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A18388 The garden of our B. Lady. Or A deuout manner, how to serue her in her rosary. Written by S.C. of the Society of Iesus Chambers, Sabine, 1560?-1633. 1619 (1619) STC 4955; ESTC S107949 68,766 292

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seuere and impartiall iudge not as an indulgent Redeemer 6. Lastly returne with these disciples to Hierusalem and imitating their vnion in spirit expect the comming of the Holy Ghost If thou desire to know Gods holy will retire thy selfe as they did and in this inward attention vnto the voice of thy Sauiour perseuere praying to know his diuine will and no doubt but he will impart it vnto thee Luke 12. which when thou knowest put it in practise otherwise the imputatiō of knowing the will of thy maister and not performing it will lye heauy vpon thee The comming of the holy Ghost CHAP. XIII YOV haue seene in the precedent mystery what diligent preparation these holy followers of Christ made The third glorious Mistery to the end they might be more fit vessels to receaue the holy Ghost And besides the former points of their peace and vnity amongst themselues and retyring from the conuersation of the world it is moreouer specified in holy Scripture that the better to make this retirement of theirs Act. 1. They went vp into an vpper chamber Of which words I would haue thee a pious interpreter and to imagine this vpper roome to be the superiour part of the foure to wit thy reason in which thou must dwell whensoeuer thou desirest to know the will of God neuer staying below in the sensuall part which in such a busines serueth for nothing but to blind thine vnderstanding Let thy sense be commanded by reason and it will presently teach thee that God is to be serued before the world and the Creatour before the Creature 1. Consider at the comming of the holy Ghost There was made ● sound from heauen Act 2. as of a vehement wind comming by which noyse The povver of the holy Ghost thou mayest consider the power of the holy Ghost which as it oftentimes st rreth vp in vs great conflicts betweene our owne peruerse nature and Gods Grace that offereth to enter into it so also it maketh vs most valiant and constant in the seruice of Almighty God and the maintayning of his glory the sound pre-figuring vnto vs the difficulties which outwardly may arise by the constant profession of his holy name 2. Most fitly is the comming of the holy Ghost expressed by fier the signe of loue and charity the holy spirit proceeding from the Father and the Sonne by a feruorous act of loue Neuer resist this holy spirit which will breath diuine loue into thy soule separating thine affections from earthly things 3. No sooner had these fiery tongues lighted vpon the heades of these holy disciples but with the gift of tongues which was then infused into them they doe speake of the great workes of God Imitate the feruour of these and let neuer the grace of God be void in th e 1. Cor. 15. but put in practise those giftes which God hath giuen thee by vsing them sincerely in his seruice 4. Consider how vncapable of spirituall things those are who measure all things by the conceit of the world this gift of tongus is interpreted in the Apostles to proceed from madnes or from some excesse committed Let not the fond interpretation of the world hinder thee from the seruice of God for if the Crosse of Christ were as the Apostle saith to the Gentils a foolishnes and euen to the very Iewes a scand●ll 1 Cor. 1. neuer be detected if the world laugh at thy proceedings which it vnderstandeth not Matt. 10. for the disciple must not place himselfe aboue his Maister 5. The cooperation of these holy disciples with the grace of God was such as they were all replenished with the holy Ghost working miracles in the face of Hierusalem Act. 5. and their very shadowes were potent to heale infirmities At the gate of the Temple S. P●ter giueth an almes of health to a lame creature from his Natiuity Act. 3. Act. 2. He conuerteth three thousand at his first Sermon See of what great vertue the holy spirit is without which neither in thy selfe nor in others thou canst make conuersions 6. Beholding with thy selfe attentiuely how this spirit is attained vnto how necessary it is to haue it and how easily it is lost make resolutions in thy soule fit for one who hath this spirit knowing it giueth life vnto thine actiōs and abhorre sinne that expelleth it The Assumption of our B. Lady CHAP. XIIII The fourth glorious Mystery Cant. 8. BEHOLD this glorious Virgin ascending Flowing in delightes leaning vpon her beloued with all contemplate vpon our B. Sauiours tender affection towards his dearest Mother requiting as it were her loue who in his infancy was borne in her blessed armes and leaned vpon her now he assisting her in this glorious triumph beares her vp towards the place of her Eternal Happines 1. Thou mayst here consider the happy passage of this B. Virgin out of this life feare not by considering this death to fall back vnto sorrowfull mysteries since death is heere glorious how the Apostles dispersed through the whole world were miraculously brought togeather to be at this glorious departure of the mother of God Togeather with the Apostles were also there present S. Denis Dionys ad Timeth Damas de dormit Deip. S. Timothy Disciple vnto S. Paul and S. Hierotheus Ponder the excessiue ioy of these Saintes behoulding the troupes of Angels attending the instant of her happy soules departure ready to accompany it into heauen No griefe could heere enter since all things gaue arguments of ioy and those teares that fell from the Apostles when the B. Virgin made her last pathetical speach vnto them were teares of comfort and consolation 2. As S. Denis writeth the B. Virgin ending this mortall life and beginning an immortall Ep●st ad T m●th S. Thomas was absent and comming to Hierusalem three dayes after her departure all which time S. Denis saith that himselfe with the rest heard most melodious harmony of Angels and vnderstanding she was buryed in Gethsemani requested he might behold her dead whome he was vnfortunate in not seeing to dye 3. And to satisfy the deuotiō of S. Thomas they opened the monument ib d. which breathed forth most sweet sauours Consider the antiquity of this holy tradition and finding the body taken away they al firmely beleeued it was also by the hands of Angels carryed into heauen and reunited to her glorious soule this priuiledge being but cōformable to the rest with which she was indued in her life 4. As in this so in other verities reuerēce the authority of Traditions in the Catholike Church which hath deuoted it selfe euen from the Apostles time vnto this glorious mystery of the Assumption of the mother of God 5. Consider the true resignation of this holy company assembled at the blessed departure of the mother of God al of them bearing that respect vnto her liuing as they now doubted not to find her in heauen a most carefull
mother of them Deuote thou thy selfe by the imitation of these thy holy predecessours vnto this B. Virgin that thou mayest also find her a Mother and mediatrix of Grace 6. Lastly let thy soule affect with an extraordinary loue this holy mother of Grace particulerly in this her sweet departure out of this life and in her miraculous Ascension begging by the merits of them both that she will assist thee with her potent care at the hower of thy death that thou maiest enioy her for euer in blisse The Coronation of our B. Lady CHAP. XV. SINCE thou art to contemplate vpon this high mistery of the Coronation of the Queene of heauen The fifth glorious Mystery dwell willingly in those celestiall parts with thy mind and till thou hast accomplished thy deuotion looke not downe vpon earth nor to the distractions it beareth and say vnto thy mind with holy Macarius the Eremite Thou hast Angels Archangels Cherubims Ioachimus Perionius in vita and Seraphims yea God himselfe for thy obiect Make therfore for a while thy aboad in heauen since no where can be found so noble obiects But it were too much for thee to haue thy mind so obedient vnto thee as this Blessed Saintes was which for the space of two whole dayes togeather remayned fixed vpon those heauēly delights without any distraction at all 1. First behold this celestiall Queene in this day of her Coronation most beautifully adorned withall perfections both of mind and body all the blessed inhabitants of Heauen attending her reioycing at the increase of her glory If these happy soules be so ioyfull at their Queenes exalting what oughtest thou to be since thou art farre off from that happines and desirest to attaine vnto it by her mediation 2. Behold the three Blessed Persons in Trinity ioyntly cooperating to the triumph of this glorious Virgin all of them placing with one consent a Diademe of glory vpon her head the reward of her faithfull seruice to their Deity in this world And meruaile not at the extraordinary glory she is endued with but consider the high vocation she was called vnto and in how great a busines she was imployed in this world and how completely she performed the same 3. Contemplate the allegiance which all the Orders of Angels with the rest of the Blessed Soules in Heauen performed to their new crowned Queene all singing her praises and extolling her dignity worthines 4. This crowne of glory imagine to be her most perfect beholding of Almighty God The B. Virgins Crovvne as much as any pure Creature can do receauing from him as from the fountaine of al glory light these her beames of brightnes 5. According to the capacity of euery soule glory is infused some are more glorious then others and yet all full of glory This glorious Virgin was full of grace heere vpon earth and therfore must needes be full of glory in heauen which fulnesse of glory proceedeth from the happy vision of Almighty God which she enioyeth according to the large measure of her merits 6. Lastly reioyce in the highest degree thou canst at the happy estate of this Queene of Glory and thinke no small happines redoundeth vnto thee since thou hast chosen for thy Patronesse Aduocate one so glorious and powerful and renew thy feruent desires to serue her with all fidelity laying open before her eyes of mercy thyne afflictions begging redresse at her mercifull hands by her potent intercession to her Sonne And thus I haue brought thee to an end of these considerations vpon the fifteen mysteries of the Rosary which as thou hast seene are deuided into Ioyfull Sorrowfull and Glorious the which thou mayest not vnfitly apply vnto the three Estates of men in this world The application of these mysteries who carefully worke their saluation to wit of those who begin those who profit those who are perfect the which three estates are termed by spirituall men the Purgatiue Contemplatiue and Vnitiue For by the Sorrowfull mysteries we may comprehend griefe for our sinnes past which is the way to purge vs since pennance is the next bath vnto Baptisme By the Ioyfull we may vnderstand Contemplatiue when we meditate and ponder vpon those Mysteries which are full of ioy And lastly to the Glorious we may fitly apply the estate of Vnion with Almighty God since Glory is nothing but an effect of this happy Vnion vnto which we all aspire it being the end wherto we were created OF THE SEAVEN Wordes of our Sauiour vpon the Crosse applied vnto the seauē Dayes of the Weeke HAVING ended the Rosary I intend to lead thee into the contemplation of the seauen words spoken by our Sauiour vpon the Crosse applying ech word or sentence to a seuerall day of the weeke that thou mayest the better