ende Amen The ninth Meditation Of the execution of the Incarnation and of some Circumstances thereof as concerning the bodye of our Lorde Christ The first Pointe FIrst D. Th. 3. p. q. 32. 33 I am to consider how the blessed VIRGIN hauing giuen her Consent in the very same instant the Holy Ghoste formed of her purest blood a most perfect Bodye and created a most excellent reasonable Soule and joyned them togither with the Person of the eternall Worde God beeing made man and man God Ioan. 1. and God beeing espoused with Humane nature in that Virgin Chamber and the Virgin herselfe exalted to the Dignitye of the Mother of God In this Action wee are to ponder the Content of all those Persons that are interposed heerein principally the Contentment of the most blessed TRINITYE to see his promise fullfilled and to haue made this Demonstration of his Omnipotencye and of his Bountye and Charitye O how joyfull was the eternall Father for hauing giuen vs his Sonne and with what infinite Loue loued hee this his Sonne true God and man And how was hee pleased in him aboue all that was created seeing as S. 1. p. q. 20. ar 4. ad 1 Thomas sayeth God much more loueth Christ alone then all the Angells and men and then all the Creatures togither Phil. 2.9 for hee would giue him a name aboue all names which is the name and beeing of God And therefore was much more pleased and did more rejoice to beholde him then to beholde all the rest of the Created or to be created With this Consideration I will rejoice at this Ioye of the Father and will bee thankefull vnto him for the fauour hee hath donne vs beseeching him that seeing hee so much loueth this Sonne for his sake hee will also loue mee and graunt mee his holy Loue. O eternall Father and our Protector Colloquie Psal 83.10 beholde the newe face of thy Christ in whome thou art so much pleased and seeing hee made himselfe semblable to vs in our nature make vs semblable to him in his Grace Then will I ponder what Contentment the eternall Worde had to see himselfe made man and with what hearty Loue hee loued that his most sacred Humanitye vniting it to himselfe with a purpose neuer to forsake what once hee had taken vpon him And in respect thereof hee desired to embrace and to put into his bowells all mankinde as his kinred And therefore I may confidently say vnto him as Ruth saide to Booz Ruth 3.9 Colloquie Spreade thy mantel vpon thy seruant because thou art nigh of kinne O diuine VVorde true Booz and Fortitude of the Father seeing thou hast made thyselfe of the kinred of men spreade vpon mee the cloke of thy diuine Protection vnite mee vnto thee in Faithe and Charitye and giue mee the kisse of Peace with the kisse of thy mouthe Cant. 1.1 Cant. 2.6 and embrace mee with the right hande of thy Omnipotencye that nothing created may bee able to seperate mee from thy Friendship Wee may likewise contemplate the Contentment of the Holy Ghoste for hauing acted this Worke which is attributed vnto him because Goodnesse and Loue is proper to this Person and it seemeth that then hee satisfied fully his Desier when hee had acted the supremest Worke of Loue that hee could Vpon which the Prophet Isaias saide Isa 11.1 A Rodde shall sproute not of the roote of lesse and from that roote a flower vpon which the Spirit of our Lord shall take rest For in this eternall Worde Incarnate figured by this Rodde and flower of Iesse the holy Spirit founde rest and perpetuall Ioye as in the thing that hee most loued From hence I will passe on to consider the Ioye of that most sacred Humanitye when it sawe itselfe exalted to so greate a greatenesse and that from the depth of nothing it had mounted to the heighth of the Diuine essence saying with greate Ioye that of the Spouse in the Canticles Cant. 3.4 I haue founde all that which my Soule could desire I will with greate Constancye preserue it and will neuer forsake it O most sacred Humanitye Colloquie I ioye for thy Ioye and for thy good fortune and seeing thou art so content with thy beloued giue vs parte of that Loue which thou hast that togither with thee wee also may enjoye it Then will I ponder the Content of the most blessed VIRGIN in that instant of the Incarnation for God our Lorde gaue vnto her an extraordinary Light whereby shee sawe the manner how this misterye was wrought in her Intrailes for when shee sawe God made man within herselfe and sa●e herselfe a Virgin and a
with a good will suffered this Imprisonment and this mortification of Senses to free vs from the euerlasting prison and to satisfye for the libertye and ouermuch loosenesse of Eua who going to recreate herselfe in Paradise bebelde the fruite of the Tree and contrary to Gods commaundement tasted thereof And so likewise to satisfye for the libertyes and Lightnesses of my Senses and to animate mee by his Example to mortifye them and to suffer any shutting vp or streightnesse whatsoeuer in my Chamber or bed or in whatsoeuer else pertaineth to the pampering of my fleshe I humbly thanke thee o diuine VVorde incarnate Colloquie for this entrance thou hast made into the VVorlde suffering so streight a goole such a horride prison and so long and tedious a mortification of thy fleshe by the which I humbly beseeche thee to deliuer mee from the eternall Prison of Hell and from the troublesome gaole of my Vices ayding mee to mortifye my passions and with the spirite to restraine the disordinate vse of my Senses The tenth Meditation Of the excellencyes of the most holye Soule of our Sauiour Christ D. Th. 3. p. q. 34. etiam q. 7 cum sequ and of the heroycall Actes of Vertue that hee exercised in the first instant of the Incarnation The first Pointe FIrst I am to consider the Graces and Excellencyes of our Sauiour Christ as hee was man his Soule beeing vnited with the Deitye the which were Immense for as his Fore-runner saide of him Ioa. 3.14 God gaue him not his Spirite by measure for the Father loueth the Sonne and hath giuen all things into his hande that is to say To the rest of the Sainctes hee giueth them his Spirit by measure and the graces of the holy Spirit as S. 1 Cor. 12.81 Paule sayeth are diuided among them some beeing giuen to some others to others but to our Sauiour Christ his Father gaue him his Spirit without measure for hee gaue him these graces all at once Ephes 4.7 not only for himselfe but with power to