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A06674 Meditations and deuout discourses vpon the B. Sacrament composed by Ch. M. Ch. M. 1639 (1639) STC 17128; ESTC S909 57,528 244

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our Sauiour we should receaue this B. Sacrament VVHEN thou hast O my soule by the considerations alleadged in the former meditation stirred vp thy selfe to a filiall feare and reuerence thou must also endeauour to moue thy selfe to a feruent loue and charitie towards thy Sauiour whō thou art to receaue To this all thy former meditations will conduce for that by them is shewed what a good house keeper how liberall an Hoste what a Father what a Mother what a Friend Spouse Phisitian and Pastour all which are titles of loue Christ hath shewed himself vnto the in this B. Sacrament Saye then vnto him thou hast shewed they self in this B. Sacrament a noble house keeper giue me the loue belonging to one of thy familie thou hast shewed thy selfe a bountifull Hoste giue me the loue of a louing guest thou hast shewed thy selfe a Father and Mother make me a louing and obediēt childe Thou hast shewed thyselfe a louinge friend make me loue thee reciprocallie yea a Spouse make me a louing spouse yea a Phisitian make me a louing patient yea a Pastour inflame my heart with the loue of a louing sheepe Thou neuer shewedst more loue to mee then in this B. Sacrament by which out of a great loue thou giuest to me and after so admirable a manner as loue is ingenious thy bodie bloud soule and diuinitie By Incarnation thou impartedst thy self onlie to that nature which thou tookest of the B. Virgin But by this Sacrament thou bestowest thyself on all in particular who receaue it VVith what loue shall I paye this loue Thou giuest thy All vnto me and can I giue lesse then my All to thee and yet so shall I not rendre like for like because my All is nothing to thy All nothing somuch as if a begger should giue his raggs for the Kinges purple robe crowne scepter and kingdome I vse to take kindelie all which a freind giueth be it but a ring or Image because I imagine that he giueth his loue in his guift yea and himself also in his guift though not in person with what loue then should I answer to thy loue who giuest thy selfe vnto me not onelie in thy guifts and effects as thou giuest by creation iustification and glorification but also by this B. Sacrament in thine owne person Children loue their parents and nurces because they feed and nourish them brute beasts loue them who giue them meate be it but crustes and bones hay or strawe how then should I loue thee O Lord who feedest me with thy owne flesh bloud seasoned and sauced with the Diuinitie O my heart to shew thy self that thou art not made of flint marble or steele but of soft flesh resolue thy self into loue for thy Sauiours loue shewed in this B. Sacrament and being so resolued and transformed imploy thy selfe and all thou are for his loue and honour If thou thus prepare thy selfe by a great reuerence and loue to this B. Sacrament in which the Sonne of God resideth as in his cabinet not onely he but his Father also the first person in Trinitie and their holy Spirit the Holie Ghost the third person who procedeth from them both consubstantiall and coequall vnto them will all three come vnto thee not onely to visit thee but also to dwell with thee for this God the Sōne promiseth saying If any loue me he will keepe my word Ioa. 14. and my Father will loue him and we will come to him and will make abode with him And because thou art notable of thyself to furnish thy howse so as it may be fitt for the entertainement of so great personages they will bring with thē their tapistrie and ornaments of grace and vertues by which thou shalt be adorned to their liking And because thou canst not prepare a feast worthie such guests though thou shouldest seeke sea and Land for it they will bring their feast with them to witt this Blessed Sacrament the Manna which conteineth all that can delight thy spirit and with it they will bring aboundāce of all grace by which they will feast thee and will be feasted of thee THE 13. MEDITATION To be made immediatlie after Communion How than●kefull the Receauer should bee VVHen thou hast receaued this B. Sacrament pause awhile and think what thou hast receaued Thou hast receaued more then the worth of Heauen and earth the Sonne of God in whom be all the treasures of wisedom and knowledge hidden Coloss 2. in whom dwelle the fulnesse of the God head corporallie who is the head of all principalitie and power thou hast receaued him who is worth so much that he is inestimable no price cā be sett on him Antonius and Cleopatra did on a time vainlie striue who should make the greatest feast And Antonius prepared all that Sea and Land could affoard Cleopatra not sollicitous for any such fare tooke an vnion which hung at her eare and resoluing it drank it at a draft and putting her finger to the other eare to take another vnion he who was elected arbiter and Iudge betwixt them bad Cleopatra hold her hand for that she had alreadie surpassed Antonius his feast hauing drunk alreadie the price of all Egypt But thou O my soule by receauing this B. Sacrament eatest and drinkest at once the bodie and bloud of Christ for with his bodie his bloud alwayes is by concomitance and inseparable vniō which is more then the price of Egypt yea thē a thousand worlds And therefore if thou shouldest resolue thy heart into gratitude and thankes giuing thou coulds not shew sufficient gratitude for this so great benefit Say then to thy bountifull Iesus with gratefull Dauid Psa 115. Quid retribuam Domino pro omnibus quae retribuit mihi what shall I