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A51306 The life and doctrine of ovr Savior Iesvs Christ. The first part with short reflections for the help of such as desire to use mentall prayer : also 24 intertaynments of our Blessed Saviour in the most blessed sacrament : with certaine aspirations tending to the encrease of the love of God / by H.M. ... More, Henry, 1586-1661. 1656 (1656) Wing M2665; ESTC R32119 366,740 462

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depart not in his love he leaveth not vs but we die leaving him Othervvise so long as we live he inviteth vs and worketh vs to his love desiring nothing more then that his love and ours should be Eternall III. O svveete Eternitie O strong and never fayling but ever loving Eternitie VVhat can a mortall and ever fading creature doe in requitall of such immortall love Of mortall to immortall of temporall to Eternall of man to God what comparison is there Betvvixt such bitternes as we offer him and such infinite svveetenes of love with which he inviteth expecteth and receiveth vs betvvixt such weakenes of affection on our parte and such infinite strength on his what equali●ie may be expected Ours lyeth dead a long time before it begin his ever liveth with out beginning ours when it beginneth to live languisheth yet betvvixt life and death and staggereth oft whether it shall choose to live by loving him or die by leaving him though the difference betvvixt such a loving life and such a hatefull death be infinite his lasteth and liveth never decaying never wav●ting never fayling but allvvayes follovving and persuing vs till our dying day when both life and love must either live our die Eternally O love Eternall The first means to perpetuate our love to God by desires that our love had been eternall I. IT is not possible that our love should be eternall without beginning for our life is not with out beginning as there was a time in which we were not so there was a time in which we could not love 〈◊〉 was no time in which God was not he 〈…〉 time and before all time he loved vs VVhat shall we doe in recompense of this love Let vs at least stretch forth the armes of our soule which are our desires and fervently wish our love had been eternall without beginning shall we wish we were God For nothing is eternall with out beginning but God perhaps nothing can be so eternall but God alone But it is the propertie of love not to consider whether the things be possible which it desireth or not possible it is sufficient if affection be satisfyed in doing all that it can doe and in desiring a greate deale more then it shall be ever able to effect And even these impossible desires as they are pleasing to men when expressed by some outvvard signe because by them we see the harts of those that doe affect vs much more are they pleasing to God to whom all harts are open and who doth not measure our love so much by the shevv of the worke as by the poyse of the affection if the worke be not wanting when there is means to performe it let vs therfore wish that our love had no beginning but had been eternall as God not only in himself but also in his love tovvards vs is eternall God is more loved then vnderstood sayth Hugo Victorinus love entreth where knovvledge stands with out O that I could from all Eternitie have been with God and loved him Eternally as 〈◊〉 deserveth II. Let vs wish againe that at least from the first instant of our Conception we had been so happy as to have no sooner begun to be then begun to love that infinite goodnes by whom we had our beginning For as all gifts when they deserve least doe yet deserve we should love the giver this being of ours being the beginning of all other gifts even then deserved our love and if it had been possible for vs we should have presently turned our harts to God and as S. Ihon Baptist not long after his conception in presence of our Lord have leaped for ioy and love at the voyce of our creatour commanding vs to bee For even then he did greate things vnto vs and things most worthy of his povverfull hand when out of his infinite love he made vs capable of loving him That which was wanting then let vs supply novv and with inflamed affection love him the more fervently the more time hath been spent before We began to love him III. O Blessed Virgen Mother of the eternal lovel thrice happy doe I account thee though it were but for this alone that even when thou weret in thy Mothers wombe thou didst more perfectly love the giver of thy life then did ever pure humane creature love him in most perfect yeares were it not possible for vs novv to supply this want which we find in ourselves of love tovvards thy loving Sonne VVe may I hope by thy assistance and by conioyning our love with thyne not only love him from the beginning of our life but from the beginning of both thy life and love and restore him not only as many yeares as are past of our love but in recompense of former losses give all those yeares which betvvixt this and that time in which thou first didst begin to live thou didst spend in his love Therfore humbly trusting in thy favour but what doe I say I feate I am too bold Noe. Thy love doth beare it his love deserveth it all love requireth it I humbly conioyne my love and life with thyne that this little drop of my love being drovvned in that sea of thyne and both made but one life and love as a drop is made one with the liquor into which it is infused I may love him as he deserveth no● only as soone but before I began to be O blessed coniunction Thou didst desire that thy love had been Eternall to make it such thou didst ioyne it with the love of thy blessed Sonne and Eternally with him thou desiredst and beganst to love him My love therfore being novv one with thyne and thyne one with his all three make but one eternall love which triple knot of love God of his infinite goodnes ever please to continue Amen The miserie of most men bewayled and the happines of younger yeares I. THe happy coniunction which we may make of our love with the love of God and of our blessed Ladie may be an exceeding comfort to vs farre greater comfort would it have been if besides the condition of being but in time there had been no further distance But alas Hovv often besides have we made a breach of love betvvixt vs and God we were no sooner Masters of our love but we began to wast it lavishly as the prodigall child did his substance in a farre country from God cleaving in affection to the husks of his Creatures which the swine doe eate the externall appearance of the things of this world in which worldlings doe delight For they never enter by consideration into the substance of things created to feed thier soules with the goodnes and mercy and wisdome and povver and other infinite perfections of God who made them neither doe they consider to what end they were made to wit to incite vs and help vs the more to his love but as the psalmist speaketh like a horse or a mule who have no
an end not because they are weary of troble with themselves or others but because love is increased and established by the presence of the parties who doe love and especially by such an all seeing and all inioying presence by which we discover infinitely more the infinite perfections of God with out the least alay of imperfection infinitely more then we can possibly arrive to vnderstand in this life by all the naturall and supernaturall knovvledge which we have and by this blessed presēce we are ourselves perpetually cōfirmed in love without any danger of fayling in the least duty of correspondence and finally we are made more capable and never weary of loving him because we still discover more and more that he infinitely and incomprehensibly deserveth the eternall continuance and perseverance of our love towards him Say therfore with the Apostle I desire to be dissolved from these mortall bonds which aggravate and depresse my soule from that perfection of love which a sincere hart desireth and thou my God deservest I defire to be dissolved if not out of perfect love which excludeth feare yet out of such love as breadeth a filiall feare of offending and lothnes to continue in the least danger of leesing or lessening thy love II. O dreadfull danger a danger worse then death itself With what exquisite manner of all corporall death would I not willingly redeeme this hazard What hazard would I not most joyfully runn to purchase an eternitie of never offending my God O pretious Eternitie One thing I have asked of my lord God this I will againe and againe require that the very houre and moment that he seeth me inclining to offend he will rather call me out of this life then permit me to fayle in his love Happy man If I be thus prevented who will give me wings as of a dove and I will fly from this death of synne which doth hang over my head ô love of my deare God! How long shall I abide this hazard of leesing thee who art my only true life III. I doe not envy any thing more in the blessed sain●ts and Angels of heaven then that thier love to God is continuall with out intermission constant without wa●ering certayne without feare of leesing it or of relenting Eternall with out end of loving neither can death be truly welcome for any other end more then that it may be a beginning of this loving Eternitie O Eternitie of love what time can be suffici●●t to dwell vpon so loving a consideration What houre or minute of my life should passe in which I should not be found still loving thee my God and still exercising acts of thy love in ha●● and deed Print this thy love sweet Jesus in my hart by thy bitter Passion and by ●hy sacred wounds what better seale then thy loving self VVhat stronger wax then thy sacred blood What highter ●ire then thy eternall love O that my soule were ●he whitest parchment worthy to receive such a noble impression which being presented and vnfolded in thy eternall Consistorie nothing might appeare written in it from the beginning of my life to the end therof but Jesus my love my love sweete Jesus Amen How we ought to imitate the Eternitie of the love of God in the love of our Neighbour I. THe ●ternitie of love which we indeavour after our meane kind of measure to expresse in ourselves towards God in answer to his eternall love towards vs the same it is fit we should practise towards others in imitation of this first excellencie of his infinite love both to f●ee ourselves from that inference which S. Jhon makes that if any say I love God and hat●●h his brother be is a lyer and from that imperfection to full●ll the commandment which we have of it for so the same beloved disciple assureth vs This commandm●● 〈◊〉 have from ●●d tha● who loveth God loveth also his ●rother and againe he that hath my commandments and keepeth them he it is that loveth me II. VVe must therfore love our neighbour even before he loves vs and when he gives vs no occasion to love him but rather occasion of hatred by his ●hvvart demeanour tovvards vs or ill cariage tovvards God Againe we must never be weary of loving him or of doing good vnto him or for him we must with greate patience and longanimitie beare his dayly and continuall imperfections and offenses neither wondering nor impatiently grudging at his often falling or hard measure● nor pusillanimously sitting dovvne thinking hovv to fly and retire from such companie to others with whom we imagin we shall have no such troble but imitating the charitie of God and patience of Christ and saying with S. Augustine if the vessels of flesh be narrovv let the bounds of charitie be enlarged that is let men be infirme and troblesome and synfull hard to be ruled harder to accommodate themselves to my disposition or concei●e it is the nature of flesh and blood to be so my charit●● shall not be so scant as not to out-reach all this and persever to the end in bearing that so I may fullfill the lavv of Christ and imitate his love III. O love of my God more strong then death for death could never have overtaken my God vnlesse love had yealded him into his hands This brought my deere Saviour to the death-bed of the crosse and did not suffer him to come dovvne from it for any of the vpbrayding-scoffs with which the Ievves did taunt him nor for any weaker motive which humane frayletie might have suggested nor for any fayre seeming reason which worldly wisdome might have invented but being stretched vpon it to the vtmost as he had began to love vs from the beginning of his not only mortall but immortall life so h● resolved to yeald vp his last breath and blessed Ghost for vs that this his ●ying for our sake might be a most evident testimonie of his never dying love seeing he choose rather to leave this life then to forgo our love O that my hart and soule were w●oly absorpt in this thy eternall love that I might dye by thy love who didst die for the love of me and die rather then relent in the least point of love tovvards thee or tovvards my neighbour for thee Amen The latitude or Vniversalitie of the love of God I. THe latitude of the charitie of God is the Vniversalitie of his love extending itself to all in generall and to every one in particular He will have all men to be saved sayth the Apostle and to come to the knowledge of the truth and the beloved disciple he inlighteneth every man that cometh into this world Therfore when he had created man he added his commandments and precep●s that if he would keepe his commandments they should keepe him Therfore he punisheth synners in this life by peeces puting them in mind of that in which they have offended that
vniversalitie of spirit professe themselves to be ready to assiste all nations and confine themselves with in no bounds of countreyes or persons or pious imployments by which they may any way advance the sal●ation of thier Neighbours to the end that having once opened thier mouth and hart to God in this vniversalitie they doe not aftervvards relent ād our of pusillanimitie or self love streighten the boūds which they have once promised should be none at all IV. O blessed Apostl who couldst say I most gladly will bestow and will myself more over be bestowed for your soules though loving more I am loved lesse How well didst thou Follow the example given thee by thy Saviour who bestowed vpon vs all that which we have and himself moreover in ●o large and loving a manner as to man is incomprehensible and is so slenderly rewarded by vs labour and miserie and much watching hunger and 〈◊〉 and much fasting cold and nakednes could not streighten thy love not whatsoever danger of thy life be a means to inlarge this spirit in the harts of those who have dedicated themselves to the like imployments The height of the charitie of our Lord. I. THe height of the charitie of God and of our Saviour is the supetexcellencie of his love for love being two fold one by which we love because we doe or may receive benefit the other by which we I ove to benefit it is evident both that this second is the more excellent and that the love of God ●ovvards vs could not have the imperfection which the first doth involue Let vs love God because God hath first loved vs sayth the beloved disciple which considering before we were we could not love is of itself apparent and considering to what end he loved vs to wit to communicate himself to vs first by sayth then by cleere sight and inioyment of his glorious self we may take a scantling according to our weake apprehension or dull affection of the excellencie of his love tovvards vs seeing nothing can be more eycellent then to see and injoy God All that we see or heare of in the world was created for our benefit yet all that is nothing compared to one minute of time what then to an eternitie of injoying God O if thou hadst seen the eternall crownes of saincts with how much glorie they now exult who were contemptible and not thought worthy to live c. II. A second degree of excellencie of the love of God is that which the Apostle doth reflect on and with reason doth dilate himself vpon it to wit that not only when we were nothing but when we were synners when we were enimies when we were weake and infirme full of vlcers and sores he loved vs and was beneficiall vnto vs when we deserved his hatred he did not only not execute it to the full vpon vs as we miserable creatures are wont to doe vpon one another but spared vs had compassion on vs releeved vs. God commendeth his charitie towards vs in that when we were yet synners Christ dyed for vs This is charitie which surpasseth all knowledge and all conceite of man for as the same Apostle discourseth A body can scarce be willing to di● when of necessitie he must or when by justice he is condemned perhaps for a good cause or for defence of that which is right a body may dare to die but for his enimie for one that taketh away his good name and as much as is in him his life who is there that would thinke of offering himself to die O my God in this thou shewest thyself to be God that is all goodnes and all love give me grace to love thee at least for this thy love and die that I may not die by syn III. Yet a third excellencie is to be reflected on which the same Apostle suggesteth to wit that God did not spare his owne Sonne but delivered him for vs all In the infinite treasure of his divine knowledge and goodnes there could not but appear● divers means to expresse his love and exercise his mercy towards vs yet this offering itself as the most convenient in all respects he did not spare it though the most pretious jewell of his heavenly Cabinet the neerest and deerest treasure of his divine breast but gave it for vs and who are we You are bought with a greate price it is reason we should glorifie and beare God not in our minds only but in our body also in our harts in our tendrest affections and let nothing have place where nothing can be spared from him who sparing not his owne Sonne gave vs all things with him and in him more then all what can the world give thee with our Iesus He that findeth Iesus findeth a greate transure Th. a K. l. 2. c. 8. n. 2. How we are to imitate the superexcellencie of the love of God I. PART I. TO love God to benefit him more thē allready injoyeth is impossible we may notwithstanding comply with the excellencie of his love by wishing him all the good which he hath and being 〈◊〉 glad that he is as he is which is the part of a frend to an other frend that is superiour to him And we may dilate our thoughts and affections of this nature congratulating him his Eternitie his Immen●itie his Omnipotencie his Bountie his perfection in all kinds and professing ourselves to be hartily glad that he is so This is the expression which the Seraphims doe make who assist before the throne of God covering thier feete as short in conceiving or affecting so greate perfections but yet stirring vp one another to prayses such as they are able repeating Holy Holy Holy is the Lord God of Hosts full is heaven and earth of thy Majestie II. To this Kind of love belongs the desire that all the world should know him and serve him and the sorrow that he is offended and that we are so short of vnderstanding what he is and of loving him as he deserves let vs therfore say with the VViseman Glorifying him so much as you can be will yet exceed and wonderfull is his magnificence Blessing him exalt him so much as you can for he is greater then all prayse Exal●ing him put forth all your strength be not wearied for you shall not comprehend him Many things are hidden greater then these for we have seen few of his works To this also belongs the desire of even being with God in Prayer and in other services belonging to him not for the benefit which comes to vs by it though it be greate but because he deserves to be continually attended and served which was the ground vpon which our Saviour retired himself so often to Prayer and spent whole nights in it and when he was but twelue yeares old answered his Mother did you not know that I must be about those things which are my Fathers
stubbornes Yet God of his goodnes as S. Gregorie reflecteth permitted this accident that the incredulous disciple while he handleth the wounds in his masters flesh should cure in our hartes the wound of Infidelitie Prayse God allmightie his goodnes towards thee and beware of the falt discovered in the disciple reflect how vnreasonable it was for one to stand against so many and the more the longer that humour stuck by him Specially our Saviour having foretold he should rise againe Hovv many means doth God vse to prevent and to salve wounds and yet we will not be cured Behold thy wayes sayth the Propher reflect what thou hast done and thou sayedst I will not I have loved strangers and after them I will walke Hovv much better is it to keepe good companie and follovv it II. After eight dayes againe his disciples were with in and Thomas as with them Iesus cometh the doores being ●●ut and stood in the midst and sayed Peace be to you Then he sayeth to Thomas put in thy finger hither and see my hands and bring hither thy hand and put it into my side and be not incredulous but faithfull Slovvnes in beleefe deserved slovvnes in the cure Yet S. Jhon Chrysostome puts vs in mind of our Saviours mercyes and goodnes who for one soule doth willingly shevv his wounds and cometh to save one and doth not expect till he begge it He reiterates the same signes againe coming the doores being shut and suddenly appearing in the midst of them and his wonted and knovvne salutation to styrre vs vp the easyer to beleeve and love him So he doth dayly in the course of nature and grace for who is the father of the rayne and who hath begotten the drops of dewe But he that is continually renevving his works for vs. Here thou mayest touch his omnipotencie and his goodnes and thrust thy whole hand into his treasures of mercyes and benefits and overcome all incredulitie and hardnes of hart and vnfaythfull serving of him and doe not content thyself with once or slightly touching vpon him stretch forth thy thoughts often to reach further and further into him III. Thomas answered my Lord and my God expressing both his acknovvledgement and his love confounded for his not beleeving and at our Saviours mildnes tovvards him beleeving novv not only that really it was his master but that he was truly God and God who to me in particular to me so vnderserving would vouchsafe to shevv himself so loving And where shall we improve these affections better then by touching the sacred wounds of our Saviour and entring by his side into his everloving hart where we may see and beleeve and yet not being overcurious to see be partakers of that other blessing contayned in the ansvver of our Saviour because thou hast seen me Thomas thou hast beleeved blessed are they who have not seen and have beleeved For wherfore should any man say I would I had lived in those times to have seen our Saviour working miracles c. we have the word of prophecie more sure which you doe well ●ttending vnto as to a light shining in a darke place The causes why our Saviour kept the marks of his wounds in his hands feete and side I. HE shewed them his hands and side and the disciples were joyed seeing our Lord. Not only at his presēce as thier frend thier maister their Redeemer novv freed from so much affliction in which they had lately seen 〈◊〉 but for the glorie also and good which was to come 〈◊〉 and to themselves and particularly they wondred to see the markes of his wounds remayne in his side fecre and hands and could not sufficiently admire them diving to the reasons wherfore some reflect that they were signes of the love which he had borne vs and manifested in his life and sufferings for vs for as S. Bernard discourseth the secrets of his hart doe appeare through the overtures in his body his bovvels of mercy are discovered II. Others beheld them as inci●ements to love him the more and to venture thy more for him so S. Thomas reasoneth He shevved his hands to incourage vs to fight for him his side to inflame vs in his love his feete to egge vs on to runne in the path of his commandments His whole body to move vs to compassion O fountaine of love what shall I say of thee who hast vouchsafed to be so mindfull of me III. S. Ambrose tells vs that they strenghen our fayth and confidence in him they set an edge vpon our devotion considering that he would retayne these markes to represent them to his heavenly Father as pledges of our Redemption and pleaders for vs. Here the sparovv finds a house and the turtle dove a nest sayth S. Bernard In these the dove doth shelrer herself and without feare beholdeth the hauke flying aboute Say then with S. Augustin Behold I beseech thee ô Lord the wounds in thy hands for lo in thy hands thou hast writt●n me read thy ovvne hand-vvriting and save me IV. They incourage vs to suffer fot him for he that entreth into his wounds will not be so sensible of his ovvne And finally as they are a comfort to the good they will be a corrasive to the wicked when in the latter day it shall be sayed to them See the man whom thou hast crucified see the wounds thou hast made see the side which thou hast pearced By thee and for thee it was opened and yet thou wouldest not enter O blessed wounds give me leave that I may with reverence behold yee lovingly kisse yee humbly enter and constantly imbrace yee that neither life not death not any chance whatever may sever me from yee but that my love stronger then death may be eternally tovvards thee sweete Jesus who barest them for me Our Saviour appeareth to some of his disciples while they were fishing I. PART I. THere were togeather Simon Peeter and Thomas and Nathanael and the Sonnes of Zebedee and two others Simon Peeter sayed to them I goe to fish they sayed we also come with thee they went into the boate and that night they tooke nothing Thomas had learned not to part with good companie and they joyntly mingled competent worke with thier retirement and vpon the confidence which our Saviours presence vpon earth had given them they durst novv go forth of thier houses without ●eare of the Jewes but yet they tooke nothing that night not because it was night but to shew that all did not lye in thier industrie and labour besides that the ill successe of thier fishing was to serve to the more cleere manifestation of Christs glorie and resurrection III. In the morning Iesus stood on the shore yet they know not that it was Iesus He sayed to them Children have you any meate They answered him no He sayed to them cast the net on the right side of the
understanding they rest in that to which sense doth lead them and like svvine feede greedyly vpon the husks and attend to fill thier bellies that is thier inordinate appetite with things which for the present and by reason of thier vnbridled hunger and distempered mind doe seeme to content them and in the meane time let thier soules pine avvay for want of the food they were created to feed on II. VVhat a dreadfull distāce is there betvvixt such soules and God when not thier love by which alone we cā approch to him but thier hat●ed by which we goe further and further from him begins by little and little to be eternall tovvards him who deserveth eternall love for the too much love of Creatures doth insensibly breed dis●ast of the Creatour the cleaving to the visible blinds vs ●owards the invisible the eye that lookes much vpon earth is loth to looke vpon heaven as too farre from its purpose If wishes will supply with what weeping and lamenting ought we to wish that such a gap had never been made but that at least we had begun the love which we ovve eternally to God so soone as it was in our power ●o love him and that when we began first to have the vse of reason we had reflected how greate reason there was not to desire to live but only for his love III. Happy are they who have thier yeares before them for by the benefit of thier age having not settled ●hier affections vpon any thing els they have them still wholy in thier hands to bestow vpon him who beft deserveth our love for all things beside him are either naught or nothing in comparison to him Happy yeares which make thier possessours able to say to God my loving Lord Thy infinite love hath been towards me e●●rnall without beginning because the being of thyself was the beginning of thy love both eternall without beginning This beginning therfore of my life shall also be the beginning of my love tovvards thee that when by thy grace and continuall assistance I shall enter into that other Eternitie which hath no end my love may be found to have been so long as my life both equally eternall for it would be a greate confusion to me in that doubtfull day of thy judgment to have it layed to my charge that I had lived longer then I had loved thee who hast not lived one moment longer then thou hast loved me IV. Thrice happy in this kind o● blessed Gonzaga who coul●st lovingly glorie that at seaven yeares of age thou didst perfectly turne thyself to God and with greate fervour of mind consecrate thyself wholy to him Thou knewest then how gratefull to God would be these first fruits of thy love Begge of him pardon for my neglect and vnmindfullnes and promote the desires of those who are yet yong that they may follow thy steps and place thier love betimes where if it be not placed it will finally either be lost or mispent lost if bestowed vpon things which doe not deserve our love mispent if vpon things which rather deserve our hatred O hatefull expence of love that is so pre●ious A second means to perpetuate our love towards God I. THey who have let s●ip time so pretious ●ust repayre thier losse so well as they can not with often sighs and sorrowes only for that which is past bu● with constant purposes for the time to come and say with the Psalmist Now I begin o Lord to love thee This love by thy grace I will continue for ever till it be perfected after this changeable life in thy never changing Eternitie O that I were able to say with they Apostle or rather with that confidence and with that love which he did Cerius sum I am certayne tha● neither death nor life nor Angels nor Principalities nor Powers neither things present nor things to come neither might nor heigth nor depth nor other creature shall be able to separate me from the charitie which I owe which I beare to thee my God for thy loving self and for thy loving Sonne Christ Jesus our Lord. II. But how oft have I sayed thus to God And may not I with reason feare least he slight my words having experienced that the worke doth so slowely follow Of this I am 〈◊〉 that were not his goodnes immeasu●able he would long care this have loathed so much instabilitie of hart and so often change of love no ma● would have abided it Bu● God knoweth himself and knoweth vs He knoweth himself to be eternall ever permanent ever the same He knoweth that as we have had a beginning in this life and shall have an end so all our life standeth vpon beginnings and endings and consequently it is no wonder that we have in vs so many changes but even this condition of ours must be to vs an incitement every houre in the day and every moment to begin as if that houre or that moment were the first and last of our life How many have been to thier ovvne and others thinking able and strong and likely to outlive many dayes and yeares and have been suddenly taken avvay Let vs therfore make vse of this our nature and beleeve this truth that we have not one day nor one houre certayne of life why therfore should we neglect this houre and not imploy it wholy in his love III. O that our love were tovvards God so fervently earyed as it is some times foolishly bent towards creatures hovv short would these dayes of our life most iustly seeme to bee O love hovv justly may I complayne of thy sottish ignorance and blind measure Greate and long love towards creatures little and short towards our Creatour what a monster is it Few be the dayes of my life ● my God the dayes of my life be few compared with the Eternitie of the love which I ovve thee they be fevv compared with the love which I wish thee O that I had a thousand lives to bestovv in they love from this hou●e if I had them I would bestovv them all in thy love from this houte I doe consecrate all the houres and minutes of my life hovv long or hovv short soever thou knowest it will be wholy and intirely to thy love Hovv to wish it I cannot tell The longer I live the oftener I offend against thy love perhaps the more I shall doe or suffer for thy love here thou must be the chooser grant me only thy grace that that which is and shall be may be wholy thyne Grant that hovv long soever I live it may seeme little in respect of the greatnes of thy love which I desire to shew cersaynly it will be little in comparison of that which ●●ou deserv●st my God my love Amen Of the desire of being dissolved I THe greate saincts of God out of the abundance of love which they beare him doe oftimes desire most earnestly that this thier miserable life were quickly at
