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A11073 The mysticall marriage Experimentall discoveries of the heavenly marriage betweene a soule and her saviour. By F. Rous. Rous, Francis, 1579-1659. 1631 (1631) STC 21342.5; ESTC S106415 66,682 385

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the heavenly Bridegroome IT is necessary to shew what these visitations are to convince that they are and so to undeceive those that thinke they are not It is also necessary to free those from errour who beleeving that they are yet doe mistake those that are not for those that are Such visitations there are for they are seene and felt by men seeing and waking and seeing and waking not onely with the bodily eyes but with two better eyes the one of humane reason and the other farre excelling that divine and heavenly light Spirituall light beholds these spirituall sights and shews them to the understanding which being convinced by that which it sees beleeves them it selfe and would also deliver over the sight and the beleefe of them to others But the thoughts of man are narrower than these joyes and words are narrower thā thoghts But which is worst of al the heart of an earthly man is narrower than the narrow words of a spirituall man for the carnall man perceiveth not spirituall things though they be held up before his fleshly eyes yet in the mouth of two or three eye-witnesses a word should stand and stand it doth though blinde men see it not standing before them and therfore stumble at it But who knowes whether an Ephatah may come downe from heaven that while a spirituall object is proposed a spirituall sight may be infused Howsoever the words of heavenly wisedome are not spoken in vaine to the children of wisedome and especially those who are yet but children and not perfect in tae art of discerning good and evill must not be left to the dangers of errour and mistaking The black Angel sometimes changeth himselfe into an Angel of light and then may he also make some shewes of lightsome visitations There is also a sanguine and naturall lightsomnesse and a bright beame of adustion that sometimes shine in the mind and these also may be mistaken to be divine But the spirit is not flesh much lesse is hee that evill spirit which is contrary to him And because the spirit is that which these are not the visitations are such as those imaginations are not which come from these And that this difference may the better be discerned let let us beholde the true characters of a spirituall visitation which the soule seeth when the husband of soules doth visit her A first marke and signe of his presence is light a light not fitted for the eye but the soule even a light spirituall and shining spirit and truth into the soule and spirit For the Lord is a spirit and when hee comes into the soule hee comes with abundance of that spirit which leadeth into all truth Hee is the light of the world even of the great world of mankinde and therefore when he comes into the little world of one man how great is his light And when this light shineth brightly then the soule by it doth see spirituall things as truly and assuredly as the corporall eye doth corporall things For there is an agreement betweene a spirituall eye and spirituall objects as there is betweene the bodily eye and bodily object By this light things formerly not knowne are seene and discovered and spirituall things knowne before onely by a carnall which is a false knowledge are spiritually and so truly discerned for the light is that which maketh manifest and this light being spirituall maketh spirituall things so manifest that it gives a full assurance of understanding and makes us know that wee know thē Even those things which before seemed fables and foolishnesse to the carnall eye to this spirituall sight and light appeare plainly to be deepe mysteries and most wise truthes Especially the great Bridegroom of soules who to the Iewes is a stumbling blocke and to the Grecians foolishnesse to this light appeares clearely to be the wisedome of God and the power of God For the light begotten acknowledgeth the light begetting and Christ is seene in the soule by his owne beames Hee is seene there as a Head and Husbād to the Church as a roote of life as an All-sufficient Saviour fit and able to restore a decayed and lost creation to disperse and treade downe a combined association of adversary and mighty spirits and to unite and recapitulate the scattered members of a mysticall body both in heaven and earth each to other and all to the Deity Hee is beheld as the fairest of men the soules well-beloved an infuser of that blessed sap of spirituall life by which the soule is purified here and made capable of the beatificall vision in an eternall life hereafter And as this derived light sheweth us the primitive light which begate it and being spirituall shewes us that Lord who is the spirit from whom it proceeded so doth it also discover to us divers other spirituall truthes and is a kinde of Oracle that gives divine answeres and resolutions Now that wee may certainely know this light to be a truth and not an imagination and withall to be truly spirituall and heavenly and not carnall earthly much lesse infused by a counterfeit Angel of light let us first observe that this light of the spirit doth agree with the light of the word The same spirit of God which shineth now in our soules in these heavenly visitations did first shine in the word so that the light of the word and the light in our soules are twinnes and resemble each other and agree like brethren If therefore there be this agreement then there is this brotherhood and if no agreement then there is no brotherhood Therefore to the law to the testimony if thy thoughts speake not according to this word it is because there is no light in them for indeed if our thoughts be truly enlightened wee shall finde some words in the word of God confirming them yea many times this light within will call up some place of the word without for a witnesse to it to confirm a truth which in that place was not formerly perceived Such is the harmony and power of harmony betweene the spirit and the word that when you hit a spirituall truth in your soule there will often come a sound answer and eccho from some place in the word agreeable to it And as the word doth approve this light so doth this light approve the word It loves to looke on it it seeth a heavenly wisdome in it yea it seeth secrets in it yea many times it will in some short sentence yea in some single word find out a Mine of heavenly doctrine and as at a little crany discover a world of divine truths And so the light of the spirit doth approve it selfe not onely by being approved of the word but by approving and improving it This is a sufficient tryall and touchstone of this heavenly light though if neede were I might adde the willing resignation of reason even of the naturall light of the soule to the soveraignty of this divine and heavenly
THE MYSTICALL MARRIAGE Experimentall Discoveries of the heavenly Marriage betweene a Soule and her Saviour By F. ROVS LONDON Printed by William Iones dwelling in Red-crosse-street 1631. TO THE BRIDE THE LAMBES WIFE A REASON OF THIS WORKE IF any man fearefull of waste doe ask To what end serveth this labour I answer To the maine end Gods glory by mans edification And to this I thinke it conduceth many wayes First by the fitnesse of it to all times and seasons either of prosperity or adversity For if the times be joyfull this subject brings the best joy with it and enables us to rejoyce with them Yea it rectifies amends and exalts our joyes for upon an earthly it sets a crowne of heavenly joy And indeede without this joy we may say to joy Thou art mad and to laughter What is it that thou doest But if the times prove sad and dangerous by pestilence famine sword or other calamities this Doctrine brings strong consolation even stronger than all sorrowes and discomforts For our Communion with Christ is a fastning of the soule to a mighty and impregnable Rocke that makes her stedfast even against the gates of hell By this Communion we are made Temples of the holy Ghost the very Comforter himselfe and by him there is a Sanctuary made within us into which the soule may fly for rest safety and comfort amid all feares and dangers For into this Sanctuary the Avenger may not enter There is a chamber within us and a bed of love in that chamber wherein Christ meetes and rests with the soule and the force of friends or men either dares not or cannot breake in to disturbe the rest of Christ with the soule nor of the soule with Christ. It is an undeniable Axiome We are more than conquerours through him that loveth us An omnipotent lover gives an excessively conquering and unconquerable safety And for this safety of us and our joy we have also the immediate word of the lover himselfe I will see you again and your heart shall rejoyce and your joy shall none take from you No wonder then if the Disciple beloved of this Lover doe tell us that writing of this communion hee writes that our joy may bee full for in this communion stands the fulnesse of joy both for soundnesse measure and safety And surely with these last times of the world it hath too great a fitnesse For it hath beene foretold that in these times the love of many should waxe colde and what fitter remedy is there for love when it hath taken cold than to kindle a fire to it even that spirituall fire which issueth frō the spirit that baptiseth with fire A second advancement to edification is this that that it presents to the view of the world some bunches of grapes brought from the land of promise to shew that this land is not a meere imagination but some have seene it and have brought away parcels pledges and earnests of it In these appeares a world above the world a love that passeth human love a peace that passeth naturall understanding a joy unspeakable and glorious a taste of the chiefe and soveraigne good Neither doth the benefit of it rest onely in the conviction of the understanding but thirdly it goes on to the will and affections It warmes and drawes them and by them the whole man to partake of the same pledges and by the incouragement of these pledges to goe on laboriously and constantly to the possession of the whole And that as by a borrowed sight men are provoked to come to tasting so by their owne tasting they may come to a sight of their owne which onely tasting can teach them But withall that by these foretastes they may be led on to that fulnesse wherewith the soule shall eternally be satisfied Fourthly it may provoke others of this Nation to bring forth more boxes of this precious oyntment even of that mysticall loue which droppeth downe from the Head Christ Iesus into the soules of the Saints living heere below For so the house of God shall bee filled with the savour of his oyntments and we know that because of the savour of his oyntments the Virgins love him And loving him they cry Draw me and I will runne after thee So the more savour of this oyntment the more love of Christ the more love the more running after Christ. But if the number of those who have written on this subject of mysticall and experimentall Divinity be tolde I thinke this worke will not be found supernumerary THE MYSTICAL MARRIAGE I. The soule seeketh a Husband and findes him I WAS first breathed frō heaven and I came from God in my Creation I am divine and heavenly in my originall in my essence in my character and therfore my happines must be divine and heavenly For to a divine and heavenly essence can agree no other but a divine and heavenly happinesse I am a spirit though a low one and God is a Spirit even the highest one and God who is a Spirit is the fountaine of this spirit Where should a low spirit finde happinesse but in the highest Spirit and where should a created Spirit seeke happinesse but in the Spirit that created it Wherefore being a Spirit I will fasten my selfe on a spiritual happinesse and this spirituall happinesse I will looke for in no other but in the first and best Spirit beyond whom there is neither good nor being Then what hast thou to doe O soule any longer among these grosse thicke and bodily things here below to cast thy love on them or to seeke happinesse in them what are they to thee or what agreeablenesse is there betweene thy purity and their grossenesse The bodie that lives by breathing the thinne element of ayre may as well live in the bottome of the thicke water as thou canst live continue much lesse better thy Being by sucking these grosse and bodily Creatures Thy being is of a higher and purer nature and therefore thy well-being must bee fetched from something that is higher and purer than they The maine use of them is to serve the body which is some kinne to their grossenesse but remember that the bodie it selfe is to serve the soule and what base felicity must that be which she shall find in her servants servant Much more reasonable were it for the soule to fetch her well-being from some being higher and better than her selfe for such onely can better her and withall to lift up the body to the participation of the soules high and spirituall happinesse for there is a naturall body and there is a spirituall body then that the body should draw downe the soule to the grosse and transitory things that are given to serve the body in the bodies service of the soule And thus may man be perfectly happy the soule a spirit by union with the highest Spirit and the body by union with the soule united also to that Spirit And now the
