THE AVDI FILIA, OR A RICH CABINET FVLL OF SPIRITVALL IEVVELLS.

Composed by the Reuerend Father, DOCTOVR AVILA, Translated out of Spanish into English.

Omnis terra adoret te, & psallat tibi.

Psal. 65.

Let all the earth adore thee, & sing to thee, O Lord.

Permissu Superiorum, M.DC.XX.

THE DEDICATORY. TO ALL ENGLISH CATHOLIKES.

HAVING receaued the honour, and hap­pines to be a member of your Holy Com­munion; and on the other side, hauing done you no­thing but dishonour, by leading [Page]an vnprofitable life at least, and most vnvvorthy of the high vocati­on of being a Catholike; I haue had too much reason to cast my thoughtes vpon thinking, hovv I might make you some little part of amendes. Nothing came to my mind (vvhich might also be vvith­in the measure of my povver) but the presenting you vvith this Book; vvhich, togeather vvith my selfe, I cast at the feet of you all, vvith an humble and most reuerend affecti­on. Our Lord doth knovv, hovv much need I haue of all your pray­ers, and the high account, vvhich I make of them; vvhereby you may ghesse, hovv much in earnest I de­sire the same.

And because there is amongst you a Religious Person, a true ser­uant & spouse of Christ our Lord, [Page]by vvhose meanes, through the goodnes of God, I am grovvne to an increase of some good desires to doe him Seruice; and vvho made much impression vpon my mind, tovvards the making me translate this very Booke; I do also dedicate it, to the same person, in a particu­ler manner, as a token of Eternall Gratitude. And I beg of that Soule, that vvhen, by vvay of Exchange, for the great Treasures, vvhervvith God hath trusted her, she shallbe remitting her deuout Petitions to that diuine Maiesty; the necessityes of myne, may not be layd aside.

Our Lord Iesus graunt, by the precious merits of his bitter Passion (vvhich I beseech him to apply to vs all, by the intercession of his Im­maculately conceaued Mother, the Queene of Heauen) that vve, vvho [Page]by his grace, are in these difficult tymes, made members of his Mi­litant Church (vvhich to vs indeed is so truely Militant) may one day, by his goodnes, arriue to be also mēbers of the Triumphant. Where clearely, and, at once, vve shalbe sure to see, and vvonder, at the inestimable riches of Mercy, vvher­vvith our Lord did choose vs fevv, out of so many millions of soules, to professe his Truth and Fayth, vvith so much preiudice to our sel­ues, in all those thinges, vvhich the Foolish and Childish World is vvont to hold so deare. Only vve must take care, that vve continue in it, to, and in the end; and in the meane tyme, also to accompa­ny our Fayth, by such good vvorks as may become this high Profes­sion; for else vve shall but double [Page]our damnation. Our Lord deli­uer vs from falling into that Abys­se of misery; and enable vs by his holy Grace, so to serue and suffer for him heere, that Eternally vve may adore him in Heauen.

The affectionate humble seruant of you all, L. T.

THE PREFACE TO The discreet, and pious Reader.

THE The great fam that this Booke enioyeth through­out the world. extraordinary fame, of this Excellent book gaue me a curiosity to be acquainted with it; & charity, I hope, is that, which makes me thus deliuer it ouer, to be acquainted with you. The Title thereof will haue told you the Authours Name; and when you shall haue peru­sed it, you will acknowledge, I belie­ue, that spirit to haue been eminent, which the only Giuer of all good thinges, bestowed vpon him. The The Nation of the Author, and the tyme wherin he liued, and when he dyed. Country of his birth, was Spaine; and the time of his life, was this last age of ours; for he dyed, in the yeare of our [Page]Lord Iesus 1569. some thirteene years after B. P. Ignatius dyed in the yeare 15 [...]6. Do­ctour A­uila, in the yeare 1569. and B. Mother Teresa, in the yeare 1 [...]8 [...]. Blessed Father Ignatius; & about as many, before Blessed Mother Teresa.

With The commu­nication, which he had with the holiest persons of his tyme. both these Saints, being mirrours of their tymes, and the lasting miracles of these endes of the world, he had particuler communi­cation. For the later of them, he aduised, and directed in the way of spirit, concerning some difficultyes, which occurred to her; and she was both comforted, and instructed great­ly by him. And as for the former, he bore such affection; and euen ad­miration to his holy Institute, that his owne being already, at that tyme, so far in yeares, was He carryed great de­uotion to the Socie­ty of Ie­sus. the only cause, that clipt the winges of his desire, which would faine haue beene carry­ing him on; to flye apace after such a guyde. But what, he could, he did; by addressing diuers of his disciples, to become members of that Society, wherein they happily both liued and dyed; as appeareth both by the history [Page]of his life, and yet further, by some of his owne printed letters; and in a Church of the Society of Iesus he would needs be buried, namely at Montillia, in Andaluzia.

The Fray Lewis de Granada, wrote his life. life of Doctour Auila, is written by Fray Lewis de Granada, a Re­ligious man, of the glorious Saint Do­minickes Order; and one renowned in the world, both for the memory of his great vertues, and the presence of his holy bookes. It is no meaning of myne, to giue you heere, the full relation of this life; but I only shew, euen by the circumstance of the emi­nent man who wrote the same, what account our Authour deserueth at our hands; which must needs rebound vpon this Booke, so farre, as to in­crease your estimation therof. For this reason also, you shall vnderstand, that when he was yet in health, and subiect to the greatest importunity of busines, he He was a man of very great Prayer. mentally prayed foure houres euery day; and he slept but foure, euery night. [Page]When afterward he grew into sicknes (which he was subiect to, and that in greate extremity, for those seauen­teene yeares, which did immediately precede his death) it is probable, that he must sleep much lesse; and [...] is faith­fully recorded in the life it selfe, that [...]e prayed much more; for all was pray [...]r with him, from the morning, till two of the clocke afternoone; and againe, from six, till bed-tyme, which with him, was not till about an eleuen.

So as this With how great light of vnderstā ­di [...]g, and hea [...]e of Charity, this Bo [...]k was writ­ten. Booke, and the rest of his excellent workes in this kind, were not so much the issue of a studious and speculatiue brayne, as of a b [...]eeding and boyling hart. Boyling, through the loue of God; and bleeding, for the sins of the world. Which two obiects, be­ing so perpetually before the eyes of his mind; and he, so hourely, treating with the purity of God, by way of amorous contemplation; and vvith men (whose consciences were loaden vvith sinne) by vvay of conuersation, and compas­sion; [Page]it is the lesse wonder, if his words vvere like so many burning coales, which might serue, to seare those soules which are full of festred soares; and to set such others as are sound, on fire, vvith the loue of Almighty God.

And in the same spirit, he hath also written a large Booke of Sermons vpon the B. Sacrament, and vpon some festi­uityes of our B. Lady; as also a Booke of Epistles to seuerall persons, vpon se­uerall occasions; vvhich I would to God some Reader, who hath knowledg of that language would take the paines or rather pleasure to translate. For I am much deceaued if there be any ver­tue to be obtayned, or any vice to be a­uoyded, or any necessity to be remo­ued, or any affliction to be asswaged, wherein a man may not find some ex­cellent addresse for his purpose, in the reading of those works aforesaid, which he was inspired to write by the loue, & for the loue of God.

This loue of God being in him so [Page]hoat, did make him profoundly loue, that which God loued so much; & the ardent desire which he had to How hethirsted after the saluation of soules. gaine such (which were the soules of men, for whom Christ dyed) to God; made him employ the credit which he found with some great Prelates, and other great per­sons (as the vvriter of his life relates) in procuring them to found Life of D. A­i [...]la [...]-part. cap. 2. some Col­ledges, for such as might instruct youth in learning, and vertue; and others, vvhich might be as Seminaryes, for the education, & intertaynment of vvor­thy, & exemplar Priests. And speaking often of this subiect, he vvas vvont to say, I Out of the feare, which then he had, that it would not be sa­tisfied, before his death. perceaue, I shal dye, with this desire. But after, when the Institute of the Fathers of the Soc ty. of Iesus came to his knowledg; he did greatly reioyce, in his very soule: per­ceauing, how for that, which he was not able to compasse, but only for some short tyme, & with no small difficulty, our Lord had proui­ded a The high ve­neration wherein [...] had B. F. Ig [...]ati­us, whom he compa­red to a mighty strong man, and himself to a child, who was not able to moue that great Stone, which the other was able to take vp, and weild at his ple­asure; and to lay it in the pro­per place. By this Stone, he ūderstāds the worke of wining soules. Vide hist. Soc. Iesu l. 14. fol. 464. man, who should go through with it in a perfect manner, and with a perpetuity of continuance and strength; and these are the [Page]very vvordes of Supra part. 3. c. 2. the Life.

This Booke is framed, and the considerations which the Authour hath fallen vpon, are drawne from his con­templation of that The ground or Argument of the Booke. verse of the psalme, which is prefixed by way of argument, before the first chapter. The An addresse to the particuler discourses that he makes in this work. particu­lers, wherof he treates, are many; and the heades of them, shall go, in a page apart, between this Preface, & the Book. But the maine drift of the Authour, is to make vs know, The chiefe drift of the Authour. both God, and our selues; and that; not by the lying glasse of fancy, but by the cleare, and sweete beame of Truth. Our selues; that we may see our misery; and fly, at full speed, from the cause thereof, which is our pride, and other sins. And God, that we may tremble, vnder that infinite Maiesty; & belieue, that infallible Verity; and hope, for a part of that inexhausted Mercy; and euen, as it were, furiously loue, that incomprehensible Abysse, of Charity, and Beauty.

This charity of God, the Authour doth gladly make appeare, vpon all occasions, and by great variety of most iust motiues; but especially, doth his soule euen regorge againe, when he enters into speach of the He ex­celleth himselfe, whensoe­uer he growes to speake of the Incar­nation, Life, and Passion of Christ Ie­sus our Lord. Incarnati­on, & Life, & Passion of our Lord Iesus. Which he pondereth so cōtemplatiue­ly, and yet so sensibly; so profoundly, and yet so plainly; so strictly, and yet so tenderly; as is able to make, euen brasse to blush, and iron to burne, and lead to melt, for the greife, and shame, of the much, that we haue sinned; and for loue of him, in respect of the infi­nite, that he hath suffered for vs. That so, in fine, we may heerafter make the consideration of the sacred Passion of our Lord, a great part of our busine, in this life; since it is by it, that we must be happy in the next, vnles we haue a mind to remayne in torment for all e­ternity. And that we may, at length, both with our hart, and tongue, make this prayer to the diuine Maiesty, to [Page]which our Author exhorts A holy prayer, which he makes in this Trea­tise fol­lowing. vs in his discourse vpon the Passion, That the mer­cy of God, may not permit vs to be so misera­ble, as not to be content so much, as to thinke, or meditate, vpon those vast affronts, & tormēts which the Son of God (being the King of glo­ry, and God himselfe) was content, not only to consider, but to suffer. Yea and so to suffer, as that the infinite desire of loue, wherewith he suffered them, may euen put the things thē ­selues, as it were, to silence; how lowd soeuer, they otherwise, deserue to be crying out, in the eares of our hart. And this he did, with­out all interest of his owne, and only for our eternall good (as the Author doth excellēt­ly declare) that so, insteed of enemyes, and rebels, & most wicked slaues, which naturally by our descent from Adam, we were, in the fight of God, we might be translated, into the condition, of being made his seruants, his friends, & his adopted sonnes, vpon the price of his owne pretious life. This is the nayle that he beats most vpon; and I beseech our Lord, that our harts may be euen riuetted to his diuine hart, thereby.

In the meane tyme, you the Reader, must not spend your hope, vpon the meeting heer with Con­cerning the stile. any curious, or e­laborate stile. For though euen in this kind, the Author be far inough frō fault; yet, composition, was the thing, which he might well disdaine to affect; as know­ing, that the inualuable stone which he was exposing, did deserue to be most highly esteemed, though it were not ar­tificially either cut, or set. Nor Concerning the quali­ty of the Authors concepti­ons. yet, are you heer, so much as to think of en­countring certain flourishing, & fading cōceits; though I am much deceaued, if the most fastidious mind, wil not heere find matter, whereupon to feed with great delight. But the Authours ayme, was at a fairer marke. It is not the clap­ping of handes which he begs; he He shootes at the soules of men, and not, at the on­ly tickling of their eares, or the ap­plause of their handes. shoots at no lesse, then the souls of mē; & them he conuinceth, by so pregnant reasons, and obligeth by so plaine de­monstrations, as to make them glad (or, or least, he giues them cause, why they should be so) to cast away that [Page]loose liberty, which made them slaues, to their own passions; & to step, or ra­ther to leap, into the chaines of the loue of God, which will put them, into a kind of soueraignity, not only ouer all o­ther thinges created, but euen ouer their very selues.

And The extraor­dinary great care, wherwith he condu­cteth his Reader, through­out the whole dis­course. in this he equalleth in my poore opiniō, if he do not rather excel, any other whom I haue read, That he most carefully doth conduct the soule, which he instructeth in the way of spi­rit; accompanying his discourse with aboundance of caution; so to saue his Reader from sliding into any extreme; and being no lesse sollicitous, to guide him straight, then a tender mother, or nurse would be, to lead her only child, by the sleeues or armes, for feare least otherwise he might take a fall. I The occasion where­upon he wrote this booke. will further premise to you, vpon what oc­casion he wrote this Booke; and to whom he did particulerly direct the same; and then, by way of preuention, I will both make, and answere an obie­ction [Page]to the end, that your selfe may be kept from errour afterward.

There was a Lady, called The person for whom he wrote it. Donna Sancba the daughter of the Lord of Gua­dalcaçar; who for her beauty, and other better parts, was designed to serue the Queene of Spayne, in quality of a Lady of Honour. Already, she was euen vpon the point of parting, from her parents; who had put her into an equipage, which was to haue becom a Court. But, before her iourney, she meant to arme her selfe with the holy Sacraments of the Church; &, in the strength of that desire, she went and cast her selfe, at the feet of Doctour Auila, in the way of Confession. She would after say, that he reprooued her a little sharply, for bringing a hart, which pretended to be penitent for sin­ne, in a body set out, & ardorned too curiously, & too costly for such a busi­nes. What els passed between them, in that priuate conference, and Confession of hers, God, and they do only know; but the sequele thereof, was notorious [Page]to the world. For she, instantly, did vnturne Courtier; she grew quickly to cast away her vaine, and sumptuous attires; and she betooke her selfe (tho­ugh only in her Fathers house) to a course of admirable pennance, & recol­lection, which she accompanied with a Vow of perpetuall chastity; wherein she dyed, most holily, and most happily, some ten yeares after. This Lady then as being the Child, and Creature (as it were) in spirit of Doctour Auila, was deare to him, after an extraordinary manner. And so, for her, both consolation, and instruction, he made this Booke, of Audi Filia; and she esteemed it as she ought; for she neuer would know, or call it by other name, then of her Trea­sure. But when she was gone to God, he took the Booke againe to himselfe; and enlarged it, and enriched it to that proportion, which, at this day, we see it beares.

Now, in regard that he chiefely speakes therein, to her, as to a person, [Page]who had giuen her selfe to God, by a vow of chastity; you An obiection which it importeth much, to be wel an­swered. may seeke per­haps to make your selfe belieue, that the doctrine therin conteined, belon­geth only to such as she. But the an­swere is obuious, and assured. That howsoeuer it may import such as she was knowne to be, in a more eminent manner, then other Christians; in re­gard that she had consecrated her selfe, to our Lord Iesus, as to the spouse of her soule, by a particuler vow; yet, for as much as cōcernes the obligation which we The general o­bligation, to which all good Christians are sub­iect. all haue, to abstaine from sinne; to imploy ourselues in prayer, & good workes; to despise the vanity of the world; to resist the motions of sense, & to arme our selues against the temptati­ons of the Diuel (to which the promise, euen of our very Baptisme, bindes vs;) to loue God aboue all thinges; to imi­tate the life; and to practise the doctri­ne of our Lord Iesus; and finally, to be, and to continue true children of his ho­ly Catholique Church; this doctrine, I say, [Page]doth so much, and so mightily belonge to vs all; as that none of vs shall euer get to heauē, but either by an exact obe­dience to it, or a cordiall griefe, for ha­uing swarued from it. And so Of the variety of addresse, in the way of spirit, which is to be found in this book for per­sons of al quality es. if you may be intreated to obserue, what va­riety of addresse for spirit, the Authour giueth in the seueral parts of the worke; you cannot chuse but discerne, that it is not only meant for Virgins, but for all others also, if they be Christians; yea, and if they be not so much as that, they yet will heer find reason, to beg of God that they may grow so happy.

Let How much it importeth that this booke be read, with great at­tention & deuotion. vs also, all, beg hard for that, whereof we haue most need. That when heerafter, at the day of Iudgment, we shall meete Doctour Auila, in the valley of Iosaphat; there may be no cause to be reproached by our Iudge, of so deep ingratitude, as not to haue been the better, for the great benefit, which the godnes of God hath vouch­safed to mankind, by means of this, his deare, and most deuout seruant. But In this valley, & there a­bouts, is the vni­uersall Iudgmēt to be made, Ioel. 3. [Page]that the seed which hath fructified so a­bundantly, in Spayn, in Italy, in France, & in I know not how many other coun­tryes, by the translatiō of this booke, in­to so many seuerall languages, may also in England, be of comfort to that good Matt. [...]. husbandman of the ghospell; and not be choaked by thornes, nor supplanted by stones, nor deuoured by the rauenous birds of the aire; who are euer watching, how to enrich themselues by our pouer­tie. For so truly miserable, are those damned spirits, as to think themselues more happy in nothing, then if they might draw vs into a society with them in torment: though indeed, euen our ve­ry torment, would be sure to serue, but for an increase of theirs. Our Lord Iesus deliuer vs from that place of eternall malediction; both for that, which we know thereof by Fayth already; and much more, for that, which we do not know; and which I hope we shall neuer know, by experience.

A RICH CABBINET, FVLL OF SPIRITVALL IEWELLS.

CHAP. I.
WHEREIN IS TREATED, How necessary it is for vs, to giue eare to God; and of the admirable Language, which our first Pa­rents spake, in the state of Innocency: Which being lost by Sinne, many ill ones, did succeed in place therof.

‘He [...]en, O Daughter, and behold; Psal. 4 4. and incline thine eare▪ and forget thy people, and the house of thy Father; and the King shall with delight desire thy beauty.’

THESE words, O thou deuout Spouse This Booke was writ­tē chiesly for the Lady, Don̄a Sancha, daughter to the Lord of Guadal­caçar who liued not in a Mo­nastery, but in her Fathers house▪ though she con­secrated her self to God, by a vow of virginity. of Iesus Christ, doth the Prophet Dauid speake, or rather God, by him, to the Christian Church; aduising her of that which she ought to do; that so the great King may be drawne to loue her; by meanes whereof, she may be endewed with all happines. And because thy soule, is, by the great [Page 2]mercy of God, a member of this Church, I haue thought fit to declare these words to thee. Implo­ring first the ayde of the Holy Ghost; to the end, that it may direct my pen, and prepare thy hart, that so neither I may speake vnfitly, nor thou heare vnfruitfully; but that, both the one and the other, may redound to the eternall honour of God, & the performing of his holy will.

The first thing that we are wished to, in these wordes, is that we hearken; & not without cause. Because as the first beginning of our spiri­tual life is fayth, & this, as Rom. 10. S. Paul affirmes, doth enter into the soule by meanes of hearing; it is, but reason, that first we be admonished of that, which we are first to put in practise. For it will profit vs very litle, that the voyce of diuine truth do sound exteriourly in our hearing, We must hear first, & practise after. if withall, we haue not eares, which may hearken to the sa [...], with­in. It will not serue our turne, that when we were baptized, the Priest did Accor­ding to the anci­ent custo­me of the holy Ca­tholike Church. put his finger into our eares, requiring them to be open; if afterwardes we shall shut them vp, against the word of God; fullfilling so in our selues, that which the Prophet Dauid sayth of the Idols, Psal. 11 [...]. Eyes they haue, and they see not; eares they haue, and they dee not heare.

But because some speake so ill, that to heare them, is no better then to heare the Syrens, who kill their auditours; it wilbe fit for vs, to see, both whom we are, and whom we are not to heare. For this purpose, it is to be noted, that Adaw, and [Page 3] Eue, when they were created, spake one only Language; and that continued, in the world, till the The con­fusion of tongues, grew in punish­ment of the pride of man. pryde of men (who had a mind to build vp the Tower of confusion) was punished. Where­vpon, insteed of one Language, whereby all men vnderstood one another, there grew to be a mul­titude of Languages, which they could not, mu­tually vnderstand. By this we also come to know, that our first Parents, before they rebelled from their creatour (transgressinge his Commaunde­ment with presumptuous pride) did speake also in their soules, but one spiritual Language; making a A sweete & happy Language perfect kind of concord; which one main­teyned with another, and each one with him­selfe, and so also with God; liuinge in the quiet estate of Innocency, the sensitiue part, obeying the rationall, and the rationall, obeying God; and so they were in peace, with him; in peace within themselues; and in peace, with one another.

But now, when they rebelled, with so bold disobedience, against the Lord of heauen, both they were punished, and we in them. In The case is al­tered. such sort, that insteed of one good Language, (by meanes whereof they vnderstood one another so wel) there haue succeeded innumerable other ill ones; all full of such confusion, and darkenes, that neyther do men agree with others, nor the same man with himselfe; and least of all, with God. And although these Languages do keep no order in themselues (since indeed they are but moore disorder) yet to the end that we may speake [Page 4]of them, we will reduce them to a kind of me­thod, and to the number of three; which are the Language of the World; of the Flesh; and of the Di­uell; whose office, as S. Bernard sayth, is, Of the first; to speake vayne thinges: Of the second; delightfull things: And of the third; afflictiue, & bitter things.

CHAP. II.
That we must not hearken to the Language of the World, and Vayne-glory; And how absolute dominion it exerciseth ouer the hartes of such as follow it, and of the punishment that they shall incurre.

VVE must not hearkē, to the language of the VVorld, for it is al but lyes; and they, most preiudiciall to such as credit them. For they make vs forsake that truth which is indeed; and to im­brace a lye, which hath no being; but only in appea­rance and custome. Heereby man, being decea­ued, presumes to cast Almighty God, and his holy will behind his backe; and he disposeth of his life according to that blind guide, of pleasing the world; and so he groweth to haue a hart all desi­rous of honour, and to be esteemed amongst men. He proues like those ancient proud Romans, of whome S. Augustine sayth, That A strange and yet true state of mind. for the loue of worldly honour, they desired to liue; and yet for loue of is, they did not feare to dye. So much do they prize it, as not by any meanes to endure the least word, [Page 5]that may be in preiudice thereof; nor any thing which may tast, or euē sauour, of neglect, though neuer so far of. Nay heerin there are such nyceties and puntillios; that it is hard for a man to scape stumbling vpon some of them, & so the offending of this sensitiue worldly man: yea A misera­ble serui­tude which pryd hath put vs in. and often, you shall fal out to offend him, much against your wil. These men, who are so facile to find thēselues despised, are no lesse vntoward, and vntractable in passing ouer, and pardoning the same. And if one should yet, of himselfe, be disposed to do so; what troupes of Indeed they are truly sayd to be false freinds, who per­swade a man, to the perdi­tion of his soule. false friendes and kinred will rise vp against him; and alleadge such lawes and customes, graunted by priuiledge of the world; as whereby this proposition may be concluded, That it is better to loose a mans fortune; his health; his house; his wife; and his children; yea all this see­meth little to them, since they do as good as say, that he must euen loose the life both of body, and soule; and all the care that he hath both of earth and heauen; yea & that, euen God himselfe, and his law, are to be contem­ned, and troden vnder foote, that so this most vayne honour, may not be lost; but that it may be esteemed aboue all things, yea euen aboue God himselfe.

O thou vayne honour, which wert condem­ned by Christ, vpon the Crosse, vpon the price of his so extreme dishonour; and who is he, that gaue thee place in the Temple of God, which is the hart of a Christian? and this, with so great aduantage, as that (after the manner of Antichrist) thou wilt more be prized, then the most high God? Who [Page 6]made thee a competitour with God? yea Pride makes a man esteeme himselfe, more then God. and that thou shouldst euen outstrip him, in the harts of some; by being more esteemed then he? So re­newing, that vast affront, which was done him, when they preferred Matth. 27. Barabbas before him? We must perforce confesse, that thy tyranny is great ouer such harts, as make themselues thy subiects; and with great expedition and facility, do they performe thee seruice, whatsoeuer it cost them.

Aaron Exod. 32. made him self belieue, (by demanding the golden eare-rings of their wiues & children, who asked an Idoll at his hands); that rather, then to see such as they loued, to be disadorned, they would desist from their wicked desire of a false God. But so it fell not out; for those things were no sooner askt, then giuen. Nor did they then, nor do men now, take care of what is needfull, for house or Children, so that they may haue an Idoll of honour, to which they may offer sacrifice. Oftentimes it happens, that euen some of them who serue thee, doe yet vnderstand well in­ough, how vayne and shaddowy a toy thou art; and what a wofull thing it is to follovv thee; and being able, if they would, to deliuer themselues from thy heauy yoake, by breaking from thee all at once; yet A misera­ble case. is their infirmity, & misery so great, that they rather choose to burst, and to proceed against the honour of God, then to doe God honour, and be at rest, by flying from thee.

God did cast this out, for a curse against [Page 7]thē who serued false Gods, That Sin makes men slaues. they should serue them, day and night; and this is punctually fulfilled by such as do adore this Honour. S. Iohn, speaking of some principall people of Hierusalem which belieued in Christ, but durst not declare them­selues for his (in respect of men) doth say of them, with great reproach; Ioan. 12. That they loued the honour of men, more thē that of God. Which with much rea­son may be verifyed vpon these louers of honour; since we see that they despise God, rather then they wilbe despised by men; and that they are ashamed to performe his law, rather then to be ashamed, in the sight of men. But let them be doing as long as they list; let them honour this Honour, euen to the outside of all their power; yet firme, and fixed doth that sentence stand, which was pronounced against them, by the soueraigne Iudge Christ Iesus, when he sayd, He that shalbe ashamed of me, and of my words; of him will the Sonne of the Virgin be ashamed, when he shall come in his ma­iesty, and the maiesty of his Father, with his Angells. And then shall al those Angells, and all the saints, singe out, Iust Psal. 118. art thou O Lord, & thy iudgments are iust. For if this vild worme, were ashamed to follow the King of Maiesty; be thou O Lord ashamed (thou who art Honour and Altitude it selfe) that a thing so base, and so wicked, should remayne in company of thee, and thyne.

O, Read & trem­ble. with what a powder, shall the honour of this Babylon, be then shot down, into the profoū ­dest pit of Hell, to be tormented, in company [Page 8]of the proude Lucifer, since these men would needes be his companions, in the sinne of pryde. Let no man offer to make a ieast of this; or esteeme that the loue of worldly honour, is a sinne of small importance; since our Lord, who searcheth the hart, said thus, to the Pharisies, Ioa [...]. 5. How can you belieue in me, since you seeke to be honoured by one an­other; & seeke not that honour, which proceedes from God alone. And now for as much as this vicious affection, is so powerfull, as that it sufficed to make men forbeare the belieuing in Iesus Christ; what mischeife is that which it will not be able to effect? & who will not blesse himselfe from the same? S. Augustine therefore sayd, that no man knowes what force he hath more or lesse, to con­quer the loue of Vayne-glory, but he only, who maketh warre against it.

CHAP. III.
Of what remedies we are to serue our selues, towards the contempt of the Vayne-glory, of the world; And of the greate force, which Christ our Lord doth giue, for the ouercomming thereof.

VVE ought to esteeme it, as a great remedy against this mischiefe, that it is condē ­ned by the very light of Nature. For as much as euen that, doth teach vs, That man is to do workes, worthy of Honour, but not for Honours sake; That he should deserue it, but not valew it; and that a True nobility. noble [Page 9]courage, ought to despise, both the being esteemed, and disesteemed; and that nothing should be held in high account, but vertue. But Note. if notwithstanding all this, a Christian haue not the hart, to contemne this vanity, let him rayse his eyes vp to his Lord, being placed vpon a Crosse; and there he shall see him, so surcharged with dishonour, that if it be wel considered, it may enter into competition with the grieuousnes of those▪ very torments, which he there endured. Nor did our Lord, without cause, make choice of a death, which might be accom­panyed with extreme dishonour; but for that he knew, what a powerful tyrant this loue of honour was, & was likely to be in the hart of many, who would make no difficulty to expose themselues to death; but yet would flye from the manner of the death, if it were dishonourable. Now to giue vs to vnderstand, that neither the one, nor the other, ought to fright vs; he Our Lord chose re­proach, to confound and refor­me our pride. chose the death of the Crosse; whereupon, extreme torments, with excessiue dishonour, did ioyne, hand in hand. Be­hould then (if thou haue eyes wherewith to do it) how Christ is esteemed, for the meanest of men; and abased, by deep dishonours; some of which, were brought vpon him, by that very death of the Crosse (since that was the most infamous of all deaths) and others also, whereby they out­raged our Lord in particuler manner; for as much as there was no kind of people, which did not imploy it selfe, vpon despising, iniuring, and blaspheming him, with certayne fashions of dis­honour, [Page 10]which neuer were found out before:

Thus shalt thou perceaue, how entirely that was fullfilled, which he (whilest he was preaching) sayd, Ioan. [...]. I do not seeke myne owne ho­nour; and doe thou, after the same manner. And Note if thou wilt rayse vp the eares of thy soule, to heare that lamentable Edict with atten­tion, which was made against innocency it selfe, proclayming Iesus Christ our Lord (throughout those streets of Hierusalem) for a malefactour; thou Sure I am that we ought to be so. wilt be confounded, when thou seest that thou art honoured; or when thou shalt desire so to be. And thou wilt say with a deep & cordial sigh, O Lord. art thou proclaymed for wicked▪ and I praysed for good? What is there that can giue vs grea­ter griefe? And not only wilt thou loose the hun­gar of wordly honour, but thou wilt couet gree­dily to be despysed, in conformity of our Lord, whome to follow (as the Scripture Eccles. [...]. sayth) is great honour. And then wilt thou say, with S Paul, God forbid that Galat. [...]. I should receaue honour, but in the Crosse of Iesus Christ, our Lord; yea, & thou wilt desire to fullfill that, which the same Apostle sayth els Heb. 13. where, Let vs go out, and seeke Christ in the campe, and let vs imitate him in his dishonour.

Now if this passion of vayne glory, be a pow­erfull kind of thing; much more powerfull, is the remedy of the example, and grace of Christ. Which The bloud of our Lord, worketh wonders vpon the proud hart of man. doth in such sort ouercome, & roote it out of the hart, as to make it find, that it is a thing to be abhorred, for a Christian to see the [Page 11]Lord of Maiesty abase himselfe to such contempt▪ whilest he, vile worme, swelleth vp with the loue of honour. Therefore is it, that our Lord in­uiteth, & encourageth vs, by his example saying, Haue confidence, for I haue ouercome the world. As if he had sayd, Before I came hither, a hard point▪ it was to wrastle with the deceitpfull world; casting away that which flourisheth therein, and imbracing that, which it contemnes; but, after that it imployed all the forces it had against me; inuenting new kinds of tor­ments, and dishonour, all which I endured without once turning my face aside; it is now, not only growne weake, for hauing encountred with one who was able to suffer more then that; but it is euen ouercome outright to your benefit; since by my example which I gaue you, and by the strength which I haue gayned for you, you may at case subdue, and trample it, vnder your feet.

Let the Christian man consider, that since the world, dishonoured the Blessed Sonne of God, who is Eternall Truth, and our Soueraigne Good; there is no cause why any man should esteeme, or belieue it in any thing Nay, seeing A demon­stration, why we ought to beleeue the world, no more. that it was deceaued, in not discerning such a light of ex­treme clarity; and in not honouring him, who is most true, and perfect honour; let the Christian man reiect that▪ which the world allowes; & let him prize & loue that, which the world doth des­pise, & hate. Flying with much care from being esteemed, by that The World. which did despise his Lord, and holding it for a great signe of being beloued by Christ, to be despised by the world with him, [Page 12]and for his sake.

Out of which this resultes; That as they who are of this world, haue no eares wherewith to hearken to the truth, and doctrine of God (nay rather they despise the same) so The seruant of our Lord ought at least to be as careful to please him, as the ser­uants of the world are, to please it. he who taketh the part of Christ, is to haue none, wherewith to hearken to, or to belieue the lies of the world. For in fine, whether it flatter or persecute; whether it promise or threaten; whether it speake frightfully or fayre; it doth euery where deceaue; and hath a mind to doe so; and with such eyes, we are to looke vpon it. And Note this, for a most certaine truth. it is certayne, that for so many lies, and false promises, wherein we haue taken it tripping; if any man should haue told vs but the one halfe, we would trust him now in nothing; yea hardly should we credit him althogh he might chaunce in other things to say true. That If the world do either promise, or threa­ten, it lyes. which the world can do, is indeed neither good nor bad, since it cannot eyther giue, or take away, the grace of God. Nay euen in that, ouer which it seemeth to haue power, it is yet not able to do any thing; since it cannot reach to the least hayre of our head, without the will of our Lord. And if it tell vs any other tale of it selfe, we must not belieue it. And who then will not dare to en­counter an enemy, who hath no power at all?

CHAP. IV.
In what degree, and to what end, it is lawfull for a man to desire Honour in the world; and of the ex­treme danger which there is, in holding places of Authority, and Commaund.

THAT thou mayst the better vnderstand what hath byn sayd; thou art to know, that it is one thing to loue honour, and humane estima­tion for it selfe, as resting therin; & this is euil, as hath byn shewed. But another thing it is, when these things are beloued for some good end; and this is not euill. It is a cleare case, that a person who hath cōmand, & holdeth place, may for doing good to others, desire, that honour and estima­tion, which is fit, for the discharge of his em­ployment, therby the more to do good. Men of authority may desi­re to be well re­puted, so that it be to a good end. For if men haue him, who commaundeth, in meane account, they will not much esteeme of his com­maundement though it be iust. And not only this kind of persons, but all Christians ought to pra­ctise, that which is writrē, Take Eccles. 41. care, of thy good name. Not as if he were to rest in that; but because a Christian, ought to be such a kind of man, as that whosoeuer should vnderstand or behould his life, Note. might giue the glory to God; as we vse to do, when we see a rose, or a tree, full of shade, & fruite. This is that, which the holy Ghospell re­quires, That our light may so shine before men, that [Page 14]they seing our good workes, may giue glory to the ce­lestiall Father, from whome all good things proceed.

This ayme at the honour of God, and the profit of men, did mooue 1. Cor. 4. S. Paul, to recount those great, and secret fauours, which our Lord had done him, without holding himselfe for a transgressour of that other Prou. [...]7. Scripture, which sayth, Let the mouth of another prayse thee, and not thine owne. For He might safely do so; but o­ther men must take heed. he recounted his own prayies, so much without the sticking of any part therof vnto himselfe, as if he had not spoken therof at al. Thereby fulfilling, that which he had already sayd to the Corinthians, [...]. Cor. 7. That they who had wines, were to haue them, as if they had them not; and they who wept, were to be as if they did not weep, & the like. Wherby he had a mind to say, That he vseth tem­porall things as he ought, whether they be pros­perous, or aduerse, whether they be of consola­tion or affliction, who suffers not his hart to stick vnto them; but it passeth by, as by a thing, which is transitory, and vayne. And certaynly S. Paul, (when he related those things of himselfe) did speake of them with a hart, which was not only a despiser of honour, but a louer of contempt and dishonour, for Iesus Christ his sake, whose crosse he held, for the highest honour.

Such hartes as these, may well be trusted with taking honour▪ and may relate such things as will purchase it; for they wil neuer do so, but whē it shalbe necessary, for some good end. But, as it is a point of much vertue, for a man to possesse a [Page 15]thing, as if he had it not; and so, as that the honour which is imparted to vs by others, should not cleaue vnto our hartes; so The more need we haue, to vse all di­ligence. is it also a matter of much difficulty, and to which very few arriue. For, as S Chrysostome sayth, To be in the middest of honour, and that the hart of him that is so honoured, should Both these cases are full of daunger. not be affected by it; is, as if a man were to conuerse amongst fayre women, without euer behoul­ding them, with vnchast eyes. And experience hath taught vs, that honourable and high place, hath seldome made men better of worse; & hath very often, made men bad of good. For to beare the weight of honour, & to resist the occasions which grow in company thereof, a man had need of much strength. Because, as S Hi [...]rome sayth, The highest moūtaynes, are assaulted by the greatest winds. This is certayne, that greater vertue is requisite, for commaunding, then for obeying. And not without cause, & great cause, did our soueraigne Mayster, & Lord (who knoweth al things) fly a­way This point de­serueth great pon­deration. from being made a King. Now since it was not possible for him to run hazard in any estate, how high so euer; it is playne that this doctrine was deliuered for the help of our weaknesse; and that we ought to fly from that which is daunge­rous, since he fled who was out of daunger. And if it be a very great boldnesse, and against the ex­ample of Christ, to receyue a place of honour, when it is offered; what then shall it be to desire it? and what againe to procure it? For, as for the mischeife which it bringes, to purchase such a [Page 16]thing with money, there liues not the man that can declare it.

We should find it very strange, that a man, who might walke securely vpon firme land would rather choose, the daungers of going by sea; We should thinke that he were mad. and that, not in fayre weather, but in a perpertuall tempest. For, as S. Gregory sayth, What other thing is the power of honour, but a tempest of the soule. And besides, these troubles, and the daun­gers which are euer found in eminent place, are followed by that terrible menace, sounded forth by God, though it be hearkned to, & vnderstood by few; A Sap. 6. most seuere iudgment, shall passe vpon s [...]ch as command. What kind of thing shall this be, whē Let men of power & com­maund, consider this. euen the ordinary iudgment of God, is such; as that the men, who are most refin'd in vertue, do tremble thereat, and say; Psal. 141. Enter not O Lord into iudgment with thy seruant. And yet, there are persons so blindly bold, as For want of faith and the conside­ration of the next life. that they choose to enter into his iudgement; and that, not such a one as may be accounted ordinary; but into the most straite, and hard, that God affoardes. And consi­dering, that Saul 1. Reg. 10. the King, to whom that king­dome was offered by the order of God, (without his prizing it, or making much account thereof, (yea & he declined it, by hiding himselfe, but was poynted out, and shewed by the hand of God) yet neuerthelesse that height of dignity, with the circumstances therof, treated him so ill; that although God made choice of him, and himselfe desired to be excused, he yet passed through so [Page 17]wicked a life, and ariued to so wretched a death, that it ought to cast apprehension and feare, v­pon such as enter into place of honour, though they be called in, by the right doore; and far, far, more, vpon such others, as go not in, by so good a way.

Verily, A strange blindnes, or rather madnes. it is to be wondered at, that there are persons to be found, so strait-harted in the seruice of our Lord, that if they be aduised to do any thing therein, though it be clearely good, yet do they go considering, & reconsidering whether or no the doing of it, do oblige vnder the payne of mortal sin, that so indeed, they may forbeare to do it. For they say, that they are but weake, & they will not ingulfe themselues into matters of great perfection, but tread in the playne, & beatē way. And yet these very men, who are so voyd of courage, in the search of true vertue, (which by the grace of our Lord, it would be no hard mat­ter for them to obtayne) are, on the other side, so audacious, as to put themselues into dignity, ho­nour, and places of Command. For the innocent vse whereof, (without the hurt of him that hath them) there is need of perfect, and tryed vertue; which they make themselues belieue that they haue; and that, forsooth, they will giue a good account of the forward ranke they hold, without hazarding any thing of conscience, wherein yet others, haue runne so much hazard. So How mightily doth the loue of honour, intoxicate the bray­ne. deep­ly doth the desire of honour, and command, and other humane interests, blind men; as to make [Page 18]them, who dare not set vpon an enterprize which is secure, and easy, attempt other thinges, which are accompanied with difficulty, and danger. Yea, & they, who do not confide in God, that he will help them, in those good workes, (which only do concerne themselues:) do promise them­selues (with strange boldnesse) that God will guide them by the hand, towards those things, which concerne the gouernement of others. Whereas indeed, he may answeare them with great reason, That since they would needs plung themselues into that danger, let them looke to their owne carriage therein. For of such as these, it is, that God did say, They raigned, but not by my direction; They were Princes, and I knew nothing of the matter; which signifieth, that he did not ap­proue, or like it.

And he that shall consider, how God Os [...]ae. c. 8. a­bandoned King Saul; (the same God hauing pla­ced him in the Kingdom) wil find, that he A sad example, but fit for ambitious men, to looke much vpon. hath much reason to vndeceiue himselfe; since there will be no assurance giuen him by any, that he is not to proue as frayle as Saul; but only by his owne pride, and ambition of command. Of Note. this I am very sure, that he shal neuer more ho­nestly enter into it, then Saul did. S Augustine had reason, when he sayd, That authority, and dignity, is necessary for such as are to rule the people; and that when a man is in it, he must administer it according to reason; but that it is vnlawfull for him, that hath it not, to desire it. And of himselfe he [Page 19]sayd, That he desired and procured to saue his soule, in a low place; that he might not put it, to hazard in a higher. This is especially to be done, when the place whereof we speake, doth concerne the charge of soules; the well discharging whereof, doth carry with it so much difficulty, as that it is called the Art of Artes.

These Cer­taine ex­cellent di­rections, for pra­ctise. dangers ought to be fled by vs, as much, as with a morall possibility we may; in imitation of the example already touched, which our Lord did shew, in flying from the acceptance of a Kingdome▪ & he hath represented to vs, many other holy & wise persons, who haue fled the like, with al the harts they had. And such as enter in­to these places, had need do it, either by reuelatiō of our Lord; or by obedience to such as haue power to command them; or by counsell of such others, as do well vnderstand the obligation of such an office and the dangers thereof; and they must be sure, to keep the iudgment of God before their eyes; and to cast all temporall respects be­hind their backes. If these conditions may not be found, it will at least be needfull, that there be ground for good coniecture, that God is pleased to lay such a burthen vpon them; & that such or such a man, may giue credit to those coniectures, before he imbarke himself into so great a danger. And notwithstanding all this, there will be mat­ter inough of feare; and continuall watch must be kept; and our Lord must be prayed, that since he kept the entrance free from ill, he may also [Page 20]defend them in the issue of it; for feare least o­therwise, it end in euerlasting condemnation. For we haue seen many of them, who liued with much contentment, in such command, dye full of wishes, that they had neuer beene imployed therein; and loaden with great feares of that, whereof before, they were, in their opinion, se­cure. And Plate­rv, and false iudgment, is then out of date. in all likelyhood, the truth of a mans iudgment concerning temporall thinges, doth shine brighter vpon him when he is depar­ting from them; & when he is more approaching to the iudgment of God, wherein all Truth re­maynes.

CHAP. V.
How much we ought to fly from the pleasure of flesh and [...]loud; and what a most dangerous Enemy this is; & of what helpes we are to serue our selues, for the subduing thereof.

FLESH and Bloud, speakes of Delights, and pleasures; sometymes expresly, & sometymes, vnder a colour of necessity. The warre which is made vpon vs by this enemy, besids, that it brings vs much affliction, is full of danger. Because it fightes, with pleasure in the hand; which is Note, and take heed. the strongest weapon of all others. This doth euidēt­ly appeare, since many haue beene conquered by pleasure, who were not so, by riches, honours, or euē by cruel torments. Nor is it any meruayle; For this [Page 21]ware is so secret, and so in the way of ambush or treasō; that a man had need of much cōsideration for his defence. Who We may well beleeue it, vpon the infinit experiēce that hath byn takē. would belieue, that death, and death eternall, should come towards vs, vnder a maske of sweet, and smooth delight; death being the top of bitternesse; & delight, the very thing, that we most aspire to tast. A cup of gold, with a draught of poyson, is this false pleasure; whereby they are made drunke, who haue no eyes, but for the exteriour. This is the treason, of 2. Reg. 20. Ioab, who killed Amasus, by imbracing him; and of Matt. 26. Marc. 14. Luc. 22. Iudas, who by that treacherous kisse of peace, deliuered ouer, his blessed mayster, into the hands of death. So is it, when by drinking the pleasure of a mortal sin, Christ dyeth in the soule; vpon whose death, it also dies for company; for the life it had, came from him. So sayth Rom. 8. S. Paul; If you liue according to the flesh you shal dy. And in another place; Tim. 5. The widdow that remaynes in pleasure, being yet aliue, is dead; aliue, by the life of her body; but dead, by that of her soule.

By how much the more closely we are ioyned to this It is a traytour, lodging in our bo­some. flesh and bloud, so much the more, we are to feare it; for our Lord hath sayd, Matt. 10 [...] That a mans enemies, are they of his owne house. And this flesh & bloud, is not only belonging to this house of ours; but, of the two walls whereof the same house is made, this is one. For this, and other reasons, S. Augustin sayd, that the combate of our flesh, & bloud was continuall; and the conquest full of difficulty; and whosoeuer will proue victorious, must go armed, with [Page 22]many, and strong Of Armes. pieces. For the pretious iewell of chastity, is not imparted to al; but to such, as by the much sweat of many earnest prayers, and of other holy pēnance, do obteyne it of our Lord. He was pleased to be wrapt in a fayre sheete of linnen; which must passe through many rude handlings, before it wil come to be white. Wherby we may vnderstād, that the man who desireth to obteyne, & to conserue the guift of chastity, and so to lodge Christ in himself, (as if it were in another sepul [...]her) must be content with a great deale of cost, & la­bour, to gayne this purity; Cha­stity is such a iewell, as that it can neuer be ouer­bought. which is a thing so rich that whatsoeuer be spend vpon it, he may ac­count himself to buy it cheap. And, as many more painfull works of p [...]nnance, & satisfaction, are to be required at his hands, who hath much offen­ded our Lord, then at his, who hath not so much offended; so though all of vs, who liue in flesh, must be afrayd of it, and watch ouer it, & bridle it, and rule it with discreet-temperance; yet they, who particulerly are infested by it, wil haue need to vse particuler endeauours, and remedies.

He therefore that shall find himselfe subiect to this necessity, must in the first place, treate his body with seuerity; by lessening both food & sleep; and by giuing it a hard bed, hayr-clothes, & other conuenient helps of this kind, whereby it may be afflicted. For, Harkē to this holy Fa­ther, though he were no Prote­stant. S Hierome saith, By fasting, the plague of this body of ours, is cured; and S. Hi­larion spake thus, to his flesh and bloud; I will tame thee; and take order that thou shalt not ki [...]ke; but that, [Page 23]through hunger, and payne, thou maist haue more mind of m [...]ate, then lust. And S. Hierome counsel­leth Eustochium the Virgin, That although she had bin brought vp in daynty fare, yet she should be very carefull to vse abstinence in diet; and not to abstayne from giuing the body further troubles; assuring her, that without taking of this course, she would not be able to make good the possession of chastity. Yf, by oc­casion of such pennance, the body should grow to weakenesse, and the health to preiudice; the same S. Hierome maketh answeare in another place. That it were better the stomacke should suffer, then the soule; and to commaund the body, then to be subiect to it; and that the legges were better to trēble for weakenesse, then that chastity should reele for lacke of strength. It is true indeed, that in another place, he withall requires, That the fasting be not so exces­siue, as to weaken the stomacke; & yet againe in an­other place, he reprehendeth some whome he had knowne to haue runne hazard of loosing their wittes, through the excesse of fasting & abstey­ning.

In this, it is impossible to giue a general rule, that may square with all. For It is therfore necessary to haue often re­course to his gho­stly Fa­ther. some find help by one meanes, & another not; & some one, may be hurt by it in his health, and not another. And one thing it is, when the warre is so great, as to place a man in daunger of loosing his Cha­stity (for in that case, it is fit to put the body to any inconuenience, that the soule may so be able, to remaine with life,) and another thing [Page 24]it is, for a man to struggle with a moderate ten­tation; whereby he feareth not so much danger; nor for the conquest thereof, is in necessity of ta­king so much paynes. Now for the vsing of the most conuenient help in such occasions, it will much depend vpon the discreet conduct of him, that guides the person tempted; who, are, both to pray, with al humility, to our Lord, that heer­in he will impart some light. And since th [...] vessel 1. Cor. [...]. of Election▪ S Paul did not trust his flesh and bloud, S. Paul was no Protestāt; both be­cause he thought it necessary to chastize, & beat his body, and for that he made not himselfe sure of his saluation, as these others doe. but that he punished and made it subiect; least preaching vertue to others, himself might become vicious, by falling into sinne; how shall we con­ceaue, that we can be chaste, without chastizing our body; since we haue both lesse vertue, and greater causes of feare, then he? Very Note. hardly, is humility held fast, in the middest of honours; & temperance in the middest of abundance; & chastity in the middest of delicacies. And if he should be worthy of derision, who, procuring to quench the fyre wherein his house were burning, would cast in a supply of more dry wood; much more worthily shall he be derided; who on the one side desyreth chastity; and on the other, stuffes his skin with curious, and choice meates; and giues him­selfe moreouer, to idlenesse. For these things doe not only not quench the fire which already is kindled, but would suffice to kindle it, euen where it were already quenched.

And since the Prophet Ezech. 1 [...]. Ezechiel, is a witnesse to vs, that the cause why that vnfortu­nate [Page 25]Citty of Sodome, grew vp to the highest of that abominable sin, was the A­boundāce and Idle­nes, are the mo­ther, and the nurse of lust. fullnesse, & aboun­dance of bread, and the idlenesse, wherein they spent their tyme; who will now presume to liue in idle­nesse, or in delicacyes; yea, or euen to see them though but a far off? For as much as these things, which, in them were able to produce that greater sinne, with facility will be able to induce vs, to commit the lesser. Let such an one therefore, as is a friend to Chastity, loue Temperance, and the ill treating of his body. For if he would haue the one, without the other, it will not proue with him; but rather he will be depriued of both. For those thinges which God did ioyne, man should not desire to separate, neyther shall he be able, though he would.

CHAP. VI.
Of two causes that there are, of sensuall tentations; & what meanes we must vse against them, when they rise, from the Malice of the Diuell.

VVE are much to marke, that the remedy of which I haue spoken in afflicting the body, is wont to help, when the tentation sprin­geth from the body; as it vseth to do in young men, who haue good health, and haue vsed to re­gale themselues. Then, Accor­ding to the seue­rall root, & motiue of the tentation, so is the remedy to be ap­plyed. I say, it is fit to refor­me the body, when the roote of the infirmity ri­seth thence. But sometymes, the tentation grow­eth [Page 26]by meanes of the Diuell; and it may partly be perceaued by this; that it fighteth with vs more by thoughts, & foule imaginations of the mind, then by impure motions of the body. Or if you find these later also in your body, it is not because the tentation began there; but hauing begun by thoughts, it groweth, at last to result into the exteriour. Which exteriour of the body being sometymes extremely weake, and little better then dead; euill thoughts are yet, now and then, most liuely in it; as it happened to S. Hierome, according to his owne relation. It is also another signe, that such tentations are of the Diuell; when they come vpon a suddayne; and when a man giueth least occasion, or hath cause to expect them least. Nor There is no sin at all, if no occasion, nor cōsent be giuen, nor plea­sure taken in the suggestiō of carnall thoughts. can he, as it may happen, ob­serue due reuerence, in the very tymes of his Prayer; no nor at the Altar, nor in other holy pla­ces; where yet euen a very wicked man, would cōsider where he were, & abstayn from thinking of such things. Sometymes Note. these thoughts are such in quality, and so many in number, as that a man neuer knew, nor heard, nor imagined any such things, as do then present themselues. And by the force, wherewith they come, and by the very things themselues, which interiourly are told him; a man findes that they spring not from himselfe; but that it is somewhat els, which sug­gested, and represented them, to his mind.

When you haue these, or such other signes as these, be well assured that it is a persecution of [Page 27]the Diuell; and that, howsoeuer you may suffer it in your flesh and bloud, yet is it not from thence, that it proceeds. This warre is more dangerous then the other; through the much euill which he wisheth vs, by whome it is made; and for that he is an enemy, that is neuer weary of fighting, when we are eyther waking, or sleeping, at all tymes, and in all places. The remedy of this in­conuenience, is To put thy selfe vpon some ho­nest busi­nes, is a good di­uersion. to procure some good im­ployment, which may put vs into thought, and care; making vs thereby, cast off, those impure imaginations. S. Hierome, for this purpose (as himselfe relates) gaue his mind to the study of the Hebrew tongue, with much labour, but not without much fruit; and he sayth, Let the Diuell, euer find thee well imployed. Speaking also in con­formity of this, how profitable the manner of life, which is lead in Monasteryes was, to this purpose; he instructeth it, saying thus. S. Hie­rome was no Pro­testant. See, that euery day, thou performe, whatsoeuer thou hast in charge; and be subiect to whome thou wouldest not; and go well weary to thy bed; yea and so, that euen, as thou art walking, thou mayst be ready to fall downe a sleep. Be thou also inioyned, to rise before thou hast slept thy fill; and recite thy Psalme, when it commeth to thy turne; and serue thy brethren; and wash the feet of strangers; and when thou art wronged, hold thy peace; and as for the So that in S. Hie­romes tym there were Ab­bots and Monaste­ries. Abbot of the Monaste­ry, see thou feare him, as if he were some great Lord; and see thou loue him, as if he were thyne owne Father; and beleeue, that all V [...]les euidently it should contayne some sin. Such is the religi­ous obe­dience, which is practised in the ho­ly Catho­licque Church; and such a Papist as you see, was S. Hie­rome. that which he commandeth [Page 28]thee, is fit for thee to obey him in; and take not thou vpon thee to iudge of thy superiours, since thy office is but to obey; and to comply with that which is com­manded; according to that which Moyses sayth, Hearken, O Israel, and hold thy peace. Being thus im­ployed vpon diuers thinges, there will be no place, for euill thoughts; and when thou art to passe from the doing of one to another, haue that only in thy mind, which thou art then, about.

This is sayd by S. Hierome; and according to this, it was then the vse of Monasteryes to ex­ercise their younger men, more in these good im­ploymēts, thē in solitude & large Prayer; through the dangers, which, by flesh, and bloud, and passi­ons, (as yet vnmortifyed) both might, and did grow vpon them. Though yet, this rule is sub­iect to an exception, through the diuersity of dis­positions, and the particuler gifts of God. Men must not be restrai­ned from liberty to make much prayer, but vpon ve­ry particu­ler rea­sons. V­pon which motiues, there may be reason, to al­low a large tyme of prayer to a yong man; and to abridge another, who is more in yeares. When I sayd before, that yong men did not imploy them­selues in large prayer, I vnderstand that to haue beene large, wherein, almost all his tyme was spent; and as if in effect he had no other office but that. For, not to let him haue some good spa­ces for it, should be a very great errour; by rea­son of the benefits which he should loose therby; and There is nothing which maks our miseries, and bur­thens so light, as the fre­quentatiō of Prayer. because euen for the well going through, any other imployment, it is necessary that he gaine strength and spirit, in his Prayer. For o­therwise [Page 29]they who are exteriourly imployed, are wont to be still complaining, and vntoward, like Marke this com­parison, for it is a good one. a cart that is loaden, without hauing the wheeles made easy towards turning, by the ten­dernesse of deuotion.

Let beginners be aduertised, that the Diuell doth particulerly procure to trouble them, with these impure imaginations, in the tyme of their prayer; that so they may be induced to leaue it; & the Diuel himselfe may so take his ease, the whyle. For although the Diuell doe much weary vs by these tentations; much more doe we weary, and euen add fyre to him, by our deuout Prayer is a scourg to the Di­uell. prayers; & therfore he procureth, that we eyther make them not at all, or not well. But we, on the otherside, ought (euen, as it were, for spight against him) to labour with al possibility; that so we may not giue ouer that holy exercise; since euen by the very persecution it selfe which he bringes vpon vs, we may see how profitable it is. And if the warre should presse vs so hard, whilest we are praying mentally, as that we might find much danger by impure imaginations, the least that we must doe is to put our selues into vocall prayer; and to beate our breastes; to punish our bodies; to cast our armes into the forme of a Crosse; to rayse our hands, and eyes towards heauen, desiring suc­cour of our Lord; in such sort, as that, howsoeuer the tym which we deputed for prayer may be wel imployed. We must else do somewhat that may diuert vs; and especially procure to speake with [Page 30]some good man that may giue vs hart. Though He meanes, that we must not giue ouer our Pray­er, for the going to aske coū ­sayle; but we must do that afterward. this last, should not be done, at that tyme, til we can no more; that so we may not discouer our weakenesse, in not being able, to ouercome otherwise, then by flight; and least our enemy, do so make vs quit the field, and distrust our for­ces. For in fine, our Lord, who is both full of pitty, and full of power; will impose silence v­pon our aduersary, when it shalbe fit for vs; that he may not interrupt the priuate, and friendly conuersation, which we were wont to hould with him.

CHAP. VII.
Of the great peace, which our Lord God giueth to them that fight manfully against this Enemy; & of the much that it importeth vs, for the ouer­comming of him, to fly from familiarity with women.

ALL these skirmishes are wont to be made, in the warre against chastity; when our Lord permitteth it, for the triall of his Caualliers, whether indeed they truly loue him, and chastity, for which they fight. And after, that he hath found them faithfull, he sendeth downe his om­nipotent fauour, and commaundeth our aduer­sary, not to giue impediment to our peace, and priuate speach with him. Then doth a man taste the fruite of his labours, and they are full of sa­uour [Page 31]to him, and more full of merit.

It is also necessary, and very necessary, for the conseruation of chastity, that familiar con­uersation of men with women be auoyded; how much so euer they be of vertue, and how neer soeuer in bloud. For The examples are infi­nite: and therefore we shallbe more faulty, if we take not heed. the foule, and strange falls, which haue byn giuen, and taken in the world, by occasion of this, ought to be a conti­nuall remembrancer to vs, of our fraylty; and a quicke warning, at the cost of others, where­by we may vnbeguyle our selues, in respect of the false security, which our pryde, would fayne make promise off; saying, That we should passe on, without receyuing of any hurt; we, I say, who are weake; wherein others, who were so strong, so wise, and (which more importes) so great Sayntes, were most miserably wounded.

Who would trust the bond of bloud, when he reades of that bestiality, which Amon 2. Reg. 13. com­mitted with his sister Thamar? with many other, as foule examples as this, and more, which haue hapned in the world, to persons, whom the bru­tish passion of flesh, and bloud made blind. Note this, and take thine eyes into thy head. And who would trust to the sanctity, either of him­selfe, or any other, when he seeth Dauid; who was a man made after the hart of God, drawne downe, by such obscurity of mind, into so many and so filthy sinnes, by only looking vpon a wo­man? And who will not tremble, to thinke of his owne fraylty, when he considereth the san­ctity, and wisedome of King Salomon in his [Page 32]youth; and his deformed falles from chastity; which did hammer so fast vpon his hart, in his old age, as to induce him, to erect a number 3. Reg. 3. of Idolls, and to adore them, after the example of those women, whom he loued.

Let no man in this, deceaue himselfe; nor confide in his chastity, either past or present; though he find his mind as strong, and as hard against the contrary vice, as any rock. For it was a great truth, which the experienced Hierome deliuered to vs, That luxuriousnesse of the flesh, sub­dueth soules that are made of yron. And S. Augu­stine, would not dwell with his owne sister, saying, They that will conuerse with my sister, are no sisters of mine. By There is no way to con­quer, in this warre but by flight. this way of caution, all the Saintes haue vvalked, & them vve must fol­low, vnlesse we haue a mind to loose our way.

Be not therefore, thou, O Child of Christ, remisse heerein; but heare, and performe that which S. Bernard sayth; That virgins, who are truly virgins, are fearefull in all occasions, yea euen in such, as are secure from danger. And they who proceed not thus, shall quickly see themselues as miserably fallen; as formerly, by meanes of a false security, they were miserably deceaued. And although, by pennance, a pardon of the sinne is obteyned; yet reacheth it not, to a reco­uery of the crowne of Virginity, which is lost. And a poore thing it is, sayth▪ S Hierome, that a virgin who expected a crowne, must be glad of a par­don, for not hauing kept it. As it would be, if any [Page 33]King Note. should haue a daughter, whom he loued much, and vvhom he kept for marriage, accor­ding to her rancke, & when the occasion thereof should present it selfe, this daughter of his should tell him, that she asked his pardon, for that she vvas not fit for marriage, as hauing vilely lost her Virginity. The remedyes of Pennance, are mi­serable remedyes, as sayth S. Hierome; since there is not any greater misfortune or misery, then to commit a mortall sinne, for the remedy wherof, it is necessary to resort to Pennance. Therefore must thou, with all vigilancy, attend to be loyall to him, that chose thee; and to make that good, which thou hast Be­cause she had vow­ed virgi­nity. promised to him; that so thou mayst not try, by experience, that which is written, Know thou, and see▪ what a bitter thing it is▪ to haue left the Lord thy God, and that his feare did not cōtinue in thee; but do thou enioy the fruit, as well as the name, of his chast Spouse; and the crowne, which is prouided, by him, for such.

CHAP. VIII
How the Diuell, vseth to deceaue spirituall men, by meanes of this enemy of our Flesh, and Bloud; & of the course that we are to hold, in keeping our selues from errour.

