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A92898 The Christian man: or, The reparation of nature by grace. VVritten in French by John Francis Senault; and now Englished.; Homme chrestien. English Senault, Jean-François, 1601-1672. 1650 (1650) Wing S2499; Thomason E776_8; ESTC R203535 457,785 419

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labour and is master of that with complacency which another cannot reach to but with much sweat of anxiety Thus the courage of the Martyrs supplies our weakness the knowledge of Doctors our ignorance the purity of virgins is in stead of continence in Marriage and the solitude of Anchorites is a supplement to the employments of those that are conversant in the world Hence 't is evident that he that is in the Body of the Church partakes of all the merits of the Faithful that without admitting himself into Religious Orders he shares in their travels if he be associated to them by charity without wearing their habit he participates of their vertues and that in an ordinary Secular condition he preacheth with the Dominicans sacrificeth with the Priests is in the desart with the solitary and is chaste in the highest degree of continency with the virgins But in this prerogative the Christian must defend himself from two mischiefs which strongly threaten him the first is Pride receiving with humility what he possesseth not but by right of Charity lest his own sufficiency make him lose the benefit of the Churches community The second is Idleness not to neglect the practice of vertues under a pretence of enjoying them in others but going forward with the highest industry in the way of perfection to store the Church with his pious endeavours and to adde new merits to the treasures of this charitable mother The Fourth TREATISE Of the Grace of a Christian The first DISCOURSE That Predestination upon which Grace depends is a hidden Mystery INasmuch as men are the children of Adam they are as curious as they are proud and as the haughtiness of their Father hath made them lose the remembrance of their misery his curiosity hath made them forget their ignorance They aspire to reign although they be slaves they would be masters of knowledge although they are born ignorant and these two unjust desires have made so deep an impression in their souls that all the punishments inflicted upon sin have not been able to suppress them I could pardon this imperfection of man had it any bounds nor would I find fault with an ignorant person desiring to be learned could he content himself with the knowledge of what might be known without danger or sin But the difficulty sets an edge upon his appetite there are no truths he is more eagerly inquisitive of then those God hath pleased to leave in the dark He mounts up to the Heavens to know their motions and influences he seeks his destiny in the Conjunction of the Planets and studies a Book whose Characters have abused all Astrologers and means to finde that in Stars which God hath lock'd up in his own Bosome He descends into the Abysses of the Earth out of Curiosity as much as Avarice he thinks knowledge is retired to the Center of the world and that he must confer with the spirit of lies to be acquainted with truth His Insolence hath passed as far as Religion he would fain penetrate its mysteries nor does God bring any thing to pass in the world the Causes and motives w●ereof he endeavours not to discover 'T is a crime in the State to comment upon the intentions of the Ministers thereof Sicut inquirere in vitam Principis ita in arcana ejus nefas est Taci Annal. Their prudence draws a curtain over the wheels they work by and they believe that he that shall sound the secrets of the Prince is not less guilty then he that would know the end of his life In the mean time we commit this crime against the mysteries of Faith we would make Religion a Science and we daily search for evidence and certitude in the region of ignorance and obscurity The desire we have to fathome the depths of Predestination is a certain proof of this Insolence For though there be nothing in the world more bid more in the dark there is not any thing man hath more curiously examined and made the employment of his busie undertakings seeking his fall in the fountain of salvation I should account my self very happy could I cure him of this malady and if describing the mystery hidden in eternity could make him see 't is an impiety to pretend to know more then God hath been willing to reveal Predestination is as certain as it is secret it makes up one part of Providence and if God have any care of his creatures he must needs lead them to their end There are none but the Epicures who fearing to trouble his rest have denyed him the knowledge of humane affairs The best of Philosophers have believed our fortune is in his hands and that having given us our beeing he must also give us our felicity Christian Religion hath confirmed us in this Creed and Faith perswading us that God hath regulated all things from Eternity obligeth us to believe that he hath ordained necessary means to ascertain our salvation Sufficiat eis scire quod non sit in quitas apud Deum cum cuim nulla merita invenisset Apostolus quibus Jacob apud Deum praecederet fratrem dicit Numquid apud Deū est iniquitas absit Aug. lib. 4. contra duas Episto Pelag. Shee teacheth us that he beheld all his works before they proceeded out of Nothing that he hath drawn forth what he pleased not all that he was able That he created Men and Angels elected some out of Mercy rejected others out of Justice and that in these two contrary judgements he hath carried himself with so much evenness that no person hath any cause to complain Reason together with Faith instructs us that God loves all his creatures that his being Absolute makes him not unjust and acting according to the knowledge of the Cause he punisheth none that have not deserved it If he be no more liberall in his recompenses then severe in his corrections he fails not to be very observant of Justice if we be not sure that he hath respect to our merits we know at least that he hath to his own favours and that when he crowns our good works he crowns his own benefits and endowments The Scripture that knows very well that men are in love with their salvation and jealous of their liberty represents them often that God is absolute in his State that he is not to give account of his actions that his judgments being equitable in themselves have no need of our approbation nor are therefore less just because not conformable to our weak reasonings This divine Register insinuates to us that God is the master of his creature that he disposeth thereof as he pleaseth and that if Nothing whence he had his Beeing give him right enough to destroy him sin which he is guilty of gives him title enough to punish him But delivering all these reasons in different passages we are not permitted to deduce thence infallible consequences nay we may easily perceive the whole drift is rather to
to act when this ceaseth to operate For the right understanding of this Truth we must remember that though the Christian and the Man be one and the same person yet have they their oppositions and their differences Man believes himself perfect when he is free and reasonable these two faculties are his principal advantages and the vanity of Philosophy perswades him that as long as he acts according to Reason he cannot fail of attaining felicity To keep himself in this state he is careful that the Senses pervert not his Understanding that the Passions trouble not his Rest and an inordinate Love deprive him of his Liberty But this blinde Opiniator sees not that he carries his enemy in his own bosom that Concupiscence orders all the motions of his soul that Reason is but her slave and that he is never more wedded to himself then when he thinks to hang loose from all things else As the Christian is a new man he acts by other principles for he renounceth Reason to give himself over to Grace he quits the light of his Understanding to submit to the obscurity of Faith and his endeavour is to quench the flames of Self-love that he may burn onely with the fire of Charity He learns in the School of Christianity that Reason is a bad guide because she lets Concupiscence lead her he knows that the Understanding is prevented with a thousand errours and having lost the better part of his light he many times confounds Vertue with Vice He is not ignorant that the Will is the most depraved as it is the most guilty of all his faculties and being engaged in the love of the creatures finds nothing that charms the affection but what is corruptible and perishable Therefore is his greatest care to get assistance against these domestick enemies and wholly to surrender himself to grace that it may be to him for a guide and a defence Thus Faith becomes his Light Hope his Supporter Charity his Love and if we may speak so Grace is made his second Nature To the vain errours of Science he opposeth the solid lights of Faith to the false promises of the world the true promises of Jesus Christ to self-love divine love and to the corruption of Nature the purity of Grace Then is it that soaring above himself he learns by a happy experience that he was never more free then since he became a slave and that Grace is so far from robbing him of his liberty that it hath delivered him from a bondage as cruell as it was ignominious For as Saint Augustine saith Free-will finds its perfection in Charity he that was in darkness becomes enlightned from weakness he passeth to strength from disorder to good government and he that was sullied with the love of the creatures recovers his purity in the love of the Creator But nothing more obliges the Christian to renounce his reason that so he may become the subject of Grace then to know that his last end is supernaturall and that he cannot attain it by forces solely naturall For though man have some knowledge of God though he observe his perfections in the creatures though he judge of his greatness by the beauty of his works and recoiling into himself sees there some shadows of him whose image he is yet he knows very well that God is so great that he cannot be perceived but by his own light Indeed he must shed abroad some rays into our soul that the soul may have some glympse of him he must clarifie and strengthen her that she may look up unto him and mounting above her selfe may render her partaker of that light whereby he is made visible to the blessed in glory Thus though the will have some affection for the Supream Good though she cannot fixe upon any objects that have not some appearance of Goodness in them and that in the midst of her greatest disorders there still remains some inclination towards her Creator yet the Christian knows that God cannot be worthily embrac'd but by that love he works in us that charity must be poured into our hearts and that without the assistance of this Divine gift we can neither love him nor hate our selves as we should The inclination Nature stamped upon us in her purity was too weak to effect this and that which Nature hath left us since her corruption is too inordinate to lead us to it Thus Grace is necessary in both conditions and the actions that proceed not from this Principle are to be suspected because according to the Maximes of Saint Augustine those that flow not from Charity flow most commonly from Concupiscence These two Soveraigns possess the will successively as the first works nothing but good the second is only active in evil and to be disingaged from the tyranny of the one there is no other way but to submit to the lawful dominion of the other Thence it comes to pass that the same Doctor declaring his full judgement in that Epistle he writ to Vitalius informs us that Grace depends upon Gods pure Liberality that 't is due neither to Men nor Infants though it be necessary to all the actions of the former that God who is the Author of it respects neither their works nor their dispositions that men may know when he bestows it 't is an emanation of his mercy and when he denies it 't is an act of his justice He that shall well weigh the sense of these words as profound as the depths he treats of will not have much adoe to acknowledge the indigence of the creature the need he hath of Grace and the Liberty God reserves to himself of dispensing it to whom he will The Third DISCOURSE That the Grace of a Christian ought to be more powerfull then that of Adam IT is strange but withall very true that nothing so much hinders a man from valuing the remedies that cure him as the opinion he hath that he was not very sick This is it that to this day abuseth the greatest part of Christians and lessens the obligation they have to the Grace of Jesus Christ For they are perswaded that the fault of our first Father hath scarce made any devastations in our Nature that the greatest part of our evils spring not so much from our will as from our imagination and that there is little difference between the state of sin and the state of originall righteousness Pride insensibly confirms us in this belief we make our weakness pass for cowardise nor can we be brought to acknowledge that our passions are the punishment of our disobedience From this first Errour is derived a second more troublesome then the former For believing our disease light we think the remedy extream easie and judging Concupiscence not so strong we judge the Grace of Jesus Christ nothing so powerful Indeed those that imagine that mans liberty is yet vigorous enough to resist sin acknowledge only a sufficient grace adding little to that of
that to render him Faithful it will not suffer him to be Rational Though Faith have all these advantages yet must we acknowledge that without Charity it is unprofitable all a mans Miracles profit nothing without Good works and though this vertue raign so absolutely in the State of Jesus Christ she will never cause the Faithful to raign in Glory if he adde not the ardors of Love to the Light of Belief S. Augustine hath observed that though Abraham owe the beginning of his happiness to Faith he owed the perfection thereof to his Good works and Obedience when he believed the Word of God 't was a rare effect of Faith but when he obeyed the voice of the Angel armed his hand with a Sword lifted up his arm to strike his onely son 't was doubtless a very great act of Faith and a certain proof of his obedience Let us joyn therefore these two vertues that we may imitate him let us pass from Faith to Good works and if we would have the merit of that Patriarch let us fully believe the promises of Jesus Christ and faithfully execute his will that we may not be reproacht that our Faith is like that of Devils that fear the Justice of the Almighty but love not his Goodness The Fourth DISCOURSE Of the Hope of a Christian AS Sin hath robbed us of our Light so hath it deprived us of our Strength and he that cast us into Errour hath precipitated us into Weakness we are not onely Blinde but Impotent nor is it a sufficient Cure for us to have our Sight restored if withal we recover not our Vigour Faith takes pains to scatter our Darkness and Hope endeavours to strengthen our Weakness This vertue bears up the heart of a Christian draws him out of that unhappie Impotencie whereto sin had reduced him and resting upon the veracity of God expects with confidence the effects of his promises it knows very well that his Word is not like that of Soveraigns and being not subject to their Infirmities neither is he liable to their Changes For Princes oftentimes break their word either out of weakness or lightness or imprudence they cannot always do what they would their Will exceeds their Power and they are constrained to recal their word because they are not able to put it in execution 'T is enough that they are Men to make them Lyers The Scepter that adorns their hand and the Royal Wreathe that circles their head change not their Nature upon the Throne they are sensible of the failings of their Subjects and though the disposers of Honour and Life yet are they inconstant as their Mothers But were they resolved to keep their word that they might imitate his Constancie whose Majestie they represent they would be often forc'd to revoke it to avoid those disorders their Prudence had not foreseen for the Light of Kings is bounded as well as their Power they cannot read the obscure Characters of Futurity and whatever ministers their Councel is composed of they cannot prevent accidents if they consult not with Prophets so that necessity compels them to fail of their word if they will not fail of their duty But the God we adore is free from these infirmities and if he appear sometimes to repent of his designs or recall his decrees 't is only to suit with our understanding and to deal with men after the manner of men He is absolute in his state his Power is his Will as his Goodness is his Essence he finds no Rebels in the world and if there be any that seem to brave his Mercy they obey his Justice that punisheth them His Immutability is equall to his Power he never changeth his designs and though he accommodate himself sometimes to his creatures 't is in reducing them to his Will without constraining them He magnifieth himself in this Attribute in Holy Scripture and as if his Constancy were a proof of his Divinity he will have us believe him God because he is Immutable Ego Deus non mutor A surprisal or a mistake obligeth him not to change his resolution nothing happens in his State contrary to his Will or his Permission he prevents the revolts of his Subjects and if his Justice punish Crimes in Time his Wisdome foresaw them in Eternity His Councel regulates Events Successe answers his Enterprises and the malice of men not being able to surprise his Providence he is never forced to revoke his Decrees Thence it comes to passe that Hope which is founded upon his Promises is not liable to distrust 't is well assured that Truth can neither deceive nor be deceived that an absolute power meets with no difficulties that check it and that a wisdome subject to no errour is subject to no change Thus the Christian assisted with this Vertue lives in the sweetness of tranquillity nothing in the whole world makes him afraid the greatness of danger heightens his confidence and knowing very well that God can raise his salvation out of his very fall he is fearless in the midst of his enemies This made David utter those words In Domino sperans non infi mabor he could not have said so had he placed his confidence in the creature because as Saint Augustine saith it fell with man who was its support but being grounded upon him who is as Powerfull as he is True he was able to preserve his assurance in the midst of danger and to promise victory in the thickest of the conflict Thus doth Saint Augustine paraphrase upon the words of the same Prophet where out of an excess of confidence he cals his God his Hope Quoniam tu es Domine spes mea Let other men saith that incomparable Doctor trust in the vanity of their riches and think that with their gold they can seduce Women corrupt Judges and subdue their Enemies Let others confide in their Friends and perswade themselves they have a share in their goods as well as in their affections that assisted by their counsell or supported by their furtherance they can triumph over grief and fortune Let others raising their thoughts a degree higher hope in the weak power of Kings promise themselves admittance into their favour to be of their Councel to partake of their Secrets and to govern their Person or their State as for me who am no longer abused with these vanities I will rest upon my God and not violating the respect I owe him making the Almighty my Hope will say Quoniam tu es Domiue spes mea If this Vertue heighten the infirmity of Christians we must confess it sweetens their discontents and is in stead of Consolation midst all the torments that afflict them Not to know that man is miserable since he became criminal is to be extreamly ignorant the sweetest life hath its labours the shortest is long enough to be sensible of a thousand calamities the remedies whereof are a second affliction and that which we call comfort and consolation