distribute them to others giuing to euery one his measure for hee loueth him as his only begotten Sonne with a most singular Loue and therefore hee communicated vnto him such fullnesse of Wisdome Grace as was fitting for the Glorye of such a Sonne whereupon his Euangelist S. Iohn saide of him VVee sawe the glory of him Ioan. 1.14 glory as it were of the only begotten of the Father full of Grace Veritye Besides this the eternall Worde hauing communicated to this most blessed Soule the principall thing which hee had which was his owne personall Essence it pertained vnto his Honour to communicate likewise vnto it the Immensenesse of those Graces giftes that were conuenient for that which had so noble a Beeing These graces wee may reduce vnto 7. heades The first was Immense Puritye in such sorte 1 Pet. 2.22 that hee neither sinned nor could sinne nor erre nor bee deceiued nor haue any Imperfection that might bee repugnant to this Puritye and Cleanesnesse of Hearthe Ioa. 1.17 for hee was the Lambe of God not the earthly but the heauenly Lambe the most Innocent Lambe without any blot whose comming was to take away the Sinnes of the Worlde and so by Right was free himselfe from them all The second is the Grace of Sanctitye the which incomparably exceeded that of men Angells all togither And in this measure hee had Charity and Humillitye and Obedience and the rest of the Vertues in such sorte Dan. 9.24 Isa 11.2 that for Excellencye hee is called the Holye of Holyes in whome the holy Spirite reposed filling him with his seuen giftes with an Immense Plenitude The third was Grace consummated which is Blessednesse and the blessed-making Vision for from that very first instant his Soule sawe the Diuine Essence with greater Clearenesse then all the Blessed togither and in this proportion it loued God and rejoiced with vnspeakeable Ioye for the which it is saide of him that God annointed him with the oyle of Gladnesse aboue all his Companions Psal 44. ● From hence proceeded the 4. Colos 2.3 Grace which comprehendeth the Treasures of the Wisdome and knowledge of God not diuided but all togither as S. Paule saieth that hee might knowe all things created passed present and to come and that nothing might bee couered from him hee beeing to bee the Iudge of all things to rewarde the good and to chastize the euill The fifth is the Power of doing miracles without any Limitation meerely by his owne Will by the which hee had power to giue Life to the Deade Luc. 4.14 32.36.39 to heale all that were sicke to cast out Deuills out of Bodyes possessed to commaunde the Windes and the Sea and all the Elements all subiecting themselues to his commaunde The sixt is Matt. 6.9 vltim 18. the Power of Excellencye in pardoning Sinnes conuerting Sinners chaunging their Heartes ordaining Sacraments and Sacrifizes and distributing among men Graces and supernaturall Giftes The seuenth is Colos 2.10 Eph. 1.22 the Grace of beeing a Heade as well of the Church militant as of the Triumphant of men and of Angells beeing superiour to all and the Fountaine of all the celestiall blessings and of all the giftes and Graces that proceede from the Father of Light Iac. 1.17 for the good of the mysticall Bodye whose Heade is Christe From hence it is that this our Lorde was the first and principall of all the predestinated for whose respect our Lorde predestinated others that hee might haue many Companions in Glory but especially for that hee might bee as the Apostle S. Rom. 8.29 Paul saieth the first borne of many Bretheren like and conformable vnto him in the giftes of Grace as they were in nature and so hee entred first before all men into this Glorye and sawe the diuine Essence and opened the Gates of Heauen that the rest might enter in to beholde it Considering these 7. kindes of Graces that our Sauiour Christ hath and euery one of them I am to collect from them seuerall Affections sometimes blessing and praysing the eternall Father for the Giftes hee gaue to his Sonne as hee was man sometimes rejoicing at the benefits which this our Lord hath giuing him the Much good doe it him thereof and sometimes beseeching him to imparte vnto mee of what hee hath for of his fullnesse all wee haue receiued Ioan. 1.16 and therefore with greate Loue I may say vnto him O Sonne of the liuing God Colloquie Psal 44.3 Cant. 5.10 Zacha. 3.9 I reioice to see thee so beautifull aboue all the Sonnes of men white red elected among a thousand O liuing and corner stone how sightly thou art with these seuen eyes of vnspeakeable splendour put into thee by the hande of thy Father O Sonne of man how well doe these seuen starres become thee giuen thee for thy Glorye Apoc. 1.16
to giue them an example of all Vertue thou bee borne in a poore manger thou bee circumcized and persecuted by Herod and the Iewes and that thou bee taken whipped crowned with Thornes and dye vpon a Crosse with greate Dolour and Contempt Therefore seeing thou louest mee for my Loue and for the good of thy Bretheren Ioan. 10.18 14.31 accept these Afflictions To this Will of the Father which our Lord Christ calleth the Commaundement and precept of his Deathe hee readily aunswered offering himselfe with a prompt and ready will to suffer all whatsoeuer and then was fullfilled that saying of S. Heb. 12.2 Paule That abandoning the Ioye of this Life and contemplating the eternall Ioye of the other hee embraced the Crosse not regarding that it was very Ignominious Then allso with an effectuall Will hee dranke the bitter chalice of his Passion and was baptized with the Baptisme of his Ignominies Mar. 10.39 and Dolours perseuering as hee himselfe saide in the bitternesse of this Drinke and of this Baptisme all the dayes of his Life vntill in the ende thereof hee effectually dranke it accomplishing all that his Father had ordained him But his Charitye and Obedience passed yet farther for that allthough that was so much that hee was to suffer yet not contented heerewith with a most generous Hearte and most ardent Thirst hee offered himselfe to suffer much more if his Father would ordaine it and that it might bee needefull for our good Act. 21.13 for if S. Paule when the Prophet Agabus tolde him that hee was to bee bounde Prisoner in Hierusalem aunswered that hee was readye not only to bee bounde but to dye also for the name of our Lord IESVS how much more