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A78099 A brief explication of the Office of The Blessed Virgin Marie Mother Of God together with a small treatise concerning the institution thereof &c. / composed by the R.F.E.VV. Priest and Monke of the Order of S. Benedict. Byfleet, John Edward, b. 1607. 1652 (1652) Wing B6401A; ESTC R203969 220,898 605

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note that the Iewes in reuerence of their Sabbaoth did number the daies of the weeke from that daie calling the daie immediatly following the first of the Sabbaoth and soe forth of the rest The Gentils called the daies of the weeke by the names of the Planets to wit Sūnedaie Moonedaie c. but the holie Church doth call our Sabbaoth which was the first of the Sabbaoth according to the Iewish accoūt our Lords daie in honour of the Resurrection of our Sauiour on that daie and the daie immediatly following the first Feria and soe forth of the rest signifying thereby that all good Christians ought euery daie to feriate that is to liue holily abstayning from sinne vaine vnnecessary imployment yet not desisting from lawfull labours The sense therefore of this title is The Psalme written by Dauid for the glorie of the Resurrection of Christ which was to bee vpon the first of the Iewish Sabbaoth when Christ rysing on that daie should haue all power giuen him in heauen and vpon earth THE ARGVMENT HOlie Dauid by this Psalme doth intend to shew how of the innumerable multitude of men onely Christ and some few few indeed I maie saie in respect of the multitude of others shall enter into the celestiall house of our Lord. And therefore least perhaps any should beleeue that the residue of mankind did not belong to God but were created by some other Principle as afterwards the Marcionists and Manichees did suppose he declareth and prooueth in the beginning of this Psalme that man and all things else whatsoeuer are our Lords as being their Creator and conseruer which being soe he admireth the inscrutable iudgements of almightie God that out of the plenitude of the earth soe small à number compared with the rest should ascend in●o the mount of our Lord that is into his holie Church and that euen of those all should not perseuer in his holie place and dispose themselues to receaue the benediction and the mercie from their Sauiour that is to bee made partakers by him of the merits of his death and Passion but onely such as should haue the fower conditions he there specifieth Next the Prophet addresseth himself towards the Princes of darknes commaunding them to open their gates that Christ maie enter and set free the captiue soules whose ransome he hath paied vpon the Crosse And lastly he speaketh ●o the celestiall powers to open their gates that Christ and his blessed traine and all others that shall euen vntill the end of the world take vp their Crosse and follow him maie enter and keepe an eternall Sabbaoth The exposition of the Psalme THe earth is our Lords and the fulnes thereof all things therein contained to wit men beasts all that groweth thereon or is within her bowells the round world the circumference of the earth and all that dwell therein all these are our Lords as being their Creator gouernour conseruer Because he hath founded firmely placed it the earth or round world vpon the sea vpon certaine armes of the Ocean which inuiron it Yet this is not to bee vnderstood as though the earth properly speaking were aboue the sea for the earth is the Center of the vniuerse whence it is necessarie that it bee in the middest of the world and consequently according to its naturall seate incompassed by the waters and for the greatest part in the middest of them but it is saied to bee placed aboue the sea because by the diuine prouidence it is not wholly ouerwhelmed by the waters but that part which boundeth vpon the sea and the superficies thereof is higher then the sea that creatures maie liue and feed thereon Me then saieth our Lord will Ierem. 5. v. 22. you not feare who haue set the sand à limit for the sea an euerlasting precept that shall not passe the waues thereof shall swell and shall not passe ouer it And vpon the riuers hath prepared it made it an habitation fit for men and other liuing creatures The two precedent verses as likewise the rest of this Psalme maie bee explained in à more spirituall sense as followeth The earth the Church militant remaining vpon earth producing plentifull fruit of holie conuersation is our Lords and the fulnes thereof the whole vertue grace perfection of the faithfull ought by all right to bee ascribed vnto him as being the author and giuer thereof the round world the holie Church spread through all the confines of the earth or collected of people from all the ends of the earth and all that dwell therein all the true beleeuers established in Ecclesiasticall vnitie of faith and operation All these belong to our Lord Iesus Christ who hath purchased them with his pretious bloud That he might present to himself Ephe. 5. à glorious Church not hauing spot or wrinkle Because he hath founded it vpon the Sea vpon secular men wallowing and wauering as the Sea from one vanitie and inconstancie into an other or thus He hath founded it he hath strengthned his Church vpon the Sea vpon the persecutions tribulations bitternesses and inconstances of the world Yet this is not to bee vnderstood that these before named are the bases or foundations of the Church but that Christ hath established his Church in such sort against them that although they should neuer soe much endeauour to subuert her as the vast billowes of the sea doe menace to inuolue and swallow vp the earth yet she shall subsist and neuer bee altogether ouercome by them And vpon the riuers vpon vices gliding like riuers inordinately and without ceasing from one sensuall pleasure to another but neuer satiating hath prepared it disposed the holie Church to combate against them VValking in flesh saieth the Apostle we 2. Cor. 10. warre not according to the flesh for the weapons of our warfare are not carnall but mightie to God Since therefore all things are our Lords as hath been proued VVho shall ascend into the Mount of our Lord who from the seruitude of sinne shall ascend to the obedience of the holie Church who shall forsake the world and enter into religion who from imperfection shall ascend to perfection who from this vale of teares shall ascend into the Kingdome of heauen Or who shall stand in his holie place who shall perseuer to the end in the saied mount of our Lord verily all men shall not It is true indeed that many wicked and reprobate people doe ascend into the mount of our Lord but they stand not there for that belongeth onely to them in whome are found the fower properties following The innocent of hands who hath not iniured any man by his actions and of cleane heart who hath his heart purified from the staine or guilt of sinne and affection thereunto that hath not taken his soule in vaine that hath not neglected to fulfill those things for which his soule was created and infused into the body to wit to adorne it with vertues
