glory and boast theâ selves in sin are absolutely uncapâble of doing any good work pleasâââ to God or meritorious of eternal âward The reason is because theâ take pleasure they delight and spoâ themselves in sin then which nâthing can be more sinful No maâ can make himself sport with thâ which he really hates If thereforâ we can play with sin whether ââ our selves or others 't is certain wâ do not hate it as we ought I adâ moreover that though we shoulâ grant that some good in order tâ God might be done by these Self-lovers Self-praisers and Self-pleasers yet certain it is little or none would be done for the reason above-mentioned to wit because they place their chiefest pleasure in wickâd actions and all their endeavours âre so bent and fixed upon their Vaniâies and in taking complacency in âheir own doings be they good or âad that oft times they do violence âo themselves meerly for the augâenting the follies of their wickedâess that is in striving to be more âoolish and wicked Sect. 4. How Self-love is prejudicial to God and Men. Sect. 1. Self-love causeth Blasphemy Vndervaluing of God therefore prejudicial to him 2. Self-love looks always at his own interests in treating with neighbours therefore prejudicial to them 3. By self-Self-love we Seek all sorts of Vanities therefore prejudicial to our selves Sect. 1. self-Self-love causeth Blasphemy and an Undervaluing ââ God therefore prejudicial ââ him SInce it is the Divine Precept Tâââ we should love Almighty Goâ above all things with all oâ hearts that is to say by all oâ Understanding without any erroâ contrary to Faith and with all oâ Soul that is to say with all our Wiâ without any opposition or contraââction to the Will of God with all oâ Mind that is to say with our Mâmory not yielding to any oblivioââ or voluntary forgetfulness of him and finally with all our Strengtâ that is to say with all our endeavours and power not using aâ slightiness or negligence in doinâ his Service seeing I say thâ we ought thus to love God it foâlows of necessity that if we do noâ but the contrary being found negâigent in the performance of any the âore-mentioned particularities we âo prejudice God and rob him of his âues and Rights For man cannot âe cornival with God so as to give âim no more than heâ thinks meet âut must give all that is required and âo all that is commanded and in such ãâã as it is commanded nor may âe yield to any other love which iââot in order to the supreme love of âod And with most just reason it is that âod doth thus claim all to himself âll Love all Service all Honour ând acounts himself in jur'd when aây Love Honour or Service but âhat he allows is performed to any âhings else for he made all he ãâã ââd all Creatures even the whole âniverse He gave us all the Being ââat we have all our Powers Faâulties Parts We have nothing âut of his Gift and could do noâââing but for his help Therefore it is most due to him that we should love him as above-said with alâ our Hearts with all our Souls with all our Mind and Strength This is Gods due by that great and universal Title of Creation to which that more Special Title of Redemption adds much right Bââ alas how little sensible are we ââ either how often do we trangâgress and leap over the limits of oâ bound duty and how much negleââ our oblâgation through the vehemeâcy of Self-love and the affection wâ bear to our selves the world anâ the things contained in it the richeâ the honours the pleasures and vânities of the world not to speak oâ divers more unlawful objects thââ to be found and too frequently stumbled upon which cause much disâânour to God and great prejudice ââ our Souls through the innumerabââ disorders and distempers which happen in Chistianity by occasion oâ them blinding the understandingâ and shutting up the eyes as it were of all Mankind through the preâalency of their mischievous efâects One of the chiefest and greatest whereof is pride and ambition of which intending to speak more at âarge in an other Treatise for the âresent I will only say and desire it may be observed that through this âxcessive pride and ambition God is âighly dishonoured and the rights of his absolute and sole Sovereignty âresumptuously trampled upon and âespised no less than by open Blaspheây while through the pride of their âearts men refuse to acknowlege him âhe only God the Creator of all âhings and that his providence ruâeth the world and while out of the âame affection of pride disdaining to âe under his power or command âhey forbear not to speak evil of his Deity and either to deny or dispute âis Supream Authority Divine Omnipotency c. Verities ever acknowledged from the beginning of the world continued in all the ancient Law and renued in the Gospel at the very birth of Christ and by the Publick Confession of all Chrians preserved to his present So that there seems nothing to be added to the pride of too many now adays but with Domitian the Emperor having thrust God out of his Throne to place themselves in it as if you please to consult ancient Histories you will find that Emperor to have done who through the exorbitancy of many other precedent Vices arrived at last to such a stupendious height of Pride Self-estimation and sottish Ambition as to require to be called and proclaimed God not enduring to hear of any other and as Eusebius Caesariensis relates of him Lib. 3. Hist Eccles cap. 19. 20. putting to death all those of the Tribe of David among the Jews that himself might be acknowledg'd the onely King and God of the whole World as Jesus Christ the son of David was by Christans confessed to be A great excess of pride and Self-love this was certainly in a mortal man to affect the honour and esteem of being accounted God yet it was no greater than what some others had attempted before him as for example Nabuchodonosor of whom according as holy Scripture reports Judith 6. v. 3. his servants were wont to speak thus Ostendam âibi quia non est Deus nisi Nabucodonosor I will shew you that there âs no other God but Nabucodonosor and of Herod Acts 12. 22. who accepted of the Title of God though to his cost given him by the publick acclamation of the people And as these through pride think themselves to be Gods and require others to have the like opinion of them So there are that altogether deny God and either through pride or some other distemper of mind think there is no God at all to be acknowledged of whom the Prophet David coâplains Psal 13. v. 1. calling theâ Fools though none think themselveâ wiser men Dixit insipiens in corââ suo Non est Deus The Fool haâ said in his heart there is no God Câârupt they are and become
desire a greater conquest than to subdue the world and to trample all the deceitful glories and vanities thereof under your feet Can you think any victory more advantageous than that which of Captives makes you Kings for freedom and true liberty and of Slaves to Self-love and sin the Sons of God and Heirs with Christ of Eternal Glory A greater Conquest you cannot reasonably desire than to subdue all your enemies nor Dominion than to be master of your self and this is done by the way I have shewed you Happy therefore I say are those that conquer and overcome their passions yea much more happy are they than those that conquer Kingdoms and Countries but cannot conquer themselves Happy are those that can rule and govern their sensual love concupiscences and appetites so as not to transgress in them or by them Such a one is Lord of a great Empire Lord of this World and Heir of Heaven To be truly humble is a great Trophy and the right way to Jesus Christ is to subdue your own proper will to suffer injuries and other evils not seeking overmuch after any temporal interests or things concerning the Body Be content to suffer with Christ and for Christ and be sure that if you thus suffer you shall also reign with Christ For a little adversity you will enjoy a perpetuaâ felicity therefore do not think iâ a troublesome thing nor grieve thaâ it is requir'd of you to fight with and to overcome your self for how bitter soever it may seem in the beginning the end of it will be sweet and God will fight for you and help you to get the victory only remembring this not to attribute the glory of âhe conquest to your own strength âut only to the Divine Majesty whose Grace gains you the Victory and âet you must do your endeavour too âor that Gods Grace helps none that âill not help themselves as well as âhey can and you may observe that âf those who only cry Lord Lord ând do nothing else it is said They âhall not enter the Kingdom of Heaven None shall be crowned but âhose that fight well and with couâage persevere to the end If two Men come to fight being both of âqual strength courage and skill and âoth alike arm'd naturally speaking ât is certain that he that gets help or â second to joyn with him will get âhe victory In the same manner it âs between the Body and the Soul continually fighting supposing both equal and alike in strength if we favour and help the Body by idleness over much eating and drinking and will not deny it ought of its sensual desires be sure it will get the victory over the Soul and subdue her to its lure and appetite and so on the contrary if we favour and help the Soul by fervent Prayers to God if we support and uphold her by the practice of Vertues and arm her Cap-a-pe from Head to Foot with the whole Armour of Righteousness Faith Hope Charity Patience Zeal and other good Graces of the Spirit it is not to be doubted but she will have a glorious victory over the Body vanquish all the Vanities of the World and find a saving cure for all her languishings and distempers occasion'd by self-Self-love SECTION VII How to love God and our Neighbour Sect. 1. How we are to love God 2. How we are to love our Neighbour 3. How we are to love our Enemies 4. In what manner of love we are to love our Neighbour and our Enemies 5. How we may know our selves free from self-Self-love in loving God and our Neighbour Sect. 1. How we are to love God I must confess that all we have hitherto said or written serves in part to declare how we are to love God namely above all things with all our hearts with all our mind with all our soul and with all our strength This hath been often inculcated by us But such is the thing that whether we consider the difficulty and hardness or the utility and benefit of it it can never be insisted upon too much We cannot be too often called upon or too often put in mind of this duty and therefore I will in short speak a word or two more to that effect that if you desire to attain the Perfection of that Grace to wit of Divine Love I may by the mercy of God be a little helpful to you in order thereto Verily it standeth with great reason that we should love God in the manner above-said both Justice and Natural Reason dictating and commanding with all urgency that we should wholly give and dedicate our selves by love unto God and by lovinâ him from whom we wholly possess and enjoy our selves to re-pay in some sort our Duty and Obligation Now for the better performance of this my advice is that you follow the counsel of the seraphical and subtle Doctor Scotus who says That we are to love God sweetly prudently and valiantly or with good courage Sweetly that you be not by any bitterness or amarulency that sometimes happens therein averted from loving him Prudently that you be not by the guil of your Ghostly enemy ensnared nor catch'd in any ambuscado of his Valiantly and with good courage that when you come to suffer injuries oppressions affronts for loving him you be not in any manner of wayes drawn or driven enticed or forced from his Divine Love either by the pomp and glory of the world together with the voluptuous Allurements of the Flesh or by the sterner violence of Persecution and Troubles threatned for loving him and being resolv'd for your part thus to proceed towards the Love of God there are Three Things more chiefly required of you The first is You must extirpate out of your heart all Sensual Love all Love that proceeds from Concupiscences all inordinate love of the World and purge your selves of all sorts of Self-love Inordinate Appetites and Passions and of all the sins that proceed from them It is the admonition of Saint Paul Ephe. 4. 22. Deponere vos secundum pristinam conversationem c. That you put off concerning the former conversation the Old Man which is totally corrupt through deceitful and erroneous lusts and be ye renewed in the spirit of your mind putting on the New Man which according to God is created in Justice and True Holiness And again Rom. 13. v. 12. Cast off saith he the works of darkness which are Self-love and Sin and putting on the armor of light which is the practice of Divine Love let us walk honestly as in the day not in Banquetting and Drunkenness not in Chamberings and Impudicities not in Strife and Emulation in a word nor in making any provision for the Flesh in Concupiscences or to satisfie the lusts thereof consonant unto which is that of Salomon Sap. 1. v. 4. In malevolam animam non introibit sapientia c. Divine Wisdom will not enter into a malicious soul nor dwell in a Body that is
De Civit. Dei and in Psal 74. For as the True and Divine Love which reigneth in the Citizens of Hierusalem that is in the Servants of God takes its original spring from the Charity of God and makes them humble and to undervalue themselves for the honour and praise of God so in the same manner the Self-love of the Citizens of Babylon takes its original spring from their proper will and they raise themselves so high by reason of it that they come to undervalue and despise even God himself their own salvation and eternal interest We see in men divers sorts of affections divers sorts of judgements oâinions wills in so much that they âre not more different in feature and ân the frame and fashion of their Boâies and natural Humors then they âre in their proper Wills and Self-love ând the reason hereof is because they âo not regard to conform themselves âor to adjust their proper loves to the True Divine Love This is the source ârom whence so much Self-love proâeeds men do not their endeavour to perform the will of God as they ought put follow too much every one their proper sensualities and private wills Oh would to God the onely true and perfect Love were well rooted and engraven in the hearts of men how would it make them true Followers and Imitators of those that live now ân the Coelestial Hierusalem â Without question they would then be all of one mind as the Apostles and Disciples of Christ were who so conformed themselves that as the Holy Text saith of them Acts 4. 32. they werâ Cor unum anima una all one souâ and one heart SECT 3. Self-Love contrary to the Love oâ God Egredere de terratua de cognatione tua de domo patris tui Gen. 12. 1. Go forth of thy Countrey from thy kindred and thy Fathers house said Almighty God unto us all in the person of the Patriarch Abraham ouâ Father insinuating hereby that you must all go forth and give over the love of worldly Creatures if you mean to love Coelestial you must pluck out of your selves all the weeds of self-Self-love and so root them out of your hearts that they may never grow up again self-Self-love is displeasing to God and altogether contrary to his love self-Self-love is the cause of all evils it perverteth the judgement overthrows and disturbs the mind stops and perverts reason dulls âhe understanding empoisons the will and shuts up the way to Eternal âalvation He that loves not well doth not know God injures his neighbour âorsaketh Vertue and seeks after honour riches and such like things âoves the world and himself but not God Take heed therefore since it âs this self-Self-love that destroys all commands and leads by it self all sinners âo eternal damnation Why do you love Honour Riches ând other Corporal Objects of the World so much Why do you seek why do you hunt after them with so much greediness It is only because you love your selves inordinately Yet are you to leave all and forsake all even your selves and your own âife for the Love of God if you preâend to be everlastingly happy And âhe reason is because if the Love of God be not the first and chief in your affections sensual desires will usurp the prerogatives of Reason and get thâ chief place which is due to God alone and so by consequence you forsake God for the love of your self and for the enjoying of your own propeâ will and fancy you rob God of thâ honour which is due onely to him aâ the Creator and Maker of all Creatures To mortifie and subdue Self-love and our proper wills is not onely the Counsel but was also the Practice oâ all the Ancient Fathers who used all their endeavors to weed and pluck out Self-love from themselves and to with-draw it also from the hearts of others especially of those who pretend to the perfection of Christian Vertue and Piety and have the state of a Religious Life in honour and esteem Now our proper will in this place signifies that absolute Self-love which men use and whereby they alwayes take complacency in themselves and ordain and refer all things to the satisfaction of themselves and of their own mind whereas on the âontrary true and perfect Christians âenounce whatsoever is contrary to God and give themselves totally to Divine Love and to the performance âf Gods Will and Commandments ârdaining all to God and in a manâer denying all to themselves Seeing then that these two Loves âre so contrary and opposite the one âgainst the other it follows that such âikewise must be all the affections and âhe operations that proceed from âhem that is opposite and quite conârary one to another in so much that ât is impossible these two Loves should ever reign at once or together at the âame time in one and the same heart âeeing they are altogether incompatiâle You will never find the Love of God agree with the love of the world âhe love of Earthly Things with the âove of Coelestial the Carnal with the Spiritual And as it is impossible for Truth and Falsity to agree or Morâality with Immortality Sweetness with Bitterness in a high degree oâ Peace with War so in the same manner impossible it is to reconcile Self-love with the Love of God We cannot with one and the same eye aâ the same instant look up to Heaveâ and down to Earth so neither is it iâ our power at the same time to lovâ God and this world Therefore to humble and get thâ Victory over Self-love we are firââ to overcome our selves and shake oâ the yoke and tyrannizing power oâ our proper will which is the spring of all evil to us We must absolutely reject that if ever we mean to embrace Vertue as we ought and submit our selves wholly unto God beinâ mindful of all the graces and benefitâ we have received and do still everyday receive from him following herein the good counsel of Saint Augustin great Pillar and Doctor of thâ Church Recordare quomodo creaviâ te non existentem redemit te c Remember saith he how God createâ thee of nothing how he redeemed âee with his own blood how he did âee thee being captive how he proââcted thee in thy infirmity how he âriched thee being poor and naked ând how he will happily reward and âown thee if thou remainest a true âver to him SECT 4. How Self-love opposeth the Love of God Upon the apprehension you might âât perhaps be satisfied with me in ââving onely declar'd That Self-love contrary to the Love of God but âould willingly know some particuâârities how and in what manner this ââlf-love repugns and opposes that âhich is divine to comply in some âeasure with your desires and inâânations I say in the first place âhat as Divine Love doth afford ââd cause to mankind all manner of ââiritual comforts consolations and â kind of happiness so on the contrary
