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A07489 The heauenly pro:gresse. By Rich: Middleton Middleton, Richard, d. 1641. 1617 (1617) STC 17872; ESTC S114542 286,451 938

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most pleasant refreshing 3 The third thing which I proposed to bee considered in this first part of the true ruele and art of seruing God after the instructions and exercises for the reparation of the slaughter which sinne hath made in the soule is the loue of God which being the fire which God would haue euer burning vpon the Altar of our hearts all that we haue yet spoken of the reparation of the soule is onely directed vnto it And if any will know of what dignity this loue of God is hee shall see that whatsoeuer hath beene spoken of the reparation and clensing of the soule is but little to the acting of so worthy and sublime an enterprise For of so great excellency is the loue of God that none of those blessed Spirits nor any other created thing or which can be created is able to doe a more soueraigne worke For which cause the Son of God calls this the great first commandement Nay say that all the labours and powers of Angels and Men together were in any one Angell or Man yet were they not all able to doe a worke more excellent then to loue God Nor can any creature sufficiently so loue this our GOD as his goodnesse and worthinesse requireth Now as this tract of the loue of God followeth that of the reparatiō of the soule because those things are very fit to the obtaining of this loue so this of the loue of God is placed before that of the loue of our neighbours and the loue of our selues because from this loue of God onely proceeds the loue of our neighbours and the loue of our selues 1. Therefore of the loue of God 2. Of our Neighbours And 3. of our selues 1 This loue of God being so glorious and ioy ous a thing when it is expressed in words what ioy I and glory shall it bee to seele it and how much more to doe it This is the holy worke of God I say the holy and whole worke and labour of God for whatsoeuer God worketh withall his infinit powers is onely to loue himselfe so much as his Maiesty deserueth and is worthy that is infinitly For out of his owne infinit goodnesse and excellency he is infinitly to be beloued nor is there any excellency in heauen or earth which is not much more his then it is his that possesseth it and from them all hee hath infinit glory and loues it and reioyceth and glorieth in it and would also that wee should loue it thinke vpon it and reioyce in it seeing nothing is so consonant to equity as that with all our powers we should loue him from the louing of whom we must neuer cease albeit wee had infinit powers so to doe Therefore are we to giue God thankes that in louing himselfe infinitly he supplies by his owne powers what is defectiue in euery one of vs. Let vs euer reioyce in louing him who is so great dignity that neuer ceasing to glory at his excellencies yet that which we doe is nothing if it bee compared to that hee deserueth For of so great glory and Maiesty is God that he stands in no need of our seruice but onely requires it because it is profitable of vs. This onely hee desireth that we loue him and reloyce at his good things for this is his owne holy worke Therefore he would haue all men with all their strength to doe that which hee doth with all his strength And for that which remaines he stands no neede it no nor of this neither but that it is good and iust and vnto vs glorious and therefore hee so much desireth it that hee laide downe his life for it that so by dying he might prouoke vs to loue him Besides that there are other things found in the Scriptures which are by him commanded to bee desired that is for this end because they are helps to this loue and to omit them would bee a great hinderance to it For neither are the vices which are prohibited any other thing then the inordinate loue of vaine things which doe occupie that place which is diputed onely to the loue of GOD. Not doe vertuaes serue to any other purpose but to despose the soule to this loue yet are they so necessary therunto that it were great presumption to thinke to obtaine it without the mighty exercise of such vertues That therefore wee may fitly speake of this pretious loue wee will first declare the various manner of louers but withall iudging that best which is most sublime and high To which purpose wee may vse this example Therefore touching the variety of louers we must obserue that which by the experience of many was a testimony vnto them when they had attained a greater knowledge of truth namely that they had a long time loued God as a most sweete Lord who had communicated himselfe to them as a liberall benefactor in whose seruice they were delighted and often had asked of him many benefits with great delectation in the contemptation of his bounty and of the knowledge of his excellent graces which they asked of him and that often they came vnto him as to the fountaine in which they found so great sweetnesse as that they thought there was nothing a wanting to their loue of God For they thought that the greatnesse of that sweetnesse which they felt in the sensitiue appetite was nothing else but the greatnesse of that loue And would to GOD that all men who doe not loue God did so loue him Yet God forbid that those who loue God should bee content with this loue although it be very good and so good as that it sufficeth thus far that for certaine daies beginners doe exercise themselues therein for they may so easily come to that more excellent manner of louing God which followeth It an argument that this loue I haue spoken of is fraile seeing that hee who so loueth assoone as that sweetnesse is a wanting or gone goes on with an abiect minde in the things of God and is so ouercome of the frailties of his minde as if he neuer had had any such loue For hee doth so much procure vnto himselfe corporall delights as to feede on delicate viands to drinke the most pleasant licours to weare most gorgeous clothes and such other vanities pleasing to his appetite sensuall friendships honours fauours euen as he doth that hath neuer begun to taste the things that are of God Nay oft times at such time as hee is visited with such an apprehension of sweetnesse hee is taken vp with many vaine affections and very sensuall being drawne thereunto by the beauty and pleasures of some persons Againe hee desires to be seene and to be accounted deuoute and grieues if hee bee not reputed for such nor doth hee reioyce when he vnderstands that others are accounted more feruent in deuotion and such other blemishes hee casts vpon himselfe all which are so abiect that they suffer not the society of that excellent
which thou hearest or readest giue thy selfe to vnderstand them and certifie thy selfe of all doubts Twelfthly vse all diligence to commend to the Treasure-house of thy minde as much as possibly thou canst euen as one that is desirous to fill a vessell Thirteenthly seeke not after things beyond and aboue thy reach And following these steps thou shalt carry and bring forth on thy shoulders as long as thou liuest both boughes and fruites most profitable into the Vine-yard of the Lord of Sabaoths these things if thou dost follow thou shalt attaine to the thing thou affectest Now hauing laid these short grounds of procuring the vertues tending to sanctification and holy perfection as an entrance to the sequent Treatise you may remember that in the front of this last part hauing said that the ignorance of a certaine methode and Art whereby to direct vs to the attaining of Christian perfection and the knowledge of a right seruing of God was the onely cause why so many Christians came so farre short of their duty drift heerein as that scarce one was to bee found who had made any competent passage into the habite of any one vertue I must now as my first ground of this Discourse according to my promise set forth this methode and Art of seruing God aright to euery mans view Wherein for our better proceeding I will first giue some more generall instructions to direct vs in all our actions secondly some more particular for the repayring of that slaughter which sins haue made in mans soule thirdly I will speake of the loue of God and of the things which a man ought to loue in which loue consists the fulfilling of the Law and of all our good works 1 If it be true which S. Ambrose writeth that the ignorance of order and manner whereby things are to be done doth much trouble and deface the quality of ones desert and worke and that hee is not to bee thought to haue the full knowledge of any thing who knoweth what is to bee done but yet knoweth not the order whereby hee is to proceed therein Then it is manifest that it profites very little that a man do know all that is written concerning the seruice of God if withall hee bee ignorant how and by what meanes the same is to bee put in practise And albeit all Arts and knowledge of good things doe slow from the supreme Artificer God and many are enlighted with his goodnesse and preuented with the blessings of sweetnesse yet are wee not for that cause to omit our duty nor is the obligation of doing what is in our power dissolued in searching into his Precepts and Will and such things as are necessary for vs to the end that we may doe what is pleasant in his sight to which purpose this present methode is necessary wherby wee may know and bee able to put in practise all those excellent things which the holy Scripture teacheth vs. Nor let any man thinke it superfluous that wee shall haue instructions giuen vs helping to the seruice of God seeing the whole Scripture witnesseth it and the Apostle expressely that wee are Gods fellow-Labourers 1. Cor. 3. But wee cannot say that he doth truely or sufficiently helpe that doth not helpe so much as hee can and ought to helpe Nor is it any thing else for vs to bee helpers vnto God then to moue the soule in all our workes as much as wee can to repaire the grieuous losses which sinne hath brought into the soule and purely to loue God aboue all Besides there is no cause why any should excuse themselues in that the annointing of the Holy Ghost doth teach all things and so there should bee no vse nor need of any Art or methode whereby to learne the seruing of God For that is true but yet so as that wee bee not wanting vnto the Spirit and to our selues in searching and labouring by all holy meanes to come to that knowledge For the holy Ghost teacheth not those that are altogether vn-willing much lesse such as reluct and striue against it Nor let any thinke this sweete yoke of the Lord to bee heauy in spending so much time to attaine so high and heauenly wisedome whereby to vse this methode of seruing God aright For if vsually men spend three foure or more yeares in Grammer Logicke and other inferiour Arts nay sometimes all their liues if they study to bee perfect in it how much better shall hee bestow his whole life to learne perfectly this most heauenly Art to teach vs which our most deere and heauenly Maister Iesus Christ came downe from heauen vnto vs and with so much labour and paine performed it therefore let not any bee discouraged in following this course if hee finde in himselfe many disabilities for herein it chanceth to him as to an infant for hee hauing a soule hath not yet the vse of reason and hauing a body feete and legges yet cannot goe but when hee beginnes to grow and to moue the members of the body hee can goe yet for all that with much difficulty and often falling vntill increasing in yeares and by continuall exercise hee goes so freely that whē he listeth he can runne The same thing falleth out in holy exercises whilst one beginnes purely to serue God for albeit the soule bee found yet it is so bound and burdened so without power wherby to moue it selfe in this iourney to God as the whole Scripture declareth that we cannot walke at all and if wee bee moued something towards it yet it is with such difficulty faintnesse and fallings as that our walke is but a very standing still if not rather a very going backewards but when we shall haue practised this methode and meanes of seruing God for some short time wee shall grow to such strength therein that wee shall doe things which before wee durst not hope for and shall so runne through these high and heauenly iournies as that our motions may rather bee called the motions of Angels flying then of men walking on the earth And it is much to bee forewarned that no man make any pretext or excuse of seruing God in this ensuing manner as contenting himselfe with the ordinary manner of seruing God to bee sufficient to bring him to saluation for it is the will of God euen our sanctification 1. Thess 4. and not our sanctification for some short time or in some one part of body or soule but during the whole life and throughout the whole Spirit soule and body Seeing then that the louers of the world are neuer satisfyed with riches honours and pleasures but still wish and seeke for more yea God commanding the contrary neither let vs bee content with present graces and vertues but labour for an increase of all graces and of that Crowne of glory which wee daily expect seeing God so earnestly desires that wee should obtaine it and if so bee our mindes and appetites bee not therefore set