would our sweete Lord IESVS when his Father related vnto him the Afflictions of his Life and Deathe immediately aunswere that hee was prepared not only to suffer those afflictions but others also much greater for his Loue. And that I may perceiue how much I am indebted to this our Lorde I am to consider how in that instant hee presented vnto his memory all mankinde and myselfe among them and offered himselfe to suffer all this for euery one in particular and for mee myselfe as if I alone had stoode in neede of his Remedye So that then was fullfilled that saying of S. Paul Gal 2.20 Hee that loued mee and deliuered himselfe for mee to Deathe offering himselfe thereunto for my Loue. O tender Babe and valorous Gyaunt Colloquie wherewith shall I repaye thee the Affection with which thou this day offerest thyselfe to runne thy Carreere Psal 18.6 accepting withall all those Afflictions which in the course thereof thou art to endure May the Angells praise thee for this singular fauour that thou hast donne vnto men and may my Soule glorifye thee for the Loue that then thou diddest beare mee for the which I offer myselfe to suffer whatsoeuer shall happen vnto mee in the Carreere of my Life thou fauouring mee with thy grace that therein I may not faile The eleuenth Meditation Of the Iourney which the eternall VVorde Incarnate made in his Mothers VVombe to the House of Zacharias to sanctifye his Forerunner S. Iohn the Baptist The first Pointe FIrst I will consider Luc. 1.44 how the Worde made fleshe beeing yet in the Wombe of his blessed mother with the exceeding greate desire hee had to saue men presently fixed his eyes vpon Iohn who was in the Belly of S. Elizabeth and was to bee his Fore-runner and seeing him to bee in Originall Sinne hee was greiued thereat and determined with himselfe forthwith to free him from that miserye and to sanctifye him taking possession of his Office of Redeemer which was giuen him in charge And to this ende hee effectually inspired his mother speedily to goe visit her Cosin that hee thereby might effect this his Worke. Wherein I am to ponder First the greate Desier that this our Lorde hath of our Saluation thanking him therefore and confounding myselfe for the litle Desier that I haue of mine As also how carefull hee is of the good of his elected and how vigilant in exercizing his office of Redeemer seeing hee began it from the Wombe of his mother not desiring to bee Idle any moment I will likewise ponder what a greiuous euill Sinne is and how much our Lord is displeased that his elect should bee in Sinne but a moment seeing for this cause hee inspired his mother so hastily to vndertake that iourney to free from Sinne his chosen Iohn Baptist O Diuine VVorde that madest thyselfe man to deliuer vs from Sinne Colloquie and deriuedst to enact this office with such speede Isa 8.1 that thou tookest for thy Surname Make speede hasten robbe and take Spoyles seeing thy names are not emptye but full come Lord with speede to free mee from my Sinnes make haste to sanctifye mee with thy Grace robbe my Hearte for thy Seruice and take it for the Spoyle of thy Victorye that from hence forth I may begin feruently to serue thee The Second Pointe SEcondly I am to consider how our Lord hauing power to sanctifye the Baptist from the place where hee was would notwithstanding inspire his mother to carrye him to the house of S. Elizabeth and there to worke this miraculous sanctification for causes very admirable and proffitable for our instruction First to giue newe Demonstrations of his Humillitye and Charitye For as these Vertues mooued him to come downe from Heauen and to come into the Worlde to visite it Luc. 1.79 Beda ibid. and to drawe it out of the Darkenesse and Shadowe of Deathe wheerein it stood so likewise they mooued him to come from Nazareth to visite Iohn and to drawe him out of Sinne the greater comming to visite the lesser to honour him and the Phisicion the Sicke to cure him The second cause was that his most blessed Mother might haue a share in this Action taking her for the Instrument of the first sanctification that hee wrought in this Worlde iustifying by her meanes the Childe Iohn that was in Sinne and replenishing with the holy Spirit his mother that was just to the ende that wee Sinners might vnderstand that to obtaine Pardon of our Sinnes the blessed Virgin was to be our Mediatrix that the Righteous might vnderstande that by her meanes they were to obtaine fullnesse of the holy Spirit and of his grace with the vertues and giftes that descende from Heauen and that therefore all might endeuour to loue and serue her and to be much deuoted vnto her O soueraigne VIRGIN Colloquie seeing to day togither with thy Sonne thou takest possession of the office giuen thee for our benefit prosecute it this day with mee obtaining for mee pardon of my Sinnes and abundance of spirituall Craces Amen The third cause was Inspirations of our Sauiour Christ for that it is the propertye of our Sauiour Christe in entring into a Soule to
as heereafter we shall see The seuententh Meditation Of the birth of our Sauiour Christe in a Stable in Bethlehem The first Pointe FIrst I am to consider what the Worde Incarnate did in the wombe of his mother when the hower was come of his deliuerance from thence Pondering first that as he would not anticipate the time of his birth so also hee would not deferre it but would puntually be borne at nine moneths ende to manifest himselfe vnto the worlde with an hearty desier to begin his carreere with greate feruour and Alacritye of Hearte fullfilling that of Dauid Psal 18.7 He hath reioiced as a Gyaunt to runnet he waye his comming forth from the top of Heauen not staying till he come to the other extreeme For albeeit he knewe what a sharpe carreere he was to haue from his natiuitye to his Deathe yet he rejoiced with fortitude to begin it issuing out from the wombe of the VIRGIN which was his Heauen and presently setting his feete vpon the vilest and basest place that was on the Earthe For the which I ought humbly to thanke him beseeching him to giue mee light to knowe and vnderstand what passed in this his entrance O Childe more strong Colloquie and valiant then a Gyant seeing that respleudent like a newe Sun thou wilt issue by thy Orient to run thy Carreere vnto the Occident of the Crosse Illuminate