honor and praise of God which is principally intended by this and all other offices● secondarily did appointe Psalmes which speake in some of the verses of the B. Virgin as I shall shew hereafter in my explication of them And the same order is likewise obserued in all the feasts which are celebrated by the holie Church as for example in the feast of the Natiuitie of our Lord the second Psalme is ordained to be saied for the 7. verse The Lord saied to mee thou art my sonne I this daie haue begotten thee And in the Epiphany the 41. Psalme for the 10. verse The kings of Tharsis and the Ilands shall offer presents The kings of the Arabians and of Saba shall bring guifts And in the feasts of the Apostles the 18. Psalme for the 4. verse Their sound hath gone forth into all the earth c. And in the feasts of Martyrs the 115. Psalme for the 5. verse Pretious in the sight of our Lord is the death of his Saints And in the feasts of holy Virgins the 44. Psalme for the 15. verse Virgins shall be brought to the king after her And soe forth in all other feasts But the rest of the offices as the Inuitatories Antiphones Lessons Responsories Verses Chapters and Praiers are for the most part proper to the feasts CHAPT VII Shew●ng with what Reuerence the Canoni●all howe●s ought to bee reci●ed and vsually w●re recited by many Saints OVr glorious Father S. Benedict speaking in his holy Rule of the reuerence which is requisite to be vsed in Praier hath these words If when we desire to speake to any great person touching any busines we dare not doe it but with submission and reuerence with farre greater reason when we are to supplicate to God the Lord of all things we are to doe it with all humilitie and puritie of deuotion and in another place We beleeue saith he that Gods diuine presence is euery where and that in euery place the eies of our Lord behold the good and the euill Neuerthelesse we especially and without any doubt beleeue this when we present ourselues to the diuine office Wherefore let vs alwaies remember what the Prophet saieth Serue Psal 2. Psal 46. Psal 137. yee our Lord in feare againe Sing yee w●sely And In the sight of the Angells I will sing to thee Let vs therefore seriously consider with ourselues what our comportment ought to be in the presence of God and his Angells and let vs stand to sing in such manner that our mynd and voice may accord together S. Bernard in the 2. Tome of his works treating of the same subiect hath these words Let those that enter in to the Church put their had vpō the doore and saie Expect here all euill thoughts intentions and affections of the hearts and desires of the flesh but Thou my soule enter into the ioy of our Lord God that thou maiest see his will and visite his temple Concerning which aduice of S. Bernard of putting their hand vpon the Church doore we may note out of Nauar in his Enchiridion de Horis that Cap. 17 n. 4. the holie Church did ordaine that there should be placed à holy-water pot at the entry in to euery Church to the end that those who came to pray there might take holy-holy-water in token that they ought to leaue behind them at the Church dore all thoughts which maie distract or hinder them in their praier Which laudable institution hath been carefully practised in Englād as may yet be seene in diuers Churches where the holy-water pot is placed in the Church porch but now serues to no other vse then to testify with what reuerence our forefathers were accustomed to enter in to those Churches whilst they were holy hauing holy Altars holy Priests and a holy Sacrifice in them of all which since they are now emptied the holy water pot hath little reason to complaine of its vacuitie S. Bonauenture writeth that S. Francis De act S. Frāc cap. 10. did beare such reuerence to the Canonicall howers that whilst he did recite them he would not leane to any place but stood vpright and bare headed that he omitted not this custome when he trauelled any iourney but would stay in that place where he happened to be when the tyme occurred that those howers were vsually recited and not remoue from thence although it rained neuer soe fast giuing this pious reason for his soe doing worthy of soe great à Sainte If the body doe quietly receiue its food which after wards will turne to wormes meate together with the body with what peace and tranquillitie ought the soule to receiue the food of life Moreouer he recited the Psalmes with such attention as if God were present and when the name of our Lord occurred in the office it relished most sweet with him and he was soe transported with interiour ioy when he pronounced the holy name of Iesus that he could not containe himself from manifestation thereof by exteriour signes Theodoricus de Apoldia in the life of Lib. 4. cap. 11. S. Dominike doth affirme that the face of this holy Saint was very frequently bedewed with teares whilst he was reciting the diuine office and that if he chanced to be forth of the Monasterie when the signe was giuen for the beginning of the office he would presently call the Religious together and performe it in that place Petrus Ribadeneira in the life of S. Lib. 5. cap. 1. Ignatius the Institutor of the famous and florishing Order of the Societie of Iesus writeth that when the said holy Saint did recite the diuine office he experienced such diuine consolations and shed teares in such aboundance that he was forced to stop at almost euery word by which meanes he was faine to imploy à good part of the daie in reading the Psalmes Horatius Turcellinus writheth alsoe Lib. 6. cap. 5. of S. Francis Xauerius the Apostle of Iaponia that before euery Canonicall hower he was accustomed to implore the assistance of the holy Ghost by saying the Hymne Veni Creator Spiritus which hymne he would pronounce with such feruour that his hart did seeme euen to leape in his body CHAPT VIII Shewing the necessitie of Atten●ion in praier what Attention is best and what will suffice ATtention is an intrinsecall and essentiall qualitie appertayning to praier that is to saie Attention is soe necessarily requisite whilst one praieth that Sotus affirmeth one is not esteemed to Sot lib. 10 de Iust. q. 5. à 5. praie any longer then his attention doth indure Which being à certaine truth it will be needfull in this place for the better instruction of the lesse learned and comfort of tender consciences to sett downe the diuersitie of Attentions which are described by the holy Doctors and to shew which of them will suffice that euery one may take his choise out of them as best futeth with his capacitie or the portion of
stealth but our Lord made vs wherefore we are the people of his pasture and sheepe of his hands which he of his ineffable goodnes hath vouchsafed to make vnto himselfe Our Sauiour saieth My sheepe heare my Ioh. 10. voice If therefore you will be his sheepe To daie that is euery daie whilest it is saied to daie for the daie here mentioned shall endure vntill tyme shall cease If you shall heare his voice that is come to know his will either by the lawfull preachers of his holie word or by reading the holie Scriptures or the writings of the holie Fathers or by his interiour motion or otherwise in what manner soeuer he shall please to manifest his will vnto you Doe not harden your hearts be not disobedient to his gracious inuitation and call but receiue it thankfully and put it in execution without delaie The Hebr. 4. Apostle did exhort the Hebrews by these words to embrace the doctrine of Christ shewing that the daie was then come whereof the Prophet spake soe many yeares before For sa●eth he if Iesus that is Iosue had giuen them rest the Prophet would not haue mentioned another daie In tymes past our Lord spake vnto his people by the mouth of Moyses and other his holie Prophets but now in the law of grace by his onely Sonne Christ Iesus Let vs therefore mollifie our hearts let vs not be As in the prouocation according to the daie of the tentation in the desert at the waters of contradiction and other places in the desert VVhere our Lord saieth your fathers tempted me proued me and