leaving thier malice they may beleeve in thee ô Lord Therfore he picked out a choosen people to shevv his wonderous povvre more signally to all the world by them that hearing all his precepts they should say behold a wise and vnderstanding people a greate nation Therfore he came himself and tooke flesh vpon him to satisfie for the synnes of everre one of vs and to give vs example of obedience to the lavv of God which he came to promulgate and aftervvards sent his Apostles and thier successours into the whole world with commandment to preach the Ghospell to every creature testifying that with the like assistance he will be with us to the end of the world II. To this vniversalitie belongeth the sweetnes of the lavv of Grace and the easynes by which we may come to the remission of our synns and to saluation for what ceremonie could be instituted more easy then that of baptisme VVhat means of remissiō of synns aftervvards committed more indulgent then that of private confession● For whatever people ill disposed may think of it if an earthly Prince had appointed such a way of pardon for crimes committed who would not runn vnto it And this not once or tvvice but ten thousand thousand times to be had and in fine as oft as we shall have offended and when ever we will have recourse vnto it after never so long delayes or relapses VVhat shall I say of the helps internall by remorse and inspiration and externall by exhortation and example of which in the Church of God there is continuall succession and abundance what of the presence of our blessed Saviour in the Sacrament continually as it were wayting vpon vs and by it inviting vs. and puting vs in mind of our duty tovvards him That he would be in every Countrey Church attending vs is no small token of his vniversall love tovvards vs refusing no body neither rich nor poore nor lame nor blind nor the most noylomest creature that we can imagin Come to me allyee that labour and are burdened and I will refresh yee III. That he refuseth no synner though never so greate is particularly to be pondered as a signe of the v●niversalitie of his love of which though we see dayly example the Apostle testifyeth it in himself extolling this grace and giving speciall thanks that though before he was a blasphemer and a persecutour and contumelious in his thoughts and speeches tovvards Christ our Saviour yet he received mercy Ponder the hardnes which naturally we find among men to forgive offenses and compare it with what we experience in God and be confounded at thy ingratitude have recourse to his mercyes inlarge thy ha●t in hope and confidēce and give not way to thoughts of diffidence for if thy synns be as scarlet they shall be whitened as snow and if they be as red as crimson they shall be white like wooll He gave vnto Salomon latitude of hart as the sand which is on the sea shore but what is this compared with the largenes of thy mercyes my God ready to forgive more offenses then there be sands on the shore and to receive into thy armes more offenders then the whole world is capable of One drop of thy pretious blood was capable to satisfie for millions of worlds what a sea then of mercyes hath all humane kind offered vnto it by thee my God to plunge and cleanse itself to the full O let me not be vngratefull Amen The love of God towards vs is vniversal because to every one in particular I. THis is testifyed vnto vs by the Apostle when magnifying the grace received by Christ he sayth I live in the fayth of the Sonne of God who loved me and delivered himself for me And is seconded by ovr Saviour to S. Gertrude saying Behold thou seest how for thy love I did once hang vpon the Crosse naked contemptible disjoynted in every member and wounded in every part of my body and yet to this very day my ha●t is so sweetely affected towards thee by love that if it were convenient for thy good and that thou couldst not othervvise get to heaven I would for thee alone suffer all that which I suffered then for the whole world O my God! what am I in particular that thou shouldest thus lovingly expresse thyself Or what doth my particular import thee that thou shouldst be so tender of me O that I had the loves of all in particular to bestovv vpon thee who deservest all Blessed is he that vnderstandeth what it is to love Iesus c. II. That which our Saviour sayed to S. Bridget expresseth an other degree of latitude in this love for thus he is recorded to have spoken My love tovvards mankind is novv as greate and as incomprehensible as it was at the time of my passion And if it were convenient that I should die as many deaths as there be damned soule● in hell I would most willingly and with the greatest love that may be deliver my body to be tormented and would suffer the same death and passion againe for ech soule in particular which I indured for all This infinite charitie seemeth strange to men who measure the perfections of God by thier ovvne imperfection But the heavenly wisedome pronunced rightly of him Thou lo● vest all the things which are and hatest nothing of that which thou hast made neither hast thou ordayned or made any thing hating it In so much that the very damned soules are punished though excessively yet beneath the desert of synne and hovvever he be a rigorous judge yet he desi●eth that in the later day he might find nothing to be punished for which end he gives vs day to repent to the very last and so many means to blot out synne and the remaynders of it III. To this end he reserved the blessed marks of his sacred wounds even in his glorifyed body that we should ●●nd as it were so many gates layed open to his mercyes and that these might be a never dying memoriall of his pa●t and future love both to vs to excite vs and to his heavenly Father with our further words to plead for vs for though neither he nor his heavenly father doe need incitements to love vs or remembrances not being subject to forget or to forgo thier ovvne loving natures yet out of thier superabundant goodnes they would that these marks should be reserved more efficatious to assvvage thier anger against synne then could the rayne bovv be against a second diluge O Blessed wounds layed wide open for my sake it seemes by you that the divine soule of my Saviour had more love for me then the earthen vessell of his body could contayne O that my soule were capable to receive the remaynder I did runne in the way of thy commandments when thou didst dilate my hart sayed they holy Pro●het supply it with thy ardent affection stretch it to all
And it hath been the drift of those saincts who have practised the retayning of the presence of God continually in thier thoughts doing whatever they doe as in his sight with affections to please him in what they can that is ever to doe his will in all things endeavoring to imitate our Saviour in that which he sayed He that sent me is with me and hath not left me alone because the things that please him I doe allwayes say therfore which the wiseman Entring into my house that is into the Closet of my hart and secretest retyrement I will rest with him for in the conversation with him there is no bitternes nor tediousnes in living with him but joy and gladnes Say with the Psalmist one thing aboue all others have I asked of our Lord this will I againe and againe seeke after that I may dwell in the house of our Lord all the dax●● of my life that I may behold the pleasure the delight the sweetnes the beauty of my God Blessed sisters Martha and Mari● the one diligent in serving our Saviour the other attentive to heare his words both happy in his loving presence who can expresse the delight and benefit which you reaped by so desirefull a conversation for if by conversing with men we come to knovv them why should we not by conversing with God increase in his knovvledge and consequently in his love for in him there is no danger of discovering imperfection as too too often it happeneth in men How we are to imitate the height of the love of God II. PART I. OVr Saviour vpon his parting with his disciples before his passion gave them command to love one another and styled it anew commandment because thier love was to have the ex●●llencies of his love I give you a new commandment that you love one another as I have loved you VVe must therfore love our neighbour before he love vs as hath been sayed yea though it were impossible for him to love vs we must love him though he be vngratefull vnthankfull mali●ious tovvards vs we must love him though never so poore and vnable ever to requite our love and this not in words only or bare affection but with reall deeds and services according to our abilitie and ready for more then our abilitie seems able to reach vnto and as the Apostle adviseth we must not be overcome by any evill ●urne but overcome evill with good heaping coles of charitie vpon his head vnquencheable by whatever misdesert II. If we cast our eyes vpon our Saviour we shall moreover see that he was so farre from sparing himself in any thing for vs that he debarred his humane nature from that happines which was from the first instant of his conception due vnto it to the end to suffer for our sakes what is it then for vs to barr ourselves of the contentments of this world for the service of our neighbour S. Ignatius Founder of the Societie of Iesus left a president in this nature above the ordinarie strayne for discoursing of an offer which might be made of dying presently and going directly to heaven to inioy God for ever or of staying still in this world to doe him more service in the way in which he was he sayed that of the tvvo he would choose to stay though vncertain as he was of ●aluation if he might be sure to doe God any whit the more service not doubting but God would have care he should not peri●h Here certaynly self love was not called to counsell nor slothfull pusillanimitie but perfect love and a true value of that which God deserveth at our hands had taken full possession of that vertuous and loving ha●t causing him to prefert the service of God before whatever concerned himself though never so important III. The like doth happen in other saints who are so wholy absorpt in the desire and indeavour of helping thier neighbour for God that they wholy forget themselves and live and labour as if they had not bodyes as other men or as if the common infirmities did not worke vpon them such was S. Francis Xavier who passed neither for heate nor cold nor fayre nor foule weather nor stormes at sea nor dangers at land but all was sweete vnto him through the vehemency and sweetnes of his love in so much that he rather desired more and more to suffer that he might be more conformable to his Saviour who had suffered for him IV. O love which in my Saviour we●t more strong then death place thyself as a soale or marke vpon my hart that beholding thee I may never forget my dutie to God and to my neighbour for God place thyself as a badg● vpon my arme that all my works may carry a resemblanc● of his love O that thou wert in me as strong as death which overcometh all things high and lovv rich and poore mightie and infirme beautifull and hard favoured noble and ignoble O that thou wert as fast holding as the very gate of Hell which keepeth its prisoners eternally captive Happy were this eternall captivitie for me for though to those who measure all things by sense and ●emporall contentment it would seeme hard indeed to be so toyled as the saints of God have been and a kind of Hell vnto them for those who knovv what it is to love and serve God it is a sweete captivitie and the harder we are held by love the easyer we shall beare the burdens of this life for even in this it is most true that nothing is hard to him that loveth The depth of the love of God I. PART I. THe depth of the love of God appeareth first in that when he had choosen to save vs by means of his eternall Sonne being made man for our sake and the life of that man might have been ordered severall wayes for our benefit he choose the most abiect way of living and the most paynefull and ignominious way of dying to be born of poore parents in an obscure cottage persecuted from his cradle and in the height of his preaching to be circumvented condemned as blasphemer whipped and scourged as a slave crovvned in scorne as an vsurper and crucified betvvixt tvvo theeves as a notorious malefactour This to the Iewes who expected thier messias to be glorious in a worldly way was a scandall and by the Gentills and worldly wise to this day is accounted folly The sensuall man sayth the Apostle perceiveth not the things which are of the spirit of God for its foolishnes to him and be cannot vnderstand because it is spiritually to be examined II. The depth of his love appeareth secondly in the vnsearcheablenes of it in that having vouchsafed to be the scorne of men and outcast of people for our sakes and suffered death for vs and the death of the crosse he would notwithstanding that the finall effect and fruite of all his paynes our eternall saluation
day which will never end when wilt thou come My soule is weary of this wearisome life I will send forth my speech against myself I will speake in the bitternes of my mind I will say vnto God When shall I see the good things of my Lord in the land of the living My soule hath thirsted after thee my God when shall I come and appeare before thy face My teares are vnto me my dayly bread while it is sayed vnto me everie day where is thy God II. Alas everie day it is here sayed vnto me where is thy God And betwixt so many dayes and nights as I find dayly and hourely in myself now rising now falling while I loose thee and I leave thee through my manifold imperfections and doe scarce for one minute perfectly hold thee what a life doe I live VVhat death had I not rather die That once with thy thrice happy spouse having passed these transitorie dayes and these too too do●btfull nights I may say I have found whome my soule doth love I hold him and I will not let him go III. Here if one aske me where thou art my God I must confesse thou art a farre of because a farre of thou doest behold those which are not humble Thou turnest away thy face and I am filled with affliction sorrowes of death doe compasse me round about daungers of Hell doe presently assalt me and whether to turne myself to seeke thee and to find thee I cannot tell Shew me O my love where thou feedest where thou restests at noone day when the heate of temptation scorcheth my soule that flying vnder the shaddow of thy wings I may feed where thou feedest and reste where thou restest and not beging to wander after the droves of these vnperfect comforts in which there is no quiet rest no solid foode IV. Shew me rather my God that everlasting noone in thy heavenly cittie where neither sonne nor Moone doe shine but thou art the ever permanent comfortable light of all the inhabitants that there I may rest and feede with thee without danger of resting in any other but in thee or of feeding of any thing but of thy only self for in this world I see there is no rest but continuall tumbling and tossing from one thing to an other and who is he that amidst so many boisterous winds and wayes can continually hold thee Since thy blessed Apostle the beloved disciple giveth Sentence vpon vs all that we are subject not only to loose thee by many distractions but also to leave thee by synnes by too too many and dayly imperfections V. And who knoweth but thou o my loving God! whether in this very desire of myne to be ever with thee in blisse since I cannot be ever with thee in this fearefull banishment there lies not secretly hidden more love of myself then perfect love of thee O hard vncertanti● I am delighted with the love of God and drawne to desire to injoy it everlastingly there where it only ever permanently lasteth I desire it and begge it according to the inward man but I see another love which I feare creepeth in with it rep●gnant to that perfect love and pure desire which I should have of thee Vnhappie man that I am who shall deliver me from this doubtfull and vncertayne state VI. I am in streights on everie fide if I remayne I am in doubt whether I shall ever remayne with thee rather I am certaine I shall often shrink from thee for i● many things we doe all offend Jf I desire to be dissolved and to be with thee thy Apostle sayth it is a thing much more better and yet he himself what he shall choose he knoweth not because to abide in flesh is necessarie for thy service But alas what necessitie can there be of me that am so vnprositable Thou wilt say that all must think and say of themselves that they are vnprofitable Servants even when they have doone thier very best in thy service Jt is so And therfore be I profirable or vnp●ofitable I know not what more to say or doe but yeald myself wholy into thy hands to doe with me as thou pleasest Take me or leave me as thou thinkest good Hastenme or differre me as thou seest reason I refuse not the labour if tho● thinkest me profitable I will beare patiently to be differred if thou judge me vnworthy yer still I am streightened of the two having desire to be dissolved and desire to be with thee which is by thy owne Confession in thy blessed Apostle a thing much more better Intertaynments of our Blessed Saviour when we receive him in the Blessed Sacrament First as God I. AT the birth of our blessed Saviour the swathing bands did not hinder vs from beleeving that infant to be God or stop the Angels from singing Glorie to God in the higest degree and from adoring him but doe incite vs the more to admire and love his goodnes the resemblances of bread and wine remayning after consecration in this blessed Mysterie must not in like manner be any hinderance to vs from beleeving the truth contayned vnder them delivered in our Saviours owne words This is my body this is my blood that is the living body and blood of our Saviour and consequently his blessed soule and divinitie God and man the eternall word made flesh for our sakes And as in them we adore his power we admire his wisdome we imbrace his infinite goodnes we doe not argue from his immensitie that he could not be contayned in the manger nor from his vnitie in essence with the Faiher and the holy Gost that he alone could not be man nor from his immortalitie that he could not suffer but doe submit as to the manner and doe beleeve the substance soe we must rayse our thoughts in this Mysterie to beleeve his reall presence though in a way incomprehensible to our short vnderstanding and adore the person of the Sonne of God our Saviour not arguing from his quantitie that he cannot confine himself to so little roome nor from his vnitie that he cannot at once be in so many places nor from his Majestie that he will not stoope to so meane an action as to be dayly handled and received by vs but so much the more admire his goodnes that as there once so here dayly he doth give himself vnto vs. O blessed Angels who in multitudes did adore him at his coming into the world though in a disguise farre different from your apprehensions with you I doe willingly submit my weake conceits and doe adore here present the living God the eternall word made flesh for vs. O blessed host with how much reverence art thou to be handled and received seeing the ground on which Moyses stood when God appeared to him was holy for here the holy of holyes is contayned after a more sublime manner put my Soule thy
see no more such effect we say it is dead In which respect charitie or the love of God being the life inherent in our soules S. Gregorie sayth that the proofe of charitie is the exhibition of the worke and our Saviour himself He that bath my commandments and doth keepe them he it is that loveth me our Saviour in nature of a Phisitian cometh to vs to strengthen this life by the cordiall compound of his owne pretious body and blood delivere● vnto vs vnder the shapes of bread and wine that by the devout receiving we may both breath out the superfluous and corrupted humours remayning after our purgation and cure and with more rigour apply ourselves to the exercises of Christian dutie to which by his charitable assistance we must concurre first by giving time to the working of this heavenly receite by some little recollection and not instantly ingulfe ourselves in our wonted worldly affayres and secondly by renewing our good purposes in his presence and begging of him that he will blesse them and those most in which we feare we shall have most difficultie to accomplish towards which also we may justly expect he will suggest some speciall remedie to a willing mind Intertaynment of our Saviour as he is our Redeemer I. THe word Redeemer doth import that the redeemed being once e●ther free or in the power of one cometh to be subiect to another and is bought out of that subiection so was man by his creation wholy Gods and being left free as to his will he fell by synne voūltarily into the possessiō and powre of the divel and as his captive and prisoner was loded with a thousand miseries and egged on dayly from one synne to another till dying in synne he should be eternally condemned to the prison and paynes of hell fire and no power vnder God being able to rescue him the Sonne of God our Saviour offered to pay his ransome and to give him againe his freedome wherby he might remaine in Gods possession perpetually by his owne free choyce as well as he was by nature and come to inioy the happines which God had layed vp for him The price where with he was ransomed was the body and blood and life of our Saviour layed downe for vs vpon the crosse i this very body and blood and life himself doth here present vs in the Sacrament that we may make a gratefull oblation of it to our heavenly Father as the price of our redemption in particular and represent vnto him with ioy and thanksgiving our freedome to serve him pro●essing that we will never give way to any other to possesse vs. II. This benefit of our redemption will appeare in a better light if we consider the miserie of the slaverie in which we were or are by synne And first by synne from reasonable creatures we turne vnreasonable and the longer we continue in synne the more vnreasonnable we become not vnlike the man mentioned in the Ghospell whose habitation was not among men but in the fields and dens among beasts and beastly company ●aked having lost all shame and could not be held within any compasse but ranged about breaking through all bonds of the law of God and man and being possessed by a legion of Divels did not vnderstand that they were his masters who did egg him on to his owne destruction in so much that he cut his owne flesh and did make nothing of it and when our Saviour or any good body came neere him he raged the more crying out with a lowde voyce what have you to doe with me or I with you VVhich state of a synner however while one is in it he doth not heed it in itself notwithstanding is extreame miserable and men of reason see it to be so And how much this man did afterwards acknowledge himself obliged to our Saviour when being delivered from this legion of Divells he quietly sat at his feete clothed and well in his wits much more ought we to thank our Saviour for our redemption our spirituall slaverie being infinitely more preiudiciall and more to be lamented III. Our Saviour in S. Luke asketh this question who among you having a servant ploughing or keeping cattle will say to him returning from the field go sit downe and sayth not rather make ready for me and serve me and afterwards thou shalt eate and drink This is the practise among men one to another but our Saviour more indulgent to vs not weighing that we are indeed but his slaves bought at so deere a rate as his most pretious blood and from so base and vnworthy a slaverie as is that of synne and so iniurious to himself doth notwithstanding coming from our owne worldly occasions no● much thinking of his service in them invite vs to his owne table that is to his owne most pretious body and blood intreating vs to pattake of so heavenly a banket at which the Angels doe reioyce and doth not passe for many a spo● dust that stick vpon vs though we have washed away the dirt and filth it were our dutie to be as cleane as out of the font of baptisme but ô the weakenes of man O the goodnes of God Who notwithstanding our vnworthynes when least vnworthy doth extend his kindnes vnto vs so farre beyond all humane kindnes or capacitie He out of whome he had cast the legion desired to be with him still in his companie and he did not admit of him but bad him go home and recount how mercyfull God had been to him How much more ought we to retire ourselves for a while into the closeth of our hart and reckon vp the mercyes of God towards vs and put this in the head of them that notwithstanding so lately voluntarie slaves to his enimies he doth vs this greate mercy and favour to admit of vs not only to his presence but to his table Intertaynment of our Saviour as Judge I. THe coming of a Judge to a citty or house is generally not without some apprehension and feare in the parties to whom he comes for if they be gylty they have reason to feare if they be not giltie they know not how the Judge may be informed concerning them That our Saviour is our Judge is vndoubted the Father hath given judgement to the Son●e sayth our Saviour of himself yet at this his coming vnto vs in the blessed Sacrament we have not so much cause of feare first because his rigorous judgement is reserved till after this life in which respect himself sayth God did not send his Sonne into the world to judge the world but that the world should be saved by him Secondly there is no danger that he should be misinformed of vs. Thirdly when he comes to judge he comes in majestie with the attendance of all his heavenly courte here he comes disguised of set purpose because we should know that he comes in a familiar way to doe vs honour and
