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A51685 A treatise of morality in two parts / written in French by F. Malbranch, author of The search after truth ; and translated into English, by James Shipton, M.A.; Traité de morale. English Malebranche, Nicolas, 1638-1715.; Shipton, James, M.A. 1699 (1699) Wing M319; ESTC R10000 190,929 258

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unite our selves to corporeal Objects and separate our selves from them without loving or fearing them But the surest way is to break off all Correspondence with them as far as is possible p. 99. CHAP. XII Of the Imagination This Term is obscure and confus'd What it is in general Several sorts of Imagination Its effects are dangerous Of that which the World calls Wit That quality is very opposite to the Grace of Christ It is fatal to those who possess it and to those who esteem and admire it in others tho' they have it not themselves p. 109. CHAP. XIII Of the Passions What they are Their dangerous effects We must moderate them The conclusion of the first Part. p. 119. THE CONTENTS OF THE SECOND PART Of Duties CHAP. I. GOod Men often do wicked Actions The Love of Order must be enlightned to make it regular Three Conditions requir'd to make an Action perfectly Vertuous We should study the Duties of Man in general and take some time every day to examine the Order and Circumstances of them in particular Page 1. CHAP. II. Our Duties toward God must be refer'd to his Attributes to his Power Wisdom and Love God alone is the true Cause of all Things The Duties we owe to Power which consist chiefly in clear Judgments and in Motions govern'd by those Judgments p. 4. CHAP. III. Of the Duties we owe to the Wisdom of God It is that alone which enlightens the Mind in consequence of certain natural Laws whose efficacy is determin'd by our Desires as occasional Causes The Judgments and Duties of the Mind in relation to the universal Reason p. 14. CHAP. IV. Of the Duties which we owe to the divine Love Our Will is nothing but a continual impression of the Love which God bears to himself the only true Good We cannot love Evil But we may take that for Evil which is neither Good nor Evil. So we cannot hate Good But the true Good is really the Evil of wicked Men or the true cause of their Misery That God may be Good in respect of us our Love must be like his or always subject to the divine Law Motions or Duties p. 21. CHAP. V. The three Divine Persons imprint each their proper Character on our Souls and our Duties give equal Honour to them all three Tho' our Duties consist only in inward Judgments and Motions yet we must shew them by outward Signs in regard of our Society with other Men. p. 30. CHAP. VI. Of the Duties of Society in general Two sorts of Society Every thing should be refer'd to the eternal Society Different kinds of Love and Honour The general heads of our Duties toward Men. They must be External and Relative The danger of paying inward Duties to Men. The Conversation of the World very dangerous p. 36. CHAP. VII The Duties of Esteem are due to all Mankind to the lowest of Men to the greatest Sinners to our Enemies and Persecutors To Merits as well as to Natures It is difficult to regulate exactly these Duties and those of Benevolence by reason of the difference of personal and relative Merits and their various Combinations A general Rule and the most certain one that can be given in this matter p. 42. CHAP. VIII Of the Duties of Benevolence and Respect We should procure all Men the true Goods and not relative Goods Who it is that fulfills the Duties of Benevolence The unreasonable Complaints of worldly Men. The Duties of Respect should be proportion'd to the greatness of participated Power p. 52. CHAP. IX Of the Duties due to Sovereigns Two Sovereign Powers The difference between them Their natural Rights Rights of Concession Of the Obedience of Subjects p. 61. CHAP. X. Of the Domestick Duties of Husband and Wife The Ground of these Duties Of the Duties of Parents toward their Children with relation to the Eternal and Civil Societies Of their instruction in the Sciencies and Morality Parents should give their Children a good Example They should govern them by Reason They have no right to use them ill Children owe Obedience to their Parents in all Things p. 69. CHAP. XI The original of the difference of Conditions Reason alone ought to govern but Force is now necessary The lawful use of Force is to make Men submit to Reason according to the Primitive Law The Rights of Superiours The Duties of Superiours and Inferiours p. 81. CHAP. XII Of our Duties toward our Equals We should give them the place they desire in our Mind and Heart We should express our inward Dispositions in favour of them by our outward Air and Behaviour and by real Services We should yield them the Superiority and Pre-eminence The hottest and most passionate Friendships are not the most solid and durable We should not make more intimate Friends than we can keep p. 90. CHAP. XIII A Continuatian of the same Subject If we would be belov'd we must make our selves amiable The Qualities which make a Man amiable Rules for Conversation Of different Airs Of Christian Friendships p. 100. CHAP. XIV Of the Duties which every Man owes to himself which consist in general in labouring for his own Perfection and Happiness p. 110. A TREATISE OF Morality PART I. CHAP. I. Vniversal Reason is the Wisdom of God himself All Men have some Communication with God True and False Just and Vnjust is the same in respect of all intelligent Beings and of God himself What Truth and Order is and what we must do to avoid Error and Sin God is essentially Just he loves the Creatures according as they are amiable or as they resemble him We must be Perfect to be Happy Vertue or the Perfection of Man consists in a Submission to the immutable Order and not in following the Order of Nature The Error of some of the Heathen Philosophers in this Matter grounded upon their Ignorance of the simplicity and immutability of the Divine Conduct I. THE Reason of Man is the Word See the first and second Christian Meditation or the Illustration on the Nature of Ideas Search after Truth Tom. 3. or the Wisdom of God himself for every Creature is a particular Being but the Reason of Man is Universal II. If my own particular Mind were my Reason and my Light my Mind would also be the Reason of all intelligent Beings for I am certain that my Reason enlightens all intelligent Beings No one can feel my Pain but my self but every one may see the Truth which I contemplate so that the Pain which I feel is a Modification of my own proper Substance but Truth is a Possession common to all Spiritual Beings III. Thus by the means of Reason I have or may have some Society with God and all other intelligent Beings because they all possess something in common with me to wit Reason IV. This Spiritual Society consists in a participation of the same intellectual Substance of the Word from which all Spiritual Beings may receive their Nourishment In
hurries him away But Christ very rarely bestows such Favours and that Man is very senseless who throws himself into a Precipice in expectation that God should work a Miracle to save him from death XII What then must we do to moderate our Passions I have already spoke of this in the Seventh Chapter and elsewhere but I shall sum it up here in few words I. We should avoid the Objects which excite them and mortify our Senses II. We should keep our Imagination within the bounds of that respect which it ows to Reason or makes a continual revulsion in the animal Spirits which by their Course keep up and fortify the sinful Impressions III. We should seek after the means to make our Passions appear ridiculous and contemptible we should examine them by the Light confront them with Order and use our utmost endeavours to discover the foulness injustice and irregularity of them and their fatal consequences as well in respect of this life as the other IV. We should form no Design when they are excited nor ever enter upon any Business by their direction or influence V. We should get a Habit and lay an Obligation on our selves of consulting Reason in every thing and whenever we have neglected to do it either by surprize or for any other reason we should change our manner of proceeding and at least take upon us the shame we deserve for having acted like Brutes by the construction and motion of the Machine much less should we justify the foolish step we have made by continuing in a vitious and sinful Course VI. We should labour to augment the strength and liberty of our Mind that we may be able to undergo the labour of Attention and to suspend our Assent till Evidence forces it from us Without these two Qualifications we cannot receive from Reason any certain Rules for the Government of our selves VII Lastly that we may be in a capacity to follow those Rules which destroy the Passions we should above all things have recourse to Prayer and with confidence and humility draw near to him who came to deliver us by the strength of his Grace from that Body of Death or that Law of the Flesh which rebels every moment against the Law of the Spirit For I have often said already and do not stick to repeat it here again because I think there is no fear of reflecting on it too much That neither Reason by it self nor all the helps which Philosophy affords us can without the influence of the second Adam deliver us from the malignity of the first XIII The sum of what hath been said relating to the First Part of this Moral Essay is this First I shew'd that Vertue consists precisely in an habitual and ruling Love of the immutable Order Then I spoke of the two principal Qualities necessary for the acquisition of Vertue After that I laid open the occasional Causes of Light and inward Sense without which we cannot acquire or preserve the Love of Order And lastly I examin'd into the occasional Causes of certain Sensations which are contrary to those of Grace and abate the Force and Efficacy of them that we may avoid them So that I think I have omitted nothing necessary for the acquisition and conservation of Vertue in general I come now to the Second Part which treats not of Vertues but of the Duties of Vertue For I know of but one single Vertue which renders those that possess it truly and substantially Vertuous namely an habitual and ruling Love of the immutable Order A TREATISE OF Morality PART II. Of DVTIES CHAP. I. Good Men often do wicked Actions The Love of Order must be enlightned to make it regular Three Conditions requir'd to make an Action perfectly Vertuous We should study the Duties of Man in general and take some time every day to examine the Order and Circumstances of them in particular I. THE Actions of those that have attain'd to the true and solid Vertue are not therefore all solidly and substantially Vertuous There is in a manner always some deficiency or imperfection in them nay many times they are really sinful The reason of this is because a Man doth not always Act by the influence of his predominant Habit but sometimes by the operation of the Passion which is actually excited in him For if the predominant Habit be asleep as I may say and the rest awake the Actions of a good Man may be many ways sinful But besides tho' the predominant Habit of the Love of Order be actually excited in a good Man yet at the same time his Actions may be defective and imperfect and even directly opposite to Order which he actually loves and designs to follow For beside the difficulty of paying an exact Obedience to the Order which we do know indiscreet and ill govern'd Zeal often makes us Act contrary to the Order which we do not know Wherefore that an Action may be compleatly Vertuous it is not sufficient that it proceed from a good Man nor from a Man actually mov'd by the Love of Order but it must also be conformable to Order in all its Circumstances and that too not by a kind of Chance luckily determining the actual Motion of the Soul but by the strength of Reason guiding and governing us in such a manner as to make us fulfill all our Duties II. So then tho' it be sufficient to make us just and acceptable to God that the Love of Order be our predominant Habit yet if we would be perfect and compleat we must be able to govern this Love by an exact Knowledge of our Duties Nay I may say that he who neglects or slights this Knowledge what Zeal soever he may find within himself for Order his Heart is by no means rightly dispos'd For Order would be lov'd by Reason and not altogether by the Heart and fervency of Instinct which often fills with indiscreet Zeal those whose Imagination is too brisk and lively who are not us'd to retire into themselves but are continually apt to mistake the secret inspirations of their Passions for the infallible Answers of the inward Truth III. Indeed those whose Mind is so weak and their Passions so strong that they are not capable of giving Counsel to themselves or rather of taking Counsel of him who enlightens all Men are excusable before God if they sincerely desire and follow the Advice of such as they believe to be the best and wisest Men. But those who have or pretend to have Wit and Sense are guilty in the sight of God if they undertake any Design without consulting him that is without consulting Reason how fervent soever the Zeal may be which transports them For we must distinguish the Answers of the inward Truth which illuminates the Mind by the Evidence of its Light from the Language and secret Inspirations of the Passions which confound and deceive it by such Sensations as are indeed lively and agreeable but always obscure and
