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A16740 Diuine considerations of the soule concerning the excellencie of God, and the vilenesse of man. Verie necessarie and profitable for euerie true Christian seriously looke into. By N.B. G. Breton, Nicholas, 1545?-1626? 1608 (1608) STC 3647; ESTC S116485 38,586 191

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Glorie who seeketh it shall finde it who findeth it shall loue it who loueth it shall liue in it who liueth in it shall ioy in it and who so ioyeth in it shall be blessed by it It is brighter then the Sunne purer then Golde sweeter then the honie and the honie combe and for the worth of it it is more worth then the whole worlde it beautifies nature it rectifieth reason it magnifies grace and glorifieth loue it loueth humilitie it aduanc●th vertue it enricheth knowledge and maintaineth honour it laboureth in heauen for such as from heauen are preserued for heauen to bring them to heauen in somme it is where it is the blisse of nature the honour of reason the light of life and the ioye of loue The elect loue her the Saints honour her God onely hath her in summe so much may be said of her and so much more good thē can be said or thought is in her that fearing with the deuine light of my praise to obscure the glory of her worthynesse I will onely wish the worlde to seeke her the godly to finde her the gratious to loue her the vertuous to serue her the faithfull to honour her and all the creatures in heauen and earth to praise her and so much touching the consideration of the wisdome of God The fourth Consideration touching the loue of God OH who coulde with the eyes of wisdome in the humilitie of the hearte looke into the vertue of that grace that liueth in the loue of the Almightie should finde that sence of sweetnes that should rauish the soule of vnderstanding but though it bee in it selfe so gracious and in grace so glorious as exceedeth the exceeding o● all praise yet as a Mole-hill t● a mountaine a Flie to an Eagle or an Ante to an Elephant le● me with the poore widdow put in my myte into the treasurie in humilitie of my hear● to speake of the life of my soule which being onely in the loue of the liuing God let me speake a little in the cōsideration of the same that the vngratefull world seeing their lacke of grace may blush at their blindnes be ioyful of a better light where beholding the beautie that rauisheth the soules of the beloued they shall find the loue that is the ioy of the blessed touching the which let me by degrees speake of such points as I find most necessarie in this consideration ●et vs first I say consider this first ●oint of the loue of God that ●efore we were created for his ●eruice wee were elected in his ●oue then to make an Image to it selfe yea as it were another it selfe for the first Romans 8. Iacob haue I loued euen before he had done good or euill There is election prooued in loue When the Angell saluted Elizabeth with the message of her conception was it not of Iohn the baptist who was sent to pronounce the word of the Lord to make streight his way before him and what greater proofe of loue then to electe him to such a message againe doth not Christ the Sonne of God praye to his Father that as hee is one with his Father so his maye be one with him Oh how can there be so greate a proofe of the election of loue in Christe as by his loue to be made one with him Looke I saie into the excellencie of this incomparable loue in God towards man first to make him to his Image and not onely by his worde as by which he made all other creatures but as it were by a consent or consultation of the Trinitie about an especiall worke to the pleasing of the Deitie as it is written Let vs make man in our owne Image according to our likenesse But well may it bee saide that Nullum simile est idē for though he were perfect in respect of our corruption yet by his fall it appeareth that the creature was farre shorte of the perfection of the Creator but being falne from that perfection by the venome of temptation into the state of damnation how greate was the loue of God to effect againe by himselfe the blessed worke of his saluation for as it is written GOD so loued the worlde that hee gaue his onely begotten Sonne to death that all that beleiue in him shal be saued againe looke into the admirable loue of Christe to his beloued to come from the bosome of his Father in heauen to his graue in the earth to leaue the seruice of Angelles to be skoffed of diuelish creatures to leaue the ioyes of Paradise for the sorrowes of the worlde to leaue his Throane in heauen for a maunger on the earth to leaue his seate of iudgemente to suffer death vpon the crosse well might hee say as in respect of his sorrowes for the sinnes of the worlde with the punishement that hee was to endure for the sinnes of others himselfe without sinne when hee felte the extremitie of those paines that in the sweate of Bloud and water prooued the passion of true patience and the life of true loue Vt non est dolor sicut meus sic non est amor sicut meus for indeede he knoweth not nor can he iudge what loue is that in his heart cannot saie in honour of his loue neuer such loue the freinde to die for his enemies the maister to die for his seruants the King to die for beggers the Sonne of God to dye for the sonne of man well maye it be saide neuer such loue to leaue all pleasures to bringe thee to all pleasures to endure all crosses to worke thee all comforts to leaue Heauen for a time to bring thee to Heauen for euer What art thou that in the thought of such loue canst not saie in thy heart in the ioye of thy soule as Nullus dolor sicut eius sic Nullus amor sicuteius as no sorrowe is like to his so no loue is like to his doth not hee truely saie that can say nothing but truth loue one another as I haue loued you greater loue then this cannot be for a man to lay downe lyfe for his beloued Oh let vs a little meditate vpon this excellent comforte that is vnspeakable in God towards man through his loue was man created the goodlest creature where al other creatures haue their eyes bēt downward to the earth where they seeke their foode man hath a face looking vpwards toward heauen where the soule seeketh foode aboue the flesh Againe through the loue of God was man made the wisest creature to know the varieties of natures to giue names vnto creatures to note the courses of the heauens to till the earth and make his pathes through the seas to deuide the times to distinguish of doubts to search into knowledge and to know the giuer and glory thereof Againe through the loue of God man was made commaunder of all creatures vnder the Sunne Lord of all the earth foreseer of after-times messenger of the worde of God