harken vnto this sweet Sauiour of thine who neuer leaueth preaching vnto thee For vpon his bitter Crosse he teacheth thee these diuine documents shewing euen at his death the exceeding loue he bare vnto thee being then most mindfull of thee that thou mightest the oftener remember him and chiefly vpon his Crosse THE FIRST VVORD Pater ignosce eis quia nesciunt quid faciunt Father forgiue them for they know not what they do CHAP I. FIRST consider the exceeding loue of our Sauiour shewed in Luke 23. these wordes A meditation for Sonday whose afflictions although they were extreme could not make him forget our misery but that crowned with thornes torne with whippes wearied out with paines his sacred hands and feet pierced with grosse nailes he would yet beg pardon for his enemies neglecting his owne painfull estate Loue this louing Sauiour of thine and loue him ardently since thou canst neuer loue him inough who loued thee so entierly 2. He seeketh all meanes possible how to obtaine their pardon for he calleth vpon God by the name of Father a name of meekenes a name of mercy as if he should say I thy obedient Sonne who suffer heere vpon the Crosse call vpon thee my Father to forgiue them for they know not what they do In imitation of thy Sauiour forgiue thine enemies endeauour to make others to do the like diminishing their errours hiding their offences 3. Consider that our Sauiour did not only pray for these present persecutors of his but for all who euer did or shall offend him euen from our first Parents to the worlds end imagin that when thy deerest Sauiour pronounced these words he beheld euery particuler sinne of thine pondered the circumstances considered the occasions and marked the great malice of thy sinne in despising him and preferring before him some idle transitory pleasure and yet would aske thy pardon so earnestly excusing thine offence Oh then loue this ardent louer weep bitterly that euer thou hast offended him 4. One only offence in the Angells was eternally punished God more seuere to Angels then to men and yet for thy many offences
yet experienced or could conceaue being the most perfect that may be free from any mixture of sorrow or feare of ending it must needs be wholy rauished in the loue of him whome it possesseth O how wil that soule magnify the goodnes of Almighty God in giuing it grace to ariue vnto this infinite happines and how will it reioyce in hauing cooperated with the same in this world 2. Heere it will reflect with exceeding ioy and contentment vpon the afflictions it endured in this world most clearly perceauing Rom. 2. that the passions of this life are not condigne to the glory that shal be reuealed And now this soule most euidently seeth with what great crownes small actions are rewarded how important it is to haue serued God Almighty to haue contemned the world to haue kept in seruitude the body and to haue fed the soule with cōtemplation of heauenly things oh how abiect and vile will all contentmēts of this world seeme to this blessed soule how mad and fencelesse will it esteeme thē to be who preferre these worldly fooleries before those ioyes which are in heauen 3. If it were possible for a soule in heauē hauing bin shewed those delights which God hath prepared for those who loue him to be taken thence againe and placed in this world what would not that soule do to be brought to that sight once againe although it were but to endure for one houre If penāce were the meanes to obtaine it what would it not vndergoe If abnegation of it selfe how perfect would it becōe in that admirable vertue If by exercising acts of charity how feruent would it be seeking occasions to exercise it If for the enioying of that happines so smal a time a soule who had seene it would vndergoe so much what should we do vnto whome the possession of these ioyes is most certainly promised for euer Blessed are they who beleeue before they see Ioh. 20. since our faith increaseth our reward 1. Cor. 2. For neither hath the eye seene nor eare heard neither hath it ascended into the hart of man what God hath prepared for them who loue him 4. And God shall wipe away all teares from their eyes Apoc. 21. and death shal be no more nor crying neith●r shall there be sorrow any more because the first things are past This will Almighty God do to all his constant seruants who haue suffered any thing for his sake in this world as soone as euer they are made partakers of this happines their eyes shed no more teares neither shall there be sorrow any more because the first things are gone and past as a shadow which vanisheth away at the presence of light All things that are in this world are short and endure a small time and as the pleasure of it is short which blind man so much seeke after so are the pūishments which are inflicted vpon the good and this short and as it were momentary suffering is to end and to be rewarded without end according to that of the Apostle 1. Cor. 4. For that our tribulation which presently is momentany and light worketh aboue measure exceedingly an eternall weight of glory in vs we not considering the things that are seene but that are not seene For the things that are seene are temporall but those that be not seene are eternall 5. Heere consider in the best manner thou canst the admirable estate of a soule in blessednes and as thou hast seene before that this blessednes consisteth in our vnderstanding which is most properly explicated by this word Vision yet doth it not so consist therin as that it excludeth our wil which is made partaker therof by the delight which a soule receaueth from that diuine vision of Almighty God And to know what that delight is and how great no vnderstanding vpon earth can conceaue the reason is because we cannot possibly conceaue what God is from the sight of whom this delight proceedeth Our best way is to make a comparison though it be infinitely defectiue with the delights of this world and those of heauen If we delight in the possession of any thing in this world let vs consider how many defects are in the thing possessed as also in the possessour which hinder the completenes of this happines both are changeable and subiect to infinite alterations and ends neuer was there yet any worldly contentment so enioyed but that if it were truely looked into there was conioyned with it some corasiue that might change the tast of the Enioyer But in heauen both that which is possessed and the Possessour are most permament and this fruition is not capable of any alteration or end this delight is complete mingled with no sorrowes since from God that delight floweth in whome there is nothing but delight 6. When we haue arriued by the contemplation of heauen vnto the delights therin our vnderstanding presently butteth vpon Almighty God who is a Non plus vltra and the end of all that we can thinke of since in him all this Beatitude is contayned as in a place inaccessible vnto mans vnderstanding Well may we whilest we are in this world goe about this hidden treasure to wit the Nature of Almighty God by outward signes in his Creatures ghesse somewhat at that which is included in him but neuer can we truly comprehend and know what this infinite happines is Exod. 53. till we see him facie ad faciem face to face and be partakers of that diuine torrent of pleasure How feruently haue all Gods Saints desired the enioying of his felicity Phil. 1. S. Paul desired to be dissolued and to be with Christ because he had seene those things in his high extasie which were not lawfull for man to speake S. Peter hauing but seene a glimpse of Christ his glory which then was far inferiour to that with which he now shineth in heauen yet as hauing ariued to the toppe of felicity Math. 17. he desireth to remayne there And leauing the infinite number of Saints betweene their time ours whose desires were the same let vs behold the blessed Father Ignatius de Loyola who in his contemplations vpon heauen cryed out with a true contempt of this world In his life Quam sordet terra cùm caelum intu●or how base and foule seemeth this earth when I behold heauen Oh that we would imitate these great Saintes whose eyes were truly purged contemning this earth the thornes that grow thereon and hauing their thoughts fixed in heauen and vpon true happines were euer in a continuall flame and desire to attaine thervnto Of Hell CHAP. IIII. THE calling backe of thy Vnderstanding from the toppe of heauen and leading it to the Center and bottome of the earth where the damned soules are tormented must needs breed a great alteration in thee and by it alone perswade thee that this world is full of changes and that our Vnderstanding is as mutable as
THE GARDEN OF OVR B. LADY OR A deuout manner how to serue her in her Rosary Written by S. C. of the Society of IESVS Veniat dilectus meus in Hortum suum Cant. 5. Let my beloued come into his Garden M.DC.XIX THE EPISTLE DEDICATORY TO THE Deuout Catholike Laity of ENGLAND THE Beloued of the Espouse after her many sweet ●uitements to a Garden of ●elight being won by her ●ire requests telleth her I am come into my garden Cant. 5. O m● sister Espouse where hauing found variety it selfe placed in the middest of spirituall delights preferred before all those ornament which that place of pleasure brought forth th● Myrrhe which he vouchsafed first of all to gathe● saying O my sister Espouse haue reaped my myrrhe Sma●● explication of these word most deuout Catholikes is desired yet for the mor● generall vnderstanding o● them take which the ancient Fathers the Beloued to be our Sauiour the Espouse his B. Mother the Garden Perfection and Myrrhe the acts of Pennance And since you haue so ●imitated the Beloued of the Espouse in preferring before althings his blessed choice of Myrrhe by enduring so many pressures for the loue and imitation of him The reason of the dedication and the defence of his Truth which state of yours being that of persecution may well be tearmed a certayne state of perfection me thinkes I behold the Espouse inuiting you also to come into her Garden knowing already your choice to be so like vnto that of her Beloued That Garden of perfection this small Volume resembleth in which are with order disposed the admirable perfectiōs both of the Espouse and her Beloued although those of her Beloued giue forth a clearer light and are of greater ornament to this place then those of the Espouse yet here it is the Beloued his will seeking to honour her to call this Garden hers by adding his graces vnto it to make his Espouses worthines the more apparent Enter therfore with al confidence being so louingly inuited into this Garden of our B. Lady in which your interest is so great view and with all attention behold the natiue beauties and the fruites that are in it so delightfull Our intention once rectified our end ought euer to be in sight see what pleasant pathes are heere plained forth how streight they are without turnings at euery entrance wherof the end is most clearly discouered The passages of this nature are many and diuersly employed in some you shall find diuine Loue leading the B. Virgin to the Tēple in Hierusalem to consecrat her selfe vnto perpetuall virginity in others you shall behold her conducted by the same guide going to giue her consent to become the mother of the Sauiour of the world here she is in her iourny to visit her Cosin Elizabeth and by her presence to make holy the fruite of her wombe in these pathes she reioyceth and mourneth mourneth and reioyceth diuine loue producing in her purest hart diuine effects But besides these most euen and direct passages Loue being the contriuer of this