consults with reason and finding that the thing is conueniēt for it it is then freely mooued to will and desire it Therefore the Philosopher said that nothing was desired that was not foreknowne Whence we collect that the knowledge of the soule which wee haue in our vnderstanding is like a light whereby the will may see what it ought to desire This therefore being presupposed we must chiefely regard that to doe well and perfectly the vnderstanding doe not erre in knowledge which bceing had presently the will is mooued to desire that which is so knowne but if the vnderstanding doe erre which often comes to passe by the malice which blindeth vs or happily it erreth not but the will through the liberty it hath to euill will not follow that it knowes to be good then man falls into all kind of mischiefe therefore omitting many things which may serue for this purpose this is chiefely to be obserued that we be most attentiue euer when we will vse the vnderstanding that when we would desire to do any good worke or to get a disposition thereunto namely to be despised of men to flee all delights of the world which godly men euer abandoned in these and the like which seeme to be grieuous vnto vs to doe or desire by and by wee must vse the helpe of the vnderstanding whereby wee consider and apprehend these things as most pretious and acceptable to God and such as doe accompany the godly men to heauen without which he is euer out of his way to that happinesse Which assoone as it knoweth to be such then the will takes courage to will and imbrace that thing and also to practise it For albeit the will as it is assisted by Gods Spirt worketh sweetly yet often the difficulty and sharpenesse of the thing so deters it that it fayleth to worke omitting the duty it is bound vnto but as we indeuour to make way vnto it by the vnderstanding as I haue said it will assume such courage and strength that the excellency of the worke being knowne albeit most painfull it will desire to do it and almost with as great facility will doe it as that thing which it naturally desireth Hee that workes after this manner shall easily become a man of singuler vertue and shall make a wonderfull repaire in his soule of the slaughter and ruine which sinne hath there made and shall also with great facility doe that which maketh men happy both in earth and heauen namely know in a great measure the wonderfull things of God and knowing to loue them and louing to reioyce in them contemning all earthly ioyes and pleasures for them 6 Instruction That God is pleased to giue to all his Saints and such as from the heart seeke to serue him such a strength of will whereby they may both desire loue refuse detest euery thing in a great measure which either helps forwards or hinders their saluation This is surely to be knowen of all as the chiefe foundation of all this discourse and of all holinesse of life conteyning a memorable Cannon of the freedome strength of will which God by his Holy Spirit hath renewed and repayred in the soules of his faithful seruants and so rowsing vp the soule from a dead sleepe and spiritual lethargie and benummednesse But here let no man deceiue himselfe as though this freedome of will were naturall and in his owne power for without the goodnesse of God 2. Cor. 3. wee cannot thinke a good thought as of our selues How much lesse can wee will or worke it But presupposing this wee say it is in mans power to desire or not to desire any thing which hee iudgeth to be desired or refused and that to this or that end as often as hee listeth as for the purpose There is no man but he may desire to be dis-reputed and dis-esteemest of men albeit thing to some men be difficult to incline vnto he may also to diuerse ends desire it and make choice of these ends as he listeth For a man may desire it thereby to obtaine the modesty of the minde which is a good end he may also affect it to the end that in something he may be like the Sonne of God which is yet a better end and he may wish it that by abiection contept he may be so disposed to God-wards that God may find in him an acceptable obedience by perfect loue charity this is the best end of all the rest Now to giue an example of refusing to will and desire a thing a man may omit and refuse and not desire to be esteemed or to be he loued before other men and that to the same ends which wee haue spoken albeit by corruption of nature he be inclined hereunto greatly to desire to be esteemed and reputed in like manner as it is in euery mans power in some degree whom Gods spirit hath sanctified to desire or not to desire any thing so is it to doe the same as often as he will bend his will and vse the holy meanes thereunto Yea euery houre as by how much oftner hee inclines and inforces his will to desire or not to desire so much sooner shall he extinguish in the soule all vitious habits and ingender those vertuous For better declaration whereof let it be remarkeable that to produce the act of willing the thing which we abhor we must consider that God is hereby serued in that we doe desire this thing and incline ourwils vnto it and as it were vse violence to the will to effect it euen as the sicke desires the bitter potion because it brings health with it which yet he naturally hateth because it is bitter But the act of not desiring that which naturally wee wish and effect is whilst considering that the thing is not acceptable● to God nor profitable for vs we incline and in some sort inforce the will that it should not effect and desire it And this shall be truly not to desire when wee inforce the will albeit there remain a certaine repugnancy of sensuality as we see it fall out in the sick man who will not eat the meat albeit hee haue an appetite to it because it is hurtfull to him and it is something profitable for him to be vnwilling to eat it albeit the inordinate appetite hee hath to that meat be not taken away So we see that we may produce the acts of vertue as often as wee will being assisted by the mighty working of Gods holy spirit But we must consider that besides the continuall care we ought to haue of exercising the will to desire the good things that are to be desired and to omit and refuse the euill whereby the euill habits being rooted vp we may plant those that are good it concernes vs much most often to vse this present instruction whereby to restraine those first motions which do much confront and impugne euen men much giuen to vertue or
with me euen where I am that they bee one as wee are one I in them and thou in me euen that they may be one in vs. These are some of the ends which wee must set before vs when wee come to celebrate this most holy communion There are others who prouiding for the more vnlearned sort and the frailty of memory doe draw frō these seuen petitions of the Lords praier seuen ends and considerations sit to be obserued of such as come to the holy communion which they distingush according to seuen daies of the weeke assigning one to euery day Thus the 1. day thou shalt come with the affection of a faithfull seruant desiring that the name of God may bee hallowed and sanctified of all and may be honoured of all nations 2 Thou shalt put on the affection of a sonne and desire that the Kingdome of God and the inheritance of thy heauenly father may come vnto thee and all that call vpon his name 3 Thou shalt take vnto thee the affection of a spouse intreating that as in heauen so in thee and in all earthly things Gods will may be fulfilled 4 Thou shalt thinke thy selfe most needy and shalt come with a beggers affection that in some sort thou maist bee fitted to eate the heauenly bread and that thou maist daily receiue the breade of Gods word and the bread of celestiall helpes to liue holily 5 Thou shalt put on the affection of a sinner and beholding thy selfe intangled with thy sinnes thou shalt make hast to this heauenly banquet that thou maist obtaine forgiuenesse of thy sinnes 6 Considering thy imbecility and touched with the affection of a man who is inclosed with most puissant aduersaries thou shalt begge to bee deliuered from the enemies of God thine enemies spirituall and temporall 7 Feeling thy selfe to be prone to all euill and propense to all kinde of vices and Sathan euer more ready to assault thee thou shalt come to this sacred conduite of graces that thou maist be requited from all true euils namely Satan sinne and all the miseries of this life Some there are who not vnprofitably doe order their intention frō the consideration of the 7 words of our Sauiour on the crosse 1 He said Father forgiue them Luk. 23. for they know not what they do And they imitating our Sauiour must adorne themselues with charity and pray as well for their enemies 2 He said to the theefe Very I say vnto thee Luk. 23. this day shalt thou be with mee in paradise And they allured by the largesse of so great a promise come to the communion that they may conceiue hope and draw nere to the reward of glory 3 Hee said to his mother Io. 19. behold thy Son and to his disciple behold thy mother and they compelled by their beggary and misery come to his holy Sacrament that they by his prouidence may be prouided of all necessaries 4 He said I thirst therfore they seeke out of this blessed mystery Io. 19. an ardent desire of perfection and thirst of righteousnesse 5 He cried and out of the loue of a most beloued Son Matth. 27. complained that hee was forsaken therefore they approach this Sacrament that in all pressures and temptations they may know that the help of God is at hand 6 He testified his obedience saying Io. 19. it is finished Therefore they celebrat the cōmunion that by a cōstant obediēce of cōmandemēts they may happily finish their course 7 At lēgth he cōmended his most holy spirit into the hāds of his Father Luk. 23. and they desire the vnion of the soule vnto God that he would be pleased to ioyne thē by loue to their Father and most louing Lord and Husband But whether thou wilt imitate any of these or some other of thy owne inuention I leaue it at thy choice onely labour that thou come to this holy sacrament with a most pure actuall intention of pleasing God of coupling thy selfe vnto him by loue 3 Now followeth the stirring vp of the deuotion which is the third thing in this preparation This is stirred vp by an attentiue meditation of this sacred mistery the power whereof is so great to catch and inwrap the soules of men with loue that they must be stony or rather brasen soules which at the presence of so great a fire melt not In this mystery there are infinit things to bee meditated but I will reduce all to three points namely First who it is that commeth vnto vs. Secondly vnto whom he commeth Thirdly for what cause hee commeth I call it comming because be is neuer absent from his owne ordinance but commeth with his effectuall graces to replenish the soules of the worthy receiuers Euery one of these points may bee dilated by the number of seauen that by the weeke they may serue by distinct reason to dispose the soule Who commeth in this Sacrament Christ with all his graces to bee ioyned vnto mee To whom commeth he to me a despicable man who am not worthy to bee present at his holy Sacrament or present my selfe before him For what cause comes hee Not to seeke any good to himselfe but that he might giue vnto me his whole Church yea the whole world innumerable good things 1 Who is it that commeth Christ a King receiued with this acclamation Blessed is the King of Israell that commeth in the name of Lord. Io. 12. To whom it is a small thing to be king of men seeing he is a King of the whole world A King gentle and meeke who comes to reigne not that hee might fleece and poll his subiects but that hee might teach righteousnesse and with most abundant saluation saue his people Hence it is written Behold thy King will come vnto the righteous and a Sauiour Zach. 9. 2 To whom comes he To his vassall a debtor of 10000 talents who hath not one farthing to begin to pay so huge a debt 3 For what cause comes he Not to sell his miserable seruant and to take all that he hath and make his sonnes slaues but to giue vnto him the immense price of his body and bloud which is infinitly greater then the debt he was to pay 2 Who is it that comes Christ the Lord who saith of himselfe Yee call me Master and Lord Io. 23. and yee say well for so I am But such a Lord as laieth on his seruants the sweete yoake and easie burden of his Law and for the obedience of one moment thereof in and through Christ will giue an eternall weight of glory 2 To whom comes hee To his slaue who more then millions of times hath broken all the bands of his most holy Law and shaken off the yoake of all due seruice and more then so hath sworne homage and subiection to the aduersary of his Lord sin and Sathan 3 Why comes he That hee might draw vnto him with the cords of Adam Hosea 11.