things and âesirous to withdraw them from it ând to fix their minds and hearts âhere they ought to be fixed that â upon God and the life eternal he âys thus to them 1 Joan. 2. v. 15. âratres nolite diligere mundum neue ea quae in mundum sunt My âear Brethren do not love the world âor the things that are in it as beââg a thing most prejudicial to your âpiritual interest by reason that if â man loves the world and the things âhereof he cannot love God as he âught the love of the Father is not ââ such a man which counsel of the âpostle is also seconded and confirmed by the Catholique Church by whose Order it is that being to be enrolled in the rank of Christians before our admittance to the Sacrament of Baptism it is demandeâ and asked of us whether we do renounce and forsake the World and the Devil Abrenuncias Satanae â omnibus pompis ejus omnibus opâribus ejus See the Roman Ritualâ Do you renounce the Devil and aâ his pomps vanities and wickeâ Works To which we all assent anâ answer Abrenuncio I do renouncâ and forsake them most freely anâ willingly But alas notwithstanding our promises and engagements to love God only and all other things meerly for his sake in order to him and so far as he allows us to love them such is our depraved nature such our false hearts that we mind nothing less than those our sacred vows and suffer our selves to be violently carried away to all the excesses of worldly pomp pride and vanity âading our selves with Gold and Silâer and setting our selves out with ââl the bravery of sumptuous Garâents to the confusion of our Souls âonsumption of our Estates and âorning of those who are our infeâours or fall any thing short of us â vanity or vice Add hereunto the âany vain divertisements which Self-âove has invented and doth invent âaily for our pass-time and the staâing us off from more serious thoughts âith these sports and divertisements âe spend unprofitably and thereâore more or less sinfully all our âime which is one of the most preâious things we have in nature and ââ the spending whereof well or ill âe are most concern'd Thus we âpend all the day thus we spend most part of the night these diverâisements take up all our time so âhat we have little or none to spare âor God or our Soul And what may âhe subject of these divertisements be for the most part setting aside those which are exercis'd in voluptuousness and Belly-chear feasting and Banquetting 't is little else but vain discourse vain conversation vain entertaining of one another if we proceed not to worse and that our discourses wrong not those that are absent by detraction slander and mis-report and that our conversation runs not out into some dishonesty or other some impudicity or unchastness of action some immodesty filthiness and unseemliness of speech as considering the great frailty of humane nature and the prevalency of ill custom it can hardly be thought but we do In thus doing we turn night into days and days into nights not to be wondred at nor much spoken against it is the mode amongst so many of the great ones who after the night spent in revelling are obliged for their health to keep their Bed till towards noon and well it is if they can rise to take their dinner How much time is consumed in vain unprofitable playing at Cards and Dice What Swearing is occasion'd thereby by all manner of fearful Oaths that can be imagined What horrid Cursing Blaspheming and Damning themselves at every Chance What giving their Souls and Body to the Devil so as it would make a man tremble but to think of their horrid and execrable expressions What should I speak of the divertisements of Comedies and Plays and Balls How much precious time is spent herein is known but perhaps not so well considered by those that frequent them Account must be given for it together with the rest Thus do men consume their time and live indeed more like Brute Beasts than good Christians since they mind nothing but sensual things neglecting prayer and devotion wholly Thus sadly do they forget their Vow and Promise made in Baptism that they would renounce the world the flesh and the devil with all his wicked works and vain pomps Add unto all the vanities aforesaid the continual use and fruition of bodily pleasures in meat and drink c. to which others wholly give themselves up pleading for their practice though to the great aggravation of their guilt those words of Saint Paul Ephes 5. v. 29. Nemo unquam carnem suam odio habuit c. No man ever hated his own flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth the same For this reason say they we will taste so much as it lies in our power all the pleasures of the five senses nothing that is pleasant shall escape us Quae desideraverunt oculi nostri non negabimus eis All things that our Eyes desire they shall have if we can procure it for them Eccles 2. v. 10. We will enjoy the good things that are present we will fill our selves with Wine and crown our Heads with Rose Buds Sap. 2. v. 6 7 8. Thus they say and do But oh how sad and fearful a thing is it for men that profess themselves Christians to lead such lives so absolute contrary to what they have promised to God and against the special command of the Apostle who in compassion to such men prescribes them a remedy for their Disease and shews them how to employ their time Redimentes tempus quoniam dies malisunt Ephes 5. 15 c. Walk warily dear Brethren saith he redeeming the time because the days are evil Wherefore be not unwise but understanding what the will of God is and perform the same Walk honestly as in the day not in banquetting and drunkenness not in beds and impudicities not in contentions and emulations Nor make any provision for the flesh in concupiscences Rom. 3. v. 13 14. Ah poor Self-lovers that this passage and expression of the Apostle could be to you the subject and means of conversion as it was hereto fore unto the great Saint Augustin that most glorious Doctor and Pillar of the Church who at his first happy and miraculous conversion was by a voice from Heaven directed not only to the Catholique Faith but to a Life of perpetual Continency as he himself doth acknowledge Lib. 8. Confess Cap. 18. The voice which came from Heaven was this Tolle Lege Tolle Lege Take up and read Take up and read meaning the Book of the Gospel which lay there by him Having done as he was commanded upon opening of the Book the first place his Eye fixt upon was that Text of Saint Paul above-mentioned to wit Rom. 13. 13. Sicut in die honeste ambulemus non in comessationibus ebrietatibus c. The consideration of which words
Divine Grace and the Spirit of God who is Love according to the same Apostle 1 Joan. 4. 8. Quoniam Deus Charitas est These two Loves are so inseparable that as soon as one commeth to decay the other at the same time perisheth On these two Loves depend the whole Law of God and he that has them and does exercise them as he ought fulfils the Law according to that of the Apostle Rom. 13. 8 10. He that loveth hath fulfilled the Law and Love is the fulfilling of the Law and all that God has commanded us by the Prophets by the Apostles by the Evangelists by his Disciples or any other lawful Teachers yea by Moses or by Christ himself tends altogether to this end namely to love God and our Neighbour Christ our Saviour himself loved his Neighbour that is all Mankind for by taking our Nature upon him and by conversing with us in Humane Flesh he made us all his Neighbours and Brethren Christ I say himself loved Mankind so tenderly that all his Desires Entreaties Counsels and Commands tended to almost no other thing save only to excite move and stir us up to a mutual loving of one another and to mutual affections mutual good-will and kindheartedness one from another charging it upon his Disciples even at the last and when he was ready to leave the World in these express words Joan. 15. v. 12. This is my Commandment that ye love one another and telling them Joan. 13. v. 35. that hereby all men should know them to be his true Disciples if they had love one to another and when he gives the world precaution not to offend or do injury to any of his for that all offences committed against them are taken by him to be done against himself as we read Zach. 2 v. 8. Qui tetigerit vos tangit pupillam oculi mei He that shall touch you to do you harm toucheth the Apple of mine Eye I say to what end tendeth this precaution but to signifie how much we should love one another after the Example of Christ who declares himself as much sensible and seems to be as much offended at transgressions done against another as at those committed against himself I do not advance this truth without ground and reason seeing Christ himself in the Gospel makes it manifestly appear to be so to wit in the Parable of the King calling his Servants to account Matth. 18. v. 23 24 25 26 c. The good King when his poor indebted Servant asked him mercy being fallân into arrears with him much more than he was able to pay presently and most willingly pardoned him and forgave him the whole Debt that is all the transgressions and offences which the Servant had committed against himself yet because the same ungrateful Servant would not forgive a small Debt nor have patience with his Neighbour or Fellow-servant he presently called him to him and rebuked him adjudging him to severe punishment as that he should be cast ânto a Dungeon and there tormented not to come out till he should have paid the utmost farthing which âe ought his Lord thus speaking to âim Thou ungracious and wââked Servant I forgave thee all thy Debt âecause thou be soughtest me oughtest âot thou therefore to have mercy upon âhy Fellow-servant even as I had âercy upon thee immediately whereupon saith the holy Text he was delivered to the Tormentors By the conclusion of which Parable it is easie to see how absolute the will and pleasure of God is that we should love our Neighbour even as we love our selves and to do to them such things as we desire should be done to our selves But here a question maâ perhaps be asked of some viz. Whether loving our Neighbour as our selves be such a condition or qualification of our love as that it is of it self sufficient for the fulfilling of the Precept of loving them I answer no it is not alwayes sufficient in some cases it is and in some it is not When the love of our Neighbour tends to the honour and glory of God then it is sufficient and then by loving our Neighbours as our selves we do fulfill Gods Commandment or the Precept of loving our Neighbour but when it is on the contrary that is when the love of our Neighbour tends to the dishonour of God or be such as he is offended by it then instead of being a fulfilling of Gods Commandement or a just performance of our Duty and Obligation it is matter of high displeasure against God and we incur the guilt of great and grievous offence in so loving our Neighbour And therefore as Lusitanus the honour of the Friers Minors doth well observe and admonish us Serm. 1. in Com. Apost Though the Commandment of God doth exact of us to love our Neighbours as our selves yet we ought to consider how this is to be done by reason that many men love themselves amiss not according to God but according to the lusts of concupiscence giving themselves up to all sorts of inordinate love so as to drown and cast themselves thereby into eternal perdition For such men to love thoir Neighbour as they love themselves were to make sport for the Devil and to aggravate their own damnation As for example a fawning and foolish Lover will not stick to say to some vain woman that he loves her as much as he loves his own self and with all his heart and though for the most part such people mean nothing less than they say yet they utter unawares a sad truth For they love themselves not well they love not themselves so as they ought but with a love that in fine will carry them headlong to Hell and plunge them into the deepest pit of Destruction Well therefore may they profess to their companions in lewdness that they love them as they love themselves and their own hearts and if their Copesmates consent with them and love them as well they will both have the Sentence of Eternal Wrath pronounced against them Go ye wicked into everlasting fire Matth. 25. 41. O unhappy love of our Neighbour that by loving sensually the Body hates his soul Such do not know how to love seeing that in loving themselves after this manner they destroy both their own and their Neighbours souls For true is that saying of the Prophet Qui diligit iniquiâatem odit animam suam He that loves iniquity hates his own soul Now to know the True Lovers from false and also how to love our Neighbour rightly the great Doctor Saint Gregory will teach us Ille veraciter amat proximum qui eum diligit in Deo Greg. Homil. 27. in Evang. Joan. cap. 15. True Lovers of their Neighbour are those that love him in God and for Gods sake which plainly shews how many there are that mistake themselves herein and love their Neighbour to little purpose as to God and his Divine acceptance because they love him not in God God is
part by reason it is otherwise with men than with God Men may not be then oân revengers and therefore whatsoeveâ Men do to us we must do to theâ no more than what God allows uâ to do Revenge belongs to God âlone and his Divine Justice doe oblige him first or last sooner or later to punish all offenders which repent not and doth never forgive save onely where men repent Now as concerning Man God hath giveâ him an express Charge to leave alâ revenge to him alone he thereforâ is obliged to pardon his enemies whether they repent or not Sâ that knowing our Obligation it iâ most requisite that we also know what manner of love we ought tâ have and to bear towards them or how and in what manner to exercise that love To which purpose the renowned Saint Vincentius according to the relation of the R. F. Granada in his Fourth Treatise chap. 3. Sect. 3. hath an ample and large Discourse to this effect He that will perfectly love his Neighbours and Enemies ought to have seven special affections towards âhem In the first place he ought to have an inward hearty compassion of âheir miseries and to be grieved as if they were his own In the second âe ought to have charitable gladness âf mind wherewith to rejoyce at the ârosperities and felicities of others as much as he would do in case they were his own These two first affections are commendable and do agree to the full with that which Marchantius deâivers saying That we ought to have a joyful affection and conâratulation in the prosperities of our Neighbours as also a pious comâassion in their adversities as much âs if they were our great concerns Therefore let our Charity rejoyce at other mens good when it tends to âheir salvation for otherwise it is âot indeed to be accounted their good âf it tends to their destruction and ruin of their Soul Let us also participate and have our share in their sadness and afflictions and so fulfil the Apostles Precept bidding us Rom. 12. v. 15. Rejoyce with them that rejoyce and weep with them that weep and in so-doing we shall shew our selves to be lively members of Christs Mystical Body For as Saint Paul saith of the Natural Body of Man that if one member suffer any thing to wit of pain and infirmity all the members suffer with it in some measure as likewise if one member rejoyce or be honoured all the rest of the members rejoyce with it in their kinds So is it true of the Body Mystical of Christ which is his Church all the members thereof ought in a special manner to sympathize with each other and for each other and to be like-minded one towards another rejoycing for the Consolations which each one receiveth from God and mourning or being sad for the afflictions which he suffers There must be no Schism or Discension in Christs body but the members must have the same care one for another as being one Body in Christ and members of each other in particular as the Apostle teacheth 1 Cor. 12. 26 27. As to the Third Affection proposed by Saint Vincentius men ought to have a quiet and setled patience willingly contenting themselves to suffer all vexations troubles and injuries that shall be done to them being alwayes ready to forgive them of which kind of affections or love I have in part already spoken somewhat in the fore-going Paragraphs as namely that we should love our enemies do good to them that hate us pray for them that persecute and calumniate us forget and with all our heart forgive injuries and the like I have only this one thing to adde further in this place that concerning the point of loving our enemies and doing good to them thatthis affection may be found true real and meritorious of Divine reward it must be operative and effectual it must not rest or contain it self only in well-wishing but must extend to well-doing also Remember you not what hath been often said to wit that we must love others our Neighbours our Enemies as we love our selves Now in loving our selves we do not think it enough meerly to wish good or pray for good to ones self but we are diligent and careful to use our best endeavours to help our selves what we can and to desire that all others that can would also help us In the same manner the duty of true Charity obligeth us not only to wish good but to do good to our Neighbours to our Enemies and to all others that want the good we can do them For if we only wish and do nothing we trifle our wishes serving for nothing but to bring us under the censure and reproof of Saint James the Apostle which he useth against such like people in these words Jac. 2. v. 15. Si autem frater aut soror nudi sint c. If a brother or sister be naked and lack daily food and one of you say to them Go in peace be warmed be fill'd with meat but you give them not the things that are necessary for the Body what shall it profit It will not satisfie the Belly to say Eat where nothing is given to eat nor keep off the Cold to say Be warm be cloathed to one that hath no Cloaths to put on In like manner neither can we merit any thing with God only by wishing good to another and not doing him the good that is in our power to do Therefore we are not only to wish good but to do good so far as we are able to our Neighbous Enemies and all men living and not only to pray for them but also to assist and help them in their necessities as God shall enable us The third Affection or Love mention'd by Saint Vincentius requires that we use gentle and benign behaviour and affability towards all men as reason requires demeaning our selves in conversation amongst men as becometh Christians with courtesie respect mildness not giving any sign of anger or offence of mind nor of contempt and disrespect to any but wishing well in our hearts to all to afford all convenient testimony and demonstration thereof both in our words and deeds for so the Blessed Apostle requires 1 Joan. 3. 18. Fratres non diligamus verbo neque lingua sed opere veritate Brethren let us love not so much in word and tongue as in work and in truth He doth not forbid us to make profession of our love and good will to others by words and by our tongue but to take heed that our love lies not wholly in our Tongue that it be not only a feigned love of outward profession and not in deed and truth This affection is likewise congruously exercised in judging of other mens actions in the better sense in concealing and keeping secret their faults and imperfections supporting their infirmities c. considering that we our selves are infirm and weak frailties and imperfections are to be found in our selves
as well as others and mutual Charity in this kind is requisite on both sides Verily it is no easie matter to converse with men I mean those of worldly and common conversation without transgressing or giving offence For which reason it behoveth us prudently to comply with every one for the Love of God and as much as is possible to have a quiet and settled patience in their infirmities being always more ready to pardon pass by and over-see what happens to be amiss so far as just reason and charity permits then to check or reprove it unseasonably and with offence What the Apostle says Galat. 6. v. 2. is good counsel for us all Alter alterius onera portate Bear ye one anothers burthens and so you shall fulfil the Law of Christ And truly with great reason it is required of us that seeing we all desire to have our own defects and frailties covered our own infirmities supported our ignorances excus'd and our offences forgiven we should do the same unto others supporting one another and pardoning one another but above all things having the true Charity of God one towards another which where it rules is the bond of Perfection Colos 3. v. 14. The fifth sort of Love or Affection which the good Author Saint Vincentius suggests to us is to have an humble and reverent regard towards all men according to their dignity and quality esteeming them all as they are for our betters yielding them place and submitting our selves with all our hearts to them as justice and charity requires giving them willingly all the honour respect and reverence which their qualities dignities states and conditions do merit If they be our equals and no more it suffices that with candour and all sincerity of good will we treat them and carry our selves to them as we in like case would be treated and convers'd with by others Thus doing we shall in good manner correspond not only with that general and most equal precept of the Gospel Luc. 6. v. 31. Prout vult is âât faciant vobis homines c. As ye would that men should do unto you do ye also to them but also to that more special Counsel of the Apostle 1 Pet. 2. v. 13. Subjecti estote omni Humanae Creaturae propter Deum Be subject therefore to every Humane Creature for Gods sake whether it be to the King as most Excellent or to Rulers as sent by him as likewise to what Saint Paul saith Rom. 13. v. 1. in confirmation of this Truth Omnis anima potestatibus sublimioribus subdita sit c. Let every Soul saith he be subject to the higher powers for there is no power but of God the powers that be now in the world are ordained of God Obey therefore at a word and be ready to every good work that shall be commanded you Be not litigious but modest shewing all mildness and equanimity towards all men Titus 3. 2. Where yet I would have it remembred that as in the exercise of Chastity or Divine Love so in the exercise of Obedience there is an order to be observed which the Spirit of God and Christian Prudence will not fail to dictate to every one that truly loves God and desires nothing but to perform his duty An order there is I say to be observ'd in the exercise of Obedience Where Powers or Commandments clash we must obey God rather than Man and be more careful to fulfil the Divine Laws whether of God or the Catholique Church which is a Spiritual Power than the Laws of any Temporal or Earthly Power commanding contrary thereunto that is contrary to our duty to God and to the true Confession of Cathoâique Faith in which case such Laws and Comandments are not to be obeyed As to the Holy Saint Vincentius his sixth sort of Love and Affection it obliges us to be at perfect agreement with all Men and to live in Concord and Amity with all so much as it is in our power to do and so far forth as our Concord and Amity with others may not displease God or tend to his dishonour for if it does such Amities are to be broken off There is no Concord betwixt Christ and Belial 2. Cor. 6. 15. We must say the self same thing with other Christians so long as they confess the Catholique Faith but if they will depart from it either in whole or in part we are not then to say as they say but to say Anathema to them and to all their wicked errours We are to agree with men in good not in evil in the Truth and in the sound Doctrine of Christian Catholique Faith not in Devillish errour The Prophet David took very much pleasure in such kind of love and in such agreement as this witness that of the Psalm 132. v. 1. where he saith O quam bonum quam jucundam habitare fratres in unum Behold how good and how pleasant a thing it is for Brethren to dwell together in Vnity And truly that Concord and Unity are both good pleasant and profitable things needs no other proof than to consider and take notice of the fruit it has produced in every well govern'd Community more especially those in the Church of God which the Apostle might seem to foresee when he said with such a passion of Holy Charity Philip. 2. v. 2. Siqua ergo consolatio in Christo c. implete gaudium meum c. If there be any Consolation in Christ if any comfort of Love if any fellowship of the Spirit if any howels of Compassion fulfil ye my joy that ye be all of one mind having all the same charity being all of one accord thinking the same thing doing nothing by Contention neither by Vain-glory but in humility each one accounting other better than themselves The like pathetique exhortation to the same end he makes Rom. 15. 5. Deus autem patientiae solatii c. The God of Patience and Comfort grant you to be of one mind of one love and affection one towards another according to Jesus Christ that of one mind and with one mouth ye may glorifie God and the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ The seventh and last sort of Love is that which we are chiefly to look at and regard in the Example of our Saviour Christ to wit that we have a ready mind and will to sacrifice our selves for the good of others that is to say This Love requires that we be prepared to bestow our lives for the Salvation of all Men eveâ our Enemies occasion requiring iâ This is a high degree of Love anâ so commended by our Saviour him self that he saith of it Joan. 15 13. Majorem Charitatem nemo habet ut animam suam ponat quis prâamicis suis Greater Charity none can have than to expose or lay down his Life for his Friends And this Perfection of Love if we have not yet at least we must have so much Charity for all Mankind
5. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God from thy whole heart with thy whole soul and with thy whole mind This is the greatest and the First Commandment and the second to it is Diliges proximum tuum sicut teipsum Matth. 22. 39. Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self From which precepts we may absolutely say That Love is the onely end of our salvation and that God doth therefore save us that we may be perfected in love Nevertheless give me leave to tell you that this love must be to the utmost regulated that is performed with all due exactness both towards God our Neighbour and our selves for fear least otherwise in stead of making us agreeable to God and being advantageous to us it prove much prejudicial to our souls and render us difforme to him Since then we are bound so strictly to use and exercise Love in a right manner it behoveth us to hear what âs said of the same that we may proceed in it accordingly The Master of the Sentences lib. 3. Distinct 28. doth not only confirm that we ought to love God above all things without exception but saith also that we are to love our selves that is to say the health of our souls and our neighbours as for my part I take his meaning to be and must confess that I never yet observed that God doth any where positively or in express terms command that Man should love himself as being naturally inclin'd and fully enough affected to do that as well in what is good or pleasing to his nature as also iâ what is evil and prejudicial to his soul Therefore to know how far we may lawfully love our selves and our neighbours without being intangled with that Vice which is properly called Self-love will be the whole subject and matter for us to enquire of in this present Treatise SECT 2. Three several sorts of Love To the end that every man may know and likewise have strength and courage to perform all things well in order to please Almighty God in returning love for his love as also the better to with-draw himself from all sorts of Self-love that are evil I would have him consider and observe the Saying of a most learned Divine to wit the R. F. Bernardin de Siena who in one of his Sermons De Amore proprio privato telleth us That there are three several sorts of Loves the first whereof is lawful the second to be rejected but the third totally to be abhorred as being cause of the general destruction and ruin of Mankind Wherefore that every one may discern the one from the other and discover which are the most pernicious and to be avoided I will in few words declare and speak of them one by one In the first place there is a Love which is natural and reasonable This is lawful to be observed by every one This love appeareth when a person seeketh and desireth only that which is lawful good profitable and meet for him without prejudice to any other For seeing according to reason no man should have in hatred his own nature substance or being it is therefore lawful for him to procure all such things as are good and convenient for him and to dispose of them to his best advantage for the good of his soul We are also to love our Neighbour because the Law of Nature obligeth and commandeth us to do unto others that which we would desire should be done to our selves in like case Yet nevertheless we are to be vigilant and consider well how we do love our Neighbour to the end we may love him well and so as may be both for hiâ and for our spiritual profit and that our love to God suffer no prejudice by it Now to declare the love we owe unto God there are many things requisite and to be observed since we are to love him above all things with all our understanding that is without any error contrary to what he hath revealed for our Belief with all our will that is without any opposition or contradiction to what he requireth of us with all our mind and memory that is without any oblivion or forgetfulness of him or of our duty towards him lastly with all our endeavour and power that is without all sloth or negligence in performing his holy Service Commandements Divine Counsels and Inspirations The second sort of Love before-mentioned which is to berejected may be said to be Venial Sin to wit when as we have said before the passion of Love over-reacheth the Rule of Reason as also when the order to be observed in the exercise and performance of Love is not punctually exactly kept and fulfilled As for example according to reason and the great obligation we have to Almighty God we are to love him above all things and we are onely to love our selves and our neighbours purely for the love of him and not for any other respect Yet sometimes yea very often experience shews that Self-love and proper will such is our frailty and weakness do exceed their limits and become more or less extravagant being carried with a desire not so sutable to reason and our obligation as it ought to be And although considering Divine Clemency it may well enough be thought that such extravagant or inordinate desires affections actions do not alwayes come to such a height as to be mortal sin and consequently may remain though not perfectly with Charity yet for this reason that is because they do render our Charity or Love to God less perfect then it should be all the Ancient Fathers and Doctors of the Church do unanimously counsel and advise that all such Loves be rejected and totally avoided by all in general but more especially by those who tend to perfection and in order thereto have by Vow entred the state of a Religious Life And the reason hereof is because if men will voluntarily give way and suffer themselves to take pleasure in such inordinate desires affections loves of what kind soever they be they expose themselves and their souls to danger of falling most deeply and desperately into such spiritual Disease seeing the soul thereby grows every day more and more weak and faint in the love of God and inordinate Self-love grows so strong that in the end it becomes mortal and hardly capable of Cure As concerning the third and last sort of Love which we are to declare and speak of more at large in this present Treatise it is that which Divines call Mortal Self-love and Mortal Sin a thing even noisome and of the highest offence to God and more than all other evils whatsoever beside such as it self is hurtful and prejudicial to man For this Self-love is so immoderate and inordinate that it causeth men so to forget themselves that they undervalue even Almighty God and by consequence their own salvation Of this Self-love Saint Augustine telleth us that Satan hath built his great City of Babylon lib. 1.
Self-love being a Self-seeker ââ all things never rests never cease troubling and intaingling it self anâ others in all sorts of inconvenienceâ dangers and evils being the Oâ man which reigneth in mankind and causeth so great disorders anâ confusions amongst men and so mâny spiritual diseases in Christianity that even St. Paul himself Doctor ââ the Gentiles could not restrain froâ crying out desiring to be freed froâ it Infaelix Ego homo quis me liberâ bit de corpore mortis hujus Rom. 7. ââ Vnhappy man that I am who shâââ deliver me from the body of this deaââ This Self-love therefore may be saââ to be as a wioked Monster in us thâ totally ruins and destroys mankind in another place I shall further declaââ and at present though it be impâsible to unfold and discover the wiââedness of this pernicious Monster ââ the full I will endeavour in part ââ make it appear how horrid and frigââful he is by the opposition which ââ hath against the Charity or Love of God Saint Paul doth much encourage âe to this design having so incomâarably well demonstrated and declaâed the excellencies of Charity or Divine Love so lively so fair so loveây and so agreeable that nothing âan be desir'd nor wish'd more perâect and accomplish'd in these expresâions Charitas patiens est benigna âst Charitas non aemulatur c. 1 Cor. â 3. 4. Charity or the Love of God âs patient is benigne gentle kind Charity envieth not dealeth not perââersly is not puffed up is not ambiâious seeketh not her own provokâth not to anger thinketh no evil âejoyceth not in iniquity but rejoycâth in the truth Charity suffereth all âhings believeth all things and âeareth all things In a word Chaâity abideth all wayes free constant âively simple or sincere without âny doubleness or disguizement causâng no deceit nor using any dissimulation for having God only for hâ last end in that respect she totalââ resteth and sweetly reposeth in him But Self-love proveth quite contrâry both within and without beiââ alwayes deceitful and disguized ââ all her proceedings blaming thââ which should be praised and praisiââ that which deserves blame esteeâing her self better than all others yââ sometimes feignedly undervaluinâ and speaking meanly of her self ââ the intent she may be the more praiâed and exalted by others If sââ speaks well of her neighbour 't is only ââ bring him upon discourse or make hiâ talkt of that afterwards she may fiââ occasion to traduce and slander him â for Self-love is subtle and seldom ââ at any time wants ground true ââ false to maintain or excuse to paâliate or hide the naughtiness of heâ proceedings being like to a Squinâey'd man who being bidden to looâ on one side looks on the other ââ wicked and deceitful Self-love tâ whom it must be said what the Proâhet Ahias said to the Wife of Jeroâoam that came to see him disguized âxor Jeroboam curte aliam esse siâulas 3 Reg. 14. 8. Jeroboams âife why doest feign thy self to be ânother woman Secondly Charity or the Love of âod makes a man value nothing âor esteem any thing in this world âut vertue for which reason he lovâth all perfections and vertues in âeneral but in a singular manner the âertue of Humility by which he alâayes submitteth despiseth and unâervalueth himself suffereth injuries âpprobrious and abusive speeches conââsions and beareth all mortificatiâns for Jesus Christs sake patiently ând meekly without commotion or âesentment attributes no good actiâns to himself but to God alone and ânstead of praising commending ând thinking better of himself for doâng well he humbleth himself flies âonour declines and refuses the praises and applaudings of men whaâ possible he can not seeking riches nor worldly pleasures or perferments but desiring rather to be commanded than to command or to have any power authority or dominion over others and in sine so contentâ himself to live in all due submissioâ under God and men that for ouâ Lords sake he is alwayes ready to obey every humane creature that haâ authority to command But on the contrary Self-love by wayes quite opposite to these causes a man to affect greatness honourâ riches and plenty of all things to glorify himself in his Extraction Nobility Friends Estate Power anâ Dominion over others to delighâ much in the society and acquaintancâ of great men and to take his pleasurâ in all sensual vanities so as verâ often to offend God through frailty anâ undue complacence with the world self-Self-love causeth men to be proud so that they love to be praised considered honoured and respected makes âhem desire to be imployed in great Offices and in things of great concern ât makes one to equalize himself to great Persons and oft times to prefer himself before his Superiours and Betters and to despise all he thinks under him or inferiour to him This makes him glory in what he possesses and of what he can do but sad and dejected and full of melancholly when he falls into any want or necessity This makes us angry and full of fury when our conceits and discourses are not well taken or not approved and finally through Self-love it is that we are so easily and so much troubled in mind at every small thing that happens contrary to our desire and expectation Thirdly Charity or the Love of God causeth a man not to regard so much his proper utility and conveniencies as those that concern the common and publique good or are profitable to many for which cause he doth not take so much pains and labour for his own interest as he will do for others he is in a sorâ common to all and upon that accounâ loveth a common life abhoring alâ singularities at all times being contented with little and giving willingly of what he has But on the contrary Self-love causeth men to be chiefly solicitous in what they undertake that it may be for their own conveniency interest and proper utility makes them unwilling and slow to do any thing gratis or for nothing They will be rewarded to the full and whether it be in praise favour or goods they alwayes pretend to a full value of recompence Those who are led by self-Self-love love to be praised in all their actions be they either good or bad such men love Singularities and desire in all things to be treated better then others and applauded above the rest envying their equals above measure more especially if honour place employments or charges be given to ââem for then they grow discontentâd grudge murmur and complain âretending that themselves had been âore fit for such a great place and âore deserved to have had such a âreat Office Honour or Dignity conâerred on them yea sometimes pleadââg not only their greater Merits greatâr Parts and Sufficiency but rather then âil even greater need and want âf it then others Behold here but âne of the least parcels of the evil âffects which proceed from Self-love âehold a glimpse of
what a Self-lover âs alwayes ready to say and do beâng altogether for himself and scarce âor any body else But alas the time âs coming when they must repent of âhis their inordinate Love if not in âhis world yet assuredly in the next âor all eternity SECTION II. Self-love the original spring of all Spiritual Diseases SECT 1. All the Spiritual Diseases of Christians from Self-love 2. Self-love it self a most daâgerous Disease 3. A Description of the same 4. The beginning and continuance of that pernicious Disease 5. How that pernicious Disease corrupteth all Vertues anâ good Actions SECT 1. All Spiritual Diseases of Christianâ from Self-love FOr the most part as soon as â man findeth himself weak and sickly he presently doth his endeavour to know the original cause of ââat his corporal Disease and infirmiââ consulting with Physicians that ây their means and prescriptions a âresent and fit remedy may be apâlied for the ease of his pain I say âe same of the Spiritual Diseases of âhristians If any of them would now from whence the Languishing ânfirmities of their Souls which hold ând torment them daily do proceed Divines will unanimously tell them ââ is a continual Feaver of Self-love ââat troubles them which according ââ Saint Augustin is the root of all ââns and consequently of all the Spiââtual Diseases Distempers Sickâesses and Infirmities which afflict ââem being the source and spring of âll evil and the plague of humane âââfe in so much as it may be said to ââe that Trojan Horse bearing fire ând swords saccage and rapin in its âowels This Self-love may be well âompared to a Malignant Feaver of which as there be several sorts and all of them for the most part mortaâ and deadly so are there several sort of Self-love all in their kind pernicious and dangerous consisting somâ in pride some in ambition some iâ vanity and presumption there aââ Self-esteemings Self-admirings Self-complacencies and pleasings Self-delights Self-praisings Self-interests Self-wills with innumerable otherâ of like nature which apparently spring from the main root of Self-love Saint Ambrose one of the chiefesâ and greatest Physicians of Souls â writing upon Saint Lukes Gospel Lukâ 4. 38. speaketh of Seven sorts of these Pestilential Feavers which are mosâ dangerous to Christians The firsâ riseth from pride ambition and hypocrisie c. The Second from covetousness the unsatiable desire oâ money or worldly things The Thirdââ from sensuality and prodigality iâ meat and drink The Fourth from the concupiscence of the flesh wantonness in unlawful desires and pleasures The Fifth from troublesome humours ând bad conditions as anger and oâher disorderly passions The Sixth ââom a great negligence in good works ând carelessness in the performances âf good purposes and resolutions The Seventh and last from envy ând displeasure taken at others properties happiness good c. All which properties are fully contained ââ Self-love for from thence proceed âmbitions rebellions sacriledges âreacheries rapines in a word all âhat which is most horrid in Nature For it being the root of all sin âhere must of necessity grow up from ââ as from their Tree and Stock âhe Boughs and Branches of all âorts of Iniquity and Vice of which âlso the Apostle Saint John takes noâice in his Epistle namely 1 Joan. ââ 16. where he mentions the concuâiscence of the flesh that is all bodiây and carnal pleasures the concupiâcence of the eyes by which may be ânderstood the inordinate desire of understanding knowledge c. anâ pride of life which may also be caâled the concupiscence of the Will â breaking out into all inordinate actâons So that under these three coâcupiscences are contain'd and coâprehended the whole sinful state ââ Mankind and by the Catholiqââ Church and all Divines of the samâ are commonly sorted or divided inââ Seven branches namely Pride Câvetousness Lechery Anger Envy Gluttony and Sloth All which is fuâly agreeable to the saying of the Sâraphical Doctor Saint Bonaventurâ who speaking of Self-love useth theâ expressions It must be confessed saitâ he that Self-love is the original caâââ of all evil and wickedness and thââ by means thereof all sinful actioââ come forth or shew themselves witâ all the Languishing Infirmities thaâ attend our Spiritual Estate As for Example Doth not priââ and ambition proceed from Self-love Have they any other original fountaiâ or spring are they any thing else but an inordinate Love of our own proper excellencies and a desire to be commended in all our actions above and before others Doth not envy rise up from the same root Is it any thing but the inordinate Love of our selves that makes us grieve and be displeased at others felicity good parts vertue c. when we compare our selves with them and to grudge that others should be equal to us or to proceed in dignities before us Whence comes sloath negigence and remissness in Gods service but from hence namely that out of inordinate Love to the pleasures and delights of the Palate we pamper our selves and our carcasses so much that we become idle thereupon unapt and unwilling to take any pains care or diligence in things that concern the good of our souls and our spiritual interests Doth not anger come from hence Is it for any other reason then that of Self-love and inordinate esteem of our selves that we are so full of wrath and passion so easie to be provok'd and sâ ready to take revenge upon very frivolous accounts and that with every one Whence comes lechery oâ the intemperate pursuing of sensualâ or carnal pleasures It is an effect oâ self-Self-love though one of the ignoblest and least worthy of man that we are transported so far beyond measure with those wanton concupiscences of the flesh The same I musâ say of gluttony it is from an inordinate and no due love of our selves that we exceed so much in our appetite and affections towards meat and drink From this disorderly love it is that we affect so much to feed on delicacies and dainties even to the making a God of our Belly Lastly As concerning covetousness it proceeds most apparently from hence and from the inordinate love of our selves it comes that we are so unsatiably greedy and desirous of Riches Wealth money and all other worldââ possessions so that for conclusion âith infalible truth it may be said ââat this Self-love is a Mother vice ând that from thence all the vices âânnes evils and spiritual maladies âhat so unhappily infest Mens Souls âave their original and do spring âs Branches do from their proper Tree ând Stock and as Rivers flow from âheir Springs and Fountains SECT 2. Self-love it self a most dangerous Disease It is not without just cause and reaâon that these Seven Branches of âelf-love are commonly called and âear the Title of Mortal or Deadly âeeing all the vicious and corrupt inâerests and practices of men are reâuced to some one or other of them âs we have already declared