with as much love and confidence say vnto him Lord it is good for vs to be here and insteed of the tabernacles of Moyses and Elias make vse of the figures of the old testament which represented this blessed mysterie as the Sacrifices of Abel and Abraham here accomplished and the Manna outgone by many degrees and the Paschal lambe and the bread of proposition and the dayly Sacrifices and what ever el● is recorded in all the ceremonialls with all the prophecies and consider how much the person of our Saviour and the manner of his being present with vs and the inrent and effect of this my sterie doth exceed all that is gone before and taking vp thy rest in the tabernacle of thy hart with our Saviour say often to him how amiable are thy tabernacles o Lord of hosts My soule longeth and languisheth after the cours of my Lord my hart and my flesh have exvlted in my living God c. II. S. Paul had a desire to be dissolved that is even to dye that he might be with Christ esteeming better then life or any thig that that this life can affoard that was a desire of seeing him in an other world yet if we did conceive things in thier right value we should in reason with as much fervour lay aside all worldly busines to be with Christ in this blessed action at convenient times saying with the same Apostostle To me to live is Christ and to die is gayne that is Christ is my life and though I forsake all the world to be with him I shall be a gayner by i● Who therfore shall sever vs from the Charitie or love of Christ. Tribulation Or distresse or famine Or nak●dnes Or danger Or persecution Or the sword I am sure that neither death nor life nor Angels nor Principalities nor Powers neither things present nor things to come nor might nor heigth nor deapth nor other creature shall be able to separate c. I desire to be dissolved from this mortall body that I may see thee face but seeing it is thy pleasure that I only injoy thy in this covert manner I willingly forgo all worldly content all companie all pastime or intertaynment to be with thee for thou art my God and all things III. S. Andrew with another seeing our Saviour once passe alone by him and hearing S. Jhon Baptist whose disciple then he was say Behold the lambe of God accosted our Saviour and asked him Master where dwellest thou And he sayed come and see they came and saw where he abided and taried with him that day VVhat can be more beseeming thee in this blessed action then even out of compassion to aske our Saviour where he dwelleth here below seeing his glorious habitation is so adorable in heaven VVhat are our Churches be they never so sumptious And how many of them are more like stables then Churches And what is thy breast Come neere and home to thyself and see where and how thou intertaynest him and how long thou vsest to stay with him S. James and S. Ihon vpon occasion that the Samaritans once did with discurtesie refuse to give passage to our Saviour through thier citty would have commanded fire from heaven vpon them which zeale though our Saviour rep●ehended as vnreasonable yet it behoveth vs to reflect how deepely we are apt to take an indignitie offered where ourselves are concerned and how slight oftimes we make of this so greate a curtesie of our Saviour though it wholy concerne vs and againe how that really that punishment was not exorbitant considering the person contumeliously rejected and yet how little oftimes we value him IV. Finally therfore joyne with S. Ihon who deserved the name of the beloved disciple and seeing our Saviour is pleased to remayne in thy breast as he gave vpon his a resting place to S. Ihon be not backward nor streight laced in point of love but as the favour is greater so to thy abilitie straine thy●elf to greater love give him his full rest in thy soule doe not disquiet him with v●● quiet thoughts words or deeds Begge of him that he will stay with thee even beyond the time limited by the species say with the two disciples Mane nobiscum Domine quoniam advesperascit And with the devout Thomas a Kempis VVould to God that thou wouldest totally inflame me by thy presence stretch forth thy hand with S. Thomas and touch his sacred syde and hands and frete and kissing them say My Lord and my God Intertaynments of our Saviour with the Angels and Saints I. VVHile the Apostles at our Saviours Ascension were looking towards heaven after him two Angels appearing sayed what stand you looking into heavon This Iesus who is taken vp from you into heaven shall so come as you have seen him going into heaven And really if we should consider only the worth and dignitie of his person it were but fitting he should in all occasions appeare in so much and much greater glorie but stooping to our weaknes and to our commoditie behold how he cometh not clad with glorie but clouded vnder the shapes of bread and wine yet this is the same Iesus who then taken vp into heaven sitteth at the right hand of his heavenly Father in glorie Stand therfore and looke earnestly into this heavenly mysterie Admire and love his goodnes once he will come to judge but to doe mercy vpon vs to increase his graces to bestow himself in so frendly a manner he comes millions and milleons of times and will continue so till the end of the world This is Iesus this is my Saviour my Redeemer my all things O that I could say he shall never be taken from me Come sweet Jesus and come so that I may ever inioy thee Amen II. His taking vp into heaven betokeneth not any need that he had of assistance for he ascended of himself but the reception or intertaynment which the Angels and Saints gave him at his ascension all the nine quiers ranking themselves in order from the highest to the lowest heaven and taking him in the midst of them singing prayses of his divinity and humanitie and of the wonderous things which he had done and suffered for mankinde and rejoycing at his exaltation even above themselves the Cherubims not daring to stretch thier wings over his head as anciently over the Arke and the Seraphins hiding thier faces in reverence of the splendour of his glorious countenance the Thrones and Dominations and Principalities proftrating themselves vnto him as king of kings and Lord of Lords and the rest of the heavenly court doing homage every one in his degree VVhy stand we looking only vpon him And not industriating ourselves to doe him with the holy Angels all the honour and homage thar lyeth in our powre or perhaps doe not so much as looke after him but let our thoughts ād feete wāder instantly after other
with so contemptible a weapon he was able alone to doe such execution vpon such a multitut● S. Hierome deservingly accounting it as greate a miracle as any other done by him we have reason to dread and to beware least through our misdemeanours his heavy hand doth not at last light vpon vs. Wealth will not avayle in the day of revenge but iustice will free vs from death III. The Iewes sayed to him what signe doest thou shew vs that thou doest those things Iesus answered dis●olve this Temple and in three dayes I will rayse it againe the Iewes sayed in six and fourtie yeares was this Temple buylt and wilt thou rayse it in three dayes But he spake of the Temple of his body It was true of both the one and the other he had been able to have raysed in three dayes the materiall Temple if it had been demclished and he would insinuate that the Temple and all that which was done in it was but a figure of his body and of the humane nature which he had assumed to accomplish those figures in it so sayth S. Ambrose The body of Christ is truly the Temple of God wherin is wrought the purgation of our synnes that flesh was truly Gods Temple in which there could be no con●agion of synne but was itself the sacrifice for the synnes of the whole world that flesh was truly the Temple of God in which the image of God did shine and the fullnes of divinitie did corporally dwell The Iewes required a signe of his commission to vndertake such grea●e things as if that very Action had not been signe sufficient Yet our Saviour did not deny them a signe but referred them to that which had been figured in Ionas of him and prophecyed that is to vse thier owne Industrie and the ordinarie means of vnderstanding the mysteries so faire as is necessarie and not to be still asking new signes and still remaine vnsatisfyed because things were not according to thier fancy He instructs Nicodemus I. THere was of the Pharisees a man called Nicodemus a Prime man among the Iewes This man came to Iesus by night and sayed Rabbi we know thou art a Master come from God For no man can doe these signes which thou doest vnlesse God be with him He came by night held back as yet by the infirmitie of his profession as S. Ihon Chrysostome reflects and loved God but by halfes the other halfe the world had still in possession And by his speech it appeares he did not beleeve as yet that our Saviour was God but some speciall teacher or prophet sent from God testifying his mission by those signes Our Saviour finding that he retayned too much of the Pharisaicall spirit told him three things very strange and wholy contrarie to his and the worlds apprehension and humour for first he sayed Amen Amen that is in every truth I say vnto thee vnlesse a man be born againe he cannot see the kingdome of heaven as if he would have sayed you talk to me of greatnes but I say you must all become little and begin of new and take new wayes if you will enter the kingdome of God and when Nicodemus asked how can these things be done how can a man be born when he is old Our Savior repeated the same againe and told him moreover that now he must withdraw his thoughts from materiall and wonted obiects and things concerning this corporall life and think of a spirituall life the beginning and entrance wherof is baptisme and so to be born of water and the spirit was necessarie towards it This to naturall reason and common apprehension seemes strange and to some perhaps impertinent But no man hath ascended into heaven to know the secrets of Gods eternall disposition but he who descended from heaven the sonne of man who is in heaven To him the greatest Clarks must stoope and humbly receive from this greate Master that to which by strength of wit and industrie they cannot reach And to our dayly purpose besides the thanks which we owe to God for the benefit of baptisme and of faith S. Augustin puts vs in mind dayly to renew ourselves for sayth he wherfore should a body be borne againe but to the end to be renewed And wherfore should he be renewed but for that he is become old II. The second strange thing was that wheras Moyses had set vp a brasen serpēt in the desert to the end that they who were bitten by serpents should be cured by casting thier eyes vpon that figure so sayth our Saviour must the sonne of man be exalted that every one that beleeveth in him may not perish but have life everlasting as if he had sayed this very man whom thou doest so much reverence as a man of God must be exalted vpon the Crosse and die a shamefull death and vnlesse people doe notwithstanding beleeve in him ād follow him they cannot have life everlasting His person will be hated among you as much as those serp●nts of the desert yet you must fix your eyes of faith vpon him or ells you will perish As Moyses by Gods appointement placed that serpent for a corporall reliefe of those who were stroken by the same Gods appointment shall I be placed vpon a Crosse for the cure of those who have fallen into spirituall serpents jawes by synne III. And yet a stranger thing I doe tell thee God so loved the world as to give his only Sonne to be so misvsed and so tormented to the end that every one that beleeveth in him perish not but have life everlasting Thou takest me to be man only as other men and doest wonder that I so much favoured by God should come to suffer as I tell thee But the love of God is greater then to content himself to imploy a man only I am not man only but the only Sonne of God and yet I am to suffer as I sayed for mankind O strange thing o infinite love Tell vs ô blessed Ihon what doth this short word so signifie Tell vs the measure declare the greatnes teach vs the excellencie of this love God so loved ô love incomprehensible by man or Angel So that none can comprehend the reason of it why so why not otherwise O deapth vnsearcheable renew thy love dayly testifie it by thy actions declare it by thy conformitie to him in beleefe and life serve him night and day in publike and in private let no part of thee be wanting to this love that thou may not perish but live and love eternally Amen The Conversion of the Samaritan I. IEfus cometh to a citty of Samaria called Sicar and there was a fountaine or well of Iacobs Iesus therfore wearied of his journey sat so vpon the fountaine it was about the sixt houre There cometh a woman of Samaria to draw water Iesus sayth to her give me to drink His disciples were gone into the citty to buy
this time forvvard thou shalt be taking men and having brought thier ship to land leaving all things they follovved him Miserable creatures who fall out of the net in which our Sa●iour hath taken them more miserable those who teare it Happy they who are called and imployed to assist that it be not torne They will be filled with heavenly graces and though they be often ready in a manner to sink vnder the burden they will be relieved in time so that they shall suffer no prejudice Fall downe before our Saviour with admiration and thanks and acknowledgment of thy vnworthynes Peeter doth not aske to be forfaken but that he may not with the successe be puffed vp with pride Leave all things rather then leave thy Saviour c. Second Application to the most blessed Sacrament I. OSonne of the highest o depth of mercy and love I a synfull man and thou not only to receive me into thy ship but into thyself for so are thy words he that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood remayneth in me and I in him O deepth vnsearcheable the life of the fish is to be in water it thinks it death to be in the net and struggles to get out But here is a net out of which no man that is wise will be because the more he is in it the more water he hath and the more scope to doe whatever is fitting to be done His precious wounds are as so many messhes which captivate vs to Christ yet doe let in vnto vs the fountaines of living vvater promised to the devout Samaritan fresh sweete pleasant springing vp to life everlasting in which we may live and drink when ever we will Lord give me the right tast of this vvater that I may not go other where and thirst when I have done I am not worthy to approch vnto thee because I am a synfull man but thou hast ordayned this sea of vvater to the end that plunged in it we should both be cleansed and refreshed and live eternally in thee O that we did knovv how greate a gift this is fall dovvne at his knees and aske he is not sparing of his gifts who so freely and bountifully giveth his owne self vnto thee II. O prodigious bounty O wonderfull dulnes of such as hearing and knowing that Iesus comes thus dovvne from heaven for our reliefe doe not make hast vnto him How insensible are we of our dangers and our diseases we have but one soule which ought to be more deere vnto vs the any Sonne to his father it lyeth gasping oftimes for life and here is life which offereth itself and we are slow in accepting it VVhen a sick person begins to have no heate in his fecte we say he begins to die what are the feete of our soule but our affections If these be not warmed with this fire of love which is our Saviour what can we thinke of ourselves Lord come dovvne before my soule dye O stupiditie of mankind can this Lord of Lords come dovvne lower then he hath done he came into a Virgins wombe into the Crib vnto the Crosse into the jawes of death and yet here he comes lower then in all these into thy bosome into thy breast Go and beleeve and obey readyly his commands and his Angels will meete thee and bring thee the ioyfull tidings of health and thou wilt know that that houre most of all will be the time in which thy feaverish distempers will leave thee III. Be not still asking with Nicodemus in the cold night of thy tepiditie hovv can these things be done But buyld vpon the testimony of our Saviour who speakes vvhat he knovves will be done vpon his word this is my body God so loved the vvorld as to give his only Sonne this sonne hath no lesse love to the world then his father He giveth himself and is dayly giving in this admirable manner no● contenting himself to be once only for three and thirtie yeares and vpward vpon earth he will be with vs to the worlds end really present among vs that after-ages need not envy those yeares of his visible appearance having the selfsame Sonne of God here present vnder these visible shapes more vniversally through the whole world and more for our present vse and necessities Exalt him as Moyses did the serpent in the desert Behold him with a devou● and loving eye and he will preserve thee Cast out all earthy conceites and tumultuous busineses from the temple of thy hart and make it as it ought to be specially in this coniuncture of time a house of prayer a house of thanksgiving a house of prayse and of magnifying thy loving Saviour who hath done so greate things for thee and this greatest of all that he vouchsafeth to be within thee O invisible creatour of the world how wonderfully doest thou deale with vs how sweetly and graciously with thy elect offering thyself vnto them to be received in this Sacrament His fervourin preaching and divers cures I. ANd they enter into Capharnaum and forth with vpon the Sabboth going into the Synagog he taught them and they were astonied at his doctrine for he taught as having power and not as the Scribes And there was in the Synnagog a man possessed with a vncleane spirit who cryed out what to vs and to thee Iesus of Nazareth art thou come to destroy vs I know who thou art the holy of God And Iesus threatened him saying hold thy peace and go out of the man And the uncleane spirit tearing him and crying out with a lowde voyce went out and did not hurt him And they all marvelled and questioned among themselves what thing is this What is this new doctrine For with power he commandeth the vncleane spirits and they obey And the bruit● of him went forth presently through the whole country we have no lesse reason to admire and rejoyce and magnifie his name and his power which he retaynes over all evill spirits and his wonderfull wholsome doctrine and to begge he will ever exercise the same power over them to restrayne thier malice and over vs by the force and vertue of his doctrine to over-power all that may contradict it in vs for we find a law within vs striving against the law of our mind which is reason and vertue and captivating vs vnder the law of synne vnhappy that we are who shall deliver vs But the grace of God by Iesus Christ. This law as it were teareth vs in peeces yet doth not hurt vs vnlesse we voluntarily consent vnto it for it is left in vs not to damnation but for exercise and reward if we fight couragiously II. Going forth of the Synagog they came into the house of Andrew and Simon Simons wifes Mother lay sick of a greate fever and they besought him for her and taking her by the hand he commanded the fever away and it left her and she presently rising ministred vnto them
blessed Sacrament and there wher● thou art in glorie when it shall please thee to call me to ●hee Amen The third seate the seate of Majestie I VVHen the Sonne of man shall come in his majestie ād all the Angels with him thē he shall sit vpō the seate of his majesty and all nations shall be gathered together before him If his countenance were terrible when he tooke outhoriti● vpon him in this world what will it be when mounted on high vpon the Cloudes he shall have all the World before him at once and come with thousands of attendance to doe justice against all and co●vince all the impious of all the works ●f their impie●ie and shall thunder out that terrible sentence against those who shall have deserved it Go yee accursed into fire everlasting Art thou able to looke vp to that terrible seate Or rather looke downe into thy hart and wash it quickly with reates that that fire may not find where to take hold of thee That day is a day of ●rat● ● day of tribulation and anguish a day of calamitie and miserie a day of darkenes and mist a cloudy and stormy day a day of trump●t and alarme against the strongest and highest that people ●hall even wither away with feare and exp●ctation of what will come vpon them He preached here an acceptable day if here we receive what he preached we may be there accepted of if we neglect here that day will be little w●lcome to vs a dismall day to those who have here spent their dayes vnprofitably I● S. Ihon in his Apocalyps describeth this seate saying I saw a greate white throne and one siting vpon it from whos● sight earth and heav●n fled and there was not pl●ce found f●● them and I saw the dead greate and little stand in the ●ight of the throne and bookes were opened and anoth●r booke was opened which is of life and the dea● were●●dged of thos● things ●hich were written in the bookes a●cording to their workes and the sea gave th● dead that were in it and death and hell gave their dead that w●re in them and it was i●dged of every one according to their workes And death and hell were cast into the poole of fir● This is the second death And he that was not found 〈…〉 in the book● of lif● was cast into the poole of fire Behold againe and againe this gre●te seat● of the judge and his Assessours behold the inhabitants of 〈…〉 declining as much as they can this sight but that they found no place to fly from him behold the dead of all sorts greate and little rich and poore Kings and slaves and no difference to be seen among them but by their workes Behold the bookes of every ones conscience layed open not only to the iudge and to every one of his Assessours but to all the standers by so that thousands and millions will be looking into thy secretest thoughts and actions and see that which thou wouldest not have God to have seen if it had been possible and not only thy actions but thy intentions so oft dissembled ād laboured to be cloked with I know not what Ca●st thou abide these lookes Now thou canst not then of force thou must to thy vtter shame and confusion no wonder that the wicked are described to begin to say to the mountaines fall vpon vs and to the hills cover vs. For it will be an intollerable disgrace to be thus looked on How willingly would the allready damned have remained where they were and not have here appeared But death and hell must of force give vp their dead and the sea and the earth and wherever they were concealed Finally looke if thou canst for feare and trembling into that poole of fire so vast that it is capable of a whole world of corpses as stinking and as filthy as they are see how it gapes vpon thee see the vggly smoke that riseth from it Go downe into it living that thou mayest escape it dying III Doe not mistake thyself and think that this day so dreadfull is farre of it will be represented vnto thee as the greate world in a little mal at whatever houre thou shalt come to dy then the sunne will be darkened as to thee and the moone will not give the light all thy pretenses will fall to ground as so many starres on which thou wert gazing and the powers of those heavens in which thou hast placed thy hopes and thy felicitie will all fayle thee Anguish and confusion and troble and feare will ●eise thee if before hand thou hast not provided so that when the signe of the sonne of man shall appeare thou mayest say with S. Andrew O good Crosse long desired and now prepared for my loving soule I come vnto thee secure and ioyfull receive me also ioyfully who am the dis●iple of him who did hang vpon thee O mercyfull Saviour who art to be my Iudge by thy infinite mercy I'beseech thee that thou wilt now protect me that I may be then protected delivet me from evill now that I may then be delivered in that evill day If thou be good to me here it will be then well with me for if God be for vs who will be against vs and he delivered thee for vs all as a pledge of his love and mercy towards vs as a mediatour for vs betwixt his mercy and his iustice Who then shall separate vs from the Charitie of Christ With which either he doth love vs or we him I am sure that neither death nor life nor Angels nor things pres●nt nor things to come shall separate vs. c I reioyce with the multitude of Angels and Saints at thy victorie over thy e●imies and at thy iust iudgements over them Give me grace to ovbercome them here that with thee Lord God Omnipotent we may reigne for ever and ever Amen Allelui● The fourth seate the seate of love I. HIs seate of love is the most blessed Sacrament of the Altar For what can be more lovely then Christ in our hands in our mouths in our breasts in our soules Here he doth act all the parts which possibly love can expresse he desireth to be continually with vs he accomodateth himself in a way that he may be wit● vs and within vs with out all manner of offence because in the shape of bread and wine he beareth wtih our infintie and hourely imperfections and doth not avoyde vs for them He is continually giving vs him●elf in whome are all treasures And because it is neither necessarie nor fitting that he should againe die for vs yet he is so pleased with his death for vs that he will have it dayly commemorated and in a divine kind of manner acted and represented in this blessed Sacrament The bread and the C●alice being consecrated severally into his body and blood as if one were separ●ted from the other He acts the part of a father
behold the vayle of the temple was ●ent into two parts from the top to the bottome and the earth did quake and the rocks were split and the sain●ts that had stept vose Behold these Alterations not without contentment that novv the hidden mysteries of the old testament should be revealed and the holy of holyes be knovvne publi●ely to all The very rockes and dull earth testifying the feeling which we ought to have of the indignities offered to our Saviour and that the hardest harts and people dead and buryed in synne and oblivion should reape benefit if they would by out Saviours death and passion Open thyself to thy Saviour divide thy hart into love and grief think of thy life past from the top to the bottome breake through the rockes of difficulties cleanse the sepulchre of thy hart from all corruption II. Imitate the Centurion who seeing what passed cryed out truly this man was just certaynly this man was the Sonne of God And multitudes of them that ●ere present returned knocking thier breast These are the affections which thou must endeavour to rayse in thy soule and many more which thou mayst learne of our blessed Lady and S. Jhon and S. Marie Magdalen reflect vpon the behaviour of every one of them and dive into thier invvard thoughts while they were expecting what would be further done to the dead body of our Saviour III. The Iewes besought Pilate that thier bodyes might not remayne so vpon thier Saboth but that thier thighes might be broken and so taken downe and the soldiers broke the thighes of the o●e and the other thoefe In what anguish may we imagin were the devout soules fearing that that cruelric might be done vpon our Savoiur also not knovving perhaps certaynly that he was dead or though they knevv it But the providence of God prevented their malice for coming to our Saviour and finding him dead they did not breake his thighes but one of the soldiers with a lance opened his side and instantly water and blood issued This speare went also to the hart of the Blessed Virgon and of the rest yet finding that he was dead before they applyed themselves more to the gathering vp of that Sacred blood and admired the my sterie of the ●vvo different liquors which S. Augustine explicareth in these tearmes The Ev●●gelist made vse of a very significant word when he sayed He opened to shevv that there in a manner the gate of life was set open from whence the Sacraments of the Church have flovved with out which no man enters into that life which is truly life IV. Open thy hart to our blessed Saviour and if i● payne thee here thou hast a lenitive Thou hast wounded my hart in one of thy eyes Sayth the spouse Hovv many darts are here by which thou mayest receive the like loving wounds Cast vp thy eyes frequently meditate continually of these mysteries enter into his sacred side c. say with the Prophct This is my resting place for ever here I will dwell because I have chosen it Of the taking downe from the Crosse and buryall I. IN the evening Ioseph a rich man of Arimathea and noble decurion iust and expecting the kingdome of God disciple of our Saviour in private came and boldly went to Pilate and demanded the body of Iesus and Pilate gave it him He is deservedly reported to be rich sayth S. Ambrose having received the body of Christ. But see the preparations to receive it he was just valuing the kingdome of God more then his wealth and hovvever private before novv he boldly professeth it devotion overcame feare and humane respects Asteeme of this gift above all gifts and think hovv and where thou wilt reserve it II. Ioseph having bought a syndon or rich winding sheete and taking him downe wrapped him in it Nicodemus came also who first came by night to our Saviour and brought a composition of myrrhe and aloes about one handred pounds and they bound up the body with them If the Apostles had buried him the Ievves would have sayed the had not been buryed as they sayed he was stolen But the iust man is he that wrappeth our Saviours body in white linnen the Innocent man inbalmes him doe thou the like offices bring one hundred pounds a compleate quantitie of faith and good works III. And there was in the place where he was cru●ified 〈◊〉 garden and in the garden a new Monument in which not any had as yet been layed cut out in a rock There therfore because it was night they layed Iesus and rolled a greate stone to the entrance or dore of the monument To the body of our Saviour Sanctitie and Virginitie is ever due a wombe vntouched conceived him a nevv sepulchre received him And deservedly is it cut out in a firme faith and a stone rolled to it because whoever shall have buried our Saviour in his breast must be carefull that he leese him not See also that thy hart be a garden well kept not a wildernes or full of weeds and neere to the Crosse that thou mayst be the surer to have him lodged in it IV. Forget not in the meane time the duties which our Blessed Lady and S. Ihon and the Magdalen did vnto him when he was taken dovvne hovv every one strived to imbrace him and reverently to kisse his feete and hands and side and could hardly be brought to relinquish him but that the time of day and precept of keeping the sabboth called vpon them which they dutifully obeyed retayning him still in thier thoughts and in thier p●ous discourses An Excercise in honour of the precious wounds of our blessed Saviour I. IT is likely that those devout persons who were actours in taking our Saviours body dovvne from the Crosse did severally thier respects to his sacred wounds all proceeding from love and mingled with it yet diversly according to the severall dispositions of thier minds and the occasions which they had to attend our Saviour in his life time S. Ihon betooke himself to the right foote and as more beloved then the rest expressed his gratitude in affections of love and thanksgiving for the particular favours receaved leaning his head vpon that foote as before vpon our Saviours breast and pouring forth abundance of teares for the absence of so loving a master He remembred the request of his Mother that he might sit at the right hand or at the left of our Saviour in his kingdome but novv he resolved to drink perpetually this chalice This should be his cup and his comfort till that other kingdome came to be revealed after this life miserable with out this releefe O svveete cup. c. Dominus regit me nihil mihi deerit II. The Magdalen was at the left foote where thou must begge of her to give thee a little roome to wash that foote with teares of sorrovv for thy severall offenses she is loth to yeald