conceite reacheth not let him obserue it and after conferre with others and with the Preacher about it 17. That hee may the more soundly teach others and if need bee make confession of his faith to the edification of others Let him first giue all diligence soundly to learne not onely in the Schooles Catechisings administration of the Sacraments prayers singing of Psalmes conferences and reading of Scriptures but also in the Sermons bee shall heare in what things the substance of the matter of saluation consists 3 The third necessary duty to come to the right scope and drift of hearing Sermons is that the hearer haue a right and holy affection of heart towards the things vnderstood for many do heare and vnderstand Sermons who are yet nothing affected with them nor truely and rightly affected towards them There is no man liuing hath so sound a knowledge of truth and falshood good and euill as hath the deuill his knowledge heerein is farre more perfect and full then any mans in the world yet there is no man doth hate truth and goodnesse nor reioyce more at falshood and mischiefe then he doth which is the cause that makes his sins and punishments the more grieuous Therefore seeing it neither sufficeth to heare and vnderstand Sermons but withall that the affections of the heart must bee placed vpon them wee will heere as in the former duties discourse first of the nature of the duty secondly remoue the impediments thirdly shew the aduancements and helpes conducting to it 1 The right affection of the heart towards the things in Sermons perceiued and vnderstood is the third duety of the Hearers at the Sermon whereby he doth cheerefully entertaine true and good things present certainely beleeues them to come and hopes and heartily desires them but for things wicked and false in the present hee sorrowfully shewes himselfe auerse from them and feares and forsakes wicked and false things to come And this duty appertaines to the information of the will affections and conscience of the hearer And surely not without great cause ought our hearts to bee rightly and holily affected towards the things vnderstood in regard of the sundry sorts of men who heare and vnderstand Sermons but yet stand nothing well affected towards them First there are some men who euen at the Sermon doe giue very euident argument either by their words or behauiours that they are the manifest enemies of truth and vertue and the friends of falshood and vices These mens affections towards the Word are nothing right Secondly there are certaine hypocrites who albeit by their words and gestures make a faire shew of the loue of truth and goodnesse and the hatred of falshood and wickednesse yet their heart is not vpright Thirdly others do thinke that if they carry the truth and vertue hid in their hearts albeit in word and deed they carry themselues otherwise that they cannot bee accused of the vn-vprightnesse and prauity of their hearts but these haue not a right hart Fourthly there are some that albeit they vnderstand not soundly and fully the things heard yet are angry with the true and good things and are delighted with the false and wicked thing nor yet haue these men any right affection Fifthly some on the other side albeit they do soundly know the things they heare insomuch that they can say nothing against it yet haue things false and euill taken such deepe roote in them and so preuailed by the long custome they haue had with them that they had rather quite forsake that which is true and good then cast away their inueterate and ancient errours and manners and who can say that these men haue a right affection Sixthly but others are so taken vp with the care of the belly and worldly things and are so much estranged from suffering persecution for the profession of the truth and vertue that they will in no wise entertaine either vertue or truth and these mens affections are much lesse right then the rest And therefore a right affection and good heart towards the things which are heard is a most necessary duty of hearing 2 There are some impediments and hinderances of this right affection vnto things knowne which of necessity must bee remoued Now wee must know that whatsoeuer things do hinder the attentiue hearing and sound vnderstanding of the Word those also are blockes and lets to the right affection of the heart therefore I leaue the Reader to looke backe vnto those impediments which are described in handling the said two former duties of attentiue hearing and sound vnderstanding And heere in two obseruations I will onely point at the summe of those impediments before handled for it greatly hinders a right and holy affection First if the Preacher bee cold or luke-warme if hee do not labour by all meanes diligently prudently to moue inflame and direct the affections to that which is true and good and on the other-side to withdraw them from things false and euill Secondly say hee doe his duety yet if the hearer either by naturall corruption and malice of the will be auerse from the present truth and good of vertue and doe gladly embrace that which is false and euill and fall into doubting of that which is true and good to come and doth not desire it nor is troubled with that which is false and euill Either if that the hearer be infected with inueterate and euill manners which are pleasing to our corrupt nature and are easily conceiued but not so easily cast off Or with the outward glosse of good things as of riches pleasures and honours and of euill things as of calumnies condemnations and persecutions and so to bee with-drawne from a right affection towards truth and vertue and inclined to an affection towards lies and vices or to hypocriticall dissimulation then is the affection of the heart much blurred and dis-ordered and so are the things they heare not rightly affected 3 The aduancements and helpes of this duety are no other but such as are prescribed in the helpes of the two former duties of attentiue hearing and sound vnderstanding where the reader may bee furnished with meanes sufficient to promote this duety Yet to helpe the right affection of the heart towards vertues and the truth knowne and also falshood and vices we shall vnderstand that these haue great force namely first if the Preacher doe not onely put on the sense and right affection by the grace and operation of the Spirit according to the quality and quantity of the things spoken but also giue all diligence in mouing the hearers affections thereunto inflaming and directing them to the loue of truth and vertue by most weighty impulsiue causes chiefly by the couenants and promises of God by the examples of the godly and the singular and manifold benefite and vse And also by stirring them vp and stinging them to the hatred and detestation of falshood and vices by the seuere interdicts and comminations of God
abused are First that vulgar but most pernicious opinion that it sufficeth to heare the word of God to vnderstand it and with a transitory sense of the fruite and profite thereof to bee affected albeit the practise of it bee not extended through our whole liues This dangerous conceite is strongly shaken and ouerthrowne by our Sauiour in the parable of the Seed Mat. 13.19 20.21.22 which falling in three sorts of ground namely by the way side in stony and thorny ground was caught away choakt and withered and all because there was no application And no lesse sweetly cheecked and branded with the note of deceiuing themselues is the same opinion by the blessed Apostle Iam. 1.22.23 24. But aboue all that fearefull commination of Christ is not to bee forgotten Luk. 12.47 That seruant that knew his Maisters will and prepared not himselfe nor did according to his will shall bee beaten with many stripes Nor yet that of the Apostle so strongly aggrauated in fiue verses Heb. 6.4.5.6.7.8 That the earth which brings forth Thornes and Bryars is reproued and is neere vnto a cursing whose end is to bee burned Therefore let this most vaine perswasion and peruerse custome bee blotted out with this consideration Math. 7.21 That Not euery one that saith Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of Heauen but hee which doth the will of God who is in heauen Iam. 1. And those that bee hearers of the Word and not doers doe but deceiue their owne selues Secondly a vaine perswasion and glorying in the title of Christianity without any change of life or application of the doctrine of Christ to themselues Thirdly the not vsing of force against our desires and delights by applying of those profitable things which are taught out of the Word and fighting with our corrupt nature by which meanes application is much hindred as wee may see in those Guests that being bidden to the Supper Luk. 16.14 excused themselues by their seuerall employments of seeing a Farme marrying a wife and trying two yoake of Oxen. Fourthly rashnesse and rushing into businesse is a great enomy to application namely when men thrust themselues into the handling of businesses without any censure or tryall of their liues counsels words and actions to the touch-stone of the doctrines contained in the word Fifthly the horrible carnall security of the greatest part of the world running vpon their owne destruction euen in the entrance hinders much the application for heere hath Satan a wished occasion of sowing his Tares Sixthly the too much care of this life of the belly and pleasures whilst in the meane time not onely the generall care which all Christians ought to haue but also the speciall care which concernes euery man in his place and calling is neglected And this is not the least impediment of application and therefore wee must labour by Gods grace to take this out of the way that the heauenly doctrine may finde place Seuenthly opus operatum is not the least poyson of application to wit a conceite wherewith many falsely perswade themselues that it sufficeth to bee Baptized at certaine times to frequent the Temple for an houre to heare a Sermon which happily may strike the eare but neuer wound the conscience and happily sometimes with others receiue the holy Communion and performe such other outward rites and ceremonies but yet without all vnderstanding or inward motion of the heart or amendment of their liues Eightly the vaine hope of a longer life makes many slow in applying the most profitable doctrines for they suppose that albeit for the present they omit and neglect the application yet there remaines a great part of their time behind wherein they will expresse the doctrine in their liues And if they chance to fall into any disease or bee brought neere death that then it will bee a fit time to performe these things Ninthly the euill examples of such as do daily but securely contemne the word of God doe hinder and disturbe many from applying the doctrine to themselues Eccl. 8.11 For Because sentence against an euill worke is not executed speedily therefore the heart of the sonnes of men is fully set in them to doe euill Tenthly the detestable hypocrisie of those men that with an externall visard of piety do set vpon men and giue a goodly shew of goodnesse like painted wals and whited Sepulchres such as were the Pharises but especially hee that was not like other men and scorned the Publican in respect of himselfe Luke 18. Eleuenthly this Diabolicall stratageme of Satan in making men beleeue that they may serue two Maisters Math. 6.9 10.11.12 God and the world God and the flesh against the manifest truth of our Sauiours owne mouth doth also preuaile with many men who would not seeme to be altogether Atheists not to make any application to themselues of the good things they heare Twelfthly also feare of the crosse and persecution with-draw many from the application of the heauenly doctrine of Christ for the flesh and the deuill obiect that if thou in thy life shalt professe the knowne truth thou shalt cast thy selfe into manifest danger of life and goods Thirteenthly nay both Scripture and experience doe teach vs that some are growne to that madnesse and malice as not to bee ashamed Rom. 6.1 to draw the most profitable doctrine of Gods holy Word into an occasion of sinning These Impediments and Lets the Preacher must not onely set forth in his Sermons and conferences but also the Hearers must with all care and diligence obserue and shunne them as the maine pests of application 4 Thus hauing runne ouer such things as the hearer is chiefly to abandon except in applying the holy doctrine of Christ hee will cast himselfe vpon a snare and stumbling blocke I will in few words teach wherein this soule-sauing application consists that the sincere Professors may know how to exercise themselues therein with a holy endeuour Therefore first wee must know that the very beginning of all application is a serious and fixed purpose that the Hearer hath of what condition soeuer hee bee that hee will by the grace and helpe of Gods Spirit conforme himselfe and all his internall and externall actions at all times as well in prosperity as aduersity according to the doctrines in the Word of God proposed Secondly seeing our nature after the fall of our first parents is so depraued that it neuer agrees with the will of God in the sacred Word reuealed the Hearer must certainely resolue with himselfe that there is no other way of application but that both in his entrance into the Schoole of Christ and in his progresse thorow it hee deny himselfe seeing Christ hath so admonished before hand Hee that will bee my Disciple let him take vp his crosse deny himselfe and follow mee For application must begin at the mortification of the old man and it must end at the quickning