THov This excellent Chapter deserueth to be seri­ously pondred, by all kind, of spiritual persons. art to be aduertised, that the fall of deuout persons, is not vnderstood at the first, no not so much, as by themselues; and for [Page 34]this, it is the more to be feared. At the first, it seemes to them, that by communication with such persons, their soules do profit; and con­fiding therein, they do often resort to such con­uersations; and By how in­sensible degrees, may the most spi­rituall persons come to be sould ouer to this sinne of sense. thereby is engendred in their harts, a kind of loue which doth captiue them a little; and putteth them to payne, when they see not one another, and with seeing, and spea­king they are at ease. After this, it growes, that they expresse the loue they mutually beare; wherby, and by other discourses, which already are not so spirituall, as the former, they take ioy to be talking at large. And by little & little, that conuersation which formerly might profit their soules, they find to haue taken them prisoners; by often thinking of one another, and by the care, and desire, which they haue to meet some­tymes; and mutually to send amourous presents, and sweet recommendations, or letters. These thinges with other such like fawninges, are not agreable to a holy affection, as S. Hierome sayth; and by these slippery steps, from one to In the end they find, that euen the very be­ginninges were naught: which [...]e [...] at the first they sus­pected not. ano­ther, they vse to come to such ends, as giue them to vnderstand (& that very much to their cost) that euen the beginning & entertayning of that conuersation, which first they tooke to be a ser­uice of God, without finding any ill motion at all; was no other, then a meere deceit of the flye Diuell; who at the first, gaue them security, that afterwardes he might catch them in the snare, which he had hidden for that purpose. And after, [Page 35]being fallen, they learne, that a man and a wo­man, are but fire and flaxe; and that the Diuells errand, is but to bring them neere one another; and when they are so, he blowes the bellowes with a thousand arts, & tricks, to inflame them heere, with the fire of Flesh and Bloud; and to car­ry them afterwards into that of hell.

Therefore thou, O Virgin, fly away from the familiarity of euery man; and continue, to the end of thy life, in that good custome, which thou hast begunne, to be neuer alone with any man; except thy Confessour; and that, no longer then why lest thou art making thy Confession; & yet euen let that, be dispatched with as much breuity as thou canst; without enterlacing other discourses; fearing the account of the speach that thou shalt either vtter, or heare, which thou art to giue vnto the strict iudge. So Note this, and for the re­uerence of the Sacra­ment, a­uoid euen the least idle wordes. much the more, art thou to auoyd this in confession; because that, is ordeined, for the taking away of old sins, and not for the committing of any new; or to make thy selfe sicke with the very taking of phi­sicke. The spouse of Christ, (especially if she be young) ought not to be easy in the choice of her Confessour; but What kind of Confes­sour a wo­man of honour, & especi­ally a Vir­gin, must procure. carefull that he be a man of vertuous, and tryed life; of good reputation, & ripe yeares; and thus thy conscience shall be safe, in the sight of God, and thy fame, shalbe faire, & spotlesse, in the eyes of men.

Thou must vnderstand and know, that thou hast need of both these things, for comply­ing [Page 36]with the height, of the state of Virginity. And whē thou shalt haue found such a Confessour, giue thankes to our Lord; and obey him; & loue him; as a guift that he hath bestowed vpon thee. But yet stil be very careful; for although this loue be good, as being spirituall, yet there may be a fault in it, if it be too much; and it may bring him that hath it, into danger; and it is an easy matter, for spirituall affection, to translate and turne it selfe ouer, into carnall. And if thou vse not restraint in this, thou wilt grow to haue thy hart as much taken vp therby, as marryed women haue with their husbands, & their children. Now this, thou seest, would be a great irreuerence, in respect of the loyalty which thou owest to our Lord, whom thou hast taken for thy Spouse. Do not therefore place, and keep thy Ghostly Father, in the most interiour part of thy hart; keep him neare thy hart, as a friend of thy Spouse but not in the place of thy Spouse himself. And let the memory which thou holdest of him, serue for the putting of his directions in practise; without reflecting other­wise vpon his person; esteeming him as a gift of God, bestowed for the helping thee to vnite thy selfe to thy celestiall Spouse, but yet without brin­ging him into that Vnion.

Thou Note. must also be prouided, for the loosing him, without losse of thy patience, if God shall so ordayne, in whome alone thou art to lodge thy hopes, and he is to be thy only resting place. That which we read in S. Hierome, of the [Page 37]loue and familiarity between him and S. Paula, did keep conformity with these rules. Though yet many thinges are lawfull, and safe, to them who haue sanctity, and mature yeares, which yet are not so to such others, as want one of these qualityes, if not both.

In this sort then, art thou to carry thy selfe, with the Ghostly Father, whome thou choosest, he being such as I haue described. But if thou canst not haue him such, it is much better, that thou By this he shew­eth the great care which a Virgin ought to haue, of her good name; though such as liue not in villages, but in townes, can haue no diffi­culty, to find ma­ny most worthy Ghostly Fathers▪ at whose handes they may receaue the Sacra­ments, as often as they will do it with deuotion. confesse and communicate but twice or thrice in the yeare, and keep good account with God, and with thy spirituall bookes in thy Ora­tory, then by confessing often, to bring thy fame into hazard. For if, as S. Augustine sayth, Good name amongst our Neighbours be necessary for vs al; how much more necessary then, shall it be for the Virgin of Christ; whose reputatiō is very delicate, and tender, as S. Ambrose sayth. And that so much, as that to haue a confessour who wanteth any of the former qualityes, doth cast a spot v­pon her fame; which because it is in so pretious, and pure a cloth, it seemes to be very deformed, and in no case to be endured. And to the end that they, who content themselues with saying, There is no hurt, my conscience is cleare; and, who haue the reputation of their honesty, in small ac­count, should not be able to help themselues with a conceit, that men imposed any of these infamies, vpon the most sacred Virgin Mary; it Note. pleased her most blessed Sonne, that she should be [Page 38]espoused; choosing rather that they should hold him for the sonne of Ioseph, which yet he was not; then that men should haue colour to say, and thing sinisterly, of his most sacred Mother, by seeing her haue a sonne, and not to thinke, that she had a husband.

Therefore let such as haue no care to pre­uent scandalls, seeke out some other shelter; for that which they may learne of the most sacred Virgin Mary, and of other holy women, is purity within, and good example without; togeather with all reseruation, and caution, in conuersati­on. And although none of these inconuenien­ces did follow vpon those superfluous intertayn­ments, yet Note this, for the pre­seruing of thy soule, in perfect purity, & peace. should they deserue to be speedily auoyded; because they do with the multitude of thoughts, which they vse to bring, depriue the soule of liberty, whereby it might freely fly vp, by the cogitations thereof, to God; and it takes away that purity, which the secret corners of our hart (where Christ desires to dwell alone) were bound to haue. And it seemes, that it re­mayneth not so entire, nor so shut vp against all creatures, as it were fit that the bed of so soue­raigne a spouse, should be; and that it doth not wholy possesse the perfect purity of chastity, if therein there may be found, but euen the ayre, or memory of a man. But thou must know, that yet what hath byn sayd, is meant, when there is excesse in familiarity; or when there groweth any scandall by it. For otherwise, thou art not [Page 39]to conuerse with such, as reason leades thee to, with a scrupulous, or perplexed mind. For from hence, euen the very tentation it selfe, doth often rise; but thou art to carry thy selfe, with a holy and prudent simplicity; and neither to be care­lesse, on the one side; nor malicious on the other.

CHAP. IX.
That one of the principall remedies for the conquering of this Enemy, is the exercise of deuout and fer­uent Prayer, whereby we may find gust in diuine considerations, which maketh vs abhorre all worldly pleasures.

IN one of the former Read this chap­ter with extraor­dinary at­tention; & be sure to blesse God, for the great, & sweet goodnes of his, to­wardes mankind; and let it help thee to hate all bestiall pleasure. Chapters it was tould thee, what a strong, and well tempered wea­pon Prayer is, for the fighting against this vice, yea although the prayer be not of so great length. Thou shalt now vnderstand, that if this prayer be deuout, and long continued; and such, as wher­in gust is taken, according to that diuine sweet­nesse, which it imparted to some; such prayer I say, is not only a weapon, wherewith to fight, but euen outright to cut the throat of this bestiall vice. For the soule, wrastling, hand to hand with God, (by the armes of her deuout affections and thoughtes) doth obteyne of him in particu­ler manner, as another Iacob, that he blesse her, with a multitude of graces, and with a profound internall sweetnesse. Heereupon she remaineth [Page 40]strucken in the thigh, which signifieth sensuall ap­petite; this, growing to be mortified in such forte, as that from thenceforth, she goeth lame on that side; and she remayneth liuely & strong, in her spirituall affections, being signified by the other thigh, which was vntouched.

For, as the delightfull gust of flesh and bloud, maketh vs loose all gust and strength of spirit; so if once we come to haue gust in spirit, the gust of all flesh and bloud, grows highly vnsauoury. Som­tymes See how God vseth his true ser­uants. the delightfull sweetnesse, which a soule, being visited by God doth tast, is so great, that the body cannot beare it; and the same body re­mayneth so weake, and so defeated, as it might be, at the end of some corporal infirmity, which had held it long. Though at other tymes it hap­ [...]eth, that by the strength, which is receiued by the soule, euen the very body also is assisted, and recouers new forces. Making some experience, in this exile of hers, of that which shee is to find in heauen, when the soule being happy, in God, & full of inexplicable delightes, there shall result into the body, both strength and ioy, and other most pretious endowements, which our Lord will then impart.

O soueraigne Lord, and how How inexcusa­ble they are, who leaue God, for the loue of creatures. mightily without excuse, hast thou made the fault of them, who for the seeking of delight in creatures, are content to forsake, yea & to offend thee; vvhilest yet euery one of the delightes that be in thee, are so massiue, as that all they, which are in the cre­atures, [Page 41]being summed vp into one, are, in com­parison of thyne, no better then pure, and perfect gall. And this is so, vvith great reason. For the delight or ioy, vvhich is taken from any thing, is but the fruite of that thing, whatsoeuer it be; and such as the tree is, the fruit is also. Therefore, is the ioy, which is deriued from creatures, but short, and vayne, and filthy, and compounded with sorrow; because the tree, from whence it is gathered, is subiect to the same conditions. But the ioy which is in thee, O Lord, what imper­fection, or decay can it be subiect to? Since thou art eternall, quiet most simple, most beautifull, im­mutable, & a Good, which is infinitely complete.

The The delights of this world, are all but lyes. tast which a partridge hath, is of a partridge; & the gust which a man hath of any creature, sauours of the creature; and he that can say, who thou art O Lord, can say, of what tast thou art. Aboue all vnderstanding, is thy being; and so also is that sweet delight of thyne, which is kept, and hidden vp, for them that feare thee; and who, to enioy thee, do, with their harts, re­nounce the gust of creatures. An infinite good thou art; and so are thy delights, also infinite. And therfore, although the Angels of heauen, and the happy soules of men liuing there; are euer to re­mayne, enioying thee; (and The ioyes of heauen are so great [...] as that no soule, would be able to subsist in them, if it were not superna­turally e­nabled to it, by Al­mighty God. that, with a proportion of strength, which thou hast giuen them for that purpose, which is not small) and although incomparably, many more were added also to them, that in like māner they might enioy [Page 42]thee; and that, with much greater strength then now they haue; yet so boundlesse is that sea of thy diuine sweetnes, as that (they all, wauing, and swimming, as being full, & euen inebriated with those delights) there doth yet remayne, so much more thereof to be enioyed; as that if thou, O Lord Omnipotent, with the infinite powers which thou hast, didst not possesse and enioy thy selfe; those delights would carry with themselues a kind of complaint, in that there would be want of such, as might enioy, all that, which is there, to be enioyned.

And thou, O most wise Lord, vnderstan­ding, (as being our Creatour) that our inclinatiō carryeth vs to a loue of rest, and ioy; and that a soule is not able to continue long, without a search of some consolation, either good or bad; thou God is so deerely good, that euen in this life, he puts his fayth­full ser­uants, in­to a kind of para­dise. dost inuite vs, by those celestial delights, which are in thee; that so we may not cast our selues away, vpon the pursuite of sinneful pleasure in thy creatures. Thy voice it is, O Lord, Come vnto Matt. 11. me, O all you that labour, and are loaden, and I will refresh you. And thou didst commaund, that this should be proclaymed in thy name O all you that are thirsty, come to the waters. And thou hast made vs know. That Is [...]. [...]s. there are delightfull ioyes, in thy right hand, which continue to the end & that of the same riuer of thy delight▪ (not by any li­mited taxe, or measure) thou giuest to thy seruants to dri [...]ke, in thy kingdome. Yea sometymes thou vouchsafest, a tast of some part therof, to thy [Page 43]friends, euen whylest they are yet on earth; to whome thou sayest, Come Can [...]. 5. eate, and drinke, and be inebriated, O you, my deerest friends. Al this thou doest, O Lord, through a desire of drawing them to thee, by meanes of ioy, whome thou knowest to be so affected to it.

Let no man therefore, lay the least imputa­tion vpon thee, O Lord, as if there were any want of goodnes in thee, to be loued, or of true delight to be enioyed; and let him neuer be hun­ting, after any pleasing, or delightfull conuersa­tion out of thee; since the reward which thou wilt giue to thy seruants, is to bid them, Enter into Matt. 20. the ioy of their Lord. For of the same plate, and out of the same cup, whereof thou eatest, and drin­kest▪ they shall eate, and drinke; and of the same which thou enioyest, they shall enioy; for thou hast al­ready inuited them, to eate at thy table, in the Luc. 21. king­dome of thy Father.

What canst thou haue heere to say, Hear­ken to this, for he speaks home to thee; if it be to thee. O thou carnall man; thou who art, in so high a measure, deceaued, as that thou ariuest, to prize these filthy pleasures, of flesh and bloud (which base, and wicked persons, and euen the very beastes of the field, enioy) more, then that so­ueraigne sweetnes, which is in God; and which is enioyed, by the Saints, and by the Angells, and by God himselfe, the Creatour of them all. It is a bu­sinesse belonging to beasts, which thou dost so prize, and loue; and thy passions, are no better then very beastes. And so often doest thou cast, [Page 44]the most high God, vnder the feet, of thy most vile beasts; as thou doest offend him, for carnall pleasures Fly therefore, O thou Virgin, from a thing so infamous as this; and ascend thou vp, to the mount of prayer; and beseech our Lord, that he will giue thee some tast of himselfe, that thy soule, being strengthned by the sweetnes, that distills from him; thou mayst despise those durty pleasures, which inhabit flesh and bloud. Then wilt thou haue a cordiall, and deep compassion, of them, who go casting themselues away through the b [...]senes of the durty vallies, of a bestiall life. And Thou hast a hart of stone, if this do not moue thee. being all amaz'd, thou wilt cry out, O you men, and what is it that you loose? And for what? The most sweet God, for most stinking flesh, & bloud? And what payne do they deserue, for so False weights, are an a [...] ­h [...]min [...]iō to God: and how false are these, which make vayne & empty creatures, to out­weigh, the God of eternall glory. false weights and measures, but eternall torment; and of that, they shall infallibly be sure.

CHAP. X.
Of many other meanes, which we are to vse, when this cruell Enemy doth assault vs, with his first blowes.

THE aduises which thou hast already heard, by way of remedy of this infirmity, are thinges which ordinarily thou must vse; though it be not, in the tyme of tentation. Hearken now to that, which thou art to do, when it sets vpon thee, by giuing thee the first blow. Then, blesse [Page 45]thy Diuers profitable and pra­cticall re­medyes, against temptati­ons of sense. forehead, or thy hart, with the signe of the Crosse; calling with deuotion vpon the holy name of Iesus Christ; and say; Not I; I sell not God so good cheape. O Lord thou art more worth, and I loue thee more then so. If Note. the tentation do not then giue ouer, descend, with thy thoughts, into hell; and behold how terribly, that liuing fire doth burne, and maketh those miserable creaturs which were heere inflamed with the fire of lust, cry out, and howle, and blaspheme; why lest, in the meane tyme, the sentence of God is executed vpon them, which sayth, Let Apoc. 18. somuch torment and desolation be laid vpon them, as they glorifyed themselues, in their delights. Be thou astonished, at the grieuousnes of the punishment (though yet withall, it be most iust) that the pleasure of one moment, should be chastized, with eternall tor­ments. And say, within thyselfe, as S. Gregory doth, Momentary is that which delighteth, but eter­nall, is that which tormenteth.

If this contemplation help thee not; send vp thy hart to heauen; and represent to it, the purity of that Chastity, which remayneth in that happy Citty; where no beast can haue any entrance; I meane, no person that is bestiall. And there continue thou for some time, till thou mayst find strength of spirit; and so that heere, thou mayst abhorre, that which there is so abhorred through the loue of God. It doth also help, to suppose that thy body were in the graue; and to behold, at leasure, how miserable, [Page 46]and stincking the bodies of men and woman, are there to be. So also is it good, to go instant­ly to Christ Iesus, nayled vpon the Crosse; and especially, as he is tyed to the pillar, and whip­ped, and bathed in bloud, from head to foote; and then to say, with a deepe, internall groane; Thy virgineall and diuine body, O Lord, so tormen­ted, and so loaden with grieuous paynes, and that I should put myne into pleasure? this were worthy of all rigorous punishment. Since thou, with scourges so full o [...] cruelty▪ doest pay for the delightes, which men take in offence of thy law, I will not, O Lord, delight my selfe so much to thy cost. In like manner, will it auayle, to represent thy selfe instantly, in pre­sence of the most pure Virgin Mary; considering the purity and integrity both of her body, & mind; and instantly to abhorre the dishonest thought which came to thee, as darknesse is driuen away, by the approach of light.

But Pray to God to giue thee grace, to practise this. aboue all, if thou canst, shut the dore of thy vnderstanding, and shut it well; as we vse to do, in the most internall recollection of our prayer, (as hereafter we will declare) thou shalt find help at hand, with more facility, then by al those other remedies. For it happens many tyms, that by opening the dore, to a secōd good thoght, an ill one doth vse to enter in; but keeping out both the one & the other, it is a turning from the enemy, & not opening the dore, till he be gone, and so he is put to a scorne. So doth it also help, to spread the armes into the forme of a crosse, to bēd [Page 47]the knees, and to beate the breast. But that which most importes, or at least, as much as all the rest togeather, is, to The deuout receauing of the B. Sacramēt, is the most souerai­gne reme­dy against tentations of sense. receiue, with due preparation, the holy body of Christ Iesus our Lord; which was formed by the holy Ghost, & is very far estranged from all impurity. This is an admirable remedy against those mischeifes, which would grow vpon vs, by occasion of our flesh, conceyued in sinne. And if we could well ponder the blessing that we receyue by the comming of Christ Iesus into vs, we should esteeme our selues to be as so many pretious Reliquaries; and we would fly, from all kind of filthynesse, for the honour of him whome we had receiued.

What Read this with great feeling. hart can any one haue, to pro­phane his body, when it hath byn honoured so far, as to close with the most holy body of God huma­ned? what greater obligation, could haue byn cast vpon me? what more forcible motiue cold haue byn offered, to make me liue inpurity then to behold with myne eyes, to touch with my hands to receyue with my mouth, to ledge in my breast, the most pure body of Iesus Christ? He vouchsafing me that vnspeakeable honour, to the end, that I might not descend to basenesse; and knitting me to himselfe, and consecrating me, as a place, into which he vouchsafes to enter. How then, & with what body, shall I endure to offend our Lord. since he, being the authour of purity, hath entred into the same body? I haue fedd vpon him, and fedd with him at the same table; and shall I now be a tray­tour to him? No; I will neuer be so, for the whole [Page 48]world. Thus is it fit that we esteeme this fauour, to the end that we may haue a crown put vpon this weake and frayle condition of ours. But Trem­ble, and take heed. if we receiue him ill, or do not serue our selues wel of this benefit, iust the contrary effect doth fol­low; and such an one, shall find himselfe more enthralled by dishonesty, then he was before he communicated.

If, with all these considerations, and reme­dies, this bestiall flesh grow not quiet; thou art to vse it like a beast; laying good sound loads vpon it, since it will not hearken to so iust reason. Some find helpe by pinching themselues very hard, in memory of the excessiue paine, which those nayles did cause to Christ Iesus our Lord; Others, by whipping themselues seuerely; cal­ling so to mind, how our Lord was scourged; others with spreading their armes into the forme of a Crosse; others with fixing their eyes on hea­uen; others with beating their face; and such other thinges as these, which put the flesh to paine; for at that tyme, she vnderstands no other language. This The example of Saints. is the manner, which, by rea­ding, we find that the Saintes did hold; wherof one did strip himselfe starck naked, and did all tumble in thorny bushes; and so by meanes of his bloudy and afflicted body, the warre which was made against his soule, did end. A­nother did cast himselfe, in the depth of winter, into a poole of water, which was extreamly cold; wherein he stayed, till the body came forth halfe [Page 49]dead, but the soule was freed from all danger. Another, thrust his fingers into the fyre, and with burning them, that other fyre, which tor­mented his soule, was quenched. And a martyr there was, who being bound hand and foote, (& then tempted to vnlawful pleasure) by cutting of his owne tongue, with his owne teeth, became victorious in that combate.

And although some of these things are not to be imitated, because they were inspired by particuler instinct of the holy Ghost, and not by the ordinary law vnder which we liue, yet here­by we may learne; That in the tyme of spirituall warre, when there is question or hazard of the soule, we are not to be lazy, or to expect till our enemyes do giue vs thrustes; but we must leape backe from sinne, as from the face of a serpent, as sayth the Scripture; and euery one must apply that remedy to himselfe, wherein he findes most profit, according to the addresse which shall be giuen him, by his prudent Ghostly Father.

CHAP. XI.
Of other meanes, besides the former, whereby some grow to loose their Chastity; that we may fly from them, if we a [...]so will not loose ours; and by what meanes we may strengthen our selues.

NO care, or labour (though neuer so great) which is employed towards the proseruatiō [Page 50]of Chastity, will be esteemed too much by any, if he know, how to put the true price, vpon the merit, and reward thereof. Now since our Lord hath made thee vnderstand, the valew of this treasure; & hath giuen thee grace both to choose it, and to make This Ladv had vowed Chastity. promise therof againe to him; I shall not be put, into so much necessity to de­clare the excellency thereof, as to giue thee good directions, how thou mayst be sure not to loose it; and to tell thee of some errours, besides the former, through which it is lost by others; that so thou knowing them, mayst auoyde them, least thou also come to loose it, and thy selfe with it. Some Of the diuers wayes, whereby chastity groweth to be lost. loose it, in respect, that hauing fierce & violent inclinations against it, and they, on the other side, being not earnest in making such a continuall and sharp warre against themselues; do, with a miserable resolution, deliuer them­selues ouer, bound hand and foot, to the will of their enemyes. Not considering, that the pur­pose of a A no­ble word for a Christian to write in his hart; [...]ither to couq [...]er sinne, or to dye in the battai­ [...]s. Christian, is to be, either to dye, or els to ouercome; by meanes of his grace, who hel­peth such, as fight for his honour. Others there are, who although they be not greatly tempted, haue yet naturally a certaine basenes & straitnes of hart, which is inclined to vile, & poore things. And for as much as this pleasur, is one of the most vile, & poore, & most at hand; they quickly find meanes to meet with it, & to bestow themselues vpon it, as a thing that is proportionable to the basenes & poornesse of their owne hart; which [Page 51]doth not rayse it selfe so high, as to imbrace a life of such men, as are ruled euen by naturall reason. Which alone, taught one, so good a lesson, as to make him say, That in carnall pleasures, there was no­thing worthy of a magnanimous hart. And another sayd, That the life which consists in carnall pleasure, is a life of beasts. For not only, doth the light of heauen, but euen that of naturall reason, condemne such as employ themselues vpon this basenes; as people who liue not in the circle of men, whose life must be agreable to reason; but of beasts, whose very life is, sensuall appetite. And if iu­stice might be done, there would be a great deale of cause, to take away the name of men, from these fellowes; in regard, that although they haue the shape of men; they yet lead a life of beasts, & are the true dishonour and reproach of men. Nor would How strang this is, and yet after a sort, it is dayly seene. it be a thing moderatly strange, or giue small wonder, to them that saw it, if a beast should lead a man, bridled, vp and downe; and carry him whither it would, directing him, who ought to gouerne it. And yet there are so many, ruled by the bridle of bestiall appetite, both of high and low condition; that I know not, whe­ther it is through the multitude thereof, that it cannot be so easily discerned. Or els I rather be­lieue, that it is because there are few, who haue light to see, how miserable, a soule in a body is, when it is killed by carnall pleasures; and the more, if that body, be fresh, and fayre.

O how many soules of these, and others, [Page 52]are burning in this infernal fire; nor is there any to cast tears of compassion vpon them, or to say with their hart, To Iod. 1. thee, O Lord will I cry out, because the fire hath denoured, the beautifull thinges of the desert. For Note. certainly, if we had amongst vs of those Luc 7. widdowes of Naim, who would bit­terly bewayle their dead children, Christ would vse mercy, for the reuiuing them in soule, as he did the body of that widdowes sonne, who is mentioned, in the Ghospell.

It is not his part to sleep, who hath the office, in the Church, to pray, and intercede for the people with the tendernes of a Mother. Least God do chastize both him & them; saying, Ezech. 22. I sought, among them, for a man who might place him­self, as a wall; & See the infinit goodnes of God, who is angry, if by pray­ing for one ano­ther, we seeke not to appease his wrath. might oppose himselfe against me, and so I might not destroy the earth: but I fou [...]d no such man; and I powred out my wrath vpon them, & in the fire of my Ezech. 22. anger I consumed them. Take heed therefore that thou loue not a narrow, and poore hart of thyne owne; to which these base pleasures vse to be agreable and delightfull. Re­member that which S. Bernard sayd, That if thou well consider the body, and that which proceeds from thence, it is a kind of more loathsome dunghill, then otherwise, thou hast seene. Despise it from thy hart, withall the ornaments, and [...]ace, and delight it hath; and make account that euen already, it is in the sepulcher, conuerted into a handfull of dust.

When thou seest any man or woman, looke [Page 53]not much vpon their face, or person; and if thou doe, let it be to loath it; but addresse thy inter­nall eyes, to the soule, which is shut vp, and hid­den in the body; amongst which soules, there is no difference, of man, or woman. And admire thou that soule, as a thing created by God; since The inestima­ble digni­ty, & ex­cellency of a soule. the valew of that alone, is greater then that of all corporeall things, eyther made, or to be made. And thus, dismissing thy selfe from the basenesse of bodies, bestow thy selfe vpon the search of greater treasures; and vndertake thou, noble en­terprizes; and no lesse, then to lodge euen God himselfe both in thy soule, and in thy body, with a profound purity of hart.

Behould The height, and dig­nity, of the voca­tion, of a Christiā. thy selfe with such eyes, as these, since S. Paul sayth, C [...]. or. 3. Know you not that you are the temple of God; and that the spirit of God remayneth in you? And in another place, do you not know that your members, are the temples of the holy Ghost, who remaynes within you, and whom God hath giuen to you; And, you are not your owne; And since you are bought with a great price, let God be honoured in your bodyes. Consider allso, that when thou diddest receyue holy Baptisme, thou wert made the Temple of God; and thy soule was consecrated to him, by his grace; and so was thy body also, by the [...]uch of that holy water. And the holy Ghost doth [...]erue it selfe, both of the soule and body; as being the Lord of the whole house; enclining both the one, and the other, to good workes; and for this it is sayd, That euen the partes [Page 54]of our body, are the Temples of the holy Ghost.

God Be thou ama­zed, at this infinite vouchsa­fing, of al­mighty God. doth vouchsafe vs great honour; by being pleased to dwell in vs, and to honour vs indeed, with the name of Temples; and great is the obligation which thereby is put vpon vs, to cleanse our selues; it being so fit, that the house of God be cleane. And if thou wilt consider, that thou wert purchased, as S. Paul sayth, at a great price; that is by the life of God humaned, which for thee was giuen, thou mayst see, how great reason it is, for thee to honour God, and to beare him in thy body, doing him seruice; and not therein, to com­mit any thing, which may be to his dishonour, and thine owne extreame disaduantage. For iust, and true, is that sentence, That 1. Cor. 3. who­soeuer shall defile the Temple of God, him will God destroy. For in his Temple, there must be nothing, but that which tends to his honour, and prayse. Remember that which S. Augustine sayd, When I had once vnderstood, that God had redeemed and purchased me, with his pretious bloud, I resolued, that neuer more, I would sell my selfe; To which I would haue thee add, And how much lesse will I doe it, for the base pleasure of flesh, and bloud.

Thou hast begunne a A vow of perpe­tual Cha­stity. worke, worthy of a noble courage, because thou meanest to be incorrupt, in that corruptible flesh of thyne; and to possesse that, by way of vertue, which the An­gells possesse by way of nature; and to pretend to a particuler crowne in heauen, in being com­panion to those blessed Virgins, Who sing that new [Page 55]song, and follow the Lambe, wheresoeuer he goeth. Consider the name, which now thou holdest, of being the spouse of Christ; and the ioye which thou mayst expect in heauen, when there that spouse of thyne shall lodge thee in thy bed; for thus thou wilt come to so much loue of the purity of virginity, that for it, thou wilt gladly loose thy life, as many holy Virgins haue done; who rather then they would not be Virgins, were content to be Martyrs, with great magnaminity. Procure thou also to This is true No­bility; & the con­trary is meer ba­senesse. haue a noble hart, which is very necessary, for the keeping of thee in that high estate, where God hath placed thee.

CHAP. XII.
That God vseth to punish such as are proud, by per­mitting them to loose the treasure of Chastity, thereby to humble them; and how necessary it is to be humble, for the ouercomming of the enemy to this vertue.

THERE haue byn others, who lost the trea­sure of their chastity, by reason that God did punish them in his iust iudgement, through a giuing them ouer (as S. Paul sayth,) to the disho­nest affections of their owne hart, as into the hands, of cruell executioners. Chastizing thus, some of their sinnes, by other sinnes of theirs, he not in­citing them to sin, See & detest the doctrine of Caluin, which he vttereth in his In­stitutions; for the maketh the trea­son of Iu­das, to be as pro­perly, and as truly, the work of God, as the cōuer­sion of S. Paul. (for a very strange thing it were for him, who is soueraigne goodnesse, to [Page 56]because of sinne in any soule) but by retiring his succour, from a man, for other sinns of the same man; which is the worke of a iust iudge; who in that he is iust, is also good. Thus sayth the scri­pture; A wicked woman is a deepe well; and a loose woman is a straite well; and he shall fall into it, who hath offended God.

Let Be not high-minded, but feare. no man therefore presume, vpon his not sinning against God in the point of chastity, if yet he sin in other thinges. Since God is wont to let men fall into that which they would not, & into which they were not wont to fall, in pu­nishment of their falling into other sinnes, from which they ought to haue kept themselues. And though this be generally true in the case of all sinnes, and God is offended with them all, and doth punish all; yet more particularly doth he (as S. Augustin sayth) punish secret A­boue all thinges, take heed of Pride. Pryde by open lust. So is it related of Nabuchodonosor; That for the punishment of his pryde, he lost his Kingdome, & was cast out of the conuersation of men; and the hart of a beast was giuen him; and he past his tyme among the beastes. Not that he lost the nature of a man, but that euen to himselfe, it seemed that he was not such. This did he continue, till God gaue him vnderstanding and humility, whereby he knew & confessed, That honour & dominion was of God; and that he bestoweth it, where he would. Certainly Note. so it is, that the man who attributes the buyl­ding vp of chastity, to the strength of his owne arme, God doth driue him from amongst his ser­uants; [Page 57]and being departed out of that company, which was, as it were, of Angells, he dwelleth now amongst beasts; hauing so bestiall a hart in his body, as if he had neuer loued God; nor known what chastity meant; & as if there were no hell, nor glory, nor reason, nor shame. In How highly true is this? so much, as themselues are amazed at what they do; and they seeme not to haue the iudgment, or dis­course of men; but to be wholy abādoned to this brutish vice, like very beasts; till the mercy of our Lord, do looke with pitty vpon so great misery; and make him, whose case is such, to know, that for his pride he fell, and by meanes of humility, he is to recouer and rise. And then doth he confesse, that the kingdome of chastity, by which he had dominion ouer his body, is a blessing of God, which, by his grace, he giues, and which, for the sinnes of man, he taketh away.

This sinne of Pride is so hard to be discoue­red, and consequently so much to be feared; that sometymes a man hath it so conueyed into the most secret corners of his hart, that euen him­selfe vnderstands it not. A witnesse of this, may be S. Peter, and many others; who whilest they were taking pleasure, and confiding in them­selues, did thinke that they were putting their trust in God; who by his infinite wisedom seeth their infirmity; and with his mercy, accompa­nyed by his iustice, doth cure and heale them; by giuing For Pride, and Ingrati­tude, ma­ny haue grown to lose their chastity. them to vnderstand, (though to their cost) that they were vnthankefull vnto him, & [Page 58]vnduely confident in themselues, since now they see how miserably they are fallen. Now although this fall, cost them deare, yet doth it not carry so great danger with it, as doth the secret sinne of Pride, wherein they were. For, not knowing therof, they would haue sought after no remedy; and so they would haue runne vpon their owne ruine; but comming to find out, that sinne by their fall, and being humbled before the mercy of God, they obtayne remedies from him, against both inconueniences.

For this I say it is, that S. Augustine told vs, That A gol­den sen­tence of the great S. Augu­stine. God doth punish secret pride by open lust; because the second sinne is manifest to him that committeth it; and by meanes thereof, he grows to a knowledge of the former, which lay hidden. And thou art to know, that some people are on­ly proud, within themselues; and others are so with contempt of their neighbours, whom they conceaue to be defectiue in vertue; and especi­ally in that of chastily. But Note this. thou, O Lord, how truly wilt thou behould this fault, with angry eyes? And how thankelesse were those thankes to thee, which were giuen thee by that Pharisee, who sayd, I am not ill like other men; I am not an adulterer nor a robber, like that Publican. This, O Lord, thou doest not leaue without punishment; Thou doest punish it, and that with great seue­rity; by letting him fall that stood on foot; in punishment of his sinne, and thou dost rayse the other vp, who was fallen; thereby, as it were, to [Page 59]make him a kind of amends, for the wronge which the other had done him.

It is a sentence of thyne, and thou obseruest it very well; Do Luc. 6. not condemne others and thou shalt not be condemned: And, with the Matt. 5. same mea­sure wherewith you measure to others, with the same it shallbe measured to you againe. And, he that exal teth him [...]elf, shallbe humbled. And thou didst com­mand it to be thus published in thy name, to such as despise their neighbours Woc be to thee who des­pisest; for thou shalt be despised. O how many haue myne eyes seene, punished according to this sentence, who neuer had vnderstood how much God abhorreth this finne, til they saw themselues fallen, into the very same, for which they con­demned those others; yea and into worse.

Of Take heed of contem­ning o­thers; least thou grow the subiect of the con­tempt of others. three thinges (sayd an Ancient of for­mer tymes) I condemned others; and into all three, my selfe did fall. Let him that is chast, giue God thankes for the fauour he doth him; and let him liue with feare, and trembling; least himselfe do fall; and let him help to rayse such an one as is fallen already; shewing We may be se­uere to our selues but we must haue compasio vpon o­thers. compassion towards him, and not contempt. Let him consider, that they are both made of one piece; and that as the other fell, so he (for as much as concernes him­selfe) doth fall. For, as S. Augustine sayth, There is He is blind, who be­leeues not this. no sinne committed by one man, which would not be also committed by another man, if he were not assi­sted by him that is the maker of man. Let him draw good out of euill; humbling himselfe by occasion [Page 60]of the others fault. Let him, I say, draw good out of euill; and as for the good of his neighbour, let him reioyce in that. Let him not be as a vene­mous serpent, which fetcheth euill out of all thinges; pride out of ethers miseryes, and enuy out of their fe­licityes. Such Note. soules as these, will not escape the punishment of God. He will suffer them to fall vpon that, into which those others fell; and he will not giue them the felicity for which they did enuy others.

CHAP. XIII.
Of two other dangerous meanes, which are wont to make way for the losse of Chastity, in such as en­deauour not to auoyd them.

AMONGST the miserable falls from cha­stity, wherewith the world is made ac­quainted; it is reason that we forget not that, of the King, & Prophet Dauid. Because that fall, be­ing so miserable, & the person that fel, so highly qualifyed, it leaues the hearer with great appre­hension; that there is no one, who may not feare his owne infirmity. The occasion of this fall, (as sayth S. Basil) was a light kind of compla­cence, which Dauid tooke in himself, when once he was visited by the hand of God, with much consolation; and he presumed to expresse him­selfe in this manner, I sayd in my abundance, that I shall neuer be moued. But O, how far otherwise [Page 61]did it fall out; and how well did he afterward vnderstand, that, whereof before he was igno­rant, That Eccl. 7. in the day of prosperity which we haue, we must be calling those A safe and most profitable aduice. miseryes to mind, which we may haue; and that we must take in, those di­uine consolations, by the weight of Humility, ac­companying it with the holy feare of God; least otherwise he experience that, which Dauid him­selfe deliuered, Thou turnedst thy face from me, and I was troubled.

Another cause of his fall, is giuen vs to be vnderstood, in holy Scripture, by saying that at such tymes as the Kings of Israel, were wont to passe into the warres, against the infidells, King 2, Reg. 1. Dauid stayed at home. And walking vp and down, vpon a tarrasse of his pallace, he saw that which was the occasion of his adultery, and of the murther al­so, not only of one, but many. All this had byn auoyded, if he had gone to fight the battailes of God, according to the custome of other Kings; and himselfe had done so, other yeares. If A good les­son to vs Catholike to be sympa­thizing alwayes with the Holy Church our Mo­ther, both in sorrow, and in spirituall ioy, ac­cording to the di­uersity of tymes, & occasions. thou wilt be wandring vp and downe, when the ser­uants of God are recollected; if thou wilt be idle, when they labour in good workes; if thou wilt be dissolutely sending thyne eyes abroad, whi­lest theirs are weeping bitterly, both for them­selues and others; and if, when they are rising vp by night, to pray, thou art sleeping and snor­ting, and leauing of (by occasion of euery fan­cy) the good exercises which thou wert wont to vse, (and by the force and heate whereof, thou [Page 62]wert kept on foote) how doest thou thinke to preserue chastity, being carelesse, vnprouided of defensiue weapons, and hauing so many enemi­es, who are so stout, laborious, and compleatly armed, in fighting against it.

Do Note. not deceiue thy selfe, for if thy desire to be chast, be not accompanied by deeds, which are fit for the defence of that vertue, thy desire will prooue vayne; and that will happen to thee, which did to Dauid: Since thou art not more pri­uiledged, more stout, nor more a Saint, then he. And to conclude this matter, (of the occasions, through which, this pretious treasure of chastity, is wont to be lost) thou art to vnderstand, that the cause why God permitted, that the flesh shold rebell against reason, in our first parents, (from whome, we haue it by inheritance) was, for that they rebelled against God, by disobeying his com­mandement. He chastized them in conformity of their sinne, and thus it was; That Note. Lex Talio­tus. since they would not obey their superiour, their inferiour should not obey them; and so the vnbridled nesse of this flesh, being a subiect and a slaue, rebelling against her superiour, which is reason, is a punish­ment [...]ayd vpon reason▪ for the disobedience, with she committed against her superiour, which is God.

Be therfore very carefull, that thou be not dis­obedient to thy superiours, least God permit, that thy inferiour, which is thy flesh, do rebell against thee; as he suffered Adad to rebell against King [Page 63] Salomon 3. Reg [...] 12. his Lord; and least he scourge & per­secute thee; and, by thy weakenesse, draw thee downe into mortall sinne. And if, with the in­ward eyes of thy hart, thou haue vnderstood, that, which heere with the eyes of thy body thou hast read; thou wilt see how great reason there is, that thou shouldest looke to thy selfe, and con­sider what there is within thy selfe. And No man can see him­selfe exa­ctly, but by light from hea­uen. be­cause thou art not exactly able, to know thyne owne soule, thou art to begg light of our Lord; and so to sift the most secret corners of thy hart, that there may be no ill thing there; which eyther thou knowest, or knowest not off; by meanes whereof, thou mightest, through some secret iud­gement of God, runne hazard to loose the trea­sure of chastity; which yet it doth so much im­port thee to keep safe, by meanes of his diuine assistance.

CHAP. XIV.
How much we ought to fly from the vaine confidence of obteyning victory against this enemy, by our owne only industry, and labour; and that we must vnderstand it, to be the guist of God; of whom, it is to be humbly asked; by the intercession of the Saintes; and in particuler of the Virgin, our Bles­sed Lady.

ALL that which hath byn sayd, and more which might be sayd, are meanes for the ob­tayning, [Page 64]and keeping of this pretious purity. But it happeneth oftentymes, that as, although we bringe, both stone and wood, and all other ne­cessary materialls, for the making of a house, yet we do not fall vpon the buylding of it; so also doth it come to passe, that vsing all these reme­dies, we yet obtayne not the chastity which we so much desire. Nay there are many, who, after ha­uing had liuely desires thereof, and taken much paynes for the obtayning of it, do yet see them­selues miserably fallen, or violently at least, tor­mented in their flesh; & with much sorrow they say, We haue laboured all night, and yet we haue taken nothing. And it seemeth to them, that in them­selues, that is fulfilled, which the Wiseman sayd, The Eccl. 7. more I sought it, the further off, it fled away.

This Take heed of trusting to thy selfe. vseth oftentymes to happen, by reason of a secret confidence, which these proud labourers, haue in themselues; imagininge, that chastity, was a fruite which grew from their only endeauour; and not, that it was a guift, imparted by the hand of God. And for not knowing of whom it was to be asked, they iustly were depri­ued of it. For God sheweth mercy sometyme euen in suffring vs to sal into [...]nne. it had byn of more preiudice to them, to haue kept it; (since withall, they would be proud, and vngratefull to God) then to be without it, yet withall, to be full of sorrow, and humility, and so to be forgiuen by pennance. It is no small part of wisedome, to know by whom cha­stity is giuen; and he is gone a good piece of the [Page 65]way, towardes the obteyning of it; who indeed belieueth, that it comes not from the strength of man; but that it is the guift of our Lord. This doth he teach vs, in his holy Ghospell, saying, All are not capable of this word, but they to whome it is giuen, by God. And although the remedies al­ready pointed out, for the obtayning of this hap­pinesse, be full of profit; and We must both worke & pray, for neither of them both a­lone, will serue the turne. that we must employ our selues thereupon; yet must that be with this condition, that we place not our con­fidence in them; but let vs deuoutly pray to God, which Dauid did both practise, and aduise, by saying; I did cast vp myne eyes to the mountayns, from whence my succour shall descend▪ my succour is of our Lord, who made heauen and earth.

A good witnesse of this, may the glorious S. Hierome be; who relates of himselfe such ex­treme afflictions, by temptation of the flesh, as reduced him to so great extremity, that nei­ther great fasting, nor large watching, nor slee­ping vpon the ground, nor that his body was e­uen halfe dead, could deliuer him from the same But then, as a man depriued entirely of all suc­cour, and finding no remedy in any remedy; he cast himselfe at the feet of Iesus Christ our Lord; and made him He al­ludeth to S. Mary Magda­len. a bath of his teares; and wiped them with the hayre of his deuout thoughts. Yea, and sometymes it happened, that he spent whole dayes, and whole nights in crying out af­ter Christ. In God is a liberall rewarder of his ser­uants, if indeed they be his ser­uants. the end, he was heard; & God gaue him the desire of his hart, with so great se­renity, [Page 66]and spirituall consolation; that it seemed to him, as if he were assisting, among the quires of Angells. In this sort, doth God relieue such as call vpon him with entire affection, and who re­maine faythfull in the warre, till he send them succour.

And The inuocat [...]ō of Saints, is very vsefull, & especially of the im­maculate Mother of God. not only must we inuoke God to fauour vs, but the Saints also; who are signified by the Mountaynes spoken of heere by Dauid; & especially must the most pure Virgin be called more vpon, then any of them. Importuning her with seruices and prayers, that she will obtayne this blessing for vs. And these seruices, she will receaue, and these prayers will she gladly heare; as a true louer of that, which we desire by her meanes. I haue, in most particuler manner, seen great fauours obtayned, through the meanes of this [...]lessed Lady, by persons troubled with the temptations of sense; with The deuotion to the sa­cred, and immacu­late con­ception of the Mo­ther of God, is much, & most wor­thily re­commen­ded by this Holy Authour. hauing offered some prayers to her, in memory of that purity, wherin she was conceaued without originall sinne; and of that virginall chastity, wherewith she did conceaue the Sonne of God. Take therefore this B. Lady, for thy particuler aduocate; to the end, that, by her prayers, she may obtayne and con­serue purity in thee. And consider, that if among the women of this world, we find some, who are such friends to honesly; as that, to the vttermost of their power, they assist and protect any crea­ture, that will forsake the basenesse of the con­trary vice, and walke on by the purity of chastity; [Page 67]how much more, incomparably, is it to be hoped, of this most pure Virgin of Virgins, that she wil cast her eyes, and her eares vpon the seruices, and prayers, of such as desire to preserue chastity, which she so cordially loues? Be therefore sure, that thou abound in desire of this blessing. Fayle not of confidence in Christ, nor of earnest prayer, nor other endeauours, as hath beene sayd. For neither in his Saints, will there be wanting any loue or care to pray for vs; nor mercy from hea­uen, for the graunting of this guift, which God only giues. And his pleasure is, that euery one who receaueth it, should know, that of him they haue it; and they are to giue him glory for the same, since, in all reason, it is so due to him.

CHAP. XV.
How our Lord disposeth not, equally of the guift of Chastity, vnto all; because to some, he giueth it only in their soules; and of the great profit which the temptations against Chastity, do bring, if they be well borne.

IT is to be considered with attention, that God doth not equally impart this guift to all; but with difference, according to the pleasure of his holy will. For to some he giueth, more, and to others lesse. To some he giueth chastity in the soule only; which is, A deliberate, and firme resolu­tion, not to fall into the contrary vice, for the whole [Page 68]world, but yet, togeather with this good purpose, such an one, may haue foule imaginations in his mind, and painefull temptations, in the sensitiue part of his soule. Which, although they cannot draw the reasonable part to consent to sinne; yet do they afflict her, and giue her inough to do, in de­fending her selfe against their importunityes. This A good picture, of the pre­sent case. carryeth some resemblance to that of Moyses, and the people. For he being in the top of the mountaine, in the company of God, the base people, were at the foot thereof, adoring I dolls. But whosoeuer is in the state aforesayd, must giue great thankes to our Lord, for the fauour that he hath vouchsafed to his soule; and he must patiently suffer the little obedience, which is per­formed to him, by his sensitiue part. For Note. as, if only Eue had eaten of the forbidden tree, Original sinne, had not beene committed, vnles Adam also had consented, and eaten thereof; so whilest the good purpose of not cōsenting to any thing that is euill, doth raigne in the superiour part of the soule, it is not in the power of the sensitiue part, (how much soeuer it That is, how much soe­uer it sol­licite vs. eate) to produce a mor­tall sinne, since the That is, Reason. man consents not to it; but it is displeasing to him, & he reprehēdeth it; wher­by thou seest that thou art to be very carefull, not to suffer these imaginations, or motions, to remayne in thee, but to driue them away. For he that seeth the danger wherein he is, by keeping that fyre of hell within himself, and by cherishing that serpent in his bosome (especially Note this, and note it well. if he [Page 69]haue obserued, at other tymes, that from thence, hath vsed to growe a consent to do that euill worke, or to take pleasure in that vicious de­light,) such negligence is adiudged to be a mor­tall sinne; since when he saw the danger, he loued it, by not driuing it away. But as long as there is a purpose aliue, of not consenting to the euill worke, or to the euill delight; but to resist (al­though weakely) when thou seest the daunger wherein thou art; thou art to thinke, that our Lord did not suffer thee, to fall into mortall sinne. And because herein, it is very hard to giue a cleare sentence, without particuler information of him that suffers the temptation, it No security of light, vnder God, without aduising with a good Ghostly Fath [...] is fit to acquaint the learned Ghostly Father with it; and to take his counsell. And if, notwithstanding all this, it offend any man to suffer so continuall warre within himselfe; let him consider, that by the trouble of temptations, the sinnes which he hath committed are purged; and man, is anima­ted, towardes a better seruing of God, when he seeth that he hath more need of him. And, [...] hum­ble, by the importu­nity of the temp­tations of sense. as madd as we are, we come to know, by our owne weakenesse, and by seing our selues in so gro [...] hazard, and that we are, euen vpon the very hornes of the bull; as that, if the hand of God, did, neuer so little, abandone vs, we should fall into that fearefull [...] of mortall sinne. And till this weakenesse be, euen from the roote ther­of, acknowledged, and experimented by thee, the temptations of sense will not giue thee ouer; [Page 70]which are, as so many tempestuall showers, and blowes, that may cause thee to acknowledge, that this blessing is not to remayne in thee, vn­lesse it be graunted thee, from aboue.

If thou wert a faithfull seruant of God, the more thou wert combatted, by thy flesh, the more would thy soule encourage her selfe, to the con­seruation of chastity; & so the temptations, should be as knockes which might help thee to giue thy purity, a deeper roote; and thou shouldst see the wonderfull thinges of God. For The great goodnes of God shines fair in our wicked­nes, & his strength in our weaknes. as, by occa­sion of our wickednesse, the goodnesse of God appeares the more; so by the weakenes of our flesh, he bringeth strength into our soule; the spi­rit giuing the No, to that which the flesh enticed it to; and the loue of chastity, doth vnite and for­tify it selfe with new spirits, as often as the flesh solliciteth the mind to put it away. Thus, by meanes of one troublesome, and base contrary, God perfects another, which is noble, and pre­tious; and this is chastity.

Remember that a good warre, is more to be desired then a wicked peace; and that it is better for vs, to labour that we may not consent, there­by to please our Lord; then for the taking of a little bestiall pleasure (which, euen as soone as it is taken, leaues a Sinne­full plea­sure, is a bitter payne dis­guised. double sting behind it) to cast him into indignation, against vs, whome we ought, with all our powers, both to loue, and please.

Call thou with humility, and with confi­dence, [Page 71]vpon him who will not fayle to succour one, that fightes for his honour. And in the end, he will so ordayne, that thou shalt come rich, out of this skirmish; and he will esteeme of the affli­ction, which thou hast byn in, as of a kind of martyrdome. For as the Martyrs, chose rather to dye, then to deny their fayth; so thou choosest to suffer what thou sufferest, rather then to violate his holy will. And he will make thee a companion in glory with them, since thou art so heere, in thy afflictions. In Note. the meane tyme, comfort thy selfe with hauing in thy hart so good a proofe, that thou louest God; since for loue of him, thou leauest that which thy flesh liketh.

CHAP. XVI.
How the guift of Chastity, is graunted to some, not only in the interiour part of the soule, but in the sensuall part also; and this, after two man­ners.

TO others, our Lord giueth this blessing of Chastity, more abundantly. For not only doth he grant a detestation of these delightes, to the soule; but euen in the sensitiue part, and flesh, they haue so much temper, as that they enioy great peace; and do scarce know what a paine­full temptation doth meane. Now this hapneth after two manners. Some haue this peace and purity, euen by naturall complexion; but others, [Page 72]by election, and fauour of God. They who haue it by naturall complexion, are not greatly to ap­plaude themselues, for the peace that they find; nor to contemne such, as they see are tempted. For The greater the temp­tation is, the grea­ter is the vertue, in ouercom­ming it. the vertue of chastity, receiues not her measure, from the hauing of this peace; but from the mainteyning, in the soule, a firme purpose not to offend our Lord, by the contrary sinne. And if one being tempted with sense, make good, the purpose of Chastity, in his soule, with greater strength then the other, who is not called into that warre; more chaste shall this person be, who is assaulted; then the other, who is not sollicited.

Neither yet, are those well complexioned persons to goe out of countenance, by saying, I doe little, or I gayne little by being chaste; But they must serue themselues of their good inclination, and make choice of chastity, by discourse of spirit, to please our Lord; to which they are inuited, by their owne inclination. And, by this meanes, they shall serue God, vvith the superiour part of the soule, by a vertuous election; and with their sen­sitiue part, by their obedience, and good inclina­tion.

Others A more no­ble kind of chasti­ty. there are, who not by naturall in­clination, but by fauour of our Lord, are so chast, as that they feele in their soule, a most profound, internall detestation, of that basenesse; and in their se [...]siti [...]e part, so greate obedience, that it goeth not dragging, after the commaundment of reason, but obeyeth with gust, and speede; [Page 73]and they both, enioy an entire peace. At this ex­cellent condition, did those Philosophers point, who sayd, That some men there were, so excellent: & who had their minds, so well purged that not only they did operate vertuously, without any warre of their passions, but that, euen those passions, being so abso­lutely ouercome, they forgot that they had any; and that, not only their passions did not conquer, but not so much as assault them.

But Few Philoso­phers, were euer chasts and neuer any was truly humble. that which the Philosophers were talking of, and neuer had, (for without grace, there is no true vertue) that, good Christians do possesse, to whome God is pleased to impart this perfect guift. Not purchased by their own force, but graunted by his strong, and celestiall holy spirit, which is bestowed through Christ Iesus our Lord, in resemblance of the same Lord, who kept the entirenesse of Virginity, in mortall flesh. This heauenly spirit infuseth perfect chastity into whom he wil. And this he worketh in them, That as the superiour part of the soule, is with perfect obedience, most subiect to God, & from him re­ceaueth powerfull strength, and most excellent light, being so perfectly vnited with him, and so ruled by his will, that he may say with the Apo­stle, He 1. Cor. [...]. that commeth close to God, is made one spirit with him; so this efficacy of God, which in­fuseth force, and giueth, to the sensitiue part this disposition; doth procure, that (wholy forsaking bestiality, and that fiercenesse which naturally it hath) it may be obedient, and yield it selfe very [Page 74]subiect to reason. And although they are of diffe­rent natures, the one being spirituall, & the other sensuall; yet doth the sensitiue draw so neare to reason; and takes the bridle into her mouth so well, that she goeth tamed, and in order. And howsoeuer it be not that thing, which reason is; yet doth it proceed according to reason; not hin­dering, but rather helping the spirit; as a faithful wife, would do her husband.

And Euen the reaso­nable part, of a carnal mans soule, groweth to be, as it were br [...]tish; and so, euen the sensitiue part of a chist per­son, groweth to be, as it were rea­sonable. as the soules of some, are so misera­bly giuen ouer to the flesh, that they sayle not by, any other star, then of their appetite (& though, the nature thereof be spirituall, yet they abase themselues to the lamentable subiection of their body (being so transformed as it were into flesh, that they grow fleshly, and do seeme in their wil, and in their thoughts, to be but a meere lumpe of flesh;) so the sensuall part of those others, com­meth so close to their reason, that the same doth more, looke like reason, then euen the very soules. of those others do. This The doctrin of Chast [...]y, till the comming of [...]sus Ch [...]st our Lord, was a great peece of newe [...] & the Secta­ryes of this age would now sayn put it out of [...]ashion. seemeth a hard thing to be belieued; but in fine it is the worke & guise of God; and conceaued especially (through Ie­sus Christ his only Son) in this tyme of the Chri­stian Church. Of which time, it was prophesyed▪ That the wolfe and the lambe, the Lyon & the Beare, should feed togeather; because the irrationall affecti­ons of the sensitiue part (which (as cruell beasts) would be striuing to vexe and swallow vp the soule) should be put in peace, by the guift of Iesus Christ; and, hauing giuen ouer the warre that [Page 75]they were in, should liue in amity. As Iob sayth, The Iob. 5. beastes of the earth shallbe peaceable to thee; and thou shalt keep friendship, with the stones of the earth. And then also, is that fullfilled, which is written in the Psalme, Thou man of one consent with me, and my guide, and familiar acquaintance, who diddest A place of Holy Scripture, well pon­dered and applyed. eate with me of that sweet food; and we went into the house of God, with one consent. Which wordes, the interiour man, doth say to the exteri­our; holding him in such subiection, that he sti­leth him to be, of one soule: and of such confor­mity to his will, that he sayth, they eate sweet food togeather, and go iointly into the house of God. For they are in such a league, that if the interiour man, do feed vpon chastity, or prayer, or that he fast, or watch, or performe any other holy exercise, fin­ding much sweetnes in them; iust so doth the ex­teriour man also, and they are sauoury to him, like a sweet food.

But Note. yet, do not thou conceaue, that in this exile of ours, one shall arriue to so great a­boundance of peace; as not to find sometimes, both in this, and other particulers, some motions against reason. For excepting Christ our Redee­mer, & his sacred Mother; this prerogatiue was neuer graunted to any. But thou art to vnder­stand, that although there be of these motions, in persons to whome God doth graunt this guift; yet are they not either so many in number, or such in quality, as to put them to any great payn; but without engaging them to much warre, or [Page 76]taking from them true peace, they are ouercome by them, vvith ease. And A sig­nificant compari­son. if, in a Citty, we should see a couple of boyes togeather by the eares, & instantly after to shake hands; we should neuer say, That, for that short little bickering, the peace of the Citty were broken, if it were maintayned by the rest of the people.

And since, euen the Philosophers, confessed that there was such a state of soule as this; with­out knowing what belonged to the power of the holy Ghost; Let A for­tiori. it not be hard for a Christian, to confesse it, and to desire it, for the glory We proclaime the Diui­nity of Christ, by the conquest of our sensu­alityes. of the redemption of Christ, and of his power; to which nothing is impossible. Of whose com­ming, it was prophesied, That then, there was to be an aboundance of peace. And Isay sayth, It is as a riuer. And S. Paul sayth, That it exceedeth all vn­derstanding. And when the flesh shall be thus obe­dient, and thus tempered, then shall we be far from hearing the voyce of her Of sensuality naturall language; and out of danger also, of falling vn­der that terrible malediction, which God cast out against our first Father Adam, because he beark­ned to the voyce of his wife. It rather belongeth to vs, to make her serue vs; and to heare our voyce; and, (as we would do, to a byrd in cage) so to teach her to speake our Of reason & religion. language; and to make her learne it, since she can obey vs, with so much readynesse. By A sweet frai [...]e, of a long la­bour. which long rooted obedience, which she yealdeth to reason, she groweth so wel nourtured, that if she aske for any thing, it is not [Page 77]for the vse of pleasure, but for the reliefe of ne­cessity. And that voyce we may well heare as God commanded Abraham to heare the voice of his wife Sara; who was then so aged, and her body so weakned, and so mortifyed, that now it had no more the superfluityes, which others of fewer yeares were subiect to. And such a body as that, we may trust the more; hearing that which it wil say to vs; though Note. yet, we must not giue it so much credit, as that the will thereof, may be a law. But we must examine it with prudence of spirit, least that flesh of ours, which seemed to be dead, do but only counterfeyte the being so; & least it do so much the more dangerously draw vs downe, as we thought it had been more faith­full to vs.

CHAP. XVII.
Wherein he beginneth to discourse of the languages, spoken by the Diuell; and how much we ought to fly them; and that one of them, is to make a man proud, and so to bring him to great mischeife and errour▪ and of the meanes, how to auoyde this lan­guage of Pryde.

THE Languages of the Diuell, are as many, as be the kinds of his malice, which are innu­merable. For as Christ, is the fountayne of all the graces, which are communicated to the soules of such, as by obedience grow subiect to him; so [Page 78]is the Diuell, the Father of sinne, and darkenesse; who by inciting, and persuading his rotten sheep, induceth them to wickednesse, and lies, wherby they may eternally perish. And because his de­ceites are so many, that the spirit of our Lord alone, is able to discouer them, we wil only speak a few wordes, remitting the rest to Christ, who is the true instructour of our soules.

The Diuell is called by many names, to de­clare the mischeifes that are in him. But amongst them all, let vs speake of two; That of Dragon; and that of Lyon. A Dragon he is, as sayth S. Au­gustine, because he secretly doth lye in ambush, and lay his snares; A Lion, because he doth openly persecute. The snare which he layeth to deceaue vs by, is first to puffe vs vp with Vanity, and Falsehood; and afterwards to pull vs downe, by giuing vs a reall, and a miserable fall. He puffes vs vp, with thoughtes, which incline vs to an estimation of our selues, & so he maketh vs fall into pryde. And for as much as he knoweth by experience, that this sinne is so The power which pryde hath to do mischeife. great, that it sufficed to make himselfe, of an Angell, a Diuell; he labours all he can, to make vs partakers with him therein; to the end that we may also partake with him, in the torment, that he is subiect to. Full well he knowes, how displeasing, Pryde is to God; and that it serues the turne to make vnprofitable, whatsoeuer a man hath, how good soeuer it seeme. And he laboureth so hard to sow this vile seed in our soule, that Marke the craft of the Di­uell, and learne to [...]y him. he will not stick many [Page 79]tymes to speak truth; and to giue good counsayle; and feelinges of deuotion; only to induce vs thereby, to pryde; making small account of what he looseth, in that, one doe some one good work; that so he may gayne him to himselfe, in grosse; and others also, who follow him, by the sinne of pryde. For as a King goeth accompanied with muoh people, so doth pride with many other sins. The scripture sayth; The beginning of all wicked­nesse is pryde; and he that hath that, shalbe full of maledictions; That is to say, both of sinnes, and punishmentes.

