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A06447 The sinners guyde A vvorke contayning the whole regiment of a Christian life, deuided into two bookes: vvherein sinners are reclaimed from the by-path of vice and destruction, and brought vnto the high-way of euerlasting happinesse. Compiled in the Spanish tongue, by the learned and reuerend diuine, F. Lewes of Granada. Since translated into Latine, Italian, and French. And nowe perused, and digested into English, by Francis Meres, Maister of Artes, and student in diuinitie.; Guía de pecadores. English Luis, de Granada, 1504-1588.; Meres, Francis, 1565-1647. 1598 (1598) STC 16918; ESTC S108893 472,071 572

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alike yet there were great cause of feare Why do I say alike Yea such so great are the euerlasting torments of hell that if onely one man of all man-kind were to be banished thether yet we all should tremble and feare When our Sauiour did eate his last Supper with his Disciples and sayd One of you shall betray me they were all exceeding sorrowful began to feare although theyr conscience witnessed their innocencie For when as an imminent mischiefe is grieuous heauie although there be but few to whom it is threatned yet all and euery one feareth least it should happen to him If there were a great Army of men in a fielde and it should bee reuealed from heauen to them all that a little after an Arrow should fall from heauen and should kill one of them neyther was it known whom it should be there is no doubt but that euery one would feare himselfe least it should fal vpon him But what would they do if the greater part of them should be in danger and ieopardy How much greater would thys feare be Tell me ô man thou that art so cunning in fleshly wisedome and so vnskilfull in the busines of thy saluation did God euer reueale vnto thee that there should be so many whom the thunder or sword of the Diuine iustice should smite If thou knowest not this certainly I much lesse beleeue that thou knowest how many and which ●e they that shall escape that plague on which side thou shalt stand and yet doost thou not feare Or doth hell seeme more tollerable vnto thee then the wound of an arrow Or hath God secured thee or hast thou letters of thy securitie or is an infallible charter of thy saluation graunted vnto thee or a priuiledge of immunity and freedom Hetherto there is nothing that promiseth any such like thing vnto thee moreouer thy works condemne thee and according to the present iustice vnlesse thou turne ouer a new lease thou art reprobated and doost thou not yet feare or wilt thou say that the Diuine mercie doth comfort thee Surely that doth not dissolue the works of iustice neither is contrary to them yea if it suffer so many to be damned will it not also suffer thee to be one of them if thou together sinnest with them Doost thou not see that thys vnhappy loue of thy selfe doth blinde thee and miserably deceaue thee whilst it maketh thee to presume other things then are seene in the whole world What priuiledge I pray thee is giuen vnto thee beyond the other sonnes of Adam that thou shouldest not be banished thether whither they are gone whose works t●o● doost follow But if God be to be known by his works I know what I wil say For although there be many comparisons by which the mercy of God his iustice may be compared between themselues in which the works of mercy doe preuaile yet at the length we finde that in the posterity of Adam of whose seede thou also art borne that there are found many moe vessels of wrath then of mercy seeing that there are so many that are damned and so few that are saued The cause of which is not because the grace and helpe of God forsaketh them or is wanting vnto them For God as the Apostle sayth would haue all to be saued and to come to the knowledge of his truth but because the wicked are wanting to themselues and the grace of God is of none effect in them All these things are remembred more largely and prolixely of me that thou mayest vnderstand that notwithstanding the mercy of God which thou pretendest God suffereth so many to be Infidels and in the Church so many euill Christians and so many Infidels and so many euill Christians to perish so also he will permit thee to perish with them if thou imitatest theyr life Or when thou wast borne did the heauens reioyce or shal the iudgements and decrees of God be changed that the world may be peculier to thee and another to others If therfore notwithstanding the mercy of God hell be so enlarged and so many thousand soules be daily swallowed vp of it shall not thy soule also come thether if thou continuest in thy sinnes But that thou mayest not say that God in times past was seuere and sharpe but now gentle and mild consider that also with this gentlenes and clemencie he suffereth all that thou hast heard neyther shalt thou be free and exempted from it but also thy punishment remayneth for thee yea although thou beest called a Christian if thou beest found a sinner Or therfore shal God lose his glory if he shall condemne thee Hast thou I pray thee any singuler thing in thee for which God aboue others ought to spare thee Or hast thou any priuiledge which others haue not for which he should not destroy thee with others if thou beest not lesse euill then others be Consider I pray thee the sonnes of Dauid for their fathers sake many priuiledges were promised vnto them but neyther for that cause would the Lord suffer their wickednes vnpunished wherefore many of them had but sorrowfull ends Where then is thy vaine trust Why doest thou vainely hope they perishing that thou shalt not perish seeing thou art pertaker of their wickednes Thou errest my brother thou errest if thou thinkest that this is to hope in God This is not hope but presumption For hope is to trust that God will forgiue thee thy sinnes if thou be repentant and sorrowfull for them and turnest from thy wickednes and that then he will receaue thee into fauour But it is exceeding great presumption to beleeue that thou shalt be saued and happy perseuering and continuing in thy sinnes Doe not think that this is a small sinne for it is numbred amongst those which are committed against the holy Ghost for he that presumeth after this maner he offereth no smal ignominy reproch to the Diuine goodnes which especially is attributed to the holy Ghost Such sinnes as our Sauiour testifieth are not forgiuen in this world nor in that to come insinuating that they are remitted with great difficulty for as much as they shut against them the gate of grace and offend a Phisitian who can giue life apply the medicine to the wound ¶ The conclusion of all those things which haue beene spoken in this Chapter LEt vs at the length conclude this matter with that excellent sentence of Ecclesiasticus Because thy sinne is forgiuen be not without feare to heape sinne vpon sinne And say not The mercy of God is great he will forgiue my manifold sinnes for mercy wrath come from him and his indignation commeth downe vpon sinners Tell me I pray thee if of a sinne forgiuen we ought to feare how can it possibly be that thou shouldest be secure by daily adding sinnes to sinnes Marke diligently what he sayth His indignation commeth downe vpon sinners For of this sentence the
mistery of that time it will be counted a ridiculous thing to thinke that these are matters for all times and places which were onely proper for that time We see also in all well ordered common wealths that some things be done ordinarily and alwayes after the same manner and some things that are vsed extraordinarily Ordinary things are common to all but the extraordinary are proper to some certaine The same thing also commeth in vse in the common wealth of God which is his Church And so that of the Apostle is regular and ordinary Whose end shall be according to theyr works signifying that after the common manner of speaking an euill death followeth an euill life and a good death a good life And it is an ordinary thing that those that embrace Vertue and leade a godly life doe enter into an eternal life and those that liue viciously and wickedly to be cast into hell fire This sentence is common and true which the holy Scripture doth beate vpon in many places This the Psalmes doe sing of this the Prophets doe celebrate this the Apostles doe preach of this the Euangelists haue noted The kingly Prophet hath comprehended this in few words when he sayd God spake once and twice I haue also heard the same that power belongeth vnto God And that thou Lord art mercifull for thou rewardest euery man according to his worke This is the summe of all Christian Philosophy Therfore according to this speach of Dauid we say that it is an ordinary thing that as well the righteous as the sinner should receaue a reward at the end of their lifes according to the works which they haue done Yet besides this vniuersall law God can by his especiall grace and fauour bestow mercy vpon some that they should dye the death of the righteous who haue liued the life of sinners as also it may come to passe that he that hath liued like a righteous man in this world by the secret iudgement of God may dye as a sinner As it happeneth vnto them who haue sayled very fortunately in a long voyage and at the very mouth of the Hauen suffer shipwrack Hence it is that Salomon sayth Who knoweth the spirit of man that goeth vpward and the breath of the beast that goeth downe to the earth For although it be alwayes in a manner true that their soules who liue like beasts descend to hell and that theirs that liue like men ascend to heauen yet in the secret and particuler iudgement of God this order may be somtimes inuerted Yet it is safe and generall doctrine that a good liuer shall haue a blessed death Therefore no man ought for the praecedent causes to leane to their examples who haue been saued by especiall and particuler grace and sauour for they make no generall rule nor extend themselues to all men but onely to few and those vnknowne Neyther canst thou know whether thou art contayned in that number But if thou obiectest vnto me the repentance of the Niniuites which proceeded from feare least they should all haue beene destroyed within forty dayes consider thou not onely their sharpe and seuere repentance which they made but also their change of life Change thou also thy life after the same manner and the same mercy shall not forsake thee But I perceaue that thou art scarcely recouered of thine infirmity and scarcely risen out of bed seeing that thou straightwayes runnest to the first kind of life and recallest all that which thou didst purpose when thou wast weake Wherfore I leaue thee to consider what I may think of thy repentance ¶ The conclusion of the former disputation WHatsoeuer hath hetherto beene spoken hath not beene spoken to that end that it should shut the gate of saluation or of hope against any man for neyther hath any of the Saints shut it neyther ought any man to shut it but to this end that the wicked may be recalled turned from that refuge and fortresse in which they lurke and are made mightier to perseuere in their iniquities But tell me I pray thee my brother if all the voyces and iudgements of Doctors and holy men if all reasons if the holy and sacred Scripture pronounce so dangerous and perillous things of it how darest thou hope for saluation in so great danger and hazard In whom doest thou trust that will helpe thee in this ieopardy Perhaps thou placest thy hope in thy preparations in thine almes and in thy prayers Thou vnderstoodest a little before how the fiue foolish virgins with great care would haue prepared made ready thēselues after that they had heard the voyce telling them that the Bridegrome came thou hast learned also with what great instancie they knocked and cryed at the doore yet it profited none of them for it proceeded not of true loue or of true repentance Perhaps thou trustest to thy teares which thou wilt poure forth at that time surely vnfained teares at all times are auailable happy is that man that from his very hart can poure thē foorth but remember I pray thee what teares Esau shedde Who as the Apostle saith found no place of repentance though he sought it with teares For he did not weepe for the loue of GOD but for his owne commoditie Or doost thou put thy hope in thy good purposes which thou then settest before thine eyes These are of force vvhen they are true and sincere but remember the purposes of King Antiochus who when hee was in this danger promised such great and magnificent things that it would make a man amazed that readeth them This wicked man saith that booke prayed vnto the Lord of whom he obtayned no mercy The reason was for all things that he purposed proceeded not of the spirit of loue but of seruill feare which is not acceptable For to feare hell may proceede of the meere naturall loue which man beareth to himselfe But that man loueth himselfe is no reason that the kingdome of heauen should be giuen vnto him Insomuch that as no man entred into the pallace of King Assuerus clothed in Sackcloth so it is lawfull for no man to enter into the pallace of God with a seruill garment but all that will enter must be clothed with wedding garments that is adorned and beautified with true loue and charitie Wherefore my brother I pray and intreate thee that thou wouldest reade and consider of these things with great attention that thou after a very short time without all doubt shalt come to this houre and to this ieopardy For thou seest vvith what great swiftnes heauen is turned about and with what velocitie time slippeth and posteth away how soone the thred of thy life shall be cut off The day of destruction is at hand sayth the Prophet and the times that shall come make hast Therefore a little space of time being ouer-past this prophecie shal be fulfilled Then thou shalt
THE SINNERS GVYDE A WORKE CONTAIning the whole regiment of a Christian life deuided into two Bookes VVHEREIN SINNERS ARE RECLAIMED FROM THE BY-PATH OF VICE AND destruction and brought vnto the high-way of euerlasting happinesse COMPILED IN THE SPANISH TONGVE BY THE LEARNED and reuerend Diuine F. Lewes of Granada Since translated into Latine Italian and French ¶ And nowe perused and digested into English by FRANCIS MERES Maister of Artes and student in Diuinitie 1. TIMOTHIE 4. verse 8. Godlines is profitable vnto all things which hath the promise of the life present and of that that is to come ¶ AT LONDON Printed by Iames Roberts for Paule Linley Iohn Flasket and are to be sold in Paules Church-yard at the signe of the Beare Anno. Dom. 1598. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE SIR THOMAS EGERTON KNIGHT LORDE Keeper of the Great-Seale of England and one of her Maiesties most honourable priuie Counsell * IN the shoare of the Sea Euxinus in the land of Colchis there stoode a Cyttie named Dioscurias so much haunted of strangers that as Plinie writeth by record of Thimostenes it was resorted vnto of three hundred Nations of distinct languages and that the Romans for the better expedition of their wares there had at length lying in the same 130. Interpreters Saint Ierome testifieth that men in times past came to Rome from the furthest Coastes of Spayne and Fraunce to see Titus Liuius whose eloquence was famous throughout the whole vvorld Certainly famous and excellent was that Citty that so many resorted vnto and where the renowned Romans had so many Interpreters lying And without all question admirable was the eloquence of Titus Liuius that fetched men frō so farre to see him Then vndoubtedly Right Honorable diuine learned is this reuerend Authour F. Ludouicus Granatensis whō not onely the spacious Empire of the Latines but Spayne Fraunce and Italie haue trauailed to see and tasting the honnyed sweetnes of his celestiall ayre and finding such supernaturall and heauenly treasures in him haue not onely com'd to see him but haue sent thether their Interpreters there to soiourne for the better transportation of his wares and commodities Onely I wondred that England whose Voyagers were neuer out-stript by any had so sparingly and slenderly visited this famous and renowned Diuine that shee I say as Germany had but onely one Interpreter lying with him seeing that otherwhere she had such aboundance of worthy Factors rich linguists Entering into consideration of the great scarcity of our Traffickers to so rich a Mine I discouered certaine corruptions which as dangerous Rockes threatned shipwracke to them that sailed vnto him The Poets faine that a Dragon kept the Golden-fleece and yet that hindered not Iason from the conquest of it neyther did Gyants nor Monsters fright Hercules from his rich spoyles glorious conquests Cosmographers write that in the Mountaines of Albania and Hircania Countries of Scythia there are found the best and freshest Emeralds the purest Christall much gold precious stones but these Mountaines are encircled with huge woods wherein are aboundance of fierce and cruell wilde beastes as Gryphons Leopards Tygers Panthers and Dogs of that fiercenes and greatnes that they pull downe Bulls and slay Lyons But as the Dragon amated not Iason nor the Monsters amazed Hercules and as these Scythian dangers doe not hinder men from seeking and finding these earthly terrestriall iewels so should wee not be discouraged in this spirituall pursute for a few corruptions and dangers remembring that all wrytings the sacred Scriptures excepted which are absolutely pure and perfect haue a relish of theyr earthly and corruptible Authours Nihil ex omni parte beatum sayth Horace and yet wee must not doe as Lycurgus dyd who because the Grape was abused by potte companiors cutte downe all the Spartan Vines For we finde by experience that this Argument Ab abusu ad non vsum from the abuse of good things to the abolishing of them as it hath bred heresies and schismes in the Church so also rebellions treasons in the Common-wealth Plutarch sayth that it had beene better for Lycurgus to haue digged Wells and Fountaines neere vnto the Vines and as Plato counselleth Insanum Deum alio sobrio repressum that is to take away the abuse by mixing some quantitie of water with it Which gaging moderation as I haue performed in this interpretation by remouing corruptions that as Rocks would haue endangered many so if other Interpreters as good Pylots doe the same in this learned Iberian neuer had Dioscurias moe Interpreters nor Titus Liuius moe visiters then Granatensis shall haue For if that most famous and excellent Phylosopher Apollonius Tyaneus as Philostratus writeth trauailed almost throughout the whole world and passed euen to the Mountaine Caucasus and to the Brachmanes Phylosophers of India that he might onely heare Iarchas an Indian Philosopher in his golden throne professing wisedome among the small number of his schollers and disputing of the motion of the celestiall Spheres what ought not Christians to doe and whether shoulde not they trauell to heare one not teaching how the heauens are mooued but how men may come to heauen yea how Sinners may be Guyded thether And albeit all the workes of this reuerend Diuine are profitable for instruction in religion and very auaileable for perswasion to good life yet my iudgement beeing grounded vpon the iudgements of graue and worthy Diuines doth estimate this booke aboue the rest as Sybilla Cumaea did the last of her three Bookes vnto King Tarquine Which with all humility I dedicate vnto your Honor whom God of his great mercy hath vouchfafed in this decrepit and ruinous age of the world to bestow vpon our state for the maintenaunce and countenaunce of Religion and Learning and for the defacing suppressing of vice and corruption like as in times past hee gaue vnto Common-wealths that needed such helpe Dauid Hezekiah Iosiah Hercules Cyrus Artaxerxes Alexander Magnus Scipio Affricanus Iulius Caesar Augustus Mecaenas Constantinus Magnus Theodosius Carolus Magnus Sigismundus Ferdinandus Alphonsus King of Naples Fredericke Duke of Saxon Prince Elector and Lord Ernestus his Brother Laurentius Medices Duke of Florence and Borsus Duke of Ferrara with many other Princes and Nobles some of which were mighty Pillars and Protectors of true Religion and Christianity others liberall maintainers and bountifull Patrons of learning and vertue against all Licinians Iulianists Valentinians Caligulaes Neroes Dioclesians Mahometists Baiazets Aretinists Simonists such like Monsters of nature beeing cruell persecuters of true Religion enemies of all humanity and destroyers of all learning and discipline who despising God and all goodnes did degenerate so farre from their forefathers that they delighted wholy to spill the blood of worthy men to burne famous Libraries to rob the Church of her patrimony and to rase and ouerthrow the Vniuersities and Schcoles of all Artes Sciences as in the tragicall Histories of former times is recorded cannot