except one Tree with a sharpe warning of death in the touching of the same when neither his loue in his creatiō his bountie in his possession nor his care in his commaund regarded but either carelesly forgotten or wilfully disobeyed Oh what greater vilenes could be shewed then in such vnthankfulnes and what greater greater wickednesse then to shake handes with the Deuill to offend the God of so much goodnesse but more to make him blush at his owne shame in beholding the foulenesse of his abhominable filthynesse let man in the glasse of truth see the leprosie of his soule by the infection of sinne Pryde hath defiled humilitie couetousnesse charitie lecherie chastitie wrath patience sloath labour enuie loue and murther pity so that whereas man was before in these vertues a creature of Gods loue and in whose presence hee tooke pleasure now through these vices is hee become a most vglye and hatefull creature in the sight of the Creator what Peacock more proude of his taile then man is of his trumpery what Tyger is more cruell to any beaste then one man to another what Goate more lecherous then the licentious Libertins what Dogge more couetous in hiding of meate then the dogged miser in hoording vp of money what Snake more venemous then the tonge of the enuious and what Dormouse so sleepie as the slouthfull Epicure Consider then if there bee a vile nature in any of these how much more vile is man that hath the condition of all these Oh should a man haue his Image or proportion drawne according to his condition how monstrous would he finde himselfe with a Tygers head a Goates bearde a Snakes tong a hogs belly a Dormouse cie and a Beares hand But let the Image goe and looke into the vilenes of man and see if it bee not such as passeth the power of discription when God is forgotten the Deuill shal be remembred when grace is forsaken sinne shal be entertained and when Christ shal be crucified Iudas shal be monyed A Dogge will fawne on his maister Oh how much worse then a Dogg was man that was the death of his maister an Elephant is a monstrous beast and yet is pitifull to man wil lead him out of the wildernes but man more monstrous then any beast will leade man into wickednes the Goate hath his time wherin to shew the heate of his nature but man spareth no time to follow the filthinesse of his lust the Dogge will bee satisfied with a little that hee hath hidden but the vsurer is neuer satisfied till hee bee choaked with his Golde the Lyon will not praie vpon the bloud of a Lambe when the murtherer will not spare the bloud of the infante the Ante will worke for prouision for his foode while the Epicure will burst in the bed of his ease See then oh man the vile substance of thy condition whereby of the best creature in thy creation thou art become the worst in thy corruption therfore looking on the goodnes of thy God and the vilenesse of thy selfe Thou maiest well saie with Peter Luke chap. 5. verse 8. Lord come not neere mee for I am a poluted creature and with the Prophet Dauid Psa 44. ver 16. Shame hath couered my face yea and beholding the leprosie of thy soule by the spottes of thy sinne stand without the gates of grace that the Angells may not abhorre thee nor the Saincts be infected by thee till thy heauenly Phisitian with the Bloude of the Lambe haue cured thee of thy corruptiō Look I say oh vile man vpon the wickednesse of thy will to offend thy good God to bee a seruant to sinne the ruine of thy selfe and the plague of thy posteritie In thy riches see the rust of coueteousnesse in thy pryde see the fall of Lucifer in thy lechery see the fire of lust in thy wrath see the bloud of murther in thy sloath see the filth of drosse and thus beholding thy besmeered soule see if thou canst see so vile a creature vile in vnthankfulnes vile in haughtines vile in coueteousnes vile in sloathfulnes vile in furiousnes vile in filthines and so vile in all vilenes Thus I say looke into thy selfe and see what thou arte and if such thou be not think of the greatnes of the goodnes in thy God that by the vertue of his power in the mercie of his loue hath healed thee of thy sinne made thee fit for his seruice which till thou findest in thy selfe thinke there is not so vile a creature as thy selfe And thus much touching the vilenes or wickednes of man The third Consideration touching the folly or Ignorance of man THe smalnesse and vilenes of man thus considered we are now to looke a little vpon the folly or ignorance of man not a little needfull with the precedēts what shall follow to be considered First to the first point of folly could there bee a greater folly thought vpon then to lose the benefit of Paradise for the bit of an Apple for touching one tree to loose all to loose the plesure of ease to labor for food to forget god to listē to women to distrust God and to beleiue the Deuill to loose the beautie of perfection for the foulnesse of corruption and as much as in him lay to leaue heauen for hell are not these without comparison so high pointes in ignorance as make a ful point in folly But leauing the first folly of the first offender Oh what a swarme of follyes hath this ignorance begotten in the worlde which like Snakes in a Bee-hiue sting the takers of misstaken hony what a folly is it in man to worship a golden calfe which at the houre of his death can giue his body no breath but in the time of his life may hasten his soule into hell For example reade the history of Diues and see the fruite of such a folly Againe what a follye is it for man to make an Idoll of his fancie when Sampson with his Dalila may shew the fruite of wantonnesse Againe what a folly it is to execute the vengeance of wrath Let the murther of Cain speake in the bloud of his brother Abell what a folly is enuie let the swallowing of Coran Datha● and Abiram speake in their murmering against Moses what a folly is pride looke in the fall of Lucifer But as there are many great follyes in the world so there are many and great fooles but aboue all one most great foole which wee may iustly call foole by the word of God Psalme 53. verse 1. The foole hath said in his heart there is no God This foole doe I holde the foole of al fooles who hath ben so long with the Deuil that he hath forgotten God for he is more foole then the Deuil who will acknowledge God tremble at his Maiestie and be obedient to his commaund therefore I may well say that he is not only a deuilish foole but worse then a Deuill foole
student of Diuine misteries cheife seruant to the Lord of Lords freinde to the King of Kings and coheire in the heauenly kingdome through the loue of God hee was made a seruante but as a friend a brother and a coheire now hee that thinks on these pointes of loue is worthy of no loue if he cannot say in his heart there was neuer such loue hee loued man in himselfe when there was none to perswade him to loue him but himselfe he loued man as himselfe that he wold haue him one with himselfe yea he loued man more if more could be then himself that for man to death would giue himselfe hee made man louingly he blest man louingly hee came to man louingly and dyed for man most louingly in the beginning hee shewed his loue without beginning and in the end will shew his loue without ending he made him better then his creatures for hee made him Lord ouer them hee made them better then his Angells for hee made them to serue him alittle lower then himselfe Psalme 8. verse 5. that himself might chiefly loue him see further his loue vnto man as it is writen I say 49. 