produce him Therefore hath he received a name that perfectly expresseth his ineffable procession Charitas quae pater diligit filium filius patrē quae est Spiritus Sanctus ineffabilem communionem demonstrat Aug. de Trini for being the production of the Father and the Son he bears a name common to both and he is cal'd the Spirit because the Father and the Sonne call him so in Scripture Now this Spirit is the sacred Bond which conjoyns all Christians together he is not onely the soul but the unity and he it is who by admirable and secret Tyes entertaines a faire correspondence between all the parts of this great body The diffence of their conditions the contrariety of their humours the diversity of their designs hinders not the Holy Spirit from uniting them together nor that he that is the agreement of the Father and the Son be also the peace and agreement of the faithfull He it is that decided the differences between the Jewes and the Gentiles he it is who breaking down the partition Wall hath made of them one building he it is who perfecting the design of Jesus Christ hath happily taken out of the way all obstacles that impeded the unity of the Church and he it is who equalling the poor with the rich the freeman with the slave the learned with the ignorant hath framed that wonderfull body the most perfect Image of the Trinity Therefore must we acknowledge that all those figures that represent to us the person of the holy Ghost abundantly bear witnesse that his principall work is unity For sometimes he is called Fire because that element combines metalls in melting them and of two different substances makes a third which is neither one nor the other but rather both Sometimes he is called Water because he gives consistency to the earth watering it by secret veins and of a fluid sand makes a solid heap which serves for the foundation and centre of the whole Universe Therefore is it that the great Apostle of the Gentiles never speaks of unity Solliciti servare unitatem spiritus in vinculo pacis Epist but he mentions the holy Ghost as the source and fountain of it As often as he recommends peace to the faithfull he wisheth them him that reconciles men unto God by the remission of sin that separates them asunder Neither hath charity which is the principall effect of this ever to be adored Spirit any more worthy employment then to unite Christians together after he hath united them with the Trinity The second Alliance that he contracts with us is that he becomes the gift of God to men as he is the gift of the Father to the Son and of the Son to the Father back again If we beleeve prophane Philosophy Love is not onely the first production but the first profusion of the will This faculty is liberall assoon as it is amorous and parting with its love it makes a donation of whatever holds of its Empire Thence it comes to passe that all Lovers are prodigall that they engage their liberty stripping themselves of their goods and renouncing their own inclinations assoon as ever they begin to be affectionate Now as the holy Spirit is the Love of the Father and the Son so is He their mutuall gift they give themselves whatever they are in producing him and it seems the Son renders to his Father by the production of the Spirit all that he received by his birth Though we want termes to expresse the greatnesse of these mysteries Faith which supplies our impotency steps in to perswade us that the holy Spirit is the uncreated Liberality of the Father and of the Son from all eternity and t is the same faith that teacheth us that the holy Ghost is also the gift of God to the Christians and that at the same time he entered into alliance with them he bestowed his love upon them as a mark of his largesse wherein I observe two or three things worthy of admiration The first is that God makes us a Present equall to himself Dedit dona hominibus quale donum Spiritum sanctum magna est autem Dei misericordia donum dat aequale sibi quia donum ejus Spiritus sanctus est Aug. ser 44. de verb. Dom. which the truest and most affectionate Lovers never do for though gifts are the effects of love they never equall it and if the Lover makes not himself a slave to the person he loveth he can offer no Present equivalent to his affection Pearls and Diamonds are but weak expressions of his good will whatever contents others are but incentives to his desires he would be a Monarch that he might bestow a kingdom and in that height of fortune he would professe no prodigality can satisfie a Lover But God to whom nothing is impossible hath in presenting his love presented a gift commensurate to the greatnesse of that best love he would expresse that which he bestows equalls himself his Present is infinite and when he tenders us the holy Ghost he makes offer of a divine Person The second excellency of this Present is that it prevents our merit because it findes us in the state of sin and did God consult his justice as much as his mercy we should appear the objects of his wrath rather then of his love For he bestows his Spirit upon his enemies he sheds his love abroad in the hearts of beleevers and we receive this favour from him when we deserve nothing but chastisements The third excellency of this gift is that it is the source of all others for being the prime radicall donation 't is that from whence all the bounteous liberality of God issues and proceeds who confers no benefit upon us which bears not the image and superscription of this first and prime gratuity Whatever comes from heaven is a copy of the holy Spirit riches are the expresses of his bounty advantageous parts of soul or body are the marks of his goodnesse Graces and vertues are his immediate impressions and in a few words to comprehend the priviledges of this Divine Offertory we must say with S. Augustine 't is the Pandora thorow which all other gifts are bestowed upon us If the Angels descend from heaven to protect us if the Sun enlightens us if the Stars favour us if the Earth nourish us if the Trees shade us if the Eternal Word leave the bosome of his Father to take upon him our miseries 't is by the counsel and mediation of the holy Spirit and this gift that ravished the Apostle who tells us of it was nothing but an effect and consequence of that primitive largess which is the cause of all others Thence I infer that when we receive any grace we ought to look upward to the Holy Spirit and acknowledging him the fountain of all blessings profess our selves bound to render him the eternal calves of our lips This favour would take away all hope of gratitude
the faithfull and having deposed for the Divinity of him deposeth daily for the Innocence of these For we know by Scripture that the same Spirit that spake heretofore by the Prophets hath since spoken by the Apostles and having foretold the Ages past the wonders that Jesus ought to doe revealed them to the generations to come that all men might bee fully informed of the Mysteries concerning him to whom they were beholding for their salvation This Spirit is the testimony of Jesus and of the faithfull because he hath formed them and knows all their thoughts whereof hee is the first Principle and Author This also was he that descended upon the head of the Son of God in the forme of a Dove during the ceremonies of his Baptisme 't was he that discovered to S. John Baptist his Innocence and taught him without speaking that he was that Lamb of God that was to take away the sins of the world And hee it is that daily performs the same office to Christians For having been their Master he vouchsafes to be their witnesse he speaks to the eternall Father in their behalfe having pleaded their cause he gives them assurance of their salvation The Rest that calmes the waves of their conscience is an effect of his testimony those sighes and groans he draws from the bottome of their heart those desires he inspires them with for everlasting good things those scorns he furnisheth them with for perishable ones are so many Earnests which the Elect have of his love and their salvation if there be some remainders now and then of Fear amidst their Hope 't is to preserve them from Negligence or from Pride and to make them profess that they finde in him a Divine Principle a wise Director a knowing Master and a faithful Witness The Fifth DISCOURSE That the presence of the Holy Spirit gives life to the Christian and his absence causeth his death ONe of the chiefest advantages we shall partake of in Glory is that God will be to us in stead of all things and that finding in him the accomplishment of all our desires we shall there meet with our perfect felicity He will be the Temple of the Blessed because they shall lodge in his Divine Essence He will be for a garment to them because they shall be cloathed with his light He will be their nourishment because he gives them eternal life and according to the language of S. Paul he will be All in all to these blessed inhabitants The Holy Spirit seems to have a minde to make us taste upon Earth the Happiness of Heaven inasmuch as he is all things to us in the Church that he informs us in our doubts comforts us in our afflictions assists us in our conflicts teacheth us in our prayers For Christians owe all that they are and all that they do to the holy Spirit They live by his presence act by his power understand by his light and love by his charity All their advantages flow from him If they are Saints 't is he that sanctifies them if they are free 't is he that sets them at liberty if they are generous 't is he that encourageth them and if they be wise 't is he that enlightens them In the mean time the most part of the Faithful are ungrateful to the holy Spirit Liberalitem Dei servitutem faciunt Tert. They attribute that to their own power which they derive from his and turning his grace into a slavery they would pass for the Authors of a work whereof they are at most but the Ministers Therefore will I spend this Discourse to let them see that the holy Spirit inanimates them and that as by his presence he makes them live so by his withdrawing himself he makes them die A Man and a Christian have some resemblance in their difference they live both of them by the Spirit and their life is rather spiritual then animal For though Man have a body composed of the Elements which hath need of the Air to breathe of the Earth to bear it of Food to nourish it and of Light to make it see yet is his soul the principle of his life This Form inanimates the heart giving it motion whereby all the other parts live The absence of the soul is the death of the body its presence the life and when grief or weakness separates them Man ceaseth to be a living creature Inasmuch as a Christian is more excellent then a Man by so much is his life more sublime and he hath a nobler principle of his Being For the holy Spirit is his Soul and paring off whatever defects that name may include he is the Form that inanimates the Believer Though he have an Understanding that reasoneth a Memory that preserves his conceptions and a Will free and absolute yet does he live by the holy Spirit and receive from him a supernatural life which makes him capable of God As long as he is united to this Spirit he is alive assoon as he is parted from him he is dead And 't is a miracle saith S. Augustine that the soul dead by sin does nevertheless enliven the body and that notwithstanding that imperfection Aliud est in anima unde corpus vivificatur aliud unde ipsa anima vivificatur Melius quippe anima quam corpus sed melius quam ipsa est Deus est ergo ipsa etiamsi sit insipiens injusta impia vita corporis Aug. Tract 19. in Joan. it have wherewithal still to reason in the finding out of Sciences and to manage it self in its affairs and negotiations It is true therefore that the absence of the holy Spirit greatly impaireth the vigour and clearness of Man for the life of Man as a Reasonable creature and as a Christian are so intimately united together that the one cannot be separated from the other without an extreme detriment and enfeebling of the creature The Christian merits not till he begin to reason Grace is idle in his soul when Reason is not yet formed in it and all Divines are of opinion that children baptized have no other merits but those of Jesus Christ Heaven is their Inheritance but not their Recompence they are in the condition of Heirs but not of Souldiers and the Crown they receive is rather the Consequence of their good Fortune then the Reward of their Labour Man is yet more deplorable when he loseth Grace then when the Christian loseth Reason for besides that none of his actions are any longer meritorious that he does nothing pleasing to God and having lost the Principle of his supernatural life he is destitute of all recompence and desert he hath moreover contracted this misfortune Vita infidelium peccatum est nihil est bonum sine summo bono ubi enim deest agnitio aeternae veritatis falsa virtus est etiam in optimis moribus Prosp sen 106 that he is become the slave of Concupiscence which throws Darkness over his
give a little light to this Speculation let us amplifie in this discourse what Saint Augustine hath wrapt up in this passage and unfolding all the evils derived from sinne discover the malignant influences of this Delinquent in chiefe upon his wretched members Ignorance seems to be one of the prime calamities of man 'T is born with him ever since he was born with sinne it sinks so deep into his soule that it cannot be expell'd thence but with labour and pain Children know neither their Creatour nor their Father they live some years in this sad condition we must expect till Nature ripen their senses and make them capable of the instructions of their Nurses or Masters that knowledge and truth may passe into their soules by the mediation of their eyes and eares Those that are born among infidels thinking to deliver themselves from ignorance are plung'd into falshood and fall into a mischiefe more grievous then that they labour to avoid when these two evils are associated together they heighten the bad inclinations of the Will of an offender they make an Opinator and adding obstinacy to malice throw him into a necessity of sinning If it have not this unhappy consequence in the faithfull who are instructed in the School of Truth it occasions another whose effects are no whit lesse tragicall For the Will feels a wretched impotency towards all those good things the combate of vices and the conquest of vertues makes him apprehend she complains that what ever is enjoyn'd is harsh and difficult what ever is forbidden easie and delightfull and having no strength to secure her selfe against griefe and pleasure Languorem istum culpa meruit natura non habuit quam sane culpam per lavacrum regenerationis Dei gratia fidelibus jam remisit sed sub ejusdem medici manibus adhuc natura cum suo languore confligit Aug. she loseth as many victories as she fights battles In the mean time all the children of Adam live in this misery what ever habituall goodnesse they acquire they never lose all that weaknesse they extracted from their Father assoon as Grace forsakes them they relapse into their former infirmity and being members of Adam they are always feeble and languishing But that which is most deplorable Concupiscence that so disables for good raiseth their appetite with so strong a propensity to evill that nothing seems difficult that appears under that notion The ambitious suffer with pleasure those great anxieties that accompany Glory this vain Idol makes them so couragious that they are true to it to the last gasp their constancy imitates that of Martyrs and they endure more hardships to conquer a Province then those generous Champions have to purchase Heaven The Covetous make our Penitentiaries blush their Interest costs them more then our Salvation Passion that swallows them up exerciseth so cruell a Tyranny over their wills that it obliges them to all the painfull severities the love of Jesus Christ disciplin'd the Anchorites to They fast to save charges they watch for lucre they leave their Countrey to traffique they venture their lives to assure their gains and lose their conscience to enrich their house Finally Haec cupiditas vana ac per hoc prava vincit in eis ac fraenat alias cupiditates Aug. Concupiscence works as many disorders in sinners as Charity does good in Martyrs it inspires them with vigour in tickling them with love it sheds a poison into their souls which blending weaknesse with strength makes them so unable for any good that the least difficulty that accompanies it astonisheth them and so valiant for evill that the greatest oppositions that attend it raise their courage to compasse it To all these mischiefs might be added the division of the soule and body the revolt of the passions against reason the treachery of the senses in respect of the understanding and all the distempers that arise from the unseasonablenesse of the weather or the strife of the Elements had I not largely describ'd them in discovering the miseries of man a Criminall But not to fall upon tedious repetitions 't is more usefull to consider the Head from whence we have derived our Benedictions and confront him against the other from whom we have received our Anathemaes Jesus Christ is that glorious CHIEF whom the Eternall Father is pleased to engraffe upon our Nature to deliver it from those miseries it grones under 't is from Him that all our advantages flow and as we are made guilty by descending from Adam we become innocent by being planted into JESUS CHRIST Our Redemption holds some proportion with our Fall the Mercy of God is regulated by his Justice and the Grace he bestowes upon us is a copy of our chastisement The first Man saith Saint Augustine received a Liberty void of all servitude God presented him with Fire and Water and gave him leave to chuse Man took Fire and rejected the Water God who is just let him grasp what he had chosen so that hee was therefore unhappy because he would be so See here an Expresse of the Justice of God Turn the Table and behold one of his Mercy For seeing that Man by the bad use of his Free-will had corrupted all Mankinde in his Person He came down from heaven not tarrying for his prayers and healed him by his Humility who had lost himself by his Pride he rectified the wanderers and put them into the right way hee call'd home the Banished and instated them in their Country that they might no longer glory in themselves but in that immaculate CHIEF from whom they derived their salvation This Verity is the Foundation of our Religion The beliefe of two Adams acquaints us with our Fall and with our Recovery Wee cannot know what we owe JESUS CHRIST unlesse we know what we lost in Adam nor can we ever worthily comprehend the obligations we have to our Redeemer unlesse we fully understand all the misfortunes accru'd to us by him that was our Parricide at the same instant that he was our Parent Therefore is it that the great Apostle never separates ADAM from JESUS CHRIST he always opposeth Grace against Sin be heightens the greatness of the Remedy by that of the Disease and that we may have a right estimate of the children of God he minds us that they were the children of wrath and vessels of dishonour Saint Augustine the faithfull Interpreter of Saint Paul admirably explains this Mystery in commenting upon the words of this Apostle As none saith he enters into the kingdom of Death that passeth not by Adam Si●●t in regno Mortis nemo sine Adam ita in regno Vitaenomo sine Christo sicur per Adam omnes peccatores ita per Christum omnes justi homines sicut per Adam omnes mortales in poena facti sunt filii seculi ita per Christu● omnes immortales in gratia sunt filii Dei August ad Optat. so none enters into the
agnosce ●e in ipso tentatum te in illo agnosce vincentem Aug. Jesus Christ saith he was tempted by the evil spirit in the desart or rather we were tempted in him for 't is from us that he took Flesh from him that we derive Salvation 't is from us that he receives his Death from him that we receive our Life 't is from us that he had these affronts cast upon him from him that we have Honours conferred upon us 'T is therefore for our sakes that he suffered Temptation and for his sake that we carry away the victory Or to say the same thing in other words If we were tempted in him 't is in him also that we overcame the devil our enemy He certainly could have difcarded him from his person and using him like a rebellious slave have punished his rash boldness by commanding him to hell but had he not been willing to be tempted he had not taught us to overcome by his example nor had the combat he fought in the wilderness procured us the honour of a Triumph Thus the quality of Head is injurious to Jesus Christ and honourable to Christians because in that exchange it obliged him to make with them he endured the shame of the Temptation and purchased for them the advantage of the Victory Finally to conclude this Discourse The Son of God was willing to bear the reproaches of the Cross and to merit for us the priviledges of Glory For being charged with our iniquities he suffered death the punishment of them permitted Shame to be added to Cruelty that spoiling him of Life Si moriamur saltem cum libertate moriamur Cicero in Ver●em de Crucis supplicio agens they might withal rob him of his Honour and he might give up the ghost as an Offender and a Slave together In the mean time his Punishment purchased our Glory his Death merited our Immortality and in stead of taking vengeance of our crimes he procures us his own advantages It seems saith S. Augustine the Father mistook himself he treats his onely Son as a Delinquent and handles Men as Innocents he crowns him with Thorns these with Glory and confounding the Sinner with the Just confounds Chastisements with Rewards But if we consider that the Son of God took our place and we his that he is our Head and we his Members we shall finde that his Father had reason to punish him and to reward us because having made a change with us he is become Guilty we Innocent Let us therefore be thankful to Jesus Christ who disdained not a quality which investing him with our Nature chargeth him with our sins and our infirmities and uniting him to us as to his Members obliges him to be tempted to make us victorious Ille quippe Christianorum caput in omnibus tentari voluit quia tentamur sic morivoluit quiae morimur sic resurgere quiae resurrecturi sumus Aug. in Psal 9. Serm. 2. and to suffer the death of the Cross to obtain for us the glory of Immortality The Ninth DISCOURSE Of the duties of Christians as Members toward Jesus Christ as their Head THough the duties of the Head and of the Members are reciprocal and that composing one Body they are obliged to a mutual correspondence arising from Necessity as well as Love yet there is no man but will acknowledge that as the Members receive more assistance from the Head ten the Head from the Members so are they tied to greater expressions of dependence Nature which is an excellent mistress in this matter instructs us that the life of the Members depends upon the Head and their very preservation obliges them to three or four duties without which they can no ways subsist Their Interest requires that they be inseparably fastned to that from whence they receive their life lest their division with their death deprive them of all those advantages which spring from the union they have with their Head Thus we see that the Hand which is one of the most ingenious parts of the body and which may be called the Mother of all Arts and the faithfullest Minister of the Soul loseth its dexterity and comeliness as soon as separated from the Head that enlivens it The Feet though not so noble as the Hands are yet as necessary being the moveable Foundations of this living building are destitute of all strength when they have no commerce with the Head This indeed ceaseth not to act and move though provided neither of Hands nor Feet when Nature fails it hath recourse to Art and being the throne of the Soul ransacks all her treasures of Invention to execute that by it Self Omnis salus omnis vita à capite in caeterae membra derivatur Galen was wont to be put in execution by its Members But though the hands are so industriously subtil and the legs so vigorously strong they are absolutely useless because their separation deprives them of the influences of their head This Maxime so notorious in Nature is much more evident in Grace For the Son of God hath no need of his Members 't is Mercy and not Necessity obligeth him to make use of them He is not at all more powerful when united to them nor more feeble when separated from them Faith tells us he can do all things without them whereas they can doe nothing without him Therefore is he compared to the Vine and they to the Branch to acquaint them that all their vertue flows from his and being pluckt from his Body can as the Branch expect nothing but the fire Therefore the first obligation of Christians is to unite themselves to Jesus Christ to seek their life in this union and to believe that their death is the infallible consequence of their division This is it that Saint Augustine represents us in this Discourse which though long cannot be tedious because there is nothing in it that is not delightfull and necessary As the Body hath many members which though different in number make up but one body so Jesus Christ hath many members which in the diversity of their conditions constitute also but one body so that we are always with him as with our Head and drawing from him our strength as well as our life we can neither act nor live without him We with him make up a fruitful Vine that bears more Grapes then Leaves but divided from him we are like those Branches which being good for nothing are destin'd to the slames when stript off from the Vine Therefore doth the Son of God so earnestly affirm it in the Gospel that without him we can doe nothing that our interests as well as our love Domine si fine te nihil totum in te possumus Etenim quicquid ille operatur per nos videmur nos operari potest ille multum totum sine nobis nos nihil sine ipso Aug. in Psal 30. may engage us to be united to his