on Christs death is euery day to take one of the chiefest Mysteries of Christ from the Annuntiation of the Angell to Mary vntill the ascension of Christ into heauen to bee meditated on 2 To distribute the whole life of Christ into seuen parts and euery weeke once in meditation to runne ouer his whole life allotting to euery day his part 3 The third is to diuide Christs whole life into ten parts according to those ten places wherein it pleased him to dwell and to consider what hee did and suffered in euery of those places For the first what in the wombe of his mother nine monthes secondly what in the Stable at Bethlem forty daies thirdly in Egypt seuen yeares or thereabouts fourthly in Nazareth twenty two yeares and more fifthly in the Desart forty daies and forty nights sixthly in Iudaea and Galile● Preaching three yeares and a halfe seuenthly in paines and torments one whole day eighthly on the Crosse three houres ninthly in the Sepulchre and in Hell forty houres tenthly on the earth being risen from death forty daies Thus may one in an houres or halfe an houres meditation repeate with himselfe the whole life of Christ pawsing a while vpon euery point which is of no small benefite to the deuoute soule Hee may also if hee please make seuerall meditations vpon euery part as time and place will giue him leaue from the necessary workes of his Calling 4 Another manner of meditating hereon is to distribute the life of Christ into three parts as namely his entrance into the world his abiding in the world his departure out of the world and so cast in his minde what kinde of entrance hee had into the world what kinde of entertainement hee had in it what hee did in it and how hee departed out of the world and on euery one of these to frame one or more meditations 5 Besides to comprehend all the life of Christ in these three generall points first what hee said secondly what he did thirdly what hee suffered Dixit multa fecit mira Ber. pertulit dura Hee spake many things hee did wonderfull things but hee suffered cruell things and heereof also may seuerall meditations be vsed vpon euery one of these 6 Lastly is to take one of the foure Euangelists or the Concordance of the foure Gospels and in meditation to runne ouer it from the beginning to the end 8 How to meditate on the Passion of Christ 1 Is to begin with the last Supper daily to propose vnto our selues one of the Mysteries to bee meditated according to the order of the Text of the Gospell vntill his death and buriall 2 Or to diuide the Lords Passion into seuen parts and in meditation to passe ouer it euery weeke wholy 3 Also to frame so many meditations of it as are places wherein Christ suffered any torment euery day insisting vpon one place first in the lower Parlour wherein his last Supper was celebrated secondly in the Garden wherein hee felt that mighty troublednesse of Spirit and heauinesse of his Soule vnto death thirdly when before Annas fourthly before Caiphas fifthly in Pilates house sixtly in Herods house seuenthly againe when hee was brought to Pilate eighthly in his iourney to Mount Caluary carrying his Crosse ninthly in the Mount Caluary it selfe 4 To meditate our Sauiours seuen sentences which hee spake in those three houres hee hanged on the Crosse which euery Christian ought to commend to memory first Father forgiue them for they know not what they doe secondly to the Thiefe Verily I say vnto thee this day shalt thou bee with mee in Paradise thirdly to his Mother Woman behold thy Son c. fourthly My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee fifthly I thirst sixthly It is finished seuenthly Father into thy hands I commend my Spirit 5 One may meditate on the three kindes of paines our Sauiour suffered viz. what hee suffered in his Soule in his Body in his Honour taking the matter of his meditation from the sacred bookes of the Gospels and making one or more meditations thereof 6 We may also consider these foure things who it is that suffered what things hee suffered for whom hee suffered and how hee suffered 7 Wee may also meditate on Christs Passion to diuerse ends and all of them very good first to the end to suffer with Christ if wee consider the bitternesse of his torments secondly to conceiue and beget in vs contrition and sorrow for our sinnes if wee weigh that hee suffered to put away our sinnes and did vndergoe a death of all other most ignominious thirdly to imitate him if wee consider that Christ suffered that hee might leaue vs an example to follow his steps fourthly to bee thankfull to him if we consider the greatnesse and excellency of this benefite fifthly to loue him if wee conceiue the vnspeakeable charity which in this worke hee shewed towards vs sixtly to conceiue hope if wee behold that hee tooke on him the death for the expiation of our sinnes and for our saluation seuenthly to admire if we bee astonished at the consideration of his infinite goodnesse and loue Thus may wee euery week consider all these ends if euery day we propose to our selues one of these or if in the consideration of euery point of the Lords Passion wee stirre vp in our selues one or more of these affections 9 How to meditate on the holy Sacrament of the Lords Supper 1 For the History thou maist meditate first how Christ did eate the Paschall Lambe with his Apostles secondly how hee washed their feete thirdly how hee instituted this most holy Sacrament and distributed it to his Apostles 2 As touching the names of it thou maist consider that it is called an Eucharist or Thankesgiuing a Sacrament a Communion of the Body and Bloud of Christ the Supper of the Lord Bread and Wine 3 As concerning the figure of it thou maist meditate that it is represented and figured vnto thee by the Bread and Wine which Melchisedec brought forth to Abraham by the Paschall Lamb by the heauenly Manna by the stony Rocke that gushed out water by the bread of Elias 4 If thou wilt consider the causes for which Christ instituted this holy Sacrament then meditate that the first cause is to continue the memory of his Passion secondly to set forth his loue vnto vs thirdly to feede our soules fourthly to be a Seale and Pledge vnto vs of eternall happinesse 5 Meditate on the fruites and effects of this holie Sacrament the first whereof is that as bread and wine nourish the body and make glad the heart of man so this sacred bread and wine nourisheth and maketh glad the soule preserues the life of it streng theneth it against the assaults of the spirituall aduersary and filles it full of ioy and the marrow of deuotion if with due preparation and a liuely faith assured purpose of amendment of life it bee receiured and digested Secondly it in-lightens
Hallowed bee thy Name where wee may meditate first that the name of God is nothing else but his knowledge honour renowne celebration and inuocation Secondly that to sanctifie this Name is to celebrate praise magnifie and glorifie him and that Hee and his Honour and Knowledge may bee such as all the world may acknowledge it Thirdly that wee first begge this of him because wee call him Father and our selues his sonnes and it is the part of sonnes to desire their Fathers honour as nothing doth more reioyce the sons heart then the glory of their fathers so wee being the sonnes of God ought to wish nothing more then that hee may bee acknowledged and honoured for this is the first and chiefe good of which the first and second Commandements and all the first Table chiefly treates This is the first worke of a Christian to wish that Gods name may bee sanctified and his owne name may bee condemned and obscured namely that God may bee knowne such as hee is in heauen and in earth that hee may haue all honour and glory that there bee no creature in which hee bee dishonoured polluted and blasphemed but as hee is holy in himselfe so hee may be taken by all his creatures Fourthly that in doing that hee commands and forsaking that hee forbids wee sanctifie and glorifie his name for wee cannot commit any act whatsoeuer against the Law of God and chiefly against the first Table but wee speake against this demand and hinder the fulfilling of it 2 Thy Kingdome come In which meditate first that the Kingdome of God is nothing else but the Preaching of the Gospel by which the Church is gathered which God rules with his holy Spirit and the abolishing of the Kingdome of sinne and Satan as also all the meanes that conduct thereunto as on the one side the word of God the Ministery of the Gospell the holy Ghost Faith Loue Vnity c. and on the other errours abuses false doctrine heresies schismes and the like Secondly that wee begge this in the second place because sonnes desire nothing more then that their fathers Kingdome may be inlarged that they may dwell in the more safety and honour For if the fathers be aduanced vnto high honours vnder their shadow their sonnes do raigne and what dignity soeuer their fathers haue they think it their owne so the sonnes of God desire nothing more then the amplenesse of his Kingdome that they may bee safe vnder his shadow Thirdly that of all others the Christians dignity is the greatest for hee comes from Gods House hee is a King of his Kingdome Ergo when wee put our selues into the seruice of the deuill and become instruments of his wrath how much worse are wee then the prodigall sonne that kept Swine When wee commit idolatry whooredome couetousnesse gluttony drunkennesse enuy hatred rancor and malice is it not worse then to be in Sampsons case ouercome by a harlot Fourthly that those doe oppose the comming of this Kingdome which are not lead with the Spirit of God by the Word which defend the impious Traditions of men and labour to extinguish the truth of God which defend with tooth and naile Idolatry by which Satan raignes which make of this Kingdome a temporall Kingdome to serue their lusts and ambition as all wicked Magistrates and Ministers doe 3 Thy will bee done in earth as it is in heauen In this meditate first that the will of God is to know and beleeue in his Sonne Ioh. 6. 1. Thess 4. also our sanctification and that all sorts of men may rightly and faithfully doe their duety and obey God that all the contumacy of all men and creatures being tamed their wils may bee to his so subiect that the same thing which hee willeth hee will effect that wee also may will and doe the same Secondly that wee aske this fulfilling of his will after the comming of his Kingdome because heerein is the felicity of the Kingdome and Family that all bee obedient to the authority of the King and Father and that all things may depend vpon his will For God raignes not in vs except we obey him and so our felicity in the House of GOD consists heerein that wee are obedient vnto him Thirdly that we beg of him that hee will frustrate all our desires that are contrary to his will that hee will frame in vs new mindes and new hearts that wee aske nothing of our selues but rather that his Spirit may gouerne our desires to haue a ful consent with God that wee may haue obedience patience perseuerance in the crosse and all this so perfectly as the Angels in heauen doe performe his Will Fourthly that all free-will and power to doe any good of our selues is quite extinguished That who beleeue not in the Sonne obey not the word of God pray not for the Spirit of God are impatient vnder the Crosse doe oppose this will of God 4 Giue vs this day our dayly bread meditate herein first that this bread is nothing else but all things appertayning to the bodie and soule meat drinke clothing health defence peace good successe and all spirituall blessings secondly that we first begge this bread of God for that as sonnes doe aske bread of their fathers so doe wee the sonnes of God aske necessaries of God And the will of God cannot be done in vs except wee be nourished with the bread of God thirdly that albeit wee are commaunded to get our bread with the sweate of our browes yet wee must begge it of him because we must not ascribe it to our labour and industry that wee are nourished but to the onely blessing of God who prospers our labors which other wise would be in vaine Besides it is not by the substance of the meate that we are fedde but by the only power of God for they haue no such naturall power from heauen but God administers it from heauen as to the instrumēts of his bounty fourthly that it is our bread albeit wee begge it of God first ours because by the bounty of GOD it is made ours albeit not due vnto vs secondly ours that we might learne to temper our selues from desiring other mens bread and to be content with that which by lawfull means doth come vnto vs as out of the hand of God thirdly because albeit that it bee the blessing of God yet it is destinated vnto vs for our conseruation as necessary for vs fourthly because as the corporall food so the bread of Life the word of God is ours fiftly because we ought so to aske this bread of God that wee may haue to breake vnto others sixtly for that not for our selues but also for others we must aske it seuenthly that it is so our daily bread that without by both sorts of it daily receiued we be nourished wee come to ruine Whence consider mans misery for except nourished with foode wee cannot continue eightly that it is giuen vs for onely God can
and may stirre vp in himselfe a feruent desire of doing the same aright Sixthly a little before his meditation let him remember that as our Sauiour willes all before they pray to go into their chamber and shut the dore so hee must enter into himselfe shutting the dore of his heart against all othor thoughts and worldly imployments and considering with himselfe what it is that hee is to doe and to what end Seuenthly it will much helpe the fruite of meditation to come to it with an appetite and inflamed desire of meditating to which purpose hee must vse the meanes to prouoke his appetite For as those that haue no stomacke to their meate do labour to get one by strong exercise of the body and diuerse poynant and sharpe sawces so hee that meditates must labour by reading godly bookes diligent examination of his conscience or some holy act whereby to mortifie his affections to stir vp in himselfe a holy deuotion and zeale of meditating Eighthly the more to enflame him heereto hee may thinke with himselfe when hee comes to meditate that hee is making a iourney to the most rich veine of siluer and gold in the world from whence hee may carry great and in-valuable Treasures Ninthly vpon the point of putting himselfe to meditation let him cast himselfe downe vpon his knees or vse such humble and deuoute reuerence and gesture of body as is most agreeable and with his heart and minde lift vp let him consider with himselfe on the one side the greatnesse of God and his presence on the other his owne basenesse and multitude of his sinnes and yet notwithstanding that his so infinite Maiesty that hee vouchsafeth vs free accesse and audience when wee come saying with the blessed Patriarke Shall I speake vnto my Lord being but dust and ashes Tenthly in conclusion let him commend himselfe and his meditations to God and pray him in Iesus Christ to assist him in all his meditations and not to depart from him to take from him all matter and occasion of distraction and to giue him a comfortable and happy successe in them And let him vse all diligence in the obseruation of all these instructions but yet without scruple or trouble of conscience if at any time hee forget any of them for it oft fals out to such as meditate much that without so much preparation they are admitted to many heauenly secrets Onely our part is to vse diligence that wee omit not the things which are necessary 2 Such things as accompany meditation are to be considered and these are first Praeparatory prayer secondly préparatiues thirdly colloquies with God First I call this a preparatiue prayer because in the entrance of the meditation it is a short request vnto God that hee will direct all the powers and actions of our body and soule to his glory our owne saluation and the good of others praying him to giue vnto vs grace to meditate aright of heauenly things and acknowledging that of our selues wee can doe nothing but all our sufficiencie is from God Secondly preparatiues which are things going before meditation and making way for it that it may the more easily enter Now after the preparatory prayer for the most part there are two preparatiues which that wee may know how they are to bee made wee must obserue that the matter of meditation is of two natures the one corporall such as is the natiuity of Christ the other spirituall such as is sinne When wee are to meditate on corporall and visible things the first preparatiue is to imagine and conceiue the place and persons as if they were present as for the purpose if wee would meditate on Christs Natiuity the first preparatiue is to propose and set before the eyes of our mindes the Stable the Manger the infant IESVS the Virgine Ioseph her husband these are to bee represented vnto vs in our imagination but yet without any violent action of the head or braine The second preparatiue is to begge of God such grace as that wee may ob●aine the true end which wee ●imed at in meditation namely sorrow for our sinnes the loue of God the knowledge of a mans selfe or some other end agreeable ●o the meditation But if the matter of meditation bee spirituall wee must then vse another kinde of representation namely the soule to bee in the body as in a prison man to bee in this vale of teares exiled amongst