render to our Lord for all things that he hath rendred to me nay what shall I render to my Lord for this onlie thing which he hath bestowed on mee thou hast ô Lord not onlie bestowed on mee great benefites and this the greatiest of all● but thou hast also rendred good for euill mercie and grace for my sinnes what can I render thee for this Psa 115. I will follow King Dauids counsell I will take the chalice of saluation and I will inuocate the name of our Lord I will take the chalice of thy Passion which thou didst drink on the Crosse I will offer that sacrifice for this and both for all thy benefites and by them I will inuocate and praise thy name for euer If I could speake at once with all the tongues of men and Angels I could not ô Lord giue thee sufficient thanks for this so great a benefit which conteineth thy sacred self and thy holie flesh and blood Deifyed by thy Diuinitie VVherefore in an astonishment at this great benefit and thy great liberalitie I will be silent and by my silence I will testifie and confesse that thou hast bestowed on me in this B. Sacrament more then
Rō 9. Hierm. 22. he loueth them heere by grace and in heauen and that eternallie by eternall glorie VVherefore O my sweet Sauiour thow who in this B. Sacrament hast shewed thyselfe a supernaturall and most perfect Father and Mother to all that receaue thee in it and euen to mee though otherwise a wretched sinner loue mee I beseech thee as thy child for parents do naturallie loue their children loue me perpetuallie heere by thy grace and in heauen by thy eternall glorie if thou shouldst vouchsafe so to loue me I care not though all the world should hate me for if thou by thy loue stand for me who can stand against me And because by this Holy Sacramēt thou art my Father Mother giue me grace alwaies to loue thee also because children do naturallie loue their parents and graunt me grace to loue thee aboue Father and Mother for that in this B. Sacrament thou art become vnto me more then any Father and Mother And if thou loue me how can I miscarrie thou protecting whom thou louest And if I loue thee nothing can come amisse vnto mee be it prosperitie or aduersitie health or siknes riches or pouertie because to them that loue thee all things cooperate vnto good Ro. ms and so euen my sincnes ô Lord though they dishonour thee and hurte me for a time yet if I loue thee they will turne to thy greater honour my greater spirituall profite because through thy grace they will turne as were the sinnes of Marie Magdalen to her motiues to a greater penance and spurrs to a better life then otherwise I should haue ledd Thou comawndest vs ô Lord to honour our Father and mother Exod. 20 that we may be long liuers vpon the Earth Euerie effect if it had reason would honour it's cause of which it hath it's being and by which it subsisteth and so the light would honour and loue the Sunne the riuers their fountaines the fruites their trees the yong birds their oldones the yong beastes those that did generate them if they had reason Man then who is endued with reason must honour his Father and Mother who begot him brought him to light and after God gaue him his life and being and to this he is obliged by the Lawe of God and nature How much then o swere Iesus should I honour thee who in this B. Sacrament art a Supernaturall Father and Mother vnto me and more then any Father and Mother Thou commaundest vs ô Lord to acknowlge no other Father thē God saieng Matt. 23 call none Father to yourself vpon earth for one is your Father he that is in heauen Because although our Carnal Fathers be our true Fathers yet in cōparison of thee ô Lord they are no Fathers thou by creation being more our Father then they and by sanctification and this B. Sacrament being our Supernaturall Father more then our carnall Father and mother Our carnall parents are but halfe Fathers and Mothers generating onlie our bodie whereas thou art our totall Father that is of soule aswell as bodie Giue me grace then ô heauenlie Father to loue and honour thee aboue my carnal Father and Mother to forsake them rather then offend and foresake thee by sinne that so honouring and louing thee I may be a long liuer Exod. 20. not vpon earth but in heauen wher my life shall be eternitie And because children do willinglie followe their Fathers and Mothers stepps and do imitate them in all their actions bee they good or badde thinking it conuenient for them to do what they see their parents do before them giue me ô Lord by thy grace a desire a delight to imitate thee in all thy holie actions vertues in thy humilitie Phil. 2. patience charitie obedience euen vnto death Thou saydst once to the Iewes Io. 8. If you be the children of Abraham do the works of Abraham wherefore seing that by this Holie Sacramēt thou ô Lord art my Father Mother they who receaue it worthilie are thy children giue me grace to imitate thy vertues and holy actions lett them be patterns and examples for me to followe let them be alwayes before my eyes that I may euer behold them let them be alwaies in my heart that I may euer loue them lett them be alwaies in my hands that I may euer practise them so I shall be to thee as an obedient child doing in all things thy holie will and thou wilt be to mee a louing Father furnishing me not with a temporall estate as carnall parents onlie can doe but prouiding for me heere grace and an inheritance in heauen of glorie which thou hast layed vp in store for all eternitie for those that are thy true and obedient children fullfilling in all things thy holy will and commandement THE SEAVENTH MEDITATION VVhat a freind Christ hath shewed himself in the B. Sacrament ARistotle the Prince of Philosophers