Paradise there are pleasant descents which rising againe into mounts keep correspondence one with the other in these descents you may behold the Virgin as an humble handmayd going towards Bethleem to bring forth her glorious Infant poorly flying into Egipt fearfully seeking her lost Iesus amongst her kindred carefully and following her tormented Iesus vnto his death most dolefully But in the ascent or rising againe the things you are to see are farre different for diuine Loue hauing out of the descent redoubled the Virgins forces The humility of the B V●rgin giueth increase to al her other vertues leadeth her vp first towards the sight of her most glorious risen Sonne thence to the behoulding of his most powerfull Ascension to her own replenishing with the holy Ghost to her most happy death to her assumption both of body and soule and lastly to her most glorious Coronation To giue you a full description of this Garden and to tell you what Fountaines Figures of the B. Virgin and Tabernacles what Houses and Towers what Roses what Lyllies adorne it were neuer to end wherfore desiring you to be curious perusers of it your selues not to passe any thing vnnoted I leaue to be any longer hindrance from your entring into it This only requesting at your hands The Authors request that those things in which this Gardē shall seeme pleasing vnto you by which your pious affections shal be any way moued you would seeke by imitation to transport them into your owne Gardens wherby you shal make your entring into it not pleasant alone but withall most profitable S. C. A TABLE OF the Contents VVHAT the Beades signify Chap. 1. pag. 1. Of the fruit of praying on the Beades Chap. 2. pag. 5. Of Preparation to say the Beades Chap. 3. pag. 10. Of the seuerall parts of the Beades Chap. 4. pag. 14. Of the Creed in general Chap. 5. pag. 17. Of the words of the Creed and their sense Chap. 6. pag. 20. Of attention to the Diuine Persons Chap. 7. pag. 25. Of the Pater Noster Chap. 8. pag. 39. Of the Aue Maria. Chap. 9. pag. 52. Of the six Feasts of our B. Lady The Conception Cap. 1. p. 62. The Natiuity Chap 2. pag. 65. The Presentation Chap. 3. pag. 67. The Visitation Chap. 4. pag. 69. The Purification Chap. 5. pag. 71. The Assumption Chap. 6. Pag. 74. Of the Rosary The fiue Ioyful misteries The Anunciation Chap. 1. pag. 77. The Visitation Chap. 2. pag. 83. The Natiuity of our Lord. Chap. 3. pa. 82. The Purification Chap. 4. pag. 85. The finding Iesus in the Temple Ca. p. 5. 89. The fiue sorrowfull mysteries The praying in the garden Chap. 6. pa. 92. His whipping Chap 7. pag. 94. His crowning with thornes Ca. 8. pa. 100. The bearing of his Crosse Cha. 9. pag. 104. His crucifying Chap. 10. pag. 108. The fiue glorious mysteries Of Christ his Resurection Cha. 11. pa. 112. His Ascension Chap. 12. pag. 119. The comming of the holy Ghost Chap. 13. pag. 125. The Assumption of our B. Lady Chap. 14. pag. 130. The Coronatiō of our Lady Cap. 15. pa. 134 Of the seauē Words on the Crosse The first VVord Chap. 1. pag. 141. The second VVord Chap. 2. pag. 146. The third VVord Chap. 3. pag. 153. The fourth VVord Chap. 4. pag. 159. The fifth VVord Chap. 5. pag. 166. The sixt VVord Chap. 6. pag. 172. The seauenth VVord Chap. 7. pag. 179. Of the fiue Woundes The right Hand Chap. 1 pag. 187. The left Hand Chap. 2. pag. 193. The side Chap. 3. pag. 199. The right Foot Chap. 4. pag. 206. The left Foot Chap. 5. pag. 214. Of the foure last Things Of Death Chap. 1. pag. 222. Of Iudgement Chap. 2. pag. 233. Of Heauen Chap. 3. pag. 240. Of Hell Chap. 4. pag. 215. THE GARDEN OF OVR B. LADY OR A deuout Manner of seruing her in her
their harts saying Matt 15. M●rc 7. Prou. 23. My sonne offer vp to me thy hart In which words two things are included namely Corporall Preparation and Spirituall Disposition in fruitfully saying our Beads The former of these two dependeth vpon the exteriour disposition of our body to this exercise which consisteth in these pointes Corporall Preparatiō First in decent placing of our body in the well ordering of our fiue outward senses in well endeauouring to keepe them from distractions as also by so scituating our selues that the ouermuch diseasing of the body eyther by continuall kneeling or prostrating our selues vpon the ground by extension of the armes in manner of a crosse and the like mortifications cause not the distraction of our minds Wherfore for the tyme thou prayest I could wish thee not to put thy selfe to any great corporall affliction but so to dispose of thy body that it remayne quiet and if it were possible as if thy soule were for that tyme separated from it The later Spirituall disposition namely spirituall disposition is a restraint of all our internall sensitiue powers in keeping them attent and wholy imployed about our prayer also a deuout applying of our three spirituall faculties of the soule namely our Will Vnderstanding and Memory with all their actions and functions to Gods seruice in this holy exercise For seeing God hath created both soule and body to his seruice commanded vs to loue him with all our soule hart mind and power and seeing the performance of the worke is a proofe of our loue it standeth with great reason we should endeauour to imploy our selues in this action wholly and sincerely performing it with all reuerence both of soule and body Of the seuerall parts of the Beades CHAP. IIII. I Intend to discourse vpon this pious manner of praying plainly and cleerly to the end that the explications I shal here make may be more generally vnderstood Wherefore I will speake only of such parts thereof as are appointed by our holy Mother the Catholike Church to wit the Creed Pater Noster and Aue Maria An vsuall payre of Beads cōmonly consisteth of one Creed three Aues six Decades or six tymes ten Aues more and seauen Pater Nosters The decade or ten Aues is sayd in remembrance or honour of the ten Commandements of God The Creed signifieth the Vnion of our Fayth according to that of the Apostle One fayth Ephes 4 one God one Baptisme and therfore is but once sayd in the Beads The Pater Noster betokneth hope and is seauen tymes repeated and that for diuers reasons First in respect of the seauenfold graces or gifts of the holy Ghost which we still pray for Secondly for the extirpation of the seauen deadly sinnes out of vs. Thirdly for the obtayning of the seauen contrary vertues Fourthly for the sincere and pure vse of the seauen Sacraments Fiftly for the Christian practising of the seauen Workes of Mercy as well spirituall as temporall The Aue signifieth Charity and is repeated sixty three tymes after the Creed in saying ouer the beads to wit thrise after the Creed and ten tymes in ech of the six decades and this for three causes First in honour and remembrance of our B. Ladies age who liued on earth sixty three yeares Secondly to insinuate vnto vs the frequent vse of workes of mercy of all moral Vertues whose good habits help our weake powers with their assistance in al our operations Thirdly and especially to teach vs that the Works of charity ought farre to surpasse in number and value all the actions of intellectuall and voluntary habits Of the Creed in generall CHAP V. IN saying our beads we alwaies begin with our Creed By the Creed Faith is expressed which is a briefe summe of our fayth and a bridgment of Christian Religion The reason why we begin with our Creed is because the deuout saying of it is an expresse profession of our faith which is to be made in the first place Quia accedentem ad Deum oportet credere because he that commeth vnto God must belieue Againe prayer is an accesse of the Creature to his Creatour which can by no meanes be more aduanced then by an act of Faith Lastly the foundation of iustice which by prayer we seeke for is Faith which is comprised in our Creed To this purpose the Apostle saith with hart we beleeue to iustice Rom. 10. and with mouth we make profession to saluation In which sentence we are taught two things touching our Creed First an inward action of our soule which is nothing els but a spirituall motion of our mind and will towards God the giuer of all vertues and the only rewarder of the same VVhat fayth is For faith is an infused habit proceeding frō God which perfecteth our Vnderstanding and inclineth our Will with a pious affection to belieue in God and consequently by the meanes of his diuine grace to attaine vnto Iustification Secondly we are taught an outward action of our body consisting in a profession of our faith when with words we outwardly make knowne to others that faith which inwardly in hart mind we belieue Which action also cōioyned with charity doth bring vs vnto Iustification Wherfore in saying the Creed we must attend to foure things First to the words and their meaning Secondly to the persons to whome they are directed who are alwaies God the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost Thirdly to the mysteries cōprised in those twelue articles which are many and admirable Fourthly to the manner and fashion wherwith the B. Trinity doth cōmunicate to mankind those his manifold and exceeding great benefites Of the words of the Creed and their sense CHAP. VI. ADMIRABLE are the sacred words of the Creed because they are signes leading vs into an Ocean of diuine mysteries whose signification is mysticall vpon which I wil only stay omitting the pious conceites of some vpon the number of the words which in latin are 75. but in other vulgar languages 77. for the latin word Credo in all vulgar tongues is two words I Beleeue Ie crey Io Credo c. which word being twice inserted into the Creed maketh vp seauenty seauen and these words signify the whole essence of our beleife I will not say these 77. words in our Creed signify the 77. Matth. ● tymes we ought to forgiue our brethren when they offend vs nor that they betoken the Grand Iubiley because S. Luke writeth in the 77. generation from Adam downward Christ our Sauiour was borne Gen. 4. who as Origen and diuers other of the Fathers vpon Genesis haue noted did superabundantly satisfy for all mankind These and the like pious coniectures omitted I will come to the signification of the words The sense and meaning of these words in our Creed ought to be discussed seriously and with great attention for they import signify meruailous things Wherfore as the Israelites departing out