saw my workes They doubted in their hearts whether I we●e of power to giue them food defend them from their enemies and bring them to the land of Promise but they experienced me by my wonderfull workes to be the onely true God What should moue my people to be soe incredulous and obdurate What could I haue done more to shew my loue vnto them then that I haue done I brought them from Aegipt where they were oppressed I dried à passadge in the red Sea that they might passe without difficultie drowned their enemies in their sight I went before them in forme of à clowde by daie and like à piller of fier by night I fed them with Manna for Fortie yeares space in all which tyme neither the garments they wore nor their shooes were the worse for wearing Fortie yeares was I nigh to this generation guiding them teaching them working wonders amongst them and experiencing alwaies to winne their hearts And saied by my Angel to Moyses by him to them These alwaies erre in heart They erre not through ignorance they know what they ought to beleeue what they maie lawfully desire and what to doe to please me but they will not know I haue often instructed them in my waies by my seruant Moyses But they haue not knowne my waies that is they haue disliked would not approoue of my waies and therefore all remedies fayling I haue sworne to them in my wrath We must not conceiue by these words that the passion of anger is in God but onely that he swore to proceed to punish them as if he had been possessed with anger and wrath against them for S. Thomas saieth Anger is attributed to God metaphorically If they shall enter into my rest that is into the land of Promise I will cease to be that I am as I liue they shall not enter for their incredulitie These oathes are vertually included in the former words which doe seeme to be spoken by the figure Aposiopesis wherein something is not formally expressed which yet is vertually included in the sense of the words By the place of rest here mentioned is signified eternall happines for the land of Promise was à figure of the celestiall countrie It is not here expressed who shall enter into that rest but in the booke of Numbers we read that our Lord Num 14. saied My seruant Caleb who being of another spirit hath followed me him will I bring into this land and Iosue and the litle ones whome they saied should be à prey to the enemies By Iosue and Caleb maie be vnderstood the small number of the Iewes who filled with the spirit of God did follow the doctrine of our Sauiour and by the multitude of those litle ones the fulnes of the conuersion of the Gentils whome the holie Church brought forth in the last age litle ones indeed because they entred by the gate of humilitie The Apostle speaking of the Rome 11. Gentils saieth that they were wild oliues were taken and grafted in some of the oline branches wich were broken and soe made partakers of the roote and fatnesse of the oliue The faithfull therefore of the Iewes w●ich are signified by the boughes of that oliue which were not broken all true Christians who shall perseuer in the vnion of the Catholike Apostolicall doctrine who are ment by the wild oliues which were inserted into the oliue tree these shall enter into that place of rest We hope alsoe that those broken branches shall againe be reunited to the naturall oliue towards the end of the world Beho●d à Psalme full of ioye and sweetnes à Psalme apt to inflame à pious soule with the fier of the holie Ghost It importeth vs to sing or recite it in the beginning of the morning office with all attention and spirituall feruour that soe by beginning the worke of God with ardour we maie passe the rest of the daie with profitt Let vs therefore doe that whereunto we are inuited in this present Psalme and when we rise to the morning office let vs beginne with couradge and alacritie let vs banish from our hearts all vaine thoughts impertinent fansies let vs carefully busie our hearts with God alōe saying to ourselues in our interiour or to such as are present Come let vs exult to our Lord c. and with à recollected and amorous mind let vs put in practise those most noble acts whereunto this Psalme doth inuite vs which are these that follow vdzt To exult and make iubilation to our Lord To preuent ●is face in confession of praise and confession of our sinns with teares of contrition To fall downe before him and adore our maker VVhat is vnderstood by Hymnes Psalmes and Canticles AFter the Inuitatorie Psalme followeth an Hymne by which is signified that the mind being now inflamed with the diuine loue cannot containe it self any longer but must needs breake forth into à more sweete expression of its interiour affections An Hymne maie be thus defined an Hymne is à Poeme declaring certaine workes of God benefits shewed towards mankind or thus An Hymne is à Poeme recounting the vertues and praise worthy actions of the holie Saints or exhorting vs to amēd our liues The vse of Hymnes is most auncient S. Ierome affirmeth that all the Psalmes of Dauid before or after which Alleluia is placed are
for thy loue for he is the Lord thy God and they to wit all that shall beleeue in him shall adore him according Daniel 7. to that of the Prophet All peoples Tribes and tongues shall serue him And the daughters of Tyre of that great cittie neare to the land of Iuda called Tyre by whome are signified the Gentils shall present him with gifts all the rich of the earth shall beseech thy countenance shall with humble praiers and gifts seeke to winne thy fauour that they maie bee admitted to bee of thy traine and by thy meanes bee brought vnto his presence All the glorie of that daughter of the King who sometymes is called the Queene the spouse of Christ and the Church is within in interiour vertues and beautie of her mynd not in exteriour vaine fading things in borders of gold in workes of charitie clothed round about with varieties with the acts of diuers vertues In these consisteth her glorie and with these she trimmeth and adorneth herselfe that she maie appeare amiable in the eies of her spouse who is not delighted with exteriour vaine dressings and attyre Virgins shall bee brought to the King after her in the first principall place after her Virgins shall bee brought to thee ô Christ and next after them her neighbours holie widowes and such as lead their liues in lawfull wedlocke vsing it for the true end for which marriage was instituted and not for carnall delectation shall bee brought to thee They shall bee broug●t in ioy and exultation of body and spirit they shall bee brought into the temple of the King into the Kingdome of heauen after their passadge out of this place of banishement For thy Fathers in the place of the holie Patriarks and Prop●ets thy Fathers ô holie Church ô spouse of Christ there are borne to thee sonnes Apostles Bishops and Priests thou shalt make them Princes ouer all the earth and they shall prescribe lawes to the whole earth which neuer yet any temporall Monarch could doe They and all those they shall begett in Christ Iesus shall bee mindfull of thy name in all generation and generation shall seeke to dilate thy glorie in all ages Therefore shall peoples of all nations ●●ome the holie Apostles and their successors haue taught and inst●ucted Confesse vnto thee for euer shall praise thee vnto the end of the world and for euer and euer for eternitie This their praise shall beginne in this world and continue in the future without end By the espoused here mentioned all Expositors doe vnderstād the holie Church because the Apostle in the 5. to the Ephesians doth most clearly teach that