soule is resolved of her choise for she hath fixed her love on that Spirit which is the true object of the love of spirits But even that excellency which draweth her love awaketh her fear and beholding admirable purity and majesty together with her owne impurity and lownesse shee is moved at once both to runne to happinesse and to fly from it Shee stands distracted and in this distraction asketh Will God indeede dwell with men and will the highest Spirit who inhabiteth eternity and cannot abide iniquity dwell with low spirits that are defiled and be full of impurity Who shall dwell with the devouring fire and who shall dwell with everlasting burnings But the Lord himselfe speaketh to her and saith Feare not for thy maker is thine husband the Lord of Hosts is his Name and thy Redeemer the Holy One of Israel the God of the whole earth It is the glory of the greatest spirit to blesse the lesser spirits as it is the happinesse of the lesser to bee blessed by the greatest Fulnesse is glorified most by filling the greatest emptinesse and majesty by succouring greatest infirmity As for thy impurity true it is that thou art indeed too uncleane to touch God in an immediate unity but there is a pure counterpart of thy nature and that pure humanity is immediatly knit to the purest Deity And by that immediate union thou maist come to a mediate union For the Deity and that humanity being united make one Savior Head and Husband of soules and thou being married to him who is God in him art also one with God He one by a personall union thou one by a mysticall And being thus united and married to him his spirit flowes into thy spirit and the sappe of the Deity sheds it selfe into the soule For as man and wife in a corporall marriage are one flesh so in this spirituall and mysticall marriage Christ and his spouse are one spirit The spirit of Christ entring into our spirits layes in them an immortal seed and from thenceforth those whom he found impure he makes pure even pure in heart so that they may see God The Sonne of God so loved the soules of men that hee would make them a wife and marry them And that hee might make this wife fit to be brought into his Fathers house hee left his Father to come to his wife that he might cleanse her frō spots blemishes and present her pure glorious to his Father By his precious blood he purgeth her from her guilt by his spirit he purifieth her from her uncleannesse and both of these hee bestoweth on her in his marriage with her And then the soule thus washed hath boldnesse to approach unto God through her husband the Sonne of God who hath loued her and giuen himselfe for her and giuen himselfe unto her For God beholds her and she beholds God as one with his Sonne euen as his Sonnes wife Then draw neere O soule to this husband of soules the Lord is the spirit that marieth spirits and makes them one spirit with him in a knot of eternall blessednes Cleare vp thine eye and fixe it on him as upon the fairest of men the perfection of spirituall beauty the treasure of heauenly joy the true object of most feruent loue and inflamed affections and accordingly fasten on him not thine eye only but thy mightiest loue and hottest affections Looke on him so that thou maiest lust after him for here it is a sinne not to looke that thou maist lust and not to lust hauing looked For the spirit hath his lust also it lusteth against things contrary to it and it lusteth for things connaturall to it Accordingly it lusteth against the flesh but it lusteth after spirituall objects wherof Christ Iesus is the chiefest Let thy spirit then looke and long and lust for this Lord who is the spirit the chiefest spirit let it cleaue to him let it hang about him and neuer leaue him till hee bee brought into the chambers of the soule Yea tell him resolutely thou wilt not leaue him untill thou here a voyce in thy soule saying My wellbeloved is mine and I am my wellbeloveds To this end bee still gazing on him and still calling on him Kisse me with the kisses of thy mouth Yea kisse my soule with such a kisse of thy spirit that they may be no longer two but one spirit say to him whom haue I in heauen but thee and whom haue I desired on earth besides thee My soule thirsteth and panteth for thee the liuing God Tell him that thou art sicke of loue Vexe him with Importunity and put him out of hope of ease as the widdow did the Iudge but onely by satisfiing thy desires It is the right-voyce of the spirit I found him whom my soule loveth I held him and would not let him go If then thou hast found him with thine eye hold him with thine heart and winde thy affections round about him And if he see thee all on flame with loue and obstinate in Importunity by loue he who is loue cannot deny the importunity of loue The bowels of loue in him melt at the sound of loue in thee as one string danceth at the sound of another agreeing with it Hee was great with loue before thou louedst him and hee looked but for a loue to draw his loue from him Hee was great with spirit and did but looke for spirits that by loue would draw some spirit from him And now when his loue meeteth with thine his loue joyneth with thine when his spirit meeteth with thine his spirit powreth it selfe out into thine hee is joyned to thee and thou art one spirit with him his spirit and thine being united and mingled in a blessed communion II. The soule hath but one husband at once THere is a law in heaven that the heavenly Bride may at one time have but one Husband The first marriage on earth was a patterne of this Law for then God gave one woman to one man God that made this first marriage gave not two women to one man nor two men to one woman but he gave one to one that two not three or foure may be one flesh Accordingly the heavenly marriage-makers espouse the Church to one husband and that they may doe so they doe teach that the former husband must be dead before the soule can marry with another No soule can marry with Christ Iesus but a widow for she must be freed from the law of her old husband by his death before shee can come to be subject to the law of the new Her olde husband was concupiscence to who she was married in carnall generation and this husband must be slaine and put off by death if Christ Iesus the new and true husband of the soule shall be put on in regeneration And indeede if the soule will give her consent this new and true husband will kill the old not so much an husband
as a thiefe and adulterer A theefe he is for he hath stollen the foule from her first Lord and husband even the Lord that made her and an adulterer he is for he lives with her that belongs to another and while hee lives with her he keeps her not for love but lust wherefore let the soule give her consent to his death that thereby her true husband may recover his right in her and that she may receive her true husband and in him life liberty and felicity And indeed she may well be weary of the old for her living with him is most unreasonable most slavish and most miserable It is most unreasonable for there is no sense in the mariage of a soule with lust What good can lust do to a soule there being no likenesse but a meere contrariety betweene them and wee know that things are cherished and augmented by their like but they are destroyed by their contraries The soule is light and lust is darknesse and can darknesse give any increase of being or wellbeing to light Yea doth not darknesse goe about to lessen to quench and kill light Againe lust hath in it a venome contrary to goodnesse and can evill give any accesse or addition of goodnesse to the soule Yea this venome hath in it a force and power to draw the wil and affections from that soveraigne good which is the true and onely beatificall object of the soule and to glue and fasten her to objects of vanity yea of death and misery Againe the soule in her substance is a spirit and what kindly or naturall pleasure or profit can a spiritual essence receive from grosse and fleshly lust The soule hath no savour in the ranke and grosse pleasures of the flesh but they are to her as the onions and garlike of Egypt to a dainty delicate taste Surely so well may the earth lighten the Sunne and a tempest give rest to the sea as lust can give light or life or rest or happinesse to the soule but darknesse and death and misery it can and doth give and so under the shape of an husband it is a cruell enemy and a very murtherer of the soule And surely hee could be no other but a mortall enemy of the soule that made such a marriage betweene the soule and her mortall enemy And hee had neede to be as cunning as malicious to put a shew of reason upon a match so absurd and unreasonable And if in a second place wee beholde the slavery of the soule in this marriage with lust the teares that bewailed the virginity of Iephthahs daughter are not sufficient to bewaile this slavish marriage The body commands the soule earth heaven and dust that noble and divine essence which was breathed into man even from Gods owne mouth and had his owne image imprinted on it Neither is it the body of dust onely that commands the heavenly soule but the body it selfe being commanded by lust doth command the soule so is lust the chiefe lord both of body and soule even a certaine venome itch and fury dwelling in this earth of man There may be some proportion betweene the dust which God turned into a body and that soule which God made with his breath though in a large and remote distance and difference But betweene the soule which God made according to his owne image and this blinde and wilde lust which God made not in man there is no portion or part of proportion whereupon any right or power of command may be grounded Yet in this base and wretched marriage vile and odious lust spurs up the soule with his commands and makes her to trudge up and down in businesses of darknesse filthinesse and wretchednes The soule is set on work in things that are no kin to her no good to her yea that are contrary to her being and well-being For contrary they are to that image of God which is in her and consequently contrary to that God whose image this is and to whō this image points and leades her as to her soveraigne good And thus have wee a third mischiefe of this marriage even misery annexed to slavery For as the image of God in the soule turnes the eye and heart of the soule to looke unto God her chiefe happinesse so lust turnes about the eye and heart of the soule from her happinesse and