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A15779 A treatise, shewing the possibilitie, and conueniencie of the reall presence of our Sauiour in the blessed Sacrament the former is declared by similitudes and examples: the latter by the causes of the same. Wright, Thomas, d. 1624. 1596 (1596) STC 26043.5; ESTC S111546 105,764 270

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creatures become sensible and animate substances but Christs body so feeds the soule that it giueth life vnto it Qui Ioh. ● manducat me vinet propter me He that eateth me the same also shall liue by mee And therfore as God is saide to be in the Iust by grace charitie and they in him so by this Sacrament Christ is in vs and we in him Herevpon it followeth that men are deified in two sortes by receiuing this Sacrament first by a reall communication with Christ whom they harbour in their bodies and therfore of S. Cyprian are called Baiuli Christi carriers De caena Dom. or bearers of Christ and others terme thē Christoferi secondly they are deified in soule by receiuing this grace which is a diuine coniunction and admirable participation of his deitie by which they are made diuinae naturae consortes partakers of the diuine nature The fourth cause to vnite the faithfull after a certaine reall manner CHrist our Sauiour making his praier to his Father among other graces hee Ioh. 17. Hec expositio est Cirill lib. 11. in Io. ca. 26. Hillari lib. 9. de trinit demanded he asked this for all the faithfull that as his Father was in him and hee in his Father so the faithfull should bee one thing Christ is in his Father because he really and essentially participateth the same substance with the Father and his Father is in him for that he possesseth the same nature and substance with his sonne It was vnpossible that the faithfull should in such sort participate one cōmon essence because the infinite perfection of God chalengeth this as a proper dignitie to haue a nature communicable to diuers persons But since that mans nature was not capable of such fecunditie our prouident Pastor prouided a way to keepe his flocke together and to vnite them not only by affection in minde but also by a certaine reall and substantiall nature wherein they should be made all one and most excellētly resembled vnto the blessed Trinitie which was effected by this Sacrament for by giuing them all the same body and bloud he caused them to be vnited in one substance one nature essence and that more excellent than their owne naturall substance was Wherefore al those that receiue their body may bee called one body as S. Paule doubted not to call them when he saide Vnus panis vnum ● Coria 10 corpus multi sumus omnes qui de vno pane participamus beeing many wee are one bread one body all that participate of one bread And for this cause as wee say all the three persons in Trinitie are one God euen so all the faithfull by a certain maner are one body and as the starres in the firmament though of themselues very different yet are vnited al in one indeficient fountaine of light so all the faithfull fituated in the firmament vnmooueable of the Catholike Church are vnited together and made one in this blessed Sacrament but with this difference that the starres haue not the Sunne in them but ●nely the light whereas the faithful haue the Sonne of all light continually springing within them Iosuah thought GOD Iosu ●● shevved him a singular fauour and woorthily al admire it that God at the request of a man shoulde staye the course of the Sunne till he had ouercome his enemies But what would he haue saide if God had brought the Sunne from heauen and put it in his hand to haue vsed it at his pleasure so hee hath dealt with vs in this Sacrament by drawing his eternall Sonne from heauen to dwel in earth to be held in our hands to be receiued as foode to ioyne vs all that be in his church to fight against al visible enemies as tyrants and heretikes and inuisible foes as the Divel and his infernall ghosts The fift cause to vnite the faithfull in affection AS the bodie of man containeth diuerse parts of contrary nature and disposition the heart being hote the braine cold fleame moist melancholy drie spirits of a fiery nature bones of an earthly all the foure elementes in sundry partes holding predominion yet the soule keepeth them in peace conserueth a most sweet harmony containeth euery one in his office euen so this blessed Sacrament ioyneth Christs seruants Greekes and Egyptians Iewes and Gentiles poore and rich learned and ignorant in an admirable bond of loue and vnitie if they receiue it with that preparation and vse it as they ought the Isai 11. which vnion loue and peace I say the Prophet foretold was too slowe ouer the earth after that little cloude which Elias 3 Reg. 18. behelde had powred downe this blessed Sacrament vpon it Habitabit saith he lupus the woolfe shall dwel with the lamb the libbard shall rest with the kidde the calfe the lion and the sheepe shal lodge all together and a little childe shall leade them he meaneth fierce cruell and intractable men sauage nations and barbarous countries shall be brought to vnion peace and loue no doubt but principally by vertue of this sacred communion this common soule will cause euery one to keep himselfe in order this little childe which we fold with our breasts in this sacrament will guide pacifie and comforte them all for what inflameth men one to loue another principally but resemblance and similitude Why doe kinsemen so affect one another but in regard of resemblance of bloud and similitude of complexions And therefore they are called Consanguinei and Kinsemen And what similitude can be greater then this whereby good christians are made Verè Consanguinei Christi In very deede the kinsmen of Christ Yea rather identified or made one with the selfe-same bloud the selfe-same body and