what he indured for even in the garden after his prayer he was another man then when we went in Then he was sorrovvfull as he sayed vnto death and it appeared in his very countenance and cariage but novv he was couragious and ready to meete his enimies and in all the affronts and indignities which were offered him either at Cayphas or Herods or Pilats palace he did not blanche III. Yet it could not but be very irksome and paynfull to him and with whar a Crosse did they load him when he was scarce able to stand and hovv cruelly did they rend of his garments from his bleeding shoulders and streach him and vnmercifully nayle him This is the sword of which old Simeon told me so many yeares since it cannot but pearce my very hart and soule with griefe and though he sayed he would rise againe the third day and I veryly beleeve it will be so yet what hart can think of these things and not even burst with sorrovv It will be night with me till that day comes which he hath promised O light of my ●yes when shal I see thee Me thinks I still heare him crying with a lovvde voyce Father into thy hands I commend my spiritt O Father returne this happy soule so commended returne it againe with glorie that we may see his face as in mount Thabour which mount Calvarie hath so defaced I ●ommend my soule into thy hands O hands of pitty Thou hast done justice enough vpon thy Sonne restore him that we may joy togeather in the meane time I shall expect with sorrovv yet resigned to thy will as he hath taught me Not my will hut thyne be done Amen Introduction to the Mysteries of the Resurrection of our Saviour I. THe Mysteries of the Resurrection of our Saviour being full of ioyful Communication with him who is in himself the fountaine of all happines and to vs hath been and is the source and conduit● of all goodnes the affections which are properly to be raysed and somē●ed by the consideration of them be those of love and ioy and Congratulation Admiration also and prayse of his loving goodnes desire of his presence in this world and in the next horrour of being separated from him detestation of the least beginning of a gap or distance betvvixt our soules and him And in these and in the like our time is more to be bestormed then in discourse 〈◊〉 every action and word indeavouring to fall vpon some such short reflection as may ●indle in ou● hart these flames of love II. The chiefe ground wherof the Apostle doth represent vnto vs and placeth in that God who is rich in mercy his exceeding Charitie wherwith he loved vs even when we were dead by synns quickned vs togeather with Christ and raysed vs up with him and made vs sit with him in the Celestiales Chiefly therfore we are to ponder from what and to what we are raysed where we lay and where we might justly have been layed by our offenses and where he offers to seate vs if we concurre with his grace and love Hovv Rich he hath been tovvards vs in what infinite proportion his Charitie hath exceeded and doth exceed When we were dead he gave vs life when we were buryed in synns he raysed vs and hath made himself our Harbinger going before to prepare a place for vs at the right hand as his father with him III. O Iesu is it possible that I should 〈◊〉 Companion to thee in Glorie who hast been so farre from consorting with thee in thy will and commandment O vnspeakable love ô vnconceivable Goodnes I wretched synner not worthy to lift vp my eyes to heaven with thee in the heavenly places ô Charitie exceeding all thought ô Mercy with out bound or measure What can I say of myself but that I am worthy of all confusion and thou preparest Glorie for me I have nothing to say for myself but that I have synned Blessed be thy infinite Mercyes towards me and blessed be thou with the Father holy Ghost for ever and ever Amen Our Saviours going downe to limbus Patrum I. NO sooner had our Saviour given vp his blessed Ghost but troopes of Angels who wayted against that houre attended him as after his victorie in the desert and accōpanied his glorious soule towards limbus Patrū with songs and hymnes farre more full of lubilee then that which they sung at his nativitie The infernall fiends hovvled and roared at the arrivall of his forerunners commanding them to avoyde but much more at his glorious and triumphant presnce shining brighter then the sunne at noone day and more resplendent then all the heavenly hoast togeather Here they were forced to adore his glorified soule who had refused due homage at first to thier Creatour when themselves might have been in glorie by one act of humble dutie what a corrasive was this to them VVhat a document to vs VVhat comfort to the iust that had been confined so long to darknes novv to see so much light approching II. But he appearing in the midst of them and saluting them with the like salutation as aftervvards his Apostles Pax vobis what exultation VVhat Jubilee was there VVhat wellcomes on all sides VVhat congratulations tovvards him in regard of his victorie Tovvards themselves in regard of thier speedy releasement And if he appeared vnto them with his glorious body also as many affirme what admiration VVhat acts of compassion VVhat wondering that he would retaine the marks of his wounds What are these wounds in the midst of thy hands sayd Zacharie the Proph●t and he ansvvered these I received in the house of them that loved me And David remembred that prophecying he had sayed they have digged into my hands and feete and have numbred all my bones S. Ihon Baptist most ioyfull of any repeated his wonted saying Behold the lambe of God behold who taketh away the synne of the world and hath born the smart of it vpon his ovvne shoulders And all generally from Adam to the good thiefe extolled his mercies and novv not only vnderstood of what they had beē a figure but gave him the ioy of having fullfilled all to his greater glorie III. Our Saviour also tooke particular content to see them all at once who had been subservient to the mysteries which he had accomplished and congratulated the iust for concurring with his graces tovvards the preserving of thier iustice and with the penitent for having recourse to his mercyes with those who had suffered persecution torments and death for his love and lavv for thier fidelitie and constancie giving them all novv with more feeling to vnderstand hovv wei bestovved was all that which they had done or suffered in the world and hovv greate mercy it was that they persevered to the end among so many millions who fayled and that they were not overvvhelmed in the deluge of synne but preserved in that of his sacred blood
and vnconceivable obedience to thy heavenly father O that I had never offended rather then such indignities should be offered thee O give me grace that I may never offend thee for to offend thee is yet a greater indignitie Sonnes of men how long and to what end heavy harted Wherfore doe yee love vanitie and seeke after that which will deceive yee Here is matter of love worth your longing and truth worth your seeking Christ suffering and so entring into his glorie Our Saviour appeares to the two disciples travelling II. PART I. ANd they drew nigh to the towne whether they went and he made as though he would have gone further and they constrayned him saying stay with vs because it is towards evening and the day is farre spent And he went in with them They were courteous and charitable as to a stranger He is no stranger to thee see with what affection thou wilt invite him Consider thy necessitie hovv neere the nighr thou travellest and how neere thy end He deserves he expect to be invited and in a manner forced by our earnestnes that we may grovv in esteeme of him and thevv it O hovv many wayes doe we rather give him occasion not to come in to vs O slovvnes and dulnes that cannot compasse so happy companie vnles he stay for vs Man● mobiscum Domine II. And while he sat at table with them he tooks bread and blessed and brake it and did reach it to them and thier eyes 〈◊〉 opened and they knew him and he vanished out of 〈◊〉 sight See the effect of Christ his staying with vs and of devoutly communicating with due thanks giving and blessing of God for his so greate benefit and consideration of the passion of our Saviour Be not hasty to depart when thou hast received him stay and ponder his greatnes his goodnes his familiarnes with vs his wisdome his povver c. This is the way to have thy eyes more and more opened and to increase in his knovvledge and love This vayle of mortalitie and the Sacramentall shapes will not afford thee a cleere sight but fayth and submission must supply and love proportionable It is better to sit in a corner with him then with multitudes of those to whom nature doth more incline vs. III. And they sayed one to the other was not our hart burning in vs while he spake to vs in the way and opened to vs the Scriptures And rising the same howre they returned to Hierusalem and told the things that were done in the way and how they knew him in the breaking of bread The means to become fervant is meditation and pious discourse often also to reflect vpon our former courses hovv we have gone a●tray and to be punctuall in observing our times and hovvers of reading and hearing spirituall things and of other devout practises with hovv little fervour alas Doe I think or speake of these things after so much handling of them Hovv cold is my hart even at the times when it hath cause of most heate Our repiditie and negligence is much to be lamented and commiserated that we come to our Saviour with no more affection c. Th. à Kemp. lib. 4. cap. 1. n. 2. Our Saviour appeares to his disciples when they were together I. VVHen it was Late that day and the doores were shut where the disciples were gathered together for feare of the Iewes Iesus came and stood in the midst and sayth to them Peace be to you and shewed them his hands and side The disciples therfore were glad when they saw our lord It seemes alwayes late when Iesus delayes his coming Yet we ought not to despayre specially if we forgo not our recollection and doe intertayne ourselves in holy desires of seeing him Veni Domine noli tardare Come to forgive come to comfort the closest secrets of my hart shall be allvvayes open to thee and allvvayes ready no feare shall shut the doorevpō thee take thy standing in the midst and full possession of me for thou bringest peace and complete ioy O blessed hands and side pearced for my sake what obiect can be compared with this VVhere can I dvvell with more content II. He sayed to them againe Peace be to you as my Father sent me I also send you then he breathed vpon them and sayed receive the holy Ghost whose synns you shall forgive they are forgiven and whose you shall retayne they are retayned VVhat doth this repetition of peace betoken but that as he had with his presence quieted thier minds so did he commend quiet and peace among themselves to the end that while some did rejoyce that they had beleeved others lament that they had fayled one should not immoderately extoll himself above the other or think of himself the be●●er Secondly that the peace which he did give them did not consist in an idle rest or present quie● from troble and payne but as his Father sent him to suffer and take paynes and with the like love to them as his Father had notwithstanding his sufferings to him Where we must not forget to prepare ourselves with a pure conscience that we may act and suffer with merit of the revvard promised and to that end make vse of the power given to the Apostles and thier successours for the remission of our synnes that they be no hinderance to ourselves nor to the good intended by our good God III. They yet not beleeving and marvelling for ioy he sayed have you here any thing to be eaten and they offerd him a peace of fish broyled and a hony combe and when he had eaten before them taking the remaynder he gave it them His eating was not for need of it but by that which he could doe to confirme his resurrection besides that the ●●sh broyled signified our Saviour himself who ought to be our continuall food He vouchsafed to hide himself in the sorrovves of mankind and be caught in the net of death broyled vpon the crosse but he that was thus broyled in his passion became a hony combe in his resurrection and ioyned these tvvo together in his refection because he receiveth those into his mysticall body in eternall rest who suffering here for God find svveetnes in it in regard of the love which they beare him Thou hast this food in the blessed Sacrament feed on it with svveetnes of hart and love for it contayneth all sort of delight He appeareth againe to his disciples Thomas being present I. THomas one of the twelve wae not with them when Iesus came the other disciples sayed to him we have seen our Lord But he sayed vnlesse I see in his hands the dint of the nayles and put my finger into the place of the nayles and put my hand into his side I will not beleeve S. Jhon Chrisostome As to be easy of beleefe is a signe of weaknes so to be over curious in searching is dulnes and
in darknes We know that we are transferred from death to life because we love our brethren he that loveth not remaynes in death And the colder our love is the more signes of death He layed downe his lif● for vs and we must lay downe our lives for our brethren He fedd vs with his whole life by example by word by labour by day and by night feede my lambs with tender love feede my sheepe with solid love feede every one to the proportion of his necessitie but with no small proportion of love III. Peeter was grieved because he was asked the third time but the asking shevves the necessitie of our inquirie and searching into our breasts whether there doe not lurke something that doth gaynesay our affirming and as for the comparative we must allvvayes avoyde it with S. Peeter here novv learneder then at the last supper when he sayed Though all be scandalized in thee yet not I. Lord thou knowest all things the secrets of my hart are secret from myself hovv oft have I been deceived in myself and hovv apt to be still deceived Yet I cannot but say I doe love thee and if I doe not I wil love thee I desire to love thee more and more Love all for Iesus love Iesus for himself Iesus Christ alone is singularly to be loved Thomas a Kempis lib. 3. cap. 8. num 4. Our Saviour foretelleth S. Peeter of his death I. VErily Verily I say to thee when thou wert yonger thou didst gird thyself and walk where thou wouldest but when thou shalt be old thou shalt stretch forth thy hands and another shall gird thee and lead thee where thou will not This he sayed signifying by what death he should glorifie God and when he had sayed this he sayed 〈◊〉 him follow me It is a kind of death also by which God is greately glorified when for the love and service of our neighbour we let him gird vs that is restrayne vs from that to which of ourselves we have a mind and doe yeald to anothers weakenes in that which is no offense to God or beare patiently even with offenses VVe may also learne here that the elder we grow the more we shall see that it is wisdome to suffer ourselves to be guided by others and not wed ourselves to our ovvne dictamens and desires specially if we reflect what hath been oftimes the result of follovving ourselves Confine thyself to the Tenets of the Church to the commandments of God and of his Church and to the will of thy superiour in that in which thou art subiect II. He say to Peeter follow me perhaps parting from the rest he intended to instruct Peeter more particularly concerning his Church and the government of it and desired that the rest should vnderstand it so but by occasion of it we may reflect hovv greate a dignitie it is to follovv Christ greater then whatever promotion and that those who have charge of others or pretend to the lo●e of Christ more then others must follovv closer imitating his vertues and suffring for him Peeter turning saw the disciple whom Iesus loved following and sayed Lord and this man what Not thinking much that he followed also though not spoken to but for the love and cour●esie which was betvvixt them he was desirous to knovv what was to become of him as well as of himself III. Iesus sayed to him so I will have him remayne till I come what is it to thee As if he should have sayed attend to thyself and thy ovvne busines leave the disposition of this matter to me when it shall be time I will manifest my will concerning him Follow thou me A document not to be inquisitive concerning others and also to beare willingly a reprehension in things which we do● or say with good zeale and intention Begge incessantly and labour to remayne with our Saviour to the end as the thing which most importeth vndervaluing whatever els in comparison of this O that I could remayne with him so that is beloved as the disciples worthy to be admitted to lea●e vpon his breast so pure so illuminated or rather so that is with that patience and love as our Saviour is content to remayne with vs in the blessed Sacrament and in our neglected if not synfull soules Dive not too farre into future things which are ever vncertaine Harken to our Saviour speaking sonne suffer me to doe what I will with thee I knovv what is good for thee Them à Kemp. l. 3. c. 17. He appeareth to the Apostles while they were at table I. LAstly he appeared to the eleven as they sat at table and checked them for thier incredulitie and hardnes of hart because they did not beleeve those that had seen him risen againe Lament thy ovvne slovvnes or slendernes in beleefe and hardnes of hart and observe hovv strictly he requires that we beleeve others and that we be not obstinate though we ourselves doe not see the grounds and depth of that which is raught vs Here he condescends to thier weakes because they were the first that were to teach others and presented himself to all because some had doubted but by this reprehension he gives them to vnderstand that thier doubts were not allwayes to de satisfied that way II. And he sayed vnto them Going into the whole world preach the Ghospell to every creature neither Ievv nor Gentil excepted he that shall beleeve and be baptized shall be saved but he that shall not beleeve shall be condemne● Reflect that the whole cour●e and intention of Christs coming into this world and preaching and sufferring did not tend to the gaining to himself or vs any worloly prosperitie or delight but that we shou●d beleeve and knovv God to be our chiefe Lord and Master obey his commands and orders and so after this life come to be saved of which the promises to the Ievves of milk and hony were but a figure Christ reserving to his ovvne coming the increase of light in these supernaturall things and the extension of his favour to all nations In this knovvledge and dutie and in no other we excell all creatures fayling of it we become like beasts and in worse condition because subiect to eternall condemnation for not having lived like men subiect by nature to God and his lavves Give God thanks for giving thee this beleefe and life at this time when with ease thou mayest come vnto it III. Them that beleeve these signes shall follow In my name they shall cast out divells they shall speake with new tongues they shall take up serpent● and if they drink any deadly thing it shall not hurt them They shall lay hands vpon the sick and they shall be well these signes when ever it is necessarie doe still follovv and continue in the Church of God as we see by dayly experience bu● mystically as S. Bernard and others doe discourse they dayly d●e happen for by the abundance of Gods grace
attending him Thou needest in all things his assistance and canst not doe any thing but by his power O lumpish flesh of myne hovv hard doest thou make it to follovv thy Saviour Nature is craftie and dravveth many and in●angleth and deceiveth them and allvvayes hath itself for its end O poore end Christs Ascension II. PART I. IN heaven our blessed Saviour was received with hymnes of joy and exultation such as the holy Prophet David foresignified when he sayed Our Lord hath reigned and is clothed with beauty he is clothed with strength and hath girt himself to accomplish his worke from heaven which he began vpon earth He hath established a nevv world vpon earth his church which shall not be moved because it s buylt vpon a rock against which hell gates shall not prevayle His seate was prepared from the beginning of the world but he as God was before from all Eternitie wonderfull persecutions will be raysed against him but he will be more wonderfull by overcoming them as it hath been prophe●yed of him And againe who shall ascend v●to the hill of our Lord who shall stand in his holy place He that hath innocent hands and a pure hart lift up your gates yee Princes O yee eternall gates be lifted vp and the king of glorie will make his entrance Who is this king of Glorie our Lord strong and powerfull our Lord powerfull in the combat c. And being seated at the right hand of his Father they all adore him with whom we must concvrre and so much the more because for vs was all his combat imployed and he is gone before to prepare us a place as parting with his disciples he told them II. But the Apostles stood amazed vpon the hill gazing tovvards heaven doubtfull perhaps whether he would appeare againe among them And as they looked stedfastly towards heaven behold two men stood by them in white garments and sayed yee men of Galilee why stand you looking into heaven This Iesus who is assumpted from you into heaven shall so come as you have seen him going into heaven He sends these blessed spirits as a restimonie that even from heaven he harh care of them and is not so de parted as to have layed aside mindfulnes of them in his greatest joy and prosper●●●e He is to come againe but not now presently and subiect to the miseries in which you have seen him but in glorie as when he went novv from you Why stand you looking only vnto heaven fall to the performance of that which he hath commended vnto you and commanded so shall his coming againe in glorie be a comfort to you In this shevv yourselves Men of courage and resolution overcoming the instabilitie of your nature This is Iesus who is assumpted from you and as he by fulfilling the commands of his father and by suffering went into heaven so make account you are to doe to attayne the eternall revvard which he hath prepared for those who obey him III. Then they adoring returned to Hierusalem with greate ioy and continued with one accord in prayer Thus the parting which naturally might have bread griefe turned to greate ioy and comfort they revereneing our blessed Saviour in their minds no lesse then externally adoring him and perhaps the print of his sacred feete did even then or soone after appeare as is recorded which was a continuall refreshing to them Observe in the meane time tvvo notable effects and signes of Gods spirit to wit vnion and love of prayer for from whence could it othervvise come that they who before were delighted only with thier trade of fishing and were ready vpon the passion of our Saviour every one to parte vpon his severall occasions should novv hold so fast together and love retirement and devotion loyne thyself to this blessed companie often behold the ioy in which novv they are and hovv they arrived to i● persever in the vnitie of holy Church have recourse to the blessed Virgen and the Apostles that by thier in●ercession and imitation thou mayest come to see Iesus in glorie and adore him with eternall comfort Amen Considerations moving to the love of God and of our Neighbour Introduction I. OVr blessed Saviour vpon his parting with his disciples before his passion in the long speech which he held at that time did particularly commend vnto them the love of himself and of one another He that loveth me shall be loved by my Father and I will love him and manifest myself to him and v. 23. If any love me he will keepe my word and my Father will love him and we will come to him and make abode with him And Chapter 15. As my Father hath loved me I also have loved you abide in my love And concerning the love of one another a new commandment I give you that you love one another as I have loved you In this all men shall know that you are my disciples if you have love one to another This interim therfore betvvixt the parting of our Saviour from his disciples in his ascension and the coming of the holy Ghost may be not vnfitly imployed in considerations moving vs to the love of our Saviour and of our neighbour both to solace ourselves in his absence and to dispose vs the better to receive the spirit of love For doubtlesse the more we resemble him who is the eternall love of the Father and of the Sonne the more inclinable he will be to communicate himself in more abundance and he that sends him finding the dispositions allready layed will willingly accept of the dvvelling and direct him to it II. S. Paul in his Epistle to the Ephesians considering the abundan●●iches of graces and glorie which are communica●ed to vs by the merits of our Saviour Christ stroken with admiration breaketh forth into an affectionate prayer that they and in thier person all Christians strengthened by the holy Ghost inwardly in thier soules might come to know and to comprehend so farre as our poore capacitie is able to reach the breadth the lenght the height and the depth of the exceeding charitia of our Saviour surpassing all 〈◊〉 To the end doubtlesse that being filled with abundance of the same charitie we might ansvver with some proportion of love tovvards him ●●kindled by his and in some sort correspond to the infinite measure of his charitie tovvards vs and have latitude in our love tovvards him and longitude and depth and height as he tovvards vs hath had all these dimensions in a proportion vncomparable III. To this purpose it will not be amisse to inlarge our thoughts vpon these considerations as foure excellencies to which all other properties of his love may be reduced and by them we may best see what measure of love in all reason God may require of vs and learne more perfectly by our ovvne experience the lesson which S. Bernard teacheth that the cause of our love tovvards God
must be God himself the measure of our love to love him without measure God of his love inspire our thoughts to conceive worthy things of him and inflame our harts in the love of them that hovvever weake our love may be it may increase to that measure which his immeasurable goodnes hath designed Amen An act of humble acknowledgment of our owne weakenes I. O My God what am I or what is thy love● Thy infinite love my God tovvards man what is it That I sylly worme of the earth so easily venture not only to lift vp my head to behold it and ponder it and esteeme it for to this end thou hast shevved it vnto vs that we should behold it and love it but dare scanne in my thoughts and vndertake to discypher the greate greatenes of it in these fevv words the broken of●alls of my shallovv conceits Or is thy love peradventure a thing which can be comprehended by man or declared by the highest Angel or defined by any but thyself for thy love is thyself and the greate greatenes of it is the immense Immensitie of thy loving self by which thou dilatest thyself tovvards vs and in vs thy creatures and through the infinite length bleadth depth and heigth of thy inflamed charlti● comprehendest vs all in the bovvels of thy love loving vs before we were that we might be and ever loving vs while we are that we may never leave to be but ever live in love with thee II. Who therfore can reach so farre as that infinite length or who is there that can measure that breadth which is immeasurable Who can sound the depth or take the height of thy infinite love but thy only self who art sole equall and sole equally infinite to thyself And yet thou wilt have vs measure it in our thoughts and sound it in our harts and stretch ourselves to that length and dilate ourselves to that b●eadth and lift vp ourselves to that heigth and drovvne ourselves in that depth of thy love that finding hovv farre we are from the true measure of it we may reach if not as farre and as wide and as high and as deepe as it deserveth yet so farre in all these kinds as by thy grace our harts will serve vs which is acceptable in thy sight though too small a measure in regard of thy infinite deserts III. O Imalnes of our measure O greatnes of thy deservings VVho hast moved heaven and earth for our sakes and searched all the corners of thy infinite treasure and poured forth thy riches to the bottome to help vs to reclayme vs to winne vs to thy love And when thou hadst as it were spent all that thou hadst to gayne our affection forall that we see or heare of or can imagine are thy love-gifts as I may tearme them to dravv vs to thyself thou sparedst not thy ovvne bovvels but gavest thyself vnto vs and in that loving and free manner that there was not any part of the breath of thy sacred body which thou didst not dedicate to our service nor one drop of thy pretious blood which thou didst not shed for vs but for the greater satisfaction of our vnbeleeving minds and the more effectually to move our stony harts even after thy death thou wouldst have thy side opened with that cruel speare that we might see with our eyes that there was no more blood left when after the blood spent there issued water IV. O sacred bath rempered for my soares soseen the hardnes of my hart alay the immoderate heate which I find tovvards temporall occasions moysten the droughth of my faint desires cure the blindnes of my eyes that at least through this gap layed so wide open I may discover some parcell of thy love and inamoured with it may be dravvne further and further into the depth that being wholy absorpt in it I may leese myself while I go about to measure and never find myself againe but wholy drovvned in thee who art my God and my only love Amen The length of the love of God is the Eternitie of his love I. THe length of the charitie of allmightie God is the Eternitie of his love If we cast our eyes vpon that beginning of his Eternitie which hath no beginning even then before we were and when he only was he loved vs as novv he loveth and determined then to give vs all that good which we find he hath since performed or hath for hereafter layed vp in store for vs in that Eternitie before all time before all thought and to which no thought of creature can arrive when he was delighting himself with his only self and with the infinite riches which he hath within himself the Father with the Sonne and the Father and the Sonne with the holy Ghost then he vouchsafed to think of vs to love vs to ordayne all things for vs and to desire our love Then when not only he had no need of vs but when he had no other reason to think of vs but his ovvne sole infinite goodnes He disposed all things sweetly to the end in time to gayne that which in Eternitie he desired to wit our love and beholding vs with in himself and seeing that we were all good and all very good because we were all in him he would in time appointed that we shoul have part of that good in ourselves by him which we had from all Eternitie in him And therfore he made vs out of himself that acknovvledging from whence we derived all the good we have we should seeke not only in duty or gratitude to returne all to him who best deserved it but also by nature we should be eve● ●orne tovvards him as every thing naturally is ever bent tovvards that from which it hath its beeing II. If againe we cast our thoughts vpon the end of his loving eternitie which hath no end we shall find his love not contayned with in the short limitts of a month or a yeare or ten thousand yeares but that he loveth vs to the end with out end and desireth nothing more then that we should live and love him world with out end And as in his Eternitie with out beginning he disposed all things sweetely for our good and saluation with out any desert of ours so in this Eternitie with our ending he reacheth strongly striving against all our deserts to bring our love to that perfection that his and ours may have no end If the least of those iniuries which we offer to God thousands perhaps in a day were done by man to another man it were enough insteed of further love to inflame a mortall and as much as lyeth in him an Eternall aversion But that which seemeth impossible to man is possible to God who with infinite charitie doth dayly and hoverly and every moment put vp infi●●te disgracefull actions and remayneth ever strong in love rill our dying day when if we