and establish this question and matter vnlesse also the contrarie arguments and obiections bee refuted therefore the third part of this Booke is occupied and conuersant in ouerthrowing and confuting them in which we plentifully aunswere all the excuses and obiections which are wont to be alledged of naughtie men why they doe flie and eschew Vertue Because the matter and subiect of these two Bookes is Vertue wee would not haue the Reader to be ignorant that by this word Vertue we barelie or solely vnderstand the habite of Vertue but also her actions and duties to the which that noble habit is ordered and disposed because the Figure is very well knowne that the effect is signified by the name of the cause the cause by the name of the effect THE FIRST BOOKE OF THE SINNERS GVIDE In which is contayned a large and copious exhortation to keepe Gods commaundements THE FIRST TITLE That man is bound to seeke after Vertue and to serue GOD and of the excellencie of the Diuine perfection CHAP. I. TWO things chiefely Christian Reader are wont to mooue and stirre vp the will of man to any good action One is the bond by which we are bound to iustice the other is the profit and fruite which proceedeth issueth of this action For it is the iudgement of all wisemen that these two things are to be considered of in euery matter and action to wit Honestie and Profit which are as it were the two spurres of our Will which pricke it forward and encourage it to take any action in hand Of these two although for the most part Profit is more sought after and desired yet Honestie is more effectuall and powerfull For there is not any profit or commoditie to be found in this world although it be great which may compare with the excellencie of Vertue as also there is no losse or discōmoditie so great or grieuous which a wise man ought not rather to choose then to runne into anie vice as Aristotle auerreth Seeing therefore that it is our purpose and meaning in this Booke to inuite men to the loue of Vertue and to ensnare them with the beautie of it I take it that we shall doe very well if we begin of this more principall part declaring the bond by which we stand bound to Vertue and therefore to God himselfe also who seeing that he is goodnes it selfe doth commend nothing in this world doth desire nothing doth not account any thing precious but onely Vertue Therefore with great care and diligence let vs consider those iust titles and claimes which God hath to demaund and exact this so great debt and bond of vs. But seeing that they be innumerable wee will onely induce sixe of the chiefest euery one of which seuerally do binde man with out any excuse to him in whatsoeuer he can or may The first and greatest and which can lesse be declared or expressed is to be him that he is to which is referred the greatnes of his Maiestie and all his perfections Hetherto pertaine the incomprehensible magnitude of his goodnes mercy iustice wisedom infinite power noblenes beautie faithfulnesse truth benignitie happines maiestie and the other riches and perfections that be in him which are such and so immeasurable that as a certaine famous Doctor saith if the whole world were ful of bookes and all creatures Writers and all the water of the Sea ynck first all the bookes should be filled first all the Writers should be wearied and first all the Sea should be exhausted and drawne drie then one alone of his perfections should be described absolutelie and as it is in deede and in it selfe The same Doctor also saith if God should create a newe man and should giue vnto him a hart so ample capable and spacious as are all the harts of men ioyned and mixed together if that hart should apprehend with an immeasurable and vnusuall light the qualitie and quantitie of one of these perfections it would faint die or breake in peeces by reason of the greatnes of that ioy and pleasure which should redound to it except it were preserued by the singuler power of GOD. This therefore is the first the most equall and iust reason by which we are bound to loue God and to serue obey him who is truth it selfe in so high a degree that the very Epicures themselues who are the ouerthrowers and destroyers of all Philosophy for they denie the diuine prouidence and the immortalitie of soules doe not denie that there is a Religion which is the worship and adoration of God For one of them disputing in that Booke which Tully writ of the nature of the Gods confesseth and prooueth very strongly that there is a God and also he acknowledgeth the altitude of his admirable and wonderfull perfections and for them he saith that he is to be worshipped adored and reuerenced for this is due to the greatnes and excellencie of this most noble substance Therefore he is to bee worshipped by that name and title onely if hee had not anie other For if we honour and reuerence a King for the onely dignitie of his presence although hee be without his kingdome where we receiue no benefit by him why rather should we not giue and exhibite all honour and reuerence to this Lord who as Iohn testifieth hath written vpon his garment and vpon his thigh The King of Kings and Lord of Lords It is he that with his three fingers doth beare vp the round Globe of the earth doth dispose of causes moueth the heauens it is he that changeth times altereth the elements diuideth the waters bringeth forth the windes engendereth causes giueth influence to the Planets and as an vniuersall King and Lord doth nourish and sustaine all creatures That also is of greater moment that his kingdom is not by succession or by election or by inheritance but by nature For euen as a man naturally is greater thē a Pismier so that most noble substance in greatnes doth far excell all other things created insomuch that euery thing whatsoeuer it be and the whole vniuersall world in his eyes haue scarce the quantitie and bignes of an Emmot If that vnhappy Philosopher acknowledged and confessed this truth why shall not Christian phylosophy acknowledge and confesse it This therefore teacheth that although there be many titles and names by which wee are bound to God yet this that we now entreate of doth excell them all the which is of such weight valuation that if there were no other this alone deserueth all the loue and seruice of man yea though he had infinite and innumerable soules and bodies which might attend and waite vpon his worship and loue That alwaies hath beene the care and studie of the Saints whose loue were so pure and sincere that of it S. Bernard saide Pure loue doth not take strength from hope and yet feeleth not the hurt of distrust As if hee
before of vs the power and force of the cause is knowne by the effects and work and by the power force the Essence is knowne What maner of power shall it be from whence so great a worke proceeded and if this power be such and so great what an one and howe incomprehensible is that Essence which is knowne by that power This contemplation without all doubt doth farre exceed all humane reach In this we must further consider that all these excellent and great workes not onely as they are but as they might haue beene are as though they were not in the viewe of that diuine power yea after an infinite manner they are lesser for that is infinitely greater to which this power doth extend it selfe Who then will not be astonished considering of the greatnes of such an Essence and of such a power which although a man cannot see with his externall eyes yet he may make a most certaine coniecture and gather of the foresaid reason how great it is how incomprehensible This wonderfull immensitie of God that great Schooleman Thomas Aquinas doth show in his Breuiarie of Diuinitie by this example We see sayth he in things corporall that by how much any thing is more excellent by so much also it is greater in quantitie for we see that the element of the water is greater then the earth and the ayre greater then the water and the fire then the ayre furthermore the first or lowest heauen is greater then the element of fire the second heauen greater thē the first and the third then the second and after the same manner by ascending euen to the tenth Spheare yea euen to that heauen which is aboue all the Spheares whose greatnes is incomparable That any one may plainly see if he haue any consideration how little the Globe and roundnes of the earth and water be if they be compared with the heauens The Astrologers also say that the whole circumference of the earth and water are but as a pricke or a poynt in comparison of heauen which they proue manifestly by their demonstrations For although the circle of the heauen be deuided into the twelue signes of the Zodiacke through which once in a yeere the Sun doth runne yet in eyther Horizon onely sixe are seene for the bignes and standing of the earth dooth take vp and possesse no more place of heauen then a leafe of paper or a tablet will being placed and sette in the Center of the world from whence the compasse of the heauen may be seene without let or impediment Seeing therefore that that heauen which is aboue all the Spheares which is the chiefest and the noblest body of the world is of such an inestimable magnitude aboue all bodies we may easily vnderstand sayth Thomas how God who is without any circumscription the chiefest greatest and best of all things as well of things corporall as spirituall who also is the maker of them ought must exceed all things with a certaine infinite magnitude not in quantitie for he is no body but in excellencie and noblenesse of his most perfect Essence But that we may returne from whence we are digressed after the same manner we may search in all other things how great and of what condition be the magnitudes perfections of this Lord. For it is necessary that they be such as his Essence is Ecclesiasticus confesseth that where he speaketh of Gods mercy According to his greatnes saith he so is his mercy of such sort are all the rest of his perfections Such is his goodnes such is his benignitie maiestie gentlenes wisedome sweetnes noblenes beautie omnipotencie and to be briefe such is his iustice He therefore is infinitely good infinitely sweet infinitely amiable and woorthy whom all creatures should obey feare and reuerence insomuch that if mans hart could containe infinite loue and feare and infinite obedience and reuerence all that should be obliged by the bond and rule of iustice to the dignitie and excellencie of this Lord. For if as euery one is more worthy more excellent so greater reuerence is due vnto him it followeth that seeing the excellencie of God is so infinite that also infinite reuerence is due vnto him Heereupon is inferred that all that which is wanting to our loue and reuerence whereby we doe not come to that measure is therefore wanting because it is indebted to a dignitie of such greatnesse Which thing seeing it is so how great I pray thee is that debt which this onelie title although there were no other doth request of vs in the loue obedience of this Lord What I pray thee will he loue who doth not loue so great a goodnesse What will hee feare who doth not feare so great a Maiestie Whom will hee serue who will not attend vpon such a Lord For what is thy will made if not to loue and embrace that which is good If then he be the chiefest good what is the cause that our will doth not loue embrace him aboue all that is called God And if it bee so heynous an euill not to loue or feare his Lord aboue all things what wil it be not to esteeme or regard him Who would haue euer supposed that the malice of man would haue come to so great impietie Neuerthelesse to that height of peruersitie they are come that for a little beastly pleasure or for a little honour or for a small gaine and filthy lucre doe offend and contemne so great a goodnesse O blindnes to be deplored ô insensiblenes more then bestiall ô deuillish rashnes and presumption What doth not he deserue who dareth such things with what punishment with what kind of torture shall the contempt of so great a maiestie be worthily satisfied It is certaine that it shall be punished with no lesser torment then that which is prepared for such an offence that is that whosoeuer hee be that contemneth God shall be tormented in hell fire euerlastingly and yet neither shall he worthily be punished This then is the first Title which bindeth vs to the loue and seruice of this Lord which bond is so great that all bonds by which by any manner of meanes in thys world we are bound to any person eyther for his excellency or for his perfection are vnworthy the name of bonds if they be compared with this For euen as the perfections of all other things being compared with the diuine are no perfections so neither the bonds which by reason of their perfections and excellencies are named such are bonds beeing compared with this as neyther all the offences made onely to the creatures cannot be called offences if they be compared to them by which the Creator himselfe is offended For which cause Dauid also in that paenitentiall Psalme sayth that he had offended the Lord onely and onely sinned against him albeit he had offended most grieuously against Vrias whō he had commaunded to be slaine being innocent and against
I owe all those things to thee which are in me Secondly because thou hast redeemed me I owe the same but by a more iust title Thirdly because thou hast promised thy selfe a reward vnto mee it maketh mee eftsoones to owe my selfe wholy vnto thee Why therfore shal I not giue my selfe once wholy to him to whom I owe my selfe by so many meanes and titles O exceeding ingratitude ô the hardnes of mans hart a hard hart in deede thou art if thou be not bended and moued with so many benefits if thou doest not render ouer and giue thy selfe for so many gifts There is not any thing found in this world so hard but that by some Art and vvorkmanship it may be mollified and softned Mettals melt through fire Iron is made tractable by the same the hardnes of a Diamond is broken by the blood of a Goate but thou ô hart of man art harder then any rocke harder then Iron harder then a Diamond when as neyther hell fire may breake thy hardnes nor the Art of thy most mercifull and louing father may mollifie thee nor the blood of the vnspotted Lambe can make thee tractable Seeing therfore thou ô Lord hast exhibited and giuen vnto vs so great goodnes and mercy doth it seeme a thing tollerable vnto thee that any man should be found who loueth thee not Who is vnmindfull of thy benefits Yea which is most insufferable that blusheth not to offend thee What loueth he that doth not loue thee For what benefit will he be gratefull who doth shew himselfe ingrateful for thy benefits How can I not but worship him but serue him who so deerely hath loued me Who with so great dilligence hath sought for me who with so great labour hath redeemed me from all euill If I were lift vp from the earth sayth our Sauiour I will draw all men vnto mee With what violence ô my Lord With what chaines With the violence of thy loue and with the chaines of thy benefits I will draw thee with the cords of a man sayth the Lord and with bands of loue Who will not willingly be drawne with thy cords Who will not suffer himselfe to be bound with thy bands Who would not couet to be bound and to be ouercome of so great benefits But if it be such an offence not to loue this Lord what will it be to offend him and to violate his commaudements Is it possible ô man that thou hast hands to offend those hands which haue been so liberall towards thee that for thee they were nailed to the Crosse Whē as that lasciuious and vnshamefast woman would haue allured the holy Patriarke Ioseph to adultery and solicited him to be vnfaithfull to his Lord the chast young man defended himselfe after this manner Behold my Maister knoweth not what he hath in the house with me but hath committed all that he hath to mine hand besides thee which art his wife how then can I doe this great wickednes and so sinne against God As if he should say If my Lord hath beene so good and liberall vnto me if hee hath committed all his goods vnto my trust if hee hath me in such great honour how can I haue hands ready to offend so good a Maister who hath bound me to him with so many benefits In which place we are to note that hee was not content to say that it was not decent or meete that I should offend him or I ought not to doe this but he sayd How can I doe this great wickednes c. Signifying that the greatnes of benefits ought not onely to bridle our will but also to take away our power and strength by any meanes to offend our Lord God If these kind of benefits deserued so great gratitude and thankfulnes what doe not the diuine benefits deserue That man had committed to the hands of Ioseph that which he had and God hath committed to thee those things he hath Now compare those things which God hath with those things which that man had and see by how many wayes those are greater and more excellent then these They are double and triple which thou hast receaued of God if thou comparest them with those that Ioseph receaued of this man Tell me I pray thee what wealth what riches hath God which he hath not communicated vnto thee The heauen the earth the Sunne the Moone the starres the Seas riuers birds fishes trees liuing creatures to be briefe all that is found vnder heauen is in thine hands What not onelie those things which are vnder heauen are in thy power but also which are aboue the heauens that is the glory of them and eternall blessednes All things are yours sayth the Apostle whether it be Paul or Apollos or Cephas or the world or life or death whether they be things present or things to come euen all are yours That is ordained and appointed for your saluation But what if I shall say that thou onely hast not those things which are aboue the heauens but that the Lord himselfe of all heauens is giuen vnto thee by a thousand wayes Hee is giuen vnto thee as a Father as a Tutor as a Sauiour as a Maister he is thy Phisition he is the price of thy redemption he is an example to thee a helpe a remedy a keeper To be briefe the father hath giuen vnto vs his sonne the sonne hath deserued for vs the holy Ghost whom the father and the sonne sendeth vnto vs from whom proceedeth all good things Seeing therefore that it is as true as truth it selfe that God hath giuen all things into thine hands which he hath how can it be that thou hast hands to prouoke and incense him Doest thou thinke that it is a thing to be borne to be ingratefull to a father so good and to a benefactour so liberall Certainly this seemeth to be extreame wickednes but if to this ingratitude thou ioynest the contempt of the benefactour and iniury or offence what a mischiefe will that seeme to be If that young man whom before we remembred tooke himselfe to be so bound and chayned that hee had no power or abillity to offend him who had cōmitted vnto him all the substance of his house how wilt thou finde strength in thy selfe to offend him who hath giuen to thee heauen earth and himselfe Ah vnhappy man more vnthankfull then the beasts more cruell then Lyons and Tygers more insensible then the stones is it possible that thou canst not keepe thee from so great wickednes What Beast what Lyon what Tyger is so vnmindfull of benefits that will hurt him of whom he is benefited Saint Ambrose speaketh of a certaine dogge which a whole night lamented his Maister slaine of one of his enemies with barking and howling In the morning many men came to the dead corps and amongst others he also came that had slaine the man The dogge seeing that homicide made out sodainly against