the holie Church is the espoused of Christ Notwithstanding all that is here spoken of her in this Psalme maie alsoe bee fitly applied to euery perfect soule and principally to the Blessed Virgin who although she bee the Mother of Christ according to the flesh is neuerthelesse the espoused of Christ according to the spirit and amongst the members of the holie Church is deseruedly alotted vnto her the cheifest place of dignitie which is the reason that this Psalme is appointed to bee song in all her feasts and in the feasts of the other holie virgins The title and argument of the 45. Psalme and fift in the Nocturne Office VNto the end to the Sonnes of Chore A Psalme directing to the end which is Christ to the faithfull who shall imitate Christ crucified For secrets for hidden mysteries which shall bee reueiled in the later daies This Psalme is fitly placed next to the former for in the former was foretold the exaltation of the holie Church by the spirituall nuptialls with Christ our Lord in this is foreshewed the persecution which shall happen vnto her after the departure of her beloued spouse vnto his heauenly Kingdome her deliuery from those afflictions which shall principally come to passe towards the end of the world The exposition of this Psalme OVr Lord is à refuge vnto vs when we are inforced to fly persecution and strength when we tollerate it and in both flying and tollerating he is an helper and comforter in tribulations which haue found vs exeeedingly which haue happened vnto vs aboue measure Therefore will wee not feare when the earth shall bee troubled although the earth bee wonderfully shaken and mountaines transported into the heart or middest of the sea with great violence Or thus therefore we that hane placed our confidence in God will not feare when earthly men who haue had their affections wholly bent vpon terrene transitory things shall tremble with great horror in the daie of iudgement and the proud and mightie men of the world shall bee throwne into the very depth and middest of hell Or thus as being the words of the Primitiue Church hauing placed her hope in our Lord Iesus Christ Therefore we will not feare with à carnall humane and inordinate feare when the land of Iuda or the people of the Iewes shall bee troubled labouring in vaine to extirpate the young plants of Christ and blot out the memory of him in mens hearts neither will we then feare when the Apostles and disciples of Christ shall bee inforced to leaue Iewrie and passe to the Gentils inhabiting the middest of the earth Their waters haue sounded the clamours false accusations of the Iewes and Gentils haue sounded before the tribunalls of the Presidents Kings whither they haue conuented the disciples of Christ and were troubled to behold that they laboured in vaine to hinder the propagation of the Christian faith the mountaines were troubled the high Priests and the Princes and Potentates of the earth were moued some to impatience and persecution and others to Pennance and imitation in his strength beholding his diuine power in whose name the Apostles wrought wonderfull signes and miracles for confirmation of the doctrine which they promulgated The two following verses are expounded diues waies and first of the Militant Church The violence of the riuer the fountaine of sacred Baptisme maketh the militant Church the Citty of God ioyfull with spirituall gladnesse The highest God who alone can make cleane him that is conceiued of vncleane seed hath sanctified his tabernacle the Church of the elect or the elect themselues who according to the Apostle are the temple of the liuing God in whome he will dwell walke God is in the middest thereof of the foresaied temple as à strong pillar sustaining it on all sides who saieth of himself that VVhere there bee two or three gathered Math. 18. together in his name there he is in the middest of them It shall not bee moued the holie Church shall not faile in her faith nor bee suppressed or ouerwhelmed by tentation and tribulation because God will help it in the morning presently soe soone as she shall call vpon him for aide early in the spirituall Aurora to wit in the instant of infusion of grace or illumination of the holie Ghost Secondly they are
alsoe very many from falling into sinne poureth forth a fragrant odour in so much that whosoeuer shall piously call her to mynd shall experience himselfe sprinkled there with Of the Canticle or Hymne Te Doum laudamus THe auncient custome of recyting this Canticle or Hymne in the diuine Office maie bee proued by the Rule of our holie Father S. Benedict where he appointeth that after the fouerth Responsory to wit of the third Nocturne the Abbot doe beginne the Hymne Te Deum laudamus Concerning the originall institution of this Hymne S. Darius Bishop of Milan who liued in the tyme of Iustine the elder about the yeare of our Lord. 540. as S. Gregory affirmeth in his 3. Booke of dialogues the 4. Chap. in his Chronicles writeth as followeth By l. 1. c. 10. Chronic● blessed Ambrose saieth he Augustine was baptised and confirmed in the name of the holie and vndiuided Trinitie all the faithfull of the Cittie being present and beholding it at which tyme according as the holie Ghost gaue them to speake they pronounced the Hymne Te Deum Laudamus all that were present hearing seeing and admiring which hath been generally receiued and religiously sung euer since by the vniuersall Church in all ages euen vnto these our daies The Title and argument of the 92. Psalme and first in the Laudes PRaise of Canticle to Dauid himselfe in the date before the Sabbaoth when the earth was founded It seemeth t●at he who appointed this title was desirous that the insuing Psalme should bee sung vpon the Sixt Feria or Fryday which is the daie before the Sabbaoth because therein is declared that the earth was founded or according to some bookes inhabited Which is fitly saied to haue been done on the Sixt Feria for on that daie mā was formed who should bee Lord of the earth and by this the earth was first established which was created for man On this daie not onely man but alsoe all liuing creatures were created which inhabite the earth and therefore on this daie the earth began first to bee inhabited On the same daie alsoe by the Passion and death of Christ Iesus our Lord and Sauiour the earth was renouated and the Kingdome of Christ established the Prince of the world being cast forth All which notwithstāding the holie Church doth appoint this Psalme to bee sung at Laudes vpon Sunday about Sunne rising or daie breake because although our Sauiour purchased his Kingdome with the price of his most pretious bloud shed for mankind on the Sixt Feria and thereby layed the foundation of the new earth yet he receiued possession of his Kingdome at his glorious resurrection early in the morning vpon Sunday at which tyme he put on beauty and strength The words of this Psalme maie bee applied both to the Creation Reparation of the world as followeth The exposition of the Psalme OVr Lord hath reigned he hath put on beautie glorie and regall Majestie Our Lord hath alsoe put on strength power and fortitude which are equally requisite to support à Kingly diademe and hath girded prepared armed and setled himselfe to reigne If these words bee referred to the Creation of the world Christ as God is saied to haue begun to reigne when he had created the world for then he first of all began to haue subiects vpon the earth ouer whome he might exercise dominion But if they bee referred to the reparation of the world Christ as man at the tyme of his Resurrection did receiue the gouernment of the Vniuerse put on the beautie of à glorified body and put on fortitude all power being giuen him in heauen and vpon earth and girded or setled himselfe earnestly to ptopagat● his Kingdome to the vtmost confines of the earth It is manifest that our Lord hath reigned in this sort For he hath established firmely fixed the round world as the center of the vniuerse which shall not bee moued according to that of Ecclesiastes Generation passeth and generation Eccle. 