We read of a solirary person, to whom the Diuell appeared for a long tyme, in the figure of an Angell of God; and gaue him many reuela­tions; and euery night, made his cell resplendent, as if there had byn some great light or lampe. But at the end of all this, he persuaded with him, to kill his owne sonne; that so he might be equall in merit, to the Patriarch Abraham▪ Which the soli­tary person (being deceyued) prepared to put in execution; but that the sonne, who had suspicion thereof, fled away. To another also, he appea­red in figure of an Angell; and for a long tyme, told him many truths, thereby to gaine credit with him; and afterward he told him a great lye, against fayth; which the other, being deceyued, did belieue. So A fea [...] ­ful exam­ple. also do we yet read of another, whom (after he had liued fifty yeares, in very sin­gular abstinence, and with more straite obser­uation of solitude then was obserued, by any of [Page 80]the rest in the wildernesse) the diuell, in forme of an Angell did persuade, that he should cast him­self into a deep wel, that so he might know by ex­perience, That neither that, nor any other thing, could do hurte, to one that had serued God, so long, and so well, as he had done. All which he belieued, and put the same in execution. And be­ing, with much difficulty taken out of the well, euen halfe dead; and being aduised by those other holy old men of the wildernesse, that he should repent himselfe of so great a sinne (being sugge­sted by an illusion of the Diuell,) he would not belieue, or do as they required him. And that which is worse, (although indeed he died the third day after) so deepely had that deceit con­uayed it selfe into his heart, as that (notwithstan­ding he euen saw himselfe dye, by reason of that fall) he still, neuerthelesse belieued, that it had byn a reuclation of an Angell of God.

O Be not high minded, but feare. how necessary is it, for such as hau [...] euen profited in vertue, that they liue with a holy feare of themselues; as men, who although they may make coniecture, that they are well with God, yet We may haue great hope, but no cer­tainty of being in the state of grace. can they haue no certainty thereof. Nor do they know, whether they be worthy of lou [...] or hate, euen at the present tyme; and much lesse what they are to be in the rest of the life which they will lead. And especially they ought to be very carefull; not to belieue themselues. Pryde deserueth to be deceiued. And if as I haue related to you the deceites of men in former tymes, I should [Page 81]also recounte, such as haue happened in these dayes of ours; neither would they be written in a small volume, nor couldst thou read them, with­out much labour. On the one syde, the case stan­deth thus, according to that which we may iudg, That See the great rea­son, that we haue, both to loue God, and to feare him. God doth rayne vpon the hartes of many, the water of particuler mercyes; in ver­tue whereof, they bring forth many fruits, which euen to the exteriour are good; but the same men, haue a kind of interiour communication with our Lord, and that so familiar, that it can hardly be beleeued. On the other side, we haue also ex­perience, that by the permission of God, the Di­uel, doth in these tymes, vse particuler diligence, for the deceauing (by false motions, and false speaches, both interiour and exteriour, and by ap­pearing with false light to the vnderstanding) of such as are proud, and addicted to their owne o­pinion; with conceit that it is the will of God. And so also, doth he suffer the Diuell to exercise, by diuers wayes, such, as serue him, in humility. And therefore in these tymes, when it seemeth, that Satan is broken loose (as S. Iohn sayth) it is nec [...]ssary for them that serue God, to vse double diligence; that they may not easily beleeue such thinges as those; and to procure profound humi­lity, and holy feare, that God may not permit them to be deceaued. They must also endeauour with speed, to giue account of what they find, and feele in themselues, vnto their Prelates, and Su­periours, who may instruct them in the truth.

The Prophet sayth, That vnder the tongue of wicked persons is the poyson of vipers; & how much more then, will it be, in the language of the Diuel. who is the most wicked thing, of all things, that are wicked. And if, he shall puffe vs vp, by occa­sion of the vertues, that we may haue, we are to humble our selues; and to consider the ill which we dayly do; and the sinnes which we haue com­mitted. Which were so many, as that if our Lord, had not beene close at hand; and had not come in­to that way, wherein we did walke, with so much desire to forsake him (as he did to S. Paul) we should haue beene multiplying our wicked­nes, to such a proportion, as that, euen the tor­ments of hell, would haue beene too little for our punishment.

O An excellent admirati­on of Gods mercy. thou Abyssus, and euen bottomlesse pit of mercy; and what could moue thee, to cry out to our hart, euen from heauen; and to say, Why doest thou persecute me, with thy ill life? By which wordes, thou didst pull downe our pride; and didst make vs profitably feare, and tremble; that with griefe, for hauing offended thee, and with desire of pleasing thee, we might say, O Lord what wilt thou haue me do? And it is thy pleasure, O Lord, that we should expect the remedy of these our miseryes, from thee; by meanes of the medicine of thy word, and They be the Sa­craments, which conuey the bloud of our Lord Iesus, to our souls; and they are the true Priests of the true Catholike Church, who may minister them. of thy sacraments, which the Priests of thy Church dispence. And thou commandest vs to repaire to them, for the same, as S. Paul did, to thy seruant Ananias. Thus [Page 83]do we know full wel, that our perdition came from our selues; and our remedy from thee. And we con­fesse, that it was thy infinite goodnes, which made thee call to thy selfe, such as had turned their backes towards thee; & to remember them that had forgotten thee; and to be shewing fa­uours to them, that had deserued torments; ta­king them to thy selfe for sonnes, who had been so wicked slaues; and lodging thyne owne royal person in them, who formerly had beene so stin­king, and euen the very sinkes of vncleanesse.

These sinnes which then we committed, were ours; and if yet, we be any thing lesse wic­ked, it is by God, and in God, that we are so. As the Apostle sayth, You Philip. once were darknesse, but now you are light, in our Lord. It is therefore ne­cessary for vs, to remember the miserable state, in which by our fault, we placed our selues; if we will be secure, in that happy state, wherein now, we are lodged by the mercy of God. Assu­ring our selues, as of a most certaine truth, That yet, we should do those very thinges which for­merly we did, if the powerfull, and pittifull hand of God, did retyre it selfe from vs. And if we considered the many dangers, to which we are subiect through our frailty, we would not presume to reioyce outright, in the grace which we haue at the present, through the feare of those sinnes, which we may commit, in the future. And we should know, how holesome a counsell that is, of the holy Scripture, Blessed Psal. 111. is the [Page 84]man, who is euer fearefull. And againe, Worke on [...] your Philip. 2. saluation with feare, and trembling. And yet againe, Let 1. Cor. 10. him that standes, take heed, that he do not fall.

A Go on in this excellent contem­plation, with great attention sinne that is committed, will cost sighes before it be pardoned; and a sinne that may be committed, must cost feare, that we may be preserued from it; as it is excellently figured, by the feare, which Iacob, had of Esau, when he came from Mesopotamia, though God himselfe had bid him come. A great ioy was that, which the children of Israell conceaued; and deuout songes they were, which they sung then to God, when he wrought so great a miracle with them, as to make them passe through the sea, without once being wetshod. And it seemed to them (since they had not perished, in so great a dan­ger) that nothing could be able to pull them downe; nor to impeach their ariual in that Land which God had promised. But the experience fell out to be contrary. For after they had receaued that great fauour from God; certaine tentations, and proofs did follow; wherin they, were found weake, and impatient to endure the touch and triall, who had formely beene so deuout, and cheerefull, vpon their passage through the sea. And Note. because no soule shall weare the crown which is promised by God, but such as are foūd to be faithfull, in the probations which he is ploased to send; those others, who were not such, could neuer reach to the Land of Canaan; but insteed [Page 85]of the life which was promised, they were puni­shed, in the desert, with death.

Who Note the great reason, which thou hast to be humble, whosoe­uer thou be. will therefore now, be so farre, from shooting at the marke, as, whether he be­hold his life past, or that which yet remaines, in spending, to presume to tosse vp the head, and to take pryde in himself; since in that part which is past, he did so miserably fal; and in that which is to come, he is subiect to so many feares of doing the like. And An excellent descriptiō of a man, who is truly ver­tuous; for he who is not thus, is but a counters fait. if he knew, and did ac­knowledge this truth, as he ought, That all good thinges come from God; he would see, that to re­ceiue gu [...]ftes from God, is no reason for making him who hath the same, to take in, the vayne snuffe of pryde; but rather to abase himselfe as a person who is bound to the performance of more gratitude, and greater seruice. And when he considereth, that togeather, with the increase of fauours, the account which he is to make for them, doth also increase, as the Ghospell sayth; he finds, that they are as a heauy burthen, which maketh him fetch many a deepe sigh, and to be fuller, then he was before, of humility, and care.

And because our leuity is so greate; and this secret pryde, is so conueyed into the very bones of vs; that no force of man is sufficient to cleanse vs wholy from this sinne; we must begg the gift of God; importunately beseeching him, that he will not suffer vs to fall into so great a treason; as that we should robbe him of the ho­nour, [Page 86]which for all thinges that are good, is due to him. The pestilencies of the body, are cu­red by fasting; and of the soule, by prayer. There­fore he, who finds himselfe subiect to this plague of the soule, must pray with all possible dili­gence, and perseuerance; and present himselfe, in the high presence of God; beseeching him, that he will open his eyes, and make him truely know, what God is, and what himselfe is; that neither he may impute any thing that is euill to God; nor ascribe any thing that is good, to him­selfe. And so he shalbe farre from hearkning to this false Language of the proud Diuell; who, by meanes of proper estimation, would fayne beguile vs. But hearken thou to the truth of God, which sayth; The Belieue this truth, if thou haue a mind to be happy. true honour and estimation of a crea­ture, doth not consist in it selfe, but in receiuing fa­uour, and in being esteemed, and loued by the Crea­tour. And because I shall afterward speake more at large of this matter, when I discourse, Of the knowledge of a mans selfe, I will say no more of it for the present.

CHAP. XVIII.
Of another suare all contrary to the former, which is Despaire, whereby the Diuell procureth to con­quer Man; and how we shall carry our selues a­gainst him.

ANOTHER inuention wholy contrary to the former, is vsed by the Diuell; which is not by blowing vp the hart, but by beating it downe, and by dismaying it so farre, as thereby to driue it vpon despaire. He contriueth this, by bringing to memory, the sinnes which a man hath committed; and by aggrauating them as much as may be; that so being frighted, he may fall afflicted, as vnder the weight of a heauy burthen, without hope of help. Thus did he pro­ceed with Iudas; from This is the vsuall tricke of the Diuel. whose sight he tooke the grieuousnesse of the sinne, when he was to commit it; but afterwards he represented to his mind, what a huge crime it was, to haue sold his maister; and for so meane a price; and to such a death. And thus he blinded his eyes by the greatenesse of the sinne, and made him fast in the snare, and from thence he carried him into hell.

So that, as he blindeth some by their good workes, letting them see the same, and remo­uing their sinnes out of sight, (that so he may de­ceiue them through pryde) so, from others, he hi­deth [Page 88]the memory of the mercy of God, and the good deedes, which, by his grace, they haue per­formed: and he bringes their sinnes into their remembrance, and so pulls them downe by de­speration. But A most pro­fitable aduice. as the remedy of the former was, That when he would vainely hoyse vs vp into the ayre, we were to fasten our selues to the earth; not considering our peacockes feathers, but the durty feete of our sinnes, which we had committed, or should commit, if it were not for the help of God; so in this other deceit, our re­medy must be, to transfe [...]re our eyes, from our sinnes, and to lodge them vpon the mercy of God; and vpon the good deedes, wherein, by his grace, we haue imployed our selues. For when our sinnes do striue to make vs despayre, it wilbe very well done, to call the good deedes to mind which we haue done, or do performe; according to the example which we see in Iob, and King E [...]echias. But Note this, for it is a most comforta­ble, and withall a most safe doctrine. this must not be done, for the placing of confidence in our owne good works, in as much as they are ours; (for feare, that least, when we are flying from one snare, we fall into another) but to the end, that we may hope, in the mercy of God; that since he did vs so much fa­uour, as to make vs, by his grace, to do well, he will reward it in vs, yea euen to a cuppe of cold wa­ter, which we gaue for his sake. And that, for as much as he hath placed vs, in the course of doing him seruice, he will not leaue vs, in the halfe vvay; since his vvorkes are perfect, as himselfe is; [Page 89]and it was a greater matter for him, to draw vs formerly out of emnity against him, then to con­serue vs now, in amity with him.

This Philip. 1. S Paul doth teach vs, saying, If when we were enemies, we were made friendes with God, by the death of his Sonne; much more, now that we are made friends shall we be saued in his life. It is most certaine, that since his death was of power to raise the dead; his life will be as able, to pre­serue life, in them that liue. If he loued vs when we loued him not, he will not vnloue vs, since now we loue him. So that we may presume to say, with Philip. 1. S. Paul, That he, who began this good worke in vs, will continue it, euen to the day of Iesus Christ. And if the Diuell procure to trouble vs, by laying those sinnes before vs, which we haue cō ­mitted; let vs consider, that he is neither the par­ty offended; nor yet the iudge, who is to giue any sentence concerning vs. It is God whome we offended, when we sinned; and he it is, that must iudge, both men and Diuells. Therefore let not that trouble vs, which this accuser doth obiect against vs; but let vs be comforted, in that he, who is the true iudge, doth pardon, and ab­solue vs, by God absolueth vs from our sinnes by means of the sacraments which are ministred by his true Priests. meanes of Pennance, and of his Priests, and Sacraments.

This is that, which Rom. [...]. S Paul sayth; If God be for vs, who shallbe against vs; he that pardoned not his owne Sonne, but deliuered him vp for vs. And how then shall it be possible, that he, hauing giuen vs his Sonne, shall not, with him, haue giuen vs all [Page 90]thinges? Who shallbe able to accuse the elect of God? It is God that iustifyeth, who shall condemne? All this sayth S. Paul And this, being considered, ought to giue vs great strength of hart; and to hope well for that which is to come; since we haue such tokens, for what is past. Nor let vs be frigh­ted by our sinnes, since the eternal Father did pu­nish his only Sonne for them; that so man might haue his pardon (who deserued to be chastized) if he would dispose himselfe to sue it out. And since he is pleased to forgiue vs, what can the Diuell get, by crying out, in demaund of Iustice. The Iustice due for all the sinnes of the world, was once done, vpon the Crosse; and it fell vpon the innocent Lambe, Iesus Christ our Lord; that so euery sinnefull person, that would, might ap­proach to him; and might enioy the benefit, of hi, redemption, when Not by sayth alone, but ac­compani­ed, with P [...]un [...]nce, shall we be saued, if we haue sinned. he should be pardoned, by doing pennance.

What kind of Iustice would it therfore be to punish the sins of a penitent man, a second tyme in hell; they hauing beene sufficiently punished once before, vpon the person of Iesus Christ our Lord? I say punished with hell (for I speake of a penitent, who is already baptized; and who hath now (by meanes of the Sacrament of pennance) [...]e­ceaned pardon, and grace, which was lost) be­cause, to such a one, the punishment of hell, which is eternall, is changed into temporall; which is either satisfyed in this life with good works, or in They who haue not satis­fied in this life, nor will beleeue a Purgatory where they may satisfy in the next, shallbe [...]a [...]e, to do it in Hell. Purgatory, by suffering those other paynes. [Page 91]Yet Note this, and thereby learne to answere the obie­ction which is made, by Protestā [...]s let no man conceaue, that the not taking totally away the payne, proceedes from any want in the redemption of our Lord; whose vertue is, and worketh in the Sacraments, Psalm. 129. For his redemp­tion is aboundant, as Dauid sayth; but this happe­neth, by the fault of the penitent, who wanted disposition to receaue more. And such griefe, & shame he may haue for his sinnes; that he may rise from the feet of his Confessour, fully pardo­ned as wel of all the paine, as of all the guilt; no lesse then if he had then receaued holy Bapti [...]me; For in Baptisme all that, is taken away, in them who are, but euen moderatly disposed, to the re­ceauing of it.

Let all men know, that the Oyle which our great Elizaus, Iesus Christ our Lord, did giue vs, (when he gaue vs his passion; and which doth worke in his most pretious The benefit of the Passion of our Lord Ie­sus, is conueyed to our soules by the Sacra­ments of the Holy Church. sacraments) is that we may, thereby, be able to pay all our debts; & to liue heere, in the life of grace, and afterwards in that, of Glory. But it is necessary, that like the other Widdow, we doe walke on, maintayning good dispositions in our selues; according to which euery one shallbe sure to receaue the effect of his sacred passion; which in it selfe, is most suf­ficient, yea and superaboundant.

CHAP. XIX.
Of the much which God the Father gaue vs, in giuing vs Iesus Christ, our Lord; and how thankefull we ought to be, and to help our selues by this fauour; and to strengthen our selues thereby, for the ex­cluding of all desperation, wherwith the Dinell is wont to assault vs.

MVCH reason hath God to complaine and his Preachers to reproue men, for being so forgetfull of this benefit, which is so excellent as that, for it, we should giue thankes to God, day and night. For as S. Iohn sayth, So God loued the world, that he gaue his only begotten Sonne, to the end that euery one who belieueth in him, & loueth him, may not perish, but haue eternall life. All other blessings, are locked vp in this; as the lesse in the greater, and as the effect in the cause. It is a plaine case, that he, who gaue the sacrifice against sin, did giue pardon to those sinnes; for as much as concerned him; and to whome our Lord gaue that, he also gaue command ouer them. And in The great rea­son of our comfort. fine, he that gaue vs his Sonne, and such a Sonne, and so giuen, and borne for vs; will de­ny vs nothing, that is necessary. And he that hath not what is fit, let him blame himselfe; for to complaine of God, he hath no reason. For the vnderstanding heerof, S. Paul sayth thus: He that gaue vs his sonne, will he not giue vs all things togea­ther [Page 93]with him? Nay he sayd more, He hath already giuen vs all thinges with him; for, in as much as concerneth the part of God, all is already giuen; pardon, grace, and heauen.

O Lay vp these conside­rations, at thy hart. you men, why do you loose such hap­pinesse; and why are you vngratefull to such a louer, and for such a benefit? And why are you slothfull in the preparation of your selues to re­ceiue it? Worthy it were, of all reprehension; that a man should goe naked vp and downe, halfe dead with hungar, and full of miseries, and if when another, had giuen him great legacies by his will, whereby he might pay his debtes, and depart from his wantes, & liue at ease, he should yet remaine without enioying all this happines, rather then trauell two or three leagues, for the prouinge of that will. Our redemption was made so copiously, that although Gods forgiuing the offences which men cōmit against him, be a bles­sing which exceedes all humane conceite; yet the payment which is made by the passion, and death of Christ our Lord, doth exceed the debt of man in valew, much more then the highest part of heauen, doth the lowest part of the earth, as S. Augustine sayth.

It This cōparison in full of cōsort to vs sin­ners. was due to sinfull man, that he should be fettered, torne, and killed; and can you find in your hartes to thinke, that these debtes are not well payd, by the scourges, tormentes, and death, of a man, who was not only a iust man, but man, and God. An inexplicable fauour it is, [Page 94]that God doth adopt for his sonnes, the sonnes of men; who are but as so many little wormes of earth. But to the end that we might not doubt of this fauour, it is seconded (according to Io [...]n. 1. S. Iohn) with another, and a greater; For he sayth, The word of God, is made flesh. As if he had thus ex­pressed himselfe; you may not fayle, to belieue, that by spirituall adoption, men are borne of God; for in proofe of this wonder, hearken here to a greater; which is, That the sonne of God [...] made man, & the sonne of a woman. So Note. also is it a wonderfull thing, that a miserable little thing called man, made of earth, should arriue to hea­uen, en [...]oying God, and accompanying the An­gells therein, with vnspeakeable glory. But yet a farre greater matter was it, that God should be placed in the torment, and ignominy of a Crosse; and that he should dye, betweene a couple of murthering theeues. Whereby the diuine iustice, was so entirely satisfied, (both by reason of the much that our Lord did suffer, and chiefely, be­cause he that suffered it, was God) as that he both pardoned that which was past, and doth further powre his benedictions vpon vs for the future. But yet so, as that our barrennesse must bring forth the fruite of good life, worthy of heauen; which is figured by the Sonne, who was graunted to Gen. 18. Sara, when she was old, and barren. For the calfe which was sodden in the house of Abraham, (this being Christ Iesus cruci­fied, by the people who The [...]ace of the lewes. descended from Abra­ham) [Page 95]was of so much gust to God; that of wrath­full he grew calme thereby; and curses were ex­changed into blessinges. Because he receyued a certayne thing, which contented him more, the [...] all the sinnes of the whole world could displease him.

Why then, O man, dost thou despayre, ha­uing, for remedy of thy miseries, & for payment of thy debtes, God himselfe, humaned, who is of infinite merit; and who, by dying, put our sinnes to death; much better then the Iud. 16. Phi­listines were made to dye by the death of Sampson. And How infinitely good, is God. although thou hast committed as many sinnes, as the very Diuell himselfe, (who thus would draw thee into despayre) thou must take hart in Christ, who is That lambe of God, which taketh away the sinnes of the world. Of whom it was prophesied, That be would cast, and, as it were, shoote, all our sinnes, into the lowest bottome of the sea; and that he was to be anointed the holy of holies; And that sinne should haue an end; and then, that Iustice should raigne for euer. Yf then our sinnes be remooued, be drowned, and be dead; vvhat cause can there be, that such vveake and defeated enemies, should ouercome, and cast thee vpon despayre?

CHAP. XX.
Of some meanes, which the Diuell vseth against the remedy that is spoken of, whereby to fright vs; and how for this, we must not fainte; but animate our selues the more, considering the infinite mercy of our Lord.

BVT I already heare, O Man, that which thy weakenesse answeareth to what is sayd. What A shrewd obiection, but mark the an­swear, for it satis­fyeth. doth it profit thee (sayest thou), that Christ dyed for thy sinnes, if the pardon therof, be not applied to thee? And though Christ dyed for all men, yet many of them are in hell; not through any fault of his redemption, which is abundant, but for want of their disposition to receiue it. From hence therfore groweth thy despayre. To this I answeare; That although it be true which thou sayest, yet doest thou not serue thy selfe wel thereof. S Bernard telleth vs, that towards 2 hauing the testimony of a good conscience, which may giue a man the ioy of a good hope; it sufficeth not, to be [...]eeu [...] in generall, That sinnes are pardoned by the death of Christ; but it is also necessary, to haue confidence and good coniectures, that this pardon is applied in particuler to such a man, by meanes of Con­trition, Conse [...]ie and S [...]o­faction. those dispositions, vvhich the Church doth teach. For though he belieue the first part, he may yet despayre; but that he cannot do, if he belieue the second; for how can he despaire, if he liue in hopes [Page 97]But Be­hold the solution. indeed, thou oughtest to consider, that it is high reason, that when thou seest euen those bowells of the heauenly Father all open, for the giuing to thee his sonne, as he gaue him; & see­ing that he was at such cost therein, and that the diuine Lamb is already dead, to the end that thou mayst feed vpon him, and not dye; thou art to driue from thee, all pusillanimity and sloath; & procure to serue thy self of this Redemption, with confidence that God will help thee to it. And since, for thy being pardoned, there is no cause why Christ should put himselfe to new paines, or to suffer heereafter more, or lesse, or to dye for thee any more; why shouldest thou thinke it, to be any desyre of his, that since he hath beene at the charge of such a feast, there should be want of guests to sit thereat. But it is far from this; nor is it his will, That the sinner should dye, but that he should be conuerted, and liue. And to the end that he might do so, himselfe left his life vpon the Crosse. And do not thou belieue, that it is need­full for thee, towardes the enioying of this Re­demption, to do any impossible thing; yea or euen so hard, as that thou shouldst despaire to go throgh with it, euen when thou art considering thy weaknes. Send but one cordiall sigh to God, for hauing offended such a Father, and haue thou a purpose of amendment; and manifest thy sinnes to a Priest, who may absolue thee; and the eares, euen of thy flesh, and bloud shall, for thy It is a picture in little, of the ioyes of heauē, which no man knowes, but he that feels th [...]. grea­ter consolation, heare the sentence which is gi­uen, [Page 98]vpon the ending of thy suite. Which shall certify thee in this manner, I absolue thee from all thy sinnes, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the holy Ghost.

And Note. although it should seeme to thee, that thy griefe for thy sinns were not so complete as it ought to be; and that therefore, thou art a­frayd of thy selfe; yet art thou not So that yet thou be sorrv, (though imperfe­ctly) for that which is past; and haue a firme pur­pose to a­uoyd the like in tyme to come. to be affli­cted thereat; because the desire which our Lord hath of thy saluation is so great, that he supplyeth our wants, by the priuiledge which he gaue his Sacrament; which maketh a man, of attrite, con­trite. And Note. yet againe, if it seeme to thee that thou art not able to do euen so much, I tell thee once for all, that thou must not presume to do it of thy selfe; but call vpon thy heauenly Father; and beseech him by his Sonne Christ Iesus, that he will help thee, both to grieue for thy life past; and to purpose an amendment for the tyme to come; and to confesse thy selfe well, and last­ly for all that, whereof thou hast need. And Deus, cutus n [...] ­t [...]a boni­ta [...] cutus Voluntas, potentia. cu [...]us o­pus, mis [...] ­r [...] or d [...] [...] S. Leo. he is of such a nature, as that there is no cause, why, we should expect any other thing at his hands, then sweetnes and succour since he, who giueth the pardon, is the same, who doth first inspire vs, with a disposition to demand it. And if, withall this, thou do not find comfort euen after hauing heard the sentence of absolution; yet In the seruice of God, a man must haue a patient, & noble courage. be not thou dismayed thereat; nor giue ouer that, which thou hast begun. For if in one confession, thou hadst no comfort, thou shalt be sure of it in [Page 99]others; and that shallbe fullfilled in thee, which was sayd by that penitent King Psal. [...]0. Dauid, Thou shalt giue ioy, and comfort to myne eares; & my bones which are humbled, shall reioyce.

It is certainly so, that although the wordes of sacramentall absolution, do not giue a man such a certainty of pardon, as that he can beleeue Not as an arti­cle of Faith. it by fayth, or know it by expresse euidence; yet do they giue such repose and consolation, as wher­with the powers of our soule may be recreated, which by sinne were humbled, and oppressed. And let no man giue ouer to aske pardon; for if he persist in his desire, the Father of mercyes will go out to meete his prodigall sonne; and will giue him pardon, and will cloath him with the hea­uenly garment of grace; and he will take plea­sure to see him so recouered by pennance, who was lost by sinne. Nor Note. let any man thinke it to be incredible, that God should liue with sinners, vnder the laws of so great tendernes, & sweetnes, which are penned by his owne goodnes, & most faythful loue; since he executed lawes of so great rigour, vpon his Sonne, as that (louing him as he loued himselfe; and being the person that he was; and paying for the iniquity but of others) he did not yet acquit him, of any one only sinne, for which his iustice was to be satisfyed. And for this reason, as A compari­son which is both significāt, & sweet. a Lyon (who how fierce soe­uer he be, if he yet be satisfyed and fully fed, doth no harme to inferiour creatures, which yet he would swallow vp, if he were hungry) so the [Page 100] iustice of God, being satisfyed with that which was payed by Iesus Christ, that di [...]ine lambe he doth them no hurt, whome he findeth [...]o ap­proach towards him, that so they may be incor­porated to his body; nor doth he hinder his mercy from working in them, according to his custome. And from hence it groweth, that in­steed of being an angry iudge to vs, he becom­meth a Father full of pa [...]ty.

CHAP. XXI.
He proceeds in the discourse of Gods mercy, which he sheweth to them that cordially aske pardon. This is a consideration, of power to conquere all Despaire.

A Cup What a hideous thing sin is, if it be truly conside­red. of dangerous poyson doth he drink who committeth sinne. A most deformed and terrible face it hath, in the eyes of such as truly consider of it; and very able to afright any man, though he be neuer so stout; if he pause and consider with a liuely feeling, what that is, which he hath done thereby; and against whom he hath done it; and the promises of happynes which he hath lost, and the threates of misery that hang ouer his head. Dauid, beholding these thinges, doth cry out, though he were full of courage, My hart hath fayled me.

But this so great misery, is no [...] left by God, without remedy, as hath byn sayd. And to the end that he, who needeth remedy, may haue it; [Page 101]I will declare somewhat of the greatnes of the mercy of God, which he vseth towardes sinners, that aske his pardon. The Diuell will not faile to play his parte, and will fright thee, as hath byn sayd, by representing the greatnes of thy sins. But make thou no answeare; only turne thy selfe to God, and say, For thy names sake O Lord, pardon my sinne, A strange reason, but so good is God, as that it workes v­pon him. for it is great. And if God wil giue thee grace to find out the mystery of these wordes; certainly thou wilt be farre from de­spaire, how much soeuer thou haue sinned. Didst Be sure to marke this well. thou euer see, or heare of any Tribunall of a iudge, where a man, being accused of many, and grieuous crimes, (with intention that he might be condemned & punished, according to his de­merit) himselfe should confesse his fault, and admit of the accusation; and should take, for the meanes of his pardon, the confession it s [...]lfe, of that very thing, which the accuser did so much exaggerate, and whereby he laboured so to con­demne him? So as, thou art to make account, that the guilty person speaketh thus; O Lord, I graunt all, and I confesse that I haue sinned much; but thou shalt pardon me for the honour of thy name. And this course taketh effect with him, both in respect of God, and in regard of himselfe.

Our A con­sideration of vnspea­ble com­fort for vs. Lord God, hath both iustice and mercy; and when he beholdeth our faultes with iustice, they prouoke him to wrath; and the more sinnes we haue committed, we vrge him to in­flict the greater punishment. But agayne, when [Page 102]he looketh vpon our sinnes with mercy, they mooue him not to anger, but to compassion; be­cause No [...]e. he doth not consider them, as an offence of his, but as a misery of ours. And as there can­not happen to vs, a thing that hurteth vs so much as sinne; so also is there not to be found, so fit an obiect for his mercy to worke vpon, as the same sinne; if it be considered, as I haue sayd. And so much more as we haue sinned, so much more hurt haue we done our selues; and so much more do we prouoke to mercy, the hart which hath it. and which is disposed to vse it; as is the hart of our mercifull Lord, who is the true shewer of mercies.

Know therefore now, that the men who haue sinned much, doe carry themselues in one of these two manners. Some, Obsti­nate, and insolent, despay­ring sin­ners. despayring of re­medy like Cain, do turne their backs to God, and deliuer themselues ouer, (as S Paul sayth) to all fil­thynesse, and sinne; and their hartes do harden dayly, more, and more, against all goodnesse. So farre, at that, euen when they are in the deep bottome of iniquity, it neuer troubleth them; but they take pryde therein; and so much more is it fit to haue compassion of them, as they haue none of themselues. The thing which happeneth to these men, is that, whereof the scripture speaketh; With the hard hart, it shall go yll, in the latter end. And woe be to him, who is to feele this yll; for it were better for him, that he had neuer byn borne.

There The sinner, who is penitent. are others, who hauing committed many sinnes, doe, by the help of God, returne to themselues; and wounding their hart with greife, and being full of confusion, and shame, do humble themselues before the mercy of God; and that, with so much more humility, and cor­diall sorrow, as their sinnes haue byn greater & more. And because God doth lodge his eyes, vpon an humbled and contrite hart; and when men are humbled, he giueth them grace; more grace he giueth, to such as he findeth more humbled; and the occasion thereof, was the hauing committed so many sinnes, which they confesse, and be­wayle, but without despayre. And they do thus al­leadge, and beg before the mercy of God, That since their misery, and ruine is very great, his mercy may be also plentifull, and very great. Thus sayd Da­uid, Haue mercy, O Lord, vpon me, according to thy great mercy. Now because God, as hath byn sayd, looketh with eyes of mercy vpon the sinner, who is contrite, and humbled. there, doth he giue a greater pardon, and a larger grace, then where there were not so many sinnes, nor so much hu­miliation. Fulsilling that, which S. Paul Rom. [...] hath sayd▪ That where sinne abounded, grace did super­abound, and thus a mans greater fall, doth result to the greater prayse of God; since he giueth him greater pardon, and more grace.

And A most souerai­gne reme­dy against despayre. where now is he, who vnderstan­ding this, will despayre, for being subiect to many debtes; since he seeth, that the liberality and [Page 104]bounty of our Lord, is more discouered, & more glorifyed, in making such a large and generall re­lease: and that God, taketh it as a point of ho­nour to his Name, to pardon, and to pardon much. Nay knowing that it is but iustice, that our Lord, and his Name should be glorifyed, we will say without despayre, yea and not without great confidence. For thy name O Lord, thou shalt pardon my sinne, euen because it is great.

But Note. Now, the glory which God draweth from hence, doth no way grow from this sinne of ours; for sinne, is, of it selfe, a high contempt, and a great irreuerence against God, See how arti­ficiall the deer goodnes of God is, to wicked mankind. but this proceedeth, from his omnipotent diuine bounty; which draweth good out of euill; and procureth, that his enemies may serue him, by giuing matter for his friends to prayse him. Call to mind, that when the people of God remayned in Egypt, men found themselues in great afflicti­on; and they did but expect their death, by the hands of their enemies, who came close vpon them. Yet Moyses sayd to them; Feare A place of Holy Scripture diuinely ponde­red. no­thing; for these Egyptians shall perish, and you shall neuer see them more. And when the sea had drow­ned them, and cast them vp vpon the shoare, the children of Israel made a stand, to looke vpon them. And although they saw them, yet they saw them dead, and consequently, without feare of seing them, as if they had seene them no more. Hereby they tooke occasion to giue glory to him that slew them; and they sayd, Let vs singe vnto [Page 105]our Lord, for he hath beene gloriously magnifyed; and he hath drowned both horse, and horsemen in the sea.

All this is a figure, of that straite afflicti­on, wherein our sinnes do put vs; representing themselues vnto our soules, as enemyes of migh­ty strength, who are about to kill, and swallow vs vp. But the word of God, (being full of all reason to make vs hope) doth giue vs hart, by requiring that we despayre not; and that we turn not backe vpon the vices of Egypt; but that (pro­ceeding in the good purpose, whereby we began to walke, in the way of God) we should keep on foot; being comforted in his assistance; to the end that we may see his wonders. Which are, that in that sea of his mercy, and in the crimson bloud of Iesus Christ, his Sonne, our sinnes are drowned; & so also, is the Diuell, who came mounted vpon them, like a Cauallier, that so, neither he, not they may do vs hurt. But A cir­cumstāce, excellent­ly apply­ed. rather we remembring them (although they grieue vs (as it is fit they should) they may yet giue vs occasion, to render thankes, and glory to our Lord God, for hauing beene such a father of pitty in pardoning vs; and of supreme wisedome in drawing good out of our euill, by giuing true death, to sinne which killed vs. And that which remayneth therof in vs aliue (which is the memory of hauing commit­ted it) doth but serue, that his elect may grow the better by it, and become the exalters of his honour.

CHAP. XXII.
Where he prosecutes the treaty of the Mercy of God, which he vseth towards vs; his Maiesty ouercom­ming our enemyes, after an admirable manner.

THIS admirable maister-piece of Gods hand which driueth treacle out of poyson, against the very poyson it selfe; and draweth the destru­ction of sinne, out of the very sinne; doth spring, and carry a resemblance to another piece of prowesse which the most High hath wrought; not lesse, but greater, both then that other, and then all the rest. This was, the worke of the In­carnation, and Passion. Wherein, God was not pleased to fight, with the weapons of the great­nes of his maiesty; but, by taking those of our weaknesse; and apparailing himselfe with hu­man flesh; which howsoeuer it were free from all sinne, it did yet resemble the flesh of sinners; for as much as it was subiect to that payne, and death, which sinne had brought into the world. And by this paine, and death, which (without their being his due) he tooke vpon him, he ouer­came, and destroyed, our sinne; and they being destroyed, both payne & death (which entred in by their meanes) were destroyed also. As A no­ble consi­deration, and a l [...] uely com­parison. if a man should set the body of a tree on fyre, by the braunches of the same tree; and so should burne vp, both the tree, and the braunches.

How The infinite­nes of our obligatiō to our Lord Ie­sus. greatly, O Lord, is thy glory magni­fied; and with how much reason, are we to sing, & to prayse thee, more then they praysed Danid, for going into the field against Golias; who put the people of God into straites, when there was none that could ouercome, yea, or who had the courage to set vpon him. But thou, O Lord, our King, & our honour; dissembling (as it were) the weapons of thy Omnipotency, & diuine life, which thou hast, as thou art God; didst fight with him, by taking that stafle of the Crosse into thy hand; and in thy most holy body, fiue stones, which were the fiue wounds, and so thou didst ouercom, and kill him. And although the stones were fiue, yet one of them, had beene inough, for the vi­ctory. For if thou hadst endured lesse then what thou didst endure, there would yet haue beene merit inough, for our Redemption. But Note. thy pleasure was, O Lord, that our redemption should be copious, and superaboundant. That so, weake persons might be comforted, & such as were ne­gligent, inflamed; by seeing the excessiue loue, wherewith thou didst suffer for vs, and kill our sinnes; being figured in the person of Golias; whom [...] Dauid slew, not with any sword, which he might haue carryed of his owne, but by the very sword of the Giant; and so the victory be­came more glorious, and the enemy was made subiect to more dishonour.

Much The infinite wisedom, which did accompa­ny, the i [...] finne mercy of God. honour had our Lord gained, if with his owne weapons of life, and diuine Omni [Page 108]potency, he had fought against our sinnes & death, and had so defeated them. But much more did he gaine, in ouercomming them, without so much as drawing his sword; Nay, by taking the same sword (that is, the effect of sinne, which is payne and death he did in flesh condemne sinne; offering his flesh to be made subiect to payne, and such hard vsage, as if it had beene the flesh of a sinner; being indeed, both of a iust man, and of God. That so, by this meanes, as S. Paul sayth, The iustification of the law, might be fullfilled in vs, who walke not according to the flesh, but the spirit. And since the iustification of the Law, is fullfilled in vs, by our walking according to the spirit; it is plaine that these (being such workes, as wher­with the Law is fullfilled) are such as it requireth at our hands; and wherby satisfaction is giuen to it; and so it groweth to be euident, that he spake falsly, who sayd, That This is sa [...]d by n [...]e, but our mo­derne Se­ctaryes. all the workes, which were done by a iust man, were sinne.

Christ, They who affirme (as our Secta­ [...]s do) that sinne doth still remayne in the soule of persons who are penitent & pardo­ned: de­priue the passion of our Lord, of the bet­ter part of the worth thereof. did perfectly ouercome sinne, both by deseruing pardon for such as were past; and force for the auoyding of such as might be to come; and so he freed our soules from the law of sinne. Because we are no longer subiect to the command thereof, and he deliuered vs from the hurt or payne due vnto it, since, by giuing vs grace to suffer payne, we satisfied for that, to which we might be liable in Purgatory; and be­sides it helpeth vs to gayne crownes in heauen. He did further also deliuer vs, frō the law of death. [Page 109]For howsoeuer we be to passe that way, we are not yet to remay ne therein; but (as one who lai­eth himselfe downe to sleepe, and is afterward awaked) our Lord will rayse vs vp, to leade a new life, which neuer is to dye againe. And that life, is to be so happy, as, that it shall reforme this base body of ours; and shall conforme it to the body of his brightenesse; and then we shalbe ioyfull, and entirely secure; and despising our enemies; and triumphing ouer them, we shal say, O death, where is thy victory; O death where is thy sting? which sting, is sinne, in them where death is still in force; whereby it doth wound, as the Bee is wont to do, with her sting; for by sinne, death entred into the world.

Both the one, and the other enemy, which were wont to gouerne, and to wound the world, remayne drowned in the blessed bloud of Iesus Christ; and slayne, by his precious death. And in See heer how copious the Re­demption is, which our Lord hath pur­chased for vs. their place, succeedeth that euerlasting iustice, whereby heere, the soule is iustifyed; and after­wards shall succeed, the vision of God face to face in heauen; and a life, which shal be eternally bles­sed, both in body, and soule.

What shall we say to this O Virgin, but that, which S. Paul hath taught vs; Thankes be giuen to God who hath graunted vs victory, through Iesus Christ. Him thou art to adore, and with a grate­full and enamoured harte, say to him, Let all the earth adore thee, and prayse thee, and singe a hymne to thy name, And see thou say this often, euery [Page 110]day; and especially, when at the Altar, his most holy body, is eleuated by the hands of the Priest.

CHAP. XXIII.
Of the great mischeise, which despayre doth worke in the soule; and how we must ouercome this ene my, with spirituall alacrity, and diligence, and fer­uour in the seruice of God.

THis despayre, and loosing of hart, is such a dangerous instrument of our enemy, that when I remember the great mischeifes which haue growen by it to the consciences of many, I desyre to speake a little more concerning the re­medy thereof, if perhaps any good may come thereby. It This is a case, too common. happeneth so, that sometymes there are persons, who be loaden with a multi­tude of great sinnes, and neither know what de­spayre, nor so much as a little feare is, nor doth it once passe, through their thought. But they goe on, as being assured, by a false hope; offending God, and yet not fearing punishment for the same. And We see, by lamenta­ble expe­rience, that such as are not Catholiks do passe from one extremi­ty of pre­s [...]tion, to the o­ther of de perati­on, with­out re­sting in true hope. if once the mercy of God shine vpon their soules, and they beginne to see the grieuousnes of their sinnes, (though it be reason, that, (since they aske pardon of God, with pur­pose of amendement, and that they receiue the benefit and comforte of the Sacramentes) they should, be strengthned thereby, both against that which is past, and that also which, in the [Page 111]seruice of God, might afterward present it selfe) yet fall they vpon the other extreame of feare; as before they were subiect to that, of false security. Not Note. considering, that they who oftend God, and do not repent, haue reason indeed to feare, & tremble, though all the world smile vpon them; (because the wrath of the omnipotēt, is prouoked against them, which wrath there is no power that can resist) and that they, who humble them­selues to God, and receiue his holy Sacramentes, and who will procure to do his will, ought to haue the hart of Lions; for as much as they are commaunded to confide in God, by that token, that God is with them. Whome as they hold for an enemy to the wicked, (and for that themselues haue byn such, they are in feare) so it is all reason, that they should hold him for a friend of the good; and that, in regard of the holy purposes, which he hath inspired them with, they may confide, that he is also their friend, and that so he will be, giuing increase, to the good seed which himselfe did plante, and perfecting that which he hath begunne.

This is certainely true; that when once a man cōmeth to say in earnest, that which Dauid sayd, I haue held vp my hands, towardes the perfor­mance of thy commanamentes, which I haue loued, God putteth his eyes, and hart, where that man putteth his hands, that so he may help him; and, (as one, who is good, by an infinite goodnesse) he taketh him into protection with care, and ran­keth [Page 112]that man on his syde, who will fight for his honour; making warre vpon himselfe, to giue contentment to God. And The difficul­ties which vse to oc­cur, to such as begin to serue God. although it be true, that when a man beginneth to serue God (through some particuler calling, which may incite him (with the contempt of all thinges) to seeke that pretious pearle of the Ghos [...]ell, by the perfe­ction of a spirituall life) there may grow against such a man, such traines and warres of the Di­uells, (both immediately from themselues, and also by the meanes of wicked men;) and they lock him vp in such straytes, that when he ray­seth the first foote from ground, and placeth it on the lowest of those fifteene steppes, whereby men rise to perfection, he is forced to say, When I was in tribulation, I called vpon our Lord and he heard me; O Lord deliuer my soule from wicked lipps, and from the deceitefull tongue; (which wicked lippes are they, which doe expressely hinder that which is good; and a deceitfull tongue is that which procureth, in a disguised manner, to de­ceyue;) and sometymes so great impediments are presented, (or at least it seemeth so) towards the making one depart from his course begunne, that they are like those great Giantes, wherof the children of Israel sayd, Compared with them, we are no more then a few little grashoppers; and the walles of the Citty which we are to assault, seeme to threaten heauen with their height; and the earth in that place, seemeth to open to swallow vp her inhabitantes: notwithstanding, I say, all this, thou art to con­sider [Page 113](and let vs all consider it, with well opened eyes) how much that faint-hartednes & despaire displeased God, which the Sonnes of Israel were subiect to, by the meanes aforesayd. For as much as, the sinns which they committed in the wilder­nes, (howsoeuer they were great, & many) and one of them was, that they adored a Calfe for God (which seemeth to be the very outside of wickednes) yet God endured all this at their hands; and did them fauour towards the prosecu­ting of their enterprize begun. But Note how pre­domināt­ly, despaire is displea­sing to Almighty God. he would not endure their disconfidence, and despaire of his mercy, and power; and he sware to them in his wrath, as Dauid sayth, that they should not enter in to his rest; and as he sware it, so he performed it. Doth it not seeme to thee, that we haue reason to curse this vice, which is opposite to the ho­nour of the diuine goodnes? That, being so much greater then our wickednes, as God is greater then man? And be thou assured, that as the way of perfect vertue, is a kind of stiffe battaile made against our enemies, who are full of strength, both within vs, and without vs; yet he that shal begin such a warre, cannot bring, in his com­pany, a thing of greater preiudice, then pusilla­nimity of hart. For he that hath this, will be put to flight, euen by shaddowes.

With much reason did God command in tymes past; That when his people were in the warres, his Priests should encourage them (be­fore they began to fight) not by humane reasons [Page 114]of the multitude of their men, and strength; but by thinking vpon the Firrne hope in God is the only soūd receite a­gainst hart-breaking. protection of the Lord of hoastes, who holdeth victory in his hand; and who is wont to conquere lofty Giants by little grasse-hoppers, for the glory of his holy Name. And agreably to this which God commanded, the valorous S. Paul sayth to them who were en­tring into the spirituall warre: Comfort Ephes. 4. your selues in our Lord, and in the power of his strength; that so being hartned, you may fight the battailes of God, with cheerefullnesse, and courage. So is it read of Iudas Machabaeus, who fought with cheereful­nes, and so he conquered. And S. Anthony, a man well experienced in theses piritual combats, was wont to say; That this spirituall cheerefullnesse, was an admirable thing, and a powerfull remedy to­wards the ouercomming of our enemyes. For certain it is, that the delight which is taken in doing of any worke, doth increase a mans forces towards the doing of it. Therefore How necessary it is to haue ala­crity, and courage in the ser­uice of God. doth S. Paul ad­uise vs thus, Reioyce alwayes in our Lord. And we read of S. Francis, that he reprehended such of his fryars, as he saw to go sadly vp, and downe, as if they were ill contented: and he would say to them, He that serneth God, should not be after this fashion, vnles it were for hauing committed a sinne; and if thou haue committed any, confesse it, and re­turne to thy former alacrity. And of S. Dominicke it is also read, That there appeared in his face, a kind of cheerefull serenity; which gaue testimo­ny of his inward ioy. This is wont to grow, [Page 115]out of the loue of our Lord, and from a liuely hope of his mercy; whereby they are able to car­ry their Crosse vpon their backes, not only with patience, but euen with pleasure; as they did, whose goods were stolne, & yet they remayned content; & the reason of that was, because they had lodged in their harts, a better kind of riches in heauen. Experimenting that which S. Paul sayd, Being ioyfull in hope, and patient in tribulation, for It is hard to haue pa­tience in a longe-li­ued Crosse, without hauing a great hope in God. without the former, men can hardly a­riue to the later.

But when this vigour, and alacrity fayleth, it deserueth great compassion, to see how men, that walke in the way of God, are full of vnpro­fitable sadnesse, their harts being discontented, and without gust, in things that belong to God; and vntoward euen to themselues, and to their neighbours; and with so little confidence in the mercy of God, that there wanteth not much to make it none. There are, many amongst these persons, who commit no mortall sinnes, or very rarely; But they say, that because they serue not God as they ought, and as they desire, and by rea­son of the veniall sinnes which they commit, they liue in such a fashion, as we see.

But A worse ef­fect, of an euil cause. if the effects of superfluous sadnes be such as these, they do men more harme, then the faults themselues, which they committed. And that which they might preuent and cut off, if they had discretion and courage, they make to increase; and so they fall out of one euill, into [Page 116]another. Such as they, ought to procure, and labour, to serue God withal diligence; & if they see they fall, let This is indeed, good counsaile. them weep, but not distrust; and (knowing that they are weaker then they thought) let them humble themselues more, and demand more grace, and liue with greater cau­tion; taking help of the tyme past, for the tyme to come.

There Ex­cessiue sloath, doth soin­tymes al­so cast men af­terward vpon des­payre. are many, who, on the contrary syde, are carelesse, and slothfull, in seruing God; and when they fall into sinne, they know not how to help themselues; but they go down into the pit of disconfidence, and of greater negligence. Whereas, in very deed, for the auoyding of de­spaire, we must auoyd to be lukewarme, and ne­gligent in the seruice of God. For No man can haue a good hope who en­deauours not to lead a good life. otherwise, as long as a man hath these rootes within him, he cannot, though he would neuer so faigne, haue that vigour and strength of minde, which Note this point well. groweth from a good, and diligent life. And if such persons would consider, that they endure more The Diuells Martyrs. trouble by these sadde and despairing thoughtes, which grow from melancholy; then they should, in cutting vp, by the roote, those cuill affections, and dangerous occasions, which hinder them from seruing God with feruour; they would, (especially since they loue to fly from payne) make choyce of those troubles which are annexed to the perfection of vertue, to fly those others, which follow vpon the want thereof.

S. Paul [...]. T [...]. 4. sayth, That the end of the law [Page 117]is Charity, which proceedeth from a pure hart, and vpright conscience, and a fayth vnfeigned. And he meaneth this vpright conscience to be hope, as S. Au­gustine sayth; giuing thereby to vnderstand, that vnlesse there be a good conscience, (hauing fayth and loue, and good works which flow from thence) there There may be in such men a fond, & dāgerous kind of presumpti­on; such as the Se­ctaryes are ac­quainted with, but no true Christian hope, which is pleasing to God. wilbe no liuely hope, which may giue vs alacrity; and if there be any want at all of good conscience▪ there wilbe also want of cheerefulnesse, and consclation, which are caused by a perfect hope. For although such a fearefull man be not slayne perhaps by sinne, but do liue in state of grace; yet he shall worke but weakely. So as they who tell thee, Belieue that God doth pardon thee, and loue thee, and then thou shalt be pardoned and loued, with such other words as these, doe As Lu­ther and Caluin hauedone their fol­lowers. grieuously de­ceiue thee; and they giue testimony that they speake by imagination, & not by experience, or according to the doctrine of fayth. And A most certaine, & a most soueraign truth, the not vn­derstan­ding whereof makes so many cast themselus away by violent death. such braueries as those, (for as much as they are not of God) cannot hold a man vpon his feete, when tribulation cōmeth, if it be a sound one. Strength of hart, and the ioy of a good conscience, are the fruites of a good life, which they gather, who liue well, although they looke not for it. And after the rate of the one, increaseth the other. Now from a contrary cause, followeth a contrary effect, as it is written, The Eccl. [...]. wicked hart, giueth sorrow and from hence groweth disconfidence, and other miseries, in company thereof.

CHAP. XXIV.
Of two remedies for the getting of Hope, in the way of our Lord and that we must not turne coward, al­though the remooue of the temptation be differred; and how there be certayne hartes, which know not how to be humbled, but by the knocks of tribulation; and therefore, that they must so, be cured.

THE conclusion that thou must draw out of all this, is, That since it doth so much import to go on comforted, with a good hope, and with alacrity, in the seruice of God, thou must procure two thinges towards it. The one, is the conside­ration of his diuine goodnesse, and loue, which he hath manifested by giuing vs Christ Iesus, for our owne. The other, that castng off, all slack­nesse and sloath, thou serue our Lord with dili­gence; and when thou fallest into any fault, be not deiected with disconfidence, but procure re­medy, and hope for mercy. And if many tymes thou fallest, procure thou many tymes to rise. For If this be not true, what is? no discourse of reason will endure, that thou shouldest be weary of asking pardon, since God is neuer weary of giuing it. And since he commaunded vs to pardon our neighbours, not only Matt. [...]. seauen tymes in the day, but seauenty tymes seauen; (which signifyeth, that we must doe it, without limitation) much, and much better, will our Lord graunt vs pardon, as often as it shalbe [Page 119]asked; since his goodnes is greater, and is placed before vs for an example, which we are to fol­low. And if integrity of life, and the remedy which thou desirest, do not come so soone as thou couldest wish, let not that make thee conceiue that it will neuer come. Nor Take heed, that such a thought as this, do not once enter into thy hart. be thou like them that sayd, If God send not remedy, within fiue dayes, we will giue our selues vp to our enemies; For the ho­ly Iud. 7. Iudith reprehended such men as these, with great reason; and she sayd, who are you, that will thus tempt our Lord? For such wordes as these, are not to mooue him to mercy, but rather to stirre vp his wrath, and to kindle his fury. Haue you perhaps appointed a tyme, wherein our Lord is to shew mercy; and haue you set downe the day, according to your owne mind? Learne to hope in our Lord, till his mercy come; and be not weary of suffering, since patience importeth you, as much as life.

And Note. if the straytes be great, which weaken thy hope; euen A comforta­ble consi­deration for En­glish Ca­tholikes; which ought to fill our soules with pati­ence, and with an humble, & peace­ful expec­tatiō of the good will of God. those very straites, should in reason giue thee courage; because they vse to be the very Eue and introduction of the re­medy. For the houre, wherein our Lord deliue­reth, is when the tribulation hath lasted long, and at the present afflicteth most. As it appeareth plainly in the case of his disciples; Luc. 5. Whom he per­mitted to suffer, during three parts of the night; and in the last, he gaue them comfort. He also deliuered his people, out of the captiuity of Egypt, when the tribulation which they suffered, was growne [Page 120]vp to the highest; & so wil he do with thee, when thou thinkest not of it. And if thou conceaue, that thou wouldest faigne leade a holy life, and perfect life, and which all, might be to the glory of God; thou Exa­mine thy consciéce by this light; and see if the case be not thyne. art to know, that there are some so proud, and lofty, that there is no humbling of them, but vpon the price of temptations, dis­comfortes, and falling into sinne; and so weake they are withall, that they will not goe on in the way of God with diligence, if they be not ridden vpon the spurre; and their hart is so hard, as that they must be hammered vpon, with a great deale of misery. Nor haue they any caution or discreti­on, but vpon the experience of many of their owne errours. In fine, they haue a mind, which is filled, and puffed vp with a few graces; and they haue need of many afflictions, to make them proceed with humility, in the sight of God, and of their neighbours.

Thou seest already, that the cure of these inconueniences, cannot be wrought but with If gentler pnisicke be not able to cure vs, we must be cotent that God do play the Sur­geon with vs. burning irons; and by Gods permitting men to fall into desolations, obscuritics of mind, and euen, into sinnes; that so, being much afflicted, they may humble themselues, and then be freed from their miseries. The Prophet Micheas sayth, Thou Mich. 4. shalt goe as farre as Babylon; and there thou shalt be deliuered, and God will redeeme thee, from the hand of thine enemies. For by the confusion of this kind of life, and by these falles in to sinne, a man vseth to be humbled; and both to seeke remedy [Page 121]of God, and to find it; which, if he had not fal­len he might perhaps haue lost by pryde, or not haue sought with diligence, and gre [...]fe.

Eternall thankes be giuen to thee Amen. O Lord; who out of such preiudiciall miseries, art wont to draw these celestiall benefits; and that thou art glorified as wel in pardoning sinners, as thou art, in making, and keeping them iust; and who sauest, by the way of a contrite and humbled hart, him who was not in disposition, to serue thee with a hart of innocency; and who makest a mans sinnes giue him occasion, of being hum­ble, diligent, and aduised; that so (as thy selfe did say,) He Luc. 7. to whome more is forgiuen, may loue more; that so it may be fulfilled, which the Apostle sayth, Mercy in iustice, maketh that iustice of thyne, appcare more glorious, as it maketh thy goodnesse seeme more in pardoning, and sauing such, as haue sinned, and returne to thee. In another place he also sayth, That Roun 8. all things prooue to the good of such, as loue God. Yea so do Infi­nite good­nes of our God. the very sinnes themselues, which they haue committed, as S. Augustine sayth. But Abs [...]. yet this must not be taken, as a ground for thy tepidity or facility in sinning, to buyld vpon; for that must in no case be done. But to the end that if thou fall into so great misfortune as to offend our Lord, thou do not yet commit a greater sinne, then that can be, by dispayring of his mercy.

CHAP. XXV.
How the Diuell procureth to draw vs to despayre, by tempting vs, against fayth, and the diuine my­steries, & of the remedies that we must vse, against these temptations.

AT other tymes, the Diuell vseth to fright vs, by drawing thoughtes vnto our mind, which are soule, and abominable, against fayth, and the mysteries of God. And he maketh him who hath them, conceyue, that they proceed from the man himselfe, and that he consenteth to them. And hereby he giueth him so great affli­ction, as to depriue his soule of all alacrity; and he maketh it belieue, that it is cast of by God, and condemned by him; and doth put him into an humour of despayre, by telling him, that it is impossible for him to belodged in anyother place but hell, since he holdeth blasphemies, and such other incidentes to that place. The Note. diuell is not such a Dunse as not to vnderstand, that a Catholike Christian, can neuer come to consent to thinges, which are so detested by his Christian hart; but the meaning is to dismay him, that so he may loose the confidence which he had in God; and, being tormented with such importu­nities, may grow to loose his patience; and so carry a hart in his body, which is full of tempest and disgust; that being a thing, whereby the [Page 123]diuells vse to make much haruest, through the disposition, which vpon this occasion, men haue, to receyue what euill impression the same diuells will.

The A mayne poynt, of all points. first thing then, which we are to do (if it be not done already), is to consider our conscience, with care and great repose of mind; and to cleanse it by confession, from all that euill which we find therein; and to put it into such order, neither more nor lesse, then if we were, that day to dy; and from thence forth, to liue with greater care in the seruice of our Lord, then before. For it hapneth sometymes, that our so­ueraigne iudge, permitteth these fearefull things to come vpon vs against our will, in punishment of other thinges which we haue willingly fallen into; and for the negligence which we haue vsed in his seruice, which our Lord is disposed to cure, by a scourge that shall smart so much, as that, being bruized thereby, we may for beare to feed vpon forbidden fruite; and that we may put on, a pace, in our way; as an vnreasonable creature would doe, when he were followed by the whippe.

Sometymes our Lord sendeth this torment for other endes, which to his high wisedome are not vnknowen. But whether it be sent for these, or the former reasons, euery one is to do (as hath byn sayd) by purifying his conscience, & grow­ing diligent in Gods seruice; for this remedy can hurt none, and it will do good to all. And their, [Page 124]confiding in the mercy of God, and desyring suc­cour of him, if yet he cannot giue ouer to heare this Language (because the diuell is able, whe­ther we will or no, to bring these thoughts, and inward speaches to our mind) let the man at least, proceed (by way of action) as if he heard them not; and let him remaine in peace, without afflicting himselfe, vpon that occasion; & with­out There is nothing to be got­té, by ar­guing with the diuell. changing of words, or making answears to the enemy, according to that of Psalm. 37. Dauid, As one that is deafe, I did not heare; and as one that is dumbe, I did not open my mouth.

These things are hard to be belieued, by such as are ignorant of the diuells craft; but if they giue not ouer to thinke, or do the good thinges they were about; and if they employ not them­selues in hearing, and catching at, and killing those former thoughtes (as they would do flyes) they presently thinke, that they haue consented thereunto. But they know not what great diffe­rence there is, Great errours grow in the mind [...] of many, for want of wel cō ­sidering this diffe­rence. betweene hearing, and con­senting. And so much the more, as those thoghts are highly abominable, so much more cōfidence may they haue in our Lord, that he will preserue them from consenting, to so extreame wicked­nesse; to which they carried no inclination, but detestation. The Note. best remedy is therefore, (through a quiet kind of dissimulation), not to seeme to valew them; for there is nothing which doth more afflict the diuell, vvho is so proud, then to contemne him, with such a down­right [Page 125]contempt, as not to make any reckoning eyther of him, or of that which he bringeth, for our trouble. Nor is there any thing so dangerous as to hold argument with one, that can so easily ouer reach vs; and the best of our case wilbe, that he will make vs loose our tyme; and giue o­uer the good that we were wont to do. We must therfore shut the dore of our vnderstanding as hard as we can; and vnite our selues to God, and make no answeare to our enemy. And for our satisfaction, and consolation, we must, diuers times euery day declare our selues to belieue, that which our holy Mother the Church belieueth; and that we haue no will at all, to consent to any such false, and foule conceits. Let vs say vnto our Lord, as it is written, O Lord, I suffer vio­lence, answeare thou for me. And we must hope in his mercy, that he will do so. For the victory in this combat dependeth not vpon the only la­bour of our armes, but the principall is, to inuoke our Lord omnipotent, and to shrowd our solues vnder him. Whereas if we should vse much dis­course, and make many answeares to our ene­mies, how can we desire of God, that he will an­sweare for vs. You, (saith Exod. 14. the Scripture) shall hold your peace, and our Lord shall fight for you. And in another place, Isay saith, Note. In silence, and hope thy strength shalbe. And in failing of either of these two thinges, instantly a man groweth weake, and troubled; but by this silence, with a not seeming to heare, togeather with hauing a [Page 126]good hope, I haue seene many cured, in short­ty me, of this great affliction; and that the Diuell hath growen to hold his peace; finding that they neither heard, nor answeared him. And it is after the manner of little country dogges that barcke; if he, that passeth, hold his peace, they do so too; or else, they barke, but so much the more.

CHAP. XXVI.
How the Diuell endeauours, by meanes of the aforesaid temptations, to remooue vs from our deuotion and good exercises; and that our remedy is, to increase therein; laying aside all superfluous desyre of fee­ling spirituall sweetnesse in the soule; and to what end these also may be desyred.

BVT some Note this Chap­ter well, for it may profit much. weake man will say, These wic­ked thoughts take deuotion from me, and the nea­rer I am to be deuout and diligent in good workes, the more they presse me: & to the end that I may not heare them, I grow to haue a desyre to giue ouer the good worke that I began. But the answeare is cleare. For this, is that very thing, which the Diuell went about, though he went by a kind of circling way; by bringing in thoughtes of a different nature. Now Note. thy course must be, rather to increase in thy well doing, then to decay; as if one would do it, euen of purpose to make the Diuell retyre with loste, when he thought to haue gone on with gaine. And if thou want tendernesse of de­uotion, [Page 127]do not trouble thy selfe for that; for as much as our seruices, are not to be measured, o­therwise then by the rate of our loue; which Note this well, and be­lieue it; for it is a certaine truth. consisteth not in tendernesse of deuotion, but in a francke offer and resolution of our will, to doe that which God, and his Church commaundeth; and to endure that, which his pleasure is, that we should suffer, for his cō ­tentment.