bruite beasts or to thinke himselfe intrenched with deuils or Angels or to imagine a voyce discending from heauen or Christ or some of his Apostles pronouncing the words which hee hath taken to meditate on That is the first preparatiue and the second is as before to begge of God to direct him to the right end of meditation The third are Colloquies and speeches with God which indeed are nothing else but prayers vnto God and of necessity euery meditation and contemplation must haue some colloquy or speech with God ioyned vnto it in which thankes are giuen vnto him remission of sinnes increase or confirmation of graces and other necessaries are to bee begged of God Now in this businesse we will open these three things first how these colloquies and prayers are to bee made secondly how often thirdly when First all these things may bee done mentally or otherwise with some vocall prayer agreeable to the meditation and about the end of the meditation with the Lords Prayer distinctly and leasurely pronounced And that the colloquy may bee the better fitted wee must obserue sometimes to speake vnto God as the Scholler to his Maister the seruant to his Lord the subiect to the King somtimes as the Spouse to the Bridge-groome the poore to the rich the guilty to the Iudge the Sicke to the Physitian and so take vpon him the person of the Prodigall childe of the blinde lame or any other troubled with any infirmity and secondly hee may make one or more to the Father Sonne and holy Spirit to giue vnto vs necessary graces And thirdly the proper place of Colloquy is about the end of our meditation albeit through the whole course of our meditations after euery point the soule being inflamed to the desire of any thing it may bee made but then they must be short as well to continue our intention as to repell distractions that meditation be not hindred 3 Now then those things which are considerable vpon the seuerall points of meditation follow to bee handled for many sticke at this knot not knowing what they ought to thinke in meditating that therefore wee may prouide for them and deliuer the matter and methode of continuing meditation and making some progresse therein we must consider these following points which in euery matter whatsoeuer must be vsed Therefore obserue that the matter of all meditation being either corporall or spirituall If it bee corporall these circumstances are to bee considered first the persons present at the Mystery such as are Christ Iesus the Virgine
and hath this assurance Math. 6. secke first the Kingdome of heauen c. fifthly it is no ill time to pray when wee finde our soules disposed with much alacrity thereunto and lastly the holy Sabaoths and other solemne seasons are fit time to bee wholy spent in prayer 2 A place is also to bee chosen for this holy worke and what place more fit then that more secret and freer from the tumults of the world what place beside the house of God which is the house of prayer fitter then our priuate chambers that God hearing in secret may reward vs openly 3 Is required compunction sorrow and repentance for our sinnes together with mortification of the members of the body for the more wee profite heerein the better shall wee speed in all our prayers 4 The safe keeping our senses chiefly the tongue the eye and eare for the curiosity of hearing and seeing is the beginning of all distractions and aboue all things hinders deuotion but the immoderate lauish of the tongue is much more hurtfull Abstinence and fasting of all outward meanes brings the greatest helpes to pray aright experience shewes in our owne bodies that the body being filled with meates is made vnapt and so makes vnapt the Spirit to exercise her functions therefore hee that by prayer desires to bee vnited to God must be sober in meate and drinke and haue great care both of the quantity quality and manner of eating to the end that as much as may bee hee may represse and mortifie sensuality and to perswade himselfe as nothing is more true that the man who is giuen to take the solaces and pleasures of the flesh shall neuer attaine to learne aright the practise of prayer seeing the flesh and the Spirit are so aduersant one to another But this sobriety is chiefly required at Supper that the minde in the morning may bee the freer to the exercises of deuotion 6 Often re-collection of a mans selfe and cogitation of the presence of God euen in the midst of a mans outward businesse and to this end often to vse iaculatory and short prayers for vsing this when the set time of prayer comes hee shall not much need any other disposition whereas on the contrary hee that is much distracted when the time of prayer growes on shall hardly exclude the multitude of cogitations that then will thrust themselues vpon him This multitude of businesse is one of the greatest impediments to prayer for whilst a man is diuided thus pretious time slips away distraction gets possession of the mind and so the minde becomes altogether dry to spirituall and heauenly thingss 7 And as the mortifying and brideling of the outward sences is necessary so is the mortification of the inward passions therefore hee that prayes must take ●eed of all vnquietnesse trou●●ednesse griefe and all inordinate affection towards any creature and labour to keepe himselfe in the true inward peace of the Soule and Spirit and to make such account heereof that for nothing in this world hee would loose it 8 Adde vnto these the reading of godly and deuout books as the vn-deuided companion of prayer where first the holy Scripture must haue precedence of all others and amongst these chiefly the foure Euangelists the Epistles of Paul Peter Iames and Iohn Iob the Prouerbes Ecclesiastes and other Canonicall bookes of Scripture secondly not to bee inconstant now reading one and then another but to continue the booke begunne vntill it bee ended except it bee to auoide tediousnesse or vpon occasion of some temptation or for that the minde may bee at that time better disposed to that booke then another and then the course may bee changed so that they returne againe to the former book thirdly they must come to reade with a right intention not of curiosity or meere desire of knowing not to adorne their tongue but first to stirre vp the minde in deuotion and to profite in the Spirit secondly they must not reade hastily but slowly and deuoutly that the words read may be ruminated chewed thirdly if any excellent or profitable sentence bee fallen vpon there to stay a while and ponder it adding some short prayer fourthly the more elegant sentences are to bee noted in the memory or committed to writing that when need is there may bee vse made of them And for the time that is to bee allowed to this reading first it must bee when the minde feeles any appetite or inclination to reading secondly when the minde is dry and deuoide of deuotion thirdly on the Sabaoths and solemne feasts fourthly before and after the holy Communion fiftly oft-times also before prayer and meditation that the minde may bee stirred vp to deuotion and finde matter of meditation 9 Discretion is heere very auaileable not to vexe the heart with drawing out of teares or sitting one the knees till one bee tired but sweetely and humbly to behaue ones selfe saying with the Prophet I will heare what the Lord God will say concerning mee Besides as to all other actions so to this it behoueth to bring a right intention that they do not seek themselues and their owne taste and consolation but the onely honour and good pleasure of God 10 Simplicity must not bee wanting for such as doe not curiously seeke themselues are most capable of heauenly illuminations Nor humility and reuerence as well outward as inward whereby a man puts himselfe before God in body and minde remembring himselfe to bee euer in the presence of his Diuine Maiesty and ioyne heereunto purity of conscience and sanctimony of life Math. 5. for these haue a promise to see God Hence it is that who are of a loose conscience and regard not slight faults do neuer profite in prayer 11 Lastly to conferre with godly and deuoute men is of much vse for such conferences of deuotion do inflame the mind as wee reade of the Disciples talking with Iesus as they went to Emaus of the Mysterie of our redemption Luk. 24. their hearts burned within them For who neglecting such holy conferences delight to spend the time in other relations neuer come to the grace of praying aright So that to end this point two things aboue all other are necessary to him that will benefite by prayer first diligent preparation before prayer of which something shall be said anon secondly perseuerance in prayer with great trust in God and diffidence in ones selfe till the last gaspe with no difficulties to bee interrupted for we must euer pray and neuer wax faint Luk. 18. Now ensues the discouery of the points following namely what wee are to doe before in and after prayer First therefore before prayer it is necessary that euery one diligently prepare themselues Syr. 18. and not to bee as one that tempteth God for when wee pray wee must enter into our chambers euen the secret chambers of our hearts and dispose things there before we pray This preparation consists in these
short obseruations following the larger discourse whereof is in the tract of meditation first to know the mysterie or matter which we build our prayers on with the circumstances of time place persons c. secondly not to come to prayer with a tyred spirit after much reading or writing thirdly for some good space before prayer diligently fore-see and commit to memory the chiefe points you will insist on in prayer fourthly to enter the chamber of the heart a good while before prayer and shut the dore of the heart against all other cogitations thinking with himselfe what hee is to doe fifthly to come to prayer with great appetite and inflamed desire and as hee that hath no appetite to meat gets one with strong exercise of the body so about to pray wee must stirre vp our deuotion either by reading or diligent examination of the conscience sixthly to inflame him the more let him that prayes thinke that hee comes to a most rich veine of gold from whence hee may carry most rich treasures seuenthly with his minde and heart lift vp let him on the one side behold the greatnesse of God and his presence and on the other his owne vilenesse and multitude of his sinnes and that yet notwithstanding all this God vouchsafeth him a free accesse and audience eighthly with humble and deuout gesture of body let him doe vnto God most profound reuerence in heart and tongue saying Shall I speake vnto my Lord being but dust and ashes ninthly and lastly let him doe all these with great obseruation but yet without scruple or too much anxiety of heart if hee forget any of them 2 What is to bee obserued during the time of prayer I refer to the former tract of meditation where I haue shewed these foure requifites in this part first a preparatory prayer secondly certaine praeludia and prefaces thirdly certaine points fourthly certaine colloquies with God 3 After prayer these things are diligently to bee obserued first a particular examination is to bee made sitting or softly walking for a quarter of an houre how our prayers haue succeeded well or ill if well then are wee to giue God thankes to humble our selues and acknowledge that this was not our owne but onely proceeded from the goodnesse of God if ill then to begge pardon of him for it Secondly inquity must diligently bee made wherein thou hast beene defectiue and a firme resolution to bee holden of more diligent obseruing them heere-after Thirdly thou must retaine in thy minde some fruite which God hath communicated to thee in prayer that thou maist conuert it to thy benefit fourthly briefly and wisely dispofe of all the businesse of that whole day that thou maist conceiue the good purposes which God inspires in thee Fifthly diligence must bee vsed that all the day wee remaine in a continuall deuotion as much as may bee free from all distraction neuer at any time for getting God but euery where from the heart proclaiming The Lord was euer in my sight Sixthly Psal 10. to conclude that this exercise may bee profitable thou must determine twice euery weeke an examination vpon all these things that belong to prayer seeing it is a thing of most account and heerein thou shalt examine how thy prayer hath succeeded whether thou hast made any passage in it whether thou hast felt any impediment and the like and to this end thou must conferre weeke with weeke and moneth with month and appoint certaine houres of the day to this purpose But yet it remaines that wee speake somewhat more of those 8 kindes of prayer that heerein wee may know first how to giue thankes secondly what things wee are to pray for thirdly for whom to pray fourthly of whom wee must aske fifthly how wee must aske 1 Mentall prayer as wee haue said is an inward talking of the soule with God to whom hee expresseth all his Petitions and necessities without any noyse of words and this is of two sorts first when the soule by it selfe findeth out sighes by which it speakes vnto God as if the soule should inwardly say ô Lord God thou hast inriched mee with many blessings giue mee grace to vse them all to thy glory and my owne saluation secondly when the soule doth ruminate with it selfe some vocall prayer as the Lords prayer or any other which it hath committed to memory and offers vnto God the Petitions therein contained In prayer therefore wherein a man hath to do with God for the most part three things are necessary first to giue him thankes secondly to aske things necssary thirdly to offer vp vnto God himselfe body and soule 1 Now that wee render vnto God worthy thankes for his benefites wee must propose to our selues a double catalogue of them in our memory the one of benefits in generall as his Creation Preseruation Redemption Vocation Iustification Sanctification Election his gratious patience long-suffering in expecting our returne and the like the other of particular benefites which as they are proper vnto euery man so must they specially of euery one bee remembred as namely that hee is borne of good and Christian parents that hee is of a good constitution of body and sound that hee hath beene preserued and deliuered from many infirmities and dangers of body and soule and such like euery one of which benefites if we doe but a little ponder with our selues wee shall finde a most large occasion of giuing him thankes and that we may haue rule heerein to procede by let euery one giue him thankes first for the blessings of nature secondly of Grace thirdly for blessings acquired Also first for the good things of the soule secondly of the body thirdly for outward good things in particular of all which hee must take an account of himselfe how God hath stored him with them that hee may bee thankefull for them And indeed it is meete that continually wee giue thankes vnto God seeing euery moment wee receiue benefites from him for no moment is there wherein wee receiue not from God life sense vnderstanding and all other good gifts both naturall and super-naturall that are in vs or belong vnto vs Therefore if when thou receiuest any benefite from any man thou art presently thankefull for it how canst thou but bee ingrate vnto God when receiuing innumerable benefites from him thou dost not answer them with a thankefull heart Thou shalt therefore giue thanks for things prosperous because they are giuen thee for thy comfort for things aduerse because they are ordained for thy correction and the augmentation of thy eternall Crowne thou shalt giue thankes for spirituall gifts because they enrich the soule and for corporall gifts because they preserue the body which is the palace and habitation of the soule Thou shalt giue thankes for the things giuen vnto thee because they belong vnto thee for the things bestowed on thy neighbours because they belong to such as thou art bound in charity Euer shall thy heart
