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A28164 Purgatory surveyed, or, A particular accompt of the happy and yet thrice unhappy state of the souls there also of the singular charity and wayes we have to relieve them : and of the devotion of all ages for the souls departed : with twelve excellent means to prevent purgatory and the resolution of many curious and important points.; De l'etat heureux et malheureux des âmes souffrantes du purgatoire. English. 1663 Binet, Etienne, 1569-1639.; Ashby, Richard, 1614-1680. 1663 (1663) Wing B2915; ESTC R31274 138,491 416

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upon the Crosse and sitting now at thy right hand makes Intercession for us I know she has willingly and from her heart forgiven such as offended her forgive thou also her sins O Lord forgive her I beseech thee and enter not with her into judgment Let thy Mercy overtop thy Justice c. And I verily perswade my self that thou hast already done what I desire but yet accept O Lord this prayer which I willingly make For she when the day of her death drew neer upon her did not crave that her body might be sumptuously adorned or embalmed with Spices and Odours nor desired she any curious or choice monument or cared she to be conveyed into her own Country They were not these things she recomme●ded to us but only she desired to be remembred at the Altar whereat she used to assist without pretermission of any one day c. Let her therefore rest in peace with her husband c. And inspire O Lord my God inspire thy servants my brethren that whosoever reads these my confessions may at thy Altar remember thy servant Monaca with Patricius her husband c. St. Paulinus that charitable Prelate who sould himselfe to redeem others cold not but have a great proportion of charity for captive souls in the other world No he was not only ready to have turnd slave himself to purchase their freedom but he became an earnest solicitour to others in their behalf for in a letter to Delphinus alluding to the story of Lazarus he beseeches him to have at least so much compassion as to convey now and then a drop of water wherewith to coole the tongues of poor souls that lye burning in the church which is all a fire I am astonisht when I call to mind the sad regrets of the people of Africa when they saw some of their Priests drag'd away to Martyrdome The Author says they Victor utic l. 2. de persec Wandal flocked about them in great numbers and cryed out alas if you leave us so what will become of us who must give us absolution for our sins who must bury us with the wonted ceremonies of of the church when we are dead and who will take care to pray for our souls such a general belief they had in those dayes that nothing is more to be desired in this world then to leave those behind us who will do their best to helpe us out of our torments §. 3. A continuation of the same subject from the sixth Age after Christ unto our dayes ALmighty God has often 6. Age. miraculously made it appear how well he is pleased to be importuned by us in the souls behalf and what comfort they receive by our prayers S. John Climacus In 4. gradu scalae writes that while the Monkes were at service praying for their good Father Mennas the third day after his departure they felt a marvellous sweet smell to rise out of his grave which they took for a good omen that his sweet soul after three dayes Purgation had taken her flight into heaven For what else could be meant by that sweet perfume but the odour of his holy and innocent conversation or the incense of their sacrifices and prayers or the primitiall fruits of his happy soul which was now flown up to the holy mountain of eternal glory there enjoying the odoriferous and never fading delights of paradise Not unlike unto this is that story which the great St. Gregory relates of one Justus a l. 4. dial c. 55. Monke He had given him at first for a lost creature but upon second thoughts having ordered Mass to be said for him for thirty dayes together the last day he appears to his brother and assures him of the happy exchange he was now going to make of his torments for the joys of heaven Pope Symmachus and his Council 6. Synod Rom. had reason to thunder out anathema's against those sacrilegious persons who were so frontless as to turn pious legacies into profane uses to the great prejudice of the souls for whose repose they were particularly deputed by the founders And certainly it is a much fouler crime to defrande souls of their due relief then to disturbe dead mens ashes and to plunder their graves And yet we read of dead carcasses that have risen up in their graves to struggle for their sheets with the wicked wretches who would have stolne them away And it were to be wished that more were permitted to do the like and that souls might have leave to appear sometimes to those that abuse them so unconsieonably happily they might fright them into reason who will not be otherwise perswaded to do them right St. Isidor delivers it as an apostolical tradition and general 7. Age. l. 1. de offic c. 18. l. 2. c. penu●t practise of the Catholick Church in his time to offer up sacrifices and prayers and to distribute almes for the dead and this not for any encrease of their merit but either to mitigate their pains or to shorten the time of their durance Venerable Bede is a sure witness 8. Age. for the following Century whose learned works are ful of wonderful stories which he brings in confirmation of this Catholick doctrine and practise St. John Damascene made an eligant Orat. quod ij qui. c. ora●ion on purpose to stir up this devotion where amongst other things he says it is impossible to number up all the stories in this kind which bear witness that the souls