Yf some, who may seeme to haue left their pleasures of the world, for the seruice of God, did leaue also the inordinate desyre of sweet, and sensible deuotions of the soule, they would liue with more alacrity then now they haue; and the Diuell should not be able to fynd certayne We must take care that the Diuell haue no hold, to take vs by. haires of appetite, to take hold of, and thereby to turne their heads about, and to deceyue & hurt them. Christ Iesus, died naked vpon the Crosse, and naked we should offer our selues to him. And we should care for no other cloths, then the doing of his holy will, as it is declared to vs, by the com­maundments of himselfe, and of his Church; and to receiue with an Pray for this blessing, for it is a great one. amorous kind of obedience, that which he shalbe pleased to send, how hard soeuer it be: with equality of mind, we are to take from his hand, eyther affliction or consolation; and to giue him thankes, both for the one and the other. S. Paul Ephes [...] 5. saith, That in all thinges we are to giue thankes to God, because, as it is the marke of a good Christian, to loue one that doth him hurt, for the loue of God (since euery one loues him, that doth him good) so to be 5. Note, thankfull to God in [Page 128]aduersity (not regarding the rough exteriour that it carrieth, but the hidden fauour which God doth send vs, vnder that superscription) is the signe of a man who beareth other eyes in his head, then of flesh and bloud; and that he loueth God, since, in that which is painefull to him, he doth yet conforme himselfe, to Gods will. And A so­ueraigne receit a­gainst all miseries of mans life, both interiour and exte­riour. so we must not seeke to fasten our selues to the weake boughes of our owne desyres, though they may seeme good; but to the strong pillar of the diuine will; to the end, that obeying it (as hath bin sayd) we may participate, according to our possibility, of that peacefull rest, and immutabi­lity, which resideth in that Will; and that we may decline those many changes, which in our hart we shalbe sure to find, if it giue accesse to this kind of Of spi­rituall gust. couetousnesse.

There is in very deed, little difference, be­tweene seruing Christ for money, or els for con­solation, and spirituall gust of thy soule, whether for heauen or for earth; if the last marke that I ayme at, be this couetousnesse. Euen Lucifer, (according to the opinion of many Doctours) did desyre true felicity; but because he desired it not as he ought, and of whom he ought, & that it might be giuen him, when it should haue plea­sed God; it serued not his turne to haue desyred that which was good; but he sinned by not desy­ring it well; for so it came to be couetousnesse, & no good desyre. In the same manner therefore do I declare, that we must not fasten our selues to an [Page 129]earnest and disordered appetite of spiritual gustes; but offering our selues to the Crosse of our Lord, we must be glad to take what he shalbe pleased to giue, whether it be sweete hony, or vinegar and gall.

Nor Note. haue I yet sayd this, as if these gustes were euill, or vnprofitable of themselues, if men know how to make true vse thereof; and if they receiue them not as to dwell in them, but to pro­cure more breath, and hart in the seruice of God; especially for beginners, who ordinarily, accor­ding to their, age haue need of milke, like chil­dren. And How great a blessing it is, to meet with a guyde, who hath the guift of spiritu­all pru­dence. he that would nurse them, with the food that is fit for men; and seeke, by that meanes, to make them perfect, vpon a suddaine: should commit a great errour; and insteed of hel­ping, would do hurt. Euery age, hath a seuerall condition, and degree of strength, according to which the food and nourishment is to be appli­ed. And, (as the well experienced, and holy Bernard sayth) We must not fly, but walke forward in the way of perfection; and let no man thinke, that it is the same thing to vnderstand it, and to possesse it. And therefore, it our Lord impart these comfortes, let them be receiued, towards the carrying of his Crosse, with greater force. For as much, as it is his custome, to comfort his disciples in Mount Tha­bor, that so they may not be disquieted in the per­secution of the Crosse. And ordinarily, before the gall of tribulation come vpon vs, he sendeth the hony of comfort. And I neuer knew any man, [Page 130]mislike or vndervalow spirituall Consolations, but such an one, as by whose soule, they had neuer passed.

But if our Lord be pleased to guide vs, by the way of discomforte, and that we must needes heare the harsh and Of d [...]aboh [...]al tentat [...]os, and diso­lations. paynefull language, wher­of we were speaking; yet must we not be dismay­ed, at any thing that he sendeth; but with pati­ence we must drinke the Chalice, which the Father giues, euen because he giueth it; and we must beg strength of him, that our weakenesse, may yielde obedience thereunto. Nor yet on the o­ther side, must thou conceaue that I teach thee, not to haue ioy when our Lord doth visit, or not to haue a sad feeling of his absence, when we find our selues deliuered ouer to our enemies, to be tempted, or afflicted by them. But that which I would say, is this, that (according to the force which God shall giue vs) we must procure to conforme our selues to his holy will, with obedi­ence, and equality of mind; and in no case to fol­low our owne: which infallibly wilbe accompa­nied with discomfort and disconfidence, & such things as these.

Let We ought to carry, a most cor­diall, and profound loue, to the acco­mplishment of the ho­ly & a [...]e will of God in all things. vs beseech our Lord, that he will open our eyes; for then we shal more cleerly see then now we do, the very light of the sun. & that all thinges of the earth, yea and of heauen it selfe, are but very poore and vnworthy of being desy­red, or enioyed; if from them we seuer, the will of our Lord. And that there is no one thing, how [Page 131]little soeuer, or how bitter soeuer it be otherwise, which if it be ioyned to the will of our Lord, is not of extreame valew. Better it is, without com­parison, to be in affliction, if our Lord require it, then (abstracting from his will) to be in heauen. And if once we did banish from our selues, this secret couetousnes, with resolution; there would fall of, withall, many euill fruites, which grow from thence; and we should gather others, in place thereof, of more worth; namely ioy and peace; which vse to be deriued from the vnion of a soule, with the will of God. And so firme they would be withall, that tribulation it selfe, would not be able to take them from vs. For as much as, although such persons do find themselues affli­cted and forsaken, yet are they not in despayre, no nor greately troubled; as knowing that, to be the way of the Crosse, to which they haue offered themselues, and by which Christ did walke, as it appeared, when, being vpon the Crosse, he sayd to his Father, O Matt. 17. my God, Why hast thou forsaken me? But shortly after he sayd, Into thy hands, O Father, I commend my spirit. Our Lord had also sayd already: Againe Ioan. 10. Will I see you, and your hart shall reioyce, and no man shall take this ioy from you For if a man enioy this condition, there is no tribulation, which there, in the most inward part of his soule, doth much disquiet him; be­cause there within, he is close vnited, to the will of him that sendeth it.

If thus we would carry our selues, we should [Page 132]deceaue the deceauer, which is the diuell. For as much, as, by not being dismayed, nor retyring from our good course begun (notwithstanding the euill language he speaketh) but, on the other syde, (taking that which our Lord doth send, with obedience, and giuing of thankes) we de­part without any hurt out of this skirmish, al­though it should last as long as we liue. Yea we come to greater profit then we had before; since it gaue vs occasion to gaine more crownes in heauen, in reward of that conformity which we had to the will of our Lord, without respecting our owne, euen in that, which was very paine­full to vs.

CHAP. XXVII.
That the conquest of these temptations, doth consist more in hauing patience to beare them; and in the hope of the fauour of our Lord; then inprocuring forcibly that they may not come.

THE conquest, whereof we haue spoken, proceedeth more from the stratageme of ha­uing patience, at that which commeth vpon vs; then in the force which we can vse in procuring that it may not come. And for this, did the spouse say in the Canticles, Catch me those little foxes, which spoyle our vineyards, for our vine hath s [...]orished. The vineyard of Christ is our soule, which was planted by his hand, and watered by his bloud. It doth [Page 133]flourish, when, the tyme of sterility being past, it beginneth to lead a new life, and yealdeth fruite to him that planted it. But because in such begin­nings, both these and other temptations of the crafty Diuell, do lye in waite for vs; therefore doth the noble spouse admonish vs, that (since our soule, which is his vineyard, is in flower) we should procure to hunt those foxes out. By which word, it is giuen vs to vnderstād, that it must be done in the Be­cause the flowers come be­fore the fruits. morning, as hath bin sayd. By saying that they were foxes, we are as good as told, that they come disguised, to deceaue vs; & seeming to byte on the onesyde, they wound on the other; and in saying that they are little, he telleth vs, that they are not so much to be feared, by him that know­eth them; for the knowing thē, is to weaken thē, if not to ouercome them out right. In saying that they destroy the vines, he signifyeth that they doe men much mischiefe, who know them not. For being frighted, and not confiding to goe through with their businesse, in the sight of God, they leaue their way; and (following a lamentable perswasion,) they giue themselues openly to sinne; conceauing that they enioy more peace, in the broad way of perditiō, then by the strayte one, of vertue, which leadeth to life.

The end of such persons, if they returne not first, to the right way, many tymes is such, as that it carrieth most certayne tokens of eternall perdition, as the Scripture sayth; He Eccl. [...]. that pas­seth from iustice to sinne, God hath prepared him, for [Page 134]the instrument of iustice, that is, for hell. They Note. should consider that as the Gabaonites were besie­ged, and persecuted by their enemies, for hauing made peace with Iosue 10. Iosue; and that Iosue (being called vpon, by them, to giue them succour) did relieue and free them; (making their case his owne, because they were persecuted by their e­nemies, in regard of the peace they made with him) so they, who (beginning to serue God) do enroll themselues in his band, grow instantly to be persecuted by the Diuells, which they were not before; and this doth euidently appea [...]e to be so, because, by forsaking the party of Christ, the persecution which is made against them would cease; and if they continue to suffer, they suffer for holding vp the party of Christ. Now this, is a most particuler fauour, which God doth, as S. Paul Phil. 1. affirmeth. To you it is giuen by Christ not only to belieue in him, but also to suffer for him. And if the Angels of heauen, were capable of enuying earthly creatures, The great no­bility of suffering for the loue of God; and for his will. it would be for this, that they suffer for God. And although, by the word of God, a Crowne is promised to that man who suffereth lac. 1. temptations, & is prooued by them, which reward it shalbe fit for vs to consider, and desyre, thereby to get more spirit, that we be neither tepide in working, nor weake in suffe­ring, (as it is sayd both of Moyses, and of Dauid also, that they had an eye to the reward) yet the true and perfect louer of our Crucifyed Lord, doth so much esteeme, a being in conformity with [Page 135]him, that he receiueth euen the very suffering it selfe, as a great fauour and reward; for, as Saint Augustine saith, A happy iniury is that, wherof God is the cause. And since there is not a man, who will not succour another, that suffereth by comming to his seruice; much more may this be expected from that diuine goodnesse. And that he will make that mans cause his owne, as Dauid thus desyred that he would; Rise vp o Lord, and iudge thy cause, & remember the iniurious words, with the foole hath vttered against thee, all the day longe. That busi­nesse belongeth to God, which is pretended to, by such a one as serueth him; & therfore God com­meth out to his succour, with great fidelity; and in this hope, and not in any thing of our owne, we are to set vpon the enterprize, of Gods ser­uice.

CHAP. XXVIII.
Of the great remedy which groweth against these ten­tations, by seeking a wise and well experiented gho­stly Father; who must be entirely informed and cre­dited; and how the ghostly Father ought to proceed with such persons; & of the fruit which riseth from these temptations.

IT vseth, in these temptations, to put men to much difficulty, that they are plainly to de­clare them to their Ghostly Father; in regard that they are thinges so wicked, and so deformed, [Page 136]that they deserne not to be mentioned; and euen the very naming of thē doth strike with horrour. And yet on the other syde, if they declare them not very much at large, and do not expresse e­uery thought, though neuer so little, it seemeth to them that they made no good confession; and so they neuer go well satisfyed, whether they speake, or be silent; but with the same affliction that they had before.

Such It is no [...]ner [...]aile if so many make thē ­selues a­way for despayre, who are not Ca­tholiks; for they want this great, and soueraign meanes of comsort. persons as these, are to seeke a wise and well experienced ghostly Father, to whome they must lay open the roots of the temptation; in such sort as that he may be satisfyed, and pos­ses [...]e the businesse. And the penitent must giue entiere credit to him, for therein consisteth the remedy of these persons, who eyther for the litle that they know, or the much passion that they haue, are wholy vnfit to iudge themselues. Now this ghostly Father, must pray much to our Lord, for the recouery of his patient; nor must he be made weary, if the penitent do many tymes aske him the same questions; nor for other weak­nesses, which such, vse to haue. Nor must he wonder at them, nor despise him for them; but he must carry a cordiall, and deep compassion to­wards him; and Gala [...] [...]. correct him, in the spirit of meek­nesse, as S. Paul saith; least himselfe grow also to be tempted, eyther in that, or somewhat else; & so he fynd to his cost, how great humane weak­nesse is. He must recommend to him, the refor­mation of his life, and to resort to the remedies [Page 137]of the Sacramentes; & then assure him, that there is no thought so deformed, and so wicked, as that it can defile the soule, vnlesse it consent; and let him giue him, good hope, that, by the mercy of our Lord, he shalbe deliuered in fit tyme; & that, in the meane whyle, he must content himselfe to suffer that torment, by those executioners, in discharge of his sinnes, and in imitation of that, which Christ Iesus suffered. The penitent, being thus comforted, and carrying his Crosse with pa­tience; and offering himselfe to the will of our Lord to carry it all his life, if it be pleasing to God, shall gaine more by that vinegar and gall, which the Diuell gaue him, then by the hony of deuotion which himselfe desired.

From hence it groweth, that our soule being in the flower of her beginnings; doth enter vpon yealding the fruite of perfect men; since for merly, we were sucking the milke of deuotion, and now we can eate the bread with the Note the true difference between begin­ners and proficiēts in spirit. crust. Sustai­ning our selues by the hard stones of temptation, which he did cast before vs, to try whether or no we were the sonnes of God, as he proceeded with our Lord himselfe. Thus do we fetch hony out of poison; and health out of being wounded; & we come out of the tentations, wel tried, with a mil­lion of other blessings. For which yet, we must not giue the diuell thankes, whose intention was not, to make Crownes for vs, but Chai [...]es. But The infinite power, & wisedom, & good­nes of God. the thankes we are to giue, is to God, that su­preme & Omnipotent Good; who would neuer [Page 138]suffer any euill to happen, if it were not to draw good from thence, in a superiour kind of man­ner. Nor would he suffer that enemy, who is both his and ours, to afflict vs; if it were not for the great confusion of that enemy, and for the good of him that is afflicted; as it is written, That Psal. 2. God will scoffe at these scoffers, & he that dwelleth in heauen will deride them. For although this dragon play his part, and doth, in the sea of this world, make a ieast, as it were, of tempting, and vexing the seruantes of God; yet it is God, who indeed doth make a ieast of him; because he draweth good, out of the others mischeife. And whylest the diuell thinkes, that he doth vertuous men most harme, it is then that he doth them most good; whereat he is so confounded, and ashamed, that through his pryde and enuy, he could wish that he had not begunne that enterprize, which fell out so much, to the aduantage of him whom he hateth. And that mischeife, and snare, which he prepared for others, hath cast it selfe about his own necke; and he is choaked with enuy, to see that the persons whom he tempted, go free a way, with this cheerfull song in their mouthes, The Psal. [...]. s [...]are is broken, and we are free: our help is from our Lord, who made heauen, and earth.

CHAP. XXIX.
How the Diuell procureth, by exteriour meanes, to make vs giue ouer good exercises; And how we must strengthen our hart by confidence in our Lord, for the ouercomming of him; And of other things, which help to free vs from this feare; and of the fruite of this temptation.

SO great is the enuy which the Diuells haue of our happinesse, as that they alwayes endea­uour to keepe vs from enioying, that, which themselues lost. And when, in any battayle, they goe away ouercome by vs, or (to speake more truly) by Almighty God; they are still ranging more, and more battailes, if so peraduenture they may find some carelesse person to be defeated. They change their weapons, and their manner of fighting; in hope that whom now they ouercame not, they may, afterward. And so, when they haue discouered, that they could not intangle vs, by craft (for as much as we are guy ded by true Christian doctrine, which telleth vs that we must commit our selues to the most iust will of God, & that patiently we must suffer what he sendeth vs, eyther from without, or within) they resolue to denounce, an open warre; and he maketh himselfe a fierce Lion, who was before a Dra­gon, but concealed. He aymeth at one thing, and thrusteth at another; and more boldly doth [Page 140]he procure to make himselfe be feared; concea­uing that he may obtaine that by giuing frightes, which he was not able to doe by other crafty meanes. Heere shall you see him not made a foxe, but a fierce Lion; who amazeth men with his roaring, as S. Peter sayth, Brethren 1. Pet. 5. be tempe­rate, and vigilant; for your Aduersary the diuell, walketh his round, seeking whom he may denoure, whom you must resist, being strong in fayth. They must not be intemperate or inconsiderate, who are subiect to haue such an enemy; and the sheep who find themselues inuironed, by such a roa­ring Lion, are much to watch and pray to our true pastour Iesus Christ. But what are the wea­pons, by which this enemy is ouercome, that so he may goe confounded, out of this warre, as he did out of the last? These weapons are fayth, as S. Peter and S. Paul haue sayd. For when a foule, through the loue of God (which is the life of fayth) despiseth both the prosperity, and aduersity of the world; and doth belieue and confide in God, whom she doth not see; the diuel must not thinke to haue an entrance there.

And besides, in [...]egard that this light of faith, teacheth men that are in dāger, to confide in the mercy of God; yf he that is assaulted, will serue himselfe well thereof; he shall get great courage, to fight against the diuell, which is a thing very necessary for this warre. For Note. if the faint-harted man, be not fit to fight euen against visible enemies (for which reason, God commaunded [Page 141]that such persons, should retire from the warre) how much lesse shall they be so, to fight, not a­gainst flesh and bloud, but against Diuells, who are the Princes of darknesse, as Saint Paul saith. And al­though, in the high presence of God, we are to be prostrate, and in feare, least he abandone vs for our sinnes; yet in tyme of warre, when we are assaulted by our enemy, it is wholy fit that we be full of courage, despising him, and implo­ring the assistance of our Lord.

In this sort do we read, that our Lord him­selfe prayed to his Father, before his apprehen­sion, being prostrate and full of anguish; and from thence he went, so full of courage, as that himselfe passed out, to meete his enemies. The prime intention of the Diuell in this battaile, is to depriue our hart of courage, to the end that so, we may giue ouer the good course begun. This he procureth, by taking sometymes the figure of a Dragon, or of a Bull▪ or some other beast, distur­bing our prayer with noise, or hindring the quiet­nesse of our repose (as we read him to haue done to Iob) and casting a man into a profound inter­nall feare, which maketh him tremble; though he be neuer so valiant, and sometimes▪ he will euen sweat with anguish. And other effects there are like these, which giue restimony, how that in­fernall wolfe is not far off. It is plaine, that since all the mystery of his warre, workes by feare; the principal weapon that we are to haue, is strength of hart; being encouraged, not through our con­fidence [Page 142]in our selues, but by a faithfull trust in our Lord. This is the thing which in this warre, doth make vs victorious; for confidence ouer­commeth feare, as it is written: I Isa. 12. will do it con­fidently, and will not feare. And be well assured, that thou shalt neuer repent thy selfe▪ for hauing placed thy firme trust, which is a couragious kind of hope, in God; neither shalt thou be able to say, He hath deceiued me, since it did not succeed as I hoped. For hope, as S. Paul Rom. 5. sayth, putteth not to shame, nor shal he that hopeth in our Lord be con­founded.

Neuer A ver­tuous life, is the ground, of giuing cōtiouāce to a good hope. doth if fayle a man, if he be not wanting to himselfe; but then only it faileth, when he looseth charity, which is the life of hope, and of all vertue. And those I he old Het­mi [...]. Ancients of the desert, knowing how neceslary, a hart full of courage was, towards a not being ouercome, in these skirmishes against the Diuell (which a­mongst them, were very vsuall) they went by night to pray alone, amongst the sepulchers of dead men; that so they might purchase a being free from feare; the dominion of which feare ouer vs, doth vse to bring vs extrem preiudice. If we wil take the counsell of Christ, we shal liue very secure from this feare: for he taketh it fiō vs, say­ing I [...] [...]0. will tell you whom you are to feare; him feare, who, after the body is dead, hath power of casting in­to hell; feare him. He that feareth not God, shall, by reason of his euill conscience, feare the world, and the Diuell; but he that feareth God, feareth [Page 143]not the Diuell; for to feare him, is in some sort, to be subiect, as to one that can do him hurt. And Note. because he hath not power to reach euen to a hayre of a mans head, vnlesse God giue him leaue, there is no cause why we should feare him, but our Lord, by whom the leaue may be giuen. For this reason it is, that we always must be hum­ble, and, with holy feare; in the presence of God; but with the Diuell we must be full of courage▪ through our hope in God; and full of a holy kind of pride. And how much more full he is of bra­uing, so much more feare thou God, and recom­mend thy selfe to him; and so much lesse, must thou feare the Diuell.

So do we read of S. Anthony, that great conquerour of Diuells; who seing himselfe enui­roned by them, in the forme of cruell beastes, (which seemed, as if they would haue swallowed him:) Yf you had (saith he) any power, any one of you would be able to ouercome a man; but because you are defeated (God hauing taken your forces from you) you procure to ioyne many togeather, and so to fright vs. Yf our Lord haue giuen you power [...] ­uer me, heere I am, come and swallow me vp; but if not, why do you labour thus in vayne. And so this Saint vsed to say, that against Diuells, the signe of the crosse, & the faith of our Lord (which somtims signifieth Confidence) is a wall vnto vs, that cannot be scaled. And though our forces, being compared with that of the Diuell, are very slender, and weake; yet faith doth tell vs, if we be not deafe; [Page 124] That God is the defendour of all such, as hope in him▪ And since he is so good, as to promise vs his de­fence and succour; and to plant his hart and eyes vpon the Church, which is figured in the temple of Salomon; and is both true of his word, and of power to performe his promises, (there being none eyther in heauen or earth, that can re­fist, eyther him, or any man who is assisted by him) that Christian should not esteeme of God, nor of his sincerity, nor goodnesse, nor power as a Christiā ought, if he belieued not of him, that he for his part, performeth well the promises, of his succour. But these, and the like thinges which he doth, must be vnderstood with this condition that a man, at that tyme, be in the state of grace, or procure to be so, not only by belieuing the promises in generall, nor yet by belieuing, that, in particuler they are applied to him; but by pen­nance also, & other meanes, which are taught by the Catholike Church. Not, but that we do neuer­thelesse assuredly belieue, that many in the same Church are in the state of grace, to whom with­out all doubt, God fulfilleth the promises of be­ing their defendour who hope in him; but yet for as much, as no man can be infallibly sure, with­out speciall reuelation, that himselfe is in that state of grace, he is to belieue by the Catholike fayth, that the diuine assistance, is neuer wan­ting on the part of God; but himselfe may, and must feare, that it will not perhaps, take effect in him, through his fault, or negligence in doing [Page 145]his duty. So that with some feare of himselfe, and by confidence in our Lord, he must procure to en­courage, and help himselfe, by the word of God, who promiseth succour to such as fight for him. And Note. this feare, or vncertainty, in which God hath left vs, of not knowing assuredly that we are in his fauour, though it may seeme painefull, is very profitable, towardes the conseruing of our humility; and the not vndervalewing of our neighbours; and to spur vs vp, towardes good workes. And with so much the more caution, and consideration must we do it, as we are lesse certaine, whether we be pleasing to our Lord, or no.

But do not for all this conceaue, that thy hart must be dismayed with vaine feare; for as much as this truth which I haue told thee, did not keep Dauid from saying, If Psal [...] 15. whole armies shall rise a­gainst me, yet shall not my hart be afraid; & if warre shal come vpon me, yet wil I hope in God. So also doth S. Paul Heb. 13. admonish, vs that we should serue our selues of those wordes which God sayd, I will not forsake thee; & I will not abandon thee; in such sort, as that we may confidently say, Our Lord is my helper, and I will not feare what man can do. These, and the like wordes, do not wholy take away, all the feare which a Christian (for his owne part) ought to haue; but it taketh away all ex­cesse thereof, by the confidence which is to be pla­ced in God. And thus we are to walke, between hope and feare; and so much more, as the loue in­creaseth, [Page 146]so much doth the hope also increase, and so much also is feare diminished. And An excellent rule. there­fore, if thou haue a mind to feele, in thy selfe, that courage of mind, and the little feare which per­fect men do find, cast thou away al tepidity from thy selfe; & take the businesse of vertue to hart, and then, in that very hart of thyne, thou shalt read that courage, which now thou readest but in Bookes. Then shalt thou be able to fight bold­ly, against the Diuell, although he circle the [...] round about, to deuoure thee; for thou shalt haue a hope to be defended by Iesus Christ, who is the strong Lyon of Iuda. He alwayes ouercommeth in vs, if we do not loose our confidence; and if, like cowards, we do not deliuer vp our selues, with our hands bound behind vs, to our enemies without resoluing to fight. Our Lord, doth not suffer these warrs, and temptations to come to his friendes, but for their greater good; as it is written, Blessed la [...]. 1. is the man who suffereth tempta­tion; for he being so proued, shall receaue the crowne of life, which God promiseth to such as loue him. He was pleased also, that patience in troubles, and the standing fast on foot, for his honour in ten­tations, should be the touchstone, whereby his friends were to be tryed. For Note. it is no signe of a true friend▪ if he only accompany another in occasions of case; but to stand fast by him, in tyme of tribulation. And as all men would be glad to haue approued friends to stand fast by them, in the tyme of affliction and triall (ac­counting [Page 147]of it, as their owne) iust so doth God desire to haue his; and like a thankfull person he sayth to them, You are the men, who haue remayned with me in my temptations. And as an aboundant rewarder, he sayth further to them, I Lue: [...]. dispose of my kingdome to you, as my Father disposed of it to me; that you may eate, and drinke at my table, in my kingdome; companions heere in payne, and af­terwards in the Kingdome of glory.

Thou must encourage thy selfe to fight man­fully, in the warrs, which are made against thee, to deuide thee from God; since he is thy helper on earth, and thy reward in heauen. Remember how S. Anthony, being cruelly vvhipped, and beaten by the Diuells, lifting vp his eyes to hea­uen, saw the roofe of his Cell all open, whereby a beame of so admirable light did enter; as at the presence thereof, all the Diuells fled away; and the payne of his wounds forsooke him; & with profound internall sighes, he sayd to our Lord, (who then appeared to him) Where wert thou, O my good Iesus, where wert thou, when I was so ill handled by the enemies; why wert thou not heere, in the beginning of my combat, that so thou mightest haue preuented, or cured all my soares. Wherunto our Lord answered, Heere I was, frō the very beginning but I stood looking on to see how thou diddest carry thy self, in thy combate. And because thou hast fought manfully, I wil euer help thee: & thou shalt be famous throughout the whole earth. By these wordes, and by the vertue of our Lord, he rose vp so full of [Page 148]courage, as to find by experience, that he had gotten then more strength, then he had lost be­fore.

In A most comfortable and true do­ctrine. this sort doth our Lord treat his friends, and he leaueth them oftentimes in traunces of so great danger, as that they scarce know where to set a foot; nor do they find one hayre of strength, by which they can take hold; nor are they able to help themselues, by the memory of those fauours which in former tymes, they had receaued of God; but they remayne, as if they were naked, and in profound darcknes, being giuen ouer to the persecution of their enemyes. But suddainly when they least looke for it, our Lord doth vi­site them; and deliuer them; and leaue them with more strength, then they had before, & thrusteth those enemies vnder their feet. And the soule (howsoeuer it be more weake in nature, then the Diuell) doth feele in it selfe, such a powerfull strength, that it seemeth to teare him euen in pieces, as a thing that is but weake, and without resistance; and not only groweth it not able, to fight against one, but against many Diuells; so great is the courage which it feeleth to haue comfreshly towards it, from heauen; and wherewith it doth not only defend it selfe, but it sayth with Dauid; I will persecute my enemies, and I will take them. I will not returne till they be conquered, and deseated, that they may no more remaine vpon their feet, but they shall fall vnder mine.

What is there of greater profit, then that [Page 149]which S. Augustine beggeth, when he sayth, O Lord, make me know thee, with an Yea, & his prayer was heard. amourous know­ledge, and let me also know my selfe. Now The excellent vse & fruit of tēptati­ons & de­solations. what meanes is there so proper, for the making him know himselfe, as to see himselfe experimentally in such traunces. That he may touch, as a man may say, with his owne hands, his owne weake­nesse; and that, so very truly; as to be wholy vn­beguiled of any estimation, which he might make of himselfe. And, on the otherside, he findeth by experience, how faythfull God is, in fulfilling the promises, of his succour, in the tyme of ne­cessity; and how powerfull he is, in deliuering his seruantes from so great weakenesse, by the suddaine gift of so admirable strength; and how ful he is of mercy, in visiting, and pittying them, who are so extreamely afflicted.

By this meanes, a man doth fall flat vpon his face, acknowledging his pouerty and misery; and he adoreth his God, by both louing him, and hoping for succour from him, when he shall find himselfe in new dangers. S. Paul Rom. 5. affirmeth that it hapned to himselfe, after this manner: I will not (sayth he) haue you ignorant, my Brethren, of the tribulation that we suffered in Asia, whereby we were afflicted aboue measure; and aboue our owne strength; so We must not be deie­cted, in being much af­flicted, since S. Paul him­selfe was discom­forted. farre, as that euen to liue, was a trouble to vs; and we did within our selues belieue as­suredly, that there was no meanes for vs to escape from death. And this hapneth so, to the end that we might not haue confidence in our selues, but in God, [Page 150]who giueth life to the dead. He, who hath deliuered vs, out of so great dangers; and by whom hereafter, we also hope to be deliuered.

CHAP. XXX.
Of many reasons which there are, why we must hope that our Lord will deliuer vs, out of all tribulation, how greiuous soeuer it be: and of two significations, which this worde Belieue, may be accounted to haue.

It is true which S. Gregory sayth, That the accom­plishment of thinges past, giueth assurance concer­ning things to come. And since men are wont to trust others, vpon taking pawnes, we seeme not to do much for God, if we hope for a deliuerance out of future tribulation, since he hath so often done it, in tymes past. It A liue­ly compa­rison, wherin we ought to take much comfort. is certayne that if any man should haue made vs find his loue and fauour, in succouring vs ten, or twelue seuerall times, in our troubles; we should belieue he loued vs; and that still he would do vs fauour, if, in o­ther afflictions of ours we should haue need. And why then shall we not haue a confident beliefe, that God will defend vs in all our dangers; since they are not twelue, but many more tymes, that we haue taken experience of his succour, in our tribulations. Remember well, how often he hath drawen thee, with victory, out of those sharpe skirmishes of thyne against thy aduersa­ries; [Page 151]and thou wert gratefull vnto him for it; and thereupon thou didst conceaue a reason to be­lieue, and confide, that he loued thee; since after the tempest, he sent fayre weather; and ioy after teares; and since he had byn thy true Father, and defendour.

And why then, if now he please to try thy confidence, thy loue, and thy patience, by a pre­sent tribulation, (as if he hid himselfe, because he answereth not to thy cryes) dost thou let thy selfe fall, into such weakenesse, as that the pre­sent triall which commeth to thee, maketh thee loose the confidence, which in many former proofes, thou hadst gained. It is true, that we feele those things most, which at the present lye vpon vs; and if thou markest the straytes wher­in thou findest thy selfe, and how our Lord doth not free thee of them, thou wilt perhaps con­ceaue, that our Lord hath layd aside the care, which formerly he had of thee; and thou wilt say, as the Apostles did, in that great sea-tempest, to our Lord, who then was sleeping, Maister Marc, 4. doest thou not care, though we perish; and thus wilt thou be ouertaken, by the reprehension of that scripture, which sayth, The foole changeth like the moone; Because it is sometymes after one manner, and sometymes after another. And thou wilt be like a Vane, vpon the top of a house, which is sub­iect to many changes in one day, because it is go­uerned by euery wind. Thou wert in possession of our Lord, as one that was carefull of thee, and [Page 152]thy defence in the tyme of trouble, because then he breathed vpon thee, by the wind of his mercy and comfort, wherewith he gaue thee deliue­rance; and thou didst pay him, with thankes. And because now, there blowes another wind, wherewith our Lord is pleased to prooue, and trouble thee; thou art no longer of that beliefe, and confidence, which before thou hadst. So that thou doest belieue, but what thou seest; & thou dost not valew our Lord, but according to that, which at the instant tyme, he doth towards thee; without helping thy selfe; of that which thou hast tried at many other tymes, that so at the present, thou mayst be comforted in our Lord.

A strange incredulity was theirs, who ha­uing seene the meruayles of God in Egypt, and the victories, and fauours, which he wrought for them, in the desert; would not take his word, whereby he told them, that they should enter into the land of promise. For this, sayth S. Paul, they en­tred not. And so is it true (though not according to equality, yet with some resemblance,) that the disconfidence, and pusillanimity of that man is great, who, (notwithstanding that God hath de­liuered him many tymes frō dangers past) grow­eth not yet to confide, that he shall not be aban­doned, nor confounded, in the danger eyther present, or future; since as we haue sayd, the hope which one putteth in our Lord, (if the man be not infault) wil neuer faile, nor wil there be cause that a man should say, I was deceaued.

Now it is to be vnderstood, that sometymes this word Note. Belieue, is taken for that worke, which the vnderstanding performeth, by setling it selfe in the truthes of the Catholike fayth, with a supreme kind of certitude, as formerly hath been sayd. And he that belieueth against this fayth, is called, with a full mouth, and is indeed, an He­retike, and an incredulous person; and such an errour belieued, hath the name of an heresy, or of incredulity. But the disconfident person, of whome we haue spoken hitherto, is neither incredulous, nor is he subiect to incredulity; because he hath no obligation to belieue (in quality of an article of fayth) that God will deliuer him, out of that pre­sent trouble; as yet, they of the The children of Israel. desert, were obliged to belieue, that God would giue them victory against those enemyes, who were in the Land of promise, if they would haue gone out to fight against them.

But, at other tymes, holy men, and euen the common vse of speach, doe call, Belieuing, the holding an opinion, which is caused by reason, or coniectures. This do they call credulity; and if it be vehement, it is called fayth. And this man­ner of credulity doth he possesse, who belieueth, by probable coniectures, that he is pardoned by God, & that he is in state of grace; and that God will help him, in that whereof he shall haue need in the future; and this which passeth in the vn­derstanding, doth help men to haue confidence, & hope, which are in the will. And therefore some­tymes, [Page 154] Incredulity is taken for Disconfidence, and credulity for confidence. And thus it may be sayd, that he who (because God had deliuered him out of other dangers, and for other motiues also) had reason to belieue though not with certainty) that God will also deliuer him out of this danger) is subiect, if he do it not, to incredulity: not against the Catholike fayth; but against that, which ri­seth, out of coniecturs. But because the The Caluinists were scar­ce known in this Authours tyme; though their case be all one with that of the Lu­therans. Lutherās take one of these wordes for the other, we Ca­tholikes must speake distinctly; calling fayth, and confidence by their proper names; declaring how we are to vnderstand, either belieuing, or being incredulous; since A wise propositi­on, and being wel applyed, will serue to many good pur­poses. that, which at some one tyme may be securely expressed, by such words, at some other tyme, must be auoyded.

Returning therefore to our purpose, thou must five from disconfidence; and from being changeable, which the Eccles. 17. Scripture reprehendeth in the foole, who is, as the Moone. And procure thou, to partake of that stability, for which the iust man is praysed thus, As the Sunne, shall he remaine. Which signifyeth, that he shall be euer after the same manner. Learne Note. by one tyme, how thou art to carry thy selfe in others; and, as the Scrip­ture sayth, In Eccles. 11. the day of thy prosperity▪ forget not that, of thy aduersity; and in the day of thy aduer­sity, forget not that, of thy prosperity. That so, tem­pering the prosperity of one, with the aduersity of the other, thou mayst grow to liue in an A happy state of mind. equa­lity. And that neither thou mayst be drawn down [Page 155]in the tyme of thy tribulation, by the weight of disconfidence, and sadhes; nor yet grow giddy-headed, by excesse of ioy, in the tyme of spirituall consolations.

So do we read, of that holy Anna, the Mother of of the Prophet 1. Reg. 1. Samuel, who, after hauing prayed in the Temple of God, still kept her face, the same way. The meaning is, that she conserued her hart in equality. Isaias Isa. 4. sayth, That one should haue such a habitation, as might giue shade, against the heate of the Sunne; and security, or defence, against the storm and the raine. And it were well, that thou didst procure to liue in this Hap­pynes is euer in this house. house; that so, hauing strength of hart, and confiding in the mercy of God, it might giue thee assurance, in those places and passages of busines, wherein there vseth to be Of trouble. danger. As it was prophesied, of the tyme of the new Law, That Ezech. 34. men should sleep securely, in the thickest woodes. And although it seem a strang thing, to be at rest; and to haue security in this place of our exile (and indeed it must be very lit­tle, in comparison of that, which is in heauen) yet, if we ranke it, by those feares, which the vvicked of the world are subiect to, it is very great; and deserueth greatly to be esteemed. And particulerly S. Paul Heb. 6. sayth, that the vertue of hope is as a firme, and secure anchor of the soule. Be­cause although we haue an enemy of the Diuell, who hath a mind to fright, & to discomfort vs, by meanes of these combats; we haue yet withall a friend, who is both more stoute, and more wise [Page 156]then he. And if the former do abhorre vs much, incomparably more doth Christ loue vs; and if he sleepe not, endeauouring still how to do vs mischiefe; the blessed eyes of God, do watch o­uer vs to help vs to saue our selues; as sheepe, for which he gaue his pretious bloud.

Since Note. then, we haue the arme of the Om­nipotent, why shall we feare the Diuell; vvhose power is meere weakenes in comparison of the other. How shall he be able to feare the Diuell, who doth cordially belieue this truth (if he vvill serue himselfe of fayth, as vvas sayd before) that the diuells can do vs no manner of harme, vnles first, they haue leaue from God Could the diuels peraduenture, touch Iob, or any thing that was his, or could they drowne the swine of the Genesa­rits, without first obtayning leaue? Or shall he perh [...]ps, who may not touch the swyne, touch the children? Do you therefore comfort your selues in our Lord: as S. Paul requireth; & in the power of his vertue take in hand the weapons of God, that you may standon foot against the cra [...]ty enterprises of the diuel. And, hauing spoken of some of the particuler weapons, he addeth, saying: In all things, take to you, the shield of faith; whereby you may quench all those dartes that burne like [...]re For as this enemy, is of more strength then we; so we must helpe our selues, by the shield of faith, which is a super­natural remedy; defending our selues with some what, that belongeth thereunto; as with some worde of God; or by receauing the Sacramentes; [Page 157]or following some instructiō of the Church. And beheuing firmely, with the vnderstanding that al power is of God. We must also be comforted with the head piece of hope; & so being offered vp to God, by the loue of him (taking with a good wil, whatsoeuer he shall send) and by which way soeuer it come) we shal make a scorne of our ene­my; and we shall adore our Lord, who gaue vs the victory, against him; and that, not only by himselfe, but by meanes of the succour of his ho­ly Angells, who fight for vs; as was declared to the seruant of the Great 4. Reg. 6. Elizaeus, who (being in much An example to proue the assi­stance that we haue by the holy Angell [...]. feare of a great army of men, who came to take his maister) the Prophet bad him not feare; for, fayth he, there are more for vs then against vs. And whilst I lizaus prayed, and sayd, Open thou O Lord the eyes of this young man, that he may see, God did open his eyes; and he saw that there was a hill full of horsemen; and chariots round about Elizaeus; who were the Angells of our Lord, who came to defend the Prophet. In such sort; that if we will take the part of God, we shal haue a multitude of Angells, on our syde; one of which number is able to do more, for vs, then all the powers of hell against vs.

Therefore, so great assistance, should make vs able, to despise the diuell; and to lay all vaine feare aside; and to giue vs the courage of [...]ions, [...]gainst him, in the vertue of Christ. Who The sweet and stronge power of our Lord Iesus. was a meeke Lambe, in deliuering himselfe to death; & was a Lion in dis-peopling hell; ouer­comming [Page 158]and binding the diuells; and with his arme, defending his beloued flock. And if any man shall thinke, that I haue been to prolixe in this argument; let him attribute it to the desyre I haue, that thou maiest not be one of the ma­ny, whom I haue seene; who for feare of the Diuell, haue giuen ouer the seruice of God.

I well know, that by this enemy, some o­ther warres are made, euen more cruell, then the aforesayd. And I also know, that in the very ex­tremity of tribulation, when already there is growne to be no strength in him that suffers, nor wise knowledge in him that guides the shipp, and when the infernall Lion, and Beare, meanes to swallow vp the poore sheep, it growes to be comforted; and that pitious Dauid, Iesus Christ taketh the sheep without harme, out of the mouth of the Lion; cutting in pieces him that was carry­ing it away. My selfe am a witnesse, of greater tribulations then I could possibly haue belieued, if I had not seene them; and of the meruailous, and pitious prouidence of God, who doth not in afflictiō abandon them that seeke him, although it be with many frailties, and faultes. And Note this for thy com­fort. although I haue seene many of them who feared God, to haue byn grieuously assaulted in these fightes, I neuer saw one that ended ill. And therefore whosoeuer shall find himselfe in these traunces, (although he seeme conueyed euen into the very belly of the whale) let him cal, euen from thence, vpon Iesus Christ; and let him serue [Page 159]himselfe of the good aduise which his Ghostly Fa­ther shall giue him. And let both of them haue good hope, in that good sheephard, who gaue his life for his sheep; who killeth, and quickneth; who placeth men, as it were, in hell, and draweth them out aliue from thence. For although at one tyme, he send troubles, at another tyme he taketh them away; and that to the great aduantage of him, that suf­fereth the tribulation.

CHAP. XXXI.
That the first thing which we are to heare, is diuine Truth, by meanes of Faith, which is the beginning of all spirituall life; and which teacheth vs so high things, as that they exceed all humane dis­course.

ALL that hithe [...]to is sayd, hath byn to giue thee to vnderstand whom thou art not to [...]eare; and to help thee to these directions which thou hast read. It remaineth that now I tell thee, whom thou art to heare; that so thou mayst ful­fill the first word which the prophet speaketh, Hearken O Daughter. And know that he who de­serueth to be hearkned to, is only Truth. But be­cause there are many Truths, the hearing or know­ing whereof doth make little to our purpose, I tell thee, (since heere we are to speake of the Note well, that when the Authour, through­out his whole dis­course of Fayth, doth speake of Christia­nity, or Christi [...]s, he mea­neth only such as beleeue, & professe the holy Catholik [...] Apos [...]olik Roman Fayth; as appeareth elswhere aboun­dantly; & especially Cap. 4 [...]. Catholike faith, which by vs Christians is im­braced) that thou art to heare, and learne, that [Page 160]which God speaketh in his holy Scripture, and in his Catholike Church. This faith, is the begin­ning of a spirituall life; and therefore (as I sayd before) it is with much reason, that we are first admonished by the prophet, of that which first it is fit for vs to do, since S. Paul Rom. 10. affirmeth, That faith comes by hearing.

This fayth is the first reuerence whereby the soule adoreth her creatour, belieuing most highly of him, as is fit to be belieued of God. For although some things of God▪ may be ariued to by reason, which S. Paul Ro [...]. 1. doth call The manifest of God, yet the Mysteries, which faith belieued [...], cannot be reached, out-right, by reason. There­fore we say, that faith belieueth that which it seeth not; and doth firmely adore, that which lieth hid from reason. And this is giuen vs to be vnderstood, by the two Seraphims which coue­red the face of that great Lord, in the Temple which Isaias Isa. 6. saw; and so also, when Moyses came neere to treat with our Lord vpon the mountayne, the Ixod. [...]4. Scripture sayth, That he en­tred into the obscurity, or cloude, where our Lord was. A strang thing it may seeme, that God should place his dwelling in darknes, since he is most pure and perfect light, which endureth no dark­nesse, as S. Iohn 1. Io [...]. 1. saith. But because he is a light so very bright, and so ouershining, that, as S. Paul 1. Tim. [...]. doth witnesse, he dwelleth in light which is ineccessible, he is sayd to dwell in The true rea­son why we cannot arriue to see God. darknesses because no eye created, eyther of man, or angel [...], [Page 161]can arriue to his mysteries, by the force of rea­son. And Note. for this cause, in regard of such eyes, the light is called darknes. Not because such light is obscure, but for that it is a light which doth in­finitly exceed all vnderstanding. As when we see that a wheele doth moue with extremity of speed, we vse to say that it stirreth not. And we speake in this manner, because our eyes are not able to hold pace, with so swift a motion; not because there is indeed any want of motion, but for that it doth outstrip the ability of our sight.

Not only doth our Fayth reuerence God, by beleeuing that, which reason cannot reach; but besides, it doth professe him to be so high, that howsoeuer God be clearely seene by his owne light in heauen, there is yet no vnderstanding, either humane or Angelicall, which of him, can see all, that is to be seene. No will, no delight although they al should be ioyned in one, are able to loue him, or enioy him, as much as there is rea­son in him, both of loue and ioy. Only God only tru­ly vnder­standeth God. God is he, that comprehendeth himself; and creaturs when they haue seene, and loued, and enioyed, and praysed him, withall the powers of their hart, they do reuerence him also by knowing fur­ther, that in comparison of that which he is, and of that vvhich remayneth to be sayd of him, and of that seruice which is his due, all that which they know of him, and which they do for him, is very little. And therefore, falling vpon their faces, they adore him vvith a profound silence; [Page 162]confessing, that he only is his own perfect prayse to which they are not able to reach. And this si­lence, is an honour very fit for God; for it is a confession, that such prayse is due to him, as can­not be expressed by all the creatures. Of this ho­nour, Dauid Psal. [...]4. sayth, To thee, O God, is prayse due in Sion. In such sort, that although, in heauen, there be an incessant voyce of diuine Isa. 6. prayse, saying, Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of hoastes; with other admirable prayses, which day and night they yeild to him, yet do they also confesse in si­lence, that our Lord is greater, then they can ei­ther expresse, or vnderstand. For Psal. 17. he mounted aboue the Cherubim; and he flew vpon the winges of the wind; and there is none, how speedy soeuer, that must thinke to ouertake him. And all they, who shall know & see him, must be faine to say, that which the children of Israel sayd, when they saw bread comming from heauen Man-hu, which signifieth, what is this? Admiring, as the Queen of Saba did, that infinite abys [...]us of light; whereof although they shall see in heauen much more, then they heard therof on earth, yet can they not comprehend it all. Such is the God whome vve haue; and such doth our Fayth teach him to be; singing that which Dauid Psal. [...]0. sayth, The heauen of the heauen is for our Lord; because the secret of what he is, after the aforesayd manner, is for him­self alone, since he only comprehendeth himself.

CHAP. XXXII.
How agreable to reason it is, to belieue the Mysteries of our Fayth, although they exceed all humane reason.

ALTHOVGH thou hast heard, that our Fayth belieueth certayne thinges which by reason alone, cannot be arriued to, yet take heed thou do not thinke, that to belieue them, is a thing, either against reason, or without reason. For as it is very For if he could, it would not be fayth, but knowledg. farre from him that belieueth, euidently to vnderstād that which he beleeueth, so is it farre from the beliefe of a Christian, to be light, or to wauer in belieuing. For we haue such reasons to belieue, as that we may dare to appeare, and giue account of our Fayth, before any Tribunall how exact soeuer; as 1. Pet [...] 5. S. Peter doth aduise, that we Christians, should be prepa­red to do. This thou shalt easily vnderstand, by the similitude which heere I put. If thou shouldst heare say, that a man borne blind had suddenly recouered his sight; or that a dead man were re­stored to life, it is plaine that thy reason could not reach to the meanes of doing this; because it would exceed the boundes of nature; and reason doth not reach, to supernaturall thinges. But yet so Note this well for it iu­stifyeth Catholike & giueth Protestāts reason to be both more pi­ous, and more pru­dent. many, and so well conditioned witnesses, might auow the hauing seene it; that not only it would be no leuity to belieue it; but it would be [Page 164]incredulity and hardnes of hart, not to beleeue it. For though reason cannot reach to know, how a blind man may come to see, or a dead man return to liue; yet at least it reacheth to this, That it is reason to belieue, such, and so many witnesses. And Ob­serue well these gra­dations, for they are most reasona­ble, and they are all in fa­uour of Catholi­ques. if they should dye in confirmation of that which they affirmed, there would be more reason to belieue it. And if they should worke other miracles, as great or greater then the for­mer, in confirmation thereof; the fault of not belieuing it, would then be great, howsoeuer the thing which they affirmed to haue happened, were very strange and high.

Iust so art thou to vnderstand, that there is nothing which reason can lesse reach vnto, thē the cleare vnderstanding of that which is belie­ued by Fayth; nor is there yet, any thing so agre­able to reason, as to belieue it; and it is an ex­treme fault not to belieue it. It is certayne, that for the true miracles which Moyses wrought, the people of Israel belieued him, to be the messen­ger of God; and that he spake with God; and receaued the law at his handes, as giuen by God. And so also the M [...]ves, who are a bestiall kind of people, belieued, that Mahomet, for a few, (and they false) miracles, which he wrought, was a messenger of God; and as from such an one, they r [...]ceaued the bestiall law, which he gaue them.

Well then, do thou consider the true mira­cles which haue byn wrought by Iesus Christ our [Page 165]Lord, and by his Apostles; and by other holy men in confirmation of our faith, from that tyme to this; and thou shalt find, that as easily thou mayst count the sandes of the sea, as the multitudes of them; and that incomparably they do exceed al the others which haue byn wrought in the world, both in quality, & quantity. Three only dead persons were raised to life, in the whol course of the old law; which continued almost two thousand yeares. And if thou consider the new law, thou shalt find, that S. Andrew alone, did raise at once, forty dead; that so it might be fulfilled, which our Lord sayd, He Ioan [...] 14. that belie­ueth in me, shall do greater things then I. And that so, his great power may be seene; since not on­ly, by himselfe, but in such other of his seruants, as he is pleased to worke, he can do what he will, though it be nouer so wonderfull.

I haue related to thee, that which one A­postle did at one tyme; to the end that hereby thou mayest vnderstand, the innumerable mi­racles which haue byn wrought, both by that Apostle, and by other, both Apostles, & Saintes, of the Christian Church. And, although in the beginning of the Church, there were so many, and so great miracles wrought for the confirma­tion of our faith, that the proofe thereof is super­abundant; yet That true mira­cles are wrought to this day; and the cau­ses, why it pleaseth God to worke them. so great is the desire which our Lord hath of the saluation of vs all; and that we all may come to the knowledge of his truth; and that they who do already know it, may be com­forted [Page 166]and confirmed therein; that his proui­dence hath care, to renew, or refresh Of mi­racles, which confirme the faith of Christ. this kind of proofe; and to giue testimony to the truth, by new miracles. And so, is there hardly to be found an age, wherein some Christian or other, is not canonized for a Saint; which I would to God, that any reaso­nable Protestāt, would but infor­me him­selfe well of the exact and rigorous care, which the Catholike Church doth we, when there is question of Cano­nizing a­ny Saint. is neuer done without sufficient proofe of a perfect life that he hath led, and of many miracles that he hath wrought. Whereof if any man were curious, & would make search, he should find no difficulty, euen in our tymes, to meete with miracles, a­mongst vs; and, in the Indies, both Orientall, and Occidentall, in more aboundance.

CHAP. XXXIII.
Of, how firme and constant, and authorized witnesses, our faith hath had, who haue giuen their liues for the truth thereof.

IT is possible that some may doubt of the truth of our witnesses, which speake, and write of the multitude of miracles which haue byn wroght in the Christian Church. For as they are peo­ple, who detest our faith; so it seemeth to them, that if these witnesses should be true, they must not fayle to confesse, that we haue much more reason to belieue our Truth, then they, their Er­rour. But I aske, that (since they will not giue credit to our witnesses; and therefore they refuse to receyue our fayth) why giue they credit to [Page 167]their owne witnesses, in receiuing their false be­hefe. Whereas A wise and excel­lent consi­deration. it is certaine, and cleere, that if they would take the paines to consider it, our witnesses do far exceed theirs, in all kind of weight of authority. There haue byn men, in the Christian Church, whose The high ver­tue, and piety of many Catholike Christians life hath eui­dently byn so good, as to prooue, that they were free from all couetousnesse; from all appetite of honour; and from all that which flourisheth, and is esteemed in the world; being full of all vertue, and Truth; so farre, as to dye, rather then loose it. To what interest can he pretend, by the testimony that he giueth, who doth not only not pretend to any thing of this world, but euen that which he hath of his owne, he ca­steth away? What interest can mooue that man to be a false witnesse, who giueth his life vnder most greiuous tormentes, in confirmation of what he sayth? And though some vse to be draw­ne by force of tormentes to confesse that which the Iudge desires (although it be against truth) yet if ours would say that which is desired by the Iudge, not only should they not loose their goods, and life, but much more prosperous should they haue remayned, by the much which the Iudges promised, and would haue performed. But de­sp [...]ing all this, they chose to dy, that they might not abandon their faith, or vertue, which the Iudge would so faine haue had them loose. So that they loued no temporall thing, nor feared they any thing that was temporall, how terrible [Page 168]soeuer. No exception therefore can be taken to that which such men say; and if it should seeme to any, that these proofes were sufficient to make vs hold them for good men; and that willingly they would deceaue no body, but that themselues were yet deceaued; and did so deceaue others, without knowing it; To this I answeare, that in the Church there haue byn men, shedding their bloud for Christ, so euidently full of The great wis­dome of many Catholike Christians who haue suffered death in confirma­tion of the fayth of Christ. wisedom, that no reason can be giuen, why we should be­lieue of them that they were deceaued, in a mat­ter of so great weight▪ and that so far, as to loose their liues for the same. For the much interest that a man hath in any thing, doth make him looke & looke againe, what it is that he ratifyeth; nor doth a man vse to lay downe his life, in confir­mation of a truth, if he be not sufficiently certi­fyed thereof. And it is a thing notorious, that so great wisedome hath byn found among the Chri­stian people, as therein they exceed all other ge­nerations of men, no lesse then wise maisters, do ignorant schollers. And that there haue byn, not one, nor one hundred, but a mighty number of such persons, is a very great testimony of the truth of our faith; in confirmation whereof, they gaue their liues. And Let the false martyrs of foolish Iohn Fox be vnpar­tially compared with out true ones, and their basenesse, & bestia­lity, will soone ap­peare. although we read of some who also dyed in confirmation of their Errour, yet ours do incomparably exceed them, in number, vertue, and in wisedome.

CHAP. XXXIV.
That the perfect life of such as haue belieued our fayth, is a great testimony of the Truth therof; and how farre Christians haue exceeded all other Nations, in goodnesse of life.

SINCE we haue made mention of the good­nes, & vertue, which hath been found in our Christian Martyrs, it is not reason that I for­beare to let thee know, how great a testimony of their Fayth, is the perfect life of them that belieue it. Since Ano­ther ex­cellent considera­tion, of the perfe­ction of the life of many of them who professe the Chri­stian Ca­tholike Fayth. God being good, and the maker of all thinges that are good, al reason telleth vs, that God is a friend to the good; since euery one lo­ueth another that is like himselfe; & euery cause, the effect, which is produced by it. Now if he be a friend, he is to help them in their necessityes, wherof the greatest of all, is the saluation of their soules. And (c) saued they can neuer be, without the knowledge of God; nor can they know him so as to be saued by him, if he do not discouer himselfe vnto them. It therefore remaynes, that since none of these things can be denyed; & if on earth there be any such knowledge of God, No saluation without fayth which i [...] entirely, and preci­sely true. as by which mē may be saued, God giueth this to Chri­stians; since amongst them, there haue byn, and are, people of the most eleuated life, and most perfect manners, that hath beene seene, in any tyme, or in any generation.

It seemes that the Philosophers were the flower of Nature, and the very beauty thereof; where it seemeth that she employed al her strēgth towardes that which concerned liuing well, in conformity of reason. But laying aside those de­formed sinnes, which S. Hierome imputeth to the chiefe of those Philosophers; and to speake of some who appeared to carry more resemblance of vertue in them, then others did; so much do they, of the Christian Church, exceed those o­thers, as that we haue weake, and young wo­men amongst vs of more vertue then they had, who were yet, amongst them, esteemed for hero­icall men. For who amongst them, will be able to equall the courage, and [...]oy, wherewith S. Catherine. S. Agnes, S. Lucy, S. Agatha, with in­numerable others like to them, did offer them­selues to most grieuous torments, and to death it sel [...]e, for the loue of Truth, and Vertue. And if in the vertue of Fortitude which seemeth to be so much estranged from the weakenes of that sexe, these did so farre exceed those others, as well in number, as in the greatnes of the torments, and their [...]oy in suffering them; how much grea­ter will the excesse be, in Humility Charity, and other Vertues, which are not so incompatible with their sexe? And although we now giue but these, for an example or pasterne of the rest, yet thou seest the innumerable store of men, and women, who in euery particuler state, haue ser­ued our Lord, with a perfect life, in the Christian [Page 171]Church. Some of which hauing beene sublimed in this world, and abounding in al kind of riches, and humane prosperity; and then at the present, possessing much, and expecting to inherite great states, and kingdomes, haue despised all this; and to please God the more, haue chosen the life of the Crosse, in pouerty, and affliction, and in obe­dience, both to God and men. And all this, with so great testimony of vertue, both in the interi­our and exteriour, as strooke them to admiration who conuersed with them.

People there hath been in our Church, which as S. Paul sayth, hath shined in the world, like lampes of heauen; and, being compared to the rest of the world, they are found to excell them, beyond comparison; which the most obstinate person cannot deny, if he will but consider the life of a S. Paul, and of the other Apostles, and Apostoli­call men, who haue beene in the Church. And since there hath beene so great goodnes in this Christian people, as by their workes we find to be euident; what scruple can we haue to affirme, that either there is no knowledge of God on earth, or els that these men had it, as persons who were more beloued of God, and did serue themselues better of his knowledge, and employ themselues more, vpon pleasing him that gaue it. In no sort can it be sayd, that the world is with­out some such knowledge of God, as is necessary for saluation. For this were to say, that the chief creatures which God made vnder heauen, and [Page 172]for whose sake he created all thinges, should all be lost; for want of meanes which God might giue them to be saued. But God is infinitely good. God is no such thing, as that he will thut the gate of saluation against vs; nor can it stand so with the bowells of his mercy, and goodnes, as that he can be without friends, to whome euen heere, he may do great fauours, and much more in heauen.

This proofe of our Fayth, being taken from the life of Christians, was much esteemed, and recommended by the holy Apostles, in the be­ginning of the Catholike Church. Amongst whome S. Peter 1. T [...]. 3. sayth, I et women be subiect to their husbands, that so if there be any who beleecue not the word of God euen without that word they may be gayned, by the good conuersation of their wiues, behold [...]ng their holy manner of life, in the feare of God. Wher by The hero [...]call vertue of [...]ēs hue [...] doth proue the truth of their Re­ligion. the force of vertuous life doth well appeare, since it was able to conuert infi­dells; which, by the preaching of the Apostles, (though that had beene vsed with great effica­cy, and euen with working of miracles) could not be gained. S. Paul sayth, That being to goe from one place to another, he had no need that they to whome he had preached, should giue him letters of fauour to countenance him, with those others to whome he was about to preach. And he sayth to the 1. C [...]. 1. Corinthians, You are my letter, which is knowne and read by all. And this he sayth, because the vertuous manner of life that they held, (by meanes of his prea­ching, [Page 173]& labours) were a sufficient letter to de­clare who S. Paul was; and how proficable his presence was; and he sayth, That all men did know and read this letter, because any nation, how bar­barous soeuer it be, howsoeuer it vnderstand not the language of wordes, yet Good life in o­thers, is a language which the most ig­norant men aliue can vn­derstand. doth it vnder­stand the language of good example, and of the vertue which it seeth to be put in practise; and thence it is, that men grow to esteeme much, the man who hath such disciples. It is also for this, that the same Apostle sayth in another place, That seruantes, who are Christians, should serue their Lords, and maisters, with so good a will that they might in all thinges do honour, to the doctrine of Christ our Sauiour. The meaning is, that their life was to be such, as to testify, that the Christian faith and doctrine, should be held thereby to be true. And how much this point importeth, our Lord (who knoweth all thinges) did teach vs well, when (praying to his eternall Father, and interceding with him, for Christians), he sayd these words; I aske of thee that all they may be one thing, as thou O Father, art in me, and I in thee; that all they may be one, and the same thing in vs; that so the world may belieue, that thou hast sent me.

Certainly, Note and liue accordingly. this is a great verity, which heere the supreme truth hath told vs; That if we Christiās were perfect keepers of the Law which we haue (the principall commaundment where­of, is that of charity) we should cause such an ad­miration [Page 174]in men of the world, that see vs (we being equall vnto them, vnder the law of nature, and much superiour to them in vertue), that they would render themselues to vs, as the weak do to the strong, and as the low to the high; & they would belieue that God dwelleth in vs, by seing vs made able to do those things, to which their power doth not arriue; and they would giue glory to God, who is the maister of such seruantes. And then would it be fulfilled, that we should be the letter of Iesus Christ, from which all might take their lessons; and that we did set forth and commend his doctrine; and that we were a good odour to him, since we speake well of him, by occasion of the life we lead.