great difficulty in seruing God after this sublime and heauenly manner For this purpose those that will serue God aright must consider their owne dispositions that they may be able aright to meete with their owne defects therefore they must know that the euill wherby they are drawen from seruing God after this most diuine manner proceeds from sin which hath weakened the soule and subdued it to it selfe For if sinne had not interposed it selfe we should haue done euery good thing with much facility but sinne once arryuing in the Soule all our desires wills and appetites are become so dissolute disordered and rebellious by that grieuous speciall disease arising from sinne that now loathing that which is good wee scarce loue affect or desire any thing saue the most abiect worth lesse and vitious things forgetting that infinit good vnto which wee were created as the thing wherein we haue neither rellish nor sauour And hence proceeds the confusion and perturbation of the soule which we feele in our selues so much distracted from the true God whereunto we were created that the thing which is absolutely and onely good being cast off we incline euer and greedily follow that which is euill Yet must we know that howsoeuer this sin hath made such a slaughter of graces in the soule that there is not one friend left to take armes against it yet doth not our obligation cease from binding vs to doe what is our duty and for which we came into this world For albeit this great infirmity doth so infeeble vs that we doe all good things with great difficulty yet doth it not make vs altogether so impotent but that we are capable of grace and diuine fauour whereby to repaire this our former ouerthrow and destruction Besides we must obserue that by so much more doe we grow to an admirable disposition of seruing God aright which disposition had euer remained in the soule vnto all good things if sinne had not diseased it by how much more we shall haue our appetites and desires repaired and disposed which by sinne were formerly indisposed And he shall haue them repaired who with an attentiue care and profound consideration of the things we speake of shall direct them all to the Lord with a repugnancy to all things that are without the will of this Lord and a following of all such remedies as are here described And in that degree wherein any shall obtaine this in the same shall hee be aduanced here in sanctity and afterwards in glory And there is no doubt but herein one may so profit by assiduity and diligence as that he may doe all things with great faclity and delight to which hee shall be the more easily aduanced if he often and attentiuely read these instructions 5 Instruction That wee haue in our bodies and soules sufficient meanes for the reparation of this decay and ruine if they be stirred vp by the grace of Gods spirit As we haue both body and soule so wee haue in both of them instrumentes wherewith to worke For as the body hath feete to walke hands to worke mouth to speake and the like so the soule hath the vnderstanding where-with to know the will wherewith to desire and diuerse other faculties of the appetite But it must bee obserued that the more excellent the worker is together with the instrument so much more worthy is the worke so that all things concurring to the acte bee suteable Corporall actions haue so much more excellency in them by how much the instrument of the soule concurring to the act is more excellent Now that is called a singular instrument which to the production of the act is mooued by a good end Therefore the most excellent instruments are the vnderstanding and the will which can bee mooued of God alone as wee haue said in the second instruction Therefore of small worth are corporall things which doe not so proceede And this is it that Saint Paul said 1. Tim. 4. bodily labour profiteth little But the actions of the soule are of another kinde namely because of themselues they may bee of great profit As if one exercising his vnderstanding shoulde consider how base and abiect the honors of this world were and of what value those things which God commands are and how vnspeakable that glory is to which we aspire also to know how one may moderate his passions and the like Againe if one exercise himselfe in his will louing that which he knowes is good and refusing that is euill Such refusals of the soule should be very profitable albeit the body were very idle for by such exercises would be produced excellent habits and the euill habits destroied which thing of it selfe is very laudable albeit done for the only loue of vertue as Philosophers did yet much more being in a Christian who hath faith but most of all if in euery worke wee ioyne faith with our intention actually directed vnto God Hence may it be obserued how much euery one ought to be exercised in the actions of the soule which thing he may doe whether he bee imployed in body or no in euery time and place so that speaking with another in any temporall affaire yet may he in soule worke by louing God recaling to mind some of his works This may seeme difficult to him that hath not attained the habit thereof yet custome wil make it easie as we must remember that vertue is practised about difficult things Therefore violence is to be vsed to the wil that thou maist become an industrious workman to doe singular things with facility Which if thou doest not attempt no maruaile is it that thou canst not be more deuout towards God seeing hee is euer ready to assist thy desires vnto that which is good and to withstand thy pronenesse to euill so that thou doe rightly vse the meanes And be sure that if thou desirest on earth to be a great and excellent friend and seruant of God thou shalt the sooner attaine vnto it by how much thou dost daily more and more vse these instrumente of the soule thy vnderstanding and will at all times and places And this is it which aduanceth the Saints of GOD to so much glory in heauen the neglect whereof is so blameable on earth Seeing then our highest glory consists herein for the most part that wee worke by these instruments of the soule and our ruine in the neglect of this exercise Let vs see what course wee must take who haue as yet beene euen liuelesse to vse these instruments of the foule And that wee may begin with the vnderstanding leauing the will to the next instruction we will premise this theologicall and Philosophicall fundamentall rule that our naturall appetite doth naturally desire that to which it is inclined seemes pleasant to it not standing need of any thing to helpe or inuite vnto it but rather necessarily as it were coactedly desiring it But so doth not the will work bur first
thy Maiesty Let all the guifts of thy holy Spirit rest vpon me O Lord the spirit of Wisdome and Vnderstanding the spirit of Counsaile Strength the spirit of Knowledge and Piety and let the spirit of thy Feare fill my heart that by these guifts I may bee made immoueable from thee and may grow vp to be a perfect creature in Iesus Christ Of other guifts graces which do not belong vnto sanctification giue mee so much onely as may serue to the saluation of my soule and performance of thy will And grant that I may bee imploied all my life in such businesse as may bee to the glorie of thy name my owne saluation Giue me O my God this grace that in all the talents and guifts which thou hast giuen mee I may neuer seeke my selfe but thy praise glory giue mee of thy goodnesse the guift of perseuerance that by no sin I may euer be separated from thee but vntil death and for euer may perseuer in thy grace Giue me by thy immortality and the most blessed death of my Redeemer a happie end of my daies in him and that after a good life in thee I may die the death of the Righteous take from mee the too much loue of this life and the immoderate feare of death graunt that I may so liue that I may say with the Apostle Phil. 1. I desire to be dissolued and to bee with Christ Giue me an inward light of the houre of death that I may flee the flattering in●icements of the world giue me an inward sauour of blessed eternity that I may ioyfully forsake all transitory things Giue me a true resignation in thy most holy will that I may willingly depart hence when how thou shalt dispose receiue my spirit cloathed with thy grace loue that for euer it may cleaue vnto thee To conclude take from me whatsoeuer may keepe me from thee giue me O Lord my Redeemer most potent helps to liue holily and die happily These are my petitions O my God these are the desires of my heart which I pray beg by all thy mercies the infinit merits of thy Son may be fulfilled not onely in me but in all my brethren vnto the worlds end that we may euer please thee in this life and inioy thy blessed presence in the life to come Amen Being thus prepared for some good time before the communion it followeth that comming into the Temple thou shouldest cast downe thy selfe vpon thy knees and prepare thy selfe further inuocating the name of God thus O blessed Trinity my God and my Lord I doe now come to be partaker of all those heauenly riches of my Sauiours life death and resurrection 1. In confession of that supreme dominion which thou hast ouer all creatures and of all manner of subiection which wee haue towards thee 2 In commemoration of the most bitter passion and death of Iesus Christ thy Sonne and my Sauiour according to his commandement saying As often as you doe this doe it in remembrance of mee 3 In thankfulnesse for all those infinit riches conferred vpon vs by his most precious death 4 In thankfulnesse for all his benefits wherewith he hath in this world magnified his Saints and mee his most vnworthy seruant O most omnipotent Father I come to this thy true refreshment of soules confirme in mee by thy grace all things which may make me worthily receiue the same I come vnto thee that thou who art life it selfe may by thy grace quicken mee thou which art the light may illighten me thou which art the fire may inflame me thou which art the rest may quiet mee thou which art the purity may purifie mee and thou which art ioy it selfe may reioice me I humbly pray by thy wisdome illuminate me that I may worthily vse these holy mysteries adorne my soule with those seauen fold graces of the blessed spirit that by thy infinit charity I may bee inflamed to receiue it worthily O my God I come vnto thee as smalnesse vnto greatnes as darkenesse vnto light as vncleannesse to holinesse as infirmity to power as the creature to God his Creator O make mee great in thy eies turne my darkenes into light my vncleannes to holines my infirmity to power shew thy selfe in mee as a most wise and potent Creator so a most wise and louing Recreator Redeemer I am most vnworthy to receiue so great fauours I confesse altogether vnworthy because I haue euer offended thee and past by al thy cōmandements vnworthy because I haue euer coldly negligētly serued thee vnworthy because I neuer fully with all my heart loued thee vnworthy because I am but dust and ashes nay very filth if any thing be worse worse then that I come vnto thee whom the heauen of heauens is not capable of how much lesse this house I come vnto thee who art the cōmon Father of Men and Angels and who will not reuerence his Father I come vnto thee who art the Lord of all creatures who will not doe homage to such a Lord I come vnto thee as to the Father and Lord whose honour I haue contemned whose sonnes and brethren I haue not once but often both by word and example smitten and who will not tremble to stand before him so offended I come vnto thee my Lord whose seruant I haue smitten vnto thee my Father whose Sonne I haue slaine I smit him by word I slew him by example and shall I not feare such a Lord and reuerence such a Father Yes surely but yet as I come with feare so will I come with hope as I come with reuerence so will I come with confidence For thou hast appointed thy Sonnes bloud whom I haue slaine to be the only soueragin antidote heauenly remedie to heale my wounds and this thy blessed Sacrament to be the Cabinet out of which I must take that sacred plaister for it is the bloud of Iesus Christ thy Sonne 1. Io. 1. that clenseth vs from all sinne He is the bread of life Io 6. hee that cateth of it shall neuer die These words indeed are Spirit and Life they giue Spirit vnto my wounded spirit and life vnto my dead soule O looke vpon thy seruant that I may liue O blesse mee with the guift of such a faith as that out of my belly may flow riuers of water of life Amen 6 How to giue thanke after the Lord Supper is receiued IT were very absurde to receiue so vnspeakable a gift and not to returne thankes if after dinner rest from businesse and imployment be necessary for the health of man that the naturall heate may concoct the meate turne it into the nourishment of the body much more necessary is rest this feast being ended from distractions and businesse that the benefit of this Sacrament may come vnto vs and that it may diffuse his vertue strength into our soules But who will be so