him and leaping at him began to bite him by which thing the wickednes of this priuy murtherer was layd open and vncouered What sayst thou ô man if a dogge be so faithfull for a peece of bread and with so great loue doth affect his Maister Doth ingratitude so please thee that thou wilt suffer thy selfe to be excelled of a dogge in the law of gratitude If thys brutish creture burned with so great anger against the murtherer of hys Maister why art not thou also displeased and out of patience at these which haue killed thy Lord What be they They are thy sinnes these apprehended him these bound him these scourged him these violently drew him to the Crosse. Thy sinnes were the causes of thy Lords death Those cruell butchers and hangmen had not had so great force and power ouer Christ vnlesse thy sinnes had armed them Why then art thou not mad angry why doost thou not whet thy furie against thē which haue slaine thy Lord Wherefore when thou seest thy Lord slaine before thy face and in thy sight and that for thee is not thy loue increased towards him Why doost thou not fret and chafe against thy sinnes which haue procured his death especially seeing that thou art not ignorant that the end of all his sayings dooings and torments was no other then that he might stirre vp anger and hate in our harts against sinne He died that he might kill sinne and that hee might binde and restraine the power of our hands and feete hasting to mischiefe he had hys hands and feete nayled to the Crosse. With what face therefore darest thou liue that all the labors and sweats of Christ for thee should be vaine and of none effect whilst thou still wilt remaine in the same seruitude from which he hath freed thee with the effusion of his owne blood Can it be that thou doost not tremble at the onely mention of sinne when thou seest that God vnder-went terrible and horrible torments that he might destroy and abolish it What could he doe more that he might draw and hold back men striuinglie rushing into sinne then that God himselfe hanging vpon the Crosse might be sent to meete them Who will be so rash and foole-hardie that he dare offend GOD when he seeth before him both Paradice open and hell enlarging her mouth yet it is much greater then that to see God hanging vpon the Crosse. He that is not mooued with thys sight I know not truly vvith what other thing he will be mooued THE FIFT TITLE How wee are bound to follow Vertue by reason of our Iustification CHAP. V. WHat had the benefit of Redemption profited vs if the benefit of Iustification had not followed by which the vertue of that most excellent benefit is applyed vnto vs For euen as a plaister is of no vse if it bee not applyed to the wound or to the diseased place so there had beene no profit of that heauenly medicine if it had not beene applyed by this benefit Which dutie especially appertaineth to the holy Ghost to whom the sanctification of man is attributed For he it is that by his mercie preuenteth a sinner afterwards calleth him and beeing called iustifieth him and beeing iustified directeth him by the paths of righteousnes and so bringeth him by the gyft of perseuerance to the end of his course and race vntill at the length he bestoweth vpon him the crowne of glory for this benefit comprehendeth in it all the other benefits Amongst all these benefits that of Vocation and Iustification is the first which is when as by the vertue of this diuine Spirit the chaynes and snares of sinne beeing broken and burst man escapeth the rule and tyrannie of the deuill is raysed from death to life of a sinner is made righteous of a child of curse malediction is made the child of God Which cannot by any meanes be brought to passe without the peculier help ayde of God which the Lord testifieth in plaine words vvhen hee sayth No man can come to mee except my Father draw him signifying that no strength of mans nature can deliuer a man from sinne and bring him vnto grace vnlesse the arme of the diuine power helpe him Thomas Aquinas dooth thus comment vpon these words Euen as a stone sayth hee alwaies of his owne nature falleth downevvards neyther can lift it selfe vpwards without externall helpe so man by reason of the corruption of sinne dooth alwayes tend downewards that is he doth alwaies slide to the loue and desire of earthly things but if hee be to be lifted vp aboue that is to the loue to a supernaturall desire of heauenly things he hath neede of the right hand of the highest and of the Diuine helpe Thys sentence is to be noted and obserued for by this a man doth come to the knowledge of himselfe and vnderstandeth the corruption of his owne nature and knoweth how necessary the continuall prayer for the Diuine helpe is Therefore that we may returne to our purpose man by his owne strength cannot be deliuered from sinne and brought to grace because necessarily the hande of the Lorde is required which must deliuer him But who can declare what other great benefits are contained in this alone For seeing without all controuersie that by this sinne is banished and expelled out of the soule which ingendereth many euils in it howe great a good will that be which doth cast and driue out all these euills But seeing that the consideration of this benefit doth very much stir vp man to gratitude and to the desire of vertue heere by the way I will declare the great blessings which this onely good is wont to bring with it First by it man is reconciled to God and is brought and admitted to his fauour and friendship For the first and chiefest of all euils which sinne bringeth to the soule is that it maketh man an enemie to God who seeing that he is infinite goodnes aboue all things he hateth and curseth sinne Therefore sayth the Prophet Thou hatest all them that worke iniquitie thou shalt destroy them that speake lyes He addeth furthermore that God abhorreth and detesteth the bloody man and deceitfull Thys is the greatest of all euils and the roote and fountaine of all the rest as on the contrary side to be loued of God is the greatest of all blessings and the cause and originall of them From thys so dangerous an euill by this benefit of Iustification we are deliuered by which wee are reconciled to God and of enemies made friends vnto him and that not in a common degree of friendship but in the highest which may be found of the Father towards the sonne The Euangelist Iohn worthily commendeth this fauour and friendship when he saith Behold what loue the Father hath shewed vnto vs that we should be called and be indeede the sonnes of GOD. He is not content to say
will be so in his old age Of these and such like coniectures which are found amongst the Doctours of the Church hee that is such an one may with humility assure himselfe of the infinite goodnes of God that he is one of the number of the Elect. For as he hopeth in the infinite goodnes of God to be saued so hee may humbly presume that he is one of their number who are to be saued seeing that the one doth presuppose the other Which seeing that it is so I pray thee consider with thy selfe ô man with how great a pledge the Lord doth hold thee bound vnto him for this vnmeasurable benefit that is that thou art written in that booke of the which our Redeemer sayth to his Apostles In this reioyce not that the spirits are subdued vnto you but rather reioyce because your names are written in the booke of life How vnmeasurable therefore is this benefit to be loued and to be elected from that eternity from which God was God To rest in his most sweet breast euen from the beginning of all eternity To be accounted for the adopted sonne of God then when his naturall sonne was begotten in the glory and splendour of all the Saints who were present in his diuine vnderstanding Consider therefore dilligently all the circumstances of this election and thou shalt see euery one of them to be singuler very great benefits and also to bring new bonds and obligations with them Consider first the dignity of him who hath elected thee who himselfe is God happy and infinitely rich who neyther needeth thine nor any mans riches else Consider how vnworthy he is who is elected if thou considerest his nature and quality for he is a miserable and mortall creature subiect to all the infirmities miseries and pouerty of this life guiltie of hell fire both for an other mans and also for his owne sinne Thirdly marke how excellent the election it selfe is after that thou art elected to an end so high then the which a greater cannot be that is that thou mayest be made a sonne of God an heire of his kingdome and a pertaker of his glory Consider fourthly how free this election is when it is as wee haue sayd before any merrit of thine of the onely lyking and ordinance of the diuine will and as the Apostle sayth for the glory and praise of the bounty and fauour of God But a benefit the freer it is the more it doth hold a man bound Fiftly the antiquity of this election is to be looked vnto for it did not begin when the world was made but it is much more auncient then the world it selfe yea it is of the same age with God himselfe who as he is from euerlasting so he loueth his elect from euerlasting and loueth them still and will loue them for euer whom he beholdeth with his fatherly eyes and those truly fauoring being alwayes mindfull to what an excellent good he hath ordayned and predestinated them Sixtly the rarenes of this benefit is to be considered after that among so many nations of barbarous men in such a multitude of the damned the Lord would call thee to so happy an estate that thou shouldest be in the number of them which are elected to eternall life And therefore he seperated thee from the masse of the corruption of mankind condemned for sinne out of the leauen of corruption hath changed thee into Angels food In this consideration few things are found that may be written but many things that may be considered of in the minde that thou mayest be thankfull to the Lord for the perticularity of this benefit which is so much the more by how much the number of the elect is lesser and the number of those greater that are to be damned which number as Salomon sayth is infinite But if none of these things doe moue thee at the least let the greatnes of the costs and charges moue thee which the most bountifull Lord determined to make by reason of this benefit as are the life of his onely begotten sonne and his blood shed in the cause of this benefit as who had determined from euerlasting to send him into this world that he might be the executor of this determination Which seeing that it is so can there be any time long enough and sufficient to consider of so great mercy of God What tongue can euer vtter it sufficiently What hart can perfectly feele and tast it To be briefe by what duties can he recompence it And with what loue can man answere vnto this diuine loue Who will be so ingratefull that will refuse now at the length to loue him of whom hee hath beene beloued from all eternity Who will change him for any other friend For seeing that in the holy Scriptures an auncient friend is so highly praysed and had in great estimation who would change the possession and fauour of this most auncient friend with all the friends of the world And if the possession of a thing time out of minde doth giue authority and right to him that in deede hath no right vnto it what shall this eternall possession doe by which the Lord doth possesse vs that by the title of this friendship we may be reputed his By these it is manifest that no good may be found in the world which is to be changed with this good neyther that there are any such great euils which are not to be borne for the loue of this good Who I pray thee can be so dull blockish and inconsiderate that being taught by diuine reuelation that some begger which daily in the streetes from dore to dore doth seeke his bread is predestinate of God after this maner would not kisse the earth whereon he treadeth with his feete Would not giue place vnto him And bending his knees with great humility would not wish well vnto him and gratulate him with these words ô thou happy and blessed man art thou one of the blessed number of the elect Shalt thou reioyce in that happy company of Angels Shalt thou sing that heauenly musicke Shalt thou possesse that euerlasting and eternall kingdome Shalt thou contemplate and view that bright and glorious shining face of Christ O happy is that day in which thou wast borne but much more happy is that day in which thou shalt dye to the world for then thou shalt begin to liue an eternall and immortall life Happy is the bread with which thou art fed happy is the earth which thou treadest vpon for that doth carry an incomparable treasure Blessed are the tribulations which thou sufferest and the neede which doth presse thee Because they doe open a way to thee which leadeth to eternall life What cloude of calamities or tribulations shall be so thicke which will not vanish and be expelled at so great hope These and such like are the words with which wee would moue and perswade any man whom we knew certainly to
thou hast loued with so an inordinate loue much lesse the Idols which thou adoredst what doe I say that they cannot helpe thee Yea those things which thou louedst most and which were in the greatest estimation with thee these then most of all shall vexe and torment thee tell me I pray thee when thou seest thy selfe left in this danger what minde or what courage wilt thou haue Whether wilt thou goe What wilt thou doe Whom wilt thou call vnto To returne to lyfe it will be vnpossible but to depart out of life it will be intollerable to stay longer in this life it shall not be giuen vnto thee what then wilt thou doe In that day saith the Lord God by his Prophet I will euen cause the sunne to goe downe at noone and I will darken the earth in the cleere day and I will turne your feasts into mourning and all your songs into lamentation and I will make it as the mourning of an onely sonne and the end thereof as a bitter day O fearefull words ô dreadfull sentence shaking all harts In that day sayth he the sunne shal goe downe at noone for in that houre the multitude of their offences shall be set before sinners and they seeing the deuine iustice to cut off the thred of their life some of them shall be strucken with so great feare and trembling and shall be so destitute of all hope and trust that they shall suppose themselues to be reprobate and vtterly excluded from the diuine mercy Be it that as yet they are in the noone mid-day that is that they are in the course of their life which is time as yet to for sake their sinfull wayes and to lay hold on Christ yet they shall perswade themselues that this time is ouer-past and that all grace and fauour is shut vp from them The most powerfull and mightiest perturbation of the minde is feare which supposeth euery small thing to be great and alwayes dreadeth things absent as present If a small feare of any thing doth this what shall that true feare doe conceaued of so fearefull and capitall dangers Be it that yet they suruiue and that they are placed in this life in the midst of their friends neuerthelesse they suppose that they as it were experiment and feele the dolours and punishments of the damned At one and the selfe same time they thinke themselues aliue and dead and they being caught with the sorrow of present things which they are to leaue they begin to feele the future euils which they feare They iudge them blessed and happy who are left in this world and of this enuy new sorrowes arise and increase Therfore then the sunne goeth downe at noone vnto them when they casting their eyes euery way shall see euery where entrance into heauen to be shut and denied vnto them neyther any beame of light shall appeare or shine vnto them For if they looke vnto the mercy of God they shall suppose themselues vnworthy that God should haue mercy on them if they flye vnto the diuine iustice they shall suspect that all cruell tortures are prepared for them and that hetherto their day hath beene but now that the day of the Lord doth hang ouer them yea they shall thinke that euen now it beginneth If they call to minde their life past euery part of that doth reprehend them if they behold the present time they see that now they are dying if the future time which is now at hand they see the Iudge sitting vpon his tribunall and expect iudgement from him Being compassed with so many causes of feare what will they doe whether will they goe The Prophet proceedeth And I will darken the earth in the cleere day that is those things which heeretofore were wont sweetly to delight thee now they shal exceedingly torment thee and shall strike and thrust through thy soule with intollerable stings and pricks of griefe It is pleasant and delightfull to a man liuing and in health to see his children to enioy his friends to gouerne his houshold to haue much riches and to possesse with pleasure whatsoeuer the minde desireth But then all that pleasure shall be turned into sorrow For all these afore-sayde with most bitter torments shall rend and cut in peeces thy miserable conscience and they shall be sharpe speares to wound their louers It is naturall that as the possession and presence of a thing which we loue doth ioy vs and make vs merry so the absence of the same thing doth bring heauines and sorrowe Hence it is that the sonnes doe flie the presence of their dying father and the louing and religious wife being full of anguish doth hide her selfe from her husbands face least by her presence she might encrease his dolours For although the soule being by and by to be seperated from the body hath a long and dangerous iourney to goe yet the great greefe doth not permit any obseruation of the termes of humanity and ciuility neyther doth it graunt the soule euen now iourneying before her departure to bid farewell to her friends If thou my Reader at anie time shall come to this passe thou shalt surely vnderstand that I speake nothing but truth but if thou as yet neuer camst into this danger at least beleeue them which haue had experience of these things For they that saile ouer the Sea as the Wiseman sayth tell of the perils thereof If therefore they be such and so great which goe before this dolorous and lamentable seperation what manner and how great doest thou thinke that they will be which shall follow after If the preparation be so great what shall the solemnity it selfe be For straight-wayes after death the account shall follow which that most iust Iudge shall require of the soule which how mightily it is to be feared I would not haue thee to learne of the men of this world who as they dwell in Egipt that is in a Land of darkues so they liue in great blindnes and intollerable errours But in this matter aske counsaile of the Saints of God who dwell in the Land of Goshen in which alwayes the light of truth shineth and they will teach thee not onely with words but also by examples how greatly this account is to be feared Without doubt King Dauid was a most holy man neuerthelesse so great was his feare which he conceaued being mindfull of rendring this account that he sayd in his prayer to the Lord Enter not ô Lord into iudgement with thy seruant for in thy sight shal none that liueth be iustified Arsenius was a holy man who yet when he should dye began to weepe and to tremble after that manner that his Schollers who stoode about him being moued at this his trembling asked and sayd vnto him Father why weepest thou Why doest thou tremble What doest thou also feare To whom he aunswered I feare in truth and verity and this feare which now is
very well That hee beholdeth the earth and hee maketh it to tremble he toucheth the mountaines and they smoake And that the starres and pillers of heauen tremble and quake at his reproofe And it is said of him not without reason that before his maiesty those great principalities and supreame powers doe tremble not because they are not secure of their owne glory but because the greatnes of the diuine Maiesty doth strike feare and trembling into them If therfore they that be perfect be not without feare what shal they doe that are guilty and contemners of the diuine Maiesty They are those vpon whom hee wil poure out the fury of his indignation This is one of the principal reasons why the greatnes of this punishment is to be feared as S. Iohn plainely teacheth in his Reuelation where he after this manner speaketh of the scourges and torments of the Lord. Therefore shall her plagues come at one day he speaketh of Babilon death and sorrow and famine and she shall be burnt with fire for strong is the Lord God which will condemne her The Apostle also was not ignorant of the strength of this Lord and therfore he sayd It is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the Lord. It is not a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of men because they are not so mighty but we may escape their violence and flye from their fury neyther haue they such authority that they can thrust the soule into hel Therfore our Sauiour sayd to his Disciples Feare not them that kill the body but cannot kill the soule but rather feare him who can cast both body and soule into hell fire These be the hands into which the holy Apostle sayth that it is a feareful thing to fall Of these things it is no hard matter to gather what is the nature of those hands of which Ecclesiasticus speaketh If we doe not repent we shall fall into the hands of the Lord and not into the hands of men By all which it is most manifest that as God is great in power in Maiestie and in all his works so he will be great in wrath in iustice and in the punishments of the wicked The same also is yet more plainly seene in examining the Diuine iustice the effects aud executions of which be these punishments Thys is after some manner knowen by the effects that is by the feareful punishments of God inflicted at diuers times vpon wicked men sundry of which are remembred in the Scriptures How terrible was the punishment of Dathan and Abiron and of all theyr complices whom the earth opening her mouth swallowed vp with theyr Tents and all their substance and they went quick into hel because they had stirred vp sedition against Moses and the Priests Who euer heard such like kind of threatnings as those that are read in Deuteronomie and they are purposed and threatned against thē who doe not obserue the Lawe of the Lord where amongst other horrible and feareful threatnings thus sayth the Lord Thou shalt be besieged in all thy Citties throughout all thy Land which the Lord thy God hath giuen thee And thou shalt eate the fruite of thy bodie euen the flesh of thy sonnes and thy daughters which the Lord thy God hath giuen thee during the siege and straightnes wherein thine enemies shall enclose thee So that the man that is tender and exceeding daintie among you shal be grieued at his brother at his wife that lieth in his bosome at the remnant of his children which he hath yet left For feare of giuing vnto any of them of the flesh of his children whom he shall eate because he hath nothing left him in that siedge and straightnes wherwith thine enemie shall besiedge thee in all thy Citties The tender and daintie woman among you which neuer would venter to sette the sole of her foote vpon the ground for her softnesse and tendernesse shall be grieued at her husband vvhich lieth in her bosome and at her sonne and at her daughter and at her after birth that shall come out from betweene her feete and at her children which shee shall beare for when all things lacke shee shall eate them secretlie during the siedge and straightnesse vvhere-with thine enemie shall besiedge thee in thy Citties Horrible and to be trembled at are these punishments yet both these and al other with which men haue at any time been punished in this world are no other thing then a smal shadow and a figure of those punishments which tarry for the damned in the other world for that shall bee the time in which the Diuine iustice shal shine vpon and against those that heere haue refused his mercy But if the shadow be so horrible who shal be able to sustaine the truth of the matter and the thing it selfe If now when as the Diuine iustice is as yet tempered with mercy and the cup of the wrath of the Lord is mixed with the water of his grace be so bitter what will it be when it shall be drunke pure without mercy especially of those that would shewe no mercy to theyr neighbour although the punishment will alwayes be lesse then the desert and merrit of the sinne Neyther onely dooth the greatnesse of the iustice argue the greatnes of the punishment but also the greatnes of the mercie of the goodnes of which wicked men presume so much For what is more admirable then to see GOD clothed with mans flesh and in it to suffer all kinde of torments reproches euen from his entrance into this life to his going foorth of it which he ended vpon the Crosse What greater mercy then to come into this world and to take vppon him the debts of the vvhole world that he might disburthen the world of them to shed his blood for them who shedde his blood Therefore as the works of the Diuine mercie are admirable so are the workes of the Diuine iustice to be feared for there is not in God lesser or greater but seeing that God is wholy and all that hee is in himselfe therefore as much as his mercie is so much necessarilie is his iustice in those things that pertaine vnto it For euen as by the greatnes of one arme we gather the quantity of the other so by the greatnes of the arme of the Diuine mercy we measure also the quantity of the Diuine iustice seeing that there is one and the same measure of them both Now therefore tell me I pray thee if in that time in vvhich GOD would shewe his mercy to the world hee wrought so admirable things and so incredible to the world that the world supposed them to be foolishnes when the time of hys second comming shall approch in which he determineth to shewe the greatnesse of his iustice what doost thou thinke that hee vvill doe hauing so many moe greater occasions by howe much there