what can her prospect and object be then but misery And if the eye of the soule happen to cast up some glances to heaven and happinesse yet the heart even the will and affections are hurried away by this lust to objects and workes of vanity and misery so that the soule can onely say I see the better things and follow the worse I see happines and runne after misery Thus by slavery shee buyeth misery and slavery it selfe being misery by misery she earneth misery And indeed is it not the true misery of an Egyptian bondage that the soule should bee still set on worke by lust in a fiery fornace yea be beaten and tormented when shee doth not worke though her worke concerne her selfe nothing but onely to strengthen her owne bondage and to increase her owne misery And indeede therefore is she kept so hard at this worke that she may haue no leisure to thinke beyond bondage and misery Accordingly if the soule at any time doe but lift up her eyes above her present bondage to that Lord of life liberty and happinesse which would once have married her and still makes new offers unto her this tyrannous husband like a Taske-master strikes in deepe lashes into her side and tells her she is idle though she thinkes on her nearest businesse and dearest happinesse If it be in the morning there is a bargaine of profit imposed on her and this lot of bricke must be made that day and about it must the soule goe being pierced throgh with the thorns of covetousnesse by the violent hand of her false husband that she may have no leisure respiration or rest And if at night the soule be weary of this dayes worke and would faine goe to bed with the body the night is lusts day as it is the Owles for both are blinde and then there is a wife whose husband is from home and the poore soule being a spirit must crafficke in this errand for the flesh to make a wary but a wicked meeting betweene her owne lewd husband and another mans wife and while she plots it she doth a worke of slavery and when she hath done it she shall have no other but the wages of misery But endlesse were it to set forth the whole story of this Aegyptian bondage Let the carnall man reade over the story of his owne life and he may see the one in the other And all being summed together amounts to this that the marriage betweene the soule and lust is monstrous as betweene a woman and a beast slavish as betweene a woman and a tyrant mischievous and mortall
he finde thee watching that so when he knocks thou maist readily open and he may readily enter and that by thy slacknesse hee doe not turne away to the flockes of thy companions And in the second place take heede that thou give not thy selfe over to a desperate idlenesse to doing nothing because thou canst not doe as thou wouldest This were a double offence both because it is impatience and because it is idlenesse This is to cut off the hands because they are feeble and because the feete halt to turne them out of the way But it were farre better to strengthen thy weake hands and that thou maist doe by exercise though it be but weake exercise and it were better for thee to halt in the right way than to runne or rest in a false way Wherefore if thou canst not doe the higher workes doe the lower for doing is thy way though thou goe but softly in it but idlenes is a false way And when thy Master Lord and Husband commeth and findeth thee doing according to that which thou hast thou shalt be blessed in thy deede by him who accepteth our worke if it come from a willing minde according to that which wee have and not according to that which wee have not If thou art faithfull in little hee will make thee ruler over much thy Masters joy shall shortly enter into thee and thou shalt shortly enter into thy Masters joy But contrarily looke for no gaine from idlenesse but the gaine of losse and punishment Thou maist lose him the longer the lesse thou doest to please him yea hee may come unto thee with a rod when thou expectest him to come with the spirit of meeknesse and consolation To the workers hee comes with a penny even with a reward favour and a good eye but to the idlers he comes with a frowne and a checke Why stand yee all the day idle Rather doe that which may winne him to come may please him being come than by doing nothing keep him from comming or make him angry when hee commeth And if thou aske what thou shalt doe Thy most ordinary worke is the worke of thy ordinary calling yet maist thou give times and turnes to those workes that more immediatly concerne thy heavenly calling even such as immediatly call for thy heavenly Lord to come into thy soule sigh and pray and reade and heare and by heavenly meditations let thy soule be trimmed as a bride that lookes for her husband yea with thy earthly labours maist thou mixe these heavenly thoughts thou maist worke and sigh worke and wish worke and pray in short ejaculations and thus working and thus waiting working in profitable duties and waiting with submissive patience he that loveth both thy workes and thy patience will come unto thee and say I know thy patience and thy workes yea hee will come with such an increase of grace that he will also say Thy last shall bee more than thy first Finally these desertions are advantageable to the soule while they draw her eye and affection from this place of interrupted joyes to the place of incessant and everlasting joyes The Bridegroome here doth but looke in upon the soule at a crany and the soule seeth him but by glimpses but there shall she behold him face to face and this beholding as it is full so it shall also be perpetuall The soule is here walled up in an house of clay and the trafficke betweene her and her husband is but by some chinke which the spirit hath bored But this clay which is now in it selfe nothing but darknesse and keepes out light shall hereafter be made all glorious and lightsome yea whereas the soule is now much carnall then the body shall be made spirituall and if the body be spirituall and lightsome how pure and spirituall shall the soule be which is now a spirit Surely then shall wee be as it were all eye even all clarity and purity and so most capable of light and glory and according to the capacity of our receiving shall the light and glory and joy of our husband enter into us and fill us And of this fulnesse of joy and glory there is no end no interruption Wherefore our husband wisely and profitably drawes us by these desertions from earnests unto full fruition from broken peeces to whole and entire joyes If the soule might still have these glimpses shee would perchance be contented with them and this were no other than to be contented with perpetuall star-light even a light fitted for this life of vanity which is but a night being compared to the bright day of eternity Yet lying in the bed of love she would be content to looke on her beloved by this lesser light and would not desire the perfect day wherein the Sun of glory might arise unto her and by a large and glorious light make her largely and gloriously to see him who is the fountaine of that large and light by which she seeeth him VVherefore this lesser light is profitably taken from her to stirre her up to the seeking of the greater and her beloved doth chastise her by desertions to beate her away from resting in lesser and interrupted joyes and to beate her unto the seeking of fuller loves mightier joyes and everlasting fruitions And indeede the earnests should have taught her this lesson but because they did not these interruptions are sometimes sent to teach it her The earnests shold have taught her to look out for the full exhibition of that whereof they are earnests but because the soule in stead of looking by them beyond them fastens and stayes her eye on them they are taken from that eye which was unduely stayed on them that so by wanting them it may looke beyond them which it should have done but did not by them And now the soule seeing that these earnests are not onely but drops and parcells of an infinite fulnesse but withall drops and red forth and his actions are answerable to his name As he was annoynted with the oyle of gladnesse above his fellows so doth he give of his oyntmentes to the Bride which is joyned in communion and fellowshipp with him For of his fulnesse doth shee receive even grace for grace The pretious Oyntment drops from this head unto his body the Church and thereby she is made all glorious within glorious shee is now within by grace and shee shall hereafter be glorious both within and without with perfect glorie Among the benefites of this glorious Grace wherewith the Church is inwardly beautified when the Bridegrome visits her with his spiritual ointments this is a great one that the heavenly oyle giveth light to the soule the soule is a lamp with this oile is the Lampe of the wise Virgins trim'd and becomes a burnning a shining light They have that light from the bridegroom by which they looke out for the Bridegroome The eye salve is gotten from Christ by which
light The understanding is not fettered and bound by a violent hand but it yeelds it selfe up freely to bee subdued and captivated by a light that surpasseth the light which it selfe hath The reasonable light of man continueth in man even when this supernaturall light shineth it knowes what other men know and knowes what it selfe knew and thought before this light came to it but this light being come it yeelds willingly to it and surrenders both it selfe and the man whom it formerly guided This homage of reason shewes a soveraignty in that spirituall light to which reason doth this homage The going out of the light of a candle not by quenching but not-shining acknowledgeth a greater and more excellent light to be present And indeede reason even with reason gives way that a greater light should rather guide than a lesser yea with reason it gives way that it selfe being a lesser light should be increased and enlarged by a higher and greater that so it may discerne higher and greater things And this increase it experimentally findes for by this new and greater light the soule sees the supreme light which begate it she sees him to be her soveraign good shee sees the way to him and is directed to union with him and to the full fruition of him And because shee sees these excellent things now which shee saw not before shee justly and wisely resignes her selfe to that light by which shee sees those excellent things which she saw not before and to that sight by which she seeth in a more excellent manner of seeing A second Character and marke of a divine visitation is ioy even a ioy of a different kind and character from other ioyes For this ioy ariseth not originally from naturall principles neither fastneth it selfe on naturall obiectes but is supernaturall in the roote of it and fixeth it selfe on supernaturall objects It is no sanguine joy neither made of humor and complection for it ariseth often in the midst of sadnes within and crosses without The spiritual man therfore thus truely describeth the manner of thē In the midst of the sorrowes of my heart thy comforts have refreshed me Even when the outward man decayeth dyeth away the inward man reneweth and rejoyceth When the disciples are talking doubtfully and are sorrowfull then Iesus appeares to them and warmes their hearts with an heavenly fire When the wine of naturall joy is spent and there is nothing left but the waters of affliction thē doth Christ turne this water into wine Thou hast turned saith David my mourning into dancing thou hast put off my sackcloth and girded me with gladnes There is a river that maketh glad the City of God there is the new wine of the kingdome that makes the heart merry there is a heavenly oyle that maketh that face pleasant and joyfull which is the image of God these flow forth from the throne in heaven from the true vine frō the right olive and that it may appeare that they doe so they are commonly sent into thirsty weary mourning almost despayring soules that the excellency of them may appeare to