more sensible express more regret they are not content only to look upon the offended part but they shed tears to comfort it and many times cure it by that innocent remedy The Head which is seated in the most eminent place of the body stoops to succour this poor afflicted he forgets his condition to satisfie his love and giving a fair example to Soveraigns instructs them they ought to be sensible of all the miseries of the meanest of their subjects the Heart Nemo regi tam vilis sit ut illum perire non sentiat qualiscunque pars imperii sit Senec. which from the centre where it is lodged equally enlivens all the parts discovers its sense of pain by its regrets and mixing its sighs with the tears of the eyes and the complaints of the mouth gives a loud testimony it cannot be at quiet when the members it inanimates are afflicted The Hands that are the faithful ministers of the body discover their sorrow by their quickness of dispatch being more active then the rest they presently visit the distressed part they sound the malady apply remedies to it and evidence that if they be not so tender they are more serviceable then the Eyes or Tongue If all things were well regulated in the Church if the Faithful acted according to the motions of Grace and if Charity that combines them together were as lively in their Hearts as in those of the primitive Christians we should see in the mystical Body of Jesus Christ what we behold every day in the natural body of Man The affliction of one of these quickned Members would equally touch all the rest every one would do his office according to his power and imitating the good intelligence of parts composing the same body some would weep as the eyes others complain as the mouth and others assist as the hands This certainly was the consideration that wrought so much upon S. Paul's affections Docet utique Paulus saue veritatem patitur sua aliorum simul mala infirmitates tolerat solatur simul de communisalute de toto orbe sollicitus Ansel and obliged him to pronounce those words flowing from the greatness of his love Who is weak and I am not weak who is offended and I burn not For as he came neerer Jesus Christ then other Christians did being closer united to this Head he sunk deeper into his minde and remembring the complaints he himself had drawn from his mouth when he persecuted the Church he endeavoured to repair that offence by compassion and in Mercy to imitate him whom he represented in Authority All Christians are bound to live in this disposition if they mean to satisfie their duty they must be afflicted with the miserable weep with those that weep and calling to minde that they are the Members of the same Body they must see no Innocents persecuted no Godly distressed but they must do their utmost to comfort them by condoling their misfortunes 'T is perhaps for this reason that the Church is called a Dove because sighs are as natural to her as to that Bird who having lost her mate spends her life in grief and solitude The Church is a widow and consequently solitary her Husband left her when he ascended up to heaven and though she be honoured with his presence being deprived of his sight she cannot secure her self from that anxiety her love works in her but she mourns as the Dove because being made up of as many Members as she hath Believers she is constrained to give her self over to Sorrow when she sees them in Calamity or in Danger Having considered the Afflictions of the Church let us consider the subject of her Joy and behold the community of Goods she hath set up among her children in that which Nature hath erected among members of the same body The union of these later is so great that though they have different offices yet cease they not to take pains one for the other The eyes see and hear not saith S. Augustine the ears hear and see not the hands act and hear not the feet walk and act not nevertheless their correspondence is so good that the eyes hear by the ears the ears see by the eyes the hands walk by the feet and the feet act by the hands so that if we ask the ears Can they judge of Colours they would answer Being in the unity of the body they are always with the eyes and if they see not themselves they are inseparable from those whose office it is to see for them Thus continues S. Augustine as the eyes say we hear by the ears and the ears We see by the eyes and both of them We act by the hands all is common among these parts their difference destroys not their unity and though their employments be divers they live in so perfect a society that the advantages of the one part make up the riches of all the rest If Christians be Members of Jesus Christ they enjoy the same priviledges all their goods are common and if envie divide them not from their Head they possess in Him whatever is wanting in Themselves The Alliance they have with his Body enriches them with another's good without any injustice and like the members of a man which act in one anothers behalf they foretel things to come by the mouth of the Prophets they are understood of all Nations by those that have the gift of Tongues they work miracles by the hands of the Apostles and they attribute to themselves without vanity whatever the Saints are able to do in the mystical Body of Jesus Christ For one of the secrets of the Natural body saith S. Augustine is that the relation of the members is so perfect that each particular labours not so much for it self as for others The eye is the onely part that can see but it sees not for it self alone it is the candle of the feet in their walking of the hands in working and of all the other members in their employments Indeed if it discover any danger threatning the foot it endeavours to protect it and gives notice that it may be avoided The hand acts onely but not for it self alone it defends the face if stricken at courageously opposeth any enemy that braves it and knowing that their interests are common valiantly suffers the evil to deliver the body from it All the members are silent there is none but the tongue that speaks but she is their interpreter and furnisheth them with words to express their like or dislike their sorrow or joy Thus must we confess in the mystical body of Jesus Christ the Faithful receive no benefit which is not reckoned as pertaining to the rest If they be prudent 't is to counsel the simple if they work miracles 't is to convert Infidels or to confirm weak Believers if they have the spirit of Prophecie 't is to instruct the ignorant if they have the gift of
lest the fear of their Infirmity should lull them asleep in the lap of Idleness they are bound to joyn Action to their Prayers good Works to their Sighs remembring that Charity is active and that she never hath recourse to Desires and Wishings but when she is destitute of occasions to suffer or do for the glory of him whom she so passionately affects The Second DISCOURSE Of the Necessity of Grace in the state of Innocence and of Sin A Man must be an enemy to his Salvation that is an enemy to the Grace of Jesus Christ because in whatever state the creature is considered he hath need of some supernatural assistance to attain to glory His weakness is so great and his end so high that he can neither master the first nor compass the second if he be not assisted with an extraordinary succour Original righteousness that furnished him with so many advantages gave no dispensation from this necessity and though he had neither Passions to combat nor disorders to regulate Grace was still necessary for him to overcome Temptations and to persevere in Innocence Had Humane nature continued saith S. Augustine in that happie condition God at first created it in it had been unable to preserve it self had it not been upheld by the power of its Creator The state of Grace is more delicate then that of Nature and if all Philosophers confess that the Creatures have need of the support of the Almighty that they return not to their Nothing all Divines acknowledg they have need of his help lest they fall into Sin Weakness which is inseparable from the Creature puts him in this necessity and notwithstanding those many priviledges his production was honoured with he cannot want that succour which supports and fortifies him Adam remained but a small time in his original righteousness his first conflict was followed with his overthrow and we know not whether his Creation and his Fall happened not on the same day but this we know that his Fall had been speedier had not Grace seconded his Liberty and that he had wandered from his End assoon as ever he had known it had he not been supplied with supernatural Means to tend thereunto And me thinks we may apply the words of the Scripture in the state of Innocence as well as of Sin and say with that excellent Doctor of Grace Let him that glorieth glory in the Lord. For as there is no Creature can begin any good without Grace neither is there any that can perfect that good beginning without it The Necessity of Grace is so great Non talis facta est Natura ut sine Divino adjutorio posset manere Aug. that 't is common to all sorts of conditions Angels can no more be without it then Men the nobleness of their Creation dispenseth not with them and if it be true that the dignity of their nature being higher then that of Men makes them more indigent of the assistance of God I conceive their elevation in Grace renders them more necessitous of its support The Greatness of the Creatures serves onely to abase them their excellence is a glorious servitude the more they have received from God the more do they depend upon him and the grace that would preserve an Angel would not be sufficient to preserve a Seraphim Thus the dignity of the Creature is as well a proof of the Necessity of Grace as his weakness and till he be admitted into Glory where he findes his confirmation in Good he stands in need of Grace to preserve those advantages he hath received from his Creator If Innocence could not free us from this happie Necessity we may say 't is increased upon us by sin and that to give us a release we have need of some more vigorous and active Grace For 't is not enough now that it shew us the Good and enable us to attain unto it but it must withal inspire us with a Will unto it it must lead us by the hand support our weakness order our doings correct our imperfections break our chains and master concupiscence that takes possession of our Will It must assault this Tyrant to set us at liberty that dealing skilfully with us and valiantly against it we may be delivered from servitude without any violence to our nature For Free-will is so weakned by sin that it cannot so much as will the Good if Grace cure it not it must change its inclinations to elevate its desires and imprint upon him the love of vertue hereby to abhor vice Indeed saith S. Augustine how should a man live justly if he be not justified how should he live holily if he be not sanctfied and how should he live truely if he be not quickned with Grace which is the true life of the soul The Cure of man and his Disease depend not equally upon his Will there needs nothing but a small excess to contract a Fever hot and cold are able to debois our constitution Fruits eaten unseasonably or excessively may cause a Flux nor is there any man so well but may be sick when he will But the Cure depends upon Physick we must recover that by the help of another which we have lost by our own fault and experience teacheth us that the end of evil is not in our power as its birth is We may reason thus concerning Man a Sinner because sickness is as well the Image as the Punishment of his crime he may sin when he will he hath liberty enough to become a delinquent there needs no temptation to make him swerve from his duty and he is dextrous enough by his sole power to render himself miserable But having lost Grace he cannot recover it by his own proper Will notwithstanding all the abilities still remain with him there will never be enough to raise him from his Fall nor can he be justified by any other then by him that is the fountain of all the Justice in the world The Law that was given to Instruct him is not sufficient to Cure him though it be one step to arrive to vertue and the knowledge of sin be necessary for the avoiding thereof nevertheless the Law without Grace cannot convert the sinner its light serves onely to dazzle him its defence onely to irritate his desires and when this feeble succour is not seconded by Grace it makes a man but more guilty 'T is Charity that inspires a love towards the Law that surmounts its difficulties changeth its pains into pleasures and of slaves making children renders that easie and agreeable that seemed burdensome and impossible But when by the mediation of Grace a man passeth from the Law to the Gospel he ought not to think this guide useless nor that he can without its aid preserve what without its light he could not attain Grace is not less necessary to finish then to begin and the new state whereto the Christian it raised depends so absolutely upon its influences that he ceaseth
afraid to injure mans Liberty in using terms so significant because supposing Grace nothing but Love it can do no violence to the Will for of all the things in the world there is none freer then Love A man cannot complain that he is forced when nothing but charms of affection are employed to gain him and if there are some Lovers that have blamed the rigour of their mistresses there is none that have found fault with their love If it be an Evil 't is a voluntary one it hurts none but those that willingly embrace it and of so many punishments that torment us there is none more innocent because none more free Crowns may be snatched from Soveraigns Confidence may be taken from Philosophers Orators may be convinced any man may lose his life but whatever stratagems are made use of whatever violence men practise a Lover cannot be forced nor his love extorted from him Seeing then Grace is nothing but Charity and Charity nothing but a holy Love we must not apprehend violence nor imagine that the assaults of this divine quality can at all injure our Liberty because it does not disengage us from evil but by obliging us to love God If Grace cannot force our Will because it is a victorious love it ought less to constrain it because according to the language of S. Augustine 't is a pleasant perswasion For this great man considering that he was to deal with Free-will on one side and the Power of Grace on the other that he was to maintain the Empire of God and the Liberty of Man he hath always exprest himself so happily that he never prejudic'd either and as indeed Grace never forceth Man but perswades him it holds something of Eloquence or of Reason that triumphs over Liberty without compelling it Rhetorick is an Art that teacheth us to perswade Truth Orators are agreeable Soveraigns that bear rule over the mindes of their Auditors that calm their Passions change their Designes Quid enim inter Pisistratum Periclem interfuit nisi quod ille armatus hic sine armis tyrannidem gess●● Cicer. and gently force their Wills Therefore was it unhandsomely done of that Ancient to compare Pericles with Pisistratus because this Tyrant domineered but over mens Bodies that Orator exercised a dominion over their Souls the one made use of Violence the other employed nothing but Sweetness the one procured the hatred of his Subjects the other the love of his Auditors For no man could complain of Pericles because he used nothing but Eloquence to perswade his Command was founded upon Reason his chief Force consisted in Truth he subjected no Understandings but by clearing them nor changed any mens Wills but in taking them by their interests or their inclinations In a word Eloquence may boast her self a Soveraign that reigns without arms subdues people by her word convinceth Philosophers by her reasons and subjects Monarchs by her power She protects the Innocent comforts the Distressed condemns or absolves the Guilty and as she animates the Advocates or the Judges produceth different miracles in their souls Whether she inchant the Ears by the harmonious cadencies of her Periods whether she excite love and hatred by her gestures her principal designe is to master the Liberty of Man She sets not upon the Understanding but to gain the Will she appears complacent that she may be perswasive nor doth she require the attention or her auditors but that she may get their consent 'T is true never any man complains of her violence because she is sweet and he that hath changed his minde at the hearing of an Orator never accused him of Tyranny 'T is certainly upon this ground that S. Augustine calls Grace a powerful perswasion because imitating Eloquence it clears our Spirits calms our Passions and gains our Consent It hath this advantage over Eloquence that it hath no need of our Ears to win our Hearts it transmits it self by it self into the inmost recesses of the soul findes out Reason in her Throne without employing the Senses carries Light into the Understanding and kindles Love in the Will Thus she perswades what she will to the obstinate subdues rebels without arms makes her Subjects will what she desires they should and when she displays all her forces she works the conversion of a sinner in a moment This certainly was the power Jesus Christ made use of when he laid Saint Paul flat at his feet when he converted that Persecutor into an Apostle changed his heart and his tongue and made him that breathed nothing but murder say Lord what wilt thou have me to do He lost not his Liberty for having lost his Fury he changed not his Nature for having changed his Judgement nor can we say that the perswasion that gained his consent was less free or more violent for being so sudden Grace knows how to be obeyed without making us slaves she can perswade without compelling and more powerful then Eloquence is able to make us love what we hated before That great Orator that guided the Romane Common-wealth with his Tongue and made his opinion so dexterously pass into the soul of his Auditors that gallant man I say hath wrought miracles by his Eloquence which we have much ado to allow the grace of Jesus Christ to effect He could boast that he altered the resolution of Caesar defending the cause of Ligarius that he shook the papers out of the hands and the hatred out of the heart of that Conquerour that he made him recal the sentence he had already pronounced in his soul that he overcame him by his Reasons that fubdued all by his Arms and trampled upon the pride of a Tyrant that had triumphed over the Liberty of Rome In the mean time we have much ado to believe that Grace can work miracles we weaken its Vertue to preserve our own Free-will we are not content that Jesus Christ should be as powerful as an Orator and when we hear of these victorious Graces and of these invincible perswasions we imagine as if there were a designe to oppress the publike Liberty Let us ascribe that to Grace which we grant to Eloquence let us confess that the Son of God knows how to imprint Truth in our spirit and Love in our heart to perswade us infallibly let us acknowledge that he is not to seek by what stratagems to gain our inclinations that his Grace more intimate then Concupiscence is able to become the mistress of our Wills and whatever command she exerciseth over us she never destroys our Liberty because she hath no other designe then to enfranchise it out of servitude The Seventh DISCOURSE That we may judge of the power of Grace over the Christian by that of Concupiscence over the Sinner FOrasmuch as the things of the world never appear with greater lustre then when they are set in opposition against their contraries I conceive in this Discourse I shall not do amiss to confront Concupiscence
confess that all we do is rather of God then of our selves He says the same thing again speaking of Perseverance and perswades all the Faithful that their salvation ought to be founded upon their humility because God hath indued them with Graces whereby they are made acquainted with his power and their own weakness For he will not have the Saints glorifie themselves for their perseverance in good out of their own abilities but from the assistance of his Grace neither hath he given them a succour equal to that he bestowed upon the first man whereby he might have persevered if he would because foreseeing that they would not persevere had they not from him the power and the wil he hath given them both out of his pure mercy Indeed their will is so effectually warm'd by the holy Spirit that they are able to doe the good because they wil and they will it because God hath inspir'd them with a will to it For did God abandon them to themselves in this infirmity which serves as a remedy against their pride and did he give them no other assistance but that by which Adam might have persevered if he would they would stoop to the assaults of temptations in the frailty of their flesh nor would they ever persevere because the weakness of their will would not suffer them to will the good at all or to will it so strongly as to doe it Therefore God desiring to succour their misery hath given them a grace that so moves this rationall faculty that she never resists it that in her weakness she may be vigorous enough to surmount all the adversities of life But because these manners of speeches might perswade the ignorant that a grace that acts so energetically would destroy liberty Saint Augustine instructs us that her force consists in her sweetness that she works upon the will only by the pleasure she there produceth nor that she is victorious but because she is agreeable This is the second truth that remains to be proved to satisfie my promise and to manifest the last resemblance between Concupiscence and Charity Though the former be sometimes so violent that she hardly leaves the sinner any liberty to resist she never employs force to extort his consent she is not of the humour of those tyrants which make use of nothing but torments to reduce their subjects to their designs and knowing that Empires are preserv'd by the same means they are acquired endeavour to keep that by cruelty they have gotten by violence But she corrupts the wil by pleasure proposing nothing but what is delightful she dexterously mixeth smiles with frowns profit with loss glory with shame and so artificially disguiseth the objects shee presents sinners with that they complain not even in the midst of their torments 'T is shee that sweetens the laborious travels of Conquerors charms the discontents of the Covetous comforts the Lascivious in the tortures that accompany their wantonness she gilds the chaines of al lthe slaves that follow her makes them acceptable when she cannot make them glorious sowing pleasure where shee cannot sow profit nor reputation Thence it comes to passe that her Empire is so firmly established among finners that to destroy it grace must change their wils subduing the vanity of their criminall pleasures by the truth of her innocent delights For she walks in the steps of her enemy she imitates her she intends to ruine and benefiting by her wiles she never sets upon the will of a sinner but she is seconded with pleasure her chiefe Stratagem is to render vertue agreeable to take off that austerity that suffers her not to be accosted and to lay all her Stoicall morosity upon the face of sin This is it that Saint Augustine declares by those words where he exhorts a sinner to be converted Confess your selves saith he in the presence of Almighty God and you shall obtain from his bounty that the vertue which seem'd so stern will seem sweet and easie When he hath wrought this first miracle you shal finde that facil which now you apprehend as impossible you shall have as much satisfaction in justice as formerly you had in iniquity Sobriety will relish better then drunkenness you will discern more charms in Alms then in Robbery and taste a farre richer pleasure in giving your own then in taking that of your neighbour Prayer will out-vie the Pastimes of the Theatre Psalmes and Hymnes will entertain you better then amorous Sonnets or the Aires of the Court you will goe to Church more chearfully then ever you went to a Play and reflecting upon the change of your heart you will acknowledge Grace the cause thereof and that the barren ground of your soul bare no fruits but because the Lord hath been pleased to water it with the perfumes of his Divine Influences For 't is an undoubted Maxime that Good though never so excellent begins not to be desired till it begin to be pleasurable Though it have more charms then beauty more lustre then glory more invitations then profit if it convey not pleasure into the will it knows not how to beget love Pleasure is the Load-stone that draws all hearts that are capable of love 't is the poyson that distils into the heart of all sinners and the only answer they return those that condemn them They oppose nothing but pleasure against all reproaches and when truth it self accuseth them they have but one reason wherewith to defend themselves they cannot forsooth leave that they take so much delight in Indeed they would never sin did not pleasure solicit them nor would the Devil ever master their will did he not make use of pleasure to gain their consent He employs the same devices against them he did against our first Father he makes use of the flesh to gain the spirit as he dealt with the woman to seduce the man he tries by suggestion to produce pleasure in his heart that pleasure may quicken sin He knows that this Commander is too free to be compell'd but he knows also that he is too amorous to hold out if he call not in another to his aid whereby he may be defended This also is the way God deals with souls to gain them he useth not his power but his sweetness he employs not his threats but his promises and when he intends to vanquish a creature he makes not use of pain but of pleasure he combates sensual delights with spiritual ones he opposeth the charms of vertue against the allurements of sin he inspires thoughts so sweet and so powerful that they blot out all those of the Earth and knowing very well that the Will always complies with the more predominant delectation that solicits her he is content to be lik't that he may be victorious For if Concupiscence contest with Grace about the conquest of a heart she that promiseth the highest pleasure shall prevail and though never so free the Helen will be overcome by the