thy commands that as there was nothing which thou refusedst for the love of me so there may be nothing at which I may shrinke which ought to be done suffered for the love of thee Amen How we may imitate the vniversalitie of the love of God I. PART I. THe vniversalitie of the love of God may be imitated first by loving and esteeming all that he loveth and esteemeth and disesteeming and hating all that he disesteemeth and hateth To which we must indeavour to attayne by continuall mortification and inure ourselves not to affect things which deserve not our affection that is all earthly things so farr as they have not connection with his service vsing them meerely as instruments to doe him service and othervvise wholy neglecting them and making no account of them nor giving them any place in our thoughts or affections which is that to which the Apostle exhorteth vs by his example allwayes bearing about in our body the mortification of Iesus that the life also of Iesus may be manifested in our hodys Hovv came it that some saynts were so perfect and so contemplative because they laboured to mortifie themselves alltogeather from all te●rene desires II. How large accordingly this measure of love towards God was in the Apostle himself and in divers other Saints is apparent in thier lives and writings and in some of them we find it expressed not with inke but with the spirit of the living God not written in tables of stone but in the tables carnall of thier hart and body such as may say with the same Apostle from hence forth l●t no man be troblesome to me that is let no man think he shall be able to take Christ from myhatt for I beare the marks of our Lord Iesus Christ in my body In which kind S. Francis founder of the Order of friars minors might justly glorie in our Lord for having expressed his love towards God in that strict povertie and perfect renuntiation of all things to the end to give himself by prayer and good works wholy to God Our Saviour testifyed to the world that he was wholy his printing the marks of his sacred passion in his hands feete and side and as it were designing in his body that longitude and latitude and height and deepth of love which was long before ingraven in his soule ô blessed Sainct c. III. Blessed Mother Teresa of Iesus for her exceeding love towards him had a favour not farr inferiour when the saw and felt another Seraphim digging in her hatt with a da●t of gold to make way for the incomprehensible greatenes of the love of God towards her and to inlarge her hatt that it might be more capable of love towards him And S. Francis Xavier late Apostle of lapan was also often seen and heard when walking in the garden at home or on his journies abroad he inlarged his garments with both his hands to give scope to the love which burned in his breast or by externall cold to suppress from outvvard shevv the internall fire with which he was excessively inflamed often repearing those words It is enough O Lord it is enough IV. These blessed Saincts and many more had enough of that of which no body can ever have enovgh because though in effect they never had so much but that they desired more and evē then when they sayed they had ●nough not content with what they had they enlarged themselves to receive yet more which is a pregnant signe that indeed they had very much VVe that feele not these inflamed desires because we never were throughly possessed by love and none but such cā ever feele thē not being able to inlarge our harts into such fervent affections what can we doe lesse then by attentive ponderation of his love and thiers and humble indeavour try whether by often striking the steele of our consideration vpon our stony harts we may at last beate-out some one sparke of of true love which taking in the tinder of our affections and blowne with the most svveete breath of the heavenly spirit may increase into a greater and never quenched fire of love Amen How we may imitate the Vniversalitie of the love of God II. PART I. AN other means of imitating the Vniversalitie of the love of God is by extēding it to the love of our Neighbour in that measure as we see God doth to vs and his Saints have done in imitation of him God out of his meere goodnes when we were not gave vs our being and all the good which we have and though we deserve it not continues his goodnes tovvards vs making his sunn which he hath at command rise over good and evill and rayning over just and injust which kind of love he requires we should beare towards others not considering what they deserve but what is sitting for vs to doe to the end to be like God in love tovvards them and therfore also it is sayed the second commandmē is like the first because it m●st have the conditio●s of the first that is as we love God with our whole ha●t our whole soule our whole vnderstanding and our whole strength so must we imploy all these wholy vpon our Neighbours good not loving him by halfs or coldly and remissely but with much heate of affection solidly constantly couragiously nobly not giving way to what ever opposeth it and imbracing largely whatever may be for his advāage ād prosecuting it with our whole strēgth ād forces II. This vniversitie requireth also that we extend our love ●o all sorts of people to the poore as well as to the rich to the infirme as well as to the strong and the more infirmities we discover in another the more should we be inclined to assist him in imitation of our Saviour who where iniquities did abound gave superabundance of his grace and of S. Paul who out of the largenes of his hart sayed to the Cotinthians who gave him not the best satisfaction our mouth is open to you O Corinthians for your 〈◊〉 instruction our hart is dilated you are not streightened in ●● And againe to the same Corinthians when I was free from all I made myself a servant of all that I might gayne the more To the weake I became weake that I might gayne the weake to all men I became all things that I might save all III. In conformitie to this love our good God hath not only set a part in his Church those of the Clergy to attend to the help of all sorts of people by administration of the holy Sacraments and of his divne word but hath instituted all sorts of religions both of men and women that those might be houses of refuge for all sorts of humours and that at least by prayer and example others might be benefitted by the most retired the obligation of which vocations is duly to be considered and specially of those who out of an
should depend vpon our correspondence with his graces and consequently that his infinite merit should be in a manner in greate part lost by our vntovvardnes or at least hazarded which as on the one side to those who indeavour to make vse of his love it is a greate incitement to love him the more who for the fruite in a fevv would suffer and taketh from all men all occasion of despayre so on the other side by reason of our weakenes it doth necessitate vs not to presume but to live in feare for the time of our seiourne and to labour by good works to make sure our vocation and Election VVhich designe of his we must everence and lovingly submiting to his divine ordination industriate ourselves to concurr the more diligently with it and with his love tovvards vs in it III. The depth of his love appeareth in the extraordinarie vocations of some and graces extraordinarie bestovved vpon persons oftimes in which we cannot only not discover any merit but rather much demerit and desert of the contrarie of whom that saying of God and of the Apostle comes to be verifyed I will have mercy on whom I have mercy and I will shew mercy to whom I will shew it And with good reason for he is Lord of his gifts and free to give of them more or lesse to whom and when he will So that as we may admire and must reioyce and not envy when he doth bestovv them so we must not grudge when and where he doth not bestow them but attend that our eye become not naught because he is good as our Saviour himself once answered IV. O my God! give me grace so to consider this thy love that I may increase in love tovvards thee give me grace that by measuring this thy greatenes I may grovv greater in thy favour and by reaching to thy height wax higher in thy sight and by diving into the bottomles depth of thy infinite charitie sink deeper into thy love that being wholy absorpt in it I may ever find myself wholy drovvned in thee my God my love Amen The depth of the love of God II. PART I. FInally in this matter of the love of God it will be profitable to reflect with a devout personage of this age I. First that it was not possible for God to create man after a heigher modell then according to the image and similitude of God 2. It was not possible to create him for a heigher end then the cleere vision and fruition of God 3. It was not possible to give him a greater Gift then God himself and all creatures 4. It was not possible to give him a heigher or more noble imployment then to serve God and in some sort to serve himself of God to de●●●e in a manner himself and others 5. It was not possile to give him a more perfect Guide in his pilgrimage then our Saviour and the holy Ghost 6. It was not possible to feed him with more choyce sustenance then the body and blood and divinitie of our blessed Saviour 7. It was not possible to expresse a greater esteeme of man then by shedding his blood for him 8. It was not possible to give him a greater motive to abhorre synne then that God dyed to abolish it 9. It was not possible to give a greater ground never to despayre then by constituting himself his Advocate 10. It was not possibble to inable synfull man to co●rrespond to these and other his benefits but by giving him the merits of Christ dignified infinitely in his divine person by which we satisfie to the full for our offenses and gayne a proportion in our good works to the rewards promised II. O infinite goodnes O immense charitie O love imcomparable Where shall I find either conceptions or words or strength to expresse the least part of my greate obligation to thy love ●hat hart can love thee enough 〈◊〉 tongue prayse thee VVhat forces serve thee as thou deservest Help me yee blessed Angels and saints of heaven Assiste me all yee orea●utes of my loving God O that I had so many tongues to prayse him so many harts to love him I knovv not what to say but with hart confounded and blushing countenance to offer my love and service such as it is conioyned with his because he is so pleased and begge of him that he will please himself with it and with his ovvne merits for otherwise whatever I can offer is nothing and that all creatures in whom he is most pleased will incessantly prays● him and glorifie him Amen The coming of the holy Ghost vpon the Apostles in firie tongues I. PART I. OVr Saviour vpon his Ascension had willed the Apostles to remayne in Hierusalem till they should be indu●d with power from above which they observed carefully persevering together in prayer with our blessed Lady and others when behold the tenth day ●arely in the morning there was suddenly heard a sound from heaven as of a mightie wind and it filled the whole house where they were sitting and there appe●●ed to them parted tongues as it were of ●ire and it sat vpon every one of them and they were all filled with the holy Ghost and began to speake with divers tongues as the holy Ghost gave them to speake Prayer and obedience and agreement together were dispositions novv as well as afterwards effects of the holy Ghost He came suddenly vpon them to teach vs perseverance in our devout imployments for we know not at what houre our Lord will come in prayer or reading or charitable action the wind was a token of dispersing the Cloudes of ignorance and deceite to which we are subiect with out the assistance of the holy Ghost and no wonder that is was a strong wind considering hovv closse the fallaci●s of the world doe stick vnto vs and hovv they are apt to possesse themselves of every corner of our house that is of soule and body The parted tongues as of fire signified the spirituall flame and fervour infused into thier harts and was then to manifest itself by thier tongues publikly and privately to be imployed in the prayses of our Saviour and of his law according as the holy Ghost gave to every one Begge of him every one of these his gifts and dispose thyself to receive them II. Consider that though the wind and firy tongues were figures of the inward operation yet the gift this day communicated was not only the proportionable effects wrought by the holy Ghost but the very person of the holy Ghost communicated vnto them and vs working these effects And as in the Incarnation of our Saviour the holy Ghost in person overshaddowed our blessed Lady so here he descended vpon the Apostles and the rest there gathered together though in such different measure as he thought good to communicate himself where we have cause to admire and adore the goodnes of God who would imploy his owne person in our
points enough both for beleefe and practise which might have averted them Prayse God for all and have confidence in him c. The Mysterie Of the Mysterie of the most Blessed Trinitie I. A Principall effect of the coming of our Saviour into this world was the declaration of the Mysterie of the most Blessed Trinitie hidden even from the Iewes though the chosen people of God and not mentioned but in very darke and hidden resemblances But our Saviour did openly proclayme it specially after his resurrection commanding his Apostles to baptize all nations in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost as three persons equall in all things and one in name that is in povver auctoritie and essence wherin we have cause to admire and adore the force of the light of the holy Ghospell by which our Saviour intending to abolish the beleefe and worship of many Gods brought in by the craft of the divel working vpon mens corrupt affections and desires established the beleefe of one true God yet so that they should beleeve in that one essence three persons equall to one another though vnder Appellations which according to our meane expression might signifie inequalitie it being impossible for vs to conceive the divinitie cleerely as it is ●ayth therfore must supply that which reason cannot comprehend and with reverence submit to what our vnderstanding cannot reach Adoring equally in three and one the Omnipotencie Eternitie infinite knowledge and goodnes and all Perfection the Immensitie the Immutabilitie the Beautie the sanctitie of God contayning all and more then we can imagin by the help or comparison of all creatures and all most perfectly and with out multiplicitie in one II. Adore the Father as the incomprehensible source of the divinitie with out beginning and of all things created in time when he thought fit to give them a beginning Adore the Sonne who being equall to the Father vouchsafed for our sakes to take vpon him our humane nature to instruct vs by word and example and by his sacred blood shed vpon the crosse to wash avvay our synns and open vs avvay to the eternall inioying of God by perseverance in his commandments Adore the Holy Ghost as the mutuall and recip●ocall love of the Father and Sonne the Auctour of our love tovvards God the cause of our adoption by his grace infused and by himself inhabiting in our soules the spirit of truth which leadeth vs into all truth and by his heavenly lights disperseth the clouds of darknes and facilitates our way to heaven by his heavenly vnction III. Adore all three in one one in nature one by consent one in operation Begge of him that we may be one with him by submission to him and to his blessed will one by constant fayth one by never decaying love one by operation esteeming ourselves in all our wo●ks as instruments of his divine p●wre and goodnes and so disposing ourselves in thought and action that we may not differ from him in the least which he of his goodnes grant Amen The obligation which we haveto love God I. PART I. SO soone as Moyses had declared to the people of ●srael that God was one he instantly inferres the commandment of loving him Heare Israel our Lord God is one Lord. Thou shalt love thy Lord God wi●h thy whole hart c. And our Saviour in his answer to the lawyer tells vs it is the gre●test and the first commandement and with reason ought we to think so and accordingly apply ourselves to love him For as we were worse then beasts if we did not love those who are beneficiall to vs much more if welove not God from whom we have absolutely all that we have The law therfore of nature doth impose this vpon vs so soone as we come into the world vpon which account S. Thomas and other divinc● doe hold it a greate offense if so soone as we come to the vse of reason in our Childhood we doe not turne ou●●arts to God with loving acknowledgment that he is ou● creatour and Lord. And the holy Text infinuates as much presently after the commandment saying And these words which I command thee this day shall be in thy hart and ●ho● shalt 〈◊〉 them thy Children to wit that they may knovv thier duty in time II. It is also the first commandment in dignitie and excellency for it hath the highest obiect that can be to wit God and the noblest way of service to wit for love not for feare of punishment o● hope of reward but riseth vpon consideration of his greate excellencie With in himself and greate goodnes tovvards vs. And besides it gives vs the greatest excellency that we can attayne vnto in this world and prepareth farre greater in the world to come for as by loving base things we become base and contemptible so by loving God and other things as they belong to God we become ●ono●rable in the ●ight of God and men and there can be no greater honour and excellency imagined then that to which those have risen who have loved God in perfection I●I It was like wise first in the intention of the lavvgive●s all other commands and directions and indeed all the works and wonders of God which he hath shevved vs tending finally and properly to this that in thought word and deed we should expresse our love to him for how could any thing subsist if it had not been thy will or been preserved if not called by thee Thou sparest all because they are thyne ●o Lord who lovest soules As he therfore did and doth all things out of love so is it expected from vs that all should proceed from love and further more as in the naturall love of one an other we must not only not shew aversion from the thing which our srend doth not synfully love but even observe his wayes of proceeding much more ought we to love that which God loves and commands because we love him and he loves vs for which reason the Apostle sayth The fullnes of the law is love even of our neighbour because we love him for God IV. It is the greatest command because most necessarie of all other precepts as with out which no other i● thoroughly avaylable or ●●●ly commendable Fo● the feare of God is but an introduction to love and some way or other must be perfected into some degree of love els it will fall of the effect we desire and how many things doth the Apostle reckon which are nothing with our Charitie If I have the tongues of Angels if Prophecie if Fayth if knowledge if I give my goods to the poore if my body to the fire and have not Charitie it avayleth me nothing On the other side it doth set an inestimable price vpon the least of our actions when ever they are done for the love of God so that with out it all with it nothing is lost V.
Finally it is greatest because it is the most lasting and worketh greatest and most lasting effects Charite never fayleth Faith instructs hope rayseth our mind to he●venly things Charitie vnites vs to God and makes vs one spirit with him And as in nature so in grace love breakes through all difficulties and accordingly we may see the efficacy of it in the Apostles and Apostolicall men in the Martyrs and Confessours E●emites and Virgins by things done and suffered beyond all compasse of other consideration then of love Our Obligation to love God II. PART I. VVE may love those things which we have nor seen with our eyes we cannot love that which doe not some way know we know God by Fayth by discourse or contemplation and by fruition or injoying him The readyest and easyest way is by Faith as we may discover by the difficultie which the greatest wits of the world anciently had with out Fayth to know there was a God one eternall Omnipotent all seeing all disposing Therfore we must both thank God for the light of Faith and often exercise acts therof submitting all contrarie suggestions vnto it This kind of knowledge was delivered first from hand to hand by our forefathers to thier Children successively then renewed in the old law by God appearing pearing to Moyses and the children of Israël lastly by the sonne of God himself our Saviour coming into this world●● confirming by signes and miracles both the being of one God and that himself was sent to establish his law in the harts of men and to vnfold and perfect all that which formerly was delivered and practised in figure of what was to come The record wherof is holy Scripture and Tradition both which concurring are a proofe so invincible that vnder heaven there is not any more forcible II. We may confirme this knowledge by discourse and contemplation as for example finding nothing to be in this world which hath not some cause or many causes concurring to its being we begin to think there can be nothing which hath not some cause wherby it begins and yet in all absolutely it cannot be so and consequently there must be a first cause caused by nothing els and that is God Then the order and government of the world and seasons of the yeare shewes there is some greate thing that governeth it as order among men cannot be without a directour and the like We must not think notwithstanding that we can comprehend his Essence or his attributes which are in him one single Essence but by admiring them and adoring them and acknowledging our owne weakenes to decipher them we shall come to vnderstand more of him for if we know allmost nothing of these inferiour things but the outward appearance of them and cannot dive into the substance and essence of them though we see them and touch them how shall we be able to comprehend the least attribute of God in whom nothing is not infini●e III. Perfect inioying of God is not the state of this life neither can any creature even in any life come vnto it but by the speciall grace of God vouchsafing to communicate himself yet in some measure through his grace●● we may even in this life inioy him and so increase also in his knowledge by beleeving him to be as he is allwayes present with vs and that there is not a place or creature in which he is not giving it life and motion and subsistence and consequently loving him for this continual and loving assistance and ioying in it for as by continual conversation with men we come to knovv them so God is also knowne by looking vpon him and because all that is in him or proceeds from him is good there cannot but be insinite cause of loving him with out any cause at all of distast which can hardly ever be among men Blessing him therfore exalt him so much as you can for he is greater then all prayse Exalting him put forth all your strength be not wearied for you shall not comprehend him Our obligation to love God III. PART I. THou shalt love thy lord God By how many titles is he Lord First he is God 2 Creatour 3. Conserver 4. Prince over all the kings of the earth 5. Redeemer 6. Sanctifyer 7. Judge 8. Rewarder And even those qualities which naturally are awefull are not in him without motives of love for though he be judge he is also our Advocate and our Father and though he be so greate a Prince he ha●h particular care of vs all and doth nothing injustly III. How many wayes is he thyne As Creatour and Conserver and Prince he gives himself in all creatures which are all for our vse and in them and with them he is continually serving vs. As Redeemer and Sanctifyer he gives vs againe himself and as the Apostle argues He that spared not his owne Sonne but delivered him for vs all how hath he not also given us all with him Finally as Rewarder he gives himself eternally and in so compleat a manner that nothing can be mote desired III. What is there in the world among the things which either we accou●t or desire to be ours which are more ours or more to be desired then God Honour Pleasure Wealth Quiet Power Frends in the world are all short superficiall transitorie short because they satisfie but part of our desire superficiall because they are ●ore outward then inward 〈◊〉 our mind transitorie because soone lost and oftimes so soone as we think we have them All things which are desired cannot come in comparison sayth the VViseman If all things fall short certaynly every thing in particular is much shorter and who in the world hath all but he that loveth God who is all in all And againe if honour be to be desired the greater honour is more to be desired and so of wealth and pleasure which greatnes nothing vnder God can clayme IV. As therfore by naturall obligation be thou also by thy owne choyce wholy his acknowledging thy subjection to him and doing him due homage by observing all his commands and follovving his counsels and flying all things which may breed a distance Let thy tongue attend vpon his prayses thy eares harked vnto his inspirations thy eyes behold his wonderous works thy feete be ready to go vpon his errands thy hands to labour in his affayres and thy hart be wholy his c. Our Obligation to love God IV. PART I. THou shalt love thy Lord thy God with thy whole hart when he sayth with thy whole hart he leaveth no part of thy life vacant no place to be given to any other love Secondly love him with thy whole hart that is with much heate and affection not coldly and remisly Thirdly with thy whole hart that is solidly constantly vndantedly not giving way to whatever opposeth and bearing whatever crosseth and going through whatever concerneth the divine love Fourthly with thy whole hart
that is with a noble and large hart imbracing whatever may be for the advantage or will and pleasure of God II. Thou shalt love God with thy whole soul● Desire conjunction with him as the soule doth with the body and be as loth to be separated labour for dispositions fiting this conjunction Have feeling of no thing but what is for him or against him be ever moving towards him both thyself and others also VVithout the soule what is the body VVorse is the soule without God have a horrour from this separation both for it self and for the difficultie of returning to returne to life is a greate miracle so is this III. Love him with thy whole mind and strength that is imploy the whole force of thy mind and body to love him let nothing occur to thy mind out of which thou doest not draw some occasion to love him Be wholy transformed into love such as our Saviour expressed when that saying of the Prophet was verified in him the zeale of thy house hath consumed me making no reckoning of temporalls in comparison of the love of God Aspirations tending to the increase in the love of God in our soules The first Paragraphe O My God my love Blessed be thy infinite goodnes and Charitie by whose only gift it cometh that I may tearme thee my love O love ●ternall O that my love had been towards thee continuall as I find and feele thine to have been ever permanent towards me II. O love to whom it is never too late to come though in regard of thy all-deserving love all delay is long all coming is late because coming is a signe that there I was not before whether I now only come III. Alas where was I That now only I may say I come I know not where I was it is a shame for me to say it is a griefe for me to think where I was This certaynly I know and must confesse to all that I was not with thee in that measure of love which thou ever deservedst of me O measure without measure why doe I so measure my affections as not to give them to the● without any measure IV. I say I come and I think it is pleasing vnto thee a●d so it is for thou art easyly pleased and pleased with a little But in reason I should not still say I comes because so long as I come there is some distance betwixt thee and me which distance yet if it were only so that thy Creature cannot be even with thee My God and Creatour in love as I cannot be even with thee in nature and Essence I could be wel content because nothing ought to content me more then thy infinite perfection in all things to which no Creature can arrive But as long as I say I come there is some thing els betwixt thee and me and not only thy sole infinite goodnes which causeth this distance V. And this grieveth me againe and to think that there should be any thing betwixt thee and me or that there should be any creature so bold as to take part of my love from thee or rather I so foolish as to give it frō thee towards whō it is apparent injustice not to give full abūdāt measure which cānot be without giving intirely all VI. Come therfore without measure to me and supply I beseech thee with thy infinite love the many defects which thou findest in myne Come who art never absent neither from those who absent themselves too too often from thee but standest at the doore and knocest expecting when we will open againe vnto thee Behold deere God now my hart is wholy thyne take it possesse it vse it fashion it as thou pleasest that it may still be more capable still more perfect in thy love Amen The second Paragraphe I. ABove all things give me grace to be ever presēt with thee who art never absent from me Ever in thee as thou art in me Present with thee by walking in thy sight who ever seest all things and to whom nothing is hiddē that I cā think say or doe in the very secretest corner of my hart every twinkling of my eyes thou markest every glancing of my thoughts thou judgest Give me grace to marke them and to judge them myself that I may allwayes as I ought adjuge them to thee and direct them for thee to whom only they are wholy due and to no other but for thee II. In the light of the sunne who is n●t ashamed to offend if men looke much 〈◊〉 what if a Master a judge a king from whome reward or punishment is certaynly to be expected What if my love Shall I before his face reprochfully turne myself from him and imbrace in his sight whome he doth disdayne O eyes of pitty pardon that which is past forgiveme my love my many offenses committed in thy sight and let this thought of thy Allseeing eye ever fixed vpon me be a stay to my thoughts a temper to my actions that nothing may passe vnbeseeming thy presence III. Behold o my soule that God doth behold thee O dreadfull ô loving sight ô that I had allwayes lovingly feared thee and respectfully loved thee my God that thy eyes might have beheld with content thy worke vnde filed but now give me grace at least to bathe myself with teares and bitterly to bewayle my many losses that so I may appeare before thee with lesse shame and remayne more constant in thy service through the memorie of my finnes which in all reason I ought to endeauour to counterpoise with ten thousand times more love and more attendance vpon thee The third Paragraphe I. GRaunt me that I be ever in thee with a right intention and with pure Affection doing all things for thee and loving nothing in all that is but thee alone who art the life the love the All of all things II. I know there is no Creature that can in reason aske any thing of me but for thee but it will happen some times as there are many of them many times vnreasonable they will demand vnreasonably I myself too too often shall be inclined vnreasonably Graunt me that I give them but that which is reason And what can be reason which is not for thee Nothing Graunt me that I give them nothing but for thee no thought no word no worke no Affection but distast of all things where I find not thee III. The whole world is a booke the fayrest the learnedost the greatest that ever was made ● verie creature is a letter Everie Accident a line Everie motion a sentence Everie disposition a lesson the whole a most eloqvent Oration a most ample Treatise full of all Rhetoricall persuasions pregnant in teaching forcible in moving pleasant in delighting sounding out thy divine prayses speaking thy wonders inviting to thy service withdrawing from thy offence inflaming in thy love O that my vnderstanding were so instructed my will so inclined