who diued as farre almost into the secrets of nature as naturall reason could permit Eib 2. Lth●c thought there could be no perfect and proper freindship betuixt God and man because there could be no equalitie or paritie betwixt them God being infinite in Maiestie and soueraigne and supreme in authoritie dignitie man infinitlie beneath him in degree base also of condition though he be an Emperour in comparison of God with which disparitie he thought familiaritie would not consist which yet he thought was belonging to freinds and freindship VVherein all though he erred yet his errour was excusable because by naturall reason he could not discouer the Excellencie of Grace much lesse of th' Incarnation the fountaine of all grace For grace being a supernaturall guift of God eleuateth nature aboue nature and maketh such a kind of equalitie betwixt man God that S. Peeter saith we are consortes diuinae naturae 2. Pet. partakers of the diuine nature And by Incarnation God became man man God and so man was consubstantiall to God and equall to him though not as man but as God And so God and man by these meanes were made freinds to which honour God out of his goodnes hath exalted vs and hath made vs equal to him by his descēding as it were debaling himselfe so lowe as to be man with vs. O the goodnes of God that would not onlie be content but also desirous to contract freindship with vs his creatures as though God could not be God vnles he were good to vs or could not liue contentedlie vnles wee were his freinds and he ours O my soule do thou heere stand amazed and in amazment fay to thy God who am I that thou shoulds so esteeme of me as to vouchsafe to accept of me as thy freind I am not worthie ô Lord to be thy vassall and slaue how then doest thou take me for thy freind VVhat Emeprour will stoupe so low as to be a freind to his vassals and yet man though
consideration of it stirring vp loue towards God for such a benefit by which we are vnited vnto him although indeed in euerie one of these my treatises I shew all the aforesayd three wayes But because Christ instituted this B. Sacrament before his Passion and was immolated mysticallie before he was sacrificed on the Crosse reallie I first present thee Gentle Reader with my Meditations on the B. Sacraments and after them I will make thee partaker of those of the Passion which shall follow these former God graunt that both thou and I in them may find out and follow the aforesayd three wayes to perfection that wee may attaine to the perfection of vertue and grace in this life and soe to the perfection of glorie which is our last and greatest perfection in the next THE FIRST MEDITATION VVhat loue Christe shewed at his last supper THE Sonne of God Christe Iesus God man in the whole decourse of his life neuer ceased to giue vs signes and tokens of his loue towards mankind For besides that he was incarnat became man onlie for man not for Angells he was borne for man in tyme of a Virgin-Mother without a Father who was borne of his Father of the wombe of his diuine substance without a Mother from all eternitie Psal 2. 109. and he who feedeth all liuing creatures was fedd and nourished by the same Virgin Mother Psal 135. was swadled by her in poore clowts who was inuested with his Fathers glorie was rocked by her a sleepe whose diuine eyes are euer open was circumcised woare the badge of a sinner who could not sinne fasted praied preached and all for the loue of man hee neuer breathed neuer walked neuer talked neuer wrought miracles or other good workes but for mans example redemption But as S. Ep. Io 3. Iohn testifieth and his testimonie is true vnto the end and in the end of his life Ioan. 13. he loued vs and gaue the greatest signes of loue that euer he gaue Loue is shewed in twoe thinges especiallie to wit in giuing and suffering For if you present one with some rich diamant or other pretious thing you shall thereby shewe your great loue vnto him loue shewing it self by guifts as fire doth by sparcles and if you giue him nothing yet do suffer much for him ether in your goods or bodie you do no lesse shewe your loue to him yea somuch the more by how much it is harder to suffer then to giue Our Blessed Sauiour the true louer of mā kind at his last supper which was the twye-light of his da●e and the euening of his life gaue vnto man the greatest guift which heauen and earth could shewe and which was more worth then a thowsand heauens and earthes to wit his sacred bodie bloud and euen himself God and man in the Blessed Sacrament And although he then suffered not death reallie for vs yet he did soone after and euen then in that in the Blessed Sacrament he represented his bodie onlie vnder the shapes of bread and his blood onlie vnder the formes of wine and so apart he was immolated and sacrificed for vs mysticallie and dyed for vs in representation before he died in veritie and soe as some Saints to shew their desire to dye and to prepare themselues the better to death haue put on a winding sheete or haue entred into their Tombe or monument before their death Soe Christ Iesus in the Blessed Sacrament and at his last supper to shew the great desire he had to dye reallie for vs did as it were put on the winding sheete of the shapes of bread and wine and wrapped himself in them and so died in figure and mysterie for vs before he died in veritie and by this figuratiue and mysticall death prepared himself to a reall death which soone after that is the next daie he suffered for vs and soe in the end of his life he shewed his great loue vnto vs both by giuing and suffering But as he first shewed his loue by giuing himself in the Blessed Sacrament and by immolating himself