shall be moe and greater offences of men For the mercie of GOD had not any thing that might prouoke it or desire it seeing there was nothing in mans nature that might deserue it but the Diuine iustice shal haue so many pricks motiues and pullers on for reuengement as there hath been sinnes committed in thys world ánd of these sufficient coniectures may bee taken how great and howe terrible the Diuine iustice will be This thing Saint Bernard excellently declareth in a certaine sermon of the Natiuitie of our Lord Looke how milde gentle he was saith he in his first comming so hard and inexorable will he be in his second and as now there is no man that may not be reconciled so after a short time there shal be no man that may Because as the gentlenes and benignitie appeared beyond all hope and esteeme so we must expect the sharpnes and seueritie of the iudgement to be God is vnmeasurable infinite in iustice as he is in mercy great to pardon great to punish but mercy doth challenge the first place that if we will iustice might not be found vpon whom it should be extended This sayth Bernard By thys it sufficiently appeareth how that by the mercie of God the quantitie of his iustice may be gathered The diuine Psalmographer doth most excellently shew thē both This is our God sayth he euen the GOD that saueth vs and to the Lord God belong the issues of death Sure God wil wound the head of his enemies the hearie pate of him that walketh in his sinnes Thou seest by these my brother that the Lorde is as seuere to his enemies and to those that rebell against him as he is kinde and mercifull to his friends The same thing the Diuine pacience doth most plainly teach which hee vseth as well towards the whole world as towards all sorts of men good and euill For we see many men so disordered and dissolute and of so reprobate a life that from the first time that they begin to open theyr eyes of reason euen to the last day of theyr life doe consume and spend the greater part of theyr life in offending God and contemning his diuine commaundements hauing neither respect nor regard of the promises threatnings benefits or coūsels of God or of any other thing Neuerthelesse in al the time of theyr life the great goodnes of God wayteth for them wyth great patience not cutting off the thred of theyr life not ceasing to call them by many wayes to repentance although he see no token of amendement in them But when that long patience shal come to an end if he shal poure vpon them the store-house of his wrath whom so many yeeres by little and little he hath beene gathering into the bosome of his iustice with what force with what violence thinkest thou that they shal be ouerwhelmed What other thing would the Apostle signifie when he said Despisest thou the riches of his bountifulnesse and patience long sufferance not knowing that the bountifulnesse of GOD leadeth thee to repentance But thou after thine hardnesse and hart that cannot repent heapest vnto thy selfe wrath against the day of vvrath of the declaration of the iust iudgement of God Who will reward euerie man according to his workes What is it that he sayth thou heapest wrath vnto thy selfe but that hee may signifie that as one gathering a treasurie doth daily adde a penny to a penny doth heape riches to riches for so the masse dooth increase so the Lord doth euery day enlarge the heape of his wrath as the wicked man by his ill actions dooth increase accounts to be rendered for them Tell mee I pray thee if any man in gathering treasure should so closely and diligently sticke to it that neyther any day or houre should passe in which hee woulde not adde somewhat to it and that by the space of fiftie or sixtie yeeres if at any time afterwards he should vnlock his doore enter into his treasure house what great store of treasure should he finde there O vnhappy man doost thou not marke that neyther day nor houre passeth in which thou doost not augment the heape of Gods wrath which is reserued for thy destruction that is increased and augmented by euery sinne that thou committest For although there were no other thing but the dishonest looke of thine eyes the impure thought or vncleane desire and the hatred of thine hart the word and periurie of thy mouth these were enough alone to fill the whole world But if to these all thy other vices sinnes be ioyned meditate I pray thee what an vnmeasurable masse of the wrath of GOD thou hast heaped to thy selfe by the space of so many yeares If the ingratitude and maliciousnes of peruerse men be well searched into they will shewe vnto vs the greatnesse of the Diuine punishments That thys is true consider the goodnesse and liberalitie of GOD towards men consider moreouer that which he dyd and sayd in thys world with that which he suffered for them all Consider also the commodities and necessaries for the vse of men prepared of hym that they might liue well and all other things that he hath pardoned vnto sinners or winked at how many blessings he hath bestowed vpon them and from hovve many euils he hath deliuered them and many other kind of fauours and benefits which daily he bestoweth vpon them All these things increase and multiply the heape of Gods vvrath Moreouer call to thy minde the forgetfulnesse and negligence of men towards God and also theyr ingratitude and rebellion lastly their blasphemies and contempt as well of God himselfe as of his commaundements which are so great that not onely they looke for no gaine or profit of theyr sinning but oftentimes of onely maliciousnes they tread foolishly all that vnder theyr feete which the Lord hath commaunded He therefore that without any reuerence or shamefastnes despiseth so great a Maiestie no otherwise then if he were some Figge-tree God who so often as Paule speaketh hath troden vnder-foote the son of God and hath counted the blood of the Testament as an vnholie thing wherewith he was sanctified he that so often hath crucified him with his works worse then the works of Pagans what other thing is to be looked for of him when the houre of rendering an account shall come then that he giue the honour to God or suffer so much punishment as he hath iniured God For seeing that GOD is a iust Iudge it is his duety to bevvare that the punishments be not lesse then the iniuries done but that they be like to the sinne of him who hath beene iniurious In thys case if it be God to whom the iniurie is doone vvhat sentence shall be pronounced against the body and soule of the condemned that the iniury doone may bee recompenced by worthy punishment But if in the satisfaction of the offence done to God the
all their tribulations This Dauid confesseth in his Psalmes when he sayth Thou vpholdest me in mine integritie and doost sette mee before thy face for euer That is thou neuer turnest thine eyes from me for that contitinuall care thou hast of mee Also hee sayth in another place The eyes of the Lord are vpon the righteous and his eares are open vnto theyr cry But the face of the Lord is against them that do euill to cutte off theyr remembrance from the earth But because the greatest riches of a good Christian is the prouidence which God beareth ouer him this the more certaine it is and better knowne vnto man the greater is his ioy confidence I thinke that I shall doe a thing worth the labour if I shall adde and bring hether moe places and testimonies of the sacred Scripture seeing that euery one of them are as the Charters and Letter-pattents of a King and new confirmations of the rich promises and legacies of his diuine will Therefore Ecclesiasticus sayth The eyes of the Lord are vpon them that feare him and he knoweth all the workes of man hee is their mighty protection and strong ground a defence from the heate and a shadow for the noone day a succour from stumbling and an help from falling he setteth vp the soule and lightneth the eyes he giueth health life and blessing Hetherto are the words of Ecclesiasticus out of which it is euident and plaine to euery man how many kind of duties there be which GOD supplyeth in the preseruation of man This the Prophet Dauid confirmeth The paths of man are directed by the Lord for he loueth his way Though he fall he shal not be cast of for the Lord putteth vnder his hand Consider I pray thee heere what ill can happen vnto him who falleth vpon a bolster so soft as is the hand of the Lord our God And in another place Many great sayth he are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord deliuereth him out of them all He keepeth all his bones not one of them is broken In the New Testament also more excellent magnificent things are spoken of this diuine prouidence where the Lorde sayth that he onely hath not a care of the bones of the righteous but also of euery one of theyr haires that they fall not nor perrish without his prouidence willing after this manner of speaking to insinuate and intimate vnto vs his greatest and speciallest prouidence towards them For of what thing shall not he haue care who hath a care of all our haires If this seeme too much vnto thee heare that which is no lesse which God speaketh by his Prophet Hee that toucheth you toucheth the apple of mine eye It had beene sufficient to haue sayd hee that toucheth you toucheth me but it is more that he saith he that toucheth any part of you toucheth the apple of mine eye Neyther is our most bountifull Lord content that he hymselfe should alone watch-ouer our safetie but he also willeth that the Angels should be ready to doe vs seruice for so wee read in the Psalmes Hee hath giuen his Angels charge ouer thee to keepe thee in all thy waies they shall beare thee in theyr handes that thou hurt not thy foote against a stone Didst thou euer see I pray thee such a Chariot or Wagon as are the hands of Angels See therfore how the Angels who are our elder brethren doe beare the righteous in their armes who are their younger brethren who as yet know now how to walk alone but must be carryed in the armes of their elders And this they doe not onely in life but also in death at the history in the Gospell testifieth of the rich Glutton in which we see that the begger Lazarus after death was carryed of Angels into Abrahams bosome The diuine Psalmographer confirmeth this The Angell of the Lord pitcheth round about them that feare him and deliuereth them How mightie and strong this garde is the translation of S. Ierome dooth more expresse The Angell of the Lorde compasseth and encircleth them that feare him that he may deliuer them What King was euer founde that had such a garde as our Lord hath giuen vnto vs This is most manifestly seene in the bookes of the Kings the King of Syria comming to take the Prophet Elizeus brought a great Armie with him vvhich the seruaunt of the Prophet seeing feared and began to tremble But the Prophet turning to his prayer prayed the Lorde that hee would vouchsafe to open the eyes of his vnbeleeuing seruant that he might see the Armie which stoode for the defence of the Prophet being stronger by infinite thousands then that which came to hurt and wrong him And hee opened the eyes of his seruant and he saw the Mountaine ful of horses and of fierie Charrets for the defence and gard of Elizeus Like to this gard is that which is mentioned in the Canticles in these words What shall you see in the Shulamite which is the Church or any soule liuing in the state of grace but as the company of an Army that is an Armie of Angels This same also in the same booke is explaned by an other figure when it is said Behold Salomons bedde threescore strong men are rounde about it of the valiant men of Israell They all handle the sword and are expert in warre euery one hath his sword vpon his thigh for the feare by night What other thing is this then that the holy Ghost by this figure might teach and show the great care singuler prouidence by which God defendeth and watcheth ouer the soules of the righteous For whence is it I pray thee that man being conceaued in sin liuing in a corrupt flesh bent to all euill should passe so many yeeres among so many snares and dangers without destruction and vtter ruine of himselfe if hee were not preserued sustayned by the Diuine prouidence Which is so great that it dooth not onely preserue men from euill but also oftentimes it dooth turne the very euills into which men fall through carelesnesse and negligence into a matter of greater good that is as often as by that they are made more wary more humble and more thankfull vnto him who hath drawne them back from so great danger and hath pardoned them so great a sinne For this cause the Apostle sayth Vnto them that loue God all things worke together for the best If this fauour and friendship be worthy of admiration that shall be more worthy that God doth not onely shew this mercy to his seruants but also to their sonnes and Nephewes and to all things that appertaine vnto them as God himselfe testifieth saying I am the Lord thy God a iealous God visiting the iniquity of the fathers vpon the children vpon the third generation and vpon the fourth of them that hate me And shewing mercy
brother of the louers of God this the sleepe which they sleepe Therefore with this sweete and amiable humming and murmuring and with this acceptable and delightfull harmony of the creatures the quiet soule is brought to bed and beginneth to sleepe that sleepelesse sleepe of which is written I sleepe and my hart watcheth When as therfore this most sweet Bridegrome seeth his spouse sleeping in his armes hee keepeth and preserueth her in that lyuing and vitall sleepe and commaundeth that none doe awake her saying I charge you ô daughters of Ierusalem by the Roes and by the Hinds of the field that yee stirre not vp nor waken my loue vntill she please Tell mee what nights seeme these vnto thee What night of the children of this world can be more sweet or pleasant Who at this time walke laying snares and setting nets for the chastity of virgins and innocent Matrons that they may destroy their good names their own soules rushing both body and soule into destruction heaping and storing vp for themselues the wrath of God against the day of the wrath of God and their owne perdition ¶ Of their comforts and consolations who first begin to serue God and are Punies and Nouices in his Schoole TO all things which hetherto haue beene spoken perhaps thou wilt ahnswere with one obiection saying these consolations and blandishments which wee haue hetherto handled are not common to all but proper vnto the perfect but that one may become perfect many things are required It is true that these belong to such men yet our most kind Lord by the sweetnes of his blessing doth meete with them who first begin giuing vnto them at the first as vnto children milke and afterwards teaching them to eate bread and more solide meates Doth not that solemne day come into thy minde which the father celebrated for his prodigall child Doost thou not know of the feast and the guesse inuited Art thou ignorant of the musicke and reioycing that there was made What doe these things meane but to signifie the spirituall ioy with which the soule is delighted when she seeth her selfe brought out of Egipt and deliuered from the hand of Pharao and from the seruitude of the deuill How shall not that pleasant banquet be prepared for a seruant made free How shall hee not inuite all creatures that they may meete together and with him giue thanks to his deliuerer How shall not he sing first and thereby also inuite others saying Let vs sing vnto the Lord for hee hath triumphed gloriously the horse and him that rode vpon him hath he ouerthrowne in the Sea Which thing if it be not so where is the prouidence of God which prouideth for euery creature most perfectly according to his nature fragility age and capacity For it is certaine that men yet carnall and drowned in the world cannot tread this vnusuall and vnfrequented path neyther tread the world vnder theyr feete vnlesse the Lord stretch forth his hand and preuent them by the like sweetenes and delectablenes It pertayneth therefore to the diuine prouidence when it is determined to take man from the world to prepare this way and to make it plaine that this new trauailer may walke more easily by it those difficulties being taken away which might terrifie him and draw him backe to the world A most excellent and plaine figure of this way is that by which the Lord brought the children of Israel into the Land of promise of which way thus writeth Moses When Pharaoh had let the people goe God carried them not by the way of the Philistims Countrey though it were neerer for God sayd least the people repent when they see warre and turne againe to Egipt The same prouidence that then God vsed in bringing his people out of Egipt into the Land of promise he now vseth in bringing those to heauen whom he first taketh out of this world We must know in this place that although the comforts and delights of the perfect are very great and excellent yet so great is the goodnes and piety of our God especially towards little ones and young beginners that he respecting their pouerty he himselfe doth helpe them to build them a new house and considering that they are conuersant among many occasions of sinning and that their passions are not as yet mortified that they might carry away the victory that they might be deliuered from the violence of their flesh that they might be driuen from the milke of the world and be tyed in such straight bonds of loue that they should not returne into Egipt and to theyr fathers house he filleth them with a ioy and consolation so powerfull that although they be but beginners and that they haue made but an entrance yet they haue according to their proportion a certaine likelyhood and similitude of the delights and ioy of those that be perfect Tell mee I pray thee what other thing would God signifie by those feasts of the old Testament when hee saith that the first and last day should be of equall worship and solemnity The sixe dayes betweene were of lesse solemnity but the first the last were beyond the rest famous and had their peculier prerogatiues What other thing is this then a shadow and an image of this we speake of Vpon the first day the Lord commanded that the same solemnity should be kept which was vpon the last that wee may vnderstand that in the beginning of the conuersion and in the ende of the perfection the Lord doth celebrate a solemne feast for all his seruants in these considering their proceedings in the other their great necessity vsing towards these iustice with mercy towards the other vsing onely grace or mercy to one giuing the reward of Vertue to the other help in need When trees blosome flourish and when they haue their ripe fruite they are most faire to the eye The day wherin the spousage is contracted and wherin the marriage is solemnized and the wedding consumated are more solemne and renowned then the rest In the beginning the Lord doth affiance and betroth the soule to him but when he taketh her into his house hee maketh a feast for her at his owne cost and charges and that feast is not conformable or aunswerable to the merrits and deserts of the Bride but to the riches of the Bridegrome sending all thinges and all prouision out of his owne houses and saying Wee haue a little sister and she hath no breasts Therefore it is necessary that he nourish his owne creature with the milke of an other Wherefore the same Bride talking with her Bridegrome sayth The young damsels haue loued thee He doth not say the women or Matrons which are soules founded and rooted in vertue but hee sayth young damsels young maydes which are soules which first begin to open their eyes and to looke vpon this new light these sayth the Spouse haue loued