be of God and not of man when the soule is parched with drynes the sap of joy cannot naturally come out of drines even Moses himselfe saith Shall I fetch you water out of this rock when there is no wine and there appeares nothing but water even teares and sorrowes it must bee a divine hand that turnes this water into wine When the soule is oppressed with spirituall wants and sees nothing but griefe within and terrours without it must be the worke of God to make this oyle to runne untill the vessels bee full Therefore Saint Paul rightly infers that it is the right hand of the most High even in an high degree which maketh this chang Yea there is in it more then a change even a harmony and agreement betweene contraries Much affliction and joy in the Holy Ghost And so Saint Peter Yee greatly rejoyce though ye are in heavinesse Wherefore since to the Saints there ariseth a light in the middest of darknesse could not make this light but he only who is the light of the world and by whom first the light came to shine out of darknesse And as this joy is divine and heavenly flowing from a divine and heavenly fountain so is it also divine and heavenly because it fasteneth on divine and heavenly objects Things that love are like the naturall joy delights in naturall objects and a spirituall joy in spiritual objects Accordingly while the naturall joy lookes out for corne and wine the spirituall joy lookes out for the countenance of God God is a spirit and he delights in spirit because it is like him and the joy of the spirit delights in God yea delights in him most because he is the supremest spirit and consequently highest in this likenes And because the union of our spirits with this spirit is onely in Christ with whom the soule becomming one spirit hath union with the highest spirit therefore the soule having found Christ rejoyceth in him above all things with a joy unspeakable and glorious She rejoyceth so in him that she will sell all naturall things to buy the spirituall happinesse that is to be found in him And thus both by the absence and by the contempt of naturall things this joy may be knowne to be supernaturall For as it doth not faint nor faile when naturall things are absent if Iesus be present so doth it not fixe or feede on them being present if Iesus also be present with them Yea if the soule may feele Iesus to be more present because they are more absent she enjoyeth that absence by which the presence of her beloved is more enjoyed She delights in the tribulations whose abundance hath caused an abundance of consolations shee so much loves Christ that for his sake shee loves things that are to nature most hatefull and rejoyceth in them And thus while the soule rejoyceth in things contrary to nature for the love of things supernaturall this joy cannot be naturall and of the same kinde that those things are which it despiseth but must needes be supernaturall and of the same kinde that those things are in which it especially delighteth Another property of these joyes by which they prove themselves to be spirituall is this that they are nutrimentall to the very soule spirit of man They feede they satisfie and in their measure fill the soule and give her an inward thriving and increase Bodily joyes are thicke and grosse and by their grossenesse sticke behind in the body and pierce not to the soule and if any thing come to the soule from them it is commonly but filth dregs guilt vexation or shame Shee may bee more clouded by them made more dull earthy and foule by materiality or filth cast upon her but they enter not into the inward
parts of the soule to water the roote of her and to give her true kindly and reall increase As mudde is to the thirsty bodies so are these to thirsty soules they cannot drinke them in nor quench their thirst with them But the spirituall joyes enter in and enlarge the very soule of man they make her who is a spirit more spirituall for shee opens her mouth wide to them and then shee is filled with that spirituall and divine sappe which accompanieth them and wherein they are founded And then as shee hath heard so she hath seene and tasted that an heavenly joy is to the soule a restaurative medicine and that when she enjoyeth her Saviour in the contemplations and tastes of his love then is she filled with marrow and fatnesse But I hasten to a third Marke of spirituall visitations and that is holinesse For when Christ visiteth the soul as he doth clarifie her with light and ravish her with joy so he doth beautifie her with holinesse Externall joyes and joyes of the body have not this vertue neither can they give it to the soule but when Christ commeth into the soule by his spirit the same spirit that doth enlighten and glad her doth also hallow her yea as by the light she is directed to holinesse so by the gladnesse shee is lifted up encouraged and actuated unto holines In these accesses of Christ there are heights of union and the increases of union bring with them increases of uniformity The spirit of union is fire and fire turnes that into it selfe to which it is united and the fuller and closer this union is the more is this turning So Christ Iesus the more hee comes into a soule by his spirit the more spirituall doth he make her yea the more doth hee melt a soule into himselfe the more doth hee turne her will into his will and the more doth hee increase his owne image in her and wee know that his image is righteousnesse and true holinesse He brings with him those oyntments for which the Virgins love him and those oyntments also make them more lovely Hence are they inwardly more glorious and hence outwardly they smel more sweetly in their conversations The Kings daughter is all glorious within and her garments smell of myrrhe aloes and cassia In these touches of Christ if in any other there comes forth vertue frō him The spirit of the lover passeth into his beloved and makes her of one heart and will with him and this conformity of the will with Christ is true holinesse The spirit by which Christ visiteth his spouse is an holy spirit and a spirit of power and accordingly when this spirit is shed into the soule there is power holynes infused with him and by him And hēce it is that they who receaue the true oyntments of the spirit in true visitacions they passe beyond a speculatiue discoursing holynes even beyond a forme of godlines and advance to the power of it to a fruitful expression of this power Yea I may say that hereunto the very loue of Christ constrayneth vs. For in these visitacions and by them the loue of Christ is shed into our harts The spirit of power holines is the spirit of loue and this loue giuen by the spirit may be called holinesse for it is the fulfilling of the law They that love Christ are certainely willing to please him and to keep his commandements and they that have the spirit of love cannot but love him Yea they cannot but love him for the union they have with him and the joyes of this union And loving him they wil desire to bring forth fruite unto him and by him even fruite that may be like him The pleasure of love and union in outward marriage is a kinde of hire of fruitfulnes and in the spirituall marriage the joy of love and union is the hire of a fruitfull holinesse Wherefore those that truly enjoy Christ in these spiritual accesses both desire and obtaine this spirituall fruitfulnesse for the spouse of Christ is most truly that vine which is fruitfull by the sides of the house and whose children stand like olive plants yea in olde age is shee full of fruite Wherefore if with light and joy the soule doe feele that the spirit of Christ by spirituall heate power and love have wrought a powerfull and fruitfull holinesse in her let her know that Christ Iesus himselfe hath beene with her Carnall and corporall things cannot doe this evill Angels neither can nor will doe it good Angels though they rejoyce to see it done yet they doe it not but that spirit alone both can doe it doth it which is the power and right hand of God which onely writeth the lawes of God in the hearts and soules of men He it is alone that giveth the soule the new wine of the kingdome wherewith the soule being once refreshed shee rejoyceth as a gyant to runne the race of holinesse It is the spirit of Christ alone that so anoynteth the soule that shee runneth after Christ in the wayes of righteousnesse And as it was said to this Head and Husband of the Church Thou hast loved righteousnesse and hated iniquity therefore God even thy God hath anoynted thee with the oyle of gladnesse above thy fellowes So it may bee also said to the Spouse Thou hast loved righteousnesse and hated iniquity therefore God even thy God hath anoynted thee with the oyle of gladnes above all those that were thy fellowes by carnall generation For there is no oyle of gladnesse that hath with it the love of righteousnesse but that wherewith Christ Iesus the Head was principally anoynted and which dropping from Christ the Head to the Members and Spouse of Christ makes her to excell the rest in vertue and holinesse And as there was not any such spice as the Queen of Sheba brought unto Salomon so there are no such oyntments of grace and gladnesse as a greater than Salomon doth give to his Queen when hee and shee are met in the heates of a spirituall conjunction and the excesses of a fruitive union CAP. VIII A Corollary of counsailes and directions to those that are entred into the estate of this blessed Marriage LEt it be the maine endeavor of a soule married to Christ to keepe her selfe still in that point wherein she may keepe him and so keepe him that she may still say and feele what she sayes My well-beloved is mine and I am my well-beloveds To this end let her still cast and consider with her selfe what those things are which hee most loves and make her most lovely in his eyes for the spirit of this lover loves to be there where his love is Therefore if there be any praise any vertue thinke on those things and set them as pearles and jewells about thy soule to make her glorious and amiable in his sight Let the face
wife long agoe Now will my husband dwell with me because I have borne him six sons Let it be said now also by a spiritual wife Now will my husband dwell with me because his dwelling with mee hath made me fruitfull Make my soule a fruitfull paradise bearing every good fruit of love divine and humane and then come often into thy garden to behold gather the fruits of it And that I may bring forth fruites wholly thine and not anothers beside thee burne and consume whatsoeuer would grow one with my soule besides thee Thou art a burning and consuming fire and the spirit by which thou art one with my spirit baptizeth with fire O let the fire of thy spirit so wholly turne my soule into spirituall fire that the drosse of the flesh the world being wholly consumed shee may be onely spirituall and so bring forth fruites onely to thy spirit Thus and thus saith my soule to her beloved but when she saith thus her beloved is not farre from her for by him she speakes to him when he is neare his oyntments yeeld their savour and the savour of his ointments draweth soules to run after him There hath beene of late a fruitive union and such fruitive unions doe individuate and enflame the love of the soule to him whom she hath enjoied in that union But alas the husband of the soule is sometimes like that husband which is not at home but is gone a long journey He is gone so farre from me as if hee were not mine yea so far sometimes as if he were not at all The summer is gone from my soule and the winter is come and the true olive so draweth in his fatnesse that my soule though a branch yet doubteth whether there bee a root that beareth her The ointments of light and love are not seene or felt and how can she love the lovelinesse that she sees not and if she saw it how can she love it without love In such a darknesse the greatest lovelinesse affects not the eye and in such a deadnesse there is no love wherewith to love the greatest