to be subiect to thee the greatest charitie is to conforme myself to thy holy disposall I yeald myself therfore wholy and freely to thee for I will be no more myne owne but thine III. But this in love and ●inceritie I must make bold to tell thee that the lesser my abilitie is or my vertue thyne must be the greater care for I account myself to be but thy instrument in what soever good worke thou art the directour thou art the workman I am as it were the Playne or chisill in thy All-skisfull hand Jf therfore I be blunt or crooked the more is thy payne the more is thy care I in so good a hand cannot but doe well only give me grace not to shrinke out of thy hand but to remayne as thou hast made me for the very remayning will better me the very benefit of thy vsing me in thy service will give me new servour and set a sharper edge on my decayed desires IV. To thee a greate deale more then to me it appertayneth that thy businesse be well done Watch therfore and be carefull and vse me as thou pleasest I know thou doest not vse me because thou needest me but only of thy infinite goodnes for thy glorie and my good as therfore thou art carefull of thy glorie and desirous of my good so carefull art thou and so desirous of my faithfull discharge The tenth Paragraphe I. VVHat more to say I know not not because there is not infinitely more to be sayed of thy infinite goodnes and of my wants but because I know not where well to beginne or when I should end if I should enter any further I feele besids that all finally must be resolved in this that thou must help me thou must instruct me thou must guide me thou must strenghthen me thou must be All in all and I suffer myself in thy hand to be dealt with as thou pleasest I see not what I need greately say more but yeald myself ioyfully to thy disposition and dayly purpose and indeavour by thy grace not to hinder thy worke and seeke to redresse what I may find doth disturbe it II. But alas whether shall I go to seeke Here againe I enter into an other wood and how shall I get out of so many busshes such thorny briars and deep-rooted brambies as I find in my soule well may I be pricked among them with sorrow and griefe well may my soule be rent with affliction but to pull them all away and give thee free passage how shall I doe it It is possible to thee to whom nothing is impossible but for me i● is wholy and absolutely impossible III Yet why doe I say it is absolutely impossible I remember a greate servant of thyne was wont to say that if we did but in a whole yeare roote out one only vice we should be quickly perfect O infinite goodnes hast thou so greate patience or is it possible to be so I● is doubtlesse for thou leavest not thy frends to be so fouly deceived as they should be if it were not so Therfore seeing it is so I dare be a little more bold and offer vnto thee my indeavour not every yeare alone but everie month o● two to doe the best I can to roote out some one thing that I may find to be a hinderance to thee In which I have this comfort that fighting against one ● I shall certainly together with that one pull vp manie more besids because when I pull at one principall one I shall shake the roots of all that be about it and dependant of it and plucking it out I shall pull the rest with it IV. And not so must Iayme at one but that of all I must have a speciall care O infinite care No I presume if I can sometimes in the day amidest all my trobles recall my mind to thee it will be sufficient thy grace will be ready when at other times busines will not le● me be so attentive to thee if when I can I be carefull to accustome myself to think of thee Yet more trust I in thy infinite goodnes that though sometimes I should be so carelesse as not to think vpon thee when there is occasion yet if I be carefull to enter into myself and acknowledge and iudge my offenses though it were but once in a day and bewayle them in thy sight in my secretretirement with purpose of amendment and humble confidēce in thy grace ● trust I say in thy infinite goodnes thou wilt perdon me for the present and give me plentie of thy grace to be more watchfull over myself an other day and more mindfull of thee my God ever after The eleventh Paragraphe I. BEhold o my love how bold I am with thee how farre I have stretched and strayned thy love thy infinite goodnes Beginning with sorrow that I was not wholy with thee and ending with care that I be not wholy from thee O Creature that I am what can I say other but that it is the propertie of all creatures in this changeable world to be thus subject to change Tho● knowest it better then I myself that feele it and smart dayly for it And therfore thou hast patience with me greater then I can many times find in my hart to have with myself and yet alas I have too too much patience or rather Indulgence when I see and say nothing and let myself go so farre that where to find myself I canno● oftimes tell but only that I am sure I am too too farre from thee II. O my God my love Behold I come againe and desire to draw as neere thee now as I was farre gone before I am bold to say so I am bold to doe so because of thy infinite and ever permanent love which cannot be overcome with ten thousand times ten thousand changes of myne in this kind thou lovest me though I leave thee that I may returne vnto thee Thou lovest me when I approch vnto thee that I may be ever more inward with thee love me now for ever that I may ever stay with thee for this is my only desire never more to part from thee III. To this purpose I give myself wholy vnto thee now and for ever This gift of myne I dayly intend to renew till that everlasting day comes when there will be no more renewing because transformed into thee we shall be allwayes new and ever permanently conjoyned in love with thee without decay which that it may quicly be I humbly beseech thee my God my love Amen The twelfe Paragraphe I. O happy day when shall I see thee O everlasting day when shall I injoy thee Too too long be these short and ever decaying dayes the evens of that one day which never fayleth when will they passe Too too many be these changing dayes the fore-running nights of that which never changeth when will they be at an end O end The breake of that
Communion Thomas a Kempis lib. 4. cap. 7. num 4. Intertaynment of our Saviour as a frend I. OVr Saviour is pl●ased to stile his Apostles his frends and the condition which he Puts gives vs ground to extend this favour to all that observe the condition You are my frends if you doe the things which I command you An easy condition if we consider with the Apostle that the fullnes of the law is love Love God love our Neighbour and we have fullfilled the law and become frends with God though indeed God is our frend before we love for so we have in S. Jhon God first loved vs. And it could not ●e otherwise for he first created vs and the wiseman assureth that he loveth all things which are and hateth not any thing which he hath made neither out of hatred did he make any thing But it is in our choyce whether we will be frends with God or no and all our miserie came and comes to this day through our choosing the negative by breach of his commandments Our Saviour as a frend exhorteth vs to the affirmative and here in the most blessed Sacrament and Sacrifice of the Altar represents vnto vs what God and he have done for vs to reclayme vs to his love our mercyfull and gratious Lord hath left a memoriall of his wonders food for those that feare him sayth the Royall Prophet O wonderfull incitement to love Our Saviour in person to be ever soli● citing vs as if it did concerne him as much as vs and to be dayly present with vs desiring nothing more then to be one with vs and therfore he did institute this blessed Sacrament vnder the formes of bread and wine to be taken inwardly by vs that as bread and wine so taken are turned into our substance and made one thing with vs so we by receiving him should become one with him transformed into his love and imitation which is the sense of that which the Apostle sayth of himself I live 〈◊〉 not I but Christ lives in 〈◊〉 II. And indeed a frend should be as it is sayed alter ●go not properly another but as it were the same againe through conformitie in thier humours and wills and proceedings How farre our Saviour doth indeavour this he makes sufficient demonstration when he sayth to his Apostles I call you frends because all whatever I have heard from my Father I have made known● vnto you and againe aske and it shall be given you seeke and you shall find knock and it shall be opened to you For as in all frendship so in this much more it is supposed that we will not aske things either vnlawfull or hurtfull to ourselves And wheras frends because they cannot be the same in person desire to be allwayes at least in place and companie together our Saviour you see doth not fayle in this being content with any kind of accomodation in the poorest parish Church or Chappel rather then to be from vs and so i● our soules so they be in grace III. Moyses by often trea●ing with God grew to that confidence that once he sayed to God If I have found favour in thy sight shew me thy face that I may know thee and God answered I will shew thee all good When the promise came to be performed i● could not be otherwise then by a little hole in the rock and God passing in a cloude and covering that little hole so as to conceale most part of his glorie for as the Apostle witnesseth God dwels in a light inaccessible no man ever saw him nor can see him In the person of o●r Saviour while he lived vpon earth God was seen vnder the vayle of his humanitie here he is seen vnder the resemblances of breade and wine that his intention is to sh●w vs finally his glorie this blessed Sacrament he hath left vs for a pledge therefore the beloved disciple recordeth before the washing of the feete and before the institution of the blessed Sacrament that wheras he had loved his who wer● in the world he loved them to the end It is our duty to be carefull that he be not frustrated of this end and we fayle of that eternall frendship which he desires we should have with him The Counsel of the Wiseman is Say not to thy frend go and come againe to morrow I will give it thee when thou mayest presently give we know not how soone our end is when it will be too late to give our love to him which we may doe presently and the more having so loving an imitation and so sure a pledge of his love Intertaynment of our Saviour as our Brother I. OVr Saviour after his resurrection appearing to the women bad then go and tell his brethren of it honouring his Apostles and disciples with this title in regard that by his goodnes thy had one heavenly Father his by nature ●hiers by adoption one eternall inheritance as the Apostle witnesseth tearming vs Heyres to God and coheyres to Christ. VVhich Brotherhood being derived vnto vs by the grace of God and by Charirie or the love of God poured into our harts by the holy Ghost which is given vs we are the more beholding to our Saviour because by this holy Sacrament received he doth confirme vs in this grace of adoption and increaseth it and strengtheneth it more and more making the etetnall inheritance belonging to it more sure vnto vs so farre is he from envying vs his Fathers love as Iosephs brothers did or not rejoycing at our returne into grace after our going astray as the elder brother to the prodigall child or contending about the inheritance as two brothers in the Gospell II. The wiseman telleth vs that a brother that is assisted by his brother is like a strong citty and thier counsels like the barres of citty gates VVhy therfore should we distrust the overcoming or keeping ou● our Ghostly enimies from the castle of our hart seeing our Saviour doth so lovingly offer vs his assistance not only incouraging vs by his words and exhortation but himself puts himself into our hart to defend it with vs so that we ●ay with Esay the Prophet confidently say He that doth iustifie me is by me who shall gayne-say me let vs stand together who is my adversarie let him come And indeed if we do not faintly or treacherously flinch from him we shall be impregnable III. By which we may vnderstand how much they wrong themselves and others who di●wade from often ●ecoiving this bl●ssed food vnder pretence perhaps of more devotion but indeed not well vnderstanding how to order thier devotions for as it is the counsel of phys●tia●s and experience teacheth that they who have weake stomacks should eate often and of things that are of good nutriment so it fares also with our soules which of themselves are weake and as to the fimilitude in
the Messias who would instruct her in all those high matters whervpon our Saviour differred her no longer but told her he was the Messias expected which she instantly proclaymed with grea●e ioy through the whole citty from whence she came and he was received in it with much satisfaction O powerfull word I am he who speakes with thee It is the Saviour of the world who doth thus familiarly impart himself vnto vs. Too greate a person to be put in balance with whatever thing created and his blessed presence too greate a favour that any thing should be admitted to stand in competencie with it Come and s●● the man who is able to satisfy you in all your doubts and from whome you shall receive all goodnes take these things into your consideration that you may inioy the living waters which he promiseth and in which you will find eternall comfor● V. His disciples returning from the to●ne with provision wondered to find him talking with the woman but 〈◊〉 more when inviting him to take his refection vpo● what they brought he answered that he had other meat● to feed on which they knew not and to take away thier ●ondering he declared himself that his food was to do● the will of his father and wheras it was then neere harvest time his harvest was the good of soules in all things indeavouring to rayse our thoughts from these temporall things to that which doth infinitely more import vs to wit our spirituall food and the harvest of which we ar● to make ou● eternall living for which end he would remaine with vs continually vnder the shapes of bread and wine that as we cannot forget nor forgo for any thing our corporall food so we should be as mind full at leas of our spirituall food and sustenance and not neglect it or differ●e it long for any temporall occasion whatsoever O Lord my God prevent m● with the sweetnes of thy blessings that I may devoutly and worthily approch to thy Sacrament stirre vp my hart towards thee and ●ake away the heavy dullnes ●hich possesse●h me Tho● 〈◊〉 Kemp. lib. 4. c. 4. Intertaynment of our Saviour with the penitent Magdalen I. S. Mari● Magdalen is set before vs as a patterne of the best love after harty repentance for our synns her teares bearing testimonie of her sor●ow her incessant kissing of our Saviours feete witne●●ing her love and her annointing them her desire of making satisfaction to her power which three though at all times it behoveth vs to practice yet chiefly in order to the holy table of our Lord before and after receiving him wich might be the cause among others why he ordered her conve●sion to happen while he was sitting at board with the Pharisee whose invitation he accepted the rather because as in the Samaritan he had other food to feede on then was outwardly set before him and accordingly he wished him to take notice of what this woman was then doing to receive instruction how it had bee●●itting for him to have behaved himself towards our Saviour in his receptiopn by discoverie of his errours com●itted in it II. The pa●able which our Saviour vsed to the Pha●isee of two debters wherof one owed a greate summe of money the other a lesse and were both forgiven may serve vs for the first document and ●each vs that we are all debters to our Saviour more or lesse and that he that ●hall think himself lesse debter then another shall runne greate hazared to be grossely mistaken as we find this Pharisee was and that other who comparing himself with the Publican however in his owne eyes he thought he deserved better was found in the eyes of God to be farre behind Let every one therfore retire himself into the closet of his hart and looke over his obligations new and old he will not find them all cancelled if those for which he was eternally to lye in chaynes have been delivered vs vpon repentance and promise of amendment as to the servant that fell at his Masters feete and craved his patience let vs looke whether the obligation which we have to our Neighbour to deale by him as God hath dealt by vs be discha●ged And if we fi●d no greate summes of this nature owing yet besides infinit● little debts which we dayly incurre we have the greate debt of his patient forbearance still lying vpon vs and of his more then patient love out of which he hath not been overcome with our often offenses but still favored vs with his graces in regard of all which we must prostrate ourselves with the Magdalen at our Saviours feete with teares acknowledging our Arriers More in number● then the hayres of our head and poure them out largely as water confessing that all we can doe is not sufficient to discharge even this new obligation of his gracious admitting vs poore synners to his table What doth this pious condescendencie meane and this frendly invitation How shall I dare to approch who have nothing good wheron to presume Th. a Kempis lib. 4. c. 1. n. 3. III. But ●o draw so neere as we can to our discharge we must chiefly in this occasion practise acts of love which is two fold towa●ds God fignifyed by her incessant kisses and towards our Neighbour signifyed by the oyntment bestowed vpon our Saviours feete These two are the fullfilling of the law and in these two consisteth our Plenarie Indulgence and remiss●●● for having received ●bsolution of all greate offenses which we could remember in the Sacrament of confession in this are forgiven more fully those which we could not remember and what other veniall synns we may have committed since confession being sory for them with purpose ●o amend and by acts of love and true contrition which are proper to this Sacrament of love much of the payne due to synne is ●eleased and the more the more we love as our Saviour sayed in conclusion of this blessed saint Many syns are forgiven her because she loved much he that finds lesse forgiven him it is signe he loved lesse And of that love which we owe our Neighbour the holy Ghost telleth vs that almes giving or works of mercy deliver from all synne and from death and will not suffer a soule to goe into darken●sse Lord what is my confidence in this life or what greater comfort among all things vnder heaven is it not thou my Lord God IV. The Magdalen vnderstood her vnworthynes yet did not forbeare to approch to our Saviour but knowing the greatenes of her disease she came with humilitie to the Physitian whom she found able and willing to cure her she placed herself behind 〈◊〉 his feete shame commanding her to be bashfull love drawing her on to a reverent confidence she began with teares but never ceased to kisse his feete for whoever hath least cause to weepe hath most cause to love his synns being either forgiven him or prevented She considered what
objects O object eternally to be looked on and vpō which the Angels ād saints doe eternally looke and cānot be satiated with the beauty and riches of it III. S. Jhon sayed once to the people There hath one stood in the midst of yee whome yee know not Let not this be now veryfied in thee after so many evidences Imitate the fayth of the Apostles and say with S. Peeter Thou art Christ the sonne of the living God Say with Nathanael Thou art the Sonne of God thou art the king of Israel Looking vp into heaven with S. Stephen acknowledge that this is the same Jesus who standeth at the right hand of God Harken to S. Ihon Chrisostome who tells vs that millions of Angels doe assist at the holy sacrifice and holy communion with head and knee bowed before him say with S. Agnes To him I keepe my fayth to him with intire devotion I commit myself Say with S. Agatha Carnall medicine I never applyed to my body but I have my Lord Jesus who by his word alone doth repayre all things Sing with S. Cecely Let my hart become without spot that I may not be confounded in the sight of my heavenly spouse Offer vp vnto him with these and other Virgins Puritie of ha●t with the holy Confessours mortification of thy senses with the holy Bishops ād Doctours entire obediēce to that which they have generally delivered concerning this blessed mysterie with the glorious Martyrs constanci● and resolution in whatever opposition VVith all the Saints joy and exultation at the glorie and goodnes which shineth in it and falling downe with them vpon thy face before him say Amen Benediction and glorie and wisdome and thanksgiving honour and power and strength to our God for ever and ever Amen THE TABLE PReface to the Reader 3 Introduction to the following Medit. I. Part. 5 Introduction II. Part. 6 The Incarnation of our Blessed Saviour I. Part. 8 The Incarnation II. Part. 9 The Incarnation III. Part. 10 The Incarnation IV. Part. 11 The Visiting S. Elizabeth I. Part. 12 The Visitation II. Part. 14 The Nativitie of S. Ihon Baptist. I. Part. 15 The Nativitie of S. Ihon. II. Part. 16 The office of S. Ihon as Precursor 17 S. Joseph certifyed by the Angel 1● A preparative for the receiving of our Saviour I. Part. 20 Of the preparative II. Part. 21 III. Part. 22 IV. Part. 22 The journie of Jesus Marie and Joseph to Bethleem 23 The Birth of our Saviour 25 The Angels joyfull tidings to the sheepherds 26 The shepeherds make hast to our Saviour 27 The Circumcision of our Lord. 28 Of the name of Jesus 29 The start which appeared in the east 30 Herode trobled 31 The Sages find our Saviour 32 The purification of the Blessed Virge● 33 The law of Purification 34 Old Simeon meets our Saviour 35 He take the Child in his armes 36 Simeon his Prophecie 37 Anna the Prophe●●sse 38 The flight into ●gypt 39 The killing of the Innocents 40 The returne out of Egypt 41 Christ in the Temple at twelve yeares of age 42 His Answer to his mother 44 His life till thirty 45 Introduction to the meditations of the Passion 46 The Councel of the Jewes against our Saviour 47 The Pascal Lambe 49 The Washing of his disciples feete 50 The parting of Judas from the test● 52 The Institution of the Blessed Sacrament 53 His Prayer in the Carden 55 Our Saviour betrayed 56 What passed in the night I. Par● 58 II. Part. 60 Our Saviour accused before Pilate 61 He is sent to Herode 63 Barrabas preferred 65 The whipping of our Saviour 67 The Crowne of thornes 68 Ecce Homo 70 The Carrying of the Crosse. 72 The Crucifying 74 The words of our Saviour I. Part. 75 II. Part. 76 III. Part. 77 IV. Part. 79 V. Part. 80 VI. Part. 81 What happened after his death 82 The taking from the Crosse and buryall 84 An exercise in honour of the woundes of our Saviour 85 Of the Passion by way of repetition I. Part. 87 II. Part. 89 III. Part. 90 IV. Part. 92 V. Part. 93 The soiitude of our Blessed Lady 95 Introdnction to the Mysteries of the Resurrection 97 Our Saviours going downe to limbo 98 His Resurrection and appearing to his Mother 100 II. Part. 102 III. Part. 103 The Angel speakes to the women 104 Peeter and Ihon runne to the sepulchre 106 He appeares to the Magdalen I. Part. 107 II. Part. 109 He appeares to the women 110 To the disciples travelling I. Part. 11● II. Part. 113 He appeares to the disciples together 114 And to them with S. Thomas 116 The causes why our Saviour kept the marks of his wounds 118 Our Saviour at the fishing I. Part. 119 II. Part. 120 Our Saviours discourse with S. Peeter 122 He foretelleth him of his death 123 He appeareth to them at table 125 He appeareth in Galilee 126 Christs Ascension I. Part. 128 II. Part. 130 Considerations moving to the love of God and of our Neighbour 132 An act of humble acknowledgment of our owne weaknes 133 The length of the love of God 135 The first means to perpetuate our love 137 The happines of younger yeares 139 The second means 141 Of the desire of being dissolved 143 The Eternitie of love in the love of our Neighbour 144 The latitude of the love of God 146 It s vniversall because to every one in particular 147 How we may imitate it I. Part. 149 II. Part. 151 The height of the love of God 153 How we are to imitate it I. Part. 154 II. Part. 156 The depth of the love of God I. Part. 158 II. Part. 160 The coming of the holy Ghost I. Part. 161 II. Part. 162 Fruits of the holy Ghost in the first Christians 164 The Mysterie of the Blessed Trinitie 166 The obligation we have to love God I. Part. 167 II. Part. 169 III. Part. 171 IV. Part. 172 Aspirations tending to the increase of the love of God in twelve Paragraphes 173 Intertaynments of our Blessed Saviour when we receive th● most blessed sacrament First as God 188 As king 190 As spouse 192 As the good sheepherd 194 As Master or Teacher 196 As our Physitian 197 As our Redeemer 199 As our Judge 201 As Mediatour and Advocate 203 As our frend 205 As our Brother 207 As the sacrifice of the law of grace 208 As a spirituall banker 211 Intertaynment of our Saviour with the blessed Virgen and S. Ioseph 213 VVith S. Jhon Baptist. 215 VVith th Samaritan woman 218 VVith the penitent Magdalen 221 VVith the Canane●n 224 VVith Martha Marie and Lazarus 225 VVith Zaccheus 22● VVith the people of Hierusalem 229 VVith the first Christians 231 VVith the Apostles 233 VVith the Angels and Saints 225 FINIS Errours of the Second Part. Such as is hoped will not troble the vnderstanding reader are omitted● Pag. Lin. Err. Corr. 9 1 mind winde 9 9 vs more more 11 10 to tho● 15