and if ââ happens that the objects of any of these branches or several kinds of inordinate Self-love be very predominant and prevailing in our affections it must of necessity be because the Love of God is proportionably weak and at a very low ebb in us and consequently it either puts us into or shews us to be in a most dangerous and sickly condition of soul even in the state of habitual mortal sin being withal deprived of Gods Grace for so long time as we remain in such estate so that we do not only languish but perish being destitute both of the Remedy and Physicians and although peradventure many notwithstanding their being in this bad condition through habitual Self-love do either by reason of their natural inclination or through the power of some other worldly interest forbear to commit those gross and palpable sins which Self-love and vicious affections do usually draw other men unto yet this will not excuse them nor put them in a good state towards so long as they âre guilty and their hearts infectâd with Self-love But what shall we say now of âhose who are so much subject and âiven up to this vice that they set âheir thoughts and endeavours wholâ upon honours vanities pleasures ââ as feasting and gaming or otherwise ângage themselves in Contentions or ââ its at Law or siding with Factions ân State so as that they seem to place âheir whole delight in such things âor although the particular actions of âhese men considered singly may âeem only to be venial yet let me âell them the whole number with ânnumerable other aggravating cirâumstances renders them damnable ând that with great reason because ât shews that through the vehemency âf Self-love their affections are placed ând fixed in those objects as in their âast end which is to transgress the Hoây Commandments of God in the highâst and most grievous manner besides the scandal they give We judge of their inward affections by their outward actions Wherefore if these worldly objects of Honours Vanities Pleasures and the like take up their whole employment or the greatest part of their time 't is evident that they are predominant over their affections and that God is not so much the object of their minds and thoughtâ as he should be namely to reign iâ them by Holy Love and to be the principal and chiefest end they aim at So that being destitute of Gods Grace and giving so great scandal by their life and manners they must needs be in a dangerous condition Certainly they do grosly deceive themselves in imagining that they love God above all things or that the Love of him is the most cordial of all their loves when as reflecting well upon themselves they would find that all their Love-actions and all the designs of their heart were so wholly bent and set upon worldly things that the service of God and salvation of their Souls were the least ân all their thoughts least spoken of and least attended unto For the love by which they are bound to prefer God above themselves doth not consist in discourse and meerly talking of ât but in doing what we are commanded and in doing it with real ând hearty affection therefore if they ântend to be cured of this dangerous Disease this languishing and Soul-âestroying distemper of self-Self-love it must be as the Christian Doctrine âoth teach and advise us to do nameây that our Love of God be the most absolute the most affectionate ând cordial the most general and âredominant of all other loves and âhat it reign in us above and more âhan all other passions We must love God more then our own selves and âur own lives we must love him generally and in all things without âxception that he commands us to âove desiring to please him more than to please our selves And besidâ this we must be truly and sincere disposed to lose all things even thoâ which are most dear unto us and â suffer the greatest indignities if ââcasion require rather than to forsaââ him or lose his grace and favour aâ consequently we must be ready â embrace all persecutions sufferance yea death it self rather than to coâmit one mortal sin And this degâââ of Divine Love is the only cure the Languishing Disease and Disteâper of Self-love and is absolutely ââquisite for the Salvation of our Soââ SECT 3. A Description of the same The Wise Hippocrates accordiââ as 't is reported of him deplored his time very much the evil effects ââ Avarice saying The Life of Mââ is rendred miserable by the same â may say the like with Father Caussââ of Self-love since it is the most fatal plague amongst all the passions It is not a simple malady but a complex a malady composed of all the evils in the World it hath the shivering and heats of Feavors the ach and prickings of the Meagrim the rage of Tooth-ache the stupefaction of a Vertigo the furies of Phrenzy or Madness the black vapours of the Hypochondry the disturbances of the Waking and Fits of the Falling-sickness it hath the stupidities of the Lethargy the heaviness of Hearts-greif the pangs of the Collick the infections of the Leprosie the venome of Ulcers the malignity of the Plague the putrefaction of the Gangreen and whatsoever else is horrible in Nature Since therefore Self-love is such a strange and pestilent Disease in Morality that there is none like it in Nature nor more hurtful to Mankind I will dilate my self more at large with the same Father upon the Disasters that are daily in the sight ââ the World caused by it Alas theââ are millions of Men who would bâ most fortunate and flourishing if the knew how to avoid the mischievoââ power of this passion but using ââ consideration nor endeavour to thâ end they abandon their Bodies ââ dishonour their Reputation to infâmy their Estates to waste and miâ spending and their whole lives to aâ infinity of disturbances and torment For from hence it comes as we daâly see the experience that Virgins ââ Noble Blood and Families are stoln âway Families dishonoured and dâsolated and grieved parents precipitated into untimely Tombs by ingrateful Children From the same it follows that sâ many Young Widows make shipwracâ of their Honour in the World anâ suffer themselves to be corrupted by incontinency that so many miserable Creatures that otherwise with the grace of God might have lived and died honourably after they have serâed for a matter of talk to a City for time by reason of their evil and ââfortunate courses very often at last âe in an Hospital Hence also it ââmes that so many Innocents are âade away by a death which preâented their birth and many of them âurthered and destroyed after their ârth as it appears more or less at âl Assizes and Sessions to the great âame of Christianity Besides all these how many poor âfants are brought into this Life as ârecks at Sea are thrown upon the âocks or
in another As for Example âow many distempers of wilful igâârance and errour in the mind How âany ulcers of envy and malice in âe will How many fallings and ofâânces happened through frailty of conââpiscences It would be endless to ââckon all the Infirmities and Lanââishings of Soul that lay upon and âpressed mankind in such a manner â was even incurable before the comââg of Christ and till he came to âply his Grace and the Merits of âs Death and Passion for their Cure âaving after him the Balsome of the ââcraments to that end as namely âe Water of Holy Baptism for the âashing away that foul stain of Oriâânal sin in every one and of all aââual sin committed before Baptism in such as were rightly Baptized aââ the other Sacraments especially thâ Holy Eucharist and Pennance for thâ healing of all actual wounds maâ in the Soul by sin committed aftââ Baptism Insomuch that before tââ coming of Christ and also since ââ all those that are through sin deprivâ of the merits of his passion and ââ those two Sacramental Antidotes âbove-mentioned it may be rightâ said even now at this present whâ the Prophet Isaias of old said of tââ Israelites Omne caput languiduâ et omne cor moerens a planta peâ usque ad verticem non est in eo sanitâ Isa 5. v. 5. Every Head is sââ and every Heart in heaviness frââ the Sole of the Foot even to the Croâ of the Head there is no Health ââ Soundness All their Kings all thâ Princes all their Priests Prophââ and People were Soul-sick all â them from the highest to the loweâ languished through ingratitude aâ other innumerable iniquities commâââed against God there was none of âhem of what condition soever but âad defiled themselves by sin had corrupted their wayes and were subject to many spiritual imperfections and that which rendred their condition most deplorable and despeâate was as it follows in the Prophet Ibid. because that Vulnus liâvor plaga tumens c. their Wounds and Bruises and Putrified Swelling Sores which sin had bred in them were not bound up by the Care and Skill of any Spiritual Physician They would not repent of their sins they would do no Pennance they would hearken to no good Counsel the Holy Oyl which should have mollified their hard hearts and brought health unto them infine they would make no use of any of those Remedies which were prescribed for recovery of their Spiritual Health and for the staying of further judgments whence the Prophet adds in the same place v. 7 9. Therefore is your Land still desolate your Cities burâ with Fire Et nisi dominus exercâ tuum reliquisset nobis semen c. Vâless the Lord of Hosts had left us â Seed we should have been ere now â Sodom and been like unto Gomorrah â but blessed be God who of his infânite mercy doth still preserve somâ good and holy people in the World that his Church may never fail SECT 5. How this pernicious Disease of Selâ-love corrupeth also all Vertuâ and good Actions The Exercise and practice of Vertues is observed and done diversâ wayes and therefore Plotinus thâ Philosopher distinguishes the rational Vertues of the Soul in two generââ kinds making some meerly morâ or civil to wit such as polish anâ adorn the manners and outward conversation others he make purgativâ of the Minde Spirit and Understandââg of Men from errours perverse âudgments and opinions Those of the âârst sort are not so absolute Vertues âs those of the second are by which âe are after a sort made to the likeâess of God All the Vertues that are âertues indeed are purgative Oââers distinguish the same Vertues inââ imperfect and perfect supposing ââat such division serves better for the âeclaration of their several natures âut it comes much to one and the ââme For under those which they âle imperfect they include all those âhich others call moral or civil and âarce any other for those which ââey call natural and humane are âally moral vertues and pertain to âe polishing of the civil life not âârightly indeed stiled and accounted ââperfect seeing that if they do not ââoceed from Self-love as very ofâân they do yet they are alwayes âânsistent with it and tend only to ââme worldly object Others they call perfect because they perfect us iâ order to God having God for theâ principal object and end and makinâ us pure and holy after our propââ measure and degree in his sight which are all by another name righâly called purgative because they purgâ and cleanse our Souls of those Vices which bar our sight of God and maââ us seem unpleasing to him In furthââ Confirmation of what has been saiâ we are to know it is the general opânion of Divines That Vertues of tââ first sort to wit those we call Nâtural Civil and Moral considerââ in themselves alone or in their owâ Nature are of no effect nor esteeâ with God as being imperfect aâ practiced by a certain instinct aâ inclination of nature whereto ââ the most part Self-love and private iâterest or at the best humane rââson and prudence that is world wisdom carries us As for Exampââ How exactly do many men yea â wise and well grounded persons oâserve the Civil and Temporal Laws â the Land The cause is they âar to do otherwise reflecting upon âe penalties and punishments inflictâ upon transgressors How many âomen live chast and contain themââlves in the bounds of Wedlock not â much minding to fulfil Gods Comâandment or to be chast continent âr Gods sake but meerly for the âame and ignominy which they apârehend would follow and happen to ââem should they abandon themââlves to sin and to an unlawful liâerty in that kind How many exârcise patience not for the Love of âertue but for fear either to disturb âhemselves to little purpose or to disâlease the party that gives the occaââon Morover How many are there to âe found in the world that seem to âove their Friends their Kindred and âelations that seem most dutiful and âbservant to their Parents as in duây all are obliged to be and yet how often is it likewise found that all ââ most of these observances dutifulness complacency proceed meetly from self-Self-love and not out of thâ Love of God or from any principle ââ true Piety Love Duty c. Wâ fear that if we should not seem loving dutiful kind c. we shoulâ lose the good-will of others wâ should be deprived of some great estate great fortune or great hopes anâ thus it is for interest only and for oââ own ends for the most part that wâ are dutiful and observant towards Pârents As much may be said of mâny that make great shew of affectâon and of great Love to those of an âther Sex it may be feared such kinânesses and courtships carry with theâ much abuse and corruption and thâ if the chief object or end be not lust ââ some
Process and Suiââ at Law what by private quarrels contentions animosities what througâ hatred envy and ill-will what by slanders detraction and defamation what by fraud and deceit what by rapine and violence what by murthers poysoning and other evil practises he is incessantly molesting and doing him prejudice sad experiences whereof appear every day iâ the world not to speak of more publick mischiefs and calamities which happen and are originally hatch'd by Self-love of which in due place But for private wrong and injury done to our Neighbour through Self-love that one example which is mentioned in the third Book of Kings Chap 21. v. 7 8 9 c. may well serve instead of many It is that of Achab and Jezabel wickedly plotting and procuring the death of Just Naboth for no other reason but because he would not part with the Inâeritance of his Fathers for to make Achab a garden of pleasure What âorrid mischiefs were caused by the âelf-love of David in the matter of Bathsabee and Vrias first defiling âhe Wife and then commanding the âeath of the Husband as we read Reg. Ch. 11. In fine all other murthers slaughers and violences of that nature âhich are daily committed do they âroceed have they any other spring âr root than the inordinateness of his passion of Self-love All conâentions in Courts of Justice all âleadings and debates in Parliament âhey have no other original ground âut Self-love All the Wars that are âetwixt Kings and Princes and which are the great and almost perâetual plague and scourge of Chriâendome whence come they but ââom Self-love The same is to be âid of all Domestick contentions ând discords their original source is Self-love so that in a word we may safely conclude of this vice that it is the common Fountain even of all the evils in the world that are committed against our Neighbour Neither need I to spend time any further to particularize or prove as it were by retail this most certain truth it being so evident in the gross beside to mention or go thorough with all particulars that might be alledged in proof would be a work of no end a mans whole life might be imployed therein And truly which of those two Philosophers I should wish to be revived whether Democritus that laught at all things or Heraclitus that wept for all things I cannot easily resolve The World affords matter enough for the exercise of both humours But till we can mend things that are amiss by over-much vexing at them I think 't is best to make as light as we can of the evils we cannot help or hinder With as equal therefore and unmov'd affections as I can I look upon the various proceedings of men and observe âhe vanities and follies of those who âre wholly addicted to pleasures and of those who with like eagerness pursue their profits and interests of gain and see how vehemently and âniversally the Spirit of Self-love agitates and works in them all how âestless they are to put their proper will and sensuality in execution and âow solicitous till they have obtain'd âheir desire which may be obtain'd âut can never satisfie their wills may be fulfilled but their minds are âever the more at rest Seneca lib. 1. de Tranquilitate âitae takes part with Democritus ând maintains that he had more reaâân to laugh at the state of the âorld or humane affairs considerââg the great vanity and folly that is â them than Heraclitus had to deâore them with his tears and the ââief reason he gives for his Opinion is that as there is no ground or cause in reason to cry to be sad angry or any way troubled in our selves at any thing that a Fool or a Mad-man says or does seeing they are people out of their wits as we say void of common sense reason and understanding so there is no reason that Heraclitus or any other of his complexion should cry weep mourn or lament in any passionate sort the evils which he sees in the world seeing they are but the actings for the most part of mad thaâ is of perverse and obstinate people playing their pranks and doing contrary to all reason There is no greaâ cause to lament one that goes to the Gallows sporting and dancing as ââ he were going to a Feast such â man deserves to be less regarded âven for his vain joy and unseasonable alacrity in seeming so little tâ consider or lay to heart the sad condition of his approaching end ââ the same manner when we see mâ go wilfully and with delectation to âternal miseries only because they will satisfie their Self-loves and ânjoy their Self-wills and sensual âleasures to the full hearing no admonition and receiving no instruction to the contrary why should we pity them I say why should we pity them âot being ignorant that all good Christians who apprehend and reâect better upon their unhappiness âut of a spirit of more perfect chariây will not fail to pity them and âo have a great compassion for their âad and deplorable estate and for âhe imminent danger they are going âo precipitate themselves into for all âternity But I mean they give no âause of themselves to be pittied I âo willingly say Alas for them âlas that for a short momentary âleasure they will thus choose to sufâer eternal torments as Job says of âhem chap. 21. v. 13. Ducunt in boâis dies suos in puncto ad inferna descendunt They spend their dayes in wealth the worldlings chief and only God and in a moment go down to Hell Verily at a dear rate they buy their Pleasure and the fruition of their Self-Loves Had Dives mention'd in the Gospel Luc. 16. 19 c. well considered the Exchange he was to make after death for the Pleasures he enjoyed in this life I cannot doubt but he would have bettered his ways and prevented the hearing of that hard sentence from the mouth of Abraham his Father Ibid. v. 25. Recordari fili quiâ recepisti bona in vita tua nunc autem cruciaris Remember Son that in thy life time thou receivedst good things but now thy life of pleasure is ended and thou art come into torments But alas I say again when we begin to speak of the torments which damned Souls endure to these Self-ended People and worldly Self-lovers we seem to them as if we told them stories to fright Children they are too old and wise to believe us âhat which Christ did teach and preach they reject for fables and untruth Alas for them there is no Faith for them nor any other true Christian Vertue self-Self-love domineers Self-love bears all the sway Self-love is all in all with them Unhappy men at so great a peril to pursue that which at length will certainly deceive every one of them and reward their pains and pursuits with perpetual sorrows Ah! would to God they would open their eyes a little and that his grace might unblind their understandings