15 Can a Mother forget her children yet wil I neuer forget thee Se heere loue more tender then of a mother and more carefull then of any other Father O loue of loues what loue is like to this loue a kingly loue which defendeth his subiects a lordly loue which rewardeth his seruants a friendly loue that is kind to his friēds a brotherly loue y t is kinde to his brothers a motherly loue that is tender to her children a fatherly loue that is carefull of his Sonnes and a Godly loue that is gratious to his creatures a faithfull loue that neuer fainteth a bountifull loue that euer giueth a mercifull loue that neuer grudgeth a pitifull loue that euer releiueth a mindefull loue that neuer forgetteth a gracefull loue that euer loueth Now who can enter into the true and due consideration of loue worthy louing in the thought of this loue will not euer confesse there was neuer such loue which regardeth nothing but loue oh how did God loue Abraham for shewing his loue in Isaack where God regarding more his will then his worke would not suffer the sacrifice of his Son but so loued him as besides many other great fauours that he did him could say within himselfe when he had determined a destructiō of his enemies shal I hide from my seruant Abraham what I will doe as thogh he wold keep nothing frō his beloued that he knew fit for his knowledge Againe how loued he Eliah that he wold neuer let him see death how loued he his seruant Dauid that he made him to his owne heart how loued he the blessed Virgine to make her the mother of his blesssed Sonne how loued hee Iohn the Euangeliste to let him leane in is bosome how loued hee Paule to bringe him from idolatry how loued he Peter to forgiue him whē he had denyed him how loued hee Lazarus when he wept ouer him how loued he Mary Magdalen when he disposs est her of fowle spirits and at his Resurrection let her beholde him and how loued he the Theife when hee carried him into heauen with him To recite all the pointes of his particuler loue to a worlde of vnworthy persons were more then a worlde could set downe but for so much as I haue said and more then may bee saide of his loue I am perswaded that if wee consider the power the grace the wisdome the bountie the pittie the maiestie the mercie the patience the passion the sorrow the labour the life and the torments of his loue for our loue he hath no feeling of loue or is worthie of no loue that will not in the ioye of his soules loue giue all glory to this loue and say with the Prophet Dauid Psalm 31. verse 23. Loue him all ye his Saints praise him and magnifie him for euer For as there was neuer such a sorrowe as he hath endured for vs so is there no such loue as he hath to vs and in his mercie dooth euer shew vs. When he came first into the world he came as an infant to shewe vs the mildenes of his loue in further yeares he came as a doctor in the wisdom of his loue to teach vs the way vnto eternall life in the vertue of his loue he came as a Phisition to cure vs of all diseases in the power of his loue he came like himselfe as a God to driue out the Deuils from vs and in the meekenes of his loue came as a Lambe to be sacrifised for vs in the care of his loue at the right hand of his father is now a Mediator for vs in the glorie of his loue into the possession of our inheritance that hee hath purchased for vs will receiue vs oh milde oh wise oh vertuous oh powerfull oh meeke oh carefull oh glorious loue who can thinke of this loue and in the true glorie of true loue cannot most truely say there was neuer such loue no as Non est dolor sicut eius so Non est Amor sicut eius And thus much touching the consideration of the loue God The fift consideration of the mercy of God IN this admirable vertue of the loue of God I finde the greate and gratious worke of his mercie towards man which Considering the wickednesse of our nature and the wofulnesse of our estate is necessary to be considered for so farre had the temtation of the Diuill poysoned the heart of man as through the sinne of pride sought not onely to driue him out of Paradice but in as much as he might to throwe him downe into hell when the Angell of his wrath was sent to giue him punishment yet wrought his mercie so with his Iustice as saued him from perdition yea though hee cursed the earth for the sins of his creature yet he blessed his labour with the fruite of his patience and reserued for his beleefe a ioy in his mercie Looke through the whole course of the Scripture how his mercie euer wrought with his Iustice yea as it were had oftētimes the vpper hand of it as in the time of Noah when sinne had made as it were the whole world hateful in his sight that he saide within himselfe he repented that he had made man yet in his mercie hee made an Arke to saue Noah and his Children yea and of all liuing creatures reserued some for generation in Sodome and Gomora he saued Lot his Daughters yet Adam deserued nothing but destruction for his disobedience Noah deserued no grace for his drunkennes not Lot any fauour for his Incest yet mercy so wrought with iustice that God not onely for gaue their sins but blessed their repētance such hath enerbene is and euer will be the mercye of God vnto mā as so far doth mit●igate the furie of his iustice as reserueth
downe out of Heauen and cast into hell from which God of his mercie blesse all his seruants for euermore and thus much touching the consideration of the hate or malice in man The fifth Consideration of the crueltie in man NOw as it is euident by too many proofes that one euill begetteth another so in this it appeareth that from the hate or malice of man procedeth the crueltie or tyrannye executed vpon man for what beast in the world was euer found so tyrannous vnto another as one man hath ben to another yea such a power hath tyrannye in the hearts of some men as hath bene the spoile and death of many a thousand what tyrannye did the Iewes shewe in the crucifiing of our blessed Sauiour Iesus Christ which did proceed not out of any desert in him who deserued all loue and honour of all people but out of a malicious humour yfused into their soules by the power of the wicked finde examples of this vile and pestilent humour not onely the books of God as well in the olde as the new Testament as in many lamentable histories extant to the whole worlde is too ful of the persecution of the Prophets and the chosen people of God by the wicked and vnbeleeuing Princes and people of the worlde some their eyes put out other their tongues cut out some broyled vpon hott Iron other boyled in skalding lead some torne in peeces with horses some flead quicke some starued to death other tortured with vnspeakable torments in some for the displeasure conceiued of some one how many thousands haue suffered either death or vndoing or both when whole howses whole Cities yea and almost whole Kingdomes by the bloudy execution of tyrany haue ben brought almost to vtter confusion a Lyon when hee hath licked his lippes after warme bloud returnes to his den and takes his rest the Dog if he fight with his match if hee runne away from him and cry he seldome pursues him and if he kill him he leaues him and as it were mourning goeth from him that hee hath bene the death of him so of many other beasts Wolues Tygres and such like death or flight satisfies their crueltie But man more feirce then the Lyō more bloudie then the Wolfe more tyranous then the Tygre and more dogged then the Dogge will neuer be satisfied till he see the death and seeke the ruine of the father childe wife and seruant kinred and generation and neuer taketh rest through feare of reuenge so that he is not onely tyranous vnto other but through the vexatiō of his spirit is become euen a torment vnto him-selfe