mounts vp to the top of the heavenly court He doth not ascend who is solicitous about his worldly wealth or honour All great and high spirits ascend And doe not think that he prayeth as infirme and weake The owner of Power becomes Master of obedience He is out Advocate he prayeth not as infirme but as compassionate what oughtest thou to doe in order to thy owne saluation seeing Christ prayeth all night for thee what oughtest thou to doe when thou beginnest any good worke having our Saviours example before thee II. He changeth thier names to give vs to vnderstand that we must change our conversation vpon whatever favour received from our Saviour and indeavour to have the soliditie of a rock in the service of God and to be able with out resolution in that which is good to terrifie his opponents Iudas also among the rest was choosen to be an Apostle to shew vs that it is not our nature which is cause of our perdition but our wretched will and that God receives a man while he is good and till himself fall of and become evill Also that we might learne the force of Truth and of the Sacraments which are the same though ministred by the wicked And that if thou chance to be forsaken or betrayed by thy frend thou mayest learne to beare it patiently III. And he made them to be with him and that he might send them to preach and he gave them povver to cure infirmities and to cast out divells First we must be vnited with Christ acknowledging that all that we can doe proceeds from him and depends of him and must be done for his glorie and with confidence in his goodnes then we must indeavour to have a longing desire to be with him as much as we can and to find sweetnes in conversing with him in prayer as with the fountaine of all goodnes our Redeemer our frend our benefactour our spouse that in all our afflictions and in all occasions we find ourselves with him as it were at home and even in our outward actions never to be from him but be doing them for his love and with reflection and desire to please him in them holding ourselves as instruments in his hand and working by the force and strength and aptitude which he gives vs. Nothing ought so much to reioyce him that loveth thee ô Lord and acknowledgeth thy b●nefits as thy will in him and the good pleasure of thy eternall disposition The eight Beatitudes I. ANd seeing the multitude he vvent vp vnto a mountaine and vvhen he vvas set his disciples came to him and opening his mouth he taught them saying Blessed are the poore in spirit for thiers i● the kingdome of heaven Blessed are the meeke for they shall possesse the land Blessed are they that mourne for they shall be comforted His going vp to the mountayne betokeneth the height of the doctrine which he then did intend to deliver farre beyond the expectation of all people of this world and contrarie to thier wonted dictamens and desires therfore also he is sayed to have ●pened his mouth as the tresurie of divine wisdome hidden hitherto from the world for the world placeth happines in riches and in filling thier desires with wealth and plentie he placeth happines in povertie nor in that which comes vpon vs by necessitie but in voluntarily quitting ourselves of the mcumbrances of this world and putting of the very desire of wealth this making the way to the kingdome of heaven playne and ready without those rubb● which the desire of wealth doth rayse In like manner wheras in the world there is perpetuall contention about lands and possessions and nothing can be had or kept without strife and debate the land of the living so greate as it is is wholy and quietly possessed by meekenes and by yealding of our seeming right according to the world Besides that nothing is more powerfull towards the world sayth S. ●ho● Chrisostome then meekenes for as water putteth our fire so doth a meeke answer quench the flame of Anger Finally not those who live in jolytie shall find comfort of it at last but those who bewayle the offenses committed against God and passe soberly through the miseries of the world and through the losses of frends and goods for all will make at last for thier eternall comfort being borne with pa●ience and with thoughts fixed vpon our heavenly habi●tion II. Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after justice for they shall have thier fill Blessed are the mercyfull for they shall obtaine mercy Blessed are the clean of hart for they shall see God Hunger and thirst are things which we seeke to avoyde in this life and we are never long satisfied But the hunger and thirst after justice is to be procured for of itself it is a full satisfaction to our soules and though we should want wherwith to satisfie our bodies we are satisfied in mind because even that want cooperates in our justice Neither is it enough to desire to be just unlesse we hunger and thirst after it acknowledging ourselves never to be just enough but being allwayes desirous of more How much vnmercyfull dealing is there in the world in all states and occupations Nothing but opression nothing but squeezing nothing but exacting satisfaction to the vtmost and more then the vtmost This is not the way to have mercy where we most need but to be mercyfull compassionate easy in our dealings towards another as we would others should be towards us in our necessities And because pure●es of h●rt is so little looked after in the world as being out of sight he puts vs in mind of the Allseeing eye from which nothing is hidden promising that if we have care that he see no vncleanes harboured in our thoughts he will discover himself vnto us who is puritie itself neithe● is it possible to arrive to the sight of God without puritie of ha●t III. Blessed are the peace-makers because they shall be called the children of God Blessed are they that suffer persecution for justice for thiers is the kingdome of heave●● They who sow discord let them reflect whose children they must needs be for if they who make peace he ●earmed children of God doubtlesse they who disturbe it are children of Satan But with in this peace are not comprehended certaine fond familiarities and frendships grounded vpon sympathie of nature but such peace as is made according to the will and pleasure of God and for his honour Finally he concludes with suffering persecution to the end to cut of all at once the desires of the contentments of this world seeing our happines is not to be wrought by them but by suffering on all 〈◊〉 in our goods and in our good name in our bodyes and in our estates keeping our mind free to God in thanksgiving for the reward which is layed vp for vs in heaven for patiently and
beware of those synnes which we have lately confessed begging assistance to avoyde them Thirdly we must indeavou● to increase in the knowledge and love and respect to our Saviour For the man before ●e presented himself this second time knew him not knowing him he proclaymed that it was Iesus who had done that greate miracle vpon him O sweete and mercyfull Iesus how much reverence and thanksgiving with continuall prayse is due vnto thee for the receiving of thy blessed body the dignitie wherof no man is able to explicate The narrow way commanded I. ENter by the narrow gate for broade is the way and large is the gate which leadeth to perdit●o● and many enter by it But narow is the gate and straight is the way which leadeth to life and few there be that find it Blinded by their owne worldly and carna●● desires which they choose rather to follow and because they are pleasing to sence the way they walke in seemes large and pleasant but in fine it leads them to eternall perdition and they are hardly recoverable in this world when they are once entred because it is harder to leave the wayes of the world when one hath once pleased himself in them then if he never rasted them yet we must not think that the gate ād way to life of is so narrow as to be allwayes irksome but as S. Gregorie advertizeth The way of God to beginners is narrow to those who are perfect it is broade for the narrowest gate is widened by love and when a man considers that for temporall commod●ties forsaken he is to receive eternall ioy he begins to love that which otherwise would afflict him II. Not every one that sayth vnto me Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdome of heaven but he that doth the will of my Father which is in heaven he shall enter into the kingdome of heaven For what kind of confession is it so to beleeve in God as not to care what he commandeth or how can we say Lord from our hart if we contemne his precepts whome we acknowledge to be our Lord and Master Our hands therfore must go with our mouth and our works according to our bel●●fe for otherwise there will be many that will say in the latter day Lord have we not prophecyed in thy name and in thy name cast out divells and wrought many wonderous things and then I will confesse unto them that I never knew them depart from me you that worke iniquitie III. Every one therfore that heareth these my words and doth them shall be likened to a wise man that built his house vpon a rock And the raine fell and the fluds came and the winds blew and they beate against that house and it fell not for it was built vpon a rock And every one that heareth these my words and doth them not shall be like a foolish man that built his house vpon the sand and the rayne fell and the flouds came and the wind blew and they beate against that house and it fell and the fall therof was great The Rock on which we must build is our Saviour whose only merits doe vphold vs for of outselves we can doe nothing nor pretend any thing in the sight of God towards eternall life His doctrine is the ground of our faith His life is the sampler according to which we must frame ours to the end to be accepted at the later day and to be able in the meane time to withstand al our Ghostly enimies S. Ihon Chrysostome tells vs more over that a strong resolution to go forward in Gods service is the rock on which vnder our Saviour we must build our spirituall building For the other building sayth he was easyly over●●rowne not by the violence of the Temptatations for so the first also might have fallen but by reason of the weakenes of the foundation that is of our resolution Temptation is not the cause of our fall but the vnconstantie of our mind and our want of courage by which oftimes even without any temptation we come to be overthrowne for sand of itself doth yeald but a diamond resisteth the force of the hammer Our Saviour cureth the servant of the C●nturion I. ANd he entred Capharnaum and the servant of a certaine Centurion being sicke was ready to dye who was deare vnto him and when he had heard of Iesus he sent vnto him the Ancients of the Iewes desiriug him to come and heale his servant They being come to Iesus besought him earnestly saying he is worthy that thou shouldst doe this for him for he loveth our nation and hath buyl● a synagog for vs and Iesus went with them The Centurion went not to our Saviour in pe●son with the strength of faith he went vnto him an Alien by birth by faith pertayning to his household And wheras others had recourse vnto him for divers infirmities this man alone intercedeth for his servant saying within himself this is my servant and I am servant to my Creatour if I doe not take pitty of my servant how shall I expect that my my Creatour will have mercy on me II. And when he was not farre from the house the Centurion sent his frends to him saying Lord troble not thyself for I am not worthy that thou shouldst enter vnder my roofe for the which cause nei●her did I think myself worthy to come vnto thee but only say the word and my servant shall be cured For I also am a man subiect to authoritie having solders vnder me And I say to this go and he goeth and to another come and he cometh and to my servant doe this and he doth it Beleeving and professing that as he being in command though a subiect had his servants and soldiers obedient vnto him much more our Saviour being Lord of the whole world could cōmand any creature and it would obey without resistance Be ashamed at thy stownes in doing his commands whome sunne and moone and starres earth and heaven doe obey upon his word He beleeved also that it was not necessarie that our Saviour should so much as see the sick person but that whatever disease he had it would leave him upon his command wherfore though he received him not under his roofe he had him in his har● so much the fuller the more humbly he did demeane himself III. And Iesus hearing this message marvelled and turning to the multitude sayed Amen I say to you neither in Israel have I found so greate faith And I say to you many shall come from the East and west and shall sit downe with Abraham and Isaac and Iacob in the Kingdome of heaven but the Children of the Kingdome shall be cast out into the exteriour darknes there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth and he sayed to the Cēturion God as thou hast bel●ved be it done unto thee and the servant was healed at the same houre● The Iewes certanly
Our glorie must be in our hope of heaven and that by Gods goodnes we are in a way towards it all other thing●●vayle vs little but as these are accōpanied with humilitie and other vertues Whosoever rejoyceth in that which another hath not by his very abundāce he becometh the worse because his joy is no● of the common good but of his private interest III. In that very houre he rejoyced in spirit and sayed I confesse to thee Father Lord of heaven and earth because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them to little ones and turning to his disciples he sayed Blessed are the eyes that see the things that you see for I say vnto you many prophets and Kings desired to see those things which you see and saw them not and to heare the things that you heare and heard them not Our Saviour rejoyced not at the synne of those by whose falt and presuming to be wise these things were hidden from them but at the goodnes of his heavenly Father who did not disdayne to reveale th●̄ to those who in the world were cōtēptible And what are these things But that by humilitie and by suffering we must go to glorie and that in this is the happines of this life not in the wealth and honour and pleasurs which men so much hunt after and think themselves only then happy when they injoy them at will and miserable whenever they are bereaved of any of them Blessed are the eyes which see these things in our Saviours life and doctrine now as well as when the Apostles saw him vpon earth Many Prophets and Kings before our Saviours coming desired to see and heare them we have the same blessing according to his owne saying to S. Thomas Blessed are they that have not seen and doe beleeve The ninth Application to the most Blessed Sacrament I. HEre we are to admire the goodnes of God and of our Blessed Saviour towards vs who notwithstanding that we are so imperfect and all the good we do if we do any so much mingled with things distastfull to him that we deserve to be kept aloofe of as the lepers and oftimes perhaps to be shutout of the citty of heaven for greater offenses yet vpon our crying to him for mercy and shewing ourselves to the Priests in the Sacrament of confession he admitteth vs so familiarly to his holy table O with what gratitude should we magnifie him for so great mercy and love with what humilitie should we cast ourselves vpon our faces before his feet● giving thanks and purposing to be perpetually mindfull of so greate a benefit But where are our thoughs oftimes evē when we should most attend Our repeditie and negligence is much to be lamented and pittyed that we are not drawne with more devotion to receive our Saviour Christ. In whome is all the hope of them that be to be saved and all their merit If one in ten of out thoughts be imployed this way we think it a greate matter wheras our whole attēdance were indeed nothing in cōparison of that which this greate goodnes of our Saviour deserveth II. Our Saviour to cure the blind man and to give him his sight layed clay vpon his eyes which seemed quite contrarie to the cure we also if we will see the truth of this mysterie must close vp our eyes to humane reason according to that which our Saviour answered the Iewes vpon this occasion for they asking him Are we also blind He sayed to them if you were blind you should not have synne but now you say we see your synne remayneth S. Lewis of Frāce when his courtiers brought him newes that there was a little child to be seen in the Priests hands as he was lifting vp the sacred host would not stirre to see it but answered that he beleeved the reall presēce of our Blessed Saviour vpon better ground then that sight could affoard him He was truly illuminated with the light of faith shutting his eyes to curiositie and opening them to the words of our Saviour who is true light and cannot deceive I am the light of the world He that followeth me wal●eth not in darkenes however darke the mysteries of faith seeme to be III. And if we reflect vpon the other title which he giues himself of good Pastour In what could he shew his goodnes more then that having once offered that greate oblation of himself vpon the Crosse and given his life for vs he resteth not content with that but dayly would have it offered for vs yea hourely through the whole world for our greater comfort and satisfaction providing that his sheepe may never want so fertill a pasture but vpō all occasiōs may haue such celestiall food at hād See how they who record the passiō ād sufferings of our Saviour in time of the holy sacrifice drinking of the spirituall fountains springing from that ●orrent of love doe delight themselves with sweete teares above all delicacies And how much sweetenes they do suck into their soules inquiring and cons●dering where their God is Certainly this one word and this one consideration that God is so neere them not only as to the whole world but in this particular familiar and constant way is able to melt the hart of any loving soule and abundantly to fill it with all delight ●●This good Pastour giverth his life for his sheepe in that he delivereth his Body and Blood in this Sacrament and with the substance of his owne flesh doth feed the sheepe which he redeemed The parable of the man wounded in his way to Iericho I. ANd behold a certaine lawyer stood vp tempting him and saying Master by doing of what thing shall I possesse life everlasting He sayed to him in the law what is written How readest thou He answering sayed Thou shalt love thy Lord thy God with thy whole hart and with thy whole soule and with all strength and with all thy mind And they neigbour as thyself And he sayed to him thou hast answered right doe this and thou shall live How many doe say would to God I knew the direct way how to be saved or how to overcome my passions And having it before their eyes they heed it no● the weake resolution or difficultie which they have about forsaking either their will or their companie or their wonted steps blinding them life everlasting when they think of it is a greate attractive and deservedly but whether they perswade themselves thoroughly that it deserves so much paines as they conceive is to be taken that is the question and yet as this man confesseth the way is love which makes all things in the world easy for vnlesse worldly people did love their employments they would find no lesse difficultie in serving the world then they apprehend in serving God Love God and they neigbour and nothing will be hard II. But ●e desirous to i●stifie himself
arise so it be an hundred fold so it be worth an hundred so it please comfort delight and be to be beloved an hundred times more then other things what madnes is it that men are so slow in leaving a single thing for an hundred fold where is the covetous what is become of the ambitious VVhere are those who trafficke in this world Doth not he in vayne doe evill who might more advantagiously and more plesantly serve God then serve the world Workemen hired into the Vineyard I. THe Kingdome of heaven is like a house holder who 〈◊〉 forth early in the morning to hire workemen into his v●●neyard and having covenanted with the workemen for penny a day be sent them into his vineyard And going forth about the third houre he saw others standing in the market pla●● idle and he sayed to them go you also into the vineyard and 〈◊〉 what shall be iust I will give you And againe he wēt forth about the sixt ād the ninth houre and did likewise And about the eleventh houre he wēt forth and found others stāding and he sayth to them what stand you here all the day idle They say to him because no body hath hired vs He sayth to them go you also into the vineyard The vineyard is the Church and every on s soule the market place is the world the workemen the Apostles ād Apostolicall mē ād every one is workemā to his owne vineyard wages is promised to the first the second and third to the last nothing is promised but yet if then they do their worke God will not be behind hand with them For any man to say he is not hired is an excuse of the idle God is the greate householder who frō the beginning of the world to the ēd therof doth not cease to hire vs to doe his worke which is ours also for ours is the benefit if we performe it though however his is the glorie of it VVe have reason to acknowledge his goodnes who in all ages doth admonish vs of our dutie and is not fayling to send helps to instruct vs and to set the worke forward and seeketh our good to the last period of our dayes II. When the evening was come the Lord of the vineyard sayd to his Baylie call the workemen and pay them their hire beginning from the last to the first Therfore when they were come who came about the eleventh houre they received every one a penny But when the first also came they thought that they should receive more and they also received every one a penny and receiving it they murmured against the goodman of the house saying The last have continued one houre and thou hast made them equall to vs who have borne the burden of the day and the heates This largesse seemed to these men iniust but what answer did they receive VVhat instruction was given them The iustice of this distribution was not revealed to them neither were they admitted to view the hidden secret but to the end that they should refrayne from scanning Gods iudgements the goodnes of the mercy-full householder and the power of him that ordayneth all things according to his will was layed before them as if that of the Apostle had been sayed vnto them Who art thou that thou doest answer God III. He answering sayed to one of them frend I doe thee no wrong didst not thou covenant with me for a penny Take that is thyne and go I will also give to this last even as to thee Or is it not lawfull for me to doe what I will Or is thy eye naught because I am good So shall the last be first ād the first last for many be called but few elect The penny promised to all is life everlasting which is cōmon to all that shall be saved yet in the same life there be degrees of glorie as betwixt starre and starre in the firmament If therfore we be admitted to life everlasting vve can have no wrong it being above any thing we can deserve and they who came later may have equaled the longer time of the former by their fervour and surpassed it we are not good iudges in our owne case it must be left to him who cannot be vniust Our eye cannot arrive to comprehend neither what in goodnes nor what in justice God may doe If we will keepe him our frend let vs not be over curious but apply ourselves to our vvorke and for the rest stand to his mercy which is infinite Many are called Take heed thou differre not to come because thou art assured to receive thy penny when ever thou comest say not to thyself He vvill give every one as much wherfore should I take more paynes VVhat he will give and what he will doe is locked vp in his owne breast Come whē thou are called Equall hire is promised all but about the houre of working their is greate question Yong men may say we will come at the elevēth houre but no body hath promised thee that thou shalt live till the seventh see that thou doest not by differring bereave thyself of that which he otherwise vpon his promise would give thee Few indeed are choosen but those are of the elect who not despising their caller follow him ād beleeve him for men beleeve not but of their owne free choyce The raysing of Lazarus I. PART 1. THere was a certaine sickman Lazarus of Bethania of the towne of Marie and Martha her sister His sisters therfore sent saying Lord behold He whome thou lovest is sick and Iesus hearing sayed to them This sicknes is not to death but for the glorie of God that the Sonne of God may be glorisied by it And Iesus loved Martha ād Marie ad Lazarus As he heard therfore that he was sick he taried in the same place 2. dayes The faithfull are diversly tried some by losse of frends others by losse of goods and severall other vexations would to God I could see my flesh infirme and weakened that I lived not in flesh but in the faith of Christ for greater oftimes is grace in infirmitie then in health Sicknes and death are no signes of lesse love but as the sicknes was not to death because death itself was not to death but for the glorie of God so our infirmities are more for the glorie of God then our weake nature will give vs leave to imagin and when God delayeth the restoring vs to health we are so much the more to conforme ourselves by how much we acknowledge that his wisedome is greater and his love by taxying nothing the lesse I whom I love doe rebuke and castise sayth our Saviour in the Apocalips II. Then he sayth to his disciples let vs go into Iewrie againe the disciples say to him Now the Iewes sought to stone thee and goest thon thither againe Iesus answered are not their twelve houres of the day If a man walke in
the day he stumbleth not because he seeth the light of the world but if he walke in the night he stumbleth because the light is not in him See the love of our Saviour for our good he doth not stick to venture his life and in structeth his followers to confide in God who is the true light of the world and walking vnder his protection even that which others may think amisse cannot be to vs amisse for to them that love God all things cooperate to good God governes the houres of the day and every thing that happēs in them vpon this his providence having allwayes our eye we shall not stumble They who consider not this as they ought doe ever walke in darknes and are diversly perplexed according to the diversitie of accidents which must needs befall thē in this world which is all in chāges III. After this he sayth to them Lazarus our frend sleepeth but I go that I may rayse him frō sleepe His disciples sayed Lord if he sleepe he shall be safe but Iesus spake of his death thē therfore he sayed playnely to them Lazarus is dead And I am glad for your sake that you may beleeve because I was not there but let vs go to him Thomas sayed to his cōdi●iples let vs go also ād die with him first father Adam brought death vpon vs Christ our Saviour coming into this world tooke away even the name of death A blessed sleepe which brings vs rest and quiet of which the psalmist sayth Pretious in the sight of our Lord is the death of his saints Consider the difference betwixt the iust and vniust To the vniust death is eternall because though they rise againe it is not to life but to a new and vvorse death the death of the iust is properly a sleepe because they rise refreshed and to a better life then before they slept thus we shall sleepe if vve be his frends Lazarus our frend sleepeth here by contemplation and love there by cleare vision and imbracings here vve must not think that our sleepe is to be continuall it is his vvill that vve be raysed from it at convenient times for his glorie in other respects he comes to rayse vs vvhen the course of our vocation calls vs to other duties the vvhich we must obey readily and lovingly knowing that it is the voyce of our beloved that calleth vs. if thus we sleepe we are safe And if vve be vvholy dead to the world we have the more reason to be glad because we shall find that to be true which vve beleeved and that Christ will not forsake vs being imitatours of his death Blessed is he that can with harty and effectuall desire say let vs go and die with him The raysing of Lazarus II. PART I. IEsus therfore same and found him now having been foure dayes in the grave And many of the Iewes were come to Martha and Marie to confort them concerning their brother Martha therfore when she heard that Iesus was come went to meet him but Marie sat at home It is a mysticall senee of holy Fathers that Iesus when he came into this world found mankind four thousand yeares b●ryed in the stinking grave of synne and there lying without sense of feeling of that which might concerne the soule and vvithout motion towards it Blesse our Saviour that at last for the glorie of God ād to the end vve should more palpably see the necessitie and vertue of grace he came himself to rayse vs. S. Augustin more over sayth that the first day of our buriall in synne is vvhen vve first consent the second when by not repenting quickly we come to have an itching desire to commit it againe and againe and take pleasure in it the third day when we grow into custome the forth day when custome brings vpon vs a kind of necessitie of doing ill and it seemes vnto vs that vve cannot avoyde it VVe must watch chiefly towards the beginning of temptations for then out enemie is more easyly overcome VVe may find many that vvill go about to comfort vs not taking the right way but vve must harken out Iesus and make hast with Martha to meete him for in him alone is our redresse II. Martha sayed to Iesus Lord if thou hadst been here my brother had not dyed But now also I know that what things that shalt aske of God God will give thee Iesus sayed to her Thy Brother shall rise againe Martha sayth to him I know he shall rise in the resurrection in the last day Iesus sayeth to her I am the resurrection and life he that beleeveth in me though he be dead shall live and every one that liveth and beleeveth in me shall not die for ever Beleevest thou this She sayth to him yea Lord I have beleaved that thou art Christ the sonne of God that art come into the world If Iesus be with thee no enemie can hurt thee Our chiefe care must be not to loose him yet if we doe chance to loose him we know that he is mercyfull and will not the death of a synner but that he live by repētāce returning againe vnto him VVe shall all rise againe in the last day but in the dayes of this life vve must labour the more that by good works we may make sure our vocation and election He is the sourse and means to life and resurrection every one that beleeveth in him and liveth accordingly though he dye in body shall live happily here by grace there by glorie This vve beleeve because he himself the sonne of God hath taught it vs. III. Having sayed these things she went and called Marie her syster secretly saying the master is come and calleth thee she when she heard riseth quickly and cometh to him The lewes who were with her when they saw her rise quickly and go forth followed her saying that she goeth to the grave to weepe there Marie when she was come where Iesus was seeing him fell at his feete and sayed to him Lord if thou hadst been here my brother had not dyed Marke the expressions of love towards our Saviour ●he rose quickly and came as sudainly she fell at his feete where first she had received pardon and loving intertaynment she expresseth her beleefe and confidence that if he had been present he vvould have eased her of that crosse Yet neither she nor her syster doe require of him that he vvould rayse their brother to life either esteeming it too greate a request or thinking that it might best as it vvas or that if he thought it better he would have compassion of their very teares without other expression In fine however it should happen it was a comfort above all comforts to have him present vvhich thou must indeavour to make also thy comfort and say what can the whole world affoord me vvithout Iesus The raysing of Lazarus III PART I. IEsus therfore when he saw her