through the Grace of God so wrought with him that he was forthwith converted both to the Catholique Faith and to a most holy continent and chaste life Oh that we could follow his good example and retire our selves out of the Life of this World to a Life Holy and Spiritual that we could give our selves up wholly to Gods service renouncing all vanities and vain divertisements fopperies and all the sensualities of the world and of the flesh and avoiding all the deceitful works of the Devil as things that are most prejudicial to our Bodies and Souls Oh that we could resolve from this present time to say with the Prophet Osee Ducam animam meam in solitudinem Oseae 2. v. 13. I will lead or with-draw my Soul into solitude I will make a divorce a perpetual seperation from all sorts of Vanities Concupiscences Pleasures and Sensualities I will henceforth with St. Paul 2 Cor. 4. v. 10. say Semper mortificationem Jesu in corpore nostro circumferam I will always bear about in my Body the Mortification of Jesus Christ that by means thereof through his Divine help and aid I I may avoid and qe free from Self-love SECTION V. How to conquer and overcome Self-love Sect. 1. Man cannot attain that Grace without the help of God 2. The first means to overcome Self-love is by the knowledge of our selves of our own Nothing Unprofitableness Vileness Miseries and Afflictions 3. The second means to overcome Self-love is by the knowledge of the Excellencies and Perfections of God 4. The third means to overcome Self-love is by the knowledge of the Benefits we have received and are to receive Sect. 1. Man cannot attain that Grace without the help of God The duty of our present state is and the chief employment of our whole life ought to be constantly and fervently to co-operate with Divine Grace and to grow in Vertues endeavouring always and in every thing to get the victory over our selves that is over inordinate Self-love and Self-interests that would debauch us from our duty and carry us into wrong ways The reason hereof is because God being a Nature or Essence superlatively excellent and infinitely above our and all other created natures requires as a tribute most worthy of him and of justice belonging to him that we totally abstract our love from all objects whatsoever and place it in him not loving any thing but God and what he commands and allows us to love for his sake This I confess is impossible for us to do by any meer natural ability or strength according as the most Reverend Father Nicolaus a Sancta Cruce a person who has been twice Provincial in the Order of Saint Francis and is famous as well for his Learning and Piety as his connual labour and pains-taking in the Mission of England confirms in his Cynosura Chap. the first page 5th upon the Miserere Psalm in these words When man looks into himself he finds a check seeing he cannot so much as dispose himself for his happiness without a supernatural aid For though it be true that humane nature by its own strength knows that God is worthy of all love yet our knowledge in Morality is much more apt for comprehension that is for understanding than for practice It is not enough to have wings to flie if they be so hamper'd as they cannot be display'd So this natural faculty in man of loving God above all things by means of Original Sin and a million of other obstacles is so weakened that we find the inclination of doing it far less vigorous and effectual than the Dictamens of our Reason to have it done And no wonder since St. Thomas affirms That our Will by Original Sin is much more damnified and impaired than our Understanding Whence Self-love grows powerful in use so that if it hath not a counter-prize of supernatural succours we yield and suffer our selves to be violently hurried on to the pursuit of fading and sensual objects for which cause the miseries of our humane nature are very much to be pittied and deplored being so wounded and made impotent unto good as that of her self alone she is not able to pay the least part of what she owes to the most lawful object of all hearts whose just homages are not only sighs groans or throws of spirit good wishes good desires c. but effective that is actual and real service done actual performance of what he commands exact observance of all his holy Precepts Laws c. together with a careful wary diligent aversion from whatsoever we know to be offensive to him and apt to put a seperation between God and our Souls Such are the excess of sensual pleasures and the immoderate affectation of worldly greatness honours riches and the like Our love and duty to God likewise requires that we resist temptations and in many encounters to suffer afflictions miseries and all manner of calamities incident to mans life yea sometimes to lose and lay down our lives rather then to fall into any transgression or sin opposite to Divine Love Now all these are difficulties hard things to be done and do far exceed humane strength which deserves indeed to be called rather weakness than strength so that it behoves us to have recourse to Divine Aid and to implore the Majesty of God for the gift of his special Grace which may enable us to perform what is required of us knowing this that should we be freed from all sins and imperfections yet could we not attain to such a degree of divine love and perfect holiness as to love him as much as he deserves to be loved how much more is this impossible for us to do in this our present condition in which beside our natural and original weakness we are through evil custom and long practice of actual sin become most averse and disinclined to it being on the contrary wholly possess'd fill'd and taken up with Self-love and the fruits thereof to wit pursuing our private interests concerns proprieties ambitious and worldly designs However some means I shall not omit to produce in this place for the helping us with more ease to vanquish this Vice of Self-love and to get a perfect victory over the same which we are not to despair of being prompted with divine help and assistance but to say confidently with S. Paul Phil. 4. 13. Omnia possum in eo c. I shall be able to do all things requisite to my Salvation through Christ who strengthens me These motives or means must be fundamentally grounded in a true and right knowledge of God and our selves and first of all in the perfect knowledge of our own selves of our nothing of our own unprofitableness vileness afflictions miseries In the second place it must be grounded in true knowledge of the Universal Sufficiency Being Power Wisdom and other the infinite perfections beauties and goodness of God who by reason of them is to be the only object of
you Chap. 7. v. 5. Induta est caro mea putredine sordibus pulveris My flesh saith he is cloathed with rottenness and filth of dust my skin is dried and shrunk up What is Man according to his Soul Alas if he be destitute of Grace and true Charity he is Gods enemy he is the heir of Hell and of eternal damnation he is a friend to all sorts of vanities a worker of Iniquity Gods Dishonour apt and ready to all Evil but slow to all that is good Infine he is a poor creature beset on all sides with evil blind in Counsel extravagant in his passions and proceedings vain-glorious and boasting in his words and in his deeds deficient and falling short of the good he pretends to in his appetites dishonest and in all things little save only in his own applause and esteem wherein he is beyond measure great for all which upon due consideration he ought rather to have a great aversion and dislike of himself than to be puffed up and swelled with Self-love so much to Gods dishonour and his own prejudice Sect. 3. The second means to over-come Self-love is by the knowledge of the Excellencies and Perfections of God It cannot be denied but there are several causes which do oblige us greatly to overcome Self-love as also induce us towards a perfect and true love of Almighty God who is the Creator of all both Heaven and Earth and all things therein contained Genes 1. v. 1. who is our Maker having made us of nothing to his own Image and Likeness according as we read Ecclus 17. v. 1. who is our redeemer having given himself a redemption for all as the Apostle witnesseth 1 Tim. 2. v. 6. who is our Heavenly Father so witnesseth Christ himself Matth. 6. 32. Your Father that is in Heaven knoweth that ye have need of these things And Joan. 20. 17. I ascend to your Father and to my Father to your God and to my God These are all of them just reasons and titles of right which God hath to our love these are all prerogatives and properties of such high perfection that in consideration of them we ought to suppress all motions of Self-love and Self-esteem and to entertain no thoughts of our proper excellency dignity merit c. But besides these there are divers other very well deserving to be taken notice of by us of which we must therefore speak I shall reduce them under two general heads To wit Those which concerns the intrinsecal perfections and unparalled excellencies of Gods Nature in himself and those which concern his outward works towards us that is to say the many and great benefits which we daily receive in this world from his infinite goodness and mercy and which we expect to receive in the world to come As concerning the first sort we are to know that whatsoever is amiable of it self or beloved it deserves to be so loved according to reason or for some reason or motive of love that is seen in it As for example when we love any reasonable or humane creature if the love be as the object is reasonable and not meerly passionate we love it upon the account of some particular quality or perfection that we see in it and according to the measure or degree of that lovely quality in the object which we apprehend and are affected with all is our love more or less great towards the subject wherein it is After this manner is all reasonable and vertuous love begotten â it arises always from the consideration of something in the party loved that justly deserves love and where there is no such thing seen or lookt at in our loving there is no reasonable or honest love Now upon this account what and how great reason have we to love God above all Creatures seeing that in him not only one or some few but all the reasons of Love all the Perfections all the good Qualities or Properties that are fit to deserve and gain Love are found All Goodness all Vertue all Wisdom all Power all Beauty all Majesty all Glory They are in him and superabundantly flow issue and proceed from him as from an eternal fountain of Good All the little rayes and resemblances of God which are seen in Creatures are darted from the Sun he imparts them all He makes Men wise vertuous good he furnishes them with all due feature of body and gifts of mind according as the Apostle S. James assures us saying Jac. 1. v. 17. Omne datum optimum omne donum perfectum de sur sum est Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above and cometh down from the Father of Lights If therefore we love any person for his wisdom God is infinitely more wise or for his nobility power wealth God is infinitely more noble mighty rich In fine whatsoever quality or perfection can be observ'd in Creatures as a Motive or reason of love the same with infinite advantages is to be found in God How much more therefore are we to love God than Creatures God I say who surpasseth all Creatures not only in the perfections already mention'd but in all others whatsoever without any exception As for his wisdom S. Paul telleth us that the depth of it is unsearchable and past finding out Rom. 11 33. O altitudo divitiarum Sapientiae Scientiae Dei c. O the height O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how in comprehensible are his judgments and his ways investigable There is none like unto him Quis poterit scrutari sapientiam ejus saith Elihu in Job Chap. 36. v. 23. Who can or will ever be able to search and know his wisdom As for his Nobility and the Titles of his due honour he surpasseth all Nabuchodonosor though his Enemy at that time and a wicked King yet acknowledged this to the Prophet Daniel saying Dan. 2. v. 47. Vere Deus vester Deus Deorum est c. In very deed your God is the God of all Gods and the Supream Lord of all Kings He is according to S. John Apoc. 19. v. 16. Rex Regum Dominus Dominantium King of Kings and Lord of Lords As for his Power Authority and Might he shall reign for ever and ever Luc. 1. v. 33. Et Regni ejus non erit finis Of his Kingdom there shall be no end Yea his power is such that nothing can be done without him by reason whereof it is said Rom. 11. 36. that of him and through him and to him are all things and Colos 1. v. 17. that by him all things consist As for his Beauty his comely and excellent features fair complexion take it which way you will whether of body or mind they are unparallell'd So the Espouse professeth Cant. 1. v. 16. Ecce tu pulcher es dilecte mi Ecce tu pulcher es decorus Behold you are fair my beloved behold you are fair and comely
And Chap. 5. 10. Dilectus meus candidus rubicundus c. My beloved is white and ruddy the choisest amongst ten thousand and according to the Royal Prophet Psalm 44. v. 3. Speciosus forma prae filiis hominum among the Sons of men none so goodly none so beautiful as he being most perfectly accomplisht and excelling in all internal and external endowments As for his great Goodness it likewise excels infinitely beyond all comparison the goodness of all men and of all creatures for according to the testimony of the Evangelist Luc. 18. v. 19. Nemo bonus nisi solus Deus None is good but God alone Tast ye therefore the sweetness of his exceeding goodness and say with the Prophet David Psalm 85. v. 5. Quoniam tu Domine suavis mitis c. Thou O God art good sweet and gentle and of much mercy to all those that call upon thee God of his own nature is good and benign ready to bestow benefits meek to remit offences and merciful to mitigate the punishments of those that love him No doubt therefore can be made but that as God is our Father most good most noble most wise most pleasant and agreeable most beautiful and fair most powerful mighty able and ready to help so he is more worthy of our love than any thing can be imagined in Mankind or in the whole race and order of Creatures Nunquid Deo potest comparari homo Job 22. v. 2. is there any thing in man that shall be compared to God no sure Divine Excellencies and Divine Perfections are such that man cannot reach the least shadow of them His goodness and mercy is such that he readily forgives all injuries all offences committed against him by sinners upon their true repentance how greatly soever and how often soever he be offended Si impius egerit poenitentiam c. saith the Prophet Ezechiel in Gods name If the impious will but do penance for his sins which be hath wrought and observe my Commandments to do them living he shall live and shall not die In conclusion he is as the Espouse in the Canticles speaks him Cant. 5. v. 16. Totus desiderabilis wholly and in all respects to be desired and to be loved There is nothing in him but what commands love in all that rightly look upon him David said of Jonathan that he was amabilis super amorem mulierum lovely beyond all the amiableness of Women How much more true is this of God the least of whose Beauties duly considered is able to ravish all hearts with the purer flames of Divine Charity Who would therefore having a perfect knowledge of these Divine Excellencies but subdue his heart to the love of them Who would not use all means and all endeavours in his power to conquer his own passion of Self-love and withdrawing his sensual affections from all worldly Creatures to fix a pure holy and perfect love on God alone and on his Neighbour for Gods sake Sect. 4. The third means and motive to overcome Self-love is by knowledge of the benefits we have received and are to receive from God As to the third motive which obligeth and induceth us to love God above our selves and all other Creatures it is grounded not only upon the benefits he confers upon us every moment which are infinite and continual according to the Sacred Text Acts 17. v. 28. In ipso vivimus movemur sumus in him we live move and have our being but also upon those that are still expected from him Either of these benefits are a sufficient motive to oblige us to love God above all and our selves only for his sake If we consider those of the first sort what greater reason of love can be imagined than to reflect that of our selves alone without his consent and permission yea without his special favour and assistance in the best things and those of greatest concernment to us we can do nothing without his leave and concurring help we are not able to lift up our foot from the ground or move a hand By his Creation we had our Being first given us and by his Conservation and continual Protection it is preserved to us with all our Powers and Faculties In him we live and without him we cannot live in him we move act and do such things as are agreeable or profitable to us but without him we neither move nor stir any more than a dead Corps so that it is of his mercy and free goodness that we do not every moment sink into our first and Primitive nothing as we should infallibly do if he were not pleased by the hand of his Providence and good will continually to hold us up This thing alone being well considered not to speak or mention as yet our Redemption or Salvation will make it more than sufficiently to appear that God is more worthy to be loved than we or the whole race of mankind are able to love For to say the truth neither the Angels nor the Archangels neither Cherubins nor Seraphins nor all the Holy Spirits of the Celestial Court of Paradice are able to do this their most united and unanimous affections in this kind their greatest and purest slames of love could not reach or come up to the merit or worthiness that is in God to be beloved Wherefore in this he condescends to our infirmity and requires us to love him above all other Objects not so much as he deserves to be loved but as we are able to love laying no other obligation upon us It behoves us therefore in all reason seeing God is so easily satisfied and requires of us no service but what is most reasonable that we give him our whole love and our whole hearts and serve worship and adore him with all our might and with all the power and vertue and strength of good will that possibly we can use This we may do if we will and it is all that he requires of us to do Fili praebi mihi cor tuum saith the spirit of God in the Proverbs Chap. 23. v. 26. My Son give me thy heart Shall we not give it him when he asks it so kindly of us Ah! if we be Sons if we be Loving Dutiful and Obedient Children and not stubborn Rebels we will give it him we will bestow it wholly upon him forsaking not only our selves but all other creatures to adhere closely unto him loving him with all our Hearts with all our Understanding with all our Will and in a word with all our Soul and our Spirit not suffering any thing to rest or have possession in our hearts that is contrary to his love nor minding ought but what may further us in his service never forgetting the merits of his great goodness towards us never tainting nor growing slothful in doing of his Commandments We will love him above all things as our Creator and Maker as our Saviour and Redeemer as our Everlasting Joy and Happiness