1. cometh but the earth standeth for euer Christ likewise by his dolorous passion and glorious resurrection hath founded and established the Militant Church spred through all the regiōs of the earth in one faith and religion which shall not bee moued but shall perseuer in the same faith and worship vnto the end of the world for Christ shall reigne in the house of Luc. 1. Iacob for euer and of his Kingdome there shall bee noe end Thy seat ô Lord is prepared from that tyme to wit from the Creation of the world or the resurrection of Christ Yet thou didst not thē beginne to haue à being for thou according to thy diuine nature art from euerlasting from eternitie Concerning which you are to note that the word art doth not here signify the simple existence of the diuine nature but the fulnesse of his being wherein all things are contained For God was not poore or had need of any thing before he created the world neither was he more wealthy or better stored after he had created it for he created not the world that himselfe might encrease thereby but that he might communicate his goodnesse to vs therefore he created not the world as being compelled by any necessitie but as being moued thereunto by his infinite charitie and mercy and with the same charitie and mercy he hath repaired it for Soe God loued the Ioh. 3. world that he gaue his onely begotten Sonne that euery one that beleeueth in him perish not but maie haue life euerlasting The riuers ô Lord haue lifted vp the riuers haue lifted vp their voices The riuers haue lifted vp their waues aboue the voices of many waters The surges of the Sea are ma●u●lous maruelous is our Lord on high If the words of these verses bee referred to the first sense they signify the manner whereby God almightie made the earth habitable that it might bee à firme seate for all liuing creatures For i● the beginning of the Creation the waters couered the superficies of the Vniuerse and the inundations of the waters were eleuated with à terrible motion but God who is infinitely more high more excellent and powerfull repressed their furie closed part of them in the concauities of the earth and appointed limits to the rest which they shall not transcend In the Second sense by the riuers which lifted vp their voices is vnderstood the Apostles and other principall planters of the Christian faith who being filled with the waters of life did passe through the world like vnto soe many heauenly riuers and eleuate their voices preaching the Ghospell of Christ with great freedome By the riuers which lifted vp their waues is vnderstood the Iewes who euen in the very beginning contradicted the Ghospell in all places raised persecutiō against the disciples of Christ By the surges of the Sea which are farre greater thē the waues of the riuers is vnderstood the persecutions of the Infidels other aduersaries of the
common onely to Angells and Men yet in as much as all creatures being the workes of God are good the diuine goodnesse doth shine in them each of them is as it were à certaine rave of its Creators perfection which thereby is knowne and made manifest for as the Apostle witnesseth The inuisible things of God are seene being vnderstood by those things which are made his power alsoe and diuinitie Consequently in this respect all creatures whatsoeuer are truely saied to blesse and praise their Creator All the workes of God therefore are here inuited to blesse praise and superexalt our Lord euery one according to its nature Angells mentally Men with their voice mynd and both Angells and Men as alsoe all other creatures the workes of God by exciting and stirring vp the minds of those that shall rightly consider their natures actions and proprieties to extoll the Creator and acknowledge his infinite glory and magnificence Blesse our Lord yee Angells of our Lord After the generall inuitation of all creatures they descend to particulars beginning with the Angells who are most immediate to God and most like vnto him as being pure immateriall substances By the name of Angells in this place are vnderstood all the celestiall and blessed spirits which as S. Gregorie sheweth out of the holye scriptures are diuided into nine quires or orders and although sometymes the name of Angells bee appropriated to those blessed spirits which are ranked in the lowest quire yet all the nine quires of them are alsoe truly and properly called by that name which as she saied S. Gregorie doth saie is imposed vpon them by reason of the functions and chardges wherein they are employed by almightie God concerning which the Apostle speaking of them in generall sayeth Are they not all ministring spirits sent to minister for them which shall recerue the ininheritance of saluation Yee Heauens blesse our Lord. By the Heauens are vnderstood the celestiall orbes of which by reason of their greatnesse beautie actiuitie motiōs seueral● other properties the Prophet Dauid doth in particular and expressely ass●uere That Psal 18. they shew forth the glorie of God All waters that are aboue the heauens blesse yee our Lord. Here it is c●earely saied that there are waters aboue the heauens and it agreeth with that we read in Genesis Gen. 1. to wit that God made à firmament and diuided the waters that were vnder the firmament from those that were aboue the firmament and God called the firmament Heauen It agreeth alsoe with that of the Psalmist Praise him ye heauens of heauens Psal 148. Psal 103. and the waters that are aboue the heauenes and in another place Stretching out the heauen as à skin which couerest the highest parts the●eof with waters Which although it maie perhaps seeme at the first veiw contrary to naturall reason the sayings of the Philosophers yet as S. Augustine writeth vpon Genesis The authority of that part of holie writ is farre to bee preferred aboue the perspicacity or capacity of humane vnderstanding But what manner of waters they are it is not certaine The common opinion is that they are corporall waters and morally by them are vnderstood the eleuated and illuminated mynds of the Saints in which as in à mirrour diuine things are clearely represented Blesse our Lord all ye powers of our Lord. By these Powers some doe vnderstand the mouers of the celestiall orbes whome the Philosophers called Intelligences and S. Thomas in his Summe affirmeth to bee of the middle Hierarchy of Angels of the quire of Vertues of whome holie Dauid maketh mention saying Blesse our Lord Psal 148. all yee his vertues you his mynisters that doe his will Others by these powers of our Lord doe vnderstand the efficient vertues in the celestiall orbes which at their first Creation God almighty ingrafted in them or which are naturally in them whereby they gouerne and worke vpon the elements and mixt bodyes according to that of the Philosopher Man and the Sunne ingender man for the celestiall bodies by these vertues are generall causes of all motions and alterations generations and corruptions in these inferiour things Sunne Moone blesse yee our Lord These are the two great lights of which is made mention in Genesis the greater of them to wit the Sunne to gouerne