and since the havock sin hath made in men we have no right to Vertue but what his mercy bestows upon us The ignorance of the last condition of Vertue hath thrown all the Philosophers into pride and blindness For not knowing the miseries of Original sin but seduced by self-love they have established their strength in their freedome and their happiness in reason they have given stately names to Vertue which helping to deceive them have fill'd their perswasion that she was rather an effect of their own labor then of Grace Therefore is it that S. Augustine observes that all the Philosophers considering the difficulties that accompany Vertue the combats that must be fought to gether have Christen'd her with a name which seems to take its beeing from force and which by a just judgement of God hath entertained them in their vanity hiding from them their weakness But Christians who have learnt humility in the School of Truth who have profited by their misfortune and are become wise by the miscarriages of Philosophers have called Vertue a Grace or a gift of God and will have her name an instance of their misery and of the liberality of their Soveraign This is it that the same Doctor saith in other terms opposing the vanity of Philosophers to the humility of Christians The Philosophers saith he loved their own glory and despised t hat of God they confided in their own strength and were not thankfull to him that lifteth up the humble and casteth down the proud But Christians instructed in a better School avoid the glory of the world and seek after that of God The experience they have of their infirmity makes them distrust their own abilities and since they know they can neither undertake nor execute any thing without the assistance of their Creator they invoke him when they begin their actions return him thanks when they have finished them and if they want courage or fidelity accuse themselves confessing ingenuously that all good things come from God and all evil from the creature Indeed God will be glorified in our weakness he will have all that we do rather an effect of his Grace then of our Liberty Omnia Dec attribuunt radicem meriti virtutum cilicet praemiūnon videntes nec in se nec in alio nisi Gratiam Dei Greg. Mag. and he takes pleasure to command us such things as exceed our power that the glory may be his 'T is perhaps for this reason that he saith in his Word that the Kingdome of Heaven cannot be gained but by violence and that he hath propounded to us so high a Conquest that the greatness thereof may oblige us to seek for his assistance It is not a Prodigy saith a Father of the Church to be born upon the Earth and scale Heaven to win that by Vertue that cannot be obtained by Nature that the whole world may know that if in this Conflict man get the victory 't is God that gives him the Courage to overcome and the Grace to triumph Therefore the great Origen considering the designs of God and the weaknesse of men Vult Dominus Jesus res mirabiles facere vult enim de Locustis Gigames de his quae in terra sunt caelestes vincere nequitias Orig. said with as much Congruity as Truth that this great Master took pleasure to work miracles in our favour that having drawn us out of nothing and then out of sin he would raise us to glory that having formed our body of the slime of the Earth he destined it for Heaven and that the Devils by their malice intending to oppose this design he gave us arms to fight them that those Pygmies vanquishing these Gyants the honour of the victory might be ascribed to him where the parties being so unequal the advantage was found on the weaker side 'T is upon the discovery of all these verities that Christians call Vertue by the name of Grace and confess that if she came not from Heaven they were never able to surpass all difficulties suffer all sorrows and despise all the delights of the Earth The Second DISCOURSE Of the Division of the Vertues of a Christian AS Physitians make an Anatomy of Mans Body thereby to discover its qualities and exercise a cruelty upon the Dead that they may benefit the Living Philosophers divide the Vertues that they may know them they separate that which is indivisible and break the sacred bonds that unite these dear Sisters that so they may peruse their beauties Or to express this Truth by a more noble comparison as the School-men divide the Divine Essence to illustrate its perfections separating Justice from Mercy Majesty from Love Wisdom from Power though they are but one and the same thing we are obliged to disjoyn the Vertues though they be all concentred in Charity and according to the opinion of S. Augustine are nothing but Charities disguised For taking leave to repeat a Principle often explained in another Work Charity is the onely Christian Vertue changing names according as her object changeth conditions When That is hid she is called Faith and with her obscure lights endeavours to discover that Sun which the splendor of his Majesty renders invisible when this object is absent she is called Hope which raiseth her soul towards him that stands at a distance onely to increase our desires when 't is armed with Thunder she is called Fear imprinting endearments of respect towards a Majestie that can annihilate all those that offend him Those Vertues that we stile Cardinal and which seem not directly to aim at the Supreme Good are but so many true Loves fastning us to him by different chains Temperance saith S. Augustine is a chaste Love which can suffer no parting of hearts obliging us to consecrate our selves wholly to his service whom we pretend to affect Valour is a generous Love making a Pleasure of Pain and gives proof of his Constancy in the hottest battery of Persecutions Justice is a regulated Love teaching us to command by obeying and subjecting us to our lawful Soveraign gains us an absolute Dominion over all the Creatures Prudence is a clear-sighted Love which is never seduced chusing by its illumination those means which are able to bring us to God and rejecting all others that may estrange us from him So that the Vertues are nothing but Charity in a several dress or to speak more correctly they are onely the different functions of Love But not to wander from this Principle which I honour because S. Augustine after Saint Paul is the author of it I will not forbear to divide the Vertues without interessing their Unity and to consider their divers employments without wronging their fair correspondence The same S. Augustine is of opinion that there are Two Principal Vertues which include all the rest The one consists in Action the other in Contemplation The one teacheth us the way we must walk in to go to God and the
other happily guides us in it The one purifies our soul by Labour the other unites us to God by Prayer The one keeps the Commandments and the other receives the Recompence The one is afflicted with grief because it bewails his sins with the Penitents the other is bathed in pleasure because it participates in the felicity of the Blessed The same Doctor all whose Maximes are Truths gives us another Division of Vertues from the difference of our conditions and being not far from that Principle we are going to explain attributes but one Vertue to the Blessed and leaves all the rest to the Faithful They indeed finde all their happiness in the Supreme Good which they are in possession of their Love makes up the total of their felicity and that ineffable Union that transforms them into him they love is the onely Vertue that for ever takes them up in the fruition of Glory Prudence is not requisite because there is no darkness to be dissipated nor misfortunes to be prevented Fortitude is useless because there are no sorrows to struggle with Temperance serves to no end because all their delights are innocent and lawful Neither is there any employment for their Justice because in the Tabernacle of Glory there are neither miserable to be protected nor criminals to be punished Thus as that incomparable Doctor goes on they practise but one Vertue and by a happie encounter this Vertue is their recompence because uniting them to God it makes them finde their felicity in him 'T is true that as the Supreme Good contains all other Goods we may say also that all the Vertues are comprehended in this and their several denominations may be imposed upon it It is Prudence because it illuminates them with the brightness of God himself Fortitude because it unites them so firmly with him that nothing can separate them Temperance because it makes them chastly embrace the Chief Good and in the delights they taste of they seek not so much their Pleasure as his Glory Justice because it subjects them to their Soveraign making them finde their Happiness in their Submission But as there is some analogie between the condition of the Blessed and that of the Faithful at the same time that S. Augustine separates them he associates them again and confounding their Vertues together saith that during this life Love is the onely vertue of Christians and that there is none other but to love that which is amiable So that to facilitate the acquisition of that object we place our affections upon by chusing sutable and convenient means is Prudence Not to be discouraged or diverted by Grief is Fortitude Not to be drawn away by Pleasures is Temperance and not to be kept off by the vain pomp and grandetza's of the world is Justice He lodgeth these Vertues in Glory which he seems to have banished thence and acknowledgeth that the Blessed enjoy them as well as the Faithful but with this difference That upon the earth they are in Act in heaven in Habit upon the earth they serve for a Defence in heaven for an Ornament upon the earth in Exercise in heaven in their Acquiescence upon the earth they are the sure Land-marks guiding the Faithful to their journeys end in heaven they happily unite the Faithful in an inseparable Bond of Communion But because this Doctrine is not fully conformable to that which is commonly received and that we have borrowed from Philosophers the Division and the Quality of Vertues let us say with them that we judge of their number by our obligations and our necessities We are upon the earth for no other end but to Know and Love to Suffer and to Do our whole life is spent in these two employments and if we be not absolutely unprofitable we must raise our selves to the Knowledge and Love of the Supreme Good and resolve if we be not altogether lazie by our Courage to overcome all the difficulties which occur in the course of our life Thence it comes to pass that we have need of different Vertues Bonam vitam ego puto Deum cognoscere amare mala pati bona facere sic perseverare usque ad mortem Bern. and that according to the designes we form we are obliged sometimes to have recourse to the Divine vertues sometimes to the Moral Inasmuch as God is surrounded with Light that darkens us our Understanding must necessarily be cleared by Faith that we may know him In that he is an Infinite Good our soul must be fortified with Hope that we may search after him and our Will warmed with Charity that we may love him For though Good be amiable and the Supreme Good transcendently amiable yet is it so far above our reach that without Grace we cannot approach unto it and as we must be clarified by his Light that we may know him so must we be warmed by his Calentures that we may affectionately close with him Thus Faith Hope and Charity are the Vertues by means whereof we treat with God But because Man is born for Society in serving God he is bound to assist his Neighbour Charity hath a double respect having united us to the Supreme Good for love of it she unites us to our Like and obligeth us to love them as we do our selves Were this Vertue in its full vigour 't would be sufficient alone Lex venit in subsidium amicitiae Atistot and as Philosophers have observed that Laws would be useless did Friendship raign in mens hearts I dare affirm did Charity set up her throne in ours the Vertues would be idle among Christians or act onely by her orders and directions But whether we have not as yet attained this Perfection or that the number of Subjects contributes to the Greatness of Soveraigns she hath under her command Four Vertues which are called Cardinal that act by her motions and execute her designes Prudence clears our Understandings to act helps us to discern Good from Evil and Truth from Falshood For as there are Evils which under a fair shew deceive us and Lyes that finde more credit then some Truths Prudence must serve us for a Guide and in so important an election secure us from mistakes Justice gives every one his due makes our Interests yeeld to Reason preserves Peace in the inequality of our conditions and taking original righteousness for an example which made a harmony between foul and body this sets Man at union with himself and by a necessary consequence accommodates him with his neighbour Therefore is it that Repentance and Humility are as rivulets flowing from this Fountain and as rays issuing from this Sun For Repentance is nothing but a severe Justice that animates the sinner against himself that obliges him to act the part of a witness in accusing of a judge in condemning of an executioner in punishing himself Humility is nothing but a modest and true Justice which considering the Majestie of the Creator
forceth the Creature to fall down before him and upon the sight of sin and nothingness to adore the Power and Mercy that drew him out of these two Abysses Temperance regulates our Pleasures and moderates our Delights lest their disorder obstruct our salvation and out of a blinde impetuosity finde Pain and Sorrow where we look for Pleasure and Content 'T is true she is not so taken up with Particular good as not to watch over the Publike For without encroaching upon the rights and priviledges of Justice she calms the Passions allays the storms and producing a tranquillity in the soul of Particulars contributes to that of Kingdoms because the quiet of States depends upon that of Families and 't is very hard that those Subjects that yeeld not obedience to the laws of Temperance should to those of Justice But as since the Fall of Adam Sufferings are as common as Actings and man spends his life in Pain as well as in Labour to these Three Vertues is added Fortitude as a Supply to combat and vanquish Griefs that set upon us Indeed the chiefest employment of Fortitude is to wrestle with whatever is most troublesom in the world It skirmisheth with those accidents that disquiet our Health or concern our Honour is armed against Fortune and defying that blinde potentate that seems the enemy of Vertue stands ready to receive all the assaults this insolent Tyranness makes upon those that slight her Empire Indeed when Valour is enlightned by Faith she laughs at an Idol who subsists onely in the mindes of those that fear it and may be called the work of their Fancie and Imagination she trembles not at the attempts of a false Deity and being assured that every thing is regulated by a Supreme Providence which cannot fail lays an obligation upon us to adore his Decrees though they condemn us and kiss his Thunders though they strike us dead Thus under the favourable shadow of these Vertues the life of a Christian passeth on calmly Faith affords him light to illuminate him Charity heats to inflame him Hope promises to encourage him Justice and Temperance their severall supplies to put him in action and Fortitude who her self is a whole Army gives undauntedness of spirit to fight and to triumph To all these Divisions this may be added namely that man being compounded of a body and a soul hath need of Vertues that may unite them together and subjecting the soul to God may subject the body to the soul For there is this order between these two parts that the body respects not the laws of the minde but as far as the mind respects the laws of God assoon as one dispenseth with his duty the other failes of his obedience and at the same time that the soul rebels against God the flesh maketh an insurrection against the soul To this day we bewail the mischiefs of this rebellion and all the Vertues are given us only to re-instate us in our Primitive Tranquillity The Theological Vertues undertake to subject the mind to God Faith captivates the Understanding and obligeth it to believe those verities it comprehends not Hope fils the Memory with the Promises of Jesus Christ and Charity sweetly divorceth the will from all perishable goods to fixe it upon the Supream Good The Vertues that are called Cardinal Prudentia se habet ad vera fa●sa temperantia fortitudo ad prospera adversujustitiase habet ad Deum Proximum D. Thom. 2.2 have mixt employments exercising their dominion over soul and body Prudence enlightens them Justice accords them Temperance regulates their pleasures and Fortitude combats their griefs so that all these Vertues associated together restrain man in his duty and make him find his happiness in his obedience But because I destine another Discourse to treat of these last Vertues I conceive my self bound to bestow the remainder of this upon the former and to shew the reasons wherefore it was requisite that the Christian must be assisted with Faith Hope and Charity Grace hath some resemblance with Nature and we find in man some Image of a Christian Man cannot come to his End unless he know it and have some assurance of a possibility to obtain it The Christian cannot move towards God his sole end unless he know him by Faith love him by Charity and promise himselfe the enjoyment of him by Hope Man that he may work aright hath need of three succours he must know what he does he must be able to doe it and he must will it otherwise all his designs will be unprofitable nor will he form any enterprise which will not confound or grieve him The Christian whose salvation is his chiefe business hath need of the same aids but because his enterprise is extreamly difficult and sin that hath made strange devastations in his soul hath spread darkness over his Rational thrown weakness into his Irascible and scattered malice into his Concupiscible faculty Faith must enlighten the one Hope satisfie the other and Charity which is nothing but an effusion of the Divine Goodness shed it self into the last and amend it Or let us say that Faith discovers the Supream Good to the Christian by its Lights that thence there arise two affections in his soul the desire of possessing it which is love and a confidence of obtaining it which is Hope These three Vertues doe consummate the Christians perfection Faith illuminates him Hope elevates him and Charity uniting him to God makes him partake in same sort of the felicity of the Blessed The Third DISCOURSE Of the Excellency and Necessity of Faith GOd is so far above our apprehension by the Greatness of his Nature that in whatever state we consider him we have only a borrowed light to know him by In that happy condition wherein Innocence dispell'd all mans darkness suffering neither ignorance nor infirmity to engage him in these sins which are rather naturall then voluntary he had need of light to know him whose Image he had the honour to be Those infused verities he received in his Creation those faithful glasses that presented him his Creator and all the beauties of the Universe that expressed his Divine perfections had imprinted in him but a faint knowledge if Faith elevating his soul had not clarified him with its brightnesse But when man shall pass from Earth to Heaven and removing from the Order of Grace shall enter into that of Glory In lumine tuo videbimus lumē Psal 35. he shall still have need of a borrowed light to behold the Divine Essence Though he be then a pure Spirit and his soul abstracted from matter act as the Angels yet all our Divines confess that his darkness must be enlightned his weakness supported that he may contemplate this Divine Sun who by a rare Prodigy hides himself in light and covers himself with his Majesty We are not therefore to wonder if Faith be necessary for man in the state whereto sin hath