But Yea & euen the wickedest diuell in hell, must in his hart acknow­ledge it to be true. thou O Lord doest know, that al­though there haue byn in thy Church very ma­ny, so alwayes there are some, whose life doth shine like a great light; which euen the Infidells, (if they would) might be drawen to looke vpon, for the discouery of Truth, and so to saue them­selues; yet A wo­full thing it is to be a wicked Christian, & their damnatiō will be worse then that of In [...]i­dells. so doest thou also know, O Lord how many there are in thy Church (which con­teineth Christians both good and bad) who not only are no meanes to make infidells know, and honour thee, but rather to alienate themselues from thee: and to blind their soules more and more; and so, insteed of the honour which they should giue thee, vpon the hearing the name of a Christian, they doe more pestilently blaspheme thee. It seemeth to their deceaued iudgement, [Page 175]that he cannot be true God, or Lord, who hath seruantes that liue so ill. But thou O Lord, hast prouided a day for thy selfe, wherein thou wilt complaine of this offence, and say, My name is blasphemed, vpon your occasion, amongst the infidells; and to chastize him with seuere punishment, who in steed of gathering togeather with thee, that which was scattered, (as he ought to haue done) doth eyther scatter that which was gathe­red, or doth hinder it from being so. And Let men be as wicked as they will, God will stil be iust & good. then wilt thou make the whole world vnderstand well mough, that thou art good, though thou haue seruantes that be wicked. For the sinnes which they commit, displease thee. And thou doest forbid them by thy commaundmentes, and thou doest seuerely punish them.

CHAP. XXXV.
That the very conscience of him▪ that de [...]yreth to ob­taine vertue doth testify, that our Fa [...]th is true; and how the desire of leading an euill life doth both procure the loosing of Faith, and hinder the get­ting it.

BY how much more the witnesse of any thing in question▪ is nearer to vs▪ and well knowne by vs; so much doth his credit increase, towards the making vs belieue, that be sayth true. And therefore, since I haue [...]old thee, of some of the meanes which giue testimony of the truth of our [Page 176] Fayth; Hearken heere, to some others, and those not past, but present. And they againe are so neere thee, that they are in thy very hart, if thou wilt receaue them, and take particuler knowledge of them, as thou vsest to take of those thinges, which passe there. This is grounded vpon the word, which our Lord spake. If Ioan. 7. any man will doe the will of my Father, he shall know whether my doctrine be of God, or no. Blessed be thou O Lord, who art so assured of the iustice of this thy cause, (that is, the Truth of thy do­ctrine) that thou leauest the sentence, which is to proceed vpon it, in the hands of whosoeuer will, whether he be friend or enemy; with this only condition, That he who shall make him­selfe the Iudge thereof, will do the will of God; which is, but that he should be vertuous, and so be saued.

It is Note this well, for it is a wise and most cer­tayne truth. certaynely so, that if a man should cordially desyre to be good, both towards God, and towards himselfe, and towards his neigh­bours; and would seeke out the fittest doctrine that he could find for making himselfe such; if before such an one, I say, they should lay all the Lawes, and doctrines, which are in the whole world, both true, and false, (to none of which he already, carried any particuler affection, or passion, but did only ayme at the finding out of Truth) this man, laying aside all the rest, would take in hand the Ghospell, & doctrine of Christ, if he Accor­ding to the true sense ther­of, which is only taught by the holy Catholi­que Church. vnderstood it, as a thing which might [Page 177]addresse him better, to the end of his iust desires, then any other. And as he were practising the vertue that he aspired to, he would be making ex­perience of the efficacy of this doctrine; & how fit it were, for all that is good for the soule; and how wel it were framed for the reliefe of our ne­cessityes; and, in how short a tyme, & with how great clarity, it did help a man to be vertuous. So that such a man comming on, by the very ex­perience of the power of this doctrine, would confesse, as our Lord hath sayd, That it came from God; and he would also say, that which others sayd (when they heard Iesus Christ our Lord preaching to them) neuer did man, speake so well. And if euen they, who know not Christ by fayth; did but heare that admirable, & charitable word, which our Lord himselfe did vtter with so loud a voice, If Ioan 7 any man be thirsty, let him come to me and drinke; and if they would come, and make triall of that delicious fullnes; and so take expe­rience of this doctrine, with desire of being ver­tuous; it is certaine, that they would not remain, in their infidelity, and blindnes.

But Behold heere the most true cause why Catholik Religion is no more imbraced in En­gland. for as much as they are friendes of the world, and not of true and perfect vertue, nor do they seeke with care, the certainty of Truth, and the knowledge of God; they continue with­out hearing, & receauing it. And although they heard it, yet would it not be receaued by some; because it would be contrary to the things which they desire. And for this, our Lord sayd to the [Page 178] Pharisees, certaine wordes which I cyted once before, How 1. Ioan. 5. will you be able to belieue, since you seeke honour one of another, and seeke not the honour, which is of God alone. And not without great waight of reason, did S. Paul 1. Tim [...]. affirme, That some had lost their faith, by giuing themselues to coue­tousnes. Not that a man doth instantly loose fayth, by committing of any sinne, except heresy; but for that, a hart which is affected to thinges of the world, & disaffected from vertue; when it finds in Christian doctrine, certaine Truthes, which are contrary to the wicked desires of the same hart, and which condemneth, vnder so grieuous paynes, the thinges which it selfe desires to pra­ctise, it growes by little and little, to seeke other doctrine, which may not be of so bad tast in the mouth; nor keep such a barking against the ill affections & actions thereof. And The case of most Pro­testants, who are intel [...]g [...]. so the will, being ill inclined, is wont to be a meanes of put­ting blindnes vpon the Vnderstanding; and pre­uailes so farre at last, as to make a man giue ouer that Fayth, which cryeth out against wickednes that he may follow and belieue other doctrines, wherin he may be more at ease, and liue how he listes. And as this corrupted will, is a meanes sometymes to make him loose Fayth that hath it; so is it also a meanes to de [...]a [...]ne him, from it, that hath it not. For both these, & those, carry a fasti­dious kind of mislike, against perfect vertue; without alleaging in very deed any other cause, but only, That it is vnsauoury, or too highly [Page 179]good; & so they haue also such a mislike, against the Truth of Fayth, as being contrary to that wic­kednes which they loue.

CHAP. XXXVI.
That the admirable change which is made in the hart of sinners, and the great fauours which our Lord doth to them, who follow him with perfect vertue, and do call vpon him in their necessityes, is a great testimony to the Truth of our Fayth.

IN how much better case are they, who, with de­sire to serue God, haue chosen to imbrace this perfectiō of vertue; though al they that serue him do enioy otherwise (if they will marke it) many testimonyes, which Fayth placeth in their hart. But especially do they enioy it, who serue him, with a profiting, and proceeding vertue; many whereof were yet formerly in miserable case, and made slaues to sinne; and so passionatly affected to it, that their harts did seeme, euen to be trans­formed into the same. And that with so great de­termination to follow wickednes, that they wold passe (as we vse to say) the vory pikes, for the committing thereof But The powerfull grace which God im­parteth, in the holy Catholike Church. these miserable cap­tiues, who were so weake, in the deliuery of thē selues from so strong a tyrant, haue sometymes, by the hearing of one Sermon, other tymes, by making one confession, other tymes by some one single inspiration of God; and others by other [Page 180]meanes, which doe abound in the Catholique Church, haue found within themselues, a most powerfull and mighty hand; which putting those in captiuity who lead them captiue, drew them out of the slauery of sinne, wherein they were; and made a change of their hart, so truely changed; that many tymes, in lesse space, then of a month, yea and of a weeke, they haue been seen, to haue more abhorred wickednes, then formerly they were louers of it. Saying with their harts, I haue abhorred Psal. 118. sinne; I haue detested it; and I haue lo­ued thy law. And this they do so truly, as that they resolue not to commit a sinne, neither for life, nor death; nor any thing created, as S Paul Rom. 1. saith.

Who is he, that wrought this so strang, and happy change, in so short a tyme? Who drew wa­ter, out of so hard a rocke? Who raysed vp such a miserable dead man, bestowing such an excellent life vpon him? No other certainly, but the hand of God, who is so belieued in, and so beloued, as the Christian Church belieueth in him, and loueth him, by those meanes, which the Christian doctrine imbraceth, and teacheth. And if this manner of proceedinge with God, doe passe on, (as in many it doth) in such sort, as that (leauing all thinges) they imploy themselues wholly v­pon attending to God, who brake their chaynes; and if they began to walke, by the solitude of a spirituall life, and by that strayt way which leadeth to true life (though many tymes, they might see themselues, in so great afflictions, [Page 181]and fierce tempestes, that (as Dauid sayth) it makes such as sayle, loose their courage, and their discourse) yet by calling vpon their Iesus, who is the guid of their way; and at other tymes, by receiuing the comfort of the Sacraments; and at other tymes agayne, by hearing, or reading the word of God; or by such other meanes as are in the Church; they haue found themselues so wonderfully assisted, in their tribulation, as that (seeing the sea of their hart to be growne so still, vpon such a sudden) it hath made them say, with the Apostles, Matt. 8. Who is this, to whom the sea, and the winds obey? Certainely, this is the ho­ly Sonne of God.

S. Bernard relateth, how by experience he had found many tymes, that the name of Iesus, being cordially called vpon, was a remedy and cure, of all the infirmities of the soule; and that which the Saint did say, was approued in him, by experience. The same hath hapned to many others, both before & after him; among whom S. Hierome may be one; who is worthy of all cre­dit. He relateth, (as I haue sayd before) that se­ing himselfe in tribulation of the flesh, without meeting with remedy, in any thing that he had thought vpon, & without knowing, what more to do, did find it out, by casting himselfe, at the feete of Iesus Christ, and by calling vpon him with deuour prayer. Whereupon his tempest re­ceiued such a calme, that he seemed to himselfe, as S. Hie­rome, in Extasis. if he were euen assisting among the quires [Page 182]of Angels. For Note. the fauour which God is wont to do, doth not only remooue the tribulatiō that a man is in, (which may happen sometymes, by the turning of his thoughts some other way, or by such other naturall meanes as that) but it is a fauour which God doth, whereby he planteth such a disposition in the mind, as is directly con­trary to that which was felt before. Now this change and perfect deliuery, and that vpon such a sudden; is not in the power of any man to giue himselfe; as Or els let him neuer trust me. he that shall try it, will con­fesse.

From abroad it cometh; from God it cometh; and from such other Christian meanes it cometh; and so experience is taken, of that which S. Paul sayd, That Christ Iesus crucified, to them that were called by God, was the strength of God; and the wise­dome of God; Because, they calling vpon him in the day of tribulation, he giueth them light, and force; that so, ouercomming all impedimentes, they may proceed in their way, and sing there­in, as Psal. 1 [...]7. Dauid doth, Great is the glory of our Lord. And so they find in themselues, that which the same Prophet Psal. 55. sayth, In whatsoeuer day I called vpon thee, I haue knowne, that thou art my [...]od. For to remedy them so speedily, and so powerfully, is a great testimony, and motiue to proue to them, that God is the true God, and that he hath care of them. And here we speake not of celestial visions, or reuelations, which may rather passe amongst maracles, but only those things which [Page 183]are more ordinary; and which may be subiect to better proofe.

CHAP. XXXVII.
Of the many, and great good things, which God work­eth in the soule that followeth perfect vertue; and that this is a great proofe, that our Fayth is true; because that, did teach vs meanes, how to obtaine those graces.

NOT only do they, who trauell diligently in the way of perfect vertue, enioy the bene­fit of being deliuered by Christ, from the dan­gers which present themselues; but moreouer, do they obtaine, and possesse such graces in their soule, as that we may say to them, and that with much truth, Luc. 7. The Kingdom of God is with­in you. Which as S. Paul Rom. 14. sayth, doth consist, in hauing with in ones selfe, iustice, and peace, and ioy in the holy Ghost. And so these persons, are so affe­ctioned, and such louers of that which is iust, and good, as that, if the lawes of vertue which are written in bookes, were lost; we should find them written in their hartes. Not because they haue them without In their memory. booke, but for that the re­solute loue of their hartes, doth say the selfe same thing, which the Law sayth exteriourly. Their hart, being already so transformed into the loue of goodnesse and to worke it with so much dili­gence and delight; as that to follow that, to [Page 184]which their hart inclineth, is to follow vertue; and to fly from vice; they being made a liuing Law, and a kind of measure of humane actions, which euen Aristotle himselfe was ayming at. And from hence doth spring a certayne ioy, and contentment, so complete, as none doth know, but he that feeleth it. For as much as Isaias Isa. 4 [...]. sayth, That the peace of such persons, is as a riuer, & as the very gulfes of the sea. And S. Paul Philip. 4. sayth, That this peace of God, doth exceed all vnderstanding. And S. Peter saith, That this ioy cannot be recounted. A hidden manna it is, which is giuen to him that manfully ouercometh himselfe, and they only know it, who receiue it.

And from whom now, doth this so perfect vertue proceed; and this rest of mind which is the earnest-penny, and introduction to eternall felicity. Certainely it is not by meanes of the Di­uell. For Note. although sometymes, the Diuell, (as we haue sayd), haue counselled some to doe some particuler good, that by meanes of those counsells, he might gaine credit to himself, wher­by the better to deceiue them afterward; yet to make a man perfectly good, and a fulfiller of the law of nature (which cannot be denied to be good, since God is the authour of nature it selfe) is a worke, which neither the Diuell doth, not can effect, who cannot giue that goodnes, which himselfe hath not.

Nor yet is it the worke of man alone; for as much as to haue vertue, and much more to haue [Page 185]perfect vertue, wherby God may perfectly be ser­ued, is the guift of the Father of lights, from whome euery perfect guift descendes. And See therefore how vn­iustly the Catholike doctrine is charged by the Caluinists to be a doctrine of pre­sumptiō. the same man doth find by experience; more then once, that he is deliuered from sinne, out of which he was not able to depart; and that he is fauoured with cer­taine graces, which it was not in his power to compasse. Since therefore this perfect vertue, commeth neither from the Diuell; nor from the spirit of man; it remayneth, that we conclude it to be infused by God, when The perfection is only to be found in the ho­ly Catho­lique Church. he is inuoked, & serued, as the Catholike Church doth teach. And man findeth by experience, that this vertue commeth to him, by the meanes of Fayth, in con­firmation of the truth thereof; for out of a lye, such profit of light or knowledg could not come, for the procuring of perfect Vertue; and for the inuoking of God, to fauour him in the pursuite thereof.

S. Paul vseth this proofe, when he spea­keth thus to the Galathians; I desire only that you will tell me, The holy Ghost which you receaued, was it by meanes of the workes of the Law, or els by means of fayth? As if he should haue sayd, Since I, prea­ching Fayth to you, and not the old law; and you be­lieuing it, and disposing of your selues thereunto, by your will, did receaue the holy Ghost; why do you now returne to the old Law, since you find by experience, that without it, and by meanes of Fayth, and of pen­nance, vpon the receauing of Baptisme, you haue recea­ued the holy Ghost, with the graces & benefits therof? [Page 186]And so (to proue the thing which we haue in hand) That perfect verene, which is obteyned by the right vse of Fayth, and by those other meanes which it teacheth vs, doth giue testimony, that it is true; because, towardes the obtaining of so good a thing, it was a meanes, and it taught vs also, other meanes. And so these persons, who are so rich through the graces which come to them by Christ Iesus, are so adherent to him, & so enriched by him, that they haue no thought of looking for the Messias whom the Iewes expect; nor of enioying that paradise, which Mahomet doth entice men by. For as they despise those be­stiall delights of the flesh, which Mahomet in his paradise doth promise; and those other transitory benefits of the earth, which the Iewes, by their Messias do expect; so they willingly take their leaue both of the one and the other; howsoeuer they be intreated to the contrary. And they re­member how it was prophesied, that in the tyme of the Messias, They Ezech. 14. & 16. Ierem. 31. should know, that our Lord, was God; by his breaking the chaynes of the y [...]kes of men; and that God, would giue men new hartes; and that he would write his Law, in the very howells of them, that would receaue it. Now because they make very great coniectures, that they haue a part in these blessings, it is a testimony to them that Christ is come.

By these and other effects, which cannot be related, and which they haue within themselues, they are so full of ioy, and peace, and confidence, [Page 187]in Iesus Christ, as that, if men should tell them of another Christ that were Matt. 14. in the desert, or in the secret closets of the house; or that he were farre off or neere hand; they would neuer bestow the seeking of him. For since the true Christ is but one and that they find the conditions of being true, in him, in whom they do belieue; with the same fayth wherby they accept the one, they reiect the rest. But Note. yet I say not this, to the end thou shouldest thinke, that Christians belieue by the only experimētal motiues which they find with­in themselues; for they only belieue through faith, which is infused by God, as heer after I will shew. But this I haue only sayd, that thou mayst know the many motiues, that we haue to belieue, since we are treating of this subiect. And one of them, is, The experiments which perfect men do find in their soule; which since they are thinges that passe vp and downe in their hart, thou art not to looke for them in bookes, or in the liues of others; but in thy owne priuate conscience, by striuing to attayne perfect vertue. That so, as I was say­ing in the beginning, thou mayst haue witnesses both neere thee, and well knowne by theo, as remayning vvithin thee; and that thou mayst fullfill what the Scripture sayth, Drinke the water of thyne owne Cisterne; and thou shalt see such meruailes vvrought within thy selfe; as shall take from thee, all appetite of seeking any, vvithout thy selfe.

CHAP. XXXVIII.
That if the power and greatnes of the worke of Be­lieuing, be well pondered, we shall find great testi­mony, to proue, that it is much reason, that the vn­derstanding of man do serue God, by imbracing of Fayth.

HE A worthy, & a wise discourse. that had light to know, and a steedy hand to weigh, the very worke of belieuing, vvould be in no necessity of other witnesses, to­wards the receauing thereof; but euen therein, vvould find beauty to make him loue it, & reason to imbrace it. For who is he, that will not con­ceaue it to be wholy fit, that a creature should serue his Creatour with all his power; & vvithal his meanes? And so also, do all men know, that although we owe him this seruice, withall that we haue; yet specially since God is a spirit, the prime seruice that we are to do him, is with our spi­rit, through the liknes which it hath to God. And because in our spirit, there is reason, and there is a will; and that it cannot be denyed, but that a man oweth God seruice by his will; for the same cause the seruice of the vnderstanding, must not be denyed. For there is no reason that man shold serue God with the lesser facultyes that he hath within him, and not serue him with the cheife, which are his vnderstanding, and his will.

Nor yet is it reason, that Note well. since the ser­uice [Page 189]that the will doth to God, is by obeying him, the vnderstanding should remaine without obe­dience to God. And as the obedience of the will, consisteth, in denying a mans owne will, for do­ing of the will of God; so the seruice which the vnderstanding is to do him, is to deny it selfe, for the belieuing of the truth of God. For if the ser­uice of the vnderstanding, did consist in concea­uing, or consenting to any thing, which it might be able to reach, by the only hand of reason; ey­ther it would not deserue the name of seruice, or at least but seruice of an inferiour rancke; since therein, there were no obedience. Or if there were any obedience, it would be but of the will, which God might commaund to impose vpon the vn­derstanding, that it should thinke this, or that.

But, to the end, that the seruice, and obe­dience of the vnderstanding, may be proper only to it selfe; it is necessary that it consent to some­what which it selfe doth not vnderstand; and thereby, it doth truly abase, and deny it selfe; and obey, and make it selfe captiue, and do reuerence, to the supreame God. Fulfilling that, which S. Paul 1. Cor. 10. requireth, That we must captiuate our Vnderstanding, to the seruice of Fayth; which, in another place, is stiled, The obe­dience of faith So Note this well. also, as the goodnes of God exacteth at our hands, that we loue him; and his liberality requireth that we hope for mercy from him; in the same manner, doth his truth require, to be belieued; since there is no lesse reason for the [Page 190]one of these, then for the other. And as the obe­dience which we giue to God by our loue, presup­poseth that we deny the loue of our selues; and as the hope we haue in him, is to worke by an inde­pendance vpon our selues; in the same manner, the obedience which we are to yeald to his truth, is performed, by a departure from our owne see­ming; and a beliefe of what he affirmeth, with greater constancy, then if our selues did vnder­stand it. For otherwise, what should one be be­holding for to another, in belieuing that which that other sayth, not because he sayth it, but be­cause himselfe doth so vnderstand it. But, belie­uing beyond vnderstanding, deserueth prayse, as carrying difficulty with it; as one would trust without a pawne; or walke without a staffe; or loue an enemy, for Gods sake. If therefore, it be done for God, it will be true vertue, and worthy to be offered to God; and to receiue a reward at his hands. And since the will of a man is dedica­ted to God; and sanctified, by the abnegation of it selfe; the vnderstanding must not rest, as if it were profane, by belieuing it selfe, without obe­dience to God. Since in heauen, it is to be made happy, by the cleare vision of his face. For as S. Augustine sayth, the reward of fayth, is to See; so that no discourse of reason will permit, that the vnderstanding should forbeare to do seruice here on earth; now the seruice, which is proper to it, is by belieuing.

CHAP. XXXIX.
Wherein answere is giuen to an obiection which some make against our Fayth; by saying, that God tea­cheth things, which are too high.

SOME man may say, being mooued eyther by these, or other reasons; That it is fit for a man to belieue, that which he vnderstandeth not, because God sayth it. But that, since this may be performed by belieuing diuers other things, there is no cause why yet we shold belieue that, which is belieued by Christians. But tell me, O you blind men; what is the fault you find, in that which we Christians do belieue. And if your selues know not how to say what you thinke, I will tell you what it is. The Note, and take heed. articles which of the height of God are to be belieued, do seeme so high thinges to you, that euen because they are so very high, you belieue them not: And the low or meane things which we belieue of the humility of God, are so very low; that euen for that very reason, you hold them not to be worthy of God, and so neither do you belieue them. For tell me, in that highest mystery of the most holy Trinity, what other thing doth offend you; but that it is so incomprehensible; and that the sight of your vnderstanding, being beaten back againe vpon your selues (by the A bysse of that infinite light, and the height of such a mystery) you shut your [Page 192]eyes, and with saying, How can this be? you for­beare to belieue it; whereas it were agreable to all reason, that we should thinke most highly of the most high▪ and that we should ascribe to him the most high being▪ and the most excellent being, to which our vnderstanding could arriue. And whē we shal haue arriued to things very high, we must y [...] belieue, that in him there are st [...]l things higher; & which do wholy exceed our capacity.

This is to honour God, and to hold him for God, and for a great one. For if our Vnderstan­ding could reach to all the height of God, God would be little; and consequently he could not be God. For he could not be, vnles he were infinite; and the infinite is incomprehensible by any thing that is finite. And since it is better, that there be in God, a supreme Communication, (since supre­me Communication, is due to a supreme goodnes) and if this must also be, it must be, by communi­cating the very, true, and totall essence of it selfe; and so there will be in God, supreme fecundity, as it is fit for God; and not sterility, which is a thing very far from him; as he sayth, Isa. 1 [...]. by Isaias; I who giue power to others that they may en­gender, shall I perhaps remaine barren?

And although by making of Angells, and men, and the whole world, he communicateth many fauours to it, yet neither is this any such fecundity, nor a Communication of an infinit Goo [...], because he giueth not his essence. But he only gi­ueth them, the being and vertue which they hau [...] [Page 193]nor shall God leaue to be a solitary God, notwith­stāding the many creaturs that accompany him, since betweene him and them, there is an infinite distance. Iust so, as Adam would not haue fayled to be solitary, notwithstanding the many beastes, and other creatures which were in the world, how neere soeuer they had beene to him. And, that man might not remain alone, God gaue him a companion; which might hold resemblance and equality, with him. So God is not solitary; but in the vnity of Essence, there are three persons. Nor is he couetous, or barren, since there is a communication of an infinite Deity. Neither must thou forbeare to belieue that so it is, although thou know not how it commeth to be so; since euen because it is so high, it carryeth a kind of trace, or sent, to be a thing of God. And because it is better to be so, then not; euen for this very reason, it is a thing which it is fit for God to haue; and that so we should belieue it, since of God, we are to thinke, according to the greatnes of God; that is, the highest that possibly we can imagine.

CHAP. XL.
Wherein answere is made to thē ▪ who obiect against the receauing of our Faith, that it teacheth meane and low thinges of God; and how in these meane things which God teacheth, most high glory is contayned.

NEITHER yet, is there any reason to stum­ble at the humility, which the most high [Page 194]God took vpon him; abasing himselfe to become man, to liue in pouerty, and to dye vpon a Crosse. For these workes are not only not to be sayd vn­worthy of God, but they are most worthy, if they be well vnderstood. Indeed, if he had abased him­selfe because he could not chuse; or if, by that a­basement, he had lost the height which he had be­fore; or if he had been moued to it, by any inte­rest of such an abasement. But neither did he leaue to be what he was, by taking that which he was not; nor came he from heauen to earth, by any constraint; nor was he induced by regard of profit; since God cannot increase in being rich: But Note this well discourse, and learne to loue God grea­tly, by it. he was moued to it, by his owne only goodnes; and by the loue, which he bare to men; and the desire which he had, to recouer them by such meanes, as might be, of most glory to him­selfe, and of most aduantage to vs.

And such was the meanes he tooke, by ma­king himselfe man, and dying vpon a Crosse For there is not a greater signe of loue, then that a man should dy for his friends. Which loue so ex­cellent, did not spring from any desert of theirs, but from his owne excellent goodnes. So that his lownesse, and his death, do not argue, in him, a­ny want of power or goodnesse: For as much as he being omnipotent, and wholy wise, might haue giuen vs remedy by many meanes besides this; but it argueth in him, an immense excesse of loue, and goodnes; and this so much the more, [Page 195]as God who loueth, and suffereth this, is the grea­ter; and as that which he suffered was more grie­uous, and painefull; and they for whome he suf­fered, were the more vnworthy, and base. And since in louing such persons, his excellent good­nesse is manifested; this worke is to be called a great height, since in spirituall things, high, and good, are all one; and when it is the more good, so much the more great, and high it is.

And since the greatest honour which we can do any man, is to hold him for good, more then for being valiant, or wise (for as much as no mā; who is sensible of honour, doth not so desire it) it is euident, that since these workes, do ma­nifest his goodnes and loue, more then all the rest; they giue him consequently, more honour; and they giue it better, then all the rest. And In true ac­count, no­thing doth so exalt Christ our Lord as his abase­ment. if in the opinion of ignorant persons, the abasement which God hath made of himselve, take honour from his dignity, and height; it ought in the iudg­ment of wise men, to extoll the honour of his goodnes, and consequently of his height and great­nes; and so he looseth neither the one, nor the o­ther.

And not only, doth his goodnes shine in these workes, more then others, but so also doth his wisedome and power, & other his most wonderfull attributes, appeare therin. For amongst all the workes which God hath wrought, or is to work, there is none equall, in being moruailous; nor is there to be found so great a miracle, as that God, [Page 196]should make himselfe man; and suffer afterward for man. And whosoeuer belieueth not this, doth his best, to take from God, the greatest ho­nour he hath; and greater then if he should take the honour that is due to him, for all the other workes which he hath made, or is to make in Since the Crea­tion of the world. Tyme. Consider well of this, and thou shalt dis­cerne how the omnipotency, and wisedome of Goth, doth shine in making two so different ex­tremes, to meet in one, as are God and man in the vnity of one person. And note, that his power is more declared, in combatting and conquering our sinnes, and death, by the armes of our weak­nes; then if he had ouercome them with the wea­pons of his owne omnipotency, as we sayd be­fore, whylest we were speaking of despaire. And An excellent discourse. consider, that when God continued in his greatnesse, he had but a small people that serued him, and the same went also dayly from him, to adore strange Gods; and euen when it did not so, it serued him yet with much wea­kenes. But when God abased himselfe, so far as to be man, and to dy for him; it made such deep impression, vpon the minds of men, as that they, who were high, did abase themselues; and the weake, became strong; & the wicked good; and finally there grew so great a change ouer the world, as well in the destruction of idolatry, as in the renouation of life and manners; that the accomplishment of the word, which our Lord spake, was plainely seene, lo. m. 1 [...]. When I shallbe [Page 197]exalted from the earth, and placed on the Crosse, I will draw all things to my selfe. And so it appeares, that he obteyned that victory ouer the hartes of men, by basenesse, weakenes, tormentes, and death; which he obteyned not, whylest he re­mained in the height of his Maiesty. And thus was that fullfilled, which S. Paul t. Cor. 1. sayth, The weaknes of God, is more thē the strength of men. And so it also appeareth, that God doth not only gaine the honour of goodnesse, but of wisedome & power also, by taking vpon him our basenesse, and by working that thereby, which he wrought not by his greatnes.

For this it is, that S. Paul Rom. 1. sayth, That he is not ashamed to preach the Ghospell, since it is the vertue of God, for the sauing of men. For although this humanity, hunger, dishonour, torment, & death, be truly affirmed of God, yet there is no cause for a Christian to be ashamed thereof; since by mea­nes of these thinges, God obteined the conquest, ouer other thinges, that were so mighty, as are sinne and death; and procured that man might ob­tayne the grace of God, and his Kingdome, which are the greatest things, that could arriue to man. Hereby God gained more honour, then by ha­uing created heauen, and earth, and all that is therein. And therefore this worke, is, for the eminency, and excellency of it, called the work of God; as our Lord sayd, This is my foode, to do the will of my Father, in my finishing his worke, which is the redemption of men. Not, but that God hath [Page 198]wrought other workes; but because the In [...]er­nation, and redemption which follow hereupon, is the greatest worke of them all; and that which he prizeth most, as the thing whereby he recei­ueth most honour.

For The same ex­cellent discourse continu­ed. although to haue scourged Egypt, for the loue of his people; and to haue drawne it out from thence, & to haue conducted it through the desert, did giue honour to God, as Isaias saith; yet already thou canst not chuse but see, which is the more high and heroicall act of loue, for God to whip his enemies, for the loue of his people; or to suffer himselfe to be scourged in his owne flesh, for the loue both of his domestiques, and of strangers, and both of his friends, and of his enemies. One thing it is, for God to carry his children through the desert, like an eagle that would teach his yong ones how to fly; taking them vp vpon his shoulders, when they are weary, that so they might vnweary themselues, whylest yet God groweth not weary thereby; and another thing it is, to ouerloade his owne shoulders with a heauy Crosse, (which did euen flea them of their skin) togeather with all the sinnes of the whole world, which like the beame of a wyne-presse, did straine him so far, as to depriue him of life vpon the same Crosse; and this, to the end that men might be out of paine.

Who is he that will not discerne, that this was a most excellent heroicall act of loue, the like whereof was neuer seene; which gaue more [Page 199]honour to God, then all that was past. That o­ther, was, to him, but a common thing; and there was no need of so great loue, for the doing of it. But this later, was a busines that would haue byn imbraced by few; and hardly wil there be found a man vpon earth, who would suffer himself to be publikely whipped, or put to death, for any good man, or any frend. And yet, if such a man could be found, there would still be no comparison to be made, betweene that, and the much that our Lord did loue, and suffer for vs. For he hath no equal. Nor is it to be greatly mer­ua [...]led at, if a Lion carry himselfe like a Lion; but that a Lion, should be content to suffer like a Lambe; and that the only cause therof, should be his loue; this is a busines of a strang extent, and worthy of eternall honour.

And since in former tymes, they sayd, Let Exod. 15. vs sing vnto our Lord, for he hath byn magni­fied, in a glorious manner; Let vs also say, with a most profound gratitude, Let vs sing vnto our Lord who hath byn magnifyed, in a most humble man­ner. For as much, as formerly, God did neither abase himselfe, nor take paines in the ease which he gaue vs; nor, although he imparted riches, did he impouerish himselfe; but here he impoue­rished himselfe, he did sweat; yea he abased him­selfe to death; and death of the Crosse; to raise his seruantes from sinne, and to conduct them to heauen; and he preuailed in his enterprize; and that which Isaias Isa. 55. sayd, was fulfilled, that in­steed [Page 200]of the little shrubbe, there should grow the Firre­tree; and insteed of the nettle, there should grow the myrtle. And that our Lord should be renowned, by an eternall token, which shall neuer be taken away. For the honour which God did gayne, in placing of of this signe, which is the Crosse, and to dy there­on; and to make men good of bad; shall last for euer, and there shall none be able to ouerthrow it.

CHAP. XLI.
That not only the glory of our Lord doth shine in the humble thinges, of God, which our Faith tea­cheth, but also our owne great profit, our strength, and vertue.

NOT He stil prosecu­teth the same ex­cellēt dis­course in an excel­lent man­ner. only doth the honour of God, shine after an excellent manner, in the workes of his humanity, and humility; but from thence also, doth result the great profit, and glory of man; whome nothing doth so much exalte, as that God, hath put himselfe into Brotherhood with him. Nor is there any thing, which doth so much strengthen his hart, against the swooning affli­ctions which sinne causeth in it; as to see, that God died, for the remedy thereof; and that he gaue himselfe to man, as his owne. Nor is there any thing, which can so mooue him to loue God, as to see himselfe beloued by him, euen to the death; nor to make a man despise prosperity, or [Page 201]suffer aduersity, nor to humble himselfe to God, and to his Neighbour; nor indeed to any good thing, be it great or smal, as to see God abased, & humaned, & that he was pleased, to passe through these thinges; giuing vs commandements to per­forme; examples to behold; and strength to go through. And since this way of remedying our humility, and basenes, turneth more to the glory of God, and to the good of men; it is a signe, that this is a worke of God; since in that which God worketh, he pretendeth the manifestation of his owne glory, and mans good. And therefore he that either denyeth this worke, or hindreth it, is an enemy of God, and of all mankind. Since thereby he will depriue God of the greatest ho­nour, which, by his workes, can come to him; and man of the greatest glory and benefit, that can be imagined. And since he declareth himself, as an enemy both to God and man, it is but rea­son, that he be punished, and that with eternall death in hell. And the answere that he will be able to giue, when God shall aske him this questi­on. Why Read this with great at­tention. didst thou not belieue those high things of me? must be this, Because, O Lord, they seemed so high to me, that I did not thinke thou hadst been so high. And being asked, why he did not belieue those mysteryes of his humanity and humility, since they were the testimonyes of his goodnes & of his loue, he must answere, That he did not thinke the loue, and goodnes of our Lord, to haue beene so great, that he could find in his hart, to do, and suffer so [Page 202]much for the loue of men. So that he stumbleth both vpon the high and vpon the low. And the roote of all, is, because he thinketh basely of God. And that he tooke his height, and his goodnes to be a limitted kind of thinge. Which root, and that which proceeds thereof, shall iustly burne in the fire of hell, as being iniurious to the most high God, whom it doth diminish, and confine, with▪ in a certaine narrow compasse.

How much better answere shall he make, who sayth, I belieued, O Lord of thy highnesse, and of thy goodnes, all that possibly I could; because I held thee O Lord, to be infinite in all thinges. And let it not please thee, that thy workes should seeme ill to me, because they contayne an excesse of goodnes and loue towards me: as it doth to the infidelity of some, who find no other fault in thee, but that thou art so very good, and so amorous to mankind. It being indeed, but reason, that for this goodnes, we should come to thee, and should take thee for our God, since euery one, O Lord, had rather, that thou shouldest be a [...]ouing Father, and a pardoner, then a seuere iudge, who would make men tremble, by chastizing them in rigorous manner. And if the fashion of Gods treating with mankind, and of redressing our miseries, were put into the hand euen of a man, he could chuse no other then that which God chose, as most ho­nourable to himselfe, most vsefull to vs, and full of all happy sweetnes.

CHAP. XLII.
Wherein it is proued, that the Truth of our Fayth is infallible as well in respect of them that haue prea­ched it as of them who haue receaued it; and of the manner how it was receaued.

LET vs adde to that which hath been sayd, how This considera­tion alone may suf­fice to proue the vndoub­ted diui­nity of Christ our Lord. this Fayth, and beliefe was receaued in the world; not by force of armes; nor by fa­uour of men nor by humane wisedome; but that the Truth of God, fought single, by meanes of a few Fisher men, without knowledge, or counte­nance, against Emperours, and against Priests, and against the whole wisedome of mankind. And it proued to be victorious; by making them quit their old, and false, beliefe: and by inducing them to entertayne a Truth, which was so supe­riour to reason, and that to be so cordially imbra­ced. For to giue so firme credit to thinges so high, is a great wonder of God; as also it is, that the same men, who first did murther those that belieued, should suffer themselues afterward to be murthered, for the Truth of the same thinges; and that, with greater strength and loue, then formerly they disbelieued them; and then they persecuted others. And withall, there was a law preached to them, & most pure commandments giuen them, so much against the haire of the in­clination of their harts; as that they could not [Page 204]thinke of things, which carryed greater contradi­ction to one another, then the law of the Ghospel, & the disposition which man hath to sinne; as S. Paul sayth; The law is spirituall, but I am carnal, sold vnder sinne. And notwithstanding al this the same law was receaued, & by the same vertue of Christ Iesus, their harts, and their workes, were so re­newed towardes the accomplishing thereof, as that it did euidently appeare, that he who former­ly had created men in their naturall being, was the same who by his vertue, did renew them.

And A wise and wor­thy con­templati­on. if this should haue beene preached amongst the bestiall people of Arabia, where Mahomet did preach his lyes; or amongst men like to them, who were as easy to be deceiued, as they vse to be who seeke, and who carry lies, some suspition might be had of such beliefe. But what shall we say; This Truth was preached in I [...]wry, where the knowledge of God, and his scri­ptures were: in Greece, where was the top of humane wisedome; and in Rome, where was the Empire, and gouernoment of the world. And in all these places, though it were persecuted, yet in the end it was belieued; and the triumphant title of the Crosse was verifyed, being written in H [...] ­bre [...], Greeke, and Latin; whereby it was giuen to be vnderstood, that in those tongues, which were the principall of the world, Christ was to be confessed, for King.

If therefore such as they, belieued, vpon suffi­cient motiues, it is reason that we follow them; [Page 205]and if there were any want of humane motiues, it is playne that they were led to it by light from God, for as much as, being people so aduised, and so affected, to their owne ancient beliefe; & so strong in power of armes, such a deep plant of Faith could not haue byn so low rooted, in a people so contrary to this Truth; if the powerfull hand of God had not cooperated therewith.

S. Augustine obseruing this, sayth, That he, who seing that the world belieueth, will not yet be­lieue or demaundes new miracles, for that purpose; he himselfe is a prodigious, and fearfull miracle; since he refuseth to follow, where so many, so noble, and so wise men, haue gone before; and which they haue im­bra [...]ed with so great constancy. Most iust cause haue we to do this, who by the grace of God are Christians. For as much as since the world was a world, it neuer had, appearing in it, a man of such doctrine, and of so heroicall vertue, and of so wonderfull, and miraculous works, as Christ Iesus, our Lord; who preached himself to be true God; and Plaine proofes of the Diui­nity of Christ our Lord, and the nobility and san­ctity of the Ca­tholique fayth. did prooue it, by diuine scripture; and by a multitude of miracles; and by the testi­mony of S Iohn Baptist, who was a witnesse auowed by all. And the same hath also byn prea­ched since, and proued by a multitude of miracles, in the Christian Church. And there hath neuer appeared any Fayth, which doth so honour God as this of his; nor any law which doth so teach men how to serue him, as doth the ghospel; which if a man could well vnderstand, no other [Page 206]motiue would be needfull, for the making of a man belieue. Neither haue there byn seene in the world, men of so great sanctity, as they of the Christian common weath; nor haue there byn euer preached, so great and so high rewards, for them that follow vertue; nor so horrible threates against men of vice; in testimony, that our God is a great friend to goodnesse, and an enemy of wickednes. Nor haue there byn wrought in the whole world, so many, and so great miracles, in confirmation of any opinion, as in confirmation of this Fayth Which if it were not true, it would be v [...]ry iniurious to the honour of the true God; since it ascribed an equality, and vnity of es­sence, with God himselfe, to a man. Nor would he haue suffered it to continue such a number of yeares; nor would he so seuerely haue punished the people of the Iewes, for hauing crucifyed such a man; nor would he haue wrought so ma­ny, and so great miracles in confirmation of this beliefe. So that we may with reason say to God, as Richardus doth; If we be deceaued, in that which we belieue, God hath deceaued vs. For as much as this Truth hath▪ of it selfe, so much cleere eui­dence; and such effects haue followed, and such miracles haue byn wrought, in confirmation thereof; that other then God, could not worke them. But as god is far from being a deceauer, so in this, are we far from being deceaued. Glory be to God for euer.

CHAP. XLIII.
That such is the greatnesse of our Fayth, that none of the aforesayd motiues, nor any other, that can be deliuered, are sufficient to make a man belieue with this diuine Fayth; vnles our Lord doe incline a man to belieue by particular fa­uour.

HITHERTO, thou hast heard some of the reasons, which may incline a man to find, that the Catholike Fayth is true, & to satisfy any man, that should charge vs, as if we were light in belieuing, since we haue more [...]otiues, then any Nation of the world. But with all this, assure thy selfe, that so great is the height of the Chri­stian Fayth, that although a man should haue, both these and other motiues, which might be thought of; and although amongst the rest, he shold haue also this other, to see miracles wroght in confirmation of the Fayth, with his owne eyes of flesh; yet Faith, is the gift of God a­lone. such a man shall not be able, by his owne strength, to belieue, as a Christian must, and as God commandeth him to belieue For, the teaching hereof, dependeth vpon an in­teriour Maister; infusing Fayth into the vnder­standing: whereby a man is taught, and fortified towards this beliefe, as Christ sayth, That it is written in the Isa. 54. Prophets, That Ioan. 6. all shalbe taught by God. And the same Lord, which S Peter had [Page 208]confessed for the true sonne of God, and for the Messias promised in the law, gaue him to vnder­stand, that he was not to thanke himselfe, but to acknowledge that Fayth and confession, as the guift of God; and he sayd, Plessed Mat. 16. art thou, Simon the sonne of Ionas; for flesh and bloud hath not reuealed these thinges to thee, but my Father which is in heauen And in another place, he sayth, All Ioan. 6. they who heare, and learne of my Father, come to me.

A soueraigne Schoole is this, where God the Father, is he that teacheth; and the doctrine which is taught, is the Fayth of Iesus Christ his sonne; and in that, we are to walke, by the paces of Fayth, and Loue. This Fayth must not wholy rest, vpon whatsoeuer motiues or reasons that may be brought; for whosoeuer belieueth only vpon them, doth not belieue in such sort, as that his vnderstanding is so persuaded, as to admit no place for doubt, or scruple. But the faith which God infuseth, doth rest vpon the diuine Truth; and maketh one belieue more firmely, then if he saw it with his very eyes, and touched it with his very hands, and with greater certainty, then, That foure are more, then three, or the like, which the vnderstanding, seeth things with so great cla­rity, as to haue no difficulty therein, nor ability to doubt thereof, though it would. Then doth a man say, to all the motiues which induced him to be­lieue, as they of Samaria, sayd to that Samaritan woman.

No longer now do we belieue, for that which thou saydst; for our selues haue seene, and known that this is the Sauiour of the world. But Note. although they say we haue knowne; yet do not thou vnder­stād, that they who belieue, haue that kind of cla­rity of euidēce, which the Philosophers cal Science. For (as before hath been expressed) neither can the vnderstanding arriue, by the reason thereof, to haue clarity in thinges of Fayth; nor can fayth haue euidence; for so it should not be fayth; nor would there be any merit in it. It is true, that fayth, is sayd to be a kind of sight; and that it is in the vnderstanding; but because it is not, with this clarity of euidence, S. Paul sayth, That we now see as by a glasse, but heereafter, we shall see, in heauen, face to face. But the Samaritans say, that they know Christ to be the Sauiour of the world, to giue vs to vnderstād, That they belieue it with so great firmenes, as that which they do most clear­ly know; yea and much more then so. For (accor­ding to what we haue sayd) he that imbraceth the fayth, being infused by God, belieueth it be­cause it is affirmed by the Truth of God. And The reason of the infalli­bility of Fayth, & the great extent thereof. now because this Truth, is infinit, and more cer­taine then all other Truths (since by the partici­pation thereof, all other thinges receaue their strength of truth) such a belieuer is so assured, that he cannot be deceaued in what he belieueth, as he is sure that God cannot faile to be true; which certainty, is the greatest of all others whatsoeuer. And this maketh a man remayne so full of satis­factiō, [Page 210]in this kind, that there passeth not so much as a thought in his mind, against this fayth; or if any passe, it passeth on so quickely, as that it put­teth him to little paine. And if he be combatted by scruples, or vayne thoughtes, yet is he full of repose, and quietnes in the interiour part of his vnderstanding; for his beliefe is built vpon fine and firme stone, which is Truth it selfe, which he belieueth for the very Truth, and not vpon other motiues. Therfore can neither winds, nor waters, nor riuers, driue it downe. And if thou meruaile, that in the vnderstanding of a man, who is so various, and changeable in his opinions, & who with so little firmenesse doth settle himselfe vpon the ground of reason, there is yet in him so great a certainty, and such a setled & firme con­stancy, that neither by meanes of argument, or torment, or example of others that loose their fayth; nor for any thing, either high, or low, he can be made to stirre from his beliefe, I say that euen this may make thee know, That this busi­nes, and this building, is no effect of our force, which cannot reach so farre.

A guift of God it is, as S. Paul sayth, which can neither be inherited, nor merited, not pur­chased by humane strength; that no man may glory to haue it of himselfe; but let them be faythfull, in knowing that it is the fauour of God; and giuen vs for his Sonne, Christ Iesus sake; as S. Peter sayth, You were made faythfull by him Do not ther­fore meruaile, that vpon the miserable sand of [Page 211]mans vnderstāding, so firme a building is erected; For our Lord affirmeth thus, It is the worke of God, that you belieue in him, whome he hath sent. So that as God conducteth man to a supernaturall end, which is to see him clearely in heauen; so was he not content, that man should belieue in him, as meerely a man, by the force of motiues, miracles, and other reasons. But raysing him vp, aboue himselfe, and giuing him supernaturall force wherewith to belieue, not with doubt, & scruple, as a meere man would do; but with certainty, & security, as becommeth the Mysteryes of God. And heereby we vnderstand, That no man can call vpon Christ Iesus, but in the Holy Ghost. For al­though it be not necessary, that for belieuing, a man must be in state of grace, (as heereafter I will shew) yet can it not be done without the in­spiration of the Holy Ghost; For there, S. Paul the Apostle, is speaking of such workes of graces as these, which the Deuines expresse, to be giuen gratis.

This is that Fayth, which inclineth the vn­derstanding to belieue supreme Truth, in that which the Do not will­fully mi­stake the Authour; for when­soeuer he nameth the Chri­stian fayth he mea­neth the Catholike Roman, as he sheweth plainly, & plentiful­ly by this booke. Catholike fayth affirmeth; as the wil is inclined by loue to loue supreme goodnes. And as the Mariners needle, is carryed force of the North, to turn straight towards the north; so doth God moue the vnderstanding by that Fayth, which he infuseth, to go towards him, by giuing a kind of credit, which is A true descriptiō of true Fayth, which sheweth how no­ble and sublime a thing it is. firme, quiet, and full of sa­tisfaction. And when this Fayth is perfect; it car­ryeth [Page 212]in her company, a certaine light, whereby, although it seeth not what it belieueth, yet seeth it, how fit it is, to belieue the mysteryes of God; And not only doth it feele no paine in belieuing; but much delight; as perfect vertue vseth to do, which operateth with facility, constancy, and pleasure.

This is that Fayth, which for much reason is to be prized and honoured; since by it we ho­nour God, as S. Paul sayth, that Abraham did; giuing to God the honour of being so mighty, as that he can do whatsoeuer he sayth. This is that [...]ayth, which God hath erected in our soule, as it were a Tower; to the end that mo [...]ng vp by it, we may see (though it be, but as in a glasse) that which is in heauen, and in hell, and that which happened in the beginning of the world, and that which is to happen in the end. And though a thing may be neuer so hidden, yet can it not lye hidden from the eyes of fayth; as is plame in the case of the good thiefe; who seeing so much con­tempt, and exteriour basenes, vpon the person of Christ crucifyed; did enter yet, by his fayth, into that which was most retyred; and he knew him for the Lord of heauen; and confessed him for such, with great hum [...]t [...], and constancy.

By Note this; and reuerence the church of Christ, which hath pow­er to de­clare which are the S [...] ­ [...]ture [...] which are to be be­ [...]u [...]d by [...]. this Fayth, we belieue that to be the scri­pture, and word of God, which the Church de­clareth to vs to be such. And though it be spoken by the mouth of men, we [...]et do imbrace it for the word of God. And therefore we do no les [...] [Page 213]belieue, that Euangelist, or Prophet who wrote that which he did not see, then him that wrote what he saw. For our Fayth, doth not cast her eye, vpō humane testimony, which resteth vpon meanes that are humane; but vpon this, That God inspireth such an Euangelist, or Prophet, to write the Truth; and that God assisted him, that so he might not be deceyued, in what he wrote.

Certayne it is, that although S. Peter, with his owne eares, did heare that voyce of the Fa­ther, which he sounded forth in Mount Thabor; This is my wellbeloued sonne; and who with his owne eyes saw Christ Iesus, shine as brightly as the sunne; yet if we should consider him, but as a man, giuing testimony of what he saw, and heard; more firmnesse, and certainty, hath the Scripture or speach of the Prophets, who gaue testimony of Christ Iesus to be the sonne of God; although they neither saw, nor heard him euer with their corporall eyes and eares; then that, which S. Peter sayd, by what he had both heard, and seene.

But Note this wel [...]. since the letter of S. Peter, where­in this is written, is declared by the Church, to be diuine Scripture, and so by consequence, that whatsoeuer he sayth therein, is the word of God: it is certaine that God assisted him in saying it; and assisted him so as that he might not be deceiued, in what he eyther heard, or saw, vpon Mount Tha [...]or; nor in that which he wrote, when he recounted what had passed [Page 214]there. And thus the word of the Prophets is not more firme or certayne, because he, or they did vtter them; but because they spake, by the in­stinct of the same holy Ghost, who is Truth it selfe.

This habituall fayth, God infuseth into the soules of children when they are baptized; and into persons of discretion who want it, he infuseth, both habituall fayth, and actuall; when they dispose themselues to rece [...]e it. For he de­sireth that all should be saued, and come to the know­ledge of this Truth; since without it, God cannot be pleased, nor man be saued. He faileth not to giue it to euery one, if there be no fault in him.

CHAP. XLIV.
That we must giue our Lord great thanks, for the guift of Fayth; and that we must vse it, to the end for which it was giuen; in such sort, as that we attribute not that to it which it hath not; and what both the one, and the other is.

IT is much reason, O thou Child of Christ, that all we who are Christians, be most cor­dially thankefull to our Lord, who, out of his grace, bestowed this benefit of Fayth vpon vs, whereby we might be gratefull to him. Nor must we suffer a day to passe, without confessing this Fayth; at the least in the morning, and euening; [Page 215]and without giuing him particuler thankes for this benefit. We must procure to conserue it in great sincerity, and purity, as a thing which im­porteth vs much; considering to what end it was giuen vs; both that we might not faile to vse it for that which it is, & that we attribute not that to it, which it hath not.

It is giuen vs, to the end that we may be­lieue, that which God commaundeth vs to be­lieue; and that it may be a light of knowledge, which may help to mooue our will, towards the louing of God, and the keeping of his com­mandments, whereby a man may be saued. But if any one will attribute to this Fayth, that by it A grei­uous er­rour it is to hold that sayth alone will saue our soules. alone, we ariue to haue iustice, and pardon of our sinnes; he shall fall into a Note this dis­course ve­ry wel, for it doth much im­port. grieuous er­ [...]our; as they haue done who did affirme it, be­cause, as already hath byn sayd by the authority of S. Paul, No man can say, that Iesus is our Lord, but by inspiration of the holy ghost. Whereby it is to be vnderstood, that the same inspiration is re­ [...]uisite to belieue all the other mysteries of our Fayth. And we know that our Lord sayd to some of them who heard him, why do you call me Lord, Lord; and do not the things that I commaund you. Now since they could so much as call Iesus, Lord but by fayth inspired, as S. Paul sayth; & yet, not doing that, which our Lord commaunded, they were not in state of grace; it followeth cleerely, that a man may haue Fayth without grace, which S. Paul affirmeth also in another place, where he [Page 216]fayth, That if a man should haue the gifte of spea­king tongues, and should comprehend, and possesse all knowledge, and prophesie, and haue all fayth, so farre as that he could remooue mountaynes from one place to another, and yet should be without charity, all this were nothing. And since it is certayne, that the gifte of tongues, (with the rest, which is there recounted) is compatible vvith mortall sinne, it stands not vvith reason that men should make it impossible, for fayth to be without charity; though it be true, that charity cannot be without fayth. They are the words of the diuine scripture, That iustice is giuen by fayth; but that it should be giuen by fayth alone, is an inuention of men; & a very ignorant, and peruerse errour. Whereof our Lord did warne vs, when he sayd to S. Ma­ry Magdalen. That many sinnes were forgiuen her, because she loued much. Which words are as cleare, to shew that loue is requisite, as there are any in the whol scripture, to shew the necessity of fayth. And that not only there must be loue in the iu­stification of a sinner; but because loue is a dispo­sition towards the obteining of pardon, as fayth is, they both must go hand in hand; and of both did our Lord make mention, in the conuersion of S. Mary Magdalen. For, at the end of the dis­course, he sayd; Thy fayth hath saued thee, go in peace. Nor in that which our Lord sayd before, That many sinnes were forgiuen her, because she loued much, would he say that it was, because she be­lieued much, (giuing the effect, the name of the [Page 217] cause) since it is euident, that our Lord hauing asked, which of these two debters did loue him most who released the debt, it was answered, He to whom the more was released (and not he to whome the lesse) he was to haue concluded his discourse, with speaking of loue, and not of Fayth. And if liberty may be taken, for a man to say, that he called Fayth, Loue; (tearming the effect, by the name of his cause) let vs also take liberty to say, that in those places of the Scripture, where it is affir­med, That man is iustifyed by Fayth, Loue is to be vnderstood, by the name of Fayth, by consi­dering in the cause, the effect.

In plaine manner did our Lord speake heer (vnles a man be disposed to hood wincke himself, in so faire a light) and he called fayth and loue, by their owne names, and both of them are requi­site to iustification, as we haue sayd already. And our Lord did settle the same coniunction, when he sayd afterward to his disciples, The Ioan. 16. Father himselfe loueth you, because you haue loued me, and haue belieued that I issued frō him. And fince Fayth & loue, are both requisite to a man, without doubt he will haue griefe for his sinnes, as hauing grie­uously offended God, whome he loueth aboue all things; as it is plaine, by the example of S. Mary Magdalen, and of other sinners who were com­uerted to God.

Now If this be well conside­red, it wil ouer­throw the fancyes, which the Caluinish haue, con­cerning Fayth. because both these thinges are re­quisite (and others also which flow from them) towardes the obtaining of Iustice; therefore doth [Page 218]the holy Scripture, sometymes name Fayth, and sometymes Loue, & sometymes sorrow & griefe; of Repentance; and sometymes The humble prayer of the penitent, who sayth, Lord haue mercy vpon me a sinner; and sometymes the knowledge of the sinne it selfe. I haue sinned, O Lord, sayd Dauid; & instantly he heard the word of pardon, in the name of God. But yet he, who should be induced by this, to say that sinne is pardoned, by a mans only knowledge of the sinne; should fall into no small errour; since Cain, and Iudas, and Saul, and many others did know their sinne, and yet came not to obtayne pardon of it. And so farre, with­out all ground, is it for them to say, That by only Fayth it is obtayned, in respect that the Scripture doth in some places make mentiō of Fayth alone; as it is that, for the same reason, we might also exclude fayth out of this businesse▪ as being vn­necessary, because, in other places, the Scripture sayth, That sinnes are forgiuen by pennance, & other meanes, without making any mention at all of Fayth.

But The doctrine of the Catholike Church, concer­ning this point. the truth of Catholike doctrine is this, That both the one, and the others, are re­quisite; as dispositions, towards the obtayning of pardon and grace And if any man shall reflect vpon this, That Fayth is named many tymes, by way of attributing iustice to it, and that by fayth we are made the sonnes of God; and partakers of the me­rits of Iesus Christ, and such like effects, as do ac­company grace, and charity; it is not because fayth [Page 219]alone is sufficient for it; but because, when the Scripture attributeth these effects to Fayth, it is to be vnderstood of that Faith, which is formed by charity, and which is the life thereof. Neither yet must these effects be attributed to Fayth, as if necessarily, vpon our hauing fayth, we must haue loue; because true fayth may remayne, as hath beene sayd, euen when grace and loue are lost; which loue, as S. Paul sayth, is greater then either fayth or hope. And when our Lord spake of fayth and loue, as well in that passage of S. Mary Mag­dalen, as in that other, which we mentioned, with his disciples, he named loue, before fayth; giuing the precedent place of perfection, to that which was the act of the will; which yet, after a sort, is subsequent, if it be compared with an act of the vnderstanding, to which fayth belongeth.

It is also to be vnderstood, that although the Sacraments of Baptisme, and Pennance, are ne­cessarily to be receaued (or at least, a purpose of receauing them must be intertayned) for the ob­tayning of that Grace which is lost (the former by Infidells, and the latter, by belieuers, who, after Baptisme, haue committed mortall sinne) yet is there not, in holy Scripture, so frequent speach of them as of fayth, for the reason, which shortly I shall relate. But yet, neither is the men­tion of them forborne, least any one should thinke, that they were not necessary, towardes the obtayning of Iustice. S. Paul Tim. 3. fayth, That God saued vs, by the Baptisme of regeneration, and [Page 220]renouation of the holy Ghost; and that Christ did cleanse his Church, by the Baptisme of water, in the word of life. And it, because the Scripture sayth, That we are iustifyed by fayth, we were to cast a­way the Sacraments; as iustly were we to cast a­way sa [...]th, since it sayth, That saluation, and clea­nesse, is giuen by holy Baptisme. But our Lord doth couple these thinges togeather, by saying, He, Marc. v [...]uno. that shall belieue, and be baptized, he shall be saued. The same Lord of ours, sayd also to his Apostles, when he instituted the Sacrament of Pennance, Whose Ioan. 10. sinnes you shall pardon, they are pardoned &c. and consequently grace and iustice▪ is giuen by this Sacrament, since there can be no pardon of sinne, vnles grace be giuen withall; which is signifyed, and contayned, in all the seauen Sacra­ments of the Church. And it is giuen to him that receaueth them wel [...] euen with more abundance, then To which dispositiō out of the Sacrament, there would not be allowed so great a grace, though yet still, the recea­ [...] must haue good dispositiō, if he meane to acquire new gra [...]e and not to co [...]t a new [...]acri ledge. there is disposition in the receauer; in regard that they are priuiledged workes, which by the very being receaued, do conferre grace. Therefore ought they to be receaued, and re­newed, in extraordinary manner, as the Catho­like Church doth belieue, and teach vs.

Now, This is worthy o [...] great considera­tion. if Fayth were, in the beginning of the Church, so frequently mentioned, & prea­ched; it was fi [...] to be so, because the fayth was then newly planted; and the endeauour was, to make infidells receiue it; and to enter by it, as by the first gate, which sheweth the way to salua­tion; that when once they were come in, they [Page 221]might be informed more particulerly, both of what they were further to belieue, and what they were to do.

So also was it necessary in those tymes to expresse, after a particuler manner, the mystery, and high valew of the passion, and death of our redeemer Iesus Christ, who with extreame disho­nour, had then byn crucified; and how the fayth of this mystery, maketh men belieue and confesse, That vpon that wood, which to outward appea­rance was so dishonourable, that diuine life was hanged; and that there, in the middest of the earth, God wrought, by meanes of his death, the recouery, and saluation of the world. This fayth being such, doth honour the dishonour of the Crosse; and is the exaltation of that basenes, which was exercised thereon, in a strang, and extreame manner. For which reason, it was fit to make often mention of the name of fayth; and that with great respect; since it resulted to the honour of Iesus Christ our Lord, of whose per­son, and merits she The Church. giueth testimony, by prea­ching the height thereof.

So as, if the Scripture say. That men are iusti­fyedly fayth; it is not meant, as if that alone were sufficient; but because it is the beginning, and foundation, and rote of all that is good; as the Councell of Trent defineth; and O how true is this. they who at­tribute iustification to fayth alone, do but seeke for comfort in their tepidities; or in the impiety of their liues; desiring to secure themselues by [Page 222]the way of belieuing, that their Circle may be the wider in the way of liuing. And the peace, and confidence of a good conscience, which is cau­sed by perfect charity, these men will needs ob­teine, without the taking of such paines, as the perfection of vertue doth require. Yea, and they content not themselues herewith; but, although, according to the very truth, no man can be entirely certayne in this life, whether he be worthy of loue, or hate, (though yet according to the grace & ver [...]ue which he hath, more or lesse, he may haue more, or fewer reasons of confidence) yet these men, who giue that certainty to such as belieue, (accor­ding to their owne imagination) that they are pardoned by God, which a Christian man is to haue, in belieuing an article of fayth, are people deceaued by the diuell; and these things are be­lieued, by such as haue neyther any firme ground of fayth; nor any sanctity of life; but are haters of all obedience; and who, being blindfold, go gro­ping after the mysteries of God; and indeed if they were not blinded, the diuell could not so easily deceaue them.

CHAP. XLV.
Why our Lord did resolue to saue vs, by the meanes of Fayth, and not of humane Reason; and of the great subiection which we must yield to those things which our Fayth doth teach; & of the par­ticuler deuotion which we owe, in especiall manner, to that which our Lord Iesus taught vs by his own sacred mouth.