the daie and the lesser to wit the Moone to gouerne the night In the diligent consideration of which lights especially of the Sunne the Majesty of God doth wonderfully appeare according to that of S. Denis This li. de diuinis n●minibus c. 4. visible Sunne saieth he is an euident representation of the diuine goodnesse who is the eternall intellectuall Sunne the Sunne of wisdome and iustice Yea in the greatnesse swiftnesse of motion brightnesse power and influence of the Sunne we cannot sufficiently admire the eminency of the diuine power and wisdome By the Sunne is spiritually signified the vnderstanding of truth and goodnesse and the splendor of Reason aboue the other powers all which are subiect to it illuminated and directed by it least erring in the lubricity of vice they fall violently to their owne destruction B● the Moone is signified the inferiour portion of the soule as is is gouerned and ruled by the superiour portion thereof and obedient to its direction Starres of heauen blesse yee our Lord The starres doe manifold waies represent the magnificence of their Creator in their beautie motion vertue pluralitie situation order influence They seeme indeed vnto vs but small yet the least of them is affirmed to bee greater then the whole earth and the cause of their appearing soe small is onely in regard they are situated most remote from vs. The glory of the starres saieth Ecclesiasticus is the beautie of heauen our Lord illuminating the Eccles 43. world on high By them are designed vertuous men indued with wisdome who shine to others in words of edification example fame and good life according to that of the Apostle Doe yee all Philip. 2. things without murmurings that you maie bee without blame and the simple children of God without reprehension in the middest of à crooked and peruerse generation amongst whome you shine as lights of the world and Daniel 12. that of Daniel the Prophet They that instruct many to iustice shall shine as starres vnto perpetuall eternities Euery shower and dew blesse yee our Lord. These are produced in the aire and are very profitable for the making fertile all such things as spring out of the earth and the conseruation of the life of man A shower or raine is caused by heate reuerberating vpon à clowd and dissoluing it into drops of water The shower saieth the Prophet Isaie commeth downe from Isai 55. heauen and returneth noe more thither but inebriateth the earth and watereth it and maketh it to spring and giueth seed to the sower and bread to him that eateth In the manner of the descending whereof
drop after drop with à certaine coherence in forme of little streames or most subtile water channels we cannot sufficiently admire the wisdome and goodnesse of God almighties prouidence For as holie Iob saieth If he hold in the waters all things Iob. 1● shall be dried and if he sende them forth they shall ouerthrow the earth to witt if they should fall together with violence but God almighty of his wōderfull goodnesse preuenteht this VVho bindeth the waters in Iob. 26. the clowds that they breake not forth together downewards Dew is à subtile and slender vapour compacted together in the superficies of the earth or vpon herbes by à tēperate coldnesse both to nourish them and refresh the aire By Dew is signified the consolation and vnction of the holie Ghost and by à shower is signified doctrine and preaching according to that of the Prophet Isaie I will commaund the Isa 5. clowds that they raine noe shower vpon it speaking of the Synagogue of the Iewes All spirits of God blesse yee our Lord. The spirits here mentioned are taken for the winds which proceed from sundry parts of the earth and conduce very much to the budding forth of the fruits of the earth to the consolation and refreshing of mankind By them are signified the inspiration and refrigeration o● the holie Ghost Fire and heate blesse yee our Lord. If w● will seriously consider the subtility actiuity and greatnesse of the elementarie Fire it will aboundantly store vs with matter of it's Creators praise S. Thomas affirmeth that the properties of diuine things maie fitly bee exprest by Fire for God himselfe is tearmed by the Apostle à consnming Fire charitie alsoe yea the Luc. 12. holie Ghost is for diuers reasons called Fire By Fire is signified Charity and by Luc. 24. heate which is an effect of Fire the feruour of charity of which our Sauiour saied I came to cast fire on the earth and what will I but that it bee kindled and the two Disciples saied VVas not out heart burning in vs whilest he spake in the way Cold and summer blesse yee our Lord Cold is either taken for the aire or for the sharpe quality of the winter season By it is mystically vnderstood the extinguishing of vices and concupiscence and by summer the perfection of vertues in which the elect doe magnificently praise almighty God most humbly ascribing to his diuine goodnesse aswell their ●ecesse from euill as their accesse to good Dewes and hoarie frost blesse yee our Lord. The Dewes here spoken of are most frequēt in the spring tyme but hoarie frost is most vsually in Autumne By Dewe is designed prosperitie by hoarie frost aduersitie in both which pious Vertuous men doe equally giue thankes to God Frost and Cold blesse ye our Lord. Frost is caused by cold and the most vehement frost is occasioned by the North wind according to that of Ecclesiasticus The cold North wind blewe and of the water Eccles 43. Psal 147. there froze Christ●all vpon the gatering waters it shall rest and as à brest plate it shall put it selfe vpon waters and that of the Psalmist He casteth his Christall as morsells before the face of his cold who shall endure By frost and cold is vnderstood the constriction or obduration of the mynd caused by substraction or suspension of diuine cō olations or sensible deuotion into which estate whosoeuer commeth by the diulne dispensation let him praise God in the best manner that he can and in noe sort neglect to prosecute those pious exercises he hath accustomed himselfe to performe nor condeseend to solace himselfe in exteriour vaine delights but busie himselfe in some profitable imployment as reading writing or hand labour and expect with patience the reinfusion of those subtracted gifts acknowledging his vnworthinesse resigning himselfe to beare that affliction euen during his whole life if soe it shall seeme good to the will of God and noe doubt these aridities and coldnesses will turne to his aduancement in the way of perfection and the comforts he will receiue afterwards from the diuine goodnesse wlll bee farre more reall and solide then he euer formerly experienced Yee and snow blesse yee our Lord. Some by yee doe suppose haile to bee vnderstood Snow is the dissolution of à cloud which by reason of excessiue cold cannot melt into drops but is congealed in its descent and falleth downe in forme of lockes of wooll The whitenesse thereof is caused by reason that the subtile and light spirits thereof in their congealing doe striue to exhale but are stroken suddainly by force of the cold and kept in by which meanes they are turned into à froth and seeme white and cleare In yee Psal 147. Psal 148. and snow we maie behold the immense wisdome of God who as the Psalmist affirmeth giueth snow as wooll and againe Haile snow yee spirit of stormes which doe his word By these two are signified the scourges of God wherewith we are chastized in which we ought to praise God saying with holie Iob I haue sinned Iob. 33. and indeed I haue offended and as I was worthy I haue not receiued Nights and daies blesse yee our Lord. There are