All which when Saint Anselm reflected upon he could not refrain from saying O my Soul when I consider and ponder well how much you are indebted to the Eternal God I blush at my former negligence in not performing my duty and great Obligation Tell me O Lord which way I am to turn my self and what I can do that will be acceptable to your Divine Majesty You have made and created me by your love therefore I owe you all and all that I am You have redeemed me in Love by your Sacred Death and Passion out of the perpetual slavery of Satan therefore I owe you all and all that I am You have promised me such eternal comforts and reward after my decease therefore I owe you all and all that I am In one word you did give your self wholly to me and for me therefore I owe you all and all that I am O Lord what satisfaction can Man give what recompence can he make for so many benefits already received and still to be received from your Hands and of your Bounty Quid retribuam Domino pro omnibus quae retribuit mihi said the Prophet David on the like occasion Psalm 115. 3. What shall I render to our Lord for all the good things that he hath rendered to me As if he had said I am full of confusion I am asham'd and troubled in mind what to do considering that he hath not only given and bestowed many great benefits upon me and mankind but hath also rendred good for evil mercy for ingratitude forgiveness for our sins and transgressions And we most unthankful have rendred to him evil for good for which cause reflecting upon what the truly penitent Sinner King David said in this case I resolve with all my heart and Soul to say the same with him Calicem Salutaris accipiam nomen Domini invocabo said he ubi supra v. 4. I will take the Chalice of Salvation say I and will invocate the name of our Lord that is to say Seeing that I am not able to render any thing worthy of Gods Favours to me I will do what I can I will gratefully acknowledge and accept his great benefits especially the sacred Cup of Christ which he was pleased to bless for the Salvation of Mankind and to drink of himself I will praise him and call upon his Holy Name SECTION VI. How to cure the pernicious Disease of Self-love Sect. 1. By with-drawing our love from all Corporal Objects 2. By humbling and undervaluing our selves 3. By overcoming our selves and sensual appetites Sect. 1. By with-drawing our love from all Corporal Objects To cure and totally to extirpate the pernicious disease of Self-love I must confess is no easie task it requires hard labour to overcome that inordinate Passion being a Vice so inveterate that nothing is more rooted in our hearts and so connatural that nothing is more pleasing to corrupt and unmortified nature so that to compass this end we must strive to our utmost and level all our actions intentions and wills so purely at Gods Honour and Pleasure as that we make him the only end we aim at and the sole object of our love for which purpose we cannot do better than to follow the example and counsel of the Seraphical Father Saint Francis saying daily in imitation of him Deus meus omnia Deus meus omnia O my sweet Jesus O my sweet Lord Thou art my God and all In the first place therefore great care is to be taken and exact diligence used for to with-draw our affections from all eternal objects whatsoever and to place and fix the same totally upon God for otherwise we run great hazard to fall short of our aim and that of the Evangelist will be found true in our selves Qui amat patrem aut matrem plus quam me non est ne dignus Matth. 10. v. 37. He that loveth Father and Mother more than God is not worthy of God that is deserves not to be accounted nor shall ever be accounted Gods true lover What love is more lawful or more recommended by God unto us than the love of Children to their Parents Wherefore seeing that even this kind of love to wit the love of Children to Parents and vice versa the love of Parents to Children c. can be no just excuse why we should not love God as we ought seeing that even this love when it is opposite to the love of God is forbidden us and we are commanded to cast it off there can be no reason to doubt but that all other loves of less nearness and concernment of less piety and vertue of less obligation in like occasion are likewise forbidden us and that we are commanded to with-draw our hearts from them and to give our selves wholly to the love of God above all things not to love any creature so much as we love God nor to be hindred by it from doing service The Evangelist Saint Luke seems to be yet more strict that we say not rigorous in the matter not only exacting to the full the accomplishment of what the Evangelist Saint Matthew mentions to wit that we should not love our Parents more than God or above and before God but requiring also that we should even hate our Parents if need requires it for Gods sake and renounce all affection love and Duty to them rather than to offend God or to forsake the least part of the love and Duty we owe to him for so we read Luc. 14. v. 26. Si quis venit ad me non odit patrem matrem c. adhuc autem animam suam non potest meus esse discipulus If any man cometh to me and hates not his Father Mother c. yea and his own life besides he cannot be my disciple It may seem an hard sentence but the meaning is easie This we are to do rather than hate God we must hate our Parents rather than do any thing which he will judge and esteem an hating of him we must renounce and cast off all love and duty to our Parents rather than to renounce or cast off our love and duty to God This expression therefore of the Evangelist obliges us to leap over all stumbling blocks that are laid in our way to hinder us in our going about Gods service We must renounce and reject whatsoever is most dear unto us yea our own selves and all the desires affections and inclinations of our Hearts how specious how morally good pious and honest soever they seem to be if they stand in our way and stop us from the supream love of God Fie upon all friendships must we say fie upon all affections that are attended with such mischiefs and do lead us into such dangers and fie upon all distracting and disquieting designs of the world which bend our imaginations wholly to the things unprofitable and impertinent thereby disturbing and separating us from the love of God
When we have done this and that the love of God begins to be well rooted in our hearts we are in the next place to do our endeavour that the same may increase and grow in us daily more and more which is best done by the continual practice and exercise of vertue and all manner of good works incident to our state and calling together with fervent prayers and observing such Rules of good life as by the Providence of God and the labours of pious men the Christian World as to that part is plentifully supplied with Let us have made never so great advancement in the love of God yet we are still to go on and not to make a stand in our Progress much less to think or perswade our selves that we have already attained such a perfect measure of loving God with all our hearts and all our souls as that we need not to add any more to it by Piety and Holy Living For such a degree of Divine Love is not to be pretended unto in this life until we come into the Heavenly Court of Paradise So long therefore as we live in this state of Mortality we are to go constantly forward in the exercises of Piety and Vertue For in this case it is rightly said Non progredi est regredi Not to go forward in the study and endeavour of Christian Perfection is to go backward and not to advance in the love of God is to fall back and come short more or less in point of duty and love to him and so they would find by experience in a short time whosoever should indulge to such a pernicious fancy to wit as to think they had done enough and that they loved God so well as that they needed not take any care of loving him better or with a more intense diligent exact and affectionate love Whereas the only measure of loving God is as S. Bernard often and excellently teacheth to love him without measure and never to think that we love him enough In consequence to what has been said it follows that all our endeavour must be imployed towards this end viz. of growing still more and more in the love of God and less and less in the love of this world of our selves and of all things that hinder or withdraw us from God whereto as Father Cressy rightly teacheth We must be guided by a divine light and assisted by divine grace The first for the removing such impediments as either corrupt nature or the Ghostly Enemy lays in our way to deceive us and make us give over the pursuit of vertues The second to help us forward in our journey and to bring us more near unto God till at length we be joyned to him by an immediate Union to which we ought to aspire as the end of our Creation and the ultimate perfection of our nature We must renounce as we have said before and fly from our selves that we may draw nigh unto God we must destroy Self-love in our souls that so the Divine Love may be raised up and increased in us we must give our selves to the exercise and practice of all vertues as well those which regard our selves and our Neighbour as those which concern God always remembring that those which concern our selves and our Neighbour usually called Moral Vertues are then only to be esteemed worthy of that name or to be stiled Vertues when they are exercised for the love of God and do effectually help to the mortification of our natural or corrupt passions affections lusts Those which properly and immediately concern God are called Theological Vertues and being these three to wit Faith Hope and Charity are conveniently put in practice all of them in the one exercise or duty of Prayer which includes all duties directly pertaining to God as namely of loving him with all our hearts and souls of trusting or putting confidence in him of believing his holy Word adoring his Divine Majesty obeying his Commandments submitting and resigning our selves to his Divine Will and Pleasure Follow therefore herein the good counsel of Father Grenadus who bids us not to suffer our minds to be intangled with over-much love of corporal objects or visible and worldly things whether they be Honours Lands Riches or other goods of this world Children Kinsfolks Parents Friends c. Forasmuch as this kind of love is a great occasion of all sorts of sins of cares vexations vain phantasies passions temptations and all kind of evil disturbance unquiet and disorder that is to be found in the world This Love according to S. Augustin is the poyse of the Soul and which way soever this Love draweth that way the Soul inclineth So that if this Love de set for Heaven then the Soul is drawn towards Heaven but if this Love be set upon Earth then is the Soul also bent towards Earthly things This being so it concerns us to walk warily never suffering our heart to fix upon or to cleave unto the love of visible things but rather to esteem them as things of small account as frail and uncertain and such as pass away in a moment Remove therefore your hearts from them and fix them wholly upon that which is their chiefest and most proper object viz. true felicity Sect. 2. By humbling and undervaluing our selves Deponentes omne pondus circumstans nos peccatum saith S. Paul Hebr. 12. v. 1. Laying aside all weight and sin that besets us as it were and incompasses us round about let us run with patience the Race that is set before us looking unto the Author and Finisher of our Faith Jesus who for the joy that was set before him indured the Cross despising the shame and is set down at the right hand of God The reason of his Exhortation is by the example of Christ humbling himself for us unto death yea the painful and shameful death of the Cross to move us to humility and patience for his sake who endured so much in our behalf both living and dying Christ disdained not for our sakes being God to descend from his high Throne of Majesty in Heaven and to be made Man taking our humane and vile Nature upon him yea and to be vilified contemned and undervalued by men and that in such a measure of inhumanity and malice as is beyond all expression and therefore if we will be his true Disciples and live after his example we must not disdain to humble our selves as he did nor to be ill treated by men as he was The Servant must not expect to be above his Master nor the Disciple above his Teacher If Christ were so humbled for us we ought to humble our selves for him and where his honour and service requires it not to think much to be undervalued abused despised and persecuted even to death If we will be worthy followers of Christ we ought with S. Paul continually to bear about with us the mortifications of our Lord Jesus 2 Cor. 4.
10. daily dying as to this world in all our inordinate passions and affectations of humane praise honour favour and contrariwise chusing and desiring rather to be undervalued by all to the intent that for the present the power of Self-love may be broken and abated in us and that afterward for this undervaluing and dispising our selves we may be honoured and exalted by our Lord Jesus Christ according to his promise Luc. 18. 14. Qui se humiliat exaltibitur Who so humbleth himself shall be exalted He that undervalues himself easily undervalues all other things and if you will possess all the only way is to forsake all But alas How far short are we of Perfection in this kind How few are there amongst us that forsake either the world or themselves as they ought Few there are that go by this narrow way Many are called many are exhorted and incited to it but few elected or chosen to walk and finish their lives in it Few there are that love to be vilified or desire to be humbled for Christ and yet it is that we must submit unto we must come to that perfection or miss and fall short of our reward eternal happiness If we would desire this Perfection from our heart we should obtain it seeing our Saviour hath promised us that whatsoever we shall ask in his name that shall be for his honour and our good it shall be granted Joan. 14. v. 13 14. And therefore if God do not send us afflictions and adversities requisite to this purpose viz. to humble us and mortifie our corrupt passions it is by reason he sees us unfit for them We are not strong enough nor so well mortified in mind and spirit as to bear them God on his part is always ready to do us good and to treat us so as may be best for us both as to this life and that to come and consequently to send tribulations crosses and afflictions to those that are truly mortified and so resign'd to his Divine Will as that he sees they will receive good and not harm by them that they will be humbled by them and patient under them and consequently encrease their own merits upon that account if not unto temporal yet at least which is far better unto eternal reward Observe from hence that all the things which men desire or can wish for if they tend not to the true abnegation to the true submission and humiliation of our selves for the love of God they are tainted with corrupt nature Interest and Self-love and though men sometimes are apt to think that they have clearly avoided and freed themselves from this paspassion yet it is only in appearance and they have driven it from them as it were on the one side but it returns slily and secretly upon them some other way and sticks fast on their Souls which appears by this that men seldome or never wish for or desire any great adversity any sharp afflictions tribulations or crosses nor desire much that any thing should go contrary to their mind and yet only these and such like things can shew how they are humbled how mortified and free of self-Self-love The reason hereof is no other but that vertue is imperfect in us We are yet faint-hearted and ready to fail in small matters Men are not as yet come to a true undervaluing of themselves they love themselves esteem themselves and still seek themselves too much almost in every thing Self-love is a subtile and deceitful vice it deceives others it deceives our selves using much dissimulation with every one Happy is the man that is free of it that is dead to himself that is to say who is dead in all his sensual passions and appetites and in all inordinate affections towards visible objects and dead in his own Self-love desiring to be vilified and undervalued of all according to the example of Jesus Christ who in his own person gave us a marvellous instance of most perfect mortification when being upon the Cross he cryed out in these words Matth. 27. v. 46. Deus meus Deus meus ut quid dereliquisti me My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Why am I thus left destitute to the will of my enemies without any aid or comfort from you God our Saviour and Redeemer hanging thus on the Cross was for certain deprived of all spiritual and sensible consolation yet did he suffer most willingly and not in the least lose his courage Ah he did it for our example it was to let us know that when God deprives us at any time of our wonted Consolations whether Spiritual or Temporal and brings adversity and affliction upon us it is that we should suffer them patiently and willingly for his loves sake and that we should with a perfect resignation submit our selves to his Divine Will Perfection does not consist so much in the gifts of a sensible Love and sensible Consolations but in that which may be more real and essential though less sensible to wit in a well-ordered and well-grounded affection of resolution of mind for God and for the performonce of his Holy Will and Commandments in all things The servant of Christ should not seek nor place Perfection in any sensible things whatsoever whether Corporal or Spiritual not in any sensible Devotion in time of Prayer nor in the frequency of Internal Consolations but in perfect Conformity to the Will and Commandments of God in perfect mortification of all sinful lusts and appetites and in perfect abnegation of our selves as to every thing that is offensive to him and contrary to our duty Perfection consists in being throughly clear of all affection to sin and constantly inclin'd and well disposed to whatsoever is good Happy is he who is so humble as to acknowledge himself a great sinner and with the Publican to confess that he is not worthy to lift up his eyes to Heaven for the great multitude of his sins Happy is he who is so well disposed and mortified as to be ready to endure all pains yea even those of Hell it self if it could be for the love of God though being himself in the state of Grace Happy is he who is as well prepared and as well pleased in being deprived of all sensible graces devotions love as to have or receive such gifts from God Happy is he who is so well inflamed with the Essential love of God as to desire at all times of his life to be freed from corporal love to any Creature Happy is he who desireth to imitate or be like unto Jesus Christ upon the Cross abandoned of all good spiritual and corporal rejected and vilified by men forsaken by God and left destitute to all want pain and misery But alas How few are there of this perfect disposition where is the man that is thus mortified in his passions humbled in his mind resigned in his will Where is the man to be found who being depriv'd of his wonted Consolations