lovelinesse The soule doth not now taste how sweete her Lord is and therefore his sweetnesse is to her as a thing forgotten or a thing mistaken or at best as a thing which was and is not and will be no more The often unions that are passed are wholly past and the very images and representations of them are neare wholly vanished And now my soule that will ever bee a lover of something and a seeker of good in one object or other being left to the flesh by the enchantment of the flesh runneth to the creature to seeke good in it For as the spirit runneth to Christ so doth the flesh to the creature But alas the dove of Christ thus flowne from the Arke in her thoughts and affections findeth no rest for shee is gone from her rest and how can she finde rest by going from rest Put forth thy hand O thou lover of soules and take her in unto thee yea first make her to returne to thee by finding her when she seeks thee Seeke her O Saviour when she goes astray from thee like a lost sheepe for even when shee thus goes astray she hath not utterly forgotten thee thy loves nor thy lawes One looke of thine will awake her love and make her weepe bitterly that she loved thee so little whom to love sufficiently her best and mightiest loves are most insufficient Prevent her seeking with thy seeking and be thou present with her in thy providence and preserving power even when thou seemest to be farre off in the tasts of thy sweetnesse and fruition of thy loves Love her even when thou doest not give her thy loves yea love her by not-giving them Doe her good even by the subtraction of thy goodnesse shew her that her safety is not in her owne hands shew her that her goodnesse is not her owne shew her that she is nothing in her selfe but that which is worse than nothing and that thou and thy grace make her wholly to be that which she is Then shall she be more humble by seeing her owne vilenes in thy absence and thou shalt bee more lovely and precious to her whose presence gives her all her worth and excellence VVhen she hath regained thee she will hold thee more hardly and keepe thee more fastly and love thee more vehemently Shee will value thy loves above treasures yet she will love thee more than thy loves and she will provide a stocke of loves in the summer against the winters if they perchāce shal return again For in these loves shee will behold the pledges of a love eternall in these joyes of thy presence she will behold the earnests of eternall joyes in an eternall presence and for the sure hope of these eternall joyes she will patiently endure the sorrowes of these temporall absences Yet let these temporall absences be as thornes in the sides of my soule to stirre her up to the desire of that eternall presence And be not lacking overlong O thou life and love and guide of my soule but ever and anon visit her with thy presence stay her with thy flagons comfort her with apples for she is sicke of love when shee wanteth her beloved Whē thou wast here on earth thou hadst compassion on the multitude that had nothing to eate and wouldest not send them away fasting lest they should faint by the way O sweete Saviour thou art no lesse mercifull in heaven than thou wert on earth and an hungry soule is a fitter object of mercy than an hungry body and my hungry soule hath a farther way to goe than their bodies for shee must goe from earth unto heaven O refresh her and that right soone with thy mercies with the joyes of thy presence with the bread of heaven and water of life which thy spirit plentifully giveth to my spirit when thou commest unto her Be thou her guide even to the life which is beyond death and grant that through these changes of temporall presences and absences she may runne in one even and unchanged path of love and holinesse untill she come unto that eternall presence where is the fulnesse of joy without ebbes and perpetuity of joy without interruptions There shall shee see her beloved clearely and plainely even face to face and there shall shee enjoy her beloved so fully as she seeth him clearely yea she shall enjoy him with all her might of enjoying Her being shall be the measure of her enjoying for as much as she is so much shall shee enjoy shee shall be in a perpetuall union with her beloved and in a perpetuall fruition by union and so in a perpetuall rack extent and vttermost of joy The fountaine of joy shall flow continually into the mouth of the soule the new wine of the kingdome shall still overcome her and set her up
taste of God and God being tasted overfloweth and steepeth and drencheth the soule with overcomming and inebriating sweetnesse For a high and large and mighty joy poured into a low and measured and weake spirit overcommeth her with quantity and quality and so carries her away into extasie and ravishment she is too narrow and feeble to containe and beare a joy that is too large and strong for her and therefore having filled her to the utmost capacity it goes beyond and runnes over So is she blessed in that fulnesse which her measure containeth yea she is more than blessed even blessed in a kinde of excesse by being overcome and overflowed with blessednesse And if we will consider the quality of this joy as well as the quantity there is no joy to the spirituall joy the joyes of the body being base in comparison of it the spirituall joy is pure piercing and full of activity the joy of bodies is grosse heavie dull and earthy In the bodily wine it is the spirit of the wine that rejoyceth the spirits of the body But a wine that is all spirit and spirit in the height and top of spiritualnes and newly drawne and sucked from the prime and chiefest spirit how doth that rejoyce how doth that ravish the spirits that drinke it when mans highest part doth tast the highest good Man hath no higher part whereby to taste and receive happinesse neither is there any higher happinesse to be tasted and received Therefore the soule that tasteth this wine at her spirituall marriage saith as the Master of the Feast at the earthly marriage Lord Thou hast kept the best wine untill the last And this being best the soule gives it the best place in her judgement and affection she forgets that which is behinde and indeavours to that which is before she will not rest in the low and backward joyes of the bodie but strives toward the high and forward joyes of the spirit and having attained them she rests in them as in the best joyes yet so rests in them in this life of growth that she desires to grow by them presently to a greater capacity of them and finally to a full large and everlasting fruition of them in a nearer accesse unto the very spring and fountaine of joyes But when all is said of this marriage-happinesse one taste of it wil tell thee more than all that is or can be said The true knowledge of the sweetnes of God is gotten by tasting and therefore taste first and then see how sweet and gracious the Lord is The taste of it will truly tell him that tasteth it how sweet it is but hee that knoweth this sweetnes by tasting cannot deliver over the full and perfect image of this sweetnes to him that hath not tasted it For this sweetnes surmounts all knowne sweetnesse of the creatures and by that which is knowne must that which is unknowne be made knowne But if that which is knowne be lesse and lower than that which is unknown that which is knowne may teach and tell us what the unknowne is not but not what it is So the joy of love and union in an earthly marriage cannot expresse a heavenly joy that is spiritually pure and purely active Only these and the like comparisons may serve for staires whereby to ascend even above these comparisons and to set our foot on something beyond them For if the soule rests on these she rests short of the knowledge of the sweetnesse which is beyond these shee is still in the sweetnesse of the creature and hath not attained the sweetnesse of the Creatour Therefore when she hath gone as farre as she may in the sweetnesse of the creature let her advance one step more into that spirituall union wherein is to be tasted and seene by tasting the sweetnes of the Creatour and ther shall shee see more by tasting than all the creatures could shew her by resembling she hath met with that joy which onely can truly teach it selfe and therefore it is called unspeakable And whereas before it was tasted the being of it was doubted and much more the manner and shape of it was unknowne now it is both knowne to be and the shape and manner of it is also known And being knowne all other sweetnesses which before were alone knowne and esteemed are now despised as it were unknown For this is that blessed estate of spirituall love and union whereof the spouse of Christ truely saith If a man would give all the substance of his house for loue it would utterly bee contemned And indeed the spouse having Christs love she hath that which is better than all things and having Christ with his love how can she with him but have all things also Christ is the heire of all things and the soule having married this heire is a joynt-heire annexed with Christ. She hath him by whom the worlds were made and therefore she hath also the worlds made by him yet he that made the worlds being Infinitely better than the worlds made by him she despiseth the worlds in respect of him that made them she quencheth her thirst in the fountaine onely and she accounts it a folly and a losse to leave the fountaine and to run after the streames Therefore setting her mouth to this fountaine she is filled with the waters of life with the oyle of gladnesse with the new wine of the kingdome of God with the joy of the holy Ghost even a joy unspeakable and glorious In Christ Iesus she hath all-sufficiency all safety all supply shee receives from Christ that spirituall oyntment which gives her spiritual light power goodnesse love and life yea it adorneth the soule with the most excellent beauty even the likenesse and image of God himselfe And being thus lovely the bridegroom kisseth and embraceth her with spirituall visitations he tells her his counsailes and his eyes are ever toward her even when hee seemes to be turned from her For she is set as a signet upon his heart and much water cannot quench his love she also looketh on him and is changed from glory to glory as the Moon when with more open face shee beholdeth the Sunne But of the particular benefits ane advantages of this blessed Marriage more hereafter Thus happy and thus growing in happinesse shee walkes on in this life of marriage inchoate untill she come to the eternall life of marriage consummate She is happy now in her union with happinesse and she shall be happy hereafter in a full fruition of happinesse She is happy now in the earnests and peeces of that happinesse which shall be full hereafter yea daily more and more happy here by a daily enlarging of those earnests and peeces and shee shall be the more happy hereafter by how much more these earnests and peeces of happinesse have beene here enlarged And thus shall she walke by happines unto happines and by the increase of happines