in it mysticallie onlie and in representation so let vs first imploy our best thoughtes and meditations vpon the Blessed Sacrament and Christ his last supper in which for a louing farewell he bestowed vpon his disciples the most precious banquet that euer was seene on earth consisting of no lesse then his sacred body bloud seasoned and sauced with the diuinitie it selfe And heere after in an other litle treatise we shal contemplate what he suffered for vs in his sacred Passion This Sonne of God and louer of mankind shewed great loue vnto vs in that by Incarnation and hypostaticall personall vnion of our nature with his diuine person he bestowed his diuine nature on it therfore S. Ioan. 3. Iohn expresseth this his loue with a Sic or soe saying So God loued the world that he gaue his onlie begotten Sonne and yet thus he bestowed not his diuine person on euerie one in particular but onlie on that nature particularlie which he tooke of the Virgin-Mothers wombe by it on mankind in generall But in the Blessed Sacrament hee imparteth himself to euerie one of vs in particular by communion by which he giueth vs his bodie bloud soule and diuinitie and so at the end of his life Ioan. 13. and at his last supper he especiallie loued vs. O my soule seing that thy God and louing spouse Christ Iesus hath giuen himself soule body bloud and diuinitie vnto thee what shouldst thou seeke for any other thing why shouldst thou loue any other thing then him or for him He is thine in this Blessed Sacrament thy possession thy inheritance and richesse Psal 143. O thou thrice happie and infinitlie rich cuius Dominus Deus tuus whose God is thy Lord O my soule thy spouse seemeth to content himself with thee content thy self with him If he can not content thee in whom be all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge Col. 2. in whom is all perfection beautie and goodnes nothing will content thee Noe say vnto him Quid mihi est in coelo Psal 72. a te quid volui super terram what is to me in heauen and besides thee what would I vpon the earth my heart is so ample capable that as it can not so neither desireth it to be enriched but by tuee If I haue thee as in the B. Sacrament I haue I ame rich enough and without thee I ame poore and miserable though I had all but thee If I haue thee I haue all and if I haue not thee though I had all else which is in heauen and earth I esteeme myself to haue nothing Thou o my Lord art my parte my All let me desire nothing but thee Psal 75. let me loue nothing but thee or for thee and as thow hast loued me all thy life time but especiallie at the end
this sacred fare we ouercome all difficulties which either the deuill or the worlde or our owne flesh doe laye in our wa●e By this wine the Apostles disciples and martyrs of the primitiue Church being spirituallie drunke encouraged and inflamed could not be daunted with all the instruments of crueltie with all the torments and death● which the Tyrants could deuise but were readie to suffer all torments for h●m who suffered for them yea to giue their liues for him who offered his for them on the Crosse in the B. Sacrament gaue his body and bloud to them O my soule say vnto this thy bountifull oste and howsekeeper as Dauid saied Quid retribuam Domino pro omnibus que retribuit mihi what shall I giue to God to this my Iesus God and man for all things which he hath giuen to me I am lesse then the least of them what then shall I render thee for this benefite of the B. Sacrament in which thou so often gi●est thyselfe thy bodie bloud and soule and diuinitie I can not giue thee enough for the least ●rumme of this liuing bread of thy sacred body for the least drop of this sacred wine of thy sacred bloud though I should giue all I ame and haue though what I ame were as perfect as the most perfect Angell and though what I haue were asmuch as Heauen and Earth O Lord be contente that I confesse myselfe to be ouercome by thee a thousand times in curtesies and fauours be content that I giue thee my All for I know thou art noe litle contented when we giue our All be it neuer so litle THE FIFTH MEDITATION How Christ hath shewed himselfe in this B. Sacrament a Father and more them a Father vnto vs. GOd Almightie is our Father by Creation by which he giueth vs our naturall being which is a participation of his diuinē substance Phil. lide decal Magister Confor lib. 1. con 12. and by the same Creation he is a Common Father to all Creatures especiallie man and they are as Philosaith in respect of God who created them bretheren amongst themselues and children of one Father for which cause the deuout Saint Francis called them his brethren and Sisters Yet there is in this a difference betwix man and other creatures because man is not only a participation of God his substance as other creatures are but is allso an Image of God in regarde of his intellectual nature and his vnderstanding will and memorie by which he representeth God and resembleth him as the Sonne doth the Father And therefor God when he was to create man he said not onlie be man made as he saied be light made Gen. 1. Be a Firmament made be there lights made but he said let vs make man to our Image and likenes And so God euen by creation is in a more perfect manner a Father of man and man is in a more perfect manner his Sonne resembling him as the child doth the Father Secondlie God is Mans Father and in a more perfect eminent manner by sanctifieng grace by which man reccaueth from God a supernaturall being and as S. Peeter saith 2. Pet 1. is Consors diuinae naturae partaker of the diuine nature by which he is the adopted childe of God he is his adoptiue Father Rom. 5. VVe were borne of our natural Parents dead spirituallie in soule by originall sinne but we are regenereted and borne againe spirituallie to a supernaturall life by the Grace which we receaue in and by Baptisme Ion. 3. Ion. 3.4 5. Ion. 1. Rom. 8. Gal. 3. 