soule in the midst of tribulations which is the effect of hope which hurleth and casteth foorth all carefulnesse and inordinate anxietie by that fauour which it expecteth of the Diuine mercie Not vnlike to thys is that of Ecclesiasticus Yee that feare the Lord beleeue in him and yee shall not be frustrated of your reward Ye that feare God hope in him and mercy shall come vnto you for pleasure Consider the old generations of men and marke them well was there euer any one confounded that put his trust in the Lorde And Salomon in his Prouerbs sayth Put thy trust in God with all thy hart and leane not vnto thine owne wit In all thy wayes acknowledge him and hee shall order thy goings Surely it is a great furtherance vnto hope to haue knowne the mercie of God not only by reading but much more by experience For a man hopeth through an assured affiance that hee will profit him who often hath profited others Hence is that of the Psalme They that know thy name will put theyr trust in thee for thou Lord hast neuer failed them that seeke thee He saith also in another psalme My trust hath beene in the Lord I will be gladde and reioyce in thy mercie The effect of thys hope the same man declareth when he sayth Who so putteth his trust in the Lord mercy embraceth compasseth him on euery side Hee sayth very well embraceth and compasseth that he might signifie that it shall keepe and garde him on euery side no otherwise then a King is encompassed with his Garde that he may be the more safe In another psalme he teacheth the same thing more at large I waited patiently saith he for the Lord and he enclined vnto mee and heard my calling He brought mee also out of the horrible pitte out of the mire and Clay and sette my feete vpon the Rocke and ordered my goings And hee hath put a newe song in my mouth euen a thanks-giuing vnto our GOD. Many shall see it and feare and shall put theyr trust in the the Lord. Blessed is the man that hath set his hope in the Lorde and turned not vnto the proude and to such as goe about with lies All these be the words of the Prophet in which hee also sheweth another effect of this Vertue that is the mouth and eyes of man are opened that hee may know by experience the goodnes and fatherly prouidence of God It is also a singuler fruite of hope that wee are not onely deliuered from dangers but also that there is a new prayse and a new thanksgiuing put into our mouthes which the Prophet insinuateth when hee sayth And he hath put a new song in my mouth c. He calleth it a new song which is sung for a new deliuerance with an vnusuall and new affection of mirth We shal not easily end this matter if wee should alledge all the verses and sometimes whole Psalmes written of this matter For the ninety and one Psalm and the hundreth and fiue and twenty are wholy imployed in commending this vertue vnto vs and to describe the excellent fruites of it which they enioy and ioy in who haue theyr trust and confidence in the Lord and dwell vnder his protection Saint Bernard writing vpon the ninth verse of the former Psalme Because thou ô Lord art my hope he sayth Whatsoeuer therefore is to be done whatsoeuer is to be eschewed whatsoeuer is to be borne whatsoeuer is to be wished ô Lord thou art my hope This is the onely cause of all my promises this is the whole reason of mine expectation Let one pretend merit let him boast that he hath borne the heate of the day let him say that he hath fasted twice a weeke lastly let him brag that hee is not like other men but it is good for mee to cleaue vnto the Lord and to put my trust in my Lord God If rewards be promised me I will hope that I shall obtaine them by thee if wars rise against me if the world rageth if the wicked fret and sume if the flesh lust against the spirit yet I will trust in thee For to what end are we wise if we doe not sticke and cleaue with all feruour and deuotion of soule and spirit to this solide sound perfect and blessed hope and cast away all other miserable vaine vnprofitable and seducing hopes A little after the same mellifluous Doctour by way of Dialogue doth thus reason Fayth sayth Great and inestimable blessings are prepared of God for those that serue him Hope sayth those are kept for me Charity sayth I runne vnto them Behold my brother thou doost see how great be the fruites of this vertue and profitable for what Hope is as a safe Hauen to which the righteous direct theyr course so often as any storme of the world rageth it is as a most strong shield vpon which all the darts of our enemies are receaued without any wound it is as a Store-house for foode whether in the time of famine all the poore may come haue bread It is that tabernacle couer and shadow which the Lord doth promise in Esay that hee will be to his elect a shadow to defend them from the heate of the day and a defence from the stormy tempest and from raine That is a safegard from all the aduersity and prosperity of the world To conclude it is the medicine and common remedy of all our euils and encumbrances For it is certaine that whatsoeuer we hope for of God iustly faithfully and wisely we shall obtaine it if it be conducent and appertayning to our saluation Therfore Cyprian calleth the mercy of God a fountaine or vvell of all blessings that cannot be drawne dry and our hope and trust a bucket or vessell in which those blessings are receaued and he sayth that according to the quantity of the vessell so is the proportion of the remedy For in respect of the fountaine the water of mercy neuer fayleth The Lord sayd to the children of Israel All the places that the soles of your feete shall tread vpon haue I giuen you So also all the mercy vpon which man shall set his foote shall be his Like to this is that He that taketh his motion or is moued of the Lord hee will hope all things neyther shall he be frustrated of his hope Whereby it is manifest that this hope is an imitation of the vertue and diuine power redounding to the glory of the same God Bernard was not ignorant of this when hee sayd Nothing doth make the omnipotency of the word more cleare then that it doth make all them omnipotent who hope in him Wilt thou know that this is true did not he pertake of the omnipotency of God who being vpon the earth commaunded the Sun that it should stand still in the midst of heauen and that it should not hasten to runne his course for the space of
righteous the hope of the wicked betweene the prosperity of the one and of the other What greater commodity can arise from a tree then to be planted after that maner that the Prophet speaketh Beleeue me such is the condition and estate of the righteous to whom all things fall out prosperously and with whō all things goe well because they are planted by the current of the Riuer of Gods grace But on the contrary part there can be no worser estate of a tree then to be wilde then to be planted in a dry ground in the wildernes in a land of salt it dooth not yeeld fruite in due season to be briefe it is farre remooued from the sight and tillage of men By thys comparison the wicked may easily vnderstand that they in thys life cannot haue a more miserable estate because they haue eyes remoued yea quite turned from God who is the fountaine of liuing water and haue theyr eyes sette and fixed and theyr hope reposed vpon frayle deceitfull creatures which are vnderstood by a dry land desert vnoccupied By this also it is manifest in how excellent a place the world it selfe is planted which certainly is planted in a dry barraine ground seeing it hath the footing of his hope placed on a foundation so weake which is no hope but errour vanitie and confusion as before we haue showen Tell me I pray thee vvhat misery can be greater then this what pouertie more naked thē to liue without hope Therefore seeing that man is through sinne left so poore and naked as before we haue declared and that the hope of the Diuine mercy is so necessary for him what shall bee left vnto him who hath lost it which might haue strengthened and confirmed him Wee see that all liuing creatures in theyr kinde are brought foorth perfect that nothing is wanting vnto them for the preseruation of theyr life But man through sinne is so desolate and so bereft of all things that hee hath nothing of those things which are needfull and necessary for him but he must liue of almes and be relieued from the diuine mercy Then if thys meanes be taken away what shall be the life of man Surely lame maimed full of a thousand defects What other thing is it to liue without hope then to liue without God What other thing is left vnto man of all his auncient patrimony to preserue his life besides this onely support and helpe What Nation was euer so barbarous so voyde of all religion that had not some knowledge of God or of some Dietie whom it did not worshyp with some certaine honour adoration of whom also it did not looke for some benefit of the Diuine prouidence In that short time that Moses was absent from the chyldren of Israell the people thought that they had beene vvithout a God and as rude and ignorant began to exclaime and to speak to Aaron Arise make vs Gods to goe before vs as if they durst not goe any further without some God Wherby it is manifest that mans nature although it alwayes knoweth not the true God yet it is necessary that it know some God And although man is ignorant of the cause of his owne frailtie yet he acknowledgeth his owne frailtie and for this naturally seeketh helpe of some God Euen as Iuie naturally seeketh for some post or tree which it may leane vnto or some wall by which it may bee supported and creepe aloft it beeing not able to sustaine and held vp it selfe And as a woman naturally seeketh for the supportation and shadow of man for she as an imperfect creature knoweth that the ayde and helpe of man is necessary for her so mans nature beeing needfull and wanting many things doth seeke for the shadow and refuge of God These things therefore beeing thus wee may easily coniecture what is the life of those men who liue in this wretched miserable widowish estate forsaking God and beeing forsaken of God I would gladly knowe this one thing They that lyue after thys manner how doe they comfort themselues in theyr miseries howe doe they defende themselues in dangers vvho doth cure theyr infirmities with whom doe they confer of their businesse of whom doe they aske counsaile in doubtfull matters of whom doe they seeke for help in theyr necessities with whom doe they traffique with whom are they conuersant whom doe they sticke to to be briefe by whose help doe they escape the snares of this life who haue not any refuge If the body cannot liue without the soule nor the soule without God surely God is no lesse necessary for the one life then the soule is for the other And if as we haue said before liuely hope be the anchor of our life how dare any man vndergoe the dangers of this tempestuous sea his shyp beeing destitute of this anchor of hope If hope be the shielde by which wee defend our selues how can men defend themselues in the midst of theyr enemies beeing without this shield If hope be the staffe by which mans nature is supported in all her weakenes and frailtie vvhat shall weake and feeble man doe without the staffe of this hope Hetherto as I thinke we haue sufficiently showed what is the difference betweene the hope of the righteous and of the wicked and what is the nature and condition of them both That is one of them hath God for his defence and bulwarke but the other the broken staffe of reede of Egipt which he that leaneth vpon it goeth into his hand and shooteth it through For it is meet that that error which he committeth in hoping in things so vncertaine and doubtfull relying altogether on them that he should be corrected no otherwise then by hauing mischance and being deceiued by them as the Prophet Ieremy plainlie testifieth who when he would denounce the destruction and ouerthrow of the kingdome of Moab he sayth thus For because thou hast trusted in thine owne workes and treasure thou shall bee taken and Chamos the God in whom thou trustest with his priests and Princes shall goe away into captiuitie Consider therefore what kinde of ayde that is the trust of which is the ruine and ouerthrow of him that so trusteth Therefore let these things suffise which haue beene spoken of the priuiledge and prerogatiue of hope which although it seeme almost to be the same with the speciall prouidence of God of which wee haue spoken before yet it is not the same for they differ betweene themselues as the effect and cause of a thing For although there be many foundations of thys hope as the goodnes of God truth of the same God and the merrits of Christ yet the principall ground is the fatherly prouidence of God from which ariseth thys hope confidence For to know that God hath so great a care ouer him and that he is defended and gouerned of him with so
the time of Achab king of Israell when Samaria was besieged by the Armie of the king of Syria we read that men did eate the dunge of Doues that thys kinde of meate was sold for a great price But thys was not so much at the length it came to that passe that mothers did kil and eate the chyldren of their owne wombe Iosephus also writeth that the same happened at the siege of Ierusalem But the slaughters and captiuities of this people together with the vtter ouerthrow of the Common-wealth and the kingdome of the Iewes are so well knowne to all that heere they neede not to be rehearsed An eleuen of theyr Tribes were made perpetuall seruants to the Kings of Assyria that one Trybe which remained a long time after beeing vanquished was brought into seruitude vnder the Romaines in which destruction exceeding great was the number of the captiues but greater was the number of those that were slaine as the same Historiographer copiously describeth Neyther let any one deceaue himselfe saying that this calamitie pertaineth onely to the Iewish nation seeing that it generally appertaineth to all men who haue knowledge of the Diuine law and doe despise it neyther will obey it as the Lord himselfe testifieth by his Prophet Haue not I brought vp Israell out of the Land of Egipt and the Philistines from Cappadocia and the Syrians from Cyrene Behold the eyes of the Lord God are vppon the sinfull kingdome and I will destroy it cleane out of the earth Signifying that all these changes of kingdoms whereby thys kingdome is ouerthrowne and that planted and raysed vp doth come through sinne And if any one will see that this is true let him read ouer the histories of times past he shal vnderstand how God doth chastice the froward and peruerse but especially those that haue the true law and doe not keepe it He shal see how great a part of Europe Asia and Affrica which in times past were full of Churches and of Christian people now are possessed of Infidels he shall know also what great massacres ruines and destructions the Gothes Hunnes and Vandales haue made vpon the Churches who in the time of Saint Augustine destroyed and wasted the Prouinces of Affrica and that without any mercie or compassion they sparing neyther men nor women neither old nor young neither Virgins nor married At the same time also and after the same manner the kingdome of Dalmatia was wasted with the bordering Countries as Saint Ierome showeth who was borne in that Country insomuch that he that should haue passed through trauelled those Countries should haue seene nothing but heauen and earth all things were so ruinated and ouerthrowen Yea if we will looke into our owne times we shall see what slaughters and effusion of Christian blood what desolations and euersions of Citties sinne hath caused in Fraunce Belgia and many other Countryes What mightie massacres and lamentable diuastations hath sinne brought vppon the world by the sword of the Turkes those professed enemies of Christianitie who stil brandish their swords against Christendome for the sinnes of Christians These sufficient plainly doe declare how that true vertue and sincere religion are not onely profitable to the obtayning of eternall blessings but also to gette and keepe temporall blessings that the consideration of all these may inflame our mindes with the loue of Vertue which preserueth vs from so many mischiefes bringeth with it so many good things Of the twelfth priuiledge of Vertue that is of the quiet peaceable ioyfull death of the righteous and contrarily of the wretched miserable painfull disquiet and grieuous death of sinners CHAP. XXIIII THE last priuiledge prerogatiue at the length is ioyned to the precedent that is the death and the glorious end of the righteous when they depart out of the prison of this body vnto the which end all the rest of the priuiledges are destinated and ordayned Because in the end as we are wont to say the praise is proclaimed Tell mee what is more glorious or what more delightsome then the end of the iust and righteous And contrarilie what is more wretched or vnhappy then the death of sinners Right deere and precious saith the Psalmogapher in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints but the death of sinners is vilde and exceeding euill What meaneth thys vvord Exceeding euill vttered in the Superlatiue degree Because thys is the last and greatest of all euils as well for the soule as for the body After thys manner S. Bernard doth expound this of the Psalmist The death of sinners is exceeding euill Because it is euill in losing the world worser in the seperation of the flesh but exceeding euill in that double calamitie of the worme and of the fire It is grieuous to leaue the worlde more grieuous that the soule is seperated from the body but exceeding grieuous and in no wise to be compared vnto the other to be tortured vvith the torments of hell Both these and many moe miseries shall vexe and turmoile the wicked in this houre For then before and aboue all things the accidents of thys infirmitie shall surmount the griefes of the body the terrors of the soule and the afflictions of externall things the thoughts of things to come the remembrance of sinnes past the feare to giue an account the dreadfull sentence the horrour of the graue the seperation and departure from euery thing that was too deere and imbraced with an inordinate loue that is from riches friends wife children from this light from the ayre wherein we breathe and from life it selfe All euery one of these so much the more doe afflict a man by how much they are loued For as Augustine sayth They are not lost without griefe which are possessed with loue Therefore it was very well said of a Phylosopher Hee that in his life knoweth of fewest delights least of all other feareth death But most of all in that houre the burned and feared conscience and the consideration of that which is prepared for them doth excruciate vexe the vvicked For then man beeing raised as it were out of a deepe sleepe by the presence of Death openeth hys eyes and beginneth to behold and see that which he neuer saw before Eusebius Emisse●●s giueth a reason of this At what passe will man be then at sayth hee when bidding his last farewell to all worldly matters hauing death before him leauing life behind him he shal be drawn into that horrible fearefull gulfe For there shall be no preparation for victuals or care for cloathing no busines for Labourers Souldiers or Traffickers no ambition for wealth or honour but there an intollerable terror of giuing an account shall fill and possesse the minde being free from all other cares and the heauy and vnsupportable weight of iudgment shal dreadfully hang ouer the captiue sences Then man forgetteth all thinges