THE methode of the words of this Treatise, did require, that after the first word therof, I should declare the second to thee; but the order of the sentences, whereof the first, and the third, say the same thing; requireth, that (forbearing at the present to touch the second), I now de­clare the third, which sayth thus: Incline thyne care. By this thou art to note, that so great is the height of the mysteries of God; and so low, & poore is thy reason; and so easily subiect to de­ceite; that for the security of our saluation, God resolued to saue vs, by our faith, and not by our knowledge. And this, not without most iust cause; because since the world (as Saint Paul sayth) did not know God by meanes of wisedome, but sell impertinently vpon many crrours, as [...]bing the glory of God to the Sunne, and Moone, and other creatures. And because others who (by the trace of those creatures) came to know God) tooke such a deale of pride, in their way of tracing the know­ledge [Page 224]of a thing so high, this light was taken away, for their pride, which our Lord had giuen them through his goodnesse; and so they fell into the darknesse of idolatry, and into a multitude of other sinnes, such as they had fallen into, who neuer had knowne God. For which reason, as, after the fall of the wicked Angells (God taking (as a man may say) a kind of warning by that) he would not suffer any creature to remaine in heauen, that could be able to sinne; perceiuing how ill the creatures serued themselues of reason; and be­cause the world (as S. Paul sayth) did not know God by wisedome, he would not leaue the knowledge of him, & the saluation of themselues, in the hands of their wisedome.

Therefore, as soone as the holy Ghost had gi­uen vs counsaile, by the two words already men­tioned, of Heare and See, he doth instantly aduise vs by a third, which sayth, Incline thyne eare. Whereby he giueth vs to vnderstand, that we must submit our reason most profoundly; & not be too confident therin, if we meane that our hea­ring, and our seeing, which were giuen vs for our good, may not be the occasion of our eternal per­dition. Certayne it is, that many haue heard the word of God, and haue had an excellent sight and notice, of high, and subtile things; but yet be­cause they rested vpon the curiosity of their sight, more then they did [...]cline the eare of their reason, with obedience; their sight grew to be starke blindnes; & they went stumbling in the light of [Page 225]Noone-day, as if it had beene in vtter darkenes.

If therefore thou wilt not loose the way to heauen, Incline thyne eare, that is, thy reason, for feare least otherwise thou be deceaued thereby. Incline it, with a most profound reuerence, to that which is sayd by the word of God, through­out the whole Scripture. And if thou vnderstand it not, thou art not, for that, to thinke that the Holy Ghost which spake, did erre; but submit thy vnderstanding, and belieue, as S. Augustine sayth, that he did that, which by reason of the height of that word, thou art not able to vnder­stand. And although thou art to incline thyne eare, by giuing equall credit of Fayth, to all the Scrip­ture of God, because all of it is the word of the same supreme Truth; yet art thou to carry parti­culer respect, & care, to receaue profit by those blessed wordes, which A pi­ous and very pro­fitable ad­uice. the true God incarnate spake heere on earth. Open thou, with deuout attention, both the eares of thy body, and of thy soule, to euery word of this Lord, who was gi­uen to vs for an especiall maister, by the voyce of the eternall Father, who sayd, This is my well be­loued Sonne, in whome I am pleased, heare him. Be studious. in reading, and hearing these wordes; and then thou wilt not fayle to find, in them a singular remedy, and powerfull efficacy, for those thinges which concerne thy soule, which thou hast not found in euery other of those wordes, which God hath spoken, from the begin­ning of the world. And this is so, with great [Page 226]reason, since that which he sayd in other places, was spoken by the mouth of his seruants; but that which he sayd, in the humanity which he tooke, he spake in person; opening his owne sacred mouth to speake; he who formerly had opened, and afterwardes did open the mouth of others, who spake both in the old, and new Te­stament. And take heed that thou be not vnthan­kefull; for so great a blessing, as it is, That God should be our Maister; giuing vs the milke of his word to sustayne vs; he who had giuen vs first a being, that we might haue somewhat to be su­stayned.

So great a fauour is this, that if we had scales wherewith to weigh it; and if it were told vs, that at the furthest corner of the world, some wordes of God were left for the instruction of our soule, we were to make light of all labour; and danger, to heare some few of those wordes deliuered, by that supreme wisedom, for the ma­king of vs his disciples. Serue thy selfe therefore well of this fauour, since God hath giuen it thee, so neare at hand; and desire of him, who taketh care to conduct thy soule in the way of spirit; that in holy Scripture, and in the doctrine of the Church, and amongst the writings of the Saints he will seeke out such wordes, as may carry pro­portion to the necessityes of thy soule; whether it be to defend thee against tentations, as our Lord did fast in the desert for our example; or whether it be to spurre thee vp in the search of [Page 227]those vertues, which thou wantest; or whether in fine it be to know how to carry thy self as thou oughtest, with God, with thy selfe, and with thy Neighbours, whether they be thy betters, thy in­feriours, or thy equalls; and how thou art to con­duct thy soule in prosperity, and how in tribula­tion. And finally, how thou art to behaue thy selfe, in all that, whereof thou mayst haue need, in the way of God. In such sort as that thou mayst say, In Psal. 118. my hart, I haue hidden thy wordes, that I may not sinne against thee. Thy word is a torch to my feet, and a light to my pathwayes. And be sure thou fall not, into curiosity of desiring to know more then thou hast need of, either for thy selfe, or for such as are vnder thy charge. For whatsoeuer is more then this, thou must leaue to them whose office it is, to teach the people of God; as S. Paul Rom. 11. admonisheth, That our knowledge may be with sobriety.

CHAP. XLVI.
That the holy Scripture must not be declared by what sense one will; but by that of the Church of Rome; and where that declareth not, we must follow the vniforme exposition of the Saints; And of the great submission, and subiection, which we must performs to this holy Church.

THOV art to know, that the exposition of holy Scripture, must not be made according [Page 228]to the wittes, or fancies of particuler men; for so (although it be most certainely true in it, selfe) as being the word of God) yet (for as much as concerneth vs) it would be very vncertaine; since commonly there are as many opinions, as there be heades of men. Now, for as much as it doth greatly import vs, to haue suprem certitude of the Word which we are to belieue, and follow (since we are to lay downe, for the confession & obedience thereof, whatsoeuer we haue (& euen our very life,) our businesse were not well proui­ded for, if (notwithstanding the seueral opiniōs, which men of themselues are subiect to) the cer­tainty of this Word, might not be lodged in the hart of a Christian.

To The only Ca­tholike Church of Christ, in the vn­doubted­ly true Intérpre­tour of Gods ho­ly Scrip­ture. the only Catholike Church, this pri­uiledge is giuen, that it may vnderstand, and interprete the Diuine Scripture; because the same holy Ghost, which deliuered the Scripture, doth dwell in her. And where the Church doth not determine, we must haue recourse to the vnifor­me interpretation of the Saints, if we will be free from errour. For otherwise how shall that which was spoken by a diuine spirit, be vnderstood by a spirit, & witt which is humane; since euery scrip­ture, is to be read, and declared, by the same spirit that wrate it. Thou art also to know, that the declara­tiō, of, what Scripture, is the Word of God (that so it may be belieued by all men) doth not belong to any other, but only to that same Christian Church, which by diuine ordination hath the Bi­shop [Page 229]of Rome for her head. And esteeme, thou for certayne, as S Hicrome Let Protestāts note this & trem­ble. sayth, That whosoeuer shall eat the lambe of God, out of this Church & house of God, is a prophane person, and no Christian. And whosoeuer shalbe found out of the same, will infallibly perish, as they who entred not into the Arcke of Noë, were drowned in the floud.

This is that Church, which the Ghospell com­maundeth vs to hearken to; and whosoeuer shall not hearken to her, is to be held, for a wicked person, and for an vnbeleeuer. And this is that Church, of which S. Paul sayth, that shee is the pillar, and strength of truth. And to belieue that this is so, that very Fayth infused by God, (wher­of we spake before), doth incline, and illumi­nate vs, as to one of the other articles; and with a like certainty to that which belōgeth to others, and as hitherto it hath byn so belieued of this Church. And although, in these tymes of ours, there be departed from her, a certayne race of people, full of Here­sy is both the Mo­ther, and the com­panion, and the daughter of Pride. pryde, and who, for that very pryde, were fit to be deceaued by the diuell; yet the Church doth not for this, giue ouer to be what shee was; nor must we leaue to belieue, that which formerly we belieued. And therefore a­gainst this Church, let no reuelation, moue thee, nor inward feeling of spirit, nor any other thing, eyther greater, or lesse, although it might seeme, to be an Angell from heauen, which should go against it; I say although it should seeme, for to be so indeed, it is not possible.

Much lesse art thou to be moued, by the do­ctrine of heretikes, whether they be past, or pre­sent, or to come; who being forsaken by the hand of God, through his iust iudgment, do fol­low a false light, insteed of a true; and destroy­ing themselues, they are the cause of perdition to as many as follow them. Obserue what end they haue had, who in former tymes haue depar­ted from the beliefe of this Church; and how they haue resembled the blustring of a wind, which quickly passed, and soone after was for­gotten. And consider, how this Church hath re­mained victorious. And although, euen since the infancy therof, it haue byn assaulted; yet neuer hath it byn conquered, because it was grounded vpon a firme rocke; against which, neither the raine, nor the wind, nor the riuers, nor the very gates of hell, can preuaile. Shut therefore thyne eares, against all doctrine which is contrary to this Church; and follow that beliefe, which hath byn receiued, and kept, for such a multitude of yeares; since it is certaine, that an infinite num­ber of men, haue byn, not only saued therein, but haue heere, byn Saintes.

For my part, I cannot reflect vpon a grea­ter folly, then for a man to leaue a way, by which so many persons, so wise, and so holy went to heauen; to follow certaine other folkes, who are incomparably inferiour to the former, in euery thing, that is good. In pryde indeed, and impu­dence, they are superiour; for they will needs be [Page 231]better belieued, (without any other proofe, but of their owne opinion) then a multitude of our forefathers, who were indued with diuine wise­dome; and who lead a most excellent life; and who wrought a multitude of great miracles. Whereas their chiefe, whom these deceaued crea­tures follow, was a certaine A strang fel­low to make the reformer of Gods Church. Luther, a man so weake in the point of his flesh, that he was not able to liue without a woman; nor, shee being dead, could he liue then in chastity, but Accor­ding to Luthers doctrine, he must either do that or worse: for he sayth, it was not possible for a man to liue▪ witho [...] woman. was faine (as the report goes) to take a second; though many others, haue contented themselues with one, and others agayne without any at al, that so they might, with greater liberty & purity, attend to the contemplation of God. How then shall we call that, a good spirit, which liued in that wicked man, since it had not force to giue him a chastity, euen of the most vulgar streine; whereas yet he had made a promise of it, after the highest man­ner; & which many men did so possesse, whom it had byn fit for him to follow as his betters. And since our Lord hath sayd, that by the fruites, we should know the tree; it must haue byn a spirit of earth, and of infirmity of flesh, and of the diuell, which dwelt in that man; since he yealded such fruites as these, and worse then these. Stay a whyle, & thou shalt see the end of these wicked persons; and how God will vomit them out, to their extreame reproach; declaring the errour of them by some manifest punishment, as he hath done with their predecessours.

CHAP. XLVII.
What a terrible chastisement it is, when God permit­teth men to loose their Faith; and that it is iustly taken away from them, that worke not, in confor­mity of what it teacheth.

HE that could haue light to iudge, that the true blessinges, or miseries of a man, are the spirituall; would quickly discerne the seuere cha­stisement of God vpon that kind of Here­tiques. people; yea so great chastisement, as that only hell is worse then it. Who I [...]rem. 20. Psal. 39. will not feare thee, O thou King of the Nations; or who hath knowne the power of thy wrath; or who shalbe able to recount it, through the great feare, which is to be had thereof? The greatest chastisements of God, which are most to be feared, are not the losse of goods, or of repu­tation, or of life; but, for God to suffer the will of man to be hardned in sin; or to permit his vn­derstanding to be blinded in errour; & especially in matters of Fayth, these be the wounds, which are inflicted by that celestial indignation; & they are not the corrections of a father, but of a iust and rigorous iudge. Of these it is, with much rea­son, vnderstood, which God sayth in I [...]rem. 30. Ier [...]y; With the wound of an enemy, with rig [...]rous chastise­men [...] ▪ I haue wounded thee. Though indeed he vseth not this rigour of a iudge, till first he haue im­ployed the mercy of a Father. And if thou marke [Page 233]it well, the blindnes of the Vnderstanding, hath this particuler mischiefe belonging to it, more then hath the hardnesse of the will; that Let Heretikes consider the sad case they are in. this latter, though it be a great one, is capable of more hope to meete with remedyes. For as long as a mans Fayth remaineth (though it be dead) yet stil he knoweth, that there is help in the Church to­wards the cure of his sinne; which is a great step towards his recouering, and rising. But he that looseth his Fayth, how shall he seeke it, or where shall he find it; since it is not to be found out of the Church, (because it is no where els) and that which is in the Church, he will not seeke, be­cause he belieueth it not, and so he remayneth in ruine. This is a word which God speaketh in Israel, & whosoeuer shall heare it, his very cares shall tingle a­gaine, with meere seare. But so great a punishment, is not inflicted without great cause; which S. Paul Rom. [...] declareth thus: The wrath of God discoue­reth it selfe, from the heauens downeward, vpon all the wickednes of those men, who A place of Scripture excellent­ly ponde­red. detayned the wrath of God in iniustice. And the intent of the Apostle in that place, is this, That there were men, who although they knew God, did not serue him as God; but rather did puffe themselues vp with a blind kind of pride; and hauing Truth in their vnderstanding, they wrought iniquity with their will. So that the truth of God, was detayned, or im­prisoned in them; since they did not performe that, which it aduised, but that, which their owne per­uerse will suggested. And because the Truth of [Page 234]God, is a most excellent thing; & he bestoweth it as a great fauour, to the end that a man practi­sing it with affection, may honour it and obtaine vertue by it, and so be saued; and if he consider not [...]eerof, and do entertaine it, in such a fashion, as that he neither practiseth those things which it teacheth, nor doth lodge it in so faire a place as it deserueth; he doth thereby great dishonour to God that gaue it; and to the Truth it selfe, which was giuen by him. And if it had a tongue where­with to speake, it would, with a loud voyee, de­maund iustice against such a man. For as much as it, being so precious a Iewell, and which is able, so much to enrich men, it is detayned, with­out hearing what it sayth; and without doing what it requireth; and it is quartered out, in the stincking company of sinne, wher with the will of such a man aboundes. And so, in such sort, as it is able, it doth, like the bloud of Abell cry out de­manding vengeance. Because although such an one, depriueth not Truth of life; because true fayth is compatible with a life that is wicked; yet doth he depriue it of that efficacy, which it would haue in working; if insteed of hindring, he did assist it, towardes the performance of those thinges which it teacheth.

These cryes are heard by God; for it is he that sayth, The seruant who knoweth the will of his maister, and doth it not, shallbe beaten with many stripes. Amongst which, the very greatest which he giueth, in this world, is to permit (as we haue [Page 235] [...]ayd before) that in punishment of his sinnés, he fall into errour of beliefe. And so were those o­thers punished, by being suffered to fall into such blind Idolatry, as that they came to worship, for God euen birdes, and serpents, and other beasts. And because they robbed God of that honour, which was due to him as God, and gaue it to such as it belonged not to; God redoubled vpon them the punishment of this sinne of Idolatry, by suffering them to fall into such other filthy sinnes, as breed horrour to thinke of them, and shame to name them. And although such as are afflicted with this punishment of infidelity, without doubt, wil fall into other sinnes; yet is that fall of theirs into those later sinnes as free, as that, whereby they fel into the former, through their owne will. Which yet how many soeuer they be, either of one kind, or of the other, the mercy of God is not shut vp against them, if they dispose themselues to retyre, into the bowells of his pitty.

The power of God is manifested in the first of these; his wisedome in the second; and his good­nes and mercy, in the third. Now, by the The iust iudg­ments of God both against Iewes & Gentilles. same reason, whereby the soueraigne Iudge did punish the proud Gentills, he did also punish the vngrate­full Iewes; & that vpon great cause. Because he gaue more knowlege to them, then to the Gentills; wherof they serued themselues so il; as that with infidelity they denyed the very true life it s [...]lfe, which is Christ Iesus; and they crucified him, by the hands of the Gentills. And because they had a [Page 236]mind to extinguish that soueraigne light, without which there is no light, nor Truth, they remay­ned in obscure darknes, and they will remayne in eternall perdition, vnles they be conuerted to the seruice of our Lord, whome they denyed.

But now let vs see, what the motiue was, which drew them on to so great a misery, as to vnbelieue that light; which stood there, before their eyes. S. Iohn Ioan. 3. makes the answere thus, Men loued darknesse, more then light, because their works were euill; & euery one that worketh euill, ab­horreth the light. So that, because our Lord, & his doctrine, did addresse them to all vertue & truth, & they loued falsehood and lyes; they could not endure to heare or see him; nor did they wish that there had by many light of doctrine in the world, which might be able to discouer that counterfait sanctity which they professed. Or that there should be any example of perfect life, in compa­rison whereof, their owne, might be condem­ned for wicked. And from this root, of a will which was so depraued, did grow that bitter fruit of denying, and murthering that heauenly Phi­sitian, who came to cure them. And they found themselues to be such, as the Prophet Psal. [...]8. vers. 24. Dauid had painted out long before, when he sayd thus of them, Let their eyes be obscured, that they may not see, and let their back go euer bending downeward; for their eyes haue remayned without the light of fayth; and their will hath been all imployed vpon thinges of the earth.

CHAP. XLVIII.
Wherein the former discourse is more particulerly prosecuted; and it is declared what dispositions are requisite, for the beginning to read, and vnder­stand the diuine Scriptures, & the holy Doctours.

BVT now if God did take into so zealous care, the honour of that knowledge, which he gaue the Gentills, & that which he also gaue the Iewes; how much will he haue zeale of that which he giueth Christians; since incomparably, this, is more then that, which eyther of the other did enioy. And God inflicteth grieuous punish­ments v­pon such as liue not according to the true fayth which they haue receaued. since men do serue themselues very ill of the knowledge of this so excellent Fayth, it is not to be meruayled at, if sometymes God strike such persons, by suffering them with a great chastisement to fall vpon heresies, as he suffered those of former tymes. Can it be sayd perhaps, that we see not that accomplished, with our owne eyes, which S. Paul did prophesy, of the latter tymes, saying, That God would send the operation of errour to certayne men, that they might belieue a lye; and this lye, is against Fayth. For no man can be ignorant of the miserable, and great efficacy, wherewith so much people, hath cor­dially imbraced the Lutheran heresy; so that we see plainely, how God Do not will­fully mi­stake the Scripture or this au­thour, but marke well, that which in­stantly followeth hath sent this efficacy of errour, for the belieuing of a lye, as S. Paul sayth.

Not that God doth send these things, by in­citing men to belieue a lye, or to worke any wickednesse; For he is not the tempter of the wicked, as S. Iames the Apostle Iac. 1. sayth: But he is sayd, to send the operation of errour, whē by his iust iudg­ment, he Note. suffereth the vnderstanding of men to be deceaued by false discourses, or by false mi­racles; which either some man, or the peruerse Diuell, may worke; and withall they find in themselues, such force towards the belieuing of that lye, as to thinke themselues mooued to the beliefe of it, as if it were some great and whole­some Truth.

A Heresy is one of the most terrible iudgmēts which God in­flicts, for the pu­nishment for other sinnes. great and extreame iudgment of God is this; and, since he is iust, that sinne must needs be great, whereof the punishment is such; and what this sinne is, S. Paul Thess. 2. himselfe declareth to vs, by saying, Because they receaued not the loue of Truth, to be saued thereby. For if thou consider, how powerfull the Truth is, of that which we belieue, for the helping vs to serue God, & to be saued; soone wilt thou acknowledge it to be a great fault, not to loue this Truth, and not to follow that which it teacheth; and much more, to worke wickedly against it. How A good and iust considera­tion. far should he be from offending God, who belieueth, that for such as offend him there is prepared an euerlasting fire, with other innumerable tor­mentes, wherewith such an one is to be puni­shed, as long as God shalbe God, without all hope of the least remedy? How will he presume [Page 239]to sinne, who belieueth, that when sinne entreth into the soule, by one dore, God goeth out by another? And what kind of creature, a man is, without thee, O Lord, he well knew who pray­ed, O Psal. 4 [...]. Lord, depart not thou from me. For when God is gone, we remaine in the first death of sinne, which is but an introduction, to the second death, of infernall paine.

With great reason did Iob Iob. 6. say, Who can find in his heart, to taste that, which being tasted, bringeth death? Without doubt, it is but reason, that since we would not taste of any food, which a Physitian whom we belieued, should tell vs, did carry death therin; we should lesse taste of sinne, since God hath sayd, That Ezech. 18. the soul which finneth shall dye. For the Fayth or beliefe which thou hast in the word of God, doth not worke that effect in thee, which the word of that Physitian doth worke; and yet this later both can deceaue, and vseth sometymes to do it, which God neuer doth. And since God hath sayd, That he is the eternall reward of such a seruant, why doth not this make vs all, go towards his seruice, with great dili­gence, and courage; although we were to passe through many labours; and that it should cost vs euen our liues? Why do we not loue our Lord whome we belieue to be supreame goodnesse; and whom we know, to haue loued vs first, yea and that so farre as to dye for vs? And so Note. we should discourse in all other things, which this holy Fayth doth so powerfully teach vs, and in­uite [Page 240]vs to, (for as much as concerneth it) & our selues, are in great fault for leauing to follow it, yea and for doing the very contrary things to it. Can there be a more prodigious thing in the world, then that a Christian, should belieue the things which he belieueth, and that yet he should do so wicked things, as many of them do? In pu­nishment therefore of this, that they did not loue the Truth, whereby they might haue byn saued, (putting in practise, that which they were taught thereby) it is a most iust iudgement of God, VVho Psal. 65. is terrible in his counsailes ouer the sonnes of men, That this Fayth be taken from them, & they be permitted to belieue errour.

And if thou do consider, how God doth suf­fer the snare to be prepared, whereby Iewes and heretikes, are chastised as we haue sayd, it will appeare to thee, that it is a thing rather to be trembled at, then to be talked of. Aske any of these that are so peremptory, in following the obstinacy of their errour, vpon what it is, that they ground themselues. The Al­most all heretikes do offer to shrowd thēselues vnder holy scri­pture. one sort will say, that it is the Scripture of the old Testament; and the other of the New▪ and thou shalt plainely see the prophesy of Dauid accomplished, when he sayth, The A pas­sadge of holy Scri­pture ex­cellently pòdered. Table of these people shallbe tur­ned into a snare, and into a punishment, and into a stumbling blocke. Didst thou euer see a thing, of so contrary appearance, as that the Table of Life, should be turned into a snare of death; the Table of comfort and pardon, into a punishment; that [Page 241] Table where there is light which guideth men into a way that leadeth to life, to conuert it selfe into a meanes, of making one loose the way, and fall vpon death.

Great, without A ho­ly contē ­plation of the Au­thour, & of much terrour to such as are in he­resy. all doubt, is the fault which deserueth such punishment; that a man should be blinded in the light, and that his life should be conuerted into death. But thou art iust O Lord, and thy iudgements are iust; and there is no wickednes in thee; but that wickednes, is in them, who serue not themselues well of thy goodnesse; and therfore, it is fit, that they should but stumble vpon the same goodnes of thyne; & that the dishonour should be punished, which they do, both to it, and thee. A great blessing, O Lord, an extraordinary blessing is thy Fayth; being reuered, obeyed, and put in excution, as al reason doth require. And a great blessing didst thou bestow, in giuing vs thy holy Scripture, which is so profitable and so necessary for vs, in the way of thy seruice. But Note: because the wind which bloweth vpon this sea, is a wind that cō ­moth from heauen; and there haue byn some who would needes sayle by the earthly windes of their owne braynes, and studyes, they haue beene drowned, and thou hast suffered it. Because, as in the Parables which thou, O Lord, didst preach on earth, those men were secretly taught therby, who had a good disposition thereunto; whereas others, were blinded euen thereby, through thy iust iudgment; so doest thou also gouerne the [Page 242]profound sea of thy diuine Scripture, which is de­puted for the shewing of mercy, to the lambes of thy fold, who may swimme therein, to the profit both of themselues, and others; and so also is it designed for the shewing of iustice, in suffering proud Elephants both to drowne themselues & others also. A fearefull, and very fearefull thing it ought to be esteemed, to enter into the diuine Scripture; and no man ought to runne vpon it without much preparation, as to a thing where­in there may be much danger to him. Let him that An-vnderstā ­ding exer­cised in humility, & a lifeled in piety, are good dispositiōs for the reading of holy Scripture with pro­fit. entreth into it, carry with him the sense of the Catholike Roman Church; and he shall auoyd the danger of heresy. Let him for his further pro­fit by it, carry purity of life, as S. Athanasius doth aduise, by these wordes, Goodnes of life, and purity of the soule, and Christian piety, is necessary for the search, and true science of the Scriptures. And he sayth afterwards, that without purity of mind, and a life which followeth in the steps of sancti­ty, it is not possible to vnderstand the speach of Saints. For as if a man would behould the light of the Sunne, he maketh cleare his eyes, and by so doing his sight groweth cleare, and by that meanes to be of some resemblance with the very Sunne which he desireth to behold; that so his eye being made light, he may the better looke v­pon the Sunnes light: and as also, if a man desire to see any Citty, or Countrey, he must come, within a certayne distance, for that purpose; so he that would procure the vnderstanding of ho­ly [Page 243]books, must first endeauour to cleanse, & puri­fy his soule, & by a resemblāce of life & manners, to draw neare to the Saints, who wrote thē; that so approaching to them, by his intentions, & acti­ons, he may vnderstand those things, which God reuealed to them, & being made, as it were, one of them, he may escape from the danger, that sin­ners are subiect to, & from the fire which against the day of iudgement, will be prouided for them.

It is necessary to ponder this greatly, which S. Athanasius deliuered; that so we may receaue profit by the diuine Scripture. For though without this purity of life, a man may easily know by Scripture, what God in generall requireth of him; yet in particuler to know the counsaile, & will of God, cannot be learned (as the Wiseman sayth) by humane study; but he affirmeth thus, in the manner of a question, Who, O Lord, shall know thy meaning, vnles thou giue him wisedome & vnles thou [...]end thy holy spirit from on high? This Wisedome True celestiall wisedom. is that, which teacheth the vvay how to please God in particuler manner, & this resideth not in wicked men. But when this indu­stry continueth, with experience of holy labours, humble prayers, and the fruit of good workes, it maketh a man truely wise; that so by reading of Scripture, and long experience, he may teach o­thers after the manner of an eye vvitnesse; and may light vpon the veyne of another mans hart; instructing it, by that which passeth in his owne. And without this, though he may chance to hit [Page 244]right for once, he will mistake many tymes; and will fall out to be one of them of whome S. Paul sayth, That 1. Tim. 1. taking vpon them to teach the law, they vnderstood not that, wherof they speake. A man who putteth himselfe vpon the studdy of holy Scripture, must help himselfe also, by the inter­pretation and exposition of the Saints; as also of the Schoole-Deuines. For as for the profit which may be drawne from the study of holy Scripture without accompanying it, by these endeauours, Germany hath taken experience, of it to her cost.

CHAP. XLIX.
That we must not grow in pride, for not hauing lost our Fayth, as others haue done, but rather we must be humble, with feare; and the reasons which we haue for being so.

DO not thou, by hearing of the fal of others, grow to such pride of hart, as to say, I am not like one of them, who so wickedly haue lost their fayth. Call thou to mind those men, who related to our Lord, how Pilate had caused certaine Ga­lileans to be kil'd, as they were in the middest of offering their sacrifices. And they that related this, carryed in their hart, a kind of vayne con­tentment, wherewith they held themselues for better then those others, who had deserued, that Pilate should cause them to be murthered. But now when this soueraigne Iudge, did know [Page 245]their pryde, without the manifestation of it on their partes; and being desirous to vndeccaue them, he sayd after this manner. Thinke you, that those Galileans were the greatest sinners of all the men in that Prouince, because that punishment came vpon them? Or doe you thinke, that those eighteene men, vpon whome the tower of Siloe did fall, and slew them, were the greatest sinners, of all them that dwelt in Hierusalem? I tell you, No. But if you do not pennance, you shall also perish. The same did S. Paul intend, when he sayd, For their in­credulity, were the Iewes cut off, which had byn the branches of the Oliue tree of belieuers; and thou who by fayth art on foote; do not thou grow proud, but feare; for else, thou shalt also be cut off.

The The punish­ment which God infli­cteth vpō others, must mak vs hum­ble, and not inso­lent. punishments which God hath in­flicted vpon others, ought to make vs chast, and humble, and not proud. For whither soeuer we cast our eyes, in these vnhapy tymes of ours, they will find reason to weep: and to say with Ieremy, If Ierem. 14. I go out into the field, I see that men are slayne by the sword; if I enter into the citty, I find them de­feated, and dead of hunger. The former are they, who went out of the Citty; which is, the Church. A kind of people this is, without a head; for the sword of incredulity, hath taken off from them, the head which God gaue to Christians, which is the The Bishop of Rome, as successour to S. Peter is the visi­ble head, which God hath giuen to the Church, vnder Christour Lord. Bishop of Rome. And the later, are those many, who in this citty of the Church, haue their Fayth vntouched; but they are miserably dead of hunger, because they tooke not the food, of obe­dience, [Page 246]to the cōmandmēts of God, & of his church.

These things deserue, that we should feele them much, if we haue any feeling of Christ; and that we should bewayle them in his high pre­sence, and say to him, How long O Lord, wilt thou forbeare to haue mercy on them, for whom thou didst shed thy bloud, and loose thy life, vpon the Crosse, in the middest of so many torments. And since the busines is thyne, let the remedy also come from thy hand, being impossible that it should come from any other. Be thou carefull, O daughter, to feele, and to pray for this; for Note. if thou loue Christ, thou art to lodge in thy hart a tender and profound compassion, of the soules, for which Christ Iesus dyed. And so art thou also carefully to consider, how thou liuest; and how thou doest profit by the Fayth which thou hast, least otherwise, God doe also punish thee, by suffering thee to fall into some errour; and so to loose it; since thyne eares haue heard the newes, of so many that haue lost it, by the heresies of that peruerse Luther. And others there are, who haue denied Christ amongst the Moores; to follow the bestiall law of Mahomet; whereby thou shalt see accomplished that which Saint Paul sayth, That some had lost their Fayth for hauing cast away a good conscience in their life. And whether it be, (as we sayd before) when we spake of the motiues which induce a man to be­lieue) because euen their euill conscience, by litle and little, draweth their vnderstanding vnto blindnesse, to the end that it may seeke some do­ctrine [Page 247]which doth not contradict their wicked­nes; or else, because the supreame iudge, in pu­nishment of other sinnes, permitteth them to fall vpon heresy; or whether it be, both for the one, and the other reason; it is a thing to make one feare, and to be full of care, to auoyd it. And howsoeuer this happen not to all wicked Chri­stians, since although they be in mortall sinne, they do not, for that, loose their Fayth, (as I haue sayd before) yet in a matter that is of so high im­portance, the very hauing hapned to one alone, giueth vs all reason to feare, and care, that we may auoyd the like occasion.

Without doubt, the hartes of all those ele­uen Apostles, were farre from any dispositi­on of deliuering Christ Iesus our Lord to death; yet because he sayd, that one of the twelue would do it, they were all afrayd, and they sayd, Is it I O Lord? through a feare, least by their frailty, they might fal into actions, from which they were free at that tyme. Against all such in­conueniences, the word which we haue here in hand, is full of vse, Incline thyne eare, obeying God, and his Church by Fayth. And haue not thou a busy, and sifting vnderstanding, least it be oppressed by Maiesty, as such, are threatned in holy Scripture that they shalbe. And Marke well this compari­son, for it reacheth home, they, who wilbe descanting vpon the ineffable myste­ries of God, by the poorenesse of their owne vn­derstanding and reason, shall find it happen to them, as it doth to such, as fasten the point of [Page 248]their sight vpon the sunne; which so, they do not only not come to see, but rather they loose their very sight it selfe; and it is beaten back agayne, through the great excesse of the light which they see, to the eyes themselues, with which they would see it. So those men, seeking satisfaction by the way of curious vnderstanding, and sif­ting; do find themselues full of vnquietnesse & doubt. For the wisedome of God, is not commu­nicated, but to such as are little and humble: & do approach to him with simplicity; inclining their eare to him, and to his Church; and such as these, receaue extraordinary fauours by his goodnesse, wherewith the soule resteth satisfied, and beautifyed, by Fayth and good workes; like the fayre Rebecca, to whom were giuen in the name of Isaac certayne pendents for her eares, and bracelets for her hands. And to the end, that this humble subiection might be so much the more recommended to our vnderstanding; the holy ghost was not content with exhorting vs to it, in the first word only, by saying, Hearken O Daughter; but be aduiseth to it yet, with another, by saying, Incline thyme eare. To the end that men may know, that since God doth speake no idle words, and that yet he deliuered this doctrine to vs in seuerall words; his pleasure was to recom­mend, in particuler manner, this simple, & hum­ble manner of belieuing, as the beginning of our saluation; and if to this we will add loue, it will then be entire, and perfect.

CHAP. L.
How some vse to be much deceaued, by giuing credit to false Reuelations; and it is particulerly declared, wherein true liberty of Spirit doth consist.

IT is not reason, that I passe from hence, with out acquainting thee with a great dāger which happeneth to them that trauayle in the way of God; and wherby many haue been ouerthrown. The chiefe remedy wherof, consisteth in that ad­uise, which the holy Ghost giueth vs, by meanes of this word. Inclyne thyne eare. This danger groweth, when reuelations, or visions, or other spirituall gustes, do offer themselues to some de­uout persons; which, by the permission of God, do ariue many tymes, through the worke of the Diuell; & that, for the obtayning of two effects. One is, that by the meanes of these deceites, he may take credit from the true reuelations of God; as he hath also procured, to shew false miracles, thereby to discredit such as are true. Another is, to deceaue that person, vnder the shew of Good, now that, by other meanes, he cannot do it. Ma­ny of whome, we haue read of, in former tymes, and many we haue seene in these dayes of ours; who may serue for a warning to any such per­son, as is desirous of his saluation; & to put him in feare of being easy, in giuing credit to such things as these; since some of those very persons, [Page 250]who gaue them such credit at the first, did after­ward (when they were free, from being so de­ceaued) aduise others to take heed, how they fell into those inconueniences. Gerson recounteth, that, in his tyme, many of these abuses did hap­pen; and he sayd, that be knew of many; and that some did hold for certayne, that it was reuea­led to them, that they should be Popes. And some one of them, did leaue the same in writing; and by coniectures, and other such kindes of proofe, he affirmed it to be true. And another, belieuing, vpon the same motiue, that he was to be Pope, this thought did after, settle it selfe in his hart, That he Let not a Cal­uinist mak him­selfe mery at this, but let him tremble to find how like he is to the Diuel, in saying that the Pope is Antichrist. should be Antichrist, or at least the forerun­ner of him. And vpon this, he was grieuously tempted to kill himselfe, that so he might not bring such a deale of misery vpon Christian peo­ple; till at last, by the mercy of God, he was drawne out of these deceitfull errours, and left them in writing behind him, for the caution & instruction of others.

There haue not been wanting some, in these dayes of ours, who held for certayne, that they were to reforme the Church of Christ, and to bring it to the first perfection, or euen greater then it had at first. But their being dead without doing it, is a sufficient proofe that they were de­ceaued; and that it would haue beene better for them, to haue attended to the reformation of themselues (which, by the grace of God, would not haue beene hard) then, so forgetting their [Page 251]owne consciences, to cast their vaine eyes vpon that The Authour meaneth, only Re­formatiō of man­ners▪ for he shew­eth in a hundred places, that the Fayth of the Church both is, & for euer must be true. thing, which God, had no mind to do, by their meanes. Others, haue resolued vpon seeking new wayes, which seemed to them very compendious, for their owne ariuing quickly to God. And it seemed to them, that giuing them­selues to him, in a perfect kind of a manner, and abandoning themselues into his handes, they were so taken and possest by God, and so wholy gouerned by the holy Ghost, that whatsoeuer came to their hart, must (forsooth) be no other thing, but the instinct and light of God himselfe. And Much of this discourse is meant, by a cer­ [...]ayne fan­tasticall hereticall people, which was be­ginning to sly de into Spai [...]e a­bout his tyme, and they were called Il­ [...]umimati▪ so farre did this deceite ariue, that if this kind of interiour motion came not to them, they would not stirre a foot, towardes the doing of any thing how good soeuer; and (on the other side) if they had a mind to do any thing; that they would be sure to do, though it were against the wil of God. Belieuing that the humour which they found in their hart was Gods particuler in­stinct, and the liberty of the holy Ghost; which did enfranchise them from all obligation, to the ordi­nary Commandments of God; to whome, they sayd they carryed, such an entiere, & true loue, as that, euen by breaking of his commandments, they lost it not. They considered not, that the Sonne of God, did preach, by his owne sacred mouth, a doctrine very contrary to this, when he sayd, If any man loue me, he will keep my word; and he that holdeth and obserueth my Commandements, he is the man that loueth me. And againe, If any man [Page 252]loue me, he will keep my word; and he that loueth me not, will not keep it. Giuing cleerely to vnderstand heereby, that whosoeuer keepeth not his word, doth beare no loue, nor hold friendship with him. For as S. Augustine sayth, No man can loue that King, whose Commandements he hateth.

Now as for that which the Apostle sayth, That Note how the obiection which is made by heretikes, vnder the colour of this place of Scrip­ture, is soundly answered, and at large. to the iust man there is imposed no law; and that where the spirit of our Lord is, there is liberty: This is not so to be vnderstood, as if the Holy Ghost did free any man, how iust soeuer he may be, from keeping the commandments of God, or of his Church, or of his Prelates; but rather, how much the more this spirit doth communicate it selfe, so much the more loue doth it infuse; and by the increase of loue, the care and desire doth also increase, of keeping more and more, the word of God, and of his Church. And as this spirit is most efficacious, and maketh a man be­come a true, and feruent louer of that which is good; so it further putteth, such a disposition in­to the soule, when it imparteth it selfe aboun­dantly, as that the keeping of the Commande­ments is not hard, but very easy; & so full of gust as that Dauid sayd, How sweet are thy wordes to my threate, yea more then hony to my mouth. Because when this spirit, doth place, in the will of man▪ a most perfect conformity with the will of God, making it to be one spirit with him, and doth say, as S. Paul doth, That he hath the same mind to will, and not to will; it must necessarily follow, that to [Page 253]such a man the obseruation of the will of God, is to be full of gust; since it is of gust to euery body, to do that which they loue.

And this is so full of Truth, as that if the very law of God could be lost, it would be found writtē, by the holy Ghost, as it were, in the bow­ells of these persons; according to that which Dauid Psal. 39. sayth, That the law of God, is in the hart of the man, that is iust; that is, in his will, which is according to God. And God himselfe sayd as much, I Ierem. 31. will put my law into the bowells of thē. From hence it is, that although there were no hell to threaten, and no heauen to allure, and no commaundment to oblige, yet would this iust man, do that which he doth, for the pure loue of God. For, because the holy Ghost worketh in a man towards God, that which nature worketh in the hart of a sonne towards his Father, (since by his gifte, and by his grace, we receaue the a­doption of being the sonnes of God) from hence, I say, it groweth, that such a man, like a tender harted Son, doth reuere, and serue God, throgh the filiall loue which he carrieth towards him. Vpon this doth also follow, a perfect detestation of al sinne; and a perfect hope which dispatcheth all feare, & sorrow away, with speed, (as it may be done in this exile of ours) and it enableth him to suffer paine, and trouble, not only with pati­ence, b [...] euen with ioy. And by reason of the li­berty which he hath, both in respect of sinnes, & afflictions, abhorring the former, and louing the [Page 254]latter, he may be called free; and that, vpon such a iust man, there is no law imposed.

Euen so, as if there were a mother who did much loue her sonne; and would faine do much for him; that law would be of no trouble to her, which should commaund her to do those things towards him, which her own maternall hart did induce her to. And so this mother, should not be placed vnder a law, or vnder the trouble that she was put to; but should rather be superiour to them; since she performed that with alacrity, which the law commaunded with authority. In this sort do they of whom we haue spoken, by fulfilling the law of Gods loue; yea and there are many, who do things, to which they are tyed by no obligation; their hart flaming vp into a hoa­ter fyre of loue, then the law doth any way ob­lige them to.

In this manner therefore, that of S. Paul, is Gal. 5. to be vnderstood, If you be conducted by the Spirit, you are no more vnder the law. Because This liberty of Spirit is very diffe­rent from the Prote­stant li­berty of the ghos­p [...]ll. by abhorring sinne, and carrying a tender loue to that which the law commaundes; and being ioy­full in tribulation, (which are all, effects of being guided by the Spirit) the law (as hath byn sayd) is no burthen to such. But in breaking any of the commaundments of God, or of his Church, this Spirit doth instantly fly away; as it is written, That it departeth from the thoughtes of them, who are without vnderstanding, and that it shalbe driuen out of a soule, when sinne commeth into it. And as [Page 255]then, men are not carried by this holy Spirit; so is it impossible, but that they should be vnder that weight, which the law imposeth, vpon such as loue it not; and who are weak in suffering af­fliction, and subiect to returne to sinne.

Let Heere Protestāts are playn­ly spoken to. no man therfore affirme, that when he breaketh the commaundment of God, or of his Church▪ he hath Iustice, or liberty of spirit, or loue of God in his soule; since our Lord pronoun­ceth him to be a slaue, and no free man, who commit­teth sinne. And as, there is no participation between light, and darknes; so neither is their any, between God and him that worketh wickednes. For, as it is written, The wicked man, and his wickednes, are de­testable in the sight of God.

I haue giuen thee notice of this so blind er­rour, in the nature of an example, by meanes whereof thou maiest consider of many others, as absurd and foolish as this is; into which, both in other tymes, and these also, such persons haue fallen, as grew lightly to beli [...]ue, that the notions, or instinctes of their owne harts, did come from God.

CHAP. LI.
Of the way wherein we are to carry our selues, that we may not erre by such illusions; and how dange­rous the desire is of Reuelations, and such things as those.

THROVGH the desire I haue, that thy soule may not be one of these, I recommend to thee much, that thou profit, as the prouer be sayth, by anothers harme: and that thou be very care­full, that in thy selfe, there be no consent, either great or small, to any desire of these singular, or supernaturall things; for it is a signe either of pride, or at least of curiosity, which is full of dan­ger. There was a tyme, when Marke this Ex­emple. S. Augustine, was assaulted by this temptation; his wordes are these. By how many subtilties of temptation, hath the enemy procured, with me, O Lord, that I should beg some miracle at thy hands; but I beseech thee, for the loue of our Lord Iesus Christ, and of our Citty, the heauenly Hierusalem, which is pure and chaste, that as now all consent to this temptation, is farre from me; so it may euer be farre, and further off S. Bona­uenture sayth, that many had fallen into great fol­lies, and errours, in punishment of their hauing desired such things as these; and he sayth further that they are not so much to be desired, as fea­red.

If any such extraordinary things happen to [Page 357]thee, without any desire of thyne; be thou a­fraid, and do not giue them credit; but instantly haue recourse to our Lord; beseeching A ho­ly, wise, and safe aduice. him that he will be pleased not to carry thee by this way; but that he will suffer thee, to worke thy saluation in his holy feare, and in the vsuall and plaine way, of such as serue him. Thou art espe­cially to do this, when any such Reuelation or in­stinct, shall inuite thee to admonish, or repre­hend a third person, of any thing that is secret; & much more if he be a Priest, or Prelate, or the like, to whome particular reuerence is due. In such case as this thou art to cast away these things withall the hart thou hast; and to depart from them, with saying, that which Moyses sayd, Send him O Lord, I beseech thee, whome thou art to send. And Ieremy sayd, I am but a child O Lord, I cannot speake, and both these, did hold themselues for insufficient; and fled from being sent to reproue others.

Do not feare, least by this humble resistance, God should be made angry, or to absent himself, if the businesse be his; but There is no dan­ger of loosing a­ny thing with God by doing acts of humility. rather he will draw nearer to thee; and he will assure and settle the thing in question. For he that giueth grace, to the humble, will not take it away, for an act of humility; and if it be not of God, the Diuell will fly away; as being strooke with the stone of hu­mility, which giueth a blow that breaketh his head, like that of Golias. And so it happened, to a Father that remayned in the Desert; who vpon [Page 258]the appearing of the figure of a Crucifixe, he would neither adore it, nor belieue it. But See the sweet & safe sim­plicity, & humility of th [...]se holy Er­mites. shutting his eyes, sayd, I will not see Iesus Christ in this world; it shall serue my turne to see him in heauē. Vpon which answere, the Diuell fled away, who was desirous to deceaue him vnder that forme. Another Father, answered (to one that told him that he was an Angell, sent to him, on the be­halfe of God) I haue no need, nor am I worthy to re­ceaue messages, by the mouth of Angels, and therefore consider well to whome it is that thou wert sent; for it is not possible they should send thee to me; Nor will I so much as heare thee. And so with this humble answere, the proud Diuell fled away.

By this way of humility; and by a most cordiall driuing away such things as these, many persons haue beene free, through the mercy of God, from great snares, which by this meanes the Diuell had prepared for them. Experimen­ting so in themselues, that which Dauid Psal. 12. sayth, Our Lord keepeth the little ones: I humbled my selfe, and be deliuered me. And on the other side, a false instinct, or Reuelation of the Diuell, finding any vaine contentment in the hart of him that doth receaue it, taketh roote and force from thence, to deceaue men, out right; God permitting it, with iust iudgment. For as S. Augustine sayth, Pryde deserueth to be deceaued.

Thou must therfore be free from this vaine in­clination; and from thinking that thou art capa­ble of these Reuelations; that so thy hart may not [Page 259]vary the compasse, in the least point, from that humility wherein thou wert before, vnder the holy feare of God. And so carry thy selfe in them as if they had not come to thee. And if notwith­standing this answere of thyne the matter do still go on; giue thou instantly account to them, that may tell thee what is fit; although it will be better done, to giue notice of it instantly, after first it happened; and to help him (by meanes of prayer, & fastes, & other good works) who is to giue thee counsaile, that God may declare the truth to him, in a matter that is of so much difficulty. For A great strayte. if we hold the good spirit of God, for the wicked spirit of the Diuell, it is a great blasphemy; and we shall so, be like to those miserable Pharisees, the contradictours of the truth of God; who attri­buted to an euill spirit, the workes, which Christ Iesus our Lord, did, by the Holy Ghost. And on the other side, if with facility of beliefe, we accept of the instinct of an euil spirit, as if it were of the Holy Ghost, what greater misery can there be, then to seeke darkenesse and errour insteed of truth; and, which is worse, the Diuell, for God. On both sides, there is great danger; eyther in holding God for the Diuell, or the Diuel for God. And how great necessity there is, to be able to di­stinguish and to iudge of these thinges, as indeed they are, I thinke there is none, who doth not see. But as euident as this necessity is, so difficult and hidden a thing it is, to get assurance and light, wherewith to cleare this doubt. And ther­fore, [Page 260]as it belongeth not to all men to prophesy, or to worke miracles, or to impart such other graces, but to them to whome the Holy Ghost is pleased to impart them; so also, is it not giuen to the spirit of man, how wise soeuer it be, to iudge with certainty, and truth, of the difference of spirits, vnles it were in a matter which were eui­dently For in that ease it is cleer­lynaught. against the Scripture, and the Church of God. That light therefore of the Holy Ghost, which is called Discretion of spirits, is wholy ne­cessary in this case; by the inward, and sweet light wherof, the man who hath this gift, doth rightly iudge, which is the spirit of Truth, and which of Errour. And if the matter be of impor­tance, it must be related to the Prelate, and his re­solution is to be followed.

CHAP. LII.
Wherein some signes are giuen, of good, and bad, or false Reuelations, or Illusions.

BESIDES that which I haue sayd, thou art to consider, what fruit or edification these thinges do leaue in thy soule. And This ballance is to be held by a steedy hand. yet I say not this, as if by these, or other signes, thou art to become the iudge of that which passeth in thy selfe; but to the end, that when thou giuest him account, of whome thou art to take counsell, he may so much the more certainly know, & teach thee truth, as thou shalt giue him more particuler [Page 261]information. Consider therefore, if these things help thee, towardes the reliefe of any spirituall necessity which thou hast; or for any thing con­cerning thy soule, of notable edification. For if a good man will not speake idle wordes, much lesse will God do it; who sayth, I am the Lord, who teach thee things which are profitable to be known, and who gouerne thee in the way, where thou art to goe. But when thou seest that there is nothing of moment, but intricate and vnnecessary thinges; esteeme it as a fruit which the Diuel setteth before such a one, as he seeketh to deceaue; and to make him loose his tyme, and the tyme of others, to whome he relateth it; and when the Diuell can get no more, he contenteth himselfe with this gaine.

Amongst those thinges which thou art to consider, whether they worke them in thy soule or no, let the chiefe be this, Whether it leaue thee more humble, then thou wert before. For humili­ty, as a Doctour sayth, giueth such weight to the coyne of spirit, as that it doth sufficiently distin­guish the mettall which is massy, from that which is light. And S. Gregory sayth, The In what case then be all Heretik [...]. most eui­dent distinctiue signe of a man elect, is his humility; and of the reprobate, his pride. Consider then I say, what trace is left in thy soule, by this vision, or consolation, or spiritual gust; and if thou perceaue thy selfe to remaine more humble, and in more confusion through thyne owne faults; and with greater reuerence, and trembling vnder the infi­nite [Page 262]greatnesse of God; and hast no light incli­nation to communicate that to other persons, which hath happened to thee; nor doest busy thy selfe much in considering or making account thereof; but doest procure to forget it, as a thing which may make thee esteeme thy selfe; and if (at any tyme, when it commeth to thy memory) thou humble thy selfe, and dost [...]wonder at the great mercy of God (in shewing so great fauour to so base creatures) & if thou findest thy hart as quiet, and more settled then it was before, in the knowledge of it selfe; it hath some shew to be of God; because Note this reasō. it is agreable to the instruction, and doctrine of Christ; which is, That a man should abase himselfe, and become despicable in his owne eyes; and that for the blessings which he receaueth from God, he must know himselfe to be more obliged, and confounded; giuing the whole glory of it to God, from whose hand all good thinges proceed. And with this, S. Gregory agreeth, saying, The soule which is full of diuine vn­derstanding, hath these, for most euident fignes; na­mely Humility and Truth; both which, if they per­fectly ioyne in any soule, it is a thing notorious, that they giue testimony of the presence of the Holy Ghost. But when it is an abuse of the Diuel, it falleth out very contrary to this. For Humi­lity or Pride are the distin­ctiue sig­nes, wher­by to know, the truth or falsh god of spiritu­all gustes &c. either in the beginning, or at the end of the reuelation, of consolation, the soule doth find it selfe vayne, and desirous to speake of what it feeleth; & with some estimation of it selfe; conceauing that God [Page 263]is to do great matters in it, or by it; and it hath no desire to thinke vpon the defects of it selfe, or to be reproued by others; but all that persons busines is, to be talking, and rowling vp and downe in his mind, that which he hath felt, and he would be gladd that others also, should be talking of it.

When thou shalt see these signes or the like, which shew a kind of leuity of hart, it may be af­firmed, without any doubt, that the euill spirit walketh that way. And how good soeuer the thing appeare, & though it bring teares, or com­fort, or knowledge of matters belonging to God; yea although thou be hoysed vp to the third hea­uen, yet if thy soule withall, do not remaine with profound humility, put thou no confidence in any such thing, which may happen to thee; nor do thou accept thereof. For, how much the more high it is, so much is it the more dangerous, and so much the greater fall will it giue thee. Aske grace of God, that thou mayst know, & humble thy selfe; and that being the ground, let him giue thee what is most pleasing to him; but if that be wanting, all the rest (how precious soeuer it ap­peare) is not gold but copper; nor is it the meale or floure of nourishment, but the ashes of pryde.

Pride hath this mischeife belonging to it, that it despoyleth the soule of the true grace of God; and if it leaue any thing that may seeme good, it is but counterfaite; & so it is not accep­table to God, but the occasion of greater ruine to [Page 254]him that hath it. We read of our Redeemer, that when he appeared to his disciples, vpon the day of the Ascension; he first reprehended their incre­dulity, & hardnesse of hart; & after that, he com­maunded them to go & preach; giuing thē pow­er to worke many and great miracles. Making vs vnderst and thereby, that God doth first abase such as afterward he meanes to rayse. whom he rayseth to great matters, he first abaseth in themselues, gi­uing them knowledge of their own weakenesse; to the end that although afterward, they grow to fly aboue the heauens, they may still be fastned to their owne basenes, without attributing any o­ther thing to themselues, but their own vnwor­thinesse. Let therefore the summe of all be this, that thou do well obserue the effects which are caused in thee by such things as these; not there­by to make thy selfe the iudge thereof; but for his information, whose counsell thou art to aske, and follow.

CHAP. LIII.
Of the secret pride, whereby many vse to be much de­ceiued in the way of Vertue; and of the danger that such are in, to be snared by the illusions of the Diuell.

BVT thou art further to note, that many, do find in themselues, their own meanesse; and that of themselues they are nothing; and they seeme to attribute the glory to God, for all the [Page 265]blessings that they receaue; and they haue many other signes of humility; but notwithstanding all this, they are full of pride; and that, so much the more dangerously, as they cōceaue themselues to be most free from it. The reason of this is, because although they do liue, as in the sight of Truth, by not attributing those blessinges to themselues; yet do they liue in errour, by conceauing them to be more and greater, then indeed they are; and they take themselues to haue so much light from God, as that they are able, not only to rule them­selues in that way, but others also; and no man is of sufficiency, in their opinion, to gouerne them. They are greatly friends to their own fan­cy; yea and sometymes, they make not much reckoning, of that which former Saints haue sayd, or that which the seruants of God, liuing in their owne tyme, conceaue.

They This is still meant of those he­reticall Illuminati. boast themselues to haue the spi­rit of Christ, and to be gouerned by it; and to haue no need of human counsell, since God with so great certainty, and the vnction of his spirit, doth giue them comfort in their prayers. They thinke (as S. Bernard sayth) of other mens houses, but that the sunne, doth only shine in their own: and they defye, and despise all wisemen, as Golias did the people of God. Only he is good in their opi­nion, who conformeth himselfe to them; and to them nothing is more troublesome, then to meet with a man that contradicteth them. They will be the maisters of all men, and belieued by al [Page 266]men, and they will belieue none. The wary dis­cretion of men who are well experienced, they call tepidity, and feare; but as for vnbridled fer­uours, & noueltyes, full of singularity; & which are the occasions of tumult, these men call the li­berty of spirit, and the strength of God; and they haue, almost euer, in their mouthes, This my spirit telleth me; God satisfyeth me in this; and the like. At other tymes, they alleadge the Scripture of God, but they will by no meanes vnderstand it, as the Church, and the Saints haue vnderstood it; but only as they list themselues. Belieuing that they haue not lesse light, then the former Saints: nay that God hath taken them for instruments of greater matters, then those others; and so they make Idolls of themselues; and place themselues vpon the heades of all men, with intollerable presumption. So miserable is the errour of these men, that being extremly proud they hold them­selues for perfectly humble; and belieuing that God only dwelleth in them, he is indeed far from them; and that which they take to be light is pro­found darknesse.

Of these, or such as these, Gerson sayth, There are some to whome it is a thing very a­greeable, to be gouerned by their owne conceit, and they walke vnder the conduct of their owne inuentions; or rather they are cast headlong, v­pon their owne opinion, which is a most dange­rous guide. They Euen in doing of pen­nance, dis­cretion is to be followed; & whensoe­uer ex­cesse ther­in is vsed, and not accompa­nyed with docility, & other interiour vertue, it is not on­ly su [...]pi­ [...]ou [...], but dange­rous. macerate themselues with too extreme fasting; they watch too much: they [Page 267]trouble and empty their braine, with excesse of teares, and in the middest of all this, they follow no mans admonition or counsell. They care not to aske the opinion of them that are wise in the law of God; nay they care not to heare them; & when eyther they do heare, or aske their counsell, they despise their sayings. And the cause of this is, that they conceaue thēselues to be some great men; and that they know better then all the world, what is fit for them to do. Of these I pro­nounce, that speedily they shall fall into the illu­sion of the Diuell; speedily shall they fall vpon the stone of offence, because they are conducted by a blind kind of rashnes, and an excessiue kind of lightnesse. And therefore, what soeuer they shall tell thee of any extraordinary Reuelations, know thou that it is to be suspected. Al this sayth Cerson.

CHAP. LIIII.
Of some propertyes which they haue, whome we sayd to be deceaued in the last Chapter; and how necessary it is, to take the opinion of others; and of the mis­chiefe that men are brought to, by following their owne.

THOV art to vnderstand, that some of them of He cōtinueth to describe those a­foresayd heretikes. whome I spake in the last chapter, are people without learning; yea they are cordiall enemyes to men that are learned. And if perhaps [Page 268]they haue a little Latin, to read and to carry a new Testament about them, they do belieue them­selues so much (conceauing the while, that they belieue God) and they rest so much, vpon cer­taine light motiues; and do answere themselues thereby, in such blind errours, that how manifest soeuer, in themselues they be, these men know not how to shake them off; and they are so pre­sumptuous, and so impossibly to be perswaded, that, as the Scripture sayth, A man were better, en­counter with a beare from whome they had taken her whelpes, then with a foole that presumeth in his fault. And yet they haue much, in their memory, and no lesse in their tongue, that saying of S. Paul, Knowledge doth blow vp, but Charity doth build vp. And by this they thinke they haue a pattent to contemne wise men, as men that are pussed vp; & they valew themselues at a high rate, as a kind of people that is full of charity.

The Let heretike [...] examine thēselues by this rule, and they will see their owne ex­treme pride. whyle they marke not, that them­selues are the men that are puffed vp with the pride of sanctity (which is more dangerous, then the pride of science) as a thing which riseth from that which is better, and for the same very reason it is worse, though indeed neither science, nor good workes, do of themselues produce this moath; but it is the wickednes of the wicked, which taketh occasion to swell, by that which is good. Since the case standeth so, they ought not instantly to contemne such as are wise; because wisedome, of it selfe, is no impediment, but that withall a man [Page 269]may be humble and holy. Yea to many it hath beene, and still is, a great occasion of their being so; & for others to esteeme that they are not so, proceedeth from an erroneous iudgment, and an excessiue pride in themselues. But suppose they were not, yet were those others to remember, that it is written, Vpon Matt. 1 [...] the chaire of Moyses, sit the Scribes, and Pharisees; do therefore that which they direct you to, but do not that which they do. Whereas these fellowes do iust the contrary; for they receaue not the good instruction which wise men giue; and they practise the euill, which they say the others do commit, in being proud. And they despise them, without esteeming that course and order which is both naturall, and diuine; and that is, that they who are lesse, should be gouer­ned by them who are more wise.

Nor is this doctrine against that which is deliuered by Ioan. 2. S. Iohn, That the Of the holy Ghost. Vnction teacheth all thinges. For that which he intended, is but this, That The true mea­ning of this place of Scrip­ture. the grace and light of God, doth sometymes teach a man interiourly by it selfe; and at other tymes, it directeth him to aske the opinion of others; & of whome he is to aske; and so it teacheth all, though not, all alone. To this purpose, S. Augustine sayth, Let vs flye from such tētations which incline men to the greatest pride, and are the most dangerous of all others. Or rather, let vs consider, how the Apostle Act. 9. S. Paul (although he had beene prostrated, and instructed by a voyce from heauen) yet, neuerthelesse, was sent to a man, of whom [Page 270]he was to receaue the Sacraments; and by whom, he was to be incorporated into the Church. And Act. 10. Cor­nelius the Centurion, was sent to S. Peter; not only to receiue the Sacraments, but to vnderstand from him, what he was to belieue; and in whom he was to hope, and whom to loue. For if God did not speake to men, by the mouth of men, the condition of men would be miserable. And how should it else be true which is written, The 1. Cor. 3. Temple of God is holy, which Tem­ple you are, if God gaue not answeares out of this Tem­ple, which is men; but should resolue that whatsoeuer men were to learne, should be deriued from heauen, by the meanes of Angells. And so also charity would haue no intercourse by the communication of some hartes with others, if men were not taught by the meanes of other men. S. Philip was sent to the Eunuch; and Moyses tooke counsayle of I [...]thro, his Father-in-law. All this doth S. Augustine say.

S Iohn Climacus Note the authorityes. doth also affirme, that a man who belieueth himselfe, saueth the Diuell a labour, in tempting him; for he is Diuell inough to himselfe. In like manner S Hierome sayth, I will not follow myne own opinion, for that is wont to giue me euill counsaile. And S Vincentius doth much aduise, that a man, who desireth to be spirituall, may haue some maister to gouerne him: and if he will not haue one when he may, God will neuer communicate grace to that soule, for the pride thereof. S. Bernard and S Bonauenture do, at euery turning of a hand, aduise the same. Yea the Scripture of God, is full of it. Sometymes it [Page 271]sayth, Woe Isa. 5. be to you, who are wise in your owne eyes; and in your owne sight are prudent. And else where, If thou see a man who esteemeth himselfe wise, belieue that the foole shall go away better cheape then he. S Paul admonisheth vs, not to be wise in our own opinion. And the Wiseman Eccl. 6. sayth. What­soeuer thou sayst, to a foole vnles it be of things that his hart belieues, he will not receiue the words of pru­dence. And in another place, If thou incline thyne eare, thou shalt receaue instruction, and if thou loue to heare, thou shalt be wise.