of Egypt carryed away with them the borrowed treasures of the coūtry Exod. 3. and that by Gods owne appointement so the twelue Apostles the pillars of the Catholike Church at the departure out of Iury dispersing into the whole world made by the inspiration of the Holy Ghost this abridgement of Christian beliefe carryed it away with them as an infinite treasure and dispersed it through out the whole world And to the end thou mayest orderly proceed in finding out the true literall and mysticall sense of euery word begin with the first word of thy Creed which is Credo and by it learne how to meditate vpon the rest Search and diue into it profoundly this only word I assure thee is sufficient to hold thy vnderstanding imployed all they life tyme. In this one latin word are these two English words I belieue In this word I thou mayest contemplate al things belonging to man his substance his being this man and not an other his body and soule vnited and also separated his inclinations end helpes miseries whēce they do spring and the like And when by consideration of these particulers thou hast satisfied thine vnderstāding endeauour to stirre vp in thy will some good affection of loue hope ioy desire or thanks-giuing c. For this is the end of all prayer to prayse God and to inflame our affection in his loue detesting sinne and desiring grace all vertues which good affection being once enkindled in thy hart by the help of Gods grace endeauour to continue and increase it by feruent prayer recollection purposes of good life so begin thy Beades desiring perfect obtayning of that good purpose and affection which thou seelest in thy soule And thus by example of this first Word thou mayst perceaue the manner how to vnderstand and consider with spirituall profit the rest of the words of the Creed Of attention to the Diuine Persons CHAP. VII THIS attention here required is vnto the Maiesty of the three Diuine Persons God the Father God the Sonne and God the Holy Ghost who are three distinct Persons vnited in one Nature these Persons are expressed in our Creed by these termes Father Sonne and Holy Ghost The nature of these Persons is expressed by the word God The cheife obiect of prayer Vnto these Persons as to the chiefe obiect of thy prayers thou art to haue a serious attention considering with thy selfe that in ●aying thy Creed thou makest the profession of thy faith before these diuine Persons whose maiesty is such that al the reuerence and attention thou canst make is not sufficient to shew the least part of thy allegiance and hauing duely considered before what a Maiesty thou treatest say deuoutly thy Creed in professing thy beliefe touching these diuine Persons Before the first Aue say O God the Father of heauen essentially endued with all perfection haue mercy vpon me and so offer vp thy Memory in saying the first Aue. Before the second say O God the Sonne Redeemer of the world essentially endued with all perfection haue mercy vpon me so offer vp to him thine Vnderstanding in saying the second Aue. Before the third Aue say O God the holy Ghost sanctifier of the whole world essentially replēished with all perfection haue mercy vpon me offering vp to him thy Will and Affection as deuoutly as thou canst Then say the first Pater ●oster in asking grace fruitfully ●o meditate vpon the diuine perfections included in the Holy Trinity Before the first decade or ten consider the first Attribute or Perfection Omnipotent which is the Omnipotency of God who can do all things when how and where he pleaseth to whome no creature can ●esist to whome nothing is ei●her impossible or hard to do who with one word created all ●hings gouerneth the world withall facility and with one blast can annihilate it againe This omnipotency with all thy soule belieue hope in loue and adore to this submit thy selfe of this craue pardon whome through thy weaknes and frailty thou hast so often offended To this Omnipotency entierly commend and resigne thy selfe beseeching the Saints in heauen to assist thee in louing praysing this Omnipotency by saying Gloria Patri c. Glory be to God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost because they are omnipotent As they were in the b●ginning now and alwayes world without end Amen This done say one Decade or ton Aues and a Pater noster in praysing his Omnipotency and in humbly desiring alwayes to be directed and defended by the same Before the second Decade cal ●o mind the Infinitenesse of God Infinite his power wisdome goodnes in ●ll his actions c. For example ●ehold his Infinitenesse in wisdome first in so prudently crea●ing Heauen Earth Angells Men c. Secondly in so dis●reetly disposing and ordering all ●hings in number order and measure Thirdly in so proui●ently gouerning the whole world and all therin contained ●ourthly in prouiding so abun●antly all necessaries for ech crea●ure in his kind Fiftly in cer●ainly foreknowing from all eter●ity all future euents till the ●orlds end And lastly in pre●estinating all the elect by most ●onuenient and sweet meanes ●o the attayning of eternall glory all which belieue hope for admire adore and then with the celestiall Court thanke God most humbly for the same in saying Glory be to the Father Sonne an● the holy Ghost for their Infinitenesse in Nature and Power a● it was in the beginning is now an● alwayes shal be world without end Amen Then say ten Aues and one Pater noster in praysing Gods Infinitenesse and in humbly beseeching alwayes to be guided and directed by it Eternall Before the third Decade consider the Eternity of God that he was alwayes before the world was made and that he shall euer so remaine God thrice happy whose Eternity is part of his nature cause and measure of all time See how all other things had their being beginning and continuance from him then lifting vp thy affection to adore this true Eternity say with all the blessed Inhabitants of heauen Glory to God the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost who are Eternall as they were in the beginning and euer shal be world without end Amen After this say ten Aues and one Pater noster that thou mayest be his faithfull seruant in this world and partaker of his glorious vision in all eternity Before the fourth Decade thinke vpon the Imutability or vnchangeablenes of God Vnchangeable who was is and euer shal be the same God he was from Eternity both in Nature and Operation without all chang or alteration whatsoeuer so that now he is the selfe same God in all respects that he was a million of millions of years past and as he shal be and continue world without end for heauen and earth shall passe and change but thou O Lord remaynest for euer Heere deploring thy continuall decay howerly alteration and
consider that he would be called Ours that we should not repine to offer vp our selues and all we haue to him to obtaine that sweet title to be called his Secondly inflame thy affection consider how happy thou art if thou mayest rightly say this word Our for then thou art his and he thine Thirdly in this word imbrace thy neighbour who by it is made thy brother fellow heire of Eternall felicity Then go to the second word Father not Lord nor Iudge nor Creatour nor King or the like but Father a name of loue lincking himselfe vnto vs as neere as may be to make vs loue him like dutifull children He is our Father for six causes 1. For making the substance of which we are composed 2. For casting the mould wherof we were forged 3. For fashioning the frame of our bodies 4. For creating and vniting our soules to our bodies 5. For bringing vs vp and giuing vs whatsoeuer we haue 6. Lastly and especially for adopting vs heyres to his eternall Kingdome giuing vs all the meanes possible to attaine therto guiding gouerning and conducting vs thither as it were by the hand Which six points apply to the six Decades If followeth Which art which may also be considered by six points and may be applied to the Beads as the former First how God is absolute in himselfe 2. How God is only of himselfe and independant of any other 3. And for himselfe not to any further end being his owne blessednes and end of all things 4. How all creatures whatsoeuer they be euen Angels men are of God for he made vs and not we our selues 5. All things are in God for In him we liue moue and are 6 Lastly to God all creatures belong as to their Cause Maker Redeemer Sanctifier Gouernour and last end for God made all things for himselfe In heauen to put vs in mind of our Country and inheritance to which we were borne for this place in which we liue commonly called the World is our exile and place of pilgrimage pennance and probation 2. Cor. 5. but heauen is our home Citty and country Now seeing that God is our Father let vs his children learne first fully to know the worthines of our vocation Rom. 8. and adoption who are by grace made the children of God Secondly to direct all the course of our life to the attayning of this supernaturall end Thirdly to moderate with reason all our passions and inclinations for if God be our Father we ought to loue and feare him with the feare and loue of children to trust in him stedfastly to rely on him only and so to gouerne all our motions like well nourtured children in the presence of our Father who alwayes is with vs and still beholdeth vs. Fourthly to conuerse with our heauenly Father from whome we cannot fly because he is euery where most dutifully and with all cordiall respect in humility charity patience obedience and all other vertuous comportments Fiftly not only to conforme our willes to his will but also quite to cast off our owne will and to put on his by taking all things aduersities as wel as prosperities as speciall fauours sent from him for our particuler good Sixtly seeing that this our Blessed Father hath his glorious Pallace in heauen let vs abhorre all euill conuersation of this world all excesse in apparell pleasures feeding of our senses and the like actions common to brute beasts and hau● our hopes affections in Heauen Ephes 2. whose Cittizens we are and of which we are made Coheires with Christ Hallowed be thy name Heere we pray for the increase of Gods honour and consequently for the increase of the number of the faithfull for by those only the honour of God is propagated Also for the augmenting of Gods grace in vs and extirpation of mortall sinne for without his grace we can no wayes cooperate to the honour of God for they must be pure vessels that serue to the increase of Gods honour and therfore was S Paul taken forth to preach the name of Christ to Nations because he was Vas el●ctionis a chosen vessell Thy Kingdome come In this we pray for our Childs part in the other world which is life euerlasting as also for the meanes to attaine vnto it which are infused vertues and supernaturall helpes as grace faith hope and charity and all other vertues especially the eight Beatitudes which are as it were so many steppes or ascents towards heauen Thy will be done Heere we resigne our selues entirely to the will of God for by wishing the performance of his will we submit our owne to his in which resignation those that haue experience of it do find the greatest comfort quietnes of mind that may be and within themselues such a peace as the world cannot giue To such a soule as wholy layeth her selfe in the hād of Almighty God what can come amisse Nothing without doubt for such a soule at the comming of any accident whatsoeuer saith not This such a one hath done mine enemy one that hath watched to doe me this ill turne and the like but contrarily saith This is sent me from the hand of God the guift of a Father to his child his will be done and blessed be his name for euer In earth as it is in heauen We pray here like those that are perfect let vs in all our actions shew our selues to be louers of perfection in imitation of our Father in wishing that Gods blessed will may be performed as exactly here in earth as in heauen we do wish also that there may be no greater repugnance in our obeying here vnto it then there is in heauen And in this we pray for that perfection which euery true Christian ought to aspire vnto and then how sweet and pleasant would the seruice of Almighty God be vnto euery one in being wholy conformed vnto his holy will as the Saints of heauen are This was that perfection which S. Paul arriued vnto when he burst forth into those words of perfect resignation Now I liue no more but Christ liueth in me Giue vs this day our daily bread By these words we aske all necessary food as well spirituall as corporall We say not Lend vs since we owe him so much already that we neuer shal be able to pay him any thing but still must increase our debt Neither say we Pay vs for God oweth vs nothing but we owe all what we haue vnto him and therfore beseeching his infinite goodnes to be bountifull towards vs still we intreat to giue it vs. This day signifieth the shortnes of our life our daily want our continuall failing Matth. 6. and perpetuall need of Gods prouidence towards vs. Daily bread putteth vs in mind of only necessaries and neither to demaund nor care for superfluities Forgiue vs our trespasses as we forgiue them that trespasse against vs. So that if we will not forgiue any that hath offended