4. by which God is our Father the grace of Baptisme is our regeneration and second natiuitie by which we are said to be borne to God and to be his children he our Father But although this be true yet by and in the B. Sacrament of the Altar Christe the Sonne of God God and Man sheweth himselfe a perfect Father and more then a Father A man is said to be Father of his Sonne because he imparteth vnto him his owne nature flesh and bloud not the same indiuiduall but another of the same Kinde But our B. Sauiour in this Holie Sacrament imparteth vnto vs his owne nature substance flesh and bloud of which he himselfe consisteth And so if the Sonne be called flesh of his Fathers flesh bloud of his bloud though he reccaue not from him the same flesh and bloud which he hath but other flesh and bloud of the same Kinde much more may Christians by receauing this Blessed Sacrament be called flesh of Christ his flesh and bloud of his bloud they receauing the selfe same flesh and bloud of which he consisteth And so not onlie by Baptisme but also by this B. Sacrament Christ is our Father and more substantiallie by this Sacramēt then by that because by that we receaue onlie grace which is onlie a supernatural accidental participatiō of God by this we receaue reallie Christs owne body and bloud yea soule and diuinitie and by his and our burning loue meeting together our substancies are as S. Cyrill of Alexandria saith as it were melted and vnited as waxe is to waxe Lib. 4. in Ioan. ca. 17. Chris lib. 61. ad Pop. Antioc VVe are as S. Chrysostome saith vnum corpus membra ex carne cius ex ossibus eius one body and members of his flesh and of his bones we are not only by charitie but reipsa in verie deed mingled with his flesh for he semetipsum nobis immiscuis corpus suum in nos contemperauit vt vnum quid efficiamur tanquam corpus capiti coaptatum ardenter enim amantium hoc est he hath mingled himselfe to vs and hath contempered his bodie into vs that we may be one thing and as one body linked to the head for this is the propertie of those that loue ardentlie O my soule how gratefull shouldst thou be to such a Father who hath bestowed on thee his owne substance in so admirable a manner how shoulds thou scorne this worlde and all it can afforde how shoulds thou disdaine to be aslaue to the world flesh and deuill thou being so noblie descended of so noble a Father as is Christe Iesus God and man King of heauen and Earth Diuers heathen Emperours imagined themselues to be born of the Gods and this imagination made them to disdaine all basenes Doe not thou then ô my soule debase thy selfe do not degenerate from this dignitie to thy former vilitie and basenes of life who art made partaker of Christes body and bloud and nourished therewith Lette sinners whoe thinke of noe other heauen then earth nor of any other pleasure or delight but carnall content themselues with their hoggish fare of wordlie trashe and carnall pleasures do thou take thy onlie delight in feeding of this Manna which hath all delight in eating of this bread of life which bringeth eternall life with it and in drinking of this wine
of Christs ●loud which springeth Virgins ●ebriateth the spirit and reioi ●eth the hearte Let worldlings ●ragge of their noble bloud ex●action and noble descent thou art more noblie descended to wit from Christe the Sonne of God who in this B. Sacrament is thy Father and more then a Father thou art of a more noble bloud because by this B. Sacrament thou art flesh and bloud of Christs flesh bloud who was conceaued born of a Virgin-mother by no other seed then the Holy Ghost THE SIXT MEDITATION How Christ hath shewed himselfe in the B. Sacrament a Mother and more then a Mother THe loue of a Mother towards her childe is so greate that none can imagin it but mothers themselues It is greater then the loue of the Father because the Mother suffereth more for it then the Father doth she bearing it in her womb nine monthes with great paine bringing it to light with farre greater she giuing it her milke swadling it rocking it carying it in her armes And so as wee loue that best which wee gett with most difficultie so she loueth the child most because she most endureth for it in performing the former officies and her most familiaritie with it from i'ts birth engendreth the greatest loue and affection Hence it is that when holy Scripture would expresse great loue it compareth it to the loue of a mother 2. Reg. 1. As the mother saith Dauid loueth her onlie sonne so did I loue thee Ionathas yea God himself explicateth his loue to vs by the loue of a Mother as by the greatest loue VVhy saith he can a woeman forget her Infant c. and if she should forget yet will not I forget thee Isa 49. Isa 66. And againe As if the mother should speake one faire so will I comfort thee And yet againe Io. 16. A woeman when she trauaileth hath sorrow but when she hath brought forth the child now she remembreth not the anguish for ioye that a man is borne into the world and this the great ioy of the mother is grounded on her great loue and this her great loue on her great sorrow and paines which she suffered and on her great familiaritie with her child from its birth If the loue of a mother be so tender towards her child how great must we thinke was the loue of Christ towards vs in the B. Sacrament where he hath shewed himselfe a mother and more then a mother The mother by her pappes giueth her childe her milke and so nourisheth it so our B. Sauiour