Therefore, to auoyd prolixity, I say that the holy Scripture, and the admonition of Saints, and their liues, and the experimentall knowledg that we haue; doe all, with one voyce, recom­mend to vs, that we do not leane, or rest vpon our owne prudence, but incline our eare, to the counsayle of others. For otherwise what thing would there be in the world more disorderly, then the Church of God; and the same would happen to any other Congregation of men, if euery one might follow his owne opinion, con­ceauing that he is in the right. And how can it be, that the spirit of Christ, which is the spirit of humility, of peace, and of vnion, should mooue any one to be contrary to the rest of those men, in whom God himselfe doth dwell? And how can it grow from this spirit of God, that a man should haue him selfe in so high esteeme, as that there may not be found, in the whole congrega­tion of men, another, who can teach him, or [Page 272]who can iudge, whether his Spirit be good, or bad. For as, S. Augustine sayth, He would not fayle to take and follow the counsayle of others, if it were not, that through pride, he thinketh himselfe better then the other, in giuing counsayle. And though his pride is so great, as to thinke that he is better then others, yet he might thinke, that as one may belesse good then another, and yet may haue the gift of prophesy; and power to cure sicke persons, and may haue such giftes as these, (which another perhaps, may not haue, (though he be better then the former) so it may also be, that he who is inferiour in other giftes, may be yet more eminent, in the gift of affoarding counsaile; or in the discretion of spirits, which another man, who is more eminent may chaunce to want.

And since God is so great a friend of humi­lity, and peace, let no man feare, that if the thing which he hath, be of God, it will go from him, or that he shall loose it, only because he submit­teth himselfe, for the loue of the same God, to the opinion of another; but rather it wil be more and more confirmed; and if it proceed from o­ther meanes, it will fly away.

Consider also, that if this wisedome be in­fused by God, one of the conditions thereof, (according to Iacob. 3. S. Iames) is A wise and true conside­ration. to haue a power of persuasion; and consider yet agayne, that S. Augustine calleth these thoughtes most proud, and most dangerous For The Pride of the vnder­standing, is much more dā ­gerous, them the Pride of will, and why it is so. although the pride and disobedience of the Will, be dangerous, which [Page 273]consisteth in being vnwilling to obey anothers will; yet much more dangerous is the pride of the vnderstanding, which consisteth in not be­ing subiect to another, vpon the beliefe which he giueth to himselfe. For a man that is only proud in will, sometymes may be content to obey, be­cause he holdeth another mans opinion to be better; but he that is resolued to hold his owne for best, who shall cure that man? And how shal he be able to obey in a thing, which he holdeth to belesse good? And if the eye, which is the vnder­standing (wherewith it should be able to see, and cure this pride) be blind, it selfe (with being full of the same pride) who shall be able to cure it? And if the light grow to be darkenes, and if the very rule of straightnesse become crooked, what kind of thing, will the rest be?

So great are the mischiefes which grow from pride, that it troubleth al them, with whom it hath to do; for if men will defend their owne opinion in obstinate manner, and be inseparable from it, who shall be able to liue in peace? And to the end, that thou mayst fly, & cutse this vice, know that it arriueth so farce, as to make of them that were good Christians, peruerse Heretikes. Nor haue they beene, nor are they such, for any other reason now, but because by giuing more beliefe to their owne iudgment, then to that of the Church, and of their Prelates, they conceaue themselues to hit the birde in the eye; and that whatsoeuer passeth in their hart, is the worke of [Page 274]God; & that to belieue the opinion of others, ra­ther thē that which they find in their own hart, were to forsake God, for man. But experience & truth demonstrates to vs, that the thing which they thought to be the spirit of Truth, was the spi­rit of Errour, which not being able to ouercome them otherwise, did assault them (after hauing transformed it selfe, into an Angell of light) vn­der the appearance of Good; & so depriued them of the life of their soules, for not being content to submit themselues to the aduice of others.

CHAP. LV.
That we must fly fast from our owne opinion; & chuse some person to whome for the loue of God, we must be subiect, and be ruled by him, and what kind of man he must be, and how we must carry our selues with him.

BEING therefore afrayd, and taking a war­ning by occasion of these fellowes, I admo­nish thee, that as thou art to be an enemy to thyn owne will, so thou art, much more to be so, of thyne owne opinion; and of resoluing to carry thinges, by thyne owne iudgment; since thou seest the euill conclusion, which is made by selfe conceite. Be an enemy thereof, both within doores, and without; and follow it not, euen in trifles. For Note this well. thou shalt hardly find a thing which so much will disquiet the peacefull rest, that [Page 275]Christ desireth to find in thy soule, (that so he may cōmunicate himselfe thereunto) as to be ob­stinate, & resolute, to carry the matter after thyne owne mind. And better for thee it were, not to haue that which thou desirest, then to loose that, wherof thou hast so much need, for the enioying of God, with intiere peace. This I say is to be pra­ctised by thee, if the ordering of the house do not belōg to thy care; for in case it do, thou must not forbeare to do that which seemeth best to thee, though yet withall, thou art to informe thy selfe well, both by making prayer, and taking coun­saile, according to the quality of the thing in question.

Thou Who­soeuer will mai­ster his will in great mat­ters, must be contēt to begin in small ones. knowest well inough, that they who are in dāger of receauing some great affront, do beginne to make trial, vpon enduring certaine toyes; that so they may be exercised towardes the bearing of such as indeed are great ones. And know thou assuredly, that whosoeuer is accusto­med to belieue himselfe; and doth esteeme him­selfe to haue a wise vnderstanding, resoluing to beare himselfe out in small matters; will find it very strang, and hard, to depart in greater from his owne opinion. And on the contrary side, a man who hath vsed to call his vnderstanding foole, and to giue it little credit in trifles, will find himselfe facilitated, towards a subiection of himselfe to the pleasure of God, and of his Supe­riours; and not easily to iudge ill of his Neigh­bours. And as I haue sayd, that in thinges of smal [Page 276]importance, thou shalt do well to forsake thyne owne, and to follow another mans opinion, without much examination of who it is, that sayth, or sayth it not; so I tell thee, that in the things which concerne thy conscience, thou art much more to follow aduice; neither trusting thy selfe therewith, nor yet some such other man, as thou mayst find at randome.

It will therefore be fit for thee, to take for thy guide and Ghostly Father, some person, who is both Both learning, & experi­ence are wholy necessary to such as are to be the Gho­stly Fa­thers of spirituall persons. learned, and of experience, in thinges that belong to God. For without both these qualityes (speaking ordinarily) he will not be for the purpose. For learning alone, is not sufficient to prouide for the particuler necessityes, and prosperityes, and temptations, which hap­pen to the soules of such as walke in a spirituall life; and in these cases, as Gerson sayth, recourse must be had to men of experience. And it will fal out, many tymes, to them who haue no more thē learning, as it fell out to the Apostles; who (be­ing one night, in a tempest at sea) thought that Christ comming towardes them, was but some other idle apparition; (holding that for a deceit, which yet indeed was a reall fauour, & the truth of our Lord.) Some man will strike thee into excessiue feares, condemning euery thing for e­uill. And as their owne harts are very farre from the experience of any spirituall gustes, and illu­minations of God, so do they speake therof, as of a thing neuer heard of▪ and can with difficulty [Page 277]be induced to belieue, that nobler and higher thinges do passe in the harts of others, then they find in their owne.

With others also thou shalt meet, who are practised in matters of deuotion, and who are ea­sily carryed towardes any gust of spirit, & who make much account thereof. And if any such thing be told them, they hearken to it, with great admiration; esteeming him for more holy, who hath more of them; and he is light in giuing credit to them, as if in them, all were safe. But because indeed it is not so, many of these per­sons fall into errour; and they suffer also them to fall, whom they haue in charge, for want of gi­uing them sufficient aduice, against the craft of the Diuell; and in this respect they are as vnfit to gouerne soules, as the former. But Note this and learne thereby, wherein true san­ctity doth consist. know thou, that there are some of so good iudgement, as to vnderstand, that true sanctity consisteth not in such things as these; but in the accompli­shing of the will of our Lord; and they haue ex­perience in spirituall things, and they also can tell how to doubt, and to aske of others who may informe them. Thou Great experiēce with great hu­mility, goeth far in making a manable to guyde another in matters of spirit, though there be not so great lear­ning. maiest trust these last, although they haue no eminency in learning; because that which they haue, is inough, since they haue no other employment, but to looke to themselues. And since it doth so much import thee, to light vpon a good guide, thou must with great instance, beseech our Lord, that he will di­rect thee, by his prouidence, to such a one; and [Page 278]thou being once addressed, put thy hart into his hand, with great security; & hide nothing from him, whether it be good or bad. Not the good, to the end that he may addresse it, and aduise thee; and not the euill, to the end that he may re­forme it. And do not any thing of importance without his opinion; placing cōfidence in God, (who is a friend to obedience) that he will put, into the hart, and tongue of that guide of thyne, the thing which shalbe fit for thy saluation. By this meanes thou shalt fly from those two euills and extreames; The one, Of them that say, I haue no need of mans counsayle, God teacheth me, and satisfieth me; The other, Of them, who are so subiect to some man, without considering any other thing, but that he is a man; as that the ma­lediction layeth hold on him which sayth, Ierem. 17. Cur­sed be the man that confides in man.

But The true mid­dle way that is to be wal­ked in. do thou submit thy selfe to a man, & thou shalt haue escaped the former; and do not confide in the knowledge or force of that man, but in God, who will speake to thee, and streng­then thee by meanes of a man; and so thou shalt haue declined the later danger. And be thou well assured, that how much soeuer thou seeke, thou shalt neuer find any other way so straight, or so secure, for the knowing the will of our Lord, as this of humble obedience, which is so much ad­ [...]ed to, by all his Saints; and so much practised by many of them; as we find▪ by the testimony, of the liues of the holy He meaneth chiefesly such as li­ued in that de­sert. Fathers. Amongst [Page 279]whom, it was held for a great signe of a mans ap­proaching towards perfection, if he subiected himselfe much to the old man, that was to go­uerne him. And amongst the many good things, wherwith Religious Orders do abound; thou wilt hardly find any other so good, as that all of them, liue vnder a Superiour, whom they are to obey; not only in exteriour actions; but interiourly also in the opinion and iudgement. Who if they haue confidence, and do carry deuotion to the vertue of Obedience; they shall lead a life both ve­ry safe, and very sweet.

CHAP. LVI.
Wherein he beginneth to declare the second word of the verse, and how we are to consider of the Scri­ptures; and how we must restrayne the sight of our eyes, that we may the better see with those of our soule, which the freer they are from the sight of creatures, the better shall they see God.

IF thou haue wel considered the words, which already I haue spoken, thou wilt haue seene how necessary it is, to Heare; that so thou maist please our Lord God. Now hearken to the se­cond word which is, See. It is not inough to be attentiue to the externall word of God; or yet to the internall inspirations, which are signified by hearing; but it is also necessary to keep the eye cleare, that it may see. For the blind, who do not [Page 280] see the light, are no lesse reprehended by Christ, then the deafe, who do not heare the Truth. But do not thinke, when he aduiseth thee to see, that he inuiteth thee to see sportes, or entertainments of the world; for that A most necessary thing it is, to haue the eyes well mor­tified. kind of seing, what is it else, but a kind of blinding, since it blocketh vp the sight of the soule. It is inough for the eyes of the body, if they behold the earth into which they must returne; and if they cast themselues vp to heauen, where the desire of their hart is lodged; according to that of Psal. 8. Dauid, I will behold the heauen, that worke of thy hands, the moone, and the starres which thou hast framed. And yet if thou haue a mind to looke vpon other creatures, I haue nothing to say against it; vpon this condi­tion, that such a sight may passe from them to God; and that it be, not to forget and loose God therby. For of such sightes as that, Dauid Psal. 118. sayd to our Lord, O Lord [...]uert myne eyes, that they may not looke vpon vanity and quicken me in thy way.

This wise King, knew well, that inordi­nate looking, is an impediment to speedy run­ning the Carriere of God; and vseth to make the burning hart of man, grow coole; and therfore it is, that he sayth, Quicken me in thy way. For it is plaine, to men of experience, that how much more retired these exteriour eyes vse to be, so much more clearely do men see with their inte­riour eyes. And this sight, is both more cheer­full, and more profitable. And it is but reason, that a Christian man should easily belieue thing [Page 281]since we read of some Philosophers, who did put out the eyes of their body, that they might haue the eyes of their vnderstanding, more recollected to contemplatiō. Wherin, we are to discard their errour, in thrusting out their eyes; & yet we may serue our selues of their good intention, by recol­lecting them; and we are, withall care, to keep a guard vpon thē, least such miseryes happen to vs as by dissolutenes of this kind, are wont to rise.

From Note how the immorti­fication of the eyes, was the occasion of the first great sin of Adam, and Eue. whence doest thou thinke, that the beginning of the perdition of the world pro­ceeded? I assure thee it came from one disorde­red sight. Eue beheld the forbidden tree, & grew into an appetite of eating the fruit, as seeming to her full of beauty, and gust. She did eate, and she made her husband eate thereof; and that bitt was death, both for them and all their po­sterity. There is no discretion to behould that, which it is not lawfull to desire; as is plaine, by Dauid the holy King; whose eyes tooke pleasure in looking vpon a woman, as she was bathing in her garden; and he grew to haue reason, there­by, to weep dayes and nights; and to bathe his owne bed, & Royall couch with tears in so great aboundance, that his eyes, were as if they had been moath-eaten with much weeping. And he that sayth, Myne eyes haue powred out, euen floudes of tears, because the wicked haue not kept thy law, had done better to haue shed them, because himselfe did not keep it. Good counsaile had it beene for his eyes, not to haue taken gust, in that which [Page 282]cost him afterwards so deare. And so it will also, be good for vs sinners, since we are so loose of the feare, as that, where the eyes go before, the hart with speed goeth after. Let Note well this whole discourse. vs therefore put a vayle betweene vs, and euery creature; not fast­ning our sight wholy vpon any of them; least be­ing there taken vp, we loose the sight of our Creatour; That is, those deuout considerations which we had of him. And do thou belieue for certaine, that one of the most assured signes of a retyred, and recollected hart, is the mortification of the sight, and of a dissolute hart, if the sight be dissolute.

There is no pulse which so assuredly declares the disposition of the body, as the eye expresseth the inclination of the soule, either to good, or euill. And therefore the Spouse doth prayse the eyes of his fellow Spouse, by saying, That 1. Cant. 5. her eyes were, as of the Doue; giuing vs to vnderstand that they were chast, as they of the Doue are, which vse to be blacke. Let vs therfore see wel, how we see; vnlesse we haue a mind to pay that by lamenting, which we haue sinned in by looking. And if this care must be had, in the exteriour eyes, how much more must it be had, in those of the mind; wherein chiefly the seeing well, or ill consisteth; and whereby it is best iudged, whe­ther a man haue eyes, or no. No man doubtes, but that the Pharisees to whome Christ Iesus our Lord, was speaking, had eyes in their heades, wherewith they saw; but because their soule [Page 283]had no eyes, he calleth them blind, and guides of the blind. For, as S. Antony sayd to a blind man called Dydimus, who was full of wise knowledge of holy Scripture, Thou hast no reason to be troubled for the want of corporall eyes, which cats, and dogges, and other inferiour liuing creatures haue, since the eyes of thy soule are cleare, wherewith God is seene.

Of this sight therefore, art thou to vnder­stand that, whereof thou art admonished, in the second word, see. If thou wilt performe it, thou hast eyes, which are thy vnderstanding; and this was giuen vs, for the sight of God. Do Con­sider, and auoyd, those ob­iects which are so hurtful to our sight. not fill it with the dust of the earth, and transito­ry honour; do not stop it vp with the grosse hu­mours of sensuall thoughts; but shaking of such poore thinges as these, which fill the sight, pre­serue thy vnderstanding cleare, that so it may be imployed, vpon him that gaue it; and who de­maundes it of thee againe, that so he may make thee happy by it. Do This may be good counsayle for all Christians according to our se­uerall vo­cations: though chiefly it be heere meant, for such, as are in state of virginity. not thinke it to haue been in vayne, that Christ hath freed thee from worldly busines; & was pleased that thou shoul­dest not enter into the troubles and incommodi­tyes of a marryed life; the cares whereof, vse to trouble their sight, who are subiect to them; if our Lord do not impart, a very speciall grace; in the strength whereof, they may comply with both obligations. But thee our Lord hath freed, to the end that thou mightest be wholy his; and that thyne eyes might cast themselues vpon him [Page 284]alone, as the chast Spouse should only looke, vpon him, whose Spouse she is.

CHAP. LVII.
That the first thing which a man must see, is himselfe; of the necessity which we haue of this knowledge, and the inconueniences that grow vpon vs, through want thereof.

THOV Heere beginneth a most excellent, and most profitable discourse, of the knowledg of ones selfe. It is made at large and deserueth to be well conside­red. shalt therefore hold this order in looking, that first thou looke vpon thy selfe; and then vpon God; and afterward vpon thy Neighbours. Looke vpon thy selfe, that so thou mayst know thy selfe, and haue thy selfe in small account. For there is not a worse kind of deceit, then to be deceaued in one selfe; and to esteeme himselfe for other then indeed he is. A piece of durt thou art, for as much as cōcerneth thy body; and a sinner thou art, for as much as concernes thy soule; and if thou esteeme thy selfe to be more then this, thou art blind. And the spouse will say to thee, If thou dost not know thy selfe, O thou who art fayre amongst women, go out, and looke after the footsteps of thy heardes, and feed thy kiddes, by those cottages, or tents of the sheepheardes. This place, I will declare to thee, according to the Greeke letter and the vulgar edition, which the Councell of Trent directeth vs to follow, The same place of holy Scripture may haue diuers meanings and all of them true, as S. Augustin doth pro­ue at large lib. 11. Confes. in many places. al­though the Hebrew letter do carry another sense: They say therefore, according to the opinion of [Page 285]S. Gregory, S. Bernard, and Origen after this man­ner. There is nothing so much to be trembled at, as to heare it sayd, by the mouth of God, Go out, and see. For if the saddest word that a Father can say to a sonne, or a husband to a wife (whome he kept in great honour, and aboundance) is to se­parate her from his estate and protection, by say­ing, Go thy wayes from me, and from my house; what kind of thing shall it be, for the soule to depart from God, but to be banished from all happynes, and to fall into all miseryes? Whither shall we go, sayd S. Peter to Christ, for thou hast the wordes of eternall life? Whither shall we go, for thou hast the fountayne of life, and thou only hast it? Whither shall we go, O thou sweet and cheerfull light, without which, all is darknes? Whither shall we go, O thou bread of life, without which all is deadly hunger? Whither shall we go, O thou most strong defence, without whome, euen security it selfe, is but danger? In fine, whither shall that sheep go, which is all enuironed with wolues, if the sheepheard do forsake it, and cast it off? [...] It is so, & he that doth not thinke so, doth not thinke of it, as he ought. sadd word it is, Go out, and see; and like that, which Christ hath to say to the wicked, at the last day, Go you cursed into the fire, that is prepared for you.

I say yet once againe, that there is not a thing, which ought to mak a man tremble more, or labour more for the auoyding of it, if he be, in the plentifull and cheerefull house of God, and in the hand of his most strong protection, then to [Page 286]heare these words, Go out, and see. This going out, is no trifle, but the cause of all mischiefe. For that man who is made destitute of diuine help, and left to his own strength, what will he do, as sayth S. Austine, but that which S. Peter did, when he denyed Christ? And that, without knowing, or repenting himselfe of the euill which he had done, till the diuine countenance, and fauour of Christ, did shine vpon him, who by falling into sinne, had forgotten him; giuing knowledge to S. Peter of the misery into which he had cast himselfe; and giuing him griefe for the same; & letting him see, that the cause of his fall, was his hauing confided in himselfe. So that the reason why our mercifull Lord groweth so rigorous, in turning his children out of dores, is because they do not know themselues; esteeming that they are somewhat, and resting so vpon their owne strength.

To this soule therfore, the Spouse doth say, If thou dost not know thy selfe, get thee out, and see the footsteps of thy heards of Cattell. Which is as much, as if he had sayd, that he gaue her [...]uer, to follow the trace, and workes of sinners, who commit iniquity by troopes, like heardes of Cattel, one helping on the other. And Com­panions in sinne, compani­on [...] in torment. so also, at the last day, shall they be tyed vp in bundles, to be iointly burnt in the fire of hell, who heere haue iointly giuen themselues to sinne. And the spouse to such a soule doth say, Thy heardes: because sin is of vs, and not of God; and the good that we [Page 287]do, is of God, and not of vs; since we do it by vertue of him. Now this, he is resolued, that we should soundly know to be so; not so much for that which it importeth him, (whose glory in himselfe, is not increased, although he be glori­fyed by vs) but for that which concerneth vs; for whose good it makes (and that greatly) to know, that the honour, of all the good we haue, or do, must be ascribed to him, and not to vs. And if, of that which he placed in vs, for his owne prayse, we will erect an Idoll, by attributing the glory of the incorruptible God to our selues, who are corruptible men; he will not suffer it to passe vnpunished, but will say Continue thou, with that which is thyne, and perish; since thou wouldest not remaine in me, who had a mind to saue thee, from perishing.

O with how Read & take heed and trem­ble. high Truth, are these words accomplished in proud men; and how soone do they grow from being spirituall to be carnall; from being recollected to be dissolute; from be­ing gold, to be durt. And they who were wont to feed vpon the bread of heauen with gust, do afterwards take pleasure to eat the food of swine. And it groweth to be afflictiue to thē, not only to do the works of God, but euen to heare men speak of him. Whence doest thou thinke it did pro­ceed, that some persons who were chast in their youth (although they were assaulted with stin­ging temptations) when they came into old age, haue miserably fallen into such deformed vilenes [Page 288]of this kind, as that they were amazed, and euen did abhorre themselues. The cause was this. In their youth they liued with holy feare, and with humility; and finding themselues so, vpon the brimme of falling, they called vpon God, and were defended by him. But The fruit of pride. when afterward, vpon a long possession of the chastity which they had, they grew to be high fed, and to confide in themselues, at that very instant were they forsa­ken by the hand of God, and did that, which was proper to themselues, which was to fall. And so is it accomplished, That they feede their kiddes; which are their light, and dishonest appetites, neere the Tentes of the sheepheardes, which are the bodies of the creatures of God; For in them they dwell, as if it were in a Tente, which is set vp in a field, to be remooued vpon euery short warning, and not, as in a house, or Citty of rest. And so they are sayd with much reason, to feede their senses vpon bodies; and thinges belonging to the body; because, by their pride, they lost the true sense which they had; belieuing otherwise of themselues, then they are, (which is indeed but to be sinners, and good for nothing of themsel­ues) and robbing God of that glory, which doth so duly, and truly belong to him, for all the good which we doe at all.

Awake therfore, O daughter, and be war­ned by the hurt of others, and serue thy selfe of the threat, least otherwise thou be put to feele the smart. And be thou like the spouse, to whome [Page 289]this speach was vsed, who hearing so sad a word (of, Go thy wayes, and see) to fall from his mouth, from whome all good thinges proceed, she con­sidered, and she knew herselfe; and she cast off certayne presumptions, to which formerly she had beene subiect. Being thus humbled by this reprehension, the spouse doth comfort Cant. 5. her, by saying, I haue resembled thee, O thou my friend, to my troopes of horse amongst Pharaos Chariots, thy cheekes are fayre as of a Turtle. By pride a man growes like the Diuell; who as the Ghospell sayth, did not remaine in the Truth, which is God; but did resolue to subsist in himselfe, and vpon himselfe to leane, and rest, and so he fell. For a creature cannot subsist in himselfe, but in God. And on the other side, a man, by the humble knowledge of himself, growes like to those good Angells, who did cast themselues vpon God, and vntied themselues from themselues. For they saw that they were, but as a kind of broken reed; & so God vpheld them, and confirmed them. And they cryed out saying. Michael, which signify­eth, Who like to God? Wherein they contradicted the wretched Lucifer, and his followers, who would needes make Idolls of themselues, ascri­bing that to themselues, which did belong to God; which is, To be the beginning, and the prote­ction, and the entiere repose of all creatures. Not as if they conceaued, that this could be (they who knew themselues to be creatures) but because they tooke pleasure in it, as if so it had beene. As [Page 290]proud men vse to do; who although with the mouth, or vnderstanding, they crye out, that they hold, and hope for all their good from God; yet by Note and take heed. their will; they exalt themselues, and they vainely reioyce in themselues; as if of themselues they had that good. Confessing with their vn­derstanding, that the glory is due to God, but robbing him of it, by the will.

But those good Angells, cry out, both with the will and vnderstanding, Who like to God? For with their harts they did humble, and disesteeme themselues; as they knew by their vnderstanding, that they were to do. And for this, they were ex­alted, to the participation of God, without so much as a possibility of euer loosing it. Now, to these troupes of horse. which is the Angelical army that destroyed Pharao, and his chariots in the red sea, Christ compareth his Spouse, when she is con­tent to know, & measure her selfe; & he praiseth her cheekes, wherein she vseth to shew bashfull­nesse. For the spouse was ashamed of that repre­hension, as hauing demanded higher thinges, then were conuenient for her meanenesse. And her cheekes, of bold, grew bashfull, and chast, as of the turtle; which is an honest and a modest bird. And for this it was, that the deuout S. Ber­nard S. Ber­n [...], was therefore no Prote­stant. sayd, That he had found by experience, that nothing was more profitable, for the obtayning, con­seruing, or reconering of grace, then euer to liue in feare and holy care. When A Christian must euer liue with a holy kind of feare and [...]. we want grace, we must haue feare, because we are ready to take a [Page 291]thousand falls. When we haue it, we must haue care, because we are to worke, in conformity of the talent which God bestoweth on vs therby; & most care of all when we loose it; because that fauour went from vs, by our negligence. The Scripture doth therefore say, Blessed is the man who doth alwayes feare.

CHAP. LVIII.
That we must be diligent to find out the knowledge of our selues; and by what meanes this may be done; and that it is fit for vs to haue some priuate place, into which we may dayly retire our selues for a tyme.

BY that which heere is sayd, and by much more, which hath beene sayd by the Saints, in prayse of the knowledge of ones selfe, thou wilt find how necessary this Iewell is, for the com­ming afterward to know God. And since thou hast a mind, to build a house in thy soule, for so high a Lord, know thou, that God will neuer inhabite a proud hart. not the high, but the humble of hart, are his houses. There­fore let thy first care be, to digg deep, in the earth of thy littlenes; till hauing freed all that which thou hast, from being esteemed by thy selfe, thou come at last, to the firme stone, which is God; vpon which, & not vpon thyne owne false earth, or sand, thou art to build thy house. For this did the blessed S. Gregory say, Thou who thinkest to [Page 292]rayse vp a building of vertues take into the first part of thy care, the foundation, which is humility for he that pretendeth to haue vertue without it, is like a man that would carry ashes in his hand, against the wind This he sayth, not only because vertues do not profit men without humility (though rather indeed without it, they be no vertues) but for that they are an occasion of great perdition, as a great building vpon a sleight, and weake foundation, would be sure of a great fall.

According therefore to the height of other vertues, the foundation of humility is to be layd low; to the end that the soule may be firme, and not puffed first vp, & then down by the wind of Pride. And if thou say, where shall I find this pretious iewell of the knowledge of my selfe? I tell thee, that although it be of great valew, yet Wher humility is to be found. art thou to find it in the stable; and in the mid­dest of the dung of thyne owne pouertyes, and infirmityes, remouing thyne eyes from looking on the liues of others. Do not busy thy selfe to know curious thinges; but turne in thy sight, v­pon thy soule: and continue in examining of thy selfe. And although at the first, thou canst not lay hold vpon this knowledge (like one that goeth out of a bright Sunne-shine, into a darke cham­ber,) yet Obser­ue, and practise this, for thou wile find it most cer­tainely true. by continuing, in a quiet manner, thou shalt see, by little & little, with the grace of God, whatsoeuer is in thy hart, thogh it lye in the most secret corners therof. And that thou mayst know the meanes, which thou art to vse, in a [Page 293]thing that doth so highly import thee, giue eare to S. Hierome, who speaketh thus to a marryed woman. In such sort art thou to haue care of thy house that thou also mayst find some resting place for thy soule. Seeke out some fit corner, and retyred from the noyse of thy family, to which I would haue thee go, as one doth into a hauen flying frō the stiffe tēpest of thy cares. And there be thou in reading of spirituall books and continuall prayer, and in the thoughts of another life, and they so firme, as that all the employments of the rest of the day, may be made light to thee, by this tyme of thy retraite. Nor do I yet say this, to withdraw thee from the gouernement of thy house, but rather that so thou mayst learne thereby, and consider how thou art to carry thy selfe therein. If this Bles­sed Saint do recommend to a marryed woman, that she free her self from the busines of her house for some tyme, and retyre her self into some quiet place, to read, and thinke of heauenly thinges; with how much more reason is it, that a Virgin of Christ, who is free from worldly cares; and who should thinke that she liueth not for any thing els so particulerly, as to frequent prayer, & to practise both interiour and exteriour recol­lection, should seeke out some priuate, and hid­den place of her house, wherein she may haue her deuout books, and deuout pictures; and that the same place may be only deputed, to the vse of seeing, and tasting, how sweet our Lord is.

The state of Virginity which thou hast taken, is not meant for this, that thou shouldst be wrap­ped [Page 294]vp in the cares of this world, which passe & perish. But as it carryeth resemblance to the The noblenes of the state of virginity. state of celestiall spirits (for as much as concernes the entiernes & incorruption of the flesh) so thou art to thinke (to the very out side of thy power) that no thought of earth must haue entrance in­to thy hart; but thou art to be a liuing Temple, wherein the sacrifice of continuall prayers may be offered, and prayses of him that made thee, sounded forth without intermission. Let this on­ly thought possesse thy hart: how thou mayst please our Lord, as Coloss. 3. S. Paul sayth. Giue thy selfe, for dead, to the world, since thou hast espoused thy soule to a celestiall King. And Recol­lection is necessary for soule▪ that pre­tend to serue God. remember what he sayth to the Spouse, A Cant. 4. gardē shut vp, O my sister and my spouse; a garden shut vp. For not only art thou to be kept cleane in thy body, but thou art also to be very retyred, & recollected in thy soule. And because Virginity is imbraced among Chri­stians, not only for what it is in it selfe; but be­cause it helpeth to giue the soule to God, with more freedome of spirit; that Virgin, who is con­tent with the only Virginity of her body, and is not carefull of progresse in vertue, and prayer, and taking gust in God; what other thing doth she, then dwell vpon the way; and not procure to arriue to the iourneys end? And it were, as if thou hadst all thinges ready to sew, and worke, and shouldst neuer set thy selfe about it.

A shameful thing it is for any Christian not to exercise himselfe in reading of spirituall bookes; [Page 295]and not to carry holy thoughtes in his soule; but for a Religious man not to do it, or for a Priest, or for a Virgin, who haue giuen themselues away to Christ, is not only a thing shamefull, but vnsuf­ferable. And therefore, if thou wilt reape the fruites of that holy Virginity, which thou hast promised to Christ, be an enemy both of seeing, and being seene. Go abroad the least thou canst, though it be euen to holy places, & good works; for so it is fittest for young folks. Do not plunge thy selfe into transitory cares; & when thou hast done working som what with thy hands, (which being moderately vsed, will do thee good, both in soule and body) & hauing complyed with thy obligations, either of necessity, or Charity (ac­cording to that rule of life which hath been pres­cribed to thee) take as much tyme as thou canst, to be shut vp in thyne Oratory. And although at the first, it may chance to go against thy sto­make; thou wilt come to find, that they are the affaires of heauen which are treated there; and that thou takest not so much gust in the expence of any tyme, as that which thou spendest there in peace.

CHAP. LIX.
Wherein he prosecuteth the exercise which conduceth to the knowledge of ones selfe; and how we are to profit in the vse of reading, and of Prayer.

HAVING then found out this priuate place; retire thy selfe into it, twice euery day, at the least; Once in the morning to thinke vpon the sacred passion of Iesus Christ our Lord, as I will shew thee afterward; and once againe, in the e­uening, at the shutting vp of the day, to attend to the exercise of knowing thy selfe, and let thy way to that, be this. Take first some booke of good instruction, wherein, as in a glasse, thou mayest see thy faultes; and that thy soule may therewithall receiue such food, A most excellent aduise how spiri­tuall books are to be read with great profit of the soule. as to be en­couraged in the way of God. This reading, must not be vsed with any trouble, nor by turning o­uer many leaues; but with raising vp the hart to our Lord, to beseech him, that he will speake to it, with his liuing and powerfull voyce, by meanes of those words which there thou readest. And that he wil giue thee the true vnderstanding thereof; and with this attention, and reuerence, obserue and hearken to God, by those wordes which thou readest, as if thou heardest himselfe preach, when he spake heere in the world. In such sort, that although thyne eyes be cast vpon the booke, do not thou fasten thy selfe to it, with [Page 297]so great an anxiety of mind, as to make thee not so well to thinke of God; but conserue a moderate and peacefull attention, which may not enthrall thee, nor hinder the free, and superiour kind of attention, which thou art to yeald vnto our Lord; and reading thus, thou wilt not grow weary.

By this meanes, our Lord will giue thee, the liuing sense of the wordes, which in thy soule may worke, sometimes repentance of thy sinns, at other times a confidence in him, and his par­don of them; and he will open thy vnderstanding towards the knowledge of many other thinges, although thou read not many lines. Sometymes, it wilbe fit to interrupt thy reading, & to thinke of somewhat, which resulteth from thence; and then to returne againe to read, and so at once thou shalt profit, both in reading, and prayer. And with a hart thus deuout and recollected, thou mayest beginne to enter, vpon the exercise Of the knowing of thy selfe; & then vpon thy knees, thou shalt thinke to what an excellent, and so­ueraigne maiesty thou art going to speak. Which yet How we are to thinke v­pon God when we go to pray. thou must not conceaue to be farre from thee; but that he filleth heauen and earth; & that there is nothing wherein he is not; and that he is more within thee, then thou thy selfe. And considering thyne owne poorenes, make thou a profound internall reuerence, humbling thy hart, as if it were a kind of Ant in the presence of an infinite Essence, and desire that thou mayst haue leaue to speake. Begin first to speake ill of thy [Page 298]selfe; and make thy confession in generall: and particulerly also (if it occure to thee) demand pardon of that, wherein thou mayst haue offen­ded him, that day.

Resort then to some of those Some few vocal prayers, wherein moderati­on is to be vsed. deuotions, to which thou art accustomed, but let thē not be so many, as that they may breake thy braynes, & dry vp thy deuotion; nor yet do thou leaue them altogeather; because they serue to stir vp the soule to piety; and for the offering also of that seruice of our tongue to God, in token that he gaue it to vs. For this reason, S. Paul teacheth vs, That we must pray, and sing, with the spirit both of the voyce, and of the soule. And these prayers must serue to obtaine fauours of our Lord, not only for thy self, but for them to whom thou hast par­ticuler obligation; and for the whole Church of Christ; the care whereof, thou art to haue deep­ly fixed in thy hart. For if thou loue Christ, it is reason that thou be neerely touched, by that for which he shed his bloud. Pray as well for them that liue, as for the soules that are in Purgatory, and for all that infidelity, which is depriued of the knowledge of God: beseeching him to bring al vnbeleeuers to his holy Fayth▪ since he desireth that they should all be saued. And these prayers, or the most of them, are to be addressed two wayes. By the one, to our Our B. Lady must be deuoutly prayed to, by vs, as a great interces­sour with her Sonne our Lord, for the pardon of our sins. but espe­cially Christ Ie­sus our Lord, who is the only hope of our salua­tion. Blessed Lady; to­wardes whome thou must be sure to carry a very cordiall loue, and to haue entiere confidence, that she will be a true mother to thee in all thy necessi­tyes; [Page 299]and the other to Christ Iesus our Lord, which also must be a most familiar refuge in thy troubles, and the only hope of thy saluation.

CHAP. LX.
How much the Meditation of death, doth profit to­wardes the knowledge of a mans selfe; and of the manner how it is to be meditated, for as much as concerneth the death of the body.

AFTER If this Chapter and the two next do not mooue thee, I know not what will. this, giue ouer to pray vocally; and conuaye thy selfe into the most inward part of thy hart; and make account, that thou art appearing in the presence of Christ Iesus; and that there are no more in the world, but thou, & he. Consider, that before thou camest into the world, thou wert nothing; and how that Omni­potent goodnes of our Lord God, drew thee out of that profound bottome of not being, and made thee his creature; and that, not after an ordinary manner; but he made thee a reasonable creature. Consider, how he gaue thee a body, and a soule; to the end that with them both, thou mightest labour in doing seruice to him. Make account that thou art then, in the very passage, out of life into death; and hauing the most true feeling of it that may be, say to thy selfe, This houre of my end is once to arriue; and I know not whether it shallbe to night, or to morrow; and since it must certainly come, it is reason that I take it into my thought. Consider, [Page 300]how thou shalt fall into thy bed; and how thou must sweate, that sweat of death. Thy breast shall beate, and rise vpward; the very stringes of thyne eyes shal breake; the colour of thy face shal vanish; and through the excesse of payne, that, so friendly society of thy body, and soule, shallbe cut off.

They shall prepare thy body for buriall; & lay it vpon a Beare; and they shall carry thee to the earth, some weeping, and others singing; & they shall cast thee into a strait graue; and load thee with dust; and when they haue troaden well vpon thee, thou shalt remaine alone, and be soon forgotten. Consider all this, by which thou must passe; and thinke what kind of thing thy body will be vnder ground, and how soon it will come to such a passe, as that whosoeuer he be that loues thee most, will not endure to see thee, or smell thee, or come neere thee. Behould then, with attention, to what end this flesh, and the glory of it doth arriue; and thou wilt see, what fooles they are, who being to go out of the world so poore, do now walke on, with so much anxiety, of being rich; and being so soone to be so defea­ted and forgotten, haue such thirst to ranke thē ­selues in higher places then others: & how deep­ly they are deceaued who regale their body, and walke in conformity of their desires; since ther­by they haue done nothing, but make themselues cookes for wormes; being curious to dresse the meate which they are to eate: and, the whyle, [Page 301]they haue made, by those short delights, a pur­chase of certaine tormēts, which shall neuer end. Consider, and behold with great attention, and leasure, thy body stretched a long in thy graue; and making account that already thou art there, procure to mortify thy desires, of flesh & bloud, as often as they shall come to thy mind; and so also mortify thy desires of pleasing, or fearing to displease the world; and of making any recko­ning of whatsoeuer thing, is most flourishing, since thou art to leaue both it, and thy selfe, so suddenly, and so miserably. And considering how thy body (when first it shall haue beene fed vpon by wormes) will be conuerted into filth, & dust, do not thinke of it heereafter, but as of a dunghill couered with snow; the very remem­brance whereof, may turne thy stomacke. And possessing thy body in this manner, thou wilt not be deceaued in the estimation thereof; but thou shalt obtayne the true knowledge of it; and shalt vnderstand how thou art to gouerne it; looking forward vpon the full point to which it must ar­riue, as he that placeth himselfe in the poope of▪ the ship, that so he may direct it the better.

CHAP. LXI.
Of that which is to be considered in the meditation of Death, about that which shall happen to the soule; that so we may profit the more, in the knowledge of our selues.

TO this A most singular discourse. which thou hast heard, is thy bo­dy to arriue; it remaines that thou heare, what shall happen to thy soule; which in that houre of thy death wilbe full of anguish, by the remembrance of those offences, which, in thy life, thou hast committed, against our Lord. And those thinges seeming grieuous at that tyme, which before, thou thoughtst to be of little mo­ment, it wilbe depriued of the vse of thy senses, nor will thy tongue serue thee for the asking suc­cour of our Lord. Thy vnderstanding will grow so darke, as that thou wilt scarce be able to thinke of God; and, in a word, by little and little, the end of that houre draweth on, wherein, by the commaundement of God, thy soule is to spring out of thy body; and when that resolution, con­cerning it must be taken, which shall fasten it, either vpon eternall damnation, or eternall sal­uation. It must heare, from the mouth of God, eyther, Depart from me to eternall torment, or re­maine with me in state of saluation, either inpurgato­ry, or in Paradise. Thou art to be wholy depending vpon the hand of God, and of him only, thou [Page 303]mayst hope for remedy; and therfore thou ough­test, in thy life tyme, to fly farre from offen­ding him, of whome then thou art to haue so much need. The Diuells will not be wanting to accuse thee; and demaund iustice of God, against thy soule; laying particulerly to thy charge▪ e­uery sinne which thou hast committed; and if then the mercy of God forget thee, what wilt thou be able to do; thou poore, weake sheepe, be­ing enuironed by those rauenous wolues, who are so full of desyre to swallow thee vp.

Consider then, in this tyme of thy recolle­ction, how, in that straite passage, thou art to be presented before the iudgement of God, all naked▪ and There is no com­pany in death, but the good or euill which we shall haue done. depriued of all thinges; sauing on­ly, that thou shalt be accompanied by the good which thou hast wrought, or by the euill which thou hast committed; and say to our Lord, that now thou doest willingly present thy self to him, to the end that thou ma [...]est obteyne mercy in that other houre, when perforce thou art to part out of the world. Make Help thy selfe to be con­founded with sham & sorrow for thy sinnes, by these cō ­parisons. account that thou art some theefe, who is taken in the manner, whi­lest he is stealing; & whom they present with his handes bound before the Iudge. Or else, that thou art some woman, whose husband found her dishonouring his bed, and who, through the ex­cesse of confusion, knoweth not how so much as to lift vp her eyes, and much lesse how to deny the fact. And do thou belieue, that God hath much more cleerely seene all that wherein thou [Page 304]hast euer offended him, then any eyes of man can see that which is done before him. And be thou full of shame, for hauing bin so wicked, in the presence of so great a goodnesse. Couer thy selfe with that very shame, which before thou didest loose; and procure to find, in thy selfe, confu­sion for thy sinnes, as one that standes in the pre­sence of her soueraigne Lord and Iudge.

Accuse thy selfe then, as thou shalt afterward be accused; and especially draw to thy memory, the most greiuous of those synnes, which thou hast committed; though if they should be sinnes of the flesh, it is safer for thee not to detaine thy selfe very particulerly vpon them; but only do it, all in grosse, as of a thing that stinckes; and the beholding whereof doth greately amaze thee. Iudge thy selfe, and sentence thy selfe for wic­ked; and cast downe thyne eyes, vpon those fyres of hell; belieuing that thou hast well deserued them. Lay If thou haue a ge­nerous & noble hart this thought will pierce it. on the one syde the blessings which God hath bestowed vpon thee, from the time of thy Creation; walking with thy discourse, both ouer thy body, and thy soule; and thinke how thou wert obliged to reuere him, and to be gratefull to him; and to loue him, with thy whole hart; seruing him with entiere obedience; and obser­uing the commaundements, both of him, and of his Church with all the power thou hast. Consi­der how he hath conserued thee, by a thousand other benefits that he hath bestowed vpon thee; & as many miseries from which he hath deliue­red [Page 305]thee; and aboue all things remember, how (to inuite thee to be good, by his example, and loue) the same Lord of the world, came into it, by making himselfe a man; and for the reliefe of thy miseryes, and the remouing of the blindnes, wherein thou wert, would needs endure many afflictions, and first did sheed many teares; and afterwards his very bloud, and he did cast away his precious life for thee. All Our Lord giue vs all grace, to make great vse of this certaine truth. which pondera­tion, in the day of thy death, and of the iudge­ment which must passe vpon thee, shalbe placed in one ballance; laying it to thy charge as that which thou hast receaued; and an account shal­be demanded at thy hand [...] ▪ how thou hast serued thy selfe of so great fauours; and how thou hast carryed thy selfe in the seruice of God, and with what care thou hast kept correspondence with that so great goodnes; wherewith God hath de­sired, and procured to saue thee. Consider well, and thou shalt see, how much reason thou hast to feare, since not only thou hast not answered by doing seruices, according to thy debtes and obli­gations; but thou hast payed him with euill for good; and hast despised him, who hath valewed thee at so high a rate; turning thy backe, and fly­ing from him, who did so fast follow thee, for thy good.

What thanks doth it seeme to thee, that thou art to giue him, who by his infinite mercy hath deliuered vs from hell, we hauing so iustly deser­ued it. What shal we offer him for a present, who [Page 306]hath so often stretched forth his hand towardes vs; that the Diuells might not strangle and carry vs instātly away to hel. And to vs who haue been cruell offendours of his Maiesty, he hath been a piteous Father and deare defendour. Consider, that Yea, & with­out Per­haps. perhaps there are soules in hell, who haue committed fewer sinnes then thou. And in such sort weigh thy selfe, and serue God, as if for thy sinnes thou hadst already entred into hell, and that he hath fetched thee out from thence. For it comes to the same account, for him to haue hin­dred thee from going thither, as thou didst de­serue, or to draw thee, out from thence through his great Nay, the for­mer is the greater mercy. mercy, after thou shouldst haue beene entred in. And if, by comparing the blessings which God hath affoarded thee, and the sinnes which thou hast committed against him, thou do not yet find in thy selfe that shame or sorrow, which thou desirest; be not yet afflicted there­with; but continue in this discourse, and lay be­fore the eyes of God, thy hart which is so woun­ded, and so indebted to him; and beseech him that he will tell thee who thou art, and what ac­count thou art to make of thy self. For the effect of this exercise, is not only to vnderstand that thou art wicked, but to feele it, and to tast it, with thy will; and to take fast hold of thy sinnefulnes, and vnworthynes; as a man would clap the stinc­king carren of a dead dogg, to his nose.

Therefore are not these considerations, to be certaine fleeting thinges; not the work of one [Page 307]day alone, but they are to be of good length; and to be vsed with much quietnes; that by little and little, the will may go drinking vp that contempt and vnworthynes, which by thy vnderstanding thou dost iudge due vnto thy self; & this thought of thyne thou art to present before God, besee­ching him, that he will lodge it in the most inter­nall part of thy hart. And from thenceforth e­steeme thy selfe, with great simplicity and verity, for a most wicked creature; deseruing all con­tempt and torment, though it were, euen that of hell. And The true vse which is to be made of these con­siderati­ons. be thou ready for the patient suffe­ring of any labour, or neglect which shall oc­cur; considering, that since thou hast offended God, it is but reason, that all the creatures should rise against thee, to reuenge the iniuryes that are done to their Creatour. By Note this. this patience of thyne, thou shalt vnderstand, if in very deed thou thinke thy selfe a sinner, and worthy of hell; say­ing within thy selfe, All the mischiefe that they can do me, is very little; since I haue deserued hell. Who is he, that will complaine of the byting of flyes, when he hath merited eternall torments? And thus go thou wondering, at the infinite goodnes of God, how he can perswade himselfe, not to cast off, such a stincking worme; but to maintaine it, and to regale it; and to powre blessings downe vpon it; both in body and soule; but al this must be for his glory, and not that we, haue any thing to glory in.

CHAP. LXII.
That the dayly examination of our faults, helpeth much towardes the knowledge of our selues; and of other great benefits which this practise of Exa­men doth bring; and of the profit which commeth to vs, both by the reprehension of others, and those also which our Lord doth interiourly send vs.

TO end the Exercise of thy knowing thy selfe; two things there remaine, for thee to heare. The first, that a Christian ought not to content himselfe, with entring into Iudgment before God, for the accusing himselfe of those sinnes which in former tymes he had committed; but of them also, which he committeth dayly; because thou wilt hardly find a thing so profitable, for the reformation of thy life, as to take account how thou spendest it; and of the defects which thou dost fall into. For that soule, which is not care­full to examine her thoughtes, and wordes, and deeds, is like to some lazy husbandman, who hath a vineyard, and who, as Salomon sayth, passed by it, and saw the hedge fallen downe, & the vineyard it self full of thornes. Make account that they haue re­commended the daughter of some King to thee, of whome thou art to haue continuall care, that she be well taught; and that, at night; thou take account of her; reprouing her for her faults, and exhorting her to practise vertue. Consider thy [Page 309]self The great o­bligation which we haue to looke to our souls. as a thing recōmended to thy self by God; and teach thy selfe to know, that thou art not to liue without a law, or rule; but in a holy kind of subiection, and vnder the discipline of vertue; & that thou shalt Marke this well. neuer do any one thing, that is i [...], but thou shalt be sure to pay for it.

Enter An earnest & an excel­lent lesson cōcerning the strict examina­tiō of our cōscience. as it were, into the chapter-house with thy selfe, towardes night; and iudge thy selfe very particulerly, as thou wouldest do any third person. Reprehend thy selfe, and punish thy selfe for thy faultes; and preach thou more to thy selfe, then to any other body, how much so euer thou loue him: and where thou findest most fault, there procure to apply most remedy. For belieue me, that by the continuance of this exa­men, and reprehension of thy selfe, thy thoughts cannot continue long without being reformed. And thou shalt ariue to a science, which will doe thee much good; and it will make thee weepe, & not swell; and it will keep thee, from that dan­gerous infirmity of pride, which entreth euen insensibly, by little and little; a man thinking well, and taking contentement in himselfe.

Be very watchful against the approach there of; and preserue thy selfe with all care. Take not thy selfe into good conceite, but know, by the light of truth, how to reprehend, & be displeasing to thy selfe; and so the mercy of God wilbe neere thee, in whose right they only are pleasing, who are displeasing in their owne. And he pardoneth their faultes, with a great liberality of goodnesse, [Page 310]who know them, and who humble themselues for them, with But it must be a true one. a true iudgement, and who la­ment them, by their will. Thou shalt also hereby, decline two other vices, which are the ordinary companions of pride; and they are, ingratitude, & sloth For by knowing, and misliking thy defects, thou wilt see thy weakenesse, and thy vnworthy­nesse, and the great mercy of God, in suffering, & pardoning thee, & in bestowing benedictions vpon thee, who hast deserued misery; and by this meanes, thou wilt be gratefull. And on the other side, considering the little good thou doest, & the many sinnes which thou committest; thou wilt be awaked, out of the sleepe of slouth, and wilt euery day begin with new feruour, to serue our Lord, seing the little that thou hast done hi­therto.

For this, and many other benefittes, which grow, from a mans knowing, and reproouing him­selfe, a holy old man of ancient tymes, being as­ked, whether a man might be more secure, by ser­uing God in solitude, or in company of others, did answeare, That is he knew how to reprehend him­selfe, he might be euery where safe; and if not, that he would be euery where in dāger. And because, through the inordinate loue which we beare our selues, we cannot know▪ or reprehend our selues, with that vnpartiall iudgement which truth requires, we must A hard lesson; but by the goodnes, and grace of our Lord Ie­ [...], it is lear [...]ed & practised, by [...] in the Catholike Church. thanke that person that doth it for vs. And we must earnestly beseech our Lord, that himselfe will rebuke vs with loue; bestowing [Page 311]vpon vs light and truth, that so we may belieue of our selues, as we ought, in very deed, to be­lieue. And this is that, which the prophet Ierem. 10. Ie­remy desired, saying, Correct me o Lord in iudgement, and not in sury; least otherwise, thou do turne me in­to nothing. To correct with fury, doth belong to the last day; when God will send the wicked to hell, for their synnes; and to correct in iudgement, is to reprehend his children in this world, with the loue of a Father. Which reprehension, carrieth a great testimony with it, that God loueth such a person. Nor is there any other so sure an one, as that; nor which bringeth so good newes, as be­ing the preface to vs of our receiuing great fa­uours, from God. So doth S. Marke relate, that our Lord Iesus Christ, appearing to his disciples, did Mare. 10. reprehend them, of incredulity, and hardnesse of hart; and then he after, gaue them power to doe wonderfull thinges. And the prophet Isa. 4. Isay sayth, That our Lord, doth wash away the vncleanes of the daughters of Sion; and the bloud, out of the middle of Hierusalem, in the spirit of iudgement, and in the spirit of heate. Giuing vs so to vnderstand, that for our Lord to wash way our faultes by comming to vs, is first to make vs know who we are, and this is iudgement. And afterward he sendeth in, a spirit of heate, which is loue, and that prouoketh vs to griefe, and so he washeth vs, giuing vs par­don by his grace.

Of this we must not presume, to allow our selues any part of the glory; since it is he, who [Page 312]first, gaue vs, to vnderstand our owne wicked­nesse, and rashnesse. Nor A description of that true [...]or­row for sinne, which is of God. yet art thou to con­ceaue, that this reprehension is any afflictiue kind of thing, which may excessiuely oppresse thy soule, by making it offensiue to thee. For any such disposition as this, is eyther of the Diuell, or of a mans owne spirit: and it must be fled. But it is a quiet knowledge of a mans owne faultes: and as a iudg [...]ment of heauen, which is pronounced in the soule; & which makes this earth of our infirmity, quake with shame, and feare, and loue; which clappe spurres into the sides, to make it mende & to serue our Lord, with greater diligence. Yea it giues a man much confidence, that our Lord lo­ueth him, as his sonne, since he exerciseth the of­fice of a Father with him, as it is written. And Prou. 3. whom he loueth he correcteth. Be therefore care­full, to behold, and reprehend, and to present thy selfe, in the presence of God, before whom, an humble acknowledgement of our owne faultes, is a matter of more security, then the proude alti­tude of any other science. And be not like some, who loue to haue themselues in good estimation; & who because they are loth to thinke ill of them­selues, they take pleasure in spending much tyme, to thinke of other deuout thinges: and, to passe lightly ouer the knowledge of their owne defects, because they find no sauour in them, since they take no pleasure in the contempt of themselues. Whereas in very Truth, there is nothing so safe, nor which so maketh God, withdraw his sight [Page 313]from our sinnes, as for vs to see, and to repre­hend them, with griefe, and pennance; As it is written; If we did iudge our selues, we should not be iudged by God.

CHAP. LXIII.
Of the estimation which we are to make of our good works that we may not fayle thereby, in the know­ledge of our selues, and of true Humility; and of the meruailous example, which Christ our Lord doth giue vs, for this purpose.

THE second thing that thou art to obserue concerning this knowledge, is, that although it be good, and profitable (since therby we come to haue a contrite and humbled hart) yet hath it this fault, that it is euer grounded, vpon our ha­uing committed sinne. And it is not to be much meruailed at, if a sinner do know, and esteeme himselfe to be a sinner. For being such, he should withal, be a hideous monster, if he would esteem himselfe for iust; as if a man, who were all full of leprosy, should account himselfe to be in health. We Of the humility which is to be exer­cised in the consi­deration of a mans good workes. must not therfore be contented to esteem only little of our selues, in respect of our sinnes; but much more are we to do so, in our good workes Profoundly knowing, that neither the fault of sinne is of God, nor the glory of our good deedes, of our selues. But that of all the good that may be in vs, we are perfectly to giue the glory, [Page 314]to the Father of lights, from whome all good and per­fect gifts descend. So that, although we may haue a thing that is good, we must looke vpon it as none of ours; and we must vse it with so great fidelity, as not to pretend for the glory which is due to God, nor that the hony (as the Prouerbe sayth) may be found sticking to our fingers ends. This humility is not of sinners, as the first was, but of iust persons.

Not only is this kind of humility in this world, but in heauen also. For by occasion ther­of, it is written, Who is like our Lord God, who dwelleth in the Altitudes, and lookes vpon humble things, both in heauen, and in earth. This kept the good Angells fast on foot; and disposed them fitly for the enioying of God, since they would be subiect to him. And the want thereof, did thrust downe those wicked Angells, because they had a mind to robbe God of his honour. This was pos­sessed by the sacred Virgin Mary, our B. Lady; who being preached for happy, and blessed by the mouth of S. Elizabeth, she puffed not vp, nor did she attribute to her selfe any glory, for the graces which were in her; but with More humble, and more faythfull, then all men and Angells put togea­ther. an hum­ble, and most faithfull hart, she teacheth S. Eli­zabeth, and the whole world, that the glory of the greatnes to which she was raysed, was not due to her, but to God; and with profound reue­rence, she beginneth to sing, My soule doth ma­gnify our Lord.

This very humility (and that which was [Page 315]yet more perfect) did inhabite the most blessed soule of Iesus Christ our Lord; which (for as much as concerned the personall being, that he had, did not rest vpon it selfe, but vpon the per­son of the Word) as it exceeded all the soules and celestiall spirits, in other graces; so did it exceed them, in holy humility; being further off from giuing glory to it selfe, and from relying vpon it selfe, then all those others put togeather. And from this hart did that proceed, which so often he most faythfully preached to the world, That he had receaued his workes, and wordes, from his Fa­ther and that to him, he gaue the glory. And he sayd, My doctrine is not myne but of him that sent me; and againe The Ioan. 7.14. wordes that I speake, I speak not of my selfe but the Father who is in me, is he that doth the workes. And so it was fit, that the redres­ser of mankind, should be very humble, since pride was the roo [...]e of all misery and mischiefe. And our Lord, resoluing to make vs know how necessary it is, for vs to haue this holy and true humility, he maketh himselfe a maister of it, in particuler manner; and he puttes his owne ex­ample before our eyes, saying thus, Learne Matt. 1 [...]. of me for I am humble and meeke. To the end, that men, seeing their so wise Maister, recommend this vertue so particulerly, they might labour much in the purchase thereof. And seing that our Lord, being so soueraign, doth not attribute the good to himselfe, there may be no man so fran­ticke, as to presume vpon the committing of so [Page 316]great a wickednesse.

Learne therefore, O thou seruant of Christ, of this thy Maister, and Lord, this holy humility, to the end, that according to his word, thou mayst be exalted, For he Luc. 14. that humbleth himselfe shallbe exalted. And keep in thy soule, this holy Pouerty; for of this it is vnderstood, Blessed Wats. 5. are the poore in spirit, for of them is the kingdome of heauen. And of this be sure, that since Iesus Christ our Lord, was exalted by the way of humility, he that hath not this, doth loose his way. And he must vnbeguile himselfe, and belieue, that which S. Augustine sayth; If thou aske me which is the way to heauen, I shall answere thee, Humility; and if thou aske me till the third tyme, I shall answere thee the same; and if thou aske me a thousand tymes, a thousand tymes shall I answere, that there is no other way I doubt much that Protestāts, are then out of the way, if it be but euen for this. but of Humility.

CHAP. LXIIII.
Of a profitable exercise, of knowing the being which we haue in Nature, that by it we may obtayne Hu­mility.

BECAVSE I be­seech you ponder well, the foure next chap­ters, for they will te [...]l you [...]ewes. I thinke, thou desirest to ob­tayne this holy humiliation of thy self, wher­by thou mayst become pleasing to our Lord, I will say somwhat, of the meanes how thou mayst procure it. And The meanes which are to be vsed for the procuring of the ho­ly vertue of humi­lity. let the first of them be, to begge it with perseuerance, of him, who is the [Page 317]giuer of all good thinges; for it is a particuler guift of his, which he bestoweth vpon his elect. Yea and the very knowing that it is a guift of God, is no small fauour.

They who are tempted with pride do wel per­ceaue, that there is nothing further off from their owne power, then this true, and profound humi­lity; and that it hapneth many tymes, that by the same meanes, whereby they hope to obteine it, they fly furthest from it; and that by the very acts of humiliating a mans selfe, the very contrary, which is pride, sometymes doth grow. Thou Note, must therefore (as I sayd in that discourse, which I made before, of Chastity) take in hand the obteyning of this Iewell, in such sorte; as that neither thou giue ouer thy endeauour, by saying What shall I get by striuing for it, since it is the guift of God; nor yet must thou put thy confidence, in thy arme of flesh and bloud; but in him, who is wont to graunt his guiftes, to whome he giueth the grace to aske them, by meanes of prayer, and other deuout exercises.

The course then which thou art to hold shalbe this. Consider these two thinges in order; The one a being, the other a good and happy being. As for the first, thou art to thinke, who thou wert before God made thee; and thou wilt find that thou wert a profound pit of being nothing, & a priuation, of all thinges, that are good. Consi­der then, how that mighty, and sweete hand of God, drew thee out of that profound Abysse, & [Page 318]placed thee, in the number of his creatures; gi­uing thee a true and reall being; and consider thy selfe, not as a thing of thyne owne making, but as a present, which Our creation is of God. God was pleased to be­stow vpon thee; and looke vpon thyne owne be­ing, as a thinge as farre from thy strengh to com­passe, as thou lookest vpon another mans; belie­uing, that thou couldst as little create thy selfe, as him. And as little couldst thou haue come, out of that darcknesse, of not being, as they can, who remaine therein. And those thinges which are not at all, be equall to thee, for as much as concerneth thy selfe; and it is God, to whom thou must attribute, the aduātages which thou hast aboue them. Be Our conserua­tion is of God. sure, not to thinke, now that thou art created, that thou doest con­serue thy selfe, in thy selfe. For thou hast no lesse need of God in euery moment of thy life, to the end that therein thou mayst not agayne loose the Being which thou hast, then thou hadst before, to the end that, of nothing, thou mightest come to the being, which now thou hast.