same St. Augustine sinners have no more excuse nor can they lay their sins upon their ignorance because God to ease their memory seems to abbreviate his Doctrine in abbreviating his Word Incarnate and cloathed it with so much light that the most Ignorant may understand it It is short that it may be remembred cleer that it may bee comprehended and this treasure notwithstanding its preciousnes is so easie to be discovered that it costs us no pains to have it but to ask for it Let us adde further with Saint Paul to explain the nature of a vertue that seems inexplicable that it is the source of all good things In charitate radicati not only because it imparts life but merit and goodnes For when Hope or Faith are divided from Charity they die or languish and when Justice or Temperance are animated with any other Spirit they are criminall or unfortunate I know there are some Vertues that share in this glory with Charity that Faith is called the principle of Christian life because it is the first that God sheds abroad into mens souls that Humility is the root because 't is alwaies hid in the Earth nor shines forth but by those fruits that spring from it but both of them owe their worth to Charity because without it the former is unprofitable the second hypocriticall If leaving the Apostles we consider what the Fathers of the Church have spoken of Charity we shall finde all their writings so many panegyricks of this vertue that they are never more eloquent then when they discourse of charity and looking upon her as the Queen of vertues speak of her with that respect which is due to Soveraigns Saint Augustine who hath no lesse defended the part of Charity then of Grace seeing in a thousand passages he is pleased to confound them saith that this excellent vertue is the only Science of Christians that it comprehends what ever we know already and what ever we are yet ignorant of that it is the principle upon which all other knowledges do depend and that it imbraceth in her chaste bosome what ever is scattered in the garden of the Scriptures that it shines forth in those mysteries we are acquainted with and lies hid in those we are yet ignorant of Thence it comes to passe that this great Saint ingaging himselfe in the proofe of this verity makes us see that Love is the Epitome of all Sciences and that to be learned is to be charitable What lights saith he can we finde in the writings of Philosophers which we may not discover in this Commandment which obligeth us to love God above all things and our neighbour as our selfe There you shall finde the secrets of naturall Philosophy because the true causes of the Creatures are in God as in their Principle there you shall perceive the precepts of Morality because we cannot form a good life but in loving what is amiable and withall in loving it as much as is meet there you shall read the demonstrations of Logick because the reasonable soul ought not to seek nor indeed can finde reason and truth any where but in him that is the fruitfull source thereof There you shall discover the mysteries of the Politicks because the preservation of States and the right conduct of Monarchies depends upon the fair correspondence and fidelity of the Subjects who will never love themselves sincerely if they love not the supreme Good God and if for the love of him who cannot be deceived together with him they love not all their like The Master of the Sentences Charitas est dilectio qua diligitur Deus propter se proximus propter Deum vel in Deo magis Senten who deserves that name for no other reason but because he is the Disciple of Saint Augustine walking in his steps that he may not wander and following his principles that he may not mistake teacheth us that charity is a love as just as it is discerning which weighing the condition of persons loves God for himselfe and his neighbour for Gods sake Indeed 't is a kinde of iniquity to seek for motives to love God out of God himselfe he ought to be the cause of our love if we respect his recompences rather then his perfections we are mercenaries if we stand more in fear of stripes then of his frowns we are slaves and as Saint Augustine saith if we are more taken with his gifts then his goodnesse we are adulterers Charity that it may be holy must be chaste or to speak more truly it ceaseth to be charity when it ceaseth to be chaste our love changeth it's nature as soon as it changeth it's motive when it fastens upon our interests it becomes concupiscence and when a man loves God only to purchase perishable goods or to avoid eternall pains me thinks he better deserves the name of Slave then that of Lover I am asham'd that we should deal with God as we would not be dealt with our selves could we read mens hearts we should be extreamly offended at the carriage of those friends who more respect our fortune then our person and who consulting only their own interests study not so much our glory as their own profit There is no Master will keep servants who serve him only because they cannot impunely offend him who obey him meerly for fear of the lash respect not his commands but because they fear his anger and certainly he would be well grounded in this resolution because there is no body but knowes that a slave who hath no other obligation but his fear manumits himselfe as soon as he looseth it and neglects the service of his Master when he hopes for no more recompences nor stands in fear of no more punishments If we believe Saint Augustine such a slave hath innocent hands with a guilty heart Sin lodgeth still in his soule with fear he overcomes not his inclination but out of the apprehension of pain he loves what he dares not do and by an infallible consequence he hates the Master that forbids his undertakings Therefore doth Charity which is so contrary to Concupiscence banish fear from their soules in whom it resides It seeks the honour of him she loveth sacrificeth her Interests to the glory of God and having none but commendable motives loves him not because he is beneficiall but because he is indeed amiable when she communicates her affection by endowments to her neighbour she looks only upon him whose image he is and not considering those reasons that are the inducements of interessed soules it is enough that a creature is capable of possessing God to merit a charitable affection Thence it comes to passe that she renders the same duties to her enemies cherisheth them that injure her and insensible of their wrongs pardons those that trample upon her The will of her God sets all her motions awork though inordinate nature counsell her she remains constant in her resolutions and knowing there is no
sinner whose conversion may not be hop'd for she prayes for those that despitefully use her that after the example of Jesus Christ she may make her tormentors her friends In as much as this Discourse draws to an end I must be more briefe in the other definitions of Charity and say succinctly with Saint Augustine that she is the love of the true good because to speak properly she adheres onely to God in consideration of whom she despiseth all other goods which are nothing but lies or illusions The desire and possession whereof she leaves to concupiscence she envies not her false felicity because she knows 't is really but a true misery and by means of those lights that came down from heaven she never troubles her selfe to acquire those Goods which make not the possessours better because they cannot use them well if they be not good before they take them in possession By a necessary Consequence Charity is a love which makes us tender of those goods wee cannot lose against our wills I wonder not that Concupiscence is poore because the preservation of her riches depends not upon her will shee may be rob'd of all that shee loves violence or injustice may spoil her of her treasures calumny may black her reputation grief may damp her pleasures death whose only name brings so much terrour with it may take away her life But Charity who hath this advantage that shee hath chosen the better part is well assured it shall never be taken from her she loves a Good she cannot be plundred of she knows that Fortune hath no Dominion over Grace that the severity of torments and the sweetnesse of pleasures cannot impair her felicity This is it that St Augustine hath so happily express'd in those words which contain the Encomium and the definition of Charity Charitas est amor rerum quas non nisi volentes amittimus 'T is the love of things which we part not with but when we have a mind to it Inasmuch as there is great affinity between the supreme Good and dilection St Augustine hath drawn from one and the same Principle their common advantage for he teacheth us that as Love is not charitable but when it respects a Good which cannot be taken away the Good also is not true but when he that possesseth it cannot lose it but by his own fault Nolite amare praesentia quae possessa onerant amata inquinant amissa cruciant Ber. Solid good saith he is of such a nature that 't is never lost unless a man will The Covetous every day lose their riches with sorrow of heart the Ambitious fall from their dignities with grief of minde and the immodest Wantons testifie by their tears that the deprivation of what they love is no voluntary losse But this Good that inspires us with Goodness can neither be acquired nor lost without our own consent Thence ariseth another Definition of Charity and a second opposition to Concupiscence her Enemy This makes us slaves of what we love finde Servitude where we expect Soveraignty punisheth our Ambition in deceiving it as she imitates the Divel who ruin'd us by his promises she throws us into thraldom by filling us with the hope of Liberty There is no sinner but is sensible of his torment The Covetous are the slaves of their wealth a great Fortune is a glorious servitude and all those that are ingaged in love are intangled in a Captivity Therefore hath Augustine said admirably well Men become vassals of the Creatures when by unjust means they endeavour to make themselves Masters 'T is Charity onely that exalteth us in humbling us and more happy then Concupiscence makes us finde liberty in bondage soveraignty in obedience for submitting to God we soar above all sublunary things by teaching us to obey we learn to command and imposing but one Soveraign over us gives us as many subjects as there are creatures Finally to conclude this Discourse with a Definition which may be called the Panegyrick of Charity we say shee is the Love of eternall Goods as Concupisence is of perishable ones This vertue is so generous that after the example of Eagles which look only upon the Sun shee considers only God when shee expresseth any affection to men or Angels she riseth as high as the Creator she would conceive her self unjust did she love any thing but for God and making her glory of that Maxime she bespeaks God by the mouth of one of his Lovers with these excellent words Minus te amat qui tecum aliquid amat non propter te Aug. He loves thee not at all who loves any thing with thee which he loves not for thy sake Concupiscence on the contrary is wedded to the creatures runs along unhappily with them finds sorrow where shee looks for content and seeing those objects perish which were the Fuell to her flames is forced to wast away in sad lamentations and to begin those complaints here which will last for ever in the dominions of Hell The Sixth DISCOURSE Of the Properties and Effects of Charity IF the Learned Tertullian had reason to call the Devil Gods Ape me thinks I may stile Concupiscence the Ape of Charity because she endeavours to copy her thereby to obscure her promising her slaves the same advantages Charity makes her subjects hope for she takes the same course continues the same designs and in her opposition is so perfect a Transcript of this excellent Original that the most part of Philosophers confound them together Their ends are rather contrary then different but the means they make use of to come thither are altogether alike Their Principles are opposite but their Conclusions run parallel Their thoughts clash but their language agrees so that to compleat the Portraicture of Charity I must draw the Picture of Concupiscence and make use of the same colours to paint them both Concupiscence or self-love is active the greater it is in the source the more violent is it in the effects nothing can stop its fury and all the disorders we see in the world are the works of this irregular passion she changeth her name according to the objects she fixeth upon and adhering to Glory or Profit or Pleasure she is styled Ambition Lust or Avarice But in all these different conditions she is ever active and by no means sits still Sometimes she beats an Alarum to war to increase her reputation in enlarging her Empire Sometimes she passeth the Seas to get riches and driven by want which never forsakes her feeds her wolfe supposing to allay his appetite Sometimes she sets upon Chastity and making use of a thousand subtilties to corrupt it troubles whole Nature to purchase her satisfaction Therefore is it that Saint Augustine who was so well acquainted with the humour of Concupiscence says that no love was idle that 't was active assoon as born that the oppositions made against it double its fury and judging its strength by
to know our power Fortitude to employ it Temperance to moderate it Justice to rule it and as this Divine Spirit can never be exhausted but knows how to give a hundred colours to the same thing thereby to discover all the different beauties thereof Let us adde with him that Prudence concerns the choice of means Temperance the use of pleasures Fortitude that of afflictions and Justice the distribution of all these Finally he concludes that it belongs to Prudence to foresee hidden things to Temperance to desie pleasures to Fortitude to attaque them and to Justice to regulate their interests But because these duties savour still of the description let us speak of those that denote the necessity of these Vertues and say that honesty which is inseparable from them is composed of four parts without which it cannot possibly subsist The first is Knowledge which serves it for a conduct and a light The second is the Interest of Society which ought always to be preferred before that of particulars The third is a certain magnanimity which seems as it were the soul of all honourable Actions and the defence of all Vertues The fourth is Moderation which keeps every one within his duty not suffering him to undertake any thing that may be disadvantageous to his neighbour Light appertains to Prudence the care of the Community to Justice Glorious enterprises to Fortitude and the regulating of Pleasures to Temperance Therefore hath that excellent Copier of Saint Augustine venerable Bede who being able to be a great Master of his own Head chose rather to be an humble Disciple of that learned Doctor observed that the Vertues coming in to the help of man a sinner seemed to have a mind to cure four great wounds which Original sin had inflicted upon him The first is Ignorance which is born with him which involves him in darknesse assoon as ever nature exposeth him to the light For he is Ignorant assoon as Criminal and as Grace is necessary to deliver him from sin Prudence is requisite to defend him from Errour and Falshood she irradiates his mind with a Heavenly Light gives him the spirit of discerning between Good and Evil and severing apparent good from reall keeps him from wandering in the course of his life The second wound is that of Concupiscence which seems particularly to have set upon the Concupisicible appetite which she hath engaged in the love of sinful sensualities and diverts from innocent contentments against this agreeable enemy Heaven hath given him Temperance whose businesse 't is to undeceive this irregular appetite to make use of charms to suppresse his unjust inclinations and to reduce him to a condition where he wisheth only reasonable things The third wound is Weakness which plungeth man in idleness suffering him not to act frights him from Vertue because of the difficulties 't is accompanied with and representing Death as a Spectrum Grief as a Monster strives to deter him from his duty by such fearful apprehensions against this great inconvenience which may be called the root of all other Fortitude stands up which heightens our courage fils the man with hope and activity animates him with glory the companion of difficulty and changing our diseases into remedies makes us find honour in pain and Immortality in Death The fourth and deepest wound is the malice of the will which may be called a Natural Injustice which is troubled at the prosperity and rejoyceth at the adversity of his neighbour when a man minds nothing but his own interests believes whatever is profitable is lawful placeth right in force duty in pleasure and is perswaded that glory being inseparable from profit there is nothing beneficial which at the same time is not honourable Morality to rid him of so Potent an enemy hath given him Justice which supplying the loss of Original righteousness teacheth him to prefer his duty before his interest and his conscience before his reputation This excellent Vertue which is the soule of all the rest undertakes to regulate mans actions to appease all disorders wherein his guilty birth hath engaged him For she submitteth his mind to God his body to his mind and having made this double agreement tries to accommodate man with his neighbour and to establish peace in his state after she hath brought it into his person Nothing distinguisheth this Vertue from Original righteousness but the resistence it meets with in those things it would regulate for the first took no pains to be obeyed she had to doe with tractable subjects the soul and body had not as yet clash'd their inclinations though different were not opposite and these two parts that make up man were not contrary in their designs so that Original righteousness had no hard task to manage a peace which seemed founded as well in Grace as in Nature But Christian Justice meets with insolent subjects who acknowledge not their Soveraign obey her not but by compulsion who being born in sedition think it their duty to live in disobedience nevertheless when assisted with Prudence to chuse means of accommodation seconded with Temperance to suppress pleasures and manfully supported by Fortitude to overcome grief she gains that by violence which Original righteousness did by sweet compliance and if she be not so quiet she may boast at least she is more glorious To express the same Truth in other words and to give it a new beauty in setting it out in new colours we may say that Prudence is busied in discussing those things that deceive us to discern truth from falshood and to secure us from being surprised with a lye Temperance is employed to suppress those things that charm our affections and whose allurements pleasingly heighten our appetites Fortitude is engaged to vanquish those things that terrifie us it revives our spirits and as a General of an Army that heartens his soldiers endeavours to rally that Courage Grief or Danger had in a manner routed Justice is busied in regulating those concernments wherein lies our interest and which under a colour of some gain would set us upon some violent course to compass it Wherefore Seneca said that perillous things were to be mastered by Valour pleasurable things to be moderated by Temperance Things that abuse us to be examined by Prudence and those that tempt and fain would corrupt us to be regulated by Justice If it be true that Vertue respects only our person and that according to the opinion of some Philosophers who would make her the slave of our interests her sole object is man we may say without thwarting their conceit that Prudence considers things without us which being hid and obscured by the distance of places and times cannot be foreseen but by the light of this Vertue which seems to be a natural kind of prophesie According to this principle Temperance regulates things that are below us in the inferiour Region of the soul reduceth the passions and the senses to their duty and entertains reason
contrary to all the laws of Nature that the Accidents subsist without their Subject and that the Substance of the Bread and Wine being turned into that of his Body and Blood keep notwithstanding its Colour Taste and Form He is multiplied without being divided to satisfie the love of his Spouse and admitting his Humanity into the priviledges of the Divinity filleth his State with his presence We are in a doubt whether he does not work a Miracle for the Faithful which is not indulged the Blessed and we are yet ignorant whether this divine multiplication be an effect of his glory or of his power For though there are some Divines who believe that glorified bodies may be in divers places without a miracle and that the part they have in the Immensity of God multiplies their bodies without dividing them the Schools have always lookt upon this effect as a prodigie and have taught us that the order of Glory had its Miracles as well as that of Nature and Grace Finally it seems that the Son of God to make his power and his love admired Dicitur virgini supervenient in te Spiritus sanctus dic●tur etiem Sacerdoti superveniet in te Spiritus sarctus efficiet quod intelligentiam tuam excedet Joan. Damasc had a minde in this Mystery to repeat all the Miracles he had wrought during the course of his life For if he were born of Mary without interessing her Virginity if making her a Mother he left her a Virgin if the Fruit she bare deflowred not her Purity he is produced in our Sacrifices without violating their Accidents and changing their substance into his alters not the Species that cover them If he turn water into wine at a Marriage in Cana and manifest himself the Master of the Elements in changing their qualies he appears no less absolute in a Sacrament where he turns the Bread into his Body the Wine into his Blood and the Creature into his Creator If he multiply the loaves in the wilderness and operate this prodigie by the hands of his Apostles they being ignorant of the manner he daily multiplies his Body by the hands of the Priests who cannot comprehend a miracle whereof they are the witnesses and the Ministers If heretofore he cured the sick that came unto him here he cures the diseased that receive him and if he raised the dead by his touch or by his Word here he promiseth life to all those that feed upon him and engageth himself by a promise as sure as an Oracle that he will draw all those out of the grave that have served him here for a Temple Thus this adorable Sacrament deserves the name of Manna better then Manna it self and ought no less to fill our hearts with astonishment then with love But to continue our resemblances and to manifest the truth in the figure The Psalmist hath observed that Manna was not a bare Nutriment but a preservative and a remedy For while the Israelites made use of it in the Desarts they were never molested with any infirmities Though they so often changed their Quarters marched through a Wilderness where the want of water and the multitude of serpents might make them fear an infection nevertheless this food which participated of the Tree of Life and made them taste in the Desarts the delights of Paradise so well suited with their temper that though they daily beheld rebels in their Camp they never saw any sick In Tribubus eorum non erat infirmus There by a strange prodigy diseases were not the harbingers of death they gave up the ghost without any pangs some small weakness gave them notice of the houre of their departure the soul fairly took leave of the body and the Feaver which seems the forrager of death durst not set upon men whom Manna served for nourishment The Eucharist works the same miracle in our souls that this Heavenly food did in their bodies It is at the same time diet and an Antidote it gives life and preserves it it delivers us from evil and then protects us against it it maintains the constitution of the soul in a regulated evenness of temper and much happier then physick which cannot tame the disease without weakning nature it deals so critically with the sins that it never prejudiceth the sinner Many times when Faith seconds Piety this Celestial viand extends its effects as far as the body it maintains health as well as salvation and cures the diseased as well as the wicked In the Primitive Church it wrought wonderful cures and the great Saint Cyprian tels us that Physitians were useless in those days because Christians found their cure in the Eucharist and proved there was the same Jesus present whose Word was heretofore so fatal to infirmities and so favourable to the infirm If in this particular it supass Manna in another it equals it Manna non solum sanitatem sed animum Judais conserebat Jos●ph because in restoring health it infused strength and inspired courage For there are some Writers that are of opinion that the valour of the Israelites was an effect of Manna that they owed those formidable victories they gained from their enemies to this meat that came down from Heaven Neither ought this to seem strange to the incredulous since experience teacheth us that wine which is the pure work of Nature produceth daily the same effects drowns fear in its vapours inspires men with the contempt of dangers gives a new vigour to soldiers and constitutes the best part of their courage Therefore I am easily perswaded to believe that Manna wrought the same wonder in the Israelites whilest nourishing their body it maintained their valour and making them sound and lusty made them withall magnanimous and valiant Indeed inasmuch as this food was more miraculous then natural and acted rather by the directions of Heaven then the properties of its own nature it lost this faculty assoon as the Israelites lost grace and as if it had changed quality when they changed disposition it produced fear in the same hearts where it had formerly produced courage and assurance All these wonders were but the shadows of what we adore in the Eucharist which is not only the food but the force of the Christian we come from the Altar as Lions terrifying the Infernal Spirits they cannot endure our sight the presence of Jesus Christ wherewith we are surrounded startles them into a disorder and remembring that we bear about us the same slesh and bloud which triumphed over them upon Mount Calvary they dare not set upon us They flie such men who lodge a god in their souls and beholding their Judge seated in our hearts as upon his Throne they are afraid lest he pronounce sentence against them re-doubling their pains and aggravating their torments It was this Heavenly Bread that animated the Martyrs to the combat this adorable Bread that gave them courage to daunt their executioners and the sword of