subject to sin Wherefore it is very true and in this case necessary to be observ'd what Father Granada says Such as desire to love Almighty God should endeavour to sequester themselves and depart from the practice of all sins As to the second thing required you must know that before you can obtain the grace of loving God above all Creatures it is necessary that you be very serious in your thoughts and apprehensions of God and that you delight your self to consider and meditate in your mind both the truth of his Existence and also how important a thing it is for you and all men rightly to believe and conceive of him and worthily to serve him To which end it shall not be amiss to call to mind and reflect upon the Motives which I have already in part alledged in the Fifth Section Sect. 3. for the exciting and stirring up mens hearts to Divine Love that is to say some of those Attributes Perfections and Proper Excellencies which are to be contemplated in the Divine Nature and do worthily move us to a due esteem and love of him and particularly that we do often and devoutly think upon the Perfections and Excellencies of our Lord Jesus Christ who is God Incarnate or God made Man for us and to procure our salvation in whom the Fulness of the Divinity doth inhabit corporally and in whom are hidden all the hidden Treasures of the Wisdom and Knowledge of God Colos 2. 3. and in whom all the good Properties Perfections and Excellencies whether pertaining to the Divine Nature or Humane to God or Man that can merit Love Reverence Honour and Esteem from us are found to admiration and excess he is Splendor Gloriae figura Dei Patris The Brightness of his Fathers Glory and the express Image or Figure of Gods Substance as to this purpose the Apostle speaketh Heb. 1. v. 3. Cum in forma Dei esset c. saith the same Apostle again Phil. 2. v. 6. making or confessing him to be the Form that is the most true internal and perfect resemblance of his Fathers Nature The Vapour or Breath of the Power of God and a bright streaming or Emanation of Glory from the Almighty He is the Brightness of Eternal Light the Vnspotted Mirror or Glass of Divine Majesty and Image of his Goodness Sap. 7. 25 26. In fine he is God of God True God of true God and consequently perfect and absolute in all the Properties of Divine Majesty and Glory and the Fountain of Perfection and of all Good in his Creatures which thing well considered I cannot doubt but they will make us see how just and reasonable it is that he alone should be lov'd and honoured by us above all Creatures as containing in himself all the Causes Motives and Reasons of Love and Honour As to the third thing requisite for the obtaining of Divine Love it is to recal often to mind the Graces and Benefits the Gifts and Favors which we have received and do daily receive at Gods hand as well those receiv'd before Baptism as since the benefit of our Creation whereby we have our Being the benefit of his Providence whereby we are preserved in our being defended from all Evil and supplied with all necessary Good The benefit of our Redemption and the great kindness which God therein hath shewed towards his Creatures to wit in sending his only Son our Lord Jesus Christ to take humane Flesh upon him in the Womb of the most pure and immaculate Virgin his Mother and in the same Flesh to die and redeem us from the slavery of our Ghostly Enemy and from everlasting Damnation By which means being already in right of Creation and Providence our loving Father through the Mystery of Incarnation he became our Brother our Saviour and in a more special manner our Lord our King our God our Governour and our last end Yea by reason of this Union and Communion of Nature with us he becomes through Grace the Heavenly Spouse of every one of our Souls being married to him in Faith and Charity And therefore as our Spouse so loving so good so rich so great so beautiful so provident so tender-hearted he deserves to be requited and repayed by us with the same that is with a most intense most cordial most affectionate sincere and if it could be an infinite love and as he is our last end he is to be supreamly look'd at aim'd at regarded and intended by us in every thing of moment that we do or take in hind Considering therefore that we have such motives and reasons to love God above all and especially our Blessed Saviour God Incarnate let us use no delay let us shew no backwardness to return him love for love and to to render him our most humble and daily thanks for all his benefits and mercies remembring that of Solomon Sap. 16. v. 28. Quoniam oportet praevenire Solem ad Benedictionem tuam c. That we ought to prevent the Sun to give thanks to God and the Morning-light to adore and make prayers to him and that if we do it not but remain unthankful for his Benefits it shall befall us as is said in the same place v. 29. Ingrati spes tanquam hybernalis glacies tabescet c. The hope of the Vngrateful shall melt away as a Winter-Ice and shall perish as unprofitable Water Sect. 2. How we are to love our Neighbours None can be so ignorant as not to know that it is part of our Duty to God to love our Neighbour since that God himself doth so positively and precisely require it of us by the Evangelist Matth. 22. v. 39. Diliges proximum tuum sicut teipsum Thou shalt love thy Neighbour as thy self The same Commandment is repeated in diverse other places as namely Luc. 10. v. 27. Rom. 13. v. 9. Galat. 5. v. 14. Jam. 2. v. 8. Yea it was a Law in force unto the Jews as well as Christians according as we read Levitle 19. 18. The just and honest love of our Neighbour is so united annex't and as it were chained with the Love of God that for the same loves sake whereby we love God we are commanded to love our Neighbour yea Saint John the Evangelist argues that through want of loving our Neighbour we cannot love God and calls him Lyer that pretends the contrary to wit that we may love God truly and acceptably without loving our Neighbour Siquis dixerit c If a man saith he shall say I love God and hateth his Brother he is a lyer giving this reason For he that loveth not his Brother whom he hath seen how can he love God whom he hath not seen 1 Joan. 4. 20. and making his reason good with this final assertion viz. And this Commandment have we from God that he who loveth God loveth his Brother also These two loves proceed and come forth from the same Root and have the same Original Cause to wit
not the principal Motive and Reason of their love They love him only with a natural love Thus Parents love their Children and Children their Parents Kindred love their Kindred or Relations Friends love their Friends and others love their Acquaintance Familiars Companions c. which Love although generally speaking it be not discommendable but lawful and honest in the eye of the world yet it is not that true love whereof we now speak being not grounded upon God nor exercised principally for his sake but upon natural grounds to wit upon the particular properties qualities and perfections Natural or Moral that are found in things and exercised meerly upon our own account for the good the pleasure the benefit content and profit that we receive by the persons we love by all which kind of love though we do not transgress any Divine Precept nor sin properly speaking yet neither do we deserve any reward for it at Gods hand because as the same holy Doctor says such Lovers amorem suum non spiritualiter sed naturaliter impendunt exercise love not after a spiritual but a natural and as it were carnal manner Such love may be commendable and honest but meritorious it is not We must therefore learn to be True Lovers by exactly observing and following the Commandment of Christ who when he first gave this Precept to the Apostles propounded himself as an example thereof to them Hoc est praeceptum meum ut diligatis invicem sicut dilexi vos Joan. 15. v. 12. This is my Commandment that you love one another as I have loved you Our Saviour loves us in God and for our Eternal Good so in the same manner are we to love our Neighbour This great Doctor moreover observes and mentions it as a matter whereat some wondered others disputed and enquired solicitously how it could stand that God should require us so strictly to love our Neighbours since elsewhere and at other times he requires us not only to have them in aversion but also to hate them and not only our common Neighbours and such as may be accounted as well Strangers as Neighbours but even those of the nearest and dearest relation to us that is to say even our Parents Brothers Sisters Wives and Children As for example by Saint Paul he commands in very earnest and expressive terms that Men love their Wives saying Ephes 5. 26. Viri diligite uxores vestras c. Husbands love your Wives as Christ loved his Church and gave himself for it and yet by the Evangelist he sayes Qui Vxorem non odit non potest meus esse Discipulus Luc. 14. v. 26. Vnless Men hate their Wives they cannot be his Disciples Is Christ contrary to himself Does he command that by one Apostle which he forbids by another Nothing less For we ought to reflect and consider that the substance and effect of both Precepts is by discretion and a right understanding easily kept and observed and that in different respects and for divers reasons we may both love them and hate them We may love them for Gods sake as being our Parents Friends Wives and Neighbours whom God commands us to love We may hate them when they prove obstacles and hinderances to our chiefest good when they become stumbling blocks unto us in the way of our Eternal Salvation when the loving of them will not stand with our Love and Duty to God we may hate them For so it is written in the Exposition of this great Doctor above-mentioned There is no Creature saith he so dear unto us which we must not hate and forsake if it hinder us from Christ or from his Church or from Salvation And the reason is because no earthly Thing no Duty to Parents no Love to Wife or Children Countrey or to a mans own body and life can be any just excuse or plea for him against God or for the doing of any thing that may offend or displease God in the least Sect. 3. How we are to love our enemies Having thus declared That we are to love God and our Neighbour we are to make some enquiry about loving our Enemies a thing very much against the natural bent of our minds We do not at all times find it easie for us to love our Neighbors who either love us or at least do not hate us or wish our harm Much more difficult then it will be for us to love our enemies of whom we have apprehension that they do both that is both hate us and wish and practice harm to us But how difficult soever it is and what reluctancy soever we find in Nature against it we must conclude for the Affirmative That we are to love even our enemies and to exercise all the good Offices of love to them that we can saving the due Order of Charity according unto and admitting for good the reason of Marchantius We must love our Enemies saith he by vertue of this Precept which bids us to love our Neighbors Quia nomine proximi non solum intelligitur Amicus sed quilibet homo vivens Under the Name of our Neighbour is understood not only our Neighbour that dwelleth by us but every Man living and by consequence our Enemies are to be reckoned in that sense for our Neighbors and accordingly loved This Divine Precept is not only expressed or given in the Law of Grace but was in force under the Mosaical and Prophetical Laws In the Mosaical Law it is said Exodus chap. 23. to 4. Si occurreris bovi inimici tui aut asino erranti c. If thou meet thine enemies Oxe or Ass going astray bring it back to him Under a particular cause or occasion he expresseth a general Duty namely that where we have opportunity to do our enemy a good office we fail not to do it out of our love and good will to him In the Prophetical Law it is said Prov. 25. v. 21. Si esurierit inimicus tuus ciba illum c. If thine enemy hunger give him meat if he thirst give him water to drink for in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head and our Lord will reward thee Not that we should intend evil to our enemy in doing him good but to shew that our doing him good shall be a better revenge than if we had heap'd coals of fire on his head For we both please God and may expect our reward for what we do and he if he repents not and ceases to be our enemy upon so just occasion given him must expect the effects of Gods displeasure first or last to fall upon him So likewise in another place it is said Cum ceciderit inimicus tuus ne gaudeas c. If thine enemy fall be not glad thereat and in his ruine let not thy heart rejoyce least perhaps our Lord see it and it displease him But in the Evangelical or New Law our Lord Jesus Christ doth more ratifie and confirm it Matth. 5. v.
44. in these words Ego autem dico vobis c. But I say unto you love your enemies do good to them that hate you and pray for them that persecute you and that slander or falsly accuse you that you may be the children of your Father which is in Heaven who maketh his Sun to rise upon the good and the bad and causeth it to rain upon the just and unjust What can be more express and clear For it might possibly be objected by some concerning the Old Law that there was nothing expresly declared or written that we should love our Enemies but only that we should help him in his necessity that we should not revenge our selves nor rejoyce in his ruine or adversity But in the New Testâment it is positively and expresly said Love your Enemies as is above-mentioned out of S. Matthew which the Evangelist S. Luke also confirms Chap. 6. v. 27. in the like words Love saith he your enemies do good to them that hate you bless them that curse you and pray for them that calumniate you Nay more than this The Gospel or New Law requires so great equanimity patience and good affection of mind towards those that hate us and treat us injuriously and that we be so far from revenging our selves that it requires us when we are stricken on the one Cheek to offer also the other For so this Evangelist S. Luke writeth Chap. 6. v. 29. Et qui te percutit in maxillam praehe alteram When one strikes you on one Cheek give him the other also to strike In fine for the accomplishment or full performance of this Precept we must know that as in relation to our Neighbour we are to love him corde ore opere in heart in word and in deed so must we also do towards our enemy We must in heart wish him as much happiness as to our selves we must in our actions do them as much good as we would have done to our selves in like case we must not defame slander injure or do them any harm in our words but in all our expressions and speech of them tender their good and their just concerns as our own So that although our enemies hate us yet we in charity are to love them and though they curse us we are to bless them though they persecute and trouble us we must forgive them and pray for them if they be wicked that hinders not us to be good if they be our enemies yet the holy Commandment obliges us to be their friends These things I doubt not will seem to many extream hard to be perform'd such is humane wâââness yet perform them we ãâã and that for Gods sake for so is Gods Commandment We must be not only content but willing with the Prophet David to say Psal 16. v. 14. Propter verba labiorum tuorum ego custo divi vias duras For the words of thy lips I have kept hard ways that is to say by reason of thy Commandment I have overcome my self and kept the narrow way of vertue how hard and difficult soever I found it to Flesh and Bloud Because thou hast commanded it I have loved and will still persist to love even mine Enemies and to pursue them with kindnesses as much as they persecute me with words and deeds of hatred all this I will do to fulfil your Divine Pleasure and to gain the more interest in your love Nor will any good Christian think it much or a hard thing to love his Enemies that well considers the matter and sets before his eyes the example of Christ upon the Cross None had greater Enemies than he no Innocent person was ever persecuted so maliciously so causlesly none ever suffered more contrary to all justice right gratitude at the hands of his Enemies and yet even upon the Cross while he lay under the greatest pain misery and shame that their hatred and ill will could possibly bring upon him and was breathing out his Soul with the extremity of it yet even then he loved them and did the best offices he could for them to his Father namely praying for them and excusing in some part the wickedness of their sin in these words Luke 23. v. 34. Pater dimitte illis non enim sciunt quid faciunt Father forgive them for they know not what they do Thus did the Saviour of the World requite the hatred of his Enemies thus did he repay all their revilings cursings injuries all their cruel barbarous and despiteful usage to wit by the greatest charity and good will shewed on their behalf his love contending and gloriously triumphing over their hatred I do not doubt but having such an object of Charity before our eyes and excited by such an example we will desire above all things to imitate and be like unto him his most perfect goodness duly considered will work in us the like affection so as it shall not be grievous unto us to follow his steps per vias duas in any kind of vertue though never so hard to flesh and bloud and particularly not in this of loving for the future those that we have at present in aversion Our Saviours most perfect and unparallell'd example alone might serve for this But we have several others besides this in the holy Scriptures not unworthy to be taken notice of in order to the good effect of loving and carrying our selves well to those who deserve not very well of us as namely that of the holy Patriarch Joseph who being well beloved of his Father was for that reason so hated of the rest of his Brethren that as the holy Text speaketh of them Non poterant ei quicquam pacifice loqui They were not able to speak a good or peaceable word to him Gen. 37. 4. but were perpetually quarrelling and contending with him till at length their aversion grew to such a height that they conspired his death v. 19 20. casting him first in order to that end into a Cistern or certain dry Pit in the Wilderness and afterwards sold him to the Ishmaelites to be their Bond-slave Viginti argenteis for Twenty pieces of Silver v. 28. yet Joseph took all these doings well meditated not revenge though it was in his power to have done it but when his Brethren were fall'n into distress by reason of the Famine he provided for them and their Families all manner of Food and when his Brethren did not know Joseph their Brother he made himself known to them in this kind manner excusing their iniquity towards him Accedite ad me nolite pavere Ego sum Joseph Frater vester c. Gen. 45. v. 3 4 5. Come near unto me I pray you be not troubled I am Joseph your Brother whom ye sold into Egypt Is my Father yet alive and let it not seem grievous to you that you sold me for God sent me hither before you to preserve you alive Non vestro consilio sed Dei voluntate
c. It was not so much by your design as by the will of God that I was sent hither Therefore Load your Beasts and go up to my Father into the Land of Canaan and bring him and all your Kindred from thence and I will give you of all the good things in Egypt and you shall eat the marrow of the Land Thus did the good Joseph requite the unkind wickedness and ill-will of his Brethren with love But what shall we say of the Royal Prophet King David how much was he hated by Saul and how often persecuted by him to so great extremity that he was in imminent danger of his life thereby yet he never hated Saul upon that account but did him all the good Offices he could saving him several times when he was in his power and that David might at once have ridded himself of a cruel Enemy and gained both Crown Scepter and Kingdom to which he had right sufficient being by Gods special appointment anointed King over Israel to succeed after Saul The good King found his Enemy fast asleep his Spear fixed in the ground at his head and Abner with all the rest of his people sleeping about him yet would he not hurt him And when Abisai one of the Captains of King David offer'd himself to dispatch Saul at one blow alledging some shew of reason for it Because God had now deliver'd his Enemy into his hands and he ought not to neglect the opportunity which Providence gave him of securing himself David would by no means listen to the motion but forbad him doing any such thing in these express words 1 Reg. 26. 9 10 11. Kill him not For who can extend his hand against the anointed of our Lord and be innocent Vivit Dominus quia nisi Dominus percusserit eum c. As our Lord liveth unless God shall strike him he shall not be stricken by me or that his day come to die or that descending into a Battle he perish so God be merciful to me I will not lift up my hand against our Lords Anointed The New Testament wants not innumerable other Examples of this kind namely the Examples of all the holy Martyrs both of ancient and late Times who following the Example of Christ our Saviour have ever prayed for their Enemies and Persecutors with such fervent Devotion and ardent Charity that very often their Enemies and Persecutors have been converted by that means and become great Saints and Martyrs themselves Look but into the Acts of the Apostles there you presently meet with the Blessed Martyr Saint Stephen in the midst of his Sufferings praying for his Enemies in these words Acts 7. v. 60. Domine ne statuas illis hoc peccatum Lord lay not this sin to their charge The effect of which Prayer was besides other not mentioned the present Conversion of Saint Paul one of his greatest Persecutors For behold while he was in his greatest fury against Christians and posting in all haste to Damascus with Commission and Design to make havock of the poor Church there as we read Acts 9. 4 17. Christ appeared to him saying Saul Saul why persecutest thou me As if he had said I should have lost thee standing so much against me and my name But my Servant and Martyr Stephen praying for thee for his sake you are a chosen Vessel unto me and shall bear my name before the Gentiles and Kings and Children of Israel In the same manner and for like reason it is reported by Saint Chrysostom of Saint James the Apostle that he who lead him to the Execution of his Martyrdom was so much moved with the great zeal and constancy of this holy Apostle that he ask'd him forgiveness for what he was to have done which the blessed Apostle most willingly gave him embracing him and saying to him Pax tibi sit Frater Peace be with thee my Broter At which Salutation the poor man was so animated and encouraged that he forthwith publickly professed himself to be a Christian and was upon that Confession made a Martyr having his head likewise cut off Let these few Examples suffise to give you strength and courage to do the same whensoever occasion shall require it of you At all times let us be prompt and willing to forgive our enemies seeing God is so ready at all times to forgive us having penitent recourse unto him Be not of the number of those who when duty requires of them to follow the example of Christ and to forgive and love their enemies make their excuse and say Christ was God and most Divinely perfect and consummate in all goodness but they are weak men and cannot reach so high perfection as to forgive and love enemies persecutors c. But in vain it is for them to use such speech it will not serve their turn it will be no just apology for them at the latter day And verily it is to be admired how such persons can say their Pater Noster or how they can address themselves to God to be forgiven in the terms they do For they say Dimitte nobis debita nostra sicut nos dimittâmus debitoribus nostris Forgive us our debts as we forgive our Debtors As we forgive others so let us be forgiven What iâ this but to pronounce Sentence againsâ our selves if we do not forgive others Delay not therefore to make good your promise and to discharge your obligation Forgive your enemies as you would be forgiven of God Love your enemies as you desire that God should love you For otherwise I do let you all know that who so hates his Neighbour or Enemy it matters not which all 's one in this case renders himself uncapable of begging forgiveness from God he is so far from obtaining his request that he cannot without most grievous sin and entangling his Soul with further guilt make such a request unless we do first lay aside all hatred by loving pardoning and forgiving our enemies in heart 't is in vain for us to expect any mercy from God It is against all reason that God should love him who is not in true Charity with all Those that wish harm to others and will not forgive injuries received it is evident they do not love they are not ân true Charity and consequently not in God according to the Doctrine of the holy Apostle 1 Joan. 4. v. 8. He that loveth not knoweth not God for God is love Sect. 4. In what manner of Love we are to love our Neighbors and our Enemies According to what we have said in the two precedent Paragaphs we must not only love our Neighbors and our Enemies but we must also forgive them yea though they should be obstinate and not repent for what they have offended us but should rather continue and encrease their enmity towards us than seem to desire reconciliation For we are not to reflect upon their obstinacy or disaffections but to perform what is requir'd on our