must avoid every thing that takes up any room in the Mind unprofitably And as there is nothing that possesses it more than that which touches strikes and agitates it it is evident that we must carefully avoid all Objects that please our Senses and excite our Passions The Senses and Passions being certain Modifications of the proper substance of the Soul all intellectual Ideas which do not modify it must of necessity disappear in the presence of sensible Objects tho' we strive never so much to retain them and to discover their Relations Besides we are perswaded that it is in our own power to recal these intellectual Ideas but Experience assures us that our Wills are not the occasional causes of our Senses And therefore we readily lay hold of those Sensations by which we enjoy those Delights that pass away and cannot be recall'd and neglect the pure Ideas whereby we discover the Truth which remains fix'd and which we can contemplate whenever we please For we must resolve speedily as to those Goods which fly away from us but we may defer the examination of those that are stable and always present In short we would always be actually happy We would never be actually Miserable Actual Pleasure makes us actually Happy and actual Pain actually Miserable Therefore every Sensation which participates of Pleasure or Pain possesses the Mind Every motion of the Soul which hath actual good or evil for its Object governs the Will So that we must use very strong endeavours to contemplate Truth when our Senses are affected and our Passions stir'd And since we find by Experience that these endeavours are at that time very insignificant it is impossible but that the Soul being spent and tir'd must be discontented and discourag'd And therefore those who treat of Prayer give us this weighty Admonition to labour incessantly in mortifying our Senses and not to meddle with those things which do not concern us and which may in the sequel by our indiscreet engaging in them excite in us a Thousand troublesom Motions IX The next thing we have to do is to avoid as much as we can all those Sciences and Occupations which have nothing but shew and outward splendor those Sciences in which the Memory only is employ'd those Studies and Occupations in which the Imagination is too much exercis'd When a Man's Head is full he is content with his imaginary Riches and being swell'd with Pride he scorns the labour of Attention or if he owns the necessity of it it will cost him too much Pains to remove all those false Ideas which his Memory furnishes him with And when the Imagination is too much exercis'd the evidence of Truth doth not make a lively impression on us For it is certain that there is nothing more opposite to Reason than an Imagination too well furnish'd too nice too active or rather a malignant and corrupted Imagination For the Imagination ought always to be silent when Reason Speaks but when we have us'd our selves to employ it much it continually interrupts and opposes it And therefore we see that those Men of Sense I speak of and your great Wits as they fancy themselves have not much Piety or Religion for indeed there are no Men more blind than they All the Light in them is extinguish'd by Pride for being always highly conceited of themselves and satiated or rather having no Appetite to Truth they cannot bring themselves to think of earning by the Sweat of their Brow the Bread of the Soul a Nourishment of which they have no manner of Relish X. A Man must labour with the Soul to maintain the life of the Soul this is absolutely necessary But nothing is more servile than to employ the labour of the Soul in getting Mony or Honour That a Mechanick should labour with the Body to maintain the life of the Body to get Bread this is conformable to Order at least while his Body is at Work he may feed his Mind and employ it in good Thoughts But for a Magistrate a States-man a Merchant to lavish away the strength of his Mind in getting those Goods that are many times of no use for the life of the Body and always dangerous to that of the Soul is a very great Folly And therefore we should in the third Place avoid all such Employments as deprive us of the liberty of the Mind except God engages us in them by an extraordinary Vocation For if Charity or the Laws of the Community in which we live oblige us to them and we take upon us no more than we are able to bear God will make up in us an equivalent to that which we might have obtain'd by the labour of Meditation And even then we shall find time enough to examine our selves in relation to our Duties if we are not govern'd by Ambition or Interest in the exercise of our Calling XI Every Man knows well enough what things are apt to agitate and distract his Mind at least he may be inform'd by consulting Experience or that inward Sense which he hath of himself And therefore I shall not dwell any longer in setting down particularly what we must do to make Meditation easy to us It is only the Body which makes the Soul dull and heavy This is the ground of our Stupidity Now all sensible Objects work upon us only by means of the Body Therefore it is evident that to hearken without Pain to the Answers which Truth pronounces within us we have nothing to do but to silence our Senses Imagination and Passions or in a Word to still that confus'd Noise which the Body makes in us Now every Man knows by his own Experience that the Body is quiet enough when nothing stirs it from without or hath not too much stir'd it before For since it retains a long time those impressions and motions which it hath receiv'd from sensible Objects I confess that the Imagination remains polluted and hurt when we have been so indiscreet as to be too familiar with Pleasure Notwithstanding the Wound will close up of it self and the Brain will return to its former state if we carefully avoid the action of all Objects that strike our Senses which we are always able to do at least in some measure with those necessary Helps which I all along suppose Let us do what we can on our part and we shall be so far from being out of love with Meditation that we shall find our selves so well rewarded that we shall not repent of our Pains provided nevertheless that we observe the following Rule without which notwithstanding all our Meditation we shall never be rewarded with a clear view of Truth My Design here is not to teach the Art of Thinking nor to deliver all the Rules by which the Mind ought to regulate every step in takes in the search of Truth The Subject of this Discourse is Morality a Science necessary for all Mankind and not Logick which only they who
confus'd IV. The Love of Order therefore requires of us three Conditions to make any of our Actions conformable to it First That we examine the Action in it self and all its Circumstances as far as we are able Secondly That we suspend our Assent till Evidence forces it from us or the Execution till Necessity obliges us to defer it no longer Thirdly That we readily exactly and inviolably obey Order as far as it is known to us Strength of Mind must make us couragiously undergo the labour of Attention Liberty of Mind must moderate and wisely govern the desire of Assent Submission of Mind must make us follow the Light step by step without ever going before it or forsaking it and the Love of Order must animate and quicken these three Faculties by which tho' it be hid in the bottom of our Heart it discovers it self to the Eyes of the World and sanctifies all our Actions in the sight of God V. But since it is impossible for a Man that is not vers'd in the Science of Morality to discover the Order of his Duties in sudden and unexpected Occasions tho' he have never so great strength and liberty of Mind it is necessary for him to provide against those Occasions which leave him no time for Examination and by a prudent foresight to inform himself of his Duties in general or of some certain and undeniable Principles to govern his Actions by in particular Cases This study of a Man's Duties ought without doubt to be prefer'd before all others Its End and Reward is Eternity He that applies himself to Languages to the Mathematicks to Business and neglects the study of the general Rules for the Government of his Life is like a foolish Traveller who loiters by the way or rambles out of it and is overtaken by the Night an eternal Night which will deprive him for ever of the sight of his Country fill him with immortal despair and leave him expos'd to the dreadful wrath of the Lamb and the power of the Devils or rather the justice of an avenging God VI. He that should go about to examine in particular all the Duties belonging to the several conditions of Men would undertake a Work which he could never finish how indefatigable soever he were For my part I am too sensible of my own weakness to engage in so vast and difficult a Design and all that I here pretend to is to set down in general and that chiefly for my own private use the Duties which all Men as far as they are able ought to pay to God their Neighbour and Themselves Every Man must examine his own particular Duties himself as they relate to the general and essential Obligations and according to Circumstances which vary every moment We should set apart some time for this every day and not expect to find in Books nor it may be in other Men so much Certainty and Light as we may in our selves if we consult the inward Truth sincerely faithfully and in the motion of the Love of Order CHAP. II. Our Duties toward God must be refer'd to his Attributes to his Power Wisdom and Love God alone is the true Cause of all Things The Duties we owe to Power which consist chiefly in clear Judgments and in Motions govern'd by those Judgments I. THe immutable and necessary Order requires that the Creature should depend on the Creator that every Copy should answer to its Original and that Man being made after the Image of God should live in Obedience to God united to God and like God as far as is possible obedient to his Power united to his Wisdom and perfectly like him in all the motions of his Heart Mat. 5.48 Be ye perfect saith our Saviour to his Disciples even as your Father which is in Heaven is perfect Indeed we shall not be truly like God till being swallowed up in the contemplation of his Essence we shall be wholly penetrated with his Light and Pleasure But thither it is that we must tend it is that which Faith gives us a Right to hope for that to which it conducts us that which it gives us an earnest of by the inward Reformation which the Grace of Christ works in us For Faith leads us to the understanding of the Truth and merits for us the Grace of Charity Now Understanding and Charity are the two essential strokes which draw our Minds anew after our Original who is call'd in the Scriptures Truth and Love Beloved saith St. John 1 John 3.2 3. now are we the Sons of God and it doth not yet appear what we shall be but we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is And every Man that hath this hope in him purifieth himself even as he is pure Mat. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart saith Christ himself for they shall see God II. To discover the Duties which we owe to God we must attentively consider all his Attributes and consult our selves in reference to them Especially we must examine his Power Wisdom and Love and on our own part our Judgments and Motions For it is only by the Judgments and Motions of our Minds that we render to God that which we owe him as it is chiefly on the account of his Power Wisdom and Love that we indispensably owe him the greatest Duties III. When in thinking on God we consider him only as a Being of infinite Reality or Perfection we are convinc'd that Order requires us to esteem him infinitely But we do not naturally conclude from this alone that we ought to worship fear or love him c. The consideration of God barely in himself or without any relation to us doth not excite those Motions in the Soul which carry it towards Good or the cause of its Happiness and produce in it fit dispositions to receive the influence of that Good There is nothing more evident than that a Being infinitely perfect ought to be infinitely esteem'd No one can refuse God this speculative Duty for it consists only in a simple Judgment which no one can suspend when the Evidence is full and convincing And therefore wicked Men those that have no Religion those that deny the Providence of God willingly pay him this Duty But as they imagine that God doth not concern himself with our Affairs that he is not the true and immediate Cause of every thing that is done here below and that we can have no Communication no Society no Union with him neither by a Reason nor a Power in some sort common both to him and us they brutishly follow the agreeable Motions of their Passions and pay those Duties to a blind Nature which are due only to the Wisdom and Power of the Creatour IV. These mistaken Men argue and conclude right enough but it is from false Principles and you cannot easily make them understand that God requires any Duties of his Creatures if you
it self is absolutely incomprehensible XIII In like manner that a Beast is more valuable than a Stone and less valuable than a Man is true because a Beast bears a greater proportion or relation of perfection to a Stone than a Stone doth to a Beast and a Beast hath a less proportion of perfection compar'd to a Man than a Man hath compar'd to a Beast And he that sees these Relations sees such Truths as ought to regulate his esteem and consequently that sort of Love that is determin'd by esteem But he that esteems his Horse more than his Coachman or thinks that a Stone is in it self more valuable than a Flie or than the very least of organiz'd Bodies doth not see that which perhaps he thinks he doth it is not universal Reason but his own particular Reason that makes him judge after that manner It is not the love of Order but self-love which inclines him to love as he doth That which he thinks he sees is neither visible nor intelligible 't is a false and imaginary Relation And he that governs his esteem or love by this or the like Relation must necessarily fall into Error and Irregularity XIV Since Truth and Order are Relations of greatness and perfection real immutable and necessary relations relations comprehended in the substance of the Divine Word he that sees these relations sees that which God sees He that regulates his Love according to these Relations observes a Law which God invincibly Loves So that there is a perfect conformity of Mind and Will between God and him In a word seeing he knows that which God knows and loves that which God loves he is like God as far as he is capable of being so So likewise since God invincibly loves himself he cannot but esteem and love his own Image And as he loves things in proportion to their being amiable he cannot but prefer it before all those Beings which either by their nature or corruption are far from resembling him XV. See the 3. Discourse of the Treatise of Nature and Grace Man is a free Agent and I suppose him to have all necessary assistances In respect of Truth he is capable of searching after it notwithstanding the difficulty he finds in Meditation and in respect of Order he is able to follow it in spite of all the efforts of Concupiscence He can sacrifice his Ease to Truth and his Pleasures to Order On the other side he can prefer his actual and present Happiness before his Duty and fall into error and disorder In a word he can deserve well or ill by doing good or evil Now God is just he loves his Creatures as they are worthy of Love or as they resemble him His Will therefore is that every good action should be rewarded and every evil one punished that he who hath made a good use of his Liberty and by that means hath render'd himself in part perfect and like God should be in part happy as he is and the contrary XVI See the Remarks upon the seeming efficacy of second Causes or the 5 and 6 Christian Meditations It is God alone that acts upon his Creatures at least he hath a power of acting on them and can do what he pleases with them