Gideon that won so many victories was but the Type of this For this mighty man entring the Camp of the Madianites and hearing one of their soldiers tell his fellow that in his sleep he saw a Cake fall from Heaven which routed their army he perswaded himself contrary to all appearance Sicut verbum Dei cibus est gladius ita corpus ejus Ber. that this Cake was his Sword and taking advantage from this dream set upon his enemies and defeated them Non est hoc aliud nisi gladius Gideonis But 't is very true that the Bread of Jesus Christ is the Sword of the Christians the same meat that nourisheth them defends them and the same remedy that cures their maladies subdues their enemies It s strength no way hinders its sweetness and like Manna there are charms in it that make it pleasing to every palate For the holy Scripture assures us that this Heavenly food was fitted to the appetite of the Israelites that never changing the fashion it altered the savour and following their inclinations complied with their tasts to satisfie their longing I know Saint Augustine is of opinion that this miracle was wrought onely in favour of the righteous and that the guilty were deprived of a Grace which in stead of heightning their devotion did only whet their stomack But the Scripture declares this miracle and the words thereof which are as true as Oracles inform us that Manna besides its natural taste had other rellishes according to the several appetites of those that gathered it If the Figure were thus advantageous for the body the Substance is much more beneficial for the soul For inasmuch as this Sacrament contains the source of Grace there is none but may from thence be communicated unto us though its principal effect be to maintain life it fails not to produce all Vertues and to satisfie the inclinations of all those that receive it It inspires Lovers with Charity weak persons with Courage Virgins with Purity Penitents with Sorrow and becoming all things to all upon Earth as well as in Heaven perfectly fulfils all the desires of the Faithful By its abundance it supplies all other Sacraments It gives us Jesus Christ in all his different relations and comprehending as well his Mysteries as their Graces makes us enjoy him living and dying humble and glorified acting and suffering For whether Eternity which in one indivisible moment includes all the differences of time recollect here all the Mysteries of Jesus Christ or whether this Sacrament comprehend all that it exhibits and being the Figure and Truth both together presents us the Death and Resurrection of the Son of God because it is the Sacrament thereof or finally whether Jesus Christ upon the Altars to comfort the Faithful who saw him not upon the Earth will by a miraculous way for their sakes accord the present with the past and let himself be enjoyed after his Death as he was seen before his Birth he gives himselfe wholly to them in this Mystery and fully communicates all that he is all that he hath done and all that he hath suffered for their salvation so that simple souls may consider him there as a child Hermites as solitary the Evangelists as a Divine Preacher the Martyrs as a Sacrifice the Prelates as a Pastor In hoc Sacramento judex advocatus sacerdos victima Leo Agnus Pastor Pascua Ber. and every one following his own piety may behold him in the condition which most affects him with pleasure or pain It was perhaps for this cause that the Moserabs in their Liturgy divided the Body of the Son of God into nine portions upon which they imposed the names of his chiefest Mysteries to teach us that he repeated them upon our Altars to content our piety and accomplishing the Figure of Manna exhibited himself in all these different estates thereby to accommodate himself to all our inclinations The Fourth DISCOURSE That this Nourishment gives the Christian whatever the Devil promised Innocent Man if he did eat of the Forbidden Fruit. THe Divine Providence is never more wonderful then when it employs the same means to save us the malice of the Devil had made use of to destroy us Thus let us magnifie his Oeconomy when we see our salvation somewhat resemble our fall and the same things that involved us in transgression deliver us out of it A Devil jealous of our happiness began our misery a Woman too easily listened to his words a man over-lightly complacent suffered himself to be cajoled by her and the beauty of the forbidden fruit charming his eyes seduced his mind and corrupted his will The Divine Wisdome imitating our fall in the work of our salvation made use of an Angel the Interpreter of his designs of a Virgin true to his Promises of a Man-God that satisfied his Justice and of a fruit not forbidden but commanded which really exhibits to the Christian all those advantages man was made to hope for in his Innocence For the Devil considering the just inclinations Nature and Grace had imprinted in the soul of man to seduce him promised him that if he would disobey God he should find his happiness in his rebellion and that the use of the fruit he was forbidden to meddle with should make him Immortal knowing Good and Evil and Christian Religion teacheth us that the Body of the Son of God received in the Sacrament with piety due to so great love produceth in us these effects and making us Men-Gods makes us Knowing and Immortal Let us examine these Promises and see what we ought to expect from the God of Truth and the Father of Lyes If the fear of death and the desire of life be not the most ancient passions of man we may affirm them the most natural and most violent He hath an apprehension of death before he knows what it is he desires Immortality before he believes it and whatever he does here below is only by defending himself from a dissolution to live for ever Every one seeks after the same end though by different mediums and he that would put the question to each particular would learn by their answers that they labour only to become Immortal Fathers mary not so much for the pleasure of the bed as for the desire they have to survive in their posterity and in spight of death gain a perpetuity to their Being as well as their Name Philosophers are not so much in love with Knowledge and Vanity as with Life whilst they spend whole nights in their books and leave the productions of their brain to posterity For they think to cozen death by this stratagem they believe their reputation will pierce the Generations to come and that living in the memory of men they shall in some sort enjoy Immortality Monarchs whose minde and body are equally barren leaving neither Children nor Vertues behinde them whereby they may be known to their Successors raise
dead serve for a nourishment to the living and to give him a resurrection by an artifice which can find no excuse but in the excesse of that passion that gave it a being Thus we read that disconsolate Artemisia having lost her dear Mausolus Mortui cineres vino commistos ebibit memoriae ejus tam splendidum sepulchrum erexit ut magnifica monumenta deinceps Mausolea ab illius nomine fuerint appellaii Gelli lib. 10. cap. 18. could not satisfie her love but by swallowing his ashes thereby to be united to him and to make him still co-habit with her Her grief spared nothing that might comfort an afflicted wife in honouring the memory of so dearly a beloved husband she employed the most famous Orators of her time to sweeten her sorrows and to make the Panegyrick of him she had lost she erected a staely monument which passeth for one of the seven wonders of the world and having not seen any Tomb that can equal its magnificence gives a denomination to this day to those of the the greatest Monarchs of the Universe But inasmuch as nothing can content the extremity of love and ordinary remedies doe but aggravate a violent sorrow this afflicted lover resolved to drink the ashes of her dead husband Vt esset vivum spirans conjugis sepulchrū that changing them into her substance she might expire with him or he survive together with her Me thinks the Son of God compleated in the Eucharist what love engaged this amorous Princess to attempt For being united to us in this Sacrament and converting us into himself by the mighty working of his infinite Power we may say he re-animates ashes because he raiseth the dead and converts sinners So that of all the alliances he hath contracted with us we must needs acknowledge this the closest and most intimate 'T was certainly a great testimony of his love when he was incarnate in the chast Womb of his Virgin Mother and clothing himself with our flesh took upon him the burden of our sins and of the punishments due unto them it was a consequence of this love when he vouchsafed to converse with us and treating us as his brethren gave us part in the inheritance of his glory It was a proof of his compassion when he became our Advocate to his Father pleaded our Cause before his Throne and to purchase an act of oblivion for all our transgressions mingled his tears with his bloud in the garden of Olives It was me thinks the utmost expression of his love when he became our Surety upon the Crosse loaded himself with our sins to enrich us with his merits and made an exchange with us which cost him his life and procured us salvation Nevertheless all these favours united him not with men and when he was our Brother Cum autem datur in cibum unio perfecta est uniuntur enim in unitate corporis cibus qui cibum sumit Di. Tho. our Advocate our Surety he was not one person with us But in the Eucharist wherein he is our nourishment his love hath found out the secret of incorporating us with him he yet unites man with God he repeats the Mystery of the Incarnation he does that in favour of all men which he only did for Humanity and he works a thousand times one miracle in the Bosome of the Church which he acted but once in the Womb of his Mother For if we compare the Eucharist with the Incarnation we shall find that in the one God is made Man in the other Men became Gods In the one he is united to our nature in the other to our person in the one he is invested with our miseries in the other he apparels us with his greatness But because in all these Alliances we meet not with that of Mother he is willing that his body conceived by the Virgin should be also produced by the Priests upon our Altars that they might be his parents and might boast that the Incarnation hath no preeminence above the Eucharist For the Scripture teacheth us that Jesus Christ in his birth is the work of the holy Ghost and of the Virgin both these persons became mutually pregnant Mary restores to the holy Ghost what she received from him and when she became the Mother of the Son of God he became the Principle The same Jesus in his Passion is the work of sinners they condemn him to death by the mouth of Pilate nail him to the Cross by the hands of the Executioners and despoil him of his honour and his life by the outrages of the Jews In the Resurrection he is the pure work of his Father he it is that draws him from the grave who gives him the recompence of his labours exalts him to glory and makes him raign everlastingly with him But in the Eucharist he is the work of the Priests 't is their word that makes him present upon our Altars their intention that makes him descend from heaven in the name of all the Faithful these are the powerful Ministers that conceive him and bring him forth that this holy Sacrament may perfect all the Alliances the mystery of the Incarnation had begun and that we may have this consolation to know that there is no union in Nature we contract not with Jesus Christ in the Eucharist The Sixth DISCOURSE Of the dispositions the Christian ought to bring with him to receive this Nourishment IF it be a truth that great benefits require great acknowledgements we must confess that extraordinary Mysteries require extraordinary dispositions nor that they must otherwise be approacht unto then with that reverence which is due to sacred things 'T is a Sacriledge to have to do with them with a prophane spirit and we do but expose our selves to the indignation of heaven when we think to partake of them without that preparation their stupendious holiness doth require The Levites were not admitted to the service of the Altar before they were purified The High-Priest went not into the Sanctuary of the Temple till he had expiated his sins by the blood of a Sacrifice neither did the Prophets deliver Oracles to the people till the holy Spirit who spake with their mouth resided in their heart The Eucharist therefore being the most august of our Mysteries obligeth us to very great and reverential dispositions Each quality 't is attended with exacts a particular preparation and all the titles it bears demand of the receivers as many different vertues Inasmuch as it is the most hidden Mystery of our Religion whose wonders deceive our eyes whose lustre dazzles the sunshine of our neerest observation the manner of Christs residing there being altogether imperceptible to our Senses and unconceiveable to our Understandings we are obliged to bring along with us much Faith and little Reasoning a blinde obedience is a Sacrifice that must accompany this oblation of the Son of God upon our Altars and at the same time
that his Body is the Holocaust of his Love our Understanding must be the Victim of our Faith 'T is in this occasion that we ought to relie upon the Power and Truth of him that worketh this Miracle and examining the difficulties that combat our Faith we are onely to consider that he that hath drawn All things out of Nothing is still able to extract his Body out of the substance of the Bread Haec Sacramenta necessario fidem exigunt rationem non admittunt Bern. and change one thing into another since he was able to produce what was not This is the Mystery must be approached unto in the simplicity of Faith where we must believe Jesus Christ whom we do not see that Darkness being the midwife of Light we may behold him in heaven whom we have believed upon earth The second disposition of the Christian is derived from the second quality of this heavenly meat All Religion informs us that Heaven bestows this Nutriment upon us by the mighty power of its Love every effect we observe therein is a Miracle never will the Prodigies of Manna equal those of the Eucharist Tota ratio facti potentia facientis Aug. nothing is done here according to the laws of Nature God dispenseth with all those rules in other occurrences he obligeth himself unto and we may say that in this adorable Mystery he consults onely his Power and his Goodness He changeth the Elements without altering their qualities he sustains Accidents without their Substances he multiplies his Body without dividing it he nourisheth the Faithful with his Flesh without wasting it he is present in a thousand places at the same instant Whilst Men possess him the Angels do not lose him he is wholly in heaven and wholly upon the earth and as if the Incarnation were but an Essay of the Eucharist this gives all the world the same Body the other indulged onely to Judea Such a cloud of Miracles exact our silence and astonishment we must admire what we cannot comprehend and making Ignorance serviceable to Piety say with the Prophet Mirabilis Deus in sanctis suis magnus in operibus suis Indeed if we admire the wonders of Nature if that which surpasseth our apprehension ravish our understanding if the disorder of the Elements or the irregularity of the Seasons strike a kinde of awe into us Ought we not greatly to respect a Mystery whose every circumstance is a Miracle and every effect a Prodigie But inasmuch as this Food is an Earnest of Glory and this Feast whereto the Faithful are invited is a figure of that Eternal Banquet which the Blessed sit down at we must bring along with us Desire and Hope God gives us nothing upon the earth which he doth promise us aforehand to occasion our desires But because Promises are not bare words Judaei quippe habebant quandam umbram nos veritatem Judaei fuerunt servi nos filii Judaei per mare transierunt ad Eremum nos per Baptismum intravimus in Regnum Judaei Manna manducaverunt nos Christum Judaei pruinam nos Deum caeli Salvia he many times gives us a part of what he hath promised Though the Law were but a shadow of Truth the Sacraments thereof but vain and empty Figures yet did they contain something that the Israelites were to hope for by them Manna had qualities expressing those of the Body of Jesus Christ The Law though obscure was an exposition of the Gospel and rightly understood obliged us to love God above all things and our Neighbour as our selves The Sea which favoured their retreat in parting asunder and coming together again swallowed up the Egyptians darted forth some glimmerings of light amidst these shades of darkness and by sensible effects exhibited what was to be acted upon our souls in the Sacrament of Baptism The Land of Promise had some resemblance with that of the Living its plenty was an image of the felicity of heaven where nothing is wanting to the blessed inhabitants Nevertheless we must acknowledge that the pledges we receive in the New Testament are far more certain and substantial They exhibit the best part of what they promise they do what they make shew of and joyning the Figure with the Substance we may say that without depriving us of the quality of the Faithful they procure us that of the Blessed Baptism which raiseth us to the dignity of the Sons of God gives us admittance into his Inheritance we are already new creatures and though not yet perfected by Glory are notwithstanding begun to be wrought upon by Grace We are the members of Jesus Christ though we remain the members of Adam if the Charity the holy Ghost hath shed abroad in our hearts quench not Concupiscence at least it abolisheth the sin and though our righteousness be imperfect it fails not to be true The Incarnation raiseth our hopes and having seen a God made Man in being born of a Virgin we have not much ado to believe that Men may become Gods in being born of the Church But not to enter upon a deduction which would lead too far from the Subject of my discourse we need onely consider the Eucharist to be perswaded of this Verity It is a pledge wherein God performs what he promiseth 'T is part of that sum he bids us hope for Sacramenta prima erant praenvnitiativa Christi ideo ablata quia completa alia sunt instituta virtute majora utilitate meliora actu feliciora numero pauciora Aug. an Antepast of the felicity we expect neither is there any Christian who is not fully assured to possess Jesus Christ in heaven because he so entirely enjoys him on earth He waits with patience for the effect of so many gracious promises whereof he hath received such certain earnest he comforts himself in his discontents from the consideration of his advantages neither can he doubt that he that is so often sacrificed for his salvation will not wholly communicate himself for his happiness This infallible Gage exacts from us as much Desire as Confidence It is not enough to be assured of the promise of God we must long to have it effected our enjoyment ought to produce our yearning after it All Christians must be like Daniel men of desires and renouncing the things of the world fix all their pretensions towards heaven This Mystery that unites them to Jesus Christ must raise them as high as God and when his presence is vanished with the species the desires that Grace inspires them with must give them another rellish of what the natural heat hath made them lose by digestion This disposition prepares us for another more noble and more holy For if we are to express our longings because the Body of the Son of God is a pledge of his Promises we ought to be indued with Love and Fidelity because this Sacrament is a Marriage of his soul with ours Baptism is the Beginning and