to the increase of happines since the more happy shee is in time the greater shall her happinesse be in eternity CAP. IIII. The heavenly marriage is happy not onely in the pleasures but in the labours of love A WISE husband though most loving is not alwayes embracing hee doth love ever but doth not ever embrace For there is a time to embrace and a time to be farre from embracing There is the service and labour of love as well as the pleasure of love and accordingly as we reade once that Isaac sported with Rebekah so wee reade also that she made savoury meat such as her husband loved No doubt she had pleased him before by the like service that she pleased him so certainly now at least she was no better than Sarah who did her husband the service of making cakes for the entertainment of his guests So doth the mysticall wife also she thinkes sometimes how she may please her husband by service and not onely how she may take pleasure in him and of him For the soules husband will not onely please but be pleased hee will not onely give love but take it and the love which he takes shall be sometimes in the labours of love Hee is her Lord and therfore he expects service from her that shee may not call him Lord in words onely but in deedes even in doing his will Neither is this service a meere service or a thing onely of toyle and trouble but it is an easie yoake and a light burthen yea it is full of profit and advantage for it bringeth and increaseth rest and happinesse to the soule For indeede love ever seekes the good of the beloved and accordingly Christ Iesus who is love sets the soule on worke for her owne good For the soule hath many gaines annexed to her worke she gaines before she workes she gaines in her worke and she gaines after her worke She gaines before the worke for this is one maine cause why those weighty joyes sweete embracements and ravishing consolations are given her that she may cheerfully runne the race and performe the service set before her When Angels bring meate to Elijah it is because hee hath a great journey to goe so that he is beholding to his great journey for his Angels foode The outward Israel is fed with the bread of heaven to maintaine him in his walke unto Canaan and the inward Israel is fed with the true bread that commeth downe from heaven to enable him in his workes and walkes through this pilgrimage to heaven Neither doth this course holde onely in the service of doing but in the service of suffering in the passive as in the active obedience Christ Iesus shews his Disciples on the Mount a patterne of his heavenly glory and then to Christ thus gloriously transfigured Moses and Elias doe speake of the suffering which hee should accomplish at Ierusalem So to the Head himselfe the glory set before him is an encouragement to the enduring of the Crosse and despising the shame And if it be so to the head it should be such also to the body And such it is indeed to the true members of that body for they receive not the grace of God in vaine but can doe and will doe all things through Christ that strengtheneth thē For as they finde that they are strengthened with all might according to Gods glorious power so they know the end for which they are thus strengthened even unto all patience and long-suffering with joyfulnesse Wherefore let us think that the parcels of glory joy and strength which we now receive in the visitations of Christ Iesus are a kind of wages paid aforehand to encourage us more cheerfully confidently to the worke of doing and suffering And accordingly having received them let us not dreame of rest but of labour not of setting up Tabernacles but of service and sufferings And let us not doubt but if the Angels foode be a preparation and call to a long or laborious journey of doing or suffering the same foode will also strengthen and enable us to performe the journey unto which it calls so that in the strength thereof we shall be able to walk even to the Mount of God Yet neither is all the comfort encouragement and gaine given to the soule before her worke but even in her worke she gaineth In the service of her husband is continuall gain and that not of strength onely but of pleasure and delight For the soule having tasted Christ in an heavenly communion so loves him that to please him is a pleasure and delight to her selfe Yea there is such a law of love shed into her by that communion that his commandements are so farre from being grievous to her that there is no pleasure in her taste comparable to them No sweet things no precious things in her judgement may be compared to the sweetnes and preciousnes of cōmandements Therefore it is the true voice of the Spouse and therein not so much her mouth as heart speaketh They are more to be desired than gold yea than much fine golde sweeter also than hony and the hony combe Behold how the soule married unto Christ delights in the law of her husband and no wonder if she love his law when she loves him neither if her heart be to his law when his law is written in her heart Besides the law of his lips is a law of grace and a law of grace is a lovely law So she loves his law because his law is lovely she loves it because it is his law whom she loves she loves it because the love of his law is written in her heart And as she loves his law so she loves to fulfill it for her love will not be quiet untill it see her words turned into her deedes And this she doth not negligently nor heavily but like a lover pleasantly and chearfully Looke but to a carnall lover and see how he affects the title of a servant and is more than glad even proud to receive and fulfill the commands of his beloved Give then spiritual love to a soule and she will rejoyce also to perform the spiritual commands of her beloved If a man know not this it is because hee loves not but let him love and then he will both know and doe it For the nature and law of love in the lover naturally moveth to the fulfilling of the law of the beloved And as the Sun in whom a law or covenant of motion is written rejoyceth like a gyant to runne the race and motion of that covenant so the soule in whom this law of love is written rejoyceth to runne the race and motion of this law Obedience is the kindly fruite of a loving soule and a loving soule bringeth forth this fruite as kindly as a good tree bringeth forth good fruite And as this law of love is active and laborious so is it strong and mighty Even
the language of Babel I sit as a Queene and of Laodicea I am rich and have neede of nothing But indeed this riches is the true way to poverty and nothing For the soule being once rich in her owne opinion turnes her eyes from her husband that onely gives her true riches and so lookes from riches unto poverty And againe her husband seeing her rich in her owne opinion strips her and sends her naked and empty away But what a folly and madnesse is it in the soule though indeede very agreeable to the blinde flesh that maddeth her to thinke highly of the secrets and mysteries revealed to her and withall to stoppe the current of such revelations For thus she doth by turning away the face and turning the backe unto the revealer But on the other side it is a great mercy and favour in the revealer to stop his current of revelations yea to send some spirituall affliction and desertion in stead of them to prevent or amend this turning away of the soule from her husband the giver because of his gifts For thus by a short absence of both she may recover both the sooner and keepe them the longer but if shee should have that which she will abuse the having of it would cast her into the danger of a greater and a longer losse If the Moone being full should grow proud in her fulnesse and out of that pride neglect the Sunne not caring though the earth did ever keepe him out of sight were not this a way by the pride of her light to bring her to an everlasting darknesse And were it not farre better for her that the Sunne by some short eclipse and interposition of the earth did shew her her owne darknesse being without his light that so she may the more steadily and continually be lightened by a stedfast and continuall looking on him from whom her light commeth And thus indeede doth the husband and Sunne of the soule Having sent light hee sends also some turne of darknes that by a short darknes he may prevent a longer and that by darknesse hee may send a greater light Having visited the soule with his graces hee gives a medicine and preservative against pride the poyson of grace and a restorative to humility the forerunner of grace Humility is the bed wherein the Bridegroome lyes downe and rests with the soule With whom shall I rest saith hee but with the humble contrite soule Wherfore let the soule account it a benefit when this bed is made by some spirituall affliction for the King of grace and glory is shortly comming to lodge with her in some gracious visitation he that giveth grace to the humble will visit her with abundance of consolations he will give her his loves and his loves shall againe tell her his counsailes And then shalt thou account thy selfe a gainer if affliction and desertion have beene so great as to bring forth a great humiliation for a great humiliation shall bee followed with a greatly gracious and glorious visitation Fourthly these desertions are profitable to try the truth of our love and the tryall of our love shewes us the faults of it and by shewing them calls upon us to amend them The husband of the soule will see whether his spouse love him with the love of a wife or of an harlot The love of an harlot loveth a man onely for his gifts and so in truth loveth not the man but the gifts And though this be secretly true when by outward fashion she seemes to love him yet it is manifestly true when the gifts cease for then her love to the man also ceaseth But the true wife loveth her husband even for himselfe and by himselfe shee loves him without gifts yea she loveth his gifts for his sake for she would nor take the same gifts from another man Yea the true love of a wife goes some degrees farther for shee doth nor onely love her husband when hee gives no gifts neither doth shee onely love his gifts for his sake but she loves him when he is absent from her even when she is without both his presence and his gifts for even then the memory of him is precious to her shee calls to remembrance his perfections his vertues and his loves And yet the true love of a wife goes farther for she loves her husband even whē hee chides her and is angry with her though in that case an husband seemes to be more absent being at home than an husband pleased being from home All these doth the true spirituall love of the spouse performe unto Christ and Christ delights to see them performed Christ Iesus loves his wife with a true love for he hath laid downe his true his true blood and life for her And greater love hath no man than he that laid downe his life for his beloved Now Christ thus truly loving his wife hee expects a returne of true and unfained love from his wife And that it may be tried to be true or amended and made true if it be not so these tryalls are sent to her in these desertions And indeede in most of these degrees of love are we often faulty the flesh having often too great a part and influence in our love For the flesh as mainly for things present and palpable and like Thomas is wholly for seeing and feeling And hence it is that our love dotes so much on the gifts of Christ Iesus that it cooles even to Christ Iesus himselfe without his gifts Wee are all for Christs light and knowledge for his kisses and embracements for his hony and his wine for his sweetnesses and ravishings and without these Christ is a dry and loathed husband as Manna to the fleshly Israelites was a dry and loathed food But when it is so with us how farre are we short of those higher degrees of love even of that love that loveth Christ being absent and hid out of sight or that loveth him being present in that utmost absence of anger chastisement and seeming enmity How farre short are we of that Canaanitish woman that kissed his rodds and made love out of those reproaches whereby Christ seemed to drive her away But since it is so is it not high time for Christ to remove his gifts to whom our hearts are removed from Christ that so our hearts may againe be removed to Christ from them It is a right proper cure of this adulterous love to remoue those things with which love did adulterate that so the right object of our best love may bee sought and found and constantly proposed And surely this cure is profitable to our soules as it is pleasing also to the husband of soules for by it Christ hath more interest in the soule and the soule in Christ. And if this be the fruit of desertions then art thou againer by desertions But that thou maist be sure to gaine by them be sure to learne that which they