worke vpon him beware of such hardnes and insensibilitie The parable of the King that made a mariage for his Sonne I. THe Kingdome os heaven is likened to a King that made a mariage for his sonne And he sent his servants to call them that Were invited to the mariage and they would not come Againe he sent other servants saying tell them behold I have prepared my dinner my beeves and fatlings are killed and all things are ready come to the mariage But they neglected and went their wayes one to his farme another to his marchandise and the rest layed hands vpon his servants and spitefully treating them mudered them And when the King heard of it he was wroth and sending his hostes destroyed those murderers and burnt their citty This happened literally to the Iewes who being invited to this spirituall wedding with our Saviour refused and were destroyed but mystically it concernes vs all For eery living soule is invited to a mariage with our Saviour by consent to his commandements Who would not desire this mariage sayth S. Ihon Chrysostome invited by a king and to a mariage with his intirely beloved sonne It is styled a mariage that we might vnderstand both the love which God doth beare vs and the galantnes of it where there is nothing that can contristate but every thing full of spirituall ioy All things are ready Greate therfore must their falt needs bee who neglect so greate a benefit so loving an invitatiō so plentifull a feast so greate a person so advantagious a match and turne to that wherin there is nothing but labour and toyle and hourely hazard of eternall perdition I have seen all things which are done vnder the sunne and behold all vanitie and affliction of mind The wicked are hardly corrected and of fooles the number is infinite II. Then he sayth to his servants The mariage indeed is ready but they that were invited were not worthy Go yee therfore into the high wayes and whosoever you shall finde call to the mariage And his servants going forth into the wayes gathered together all thy found bad and good and The mariage was filled with guests Literally the Jewes refusing the Gentils were called in to be the Church of Christ dispersed through the whole world and in severall wayes of living but gathered together in vnitie of Faith good and bad doe beleeve and make vp a nūber here but in the sequell the bad are rejected though also for the time the bad become good for being baptized they are cleansed of their former wickednes in which sence by the bad those are vnderstood who were very intēperate ād wedded to evill customes by the good such as were lesse vitious For S. Paul speaking of himself and all others sayth we were also our selves found synners and no man can brag of his deserving to be called but it behoveth vs to think of the way in which we were and were like to be and of the mercy of God in calling vs by his servants or by his inspirations or by watever other accident and to be thankfull to him III. And the King went-in to see the guests and he saw there a man 〈◊〉 attired in a wedding garment and he sayed to him frend how camest thou in hither not having a wedding garment And he was dumb Then the King sayd to the wayters bind his hands and feete and cast him into the utter darknes there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth For many be called but few elect If any man at the time of judgement sayth S. Hierome be found vnder the name of a Christian not to have the garment of the heavenly man but the cast clothing of the old man he will be instantly apprehended neither in that day will there be place for penance nor power for to deny the falt So that faith alone is not sufficient we must retayne the garment of charitie and the love of God in which we were wedded and not think that in the multitude we can escape the eye of God one is here mentioned because not one can be hidden He is stiled notwithstanding frend to signifie that he is not punished out of hatred but justice so requiring His ●ands and fe●te are sayed to be tyed because no man will have power to avoyde the punishment And though exemplified in one it will happen to many because many are called but farre the lesse number doe make good vse of their calling as appeares by a world of infidels and heretiks which either have not accepted of the faith of Christ or have willfully lost it Tribute to be payed to Cesar and of the Resurrection I. THen the Pharisees departing consulted among themselves to intrap him in his speech and they send to him their disciples with the H●rodians saying Master we know that thou art a true speaker and teachest the way of God in truth neither carest thou for any man for thou doest not respect the person of men Tell vs therfore what is thy opinion is it lawfull to give Tribute to Cesar or no These people were malitious hypocrites and not only in their speech bu● in their outward cariage fained themselves just as S. Luke records and sought to cloke their malice by the Herodians who were of another sect taking Herode for their Messias and so to decline the envie of taking our Saviour out of the way by geting him apprehended by the Gentils for denying the duties to the Emperour but by them we may see both the straine of dissemblers and how people ought in reason and honestie behave themselves in this world for what themselves did not practise they commended in our Saviour that he had truth in his sayings vprightnes in his proceedings respect to God above all men fortitude not to care what the wicked world thought or sayed of him not respecting either power or wealth or greatnes of men so much as to varie from the truth or from the way of God in any thing How oft have I not found faithfullnes where I thought to have had it II. But Iesus knowing their naughtines sayed what doe you tempt me Hypocrites Shew me the tribute coyne and they offered him a penny and Iesus sayth to them whose is this image and superscription They say Cesars Then he sayed to them Render therfore the things that are Cesars to Cesar and the things that are God co God ād hearing it they marvelled ād leaving him went their way Their dissembling speech ād behaviour could not hide their malice from his all seeing eye and he by his answer turned all to his owne more glorie and repute Coyne is the tribute due to Cesar man himself is the tribute due to God In the Coyne you may see the picture of Cesar in man the image of God As he that falsifyeth the Coyne of Cesar is most grievously punished so the corrupters of the image of God are eternally tormented
This must be our study and profession in this life to mayntaine the beauty and due proportion of this image which we beare that our vnderstandings and our wills be not blurred with things vnbeseeming God claymes it as his due He hath put his owne stampe vpon vs which can never be razed quite out so long as we have a soule it will be found to be the image of God however it be vsed III. That day the Saducees came to him who say there is no resurrection and asked whose wife shall she be that had seven husbands Iesus sayed to them you erre not knowning the scriptures nor the power of God for in the resurrection neither shall they mary nor be maried but are as the Angles of ●od in heaven And concerning the resurrection have you not heard that of God saying I am the God of Abraham and of Isaac and of Iacob He is not God of the dead but of the living These men had the Scriptures but had not the right vnderstanding of them because in the reading of them they did not take with them the right rule of vnderstanding them which is tradition and humble submission to approved authoritie they also doe erre not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God who condemne in this life those who doe not mary or doe vow virginitie which state notwithstanding being approved by our Saviour himself hath by all ancient Fathers and continuall practise of the Church been esteemed an Angelicall life vpon earth In like manner is prayer to saints a holy practise for they are not to be esteemed as dead but living and knowing much more by the power of God then by nature they could and more powerfull to doe good then ever they were in this life however strange things God was pleased to worke by them even here on earth The greate Commandment I. THe Pharisees hearing that he had put the Saducees to silence came together and one of them a doctour of the law asked him tempting him Master which is the greate commandment in the law Iesus sayed to him Thou shalt love the Lord thy God from thy whole hart and with thy whole soule and with thy whole mind This is the greatest and first commandment It is the first and greatest commandment because first in order of promulgation first in dignitie by reason of the person whom we are commanded to love first also in perfection because love is the chiefe of our passions and placed vpon so noble an object doth greately innoble a soule it is the greatest because it comprehends all other vertues and draweth them after it ād vpon it dependeth our whole good and salvation and in regard of the greatenes of God and his infinite deserving to be loved it requireth that no part of vs be vacant from being imployed in his love our whole hart and affection our whole soule and invention our whole mind and application must be to his love I● And the second is like to this Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self On these two commandments dependeth the whole law and Prophets Our Saviour answered the doctour more then he demanded and put him in mind that he was not to aske such questions by way of tempting but doe what the law prescribeth that is doe by others as we would be done by Love thy neighbour as thyself This commandment is like the former because we must love our neighbour also in his degree with our whole hart and soule and mind and not suffer hatred to possesse the least part of vs It is like the first because as we love God for himself so must we love our neighbour not for our owne sakes but for his and for God It is like the first because vpon this as vpon the other depends our salvation and that of S. Jhon is very true He that loveth not his brother whom he seeth God whom he seeth not how can he love III. Then Iesus spake to the multitude and to his disciples saying vpon the Chayre of Moyses have sitten the Scribes and Pharisees all things therfore whatever they shall say vnto you observe yee and doe yee but according to their works doe yee not for they say and doe not To shew vs how truly and how sincerly we are to practise the love of our neighbour by this document he giveth vs to vnderstand that however he misliked the proceeding of the Pharisees and often reprehended them sharpely yet he had care of their honourand authoritie and held with them so farre as was reason He teacheth vs also not to carpe at superiours being men as others and subiect to be misled for in what their authoritie leads them in order to the instruction of others God hath so much providence over every body that he doth particularly assist them besides that every one is more apt to say then to doe well The Pharisees sayeth S. Augustin did that in their life which was their owne but an others that is moyseses chayre did not suffer them to teach what was their owne They benefited many by teaching that which they did not but they would have benefited farre more if they had done what they taught Sonne he that indeavoureth to withdraw himself from obedience withdraweth himself from grace The fifteenth Application to the most Blessed Sacrament I. GEntils desired to see our Saviour S. Philip and S. Andrew were their mediatours and brought them to his sight if we follow the conduct of the Apostle and Apostolicall men teaching what they have received from hand to hand we shall be able to see our Saviour really present in the most Blessed Sacrament and how that graine of wheate comes to die from what it was and to be transsubstantiated into the body of Christ by the powerfull word of our Saviour This is my body This word a multitude of misbeleevers will have to signifie otherwise then it is taken by holy Church but as our Saviour concerning the voyce which came from heaven declared that it was neither thunder nor an Angel that spake but a voyce for our sake so this word by which the Sacrament is perfected he commands should for our sake be spoken in his Church and that done by it which he then did at his last supper in perpetuall remembrance or commemoration of him and of his death for our sake so that as he then did really give his Apostles what he sayed This is my Body so their descendents who are commanded to doe the same thing which he did doe really consecrate and give the same body by vertue of the same words of our Saviour By this the name ād power and love of our Saviour is glorified to the end of the world For what a poore thing had it been to have left only bread and wine for a memorie of him and of his vnspeakable love in dying for our sakes But leaving himself vnder these shapes and leaving himself so as by the consecration of them
me not to eate I was thirstie ād you gave me not to drink I was a stranger c. And these shall goe into punishment everlasting but the iust into life everlasting A terrible saying Go yee away from me who am all happines all goodnes all ioy and content from me who have spent my hart blood for you as you see by these markes of my wounds reserved Go yee away you accursed not by my fathers privie ordinati● but by your owne disorders which have brought this curse vpon you goe into fire everlasting not prepared originally for you but for the rebellious spirits whose directions seeing you choose rather to follow then myne it is reason you should rather beare them companie then mee and as you were vnmercifull to your companions looke for no mercy here but punishment and that everlasting If now a little suffering doe make thee so i●patient how wilt thou be able to abide the everlasting torments The sixteenth Application to the most Blessed Sacrament I. THe coming of our Saviour at the later day will be very terrible and the more terrible the slighter we make of his loving and gracious coming vnto vs here as therfore he advised vs to make fr●ends of the Mammon of iniquitie that when we sayle they may receive vs into the eternall tabernacles Much more ought we indeavour carefully to intertayne his frendship here that there also we may find him our frend For if here we think it tedions to be with him how can we think that there he can be so very loving towards vs It is very true that by acts of trne repentance we purchase his favo●r but there is difference in favours as there is in merits and it is the token of a meane spirit to be content with the least when it is in our power to have greater and also that we have not in our thoughts the right value of such favours besides the danger of leesing them here by slighting them and there by iust punishment The foolish Virgins were once in favour they had not that care of preserving it as they ought to have had they were shut out with I know you not Because you did not know mee nor the greatnes of my favours towards you The conclusion was watch therfore be not carelesse be not disrespectfull doe not slumber when you are to come to this holy banket nor after it To slumber before we sleepe is before death to grow remisse in the busines of salvation II. Behold the bridegrome cometh go forth to meete him In the later end of the Apocalyps when our Saviour had proclaymed I am the roote and the stock of David the bright morning starre the spirit and the spouse or bride sayed come and it followeth And he that heareth let him say come a●d he that thirsteth let him come and he that will let him take the water of life gratis That is freely without cost or charge As much as to say as vpon the least notice of our Saviours loving aproch he that hath spirit and the hart and loving disposition of a bride will instantly imbrace his coming and be as ready to invite him as he inviteth vs if not it is a signe that either we are thick of hearing or dull in vnderstanding his worth or soe altered with worldly occasions that we thirst not the true water of life If we were rightly disposed what ioy what content what comfort what readines and diligence what care and circumspection what speed what alacritie would not this newes bring the bride groome cometh Beware that because it is not so greate newes but that dayly this voyce is heard because dayly he offereth himself thou be not the lesse taken with it wheras so greate a benefit so often offered is so farre from lessening the favour that it becomes inestimably greater by it III. The structure of the Temple of Hierusalem was admirable nothing but gold and sylver and pretious stones was seen in all the furniture of it though all the sacrifices performed in it were but figures of this one sacrifice offered dayly in the Church of God How rich should in reason our Temples be Specially that of which the Apostle speaking sayth doe you not know that you are the temple of God The honour of God and the dignitie of him that was worshipped in it did then require such ornament much more doe our soules require seeing we doe really receive the same God who was in the other represented by faith and by some extrinsecall relation to it And can it be thought sakth Salomon at the dedication of his Temple that truly God doth dwell vpon earth For if heaven and the heaven of heavens cannot receive thee how much more this house which I have built And yet here truly he dwelleth Invite the heavens and the dwellers in them to magnifie this greate worke of his and to supply the want thou findest in thy house Begge and imitate the knowledge of the Cherubins the love of the Seraphins the quiet of the Thrones the courage of the Dominations the noblenes of the Principalities the fortitude of the Powers and the pie●ie of the Vertues the provident care of the Archangels the diligence of the Angels the hope of the Patriarchs the faith of the Apostles the constancie of the Martyrs the reverent respect of the Bishops and Doctours the humilitie and mortification of the other Confessours the puritie of Virgins VVith greate devotion and with ardent love and with the whole affection and servour of my hart I desire ô Lord to receive thee as many Saints and devout persons when they did communicate did desire thee c. SEVEN SEATS OF OVR BLESSED SAVIOVR WHEREIN BY A LOVING AND RESPECTFVLL SOVLE HE MAY BE FOVND IN THE SEVEN DAYES OF THE WEEKE AND CONVERSATION HELD WITH HIM WITH SPIRITVALL SATISFACTION THE INTRODVCTION I. THE bride in the canticles addressing herself in a loving way to the Bride groome maketh this request Shew me o thou whome my soule doth love where thou feedest where thou lyest in the mid-day as much as to say shewe me how I may come to know thee how I may come to love thee in perfection feeding representing knowledge because it is with labour of searching and ruminating lying or resting representing love which is a content and satisfaction in the beloved Knowledge in the way of spirit of which we speake was represented to the Propher Esay in the two wings of the Seraphins with which they did fly love in the foure wings with which they did cover Gods or their owne face and feete for to come to perfection the acts of the will and of love ought to be double to those of the vnderstanding and knowledge these being as the steel and stone struck one vpon the othe as the fire and tinder taking those are the needle these ars the thread which remaineth in the worke and accordingly that which we call meditation hath more of
beautify the moone when it is at full and leaveth no part of it which doth not sparkle with heavenly light O mother O sonne How pleasing are those doue-like glances which you cast vpon one another How doe they inflame both your harts with the purest love and set your affections on fire with mutuall correspondence How sweete are those cheeks saluted with each others lips as a bed of sweete spices and followers and as a pomegranat when it is broken How pleasing are those imbracements and a thousand expressions of love and esteeme which it is not for pe● to vndertake but a devou●e soule may imagin and yet fall short because the sonne is infinite and the mother hath been capable of that infinite of which no other creature hath been thought capable O blessed mother May I be so bold as to salute those little hands of thy greate sonne or to kiffe his feete I am not worthy give me leave at least to put my head vnder thē acknowledging him to be my Lord my God my soveraig●e and commander whome I will eternally obey O sacred feete tread downe the pride of my hart give me grace to treade the steps of thy humilitie and thy patience and thy meeknes and thy obedience O blessed feete why are they so ●a●e but that thou lovest Puritie How come they so warme but that thou lovest Charitie And nothing can make them cold but my want of love of thee O love give me grace to love thee III. Love Puriti● that thou mayest be welcome to this payre of turtles VVash thy hands and feet● thy works and they affections from all filth and dust let thy lips breath nothing but the prayses of this mother and this sonne and of whateuer hath relation to them let th● eyes bee modest thy comportment humble thy thoughts respectfull and sit vnder the shadow of this most fruitfull tree for the shade will be delightfull and the fruite sweete to thy tast Passe from branch to branch and see whether h● b● more lovely in his cralde or in his mothers armes comforting old Simeon or incouraging good S. Ioseph in his flight to ●gypt in the Temple prese●ted or found in the midst of dostours working at his trade or praying vpon his little knees lifting vp his sweete hand and eyes for thee to his heavenly Father O ●esus have mercy vpon me a synner I put my●sel into thy hands and begge that thou wilt have me in thy thoughts The second seate the seate of Authoritie I. HEre we are to represent vnot vs our Saviour as he was preaching in the Synagoges of the Iewes with power and Authoritie and not as the Scribes at which and at his doctrine they were greately as●onished Sit downe therfore at his feete as S. Paul at the feete of Gamaliel behold his countenanc● his gesture his comportment his fervour in reprehending tempered with vnwonted mildnes his zeale of Gods glorie and the good of every particular The Prophecie of Esay being fullfilled in him according as himself declared The spirit of our Lord is vpon mee for that he hath annointed me to evangelize to the poore he hath sent me to he●le the contrite of hart to preach deliverance to captives light to the blind remission to the bruised to denounce the acceptable yeare of our Lord and the day of retribution And the more thou findest want in thyself of spirit and spirituall oyntment of contrition of sight of freedome apply thyself with the more attention to heare his words for the words which he speakes are spirit and life Begge that he will open thy eares and say thou as followeth in the Prophet But I doe not gayne say I have not gone back Stirte vp thy affection not only to imbrace his doctrine with courage and love because a greater a wiser a more consrderate a more infallible teacher thou canst not have as in whome are all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge hidden And really they are treasures of wisedome which only can inrich a soule and affoord it pl●ntie and content for all eternitie They are hidden vnder the outward shape of an ordinarie man a Carpenters Sonne from the eyes of worldly given thoughts but not from the eye of faith which enters further th● corporall eyes cān reach andZ he that hath spirit will find hidden Manna in him II. From the Synagoges passe with him to Mount Olivet where he often preached but chiefely give care to that prime sermon of his when opening his sacred lips he proclaymed those eight blessings which the world accounteth rather follie and miserie Blessed be the poore of spirit Blessed the m●eke Blessed they that mourne Blessed they that hunger and thirst after instice Blessed be th● m●rcyfu●● Blessed the cleare of har● Blessed the peace-makers Blessed they who suffer persecution And inlarging himself vpon this last point declared what Kind of per●ecution we ought to account happines to wit when they shall revil● you and speake all naught of you vntruly for my sake Be thou ever praysed Lord God of heaven and earth who hast hidden these things from the wis● and prudent and revealed them to the little ones Doe not pa●●e these steps lightly over but see how he did not only preach but practise thē and made thē steps to his eternall glorie ād the glorie of all his saincts Happy is he whome truth doth teach by himself III. Then follow him with multitudes of people round about the Countri●s sowing his celestiall doctrine and curing all disceases commanding the winds and the s●a and the euill spirits Heare the people with admiration saying never man spake as this man speaketh what word is this For with power and a●ctoritie h● commandeth th● vncleane spirits and they go forth See how he enters the Temple and casts out the traffickers there with ●is majesticall countenance and a small little whip of cords Magnifie him with his disciples for if thou hold thy peace the very slones willcry him vp O stony hart of myne that is so hard so covered and incombred with earth so much inclined allwayes downewards that this heavenly Master cānot find 〈◊〉 into it Soften it I beseech thee with thy most 〈◊〉 blood hold it vp with thy powerfull hand 〈◊〉 from the earthly thoughts which clog it and if it 〈…〉 strike it with thy heavenly Chariti● that som 〈◊〉 at least may fly out of it and take in the tinder 〈…〉 doctrin to inlighten and inflame my soule which without it will be eternall darknes frō which sweete Iesus d●liver me Amen Exercise thy power and authoritie over my passions as thou didst over the winds and sea saying Peac● be still Teach me to doe thy will in all things instruct me how to performe the particular oblig●tions of my state and calling with perfection Teach me above all how I may prepare my self for thy loving presence here in the most
in providing such sustenance for vs of a mother and nurse in feeding vs at his owne breast of a frend i● comforting and assisting vs All these kindnesses require loving co●respondence on our part let vs ●leare ourselves of as many imperfections as ws can that we may be lesse troblesome accommodate ourselves to his will and pleasute in all things and be continually giving ourselves even to death for his sake if he so require and be sure never to be from him by any grievous offence II It is sayed in the first of king● that the soule of Ion●th●s was ioyned f●st to the soule of David and Ionathas lov●d him as he owne soule and they entred aleague and Ionathas striped himself of the coate where with he was clothed and gave it to David and thee rest of his garments vnto his sword and bow and vnto his belt Such ought to be our love towards our blessed Saviour in this most blessed Sacrament not only to be able to say with S. Paul Who shall separate vs from the Charitie of Christ Tribulation or distresse or famine or nakednes or danger or persecution or the sword But we must indeavour to have so tender a love towards him that we be as it Were one soule and one body for this is the intēt of this his loving and familiar communication of himself vnto vs for● as melted waxe if it be poured into other waxe they are throughly mingled one with the oother so he that receiveth the blessed body and blood of our Saviour is ioyned vnto him so that Christ is to be found in him and he in Christ. He being sonne to the king of heaven striped himself of his glorie to cloth vs with glorie and gave vs the rest of his garments that is his ver●uous life and example to imitate of what should not we strip ourselves to offer vnto him Specially our passions of Anger and spl●n● and revenge so contrarie to this Sacrament of l●ve and lay them at his feete never to take them vp but in his defence and purely in his cause III Our everlasting happines consisteth in our ever permanent vnion with God in celestiall blesse Of this happines this blessed Sacrament is a beginning and a pledge who would not be ever greedy to inioy it Entring into the ioy of his Lord so oft as ●e could and because knowledge is the greatest sput to love who would not be ever ●●minating and ever loving his perfections and with the Cher●bins and Seraphins saying Holy holy holy Tho● art my God my Cr●ato●r my Redeemer infinite in power in Wisedom● in goodnes in mercyes in liberaliti● in patien●e i● humilitie in all things imaginable Thou art the giver of all good gifts and founta●●e of living wat●rs the ●●tidot● against all evills my strength o Lord and my refuge with thee I w●ll dwell because thee have I choosen possesse thou I beseech thee my hart Absorbeat quaeso 〈◊〉 meam ignita ac melliflua vis amoris ●ui vt ●more amoris tui moriar qui amor● amoris mei dignatus es mori Am●n The fift seate the seate of Compassion I. THe seate of Compassion is the Cross● on which he hung At the foote wherof finding the Magdalen I will first with her bewayle my synns which have been cause of so painefull and so disgracefull a death of so happy and so worthy a person O synne what can setforth thy enor●itie more the● that to get pardon for thee and to deface thee it behoved th● sonne of God ●o suffer No blood could wash the away but the blood of this lambe of God O stayne in grayne no m●decine cure thee but the sacred flesh of this immacula●e body thus brused O venome intollerable Who will give to my head water and to my eyes a fount●ine of te●r●s and I will ●eepe 〈◊〉 ●●ment day and night the death of this King of all ●ations slaughtered for my synns a King crowned with thornes which ought every one of them to pearce my h●rt and pu●ish in me the pride and sensualiti● of which he never was guyltie O nayles in his hands and feete You have mi●taken the place where you should have been struck They are my hands and feet● which have synned this man wh●t harme hath he done I find no cause i● him O God my God wherfore h●st th●● thou forsaken him a● given him over to such a cruell death O death I will be thy d●●th I will be thy mortall bit ● Hell For ioyning myself With his powerfull grace and by the merits of this victorious death I will synne no more and die rather a thousand death then offend him II. Sorrow full 〈◊〉 my soul● vnto death And what wonder For if I follow thee from the place where thou didst make thy last supper to the ●rosse I find nothing but teares or blood nothing but tants and sc●ffs nothing but blo●●s ●nd stripes ●othing b●t wou●ds and t●rments nothing but 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 against thee my God my Saviour my love What doth this thy Prayer signifie Father if it be possibl● let this Chalicepasse from ●e O bitter Chalice Which so much sweetnes as was in thee would not alay I doe not say it could not for certainly the request thou didst make was possible to be granted but thou wouldest not Thou didst offer thyself ūto it becaus● thou wouldest Yet this doth not excuse me from compassionating thee for however there was a Kind of necessitie put vpon thee O hard necessitie O that from my eyes there could trickle downe such drops of blood as then from thy whole body O drowsie head of mine Why doe I sleepe in this occasion Behold the Trayt●ur sleepeth not What doe these clubs and s●aves and swords about this mild and innocent lambe He was dayly in the Temple among you what did you heare from him but good Their eares are stopped they hale him away by night they buffet him they misvse him they condemne him to dye as guiltie of what What ●ccus●tion bring you ●●●inst this man I am the m●lefactour I ●m ●e that ha●h synned I have done wickedly this lambe what hath he done Let this ●and I b●s●●ch thee be turned vpon me and vpon the house of my soule which hath harboured so many vnlawfull tumultuo●s and ●iotou● guests against the law of God and man III. Harken what a sound the lashes give which were loded vpon his tende● skin perhaps for houres together behold the ●urro●es which they h●ve made in his sacred flesh and hold thy eyes from weeping if thou be so stout● and thy hart from faynting if it be so hard O shame O confusion Behold the m●n Is this the man so cryed vp not long ●ince and now so much cryed downe as to be set behinde a murtherer and a th●●f● and a seditio●s fellow O sencelesse change Take him away 〈◊〉 him away cruci●ie him O cry vnmercyfull Take him into thy