my Vnderstanding and inflame my Will that I may beholde contemplate thy egression and may loue with feruent zeale the Vertues thou discouerest therein Then will I ponder how liberall he then shewed himselfe to his mother D. Th. 3. p. q. 35. ar 6. like as a mighty and riche man hauing beene lodged in the house of a poore labouring man who hath giuen him good entertainement not for any interest but to serue him vseth at his departure to recompense him well and to giue him some precious gift either in gratitude or for almes so likewise for that the blessed VIRGIN had so well harboured her Sonne for nine moneths at such time as he meant to departe from his lodging hee gaue her the richest giftes of grace a most high Contemplation of that mysterye and certaine extraordinary Iubilees of gladnesse in steede of those paines that other women vse to feele when they are in trauell of Childe For it was not reason that she that had no sensuall pleasure in conceiuing should haue any paine in bringing forth And allbeeit as touching the suffering Dolours he dispensed not with himselfe yet he would not that his mother in this case should suffer any In like sorte I may consider that when our Sauiour Christ entreth Sacramentally into vs at his first entrance he giueth vs Sacramentall grace and if we giue him good hospitallitye before his departure he giueth vs riche Iewells of Affections of Deuotion and Contemplation and Iubilies of Alacrity wherewith he recompenseth the good entertainement that we giue him Therefore o my Soule Colloquie regarde how thou harbourest this soueraigne guest that he may leaue thee riche and abundantly stored with the giftes of Heauen Thirdly Before in the 14. Meditation 3. pointe I will ponder how our Sauiour Christ would for the same cause issue out of his mothers wombe after a miraculous manner shee not suffring any losse of her Virginitye for it was no reason that he should departe out of a house where he had beene so well entertained with the indammaging of the Integritye that it had honoring heerein his mother and aduising vs all that to entertaine him and to serue him wee shall receiue no detriment rather if neede be he will doe some miracle to that ende For though he did none to preserue himselfe from suffering yet he vseth to doe it to preserue his elected when it is conuenient for them O soueraigne master Colloquie how well thou teachest me by this Example the Condition of true Loue which is rigorous to itselfe and gentle to others for ●●selfe it will haue rigours to afflict it but for it neighbour it will haue fauours to delight him ayde me with thy abundant grace that in both things I may imitate thy feruent and admirable Charitye The Second Pointe SEcondly I am to consider what the blessed VIRGIN did when by those Iubilies she knewe that the hower of her deliuery was come pondering her Affections her Actions and her Wordes For recollecting herselfe in a corner of the stable and setled in very high Contemplation she brought forth her only begotten Sonne and forthwith she tooke him in her Armes O what content and Ioye she receiued at that first viewe not staying vpon the outward beautye of the bodye but passing to the beautye of the Soule and of the Deitye On the one side she embraced him and kissed him louingly as her Sonne on the other side shee shruncke backe and humbly retired considering that he was God for with these two armes God desireth to bee embraced with Charitye and Humillitye with Loue and Reuerence and the like am I to doe spiritually taking him as it were in my armes louing him and reuerencing him approaching to him with Loue and retiring myselfe with Humillitye This donne the VIRGIN swathled her Sonne in such swathling cloutes and mantles as she had prepared and with an Affection of Humillitye shee layed him in a maunger esteeming herselfe vnworthy to holde him in her Armes and falling on her knees she adored him as her God and her Lord and very louingly she spake vnto him for she was assured that hee vnderstood her She humbly thanked him for the greate fauours he had donne to mankinde in comming to redeeme it She likewise gaue him thankes for hauing taken her for his mother without any merits of hers there she offered to serue him with bodye and Soule and with all her forces employing them all in his Seruice And all this she vttered with such louing wordes and tender Affections as they are rather to be imagined then possible to be explicated The like did S. Ioseph adoring the Childe humbly thanking him for taking him for his foster-father acknowledging it for a greate fauour and offering himselfe truely and really to serue him The like am I to doe accompanying these Sainctes in heartye thankefullnesse offering vnto him my bodye and Soule and all my faculties O most sweete and most soueraigne Lord Colloquie what thankes may I giue thee for this greate fauour thou hast donne mee in comming to remedye mee as a Childe and in so extreeme Pouertye O that I might haue beene present at that time to serue thee in thy Infancye I heere present myselfe in Spirit before thy diuine maiestie and I offer vnto thee all that I am or may bee able to bee to employ it wholely in thy Seruice accepte o Lord this my good Will and giue me thy grace to effect it The third Pointe THe third and principall pointe is to consider the meruailous greatenesses of that
greater wisdome nor assurednesse then to heare the voice of God and to stand for his Gouernment seeing as our Lord himselfe saide by the Prophet Isaias Isa 32.17 all is ordained for our righteousnesse and abundant peace O how full of Contentment retourned these kings on their waye and how well did they thinke their Labour and Trauell employed for the things of God although they bee painefull in the beginnings they haue alwaies good endes And therefore it is greate Wisdome to begin by that Labour whose ende shall be temporall and eternall repose rejoicing in God worlde without ende Amen The XXIIII Meditation Of the Purification of the B. VIRGIN and of the Presentation of the Childe in the Temple The first Pointe THe olde Lawe commaunded Leui. 12 2 Luc. 2.12 that a woman hauing conceiued by a man if she brought forth a male childe she should remaine forty dayes retired in her house as vncleane at the ende whereof she should goe to the Temple to be purified offering