two sorts of daies The one is called an artificiall daie which continueth during the space of tyme that the Sunne is seene in our Hemisphere the other à naturall daie which contayneth all that space of tyme which an artificiall daie doth the night following and is vsually diuided into 24. howers Night is caused by the shaddow of the earth and designeth tribulation and daie prosperitie By Night is alsoe designed the obscuritie of the old Testamēt or darkenesse of vices and by daie the grace of truth in the New testament and illustration of the mynd according to that of the Apostle The night is passed and the daie is at hand Rom. 13. Let vs therefore cast of the workes of darkenesse and doe on the armour of light Light and darkenesse blesse yee our Lord. S. Paul defineth Light by its effect Light Ephes 5. saieth he is that which maketh all things manifest It is à celes●iall qualitie created the first daie by which is designed the increate brightnesse of God In à mysticall sense it is takē for the illuminatiō of the vnderstanding or for the consolation exhilaration of the heart as darknesse which is à priuation of light is taken for ignorance or desolations and heauinesse of the heart Lightnings and clowds blesse yee our Lord. Lightning is à wonderfull hot and drie exhalation which after it is drawne aloft is inuironed on euery side and constrained into straight limits by the force of cold out of which it striuing to gett passage in that conflict fire flasheth forth the clowd bursting and thunder is heard Clowds are caused partly by the celestiall waters before mentioned and partly by moist vapours exhaled and drawne vp by the Sunne By them are spiritually
signified the cōduits of grace and the preachers of Gods holie word and by lightnings the corruscation of miracles and the commination or threatning of the terrible iudgements of God according to that of the Prophet Isaie I will command the Clowds that they rayne Je. 5. noe shower vpon it and that of the Psalmist His lightnings shined to the round Ps●l 96. world c. Let the earth blesse our Lord. The earth is the lowest and least of the sower Elements and à greate part thereof is ouer flowne with waters neuerthelesse it doth afford aboundant matter of the Creators praise to all that shall rightly consider the quantity disposition fertility and other properties thereof as alsoe how it is as it were the center of the Vniuerse and remaineth firme and immoueable in its place notwithstanding its exceeding weight which is not supported by any thing but hangeth wonderfully in the middest of the world By the stability and fertility thereof is signified constant and vertuous men whome the holie Ghost doth make fruitfull with the celestiall seed of the word of God according to that of S. Luc. 8. Luke The seed is the word of God and that which fell vpon good ground are they who in à good and perfect heart hearing the word doe retayne it and yeeld fruit in patience Mountaines and little hills blesse yee our Lord. By them are designed those that are of great and of small power authority in the holie Church and especially Prelates and such as excell in the gifts of grace according to that of the Prophet Ioell Mountaines shall distill sweetnesse and Ioell 3. the hills shall flow with milke All things that spring in the earth blesse yee our Lord. If we attentiuely consider the value beautie sweetnesse delightfulnesse and other innumerable properties of the things that are produced within the earth and of those that spring out of it we cannot sufficiently admire in them the wisdome sweetnesse and beautie of the omnipotent Creator Blesse our Lord yee fountaines Fountaines are certaine euident representations of almightie God who by reason of his Munificence liberalitie and immense goodnesse towards mankind is often tearmed in holye Scriptures à Fountaine By thē are signified Doctors preachers and Priests vnto whome it belongeth Psal 67. to communicate and impart to others the streames of wisdome and knowledge to saluation and distribute the gifts of grace and the holie Sacraments and of whome it is written In Churches blesse yee God our Lord of the Isa 12. fountaines of Israell and in another place You shall draw waters in ioy out of the Sauiours fountaines Seas and Riuers blesse yee our Lord There is one great sea called the Ocean and diuers other particular seas as it were armes of the saied great sea From the sea ' as from the first fountaine or head all Riuers issue according to that of Ecclesiastes All riuers enter into the sea and the Eccl. 1. sea ouerfloweth not to the place whence riuers issue forth they doe returne that they muie flow againe By the sea is sometymes expressed the inquietude restlesnesse bitternesse and commotion of this world to witt of secular men according to that of the Prophet Isaie The impious are as it were Psa 57. the raging sea which cannot be quiet Sometimes alsoe by the sea are designed the hearts of penitents mouing themselues with bitternesse and the waues of internall compunction By the riuers are signified the copious gifts of grace according to that of our Sauiour He that Ioh. 7. beleeueth in me out of his belly shall flow riuers of liuing waters and sometymes the excesse of tribulations according to that of Psal 92. the Psalmist The riuers haue lifted vp their waues about the voices of many waters VVhales and all things that moue in the waters blesse yee our Lord. These are the principall ornaments of the element of water and what mortall man is able to explicate the variety profit strength and other properties of the fishes of the sea Verily if we attend to what is written by Philosophers concerning the Whale we shall find an ample subiect of the Creators praise By that our Sauiour speaking to S. Peter and S. Andrew Mat 4. saied Come yee after mee and I will make you to bee fishers of men it should seeme that by fishes are vnderstood men in such sort that by the VVhale are designed the great powerfull men and by the other creatures mouing in the waters are signified the lesser simpler sort of people all regenerated by the waters of Baptisme receiuing thereby infused vertues and life of grace Blesse our Lord all yee foules of heauen to witt of the aire where birds flie Who can worthily admire the wisdome perfection and Maiesty of God in the diuersity sweet modulation swift motion and other proprieties of birds By them are sometymes signified proud men raysing themselues vnto the height of vanity and diuells flying in the aire of whome our Sauiour saied The fowles of the aire did eate Luc. 8. it that is did take away the seed of the word of God Yet in this place by the fowles of the aire some doe vnderstand Contemplatiues eleuated aloft by the wings of Praier and Meditation vnto whome maie fitly be applied that of the Psalmist VVho will giue me the wings of Psal 54. à doue and I will fly and rest and that of the Prophet Isaie VVho are these that Isa 60. fly as clowds and as doues to their windowes and againe in another place They that hope in our Lord shall change their Isai 40 strength They shall take wings as Eagies they shall runne and labour they shall walke and not faint All beasts and cattell blesse yee our Lord. In these alsoe the magnificence of the most high artificer is vnspeakably commended who to declare his singular wisdome in these his effects doth speake many things of them to his seruant Iob. S. Augustine affirmeth that those creatures which haue the least of quantity haue the most admiration for we more admire the workes of the Ante and Bees thē the vast bodies of other beasts Hugh alsoe of S. Victor conformably speaking saieth That the creatures which we admire for their littl●nes are soe artificially and wisely formed that we can scarce discerne whether we ought rather to admire the tushes of the Bore or the wings of the Moath the wings of the Griffon or of the Gnat the head of à Horse or of à Locust the thigh of an Elephant or of an Eagle c. For in these small bodies God almighty hath soe fully distributed all manner of lineaments sutable to their seuerall natures that nothing seemeth to bee wanting to them which nature hath formed in the greatest By beasts and cattell are signified men following sensuality who are inuited to blesse our Lord in that he hath soe gratiously spared them and with such pacience expected their amendment These