the eyes of the Church being annoynted doe see him and all things that cōcerne him Spirituall things are spiritually to bee discerned and Christ and his spouse are one spirit and by that spirit wherby she is one with Christ doth shee discerne spiritual things The husband of the Church is the wisedome of his Father and when wisdome goes into a soule he giveth wisedome to the soule The Spirit by which he enters into us taketh of his and giveth it to us Therefore as he is wisdome in himselfe so is he also made wisedome to us Christ is light and when light and the soule are knit together by that vnion with light there is a Communion of light The wine of the Spirit is herein quite contrary to the bodily wine The bodily wine whē it inebriates darkens the understanding and being grosser than the soule casts a mist upon the soule But the spirituall wine being purer than the soule enlightens and clarifies her and even then when it brings her to an extacie it doth it not by the diminution but by the excesse of light Wherefore let the soule make speciall use of this precious light which shineth within her in the accesses of her husband let her marke and learne and record the discoveries of that light for a spirit so enlightened will discover more than seven men upon a watch-tower There are some mysteries and secrets which thy husband wil whisper unto thee by his spirit in the bed of love and then let him that hath an eare heare what his spirit saith But if he doe not speake to thee doe thou speak to him know of him those things that are needfull for thee to know and bring to his light those things that thou wouldest have truly seene and discerned Goe into this Sanctuary and there receive Oracles and Answeres for there shalt thou finde resolutions of those things that were before too high and too hard for thee and when thou hast truly seene them beleeve them to be that which by this light thou seest them to be and resolve never to beleeve the flesh hereafter when it shall put any other shapes upon them For darknesse puts false and imaginary shapes upon things but it is light that makes all things truly manifest For example when this light shines in upon the soule looke out for thy happinesse and that thou maist finde it set all things before this light which are briefly these The Creatour and the creature God and the world and having done this thou maist plainly see where is true solid and permanent felicity and where is vanity transitorinesse and misery And when thou hast seene it know it to be the very truth which thou hast seene and that which is once truth is truth for ever If thou wantest the skil of truly measuring time and eternity so that a short life seemes to thee like eternity and eternity lesse than a short life when this light shines in thy soule bring the life of man and eternity together in one view before it and thou shalt quickly learne the art of numbring the few dayes of thy life and withall thou shalt learne that the dayes of eternity cannot bee numbred There is not so much proportion or likenesse between them as there is betweene the very lowest and least point of the earth and the circle of the uppermost sphere And what thou hast now seene to be true beleeve to be true ever even when this light is so obscured that thou seest not the truth of it If thou doubt which is better the prosperity of the wicked or the adversity of the godly bring them before this light even into the Sanctuary and Temple of thy soule wherein the holy Ghost dwelleth and shineth and there shalt thou see that prosperitie ending in a never-ending misery and that adversity ending in a never-ending felicity Besides thou shalt see the prosperity to bee but a light vanity yet followed with a weghty misery and thou shalt see adversity to be but a light affliction yet followed with a weighty glory And having seene this thou maist easily judg which is the better and as they appeare now to thy judgement such let thy memory present them to thee for ever If thou art doubtfull of thy way and thy path seeemes to be covered with darknesse search thy way by this light for it shall be to thee instead of a voice saying This is the way walke in it VVhen after some darke nights the soule is visited through the loving kindnesse of her beloved with these day-springs and mornings of grace then let her say Cause mee to see and know the way wherein I shall walke and then The good Spirit will leade thee into the land of uprightnesse If the word written be darke to thee bring it to this light and if it be fit for thy measure and the glory of thy Lord this light shall reveale it For the Spirit doth reveale the hid things of God If the infidelity of men without thee or of thine owne flesh within thee cast a mist of doubts on the Gospel of Christ Iesus with this light beholde this Gospell and thou shalt see in it a plot of divine wisedome and a mysterie of high and supernaturall truth Yea thou shalt see the face of him who is the summe of the Gospell as the face of the onely begotten Sonne of God full of grace and glory For God who commanded light to shine out of darknesse hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ. It is an ancient promise They shall be all taught of God And when will God sooner teach than when he visiteth a soule with his spirit which communicates both his light and his love unto her For both light and love are discoverers of secrets light makes manifest things hidde in darknesse and love tels counsels unto the beloved It is our Saviours owne inference I have called you friends therefore I tell you my counsels But remember that the knowledge which thou learnest from this teacher of hearts be laid up by thee safe as a precious stocke or treasure and account it thy best learning which thou hast learned of the best Teacher Having bought this truth sell it not keepe it and it shall keepe thee When thou goest thy steps shall not be straitned and when thou runnest thou shalt not stumble Therefore take fast holde on this instruction let her not goe keepe her for shee is thy life Secondly these seasons of love are seasons of prayer If thou want any thing now aske it for in these heates of love thy husband will deny thee nothing These be the times when the spirit moveth the waters therefore now cast in thy petition and what soever griefe it hath in it thou shalt be cured of it Now the King holds out his golden Scepter therefore let
the stocke of thy memorialls and remembrances for future encouragements and consolations Lastly let the peeces and earnests of heavenly joyes stirre up thy desires and affections to the fruition of the fulnesse of joyes let these drops of Gods sweetnesse enflame thy soule with a thirst and longing to enjoy God the fountaine of this sweetnesse Let these kisses of Christ Iesus kindle in thee such a fervent love of Christ that thy soule may pant to bee united to him in a perfect and consummate marriage And out of the heate of these longings and enflamed desires send up the aspirations and breathings of thy burning soule in vehement wishes and groaning complaints My soule thirsteth for God when shall I come and appeare before God My teares have beene my meate day and night while the flesh saith to the spirit VVhere is thy God I desire to bee dissolved and to bee with Christ which is best of all Surely Christ is best of all and therefore is it best of all to bee with Christ. Thou hast tryed in the drops of his sweetnesse which thou hast tasted that hee is best of all for the taste of Christ in them hath distasted all the taste of the creatures Thou hast tasted and seene that the goodnesse creating is better than the goodnesse created and therfore Christ is best of all These droppes of the Creatour are better than all the visible creature and he that is the fountaine is better than the drops that distill from the fountaine and so is he better than that which is better than the creature and therefore is best of all and if he be best surely it is best for thee to bee with him the enjoying of the best is the best enjoying Therefore call unto him O send out thy light and thy truth let them leade mee let them bring mee unto thy holy hill let thy good spirit leade mee and bring mee to thy blessed presence that as I have seene thee in these modells and mirrours and earnests so I may beholde thee face to face And though thy pilgrimage be prolonged and being present in the body thou art absent from the Lord yet desire rather to be absent from the body and present with the Lord. Accordingly let thy affections bee ever rowing in these streams of the Deity to the Deity it selfe by these patternes of rich oare having discovered a farre richer mine doe not stand gazing on the patternes nor thinke thy selfe rich enough in them but by them be stirred up to get and possesse the full riches of the Mine Indeede the patterne shewes thee the richnesse of the Mine it being a part of that riches which the Mine will give thee But remember it is but a peece and a peece cannot be equalled to the whole for the whole hath an infinite fulnesse of such peeces in it And hereby there is such oddes betweene a peece and the whole that a peece is more valuable for being an earnest of the whole than for his owne value It is more to be prized for that which it promiseth than for that which it exhibiteth Therefore value it highly for the worth which it hath in it self but value it infinitely more highly for that excessively exceeding weight of glory which it promiseth Looke upon it for the goodnesse that is in it but much more on the goodnesse without it which the goodnesse within it promiseth So by looking on it looke from it even beyond and above it for though these earnests first doe call thy affections to them yet being considered as earnests then doe they remove thy affections to that whereof they are earnests our rest is not in them but in him that gave these earnests who gave them for this end that they might direct our faith and hope to him who is our rest Wherefore as God spake to Israel by Moses so speaketh he to the true Israel by these earnests Goe forward Why stand yee still gazing and resting on these earnests when even the earnests themselves call on you to goe forward The earnests call on you to goe forward from earnests to full performances from grace to glory from faith to vision from the drops of the Deity to the Deity it selfe the onely true rest and Sabbath of the soule And when God saith Goe forward If any man draw backe his soule shall have no pleasure in him But of all drawing backe let us most of all beware of drawing backe from God to the world This were yet a farther degree of going back from God for whereas the drawing backe from God to the earnests is one degree this going back from the earnests to the world is a second and a most fearefull degree This is a true returning from Canaan to Egypt but let us remember what the Apostle saith of the right possessours of these earnests Wee are not of them who draw backe unto perdition but of them that beleeve to the saving of the soule If we beleeve we doe looke forward and goe forward for faith lookes not on things seene but on things not seene and such are the things before us yet because the strong taste of the onions of Egypt even of fleshly lust doth sticke still in our teeth and often would make Manna to seeme but a dry meate it is not amisse that this word Goe forward be often sounded in the eares of the heavenly pilgrims These earnests are Manna and this Manna is not such a dry meate as the flesh would make it for it serves to carry us unto the land of eternall felicity it both calls upon us to goe to our husband who is our happinesse and it enables us to goe that journey whereunto it calleth us Therefore let us hearken to the voice of it when it calleth because the same that calleth us doth also enable us We have received the earnest of the Spirit therefore are we alwayes bold and willing to be with the Lord whose earnest we have received We would put off these bodies of dust and lust that our soules may put on Christ in a full and fruitive union Yet neither would we wholly be uncloathed of our bodies but put them off to put off their basenesse and sinfulnesse and to put them on againe glorious and holy And then shall it be a fit garment for the soule in the day of her gladnesse and capable with her of the consummate marriage with the King of glory And for this marriage doth the spirit and the bride say Come the bride saith it by the spirit and the spirit saith it in the bride This is the voice of the bride and not of her tongue onely but of her spirit and not of her spirit onely but of the spirit in her spirit If then thou have the same spirit of love because thou lovest doe thou also speake and say Come Lord Iesus come quickly CAP. VII The signes and markes of the true and right visitations of