soule which no kindred euer did participate because they haue the like bloud and bodies but not the same nor the same soule The dignity and worth of those which be partakers of this sacrament may easily inuite al men to loue them For as we prise and admire all those whom we acknowledge to be of account so surely wee ought to esteeme those who are bathed with the bloud of Christ who are indued with his grace whose bodies are liuing temples pallaces to allodge this royall maiestio If the ground was holy where the Angell onely in a bush sp●ke to Moses If the mountaine was sanctified where the celestiall Exod. 3. Exod. 19 Act. 29 spirits gaue the law If the napkins and girdles of Saint Paule wrought miracles because they serued so great a seruāt of God O in what reputation should we haue those blessed men which we know receiue so often and keepe so long the king of Angels the head of all the Apostles in their bodies The sixt cause for the exercise of faith IN the summe of all Diuinity I find 10. difficulties hardly to be conceaued and consequently not easie to be beleeued The first is howe God hath free will 2. how he knoweth those future
lilfe Meate helpeth nature to disgest many ill humours and this sacrament is not onely a meate but also a medicine And as Saint Cyprian saith extinguisheth sinne Meate causeth growth and whosoeuer participateth De coena Domini 5 this foode encreaseth in spirit for by receuing the life of charity and grace the soule cannot but grow in vertue and perfection as hee that commeth nearer the sunne participateth more light and heate For these resemblances of meate with the blessed sacrament we may per ceaue the reason why our blessed Sauiour instituted it vnder the formes of bread and wine thereby to teach vs by these externall signes that as bread and wine feede our bodyes so Christs f●lesh and bloud our soules But for all these perfections or commodities of temporall meats they haue adioyned as many imperfections and defects the which this blessed foode of life wanteth For corporall meats if they delight vs the more we eate of them our delight is lesse and at last wee come to loathe them but this meate Qui comedit adhuc esurit qui Ecde 24. bibit adhuc sitit hee that eateth of it is the more hungry and hee that drinketh the more thirsty and none we see so much desire it as those who most frequent it Corporall meates cannot cause a body that is dead to returne againe to life but this spirituall foode giueth life vnto the dead Qui manducat me ipse viuet propter me Io. 6. he that eateth me the same also shall liue by me Corporall meate although it repaire our forces lost yet the continuall alteration and disguising of it diminisheth our naturall heat because Omne in agendo repatitur euery agent in doing suffereth againe so that at last euen meat it self would extinguish our outward facultie if we had no other cause of death But he who eateth at this table of life Non gustabit Io. 6. mortem in aeternum non morietur he shal not tast of death for euer he shall not dye For as the soule can neuer dye except it leese the grace of God and that it cannot leese of necessitie but of free will so the grace of God can neuer be consumed but by a peruerse wicked will and therefore in aeternum for euer of it selfe it conserueth the soule in life because in very deed it is life Corporall meates faile in force for they alwayes cause not the body to encrease in strength or quantitie but after certaine yeares the body doth not only cease to grow but also it begins to decay and in fine declineth to death But such is the vertue of this holye Eucharist that euery time it is eaten it addeth a new degree of growth yea and for most part when a man declineth most in body and commeth nearer his death in spirit soul he encreaseth most because he then hath most heat of grace todisgest this sacred foode for which admirable effects Dauid wel say in persō of those that receiue this Psal 22. heauenly refection Dominus regit me nihil mihi deerit in loco pascuaeibi me collocauit Out Lord doth gouerne me I shall want nothing in the soile of his pasture he hath placed mee For all pastures in respect of this are barren desarts all repasts compared with this leaueth soule euer fainting These pastures are alwaies greene with grace enameld with flowers of vertues watered with the heauenly dewe of Gods assistance and finally haue the pasture continually attending his sacred flocke The twenty ninth cause to effect the resurrection of our bodies BY the vniuersall preuarication of Adam 1. Cor. 15. all his posterity incu●red in particular the death of soule and corruption of body whereunto they onely are subiect who discende from him by naturall generation Because that God had so decreed that as from him we were to draw our nature so by his good demeanour frō him we should receiue our grace But through his transgression by communicating vnto vs a part of his substance poisoned with the sting of originall sin hee imparted together the mortall woundes of body and soule Our Sauiour Christ whose substāce was vnspotted with crime or offence pretending as life to destroye death communicated vnto vs his diuine substaunce to giue the soule the life of grace and the body immortality of glory For who can wonder if Christs body touching the bodies of good souls which receiue him with deuotion resuscitate them to life againe since the touche of Elizeus bones had vertue to restore the 4. Reg. 3. vitall spirit to a dead carcasse If seede sowne in the field although it die in the ground retaine vigour virtue of spring so liuely againe which was communicated vnto it by the roote why shall wee not imagine that our bodies keepe a certaine vertue a relation to this sacrament the onely roote of immortality For if the soule receiue grace the body concurreth it is an instrument and therefore if it bee compartner in paine