departed are relieved by our prayers and that otherwise God would not have appointed a commemoration of the dead to be dayly made in the unbloody sacrifice of the Mass nor would the Church have so religiously observed anniversaries and other dayes set a part for the service of the dead Were it but a dog says Simeon 9. Age. In vita St. Pachom St. Euseb c. Metaphrastes that by chance were faln into the fire we should have so much compassion for him as to help him out and what shall we do for souls who are faln into Purgatory fire I say souls of our Parent● and dearest friends souls who are predestinate to eternal glory and extream precious in the sight of God And what did not the Saints of Gods Church for them in those days some armed themselves from head to foot in course hair cloth others tore of their flesh with chains and rude disciplines some again pined themselves with rigourous fasts others dissolved themselves into tears some passed whole nights in contemplation others gave liberal almes or procured great store of Masses In fine they did what they were able and were not well pleased that they were able to do no more to relieve the poor souls in Purgatory Amongst 10. Age. Luitprand l. 4. c. 7. others Queen Melchtild is reported to have purchased immortal fame for her discreet behaviour at the death of the King her Husband for whose soul she caused
them with reproaches to come in upon this and either voluntarily or by a sweet kind of violence to set upon these captive soules with a new and fierce storme of reproaches Faith If you believed there was a Purgatory indeed miserable creature why did you not live so as to avoid its cruell torments Hope If you aym'd to gain Paradise why did you play the foole so as to amuse your self with such trifles and to loose so much precious time in them Charity Oh how well have you deserved to burne in these flames since you often scorned to burn with mine and to serve God with a heart all inflamed with divine fire burne then at leasure and dy here for shame since there was a time thou wouldst neither live nor die with sacred and holy love Penance Is it you that were so frighted with my rigours so terrified with my sweet austerities with which I would have preserved you from these cruel torments Tell me now where are your damask beds your soft quilts your down pillowes your fine sheets that were smoother and whiter then milke and cream your sweet bags and perfumes all your dainties all your vanities all that modish attire and braverie which did so besot and inchant you One sigh one teare one act of self denial would have kept you out of this place of torments answer me now and let me heare what you have to say for your self Prudence Foolish and senseless soule how came you so to loose your wits and even common sense too as knowing the rigour of these flames to use no caution to prevent them Oh? How well are these horrid punishments bestowed This vile creature was so simple as to believe that continually offending God without making him amends for it in an honourable way she should passe scotfree and supply for all with a slight peccavi and so enter into heaven What an idle folly was this As if it were a sufficient pretence to be wicked and rebellious because God is full of mercy Sit still then at the daily task of thy suffrings and rather think of doubling them for it is meet that God should shew himself to be God as well by justice as by mercy and that both these divine attributes should play their parts in their turnes Fortitude How oft have I offered my service to strengthen you O you carelesse a●d lazy soul how oft have I offer'd to lend you my Arme my Heart and all my invincible power to support and bolster up your pusillanimity and weaknesse and you have disdained to employ it now you are forced to bear the heavy burthen of Gods just vengeance have I not just reason to withdraw my assistance Temperance I told you as much long since that for want of bridling your unruly passions the time would come when you would curse the hours of all your excesses and disorders without having power to redeem them but by excessive torments Do you look now inconsiderate soul that I should poure out water upon your flames you that have ever slighted me Thus all the holy Quire of Gods darlings the innocent vertues come one after another and beat upon this Anvil laying whole loads of most heavy strokes upon this miserable soul that you cannot well imagine what more grievous fortune can befall her in so much that the soul so opprest with evills and so furiously battered on all sides with a fresh supply of torments is forced to cry out miserable that I am and a thousand times miserable am I not wretched enough but must the vertues themselves joyn their forces with my frailties to persecute me and compleat my misery How long alas how long will you thus cruelly combine to undoe me you love and you griefe you by a thousand sweets and you by a thousand severities You by flattering my paines and you by redoubling them you by shewing me life and you by shewing me death you by estranging me from Paradice and you by conducting me to the very gates of hel you by sweet expostulations and you by bitter reproaches which go to my very heart How long I say once more will you be so cruelly kinde as to joyn your forces to imbitter the martyrdom of a poore creature now grown to ●e the most miserable wretch under Heaven Forbear at length forbear it is not fit the severity of Gods Justice should eclipse all the raies of his infinite mercy Whether the Devils torment them All were lost if the opinion of some were true who will needs have the Devils play the executioners in Purgatory Lord what a terrible warr would these wicked Aposta●a's raise against the holy Soules who are ere long to take possession of the places which they have lost in Heaven With what a rage would they assault them wreak their barbarous fury upon them were they to be treated at their mercy But I had rather S. Tho. in 4. d. 20. 