He hath power therefore to make spiritual Beings happy or miserable happy by the enjoyment of Pleasure and miserable by the suffering of Pain He can exalt the just and perfect above other Men he can communicate his Power to them for the accomplishment of their desires and make them occasional causes for himself to act by in a Thousand manners He can pull down the wicked and make them subject to the action of the lowest Beings This Experience sufficiently shews for we all as we are Sinners depend upon the action of sensible objects XVII He therefore that labours for his Perfection and endeavours to make himself like God labours for his Happiness and Advancement If he doth that which in some sort depends upon himself that is to say if he deserves well by making himself perfect God will do that which in no sort depends upon him in making him happy For since God loves all Beings proportionably as they are amiable and the most perfect Beings are the most amiable the most perfect Beings shall be the most powerful the most happy and the most contented He that incessantly consults his Reason and loves Order having a share in the Perfection of God shall have also a share in his Happiness Glory and Greatness XVIII Man is capable of three Things Knowing Loving and sensibly Perceiving of knowing the true Good of loving and enjoying it The knowledge and love of Good are in a great measure in his own power but the enjoyment of it doth not at all depend upon himself Nevertheless seeing God is just he that knows and loves him shall also enjoy him God being just must of necessity give the pleasure of enjoyment and by it Happiness to him that by a painful application seeks the knowledge of the Truth and by a right use of his Liberty and the strength of his Resolution conforms himself to the Law of God the immutable Order notwithstanding all the efforts of Concupiscence enduring Pain despising Pleasure and giving that Honour to his Reason as to believe it upon its Word and to comfort himself with its Promises It is a strange thing Men know very well that the enjoyment of Pleasure and avoiding of Pain do not depend immediately on their Desires They find on the contrary that it is in their own power to have good Thoughts and to love good Things that the light of Truth diffuses it self in them as soon as they desire it and that the loving and following of Order depends on themselves * This Age is so ill-natured or so nice that there are somethings which it is not sufficient for a Man not to say but he must also assure the World and that more than once that he doth not say them And therefore my Readers must pardon me if I seem to distrust their equity I still suppose those necessary assistances which are never wanting to those who have Faith but through their own negligence And yet they seek after nothing but Pleasure and neglect the foundation of their eternal Happiness that knowledge and love which resemble the knowledge and love of God the knowledge of Truth and the love of Order for as I said before he that knows Truth and loves Order knows as God knows and loves as he loves XIX This then is our first and greatest Duty that for which God hath created us the love of which is the Mother of all Vertue the universal the fundamental Vertue the Vertue which makes us just and perfect and which will one Day make us happy We are rational Creatures our Vertue and Perfection is to love Reason or rather to love Order For the knowledge of speculative Truths or relations of Greatness doth not regulate our
Duties It is principally the knowledge and love of the relations of Perfection or practical Truths wherein consist our Perfection Let us apply our selves then to know to love and follow Order Let us labour for our Perfection as for our Happiness let us leave that to the disposal of God on whom it wholly depends God is just and necessarily rewards Vertue Let us not doubt then but that we shall infallibly receive all the Happiness that we have deserv'd XX. The Obedience which we pay to Order and submission to the Law of God is Vertue in all Senses Submission to the divine Decrees or to the power of God is rather Necessity than Vertue A Man may follow Nature and yet walk irregularly for Nature it self is irregular On the other side he may resist the action of God without opposing his Orders for oftentimes the particular action of God is so determin'd by second or occasional Causes that it is not conformable to Order It is true indeed that God wills nothing but according to Order but he often acts contrary to it For Order it self requiring See the 7 and 8 Christian Medit. that God as the general cause should act in a constant and uniform manner according to certain general Laws which he hath establish'd the effects of that cause are many times contrary to Order He forms Monsters and is subservient as it were to the Wickedness of Men in this World by reason of the simplicity of those ways by which he executes his Designs So that he who should think to obey God in submitting to his Power and in following and observing the course of Nature would offend against Order and fall into Disobedience every Moment XXI If all the motions of Bodies were caus'd by particular acts of the Will of God it would be a sin to avoid the Ruins of a falling House by flight for we cannot without injustice refuse to render back to God that Life which he hath given us when he requires it again At this rate it would be an Affront to the Wisdom of God to alter the course of Rivers and to turn them to Places that want Water we should follow the Order of Nature and be quiet But since God acts in consequence of certain general Laws we correct his Work without injuring his Wisdom We resist his action without opposing his Will because he doth not will positively and directly every thing that he doth For example he doth not directly will unjust Actions tho' he alone gives motion to those that commit them And tho' it be only he who sends Rain yet every Man hath a liberty to shelter himself when it Rains For God doth not send Rain but by a necessary consequence of general Laws Laws which he hath establish'd not that such or such a Man should be wet through but for greater ends and more agreeable to his Wisdom and Goodness If the Rain fall upon Men upon the Sea or upon the Sand it is because he is not oblig'd to alter the uniformity of his Conduct for the uselessness or inconvenience of the consequences of it XXII The case is not the same between God and Men between the general cause and particulationes When we oppose the action of Men we offend them for since they act only by particular motions of the Will we cannot resist their action without opposing their Designs But when we resist the action of God we do not at all offend him nay we often promote his Designs For since God constantly follows those general Laws which he hath prescrib'd to himself the combination of those effects which are the necessary consequences of them cannot always be conformable to Order nor proper for the execution of his Work And therefore it is lawful for Men to divert these natural effects not only when they may be the occasion of their Death but also when they are inconvenient or disagreeable Our Duty then consists in submitting our selves to the Law of God and following Order For to submit to his absolute Power is necessity This Order we may know by our union with the Word so that the immutable Order may be our Law and our Guide But the Divine Decrees are absolutely unknown to us And therefore let us not make them our Rule Let us leave that chimerical Vertue of following God or Nature to the Sages of Greece and the Stoicks But let us consult Reason let us love and follow Order in all things for then we truly follow God when we submit to a Law which he invincibly loves XXIII But tho' the Order of Nature be not precisely our Law and a submission to that Order be by no means a Vertue we must observe nevertheless that we ought oftentimes to have a regard to it Yet still this is because the immutable Order so requires and not because the Order of Nature is an effect of the Power of God A Man that suffers Persecution or rather one that is tormented with the Gout is oblig'd to bear it with Patience and Humility because being a sinner Order requires that he should suffer besides other Reasons which need not here be produc'd But if Man were not subject to Sin and the immutable Order did not require that he should suffer to deserve his Reward certainly he might nay and ought to seek his ease and avoid all sorts of inconveniences tho' he were persecuted if that were possible by the inclemency of the Seasons and by the Miseries which Sin hath brought into the World And a Man tho' he be a sinner may shelter himself from the Rain and the Wind and avoid the action of an avenging God because Order requires that he should preserve his Strength and Health and especially the liberty of his Mind to think upon his Duty and search after Truth And because Rain and Wind being consequences of the general laws of the Order of Nature it doth not plainly appear that it is the positive Will of God that he should suffer that particular inconvenience For it would be a hainous Crime in us to avoid the Rain if God should make it Rain on purpose to wet and punish us As it was in our first Parent to eat of a Fruit because of the express Prohibition and his formal Disobedience But if Vertue consisted precisely in living in that condition wherein we are plac'd in consequence of the Order of Nature he that is born in the midst of pleasure and abundance would be vertuous without pain and Nature having been happily favourable to him he would follow it with pleasure But Virtue must be painful at present that it may be generous and meritorious A Man ought to sacrifice himself for the possession of God Pleasure is the Reward of Merit and therefore cannot be the foundation of it as I shall shew hereafter In a Word Truth it self informs us of one that was commanded to sell his Goods and distribute them to the Poor if he would be perfect which was
to change his state and condition Perfection then or Vertue doth not consist in following the Order of Nature but in submitting wholly to the immutable and necessary Order the inviolable Law of all intelligent Beings CHAP. II. There is no other Vertue but the Love of Order and Reason Without this Love all Vertues are false We must not confound Duties with Vertues We may discharge our Duties without Vertue 'T is for want of consulting Reason that Men approve and follow damnable Customs Faith serves or conducts to Reason For Reason is the supreme Law of all intelligent Beings I. THE Love of Order is not only the chief of all moral Vertues but the only Vertue It is the Mother Vertue the fundamental universal Vertue the Vertue which alone makes the Habits or Dispositions of our Minds vertuous He that bestows his Goods on the Poor out of Vanity or natural Compassion is not liberal because it is not Reason that guides him nor Order that governs him it is nothing but Pride or Mechanism Officers that voluntarily expose themselves to Dangers are not brave if it is Ambition that animates them nor Soldiers if it is only an abundance of Spirits and the Fermentation of the Blood This imaginary noble Ardour is nothing but Vanity or Clock-work A little Wine oftentimes is sufficient to produce a great deal of it He that bears the Injuries that are offer'd him many times is neither moderate not patient 'T is his Slothfulness that makes him immoveable or his ridiculous and stoical Bravery that bears him up and in imagination sets him above his Enemies It may be nothing but the disposition of the Machine want of Spirits coldness of Blood Melancholy and perhaps above all some contagious Distemper of a strong Imagination The same may be said of all the other Vertues If the love of Order be not the foundation of them they are false and vain and altogether unbecoming a reasonable Nature which bears the Image of God himself and hath a communication with him They derive their Original from the Body only they are not form'd by the Holy Ghost and whoever makes them the Object of his Desires and the Foundation of his Glory hath a base and abject Mind a mean Spirit and a corrupted Heart But whatever a rebellious Imagination may think it is not mean nor servile to submit to the Law of God himself nothing is more just than to be conformable to Order nothing is more great and noble than to obey God nothing is more brave and generous than to follow the Party of Reason with an unshaken Constancy and inviolable Fidelity not only when one may follow it with Honour but then more especially when the circumstances of Times and Places are such that one cannot do it without the greatest Shame and Disgrace For he that passes for a Fool in following Reason loves Reasom more than himself But he that follows Order only when it shines and sparkles in the Eyes of the World seeks only Glory and though he may appear very Glorious in the Eyes of Men he is an Abomination in the Sight of God II. I know not whether I may be mistaken or no but I believe there are abundance of People that do not rightly know what true Vertue is and even those that have writ of Morality do not always speak very clearly and exactly of it It is certain that all those great Names which they give to Vertues and Vices produce rather confus'd Sensations in the Mind than clear Ideas But because these Sensations affect the Soul and abstracted Ideas tho' clear in themselves do not diffuse their Light but in attentive Minds Men most commonly rest satisfied with these words which please the Senses but leave the Mind in the dark They fancy that a Discourse the more briskly it strikes upon the Imagination the more Solid it is and look upon those exact Reasonings which disappear when Attention is wanting as Spectres and Illusions like Children who judging of Objects by the Impression they make on their Senses imagine that there is more Matter in Ice than in Water in Gold and heavy and hard Metals than in the Air which surrounds them almost without being felt III. Besides whatever is familiar to us doth not surprise us we never stand to examine it we think we conceive very well what we have said our selves or heard others say a great many times tho' we have never examin'd it But the most solid and evident Truths always create Distrust in us when they are new Thus a Word of an obscure and confus'd Signification seems clear and obvious how equivocal soever it be if common use hath made it current but a Term which contains nothing equivocal in it seems obscure and dangerous if we have never heard it us'd by those Persons whom we love and esteem This is the cause that the Terms of Morality are the most obscure and confus'd and especially those which we look upon as the most clear because they are the most common Every one for Example imagines he understands very well the Signification of these Terms Loving Fearing Honouring Charity Humility Generosity Pride Envy Self-love and if a Man should join clear Ideas to these Terms and to all the Names which are given to Vertues and Vices besides that this supposes more Knowledge than is generally believ'd he would certainly take the most confus'd and perplex'd way to treat of Morality For it will appear in the sequel of this Discourse that to define these Terms rightly he ought first clearly to comprehend the Principles of that Science and to be well vers'd in the Knowledge of Human Nature IV. One of the greatest Defects observable in the Moral Writings of some Philosophers is that they confound Duties with Vertues or that they give the name of Vertues to simple Duties So that tho' properly there be but one Vertue to wit the love of Order they make an infinite number of them This is it which causes such Confusion and so perplexes that Science that it is very hard to understand throughly what a Man must do to be perfectly Good and Vertuous V. It is evident that Vertue ought to render him Virtuous that possesses it and yet a Man may acquit himself of his Duty and with ease perform acts of Humility Generosity or Liberality without any of these Vertues So that a disposition or facility of performing such Duties is not properly Vertue without the love of Order When a Man discharges his Duty he is Vertuous in the Eyes of Men when he bestows part of his Goods on his Friend he appears Liberal and Generous But Men are not always such as they seem to be and he that never neglects the outward Offices of Friendship but when they are contrary to the inviolable Order tho' he may sometimes seem guilty of Infidelity is a truer and more faithful Friend at least he is a more Vertuous Man and more worthy of Love than those hot and