why not in gaine And if Christs soule sanctifie our soules shall not this bodye glorifie our bodies Yea both his body and soule will immortallize both our bodies and soules and therefore hee saide Hic est panis de caelo Iohn 6. descendens vt si quis ex ipso manducauerit non moriatur this is the breade that descendeth from heauen that if anie man eate of it he die not For although hee die corporally yet by vertue of this food by the touch by the relation to the soule whose instrument it was Christ will raise it vp againe Without doubt it standeth greatly with the prouidence of God that Christs body should cause their resurrection who receiue deuoutly this sacramēt because as wee saide aboue in this hoast Christ is sacrificed and those that participate it woorthily in affection suffer and die with him therefore reason requireth that as they die with him so they shall rise with him Si compatimnr conregnabimus Rom. 8. if we suffer with Christ we shall be also glorified with Christ And more plainely Reformabit corpus humilitatis nostrae Phil. 3. configuratum corpori claritatis suae Hee will reforme the body of our humillitie configured to the body of his glory For if we mortifie our bodies to make them like his body by crosses and pains Doubtlesse he wil reuiue them with delights glory causing them to be his like his body in eternall ioy For which cause we must for a while intreate our bodies not to groane vnder the burthen of Christs commaundements not to repine at fasting not to murmure at mortification not to loathe long prayers not to grudge to liue in prisons depriued of many false pleasures the worlde affoordeth for all these will passeonce When death comes our conscience will reioyce But when our Sauiour after death shall iudge vs and see our crosses conformable to his our pains for his glory our tribulation for his confession Hiems Cantie
disdain to view these fading floures these roses with thornes these bees with stings these golden aples of Sodoms loue these Syrens sugered songs conuert thy eies to this blessed Eucharist view in thy Lord a paradise of pleasure beutie without corruption profit without displeasure ioyes without deceit continual delight without satiety and then I know thou wilt breake forth and cry Deus meus omnia my God Psal 72. and al nam gustato spiritu deficit omnis caro for the spirit tasted al flesh faileth Thē I know thou canst not but direct al thy actions vse all the creatures of God for no other end then his glory for this hart will becom like a flame of fire that burneth al it incountreth conuerteth thē into fire so thy loue wil thinke speake and worke al for God and in God and consequently loath what the world loueth not for God The thirty seuenth cause to be a confirmation of his testament IT hath bin an vsuall custome with God to confirme and seale his pacts and promises with some sensible sign that by such palpable obiects men might better conceiue remember them For if he promise Noe his posteritie neuer after to ouer flowe the vniuersall earth with a deluge he imprintes his seale in the clouds ●ehes ● for his armes leaueth the rainbow If he promise Abraham to multiply his seed as the stars of heauen and to giue him the land of Canaan he causes him to deuide his sacrifices in two partes and in confirmation Genes 15. of his pacte he sendes a lampe of fire which passeth through the midest of thē If Moses sent from God giue the law writtē in tables of stone if he promise to accept them into his peculiar people hee Exod. 24. confirmeth his couenant with a bowell of bloud wherwith he sprinkleth all the people If GOD vsed such stately seales to ratifie his promises to his people in the lawe of Nature and the lawe written questionlesse hee will not omitte them in the lawe of grace where the couenaunt concerneth a greater benefit wherein are comprehended in a more iminent degree al these fauors of God promised in times past the which he sealed so solemnly and therefore in confirmation of this newe testament he instituted this blessed Sacrament and sacrifice Hic est ealix noni testamenti this is the challice of the new testament affirme the three proclaimers of Christs law Mathew Marke and Luke with the Apostle S. Paul But what couenant maketh Christ with his people that he ratifieth with the seale of his owne body and bloud Here Hieremy speaking Hier. 31. by himselfe and by S. Paul or rather God by them both Ecce dies venient dicit dominus Hebr. 8. consummabo super domum Israell super domum Iuda testamentum nouum Behold the daies shall come saith our Lord and I will consummate vppon the house of Israel vpon the house of Iuda a new testament c. see the place In these wordes God promiseth fiue things to his church first that hee wil forgiue al them which enter into it all their offences the which he effecteth by Baptisme and this Sacrament Secondly that they should know God euery one little and great the which he performeth by powring of faith into their soules thirdly that he will write this law not in stone tables as Moses did but in fleshie heartes and consequently they shal be more mollified and pliable to obserue them and not so indurated as the Iewes the which he fulfilleth by induing thē with charitie Fourthly that he would be their God and they should be his people that he would haue a fatherly prouidence ouer them the which he accomplisheth with his owne presence Ecce ego vobiscum sum vsque ad consummationem Matth. 28. seculi behold I am with ye all dayes euen to the consummation of the world and by sending the holyghost which docebit illam omnē veritatem he shall Actes 2. 5 Iohn 16. teach her all trueth Finally that he will neuer forsake nor abandon his Church as he did the Iewes Sinagog the which we haue prooued by the continuance of the catholike church from Christs time euen till these our dayes although persecuted by emperours impugned by heretikes troubled by so many euill Catholikes Matth. 