vs God will not forgiue vs our offences and since this is our owne petition we must take heed we condemne not our owne selues Lead vs not into temptation by permitting our frailty to fall but support vs from falling that is from consenting to sinne Deliuer vs from euill because without Christ we cā do nothing hauing enemies on euery side of vs the chiefest of all within vs to wit our selues Amen as a seale is added which signifieth Be it so if it please thee And thus much for the literall sense of our Pater Noster Of the Aue Maria. CHAP. IX OF all affections that of the mother to her child is held to be the tenderest By the Aue Maria Charity is vn● rstood there being betweene these two the greatest naturall vnion and participation one of the other that can be But if this naturall affection be raysed to a degree aboue nature to wit made spirituall that is a naturall affection refined or purified then without doubt there can be nothing added to the perfection of it In this height of affection which is tearmed Charity doth this B. Virgin loue mankind being euer towards him as a most tender Mother a Mother of Grace a mother of Mercy that is a Mother vnto all those that by her mediation aske mercy To this mother let vs come with an inflamed affection with a feruent desire to imitate her charity and purity Now let vs proceed to the litteral explication of the Aue Maria. In the fi●st part is contained an Honorable Salutation of our B. Lady vttered by the Angell Gabriel sent vnto her as a messenger from the B. Trinity about the busines of mans Redemption in which this B. Virgin was a speciall Agent Haile Mary full of grace our Lord is with thee she cannot be saluted by a greater title then full of grace since in it all other dignities are contained The Angel would not call her mother of God for as yet she had not giuen her louing consent to be a mother yet a Virgin Yet in calling her full of grace he did signify that shee was come to such height of perfection as was not to be giuen to any but to the mother of God and he was cōmanded so to entitle her by that Diuine Counsell that sent him She is called by the Angell full of grace that all sinners might haue recourse vnto her for grace since being her selfe full we might by our humble prayers touch that vessell that some of those graces might fall vpon our soules Our Lord is with thee in a most eminent manner by desire corporally to inhabit in her to make her the Mother of his only begotten Sonne These words also tell from whome the greeting came from the B. Trinity that made her so admirable a peece of workemanship that out of her was drawne by the hand of the holy Ghost the Humanity of Christ Iesus God and man Our Lord was with her euen at the very instan of her Conception then shewing himselfe vnto her a Lord Protectour in defending her from the originall and generall blemish of mankind Hitherto the Angell Now follow the words of S. Elizabeth admiring and praising the happines of this B. Virgin her Cosen Blessed art thou amongest women For six singular priuiledges which thou mayest apply vnto the six Decades Six priuiledges that ma●e the holy Virgin Blessed amongest vvomen 1. In being chosen out of thousands from all eternity as most fit to beare the Sauiour of the world 2. In giuing her obedient consent vnto the Angell who spake things she vnderstood not 3. In contayning God the second Person in Trinity nine moneths in her sacred wombe 4. In being a mother remayning a Virgin 5. In hauing her owne maker all his whole life obedient vnto her 6. In being priuiledged immediatly after her death to haue her body reunited to her glorious soule And Blessed is the fruit of thy wombe Iesus This last word explicateth the whole sentence for this Blessed fruit of her wombe was nothing else but swet Iesus ●nd this fruit grew vpon no other ●eethen vpon the B Virgin from whom we receaue this pleasant vitall fruite In this Virgin a Paradise of pleasure these spiritual fruits abound for cōtayning this one fruit which hath the nature of heauenly Manna she satisfieth the tast of all spirituall soules for Iesus is a fruit contayning in it selfe all delightes We come now vnto the last of these three harmonicall parts which is sung by our holy mother the Catholike Church and adioyned vnto the two former parts of the Angel S. Elizabeth Holy Mary mother of God pray for v sinn●rs now in the houre of our death Had the Church sayd only Holy Mary pray for vs her high preheminence of being mother of God had bin left out And had it bin only sayd Mother of God pray for vs her Dignity indeed had bin specified but it had not bin made knowne from what lowlinesse she was exalted Luke 8. Quia respexit humilitatem ancillae suae from the humility and lowlinesse of a hand-maid she was raysed to be the mother of God therefore we say Holy Mary mother of God by Mary signifying her humility by the Mother of God the dignity vnto which her being humble Mary raysed her Pray for vs sinners thou that wert exempt from all sinne thou that beganst the ouerthrow of sinne thou that knowest the malice of sinne being the mother of grace pray for v● sinners that haue so oftē offended thee by offending thy deare Sonne who deserue nothing of our selues Bernard serm 12. in Apoc. nor can better aske for mercy then through thy Blessed mediation knowing thy Sonne Christ Iesus can deny thee nothing Of thee therfore O blessed Virgin we begge to pray for vs. Now and in the houre of our death By the first word Now we consider our present life the misery and calamity of the same We beseech therfore the B. Virgin to assist vs in this life of misery that we may make this Now a passage vnto happines which shall last for Euer And in the h●ure of our death in which we haue most need of her powerfull ayde considering that vpon that instant our eternall estate dependeth This is the time in which the tree falleth where it shall remayne for Euer We may here out of these words reflect vpon the tender loue of the Catholike Church towards all her children aduising them by this prayer which she hath taught them to make recourse vnto so potent a friend as the Mother of God is at this most important houre after which immediatly insueth Euer Let these two words Now and Euer sound in thine eare perpetually Neuer thinke vpon the one but let thy thought imbrace also the other Neuer let thy conceit stay vpon Now to wit vpon this present life and the miseries therof but thinke also vpon Eu●r to wit the ioyes of heauen prepared for
those that passe through these miseries constantly and let not the fond and false pleasures of this life represent themselues vnto thee vnlesse thou also set before thee the eternity of paynes due to those that neglecting their saluation follow these short delights in blindnes Let Now commit nothing that it shal be ashamed to auouch before Euer but let both these proue and examine the action of ech other that so we may Now seruing this great Virgin faithfully enioy her in happines for Euer OF THE SIX FEASTS OF OVR B. LADY HAVING breifly explicated the Pater Aue and Creed we will descend vnto the feasts of our B. Lady applying them to our Beads making triall whether we can make vse of what hath bin hitherto said And beginning with her pure Conception we will runne through her six feasts ending with her Assumption since most of these festiuities were meanes vnto our Redemption which ought to stirre vp in vs the more affection and deuotion to contemplate vpon them The Conception of our B. Lady CHAP. I. CONSIDER that ordinarily the Conception of man is in sinne The first feast Psal ●0 according to that of the Royall Prophet Et in iniquitatibus concepit me mater mea in sinne my mother conceaued me This sinne in children is tearmed Originall sinne as well because it is deriued vnto vs from our first Parents The effects of originall sinne as because it possesseth euery one at his first being or comming into this world This sinne infecteth the whole man body and soule shutteth Heauen gates against him making him slaue vnto Sathan The penalties of Originall sinne are diuers Bodily deformation all kind of sicknes and death it selfe dimnesse of Vnderstanding weaknes of our Will pronesse to sinne and damnation if we dye in it without the remedy of Baptisme Our B. Lady by singular priuiledge was preserued from this Originall sinne and consequently preuented with grace in her Mothers wombe and at the first instant of her Conception was indued with all vertues as Originall Iustice and the like She was by the same priuiledge adorned with all naturall perfections of body as health beauty strength and the like graces Lastly she was not subiect to any actuall sinne not so much as veniall preseruing still entier ●er Originall Iustice much lesse was she subiect to damnation ●onder euery one of these six points according to thy deuotion applying them to the seuerall parts of thy Beads The Natiuity CHAP. II. FIRST consider her no lesse wonderfull natiuity The secōd feast for as she was conceiued without sinne so was she borne of her aged mother S. Anne as wee may piously presume without all paine How ioyfull to Angels was her birth because she was to beare the King of Angels and to be their Queene Glorious to vs men was her Natiuity because she was to be the Aduocate of Gods Church and potent Mediatrix betweene her Sonne and mankind Gladsome was her Natiuity to the B. Trinity because she was from al eternity predestinated the Espouse of God the Father Mother to God the Sonne and Tabernacle to the holy Ghost Terrible to the infernall powers was this Natiuity of hers because she was to bruse the Serpēts head Gen. 3. Lastly comfortable to all sinners of the Catholike Church was this Natiuity because she is borne a mother of mercy Queene of heauen and Refuge of sinners to whome all haue free accesse to whome God the Sonne will deny nothing and whose clemency is such as she taketh vpon her to obtaine all sinners humble petitions Apply these points as the former to the six Decades The Presentation CHAP. III. FIRST our B. Lady being chosen out of the whole world to be mother of God The 3. Feast was by degrees disposed to this office for being only three yeares old she was by diuine inspiration presented and offered vp to God in the Temple In the sacred Temple being come to riper years first amongst all the Iewes she made a vow of perpetuall Virginity In the Cloyster of this Tēple she serued God in all Iustice and Sanctity of body and soule giuing an example to all those that abandon the world to leaue with the world themselues also for without perfection invertue she knew no inclosure to be strong inough against the world teaching the best surest inclosure to be that of our affections Fourthly in that retyred place she continually exercised all vertues and good workes sutable to her calling There she mortified that Virginall body of hers imitating in the spirit of Prophesy her Blessed Sonne S. Amb. lib de Virgin who although he could not be subiect vnto any rebellion against the law of reason yet did by fasting and praying giue example to all that followed him that the way vnto the Kingdome which he promiseth is ful of mortifications and crosses Being thus trayned vp in all kind of vertue hence she was exalted to be the mother of God A vertuous life in