zealous Friends who Sacrifice their Kindred their Life and their eternal Salvation to the Passions of their Friends VI. We must not then confound Vertue with Duties by reason of a similitude of Names it is this that deceives Men. There are some who imagine they follow Vertue when they follow only a natural Inclination they have to perform some certain Duties and because they are not guided by Reason they are in truth Vicious in excess when they fancy themselves to be Heros in Vertue But the greatest part of Mankind being deceiv'd by this confusion of Terms and the splendour of Names rely upon and value themselves without Reason and often judge ill of the most Vertuous Persons because it is impossible that good Men should follow the Rules of Order any long time without failing according to outward appearance in some essential Duty For in short to be Prudent Good-natur'd and Charitable in the Eyes of the World a Man must sometimes commend Vice or at least hold his Tongue when he hears it commended To be esteem'd Liberal he must be Prodigal If he be not Rash he shall hardly be accounted Valiant and if he be not Superstitious or Credulous let his Piety be never so great he may perhaps pass for a Libertine in the Opinion of others VII It is certain that Universal Reason is always the same Order is immutable and yet Morality changes according to Places and Times It is a Vertue among the Germans to drink hard and a Man can have no conversation with them if he be not drunk It is not Reason but Wine that unites their Societies settles their Agreements and makes their Bargains 'T is reckon'd Bravery in a Gentleman to shed the Blood of him that gives him the Lie Duelling was for a long time a lawful Action amongst the French and as if Reason was not worthy to determine their Differences they decided them by Force They prefer'd the Law of Brutes or Chance before the Law of God himself Nor must we imagine that this Custom was in use only amongst the Men of the Sword it was in a manner general and if the Clergy did not fight themselves out of respect to their Character they had their Champions who represented them and maintain'd their Quarrel by shedding the Blood of their Adversaries Nay they imagin'd that God approv'd this manner of proceeding and whether their Differences were decided by the Sword or by Lot they did not doubt but that God sat as Judge in the Cause and gave it in favour of him that had Right on his side And indeed if we suppose God to act by particular wills where is the Impiety of believing either that he favours Injustice or that his Providence doth not extend to all things VIII But without going to seek for damnable Customs in the past Ages let any one by the Light of Reason judge of those that are at present kept up among us or let him only observe the Conduct of those very Persons who are appointed for Guides to others Without doubt we shall often find that every one of them hath his particular Morality his own private Religion and his favourite Vertue that one talks of nothing but Penance and Mortification another esteems only the Duties of Charity and a third cries up nothing but Meditation and Prayer From whence can this diversity proceed if the Reason of Man be always the same From hence no doubt that they leave off consulting Reason and suffer themselves to be guided by Imagination its Enemy in stead of observing the immutable Order as their inviolable and natural Law they frame to themselves Ideas of Vertue conformable at least in some things to their own Inclinations For there are some Vertues or rather Duties which have a relation to our Tempers or Humours there are shining and glittering Vertues proper for fierce and lofty Souls low and humble Vertues which are fit for timorous and fearful Minds and soft and effeminate Vertues if I may so call them which suit very well with Laziness and Inactivity IX It is true they agree that Order is the inviolable Law of Spiritual Beings and that nothing is regular if it be not conformable to it But they maintain a little too stifly that they are not capable of consulting this Law and tho' it be graven upon the Heart of Man so that he need only retire into himself to be instructed in it they think like the gross and carnal Jews that it is as hard to discover it as to climb up into Heaven or go down into Hell as the Scripture speaks X. I must confess that the immutable Order is not easie to be found it dwells within us but we are always roving abroad Our Senses unite our Soul to all the parts of our Body our Imagination and Passions extend it to all the Objects which surround us and often carry it into a World that hath no more reality than imaginary Spaces this is undeniably so But then we should endeavour to silence our Senses Imagination and Passions and not fancy that we can be reasonable without consulting Reason But this Order by which we ought to be govern'd is a Form too abstracted to serve as a Model for grosser Spirits I grant it Let us then give it a Body let us make it sensible let us cloath it in several Dresses to render it agreeable to carnal Men let us if I may so speak incarnate it yet so as it may be always known again Let us accustom Men to distinguish true Vertue from Vice from seeming Vertues and from simple Duties which a Man may often perform without Vertue and not set before them Phantoms or Idols which attract their Admiration and Respect by the sensible Splendour and Pomp that surrounds them For in short if we are not guided by Reason if we are not animated by the Love of Order how exact soever we may be in the performance of our Duties we can never be solidly Vertuous XI But say they Reason is corrupted it is liable to Error it must submit to Faith Philosophy is but a Servant we ought to distrust the Light which that affords All equivocal Terms Man is not his own Light Religion is the true Philosophy It is not I confess the Philosophy of the Heathens nor that of those great Talkers who speak to others before Truth has spoke to them Reason is immutable incorruptible infallible and ought always to govern God himself follows it In a word we ought never to shut our Eyes against the Light but we should accustom our selves to distingush it from Darkness or false Glares from confus'd Sensations from sensible Idea's which appear bright and shining Lights to those who are not accustom'd to distinguish Truth from Probability Evidence from Instinct and Reason from its Enemy Imagination Certainly Understanding is preferable to Faith for Faith will have an end but Understanding will remain for ever Faith is indeed a very great good but it
by the motion of his Body The Love which we bear to Persons of Worth and Merit is a love of Benevolence for we love them even when they are not in a condition to do us any good We Love them because they have more Perfection and Vertue than other Men. So that the power to do us Good or that kind of perfection which relates to our Happiness in one Word Goodness excites in us a love of Vnion and all other perfections a love of Benevolence Now God only is Good He alone hath the Power of acting on us He doth not really communicate that Perfection to his Creatures but only makes them occasional Causes for the producing of some Effects For true and real Power is Incommunicable Therefore all our love of Union ought to tend toward God IX We may for Instance bring our Body to the Fire because Fire is the occasional cause of Heat which is necessary for it But we cannot love it with a love of Vnion without offending against Order because the Fire is so far from having any power over that part of us which is capable of Loving that it hath no Power at all The same may be said of all other Creatures even Angels and Devils we ought to love none of them with a Love of Union with that Love which is an Honour given to Power for all of them being absolutely impotent we should by no means love them When I speak of loving I mean also fearing and hating them I mean that the Soul should remain unmov'd in their Presence The Body by a local Motion may come near the Fire or avoid the Fall of a House but the Soul must fear and love nothing but God at least it must love none but him with a love of Freedom Choice and Reason For since the Union of the Soul and Body is chang'd into a dependance it is hardly in our power to hinder sensible Goods from exciting in us some love for them The motions of the Soul naturally answer those of the Body and the Object which makes us fly from it or attracts us to it almost always begets in us Aversion or Love X. But the Case is not the same with the Love of Benevolence as with the Love of Union God is infinitely more amiable with this sort of Love than all his Creatures together But as he hath really communicated to them some Perfection as they are capable of Happiness they really deserve our Love and Esteem Order it self requires that we should esteem and love them according to the measure of Perfection which they enjoy or rather according to that which we know to be in them For to esteem and love them exactly in proportion to their being amiable is utterly impossible because many times their Perfections are unknown to us and we can never know exactly the proportions that are between Perfections for we cannot express them either by Numbers or incommensurable Lines Nevertheless Faith takes away a great many difficulties in this matter For since a finite Being by the relation it hath to infinity acquires an infinite Value it is evident that we ought to love those Creatures which have or may have a great relation to God infinitely more than those which do not bear his Image or which have no immediate union with or relation to him It is plain that all other things being equal one righteous Man one member of Jesus Christ deserves more of this kind of Love than a thousand wicked Men and that God who judges truly and exactly of the Value of his Creatures prefers one of his adopted Children before all the Nations of the Earth XI It is certain that our Duties ought to be regulated by the Love of Esteem or Benevolence but yet we must not imagine that we always owe more Duties to righteous Men than to Sinners to the Faithful than to Hereticks or even Heathens themselves For we must observe that there are Perfections of several sorts some Personal or Absolute and others Relative Personal Perfections ought to be the immediate Object of the Love of Esteem and Benevolence but relative Perfections do not deserve either this or any other kind of Love but only the Object to which these Perfections have a relation We should love and honour Merit where-ever we find it for Merit is a personal Perfection which ought to regulate our Love of Esteem and Benevolence but it ought not always to regulate the greatness and quality of our Duties On the contrary we owe a great many Duties to our Prince to our Parents and to all those that are in Authority for Authority is necessary for the preservation of Order in States which is the most valuable thing in the World But the Honour which we pay to them the Love which we bear them ought to terminate in God alone Colos 3.23 As to the Lord and not unto Men saith St. Paul The Honour which we give to Power must be refer'd to God and not to Men for the power of Acting is in God alone In like manner if a Man have such natural endowments as may be serviceable for the Conversion of others tho' he have no personal Merit or Vertue we ought to love him with a love of Esteem which hath a relation to something else and we are oblig'd to many more Duties towards him than towards another Man who hath a great deal of personal Merit but is not capable of being useful to any but himself But I shall explain this matter-more at large in another place what I have said of it here is only to prevent the Reader from running insensibly whither I have no design to lead him XII Self-Love the irreconcileable Enemy of Vertue or a ruling Love of the immutable Order may agree with the Love of Union which is refer'd to and honours a Power capable of acting on us for it is sufficient for that purpose that this Self-love be enlightned Man invincibly desires to be happy and he sees clearly that God alone is able to make him so This being suppos'd and all the rest excluded of which I do not speak it is evident that he may desire to be united to God For to take away every thing that may be equivocal I do not speak of a Man who knows that God rewards only Merit and who finds none in himself but I speak of one who considers only the Power and Goodness of God or one to whom the Testimony of his Conscience and his Faith give a free access as I may so say to draw near to God and join himself to him XIII But the case is different with the Love of Esteem or Benevolence which a Man ought to bear to himself Self-love makes it always irregular Order requires that the Reward should be proportionable to the Merit and the Happiness to the Perfection of the Soul which it hath gain'd by a good use of its Liberty but Self-love can endure no bounds to its Happiness