whyle feare and wrath keepe him in continuall perplexities Oh how vnaturall how monstrous in this horrible disposition haue many bene in the world some murthering their own children yea in the time of their infancy some their parents some their bretheren some their Princes some their Prophets some their maisters some their seruants what crueltie yea more then in any beast will many such a one shew to another in pride malice orrevenge the examples wherof the world is euery day too full of what Butcher can more cruelly teare in peeces the limmes of a beast then one mā in his malice will the very heart of another what scourges what terrors what tortures and what vnhumaine kinde of mortall punishments hath mā deuised for man no lesse intolerable then inexplicable in some the cryes the blood the sorrowes the miseries of the murthered the imprisoned the afflicted and the distressed through the oppression of pryde and the tyrannye of wrath may very well euen from Abell to Christ and from him to the worlds end sufficiently conclude the condemnation of man for the greatest tyrant in the worlde And thus much touching the consideration of the cruelty or tyranny in man The sixt Consideration of the basenes of man HAuing now spoken of the smalnesse the vilenesse the foolishnesse the hate and the crueltie in man let me a litle shew him the basenesse of his condition in going from that nature of grace wherin he was created vnto that horror of sinne by which hee is confounded-God in his gracious nature made him like vnto himselfe in holinesse purenesse and righteousnesse and through these graces amiable in his sight sociable for his Angells and coheire with his blessed Sonne in the paradise of the soule what greater title of honour then to weare a Crowne what Crowne so rich as of grace what grace so high as in Heauen and what glory so great as to bee gracious in the sight of God all which was man through grace assured of and through the lacke carlesse wherof hath not only lost all but through sinne is become vgly in the sight of God banished the courte of Heauen and through the drossy loue of the worlde become a slaue to the Deuill in hell What basenesse can be more then man by sinne hath thus drawne vpon himselfe who while hee should looke towards Heauen is digging in the earth while hee shoulde thinke vpon Heauen is puzled in the world and while he should be soaring towards Heauen is sinking into hell Oh base wretch that seeing the shamefull nature of sinne will yet so be meire his soule with the filth thereof that of the best and noblest creature hee becometh the worst and most base of all other Will the Spaniels leaue their maister to carry the tinkers budget will the horse leaue the warlike rider to drawe in a carte and will man leaue the King of Heauen to serue a slaue in hell Oh basenes of all basenes in Heauen is man a companion for the Saintes the virgins the martyrs and the Angells In hell for the fiends ougly spirits and horrible Deuills And is not hee of a base spirit that will leaue the heauenly for the hellish company fie vpon the basenesse of man that by sinne will bee brought vnto so base a nature there is no place so base as hell which is called the bottomlesse pit the receptacle of all filthinesse the caue of the accursed the denne of the desperate the habitation of the reprobate the horror of nature the terror of reason the torment of sinne the misery of time the night of darknesse and the endles torture where Serpents Dragons Night-rauens and Shrich-owles make the best musique in the eares of the damned where all obiects are so ougly all substances so filthy all voyces so frightfull all torments so continuall all paines so pitiles all care so comfortles and all hurte so helplesse that if a man through sin were not worse then a beast hee would not shew more basenesse then in the most beastly nature of the most beastly creature what shall I say such is the basenesse of sinne in the imbasing of our spirits and so base are our spirits in the yeelding to the basenesse of sinne that I must conclude with the Prophet Dauid thinking of the glory of God and the basenesse of man Oh what is man
DIVINE CONSIDErations of the Soule Concerning the excellencie of God and the vilenesse of man Verie necessarie and profitable for euerie true Christian seriously to looke into By N. B. G. LONDON Printed by E A. for Iohn Tappe and are to be solde at his shop on the Tower-Hill nere the Bulwarke Gate 1608 To the right worshipfull and worthy Knight Sir Thomas Lake one of the Clarkes of his Maieiesties Signet health happinesse and Heauen WOrthy KNIGHT The longe affectionate duty wherin I haue followed your vndeserued fauour hath made me study how to prooue some parte of my protestation but finding my spirite by the crosses of fortune vnable to be it selfe in the best nature of thankfulnesse I haue yet by Gods greate blessing laboured in the vineyard of a vertuous loue where hauing gathered those fruites that are both pleasant and holsome bounde vp this little handfull I presente them to your patience knowing that your loue to learning your zeale in Religion and your wisdome in iudgement being able in diuine Considerations to finde comforte aboue the worlde will vouchafe to make that good vse of them that maie giue me comforte in your regarde of them but least tediousnesse maie prooue displeasing yea in matter of much worth I wil leaue my labour to your liking and my seruice to your imploimēt in which I humblye rest in heartie prayer for your much happinesse Yours deuoted and obliged at commande NICH. BRETON To the Reader MAnye reade they knowe not what too many they care not what but how necessarie is it for all men before they reade to consider what they reade and to what end they bestowe both time labour in that excercise I refer to the iudgement of their discretions who are able to finde the difference betwixt good euill you then that reade this little worke to your greate good if you well disgest the considerations contained in the same Let mee intreate you what you finde for your good to esteem of as you haue cause and what may be to your dislike to correct in your kinde patience in a little room is matter enough for the good consideration of a cōtemplatiue sperit which looking towards heauen and longing to bee there shall finde such comfort in these considerations as I hope shal giue cause to gloriefie God the Author of all good and not thinke a misse of me that by his goodnes haue set them downe for the good of all his Seruants of which number not doubting you to be one I leaue you in this and all your good labours to his onely gratious blessing Your well wishing friend N. B In praise of these Diuine Considerations GOe little Booke the Iewell of delight The heauenly organ of true vertues glory Which like a christall mirror sets in sight The truest tract of high Iehouahes story Which who so reades shall finde within the same Gods powerfull loue to those that feare his name I reading of it did much comfort finde And so no doubt may euery Christian doe That is to vertue any whit inclind Such right directions doth it lead him to Read then dear friend for heere I dare well say To know God truely is the ready way And more within this lttle volume heere Who so doth read with due consideration His owne estate most vilely will appeare