for her Sinne a Lambe The heroical vertues of the B. Virgin a Turtle if she were poore a paire of Turtles or Pigeons desiring the preiste to pray vnto God for her This Lawe the B. VIRGIN accomplished with the exercize of admirable Vertues especially she exercized sixe like the sixe leaues of the whitest Lillye for the which the speeche of the celestiall spouse is very fitting vnto her Cantic 2.2 As the Lillye among Thornes so is my beloued among the Daughters The first Vertue was greate Loue to retirednesse with such delight therein that albeit the Lawe had not commaunded it yet it would haue pleased her to continue those forty dayes in her secret Corner attending only to contemplate the greatenesses of her Sonne to nourish him wherewith she remained so full of contentment that in regarde of him shee respected not the Companye of the whole worlde The second Vertue was greate Loue to puritye and cleane-nesse of Hearte giuing good demonstrations thereof in that shee being most pure delighted to be more purified obseruing the Lawe of Purification that her beloued might say of her Thou art all faire my beloued Cantic 4.7 and there is no spot in thee The third Vertue was Heroicall Obedience for albeit she knewe that she was not obliged to keepe this lawe for that she had not conceiued by the worke of man yet notwithstanding as her Sonne fullfilled the Lawe of Circumcision so she would entirely fullfill this Lawe to conforme herselfe with other women to obserue the common Lawes of all without hauing exemption priuiledge nor dispensation and without vsing therein Ambages or Interpretations euen in that wherein she might lawfully haue vsed them And so the forty dayes being fully ended with greate puntuallitye and readinesse she set forward on her waye to Hierusalem with rare modestye and Alacritye rejoicing with her Sonne whome she bare in her armes by whose example she learned this manner of Obedience The fourth Vertue was rare Humillitye in willing to be treated as one vncleane and as one that stood in neede of being purifyed as if she had not beene a VIRGIN demonstrating heerein greate Loue to puritie Humilliation by whose example I may be ashamed to see myselfe so prowde so desirous to bee reputed as pure and holy being contrarily a sinner that so foule abhominable that my righteousnesse as saieth the Prophet Isaias is like a cloth stained with menstrueous blood Isa 64.6 The fifth Vertue was greate Loue to Pouertye the sister of Humillitye for though with the golde that these kings gaue her she was able peraduenture to buye a Lambe and to offer it as riche noble Women vsed to doe yet she would be treated like a poore woman and offer the Sacrifize that was assigned to the poore which was a paire of turtles or two young pigeons The sixth was the greate Deuotion and Reuerence wherewith she gaue this offering to the Preiste requesting him with greate Humillitye to pray vnto God for her shee herselfe being one that might haue prayed for all For as the Lilly within her sixe leaues containeth other sixe little sprigs with their buttons like golde so the blessed VIRGIN to these sixe Vertues conjoyned diuerse Affections of an intention purely and directly for the glorye of God inkindled with the fier of Charitye and resplendent with the golde of caelestiall Wisdome O most sacred VIRGIN Colloquie I reioice to beholde thee so riche in Vertues and so carefull and diligent in exercizing them Cant. 2.2 Ex D. Ber. serm in Cant. now I perceiue how exceeding true it is that thou art as a Lilly among Thornes for in comparison of thee we are blacked and besmeared with the thornes of our Sinnes and thou art a most white and pure Lilly with the sixe leaues of these soueraigne Vertues VVell may we see o soueraigne Queene that thou diddest allwayes contemplate this king layed in his manger and in thy lappe seeing thy Spirit like spikenard gaue it accustomed odour to imitate him Cant. 1.11 sending out the most sweete odour of Puritye Humillitye and Obedience inkindled with the fier of Charitye obtaine for me o blessed LADYE that I may beholde him and thee with such a spirit as may send forth the like odour Amen The second Pointe THe Lawe likewise commaunded that all the first borne of the Hebrewes should be offered to God as holy Exod. 13.2 in acknowledgement of the fauour he did them in bringing them out of Egipt killing in a night all the first borne of the Egiptians And for the accomplishment of this Lawe our blessed LADYE the VIRGIN carried her Sonne to the Temple to offer him to the eternall Father Heere I am to consider first the Spirit and Deuotion wherewith the blessed VIRGIN made this offering in her name and in the name of all mankinde saying to the eternall Father Beholde heere o eternall Father thy only begotten Sonne as he is God and my only first borne as he is man he that was represented by all the first borne that hitherto haue beene offered vnto thee and whose offering thou so much hast desired I offer him with all my Hearte in thankesgiuing for hauing giuen him mee for I haue nothing more precious to offer vnto thee thine he is take him vnto thee in whome he shall be better employed then in mee I likewise offer him vnto thee in the odour of sweetenesse for the saluation and redemption of the whole worlde Receiue o my God this offering more precious then that of Abel more sweete then that of Noe more holy then that of Abraham and more excellent then all those that Moyses ordained and by this I beseeche thee to pardon all mortall men and to admitte them into thy grace and freindship O how well pleased might the eternall Father be with this oblation aswell for the deuotion of the person that offered it as for the Sanctitye of