of Perfection enlightens the Mind without moving it if it be taken only for the Law of God the Law of all Spiritual Beings and consider'd only so far as it hath the force of a Law for God loves Order himself and irresistibly wills that we should love it or that we should love every Thing in proportion to its being amiable Order I say as it is the natural and necessary Principle and Rule of all the Motions of the Soul touches penetrates and convinces the Mind without enlightning it So that we may discover Order by a clear Idea but we know it also by Sensation for since God loves Order and continually imprints on us a Love and Motion like his own we must necessarily be inform'd by the sure and compendious way of Sensation when we follow or forsake the immutable Order XX. But we must observe that this way of discovering Order by Sensation or Instinct is often render'd uncertain by Sin which hath introduc'd Concupiscence because the secret influences of the Passions are of the same nature with that inward Sensation For when we act contrary to Opinion and Custom we often feel such inward Checks as very much resemble those of Reason and Order Before Sin enter'd into the World the Sense of inward Reproof was a sign that could not be mistaken for then that alone spoke with Authority but since that time the secret inspirations of our Passions are not subject to our Wills So that they are easily confounded with the inspirations of inward Truth when the Mind is not enlightned Hence it is that there are so many People who seriously and in good earnest maintain abominable Errors A false Idea of Religion and Morality which agrees with their Interests and Passions appears Truth it self to them and being convinc'd by a pleasing Sense within them which justifies their excess they drive on their rash and indiscreet Zeal with all the Motion of Self-love XXI There is nothing then more certain and secure than Light we cannot six our Attention too long on clear Ideas and tho' we may suffer our selves to be animated by the inward Sense yet we must never be guided by it We must contemplate Order in it self and permit this Sensation only to keep up our Attention by the Motion which it excites in us otherwise our Meditations will never be rewarded with a clear prospect of Truth we shall be disgusted every moment and being always inconstant doubtful and perplex'd we shall suffer our selves to be blindly led by our Fancy XXII Indeed when our Heart is corrupted we are not in a Condition to contemplate Order as it is in it self we consider with Pleasure only those imaginary Relations which things have to our selves and neglect those real Relations which they have to one another We may then love the Mathematicks but it is because they bring us Reputation or Profit and because they examine only the Relations of Greatness whereas Order Consists in the Relations of Perfection The Evidence of Truth is always agreeable when it doth not clash with our Self-love but naturally we do not love a Light which discovers our hidden Disorders a Light which condemns punishes and covers us with Shame and Confusion Order the Divine Law is a terrible threatning and inexorable Law No Man can think upon it without fear and horror when he will not obey it all this is true But yet tho' the Heart be corrupted Self-love enlightned may sometimes stop or diminish the Motion of the Passions We do not love Disorder for Disorder's sake and a Man may desire his Conversion when he hopes to heighten his Pleasures by it After all I suppose the necessary helps for I confess that without the assistance of Grace we cannot labour in our Conversion as we ought nor so much as have one good Thought which may contribute to the Cure of our Distempers CHAP. VI. Of the Liberty of the Mind We should suspend our Assent as much as we can which is the great Rule By the Liberty of the Mind we may avoid Error and Sin as by the Strength of the Mind we free our selves from Ignorance The Liberty of the Mind as well as the Strength of it is a Habit which is confirm'd by use Some instances of its Vsefulness in Physicks Morality and Civil Life I. WE cannot discover Truth without the Labour of Attention because this Labour alone is rewarded with Light Before a Man can support and continue the Labour of Attention he must have gain'd some Strength of Mind and some Authority over the Body to impose Silence on his Senses Imagination and Passions as I have shew'd in the foregoing Chapter But how great Strength of Mind soever he hath acquir'd he cannot Labour incessantly and if he could yet there are some Subjects so obscure that the Mind of Man cannot penetrate into them Therefore to keep him from falling into Error it is not sufficient to have a strong Mind to endure Labour but he must also have another Vertue which I cannot better express than by the Equivocal Name of Liberty of Mind by which a Man witholds his Assent till he be irresistibly forc'd to give it II. When we examine any very compounded Question and our Mind finds it self surrounded on all sides with very great Difficulties Reason permits us to give over our Labour but it indispensably requires us to suspend our assent and to judge of nothing when nothing is evident To make use of our Liberty as much as we can is an essential and indispensable Precept both of Logick and Morality For we ought never to believe till Evidence obliges us to it we ought never to love that which we may without Remorse hinder our selves from loving I speak of Man only as he is Rational or as he governs himself only by Reason For the Faithful as such have other Principles than Light and Evidence The Statesman the Burgher the Religious the Souldier have each of them Principles of their own and it is reasonable that they should follow them tho' they do not clearly and evidently see that they are conformable to Reason But when Faith gives no determination we should believe nothing but what we see Where Custom prescribes no Rules we should follow only Faith and Reason and tho' human Authority doth determine and Custom authorizes any thing yet if we know clearly and evidently that their Determinations are false and erroneous we had better renounce every thing than Reason I say Reason and not our Senses our Imagination or the secret inspirations of our Passions which I desire may be taken notice of I speak also of Authority subject to Error and not of the infallible Authority of the Church which can never be contrary to Reason For Jesus Christ can never contradict himself Truth incarnate can never be contrary to Truth intellectual nor the Head which governs the Church to universal Reason which enlightens all Spiritual Beings III. The Strength of the Mind is to
the Passion which hath once reign'd in us for the Wounds which the Brain hath receiv'd from the Action of Objects and the Motion of the Spirits are not easily cur'd the animal Spirits flowing naturally to those parts of the Brain which are most open or lie most ready to receive them it is impossible to heal the Wounds of the Imagination but by continually turning the Course of the Spirits which renews them as it is impossible for a Wound in the Body to close up if you thrust the Sword which made it every moment into it or any thing which renews and enflames it XIII But the Spirits do not only of themselves and as it were fortuitously flow into the Wounds which the Brain hath receiv'd from the Action of sensible Objects they are determin'd also to pass thither continually by the Pleasure which the Soul receives from thence and especially by the admirable Construction of the Machine which goes on in its Motion without expecting the Orders of the Will and many times by reason of Sin contrary to them So that whenever we cease to resist and divert the Course of the Spirits the Passions renew and encrease their Strength Now the only way to make a Diversion and Revulsion in the Spirits is to set before our Minds those Objects and employ our selves in those Thoughts to which different courses of the animal Spirits are joyn'd by the Laws of the Union of the Soul and Body For the Course of the Spirits doth not depend immediately on our Will but only because the Thoughts which determine the Motion of the Spirits depend on it as I have shewn in the Fifth Chapter It is impossible then to deliver our selves from our Passions if we do not carefully avoid the Objects which excite them and employ our Minds in such Thoughts as are proper to make them ridiculous and contemptible But I shall treat of this more particularly hereafter XIV To make Men reflect yet farther on the Truths which I have here set down I think my self oblig'd to add this in particular That neither the Prayer of Invocation nor good Works no nor the Grace of Jesus Christ doth heal the Wounds which the Brain receives from the violent and irregular Motion which the Passions excite in the animal Spirits No the most sublime Grace of Christ that of Baptism that which the Soul receives in the Holy Communion when it comes to it with the most sanctified Dispositions do not cure this kind of Distempers without a Miracle It is true indeed that the Grace of Justification gives us a Right to those Succours which are necessary to resist the actual Assault of the Passions but it doth not deliver us from their Attacks it doth not close the Wounds which the Brain hath receiv'd from the Action of sensible Objects God doth not work Miracles on our Body when he justifies us he still leaves us all our Weaknesses Baptism doth not free us from our Concupiscence and the new Christian who is tormented with the Gout or disquieted with any Passion doth not find himself cur'd of those troublesome Distempers he only receives the assistance necessary to make him bear patiently the Pain which afflicts him and uneasily tho bravely the Caresses of the Passion which Courts and Flatters him XV. The same thing almost may be said of Prayer and good Works they obtain of God the Succours necessary for the Fight but they do not deliver us from our Miseries unless it be that continual fighting and resisting naturally makes the Spirits take another Course and then the Wounds close up and heal of themselves for to cure the Wounds of the Brain as well as those of the other parts of the Body it is sufficient that there be nothing to hinder the separated parts from reuniting XVI Now the Reason why Grace doth not deliver us from our Passions nor Baptism from the continual Assaults of our Concupiscence is because the power of the Grace of Christ appears much more by the continual Victories which the Just obtain over their Domestick Enemies the Merit of the Saints by this means becomes more pure and illustrious and since Glory is proportion'd to Merit the holy City the eternal Temple the great work of Christ receives innumerable Beauties which it would not have if our Passions did not give us continual Assaults St. Paul was just but yet he found in his Flesh a Law opposite to that of the Spirit by which he was animated He often besought Christ that he would deliver him from that which he calls A Thorn in the Flesh But Christ answers him 2 Cor. 12. v. 8 9. My Grace is sufficient for thee for it is in Weakness that my Power appears and that Vertue purifies it self Therefore St. Paul gloried in Infirmities in Persecutions in Reproaches that the Power of Christ as he saith might rest upon him XVII Let us not wonder therefore if the Sacraments leave the Body in the same condition in which they found it and strengthen only the inward Man of which we have no perfect Knowledge nor let us despair because we see our selves still insulted and ill-us'd by sinful Passions if we always continue stedfast in our Faith contented with our Hope and thereby unshaken in our Resolution of Sacrificing all Things to God But if we would as indeed we ought for we ought always to avoid Dangers if we would I say deliver our selves from those troublesome Motions which the Passions excite in us we must absolutely make use of that Remedy which I have prescrib'd and fill our Minds with such Thoughts as may make a Diversion and Revulsion in the animal Spirits and render the Passions ridiculous and contemptible there is no other way But those who either upon Philosophical grounds or by motives of Self-love enlightned condemn the Passions as Criminal must not presently imagine that they are just in the sight of God nor too hastily esteem themselves above their Brethren We must as much as we can make Nature subservient to Grace but we must still remember that Nature doth not justify and that Grace many times operates in Mens Minds and converts them and yet they perceive no alteration in them CHAP. VIII The Means which Religion furnishes us with to gain and preserve the Love of Order Jesus Christ is the occasional Cause of Grace we must call upon him with confidence When we come to the Sacraments the actual Love of Order is chang'd in 〈◊〉 habitual in consequence of the permanent desires of ●rist The Proof of this Truth being essential to the Conversion of Sinners The fear of Hell is as good a motive as the desires of eternal Happiness We must not confound the Motive with the End The desire of being Happy or Self-love should make us conformable to Order or obedient to the Law of God I. WE cannot obtain nor preserve Vertue or the Love of Order but by actual resolutions of Sacrificing every Thing to it because