If not reformed by heauenly meditation Consider then and doe aplaud his paine That thus directs true knwledge to obtaine And for my selfe as hauing gain'd therby These few lines of my loue shall specifie Pleasure attend the author that did write it Heauens happinesse the heart that did indite it True comfort be to him that loues to read it And ioy betide his soule that truely treads it I. T. A Diuine Poem O Lord that knewst me ere that I was knowne And sawst the cloath before the thred was spunne And framd'st the substance ere the thought was growne From which my being in this world begunne Oh glorious God that onely of thy grace Didst all and onely to thy seruice make me and hauing giuen me heere an earthly place Vnto the Guard of thy faire grace dist take me Of all pure bright and euer-seeing eye That seest the secret thoughts of euerie heart Before whose presence doth apparantlie Heauen earth Sea Hell in all and euerie part In wisdome more O then wit can comprehend That mak'st and iudgest gouern'st euerie thing power of all powers on whome all powers attend Spring of all grace from whence all glories spring From that high holy heauenly throane of thine Where mercy liues to giue thy glorie grace Looke downe a little on this soule of mine That vnto thee complaines her heauie cace Oh sweetest sweete of my soules purest sence That in thy mercie madst me first a creature And in the truth of loues intelligence The neerest image to thy heauenly Nature And hauing framde me to thy fauours eye Didst with thy finger fairely write me out In holy writ of heauenly Misterie How I should bring a blessed life about Forbidding onely what might be my harme Commaunding onely what might doe me good preseruing me by thy Almigtie arme and feeding me with a celestiall foode Thou madst the ayre to feede the life of nature That I might see how weake a thing it is The earth the labour of the sinfull creature Which beares no fruite but onely by thy blisse Thou madst the water but to clense or coole Or serue thy creatures in their sundrie vse That carefull wit might reason not befoole In vsing nature to the soules abuse The fire thou madst to c●eere the chilling colde With a reuiuing heate of natures ne●de That reason might in natures ruine holde How farre that Force might stand the life instead Thus vnder heauen thou madst these Elements To maintaine all those creatures thou hast made But so that nature with her ornaments shall haue a time to flourish or to fade But that same heauenly fire that doth enflame The heart and soule with a continuall heate Whose loue doth liue but in thy holy name Where faith doth mercy but for grace intreate Where that did kindle or that Cole to finde Or smallest peice or sparckle of the same I found the eye of nature was too blinde To finde the sence or whence thee secret came Till by the inspiration of that grace That to thy seruants doth thy goodnesse showe I found thy loue the euer liuing place From whence the substance of this sweete doth flowe And when I saw within this soule of mine How farre thy loue exceedes the life of nature and natures life but in that loue of thine Which is the being of each blessed creature Then I beg●n to finde the foile of sinne And onely long'd to liue in mercies grace and hate the world that doth their hel begin That doe not long to see thy heauenly face And thus perplexed in that passions griefe That hath no ease but in thy mercies eye To thee that art the faithfull
I cannot but with admiration speake of that grace that through his loue made him haue such a fauour vnto man as to elect him to his loue to frame him to his image to inspire him with his spirit to instruct him in his word to defend him with his power to preserue him in his mercie to dye for him in his loue and to receiue him to glorie all these and what euer other good wee receiue either through the loue or mercye of God are free guifts of his grace and not for any merrit in man How can this beame of glorious brightnes bee beheld with the cies of humilitie but that the soule wold be rauished with the contemplation therof and say with the Psalmist Psalme 103. verse 8. Gratious is the Lord and mercifull long suffering and of great goodnesse Furthermore of so great effect in the working of comfort in the hearts of the faithfull is this vertue of grace in God that wee finde the writings of the Apostles in their Epistles commonlye to begin with this word Grace Grace mercie and peace from our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ As if from grace came mercie and from mercie peace Oh consider the works of grace our election out of a speciall fauour our creation out of a gratious wisdome our vocation out of a gratious kindenes our sanctification out of a gratious holines our iustification out of a gratious merit our redemptiō out of a gratious loue our glorification out of a gratious mercy So that still we see that grace worketh in all thinges to the onelye glorie of God in whome it worketh to the good of man Oh how sweet a salutation was deliuered to the blessed Virgin Mary by the Angell Gabriell Haile Mary full of grace God is with thee So that if God be with any soule it is full of grace where the fulnes of grace is there is surely God but as it is written of Christ Iesus Psalme 45. vers 7. That hee was annointed with the Oyle of Grace aboue his fellowes So may wee well say of the Grace of God it is so excellent in working to the Glorie of God that as it is infinite in goodnes so must it haue the same measure in glorie I say to be glorified aboue all things Note a little the varieties of the guiftes of this grace of God vnto his seruants Moyses hee made a leader of his people and gaue him the tables of the law to Abraham he gaue the blessing that should follow in his seede in Isaack shall the seede be called at the prayer of Eliah hee sent raine after a long drought to Dauid hee gaue a kingdome and a treasure more worth then many kingdomes the enlightning knowledge of his holy loue the spirit of prophesie the confession of sinne the repentance of offence the passion of true patiēce the constancie of faith and the humility of loue To Salomon he gaue especiall wisdome to sit in the Throane of iudgement with the greatest maiestie and wealth of any earthlye creature in the world To the blessed Virgin Marie hee gaue the fulnesse of grace in the conception of his only Sonne but to him he gaue that grace that filled heauen and earth with his glorie Let vs then consider not only the vertue goodnesse and glory of grace but with all the height and glorie therof which being only in Iesus Christ our onely Lord and Sauiour let vs in him onely beholde the summe and substance the beautie brightnesse the goodnesse and glorie thereof forsaking our selues in the shame of our sinnes only flie to his mercie for the comforte of those blessings that receiuing onelye from him may make vs giue all honour and glorie to him And so much for consideration vpon the grace of God The seauenth consideration of the glorie of God HAuing thus considered of the greatnes the goodnes the wisdom the loue the mercy grace of God towards man I cannot but finde in this good God an admirable glory who containing all these excellencies in himselfe and beeing indeede the verie essence of the same doth in the vertue of his bountie appeare so