16 yet the gates of hell could nothing preuail against it the propagation also of his church was promised by God sealed with his sacrament that this vine tree planted by Christs own hands should delate the branches from sea to sea and to the worlds end the extremities thereof in Psal 79. such sort that rather lande shall faile to propagate this Church then her amplification shall finish Wherefore God shall not be knowne onely in Iudea or Siria but in all the prouinces of the world since we Psal 75. see depriued of these promises the protestants Churches eclipsed for fifteene hundred yeares and concluded in corners of the world in some few Cities of Germany in Geneua and England it is no maruaile if they haue broken the seale of the blessed sacrament where with by infallible assurance the maiestie of God confirmed them But the Catholike Church possessing all holdeth the sacred Eucharist as a perpetuall confirmation the which as 〈◊〉 it was sayde comprehendeth both the significations and signes of all the other promises made and confirmed by God in passed ages For God promised to Noe not to drowne the worlde anie more with water and Christ promiseth heere his Church shall neuer whollie bee ouerflowne with sinne hee tooke for a signe the Rainbow the which the sunne causeth by reflection of beames in watrie cloudes O what a goodly rainbowe the sunne of neuer-fading light effecteth heere what glistering beames of glorie powreth his diuinitie into that sacred humanitie what beautifull raies spring from that glorious soule and adorne with brightnesse and most liuely colours that immortall bodie if it were not for merite of our fayth wee might see through those cloudes of bread and Wine another sorte of Rainbovv then Nature in her most stately circle euer behelde God promised to Abraham to multiplie his seede as the stars of heauen and where are they multiplied but in the Catholike Church hee allotted vnto him the lande of Canaan and heere the kingdome of heauen hee commaunded Abraham to diuide his sacrifice in two partes and sent a Lampe of fire from heauen to passe betvvixt them and what coulde more expresly figure this sacrifice Are not heere diuided by vertue of Consecration the soule from the bodie and the bloud from them both and doth not both the diuinity and soule of Christ not passe but firmely stande in middest of these parts God gaue the law by Moses and promised the people to defēd protect accept thē for his but here with a more careful prouidence with a more forcible meanes with more plēty of grace with more abundance of
ouer the effects of loue and therby discouer the origen and fountaine of this vaine of life he shall finde them most liuely in this little world of al pure loue depaynted The fruits of loue be these vnion zeale extasie bountifulnes Foure riuers al issuing from one spring and as this Sacrament and the incarnation of Christ of al the wonderfull works of God most manifestly declare his loue so it were not amisse to declare the effects ofloue in them both that the resemblance of both might render the matter more plaine yet to auoide prolixitie I will content me with the Eucharist for by this the other may be conceiued but first of all let vs see what wee vnderstand by these effectes All perfect loue requireth a certaine Vaion vnion in substance as was declared in the eight cause but for that amongest men this was vnpossible without the destruction of one or both therefore they procured all these vnions which honesty puritie of loue affect and these are to be of the same iudgements and opinions the same wills desires and affections the same table and diet the same place and presence the like garments and attire and finally to expresse one another in all things as neere as they can Zeale after two manners proceedeth Zeale from loue First zealous friends cannot tollerate any iniuries offered to their friends but procure with greater or as great diligence to defend them their credit goods life or what else appertaineth vnto them as their owne Secondly zeale cannot suffer consorts in loue and therefore experience teacheth vs what a griefe it is for the husband to haue a conceit of a riuall Extasie likewise abstracteth or haleth Extasie a louer from himselfe and causeth him rather to liue there where he loueth then indeede where hee liueth for the force of loue transporteth excessiuely his minde cogitations and affections from his owne affaires and enforceth him to attende and procure whatsoeuer concerneth his friend sometimes also it leadeth the soule so farre that it is almost abstracted from the bodie as diuers saints were rauished so with the loue of God that they liued many daies in profound contemplation feeding vpon the food of life not taking any corporall sustenance Bountifulnes waiteth vpō loue as a most Bountifuln●● faithful seruant for friendes cannot but communicate their goods one with another who before by friendship had communicated their hearts therefore they presēt one another with gifts as signes of that good will they carrie in their minds and to remonstrate vnto thē that as they haue taken possession of their harts so also they may cōmand them in their goods for amicorum omnia sunt communia among friends al things are common and he that hath giuen the greater will not sticke to impart the lesser these effectes I haue set down cursorily bicause the exact treatise requireth a whole booke onely to shew how in this sacramēt God shews them al. That in the sacred Eucharist God effecteth all those vnions which proceed from loue Ca. 3 AS I said before considering the admirable loue that God hath declared by deliuering this sacrament to the world that I was calmed in the Ocean sea in the which similitude if we persist I thinke I shal be able in part to vnfold the vnion in substance betwixt