well to the learned as vnto other A wise man shall heare and increase in learning Pro. 1. and a man of vnderstanding shall attaine vnto wise counsailes And who are wise men but the Learned Or of vnderstanding but the perfect and Sanctified And yet euen these by hearing shall grow to a greater measure of knowledge and a larger taste of Heauenly wisdome This dayly practise of reading for an houre or so much as the duties of thy calling will admit doth as a mistresse reueale vnto thee the sence of sacred Scriptures this as a candle or most resplendant starre doth illuminate the vnderstanding this as a nurse teacheth the Infants to speake in the Spirit alluring and inticing them to Praier and Meditation this as fit● kindles the chaste affections of Diuine loue and in a worde this as a Schole-master doth collect our heart and disturne it from vaine foolish distractions and cogitations Ier. ep 1. ad Demot Let the aduise of that good Godly father euer bee had in memory which is this That thou so doe reade the Scriptures as that thou euer remember they are the words of GOD who doth not onely commaunde that his Law should bee knowne but also fulfilled For it profits nothing to learne things to bee done and not to doe them Thou shalt then most excellently vso the reading of Scriptures if thou dost set it before thee in steade of a Glasse that there the Soule may looke euen as it were vpon its owne image and face and may both correct the foule blemishes and also may better adorne and deck the things that are beautiful Let praier often breake the course of reading and the gratefull vicissitude of some holy exercise and worke euermore inkindle the soule cleaning vnto God Let thy reading bee temperate vnto which let not lassitude and wearisomnesse but counsaile put an end For as immoderate fasts and watchings are truely argued of intemperancy and doe by their excessiuenesse bring to passe that afterwards wee shall not be able to doe these things in any measure so the intemperate labour of reading is reprehensible and so that which is laudable in its due times becomes culpable by excessiuenes Generally and briefly wee may say and it is true that euen in good things whatsoeuer exceeds measure is a fault But that which I should first haue admonished is this that praier must euer vsher and attend our reading whereby wee desire grace to vnderstand and take profit by it Before reading we may in few words pray thus O Lord Iesus Christ open the cares and eyes of my heart to heare and vnderstand thy word and to doe thy holy will because I am a stranger vpon earth hide not from mee thy commandements open my eies that I may know the merueilous things of thy Law For in thee O Lord is my hope that thou shouldest illuminate my minde And as praier must goe before so let it both accompany and conclude thy reading accompany it in praying that the good or euill which thou art to doe or shun thou maist haue grace to performe and conclude it in giuing thankes for that grace of affording thee the knowledge of his will and desiring that thou maist haue power to performe it Reade not for curiosity but for vtility not to tickle thy cares but to pricke and mooue thy affection not to get knowledge but to increase thy zeale Reade not many things but let more things bee thought on more things deliberated and let euery one meditate with himselfe how those things ought to bee performed And if the good things thou readest shall not by the ilnesse of thy memory tarry with thee be not hereat much troubled for onely reading doth refresh and I know not how without any fixing the memory doth promote the spirit Euen as the vessell often-times washed becomes cleane albeit no water tarrie in it so the Heauenly Doctrine if it often passe thorow a Godly minde albeit that it doe not rest in it yet it makes the minde cleane and neate and keepes it verie pleasing vnto GOD. The speciall benefit consists herein not that thou commende the words of Doctrine vnto thy memory but that the effect of the Doctrine and words remaine with thee that is that thou obtaine from the Doctrine an inward purity and a readie will to liue a Holy and Godly life if thus thou shalt spende euery day some time in reading thy minde will bee refreshed with most wholesome and delicate ●oode and will become verie strong both for to doe that which is good and also to shun that is evill and not once but often will supply the defects of Praiers which are often distracted and not so feruent as they should be 2 Things to bee done in the Euening is the examination of the Conscience THis exercise is to be entred into a little before we compose our selues to sleepe and because it is of singular moment to Holinesse of life I thinke it very necessary to handle it something more largely considering therein these three points First the necessity of this discussion and examination of the conscience Secondly the manifold benefits of it Thirdly how and in what sort it is to be performed 1 This examination of conscience is a subtle and exquisite discussion whereby wee doe weigh all our cogitations words and actions and doe retract both the good and euill wee haue don This discussion is very necessary that wee may not become hatefull vnto God whom wee desire to please for he considers all the thoughts and workes of all men approouing the good deeds and condemning the euill yet doth hee mercifully pardon the euils if wee by examination acknowledge them and with teares and true repentance wash them What is man saith Iob Iob. 7. that thou magnifiest him and that thou settest thy heart vpon him and doest visit him euery morning and triest him euery moment I aske what it is to be magnified and visited of God but to bee replenished with his guifts and graces But what is it for GOD to set his heart vpon man but to obserue whether hee doe well vse his guifts and doe discusse his owne workes and manners Is not this the same that the holy man comments vpon this place Greg. 8. Mor. GOD magnifieth man because he inricheth him with largenesse of reason visits him with infusion of grace exalts him with the honour of vertue bestowed on him And when hee is of himselfe nothings yet out of the bounty of his goodnesse graunts him to be partaker of his knowledge But the Lord sets his heart vpon man so magnified when after those guiftes hee stirres vp his iudgement and examens vehemently all the moments of life and after takes of him more district punishments by how much hee hath more liberally preuented him with his guifs bestowed Now these euils which God obserues in vs prouoke him to wrath vnlesse by repentance and desire of amendement they depart from vs and then doe
our sins After that I conuerted I repented and after I was instructed Ier. 31. I smote vpon my thigh For albeit GOD alone it is that turnes vs vnto him vnto whom the worke of our conuersion is to bee ascribed as the author of all good yet seeing hee will haue vs in this worke not to bee stocks and stones hee beginning this worke doth not exclude our workes but in what manner wee are conuerted hee shewes saying After I was instructed I smote vpon my thigh First wee must by attentiue discussion knowe our sinnes and after by due repentance chastice them To conclude I was ashamed yea euen confounded because I did beare the reproach of my youth q. d. thou hast shewed mee my sinnes whilst I searched them and touched with the knowledge of them I am ashamed to haue committed them and to haue followed and serued the wicked lusts and affections of my youth Beholde how the knowledge of sinnes which comes by discussion enforceth the heart to griefe patient Iob saw not himselfe And therefore hee was not ashamed but boasted of his owne innocency complayning of the miseries which God brought vpon him but after that by a more intimous consideration he look't into himselfe seeing his owne vility hee laies downe his complaints and takes vp the countenance of a true penitent I haue heard of thee by the hearing of the eare Iob. 42. but now mine eye seeth thee Therefore I abhorre my selfe and repent in dust and ashes q. d. I now see thy wisdom and the iust causes of my smiting and plagues And therefore I reprooue my selfe that so boldly durst pronounce my selfe innocent and to haue suffred without cause I repent for it in dust and ashes So when wee doe not see our owne consciences we thinke our selues righteous and much better then others but when by examination wee discusse them then wee iudge our selues miserable sinners And by how much a man doth see himselfe lesse saith a father by so much doth hee displease himselfe lesse Greg. 35. Mor. and the more light of grace hee hath receiued the more will he know himselfe to be reprooueable Because hee shall more clearely see how much hee swarnes from the rule that is aboue him And the Prophet tells vs Psal 59. that this is the custome of God that hee might by the knowledge of our sinnes drawe vs to sorrow and repentance for them Thou hast mooued the Land and shaken it heale the soares of the land for it shaketh in this place it is demaunded how the Land is troubled and diuided And he answeres himselfe August by the conscience of sinnes a wise and true answere for when a man findes in his heart the sinnes hee knew not before then is hee pricked in his conscience mooued with sorrow troubled with feare that hee may bee healed of the Lord by grace For it is he that pricks that hee might cherish mooues that hee might quiet troubles that hee might by compunction deliuer the troubled minde from the euils for which it is troubled But if wee doe not discusse our selues wee should neither know our sinnes nor bee mooued by contrition without which wee can neuer obtaine the pardon of our sinnes The Spirit saith the Prophet Ezech. 3. lift me vp and tooke me away and I went into the bitternesse and indignation of my Spirit Into what place shall wee thinke the Spirit of GOD lifts vp the iust man shall wee not thinke that into the place of rest and peace where hee may acknowledge the goodnesse of GOD his owne imbecillity and manifold defects And from whence tooke hee him But from earthly cares and troubles of the world that his owne onely care and busines might be to know himselfe and clense himselfe from sinnes There is hee filled with bitternesse whilst hee findes himselfe lesse clensed and lesse seruent then he should be There is he offended at himselfe and from the knowledge of himselfe takes iust occasion of indignation against himselfe and so ariseth from sorrow and indignation to the hope of diuine mercy to the tranquillity of the minde and to the feeling of celestiall consolation For presently the Prophet addes the hand of the Lord was vpon mee comforting me For those doth the hand of God recreate refresh whom it findes pricked in conscience and forsaken out of the knowledge of their daily slips Therfore this is a s●re conclusion that the discussion of the conscience is the originall of cōpunction the mother of all godly sorrow wherby we are prepared to receiue consolation and pardon of our sinnes This necessity of examination a father doth thus acknowledge exhorting all the faithful vnto it behold saith he thou hast a booke Chrys where thou writest thy daily expence Haue also the booke of thy consciēce write thy daily sins whē thou art on thy bed hast none to troble thee before sleep fal on thee bring thy cōscience fourth remēber thy sins in thought word deed for thus saith the Prophet be angrie but sin not what you say in your hearts Psal 4. bee pricked for in your beds On the day time thou hast had no leisure thou hast obserued thy Iudge thy enioyned duety confabulatiō of friends domesticall necessitie care of children sollicitude of wife feare of souldiours and a thousand other causes doe incompasse thee But when thou shalt come vnto thy bed to giue thy members rest and a quiet hauen no man then troubles thee no man knocks Say in thy soule and in thy heart wee spent a day O my soule what good haue wee done or what euill haue wee wrought if any euill doe so no more if any good giue thankes vnto God And remembring thy sinnes powre out thy teares and labour to blot them out Pray to God and so suffer thy soule to rest Confessing thy sinnes make an account to thy selfe begge the mercy of GOD and thou shalt finde rest What heauie or grieuous thing is it in thy bed to bewaile thy daylie sinnes When thou sh●●● begin to thinke well of thy selfe hang thy cogitations as vpon a racke or torture and shaue them away with the rasor of the feare of God Set before thee the feare of hell which brings vpon thee a cutting blow that hath no sorrow Make vnto thy selfe the iudgement to bee terrible prepare an easier confession of thy thoughts that in the last daiy thou maist not bee more sloathfull to search out thy sinnes Therefore behold how the examination of the conscience stirres vp compunction and a minde pricked being first troubled with the stings of sinne findes out ioyfulnesse and comfort 3 Hence ariseth a third necessity of discussion that without it commonly we cannot obtaine remission of our sinnes I say commonly because sometimes a man gets the pardon of of his sinnes albeit he forget many of them whilst hee truely grieues and repents for his sinnes ingenerall But if we looke vpon the Law of GOD
no counsell because hee takes not the warnings of his owne conscience contenting himselfe onely with the externall face of vertue But the wise man giues not only eare to the counsaile of his friends but also takes counsell of himselfe whilst he requires from his owne conscience an approbation of his owne actions Therefore if thou desirest wisdome returne to thy owne heart Daily discusse thy selfe consider whence thou camest whither thou comest● how thou liuest how much thou dost daily profit how much thou failest with what cogitations thou art most assaulted with what affections most troubled with what temptations most beleagred for by so much shalt thou sooner and surelier come to the toppe of wisdome as thou shalt come more fully to know the state of the inner man For wisdome in doing things is engendred by the disquisition and consideration of things to bee done whence it is that in spirituall things wisdome is reteined by the inspection and discussion of our spirit and spirituall things But this is performed by the examen of the conscience which lookes daily into the minde what augmentations or detriments and losse of grace wee susteine by these the wisdome of the spirit doth increase and euery man learnes to direct both himselfe and others so that wee see the discussion of the conscience to be the enemy bane of all sinnes the origine of al vertues and spirituall graces the quiet of the minde the wisdome of euery Christian therefore whosoeuer will attaine any measure of sanctity must daily practise this holy duty 3 The last thing in this discussion to be considered is how this duty is to be performed what is the matter whereabout it is exercised To vnderstand this the better wee are to know that this discussion is to bee compared to the draw-net gathering of all kindes of fish Our life and conuersation is the sea a sea bitter with sorrowes anguishes and sinnes a sea deepe and vnsearchable through the obscurity of intentions and affections so that the Prophet said truely Ier. 17. The heart of man is wicked and vnsearchable To conclude a sea very turbulent and vnquiet through the multitude of thoughts and cares The great and huge fishes of this great sea are our actions as well inwardly thinking and desiring as outwardly speaking or doing any thing The good fishes are good actions the bad fishes which wee cast out are our wicked workes But the net is the examen and discussion of the conscience whereby wee gather our actions and cast them out or preserue them as they are good or bad Therefore to this examen are all both good and euill workes to bee subiect the good that they may bee approued the wicked that they may bee corrected and amended For this examen is like to a ●Iudge of Assize who cals all men within his circuite to an account and brings euery action to the barre and triall of Iustice without fauour or affection so our soule or reason cals all our actions inward and outward good or bad before it that it may cherish those good and holy and correct and amend the wicked and vngodly actions casting out our incorrigible actions checking the vnquiet amending the negligent instructing the simple mitigating the angry restrayning the voluptuous stirring vp the sloathfull comforting the weake and teaching the indiscreete actions In this Assize which euery man must keepe in himselfe reason is the Iudge conscience the Kings Atturney accusing the sinner peruersity the party excusing himselfe pride the aduocate defending the guilty but innocency the iust man confessing his fault After the manner of wicked and peruerse men vices doe contradict all commandements but after the manner of good simple persons vertues obey them yet doe vertues sometimes accuse one another For Mercy accuseth Iustice and Iustice Mercy Honesty accuseth Humility and Humility Honesty Mercy accuseth Iustice that it hath stretched its hands euen vnto cruelty that it hath vsed words of anger that it hath changed the countenance of Meekenesse Iustice accuseth mercy that it hath not put on the countenance of Seuerity that it hath suffred sinne to goe vnpunished that it hath not blamed the offender at least so much as in words Humility accuseth Honesty that it exceeds mediocrity that it followes superfluity that not onely it vseth honest but euen voluptuous things Honesty accuseth Humility that it loues too much pouerty that it bestowes not what is necessary vpon the body that it loues nakednesse