by his sacred pappe of this B. Sacrament giueth vs to sucke his owne bloud and that which as S. Chryl serm admon de Euchar in Encenijs c hom 24 in 1. ad Cor. 11. hom ●1 in cap. Io. 19. Chrisostome affirmeth issued out of his sacred fide and with his bloud the milke also of his sanctifying grace and therewith nourisheth our soules Mothers vse to chew the meate which they giue to their litle Infants so to make it fit for their eating our B. Sauiour in the First in stitution of this B. Sacrament did eate and as it were chew his owne flesh and did drinke to vs all in a draft of his owne bloud to make it fitt for our eating and drinking and as nature in the mother conuerteth her bloud into milke and so couereth it with the white colour of milke least the childe should abhorre to take it in the colour of bloud so our B. Sauiour hath couered his Sacred flesh bloud which he giueth vs to eate and drinke vnder the vsuall colour of bread wine knowing that we would abhorre to eate his flesh drinke his bloud in their owne shape and forme And to shew himselfe not onlie as a mother but more then a mother he giueth vs to eate of his owne flelsh to drinck his owne bloud which Mothers do not They giue their milke which aboundeth in them not their flesh or bloud Christ shed for vs on the crosse not his superfluous bloud but euen that bloud which was necessarie to keepe life and this bloud he giueth vs by the dugge pappe and teate of this B. Sacrament O mother and more then any mother for as S. Chrysostome saith mothers do often tymes giue ouer their children to be nursed by others but our B. Sauiour to make vs generous as he is to make vs sucke with his bloud his diuine conditions would not out of his loue permite this but he nourisheth vs which no mother will doe with his owne flesh bloud Chrys hom 60. ad pop An t●och O loue aboue the loue of Mothers ô loue aboue the loue of all creatures proper onlie to God and the louer of mankind VVith what spirituall greedines then and hunger should we come to this B. Sacrament to sucke out of this dugge the bloud of Christe and the milke of grace Nonne videtis saith S. Hom. 60. ad pop An tioch Chrysostome quanta promptitudine paruuli papillas capiunt quanto impetu labia vberibus insigunt accedamus ●nm tanta nos quoque alacritate ad hanc meusam quiuimo cum longe maiori trahamus tanquam infantes lactanei Spiritus gratiam vnus sit nobis dolor hac escapriuari Do you not see with what promptitude and greedines little Infants take their Mothers pappes with what a violence they fasten their lippes on the pappes lett vs also come with the like alacritie yea with a farre greater let vs like sucking Infants suckr the spirite of grace and let it be our onlie greefe to be depriued of this foode O my fweet sauiour ô my deare Father and Mother for so thow hast shewed thyself in this holie Sacrament be vnto me a Father and Mother prouide for me all necessaries for a fpirituall life prouide for me an inheritance in the next for that it pertaineth to Fathers and Mothers to laie vp treasures for their children O my deare Father and Mother bestow for euer thy loue on me for that it is naturall for parents to loue their children and loue me not for a while but for euer The more perfect parents are the longer they loue their young ones The beasts of the Earthe and the fowles of the ayre do loue and care and prouide for their young ones onlie for a time that is till they be able to shift for themselues and after that they make no distinctiō betwixt them and others but the Father and Mother amongest men because they are more perfect parents do loue their children euen to death and prouide an Inheritance for them to liue on after the parents death God almightie therefore who is our Father not onlie by creation but also by grace and Sanctification and a most perfect Father also loueth his Elected children for all eternitie euen before they were as he loued Iacob before he was borne and as Hieremie saith in an euerlasting charitie he loued his chosen people
an Emperour is but thy vassall It is honour ô Lord to much for me to be seruant to such a Prince how much more then to much to be thy freind Speake Dauid what thinkest thou of this honour which God doth to men in accounting them his freinds To mee saith hee thy freinds are become honourable exceedinglie nimis honorati Psa 38. to much honoured Nay God is not content onlie to be our freind but hath contracted with vs a firmer freindship and more indissoluble then euer was betwixt man and man Damon and Pythias Pylades Orestes and others are famous for their freindship which was so greate that the one esteemed th● other another himself and therefore the one was readie to dye for the other but this freindship ô Lord is not comparable to thy freindship which thou hast contracted with man Thou first hast contracted freindship betwixt thy self and man by Incarnation by which thou art linked to man in a most admirable vnitie in one person by which God is man and man is God which freindship is so faste firme and indissoluble that so long as God shall be God he shall be man and man shall be God O my soule be thou neuer so vngratfull as euer to forget this freindship It is the ground of all other freindships the most honourable Damon and Pythias were linked onlie in affection so was lonathas and Dauid 1. Reg. 1● whose soule is sayd to haue been g●●ed to Ionathas his soule but by this freindship of Incarnation God man were vnited in one person reallie and substantiallie O Lord what is man that thou shouldst so grace fauour him as to Vouchsafe to be so neerlie linked in freindship to him as to be one person with him Secondlie thou hast linked thyselfe in