Christ and our soules in the blessed Eucharist for as the Ocean sea surcharged with an infinite multitude of waters dischargeth it self in the Mediterranean and red seas for the benefit of the inhabitants of Europe Affrike and Asia not diuiding it selfe from them but rather by their meanes becommeth vnited to those coasts wheron they border and the wombs wherin they lie by which means the treasures of the one may be transported to the other and the inhabitants of the vast Ocean may haue free passage into the red and Mediterranean Euen so the endlesse goodnesse of God swelling inwardly with an immensiue loue dischargeth himself in these two seas of loue the redde by the incarnation of Christ the Mediterranean by the institution of this sacrament yet the main Ocean of his diuinitie remaineth vnited to his humanitie and thereby bordereth vpon those soules whom he bathed with his bloud and is conioyned with the breasts of thē who receiue into them this Mediterane sea by which vnion the Citizens of heauen may passe freely among the colonies of the earth therfore as Christs diuinity was substantially vnited to his humanity euen so his diuinity and humanity are vnited in this blessed sacramēt to their bodies soules who feed at this table and as from his diuinity proceeded all those graces fauors wherwith that sacred humanity was spiritually annointed euen so frō his humanity linked with his diuinity issue all those sweete vertues graces for the which this blessed bread was ordained And therfore as betwixt the sacred humatie of Christ and his diuinitie there was a most diuine reciprocate ardent and continuall loue euen so betwixt our soules Christ there should rise a mutuall flame if we faile not he cannot be defectuous And as that sacred humanitie like the needle toucht with the adamant looketh euer towardes the pole starre was alwayes directed by his diuinitie euen so ought wee in all our actions to square our intentions according as our Sauiour teacheth vs whom we holde vnited in this sacrament because he was giuen to vs as our maister our doctor and teacher Much more might be sayd of this substantiall vnion but because it hath beene partly touched before partly because I intend not here to deliuer all I think may be said but only to touch some few points or superficiall heads leauing the rest vnto the prudent and discreet Readers of godly meditations As for all other vnions which are rooted in this coniunction of our soules and bodyes with Christ briefly they may be declared For by this Vnion of conceitswith Christ effected by the Eucharist Sacrament wee come to participate many of these conceites which heere GOD reueileth and maketh vs partakers of that were most darke and hidden from nature because the very mystery it selfe openeth the eyes of our vnderstanding to wade deeper into the secrets of nature than euer philosophy could haue induced vs as that a substaunce can be wholy spoiled of his accidents that the accidents can exist without the substance that a naturall body can consist intirely without extension or circumscription of place finally all these 20. difficulties which before were proposed to this purpose may be inserted Moreouer here our mindes are illustrated with the diuine beames which issue out of Christes humanitie as in the 34. cause hath beene deliuered And then our iudgements are right and true when they come to be conformable to the rule of all true knowledge that is the infinite wisedome of God the which we attaine to by knowing God himselfe for in him by him we shal come to perfect knowledge the which this
confirme by daily experience For vvhat els pretend those who so vehemently embrace one an other but as it were one to enter into another and vnite themselues in one for the vehement affection of loue Why did Iob say Quis mihi det vt de carnibus eius saturemur who will Iob 31 giue me that wee may bee filled with his flesh but to declare that the vehemency of loue desired this vnion How possesse the three persons in Trinitye such vehement and ardent loue but for the vnion of one substance in three persons That which men thought impossible to God was possible and that which nature affected was by the Author of nature grace in this mistery effected for herby imparting his body vnto men without destruction of either he caused an vniō of both whereupon ensued that the loue of God could not but be singularly increased towards vs because as fathers loue most vehemently their children because in them they see a part of their owne substance disperced in their bodies though after many chaunges and alterations So God vewing his whole substance without any mutation or change in nature or qualitie his body and bloud his soule and person really remaining in vs and ioyned with vs cannot but loue vs exceedingly much more then any father his children And we for the selfe-same cause are moued to loue him for the same vnion or rather identification of substance For who is so base minded or cold in affection that lifting vp the eies of his soule to heauen admiring the infinite Maiestye of God where millions of Cherubins and Seraphines stand in his sight veiling their eyes with their golden wings lest they should be dazelled being not able to behold the infinite brightnes of his glory who I say after this consideration would not open all the vaines of his heart and resolue them into loue seeing this soueraigne Maiestie to discend from heauen to earth to dwell with a poore worme to lodge with a miserable man one that many times had offended him to couer himselfe vnder bread to be eaten of him and to enter into his body to be eternally vnited with him Zacheus thought Luc. 19. he shewed him a singular fauour to come into his house the Centurion passed a Luc. 7. litle furder and saide his house was not worthy of him But here what shall wee say he entereth not to receiue but