beggerlinesse and all contempt For sometimes Mercy deales too remissely Iustice too cruelly Humility too sparingly Honesty too abundantly Yet doe they not leaue to bee vertues albeit they bee weake and imperfect For whilst they accuse they lay themselues open to receiue discipline and censure But how are they made naked and open When by confession of sinnes the hidden things are declared But there are many things which require the examen of our good actions for often our selfe-love deceiues vs so that we think that to be good which is not so Therefore let euery man vse the iudgement of examination that hee may acquite himselfe from such deceipt and declare whether his workes be good or bad Hee that is negligent in discussing his good thoughts deeds exposeth himselfe to a manifest daunger of falling and of sinne whilst he admits an vnprofitable thought for a profitable and a wicked worke for a good As Ishbosheth was slaine on his bed because hee had not a wise and valiant Porter to examine and keepe out his enemies 2. Sam. 4. so he that hath not a strong keeper of the minde and great care to behold all that enters into his conscience is in daunger of his life because he thinkes he enters vertues whilst vices entring in the habit of vertues kill him on his bed vnawares Therefore let not onely a frequent but also a diligent and carefull discussion keepe our minde which may examine all our works and wisely iudge whether those that enter vnder the colour and garments of vertue bee such as they appeare to bee Euen our good actions will the Lord examine and iudge therefore it is fit that first wee examine and correct them least the presents which wee take to bee good the iust Iudge shall thinke vnfit and vnworthy to come in his sight A scholler that is learning to paint doth againe and againe behold and amend the worke he hath in hand and as much as possibly hee can shewes it to his Master polished and well limned and shall wee presume to offer vnto God our good works which are by him to bee examined without diligent viewing and lymning of them Shall it not be said vnto vs Is 1. Your siluer is turned into drosse and your wine mixt with water Your words and workes seeme to bee holy but your intentions and other circumstances accompanying them doe take from them all their worth Iob. 7. Therefore holy Iob was affraid of all his workes knowing that
Preachers which the LORD spake to the Prophet Thou shalt goe to all that I will send thee Ier. 1. and thou shalt speake all things which I commaund thee and beholde I will put my wordes in thy month But if God haue sent him whom thou hearest to teach thee if hee proprose the things which GOD commaundes thou must not thinke that thou hearest a man speaking onely but euen God himselfe Thou must not regarde whether the Preacher bee learned or eloquent or to thy toothe for if hee bring the word of GOD vnto thee thou oughtest to heare him with like reuerence as if hee were endued with great talents and guifts For as it falls out in the affaires of men Chrys when the King sends his Letters happily by some base poste or man of no reckoning and such as cannot reckon vp any petigree of greatnesse but is a very obscure fellow Yet those to whom these letters are directed looke not at the person of the Kings messenger but with great reuerence and silence receiue them So the hearer must not haue any respect to the meanes of his condition or condition of his guifts whom GOD will imploy in his seruice to bring him the tidings of saluation but with all reuerence and attention must receiue the message brough as if it were deliuered him by the king of Heauen himselfe But because wee faile herein it causeth the word to haue such small increase in our hearts For wee heare it without any reuerence not as the word of God but as a tale told vs by a man and so it goeth in at the one care and out at the other Nor yet must wee regard if the Preacher doe often propose vnto vs common doctrines and knowne to all men for thou must not heare the doctrine of the spirit to learne new things but that thou maist bee stirred to practise the olde things thou hast already learned and that thou maist bee ashamed hereat that thou hast not performed the good things thou knowest For if the worde of GOD had not come vnto thee thou had'st had no sinne but now thou hast no excuse for thy sinne Therefore heare the Worde of GOD not with loathsomnesse and tediousnesse but attentiuely and desirously not out of curiosity but out of a desire to learne and practise the good things thou hearest Heare not to forget presently but to meditate seriously In the Law those beastes onely which chewed the Cuade were cleane Leuit. in the Gospell those Soules onely which meditate the Word hearde and by their liues and it were doe turne it into their owne substance doe become cleane in the sight of God The hearer of the word saith a Father must be like to those beasts which because they chew the cudde are called cleane that it may not be irksome vnto him to thinke on the things which he receiued into the womb of his heart and when he heares let him be like to one that eates but when he calls things hard to remembrance let him be like one that chewes the cudde If so thou hearest the word thou art happy Blessed are they that heare the word of God and keepe it Heare humbly not as a censor to iudge but as a scholler to learne Heare attentiuely that thou maist keep in memory what thou hearest heare faithfully that as good ground thou maist bring foorth fruit through the seed that hath been sowne in thee and so from abundance of doctrine thou shalt gather a most rich store-house of al vertues and graces Prepare thy selfe to heare with a short prayer vnto God that he would giue vnto the Preacher the grace of speech and edifying vnto thee and all the hearers all helpes and meanes of profiting 4. The things which are to bee done euery month Concerning this point I will onely obserue one thing wherein it is fit that euery one doe monthly exercise himselfe beeing most profitable for the increasing of our graces and for live promoting of a happy life and that is that he chuse vnto himselfe one day euery month in which hee sequestrate himselfe from externall negotiations and bestow it on himselfe in diligent and wise examination of his life end manners This day thou must pray more deuoutly and giue move time to reading of Scripturs But chiefly herein thou must bee imployed to become a censor of thy selfe and a seuere iudge of thy owne actions Consider therefore the things that are aboue thee whether thou hast feruently serued God and longed for heauenly things Consider the things beneath thee if thou hast tamed thy body and restrained thy sences and affections consider the things about thee if thou hast cut off superfluous things moderatly takē necessary things and walked holily before thy brethren Consider the things within thy selfe if thou hast had purer thoughts if thou hast increased any grace or vertue and if thou hast liued with more tranquility Thinke with thy selfe that it hath beene said vnto thee that thou art a Sunne and of the Sunne it is thus written that it riseth and setteth Eccles 1. and returneth to the place where it riseth Therefore as a mysticall and spirituall Sunne doe thou neuer exceede thy calling no more then the Sun doth his Zodiacke but running all thy course within that compasse labour to enlighten all men with the example of thy life Sometimes lift vp thy selfe by praier aboue all corruptible things sometimes by holy actions draw neere vnto thy neighbours in helping them and after thou hast thus laboured for some time returne vnto thy place namely to the repose of viewing and amending thy defects and say vnto thy soule returne O my soule vnto thy rest because the Lord hath blessed thee And what blessing can bee greater then to helpe vs to liue holily to mooue vs to returne into our selues to finde strength in holy life and rest and tranquillity of Conscience But for such whose places of seruice will not fitly allow so large a time as one day in a month for this exercise let them if fitly they can steale some few houres from their necessary imployments to bee bestowed in this exercise of their amendement and gayning of a spirituall rest If they cannot gaine so much time yet let them not bee grieued at it for they may liue with such care of conscience euen in the midst of imployments that they shall not stand need of this exercise 5 The thing which are euery yeare to be done 1 IT will helpe much to aduance piety if euery yeare wee set apart some certaine daies for the renewing of the actions of a spirituall and holy life The Philosophers haue determined that a naturall motion is very flow at the beginning but swift at the end but a violent motion is swift at the beginning and very slow at the end As for the purpose if a great and weighty thing should naturally descend downewards it would slowly begin to fall downe wards but the nerer it
then the carcasse Why then should we not often or at least once in a yeare bestow a new suite vpon the soule or else patch vp the old one But take heed of patching for God loues a new creature Hee will haue all new or none at all Ambr. In a word he is rightly renewed that is changed from the darkenesse of his sinnes into the light and grace of vertues that being before more stinking then a dunghill is now become more white then snow 2 Because continuall labour euen in profitable things and worthy of all our loue is a weriso●nnesse to the spirit makes it lesse able to performe the duties required Therefore ease thy selfe for some time and dis-burthen thy minde of those serious things that thou maist rest and resume strength The minde must haue some remission that it may rise vp the more sharpe As wee must not incessantly commaund fruitfull fields for their fertility will soone be exhausted if they rest not so the daily labour of the minde breaks the strength of it A little remission and relaxation will recouer strength But dulnesse of minde ariseth from assiduity of labours Of purpose men vse to vnbend their bowes that in their time they may with profit be bent againe which if they haue no relaxation will by being continually bent loose the strength of hitting the marke So in the exercise of the minde vertue is sometime reserued when by discretion it is pretermitted that afterwards it may the more strongly hit vices by how much in the meane time it wisely ceased from smiting A key if it bee turned one way shuts the locke but turn'd another way opens it so the minde intending outward things disposeth and keepeth them but turned vnto God and inward things opens the doore of Gods mercy to fetch out the treasures of heauenly guifts except thou shalt moue thy selfe towards this side and except thou shalt receiue from GOD that which thou gauest thou shalt not haue any thing at all to giue Wisely therefore did that good father speake Ber. to waite vpon God is not to be idle nay of all b●si●esse is the great●● besi●e●se be●a●●e from this idlenesse doe forces proceed to worke and he that knowes wisely for a time to rest shall after know strongly and profitably to labour God himselfe inuiting vs to rest by his example and resting the seauenth day 6 The things which are euer more to be done THere is no question but that euermore vices are to bee shunned vertues imbraced euer we must insist in doing good fighting against Satan all his deceits But more particularly for our purpose we will reduce them into these three ranks 1. Our duty toward God 2. To wards our selues 3. Towards our neighbors 1 To wards Gods these points following must euer be obserued 1. The presence of God thinke euer thou dost heare him saying Do not I fill hea●e a and earth And behold him as a witnesse of thy though desires and a beholder of ●er 23. thy words workes He compasseth the on euery hand if thou wert in the bottome of the sea he conteines with his Deity all aboue thee below thee on the right hand and left before and behind and that Great Lord and wise Iudge lies had euen within thy selfe This cogitation that God is present that hee sees all thy inwards and outwards let it neuer depart from thee and so dispose thy life compose thy conuersation that as much as mans frailty will suffer thou needest not blush that God should behold thee In the beginning of euery worke offer it to him in the continuance behold him in the end resolue to please him for his sake to end it If thou shalt attaine this guift whether thou be idle or in businesse whether alone or with others thou knowest to contemplate God standing by thee thou shalt sooner then thou thinkest attaine to a great increase of graces 2. The loue of God Thou shalt loue thy Lord God with all thy heart all thy soule all thy minde Loue him with the heart directing all thy thoughts and desires to him Loue him with thy worke keeping his commandements loue him onely turning thy will from all created things loue him diligently performing all things that belongs to his obedience with diligence loue him purely in nothing seeking thy selfe loue him freely constantly casting away all things that oppose his loue Loue him gratis looking from his loue nothing but his good pleasure Loue him strongly suffering ●all things for him patiently Loue him perseuerantly neuer pulling thy self from his desire and obedience These thou shalt doe if thou dost contemplate him as the chiefe good as goodnesse it solfe as the fountaine of all good things If also thou shalt daily with earuest praiers beg this loue if thou labour by all good meanes to keepe thy selfe cleane from all leprous pollution and filthinesse 3 The feare of God Feare the Lord thy God because he is thy Lord and requireth it if I bee your Lord where is my feare Feare him because after he hath slaine the body he can also kill the soule and send it into h●l fire Feare him because his iudgements are incomprehensible and his wayes past finding out and thou knowest not what shall become of thee Feare him not as a seruant for feare of punishment but as a most louing and faithfull childe least thou shouldest incur his displeasure Feare him least thou shouldest bee separate from him in whom is all good and from whom if thou be separate thou drawest to thy selfe all euill and misery Feare great sinnes because they separate from God feare small ones for they set open the gates vnto greate lastly feare the Lord for his feare is the beginning of all good for nothing shall bee wanting to them that feare the Lord and those that secke him by chaste and holy fear shal not be destitute of any good From this fear proceeds intimous reucrence whereby thou learnest to adore him in spirit 4. Zeale of Gods glory Be inkindled wilh the zeale of the glory of thy God which may eat vp thy heart and consume thy soule with forrow Consider that the Lord is thy husband whom heretiques contemne the Iewes doe mocke Idolaters and infidels know not all manner of sinners doe with infinit iniuries affect him most part euen of the best men and his deare children doe but coldly and negligently serue him and wilt not thou that seest this labour to put away these iniuries gaine thy husbands honor and for so great iniurses wilt not thou intimoufly grieue therfore let this be thy care euer to seeke the glory of God and saluation of soules and both by prayer holy example and all other good meanes to helpe to promote the glory of God Forget thy owne profit and quiet contemne thy owne honor and spare not to meete with any difficulty that thou maist promote the glory of the Lord. 5. The prayse of God