freindship with man by grace and charitie and this is an effect of the former freindship because the Incarnation is the foūtaine of al grace Iac. 2. Abrahamindewed with this grace is called by S. Iames. Amicus Dei the freind of God And Christ speaketh to his Apostles in those freindlie and comfurtable words Ioa. 15. You are my freinds if you do the things that I commaund you now I call you not seruants for the seruant knoweth not what his Lord doeth but you I haue called freinds because all thinges whatsoeuer I heard of my Father I haue notified vnto you And all the Iust by this freindship are freinds to him and he to them This freindship once made on God his part is neuer dissolued for he neuer ceaseth to be our freind till we turne his enemies by mortall sinne And although by sinne this freindship be to often broken on our part by particular men yet it is generallie so firme that there was neuer so firme a freindship betwixt man and man as there is by grace and charitie betwixt God and man There is no greater freindship or charitie saith our B. Sauiour then that a man yeald his life for his freinds which few freinds haue done for one another and yet our Io. 15. B. Sauiour hath died not onlie for his frends but euen for his foes to make them freinds and those his freinds haue bene so louing and so constant to him that many millions of Christians haue died for him as appeares in our so many Martyrs whom no threatning of Tyrants could soe daunt no promises so allure no torments so terrifie no deaths so scarre as to make them denie Christ or his religion but strengthened with grace chatitie they triumphed ouer all and for his loue they forsooke all as lands liuings life rather then they would forsake him and as he first died for them so did they dye for him O Lord tye me by this linke of freindship vnto thee that I may preferre thy loue before the loue of all but thee or for thee confirme me so in this freindship that by no mortall Sinne it may be dissolued but that I may remaine thy fast freind euen to death and may neuer againe shake hands with the world flesh and deuill thy sworne enemies or any creature whose loue is offensiue to thee that I may not only liue but also dye louing and so loue thee for euer The third f●eindship ô Lord which out of thy most ardent loue thou contractest with vs is by this B. Sacrament of the Altar by which thou art vnited vnto vs not only in affection as comonlie freinds are but also in substance The first freindship of Incarnation if we may iudge of the cause by the effect is the greatest and noblest because it ca●seth a greater and more noble vnion with God for that by Incarnation man was made the naturall sonne of God whereas by the freindship of grace and charitie he is only th' adopted sonne of God and the frendship of Incarnation is altogether indissoluble in so much that death which separated Christs soule from his bodie could not separate his humaine nature from his diuinitie the freindship of grace and charitie in this life is often broken by mortall sinne The freindship also of Incarnation in some respects exceedeth the freindship made by the B. Sacrament because by Incarnation man became God and God man whereas by the B. Sacrament man is not Deus but deifer not God but a bearer of God in soule and substance yet in one respect the freindship made by the Blessed Sacrament is greater then that of the Incarnation because by Incarnation preciselie taken that freindship was contracted onlie with that particular humain nature which God assumed vnto him in the vnitie of person but by the B. Sacrament Christ vniteth himself in substance to all those whoe receaue him in it By Incarnation none but Christs humaine nature was formallie deified and sanctified by the B. Sacrament all are sanctified who worthilie receaue it Yet in this B. Sacrament Christ hath shewed himself a greater freind then euer man was to man mēnes freindship cōsisteth only in affection but the freindship made by the B. Sacrament importeth a reall vnion of Christs substance with ours and therefore humain freindship causeth onlie a metaphoricall vnion betwixt those who are freinds but this freindship implieth a reall vnion of our substance with the substance of Christ and of our flesh and bloud with his And by humaine freindship external goods of fortune as riches lands monyes are common betwixt freinds according to the common saieng Inter amecos omnia sunt communia amongst freinds al things are common But the goods of their bodies as health strength beautie c. are not common nor can they but by this freindship made in and by this B. Sacrament Christs bodie bloud soule yea and diuinitie are imparted to vs and made common to vs and our substance is reallie vnited to his ô the admirable freindship Freinds although they be sepated in bodies and places yet by mutuall loue they are vnited in wills soule and spirit and especiallie if their freindship be