21. Suar. d. 46. Sect. 3. follow the opinion of others who with farr more reason me thinks believe that the Devils have no power to do them the least mischief Tell me what good would they get by it since the soules can neither offend God nor loose Paradise which is the only Butt against which the Devils level their whole malice Origen fancied the Devil to be so sullenly proud that having been once foyled by a soul he will never after come neere her nor have any thing more to doe with her If this be so the Devils will beware how they come neare Purgatory where there are so many Victorious Souls Besides God will not permit it nor can we see what good can arise thence to Gods glory Possibly also these p●nishments which the Devils would inflict might shorten the terme of the souls durance and this may be the cause why they are loath to meddle with them least they send them so much the sooner into heaven However some of the learned think that these souls bordring so near upon hell may very probably see the Devils and Su. cit n. 10. the damned souls and hear their most execrable blasphemies and that this is no small addition to their pains to hear their good God whom they entirely love to be incessantly cursed blasphemed and renounced by those devillish and sacrilegious spirits St. Catharine of Siena was heard to say she had rather suffer all the torments of Hell then hear one blasphemy against God for whom she had so much cordial love and who is of himself so lovely I confesse this is a sweet kind of torment as proceeding from supernatural and divine love but I maintain withall that it is a torment and a most grievous one because though the Arrows of Love are guilded over or made of pure gold yet are they as sharp pointed and as piercing to the quick as those of Grief though they be but of steel Confusion is one of Their confusion the most intollerable evils which can befall a
are applied to them intention be to help any one in particular who is really in Purgatory so your work be good it is infallibly applied to the party upon whom you bestow it For as Divines teach it is the intention of the offerer which governs all and God of his infinite goodness accommodates himself to the petitioners reque●● applying unto each one what has been offered for his relief If you have no body in your thoughts for whom you offer up your prayers they are only beneficial to your self and what would be thus lost for want of application God lays up in the Treasury of the Church as being a kind of spiritual waife or stray to which no body can lay any just claime And since it is the intention which entitles one to what is offer'd before all others what right can others pretend to it or with what justice can it be parted or divided amongst others who were never thought of And hence I take my rise to Better to pray for few then many resolve your other question that if you regard their best advantage whom you have a minde to favour you had better pray for a few then for many together for since the merit of your devotions is always limited and often in a very smal proportion the more you divide it subdivide it amongst many the lesser share comes to every one in particular as if you should distribute a crown or an angel amongst a thous●●● poore people you easily see yo●● Almes would be so inconsiderable they would be little better for it whereas if it were all bestowed upon one or two it were enough to make them rich in their conceipts Now to define precisely whether it be alwaies better done to help one or two souls efficaciously then to yeald a little comfort to a great many is a question I leave for you to exercise your wits in I could fancy it to be your best course to do both that is somtimes to single out some particular soul and to use all your power to lift her up to heaven somtimes again to parcell out your favours upon many and now and then also to deal out a general Almes upon all Purgatory And you need not fear exceeding in this way of charity whatsoever you bestow for you may be sure nothing will be lost by it And St. Thomas will tell you for your comfort that since all the souls in Purgatory are perfectly united in charity they rejoyce exceedingly when they see any of their whole number to receive such powerfull helps as to dispose her for heaven they every one take it as done to themselves whatsoever is bestowed upon any of their fellows whom they love as themselves and out of a heavenly kind of curtesy and singular love they joy in her happiness as if it were their own So that it may be truly said that you never pray for one or more of them but they are all partakers and receive a particular comfort and satisfaction by it Me thinks this very consideration should inkindle in your hearts a fresh desire to be often ●olafing those happy souls and to entitle your selves their special benefactours who will never suffer the remembrance of your tender mercies to be blotted out of their gratefull memories But let us now state the case How if we employ other● to help the● thus suppose you should employ another to do those good works for the souls whether or no will they have the same effect as if you had done them your self again should this other whom you thus employ be an ungratious fellow whether would all his endeavours be able to give any ease to the souls for whose sakes you procure them I am so taken with the Angelical Doctrine of St. Thomas I le go no further for an answer He tells us then that if you be good and he starke nought by