this world is a disposition to attaine vnto happines in the next The Visitation CHAP. IIII. FIRST our B. Lady being declared The fourth feast by the message of the Angell to be the mother of God tooke a tedious iourney on foot passing the mountaines towards her cosin Elizabeth to visit her Withall patience spirituall ioy she performeth this iourny and that with great speed for S. Ambrose vpon this place saith Deuotion done with speed yeldes most abundant fruit because there is discouered the feruour of Charity Entring into her cosin Elizabethes house she saluteth her courteously whose salutation caused ioy both to S. Elizabeth to her sonne S. Iohn yet in her wombe Our B. Ladies vertues being deseruedly praised by S. Elizabeth she beareth her selfe notwithstanding most humbly and modestly She referreth al honour vnto God singing her sacred Canticle Magnificat anima mea dominum my soule doth magnify our Lord. In which many mysteries are contayned and documents for our instruction how to referre all our actions to the honour and glory of God Lastly our B. Lady hauing serued with al care and respect her aged cosin for the space of three monethes retourneth to poore Nazareth with her Spouse S. Ioseph expecting the time of her meruailous deliuery The Purification CHAP. V. FIRST our B. Lady remayning a Virgin The fifth Fe●st and yet now made a mother by bringing forth the light of the world out of her humility obserued the legall number of dayes for her retirement and keeping all the other accustomed rites went vp to Hierusalem there to make her great offer of Thankes-giuing for the high dignity bestowed vpon her Quia fecit ei magna qui potens est Luke 1 because he that is mighty hath done great things vnto her For great benefittes great thankes must be giuen And according to her pouerty purity she offered a paire of Turtle Doues the best gift she could make instructing vs to offer vp to God
the best we haue since indeed we giue it not but restore it to him of whome we haue receaued it Consider that the great giftes offered to her Blessed Sōne by the three Kings were by the B. Virgin and her Spouse speedily giuen away in almes since two Doues were now the best gift they had to offer Holy Simeon receauing his Sauiour into his armes singeth Nunc dimittis Luc 2. now thou doest dismisse thy seruant O Lord ●ecause mine eyes haue seene thy ●aluation This holy Saynt ha●ing seene his Sauiour desired not to liue any longer Here set●ing before thine eyes Happines which is the vision of God the Miseries of this world make reso●utions worthy of thy choice Our B. Lady hearing both holy Simeon Anne to prophesy of the greatnes of our Sauiour stood withall humility in the Temple conuerting none of all these praises to her selfe who was ●udged worthy by heauē to beare ●his Sauiour of the world Lastly her behauiour towards al that were presēt in such a concourse of praises admirations was such as she endeauoured to make them esteeme of her but as of an ordinary woman who needed Purification The Assumption CHAP. VI. The sixt Feast FIRST the most happy soul● of this B Virgin separated frō her body by death is by Angelicall powers transported vp to heauen In like triumph her body by singular priuiledge is carryed vp by Angels and in all happines reunited to her soule Reflect vpon the ioy at this vnion applauded by the three Persons in the B. Trinity and all the Quiers of Angels and Saintes At the hands of her glorious Sonne she receaueth a Crowne of eternall blisse She is placed at the right hand of her Sonne and proclaimed Queene of Heauen Lastly endeauour thou by al meanes possible to make this Queene of glory adored also heere on earth by drawing and exhorting as many as thou canst to deuote themselues vnto her And thus by these six feasts I haue giuen thee some light how to apply any mystery to thy Beads But whē thou art growne expert in this kind of Prayer thou mayest either saying thy whole Beads meditate vpon one only mystery as for example the Conception of this B. Virgin or else th●u mayest apply to euery decade or ten one of these mysteries so in thy six decades thou shalt runne through all the six mysteries And thus much concerning the Beads consisting ordinarily of six decades Now we will passe vnto the Rosary consisting of 15. Decades or 150. Aues and of 15. Pater nosters OF THE ROSARY THE Rosary The Rosary which diuers Sodalities both Religious secular daily vse is made of 15. D●cades or fifteen tymes 10. Aues and 15. Pater nosters is deuided into three Crownes ech crowne containing fiue Dacades of Aues and fiue Pater nosters And to proceed with the first fiue we will apply vnto it the fiue Ioyfull mysteries to wit The Annuntiation Visitation The Natiuity of our Lord his Presentation his finding in the Temple Which fiue mysteries are to be applyed to the first Crown ech mystery to a seuerall Decade Of the first Ioyfull mystery which is the Annuntiation CHAP I. CALL to mind the History of the Annuntiation The first ioyful mistery Luke 1. as it is recorded by the Euangelist in which narration six points are remarkable First the Consultatiō made in heauen by the three Diuine Persons in Trinity how they might assist man and bring him againe into the way of saluation and no other meanes was found more expedient then that the second Person of the B. Trinity should become man Consider then the obedience of the Angell in vndertaking and discharging the Embassage he was willed to beare vnto the Virgin Mary dwelling in N●zareth as also how the Angell carryed himselfe towardes this chosen Queene he discoursing with her in an humble low voice briefly and grauely after the manner of treating with Princes Likewise her Virginall modesty bein● troubl●d at the merueilous speaches of the Angell and her deep si ence Luke 1. considering with her selfe what a kind of salutation this was Againe Her singular wisdome ●aving with her selfe Quomodo fiet istud How shall this be done conioyned with a purpose of purity because she knew not man Also her holy feare Feare not O Mary thou hast found grace before God for that the holy Ghost shall come vpon thee and the power of the highest shall ouer-shadow thee Lastly contemplate vpon the meruailous fruitfulnes promised her in giuing her consent The obedience of the B. V●rgin highly revvarded Behold thou shalt conceaue and bring forth a Sonne and thou shalt call his name Iesus End this point with admiration at the B. Virgins exceeding promptnes and humility Behold the handmayd of our Lord her courage Let it be done vnto me Her faith and confidence According to thy word and lastly her deuout thankes-giuing My soule doth magnify our Lord. The Visitation CHAP. II. The secōd ioyfull my●tery SET before thine eyes the first pilgrimage of our B. Lady in visiting her Cosin S. Elizabeth mother of S. Iohn the Baptist wherin consider these six points applying one to euery Decade First contemplate the B. will of God to be that this iourny should then be vndertaken by the B. Virgin to sanctify S. Iohn by her gracious salutation The B. Virgin knowing it to be the will of God that she should take this iourney sodenly without any delay rose vp went into the mountaines by the which the holy Fathers vnderstand perfection in all vertue at which the whole Euāgelical law aymeth 3. Make thy selfe present and see the pious strife betweene these happy women allied neerer in vertue then in bloud endeauouring each one to exceed in acts of humility and charity 4. If vve be forced to discouer our ovvne vvorth let vs do it as rather be●ng mortified th●n pleased to make knovvne vnto oth rs vvh re our measure lyeth The glorious mother of God although she could not hide from her Cosin the greatnes wherto she was called yet her humble manner of disclosing it was such as could not proceed but from the mother of God replenished with all grace and vertue 5. Then consider the vertues practised by the B. virgin for the tyme that she stayed with S. Elizabeth which was three months 6. And out of ech of these flowers sucke like an industrious Bee some sweet document and admiring this Virgin-Mothers vertues and those of S. Elizabeth namely their deuotion diligence courtesy humility most humbly demaund grace now to be both prayser and follower of their vertues and after thy death partaker of their glory The Natiuity of our Lord. CHAP. III. The third ioyfull mistery GOE and put thy selfe into the company of sheepheards and by thy humility and pouerty dispose thy selfe for the inuitatiō of Angels to go and behold in poore Bethliē the King of Kinges thy Sauiour and Reedemer
the second Person in Trinity maketh intercession chooseth his time when he knew he should mooue his Father most vnto compassion Let feare be a companion vnto thy loue in this place for as he beggeth pardon so can he begge reuenge and punish men as well as Angells 5. Our actions ought to be sutable to our words we are conuinced in our vnderstanding that the perfect imitation of our Sauiour is to forgiue our enemies if it be asked of vs whether we ought to doe it we acknowledge that we ought Let therfore our actions be conformable to our opinion by hartily and willingly for giuing our enemies imagining it to be as really it is an act of the greatest courage that may be true Fortitude consisting in the conquest of our selues 6. Lastly consider what great rewards are prepared for those that are perfect imitatours of Christ neither is this a point of high perfection or counsaile and not a commaundment for if we forgiue not our enemies we daily giue sentence against our selues desiring God to forgiue vs no otherwise then we our selues forgiue our enemies These six points apply to the six Decades of thy beads and so consequently do with the meditations following humbly beseeching the Mother of Grace to obtaine for thee those vertues which are treated of THE SECOND VVORD Amen dico tibi hodie mecum eris in Paradiso Amen I say vnto thee this day thou shalt be with me in Paradise CHAP. II. A meditation for Munday VVE gather out of the holy Scripture the Fathers who write vpon this place that of those two Theeues crucified with our Sauiour SS Amb. and Aug. vpon S. Luke lib. 3. de cons Euang. one only blasphemed him for this happy Theefe whose sorrow obtained so sudden a pardon rebuked his companion saying Neither doest thou feare God Luke 23. wheras thou art in the same damnation And we indeed iustly for we receaue worthy of our doings but this man hath done no euill And he sayd to Iesus Lord remember me when thou shalt come into thy Kingdome 1. First consider how gratefull vnto our Sauiour this act of Faith was being as it were of power to exact a ful pardon at his hands according to his promises acording to the example which he shewed in the Penitent Magdalen Lord saith this happy offender remember me Behold his singular faith in the middest of all those reproaches when our Sauiour seemed least able to help him he desireth him to remember him Imitate this faith and when humane helps appeare least then let thy recourse be most vnto this Sauiour who heareth vs soonest when we are in most distresse our prayers being then most full of confidence in him 2. No sooner had this Theefe vttered these beleeuing wordes but our B. Sauiour whose mercy was most tender being touched sayd vnto him Amen which is as much as Truly I say vnto thee this day thou shalt be with me in Paradise This act shal be sufficient to obtaine thy pardon Were thy sinnes as scarlet thy penance cooperating with my grace shall make them as white as snow Isa● 1. admiring this infinite mercy of thy Sauiour vpon the Crosse who was most glad of this poore