contracted by grace and charitie and therefore of the first Christians though separated in bodies place Act 4. S. Luke giueth this testimonie the multitude of beleeuers had one heart and soule And Ionathas his soule by freinship loue was said to be conglutinata ioyned fast as it were glued to the soule of Dauid 1. Reg. 18. Lib. 4. Confes c. 6. And S. Austin speaking of a great freind of his who was dead saith I thought my soule and his soule to haue been one soule in two bodies and therefore my life to me was an horrour because I would not liue halfe and therefore perchance I feared to die least he shoud dye wholie whom I much loued But this vnion betwixt these freinds was onlie metaphoricall and in affection whereas by the freindship made in and by the B. Sacrament there is a realle vnion not only of Christs substance with those that receaue him by communion but also of the receauers communicants amongest themselues because they all receauing the same indiuiduall bodie of Christ are al reallie vnited in it and by it to one another O admirable freinship and no lesse admirable vnion greater then is the vnion betwixt children of one Father and mother their vnion is called consanguinitie by which they are vnited in flesh and bloud which they receaue frō the same parents which is counted a greater tye then any humain freindship can make and yet they receaue not from their parents the same indiuiduall flesh and bloud either with their parents or with one another but another and that distinct though of the same Kind they who receaue this B. Sacrament do receaue the same indiuiduall flesh and bloud which he hath and so are vnited to him and amongest themselues in one the selfsame flesh and bloud By this freindship we liue not onlie together in one howse as other freinds doe but as Christ saith Ioan 6. Ioan. 6. he that eateth his flesh and drinketh his bloud abideth in him and Christ in him and so they liue not onlie together in one howse but also one with in another O freindship excelling all humaine freindship and euen carnall consanguinitie and the neerest kinred O how should we loue this noble freind who out of his excessiue loue hath linked vs vnto him not onlie in affection as freinds are nor in the like flesh and bloud as children of one Father and Mother are but in the selfsame Indiuiduall substance of which he consisteth O how should wee loue one another and euen more then wee doe our brethren and sisters because we are linked not onlie in flesh bloud of the same kind taken from the same parents as they are but in one indiuiduall flesh and bloud of Christ which we all receaue in this B. Sacrament Freinds at their departure by death or by a long iorney do leaue onlie their freinds an Image or a ringe or some other guif● for a remembrance and this argueth their great loue But Christ at his departure out of this world in respect of his visible presence hath left vs in this B. Sacrament the best thing he had not an Image or a ring or such like but euen his owne flesh bloud his owne selfe and so leauing vs visible remaineth with vs inuisiblie in this B. Sacrament and will soe remaine with vs to the worlds end How should we imbrace and loue this our so great freind VVhat shal we giue him for this guift he is more worth ten thousand times then we are or haue yet lett vs giue him ourselues as he hath giuen himself to vs and though there be infinite disparitie betwixt him and vs yet he will accept of our guift because it is asmuch as we can giue Some freinds and Confederates who haue made a firme league or freindship to make it firmer and more inuiolable haue let themselues bloud and haue signed it with their bloud So our B. Sauiour to make a firmer league freindship with vs did let himself bloud on the crosse and this his bloud he giues vs to drink daylie and his flesh also to eate in the B. Sacrament thereby to signe this league and to make it inuiolable O let vs not on our part break this freindship but let vs rather signe it with our bloud if the occasion be offered as Christ hath signed it with his which also he giues vs to drinke that we may neuer forget this league and freindship True freinds are readie to dye for one another as they say Pylades and Orestes and others were thinking themselues to liue though dead so long as their freind liueth and to dye though liuing when their freind dieth Our B. Sauiour hath sacrificed hīself once on the Crosse by a reall death and he daylie sacrificeth himself mysticalie in the B. Sacrament for vs lett vs be then alwaies readie in preparation of minde to dye for him who first died for vs let vs not thinke it much to giue our life for him who gaue his life for vs which being the life of God man infinitlie surpassed the liues of all men though neuer so great and manie yea and of Angels also if they could dye as they may be annihilated O my soule do thou resolue thyselfe into loue to shew thyself gratefull to so louing a freind doe thou imitate the Phenix burne thyself in thyne owne flames of loue that dying in this Fire to the world this life and thyself thou maist rise to heauen to an eternall life ô my soule stick to this freind so fast as that neither Father nor Mother sister nor brother prosperitie nor aduersitie life nor death nor al the creatures in the world may separate thee from him but as freinds liue willinglie together so thou maist liue in him and he in thee in this B. Sacrament so thou maist liue with him in the Church militant that thou maist euer liue with him in the Chuch triumphant so thou mayst liue with him heere by grace that thou maist raigne with him in heauen by glorie THE EIGHT MEDITATION How Christ hath shewed himself in this B. Sacrament a most louing spouse O My B. Sauiour ô louer of soules thou confoundest me with thy loue shewed to me in this B. Sacrament by so many waies I haue found thee in it by it a bountifull feastmaker prouident howse-holder a Father a Mother a Freind now I finde thee to bee in it and by it a most amorous spouse of our soules that so by one Title or other or altogether thou maist wrest out a reciprocall loue of ours towards thee As thou hast contracted three freindships with vs as we haue seene in the former chapter so hast thou contracted three Mariages with vs the first by Incarnation the Second by grace the third by this B. Sacrament By Incarnation thou art so fast wedded vnto vs and linked vnto vs by a knott so indissoluble that it excelleth the bond of carnall