worlde for his sake shall receaue an hundreth fold heere and shall inherite euerlasting life Behold therefore my brother what an excellent good it is that hetherto I haue shewed thee behold to what I inuite thee consider whether any will say that thou art deceaued if for the loue of it thou shalt forsake the world and all things which are therein Onely one inconuenience this good hath if so that it may be called an incōuenience why it is not esteemed amongst wicked men that is because it is not knowen vnto them For this cause our Sauiour said That the kingdome of heauen was like vnto a treasure hid for this good is indeede a treasure but hid not to these that possesse it but to others That Prophet very well knew of the price of this treasure who said My secret to my selfe my secret to my selfe Hee regarded not whether others knew of his treasure or no for this good is not of the nature of other goods which are not good vnlesse they be known of others vvherefore they are not good of themselues but only in the estimation of the world and therefore it is necessarie that they be knowen vnto him of whom they are so called But thys good maketh his possesser good and happy and doth noe lesse warme heate his hart when he knoweth of it alone then when the whole world knoweth it But my tongue is not the key of the Casket of this secret and much lesse of all those things which hetherto haue been spoken for whatsoeuer mans tongue can vtter is much lesse thē the truth of the thing it selfe The Diuine light experience and vse is the key of vertues I would that thou shouldest desire thys key of GOD that thou mayst finde this treasure yea God himselfe in whō thou shalt finde all things and thou shalt see with what great reason the Prophet said Blessed is the people whose GOD the Lorde is For what can be wanting vnto him who possesseth this good It is written in the bookes of the Kings that Elcana the Father of Samuell said to his wife sorrowing because shee vvas barren and had no chyldren Anna why weepest thou and why catest thou not and why is thine hart troubled Am not I better to thee then tenne sonnes If a good husband who is to day and to morrow is not be better to his wife then tenne sonnes what thinkest thou of God what will hee be to that soule that possesseth him O men what doe ye whether looke ye what doe ye regard why doe ye leaue the fountaine of Paradice drinke of the muddy Cesterns of thys world Why doe ye not follow the good counsaile of the Prophet who saith O tast see how gracious and sweet the Lord is Why doe we not once assay thys Fourd why doe wee not once tast of these bankets Haue trust to the words of the Lord and beginne and he shal deliuer thee from all danger Terrible and fearefull seemed that Serpent a farre off into which Moses rodde was turned but when it was handled it returned to the old forme againe Not without cause saide Salomon It is naught it is naught saith he that buy●th but when hee commeth to his owne house then hee boasteth of his penny-worth Thys hapneth daily to men in this busines For not knowing at the beginning the value of this merchandize because they thēselues are not spirituall neither know they of what esteeme it is and vnderstanding what is requested for it because they are carnall they thinke it is too deere and not worth the price But when they once beginne to tast how sweet the Lord is foorthwith they boast of their merchandize and they confesse that no price is too high or too much to be giuen for this incomparable good Consider how the Merchant in the Gospel cheerfully sold all that he had that he might buy the field in which the treasure was hid Therfore for what cause doth not a Christian man this name being heard contend to know what it is Certainly it is a matter of wonder if any tatler or tale-bearer should tell thee that in thy house there is treasure hidde thou wouldest not rest to digge and delue and to seeke and try whether it were true or no that hee had said But when the Lorde himselfe affirmeth that within thee in thy soule thou hast an inestimable treasure hid canst thou not be brought to seek for it O how soone shouldest thou sinde this treasure if thou onelie knewest how nigh the Lord is vnto them that call vpon him in truth How many men haue their beene in this world vvho considering of their sinnes and perseuering in prayer and desiring remission of them haue in lesse time then a weeke opened the earth or that I may speake better haue found a new heauen and a newe earth and haue begunne to feele in them the kingdome of God How great is it which that Lord doth who saith At what tyme soeuer a sinner doth repent him of his sinnes I will put them out of my remembrance How great was that which that good Father did who scarcely that short prayer of the Prodigall beeing ended could no longer containe himselfe but he must needes embrace him and receaue him into his house with great mirth and feasting Returne therefore my brother to thys gracious fauourable Father and whilst it is time lift vp thy hart vnto him and cease not for some fewe dayes vncessantly to call and knock at the gates of his mercy and assuredly beleeue mee if thou shalt perseuer with humilitie at the length the Lord shall make aunswere vnto thee and shall show thee the hid treasure of his loue which when thou shalt haue tasted and assaied thou wilt say with the Spouse in the Canticles If a man woulde giue all the good of his house for loue he should count it nothing The end of the second part THE THIRD PART OF THE SINNERS GVIDE In which aunswere is made to all those excuses by which those men are wont to excuse and defend themselues who will not embrace Vertue Against the first excuse of those who deferre and put off from day to day the amendment of their lifes and the embracing of Vertue CHAP. XXV I Thinke that no man can deny but that those things are sufficient which hetherto haue beene spoken of vs yea and that they sufficientlie and plentifully doe approoue our principall purpose and intent which wee promised at the beginning to discourse a●d dispute of That is that we might moue the harts of men Gods grace being first presupposed to the loue and study of Vertue But although we may be thought to haue satisfied and performed our promise yet the malitiousnes of men haue excuses which haue a show of truth by which they defend their lingering and loytering negligence and still comfort and please themselues in their wickednes as Ecclesiasticus intimateth and insinuateth
thou beleeuest not that thou shalt finde pardon vvith God what greater foolishnesse can there be then to sinne without hope of forgiuenes But if thou beleeuest that thou shalt finde him good gracious fauourable and mercifull vnto thee who albeit thou offendest him often yet he is ready to forgiue thee thy sinnes tell me I pray thee what greater frowardnesse or peeuishnesse can there be then to take further occasion to offend him where there is greater cause that thou shouldest loue him What can be aunswered to this argument What wilt thou say vnto mee as concerning those reares which hereafter thou must plentifully shed for the sinnes which now thou committest For if God call thee out of this life or visit thee euery morsell that thou now eatest shall then be more bitter vnto thee then gall and remember that then thou shalt alwayes lament and deplore that which but once thou didst commit That day at length will come make no doubt of it when thou shalt wish to haue suffered a thousand kinde of punishments then once to haue offended God The time that Dauid enioyed his pleasures was very short but the time that he lyued in sorrow and dolour for them was exceeding long as he testifieth of himselfe saying I am weary of my grouing euerie night wash I my bed and water my couch with my teares So aboundant were his teares that the translation of Ierome hath for I wash my bed I make my bed to swim signifying the great showers and floods of waters flowing out of those eyes which had violated the law of God Why then doest thou vnprofitably consume the time in sowing that of which thou shalt gather no other fruite but teares Besides this thou oughtest also to consider that thou doost not onely sow teares whence thou reapest onely sorrow but also the difficulty and hardnes for euer entring into a better state of life by reason of the long and euill custome For euen as hee that is endangered with a long and a pernitious disease sildome so commeth to his former health that not some reliques of the disease remaine in his body so the greatnes and diuturnity of sinne is sildome healed and cured without some reliques remayning A man alwayes is weaker in that part with which he offended and the tiranny of the deuill rageth more violently in it The children of Israel worshipped a Calfe of the ashes of which being burned Moses made a decoction and caused them to drinke it For this is the punishment with which God is wont to punish certaine sinnes that by his iust iudgmēt some reliques may remaine in our bones so that may be a punishment and a torment which a little before was our Idoll Wilt thou that I shall tell thee how ●nequall the comparison is to reserue old age for repentance and filthily to spend the flower of youth in iniquities What great madnes I pray thee would it be thought if a man had many and weighty burthens to be carried to some certaine place and he had many Horses sufficient to carry them yet he should lay all the burthens vpon one of the weakest and worst Horses the other being sent away empty like or rather greater is their madnes who doe impose the burthen of repentance to be carried of olde age sparing youth and manly age and letting them goe empty which are much stronger and farre more fit to carry then old age seeing that old age is scarce able to support her owne infirmities It is excellently sayd of Seneca that great Philosopher He that deferreth to old age his goodnes and meaneth onely then to be good he plainly sheweth that he is vnwilling to giue any thing vnto Vertue but that time that is vnfit for all other things And in another place Thou shalt heare many saying when I am fifty yeares old I will take my selfe to mine ease but when I am sixty that will free me from all duties and offices And what surety doost thou take for a longer life Who will suffer these things so to passe as thou hast disposed them Doth it not shame thee to reserue thy selfe to the reliques and dregs of thy life and onely to destinate that time to a good and vertuous minde which is fit for nothing How late is it then to begin to liue when thou must leaue to liue What a foolish forgetfulnes of mortality is it to defer thy peace quiet and thy wholsomest counsels to the fiftith or sixtith yeare of thy life then to purpose to begin a new a better life whē as very few reach to those yeares But what wilt thou doe if thou considerest the greatnes of the satisfaction which the infinite maiesty of God will require of thee before thou be disburthened of so great offences For that is so great as a learned man sayth That man is not able to satisfie God for the sinnes of one day and disburthen himselfe of that day Why then doost thou gather the debts of thy whole life as it were into one grosse summe and deserrest the payment and satisfying for them vntill thine old age which not with all the paynes that it can take can satisfie for it selfe This iniquity is so great that S. Gregory calleth it the greatest infidelity as he sheweth it in these words He is farre enough off from sayth who for his repentance expecteth old age For it is to be feared least while he hopeth for mercy he finde iudgement But let vs graunt that all that we haue sayd are of no moment nor any thing worth nor that any of these things shall come to passe Tell me ought not the greatnes and multitude of benefits receaued and the glory promised be onely sufficient to perswade and moue thee so that there be any law reason or iustice remayning in the world that thou shouldest not be so negligent and idle in the time of thy seruice so niggardly towards him who is so liberall in heaping graces and benefits vpon thee O how worthily is it spoken of Ecclesiasticus Be not slow to pay thy vow in good time and tarry not to be iustified vnto thy death because the reward of God endureth for euer Goe to then tell me I pray thee if the reward shall endure so long why wilt thou that thy seruice should be so short and momentany If the reward shall not be ended while God shall raigne in heauen that is it shall neuer perish why wilt thou not that thy seruice at the least should endure so long as thou liuest in this life Furthermore if thou hopest to be saued it followeth of necessity that thou must presuppose that he hath predestinated thee from all eternity to this saluation Tell me then if the Lord was so mindfull of thee that he loued thee from euerlasting after that thou wast made a Christian adopted thee to be his owne sonne made thee an heire of
perceiue and know that I haue beene a true Prophet in these things which I haue admonished thee of Then thou shalt see thy selfe compassed about with dolours loaden with those things that are yrkesome vnto thee and miserablie afflicted with the presence of death wayting for the condition which straightwayes shall be awarded either that thou shalt be for euer happy or for euer vnhappy O perrilous estate ô hard and dangerous way ô sentence after which euerlasting death or euerlasting life is to be expected ô who can alter this Decree at that houre ô who shall be able to heare that sentence My brother now thou hast aduantage doe not neglect it now thou hast time make the Iudge thy friend that hee may be sauourable vnto thee Heare therefore and follow the counsell of the Prophet who saith Seeke yee the Lord whilst he may be found call vpon him whilst hee is at hande For now the Lorde is at hand to heare vs albeit wee see him not In the houre of iudgement we shall see him but hee will not heare vs vnlesse we be such as are to be heard now Against them that through the hope of the Diuine mercie doe continue and perseuere in theyr sinnes CHAP. XXVII SOme men there are that persisting and continuing in their wicked life doe cheere vp and comfort themselues in hope of Gods mercie and the merrits of Christes passion and to these as to the other their errour is to bee showen Thou sayest that the mercy of God is vnmeasurable infinite for he willingly would be crucified as a malefactour for sinners I confesse indeede that his mercy is exceeding great for it suffereth thee to vtter so lauishlie such cursed blasphemie as that thou wouldest his goodnes bounfulnes should be a fautour and a fauourer of thy wickednesse and that his Crosse which hee apprehended as a meane to destroy the kingdome of sinne should be made of thee a meane to strengthen and defence sinne and whereas thou shouldest offer a thousand lifes vnto him if thou haddest so many because he hath sacrificed his life for thee there thou takest an occasion to denie that one vnto him which thou hast yea vvhich thou hast receiued of him This grieueth thy Sauiour more then the death did which he suffered for thee for hee who neyther lamented nor deplored his own death most greeuously lamenteth and bewaileth thy sinnes in the Prophet saying The plowers plowed vpon my backe and made long furrowes Tell me I pray thee who hath taught thee thus to argue that because God is good and gracious thou shouldest conclude that it is lawful for thee to sinne and to follow wickednes The holy Ghost seemeth vnto me to conclude after another manner that because God is good and gracious he gathereth that he is worthy to be worshipped obeyed and to be loued aboue all things And because God is good it is meete that I be good also and that I should trust in him who although I be a most greeuous sinner yet is ready to receiue me into fauour if I with all my hart will be conuerted vnto him Because God is good and so good it is double wickednes to offend so great magnificent a goodnesse Therefore by how much the more thou doost exemplifie the goodnes of GOD by so much the more thou doost aggrauate thy sinne which thou committest against him And it is meet and equall that so great a sinne should be punished for it is the nature and dutie of the Diuine iustice which also thou esteemest not to be contrary but the sister and the auenger of the Diuine goodnesse that it should not leaue so enormous an iniury vnpunished Thys kinde of excuse is not newe or sprung vp of late but very old and vsuall in the world This in times past was the difference betweene the true and the false Prophets because the true did denounce the threatnings of God against the people and did exaggerate and aggrauate his iustice but the false on their owne heads did promise false peace and mercy But when the punishments of GOD did approue the veritie of the one part and the falsehood of the other the true Prophets sayde Where are now your Prophets which prophecied vnto you saying The King of Babell shall not come against you nor against this Land● Thou sayst that the mercy of God is great Thou which sayst so credite me GOD hath not opened thine eyes that thou mightest see the greatnesse of his iustice For if thou haddest thine eyes open to behold it thou wouldest say with the Prophet Who knoweth the power of thy wrath for according to thy feare is thine anger But that thou mayst be freed from this dangerous perrilour errour I pray thee let vs dispute of the matter a little and be ruled by reason Neyther thou nor I doe see the Diuine iustice as it is in it selfe that we may come to the knowledge of the measure of it Neither doe we know God himselfe in this worlde but by hys workes Therefore let vs enter into the spirituall world of the holy Scripture then let vs goe out into this corporall world wherein we liue and let vs out of them both reason what the Diuine iustice is that by this meanes we may know it Certainly this consideration will be most profitable For besides thys end which now we propose vnto our selues we shall reape also out of it another fruite for it will a fresh stirre vp in our harts the feare of the Lord which as the Doctors say is the treasure the keeper and burthen of our soules For euen as a ship is not safe without balas or lastage for it is easily tossed with euerie winde nowe no this side and now on that to the great danger of the shyp so is the soule endangered which lacketh the ballas burthen of the diuine feare This feare poyzeth the soule that the windes of worldly fauour or of diuine graces doe not tosse and pusse it vp and so ouerthrowe it Although it be defenced yet if it hath not his balas it is in ieopardy Neither onelie the Punyes and Incipients but also those that are growen old must necessarily liue in feare in Gods house Not onely the sinners and guiltie must feare who haue great cause so to doe but the righteous also are not to be freed who haue no such great cause to feare Sinners must feare because they haue offended and also the righteous least they should offend theyr faultes and misdemeanors past ought to strike feare into them but the dangers to come ought to terrifie these But if thou desirest to know how this holy feare is engendered and wrought in thee I say that it is wrought when it is infused by grace and it is preserued and increaseth by the consideration of the works of the Diuine iustice of which we begin now to speake Consider of them often and reuolue