to giue not to cure the body but to saue the soule how can that heart not be enflamed with loue which hath a burning flame of fier glowing so neere I meane the heart of our Sauiour Iesus Christ How doth not those veines swell with affection which are filled with the pretious bloud of their most affectious and zealous GOD How doth not that soule exult for ioy at Christs presence beeing so neere when Saint Iohn Luc. 1. Baptist exulted for ioy in his mothers wombe conceauing but our Ladies voice The ninth cause to be an ornament of the materiall Churches IN the olde Testament which was a modell of the new wee see that God had a speciall care to prouide the Arke the Cherubines propitiatorie with all the ornaments and furniture of the interiour Exod. 25. Tabernacle or Sanctum sanctorum into which none could enter but the high Priest and he only once a yeere this as the Apostle apertly declareth signified Hebr. 9. how Christ was to offer vp once a bloudy Sacrifice for the redemption of al the world Yet this was but the Allegorie of these ceremonies which God had not only instituted to signifie what was to come but also ordained them for the present vse and religion of the Iewes as Circumcisiō Māna the Pascal lambe with al the rest the reasō therfore which moued the diuine wisdome of God to ordain this so maiesticall a place so reuerend and ful of ceremonies was to strike into the peoples mindes a great conceit of him a reuerence and respect a feare and humilitie in that place The like with out al doubt stood with his prouidence in instituting this Sacrament that we should haue in our temples the true Ark of his couenant whence-frō he was to giue answere to imprint in our heartes at the view of his tabernacle a reuerend feare and a fearful loue of his maiestie for if we were Angels and needed not corporall senses to pourtraite or represent the maiestie of God vnto vs little it woulde auaile vs to haue present such rites ceremonies but because our soule in this exile is drowned in the body and cannot ascend to God but by fixing the first and second step in externall sences and corporall imaginations therfore our prouident Sauiour condescending to our infirmities ordained a sensible presence for his maiestie thereby to strike into vs reuerence feare and respect and so in effect it seemes that experience teacheth For when I enter into an heretical church without light altare or image and especialy without the body of Christ me thinks I come into some vast prophane hall or at best some great schoole for it carrieth no shew nor casteth any smel of religion Whereas entring into a church of Catholikes al that I see breatheth pietie and religion the lamps and lights represent the indeficient glory of heauen and brightnes of Gods elected the Images giue mee to vnderstand the multitude of Saints and Angels who assist the maiesty of God in his eternal temple whereas day and night they neuer cease his praises the Altare leades me to that incruent sacrifice which daily is offered to the liuing God for all the faithful in Christs church and in fine the presence of Christ in the Tabernacle mo●eth me to reuerence to look into my selfe to carry me circumspectly in that older as such a presence requireth For as wel noteth Saint Chrys When Courtiers come before the Kings presence they are careful and circumspect what they doe they roll their eyes about their garments lest any spotte or blemish in them might offend the Kings eyes they ponder theyr speeches lest any vndecent word should escape from them they forelooke al theyr gestures actions lest any of them should appeere vngrateful to the king And how doe faithfull Christians when they come before Christ in the Church they looke into their soules weigh their words consider their thoughts and in fine beware that nothing proceed from them that in any sorte may displease so diuine a maiestie for indeede as the same Authour wel aduertiseth by the presence of Christ in the Sacrament the church is conuerted into heauen For as we prooue the kings Court and Throne is not his pallace his gardens his golden galleries his ●orie beds his chaire of estate his pearled canopies but the person of the King is the essence of the Court and Throne al the rest be accessary to him euen so the court and throne of heauen is not those spheres those angels those saints they be all ornaments they be accessary
horrible paines that no mortall man can tell whether he shewed more loue in suffering for vs or in glorifying of vs. But let vs now suruey the extasie he fell into by instituting this sacrament if it was an extasie to euacuat himselfe in shew of deitie by taking the forme of a man What doth he not suffer a greater extasie here by taking the form of bread for there he tooke the shape of a reasonable creature but heere he beareth a shew of an insensible substance S. Paul speaking of his extasie affirmed that 〈◊〉 2. Christ liued in him Viuo ego non iam ego viuit vero in me Christus I liue now not I 〈◊〉 ● but Christ liueth in me If Christ liued not himselfe but in S. Paul and other faithful of his church of whom he spake as of himselfe Saule Saule cur me persequeris Saul Saul why persecutest thou me through the force of loue and affection Que potius viuit vbi amat quam vbi animat which more truly liueth where it loueth and not where it liueth how much more truly may hesay who claspes Christ in his breast in this sacred Eucharist Viuo ego iam non ego viuit vero in me Christus I liue now not I but Christ liueth in mee And let any reasonable man iudge if Christ here seeme not to put off and vnapparell himselfe of his maiestie and glorie permitting himself to be closed vnder a husk of bread at the Priests will staying dayes and nights attending in the tabernacle to receiue our supplications permitting infidells and heretikes to abuse and sacrilegiously to handle him entring