the offering that was presented him Secondly I will consider the Spirit wherewith this most blessed Childe offered himselfe in the Temple to his eternall Father Beholde heere might he say o eternall Father thy only begotten Sonne who was made man to obey thee and commeth into the Temple to honour thee heere I present myselfe before thy maiestie and I offer myselfe to thy seruice and to the accomplishment of thy Will Psalm 36.77.51 And for that neither the Deathe of so many first borne as perished in Egipt nor the offering of the first borne of Israel hath beene acceptable vnto thee for the saluation of men I offer myselfe to dye for them that my Deathe and the sacrifize of my blood may appease thy wrathe and deliuer thy people from the seruitude of sinne In this sorte was fullfilled that speeche of S. Paul Qui dilexit nos Ephes 5.2 tradidit semetipsum hostiam oblationem Deo in odorem suauitatis Who loued vs and deliuered himselfe for vs an oblation and host to God in an odour of sweetenesse And it is to bee beleeued that this offering happened in the morning at such time as in the temple was offered the sacrifize of the Lambe Exod. 29.39 Num. 28.4 called the morning Lambe that there might be a correspondence betweene the figure and the figured O how sweete was this offering to the eternall Father how content remained he therewith as one that was desirous thereof for that the offrings of all the other first-borne were of no value but as they were representations of this Thirdly I am to imagine that albeit our Sauiour Christ made this offering for all men yet he made it likewise particularly for mee holding me present in his memorye Hearte And with this consideration in the Temple of my Soule I will present myselfe in spirit before the eternall Father and in companye of the blessed VIRGIN and of the Childe himselfe I will offer him vnto him in Thankesgiuing for hauing giuen him to me for my Redeemer and master beseeching him to accept this offering and for it to reconcile mee to himselfe and to make me partaker of his giftes O soueraigne Father with all the affection of my Hearte I offer vnto thee thy only begotten Sonne Colloquie and though it being I that doe offer him I deserue to be reiected yet the offering being such as it is I hope to be admitted receiue it o Lord in an odour of sweetenesse and for it graunte mee remission of my Sinnes that with a pure Hearte I may appeare in thy presence in the Temple of thy glorye Amen The third Pointe THe same Lawe likewise commaunded that these first-borne should be redeemed for fiue sicles Exod. 13.13 Leuitic 27.6 and so the blessed VIRGIN redeemed her Sonne paying them to the Prieste who tooke them and retourned her Sonne vnto her Vpon this passage I am to consider who maketh this sale of the Childe who it is that buyeth him with what price and for whome and what benefits arize thereof First I will consider how the eternall Father to whome this Childe offered himselfe will not keepe to himselfe that which was giuen him but would a newe giue him to the Worlde and to men and sell him to them for their good demonstrating heerein his infinite Liberallitye and Bountye which is so farre from repenting to haue giuen vs what he once gaue vs that he ratifieth the Donation inuenting newe respectes to giue vs what he hath giuen vs. She that buyeth and redeemeth him is the blessed VIRGIN to bring him vp as her Sonne and yet she also will not detaine him to herselfe but will nourish him for vs and buy him that he may be employed for our good The price is no more but fiue sicles O eternall Father Colloquie how cheape doest thou sell a thing that is so precious why doest thou equall this first-borne in price with the rest if the rest were redeemed for fiue sicles this was to be redeemed for many millions for he is infinitely more worth then all the rest But I now perceiue o Lord that this is to aduise me that although the name of this ransome soundeth sale and price yet he is giuen vs freely and of meere grace that I may incessantly thanke thee for this newe grace for the which mayest thou be glorifyed and praised by all thy Creatures worlde without ende Amen I may also consider the Spirit that is included in the price of these fiue sicles by the which is signified the price wherewith is bought the most precious golde of diuine Wisdome which is Christ Apoc. 3.17 Isa 55.1 in such sorte as it may be bought This price is the mortification of the fiue senses and the actes of the fiue Vertues which dispose vs to obtaine Grace and the perfection thereof that is to say Liuely faithe Feare of God Dolour for Sinnes Confidence in Gods mercye and an effectuall Resolution to obey God and wholely to accomplish his holy will Therefore Colloquie o my Soule if thou desirest to haue Christ to be thine consider that he is not bought with golde nor siluer but with these fiue sicles of the Spirit offer them to the eternall Father and he will giue him vnto thee Fourthly I will ponder the ende wherefore he is redeemed and bought which is to be the Slaue and Seruant of men and to deliuer himselfe for them vnto Deathe O sweete IESVS Colloquie how willingly doest thou suffer thyselfe to be solde and redeemed to vndoe by thy sale that which I by sinning did with my Soule and to redeeme it with thy ransome that it might bee perpetually thine and yet thy Loue stoppeth not heere for thou art readye to be solde againe by a false Disciple and bought by thy enemies to take from thee thy life making an ende of our redemption with thy Deathe Blessed be thy immense Charitye that is neuer satisfied nor wearied in doing vs good O my Soule reioice that the blessed VIRGIN hath bought her Sonne for thee be glad that IESVS is alreadye thine seeing his Father hath giuen him thee for fiue sicles O good IESVS thou art mine by this newe buying but I yeilde myselfe to be thine Cant. 2.16 and with greate Confidence will say My beloued to me and I to him bee it so o Lord that thou leaue not me nor I neuer leaue thee Amen The XXV Meditation Of what happened in the Presentation Luc. 2.25 with Simeon and Anna the Prophetesse The first Pointe IN those dayes there was a man in Hierusalem named Simeon and this man was iust and religious expecting the consolation of Israel and the holy Ghoste was in him and he had receiued an aunswere from the holy Ghoste that he should not see deathe vnlesse he sawe first the Christ of our Lord. Vpon this pointe I will consider first how the holy Ghoste desiring to manifest IESVS Christ newly borne raised vp two