gratious vnto this people But since to speake or thinke of the glory of God or the least part thereof is ●o farre aboue the reach of the power of reason as in all confession must be onely left to admiration Let me onely say with the Apostle Glory only belongeth vnto the Lord in his presence so glorious is his brightnesse as nothing can see him and liue and therefore in a bush of fire hee spake but not apeared vnto Moyses vpon the mount in a cloud and a piller went before his people in the wildernesse was as it were inclosed in the Arke in an Angell did appeare vnto his Prophets and in his Sonne Iesus Christ so farre as he would and might be seene to his Apostles and Disciples but for his glory his diuine essence cannot be seene of any but himselfe verified by his own word Iohn 1. chap. verse 18. No man hath seene the Father but hee that came from the Father euen the Sonne of man that hath reuealed him and againe verse 28 I came from the Father and I goe to the Father for the Father I am one with his glory he filleth both heauen earth as it is written Heauen and earth are ful of the Maiestie of thy glory and againe in the Psalme 19. verse 1. The heauens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy worke his workes speake of his glorie his Saintes write of his glorye his Angelles sing of his glorie and all powers doe acknowledge his glorie It is higher then the Heauens larger then the Earth deeper then the Sea purer then the fire cleerer then the skye brighter then the Sunne The power of strength the life of Loue the vertue of mercie the beautie of grace the honour of Wisdome and the Essence of Maiestie The Angelles tremble before it the Saintes fall at the feete of it the Prophets beholde it a farre off and the soules of the elected doe adore it and being then so farre aboue the power of man to come neerer the thought of it How can the heart of man but in admiration speake of it it liues in the wisdome of the wise in the vertue of the valyant in the liberalitie of the Charitable in the patience of the Temperate in the virginitie of the chaste in the constancye of the faithfull in the humilitye of the louing in the truth of the Religious it dyrects the will of the Trinitie in the vnitie of the Deitie it commaundes the seruice of the Angells it blesseth the prayers of the Saints it pardoneth the sinnes of the repentant it prospereth the labours of the vertuous and loueth the soules of the righteous in summe it is the Maiestie of Maiesties the power of powers the vertue of vertues the grace of graces the honour of honors the Treasure of treasures the Blessing
of blessings and the being of beings and in all effects so neere vnto God himself that as he is in his glory incomprehensible so is the same for the infinite perfection of all worthines inexplicable it droue out of Paradise the disobediente to the comaund of it it made the earth swallowe the murmurers against the will of it it sent fire from heauen to consume the Captaines that came against the seruant of it it deuided the Sea to make a walke for the chosen of it it made the same Sea to drowne the hoast of the enemies of it it sent destruction vpon the Cities that wrought abhomination in the sight of it it drowned the world for sinning against it and hath cursed the Iewes for the death of the beloued of it in summe it is in all so farre beyond all that can be said or thought of it in the infinitenes of excellēce that in humilitie of adoration I will leaue it to the seruice of the wise the loue of the vertuous the honour of the blessed and the admiration of all And thus much for consideration of the glorie of God The second part of consideration concerning man and first touching the weakenesse or smallnesse of man HAuing now set downe a few notes touching the necessarie consideration of the greatnesse goodnesse wisdom loue mercie grace and glory of God Let mee a little speake of the contrarieties in man in mine opinion not vnnecessarie to be considered and first of the weakenesse or smallnesse of man First of his smallenesse touching the substance of his creation it was of the slime of the earth then what could bee lesse or of lesse force quantitye or esteeme Next for the substance of generation what was man before the meeting of his Parents not so much as a thought then which nothing could bee lesse then by the effect of consent What was his substance as in his creation a matter of like moment the quantitie not greate and the force little contained in a little roome bred vp in darkenes with paine and sorrowe fed by the nauil● without vse of sence or member Then come into the world is in quantitie little in strength meere weaknes naked and feeble like anowne adiectiue that cannot stand alone cryeth for it knoweth not what either paine that it cannot expresse or for want of that it cannot aske for Now continuing long time in this weaknes being come to further yeares what doth it finde but it owne imbecillitie desiring that it cannot haue beholding that it cannot compre hend and enduring that it cannot helpe Subiect to sinne by the corruption of nature by temptation of the flesh by the enchantment of the worlde and the iclousnesse of the Deuill subiect to the burning of the fire to the drowning of the water to the infection of the aire to the swallowing of the earth subiect to sicknesse subiect to care to sorrow to want to wronge to oppression to penurye to ignorance to presumption to tyranye to death so vnable to defend himselfe that a flea will byte him a fly will blinde him a worme will wound him and a gnat will choake him And for his sences his hearing may greeue him his sight may annoye him his speeche may hurt him his feeling may distemper him his smelling may infect him and his tasting may kill him in summe poore thing proud of nothing come of little better then nothing and shall returne to almoste as little a● nothing muste hunger must thirst must labour must sleepe must loose the vse of his sences and committe himselfe to trust must waxe olde must die cannot chuse hath no power to withstand any of these and though hee haue the commaund of creatures is but himselfe a creature and can no longer liue then to the will of the Creator sees the Sunne cannot behold the brightnesse heare 's the windes knowes not whence they blowe feeles the ayre knowes not how to lay holde of it sees the fire dares not touch it sees a world of earth but possesseth little of it perhappes none of it lookes at Heauen but cannot come at it and in summe as a substance of nothing or if anye thing like a Clocke that no longer mooueth then by the will of the Clockemaker So no longer man then in the wil of his maker what shall this little weake small creature think when he shal in the glasse of true sence beholde the obiect of himselfe and then think vpon the greatnes of his God in whome not onely himselfe but all creatures in heauen earth haue their being and without him haue no being in how little a compasse himselfe withall his is contained while such is the greatnesse of his God as filleth heauen and earth with his glory who comprehendeth all things not comprehended in any nor all but aboue all in himself in the infinitenes of himselfe Oh poore man what canst thou doe but with Iob lay thy finger on thy mouth and say I haue spoken once and twise but I will speake no more I thought