whom you procure for example the Dirge to be said or any other good work to be performed that can be done by a third person for there be some that be personal it does not at all blast the fruit of your devotion nor obstruct the souls benefit for whom you procured it That if he chance to be good so much the better the benefit will be the greater though God look more upon the chief Agent and principal cause then upon the accessory or instrument he thinks fit to make use of That if you be wicked your self and the other good the good work will have its effect and the soul will be assisted by it That if you should be both so unlucky as to be neither of you in the state of grace excepting Masse only which can never fail of its effect all other means you use will be utterly void and of no effect because they proceed from so ungratefull hands and worse hearts Would you have God to accept of his enemies presents and while you refuse to give him your heart to seal with his divine grace would you have him to deliver you up his to dispose of his mercies for the benefit of others No wicked wretch no till you alter your condition do not look that God will appear in his mercy to bestow a Jubily on those holy soules you entreat for nay it falls out somtimes even in this world th●● the pleading of an infamous advocate or a sworn enemy of the Prince or State makes the criminals case more odious and desperate and in lieu of a Gibet procurcs him a wheel or a worse punishment Yet I must tell you and I must conjure you by all the obligations of humanity that be you never so lost a creature never so covered with enormious crimes you never fail at least to procure Masses and to distribute liberall Almes for the relief of the poore souls and this for many reasons First Because the Masse is alwayes to good purpose as having its effect ex opere operato as they speak in schoools or of it self without any relation had to him that says it or causes it to be said Secondly Because they use to say that the last wholsome advice we ought to give to a desperate soul plunged over head and ears in sinne is to be sure alwayes to be good to the poore for sooner or later good will come of it Thirdly It is truly said of alms-deeds that they are good sollicitours and have a most charming Rhetorick to obtain of God and to extort as it were out of his hands what they please In so much that if the sentence of condemnation were already signed in the hands of God it is the expression of St. Chrysologus God Serm. 8. himself would teare it in pieces and revoke the sentence rather then refuse any favour to the mercifull Give Almes sayes the Eccl. 29. holy Ghost and hide it in the bosome of the poore and your Alms will intercede for you So that although you wicked wretch cannot say a good prayer for the
souls yet your charity will supply your place and plead for you and the poore that partake of it will also pray for you and all this may possibly be to good purpose What your tongue cannot your hand will perform with greater advantage and what cannot proceede from your heart which is poysoned with deadly sin will out at your purse which is full of mercy and help to purchase some comfortable refreshment to take of the fury of those hungry flames which are incessantly preying upon the poor souls And here again taking upon me to be Proctour for this sufferring Commonwealth I conjure you to be liberal in distributing your almes and procuring M●sses for the souls departed I can expect no less from their goodness but that their Angel gardians or yours or those of the poor will inspire them with good thoughts and move them to poure ou● their ardent and innocent prayers for you in recompence of so great a charity Mean while you shall be like the Crow that brought bread to St. Paul the Hermite without so much as tasting it or like the Whale that convay'd Jonas safe to the shoar without feeding on him or to use St. Gregory's comparison you shall be like the water in the Sacrament of Baptisme which falling upon the head of a child washes away the foul staine of original sin and entitles him heir to the Kingdom of Heaven and mean while glides away into some noysome sinke and there turnes to filth and corruption Now to the last Query for what What souls we ought most to pray for souls in particular we ought most to concern our selves I answer briefly thus 1. Without question all obligations of kindred promise gratitude rule command c. are to be served in the first place 2. You cannot do better then to offer up your devotions for those souls which are dearest to God or his blessed Mother 3. It is a singular charity to remember those that are in most need or most neglected 4. It is a pious and laudable piece of spiritual craft to do for thos● that will be soonest released for by this means you shall send into heaven good store of powerful advocates who will incessantly plead for you before the throne of mercy §. 