and from being knowen and reuerenced by men delighting to conceale and hide myselfe vntill God bee pleased to manifest me The second cause of his flying into Egipt was by the waye to doe good to that Idolatrous nation abandoned by God that beginning to be fullfilled which was prophecyed Beholde our Lorde will ascende vpon a light Clowde Isa 19.1 and will enter into Egipt and the idolls of Egipt shall be moued at his presence For our Lord Christ entring into Egipt clothed with the light clowde of his Humanitye in the armes of the resplendent Clowde his mother began to treade vnder his feete those Idolls which the Worlde adoreth to witte Riches Honors and Delicacyes embracing there Pouertye Contempt and Affliction And with this example he layed the foundation of that perfection which afterwardes shone brightly in Egipt and that which he planted thoroughout the whole Worlde trauelling thoroughout it in the light Clowde of his primitiue Church and of the Congregation of his Apostles and Disciples and vnto this day he ceaseth not to plant it O most sweete IESVS Colloquie who in the light clowde of the blessed Sacrament of the Altar entrest daily into thy faithefull enter into this darke Egipt of my Hearte and throwe downe those Idolls of earthly affections which it adoreth that from henceforth I may only loue what thou louest and abhorre what thou abhorrest Amen Likewise by this flight of our Sauiour Christ into Egipt because of the persecution of Herod is represented how the Primitiue Churche flying the persecution of the Iewes should goe to the Gentiles carrying with it the Faithe Apoc. 12.6 and Lawe of Christ. And genetally if one man persecute him with his Sinnes he is wont to flye and to seeke out another that will receiue him and therefore if Christ haue beene borne in my Soule I am to endeuour not to persecute him with my passions and Luke-warmnesse Apoc 3.11 leaste he forsake me and goe to another that shall receiue my Crowne The second Pointe THe Angell of our Lord appeared in sleepe to Ioseph saying Arize and take the Childe Matt. 2.13 and his mother and flee into Egipt and be there vntill I shall tell thee for it will come to passe that Herod will seeke the Childe to destroy him Vpon this reuelation I am to ponder who imposeth this Obedience who intimateth it vpon whome it is imposed and with what wordes He that principally imposeth this Commaundement is the eternall Father to manifest the Prouidence that he hath of his only begotten Sonne for allbeit he had determined that he should dye by men yet because that hower was not yet come he had a care to defend him in signe that he hath the like care of the rest of his adoptiue Children for the Loue that he beareth to this his naturall Sonne He that declared this ordenance was an Angell in the name of God himselfe for his diuine Maiestie will haue vs accustomed to obey him in his ministers whose office is not only to doe his diuine Will but to declare it to others in his name and therefore he saide of them Luc. 10.16 He that heareth you heareth me And for this cause likewise he sayed by Malachias the Prophet Mala. 2.7 That the Preiste is the Angell of our Lorde from whose mouthe we are to heare what God commaundeth From hence it is that this obedience was intimated to S. Ioseph and not to the VIRGIN because Ioseph was heade of that familye and Gods will was that the VIRGIN should obey S. Ioseph in all that he sayed he had hearde of the Angell and should suffer herselfe to be gouerned by him And so she did for as she was humble and obedient she stood not vpon this that the aduise was not giuen to her but to her Husband neither did she vainely boaste that God or his Angells should speake vnto her like the other Marye who sayed Num. 12.1 Hath our Lord spoken by Moyses onlie hath he not spoken to vs aso in like manner Wherein I am to learne this manner of Humillitye and Obedience of our blessed LADYE desiring to be gouerned by others and that greater account should be made of others then of mee holding it for a greate happinesse to knowe the Will of God and to fullfill it whither I knowe it by reuelation from God or from his Angells or by the speeche and ordination of men For albeit the first seemeth more glorious yet in the second more humillitye is exercized subjecting our iudgement and Will not only to God but to man also for Gods sake And so the blessed VIRGIN was no lesse resplendent in obeying S. Ioseph then S. Ioseph was in obeying the Angell and then the Angell was in obeying God O eternall God Colloquie 1 Pet. 2.13 graunt me that I may subiect myselfe to euery humane Creature for thy Lone obeying what thou commaundest me by men as thou in heauen art obeyed by Angells fullfilling thy will vpon Earthe with that deuotion that it is fullfilled in Heauen Amen The third Pointe THen will I consider the Wordes wherewith the Angell declared the Commaundement of our Lord the which were graue breife imperious and with Circumstances very conuenient to make proofe of the Obedience of that Sainct to whome they were deliuered For in this sorte God vseth to commaunde somewhat to men that are perfect to exercize them that they may make demonstration of their Obedience as another Angell vsed the like wordes in the obedience which he intimated to Abraham to departe out of his owne Countrey Gen. 121 22.2 and to sacrifize his Sonne Isaac And for this cause he entereth not vsing circumloquutions or preambles which the Worlde commonly vseth not requesting but commaunding Arize saith he take the Childe and his mother and flee into Egipt and be there vntill I shall tell thee c. In these Wordes we are to ponder the Circumstances that make difficult this Ordination and declare the value of the Obedience First The manner of imposing obedience vpon the perfect 1 Reg. 3.3 c. it was intimated by night S. Ioseph being at rest and asleepe when men vse to haue greatest horrour of trouble to signifye that in the middest of our ease and prosperitye we are to be prepared for Afflictions and that at all times we are to be readye whensoeuer God shall commaunde to leaue our bed and our rest to obey him as he proued Samuel calling him three or foure times in the night and making him arize out of the bed wherein he slept to exercize him in Obedience and in the abnegation of his owne will Secondly the Angell commaunded him to take only the blessed Childe and his mother leauing the companye of all others and the furniture and other temporall things that he had in his house to be able the more freely to flye and escape from the rigorous intention of king Herod and to get away with lesse noise