I was something but I see I am nothing at least so little a thing as in it selfe is nothing My righteousnesse is as a filthy cloth my strength is Weakenes my dayes as a shaddowe my life but a spanne and my substance so smal as but in thee my God is as nothing or worse then nothing at al thus I say wilt thou say when beholding the least of gods creatures thou shalt consider thyne owne smalnesse and looking on the one and the other with the Prophet Dauid say in the admiration of his glorious goodnes Psalme 8. vers 4. O God what is man that thou doest vouchsafe to looke vpon him And thus much touching the smalnesse or weaknes of man The second Consideration touching the vilenes or wickednes of man NOw I haue a litle spoken of this smalnesse or small strength of man a thing doubtles most necessary for euery mā to think vppon least finding his greatnes in commaund ouer the creatures of the earth he forget the Creator both of heauen and earth al things in the same so let me tell him that finding his smalnes to bee so great and his greatnes to be so smal as maketh him nothing more then in the wil of the Almightie hee must withal looke into the vilenes of his nature in y e wilfull offending of his moste good and glorious God for in his first offence how much did he shew the vile wickednes or wicked vilenesse of his conditiō in forgeting the goodnes of his God in framing him of so vile a matter as y e slime of the earth a liuing creture to his own glorious image then to plāt him in Paradice a place of so much pleasure to giue him so large a possessiō as of al his ground his fruit yea commaund of al his creatures vpon the earth thus not like a Lord but like himself Lord of Lords to giue him a world of earth there onely to
and so the foole of al fooles Now to speake of follyes in particular nor of a number of Idle fooles such as when they are gay thinke they are rich or when they can prate they are wise or when they are proude they are noble or when they are prodigall they are liberall or when they are miserable they are thriftie or when they can swagger they are valiant and when they are rich they are honest These and a world of such idle fooles least I should be thought too much a foole for standing too much vpon the foole I leaue further to talke of hoping that the wise will confesse that all the wisdome of the worlde is foolishnesse before God and therefore man finding in himself so little touch of true wisdome as may make him then confesse all the wit hee hath to be but meere foolishnesse without the grace of God in the direction thereof I will leaue what I haue written vniustly to the correction of the wise and for the vnwise to the amendement of their indiscretion and thus much touching the consideration of the folly of man The fourth Consideration touching mallice or hate in man NOw hauing spoken myne oppinion touching the foolishnes of man I finde that follye or ignorance of better iudgement to haue begotten in him a kinde of malice or hate as it were opposite or contrary to the loue of God or at the least contrary to that loue which God commaundeth to bee in man where hee saith Iohn chap. 13. verse 34. Loue one another as I haue loued you for in some wicked people it is too apparant which I may rather terme Deuills then men those Atheisticall villains that if they haue not their wills will not onely murmure against God but with Iobs wife seeme to curse God and with the Deuill blaspheme God may not these iustly be called the reprobate that but looking towards heauen dare stirre vp athought against the glory thereof and being themselues but earth dare mooue against the Great or of heauen and earth Oh how hath the Deuill had power with man so to poyson his soule with the venome of temptation as by the power of the corruption to bring him to etrrnall confusion but as the Deuill through his malice at the greatnes of God was cast downe from Heauen so hath hee euer since and during his time will by the same poison in as much as he can keepe man from Heauen but leauing to speake of the vngratious vngratefull and malicious nature in some man towards God most grieuous to be spoken of let me come to y e malice or hate of man to mā when there were but two brethren in the world Cain and Abel one so maliced another that he sought his death not for the hurt he did him but for that God was pleased in his brother and not in him Oh pestiferous poison to wound the soule vnto eternall death Gen. chap. 4. ver 8. what need I to alleage examples either in the booke of God or wordes of bookes in the worlde touching that vile hellish nature or humor of malice in the corrupted nature of man when it is dayly seene euē almost in al kingdōes Countries Cyties and Townes to be an occasion of ciuill discorde yea and sometime of greate and long warres to the vtter spoile of many a common wealth doe not wee see euen sometime before our eyes how many are hated euen for the good that is in them and for the good that they intend to them that hate them when a wise man reprooueth a foole of his folly will not the foole hate him for being wiser then himselfe or for telling him of his folly yea will he not carry it in minde many a day and worke him a mischeefe if hee can for his good and as the Iewes did with Christ put him to death for teaching them the waie of life hate him for his loue and kill him for his comforte Oh malicious nature in the hearte of man if the lawe giue land to the right heyre will not the wrong possessor hate both the heyre for his right and the lawe for giuing it him though himselfe would be glad if the case were his own to haue it so if two freindes bee suiters for one fortune if the one carry it is it not often seene that the other will hate him for it yea of a friend become a foe for enioyning that he should euer haue had if the other had missed it is it not often seene that vpon a humor of ielouzie a man wil hate his wife and the wife her husband the sonne the father and the mother the daughter brother and sister neighbor and neighbor and al one another sometimes for a tryfle that with such a fire of malice as is almost vnquenchable Oh how too full are the Chronicles of the worlde of the horrible and miserable Tragedies that haue proceeded out of that hellish spirite of malice that hath spit her poyson through the hearts of a great part of the whole worlde to the destruction of a worlde of the inhabitans therin Let me a litle speake of this wicked spirite and how it wrought the fall of Lucifer from Heauen through his malice at the Maiestie of the Almightie againe being falne from Heauen how it wrought in him the fall of Adam enuying his blessed happines in Paradise and therefore by temptation sought in as much as hee could his destruction In Cain it wrought an vnnaturall hatred to the death of Abell in Esawe it wrought an vnbrotherly hatred to the great feare of Iacob in Pharaoh it wrought an vnkindly hatred to the poore Isralites because they throue by their labors vnder him increased in his kingdome it wrough a hate in the children of Iacob to their brother Ioseph because their father loued him in breife you shall finde in the whole Scripture the hate of the wicked vnto the godly because God blesseth them and as in the diuine writ euen in these our daies do we not see the good ha ted of the euill which being the spirite of so much wickednesse as worketh so much mischeefe what doth it differ from the Deuill Truly I thinke I may well say that as it is written God is charity and hee that dwelleth in charity dwelleth in God and God in him so contrarily the Deuill is malice and hee taht dwelleth in malice dwelleth in the Deuill the Diuill in hlm But where God entereth with his grace the Deuill hath no powre with his malice and though hee droue Adam out of Paradice yet hee could not keepe him out of Heauen and therefore of greater power is the mercy of God then the malice of the Deuill but seeing such is the vile nature of malice as doth figure nothing more truly then the Deuill let no man that can truly iudge of it but hate it as the Deuill which maketh a man in whom it is hatefull vnto God wicked vnto man throwen