which neuer gaue sucke Then shall they begin to say to the mountaines Fall on vs and to the hils couer vs. For if they doe these things to a greene tree what shall be done to the dry As if the Lord would haue sayd if this tree of life and innocencie in which there is neyther worme found nor any corruption of sinne so burne with the flames of the Diuine iustice for the sinnes of others how thinkest thou will a dry and barren tree burne which not charity but the own proper malignity condemneth to the fire And if in this work of mercy thou doest see so great rigour of iustice what will it be in other matters in which so great mercy is not seene But if thou beest so dunsicall and blockish that thou canst not conceaue of the force of this argument at the least looke vpon the paynes of hell and see what an exceeding huge punishment that is with which the Diuine iustice punisheth one sinne how I say that sinne that is done in a moment is punished with euerlasting torment Behold how this dreadfull and terrible Iustice ioyneth her selfe to this Diuine mercy which thou so greatly extollest What can be thought of more horrible and fearefull then to see how that high and supreame Lord of Lords from the throne of his glory will behold a soule which shall be tortured and tormented so many thousand thousands of yeares with the intollerable punishments of hell yea he shall reioyce that it is thus plagued and it shall be pleasurable vnto him to haue the punishment without end without terme or limit and vtterly without any future hope of remedy O the altitude of the Diuine iustice worthy of all admiration ô secret ô the Abysse of this most deepe profundity What man will be so mad who will be so berest of all reason and iudgement that if he consider these things wil not tremble wil not stand astonished vtterly amazed at such great and dreadfull punishments ¶ Of the works of the Diuine iustice which are seene in this world BVt leauing the bookes of the holy Bible a little let vs goe out and view this visible world for in it we shall finde great arguments of the Diuine iustice I assuredly affirme vnto thee that they that haue their minds illuminated but with the least beame of the Diuine light knowledge doe liue in this world in great feare and exceedingly doe dread the works of the Diuine iudgements because seeking an issue and passage out of them and how to be freed from them they finde none other but onely a simple humble confession of the fayth they haue in Christ. Who doth not tremble to see the vniuersall face of the earth couered with infidelity to see how fruitfull the haruest of the deuils is that fill the lakes of hell with the wretched soules of men to see the greater part of the world yea after the redemption of mankind drowned in the former darknes How small I pray thee is the region of the Christians if it be compared with the Kingdomes and Empires of the Infidels It is but a small corner of the world if thou exceptest the new and late discouered regions of India which are daily more and more discouered and doe come to the fayth All besides the deuils doe oppresse with their tiranny and they mourne vnder the powerfull and tirannicall empire and dominion of the King of darknes where neyther the Sunne of righteousnes shineth where the light of truth riseth not where neyther the water rayneth nor the dew of the Diuine grace descendeth as neyther in the mountaynes of Gelboe where the deuils make such hauock of soules which they gather cast into eternal inextinguible fire For it is without all controuersie that as without the Arke of Noah in the time of the deluge none was saued nor any in the Citty of Iericho without the house of Rahab so none shall be saued that is found without the house of GOD which is his Church But looke vpon that part which Christians inhabit looke vpon the doings and affaires of Christians how they are ordered and managed in this most corrupt and deprauate age of the world and thou shalt confesse that in this misticall body from the sole of the foote to the top of the head there is scarce any one sound member to be found Looke into which so euer you please of the most famous Citties of the world in which at the least there is any footsteps of learning and doctrine yet extant afterwards runne through the lesser Townes Villages Streets and Castels and thou shalt finde those people of whom that of Ieremie may be rightly and truly affirmed Runne to and fro by the streetes of Ierusalem and behold now and know and enquire in the open places thereof if yee can finde a man or if there be any that executeth iudgement and seeketh the truth that is that is righteous in deede and I will spare it Furthermore I say not runne thorow ware-houses shops tauerns publique places of meetings for those places are for the most part dedicated to tryflings toyes lyings and deceits but also the houses of neighbours attend and harken as Ieremie and thou shalt vnderstand that there is no body that speaketh that that is good neyther shalt thou heare any thing besides murmurings lyes cursings oathes and blasphemies heere strifes and contentions doe resound there threatnings and flaunderous reproches are heard No man repenteth him of his wickednes saying What haue I done To be briefe in very deede thou shalt see and vnderstand that the harts tongues of men are busied about no other matters but their earthly owne commodities neither shalt thou heare GOD to be named after any other manner but in oathes and execrable cursings whereby his name is blasphemed which remembrance of his name the Lord complaineth of in the same Prophet saying They remembre mee but not as they ought swearing falsely by my Name So that by the exteriour markes a man can scarcely knowe whether the people be Christian or Heathen vnlesse by that manner that we know bells which are seene a farre of but are knowen by the sound so thou mayest know them by theyr oathes and blasphemies which are heard when thou art neere thē otherwise they could not be knowen or discerned what they are But I pray thee howe can these be numbred with those of whom Esay speaketh All that see thē shall know them that they are the seede which the Lord hath blessed But if the life of Ghristians ought to be such that they that see them a farre of may discerne and iudge them to be the sonnes of GOD what account are they to be made of who rather seeme scoffers mockers and despisers of Christ then true Christians Wherefore seeing that the sinnes enormities of the world are so many and so great how can it be that thou manifestlie doost not see
of sinne might be destroyed that hencefoorth wee should not serue sinne The Apostle in thys place by the old man and the body of sinne vnderstandeth our sensuall appetite with all the euill inclinations that proceede from it Hee sayth that thys together with Christ is crucified-vppon the Crosse for by thys most noble and excellent sacrifice we haue obtayned grace and strength to weaken and debilitate this Tyrant so that wee are free from the seruitude of sinne as before I haue shewed Thys is that great victorie that great benefit which the Lord promiseth by Esay saying Feare thou not for I am with thee be not afraid for I am thy God I will strengthen thee and helpe thee 〈◊〉 I will sustaine thee with the right hand of my iustice Behold all they that prouoke thee shall be ashamed and confounded they shall be as nothing and they that striue with thee shall perrish Thou shalt seeke them and shalt not finde them to wit the men of thy strife for they shall be as nothing and the men that warre against thee as a thing of naught For I the Lord thy God wil● hold thy right hand saying vnto thee Feare not I will helpe thee Thys sayth Esay Tell me who shall faile hauing such an helper Who will be faint-harted and discouraged who will feare or dread his owne wicked passions seeing that grace doth thus vanquish and ouercome them ¶ An aunswer to certaine obiections IF thou shalt say vnto me that alwayes some reliques remaine in a man which accuse him and doe beare witnes against the righteous as we reade in the booke of Iob. The same Prophet answereth vnto this saying They shall be as though they were not For although they remaine they remaine onely for our exercise and not to our ruine they remaine that they may stirre vs vp not intangle vs in the snares of sinnes they remaine that they may yeeld vs occasion to attaine a crowne and not to ouerthrow vs and cast vs downe they remaine for our tryumph not for theyr conquest to be briefe they remaine so to profit vs that they are for our tryall humiliation that we may know our selues and our owne weakenes that thereby wee may acknowledge the glory and grace of God so that thys remainder doth redound to our commodity Whereupon euen as wilde beasts according to theyr nature are hurtfull vnto men and yet when they are tamed doe them good seruice so when as the purturbations of our soule are gouerned and moderated they helpe vs in many exercises of vertue Goe to then tell me If God doth thus strengthen and defend thee who vpon the earth shal be able to hurt thee if God be for thee who is against thee The Lord is my light sith the Prophet and my saluation whom shall I feare the Lorde is the strength of my life of whom shall I be afraid When the wicked euen mine enemies and my foes came vpon me to eate vp my flesh they stumbled and fell Though an host pitched against mee myne hart should not be afraid though warre be raised against me I will trust in this Truely my brother if thou beest not mooued by thys promise to serue God thou art very slothfull and vild I will not say vncleane and corrupt And if these words are not of credite with thee thou art a very Infidell It is God who saith vnto thee that he will giue thee a new essence and will make thy stony hart fleshy and will mortifie thine affections and that he will so change thine estate that thou shalt not know thy selfe when thou seekest for thine affections and passions thou shalt not finde them he shall make them so weake and infirme What could he promise more what canst thou further expect and hope for what is wanting vnto thee but a liuely Fayth and aliuely Hope that thou mayst trust in God shroud thy selfe vnder his almighty arme Surely I thinke that thou canst aunswer nothing at all vnto these things except perhaps thou wilt say that thy sinnes are many and great and therefore this grace is denied vnto thee Vnto this I aunswer that thou canst not offer greater iniury vnto God then to say so seeing that by these words thou doest signifie that there is somthing for which God eyther will not or cannot helpe his creature when as he is conuerted vnto him and desireth mercy and pardon at his hands I would not that thou shouldest credite me credite that holy Prophet who then seemed mindfull of thee and was willing to helpe thee meete with thine infirmities when he writ these things saying Now when all these things shall come vpon thee eyther the blessing or the curse which I haue set before thee and thou shalt turne into thine hart among all the nations whether the Lord thy God hath driuen thee and shalt returne vnto the Lord thy God and obey his voyce in all that I commaund thee this day thou and thy children with all thine hart and with all thy soule then the Lord thy God will cause thy captiues to returne and haue compassion vpon thee and will returne to gather thee out of all the people where the Lord thy God had scattered thee and will bring thee into the land which thy fathers possessed and thou shalt possesse it And a little after The Lord thy God will circumcise thine hart and the hart of thy seede that thou ●ayst loue the Lord thy God with all thine hart and with all thy soule that thou mayst liue O that the Lord would now circumcise thine eyes and take thee out of this darknes that thou mightest clearely see this manner of circumcision Be not so ignorant and rude that thou shouldest deeme this circumcision to be corporall for of such a circumcision our hart is not capable What circumcision then is this which the Lord here promiseth Surely it is the superfluity of our affections and of our euill appetites which springeth from our hart and bringeth great hinderance to our Diuine loue He promiseth therfore that he will circumcise and lop off all the barren and hurtfull branches with the knife of his grace that our hart being so pruned and circumcised may imploy and bestow all his strength vpon the branch of the Diuine loue Then thou shalt be a true Israelite then thou shalt be circumcised of the Lord when hee shall take away and cut out from thy soule the loue of this world and shall let nothing remayne in it besides the entire loue of God I would haue thee diligently to marke that that which God in this place promiseth to doe that he doth commaund thee to doe in another place that when thou art conuerted vnto him thou shouldest doe it thy selfe saying Circumcise the foreskinne of your hart c. And how Lord that which thou promisest to doe thy selfe now thou commaundest that I should doe it my selfe if I must doe it how
one as the other the Lord sheweth when he sayth that his yoke is easie and his burthen light For when he calleth it his yoke he signifieth the heauines which is in the way of the Lord but when he calleth it easie he intimateth facilitie which is in respect of the grace that is giuen But if thou shalt demaund of me how both it can be a yoke and easie and light seeing that it is of the nature of a yoke to be heauy I aunswer that the reason of it is this because the Lord maketh it easie and light as he promiseth by his Prophet And I will bee to them as hee that taketh of the yoke from theyr iawes What maruell is it then if the yoke be light seeing the Lord supporteth easeth as it were carrieth it himselfe If the bush burned was not consumed because the Lord was in it what maruell is it that it is a burthen and also light if the same Lord be in it who helpeth vs to carry it Wilt thou that I shall show thee as well the one as the other in one and the selfe same person heare what the Apostle sayth We are afflicted on euery side yet are we not in distresse in pouertie but not ouer-come of pouertie We are persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but we perrish not Behold here on the one side trouble and distresse and on the other side comfort and consolation which the Lord giueth in them The same thing also the Prophet Esay insinuateth when he sayth They that waite vpon the Lorde shall renue theyr strength they shall lift vp the wings as the Eagles they shall runne and not be wearie and they shall walke and not faint Doost thou not see that the yoke is here made light through grace Doost thou not see here that the strength of the flesh is changed into the strength of the spirit Or that I may speake better the strength of man into the strength of God Doost thou not see how the holy Prophet doth not conceale eyther the trouble or the ease Therefore thou hast not my brother any cause for which thou shouldest shrinke from this way albeit it be rough and difficult seeing that there be so many and so great meanes which make it plaine and easie ¶ All the precedent matters are proued by examples to be true BVT if all those things which hetherto we haue spoken can not conquer and breake open thy hard and obdu●●● hart and thine incredulitie be like that of Saint Thomas who would not beleeue vnlesse he first saw and touched yet I will vndergoe this labour that at the length I may satisfie thee For I will not grutch to take any paines so that I may defend a cause so honest profitable and iust Therefore let vs take a man that hath tryed both estates that is who hath some-times serued the world and hath carnally liued vnder the slauery of sinne who afterwards by the mercy of God is changed and becommeth altogether another man quite altered from the former Such a man shall be the best iudge for vs in this cause for he shall not iudge by heare-say but by sight certaintie seeing that he hath tryed and learned both conditions by experience Aske thys man whether of these estates is easier sweeter more pleasant Of men of this sort they know howe to yeeld the best testimonie to whom the ouersight of the Church is committed who see into the courses of men and watch theyr pathes and proceedings For these be they that descend into the Sea in shyps and see the workes of God in many waters which are the works of the Diuine grace and the great changes and alterations vvhich by the meanes of it are daily wrought in men which certainlie are worthy of all admiration For in very deede there is nothing found in the world worthy of greater astonishment and vvhich is daily more renued and recreated if any one consider well of it then those things which are wrought in the soules of the righteous by the Diuine grace how it trans-formeth a man raiseth him vp strengtheneth and comforteth him and beautifieth him both within without how it changeth the manners of the old man how it altereth al his affections how it maketh a man to hate that which before hee loued and to loue that which he hated maketh him to find sweetnes in that which before hee despised what strength it giueth that it may worke constancie in the soule what ioy what light what peace it effecteth to attaine the knowledge of Gods will to know the vanitie of the world and the dignitie of spirituall things which before he contemned and set at naught But that is most of all to be wondred at that we see all these things to be doone in a very short time so that it is not needfull by many yeeres to frequent the schooles of Phylosophers and to expect gray hayres that time and age may helpe the vnderstanding and mortifie the affections but in the midst of the heate of youth in the space of a few daies a man is so changed that he seemeth vtterly to be made another and not the same man that he was before Wherefore Saint Cyprian saith that thys change is sooner felt then learned neyther is it attained by the study of many yeeres but by grace and that in a very short time Which grace we may worthily call a spirituall enchauntment by which God after an admirable manner dooth so change the hart of man that with a most ardent longing he doth loue that which before with the greatest hate he abhorred I meane the exercise of Vertue and he doth execrate detest that with an hate more then that which followed Vatinius which before he most tenderly loued that is the pleasure of vices But for the greater confirmation and more euidence of these things that haue been spoken I will remember in this place the examples of two famous Doctors of the church who almost at one and the selfe same time liued in this errour but afterwards when it pleased the Diuine mercy that they saw how they were deceaued they were conuerted and haue left in wryting both their error and their conuersion to the edifying of all posterity One of them is S. Cyprian who writing to his friend Donatus and relating the beginning and progresse of his conuersion sayth When I lay in darknes and in the blacknes of the night and when I nodding and reeling floted vpon the Sea of this billowy and tempestuous world walked staggering by blind and erroneous wayes I being ignorant of mine owne life and an alien and stranger vnto the truth and vnto the light I being at that passe thought that altogether difficult and hard which the Diuine fauour and mercy promised for my saluation that is that any one should be borne againe and made a new lyuing soule by the bath of that wholsome water
heauen care not what men thinke or suspect by thee in earth Humble satisfaction which would willingly content all answereth Occasion of detraction nor suspition of surmizing is to be gyuen but if thou beest rightly accused or lawfully conuinced confesse but if vniustly or wrongfully deny with an humble protestation because the Apostle admonisheth that we should giue no occasion to the deuill by reason of ill report Which is detested in them who consenting to the Christian fayth satte downe to eate meate sacrificed to Idols Sorrowfulnes sayth What hast thou whereof thou mayst reioyce when as so great euils are spoken of thee Consider how greeuously they looke who are in such bitternes Spirituall ioy aunswereth I know that there are two kinds of sorrowfulnes one which worketh to saluation the other to destruction one which d●●weth to repentance the other which leadeth to desperation Thou art knowne to be one of them but that which worketh death Therefore I am not to be heauy and sorrowfull at these things as thou wouldest perswade me but contrarily I ought to reioyce for those thinges which yet are not vnderstoode because the giuer of euerlasting ioy sayth Blessed are yee when men reuile you and persecute you and say all manner of euill against you for my sake falsely Reioyce and be glad for great is your reward in heauen Drowsines or Idlenes sayth If thou attendest reading and continuall study thine eyes will waxe dim if thou pourest forth teares aboundantly thou wilt be blind if thou giuest thy selfe much to singing of Psalms thou wilt catch the swimming of the head if thou spendest thy selfe with daily labour how shalt thou be enabled for spirituall labour The exercise of vertue aunswereth Why doost thou vse so vaine excuses and proposest vnto thy selfe so friuolous procrastination Knowest thou whether thou shalt liue to morrow or no Yea thou knowest not whether thou shalt continue one houre in this life Is it slipt out of thy mind what our Sauiour sayth in the Gospell Watch therefore because yee know neyther the day nor houre Wherefore shake off this slugishnes of thy body and alwayes remember that neyther the tender nor the effeminate nor the slothfull nor the luke-warme but the violent and feruent doe take hold of the kingdome of heauen Dissolute wandering sayth If thou beleeuest that God is euery where why doost thou keepe one place aboue all other where so many euils are committed and rather goest not vnto others Firme stability aunswereth If it be so as thou affirmest that God is euery where then this place where I am is not to be left which thou willest me to forsake because God is also in it But thou sayst I seeke for a better and I finde a better I aunswer Shalt thou finde a better or such an one as thou knowest that the deuill and his angels and man haue lost Be circumspect therefore what thou doost for the first angell fell from heauen and the first man b●●●ng expelled out of Paradice came into the miserie of this world Desperation sayth How many and how great be the faults and transgressions which thou hast committed and yet thou hast not bettered thy life neyther hast amended thy conuersation for behold as thou seest custome hath so fettered thee that thou art not able to arise Thou endeuourest to rise but being ouer-loaden with the burthen of sinnes thou fallest downe againe Therefore what wilt thou doe seeing that certaine damnation hangeth ouer thee for thy sinnes past and no amendment commeth for those that be present vnlesse thou beware that thou lose not the pleasures of temporal delights seeing that thou canst not attaine the ioyes of the world to come The assurance of Hope aunswereth If thou speakest of crimes and transgressions behold Dauid guilty of adultery and murther freed and taken by the mercy of the Lord out of the iawes of hell Behold Manasses the wickedst impurest and vildest of all sinners one of the most damnable and detestable men that euer liued by repentance returned from death to life Behold Mary Magdalen polluted and stayned with innumerable blemishes of sinnes penitently running to the fountaine of piety and mercy washing the feete of the Lord with her teares and wiping them with her haires and also kissing them and annoynting them with oyntment she herselfe was washed from her sinnes Behold Peter bound with the chaines of his deniall broke in sunder the knots of infidelity with his bitter teares Behold the theefe that in the moment of one houre passed from the Crosse to Paradice Behold Saule persecuting the Church of God slaying many for the name of Christ and as I may say bathing himselfe in the blood of the Martirs being made an Apostle was changed into a vessell of election Therefore where so many and so great examples goe before let no place be left for desperation seeing that it is written At what time so euer a sinner repenteth himselfe and turneth 〈◊〉 the Lord he shall be saued Couetousnes sayth Thou art altogether without fault in that thou desirest 〈◊〉 possesse those things thou hast and wishest some things thou hast not not because thou greedily desirest to multiply much but because thou fearest to want and that another man keepeth ill thou spendest better The contempt of the world aunswereth These things are not procured of the men of this world without danger and offence because by how much euery man beginneth to possesse more by so much he coueteth to haue more and it commeth to passe that he hath no measure in coueting whilst he posteth to engorge himselfe with the infinite cares of this world For as the Scripture saith A couetous man shall neuer be satisfied with money Gluttony sayth God hath made all cleane things for our feeding he that refuseth to be satisfied with meat what other thing doth he then contradictorily deny a gift giuen him Temperance aunswereth One of these which thou namest is true For least man should pine and dye through hunger God hath created all things for his feeding but least he should exceede measure in eating he hath also commaunded to him abstinence For amongst other euills Sodome especially perished by fulnes of bread the Lord testifying it who speaketh to Ierusalem by his Prophet saying This was the iniquitie of thy sister Sodome fulnesse of bread Wherfore as a sicke man commeth to Phisicke so euery one should come to feede on dainties that is not seeking for pleasure in them but releefe of necessity Vayne foolish mirth sayth To what end doost thou hide the ioy of thine hart within thee Walke merrily abroade and frolicke make thy selfe and thy neighbours laugh make them merry with thy mirth Moderate sadnes answereth From whence hast thou thys myrth Hast thou already ouercome the deuill hast thou already escaped the paynes of hell Doost thou nowe returne out of banishment into thy Country hast thou already receiued security of thine election Or hast thou forgotten