as in that of an Elect. This Attribute is not lesse delicate then zealous all transgressions scandalize it nor does any thing bear the stamp of sin that does not offer it violence she hath more enemies then the rest of her sisters and if the other perfections of God are dishonoured by some particular crimes this is by all inquities of what kind soever Those that sin of infirmity and pretend to find their excuse in the cause of their offence dash only upon the power of the Almighty Those that sin out of ignorance and conceive themselves not guilty because they are blind offend only the wisdom of God Those that transgress out of malice and who are less excusable because more enlightned wound only the Goodness of God and though so highly criminal perswade themselves that wronging but one of his perfections the rest will be favourable towards them But all sinners together injure Holiness and as there is not one who turns not his back upon the Creator to embrace the creature neither is there any that dishonours not this Attribute whose principal design is to unite them to their Creator Though Sanctity be thus injuriously dealt with it ceaseth not to be most profitable to Christians and so well manageth their interests with those of God that it produceth all the miracles which so highly advance his Greatness and their merit All the other perfections study more our glory then our salvation Power makes only Kings and when it would draw admiration from mortals Singula Dei Att●ibuta singulos Angelorü hominü ordines effinxerunt Marsil Fisci de religione is content to raise Shepheards to the Throne Wisdom makes Philosophers and communicating to them a part of its light gives them the understanding of the works of God Providence makes Politicians or Prophets and discovering to both of them the secrets of futurity inspires them with a science which is not learnt in the Schools But Holiness more happy and more powerful makes Saints which are Gods Master-pieces separates them from the creatures and unites them to the Creator transforms them into him or to use the words of Scripture makes commenced Gods by Grace and perfect Gods by Glory 'T is to this height of honour that all Christians are destin'd They bear this glorious title in the Gospel Saint Paul treats them as Saints in all his Epistles and as their sanctity is an effusion of Gods it obligeth them to knock off from all things that they may be united to him and to cling so close unto him that nothing can separate them Therefore is it that the Religion that leads us to Holiness invites us to a Divorce with all things else The Son of God admits none into his School of whom he exacts not this promise The Church who imitates him as her Husband requires this disposition of all her Children when she conceives them in her womb by the operation of the Holy Ghost and the vertue of the waters of Baptism she will have them renounce the vanities of the world and like the Apostles forsake their riches in deed or in affection The first is matter of counsel the second of obligation Multum deseruit qui voluntatem babendi dereliquit à sequentibus Christum tanta relicta sunt quanta à non sequentibus defiderari potuerunt Greg neither is there any creature who is not bound to say with Saint Peter Ecce nos reliquimus omnia I know there are those that laugh at the Confession of this Apostle and with Saint Hierome find it no hard matter for a man to leave all whose whole demeans was but a skiffe and a net But had they well considered the vast extent of our hopes and our desires they would find this man left very much because he bid adiew to all things these two passions could possibly promise him This first disposition is not the only abnegation the Son of God requires of us it serves but for a step to ascend to a more difficult one and having injoyn'd us the contempt of riches obligeth us to deny our selves 'T is not enough to be admitted into his School for a man to forsake his goods he must withall renounce his inclinations and pursuing the evil into its very root offer up his will for an Holocaust Had he been content with the first disposition he had exacted no more of his Disciples then vain-glory had obtain'd of its vassal Philosophers have parted with their goods to defend themselves from covetousness or discontent which usually accompanies great fortunes The Ambitious are so deeply in love with glory that they contentedly part with all riches The Prodigal seem as it were angry with money and the lavish expences they make testifies they more undervalue then prize them But both of them are wedded to themselves the more they strip themselves of their goods the more are they wrapt up in their inclinations and the less they have of avarice the more are they puft up with pride and vain-glory Therefore is it that the Son of God willing wholly to to cure man passeth from Poverty to Self-denial and having counselled us to part with our riches commands us to shake hands with our selves Saint Paul following the steps of his Master teacheth us that they only who have crucified the flesh with the lusts thereof deserve the name of Christians and speaking elsewhere of himself witnesseth that to live to God he was bound to crucifie himself with Jesus Christ He makes them pass for enemies to the Cross who love themselves and not content to declaim against uncleanness makes an invective against those stately sins which including man within himself left him not above the degree of beasts but to equal him with Devils Finally he will have all those who are risen with the Son of God to be taken up with the contempt of the Earth and to be quickned with the desires of Heaven Though this first condition of Holiness gives us occasion to see that there are very few Saints in the world the second which is union with God will more strongly perswade us of it For sin being nothing but a separation from God holiness which is so opposite thereto is nothing but an alliance with God Those that are most united to him are the greatest Saints nor does any thing more gloriously distinguish Christians from Philosophers then this happy connexion Every Sect hath formed an Idea of the supream good and done their utmost to fasten their Disciples to it The Epicures who acknowledge no other good but voluptuousness had no other passion but for this Goddess The Stoicks who adored nothing but the mind spent all their veneration upon this Idol and the Academicks who doated only upon Morall vertue laboured meerly to gain her But Christians who know that pleasure makes none but effeminate that the love of understanding renders men arrogant and that of vertue it self when it mounts not high enough makes only idolaters set
consists in the knowledge of the Supream Good and that no man can be truly content who is not acquainted with this prime Verity from whence all the rest flow as from their Fountain Profane Philosophy says the same concerning this Maxim neither hath she any Masters or Scholars who make not this confession that as the mind is more noble then the body 't is in the operations of that not in the senses of this that Beatitude is to be sought for In the mean time Earth is the habitation of obscurity we know God but in an Enigma we have only doubts and conjectures of his Greatness and though we are fully perswaded of his Existence we are altogether ignorant of his Essence If we consult our senses they cannot inform us of his Divine perfections and having neither shape nor colour our eyes nor our ears cannot tell us notice of him If our spirit reflect upon it self and elicite some act to know its Author in knowing it self it findes that the images it produceth are but Idols or phantasms and that the apprehensions it conceives of him are only mistakes and falshoods If Faith step in to the relief of the Understanding and obliging it to renounce its proper light clarifie it with what she brings 't is with so much obscurity that it hath more merit then satisfaction in its obedience I know very well that this vertue raiseth man abstracts him from sense gives him admittance into the light of God himself neither can he complain that reasoning is denyed him being prepared for an Intelligence But certainly she pays him these advantages with usury For he believes without knowing gives his senses the lye condemns his reason and obligeth himself to die for those truths he cannot yet understand Thus man is never happy in this world and whatever certainty he have of the mysteries of our Religion he will never attain to an evidence of them From this misfortune there arrives a second which is no whit less considerable For inasmuch as the Understanding is the Gandle of the soul which enlightens the will Nolunt homiues facere quod justum est sive quia latet sive quia non delectat Aug. and this blind faculty loves things according to the rate she knows them she never fully embraceth the Supream Good because she never perfectly knows it There is something always wanting to her love and to her happiness her possession is continually imperfect nor are her desires ever without discontent whatever tast she hath of felicity it rather sets an edge upon her love then any way appeaseth it and whatever pleasure she finds in transitory and perishable goods she feels by experience they may possibly divert her but no ways content her Their scantness causeth her indigence she continually changeth objects striving to find that in one which she cannot meet with in another she is like the Bees who sip upon all flowers to tast the dew that drops from heaven and being wearied with the various turnings and windings of the world is obliged to confess that Beatitude is found no where but in God but he is neither met with nor enjoyed upon Earth I proceed and say that should he suffer himself to be seen by his creature in the condition whereto sin hath reduced him it would prove rather a ground of fear and astonishment then of love and satisfaction There is so little proportion between God and Man that the one must needs be abased or the other greatly exalted that there may be some commerce between them The Majesty of God must be clouded by some allay of condescension and mans weakness strongly heightned by some gracious endowment or certainly the presence of God which is the felicity of the Angels in Heaven would occasion the misery of man upon Earth The Scripture tells us we cannot see him and live his aspect is formidable his splendour dazles our eyes his greatness chides our curiosity neither can we behold this Sun but we are in danger of losing our life together with our sight The righteous in the Old Testament repent their seeing him and though he temper his Majesty to accommodate it to our weakness they conceive this favour must be followed with their death Deum vidimus moriemur But should his Almightiness be proportionable to our misery and this Divine Sun like that of the Poets Vbi metus est ibi nulla vera felicitas Sen. lay by his rays that we may approach it the state of Earth would not suffer his presence to make us happy For our felicity that it may be true must be constant if we are not sure to keep the good we possess the apprehension of losing it traverseth our contentment and mingles restlesness with our pleasure Fear more afflicts us then the enjoyment can delight us we resent misery in the midst of felicity and we finde our happiness of the nature of those colours of the Cameleon that perish with the object that produceth them So then there is nothing durable in the world the noblest creatures are all subject to change whatever is possest may be lost The Soul though Immortal is not Immutable she that cannot die can sin and though Grace be an emanation of Glory it hath neither its constancy nor duration it is a kinde of Miracle that God works in favour of his Elect Qui se putat stare videat ne cadat Phil. 2. when he confirms them in Grace and though he give them assurance of their salvation he exempts them not from our miseries and infirmities And this is the last Reason I intend to make use of to let you see that the Earth is not the habitation of the Blessed All those that form any Idea of Happiness acknowledge that as it comprehends all Good it ought to exclude all Evil did it not include all of one sort it would not be perfect and did it not expel all of the other it would be miserable In the mean time the Earth is the region of Poverty Goods are very scarce but Evils come in crowds He that possesseth Riches languisheth after Honour he that raigns in a Kingdom does not always bear rule in his Person and if he triumph over his Enemies he seldom triumphs over his Passions He that bathes himself in Pleasures is drowned many times in Sin and he that is upon good terms with Fortune is for the most part at oddes with Himself Thus all men are miserable because they are indigent nor does the condition of their present life suffer them to associate all good things together to compose a perfect felicity It happens also by a necessary consequence that there are a thousand Evils from which they cannot defend themselves Their souls and their bodies are equally disposed to grief these two Delinquents which forsake not one another in the Sin share in the Punishment and Earth preventing Hell torments them both for company The Body bears an enemy in the bowels of it
from this misfortune it carries Eternity along with it and were it not engaged in a subject changeable and obnoxious to mutability it would be as Immortal as it is Holy Let us adde to this advantage that Grace cannot be taken from us against our will 't is a treasure we never lose but by our own default Perishable goods cannot be preserved with all our care cunning or violence may rob us of them and whatever prudence we use to keep them we are many times constrain'd to fear or feel the loss of them Calumny takes away our good name Injustice or misfortune spoils us of our riches a disease deprives us of health and death of life All these goods though precious cannot avoid the disasters that threaten them The Innocent lose their honour as well as the Guilty The rich are as much afraid of sickness as the poor nor are Kings more secure from death then their Subjects But Grace is a good which cannot be taken from us without our consent Potes aurum perdere nolens potes domum bonū autem quo bonus es nec invitus accipis nec invitus amittis Au. There is no violence can plunder us of it and men though in league with the Devils cannot make us lose it if we favour not their design by our weakness This is the difference Saint Augustine hath put between earthly goods and heavenly Those are many times lost in spite of the owners these are never lost but by the fault of those that neglect them so that the condition of the Faithful is very little inferiour to that of the Blessed because that if the one be certain their glory shal never have an end the others are sure their Grace shal never be lost unless they wil not preserve it out of malice or not consent to secure it out of cowardise Indeed inasmuch as they know that their wils are impotent and their inclinations bad they place all their confidence in the mercy of God they hope that he that converted them will make them persevere and having assisted them in the combate will crown them in the trumph The Fourth DISCOURSE That Happinesse consists not in Pleasure but in Grief OF all the Sects which have opposed Truth the most dangerous is that of the Epicures For though base and unjust in that it gave the Body preheminence over the Minde and Pleasure the right hand of Vertue Nevertheless it surprised men at first sight and seduced them by a name which bears some analogy with that of felicity For whatever Idea men fashion of this it is impossible to separate it from Pleasure and very casie to confound them together We cannot imagine such a thing as the supream Good but we must conceive it agreeable nor can we perswade our selves that there is felicity where there is not content This hath procured more Disciples to this shameful Sect then to all the rest and made it triumph over the reason of the Academicks and the supercilious vanity of the Stoicks Allsinners took part with this Philosophy Christian Religion which destroyed Idolatry hath not been able to ruine this and the Church bears those in her bosome who boast themselves Christians but are indeed Epicures The whole world courts pleasure by different addresses 'T is the Idol that hath most Altars and receives most Sacrifices The Ambitious are her slaves they adore Voluptuousness under the name of Glory and suffer themselves to be charm'd by the allurements that attend a great reputation The Covetous are her Votaries they offer Incense to this false Deity they seek for pleasure in the arms of profit nor do they so much doat upon riches because profitable as because agreeable Indeed the Supream Good is inseparable from pleasure and as you cannot see the Sun but must be enlightned no more can men behold the Supream Good without being charm'd Delectatio ex fruitione summi boni necessario sequitur Aug. If delectation be but a consequence of Happiness as some Philosophers affirm it is at least necessary and I account it no more impossible to see God and not love him then to love and see him without receiving contentment in him Therefore the errour of the Epicures consists not in placing Beatitude in Pleasure but in placing pleasure in the body because man being compounded of a body and a minde ought to be happy in both these parts Let us combate this Monster which against nature destroys not men but because he flatters them nor is dangerous but because he is over complacent There is no body but confesseth that Beatitude consists in a union with God by means of the understanding and the will we must renounce reason to oppose this truth and cease to be men to doubt of a Maxim authorised by all profane Philosophy God is the Ultimate End of his creatures and consequently their perfect Happiness The Understanding and the Will are the two noblest faculties of the soul the wings that make her soar aloft and the chains that fasten her to the object she loves so that she is never more happy then when united to the Supream Good by Knowledge and Love whatever hinders this union is contrary to it and whatever separates or removes her from God is the enemy of her felicity It is easie thence to infer that sensual pleasures cannot cause our felicity because they suffer not our souls to be united to God and imbark her so strongly in the flesh that she seems to have lost all the qualities of a spirit Impurity produceth store of miseries in the world nor can we invent too many invectives against a sin that defiles a man and of an Angel makes a Beast But the greatest of its enormities is that it inebriates our soul with its poison and makes us lose the remembrance of all Divine things Nothing pleaseth the slaves it tyrannizeth over but sensuality whatever affects not the senses seems not true they take the pleasures of the minde for meer illusions and as if the glory of Heaven were but a fable or an imposture they are less affected with the consideration of them then reasonable men with the reading of Romance This misfortune produceth another For as pleasure separates men from God it fastens them to the creatures their inferiours and debasing them below themselves Quisquis quod seitso est deterius sequitur fit ipse de erior Aug. communicates the bad qualities of the things they doat upon Love is a kind of medley it confounds those subjects it unites and by a wonderful Chymistry makes them pass one into another Thence it comes to pass that Kings become Slaves when they love their Subjects and renounce their power when abandon'd to dalliance They fall from their Greatness when they engage in an affection and as the noblest metals lose their purity when mixt with those of a baser allay Soveraigns quit their Majesty when allied with their Subjects Thus the man who gluts
the loss of their goods by Alms grow hardened against Stripes by Discipline grow acquainted with Hunger by Fasting and learn to die in Torments mortifying themselves by Austerities Nothing more heartens them then the example of their Head his Agonies sweeten their Sorrows they count themselves happie to suffer for his glory who suffered for their salvation and observing his whole life finde their strength in his death and their recompence in his resurrection The Fifth DISCOURSE That Happiness is rather found in Poverty then in Riches THe inclination we have for the Supreme Good is so strong that sin hath not as yet been able to deface it The Privation there of increaseth the desire and as Health is never more lovely then in the region of Sickness neither is Happiness ever more acceptable then in the confines of Misery Nevertheless we must not always take counsel of this nor follow the advice it always gives us for when we lie under an affliction we are easily perswaded 'tis ever more dolorous and the good it deprives us of exceedingly more considerable Thus we see those that are fallen into disgrace look upon Glory as the supreme felicity those that live in Poverty imagine Riches the true happiness Thence it comes to pass that Poverty being a very common misfortune the opinion that placeth happiness in Plenty is an ordinary errour All men would be rich this passion stealeth into all different conditions and those that speak most pompously of the contempt of earthly goods Est intolerabilis res poscere nummos contemnere pecuniam sub gloria paupertatis quarere Sen. are those that most greedily cover them It seems the evils that Want hath clogged them with provokes their desires and the fear of realpsing makes them of all men most penurious Rich men sooth themselves with this belief out of another consideration and because they see that Riches are the means to satisfie their desires that they open the gate of Honour with a golden-key corrupt the integrity of Judges and the chastity of women with silver they erect altars to a Goddess that prospers all their unjust designes Morality furnisheth us with Reasons to ruine this errour and Religion will afford us Maximes to perswade Christians that if there be any shadow of felicity upon earth it is rather found in Poverty then in Plenty One of the most splendid conditions of the Supreme Good is that it is the centre of our Love and the end of our Desires That which leaves us any thing to wish is not true and because it fully takes not up our heart it possesseth not all perfections This obligeth us to despise riches and to condemn those worldings that would establish their felicity in them For if they bear the name of Goods 't is an unjust title they usurp because for the most part they are means Nature hath furnished us with to procure what we stand in need of The use of Riches is for Commerce we give them in exchange for the commodities we would have and if sometimes we keep them 't is to make use of them in our necessities Thus Riches are extremely different from the Supreme Good which being once possessed is never forsaken and is so the last end of Man that it can never be a medium to arrive at any other more excellent All Philosophers confess that Felicity is a thing so intimately annexed to the Creature that it penetrates him thorewout and so closely united to him that it cannot be separated If it have not these two conditions Man will never be perfectly happie there will be some faculty of his soul which unsatisfied will remain languishing and when they shall all enjoy a contentment he will still be liable to fear lest haply he may be despoiled of the Good he possesseth Now Riches want one of these two conditions they surround us but no ways inform us they are in our coffers but enter not into out hearts we commit the keeping of them to our servants and we are constrained to aband on our felicity as often as we take a journey This misfortune causeth another For being not under safe custody they are exposed to pillage Injustice and violence may plunder us of them and though Gold be the sinews of War 't is in his power that hath the best Sword to take it from us Thus Riches create Fear expose their masters or their slaves to danger and whatever succour they promise procure us more ill then they bring good But should they be as good as their word and were it easie for us to keep them yet could they not give us a protection from the evil whereof they boast themselves the remedy Cum dicitur nihil illi deest attende si nihil cupit nihil deest si autem adhuc cupit accesserunt divitiae ut egestas cresceret Aug. For if there be any misery in the world which Riches can cure us of it must be Poverty It seems as soon as they enter into a house they banish Want and that 't is impossible to be rich and poor both together In the mean time experience teacheth us that Riches introduce Poverty that they inflame our desires sharpen our disease under a pretence of mitigating it and for our punishment beget indigence in our hearts at the same time that they occasion plenty in our house All prophane Philosophy hath acknowledged this Truth and the Stoicks have confessed it that the most biting poverty was that which we suffer in the midst of our Riches This just judgement hath two causes The first is the capacity of mans heart which none but an infinite Good can fill the second is the scantness of riches which increase our appetite in stead of allaying it and like a handful of water thrown upon a great fire serves onely to make it scorch more violently Thence may we conclude with the Philosopher that the richer a man is the more miserable is he that his riches impoverish him if Grace do not instruct him how to moderate his desires so that what he lookt upon as a remedy is a second evil more dangerous then that he would cure This conceit discovers another which makes it evident that in the condition whereto sin hath reduced man Riches are more pernicious then prositable Every one knows that the inordinateness of our Passions is one of the severest punishments of our transgression there is scarce one that is not rebellious against Reason and which attempts not the violation of his authority All our Desires are unjust all our Hopes interessed all our Affections criminal every Passion produceth a sin if not withheld by Grace and whoever gives himself up to his inclinations is sure to wander from his duty In the mean time Riches side with these rebels against their Soveraign they flatter all our desires serve as ministers to all our unjust designes and furnish us with means to make us more culpable under a colour of rendering