into poisoned soules beggarly lodgings and al indecent places that either malice or infidelitie can inuent yea in some sort the extasie here surpasseth the extasie of Christ in his passion for although there hee suffered and here is impassible yet there hee shewed himselfe by wordes he answered for himselfe he reprehended and argued them that offered iniuries those blasphemies were for a small time and those dishonours not so many but here he neuer moueth the blasphemies are innumerable they haue continued in all ages And therefore when Moses and Elias talked with Christ in his transfiguration De excessu Luke 9. quem passurus erat in Ierusalem of his decease that he should accomplish in Ierusalem that they might wel haue talked of this Sacrament as I doubt not but they did bicause in very truth both excesses of loue are admirable and in mine opinion Habent se sicut excedens excessum haue relation the one to the other as the exceeding and the exceeded That God in the Eucharist sheweth his beneuolence the fourth effect of loue Cha. 6. As the hearts of men lie hidden from their eies in the centres of their bodies the rootes of trees vnder the earth in such sorte as in themselues wee can not view their natures and qualities yet nature hath taught vs certaine wayes howe to discouer them the heart by motions coulour and pulse the roote by the stem branches leaues and fruit euen so loue harbouring in the bosome of the hearte cannot be perfectly discerned of mortall men who wade into the depth of secrets by senses in it selfe but by some coulours the pulse the fruit some externall signe and of al other commonly it is declared by beneuolēce bestowing of gifts conferring of benefites So as S. Iohn intending Iob. 3. to make manifest vnto vs the exceeding loue of God touched this pulse shewed this fruit Sic deus dilexit mundum vt filium suum vnigenitum daret So GOD loued the world that he gaue his only begotten sonne And Christ himselfe declaring the loue of Mary Magdalen shewed the externall beneuolence and fruits Luke 7. of her affection by annointing him with oile by bathing his feete with teares by drying them with hir haire and thervpon inferred this comfortable illation Remittuntur ei peccata multa quoniam dilexit multū Many sinnes are forgiuen her because she hath loued much All faithful chrisstians that eat this fruit of life may easily perceiue the roote from whence it drew so sweete a substance to be the abisse of the loue of God Yea I knowe not by what meanes there resteth imprinted in our mindes a certaine sent of loue When we cal to memory this blessed sacrament it seemeth to smell of the heauenly Orchards of paradise which breath no other aire then the loue of the holy Ghost for I think there is none so simple that at the first prospect of his conceit when he considereth this gift presently imagines not that it proceedeth from loue and most truely might say sic Deus so God beloued Ihon ● the world that he gaue his sonne that all those that did eate him should not perish but haue life euerlasting Yea while I wade alitle deeper in this matter I know not how but it seemeth to me the three persons in trinity contend which of them should shewe more excesse of loue by excesse of benefites not that there can bee any emulation or discention among those infinit louers and beloued but that the effects be so wōderful exceeding that we know not which to prefer To the father we ascribe power to the son wisdome to the holy ghost goodnesse because the father was produced by none the sonne sprung by vnderstanding the holy ghost issued by loue To the fathers omnipotencie we attribute creation to the sonnes wisedome redemption to the spirits goodnesse iustification Now let al diuines set their heads together yet they cannot decide which of these benefits ought most to bee prized neuerthelesse in my iudgement I take our redemption to surpasse the others because in creation God gaue vs the naturall life of our bodies and soules with this world and all the furniture thereof for our vse and domonion In iustification he imparteth the supernaturall life of grace with sundrie vertues gifts and fauors thereupon attending but in our redemption hee gaue vs the life of God which exceedeth the others so farre as God exceedeth man And in this sacrament his person life soule and bodie and therefore wel may we extoll this gift seeing God so extolled it before vs and say Quid bonum quid pulcrum eius nisi frumentum zach 9. electorum vnium germinans virgines What of his is good and what of his is beautifull but the wheate of his elected and wine that springeth virgins for indeede it is either the cheefest or next to the cheefest Much more might be intreated here of this effect by expounding all the circumstances of this gift who giueth it what is giuen with what effect it is giuen to what ende with what cost howe deare to the giuer but because partly they were handled before in the three twentieth cause of Gods liberalitie shewed in the institution thereof partly because I meane to touch it a little beneath partlie for that all the causes wee haue alleadged