6. How dangerous it is to trust others with what concerns the sweet rest of our souls in the next world AS I cannot but highly magnifie It is a folly to trust others and extoll their charity that have a sollicitous care to rescue out of Purgatory the Souls of their dear parents friends and acquaintance so I cannot forbear deploring and even laughing at their folly and meer madness as I may rightly tearm it that leave all to the discretion of their heirs and friends they leave behind them They must pardon me if I wrong them it is the zeal of their good transports me it is a just indignation sets my heart all on fire to see how the wisest often prove the veriest fools in this occasion which is the most important of all others How many wills never see any other light but that of the fire which consumes them to ashes How many false ones are dayly forged to fill up the others roome How few do we see at this day punctually performed or rather how many do we see not performed at all Having procured a Mass or two of Requiem and the Dirige to be said for decency sake and for the honour of their house who is there almost that will give himself any further trouble to pray even for his parents The good man is scarse cold in his Grave but his Children fall together by the Eares run into endless suits seaze upon what they can next lay their hands on right or wrong and will not be perswaded to forego it but by main force of Law or by the terrour of dreadful excomm●nications One layes injustice ●● his Fathers charge for doing so much to advance his eldest Sons fortune another cries out upon him for being so unnatural as to undo his own Child The Daughters think much their portions are no greater the whole house is up in armes and in continual alarums and in a word there 's nothing but a meer confusion and hurly burly amongst them Mean while the good man has leasure enough to fit at his taske of suffering and to lye frying in Purgatory not so much as one of his Children thinks on him unless it be to brand him with some injurious reproach The unfortunate soul almost killed himself with care and had like also to have damn'd himself to make his Children happy in this world and these barbarous harpies are so insatiable as to be raking at the bones and gnawing the very heart of their deceased father who must needs be very sensible if he know it to see himself so undutifully regarded by his own Children I will bring him in anon to speak for himself as best able to hold forth his own lamentable condition and sure it will break your very heart to hear him And yet tell me seriously does he not deserve all this who might so easily when time was have provided better for himself and prevented all this mischief by obliging the Chuch to offer up good store of Masses for him and was so indiscreet as to leave it wholly to the discretion of his Heirs and Executours who are little better then direct Barbarians For is there any likelihood they will stir to help him out of Purgatory they that cannot so much as afford him a stone upon his Grave worth a crown with a little inscription to put good people in mind who lies there that they may cast a good thought after him But I shall have occasion yet to enlarge my self more upon this subject and to make it appear what an irreparable folly is committed by the wisest in the world in neglecting one of the most important affaires in their whole life It would go h●rd with many Whether a soul must stay in Purg. till restitution be made were it true that a person who neglected to make restitution in his life time and only charged his heirs to do it for him in his last Will and Testament shall not stir out of Purgatory till restitution be really made let there be never so many Masses said and never so many satisfactory works offered up for him And yet St. Brigit whose revelations are for the most part approved by the Church sticks not to set this down for a truth which God had revealed unto her Nor are there wanting grave Divines that countenance this rigourous position and bring for it many strong reasons and examples which they take to be authentical and the Law it self which says that if a man do not restore anothers goods there will always stick upon his soul a kind of blemish or obligation of justice and since the fault lies wholly at his doore he cannot say they have the least reason to complaine of
4. c. 27. Abbot that this fact of Matius was as pleasing to God as that of Abraham and that he should be eternally blessed for it Go now and cast this soul into Purgatory who stuck not to cast his only Son into the River at the command of his superiour and when you have done will they not sooner think you cast in the whole River which was thus blessed by a perfect act of obedience and so quench the flames then suffer her to lye burning there Mutius did but once cast his son into the River and how many Religious souls out of the same spirit of obedience expose themselves a thousand times to all dangers both by Sea and Land and after all this must they needs visit Purgatory in their way to heaven It seems boldly said of St Austin Tract 10. in Joan. that the blessed Virgin was happier in obeying God then in being the Mother of God and yet Christ himself said as much in express tearms For when by way of applauding him they were crying up her Luc. 11. 27. 28. happy that had the honour to be his Mother and to nourish him with the milk of her breasts he sudainly replied that he took them to be happy indeed that heard his word and put it in Practise Luc. 8. 21. and another time when they had told him that his good Mother and his brothers stood without waiting for him who say he are my brothers and whom do you call my Mother whosoever does the will of my Father he is my Mother my brothers and my whole parentage Now to our purpose if an obedient person have the honour to bear this honorable title of being the brother and even the Mother of God can God so far neglect this brother and mother of his as to leave them in Purgatore fire The Abbess one day commanded S. Catherine of Bolognia that for the love of God and the excercise of l. 1. vite ejus obedience she would enter into a burning furnace The Saint runs away instantly and doubtless would have thrown herself in had not the Religious stood in the way to hinder her It is not a crime 1 de civ c. 1 says St. Austin to be thus prodigal of our lives and even like Samson to make our selves away when God requires it No this is no crime but a pious holocaust offered upon the Altar of obedience and will you then kill a man that