us more happie They promise pleasures to the Wanton Inflant animos divitiae superbiam pariunt invidiam contrahunt luxui serviunt Sen. and conspire with him to corrupt Chastity they furnish Arms and Seconds to the Furious to take vengeance on their enemies they raise the Ambitious to offices and employments and complying with all Passions engage men in all kinde of impiety Therefore he judged aright who said that to give a sinful man Riches was to put a Sword into a mad mans hand or present poyson to a Desperado because not being under the command of Grace he will make use of them only to satisfie his ambition or to content his brutality So that the Philosophers preventing the Divines rightly discovered that Poverty was more Innocent then Plenty and that it was easier for men to preserve their liberty in the leanness of want then in the affluence of riches For besides that they wed us to the earth Multis parasse divitias non finis miseriarū fuit sed mutatio Senec. Epist 17. they expose us to a thousand accidents which can neither be foreseen nor avoided and give fortune game at our person Therefore is it that Seneca said Those that will be happy must either be poor or like those that are so they must possesse their goods without being possessed by them and use them as Stewards rather then Proprietaries and they ought to be alwayes ready to part with them because they have them but in trust Religion out-bids Philosophy and requires farre other dispositions from her Children then this does from her Disciples For she will have them acknowledg that in Adam all is lost that they are fallen from their rights by his sin and being guilty are become miserable Perswaded of this Truth they live in the world as in a strange Country they possesse riches upon Loan and since their Goods were confifcated to their soveraign they enjoy them meerly from his mercy Though Jesus Christ re-instate them in their goods and being made Co-heirs with him may dispose of heaven and earth as their Inheritance yet are they obliged to regulate themselves by his Example and not to make use of their rights till after the generall Resurrection He carried himself thus during his life though Heire to his Father he disposed not of his estate a Cratch received him at his birth and a Cross served him for a Death-bed he lodged in a borrowed house and was buried in a strangers Sepulchre If he wrought some miracles for the Glory of his Father he did none for his own Interest when he created a piece of money in the mouth of a Fish it was to pay Tribute and when he commanded his Disciples to take the Asse which served to carry him in his triumph it was with the consent of the Owner Paupertate Christi non additur pecunia sed justitia Divitiae verae immortalitas ubi enim vera copia ibi nulla indigenti●● Aug. He put not his absolute power in execution till after his Resurrection nor did he enjoy the priviledges due to his Birth till he was entred into Heaven The Christians tredding in his steps pretend nothing in this world but reserve the fruition of their right for the next They are content with the promises of Jesus Christ and living here upon hope expect the effects thereof in glory During this time they look upon Poverty as an innocent Usury which gives a value to what they give or part with here for the Son of God for they know saith S. Bernard That Jesus Christ who is a New Man is come down here below to teach us new things and that those that obey him finde rest in labour liberty in servitude and abundance in Poverty Their Goods are multiplyed in being distributed and as the husbandman casting his seed into the earth promiseth himself a hapgy harvest the Christian in communicating his goods to the Poor expects a great recompence at the generall Resurrection Till then he comforts himself with the advantages Poverty bestows upon him for he perceives that if riches have their good use they have also their bad They acknowledge the Custody of them troublesome the love of them contagious the losse of them sensible and if there be pain to get them there is more to keep them This made some Philosophers rid themselves of such attendants and gave comfort to others whom injustice or fortune had made bankrupt for as Seneca sayes excellently well We gain much in losing our riches if with them we lose our covetousness and we fail not continually to gain something even when we lose it not because the subject that entertained it being taken away there is some ground to hope either that it will dye for want of nourishment or at least do no hurt for want of power The Poverty of Christians is happier in this point then that of Philosophers for being inanimated with Grace they lose the desire of evil with the meanes of doing it nor are they innocent only out of impotency but out of deliberation They make their Poverty meritorious in making it voluntary if they choose it not they endevour to accept it and a misfortune or a chastisement they husband into a vertue The losse of their Goods causeth the assurance of their salvation and the rest of their souls they cease to fear assoon as they cease to love and they draw this advantage from their poverty that being no longer engaged to the Earth by their affection they are no more troubled with fear nor abused with hope But their greatest happiness is that they learn from Scripture that their condition is a holy Asylum and that heaven hath promised a particular protection to the Poor Evangelizare pauperibus misit me Luc. 4. They know that Christ came down from heaven to instruct them that his care of teaching them is a proof of his Missions that he hath pronounced them happy in his Sermons chose them for his Disciples hath designed them his favours made them the objects of his love and hath so particular an affection towards them that a man must be poor in deed or in desire to be taken notice of in his State Let us love Poverty then and despise riches seek Felicity in want and if Nature hath not brought us poor into the world let us become like those that are poor either by unbottoming our selves of our Goods or distributing them that raking part in the reproaches of Christ upon Earth We may be partakers of glory in heaven The sixth DISCOURSE That the Happinesse of a Christian upon Earth consists in Humility rather then in Glory THe Ambitious will hardly agree as concerning this Maxime and it will pass into their minde as an Errour rather then a Paradox Merces virtutis gloria honos alit artes omnesque incenduntur ad studia gloriâ For they believe that Honour is the nourishment of Vertue that she droops and languisheth when deprived of
so excellent that we cannot so much as form an Idea of it we want words wherewith to expresse its excellencies and the Scripture tels us That eye hath not seen Eare hath not heard neither hath it entred into the heart of man to conceive the happiness God hath laid up for them that love him This last condition would impose silence upon us if the liberty we take to speak of God though incomprehensible did not permit me to write of Blessedness though unconceivable But as we cannot fail when treating of the perfections of God we follow the light of Faith I believe neither shall I wander in this vast Ocean of Glory Qui ducem sequitur fidem à veritate nunquam potest aberrare Aug. if I sayl by that Star and however shipwrack is not to be feared upon a sea where all those that are Drowned may boast themselves Happy Scripture which is our guide in the mysteries of Religion teacheth us that Beatitude consists in the love and knowledg of God For that which hath deliver'd these words Haec est vita aeterna ut cognascant te solū verum Deum hath told us also Qui manet in Charitate in Deo manet Deus in eo Knowledg would cool without Love and Love would be blinde without Knowledg All the faculties of our soul must finde their satisfaction in felicity The Understanding must see the Truth it believes the Will possesse the good it loves the Memory be filled with these two Things it hath so carefully recorded Ita sunt potentiae in essentia anima inter se conjunctae ut quicquid unam laedit alias laedat necesse est Mars Fisc If these Three Faculties be not content something will be wanting to the Christians felicity and as they are united in one and the same soul the pain of the one would be the Torment of the other When the Scripture seems sometimes to give the advantage to Knowledg over Love or to Love over Knowledg it is only more strongly to express the excellency of both and to make us comprehend that as he that clearly sees God is happy he that perfectly loves him cannot be miserable Thence it comes to pass that the Fathers of the Church are divided upon this subject whereof some have taken the part of Knowledg others that of Love Del visio sumnum bonum Aug. S. Augustin though the Panegyrist of Love hath notwithstanding so fully expressed himself in many passages of his Writings in behalf of Knowledg that he seems to have forgotten what he delivered elswhere concerning Love For he will have the End of all our Actions and the repose of all our Desires to be found in beholding the supreme Good That as he is miserable who knowing all things knows not the Creator that made them he likewise is happy that knows the Creator nor is there any addition to his happiness in that he knows the creatures together with him Finally he saith in another place that the clear vision of God is the whole recompence of a Christian and that nothing can be wanting to his happiness when he fully contemplates the Divine Essence But there are a thousand places beside where this Great Doctor placeth Felicity in Love and represents the Blessed to us as so many Lovers who finde their contentment in the possession of the Supream Good Thus saith he true Happiness consists in that joy which ariseth from Truth known and Goodness beloved Beata quippe vita est gaudium de veritate hoc enim est gaudium de te qui veritas es Aug. He assures us that the Blessed have no other employment then to love God and that all the vertues are useless in Heaven except Charity He teacheth us that enjoyment which is the Rest of Love is also its Recompence that as desires disquiet Lovers when they possess not what they long for the Divine Essence would be a torment to the Blessed if from their understanding it past not to their will and if having illuminated them with its light it warmed them nor with its flames Knowledge then and Love make up the felicity of the Saints in glory but both of them are very different from that which is found among the Faithful Our knowledge is always mixt with darkness faith though certain is notwithstanding obscure and though an effusion of the light of glory hath not its extent nor evidence We see God but in Enigma's upon Earth the species that discover him conceal him These glasses are too narrow to give us a full representation of his Greatness and our spirits are too weak to bear the lustre of his Majesty But in Heaven he fortifies the Blessed by the Light of Glory gives them a capacity to look upon him and piercing their understanding is himself both the species and the image There are three things in the world which oppose our Happiness and suffer us not to know God perfectly The first is his Greatness which dazies or astonisheth us whence it comes to pass that the Scriptures assign him for his abode either light that hides him from us or darkness that robs us of him The second is his absence for though he be every where yet is he at a distance when he will and as his presence is not fixed to the Earth which he fils so is it true to affirm of him that he is no where as to say he is in all places Nullibi est qui ubique est The third is the weakness of mans soul which cannot suffer the presence of his God finds the condign punishment of his pride where he sought for the satisfaction of his curiosity But all these impediments are taken away from the Blessed The Majesty of God is no longer formidable his Greatness which occasions our astonishment gives being to their felicity and love having banished from their hearts all fear they treat with their Soveraign as with their Beloved The absence of the Supream Good causeth not their doleance They are possessed by him whom they possess his Divine Essence penetrates their very souls and they are so full of him that those who see them are obliged to reverence them as Gods Finally the weakness of their faculties hinders not their contentment the same fire that burns them inanimates them the same light that clarifies strengthens them and the same God that searcheth all their inward parts preserves them If their Knowledge have this advantage their Love hath yet more and their Charity is much perfecter then ours Whatever pains we take to love God upon Earth our Love is never without some notable defects which enfeeble it It is blind because Faith that enlightens it is a candle whose lamp is always surrounded with a cloud or smoak It is faint and drooping because we possess not the Supream Good which we passionately affect and being separated from him we are as well his Martyrs as his Lovers It is divided because self-self-love is not
another and the remedy which cures a Disease cannot give consolation to a Discontent But the Blessed have this advantage that they finde in God whatever is necessary for them having all Perfections he fully contents their desires and one sole Good infused into their souls satisfies all their wants He that enlightens them warms them he that feeds them clothes them he that lodges them protects them he that imparts his perfections in several portions to the Saints here belowe communicates them all together to the Blessed and to express my self in the words of Saint Paul and S. Augustine his disciple God is All to All in Glory nor can we form any wishes whereof we finde not the accomplishment in his possession The Third Miracle is that the desire is not restless in heaven Those that are well acquainted with our Passions confess there is none more cruel then Desire For though it seem to supply us in our need we may say that the Remedy is more troublesome then the Disease and that it were better to retrench the most part of worldly things then to be troubled with longing for them This Passion puts us not upon the search of Good but by means of Grief 't is a spur which wounds us to make us go a needle that goads us to make us run a transportation of the soul which renders us miserable to render us happie Thence it comes to pass that Divines agreeing with Philosophers profess that Desires are the chiefest torment of the Damned that these delinquents are therefore wretched because their desires are hopeless Est in eis desiderium nec poenam generat quia desiderium omne transit in gaudium dum praesto est quicquid optatur qui quid deside ratur abun●at Aug. aut Greg. Mag. and this viper which they conceive in their bowels gnaws and devours them eternally But by an unconceiveable wonder the Blessed desire and are not at all disquieted they enjoy what they long for see what they hope and as the Goodness of God occasions their wishes his Presence begets their felicity The Good they desire is not absent the Good they possess is not wearisome and mixing Desire with Fruition they are everlastingly happie They long saith S. Augustine and their longing causeth no doleance because as soon as formed 't is turned into joy and the presence of the God they covet banisheth pain and causeth content This Miracle produceth a Fourth which makes the Blessed finde a possession which never disgusts them Duo sunt tortores cruci atum alternantes dolor timor si bene es times si male es doles Aug. Men cannot avoid being upon Earth and as Grief and Fear are two Passions which succeed to give them no respite Fruition and Desire are two states which alternately torment them Desire is always attended with Restlesness every man that makes Vows and puts up Requests declares publikely his want and misery and though raised to never so high a pitch of Fortune tells all the world that he suffers because he desires Fruition which seems the period and acquiescence of Desires and which by a necessary consequence ought to banish Grief out of the soul begets a sapless cloying of the appetite and condemns him to a punishment whereof he hath no right to complain because himself seems to have courted it In the mean time this misfortune is so common that there is no body but experienceth it and the goods of the Earth are so mean and beggerly that we cannot have them but we must despise them Their absence troubles us and their presence cloys us we make some account of them at a distance but when we approach them and taste the fruition of them we discover their imperfections are ashamed or disrelish them so that in whatever condition Fortune place us we cannot chuse but be miserable But the happiness which the Blessed enjoy is so great that as their Desires occasion not their Impatience neither doth their felicity nauseate into a distaste They daily discover new beauties in this infinite object they finde more sweetnesses then were promised them and confess that their happiness exceeds their hopes The Faithful have less love because less light present things distract them their senses which are at agreement with what they see seduce them and because they can form no noble Ideas of the Supream Good the desires they have towards it are faint and languishing But inasmuch as the Blessed know all the advantages it is attended with their love encreaseth with their light their pleasure is augmented by fruition and far distant from conceiving any disrelish their desire continues in the height of possession and they wish without pain what they possesse with assurance But the last miracle of glory and which is no whit inferiour to the rest is that the difference of conditions causeth no jealousie The variety of the world is one of its rarest ornaments Tota Naturae pulchritudo aut certe praecipuae in sua varietate sita est nec abest à varietate utilitas Mars Fisc The slowers which checker a walk imbellish it The Stars which make a hundred severall Figures in the Firmament set a lustre upon its beauty neither doth any thing make a Countrey more pleasant then the diversity of the parts that compose it Our eyes are ravished to behold rivulets creeping along the Meadows Fields stretching themselves out of sight Valleys which sink as low as the Center of the Earth and Mountains which strike Heaven with their tops The Riches and Beauty of a State depends upon its diversity if all Subjects were of the same condition there would be neither diversion for strangers nor accommodation for the Naturals The Ornament and Advantage of the Body Politick appears in this agreeable mixture of Poor and Rich Artists and Husbandmen Soldiers and Merchants Magistrates and Priests But it falls out by an inevitable misfortune that this difference of conditions which begets its beauty breeeds jealousie among the subjects For as their goods are not common because their conditions are different one is jealous of what the other possesseth The Grandees are proud and despise their inferiours the mean men are envious and murmure at the Optimacy Cum erit Deus omnia in omnibus qui minus habebunt non abhorrebunt ubi enim nulla est invidentia concors est differentia Aug. Every condition carries its own torment along with it Greatness is tortured with Pride and Misery afflicted with Envy But in Heaven the difference of conditions produceth their beauty and gives no occasion of jealousie All the Saints hold different stations their merit is the measure of their glory their crowns are proportionable to their labours and there is more variety in the Blessed then among the Stars In the mean time Peace bears rule in the diversity of their conditions Charity which unites them renders their contentment common though the Justice that rewards them makes their condition different Every one is glad of anothers good fortune and without interessing any one they finde that the felicity of particulars contributes to that of the Publick But it were to injure their dignity Non Nobis sufficit quia Christianum nomen accepimus si opera Christi non fecerimus Illi prodest quod Christianus dicitur qui castitatem diligit ebrietatem fugit superbiam odit invidiam respuit Aug. should we strive to express it silence and astonishment are the onely commendations we can give them because the Holy Scripture teacheth us that the Happiness God prepareth for those that love him is unconceivable Let us content our selves to wish what we cannot comprehend and finishing this Work with the Beatitude of Christians let us strive to merit it by the precedent advantages Let us profit by the Birth we received in Baptism follow the motions of the Holy Spirit that inanimates us imitate the examples of that ever to be adored Chief that governs us obey his Grace that masters us make use of those Vertues that assist us Entertain our life by the nourishment and our piety by the Sacrifice of the Body and Bloud of Jesus Christ Doe nothing that may dishonour our Qualities and endeavour to make our selves worthy of that Glory which is promised to all true Christians in the other world FINIS