sinners cōuersion promising vnto him presently Paradise Behold how he attends thy conuersion in like māner desirous to giue thee heauen if thou wouldest but only be sorrowfull for thine offences 3. Some good workes it is like thou hast done in thy life but probably this Theefe neuer did any as by his death the re●ard of his life appeareth Shall then one act of sorrow for his sinnes gaine him a Kingdome and thou neglecting thy conuersion after many vertuous acts dying vnrepentant for some particuler sinnes of thine loose the sight of Almighty God eternally and be tormented foreuer Differing amendment dangerous Commit not so great a madnesse but while time is giuen thee repent all shall not haue the grace to be called at the last houre for where one obtayneth it thousands are denyed it 4. Ponder the greatnes of the reward bestowed vpon this sinner for his true conuersion he is promised Paradise to wit the fruition of God Almighty and his blessed Vision the greatest and highest gift that can be bestowed vpon the best deseruing creature and from a world of calamities both of body and soule is this penitent Theefe deliuered The force of Pēnāce and brought into a Paradise of pleasures O strange alteration wrought by the powerfull hand of penance Be thou as penitent in time and by Gods grace thy pennance shal be as potent 5. Christ differreth not this reward but saith This day thou shalt be with me in Paradise a diligent rewarder of a small seruice and in this is declared the difference betweene the rewardes which the world bestoweth vpon his seruants and those which are giuen by Christ vnto his the world promiseth delights but payeth misery Christ whathe promiseth performeth giuing a Paradise to wit himselfe the seruice of the world in rewarded with lōg hopes which in the end proue vaine Christ saith This day thou shalt be with me art thou not led by a higher loue then the loue of rewards yet this very loue will teach thee to choose Christ rather then the world 6. This fortunate sinner maketh this glorious confession in the face of Christs enemies when all the Apostles fled hid themselues for feare yet as it is probable he was neuer acquainted with Christ before nor had euer heard him preach of the hundred-fold rewards promised to those that followed him Matt. 19. and yet he now cryeth our O Lord remember me when thou shalt come into thy Kingdome How soone he gaue his assent to that infused faith which was set before him The Apostles as they went towards Emaus were slow in belieuing yet this publike offender no sooner had our faith propoūded vnto him by Gods holy inspiration but he presently proclaimed that with his mouth what his hart had giuen consent vnto THE THIRD VVORD Ecce mater tua ecce filius tuus Behold thy mother Behold thy Sonne CHAP. III. BEFORE we enter into contemplation of these words let vs heare what the holy Euangelist speaketh A meditation for Tuesday Iohn 19. who will giue vs no small light And there stood beside the Crosse of Iesus his mother his mothers sister Mary of Cleophas and mary Magdalen When Iesus therfore had seene his mother the disciple standing whome he loued he sayd to his mother Woman behold thy Sonne After that he sayd to the disciple Beheld thy mother and from that houre the disciple tooke her to his owne 1. Consider that out of this third Word many fruitfull documents may be gathered as first the infinite desire that Christ had to suffer for vs and to offer vnto his heauenly Father a full and rigorons satisfaction for our offences for this cause was he willing to haue his deere
yea euen his death For hauing sayd It is consummated bowing downe his head he gaue vp the Ghost 2. Consider also with S. Chrysostome these words to haue bin sayd in regard of the power of those who had crucified him which was now consummated and ended Rom. 6. Mors ei vltra non dominabitur death shall no more insult ouer him He is freed from his laborious pilgrimage and brought againe vnto that glory which he most willingly left for our redemption The greatest sacrifice of all is now offered and consummated in which sacrifice the Priest was both God and man the Altar was the Crosse the Lambe the sacrifice the fire of this sacrifice was Charity and the fruite of it the Redemption of the world 3. Since we haue seene the exact fulfilling of the prophesies before Christ and that by this very word It is consummated all that was foretold was verified why are we so incredulous of those things which are to come and are foretold by Christ himselfe and his Prophets We haue heard of the generall punishment by water Gen. 7. and in the time of Nöe it was executed 2. Petr. We heare daily of the worlds consuming by fire at the later day and yet we liue as if we beleeued it not and with such greedines imbrace those things which if we liue to those times shal be taken out of our armes by consuming fire 4. As thou hast meditated before with holy S. Chrysostome that by this word It is consummated was vnderstood the consummation of that wearisome and dolorous pilgrimage of Christ So here consider that although it were most panifull yet it lasted but thirty three yeares a moment in regard of Eternity in which he shall possesse perpetuall ioyes The Iewes triumphed for an houre as it were ouer Iesus Iudas had an houre of content in his auarice Pilate enioyed for an houre the friendship of Augustus but how many yeares haue these already bin punished for that houres false contentment and yet their torments shal neuer end Let vs thinke them most happy who from their youth take vp the Crosse of Christ and seeke thus meritoriously to be afflicted as long they can in this life since the passions of this time so short transitory Rom. 8. are not condigne to the glory to come that shal be reuealed in vs. 5. By this word It is consummated is vnderstood the victory which Christ made ouer hell the infernall spirites when by his victorious death he tooke mankind out of the Diuels power arming vs with his grace against all assaults Since Christ our glorious Redeemer hath so vanquished our ennemy and as it were taken his sting from him why do we so often yeild our selues vnto one who is so weake hauing him on our side whose very name putteth him to flight Since so many by thy assistance of Christ Iesus our Captaine haue giuen this enemy so many ouerthrowes why should we feare why should we doubt but to be able to do the like hauing the like helpes 6. Conuince thine vnderstanding with this former argument Lib. 8. Confes c. 11. as S. Augustin did placing before himselfe many Saintes who had giuen this ouerthrow to the enemy and among the rest he set before him diuers tender Virgins and sayd vnto himselfe Why canst not thou do what these and these haue done These and these could not haue dōe these things without the help of their Lord and God Heere say vnto thine enemy It is consummated thou shalt haue no more power in me since all thy power proceedeth from my selfe no man receauing wounds but from his owne hands THE SEAVENTH VVORD Pater in manus tuas cōmendo spiritum meum Father into thy hands I commend my spirit CHAP. VII THAT our redeemer Iesus endured all these afflictiōs most voluntarily A meditation for Saturday not by constraint or violently forced is most euident since he needed not haue suffered vnles he would therefore if euer action were free this was it the which in no part was forced and the more free it was the more it bindeth vs to loue him to deale also more freely with him that dealt thus freely with vs. And that these sufferings proceeded out or a naturall propension he had to suffer for vs appeareth out of his manner of suffering for he endured most for vs in the end of his passion In finem dilexit nos Ioan. 13. he loued vs to the end there receauing more paines for vs then euer The condition of al naturall motion is to be greater in the end then in the beginning which proueth well to our purpose for the Euangelist here recordeth Luc. 23. that Iesus cryed out with a loud voice which before he was not wont to do Father into thy hands I commend my spirit and saying this he gaue vp the Ghost 1. Consider the literall sense of these words he saith Father and with great right because he was his obedient Sonne euen vnto death Into thy hands that is vnto thine vnderstanding knowing al things and vnto thy will able to do all thngs I do commend as it were giuing vnto thee as a depositum or pledge that it may be restored me when due time shall come My spirit that is my corporall life which I recommend vnto thee My Father that thou wilt shortly restore it to my body which now it leaueth 2. Consider why our Sauiour shewed this care of his body recommending vnto his heauenly Father his spirit that it might not long leaue the body destitute Our Sauiour was not sollicitous for his soule for he knew that was already most blessed and needed none to defend it he only had care of that which had need of care teaching vs to prouide and be sollicitous for that part of vs which requireth our care to wit our soule by often recōmending it into the hands of him who created it and without whose helping grace it would degenerate stray from that end vnto which it was created As for our bodies the least care is to be had since do we what we can they will fall into dust The end of pampering our bodies and the more we pamper them the greater banquets we make for wormes and perhaps fuell for hell-fire 3. Let vs contemplate vpon the wonderfull accidents which happened immediatly after these words were pronounced Matt. 27. And behold the Veyle of the Temple was rent in two peces from the toppe euen to the bottome by which was signified the opening of heauen vnto mankind the Veyle that tooke from vs the beholding of the Holy of Holies being rent in two and man made capable of the blessed vision of God It was rent from the toppe to the bottome to shew that this holy vision of God was granted to all from the highest to the lowest but as our Sauiour saith There are many māsions in the house of my Father Iohn 14. which signifieth the