naturally Habits are got and maintain'd by Acts But we cannot frame a resolution of Sacrificing our predominant Passion without a lively Faith and a firm Hope especially when this Passion appears with all its Charms and Allurements And therefore since it is Light and Understanding which illuminates Faith strengthens Hope and discovers to the Mind the ridiculousness and deformity of the Passions we should continually meditate on the true Goods and seek and carefully lay up in our Memory the Motives which may induce us to love them and to despise transient Enjoyments and that with so much the greater diligence because the Light is subject to our Wills and if we live in Darkness it is most commonly our own fault I think I have sufficiently prov'd these Truths II. But when our Faith is not lively nor our Hope strong enough to make us resolve to Sacrifice a Passion which hath got such a Dominion over our Heart that it corrupts our Mind every Moment and draws it to its Party the only thing we ought to do and perhaps the only thing we can do in this Case is to seek for that in the fear of Hell and the just Indignation of an avenging God which we cannot find in the hope of an eternal Happiness and in the Motion which that Fear excites in us to pray to the Saviour of Sinners that he would encrease our Faith and Confidence in him not ceasing in the mean time to meditate on the Truths of Religion and Morality and on the Vanity of transitory Enjoyments for without this we cannot be sensible of our Miseries nor call upon our Deliverer Now when we find in our selves st●●ngth enough to form an actual resolution of Sacrificing our Passions to the Love of Order then tho' according to the Principles which I have laid down in the foregoing Chapters we may through the assistance of Grace by repeating the like Acts absolutely acquire Charity or the habitual and ruling Love of the immutable Order yet it is better without delay to come to the Sacraments and in that actual Motion which the Holy Ghost inspires in us to wash away our Sins by Penance This is undoubtedly the most compendious and certain way to change the Act into a Habit the Act I say which is transient and doth not work Conversion into a Habit which remains and which justifies For God doth not Judge us according to that which is actual and transitory but according to habitual and permanent Dispositions and by the Sacraments of the New Testament we receive justifying Charity which gives us a Right to the true Goods and the assistances necessary for the obtaining of them These Truths I shall here explain either by certain Principles or by Evidence or by Faith III. I think I have shewn in several places and by several ways That God always executes his Designs by general Laws the Efficacy of which is determin'd by the action of occasional Causes I have prov'd this Truth by the Effects of those second Causes which are known to us and I think I have demonstrated it from the Idea of God himself because his Action ought to bear the Character of his Attributes And therefore I refer the Reader for this Matter to my other Writings But if Reason could not lead us to this Truth yet the Holy Scripture would not suffer us to doubt of it in relation to the Subject which I now treat of For the Scripture teaches us that Jesus Christ as Man is not only the meritorious but also the distributive or occasional Cause of all Graces that by his Sacrifice of himself he hath gain'd a Right over all the Nations of the World to make use of them as Materials in building the Spiritual Temple of the Church of which the stately Temple of Solomon was but a Shadow and a Figure and that now and ever since the day of his Ascension he makes use of that Right and raises that eternal Temple to the glory of his Father by the Power which he receiv'd from him in the day of his Victories when he was made High Priest of the true Goods after the irrevocable Order of Melchisedech Eph. 4.15 16. Christ is the Head of the Church he continually infuses into the Members of which it is compos'd 1 Joh. 2.1 1 T●m 2.5 Eph. 5.23 Heb. 7.25 Joh. 11.42 Mat. 28.18 Joh. 13.5 the Spirit which gives it Life and Holiness He is the Advocate the Mediator the Saviour of Sinners He is in the Holy of Holies always Living to make intercession for us and all his Prayers and Desires are heard In a word he himself tells us That all Power was given to him in Heaven and in Earth Now he did not receive this Power as God equal to the Father but as Man like unto us and God communicates his Power to the Creatures no farther than as he executes their Wills and by them his own Designs for God alone is the true Cause of every thing that is done both in Nature and Grace Thus it is certain from the Scripture that Jesus Christ as Man is the occasional cavse which determines the efficacy of that general Law whereby God would Save all Men in and by his Son IV. It is necessary that we should be well convinc'd of this Truth which is essential to Religion by reading the New Testament and particularly the Epistle to the Hebrews And having as I think sufficiently prov'd it in my Treatise of Nature and Grace and in my Christian Meditations I shall not insist any longer upon it I write for Philosophers but they are Christian Philosophers such as receive the Scripture and the infallible Tradition of the Universal Church and I endeavour to explain the Truths of Faith by clear and unequivocal Terms This makes me say that Jesus Christ as Man and High Priest of the true Goods is the occasional cause of Grace I might have call'd him the natural instrumental second distributive Cause or have made use of some other more common Term But the commonest Terms are not always the clearest Tho' People fancy they understand them perfectly yet commonly they scarce know what they say when they use them and if they would take the pains to examine these which I have mention'd they would find that the Term of natural Cause raises a false Idea that that of instrumental is obscure that of second so general that it gives no distinct Idea to the Mind and that of distributive at least equivocal and confus'd Whereas this which I have made use of the occasional cause of Grace hath I think none of these defects at least as to those Persons for whom alone I writ the Treatise of Nature and Grace tho' many others have taken upon them to judge of it who scarce understand the Principles which I have there laid down For this Term denotes precisely that God who doth every thing as the true cause which I think I have prov'd in several places imparts his
intelligent Being to another 3. God by his Power is the cause of our clear Perceptions or Cognitions in consequence of our own Desires or Attention But the intellectual and common Substance of Truth alone is the Form the Idea and the immediate Object of them The Soul separated from Reason cannot attain to the knowledge of any Truth It may by the action of God upon it be sensible of its own Pain Pleasure Perception and all the other particular Modifications of which its substance is capable but it cannot engross to it self the knowledge of Truths which are common to all spiritual Beings For Man who depends on the Power of God to be happy and powerful must also be united to the Wisdom of God to become Rational Wise Just and compleatly Perfect 4. We do not derive from the Objects the Ideas which we have of them 5. Men whom we call our Masters are only Monitors 6. When we retire into our selves it is not we that answer our selves but the inward Master which dwells in us which presides immediately over all spiritual Beings and gives them all the same answers XI Mat. 23.8 See S Augustincts Treathe De M●gistro All those may be reduc'd to that general proposition of our Saviours that we have but one Master even Christ himself who illuminates us by the evidence of his Light when we retire into our selves and solidly instructs us by Faith when we consult the visible and infallible authority of the Church in whose custody the sacred Treasure of his written and unwritten Word is deposited XII From this great Principle the following Duties are deriv'd 1. Not to value our selves on our Knowledge but to return our humble Thanks for it to him who is the Fountain and Author of it 2. To retire into our Selves as much as we can and to hearken more readily to Reason than to Men. 3. To yield only to the Evidence of Reason and the infallible Authority of the Church 4. Whenever Men speak to be sure to compare that which they say to our Ears with that which Reason answers to our Mind never to believe them but in what concerns Matters of Fact and that too with a kind of saving and reservation 5. Never to speak to them at least not with an air of Confidence before Reason hath spoke to us by its Evidence 6. To speak to them always as Monitors not as Masters to question them often and in different manners and to lead them insensibly to our common Master the universal Reason by obliging them to retire into themselves There is no way to instruct them but this 7. Never to dispute for disputing's sake nor even to propose Truth to others when the Company they are in Passion or any other Reason give us sufficiently to understand that they will not retire into themselves to hear the decision of the impartial Judge 8. Never to consult Reason but about such Matters as are suitable to the dignity of it and useful to our selves either to conduct us to Good or unite us to Truth to regulate our Heart or procure us Strength or liberty of Mind 9. To lay up carefully in our Memory as far as it is possible to be done none but certain Principles and such as abound in Consequences none but necessary Truths or the precious answer of the inward Truth 10. For the most part to neglect Matters of Fact especially those that have no certain Rules to be judg'd by such as are the Actions of Men. They give no light to the Mind and often corrupt the Heart 11. Our inviolable Law is Order not Custom which is many times opposite to Order and Reason To follow Example without confronting it with Order is to act like Brutes and by Mechanism only Nay it is better tho' that be bad enough to make our own Pleasure our Law than foolishly to obey pernicious and wicked Customs Our Life and Actions should do honour to our Reason and be answerable to the illustrious Characters we bear 12. We should set no value on Subtilty Beauty or even Strength of Imagination nor esteem any of those Studies which cultivate that part of us which makes us so valuable and acceptable in the Eye of the World An over-nice or over-stock'd Imagination doth not willingly submit to Reason It is always the Body which speaks by the Imagination and whenever the Body speaks it is an unhappy necessity that Reason must be silent or not regarded 13. To confirm us in this dis-esteem we should frequently and with a particular Application examine by the inward Light that which appears bright and sparkling to the Imagination that so we may dissipate that false and bewitching Lustre with which it hides its Follies We should very seldom regard Mens outward Behaviour which passes for current Payment in the World 14. We should carefully stop up the Passages by which the Soul gets away from the presence of God and wanders among the Creatures A Mind continually distracted by the action of sensible Objects cannot pay that respect and attendance which it owes to Reason It is a Contempt to Reason to give our Senses their full liberty 15. We should ardently love Truth Wisdom or the universal Reason We should esteem all the Gold of Peru but as a Grain of Sand in comparison of it Wis 7.9 All Gold in respect of Wisdom is as a little Sand saith the wise Man We should continually pray to it by our Attention My delights were with th● Sons of Men Prov. 8.31 We should place our whole Delight in consulting it in hearing its Answers and obeying its Commands as that delights to converse with us and to be always among us CHAP. IV. Of the Duties which we owe to the divine Love Our Will is nothing but a continual impression of the Love which God bears to himself the only true Good We cannot love Evil But we may take that to be Evil which is neither Good nor Evil. So we cannot hate Good But the true Good is really the Evil of wicked Men or the true cause of their Miseries That God may be Good in respect of us our Love must be like his or always subject to the divine Law Motions or Duties I. WE depend on the power of God and do nothing but by his Efficacy We are united to his Wisdom and know nothing but by his Light But this is not all we are also animated and inspir'd by his Love in such a manner that we are not capable of loving any Good but by the continual impression of the Love which he bears to himself This is what I must now explain in order to give a general view of our Duties toward God II. It is certain that God cannot act but for himself He hath no other Motive but his Love of himself He cannot Will but by his own Will and his Will is not like ours an impression proceeding from and tending toward something else As he is his own
Merits consist in eminent Qualities of Mind and Body Civil and Religious Merits arise from the Offices Men bear either in Church or State and from such Qualifications as are proper for the discharge of those Offices All Perfection is valuable in it self but many times it is much more comparatively or relatively A Diamond is not so perfect as a Fly but it is a great deal more valuable because of the Use Men make of it Also those Beings which have no other Perfection but that of their own Nature are preferable to those which have acquir'd Perfections A rough Diamond hath not so much Beauty as Glass well cut and polish'd but it hath much more Value as Things go So that a Man might justly be counted a Fool who would play the Philosopher so much as to prefer a Fly before an Emerald and to look upon a rough Diamond of very great Value as no better than a Pebble XII For to judge rightly of the Esteem we ought to make of Things and Persons it is not sufficient to consider them in themselves but we must also examine the several Relations which they may have to others of far greater Value The favour of the Prince gives a lustre to the vilest Persons and the Esteem Men have for Things should regulate their Price and consequently our outward and relative Esteem unless we resolve to despise Men too and make our selves ridiculous and contemptible Only we must take care not to let our Mind to be corrupted by the Judgments that are commonly made of Things Our Esteem must be only relative if the worth of the Thing be but relative for tho' Men esteem Gold and Silver more than Copper and Iron or the organis'd Bodies of Flies yet we must not pay the Duty of Esteem to Gold and Silver but to Men who make a wrong Judgment of them We must not judge of Persons or Things as Men do who attribute to the Objects of their Passions imaginary Perfections But whether they are deceiv'd in their Judgments or not we should have a relative Esteem for that which they esteem perhaps without Reason because in human Society the Worth of Things is generally measur'd by the Esteem Men have of them XIII The relative Merit of Men is many times much greater than their personal Merit and since our Duties are to be govern'd as well by the former as the latter I say again That nothing is more difficult than to judge rightly of what we ought to do in the infinite combinations of these different Merits Things may fall out so sometimes that we must unavoidably come short in the Payment of what we owe either to a Relation in such a degree or to a Man that hath done us such a Service or who bears such an Office in the Society and is serviceable to the State in such a capacity What must we do in this Case What is the common Measure whereby we may precisely discover the Proportion of our Duties For tho' it be certainly contain'd in the immutable Order yet it is not exactly known to us and if it were yet many times there are so many Relations to compare that we should never know what to resolve on if we staid till Evidence precisely noted to us every thing that we ought to do XIV We know well enough that all other things being equal we should prefer some Relations before others our Relations before our Friends and our Prince before them both But must we prefer one Relation before six or eight Friends A Relation who is our Enemy before a particular Friend Herein lies the