as to wish and make Prayers to Almighty God that all Mankind may be converted and become one in Christ and if we cannot suffer death for the good of others I mean so great good and so greatly tending to Gods Honour as is the Conversion and Salvation of Sinners yet at least let us not be unwilling to suffer injuries at their hands and afflictions for their sakes and to edifie them what we can by the example of a true Christian Life both active and passive in doing well and suffering ill when occasion âequires This is but the common Duty of all True Christians and âurely he must be thought to have but â weak and faint Love of Christ that cannot or will not do thus much for his Saviours sake who hath done and suffered so much for him and hath âeft us his own Example expresly to that end namely to shew how much we are to condescend to others and deny our selves to procure their good in order to God Exemplum dedi vobis saith he I have given you an Example that as I have done to you so you should do also to others Sustain therefore patiently for unto this you are called because Christ hath suffered for us the just for the unjust leaving us an example that we should follow his steps 1 Pet 2. v. 21. Let us therefore follow our Saviour and Redeemer since they that follow him walk not in darkness but enjoy the light of life Sect. 5. How we may know our selves free from self-Self-love in loving God and our Neighbours Seeing that the Love of God must be predominant over all other Loves and reign over all our Passions Affections Lusts Desires c. as we have already declared it cannot but seem reasonable and a thing to be wish'd for by all such persons as do seriously concern themselves in things of the Spirit that we should at least in brief point at and shew them the means how by Gods Grace they may come to a pious and probable assurance that they do truly love God above all things and by consequence that their hearts are free from the pestilent and dangerous Vice of Self-love To satisfie whose desires I think it necessary to add a word or two further upon that Subject First In the general I say that to proceed securely in this matter it behoves us exactly and without all partiality to consider what the course of our lives hath been and is whither bend our affections inclinations desires what is the intent and design of all our actions for if these either wholly or at least principally tend unto and be directed to Gods Honour to the health of our Souls and to the gaining of a good Eternity all 's well we walk safely and may promise our selves good from God As on the contrary If we find our lives to be dissolute and careless and our mind more set upon Vanity and the things of the World than upon God we must fear the worst yea know for certain that as to our Spiritual Estate things go not well with us The predominant affections that are in us will easily shew what we are and to whom we belong Amongst Men of the World we see that for the most part in every one of them some passion or other one or more predominates over all the rest and makes such persons to be accordingly esteem'd some avaritious some ambitious some voluptuous and given wholly to pleasures others extravagant and humorous and as much over-born with fancy finally others too much re-senting and apt to revenge all which are so denominated and judged from their principal Love and the Affection which they do principally bear and shew either towards Riches or Honours Worldly Greatness Pleasures and the like the whole conduct of mens lives being as it were tinctur'd or rather tainted with that principal Affection which reigns in them This shews us our selves for in the same manner it is with us No man hath reason to think himself free from self-Self-love or that he loveth God above all things which is necessary to Salvation if examining his life his actions his employments desires and pretensions he do not find the principal bent frame and design of them to be towards God and that his Honour and our eternal good are the things chiefly look't at by us The love which we bare to God must be a Love not of bear Words not vain transitory Thoughts which perish and come to nothing but it must be a Love of Effects a Love that produceth good Actions and good Works It must not be an idle Love nor a talking nor a vaunting but a working Love a diligent and industrious Love a Love that loves to be doing to be always busie and imployed in the works of love And therefore we must take heed that we do not deceive our selves in taking the acts of our Understanding for the acts of Love or Divine Affection There is not a mortal man living that hath the use of reason whose understanding does not tell him that he ought to love God more than himself yea there is not a true man who hath not some inclination of Will though weak faint and uneffectual to love God more than himself and yet for all that want the true Grace of God for as much as we must know that the Love of God doth not consist in that act of the Understanding nor in those inclinations of Will but it consists altogether in putting the said acts or judgments of the Understanding and inclinations of Will in practice and by consequence if we want those things which are the proper effects and fruits of Divine Love and Friendship how can we think our selves to be Gods true Lovers or Friends and if the true Love of God dwells not in us 't is certain that Self-love and Self-interest doth By this therefore we may judge whether we have the true love of God or not or whether we be not still under the domiâion of self-Self-love For the acts and proper effects of Divine Love as all Divines teach are to be united in our affections to God and in all things to look at him as our chief and only good If it be thus with us we love God if otherwise we love our selves This is one Rule and I think the principal whereby to know what our condition is in order to God and whether we be free from Self-love Yet I think it not amiss to mention some others that I observe to be re-commended by pious and learned Men. According to F. Cressy the property of true Divine Love is to unite all our affections to God and to make them all one in him as in our Chief and Soveraign Good and that out of this love we are to take joy in his Divine Perfections and Excellencies and that he is upon the account of them so adored and glorified in heaven by the Angels and by all Saints Besides this we are according to the same good Author
to desire and occasion being given to endeavour so much as in us lies that all Creatures acording to their several capacities may serve love and adore him That the Infidels Heretiques and all Sinners may be converted to him and truly repent of their disobedience and rebellion against him that so by love he may reign in all hearts and all hearts be sad for the offences of their own or others committed against him In pure love to him we are to determine faithfully to serve him and to take joy in all things that please him Moreover with indifferency we are to accept all things from his hands and to take them in good part as well things displeasing and offensive to Nature as pleasing It is required of us all to be heartily sorry for all things that are done or happen contrary to his Divine Will and Pleasure to love all things that are grateful to him and pertaining to his Honour his Service and his Glory and that meerly for his sake we should love all men yea even our Enemies and Persecutors doing our endeavour also where we judge it convenient to express some effects of love to them more than to others as being special Instruments to procure us greater good from God than those Friends who do all they can to please us and to foment and flatter us in vain things It is expected from us that we do all the honour we can to Almighty God and all the service and good offices in our power to our Neighbour for his Sake in nothing seeking our own commodities further then his Goodness allows but in all things his good pleasure We must imitate and follow his holy Examples in all kind of Vertues and Perfections to our utmost possibility and particularly it should be our Design to love others with the like Freeness of love wherewith he loved us without looking to our own profit or interest in loving He loved us meerly for our good not for his own so should we love our Neighbour pretending nothing but to do him good by our love and not our selves We must resolve never to accept any contentment but in him nor other happiness but in himself alone We must not set bounds to the measure of our love but still endeavour to love him more and better We are to be resigned and willing to suffer for him in this State of Mortality being contented for the present only with the hope of Fruition afterward that is in Heaven We are to hate our selves our corrupt and vicious Nature our bad Inclinations our Unsensibleness of his great Mercy and Goodness towards us c. with a most perfect hatred never being weary of persecuting and mortifying our selves We are bound to love him equally in his Commandements as his Rewards and to rejoyce or take contentment in any act of Temporal Severity exercised by him upon us We are never to cease praying that God would shew us the defectousness of our love and that he would daily give us his grace more and more to encrease both in the degrees of Fervour and Purity These are the Marks the Signs the Fruits and real Effects of the True Love of God and by them we may perceive when and whether or no we be free from the pest of Self-love Self-esteem Self-seeking and Self-pleasing This little which hath been said will serve to shew our state if we consider it well But alass where shall we find a Soul that can shew all these or the most part of these Rules exactly observ'd and practised by her However our duty is to aspire to all Perfection and to the Practice of all these good Rules and Helps thereto as much as may be yet as to the measure of our Perfection submitting our selves and being resigned therein to the Will of God of whose grace it is that we attain to any measure or degree of perfection For so is his holy pleasure The End of the First Part. THE SECOND PART OF THE Languishing Diseases OF CHRISTIANS Proceeding from SELF-PRIDE DRUNKENNESS And CARNAL CONCUPISCENCE CURED 4 ESDR 8. 31. We and our Fathers languish with such Diseases but thou for Sinners shalt be called Merciful LONDON Printed 1677. The First Treatise OF THE SECOND PART OF THE LANGUISHING DISEASES OF CHRISTIANS Proceeding from Self-Pride SECTION 1. Pride a General Disease amongst Christians SECT 1. Heaven and Earth was infected with it 2. Self-Pride of the Nobility and Gentry 3. Self-Pride of great Ladies 4. Self-Pride of other Women Sect. 1. How Heaven and Earth was infected by Pride THE Pestilent Fevor of Self-Love as Saint Ambrose very well observeth is usually attended with Two Symptoms or ill Signs as bad as it self which are Pride and Ambition Febris enim nostra ambitio est c. saith that Father The Feavor that troubles and agitates our Souls not suffering them to rest in any thing tha 's good is Ambition which according as Saint Augustine Saint Bonaventure Isidore Hugo and many others have described it is the inordinate love and appâtite of our own commendation and a desire to excel or to be thought to excel others in our actions which if they be publick and concerning the Common-wealth is then most properly termed Ambition but if the actions be private and concern only our Domestick Conversation and Behaviour it is called Pride being but one and the same feavorish Distemper of Self-love more or less extending and shewing it self A Feavor or Spirituall Distemper this is so malignant that it causeth many other Diseases and Dangerous Symptoms of Soul to Mankind as for example many Vain-gloryings many and much Vain-boasting and Vaunting of ons Self much Flattering of others much Wantonness much Hypocricy and Dissembling innumerable Impertinencies and Curiosities of like nature frequent Ingratiudes frequent Disobediencies to those in lawful Authority frequent Seditions and Commotions publique frequent Contentions and Contests more private frequent Disrespects to Superiours and Despisings of Equals and those beneath us together with many other such like Distempers and Disorders under which and by means whereof not only private persons but Kingdomes and Common-wealths languish daily and endure all the mischiefs of Devastation and Misery not to be ended but with utter ruin unless care be taken to apply fit remedy in due time and season not to menton the harm that is done to the Soul by means of them The first that ever was troubled with these Distempers to wit of Pride and Ambition was Lucifer that reprobate Angel together with all his wicked Crew who through the excess of Pride and the inordinate Love and conceit of his own excellency extolled himself to such a height as to pretend to be equal to God according to the relation which is given of him by the Prophet Isaias Chap. 14. v. 14. where the wicked Angel saith thus in his heart In Coelum conscendam super astra Dei exaltabo solium meum c. I will climb up into Heaven above the Stars of
A SOVEREIGN BALSOM TO CURE THE LANGUISHING DISEASES OF THIS Corrupt Age. By C. PORA a Well-wisher to all Persons We and our Fathers languish with such Diseases but thou for sinners shalt be called Merciful 4 Esdras 8. v. 31. PERMISSU SUPERIORUM 1678. TO His Truly and Ever Honoured PATRON MILES STAPELTON Knight and Baronet c. Of Carleton in the County of York AND To his Right Honourable Lady ELIZABETH STAPELTON Alias BARTU Daughter to the Earl of LINDSY c. Peace Health and Happiness MOST HONOURED SIR IF King David one of the greatest Monarchs âhat ever was in the World sound himself so much obliâed to Abigail for a few Victuals it is no mervail if I be ââr more obliged to You âaving received so many favours innumerable benefits ând civilities from your Noââe Person while I had thââonour of being one of youâ Renowned Family Thereââre do not think me preââmptuous if I offer to yoâââese Fruits of my Labours which I have judged fit anâ pâoper for the Cure of thâ Lânguishing Diseases of thââ Corrupted Age. I hope it will not seem strange to You nor to any others âhat I make so happy choicâ in presenting this my poor Industry to your Worthy Person to whom in all reâpects the right of it belongs having sprung and been partly conceived during âhe time of my abode in âour Family Receive âherefore Most Noble and Worthy Patron this my Offer not as a thing worâhy of your Deserts but as a small token of my love and affection to You. I do not doubt though my Work be not much polished with Eloquence nor replenished with Courtly Expressions but You will reap some spiritual benefiâ by it Although You be most Vertuous yet sure I am You do not conceive your self exempt or altogether free from all the Spiritual Diseases and Languishing Distempers of thiâ present Age. For according to that of our Blessed Saviour in the Evangelist Nemo bonus nisi solus Deus Luc. 18. v. 19. There is none absolutely good save God alone It is not therefore my intention here to extend my self in your praises or to make any long Rehearsal of your known Heroical Vertues and Pious Actions which surpass my slender capacity to express as they deserve I must pass over in silence the manifold Perfections and Graces with which the Holy Ghost hath adorned You. And especially with a great Charity which you extend and practise daily to the Poor in several effects both for their Bodies and Souls And oâ the great Zeal and constanâ Practice of your Faith and Religion which neitheâ Glory nor Persecutionâ could ever shake in the least Neither dare I be so bold as to honour my Pen with the Relation of your Affinities and near Relations who were most Loyal Subjects and Chief Officers in the Service of their King adventuring both their Estates and Lives in adhering to Him It is in vain for me to declare How they behaved themselves in the last unhappy War how often and how valiantly they fought against those Rebels losing their lives for the just Cause and Quarrel of their Sovereign how often they were taken and re-taken Prisoners your and their Houses plundered themselves wounded and left among the dead Souldiers All these I will leave in silence with many other Valourous Acts done by them knowing your humility to be such that it abhorreth to be praised and other your Allies exalted in your behalf Therefore I will and that most willingly condescend to your humble inclination craving pardon for this boldness in offering so small a Token to your great Deserts And thus with your leave I will cease to write though I will not cease to wish That all Prosperity and Happiness may never cease to You and Yours and with this desire I remain Most honoured Patron Your most humble Servant CHARLES PORA TO THE READER HAving written these Treatises of the Chief Languishing Diseases of this Corrupted Age upon no other account than for my own satisfaction with the sole intention to improve my self as well in the English Tongue as to apply readily the Antidote of all Spiritual Diseases and Languishing Distempers to my poor corrupted disposition Not thinking in the least to let it pass any further in the view of the World yet the earnest intreaties of my friends who accidentally perused the same prevailed so far that I could not but condescend to their desires in the publishing of it Accept therefore Courteous Reader my good will and hearty desire to do something that might tend to the perfect cure of those Spiritual Infirmities that chiefly corrupt this present Age. I confess and you will easily perceive by reading that neither the Stile nor the Conceits are set out to the full yet my hope is that you will never find the language so barren and fruitless but you may find likewise a Balsom for prevention or at the least to give ease to your Languishing Infirmities Expect not Mellifluous Eloquencies Vain Opinions nor Worldly Expressions but the plain Conceits of a well-meaning Mind suitable to the Subject which tends onely for your spiritual good and interest Neither do I pretend to entertain you with Novelties I shall alledge nothing that I can so properly term my own as to exclude all others from any Title to it Know therefore Good Reader that I have selected the substance of these Treatises out of the Sacred Scripture âith the confirmation both of the Anââent Fathers and of other Learned âivines Wherefore if you find any ââing amiss or superfluous as unpoââshed Phrases hard or harsh Senâânces any false Orthographics or âot true English impute the same to âây own Errors and excuse me as not âââing perfect in the English Expressiââs Thus wishing you the absolute ââre of all those Languishing Diseases ând Distempers both of Mind and âpirit here spoken of I do not doubt âut by Gods assistance you will find it ââ the reading of these Treatises or ââ least some help as well to prevent ââ to heal the same Adieu The First Treatise OF THE LANGUISHING DISEASES OF CHRISTIANS Proceeding from Self-Love We and our Fathers languish under such Diseases but thou for sinners shalt be called Merciful 4 Esdr 8. 31. SECTION I. Of Self-Love SECT 1. The Introduction to Self-Love 2. Three several sorts of Love 3. Self-Love contrary to the Love of God 4. How Self-Love opposeth the Love of God SECT 1. Introduction to Self-Love IT is not without cause most beloved Reader nor reason thaâ the Wise Solomon did exalt in his Canticles so highly that which Almighty God did ordain namely Love of which I will say that if the Rules of it be not exactly kept and observed without question it will cause infinite confusion even to the total ruin of Mankind Love in the highest degree and perfection is due to God alone as being that which he absolutely commands us Diliges Dominum Deum tuâm ex toto corde tuo c. Deut. 6. v.