present in particular before him in the moment of his eternity did see most distinctly and prouide most infallibly for them to eate this heauēly Eucharist euery time that in particular Luke 12 they did cōmunicate for if a haire fall not from their heades without his care and prouidence much lesse this angelicall foode falleth from heauen into their hearts But what confusion may it bee to vs when wee make reflection vppon our selnes to call to minde howe greene our loue is to God no blossomes āppeare it scares as yet is budded Alas our hatred and iniquity is grayer headed then our loue and amity for first wee beganne to hate him then to loue him to proclaime open warres then to sue for friendshippe and in the verie first instant wee came into this worlde wee stood at defiance with him that made the worlde Ecce in iniquitatibus conceptus Psal ●50 sum in peccatis concepit me mater mea Lo in iniquity I am conceiued and my mother conceiued me in sinne sayde one of Gods canonized Prophets and therfore wee may well bee compared to Vipers who breake theyr mothers side and rent her in peeces before they be hatched Is this the first fruits of our life to repay the benefit of our being with dispight Ah pereat dies in qua natus sum Lette the day Io● 1 perish wherein I was borne cursed bee that day I was conceiued to bee an enemie to my God O that it were not to be numbred among the daies of the yeare But Matth. 20. what remedy now we haue all been Gods ancient enemies lette vs novv beginne to bee his friendes and since wee come in the last houre lette vs recompence with feruour that wee lost with lingering and alvvaiescrie in our hearts Heu bonitas antiqua sero te delexi O old goodnesse too late I haue loued thee and for this auncient loue to God the father which wee receiue in this sacrament in recompence of our long stay and imperfection Second Puritie THe eyes of Christ as cleare as Christall and as fierie as a flame represent vnto vs tvvo conditions of his loue the clearenesse his purity and the flame his feruour this purity of Christs loue declared the spouse in the Canticles comparing his eyes to Doues washed with milke It was not sufficient to resemble them to milke-white Doues but besides to signifie more purity to Doues washed with milke Quae lacte sunt lotae which Cantie 5● are washed with milke That golde wee call pure which hath no other baser mettall intermingled that water wee thinke pure that is not stained with mudde that Wine wee say is pure that is not allayed with water that loue in like maner wee account pure which is not affected with any proper interest or commodity for if we discouer one that professeth friendshippe who wholly or principally aymeth at his owne gaine and lucre rather than our good will and benefite wee had rather haue his rowme than his company because his loue is impure and really hee seeketh more himselfe than his friend In this blessed Eucharist what interest can God pretend to forgiue vs our daily offences to nourish our soules to be vnited to him to instruct vs in faith to confirme our hope to increase our charitie to deificate vs to giue vs a taste of heauen euen in this life if these bee his gaines I must confesse that he intendeth interest but if all these bee our good without anie Interest of his well we may call his loue most pure and vnspotted But some will say God is glorified by this Sacrament all the world admireth his goodnes praiseth his bountie are thereby mooued to loue and serue him But what gaineth he by al this was not he as fully glorified before the worlde was made in himselfe as after warde Yes doubtlesse or else hee had not beene compleately perfite and consequently not God And therefore when wee haue doone what wee can to him wee are vnprofitable although wee be bound to perfourme all hee commaundeth or exacteth of vs. Moreouer all that we do to glorifie him is our good and a cause why he will glorifie vs therefore if he intend his glorie therin he violateth no lawe of amitie for that wee should loue and honour him as our chiefe good As pure as Gods loue is yet from our heartes scarce can hee distill one drop of puritie for suche is the best loue of all that it carrieth some sent of our imperfections not vnlike the water which in a Limbecke wee see distilled that neuer ascendeth pure but alwayes tainted with the filthy smell of a corrupted vessell wherein the hearbes are baked euen so our affections ascend in the sight of God for most parte infected with some inordinate passion some droppe of sensualitie some smoake of vaine complacence some drosse of proper interest Ah Domine imperfectum meum viderunt oculi tui O Lord thy eyes haue seene mine imperfections Psalme a hundred thirty eight those eyes so pure vvashed vvith Milke more cleare then cristall I know loath to looke into this muddie fenne of my vnperfect soule their seat is vpon the margins of flowing flouds of loue thy father and the holy ghost and aboue the little cristall riuers of celestiall spirits who purely loue thee and for thy glory serue thee How then will they vouchsafe to looke vppon such darknes accustomed to behold such brightnes how can they but abhorre the marches of death whose proper obiects are the fountaine of life Third Vehemencie IF eyes be seates of passions windowes of affections quiuers of loue darts ryuers ioyned with the fountaine of the heart it is no maruaile if Christ intending to declare to S. Iohn the force and fauour of his loue appeared like eyes burning like a flame because the fire that possessed his heart could not bee contained but required some vent If the eyes of our bodyes had put on the garments of immortalitie by which al sences are quikned and new abilities added we might reade in the eyes of Christ inhabiting this Sacrament as in liuing bookes and maps of grace the vehemēt loue which moued his diuinitie to institute this sacred Eucharist but since we cannot with the eies of our soules beholde his deitie nor with the eyes of our bodyes view his humanity let it be lawfull for vs to argue his loue by naturall and moral reason the which teacheth that wee must search the causes by effects principles by operations and according to the qualities and degrees of perfections in these inferre the natures degrees of perfection in them The experience is manifest in luke warme water in boyling water and in a gloing iron all which participate heat but because wee perceiue that one heateth more vehemently then another wee doe conclude that they all are hot yet exceeding one another in degree of heate Most true it is that all supernatural gifts which proceed from God and are imparted