felicity And yet againe she may looke on it to see the curse that is cast upon it and in the terriblenesse of that curse shee may see the horrour of sinne that looking from it againe to her Lord and Saviour she may see the excellency of his love and inestimable value of his person who hath taken away the curse and the sinne from his beloved Spouse and gives her a blessed use of the creature and full blessednesse in the eternall fruition of the Creatour Thus looking to the creature by looking to it shee lookes from it she rests not in it but passeth by it to her only true rest And indeed by these and the like removals the soule should ever bee kept loose from the world For as when we would not have things to glue and fasten we doe often touch and turne and moove them so the soule being apt to glue and fasten to the world wee must by these and the like meditations often touch and remove her that so she may be kept continually loose from it But because the cyment which joynes the soule to the world is the flesh and she must adulterate first with this old husband before she can prostitute her selfe to the world let the soule take especiall care to watch and resist the approaches of this fly but deadly enemy that commeth in the shape of a lover This is he whom the true husband whose name is jealous doth perfectly hate for there is a perfect contrariety betweene them Therefore so much as thou admittest the flesh so much thou expellest thy Lord and Saviour But so much as thou banishest the flesh so much roome doest thou make for Christ to come into thee by his spirit Therefore bee thou so farre from loosing thy husband for this old adulterer that thou gaine him the more by expelling and killing the other The flesh is good for nothing but to be slaine and therein there is this gaine that the more he dyeth the more thy love and life loveth thee and liveth in thee Therefore whereas the flesh would make it thy pleasure to live after the flesh doe thou make it thy pleasure to kill the flesh let the hunting pursuing and killing of the lusts of the flesh be thy pastime and pleasure even the hunting and destroying of these foxes that would destroy thy vineyard And then will the Lord of the vineyard get up early to his vineyard the vine shall flourish and the tender grape appeare and there shall he give thee his loves But if through thy owne remisnesse or the fleshes importunity the soule by concupiscence hath conceived sinne make haste to the fountaines set open for Iudah and Ierusalem to wash and to be cleane Wash thy selfe in teares and bloud the spirit of penitence contrition and conversion washeth white the bloud of the Lambe washeth whiter than snow And by the cleansing spirit is given to thee the cleansing bloud That false husband whom thou hast pleased hee hath defiled thee and thy true husband whō thou hast offended he it is that must wash thee therefore hee came by water and bloud to wash thy guilt with his bloud and thy filth by his spirit that thus being washed thou maist be without spot and blemish and againe lovely in his eyes and acceptable in the eyes of his Father And being thus made faire by his washing he will yet againe embrace thee and put thy evill out of his remembrance by his owne overcomming goodnesse But then let his goodnesse overcomming thy evill teach thee to overcome thy owne evill with goodnesse Hate and resist all sinne and especially that sinne by which thou hast most offended so loving a husband and hate and resist that false husband who tempted thee to this sin Love thy true husband the more the more thou hast offended him and the more he hath forgiven thee And the more thou lovest him the more strive not to offend him And if thus after thy sinne thou art the farther from sinne more faire in holinesse and fuller of love to thy heavenly husband thou shalt heare from his mouth the voice of ioy and gladnesse and shalt feele from his mouth a kisse of peace in thy soule And this spirituall kisse shall drop a spirituall oyntment the very pledge and seale of pardon and peace even a testimony of his spirit speaking to thy spirit Thy sinnes are forgiven thee And having regained him make thy selfe more one with him and increase thy communion with him Touch him hard with thy faith sucke him strongly with thy love that more vertue may come out of him to cure that issue of sinne yet abiding in the remnant of the flesh and to make thee more one and uniforme with him For as a bough the more hee suckes from the tree the larger is his union with the tree and the more is his likenesse to the tree so the more a soule draws from Christ the more is she one with him and the more is shee like him And againe the more shee is like him the more will hee delight to bee one with her and thus shall she goe on in an endlesse circle of happines The highest and happiest and sweetest harmony is when the soule is in an unizon with her Saviour and husband every touch and sound of the soule thus tuned to Christ Iesus resoundeth in him toucheth and moveth him And as with the sound of outward musicke the spirit of God came upon the Prophet so with the sound of this inward musicke be it in holy contemplations ardencies desires invocations resolutions the spirit of Christ Iesus commeth more powerfully and plentifully into the soule And when hee comes doe thou draw from him that spirituall sappe and nourishment by which thou maist grow up to the stature appointed thee By the supply of this head grow up to this head in a due proportion even to the fulnesse of that part which thou holdest in his body And let not the head be the head of a man yea of the fairest and goodliest of men and thou a starved dwarfish crooked or mishapen hand or foote but both in measure and shape strive to be a member proportionable to so comely an Head And that thou maist thus grow let not swelling but growth be the end of thy sucking Desire the sincere milke and hony and wine of the Deity that thou mayst growe thereby in solide substance not in frothy and puffy imaginations Growe thou in the reall excellence of a divine Nature and not in the empty swellings of a fleshly pride For the flesh hath sometimes a desire of spirituall excellencyes but it is for a fleshly end even to puffe it selfe up by thē But seeke not these pearls to cast it to these Swine nor this Bread of heaven to give it to such dogs Rather buffet this flesh and beate it downe lest a messenger of Satan be sent to buffet thee for not
in a continuall trance and extasie of joy Her life shall be rejoycing and her life shall be eternall and so shall be her rejoycing Her life shall be love and this love shall give an overcōming sweetnesse to the enjoying of him whom she loveth and the sweetnesse of her enjoying shall enflame her love to him by whom she enjoyes this sweetnes and thus shal she run an everlasting course between the pleasure of love the sweetnesse of enjoying Therefore thus saith my soule to her beloved Come away my beloved and be as a Roe on the tops of the mountaines My life is hid with thee my love Appeare quickly thou which art my life that I may quickly appeare with thee in the glorie and happines of a consummate mariage Make mee faire with thy spirit and put the golden vesture and the needle-worke of thy manifold graces vpon mee and bring me speedily into the presence of the great King Let the day of gladnes quickly come wherein both soule and body even my whole selfe may eternally enioy thee For thy spirit being now in both makes both to thirst for thee and my flesh fainteth as well as my soule and ech panteth after thee Neither will they stil be put off with these tasts and earnests but their love and longing is rather enflamed by them to the fruition of thee The very voice of these earnests is come yea they scarse know any other language but Come therefore again again they say come Yea after they have said come as if that were not enough they say Come quickly Now thou who knowest the meaning of the spirit give an answere to the speaking sighes and grones of the spirit Thou who hast enflamed the heart of thy spouse to speake vnto thee in this silent yet lowde language of ardent desires speake againe to the hart of thy spouse and answer the desires which thou hast made to speak vnto thee But harken for hee speaketh Those lips speake which are full of grace and such lips cannot but speake grace peace to his spouse to his beloved Hearken therefore and heare what he saith Beholde I come quickly O hony and sweetnesse it selfe to the soule that loveth her beloved comes quickly her consummate marriage comes quickly her full joy and perfect happinesse comes quickly And now what can the soule say more to her Lord Onely as before shee still said Come so now will she still say Amen and Even so come Lord Iesus Amen and Amen FINIS 1 Ioh. 1. Esay 54. Gal. 5.17 Cant. 3.4 Ioh. 14.21 2 Cor. 12.2 Eph. 4. Rom. 8.13 1 Pet. 2.11 1 Pet. 1.8 Cant. 8.7 Rom. 8.32 Heb. 1. 1 Cor. 3.22 Cap. 4 5 6. Eccles 3. Mat. 11.29 Heb. 12. Phil. 4.13 Col. 1.11 Psal. 19.10 Psal. 19.5 Ier. 31 33 35 36. Cant. 8.6 Rev. 12.11 Acts 5.41 Dan. 3. Acts 4.17 18. Acts 21.13 Mark 10.30 2 Cor. 1.5 2 Cor. 4.17 1 Pet 1. phil 2.17 1 Thes 1.6 c. Rev 14.13 2 Cor. 9.6 Nehem. 8.10 Luke 9.33 Heb. 4.9 Vers. 6.11 Acts 1. Eccles 4.10 Iob 6.6 Ruth 1.20 Cant. 5 Esay 54.6 7. Rom 8.28 Cant 5.2 Gen. 32.28 Luke 7.37 Matth. 26.10 Prov. 6.34 Hab 1,32 2 Cor. 3.5 Rev. 17. Rev. 3. Esay 66.1 2. Ioh. 15.13 Mat. 15.27 Col. 3.3 Iohn 3.8 Iohn 2.4 Iudg. 13.25 Iohn 5.4 Psal. 123.2 Psa. 37.34 1 Sam. 2.30 Psal. 37. Psal. 4.6 7 Psal. 42.2 102.2 130.6 Heb. 12.12 2 Cor. 8.12 Mat 10. Rev. 2.19 1 Cor 15.44 Ioh 17.14 1 Cor 1.30 Psal 73.17 Psa 90.12 Psal. 73. 2 Cor 4.17 Esay 30.21 Psal 143 8-10 1 Cor 2.10 Iohn 1.14 2 Cor 4.6 Esa 54.13 Ioh. 15.15 Pro 23.23 4.12 Mat. 6 33. 1 Kings 8 38 2 Chron 7 14 15 Zach 12.10 Rom. 8.26 2 Tim 1.7 Ioh 13.36 Acts 4.8 Iudg 15. 16. Acts 13.6 1 Sam. 14.29 30. Eph 5.9 Phil. 4.13 Neh 8.10 Heb. 12 Psal. 19. Ioh. 4.34 2 Pet. 1. Psa. 89.15 Iohn 20.27 28 Heb. 13 8. Gen. 38.25 2 Pet. 1.16 1 Iohn 1. Rom. 8.16 Gal 4.6 7 2 Cor 5.5 6 Cant. 1. 2. Luke 24 15 19. Psa 42.2 Phil 1.23 Psal. 43.3 2 Cor 5.8 Exod 14.15 Heb. 10.38 Heb. 10.39 Num 11 6 Iosh. 5 12. 2 Cor. 5. 1 Cor. 1.23 24. Esay 8.20 Psal. 94.19 2 Cor. 4.16 Luk. 24.15.17 Psal. 30.11 Matth. 5.3 4 6. Numb 20 10. 2. King 4. 2 Cor. 8.12 1. Thes. 1.6 1. pet 1.6 Psal. 112.4 2 Cor. 4.6 Psal. 4. Phil. 3.8 2 Cor. 12.9 10. Rom. 5.3 Rom. 8.5 Prov. 17.22 Psal. 63.5 Eph. 4.24 Psal. 45. Mark 5.30 Luke 1.35 2 Tim. 1.7 Rom. 13.10 Ioh 14.21 Rom. 7.4 Psal. 128. Psal 92.14 Ezek. 11.19 20. 2 Cor. 3.3 Psal. 45. Numb 24 Cant. 4.9 Psal. 27.8 2 Cor. 3.18 Psal. 25.15 Luke 24.28 c. Luk. 11.13 Ioh. 14.21 Iohn 1.3 Exod. 34.14 Gal 5.17 Gant 2.18 Cant. 7.12 Zach. 13.1 Psal. 51.7 Rev. 7.14 Esay 1.16 1. Luke 7.47 Psal. 51.8 Rom. 5.1 5.11 Hebr. 10. 19,22 2 King 3.15 Eph. 4.15 16. 1 Pet. 2. Num. 11.4 Eccl. 10 17 Psal. 19.10 Gal. 6.16 Rev. 22.14 Psal. 45. Iudg. 9.11 1 King 19 Deu. 32.25 1 Cor. 4.4 Psal. 145. 15. Cant. 5.2 Luk. 23.43 Eccl. 12.1 Rev. 3.20 Mark 4.33 Gal. 2.20 5.6 1 Ioh. 3.14 1 Cor 4.11 2 Cor. 11.23 Gen. 30. Rom. 7.4 Ioh. 15.5 psal 113.9 Gen 30.20 Ioh 14.23 Cant 4.16 Prov. 7.19 Psal. 119. 176 Luke 22.61,62 1 Cor. 10. 13. 1 Pet. 1.5 6. Gant 2.5 Mat. 15.32 Heb. 4.15 16. Psal 63.1 Rom. 8.23 Rev. 22.20