is already dead will you burn him in Purgatory that is already consumed in the holy flames of obedience God does not use to punish or purge the same fault twice and therefore a soul that has been once purged in the fire of obedience hath no need of being purged again in the fire of Purgatory O what a thing it is to be obedient cried Gerard as he lay a dying in St. Bernards armes I have been carried before Gods high tribunal and have seen the power of obedience no body shall ever perish that is truly obedient but when he comes to die shall mount above the quires of Angels Arch-angels and Apostles according to the merit of his obedience and with this he died Must Angels Arch-angels Apostles and those that are in the same degree of perfection be thrust into Purgatory fire Is it reasonable that they should be confined to so loathsome a prison that made themselves voluntary prisoners under the severe government of obedience I am resolved said H. David to fear no evils of what ragged nature soever they be Ps 22. so long as thou my God dost lead me by the hand though I should walk in the midst of the shadow of death in the very suburbs of hell which is Purgatory I will feare nothing for thy rod and thy staff wherewith thou dost governe and direct me to do thy holy will in all occasions will be my sure comfort and protection An obedient man speaks nothing but victories says the holy Ghost in the Proverbs What victories Such as St. Dorotheus Pro. c. 21. 28 Doct. 1. describes when he tells us that a soul being scated in her triumphant chariot drawn by humility and obedience treads all underfoot and with a swift motion steeres her course up to heaven If humility and obedience be her horses they will not easily convey her into Purgatory for they know not the way thither but only into heaven their own native country where they will be sur● to leave this triumphant and victorious soul in the joyful fruition of eternal happiness Take away self-will and there will be no hell cries St. Bernard If obedience can put out hell fire Ser. 1. de resur she most needs have power to put out the fire of Purgatory What a solid comfort must this be to religious souls who have given themselves over to the practice of this vertue and to all those that living in the world yet do nothing of their own heads but are constantly ruled by the will of God It is a strange but very true observation Bonau c. 13 reg novi● to 7. of St. Gregory and of St. Bonaventure that God who is invincible will yet suffer himself to be overcome by the obedience of his servants so far as even to obey them I say obey for it is the very expression he uses himselfe in the case of Josua who is said to have stopped the sun in his full carreere because God was pleased to obey the voice of his obedient servant If this be so that God will refuse nothing to an obedient soul let her aske him to be freed from Purgatory and she will not be denied it who never denied him any thing And without all doubt it is as easy for her to curb the fire of Purgatory as to stop the sweet motion of the heavens You then that are obedient know your power you may appeale from God to God in case he should sentence you to Purgatory you may boldly claim his promise of denying you nothing and then you will be sure to make it in your bargain to have nothing to do with Purgatory but to go straight into heaven there to enjoy him for ever The Conclusion IT is now high time to conclude this § and with it the whole Treatise And I cannot leave you better then in heaven whether I have brought you if you will your self for you see it is in your power to make your way thither without passing through Purgatory Believe mee it is no trifling matter but the most important business we have to do in this world to purchase heaven and to purchase it so as to have right to take possession of it immediately after we have left this world Christ our Saviour tells us that the kingdome of heaven suffers violence and that they must be both violent and valliant that run away with it where St. Ambrose observes well S. Amb. in Luc. that God loves to be forced and that they which importune him most and use the greatest violence are the men he makes most of Take courage then deare Reader take courage imitate the good thief snatch heaven out of his hands steal away his Paradise do something worthy of him worthy of your self and worthy of Paradise If no better means occur to you at least strive to to be hugely concerned for the poor souls in Purgatory pray often devoutly for them and procure that good store of Masses may be said for their relief You have the ell in your hands by which you may measure out your 〈◊〉 happiness says the devout Salvianus be charitable to others and they will be no less to you The time is not long that is allowed you to sojourn in this world in this little time be sure you make the Saints in heaven and the souls in Purgatory your friends that they be obliged to help you in your greatest need Learne at least by these discourses to have a tender heart for the poor souls and to use your uttermost endeavours to go your self directly into heaven out of this wi●ked world It is the thing I earnestly beg of Gods infinite mercy for you and for my self at the instance of your good prayers For though I must acknowledge I have de 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ●easo●●● take 〈…〉 ●our to be sent●●●● 〈◊〉 to lye there as ●any months and years a●●● shall please God yet I confess ingenuously I have no great minde to either place ●ut only to heaven which I beseech God by the merits of my dear Saviour and by the plenary indulgence of his most infinite mercy to grant us all Amen Et Fidelium animae per misericordiam Dei requiescant in pace Amen FINIS