miracles was the excellentest of all other others also defended the excellencie and prerogatiue of their owne gifts Against this error and abuse there is no remedy more profitable or more effectuall thē that which Saint Paule vseth in his former Epistle sent vnto thē in which first he reduceth all graces to their beginning saying that all graces are riuers of one fountaine that is of the holy Ghost and that therefore they all participate of one equality in theyr cause although they be diuers and sundry among themselues Euen as the members of one body of any King are all members of the King being deriued from one royall blood although they be diuers among themselues so sayth the Apostle By one spirit we are baptized into one body that we may be members of one body And therefore we all participate of one and the selfe same dignity and glory seeing that we are all members of the same head Wherefore the Apostleforth-with addeth If the foote would say Because I am not the hand I am not of the body is it therfore not of the body And if the eare would say Because I am not the eye I am not of the body is it therefore not of the body We all therfore are made equall that among all there might be vnity and brother-hood albeit there is some diuersity betweene vs. This ariseth partly of nature partly of grace We say partly of nature for although grace is the beginning of all our spirituall Being yet grace as water receaued into diuers vessels doth put on diuers figures and shapes according to the disposition and nature of euery one For there are some men by nature modest mild and quiet and therfore very fit for a contemplatiue life Others are cholerick and delighted in practise and action and therfore more fit for an actiue life others are strong and of a sound and healthfull constitution who doe not much tender and affect themselues and these are meete for greater austerity of life In this the goodnes and mercy of God shineth after a singuler manner who willing to deuide and communicate himselfe vnto all he would not doe it onely after one manner but after many and diuers according to the variety of mans condition that the man that is not fit for some one meane and gift might be fit for another The other reason is this diuersity is grace for the holy Spirit the Authour of it would that among his there should be variety to the greater perfection and beauty of the Church For euen as diuers members diuers sences are required to the perfection and beauty of the body so also it is required for the perfection and beauty of the Church that there should be diuers vertues and graces For if all the faithfull were of one and the selfe same condition how should they be called a body If the whole body were an eye sayth Paule where were the hearing if the whole were hearing where were the smelling But nowe hath God disposed the members euery one of them in the body at his owne pleasure But God would that there should be many members and yet one body that when there were a multitude conioyned in vnity there might be a proportion and an harmonious concord of many in one and hence ariseth the perfection beautie of the Church Such a like thing we see in Musick where it behoueth that there be diuersity and multitude of voces vvith vnity and agreeablenes of consent in tune so that there may be sweetnes and melody in it If all the voyces were of one qualitie and stampe they should all be either Baces or Meanes which would make neither musicke nor harmony In naturall things also it is admirable to see so great diuersitie of things as that high and almighty Work-maister hath made who hath deuided and bestowed beauty and perfection vppon all creatures in that order that although euery one of them haue somewhat in themselues in which they excell the rest yet there is no enuy amongst thē because euery one of them hath some prerogatiue which in others is not the same The Peacocke is very beautifull to the sight but maketh a ranke and an vnpleasant noyse The Nightingale singeth sweetly but is not so faire to the sight An Horse is good for the race and profitable for warre but not good for foode or fit for the table The Oxe is profitable for the table and the plough but vnprofitable for other things Fruitefull trees doe serue for the nourishment of men but are vnfit for building contrarily wilde and barren trees are fit for building but vnapt to serue for foode Therfore amongst all things there is both a certaine vnity and a diuision neither in one thing are all things found that by this meanes the variety and beauty of the Vniuerse and the forme and shapes of things might be preserued that one may loue and embrace another for that neede which one standeth of another The same beauty and order which GOD hath ordained and appointed in the works of nature he would that it should be also in the works of grace and therefore hee hath disposed by his Spirit that there should be a thousand kind of vertues graces in Church that of all them there might arise one most sweet harmony one perfect world and one beautifull bodie compounded of diuers and sundry members Hence it is that in the Church some are giuen to a contemplatiue life some to an actiue one is famous and excellent in the works of obedience another in prayer Some in singing others in studying do exercise theyr gifts that they may help further others some attend vpon the weake receaue strangers who deuide theyr goods to the poore and many other such kinde of vertuous exercises there be Therefore there be many members in one body and many voyces in one musick that by this meanes there may be comlines consonancie and proportion in the Church and therefore in one Harpe there are many strings and in one Organ many pipes that by this meanes there may be a consonancie and an harmony of many tunes This is that garment which the Patriarke Iacob commaunded to be made for hys sonne Ioseph of diuers colours These are those Curtaines which by the commaundement of God were made for the vse of the Tabernacle of wonderfull varietie and beautie That the same should be done both the order and beauty of the Church required Therefore why should one eate vp another Why should one iudge and condemne another saying Why is it not lawfull for one to doe that another doth I know not what other thing this is then to goe about to destroy the body of the Church and to teare in peeces Iosephs beauteous garment and to disturbe this heauenly musick and harmony that is to make all the members of the Church feete or hands or eyes c. which certainly were monstrous beyond
vertuous those things are vnpleasant which before did please 129 A notable example of a noble Knight called Arnulphus taken out of the Booke called the booke of famous and illustrious men ibidem The righteous haue comfort and a sweet tast yea in theyr greatest griefes and sorrowes page 130 The twelfth Chapter The twelfth Title That the first priuiledge or prerogatiue of Vertue doth binde vs vnto her which is the speciall Prouidence by which God directeth all good men to all good and chastiseth the iniquity of the wicked page 132 The matters handled in this Chapter The prouidence of God is the fountaine of all good things ibidem Two things are to be considered of in euery place of Scripture the Commaundement and the Promise ibidem Testimonies of the diuine prouidence 133 The Angels doe keepe vs. page 134 God turneth euills into good to those whom he loueth 135 God is not onely good and gracious to the righteous but also to their familie 136 God blesseth a wicked Maister for the sake of a good seruant ibidem Of the names that are attributed vnto the Lord in the holy Scripture by reason of thys prouidence ibid. God is called a Father ibidem God is more then a Mother page 137 We are the sonnes of God and so are we called 138 God is a Pastor or a Sheepheard ibidem Diuers names of God 139. God is called a Bridegrome 140 God is all in all ibidem How pleasant the promises of the Diuine prouidence bee vnto a righteous soule 141 The prouidence of GOD dooth yeeld great matter of reioycing to the good ibidem An expostulation of God with man 142 The thirteenth Chapter Of that manner of prouidence by which God esp●eth out the vvicked to chastise theyr maliciousnes 143 The matters handled in this Chapter The vvicked are neglected of the Lord. ibidem How dangerous a thing it is to liue in thys world without the diuine help 144 God doth not onely permit euills but also he sendeth them 145 A fearefull place in the ninth of Amos ibidem In how great danger a man lyueth hauing God his enemy angry with him page 146 What the soule is without God 147 The fourteenth Chapter Of the second priuiledge or prerogatiue of Vertue that is of the grace of the holy Ghost which is giuen to the vertuous 147. The matters handled in this Chapter After the diuine prouidence the grace of the holy Ghost is the beginning of all blessings 148 What the grace of the holy Ghost is ibidem Grace doth deifie ibidem Grace is a supernaturall forme ibidem Two soules of man ibidem Grace is a spirituall ornament page 149 The worke of grace maketh a man acceptable to God ibidem Grace strengtheneth man ibidem Grace maketh our works acceptable vnto God 150 Grace adopteth vs to be the sonnes of God ibidem The forrest of the effects of grace ibidem Grace maketh our soules the dwelling and Temple of God 151 The fifteenth Chapter Of the thyrd priuiledge of Vertue which is a light and a certaine supernaturall knowledge which our Lord giueth to them who seeke after Vertue page 151 The matters handled in this Chapter Thys supernaturall knowledge doth proceede from grace ibidem It is a property of grace to illuminate the vnderstanding ibidem Foure gyfts of the holy Ghost belong to the vnderstanding 152 Grace why it is called an vnction ibidem The vvill is a blinde faculty 153 God is the glasse of a purified soule ibid. God hath giuen knowledge to beastes to flie hurtfull things and to embrace wholesome page 154 What thys supernaturall knowledge is ibid. Testimonies of the Scripture as concerning this knowledge 155 The dignity of thys doctrine 157 For what thys wisedome is profitable 158 The dignity of thys wisedome 159 The vnderstanding of the righteous encreaseth ibidem The darknes of the wicked ibidem Other mens sentences and iudgements are to be heard 160 The sixteenth chapter Of the fourth priuiledge of Vertue that is of the consolations and comforts of the holy Ghost which the righteous enioy in thys worlde and which they ioy in page 161 The matters handled in this Chapter Euill men thinke that there is no pleasure in Vertue 162 The flesh also of the righteous reioyceth 163 How great the spirituall ioy is 164 God as he is great in iustice so is he great in mercy ibidem How great the force is of the sweenes of the heauenly wine 165 Spirituall languorment page 166 Coniectures of the greatnes of the spirituall delights ibidem Vertue hath her delights 167 How the righteous are refreshed in theyr prayers after a singuler manner with these diuine consolations page 168 The pleasure of the righteous is felt in theyr prayers ibidem Of the chast wedlocke of the Word and of the soule 169 The change of the righteous 170 How a long night is to be passed ibidem Of theyr comforts and consolations who first begin to serue God and are Punies and Nouices in his schoole 171 The entrance and beginnings of conuersion haue their pleasures 172 In the beginning and in the end of the conuersion there is a soleme feast page 173 Whence ioy and cheerefulnes ariseth in the nouices of Christ 174. Why the wicked doe not feele the sweetnes of God page 175 Blessednes two-fold 176. Time is very precious ibidem The 17 Chapter Of the fift priuiledge of Vertue which is the tranquility and peace of a good conscience which the righteous enioy and of the torment and inward biting with which the wicked and vngodly are tortured 177 The matters handled in this Chapter In what thing consisteth the perfection of man ibidem The conscience is the maister and teacher of good men but a tormenter and torturer of the wicked 178 The first thorne of the conscience is the filthines of sinne The second thorne is an inimy done to another The third thorne is infan●y which followeth sinne 179 Certaine other thornes ibidem The feare of an euill conscience ibidem All disordered things are euill page 180. Of the ioy of a good conscience with which the righteous are greatly delighted page 182 A peaceable and a quiet conscience is a Paradice 183 The testimony of a good conscience hath feare mingled with it 185 The eyghteenth Chapter Of the fixt priuiledge of Vertue which is the confidence and hope of the Diuine mercy which the righteous reioyce in and of the miserable and vaine trust and repose in which the wicked liue 186. The matters contayned in this Chapter Hope two-fold ibidem The effects of true hope 187 A Catalogue of the effects of hope 190 Hope maketh men omnipotent 181 Of the vaine hope of the wicked 192 The hope of the righteous is spirit but of the wicked flesh 193 To him that trusteth in the Creatour all things happen succesfully and prosperously but to him that trusteth in the creatures all things fall out vnluckily 194. Where the world is planted ibidem How vnhappy the estate
perfection of al things God all in all The mistery of Circumcision Augustine in the 17 chapter of his Manuel Apoc 21. Dan. 12. Esay 64.1 Cor. 2. Augustine in the 15. chapter of his Manuel All things to be suffered for the heauenly glory Apoc. 4. Apoc. 7. There are but two wayes Ieremy 24. A similitude The greatnes of the punishment by reason of the greatnes of God Ieremy 5. Ierem. 10. Psal. 105. Iob 26. Apoc. 18. Heb. 10. Math. 10. Ecclesi 2. The greatnes of the iustice of GOD. Numb 16. Deut 28 The husbād without the knowledge of his wife shal eate his sons and so shall the wife without the priuitie of the man that they might eate alone Of the mercie of God the greatnes of the punishment is gathered A similitude The two cōmin●s of Christ cōpared In his first Sermon of the Natiuitie of our Lord. Psalm 68. Rom 2 Heb. 10. The punishment ought to be like to the sin From the person of the executioner that is of the deuill the greatnes of the punishment is gathered Iob 1. In the 4. booke of his Dialog● chap. 37. A fearefull horrible example Apoc 9. A description of the deuils power Exod 8. The conclusion A fearfull saying Esay 33. Dan. 3 A notable Allegory Mich. 1. Math. 5. It is a wonder that among Christians so many men are found wicked and vicious A similitude Whence this negligence is Ezech 12 Esay 28 Eccle. 8. All things happen a like to the good and euill Eccle. 9. Mala. 3. Luke 19 Men are ignorant of those good things that are in Vertue Vertue like vnto Christ. Colos. 3. A similitude Helpes of God by which we ouercome the difficulty of Vertue Vertue is an habit Psalm 84. Mala. 3. A comparing of the life of good men and ill men Esay 66. Diuine bládishments with which the righteous are cherished Prou 8. Good men truely rich 1. Cor. 1. Marke 10. What this hundreth fold is what goods be those that God bestoweth vpon the good To the vertuous those things are vnpleasant which before did please A notable example The sweetnes and pleasure of the righteous yea in their greatest greefes and sorrowes The proposition The prouidence of God is the fountaine of all good things Two things are to bee considered of in euery place of Scripture the Commaundement and the Promise Psalm 41. Psalm 34 Testimonies of the diuine prouidence Ecclus. cap. 15. 34. Psalm 37 Psalm 34 Luke 12 21. Zach 2. The Angels do keepe vs. Psalm 91 Luke 16 Psalm 34 4. Reg. 6. Cant 6. Cant. 3 God turturneth euils into good to those whō he loueth Rom 8. He is not onely good and gracious to the righteous but also to their family Exod. 20. Gen. 17 and the 24. God blesseth a wicked maister for the sake of a good seruant God is called a father Psal. 103 Esay 63. God is more then a mother Esay 49. Deut. 32. Deut. 1. We are the sonnes of God and so are we called Ier 31. God a Pastour or sheepheard Ezechiel 34 Esay 40. Diuers names of God God is called a Bridegrome Ierem 3. Gene 2. Ephe 5. God all in all Ambrose of virginitie A similitude How pleasant are the promises of the diuine prouidence vnto a righteous soule The prouidence of God doth yeeld great matter of reioycing to the good Psalm 32 Psalm 144 Abac. 3. An expostulation of God with man Ierem. 2 The wicked are neglected of the lord Hosea 1. Hosea 2 Zach. 11. Deut. 32. Esay 5. How dangerous a thing it is to liue in this world without the diuine help God doth not onely permit euils but also he sendeth them Amos 5. Hosea 5. Amos 9. A fearefull place In howe great danger a man liueth hauing God his enemy and angry with him Iob 9. Psal. 8. Hosea 4. A similitude What the soule is without God After the diuine prouidence the grace of the holy Ghost is the beginning of all blessings What the grace of the holy Ghost is A similitude Grace doth deifie Gala 2. Grace is a supernatural forme Two soules of man Grace is a spirituall ornament Esay 6 Psalm 44. 1. The worke of grace maketh a man acceptable to God 2. It strengtheneth man Cant. 6 3. It maketh our works acceptable vnto God 4 It adopteth vs to be the sonnes of God Luke 10. The Forrest of the effects of grace Grace maketh our soules the dwelling temple of God This knowledge doth proceede from grace The first reason It is a property of grace to illuminate the vnderstanding Psal 27. Foure gifts of the holy Ghost belong to the vnderstanding Grace why it is called an Vnction Psal. 23. Psal 51. The second reason The will is a blind faculty Iohn 1. God is the Glasse of a purified soule God hath giuē knowledge to beasts to flie hurtfull things to embrace wholsome What thys supernaturall knowledge is Cant 5. Heb. 4 Testimonies of the Scripture as cōcerning this knowledge Iohn 14. Iohn 6 Ierem. 31 Esay 54. Esay 4● Prou. 9. In the first booke of his great Morals chap. 34. Psal. 37. Psal. 25. Psal. 94. Psal. 25. Ierome Psal. 119. The dignity of this doctrine See S. Ierome more at large in his 103. Epist to Paulinus c. 1. Philostratus in the life of Apollonius Tyaneus Psal 119 Esay 58 For what this wisedom is profitable Ecclus 27. Ambrose to Simplicianus Epist. 7. The dignitie of that wisedome Iob 28. Prou 2. The vnderstanding of the righteous increaseth Prou 4. Iob 4 The darknes of the wicked Exod 10 Esay 59 Psalm 9 Other mens sentences iudgemēts are to be heard Gala 1 Exod 18 A similitude Psal. 97. Euill men thinke that there is no pleasure in Vertue Psal. 31. Psal. 35. The flesh also of the righteous reioyceth Psal 118. Psal. 68. Psal. 36. A similitude Psal. 89. How great the spiritual ioy is God as he is great in iustice so is he great in mercy Cant. 1. How great the force is of the sweetnes of the heauenly wine Holy Effrem A similitude Spirituall languorment Cant 5. Iohn 11 Coniectures of the greatnes of the spiritual delights 1. Psalm 18 Esay 64 1 Cor 2. Vertue hath her delights Psalm 37 Psalm 84 Cant 1 Apoc 17 Esay 56 The pleasure of the righteous is felt in their praiers Of the chast wedlock of the Worde and of the soule c. 22. Iohn 17. Gene 32 Math 17. Cant 2 Cant 8 Psalm 34 Psalm 73. The change of the righteous How a long night is to be passed Cant. 5. Cant. 2. Luke 15. Exod. 15. The entrance and beginnings of conuersion haue their pleasures Exod 13. L●uit 23. Num. 28. In the beginning and in the end of the conuersion ther is a solemne feast Cant 8. Cant. 1. Whēce ioy and carefulnes ariseth in the nouices of Christ. A similitude Luke 15. A similitude Psal 65 Why the wicked doe not feele the sweetnes of God Blessednes two fold Time is very precious In the