the ministerie of his holie Angels the diuine law the holie Scriptures celestiall reuelations to vs mortalls His word runneth sw●fily The Euangelicall law and doctrine of Christ was di●●lged in all places through the whole earth in à short tyme by the preaching of the Apostles and Disciples for Into all Psal 18. the earth hath the sound of them gone forth into the end● of the whole world the words of them Christ indeed-sent forth his speech to the earth when he saied to his Apostles Going into the whole world preach the Marc. 16. Ghospell to all creatures but his word ranne swiftly when they did putt in execution and accomplished what he had foretold them to witt That they should bee witnesses Act. 1. vnto him in Ierusalem and in all Iew●ie and S●mar●● and euen to the vtmost of the earth VVho giueth s●ow as w●oll He it is alsoe who by his diuine power disperseth the waters that are eleuated into the middle region and there congealed and makes them gently fall not vnlike to litle lockes of whitest wooll couering the cultiuated feilds as it were with a woollen mantle which defends the tender blades from the sharpe rigours of the hoarie frost Scattereth mist hoarie times made small as ashes These mists cause fertilitie to plants that are purified by the nipping cold of those grizely bearded rimes which repell all vitious sappe from trees and render them noe lesse aboundant in fruits then well nourished in bodie and branches VVho casteth his Christall as morsells Christall is generally esteemed to bee certaine peeces of vce here and there dispersed in great gobbits which by long condensation and freezing is become soe hard and solide that it cannot by any meanes bee dissolued and yet retaineth the clearenesse and luster of the element whereof it is produced Before the face of his cold of the excessi●e coldnesse which he can send at his pleasure in such extremitie that it will bee of power to con●ert water into Christall who shall end●re As if he should saie noe man is able to sub●ist at the presence thereof for indeed there are some countreys which noe man can inhabite by reason of the excessiue co●dnesse He shall send forth his word and shall melt them his spirit shall blow and waters shall flow Almightie God is soe powerfull that with the least word he shall vouchsafe to let fall from his sacred mouth he can dissolue all the saied snowes frozen mists and congelations and with one blast of a Southerne wind cause the waters to runne as before These diuers effects of one the same cause doe signifie vnto vs the great efficacie of his diuine word whereby he augments the number of faithfull Christians made pure and white as snow by faith the Sacraments reducing them to Pennance signified by ashes thereby resoluing all the mists hoarie rimes which are the little obstacles that did congeale our soules to the end to render them more fertile in good workes when the Sunne of Iustice doth giue them light and life ●yea dissoluing Chrystall that is mollifying those rebellious obstinate and hard frozen hearts which retaine in apparence the splendor of christall shew an exteriour resemblance of worth and value and cannot bee dissolued by any exhortation whatsoeuer For when he pleaseth to sende his sacred word holie spirit manifested either by internall inspiration or by visible miracles and to breathe vpon their cold frozen couradges then behold them in an instant conuerted into teares and altogether inflamed with his loue and recurring to the riuers of Baptisme Some expound the former words VVho giueth snow as wool of the consolation which the Saincts receiue in tribulation according to that of the Apostle I am replenished with consolation I doe exceedingly 2. Cor. 7. abound in ioy in all our tribulateon For snow doth afflict with its coldnesse but wool doth cherish with its warmth God therefore doth giue snow as wooll because he giueth snow as if he gaue wooll for he giueth tribulation which is conuerted into the consolation of his Saints Moreouer they referre these words Scattereth mist as ashes to pennance which is designed by ashes for God scattereth the cloud or hoarie mist of tribulation whereby many are excited to pennance and soe God giueth mist as ashes because he giueth mist as though he gaue ashes in regard that tribulation leadeth to pennance Finally they expound these words He casteth his cristall a● morsell● of the greatest consolation which God almightie graunteth in tribulation for then he casteth his christall as morsells when he giueth yee as though he gaue bread because euen in the yee it selfe of tribulation he infuseth the bread of consolation VVho declareth his word to Iacob his iustices and iudgements to Israel He hath not done in like manner to any natiō and his iudgements he hath not made manifest to them The Prophet concludeth shewing what difference there is betweene the Prouidence of God towards his people and other nations For he hath taught other nations by naturall effects that they might come to acknowledge their creator by the consideration of created things but he hath taught his people by his Prophets O Ierusalem therefore praise our Lord who declareth his word to Iacob to witt to his people seeing him by faith speaking vnto them by Moyses and the Prophets and who declareth His iustices and Iudgements to Israel by his seruant Moyses vnto whome he gaue the law to deliuer it to his people of Israel Hence thou maist gather that he hath not done in like manner to any nation● because to thee alone and not to others he hath manifested his saied iudgements By his word his iustices and iudgements mai● alsoe hee vnderstood aduertisements necessarie to saluation bee it by word ●● forme their manners bee it by statutes or ordinances for what concernes his seruice and the due worship in his true religion or finally bee it by iudgements fo● that which appertaines to the distribution of iustice and right which must bee rendred to our neighbour all which God almightie hath in a peculiar manner deliuered to his elected people Behold à Psalme altogether replea● with spirituall sweetnesse erecting our minds to the contemplation of heauenly things In it the Militant Church or euery one of the faithfull doth inuite the triumphant Church to praise the author of their be atitude not that the blessed need our admonition but that we congratulating them and 〈…〉 lating their felicitie maie bee incited thereby ●o labour to attaine their vnion Whilest therefore we repeate the first verse thereof let vs ele●ate our hearts to the ioyes of that super●●all palace perlustrate that sacred Cittie with the eies of faith and sigh after the blisse thereof for whose loue we ought to flight all sensible and carnall things Let vs attend after our poore manner what ioyes the glorified soules doe securely possesse whose Cittie is fortified on all sides that noe