that thou O God wilt vouchsafe to looke vpon him And so much in breife touching the consideration of the basenesse of man The seauenth Consideration touching the ignominie or defame of man IT is an olde prouerbe and too often true that hee who hath an euill name is halfe hanged and surely that man that delighteth in sinne by the name of a reprobate is more then halfe damned before hee come in hell to bee called a villaine is a name of great infamy and doth not sinne make a man a villaine to God to be called a Dogge is most hatefull to man and is not man called a hell-hound by the hate of his sinne would not man bee loath to be tearmed a Serpent and hath not sinne made man become of a Serpent like nature Oh the filth of sinne how hath it fouled and defiled the nature of man the vtter infamy of his name the election of loue the Image of God the Lord of the best of creatures to become the hated of grace the substance of drosse the worste of creatures and the slaue of hell what a shame is this to man by sinne to fall into so foule an infamy Is it not a name of great disgrace to be called a disobedient Sonne or a faithlesse feruant a rebellious subiect or vnthankfull freinde an vnkinde brother and an vnnaturall childe and is not man by sinne become all this vnto God to bee stubborne to so louing a Father false to so good a maister rebellious to so gratious a King vnkinde to so kinde a brother and vnthankfull to so bountifull a Lorde it is a shame to liue to beare the iust blotts of such blames one of these faults were enough but altogether are too too much The Dogg will follow his maister the Horse will cary his maister and will man runne from his maister the Oxe knowes his stall and the Asse his cribbe and shall not man know his place of rest after his labours then more vile then the Dogg more vnkinde then the Horse more foolish then either Oxe or Asse Fie what an infamy is this vnto man a seruant to entertaine his maister vnkindly to vse him villanously and to kill him shamefully were not this a horrible infamy and did not the Iewes so with Christ to forget a kindnesse to distruste a truth and to abuse a blessing is not he infamous that doth so and what sinner but doth so so that still I see infamy vpon infamy one followeth another by the venome of sinne to the shame of man to leaue robes of silke for rotten raggs sweete wine for puddle water and a pleasant walke for a filthy hole what foole would doe this and doth not sinneful man doe this leaue the rich graces the comly vestures of the soule for the poore fading pleasures of the flesh the sweete water of life for the puddle watter of death the filthy pleasures of this world and the comfortable way to Heauen for the miserable way to hell Oh wretched blinded sencelesse bewitched foole that doost suffer sinne so much to be-foole thy vnderstanding Looke I say what a name thou iustly gettest by yeelding thy seruice vnto sinne a slaue a foole a beast a serpent a monster and of the best the worste creature in the worlde Loose the beautie wherein thou werte created the honour wherwith thou werte intitled the riches whereof thou werte possessed the libertie that thou enioyedst the loue wherein thou liuedst and the life wherein thou reioycedst to put on deformitie in nature basenes in ciuilitie beggery in wante of grace bondage in slauery hate hate wherin thou diest and death wherin thou arte euer accursed and all this through sin who now could in the glasse of truth beholde this vglye obiecte of sinne and would gaine himselfe so foule an infamy as to be called an obiect through the loue thereof hath not Cain from the beginning bene iustly called a murtherer Laban a cozener Sampson a foole Achitophel a knaue Salomon an Idolator Symon magus a sorcerer Diues an Epicure and Iudas a traytor and the Deuill a lyar and wilt thou Oh man that readest and beleeuest all this bee infected nay delighted in all these sinnes to receiue the name of a murtherer acozener a foole a knaue an Idolator a a sorcerer a traytor and a lyar Oh most hellish titles to set out the flagge of infamye which to auoyde seeing thy vildenes and knowing thy weaknesse praye to thy God the God of goodnesse to draw thee from the delight of wickednesse vnto that delight of goodnesse that may recouer thy credit lost blot out the spots of thy shame in thy sinne and through the dropps of the pretious Bloud of his deere beloued Sonne Iesus to wash thee cleane from thyn● iniquities make thee capabl● of his graces thankfull for his blessings and ioyfull in receiuing the gratious name of his faithfull seruant And so much touching the consideration of the infamye orignominy of man FINIS Conclusio TO conclude as a Chirurgian that hath receiued a woūd hath many medicines salues which well applyed might giue him ease and restore him to health though he haue knowledge how to make vse of them yet if he put not his knowledge in practise shall either languish or perish through want of helpe So in this woun● of the soule made by sinne whereas euery man must b● vnder God his owne Chirurgian and helper Though hee heare reade beleeue and feele the goodnes of God many wayes in his power wisdome loue grace and glorious mercy towards him yet if hee do not meditate vpon the same thankfully consider and truely confesse his vnworthinesse of the least part thereof hee may either languish or pertish in the consuming paine of sinne or dispaire of grace or mercy Looke then vpon the greatnes of God and the smalnesse of man the goodnes of God and the vilenesse of man the wisdome of God and the folly of man the loue of God and the hate of man the grace of God and the disgrace of man the mercy of God and the tyranny of man and the glory of God and the infamy of man and fixing the eye of the heart vpon the one and the other how canst thou but to the glory of God and shame of thy selfe with ablushing face trēbling spirit falling prostrate at the feete of his mercy in admiration of the greatnesse kindnes and goodnes that the Lord in his mercy hath extended vnto thee but cry with the Prophet Dauid Oh Lord what is man that thou doest visit him Which comfortable visitation when thou findest in thy soule acknowledge in the greatnesse of his goodnesse the wisdome of his loue and glory of his mercy that of so small so vile so foolish so hateful so tyranous so disgracefull so infamous a creature by the infection of sinne his glorious maiestie out of his mere mercy will vouchsafe in the pretious Bloud of his deare and onely beloued Sonne Iesus Christ to wash thee cleane