within the Catholike Church and within the liuing Temple of our Hearte making it a House of Praier and exercizing it in exercizes of Sanctitye For heereupon it is sayed in the booke of Canticles Cant. 3.1 that the Spouse founde not her beloued which is God in the bed and quietneste of the pampering of the fleshe nor in the streetes and places of the trafficke of the worlde but in the renunciation of all this leauing the comfort of the Creatures to finde out the Creator Therefore o my Soule looke where thou seekest God if thou hast a desier to finde him for as holy Iob saieth Iob 28.13 He is not founde in the Lande of those that liue sweetely at their ease Thirdly I am to ponder what Companye he was in and what he did at such time as the VIRGIN entred into the Temple for by speciall Prouidence he was then in the middes of the Doctors hearing them and asking them that she might thereby vnderstand the cause why he left her and remained in the Temple Cant. 3.3.4 and that I might vnderstand that our Sauiour Christ is founde among the Doctors of the Church who by their teaching and Direction are a meanes to finde him and that they might vnderstand that Christ is in the middes of them hearing what they speake and teache to chastize them if they speake euill and likewise to ayde them to speake well if thorough their fault he be not diuerted Fourthly I will ponder the greate ioye of our blessed LADYE the VIRGIN when she sawe her Sonne and founde whome she had lost and sought with such sorrowe She seemed this third day as if she were raised from Deathe to Life Tob. 10.4 and as Anna the mother of Tobias who bewayled the absence of her Sonne with remedilesse teares when she sawe him wept for pure ioye so it is to be beleeued that her ioye was in as full measure as her paine that being fullfilled of the Prophet Dauid Ps 93.19 According to the multitude of my dolours in my Heart thy Consolations haue gladded my Soule O Soueraigne VIRGIN Colloquie I reioice at the ioye that thou hadst at this hower at the sight of thy Sonne Pro. 13.12 Hope deferred afflicted thy Soule but the fullfilling of thy desier was vnto thee a tree of Life finding him that is the tree of Life vnto all Obtaine for me most blessed VIRGIN that I may so seeke him that I may sinde him that I may enioy the life that proceedeth from that tree Amen But withall I will ponder the modestye wherewith the blessed VIRGIN accompanied this Ioye for albeit she sawe her Sonne in the middes of the Doctors with the admiration astonishment of all yet she vsed not such gestures and behauiour as other women vse to doe boasting to haue such Children but wondering to see him there she reuerenced what she sawe whereby she teacheth vs to conjoine togither Modestye and Alacritye according to the saying of S. Phil. 4.4 Paul Reioice in our Lord alwaies againe I say reioice let your modestye be knowen to all men our Lord is nigh As if he should say So reioice that you loose not modestye for our Lord is neere you and beholdeth you and in his presence there ought to be no immodest Ioye The third Pointe THe blessed VIRGIN seeing her Sonne A forme of Praier mixed with an amorous complaining vnto God sayed vnto him with an amorous complaining Sonne why hast thou so donne to vs beholde thy Father and I sorrowing did seeke thee All these wordes are full of mysterie and therefore it shall not be amisse to consider well eache one by itselfe First we are to consider that worde Fili cur fecisti nobis sic Sonne why hast thou so donne to vs Whereby her intention was not to aske or demaunde of him the cause of what he had donne for this had beene an excusable curiositye but only to declare the greife of her Hearte and therefore holy men vse this manner of speaking to our Lord when they are afflicted and it is a manner of Praier wherein quietly they aske a remedye of their Affliction For on the one side they attribute their Affliction to his diuine Prouidence who ordained or permitted it for their good and on the other side they confesse that to him it belongeth to remedye and preuent it In this manner I may pray saying sometimes to our Lord with Iob VVhy hast thou set me contrary to thee Iob 7.20 and I am become burdenous to myselfe why doest thou not take away my Sinne and why doest thou not take away myne Iniquitye VVhy hidest thou thy face Iob 13.24 and thinkest me thine Enemye Other sometimes Ps 21.1 c. Matt. 27.46 Luc. 2.48 I may say with our Sauiour Christ himselfe nayled on the Crosse My God my God why hast thou forsaken me neither was it without a mysterie that the blessed VIRGIN sayed not Sonne Sonne why hast thou donne so to me but to vs for it is the Propertye of holy People when they suffer any necessitye that is common to many not to complaine of their owne hurt only nor to aske remedye for themselues alone but to greiue for the hurt of all and to aske remedye for all for Charitye seeketh not only it owne good but the good of many saying with the royall Prophet Ps 43.24 VVhy turnest thou away thy face from vs and forgettest our Pouertye and our tribulation But in these plaintes we are to endeuour not to loose our Loue and Confidence in God and therefore we are to ioyne therewithall some worde to discouer this as the blessed VIRGIN vsed this Worde Sonne and our Sauiour Christ vpon the Crosse this worde My God my God which are wordes of Confidence and Loue. Secondly I am to ponder that worde Pater tuus ego Thy Father and I wherein is resplendent the Humillitye of the blessed VIRGIN not only in naming S. Ioseph before herselfe for the respect she had of him but also in calling him before all the Father of Christ whereby they might imagine that he was conceiued by the worke of man which was to her owne Humilliation but the sacred VIRGIN being most humble more esteemed her Husbands honour then her owne in giuing him so honorable a name teaching vs by her example how to honour our neighbours though it be to the impairing of ourselues Thirdly I am to ponder that Worde Dolentes quaerebamus te Sorrowing did seeke thee Wherein we are aduised to seeke God with Sorrowe proceeding from Loue such as was the Sorrowe of the blessed VIRGIN for true Loue causeth all these effectes to witte Sorrowe Psa 41.4 Sap. 1.1 and Teares for the absence of it beloued Puritye of intention in seeking him with Sinceritye not for it owne interest or sensible Pleasure but to be ioyned vnto him Diligence in all the meanes and exercizes ordained to finde him with perseuerance in them vntill