and thou wilt not sinne for euer OF THE FOVRE last Things Of Death CHAP. I. OMITTING the diuers explications which deuout mē haue made of Death let vs only consider that there is a good and a bad death the one an entrance into ioyes the other into torments Of those who dye a happy death we haue this Beatification out of holy Scripture Apoc. 14. Beati mortui qui in Domino moriuntur Blessed are the dead who dye in our Lord where I would haue thee note that they are tearmed Blessed who are dead and afterwards dye Blessed are the dead who dye not the liuing whence we may conclude that it is a Blessednes to begin betimes to dy to this world and not to be found liuing when death shall come Of the other death the Royall Prophet telleth vs what it is Psal 33. Mors peccatorum pessima the death of sinners is the worst and the reason is because sinners take vpon them to liue to much in this life and neglecting the memory of death thinke there shal be no end of enioying their pleasures To this effect the same Prophet saith Vidi impium superexaltatum et eleuatum super cedros Libani Psal 36. et transiui et ecce non erat c. I haue seene saith he the impious man highly exalted and aduanced as the Cedars of Libanus and I passed by behold he was not and I sought him and his place was not found and indeed happy it were for the sinner if after this life he had no place or being since both his place being shal be so miserable 1. Consider mans nature to be such that it cannot possibly auoyd death it remayning as a punishment for that sinne which we all consented vnto in our first parent therfore that thou mayst the better cōsider this death imagine thy selfe who must once dye to lye vpon thy death bed lamented by thy freinds despaired of by Phisitians and expecting hourly to giue vp thy last breath 2. Then thou wilt easily perceaue thy folly in spending so much time which was giuen thee to serue God in the seruice of the world in following thine owne vnlawfull appetites and reiecting Gods holy inspirations Then thou wilt make many purposes of satisfying for thy sinnes Make vse of time of liuing a more exemplar life of abandoning euill company of resisting foule sinnes and the like but alas thy time is short thou hast many purposes but where is the time to performe them in After this life there is no time of satisfaction or of merit Assure thy selfe that these discourses thy soule will haue at that terrible hower therefore vse time which is now so mercifully giuen thee De imitat Christ lib 2. Cap. 25. and do now what thou wouldest then haue wished to haue done 3. This is the hower of indifferency in which thy eyes being opened thou shalt see things as they are not painted and falsly set forth by thy preiudicate affection Here what thou esteemedst in thy life time beautifull will seeme foule what then was most pleasant thou wilt not now endure to behold Since by the consideration of death we grow so iudicious to esteeme euery thing as it deserueth would to God we did alwayes carry about with vs the memory therof how sincerely should we then serue God and performe the end for which we were sent into this world how innocently should we liue how charitably one to another how diligēt in performing many good works and how strong in resisting sinne 4. Contemplate with thy selfe being in this agony thy life being more and more despayred off that saying of the Prophet Et qui iuxta me erant de longe steterunt Psal 37. and they who were neere me stood a farre of from me euen thy very freinds will leaue thee shewing their greatest affection by shedding a few vnprofitable or faygned teares for thee and being thus left of all consider what the friendship of this world is which is ended by death if it last so long make thy freindship therfore with the Saints and Angels who will neuer leaue thee but chiefly make freindship with good Works gather as many togeather as thou canst whilest thou art in perfect health for they are those who are to be thy chiefest friends who will not feare to appeare with thee before that seuere Iudge alleadging strong arguments for thee will bring thee to eternall happines 5. It is a matter of great moment to imprint in thy soule the consideration for what place we were created If we perswade our selues we were made for this world we are much deceaued for placing thy selfe as thou diddest before in the point of death thou shalt see thou wert created for an other world which is to last for euer It is but the body the meaner part of thee that dieth now thy soule is immortall The different cōdition of the sou●e and the body and must either ioy or lament eternally If it depart from the body into blysse it is because it ruled the body and made that sensuall part obey vnto reason but if thy soule departing from thy body be condemned to eternall paines it is because thy soule behaued it selfe like a slaue obeying her seruant and permitting that to comaund which was created to obey 6. If the placing of thy selfe neere vnto death hath made thee more capable to vnderstand the danger of thine estate seriously thinke with thy selfe and without any art of perswasion that thou mayst be neerer thy death then thou imaginest from which thou art no moment free There is no actiō no place no time in which death hath not surprized men Think seriously vpō these things for it may be these are the last good purposes that euer thou shalt make and the last good worke that euer thou shalt do so thinke of al thinges whatsoeuer thou doest Let vs think euery action to be our lost it may be this shal be the last Prayer that euer thou shalt make do it therfore deuoutly In taking thy refectiō thinke this may be the last time that euer thou shalt haue need to feed that carkasse of thine do it therfore with sobriety In conuersing with men thinke this may be the last tim that euer thou shalt discourse let it be therfore of some vertuous subiect and so deale with all thy actions thinking they shal be thy last and by this meanes thou shalt make them to be thy best After thou hast contemplated vpon these six points and applyed thy six Decade vnto them earnestly beseeching the Mother of Grace to increase in thee the memory of Death and to assist thee in that agony I would haue thee peruse this ensuyng table which will more fully informe thee of the nature of death and make the same more familiar vnto thee OF DEATH 1. The Necessity Proceedeth from 1. Reuelation Naturall reason Experience 2. The Vncertainty Proceedeth from 2. The Time The Place The
the same the which although it worke vpon the best subiect that may be yet doth it require a chang If we were comfirmed in grace it is certaine the thoughts of heauen and of those high Beauties would be euer profitable vnto vs but being as we are lutea vasa vessels of earth which are easily broken we must walke betweene loue and feare Ioy and Sorrow S. Paul himselfe maketh this cleere 1. Cor. 12. Least saith he the greatnes of my reuelations might extoll me there was giuen me an angell of Sathan to buffet me 1. Consider therfore first the place where these vnfortunate soules lye despayring who vnmindful of the world to come and eternity Luke 16. receperunt bona in vita sua enioyed their pleasures in this world and in the middest of all their prosperity when they least thought of it Venit mors super illos Psal 54. et descenderunt in infernum viuentes death came vpon them and they descended quicke into hell Frame to thy selfe an exceeding vast place capable to receaue infinite millions of soules which is rightly tearmed A land of misery and dar●knesse Ioh. 10. where the shadow of death is no order but euerlasting horrour inhabitet● where nothing is heard but weeping and gnashing of teeth Matt. 8. mingled with lamentable voyces of despayre and intollerable blasphemies against their iust Iudge who deseruedly condemned them for their demerites to that place of eternall punishment 2. Reflect vpon the torments inflicted vpon these Caytiffes and behold with what malice those infernall Spirits the instruments of Gods wrath impose those vnspeakable torments vpon men taking this as a part of reuenge against mankind for possessing their seates in heauen Behold those soules how diuersly they behaue themselues in these endles miseries some sighing others weeping some rauing and crying hideously by reason of their paines others blaspheming against God and cursing most bitterly the houre of their natiuity Behold others in all their paines out of very enuy and malice silent not being able to expresse the hatred they beare to God nor the miseries they endure Oh Christian soule who art yet liuing and in a state capable to shun these vnspeakeable pains of Hell how canst thou truly thinke of these thinges and yet commit sinne so freely by which thou art made subiect to all these torments 3. Amongst all these afflictions two exceed if they may not be tearmed all of them to exceed to wit the cogitatiō of what they haue lost and the worme of conscience which are the greatest torments they haue All Deuines conclude that the paine of the sense which these soules feele in the middest of these most cruel and neuer-dying flames is but dull in regard of the sharpnes of of the memory of what they haue lost those fallen Angels informing euery other soule for their increase of torment what they haue lost by loosing heauen Heere the vnderstanding of those ioyes procureth intollerable griefe for ioy in it selfe delighteth none but those who either possesse it or at the least are in hope to possesse it but these soules neither possesse it nor yet are in hope euer to do but are banished from the most blessed sight of God for all eternity being at the end of an hundred thousand thousands of yeares as farre of from the end of this endlesse punishment as now 4. Consider the griefe which proceedeth frō the guilt of Conscience which like a gnawing worme lyeth continually tormenting the hart of a damned creature Heere is a continuall warre and discussion of matters passed in this life of Graces rec●aued from the mercifull hand of God Almighty of reiecting the same of the opportunity offered of leauing that sinfull course and imbracing a vertuous life of so many purposes made of amendement and the deferring therof Oh how will this worme of Conscience teare the hart of a sinner when he shall see himselfe condemned out of his owne mouth and were it possible for him to dye this thought would end him but these greifes are endles hauing a subiect to worke vpon that neuer endeth heere harts may wither but neuer dye bodyes burne but neuer consume 5. If thou hast seene in the Considerations of Heauen what a soule would vndergoe to be made partaker of those ioyes hauing once knowne them before imagine heere on the contrary what one of these vnfortunate soules would endure to be freed from this damnation if it might returne to this life againe what wonderfull alteration should we see in that soule former pleasures turned into teares of penance the former losse of time into an exact obseruation of howers and a most perfect imployment therof all banquetings would be turned into fastings rich apparell into hayrecloth what a strait guard would be placed ouer al the sēses not so much as the least thought of rebellion in thē escaping without some seuere punishmēt Thus would this soule do if it were to liue againe but this cannot be heard the irreuocable sentence is passed and the most iust Iudge will not recall it but for euer and euer world without end this soule is to be tormented and all such wishes a●e most vaine and serue for nothing but for greater torment since they can neuer be obtayned 6. Lastly returne vnto thy selfe O Christian soule and thinking seriously vpon these things as those which most of al import thee amēd thy life which led in the offence of God conducteth thee directly vnto these endles tormēts If thou wouldest examine thine actions by eternity it would make thee no doubt a blessed Saint in heauen and free thee from the torments of hell Thinke with thy selfe which thought may be made in a moment when thou vndertakest any action doth this action this thought or this word I am ready to vtter deserue the loue or hatred of Almighty God if it deserue loue reioyce with thy selfe and go forward in it if hatred leaue it fly from it as from a serpent that would enthrall thee and bring thee to this eternity of torment O eternity eternity that men would oftener thinke vpon thee ANOTHER BRIEFE WAY HOW TO SAY THE BEADES Wherein is contained the whole life of our B. Lady Taken out of holy Scripture and the Doctours of the Church applying to euery Pater Noster one of the gifts of the Holy Ghost and to euery Aue Maria one of these ensuing considerations or briefe eleuations of the mind I. PATER NOSTER The gift of Wisdome 1. AVE Maria. In the beginning of the world she is promised to mankind A w●m●n shall bruise thy h ad 2. She is prefigured in many holy women as in Iudith Hester and others 3. She is foretould to her parēts by the Angell Conceaued without Originall sinne 4. She is borne full of grace aboue all creatures 5. Her Natiuity reioyceth the whole world 6. After three yeares she is presented in the Temple 7. She goeth vp the ●5 stepps of the Temple