difficulty For we must at the same time have regard to the Rights of Kindred of Friendship and of Society So that it often happens that we are oblig'd to prefer an Enemy before a Friend an Enemy who is a Friend of our Relations esteem'd by the Prince and serviceable to the State before a Friend who is a Person useless to the Publick or hath little or no affection for those who ought to be most dear to us Therefore there is no general Rule for the Government of our selves in the Duties of Esteem Respect and Benevolence which we owe to other Men but what is liable to a great many exceptions And that which extremely perplexes all that can be said in this Matter is That the Duties of Esteem Respect and Benevolence are of different kinds and many times in the same kind we ought to prefer one Man as to the Duties of Benevolence before another to whom we absolutely owe the Duties of Esteem and Respect XV. Seeing then the Order of our Duties is chang'd and govern'd by the different Circumstances of Things which it is not possible to foresee every Man should carefully examine them and retire into himself to consult the immutable Law without regarding those false Interests which the Passions continually represent and when he finds himself at a loss he should have recourse to such as are better skill'd than I in these matters he should consult Persons of the greatest Charity Prudence and Capacity rather than those who have their Memory only fill'd with general Rules which are insufficient to give a decision in particular circumstances and many times have neither Sense nor Charity The only general Rule that I shall venture to give at present a Rule which is not much follow'd but which seems to me to be the most certain one that can be given is this That we should prefer the Laws of Friendship in Jesus Christ and of the eternal Society before the common Rights of a Friendship and a Society which must end with our Life I shall explain my self more particularly XVI That which is finite how great soever it be hath of it self no proportion to infinity Ten thousand Ages in respect of eternity is nothing The proportion of the Universe to immense and boundless Spaces can be express'd only by a Cypher An Unite divided by a thousand Millions of Cyphers by a progression from one to a thousand Millions instead of from One to Ten would be a Fraction infinitely too great to express this proportion for indeed there is none this is my Position Now we shall enjoy God in the other life and enjoy him for ever Therefore the possession of the Empire of the Universe in respect of the possession of the true Good and the time of the enjoyment of this Empire compar'd with the eternity of the life to come are Cyphers there is no proportion between them They are totally eclips'd and annihilated by the presence of Eternity Human Greatness and Pleasures which pass away with our life nay let us join whatever we can think of for our Satisfaction all this disappears when we reflect a little and consider that we are immortal It is nothing and ought to be counted for nothing This I think every one will allow XVII Now let us observe this Principle and we shall see that he who is an occasion of falling
them this miserable Life a Life which we ought not much to value but only as it is a Time which relates to Eternity and may deserve it by the Grace which Christ the High-Priest of the true Goods distributes to Men and thereby sollicits them to enter into a communion of the same happiness with him XVI As to the Duties of Respect or external and relative Submission they are due to Power and therefore we cannot proportion them according to the merits of Persons nor regulate them by our own Light with respect to the interests of our eternal Society in Christ We must follow the Customs and Laws of the State in which God hath plac'd us It is a Duty of Justice to pay Respect and Tribute to those to whom God hath given Authority over us It is all one whether they be good or bad nay whether they be Christians or not Whether they make a good or a bad use of our Contributions And the reason of this is because it is God whom we Honour in their Persons for all Honour is relative and must be ultimately refer'd to him alone who really possesses Power So that it is an injury and a wrong to our Prince to deny him the Respects which are due to him and it is a formal disobedience against the King of Kings to refuse to submit our selves and give sensible marks of our Submission to those whom he hath appointed his Lieutenants and Vicegerents upon Earth The primitive Christians paid to the Roman Emperors even those who cruelly persecuted Christ himself in his Members all the Respect Submission and relative Honor that was due to their participated Power Well knowing that Honour is properly due to God alone and must be refer'd solely to him 1 Tim. 1.17 according to S. Paul's Words Unto the King eternal immortal invisible the only wise God be Honour and Glory They knew that the Duties of Respect ought not to be proportion'd to the interest of the Church or rather that they ought to be refer'd thither because that is the great or indeed the only design of God but that this is never better done than when Christians pay those Duties with all possible exactness For indeed this is the right way to oblige sovereign Princes who are always jealous of their Glory and Authority to favour Christian Societies more than any other in their Dominions But I must discourse more at large of our Duties as they relate to the different kinds of Society which we form with other Men. CHAP. IX Of the Duties due to Sovereigns Two Sovereign Powers The difference between them Their natural Rights Rights of Concession Of the Obedience of Subjects I. ALL the Duties which we owe to participated Powers may be reduc'd to Two general Heads Duties of Respect and Duties of Odedience The Duties of Respect depend on the Laws and Customs observ'd in every State and consist in certain outward and sensible marks of the Submission which the Mind pays to God in the Person of it's Superiors Those Duties vary according to the different Circumstances of Times and Places Sometimes Subjects prostrate themselves before their Prince sometimes they put one Knee to the Ground or both At other times they only make a profound reverence and stand uncover'd and sometimes also they remain cover'd in his Presence without losing the Respect which is due to him These are arbitrary Ceremonies and are govern'd by Use and Custom II. But that which is essential to Morality is that the Soul it self should be touch'd with Respect in the Presence of the Prince who is the Image of the true Power and that in such a proportion as the Prince actually exercises the Authority he hath receiv'd or cloaths himself as I may say with the Power and Majesty of God For we owe more respect to the King when he is in the Seat of Justice than in a Thousand other Circumstances and to the Bishop in the actual administration of his Episcopal Functions than at any other time And indeed we are naturally enclin'd to measure the respect due to Grandeur and Power by the sensible operation they have on us Certainly when we are in the Presence of the Almighty our Mind ought to prostrate it self Now tho' we are always in the sight of God yet we come into his Presence in a more particular manner when we approach Superiour who is his Image Therefore it is not sufficient to put on an outward air of Respect and Veneration but the Mind must also humble it self and respect the Greatness and Power of God in the Majesty of the Prince III. There is no great difficulty in paying the Duties of Respect to the higher Powers nay the Brain is fram'd in such a manner that the Imagination willingly bows before the splendour that environs them wherefore I think it needless to say any more of these Duties But an exact Obedience to the commands of our Superiors is a continual Sacrifice much more difficult and burdensome than the Slaughter of Beasts and therefore Self-love is an irreconcileable Enemy to it There are few People that discharge this Duty like Christians or in expectation that he whom they Honour in the Person of the Prince should be their only Reward Every one in a manner dispenses with himself as much as he can from paying an Obedience that doth not suit with his own conveniences and some preposterously obey unjust Commands because they do not know the exact order and measure of their Duties For opposite Powers having each their separate Rights their different interests are many times so intermingled that it is very difficult to know which of them ought to be obey'd and in these cases every Man follows his own particular humour or advantage for want of certain Rules to govern his Actions by I shall therefore here lay down one or two Principles which may give us some Light toward the clearer discovery of these Duties IV. There are but two sovereign Powers in the World the Civil and the Ecclesiastical The Prince in monarchical States and the Bishop The Prince who is the Image of God Almighty and his Minister upon Earth and the Bishop who is the Image of Christ and his Vicar in the Church The Prince derives his Authority over other Men from God alone so doth the Bishop and neither of them ought to use it any otherwise than God doth himself with respect to the immutable Order the universal Reason the inviolable Law of all intelligent Beings even of God himself The Prince notwithstanding hath a more absolute Power than the Bishop He hath Authority to make Laws and is not subject to them himself he may act without controul and is not oblig'd to give an account of his Conduct to any Man for he seems to have more Relation to God as Power than as Reason to God cloth'd with Majesty and Glory than to God made Man and like us to Christ glorified than to Christ upon Earth and
cloth'd with our Vileness and Infirmities But the Bishop hath more relation to God as Wisdom and Reason incarnate and compass'd about with our Infirmities than as absolute and independent Power to Jesus Christ upon Earth conversing familiarly with Men than to Jesus Christ glorified and made supreme Lord of all the Nations of the World Ye know saith our Saviour to his Apostles Mat. 20.25 that the Princes of the Gentiles exercise Dominion over them and they that are great exercise Authority upon them But it shall not be so among you The Son of Man came not to be ministred unto but to minister and to give his life a Ransom for many Not that Princes have a Right to use their Authority without Reason God himself hath not this miserable Right he is essentially Just and the universal Reason is his inviolable Law But the abuse of the Ecclesiastical Authority is more criminal in the sight of God than the abuse of Royal Authority not only because there is an infinite difference between spiritual and temporal Goods but also because the Ecclesiastical Power that acts imperiously and arbitrarily acts directly contrary to the Character which it bears of Jesus Christ who is always Reason and Reason humbled and proportion'd to the capacity of Men for their Instruction and Salvation V. The end of the institution of these two Powers is very different The Civil Power is ordain'd for the maintenance of Civil Societies The Ecclesiastical Power for the establishment and preservation of the heavenly Society which is begun upon Earth and shall never end The Duty of the Prince regards only the peace of the State the Duty of the Bishop the peace of Christ's Church The Prince should preserve and augment those Conveniences that are necessary for the temporal Life The Bishop by his Preaching and Example should instruct and enlighten the People and as the Minister of Christ diffuse inward Grace by the Sacraments in the Members of the Church and thereby communicate the life of the Spirit to those that are committed to his charge In a word the Power of the Prince is ordain'd for the temporal Good of his Subjects that of the Bishop for the spiritual Good of his Children VI. This being laid down as the first Principle the second which follows from it is That since God is the absolute Lord of all Things his Orders give a Right to all necessary and reasonable means for the execution of them A Servant who receives Orders from his Master to carry a message of importance with all speed to his Friend hath no right to take his Neighbour's Horse for the execution of his Master's commands because his Master himself hath not that right But God being the absolute Lord of all Things when he saith to St. Peter Feed my Sheep or when he commands the King to preserve his Subjects in Peace he gives to these two sovereign Powers as far as Order permits an absolute right to all Things necessary for the execution of his Will So that the natural essential and primitive Rights of the temporal Sovereignty are as far as Order permits all necessary means for the preservation of the State and the natural rights of the Ecclesiastical Power are all lawful means necessary for the edification of the Church of Christ VII But the Church and the State being compos'd of the same Persons who at the same time are both Christians and Members of a Body Politick Children of the Church and Subjects of the Prince it is impossible for these two Powers which ought to have a mutual regard to each other and should be absolute and independent in the Administration of their several Functions to exercise their Jurisdiction and execute the Orders of their common Master if they do not perfectly agree together and even in some Cases depart with something of their Rights to one another For this Reason it is that the Prince by the concession of the Church hath now a right of Presentation to many Benefices and the Church by the concession of the Prince enjoys temporal Possessions These are not natural rights because they are not necessary or natural consequences of the Commission which these different Powers have receiv'd from God They are only rights of concession depending on a mutual Agreement whose end ought to be no other than that which God propos'd to himself in the institution of these two Powers VIII The building of the Church of Christ the eternal Temple being the great or indeed the only design of God for all the Societies and Kingdoms of this World shall be dissolv'd when the Work of him who alone is immutable in his designs shall be compleated it is evident that the State hath a reference and should be subservient to the good of the Church rather than the Church to the glory or even the preservation of the State and that one of the principal Duties of a Christian Prince is to furnish Christ with Materials fit to be sanctified by his Grace under the care of the Bishop and to build up the spiritual Edefice of the Church For this end chiefly it is that the Prince should prefer the State in Peace give Orders that his Subjects be instructed in solid Learning such as gives perfection to the Mind and regulates the Heart and take care that the Laws ordain'd for the punishment of Vice and Injustice be strictly observ'd For a People well instructed and obedient to reasonable Laws is better fitted to receive effectually the influence of Grace than a rude vicious and ignorant People For this Reason the Prince ought to employ his Authority in causing the Decrees of Councils to be observ'd and keeping the People in the Obedience which they owe to their Mother the Church of Christ For in fine there is so close an Union between the Church and the State that he who troubles the State troubles the Church which consists of the same Members and he that makes a Schism in the Church is really a disturber of the publick Peace and Tranquility IX But whether a Prince doth or doth not propose to himself this great design of gaining immortal Glory by labouring for Eternity and carrying on a Work which alone shall last for ever it is not for private Men to censure his Conduct And provided that he requires nothing but what flows from the natural Rights given him by the Commission which he hath receiv'd from God he ought to be obey'd in all things even by those that hold the greatest Dignities in the Church X. It doth not belong to me to deduce from the certain Principles which I have here laid down such consequences as contain the particular Duties of those that have a right to command and besides there is more difficulty in it than may be imagin'd There are a great many circumstances to be consider'd which vary or determine these Duties Princes should examine their own Obligations in the sight of God by the light of the
doubtful and equivocal marks of an Esteem which cannot make a Man truly and substantially happy or contented but only when it is govern'd and supported by Reason which alone is the supreme Judge of Merit and alone able to give it an eternal reward III. Tho' Honour and Glory absolutely speaking be due only to God yet created Spirits may also challenge it in regard of the relation they bear to the divine Perfections and the resemblance they have of the Model by which they were form'd We have reason to believe that they do in some measure at least correspond with their original We are certain that the Image of the invisible God stamp'd on the very Foundation of their Being is indelible Therefore we may nay and ought as long as we live with them to give them marks of Esteem and respect and so much the more because we cannot acquit our selves of the obligation we are under to preserve Charity for them without the performance of these Duties IV. For since Men invincibly desire to be happy they cannot without an extraordinary degree of Vertue unite themselves with those that despise them because in consequence of the Laws ordain'd for the good of Society they feel an extreme Pain when they find themselves not well entertain'd in the Minds of others In Winter we get away from such places as are expos'd to Winds and Frost because in consequence of the Laws of the Union of the Soul and Body the Soul is unhappy in those places How is it possible when we are govern'd by our Passions and Pleasures to unite our selves to those whose Coldness chils and freezes us to those who sensibly afflict us by the incommodious and disagreeable place they give us in their Mind and Heart Therefore we must not think to maintain Charity amongst Men to bring them near and unite them to us and to be serviceable to them if we do not pay them such Duties as may persuade them that they shall live easily and contentedly with us V. Since it is not in our Power to infuse inward Grace into the Hearts of Men which alone can dispose them to sacrifice their present Happiness to the Love of Order we are many times oblig'd to make use of their Concupiscence or Self-love to moderate their Passions and favour the efficacy of the Grace of Christ For if in the Old Testament the Angels to preserve the Worship of the true God among the Jews govern'd them only by Motives of Self-love as not being themselves the dispensers of the true Goods nor of the Grace necessary to deserve them certainly we ought also to labour for the Conversion of Men by those natural means which the general Laws supply us with We must Plant and Water and expect from Heaven the increase and maturity We must endeavour to employ to a good purpose the universal Instrument of Iniquity the Concupiscence of Pride and Pleasure or rather Self-love the abundant source of all our Miseries The Grace of Christ coming to our assistance will change Men's Hearts and enable the Weak to go on in the ways of Righteousness which we shall have taught them by a prudent and charitable management of those things that are in our Power VI. It is certain then that tho' our Duties for the most part consist only in certain outward and sensible Marks by which we signify to other Men that they have such a place in our Mind and Heart as may content their Self-love yet we are oblig'd to perform them exactly not with a design to advance our own private Interest nor to fortify and keep up Concupiscence in others which we do in some measure please and gratify by these Duties but to destroy and sacrifice it by the assistance of the Grace of Christ VII Now tho' our equals do not sensibly represent the Power and Majesty of God to which the submission of the Mind is due yet we ought to treat them as our Superiors and to give them sensible Marks of our inward Respect upon this consideration that their Merit their Vertue and the invisible Relation which they have to God renders them worthy of these Duties or if they are not worthy of them that we cannot contribute to make them so if we do not first gain their Friendship and Affection VIII As for those that are below us we should not treat them as our Superiors tho' we may look upon them as such according to those general Words of S. Paul Let each esteem other better than themselves Phil. 2.3 But we should in many cases treat them as our Equals and Friends For the main end of our Duties is to preserve Charity among Men and to joyn our selves with them in an affectionate and durable Friendship that we may be useful to them and they to us For this end it is necessary that our Duties should be sincere or at least it should be probable that we give other Men the same place within us which we express by our outward Signs Thus a Superior may descend so far as to treat his Inferiors like equals and they will be pleas'd and satisfied with it for there is some likelyhood of Sincerity in this But if he stoops below them they will have reason to believe if they look upon him as a Man of Wit but not much Vertue that he mocks and abuses them They will be apt to imagine that this excessive Humility is only a Blind to cover some extraordinary design Or else they will despise him as a Man of a low and mean Soul in which it is no advancement to possess the highest Place They will look upon themselves to be without a Head and will live every one according to his own Fancy when he that should guide and govern them so imprudently debases himself For when the Head stoops too low the Members despise him and he cannot raise himself up again without angring and discontenting them But when he treats them only as his Equals they are sensible that they still have a Master and are not surpriz'd to see him resume the Command and Authority IX When our Equals out of a Principle of Vertue humble themselves below us and give us the precedence yet they do not fully acquit themselves of their Duties toward us unless they yield us the pre-eminence too and give us real or at least probable Testimonies of a particular Esteem and Affection For if we do not believe that their Humiliation is a mark of the esteem they have for us our Self-love cannot be satisfied with it Vertue may make a Man lower himself to one whom he despises Now it is more disagreable and displeasing to be obey'd by one that despises us than to be commanded by one that gives us real marks of his Esteem and Friendship It is Nature many times that gives us Masters We may obey without debasing without sacrificing and destroying our selves But we cannot naturally and without Vertue love Contempt This is a thing
The Mind clearly sees all this And what then must our Self-love enlightned our invincible and insatiable desire of Happiness conclude from hence but that if we would be solidly happy we must submit our selves entirely to the divine Law This is evident in the highest degree V. Our Self-love then is the motive which being assisted by Grace unites us to God as our Good or the cause of our Happiness and subjects us to Reason as our Law or the model of our Perfection But we must not make the motive our End or our Law We must truly and sincerely love Order and unite our selves to God by Reason We must prefer the divine Law before all things Because we cannot slight it and cease to conform our selves to it without losing the liberty of access to God which we enjoy by it We must not desire that Order should accommodate it self to our Will It is impossible to be done for Order is immutable and necessary We must not wish that God would not punish our Iniquities God is a Judge that cannot be corrupted These desires corrupt us These foolish and insignificant Wishes are injurious to the Purity the Justice and Immutability of God they strike at the essential Attributes of the divine Nature We should abhor our own Corruptions and fashion all the motions of our Heart by Order We should revenge on our selves the injuries done to the honour of Order or at least we should humbly submit to the divine Vengeance For he who wishes that God would not punish Theft or Drunkenness doth not love God and tho' the strength of his Self-love enlightned may keep him from Stealing or Drinking yet he is not Righteous He makes that the end which should be only the motive of his desires He must call upon the Saviour of Sinners who alone can change his Heart But he that had rather there should be no God than such an one as delights to make eternally miserable even those that truly love Order and Reason is a just Man For that chimerical Deity that unjust and cruel God is not amiable Grace it self doth not destroy Self-love but only regulates it and makes it subject to the divine Law It makes us love the true God and despise that Irregularity and Injustice which a disturb'd Imagination may attribute to the divine Nature VI. From what hath been said it is evident First that we must enlighten our Self-love to the end it may excite us to Vertue Secondly that we must never follow the motion of Self-love only Thirdly that in obeying Order inviolably we labour effectually for the contentment of our Self-love In a word since God alone is the cause of our Pleasure we ought to submit our selves to his Law and labour for our Perfection leaving it to his Justice and Goodness to proportion our Happiness to our Merits and to those of Christ in whom ours deserve an infinite Reward VII I have explain'd in the first Part of this Treatise the most material things that are necessary to make us labour for our Perfection or to acquire and preserve an habitual and ruling Love of the immutable Order in which our Duties toward our selves consist They are these in general VIII We should accustom our selves to the labour of Attention and thereby procure some strength of Mind We should never assent but to evidence and so preserve the liberty of our Mind We should continually study Mankind in general and our selves in particular that we may gain a perfect knowledge of our selves We should meditate Night and Day on the divine Law that we may obey it exactly We should compare our selves with Order to humble and despise our selves We should reflect on the divine Justice to fear it and awaken our selves We should think upon our Mediator to call upon him and comfort our selves We should look upon Christ as our Model love him as our Saviour and follow him as our Strength our Wisdom and the Fountain of our eternal Happiness The World seduces us by our Senses It troubles our Mind by our Imagination it carries us away and plunges us in the depth of Misery by our Passions We should break off the dangerous correspondence which we hold with it by our Body if we would strengthen the union which we have with God by Reason For these two unions of the Soul with God and with the Body are incompatible We cannot unite our selves perfectly to God without abandoning the interests of the Body without despising sacrificing and destroying it IX Notwithstanding we are not allow'd to procure our own Death nor to ruin our Health For our Body is not our own It belongs to God to our Country our Family and our Friends We must keep up its strength and vigour according to the use we are oblig'd to make of it But we must not preserve it contrary to the command of God and to the prejudice of other Men. We must expose it for the publick good and not fear to weaken ruin and destroy it in executing the commands of God And so likewise for our Honour and our Fortunes Every thing we have belongs to God and our Neighbour and must be preserv'd employ'd and sacrific'd to the honour of the divine Law the immutable and necessary Order and with a dependence on it I shall not enter into the particulars of this matter for my design was only to lay down those general Principles by which every Man is oblig'd to govern his Life and Actions if he would arive happily at the true and certain place of Rest and Pleasure FINIS BOOKS sold by James Knapton at the Crown in St. Paul 's Church-yard A New Voyage round the World Describing particularly the Isthmus of America several Coasts and Islands in the West-Indies the Isles of Cape Verd the Passage by Terra del Fuego the South-Sea Coasts of Chili Peru and Mexico the Isle of Guam one of the Ladrones Mindanao and other Philippine and East-India Islands near Cambodia China Formosa Luconia Celebes c. New-Holland Sumatra Nicobar Isles the C●pe of Good Hope and Santa Hellena Their Soil Rivers Harbours Plants Fruits Animals and Inhabitants Their Customs Religion Government Trade c. By William Dampier Illustrated with particular Maps and Draughts The Third Edition Corrected Capt. Dampier's Voyages Vol. II. in Three Parts First the Supplement of his Voyage round the World being that part that relates to Tonquin Ac●in Malacca and other Places in the East-Indies Second his Voyage to the Bay of Campeac●y in the West-Indies Third his Observations about the Winds and Weather in all parts of the Ocean between the Tropicks with a General Index to both Volumes Octavo Illustrated with particular Maps A New Voyage and Description of the Isthmus of America giving an Account of the Author's abode there the Form and Make of the Country the Coasts Hills Rivers c. Woods Soil Weather c. Trees Fruit Beasts Birds Fish c. The Indian Inhabitants their Features