Enter into thy selfe; and consider, that now, thou art a certaine thing, which hath both being, and life. Aske thy selfe this question: Is this crea­ture depending vpon it selfe, or vpon some o­ther? Doth it susteine it selfe, or hath it need of some other hand? And S. Paul will answere thee, Act. 17. That God is not farre from vs; but that in him, we liue, and mooue, and haue our being. And doe thou consider God, who is the being of all that [Page 319]which is; and without him nothing is. And he is the life of all that which liues; and without him all is death. And he is the strength of all that which hath any power; and without him all is weakenesse. And he is the entiere good of al that which is good, without whom, the least of good things, can haue no goodnesse in it. Therefore doth the Scripture Isa, 40. say, All nations are before God, as if they were not; and they are reputed as vanity, and as no­thing, in his presence. And in another place, it is written, He Galat. 6, who thinketh himselfe to be some­what, whereas indeed he is nothing, doth but deceaue himselfe. And the prophet Psal. 3.8. Dauid, speaking to God, did say, In thy sight, I am as nothing. By which passages, thou art not to vnderstand, that creatures haue no being, or life, or operations, which are not proper euen to them, and distinct from those of the Creatour, but because that which they haue, they hold not of themselues; nor are able to conserue it, but only of God, and in God, they are said not to be, because they hold their being, & strength, from the hand of God, and not from their owne.

Learne therefore to sound well, into the bottom, of the being, and power which thou hast; and giue not ouer, till thou arriue to the which is the po­wer, and wisdome, & good­nes of Al­mighty God. very first foundation thereof; which, as being most firme, and neuer fayling, nor being founded v­pon any other; but being the foundation of all the rest, doth mainteyne thee, that so thou mayst not fall agayne, into that profound pitt of No­thingnesse, [Page 320]out of which he drew thee, before. Know, that the protection which he hath of thee, and the hand which he carrieth ouer thee, keeps thee still on foote; and confesse thou with Psalm. 138. Dauid, Thou, O Lord, didst make me, and thou didst place thy hand aboue me. And know, that thou doest so hang vnder this power of God; that at the same instant, wherein that should fayle thee, thou wouldest also fayle; as the light which was in a chamber would fayle, if the torch which gaue it, were remoued; or, as all light, is reti­red from the presence of the earth, by the absence of the Sunne.

Thou Our Lord Ie­sus make vs able to do it. must therefore adore this Lord, with profound reuerence; as the sole beginning of thy being; and thou must loue him, as the perpetuall benefactour, and preseruer of it; and say to him, both with thy hart, and with thy tongue. Glory be to thee for euer, O thou Omnipotent power, by which thou doest maintaine me. There is nothing, O Lord, for me to seeke, out of my selfe; since thou art more in­ternally to me, then I am to my selfe; and by myselfe, & through my selfe it is, that I must first passe, that so I may enter into thee. Come close with thy hart, and vn [...]e it to him, in an amourous manner, & say to him, Psalm. 13 [...]. This is my ioy for all eternities, heere will [...] d [...]ell, because I haue chosen is. And N [...]te this well & begge of God that thou may est [...]augrace [...] practise [...]. from thence forward, know how to carry the presence of God in thy selfe, withall reuerence; since he is most present to thee. And as thou hast vnder­stood, by that which passeth within thee, that it [Page 321]is God, who hath giuen thee thy being, and thy working; so art thou to vnderstand the same in all the creatures. And considering God in all things, they all will serue thee, for a bright glasse, which may represent their Creatour to thee; and so thy soule may go well vnited to God, and de­uoutly singing of his prayses, if thou seeke no­thing, but God in the creatures.

CHAP. LXV.
How the exe [...]cising of our selues in the knowledg of the supernaturall being which we haue of grace, doth serue towards the obteyning of Humility.

IF thou haue byn carefull to resolue, by the knowledge of thy selfe, (for as much as concer­neth thy being) to giue the glory thereof to God; much more must thou attend to know, that thy well being, is not of thy selfe; but that it is a gra­cious guift of our Lord. For A ne­cessary cō ­sequence. if, (whilst thou ascribest the glory of thy being to him, by confes­sing that not thy selfe, but his hands did make thee) thou shouldst appropriate the honour of thy good works to thy selfe; conceauing it to be thy selfe that made thee good; thou wouldst take so much more honour to thy self, thē thou didst giue to God, as a good or happy being, is a more excellent thing, then a mere being. It is therefore necessa­ry, that with extraordinary diligence, thou do attend to know God, and to acknowledge him, [Page 322]for the cause of all thy good.

Liue thou in such a fashion, that there may not be, so much as a seame, or stitch, of foolish There is nothing which more pro­perly doth belong to Pryde, thē that it is a fooli [...]h thing. pride, in thy soule, but as thou knowest that thou canst not haue the least being, that can be thought of, if God do not giue it; so also know, that thou canst not possesse in thy selfe, the least good thing, if God do not open his hand, to bestow it on thee. Consider also, that, as that which is nothing, hath no naturall being, amongst the creatures; so a sinner, to whom the spirituall being of grace, is wanting; must be accounted (notwithstanding all the greatnesse, and riches, that he may haue otherwise) for nothing, in the sight of God. S. Paul expresseth this, in this manner; If I should haue the guift of prophesy, and should know all my­steries, and all science, and should haue all Fayth; so far as to remooue mountaines, from one place to another; and yet withall, I should not haue charity, I were no­thing. Which sentence is so highly true, as that a sinner, is yet worse then nothing; because an euill being, is worse then a not being. And there is no place so base, nor so cast out of the way, nor so despicable, in the eyes of God, amongst all the things that are, and are not; as a man that liueth in offence of him, being disinherited of heauen, and adiudged to hell.

And to the end, that thou mayst haue some­what to rouse thee a little vp, in the considera­tion of the miserable sta [...]e of a sinner, hearken to this. When thou shalt set any thing, which is [Page 323]very contrary to reason, and much out of order, consider, that it is a most vgly, and abhominable thing, to be in the displeasure, and emnity of our Lord. Thou hast heard men speake, of some huge theft, or treason, or some other wickednesse, which some woman may haue cōmitted against her husband; or of some high irreuerence, which a sonne may haue expressed towards his Father; or some other crimes of this nature, which in the eye of any ignorant person whatsoeuer, will in­stantly appeare to be foule; because they are a­gainst all reason. But thou must know that to of­fend God by one only sinne, is There is no com­parison betweene these two. a greater de­formity, in being against the Commandment giuen by him, and the reuerence which is due to him, then all the wicked actions that can be wrought, in consideration that they are against reason only. And since A na­turall and reasona­ble ad­dresse. thou seeft, that al they are so much disesteemed, who commit wicked­nes of that kind; do thou esteeme thy selfe for a most contemptible creature, and sincke thou downe, into that profound pitt of being despi­sed, which is due to a person who offēdeth God. And as, for thy knowing that thou wert nothing, thou didst call that tyme to mind, wherein thou hadst no being; so now for the knowing of thy basenes, and vilenesse, call to mind, the tyme when thou didst liue in the offence of God. Be­hold as in wardly, as feelingly, as profoundly, & as leasurely as thou canst, when, in the eyes of God, thou wert displeasing, and deformed, and [Page 324]esteemed nothing, and lesse then nothing. For nei­ther vnreasonable liuing creatures, nor others, which haue no life, how vgly & base soeuer they be, haue committed any sinne against our Lord. Nor are they vnder the obligation of eternal fire, as thou wert. And thus despise thou, and abase thy selfe, the most deeply, & aduisedly that thou canst; for There is nothing more as­suredly true then this. thou mayst safely belieue, that how much soeuer thou do it, thou wilt neuer be able to descend so low into the very abysse of con­tempt, as is deserued by him, who is the offen­dour of an infinite good, which is God. For Our Lord grant that we may see it there. till in heauen, thou shalt see how good God is, thou wilt not be able out-right to know, how wicked sinne, is; and what misery he deserueth that com­mitteth it. But yet when thou hast soundly felt in thy soule, and drunke deeply of this disesteem of thy selfe, cast vp thyne eyes to God, conside­ring his infinite goodnes, who drew thee out of such a deep pit, which for thee, it was impossible to haue done; and behold that supreme goodnes, which, with so great mercy, drew thee out, why­lest thou didst merit nothing towardes it; nay, when thou didst greatly demerit. For till God giue his grace, though al that which a man doth, be not sinne, yet neither doth he, nor can he do any thing, which may deserue his forgiuenes & grace.

Know, that he, who drew thee out of darck­nesse, into his admirable light; and made thee, of an enemy, a friend; and of a slaue, a child; and [Page 325]of a creature, that was good for nothing, to be­come acceptable in his sight; he, I say, who did this, is God. And There is no rea­son of interest, in the loue of God to vs; God graunt there be nomotiue of interest in our loue to him. the reason why he did it, was not any former desert of thyne; Nor any re­gard which he could haue, to the seruice which thou mightest do him afterward; but it was for his owne only goodnesse, and by the merit of our only mediatour, Iesus Christ our Lord. For thyne owne, thou art to esteeme, the vile state where­in thou wert; and thou maiest accompt hell, to be the place so due to such sinnes as thou didest, or wouldst haue committed, vnlesse it had byn for God. For that, which thou hast more then this, acknowledge thy selfe to be a debter to him, and to his grace. Hearken to that which our Lord said to his beloued disciples, and, in them, to vs. You Ioan. 15. chose not me, but I you. Consider what the Apostle S. Paul Rom. 3 [...]. saith, You are iustifyed gratis by the grace of God; by the redemption, which is in Christ Iesus. And lodge this in thy hart; that as thou hast thy being from God, without any reason at all to giue the glory of it to thy selfe; so doest thou also hold thy well-being from God; and thou hast both the one, and the other to his glory. And carry in thy tongue, and in thy hart, that which S. Paul Cor. 19. saith, by the grace of God, I am, that which I am.

CHAP. LXVI.
Wherein the aforesaid exercise, is prosecuted in parti­culer manner.

CONSIDER thou moreouer, that as when thou wert nothing, thou hadst no power to mooue thy selfe, nor to see, nor heare, nor taste, nor vnderstand, nor will, any thing; but God (giuing thee a being) gaue thee also these faculties and forces; so not only is the man, being in mor­tall synne, depriued of that being, which is accep­table in the sight of God; but he is without all po­wer, to doe the workes of life, which may please him. When therfore thou seest some lame man without leggs, or armes, thinke that so is a man, without grace in his soule; and if thou see one who is blind, or deafe, or dumbe, take him for a glasse, wherein thou mayst behold thy selfe; & in all those sicke persons, who were leapers, or pa­ralytikes, & who had their bodies crookedly bent towards the ground, not being able once to looke vp, with all that multitude of diseases, which they presented in the presence of Iesus Christ, our true physitian; do thou vnderstanding, that wic­ked men are as much defeated in their spirituall partes as those others were in their corporal. And obserue, that as a stone, by the weight which [...] hath, worketh downeward; so through the cor­ruption [Page 327] That is, the ill inclinatiō which it leaues be­hind, euen after the remission thereof in Baptisme. or original synne, which we carry about vs, we haue a most ardent inclination, to the workes of sense, of honour, and of profit; making idolls of our selues, and doing that which we do, not for the true loue of God, but of our selues.

Most liuely we are towards the earthly things which concerne vs; and all dead towards the taking of any gust in the thinges of God. That Becau­se our ap­petite doth na­turally now com­mand our reason. exerciseth authority ouer vs which should o­bey, and that obeyeth, which should commaund. And so miserable we are, that vnder the persons and priuiledges of men, we harbour the appetites of beastes, which lye hidden in vs; and our harts are drawne downe towards the earth. What shall I say to thee, but that, in as many weake, and dry, and deformed, and disordered deeds, as thou shalt see, thou mayst obserue, and conclude vpon the corruption, and confusion, which the man, who is without the spirit of God, doth car­ry in his actions, and passions. And A good lesson. as soone as thou behouldest any of them, retire presently into thy selfe; and ponder, that thy selfe, is the same thing; for as much as concerneth thee, if God had not giuen thee help. And if thou be Many do thinke that they are reco­uered, who still are sicke. indeed recouered, thou wilt know that it was only God, who opened thy hart, to the feeling of him, & who subdued thy affections to the do­minion of reason; and who made that distastefull to thee, which formerly was delightefull; and who gaue thee an appetite to those things, which before were so vnsauoury; & who operateth new [Page 328]workes in thee. It was God as S. Paul Philip. [...]. saith, It is God who worketh in vs, a will, and an executing of it, through his good will. But Take heed of this mon­struous, and vn­manly ar­rour, and consider this place of Scrip­ture well expoun­ded by this Au­thour. conceaue not, vnder colour of this, that the free-will of man worketh nothing in good workes, for this should be a great ignorance, and errour. But it is said, that God worketh the willing, and the finishing▪ because he is the principall operatour, in the soule of him that is iustifyed; And he it is who mo­ueth, and sweetly induceth, the free will to worke and cooperate with him, as S. Paul [...]. Cor. 3. saith, we are the helpers of God; who doth procure, by inci­ting, and assisting a man, that he may freely giue his consent to good workes. And therefore doth he worke, because by his proper, and free will, he willeth what he will; and he worketh that, which he worketh; and it is in his power, not to do it.

But God doth worke more principally, in producing the good worke, and helping the free will, that it may concurre to the production ther­of: and the glory both of the one, and of the o­ther, is only due to God. And therefore, if thou wilt be sure not to erre, be not curious, in sifting out the blessings of nature, and of thy free will, & what giftes of grace thou hast, for this is fitter for such as are learned; but go thou, with thyne eyes shut, after the direction of sound faith, which admonisheth vs to giue the glory of them both, to God; and that we, as of our selues, are not suffici­cient, so much as to thinke, one good thought. Gon­sider [Page 329]that which S. Paul sayth (reprehending such an one as shall ascribe any good to himselfe,) What hast thou, which thou hast not receaued; and if thou haue receaued it, of what doest thou glory, as if thou hadst not receaued it? As if he had sayd, If thou haue the grace of God, whereby thou pleasest him, and whereby thou performest workes, though neuer so ex­cellent; do not glory in thy selfe, but in God who gaue it.

And See how all kind of pride, is e­uen, in all reason, to be for e­uer pluc­ked vp by the roots. if thou wouldest glory, in the good vse which thou doest make of thy free-will; and in consenting to those good inspirations of God, and of his grace, yet neither must thou glory in thy selfe for this; but in God who wrought it, by inciting, and mouing thee sweetly; and by giuing thee, thy very free-will it selfe, whereby thou mightest consent freely. And Note this excel­lent gra­dation. if yet thou wouldst fayne glory, because when thou couldest resist that good motion, and inspiration of God, thou didst not do it; yet euen of this little, thou art not to glory; because first, that were not so properly to do any thing, as to leaue to do it; & next, thou didst owe, euen that to God. For when he holp thee to consent to good, he did in­cidently assist thee, in not resisting it. And what­soeuer good vse thou hast made of thy free-will, in that which concerneth thy saluation, is, all of it, the guift of God, deriued from For which his holy Na­me be e­uer pray­sed. that mercifull predestination, whereby he determined to saue thee, from all eternity.

Let therefore all thy glory be in God alone; [Page 330]of whom thou holdest all the good thou hast. And know, that, without him, thou hast nothing of thyne owne stocke, but vanity, and impiety; and indeed, the thing which we call Nothing. And in conformity of this, there is a glosse (v­pon that Text of Saint Paul, He Galat. [...]. that thinketh himselfe to be somewhat, whereas indeed he is nothing, doth deceaue himselfe) which sayth, A man of him­selfe, is but vanity, and sinne: and if he be any thing better, it is by our Lord God, that he is so: And a­greably to this S. Augustine sayth, Thou See how hum­ble the sublime S Augustin is. O Light didst open myne eyes, thou didst awake me, & illuminate me; and I saw that the whole life of man vpon earth was but tentation; and that no good man can glory in thy sight, nor is any man so iustifyed that liueth. For if he haue any goodnes, great or little, thy guift it is; and that which is ours, is but sinne. In what then shall any man take glory? Shall he perad­uenture glory in euill? This is no glory but misery. Shall he glory then, in the good he hath? No, for it be­longeth to another. Thyne is the good O Lord, & the glory must be thyne. And agreably to this, the same S. Augustine sayth els where, O Lord Loue and imi­tate this incōpara­ble Saint our God, I confesse my pouerty to thee; and to thee, be rendred all glory; for all the good that I haue done, is thyne. I confesse, according to that which thou hast taught me, that I am no other thing then meere vanity; A shad­dow of death; A deep and profound pi [...]t; An empty and barren soyle; which without thy benediction, doth bring forth no other fruit then confusion, sinne, and death. And if in any sort, I haue had any good thing, [Page 331]I receaued it of thee. And whatsoeuer good I haue now, the same I hold of thee. If at any tyme, I stood fast on foot, I stood by thee; but when I fell, I fell of my selfe; and for euer should I haue remained fallen into that durt, if thou hadst not raysed me; and for euer should I haue beene blind, if I had not beene illu­minated by thee. When I was fallen I should neuer haue risen, vnles thou hadst reached forth thy hand; and after I was once raysed, I should instantly haue retur­ned to fall, if thou hadst not held me. And so thy grace, and thy mercy, O Lord, did euer march before me; deliuering me out of all mischiefe; sauing me from sinn [...]s; stirring me vp to auoyd such as were present; preuenting me in such as were to come; and remouing, from before my ne eyes, those snares of wickednes, by diuerting the causes and occasions therof. And if thou O Lord, hadst not done so, there is no sinne in the whole world which I might not haue committed. For I know, that there is no sinne which hath beene com­mitted by any man, in any kind, which another man may not commit; if that guide retyre himselfe, by whome man was made. But thou didst procure, that I should not do it; and thou didst command me that I should abstayne from it; and thou didst infuse thy grace that I might belieue thee. For thou O Lord, didst con­duct me towardes thy selfe, and didst preserue me for thy selfe, and didst giue me grace, and light, that I might not commit adultery, and all other sinne.

CHAP. LXVII.
Wherin he prosecuteth the former exercise; and of the much light which our Lord is wont to giue by meanes thereof, whereby they know the greatnes of God, and as it were the Nothing of their littlenes.

CONSIDER therefore, O Virgin, these wordes of S. Augustine with attention; & thou wilt see how farre off thou art to be, from ascribing any glory to thy selfe; not only of ray­sing thy selfe from sinne, but in determining thy selfe from returning to fall. For, as I told thee, if the hand of God should once retyre it selfe from thee, thou wouldest instantly fal backe, into that profound pit of being nothing, so if God should forbeare to preserue thee, thou wouldest returne to those, and more grieuous sinnes then those, from which he deliuered thee. Be therefore hum­ble, and gratefull to this Lord, of whome thou art, at al moments in so great necessity; & know, that thou art depending vpon him; and that all thy good is to be deriued from his holy hand, as Dauid sayth, In thy hand, O Lord, are my lettes; for lettes he calleth the grace of God, and the eternall predestination which commeth by the The first grace of God is giuen v­pon no other ground, then his own meer goodnes. good­nes of God; and they are graunted to such, as to whome he graunteth them.

And, as if he should resume the being which he gaue thee, thou wouldst againe be nothing, so he [Page 333]retiring his grace from thee, thou wouldest re­turne to be a sinner. I speake not this, that thou shouldest fall into any deep discouragement, or desperation, in that thou seest, how thou art hanging vpon the handes of God; but to the end, that with so much the more security, thou mayst enioy the good thinges which God hath giuen thee; & Let this be the hope of a­ny man, who by the good­nes of God doth liue lesse sinfully, then he was wont. mayst haue confidence, that through his mercy, he will finish that in thee, which he hath begunne. And that so much the more, as thou, with greater humility, and profound re­uerence, and holy feare, shalt cast thy selfe trem­bling, and prostrate at his feete; not relying any way vpon thy selfe, but hauing a strong hope in him. For this is a great good signe, that his infi­nite goodnesse will not forsake thee, according to that, which that blessed, and The humility of our B. Lady, was aboue all the humi­lities, of al pure crea­tures. humble, aboue all humble creatures Mary, did sing, when she said, Luc. 1. His mercy is from generation, to generation, vpon them that feare him.

And if our Lord be pleased to giue thee this knowledge of thy selfe, which thou desirest; thou The sweet and sublyme effects of holy hu­mility. wilt find, cōming into thy hart a certaine hea­uenly light; and a kind of feeling into thy soule, whereby vpon the driuing away of all darcke­nesse, it findeth, and knoweth, that there is no being, nor good, nor strength, in any thing created; but that which the blessed and deare will of God, hath bin pleased to giue, and conserue. And then he knoweth, how true that part of the other can­ticle is, The heauens, and the earth, are full of thy [Page 334]glory. For in all, that is created, he seeth nothing good, the glory whereof, is not due to God. And he vnderstandeth how truly God directed Exod. 3. Moyses, that he should say of him to men, He that Is, hath sent me to you; and that also which our Lord said, in the Marc. 10. Ghospell, There is none good, but God alone. For as all the being and all the good which thinges haue, whether they be of free will, or of grace, is giuen, and preserued, by the hand of God, such a person will know, that God is more to be said to be in them, and to worke that which is good in them, then they in them­selues. Not How God wor­keth in man; and how man worketh with, & vnder God. but that they doe also worke, but because they worke as second causes, being mo­ued by God; who is the principall, and vniuer­sall operatour; and of whome they hold their po­wer to worke. And so looking vpon them, he findeth there no hand-fast, nor resting place; but vpon that infinite Essence, which vpholdeth them; in comparison wherof, they doe all (how great soeuer they be) appear but as a little needle, which is cast into an infinite sea.

From This is an inesti­mable iewell. but pray hard for it, and by the goodnes of God, thou maist pur­chase it. this knowledge of God, there doth result to the soule, which profits by it, a profound and loyall reuerence, to the superexcellent di­uine maiesty, which placeth in her, such a dete­station of atributing any good thing to her selfe, or any other creature, that she will not so much as once thinke thereof. Considering, that as the chast Ioseph, who (though he were sollicited by the wife of his Lord) yet would not commit such [Page 335]a treason against him; so must not a man rise vp, and robbe God of his honour, which he resolueth to keep for himselfe, as the husband doth his wife; according as it is written, My glory I will not giue to another. And then also growes a man to be so grounded in this truth, that although all the world should exalt him, yet would he not exalt himselfe. But, as a true, iust person, he de­priueth himselfe of that honour which he findeth not to be his owne; and he giueth it to our Lord, whose it is. And in this light, he findes, that the more high he is, the more he hath receaued of God; and the more he oweth him; and the more poore, and base he is in himselfe. For This is a most pure, and perfect truth. he that doth truly grow in other vertues, doth so also, in humility, saying to God, Thou must increase in me▪ and I must decrease in my selfe, dayly. And if, euen with al these considerations already mētio­ned, thou find not the fruite of the contempt of thy selfe, which thou desirest, be not yet dismayd thereat. But call vpon our Lord, with continu­ance of prayer; for he knoweth how, and he is accustomed, to teach, both interiourly, and by way of exteriour comparisons, the little that all thinges created are to be esteemed. And in the meane tyme, till this mercy come, liue in pati­ence, and know thy selfe for proude; which is a kind of humility; as for one to hold himselfe humble, is a kind of pride.

CHAP. LXVIII.
Wherein he beginneth to treate of the consideration of Christ our Lord, and of the mysteries of his life and death, and of the great reason we haue to exercise our selues in this consideration; and of the gre [...] fruites which grow from thence.

THEY He be­ginneth heere and continu­eth till the the 8 [...]. Chapter a discourse vpon the meditatiō of the sa­cred Pas­sion of our Lord Iesus▪ as excellent­ly written perhaps, as any hath been seene in this age. I am sure I neuer saw any, that I liked so well. who are much exercised in the know­ledge of themselues, (in respect that they are cōtinually viewing their defects so neer at hand) are wont to fall into great sadnes, and disconfi­dence, and pusillanimity; for which reason, it is necessary that they do exercise themselues also in another knowledge, which giueth comfort, and strength, much more then the other gaue discou­ragement. And against this inconuenience there is no other knowledge (which may compare with that) of Iesus Christ our Lord, especially if we consider, how he suffered, and dyed for vs. This is the cheereful newes, which in the new law was preached, to all such as are of broken hart; and here­by is ministred a kind of Physicke, which is more efficacious towards their comfort, then they can be discomforted, by the woundes, and soares of their ownesoules.

This crucifyed Lord, is he, who cheereth them vp, whom the knowledge of their owne sins afflicteth; and he it is that absolueth, whome the law condemneth, & maketh them sonnes of God, [Page 337]who were slaues of the Diuell. This Lord they must procure to know; and they who are subiect to the spirituall debtes, which they haue made by finne; and they who find straitnes, and bitter­nes of sorrow at their hart, when they consider themselues; must approach to him, and they shal find themselues well therewith; as heeretofore others that were afflicted, and indebted, did re­sort to Dauid, and found help in his society. For as we vse to giue counsaile, that they who are to passe a riuer, should looke vpward, or, at least, out of the water; least their heads may els be sub­iect to some trouble, by staring vpon the running streame; so, whosoeuer shall find himselfe dis­maid, by the contemplation of his own miseryes, if he will cast vp his eyes to Iesus Christ vpon the Crosse, he may recouer strength. For it was not sayd in vaine; My soule was troubled within me; and for this reason, I remembred thee, of the land of Iordan, and of the hilles of Hermon, & of the little hill. For the mysteries which Christ did worke in his Baptisme, & Passion, are able to quiet any tempest of distrust, which riseth in the hart of man. And so it doth; both for that reason afore­sayd; as also, because there is no This is the booke of Bookes. booke so effi­cacious, towardes the instructing of a man, in al kind of vertue, nor how hartily sinne ought to be abhorred, and vertue loued; as the Passion of the Sonne of God. And againe, because it is an ex­treme ingratitude, to put such an immense bene­fit of loue, into obliuion, as that was, in Christ [Page 338]to suffer for vs.

It is therefore fit for thee, after the exercise of the knowledge of thy selfe to imploy thy mind▪ vpon the knowledge of Christ Iesus our Lord. S. Ber­nard teacheth vs this, by saying, whosoeuer hath a­ny feeling of Christ, doth know how much it belongeth to Christian piety, and how necessary it is, and what fruit it bringeth to the seruant of God and a seruant of the redemption of Christ, to remember with attentiō ▪ for, at least, the space of one houre in a day the benefits of the Passion, and Redemption of Christ Iesus our Lord; to enioy it sweetly in our soules, and to settle it faythfully in our memoryes. This S. Bernard sayd▪ & this he did. And besides this, thou art to know, That God, when he was pleased to communicate the riches of his Diuinity to men, imbraced the meanes of making himselfe a man, that by such basenes, and poorenesse, he might conforme himselfe to the small capacity of such as were base, and poore (and by ioyning himselfe to them, he might raise them vp, to his owne height;) so that the way, by which God hath vsed to com­municate his Diuinity to men, hath beene, by meanes of his sacred Humanity.

This is that gate, by which, whosoeuer en­treth, shallbe saued; and it is the staire, by which we must ascend to heauen. For God the Father, is pleased to honour the humanity, and humility, of his only begotten Sonne; so far, as not to make friendship with any creature, who belieueth not in him; nor to grant his familiar conuersation, [Page 339]but to such as meditate vpon him, with much at­tention. Since therefore, there is no reason that thou shouldst forbeare to desire so great blessings, see If we meane not to be wholy miserable, we must become slaues to the Passiō of Christ our Lord. that thou make thy selfe a slaue, to this sa­cred Passion. For as much as, by it thou wert de­liuered, from the captiuity of thy sinnes, & from the torments of hell; and those other blessings, do also come to thee by this. Do Note, and be a­shamed of thy ingra­titude. not esteeme it a trouble to thinke of that, which he, through his great loue of thee, did thinke no trouble to endure.

Be thou, one of those soules to which the Holy Ghost speaketh, in the Cant. 3. Canticles, Go forth you daughters of Sion, and behold Salomon the King, with that garland vpon his head, wherewith his Mo ther crowned him, in the day of his espousall, and in the day, of the ioy of his hart. In no place of the Holy Scripture, is it read, that King Salomon was crow­ned with any crowne, or garland, by the handes of his Mother, vpon the day of his espousall. And therfore, because according to the history, it cannot agree to Salomon, who was a sinner; we must necessarily (since the Scripture cannot speake vntruth) vn­derst and it of another true Salomon, who was Christ; and that with great reason. For Salomon doth signify peaceable; & that name was imposed vpon him, because he made no warrs in his time, as his Father Dauid had done. And therfore God was not pleased, that Dauid, who was a Not of cruelty towards his sub­iects, but of con­quest o­uer his e­nemyes. man of bloud, but his peaceable Sonne, should build that famous Temple of Hierusalem, wherein he would [Page 340]be adored.

Now if the name of peaceable, were imposed vpon Salomon, because he was peaceable, accor­ding to the peace of the world (which sometymes wicked Kinges maintaine); vpon how much more reason, is this name, due Christ our Lord is the true Salomon, the true Prince Peace. to Christ, who made the spirituall peace betweene God and ma [...], to his owne so great cost; the paine of all our sinnes, which caused the emnity betweene God and vs, falling headlong vpon him. He also made peace, betweene those people which had been so contrary to one another; namely the Iewes and Gentils, taking away that wal of emnity, which stood betweene them, as S. Paul sayth; That is to say, the Ceremonies of the old Law, and the Idolatry of the Gentills. To the end, that both the one, & the other, hauing left their particularityes, and th [...]se rites which they deriued from their ancestou [...], might submit themselues, to the new Law vnder one Fayth, one Baptisme, and one Lord; hoping [...]o participate the same inheritance, as being all the sonnes of one Father of heauen, who begot the [...] a second tyme by water, and the Holy Gho [...] ▪ with more honour, and aduantage, then they were engendred before of flesh, by their Fathers, to misery and shame. All these blessinges came by Christ Iesus, who is the pacifyer of heauen, a [...]d earth; and of one people with another; and of a man with himselfe; whose warre, as it is m [...] troublesome, so the peace is more desired. Th [...] peace could not be made, by the other Salomon, but [Page 341]he had the name of the true pacifier, only in figure; as the peace of Salomon, which was temporall, is a figure, and shaddow of that, which as spirituall, and which hath no end.

If then, thou do well remember, O thou spouse of Christ, (which in reason thou must ne­uer forget) the Mother of this true Salomon, who was, and is the blessed Virgin Mary, thou shalt find her to haue crowned him, with a fayre gar­land; giuing him flesh, without any sinne, vpon the day of the Incarnation, which was the day of the coniunction, and espousall of the diuine word, with his sacred humanity; and of the word being made man, with his Church, which Church we are. From that sacred wombe, did Christ issue as a spouse, who riseth from his bed of state, and he be­ginneth Psalm. 18. to runne his Carriere, like a strong Gi­ant; taking the worke of our redemption to hart; which was the hardest thinge, that he could en­terprise. And at the end of this Carriere, he did, vpon the day of our Good fryday, espouse Christ espoused the Church to himselfe vpon the Crosse. his Church by wordes de prasenti; For which, he had taken paines, as Genes. 19. Iacob did for Rachel. And then was she drawne, out of his side, when he was reposing in the sleepe of death, as Gen. 2. Eue was out of Adams, whylest he slept.

And for this worke so excellent, and of so great loue, which, in that day was wrought, Christ called that day, his day, when he saith in the Ioan. 8. Ghospell, Your Father Abraham, reioyced to see my day; he saw it, & he reioyced thereat. Which [Page 342]was accomplished, as S Chrysostome saith, when the death of Christ was reuealed to Abraham, by the resemblance of his sonne Isaac, whome God commaunded him to Genes. 22. sacrifice, in the mount Moria, which is mount Sion. Then did he see this painefull day, and he reioyced at it. But at what did he reioyce? was it perhaps at the scourges, at the [...] afflictions, and at the torments of Christ? No; it is certayne that the affliction of Christ, was so great, as to be sufficient for the making of any hart, though neuer so cheerefull, to be euen op­pressed with compassion. And if you belieue not me, let those three beloued Apostles tell you this truth; to whome he said, My Watt. 10. Mare. 14. soule is sad, e­uen to the death. What did their hartes feele in themselues, at the sound of that word, which v­seth to wound their hart, with the sharpe knife of sorrow, who heare it spoken but a farre off. And his scourges, torments, nayles, and Crosse, were so full of torment to him, that whosoeuer should see them, (though he had a most inflexible hart) could not choose but be moued by them. Yea, & I know not, but that those very wretches that tormented him, seing his meekenesse in suffe­ring, and their owne cruelty in afflicting, must needs sometymes haue compassion, of one that suffered so much; and euen for them, though they knew not that. Yf therefore they, who abhorred Christ, might be afflicted by the sight of his tor­ments, vnlesse their hartes were made of hardest stone; how shall we say, of a man, who was so [Page 343]greately Gods friend, as Abraham was, that he reioyced to see the day, whereon Christ was to en­dure so much?

CHAP. LXIX.
Wherein he prose [...]uteth, that of the former Chapter; & pondereth this passage of the Canticles, in con­templation of the passion of Christ.

BVT, that thou mayst not meruaile so much at this, do thou hearken to another thing, yet more strange; and which is expressed by these wordes of the Canticles. That this garland, was put vpon his heade, in the day of the ioy, or triumph of his hart. The day of his so excessiue griefe, as that no tongue is able to vnfold it, doest thou call the day of his ioy? And that, no ioy which was counterfaite, and exteriour only; but they call it, the day of the ioy, of his very hart. O Note, and learne hereby to loue God. thou ioy of the Angells, and thou full riuer of their delight, in whose face they desyre to looke, & by whose most puissant waters, they are swallowed vp, by finding themselues within thee, and by swim­ming, in that ouer abounding sweetnesse of thyne; and what is that, at which thy hart reioy­ceth, in this day of thyne afflictions? At what doest thou reioyce, in the middest of those scourges, those nayles▪ that dishonour, & that death? Is it true perhaps, that they did not afflict thee? Yes verily, they did afflict thee; and more thee [Page 344]then they could haue afflicted any other; though it were but euen for the delicacy of thy complexiō. But because our miseries do afflict thee yet more, then thyne owne afflictions, most gladly didst thou resolue to suffer them, because thereby thou diddest remoue ours.

Thou art he, who saidst, to thy beloued Lue. 22. Apostles, a little before thy Passion, With Note & wonder at these wordes. de­syre, haue I desyred, to cate this paschall with you, be­fore I suffer. Thou art he, who saidst before, Lue. 12. I came into the world, that I might bring fyre; & what do I desyre, but that it should burne. With a baptisme I am to be baptized, and how am I straitned, till it be effected? This fyre of the loue of thee, which thou desyrest may be kindled, till it may inflame, and burne vs wholy vp, and till it transforme vs into thee, thou still art blowing, by the blessings, which by thy life thou bestowedst on vs; & thou makest it burne, by the death which thou endu­redst for vs. And who amongst vs, is so well na­tured, as that he would haue loued thee, vnles thou hadst died for the loue of vs; therby to giue vs life, who are dead, for lacke of louing thee. But now, who wilbe wood so cold, and moist, as that (seeing thee so faire, and flourishing a tree (wherof whosoeuer doth eate, shall liue) to be thus kindled vpon the Crosse; & burnt vp by that fyre of tormentes, which they gaue thee; and yet more, by that loue wherewith thou sufferedst them) he will not yet be kindled now at last, to loue thee; and to do it, euen to the death? Who [Page 345]wilbe so deadly obstinate, as to shut himselfe vp, against that importunate Our Lord Ie­sus doth make no other suit to vs, but that we will loue him, only it must be with true loue. request, wherein thou didst persist, from the tyme that thou wert borne of the wombe of the B. Virgin, and that she tooke thee into her armes, and layd thee in the maunger; till the same handes, and armes of hers, tooke thee agayne, when being dead thou wert taken from the Crosse, and wert deliuered ouer, to the holy Sepulcher, as into another wombe.

Thou Note. didst burne thy selfe, that we might not freeze in the cold; Thou didst weep, that we might reioyce; Thou didst suffer, that we might repose; and thou wert baptized, euen by the shea­ding of thy bloud, that we might be washed from our sinnes; and yet thou saydst withall, O Lord, How do I liue, in the straitnes of affliction, till this Baptisme be accomplished. Giuing vs thereby to vn­derstand, what an imflamed desire thou hadst to giue vs remedy, though thou knewest, that it would cost thee thy life.

And as the Spouse, desireth the day of his marriage, that he may enioy his end; so doest thou desire the day of thy Passion, to deliuer vs, by thy paynes, from our miseryes. One houre, O Lord, did seeme to thee a thousand years till thou camest to dye for vs; conceauing, that thy life, would be well imployed, if it were laid downe for thy seruantes. And because that which is de­sired, doth carry ioy after it, when it is accom­plished; it is no meruaile, if the day of thy Passion, [Page 346]be called the day of thy ioy, since it was so desired by thee. And The vast loue of God in Christ our Lord. although the griefe of that day, were excessiue; in so much as it is sayd, in thy person, O all you that passe by the way, attend, and see, if there be any griefe like myne; yet the loue which flamed in thy hart, was incomparably greater. For if it had been needfull, in respect of our good, that thou shouldst haue passed, throgh a thousand tymes as much as that; and that thou shouldst haue continued vpon the Crosse, till the end of the world; thou didst place thy selfe vpon it, with firme determination to do, and suffer, whatsoeuer might haue beene necessary for our remedy. So that thou didst loue, more then thou didst suffer; and more was thy loue able to pre­uaile with thee, then the want of loue in those wretches that did torment thee. So then did thy loue remaine conquerour; and that being so liue­ly a flame, those great riuers of many afflictions, that came against thee, were not able to quench it. And therefore, although the torments gaue thee sorrow, and sound griefe; yet thy loue tooke pleasure in that benefit, which we were to re­ceaue thereby. For this it is called, the day of the ioy of thy hart; & this day, did Abrahā see, & he reioyced▪ not that he wanted compassion of thy paines, but because he saw that the world was to be re­deemed by them.

In this day therefore, Go forth you, daugh­ters of Sion (you being the soules, who behold God, from the tower of Fayth) to see your peace­making [Page 347]King; who, by his affliction, goeth no conclude the desired peace. Looke I say vpon him, since your eyes were giuen you for that purpose. And amongst all the ornaments of his espousall, which he weareth, looke vpon that crown of thornes, which his diuine head, doth carry. Which although it were platted, and put on, by those of the Court of Pilate, (who were Gentills) yet is his Mother sayd to haue placed it vpon his head; which Mother in that sense, was the Syna­gogue, of the race wherof Christ descended, ac­cording to the flesh. For by the accusation of the Synagogue, and at the will therof, Christ was so tormented.

Now A strange kind of marriage. if any man say, that this is a new kind of ornament; for a spouse to weare a dolo­rous crowne, insteed of a garland; for ornaments of handes and feet, sharpe nayles, which might passe and pierce them through; scourges insteed of a girdle; and the hayre of his head, and face glued togeather with his owne bloud; his sacred beard, pulled off from his cheekes, and they dis­coloured with buffeting; and that soft bed, (which, in the case of persons newly espoused, vse to be filled with pretious odours) being con­uerted into a bitter Crosse; and that, erected in place where malefactours were put to death: what hath this extreme abasement to do with the ornaments of an espousall? What hath this being accompanied by theeues to do, with being in the society of friends, who should ioy in doing ho­nour [Page 348]to the new spouse? What fruit, or musick [...] or pleasure, may it be, which heere we see; since the Mother, and the friends, of the spouse, do ease griefe, and drinke teares; and the Angells of peace, weepe bitterly.

There is nothing further off from an espou­sall, then all that, which heere appeareth. But yet this nouelty, is not to be wondered at; be­cause the Spouse, and the manner of the espousall, is all new. Christ, is a new man; both because he is without sinne; and because he is both God, & man; and we are they, whome he espouseth to himselfe; we who are deformed, poore, and full of misery; and this he doth not, to permit vs to remaine so, but to kill that which is euill in vs, and to impart to vs that which is good in him. For this reason, it was fit, according to the diuine ordinance, that he should pay for vs; taking v­pon him our place, and resemblance; to the end, that by seeming a debter, which he was not, and by enduring that bitter chastisement which he deserued not, he might take away our deformi­ty, and might communicate his beauty & riches to vs. And The difference of Christ our Lord the spouse of our soules, & carthly spouses. because no man who seeketh a Spouse, can make her good, if she be euill; nor ce­lestiall, if she be infernall; nor can he giue her a beautifull soule, if it be deformed; therefore is it that men seeke spouses, which are already vertu­ous, beautifull, and rich; and vpon the marriage day, they go well adorned, to enioy those aduan­tages, which the others haue, and which them­selues [Page 349]did not giue. But this Spouse ours, doth find no soule, either good, or faire, vnles he make it such. And that which we are able to giue him, as a Dowry, is the debt that we haue contracted by our sinnes. And because he was pleased to abase himselfe to vs, we haue He tooke our misery, that so he might cō ­municate to vs his glory. apparelled him, so, as we our selues were apparelled; and he hath so cloathed vs, as he is clad. For, destroying the Sinne. old man, vnder the habit which he tooke of a man; he hath placed in vs, a new and celestiall man, after his image. And this he brought to passe, by these or­naments, which seeme to be deformity and frailty; but are, indeed, most high honour, and greatnesse; since they were able to defeate our so obdurate, and inueterate synnes; and to bring vs, to the grace and friendship of our Lord, which is the toppe of all that, which can be aymed at.

This is that glasse, wherein thou art often, to behold thy selfe, euery day; to beautify there­by, whatsoeuer thou seest deformed in thy soule. And this is that figure, which is placed on high; to the end, that whosoeuer shalbe bitten by any serpent, may looke vp to it, and so his woundes may be cured. And whensoeuer any thinge which is good doth grow to thee, it wilbe con­serued by thy looking hither; giuing thankes to our Lord, by the meanes of whose affliction, all our blessings, are deriued to vs.

CHAP. LXX.
That the exercise of prayer, is most important; and of the great fruit which is reaped thereby.

SINCE thou hast already heard, that the light which thy eyes are to looke vpon, is God huma­ned, and crucifyed; it remaineth for me to tell thee, what meanes thou art to vse in looking on him. Since the thing must be done, by way of deuout considerations, and by that inward speach, which is vsed in prayer. But before I tell thee, of the course that thou art to hold in thy prayer, it wilbe fit, that I let thee know, how profitable this e­xercise is, and especially for The Lady to whom he wrote this booke, was not a religious womā, in clausure, but she li­ued de­uoutly in her owne house; yet in state of Virgi­nity, and great pen­nance: she was Do­n̄a Sancha, daughter to the Lord of Guadal­caçar. thee; who hauing renounced the world, hast offered thy selfe who­ly to our Lord, with whome it wilbe fit for thee, to haue familiar and straite communication, if thou desyre to enioy the delicious fruit, of thy holy state.

By prayer, we do heere vnderstand, A se­cret, and interiour speach, whereby the soule doth im­part it selfe to God; whether it be, by way of thinking, or by crauing, or by thanking, or contemplating; and, in a word, all that, which doth passe betweene the soule, and God, in that priuate kind of speach. For although to euery one of these particulers, there do belong a seuerall reason; yet my intent, in this place, is but only to deliuer in generall, how important a [Page 351]thing it is, that the soule do intertayn this choyce kind of speach, and cōmunication, with her God. For Pōder this well; & belieue the truth thereof; and put thy selfe vpon the practise. proofe whereof, it would suffice, (if men were not wholy blind) to tell them, that God gi­ueth liberty, that all men who will, may enter, into speach with him, once in a moneth, or in a weeke; and that, most willingly he would giue them audience; and redresse their miseries, and enrich them with fauours; and that there should be betweene him, and them, a friendly kind of conuersation, as betweene a Father and a sonne. And if he would permit, that they might speake to him euery day; and if yet further, he would suffer that euery day, they might do it often; and lastly if they might haue leaue to be in conuersa­tion with our Lord the whole day, and night; or as much of this tyme, as they could, and would; and if he would be well content therewith; what may that man be, vnles he were a man of stone, who would not be highly thankefull for such a li­berall, and profitable licence as this? And who would not procure to serue himselfe thereof, as much as it were possible for him; as of a thing most conuenient, for the gayning of honour, by being to treate with his Lord; and of delight, by the enioying of his conuersation; and of profit also, for as much, as they can neuer come empty handed from him.

And how shall not this be much esteemed, which the most high doth offer vs, since it would be set at so high a rate, if it were offered by some [Page 352]temporall king; who in comparison of this most High and of that which may be obtained by con­uersation with him, the king is a worme; and that which any of them, or all of them, is able to giue, is a handfull of dust. Why do not men ioy to be with God, Prou. [...]. since the delight of God, is to be with the sonnes of men? His cōuersation hath no bitter­nesse belonging to it, but alacrity, and ioy; nor is there incident to his condition, any petty, or paltry miserablenesse, to deny the thinge that is asked of him; and in fine, our Father he is, in whose conuersation we were to ioy, though no other aduantage did acrew thereby. But A strange progresse of Gods loue, to wicked stupide man. if thou wilt accompany, all the other considerati­ons with this, that he doth not only giue vs leaue to speake with him, but that he begges it at out handes; and counsailes, and sometimes com­maunds it of vs, thou wilt see, both how great his goodnesse and thirst is, that we would con­uerse with him; and what wicked thinges, we be, who will not go, being desired, and hired, to that, which we ought to go, beseeching that we might haue leaue; and offering to pay, what­soeuer were demaunded for it.

Heereby thou mayst discerne, how little fee­ling men haue, of their spiritual necessities, which are the true ones; for as much as he, who truly feeleth them, will truly pray, and desyre remedy thereof, with great instance. There is a Prouerbe, which saith, Yf thou canst not pray, get thee to sea▪ because the many dangers wherein they are that [Page 353]sayle, make them cry out, to our Lord. But for my part I see no reason; why all of vs should not vse this exercise, and that with diligence; since, whether we go by sea, or by land, I am sure we we are in danger of death, eyther of the soule, if we fall into mortall synne, or of soule and body if we do not rise by pennance, from that into which we may fall. And The miserable blindnes of man. if the care of transi­tory things, and the dust which we beare about in our eyes, did giue vs leaue but to consider; & to reflect vpon the necessityes of our soules, without faile we should go crying out to God, & saying with our whole harts, Suffer vs not to fall into tentation, O Lord Psalm. 34. depart not from me; & such other wordes we would vse as these, agreeable to the present necessity. But all our praying, depen­deth vpon that which passeth in our mindes, which vseth to be some temporall good, or euill; and yet, euen vpon those occasions, we resort not It dra­weth a mighty disaduan­tage vpon vs, that al­though we go to God by Prayer, yet for the most part we do it late. speedily to prayer, but are like people, whose last confidence is placed in our Lord; and the first and chiefest in themselues, or others. Whereat our Lord is wont to be much offended; and he sayth, Where Deut. 3 [...]. are thy Gods, in whome thy trust is put; let thy friends deliuer thee whome a blast of wind will carry away.

See therefore, O Virgin, that these things may not besayd of thee; but keep thou quicke, that feeling in thy soule, whereby thou mayst tast this truth, That thy true misery, consistes in thy not seruing; and thy true felicity, in seruing [Page 354]God. When How we are to carry our s [...]lues in the desire of any temporall good, at the hands of God. thou askest any temporall thing, let it not be with that kind of anguish, and affli­ction, which vseth to proceed from inordinate loue. And whether the question be, of much, or little, let thy first confidence be in our Lord; & the last in those meanes, which he shall addresse thee to. And be thou greatly thankefull, for this benefit; that he hath giuen thee leaue, to speake, and conuerse with him; and do thou serue thy selfe of it, both in thy prosperityes, and afflicti­ons, with much frequency, and care; since by meanes of this speach, and conuersation with the most high, the seruants of God, haue beene enri­ched, and relieued in all their necessityes. For they vnderstood, that the dangers wherein God left them, was to the intent, that being straitely assaulted thereby, they might haue recourse to him; and so the blessinges vvhich he affoarded them, did make them go to giue him thankes.

We Of the great power deuout prayer. read of the Gabaonits, that they being in great danger (vvhen they were besieged by their enemyes) sent a messenger to Iosue, to whose friendship they had recommended them­selues; & by occasion wherof, they were grown into that danger; but they found fauour, and as­sistance by demanding it. And although those fiue Kinges, of whome the Scripture speaketh, vvere ouercome in the valley called Siluester, and their Cittyes were sackt; yet because a young man who had escaped out of the battayle, went to carry the news of this defeate, to the patriarke [Page 355] Abraham, those Kings, and their fiue Cittyes ob­tayned remedy, by the hand of Abraham, vvho succoured them. So that by meanes, of one only messenger, who goeth to aske fauour of him, that hath a power & vvill to giue it, there is more to be obtayned, then by a multitude of fighting men, vvhich are either in the Citty, or in the Campe. And vvithout doubt so it is, that who­soeuer shall send the messenger of an humble and faythfull prayer to God, howsoeuer he may be be­sieged, and defeated, and thrust euen into the very belly of the Whale, shall find our Lord to be Psalm. 144. present; vvho is neere to all such persons, as do vvith sincerity call vpon him. And if they know not yet vvhat they are to do; by meanes of prayer, they find light. For with this confidence it was, that King Iosaphat sayd, When Paral. 20. we know not what to do, one remedy we haue, which is to lift vp our eyes to thee. And S. Iames Iac. 1. sayth, That whosoeuer hath need of wisedome, is to aske it of God. And by this meanes, vvere Moyses and Aaron taught by God, in those things which they were to negotiate, vvith the people. For as they vvho gouerne others, haue need of double light, and to haue it very neere at hand; and that at all tymes; so haue they also need to make double prayer, and to be perfect in it, that they may per­forme it vvithout difficulty; and that so they may come to know the vvill of our Lord, con­cerning that which particulerly they are to do; & that they may obtayne strēgth to perform it. And [Page 356]the knowledge, which is so obtayned, doth as far exceed all that which vve compasse by our owne discourse, and coniectures, as he goeth more cer­tainly, who seeth his vvay, then another who goeth groping in the darke. And the good pur­poses also and strength vvhich is gotten in prayer vse to be incomparably more efficacious, and to proue more solidly true, then they which are ob­tayned out of prayer.

S. Augustine (as one who was able to speak by experience) sayd that doubts were better dis­solued by prayer, then by any other study. And for feare of wearying thee, and because it would be impossible to reckon vp all the particuler fruits of prayer, I say no more, thē that which the supreme Truth sayd, That Luc. 11. the celestiall Father would giue a good spirit to them that aske it. And it ought to suffice thee, that all the Saints did fre­quent this exercise of prayer. For as S. Chrysostome sayth, Which of the Saints did not ouercome by pray­ing? And he sayth againe, That there is not a more puissant thing, then the man that prayes. And The excellēcy & neces­sity of prayer, shewed by the ex­amples of Christ our Lord. it should be inough, and more then i­nough, for vs to know, that Christ Iesus, the Lord of vs all, did pray in that night of his tribu­lation, so hard, as that it cost him a sweat of bloud; and he prayed in the Luc. 21. mount Thabor, before his body was trāsfignred; he prayed before he raysed Lazarus Ioan. 11. from the dead; and some­tymes he prayed so at large, that the whole night did passe away with him, in prayer. And after [Page 357]such a long prayer as this, S. Luke Luc. 10. relates, that from out of his Disciples, he chose his twelue Apostles. Whereby he taught vs (as S. Ambrose sayth) what we are to do, when we beginne to treat any businesse, since he, in that first busi­nesse of his, did pray, and that in so great length. From hence it is, that S. Denis saith, that at the en­trance into any work [...], we must begin by prayer. S. Paul exhorteth vs, to be instant, and earnest in pray­er; and our Lord saith, Luc. 1 [...]. That we must euer pray, and not giue ouer; which signifieth, that this worke must be performed with frequent diligence, and care For they who thinke it will serue their turns, to take heed to themselues, in doing workes plea­sing vnto God; & yet make no accompt of vsing prayer, do swimme, and fight, with one only hand, and do walke with one only foot. For our Lord did teach vs, that two thinges are necessary when he sayd, Matt. 26. Watch and pray that you may not enter into temptation. And the same did he aduise, when he said, Luc. 21. Watch in prayer at all tymes, that you may escape from these thinges, which are to come; and that you may be able to appeare before the sonne of the Virgin. And S. Paul Ephes. [...]. doth couple these two thinges, when hearmeth the Cauallier of Christ to­wards the spirituall warre which he is to make, against the Diuell. For, as a man, how well so­euer he fare, yet vnles he rest, and sleepe, he wilbe weake, & run hazard of going out of his wits; so wil it happen to one that worketh, & pray­eth not; for Prayer is that to the soule, which rest is to the [...]ody. prayer is that to the soule, which [Page 358]repose is to the body. There is not any estate so great, which will not be brought to an end, if there be euer spending, and no getting; nor are there any good workes which will last, without praying. For thereby that light, and spirit, is got­ten for the recouery of that feruour of charity, & interiour deuotion which is diminished by busi­nesse, though it be good.

How necessary it is to pray, seemeth plaine, by the instance, and fastes wherewith the prophet 1. Reg. 2. Samuel prayed our Lord, That Marke this well. he would deliuer the people out of the captiuity of Babylon, although the seauenty yeares which our Lord had appointed, for the terme vpon which he would deliuer them, were accom­plished. And if in that which God hath promised that he will do, or giue, there be yet, neede to begge it by earnest prayer; how much more will it be needfull to do it, in such case, as wherein we haue no particuler promise from him? S. Paul, de­syreth the Romanes to pray for him, that all impedi­ments being remooued, he might be able to visit them. wherevpon Origen saith, that although the A­postle had said, a little afore, I know, that when [...] shall go to you, my going wilbe in the aboundance, of the benediction of Christ; yet notwithstanding all this, he knew that prayer was necessary, euen for the thinges which we expressely know, shall happen [...] and Be­cause our Lord or­dayneth the giuing of his gra­ces, by meanes of Prayer. if there were no prayer, without doubt there would be no accomplishment of that which is foretold.

Doth it not seeme to thee, that he had rea­son, [Page 359]who S. Gregory. said, that prayer was the meanes, to obteyne, what the omnipotent God, had ordai­ned in eternity, to bestow afterward in tyme? And againe, That as plowing, and sowing, is the meanes for the getting of corne; so is prayer for the obteyning of the fruits of spirit; and therefore we are not to mer­uayle, yf we gather so few, since we pray so little?

A Note this soūd & certayn reason. most certaine thing it is, that by con­uersation with a good man, it doth follow that one will loue him, and he will conceaue desires of being vertuous. And so, if we did conuerse with God, with more reason, we might hope for these, and other aduantages, by his conuersation. As Moyses did, who after he had treated in the Mount with God; he came downe from thence, full of splendour. And from no other roote it growes, that we are so wanting to shew pitty to our neighbours; but because we frequent not this conuersation with our Lord. For the man, who by night, lay prostrate in the sight of God, demaun­ding pardon for his sinnes, and mercy for his mise­ries; if vpon the day following, himselfe sind an­other, who asketh that of him which he begged of God, he will not be able to choose, but know those very wordes which himselfe vsed; and he will remember the great affliction, wherewith he spake them to our Lord; and with how great de­sire to be heard; and he will do by his neighbour, as he desired that God should doe with him.

And to deliuer to thee what I conceaue of this, in a word; I represent to thy memory, that [Page 360]which Dauid Psal 65. said. Blessed be our Lord, who to the not my prayer, nor his mercy from me. Whereupon S. Augustine Note. saith; Thou maiest well be secure, that if God do not take thy prayer from thee, neither will he take his mercy. And remember yet againe, what our Lord said, Luc. 11. That the heauenly Father, will giue a good spirit, to them that aske it. And with this spirit we fulfill the law of God, as S. Paul saith. So that the mercy of God is neere vs, and we ful­fill his law, by meanes of prayer. Thinke Note. then, what kind of Creature that will be, to whom by the want of prayer, these two thinges shalbe wan­ting. And I will aduertise thee of an errour of some men, who thinke, that because Rom. [...]. S. Paul said, I would haue mē pray in al places, it should ther­fore not be necessary, to pray long, at once, not in any particuler place; but that it would suffice to enterlace, our prayers with the rest of our workes. A The answere to an ob­iection. good thing it is to pray in all places; but that will not serue our turne, if we meane to imitate Iesus Christ our Lord, and to practise that, which his Saintes haue said and done, in matter of prayer. And be thou well assured, that no man wilbe able to pray with profit, in euery place, vn­les first he haue learned to do this duty, in a par­ticuler place; and to imploy some space of time, v­pon it.

CHAP. LXXI.
That the pennance due to our sinnes must be the first pace, whereby we come to God; conceauing true griefe for them, and making true Confession there­of, and satisfaction.

THE first pace which the soule is to make, in approaching towardes God, is to be the pennance of her sins. And to the end that this may be well performed, it will profit much, that a man disimploy himselfe from all businesse, and from all conuersations; and do attend with care, to draw to his memory, all the sinnes of his life; helping himselfe for this purpose, by some Cer­taine bookes which in­struct mē, how they may exa­mine their conscien­ces, for confessiō, which are euery where to be sold in Catholike coūtreys. Confessionary. And after, that he hath lamen­ted them, well, he must declare them to some spi­rituall Phisitian, who hath the power and know­ledge, to prescribe fit remedyes for that infir­mity; and who may lay his conscience, as flat and euen as yf the man, were that day to dye, & to be presented before the iudgement seat of God. In this businesse, he may spend some moneth, or two; dissoluing with bitter sighes, the sinnes which he committed by wicked pleasures. And for this purpose, he may serue himselfe of the rea­ding of some good booke, such as I spake of In the discourse, of t [...]e knowledge of ones selfe. longe before; which may helpe him, to thinke of his death, and Iudgement; and with his thought to descend aliue into that bottomles pitte of [Page 362]eternall fire; to the end that he may not descend after he is dead, to find the misery which there is felt. It will also conduce to this purpose, that beholding some Image of the Crucisixe, or else re­membring it, he consider, how himselfe, by his sinnes, was the cause why our Lord did suffer so great tormentes. And Woe will be to vs, if we do it not. let him behold him with attention, from head to foot; and ponder euery particuler payne of his by it selfe; & lament euery particuler sinne; since the afflictions of our Lord, do correspond to our crimes; he suffering dishonour for the payment of our pride; and of scourges and paynes, in payment of our sensuall pleasures; and so also in the rest. And let him thinke, that if a sonne should see his father cruelly scourged, and tormented, for a fault which not the Father, but that sonne had committed; and if he should heare this Proclamation made, He that committeth such a sinne, shall pay for it with such a punishment. This Sonne would haue great com­passion of his Father; and great sorrow, for ha­uing done any such thing as was to cost that Fa­ther so dear. And if he were a true Sonne, it would more afflict him to see his Father so punished, then if they should haue punished himself. And a strāg thing it would be, if he cryed not out, through excesse of griefe; confessing, that himselfe was the guilty person, & that him they should punish, and not the Father, who had made no fault.

From hence let vs take example, to conceans therby, more griefe, for hauing sinned. For it is [Page 363]God, who was offended, and it is God, who was punished, for euery mischiefe, which might haue growne to vs, by euery sinne. It is Let euery one make this case his owne. I, O Lord that sinned, but it is thou that payest the payne thereof. My wickednes, O Lord, did put thee in prison, and it made thee be proclaimed with in­famy, through those streets; and at last it layd thee vpon a Crosse. Let this be thy lamentation, with desire to suffer all that for God, which he shalbe pleased to ordayne. And when thou shalt haue made this Examen of thy conscience, with sorrow, & satisfaction, according to the aduice of thy Ghostly Father, thou mayst (after thy hauing receaued sacramental absolution) haue confident hope of pardō, & receaue comfort into thy soule.

CHAP. LXXII.
How the second pace towardes the bringing vs to God, is the giuing of thankes which we owe him, for his hauing so deliuered vs; and of the manner how this is to be done, by meanes of diuers Misteryes of the Passion, which are to be meditated, in diuers dayes.

VVHEN the soule is thus purged, from the humours of sinne, which gaue it death; it must imploy it selfe vpon giuing of thankes, for so great, and so vndeserued a fauour. Not A gre­ater bles­sing it is to be made the adopted Sonne of God, then to be fre­ed from the paines of hell. only in respect that God hath forgiuen him, the paynes of hell; but because he hath re­ceaued him for his Sonne; and hath bestowed [Page 364]his grace vpon him, and certaine interiour guifs, by the merits of the true God, Iesus Christ, our Lord, who dyed for our sinnes, and rose againe for our iustification; killing our sinnes, and our old life by his dying; and raysing vs vp, to a new life, by his resurrection. And if Iob sayd, That the body of a poore man whome he had cloathed, would heap benedictions vpon the man, who imparted that benefit; with much more reason ought we to blesse Christ Iesus crucifyed, when our soule doth find it selfe free frō misery, & conforted with fauours; belie­uing, that all our good commeth from him; for it is strangely against all reason, to be vngrateful to such loue, and for such benefits. And although euery tyme that thou findest thy selfe well, thou art instantly to prayse Christ Iesus, with particu­ler gratitude; yet to the end that this may be don the better, and with more fruit, it will be fit, That as, to thinke of thy sinnes, I aduised thee to seeke some priuate, or retyred place, there to looke v­pon thy selfe; so now, thou do with much more reason, imploy another part of the day, in thin­king of the Passion of our Lord; & in giuing him thankes for the benefits which are come to thee by it; crying out from thy hart, I will neuer forget thy iustifications, because in them thou didst giue one life.

The course then which thou shalt hold, if no other better doe occurre, may be this. On A di­stribution of the dayes, in the Medi­tation of the Passiō of our Lord. Munday to thinke on the prayer of our Lord, and the taking of him in the Garden; and that [Page 365]which passed, in the house of Annas, and Caiphas. On Tewesday, the accusations which were presen­ted against him; and the processions, that he made from Iudge to Iudge; and of the cruell scourging, which he endured when he was tyed to the piliar. On Wednesday, how he was crowned with thornes; and what scorne they put him to by drawing him out in a red coate, and with a Reede in his hand, that all the people might see him; and how they sayd, Ecce Home. On Thursday, we cannot displace, that most excellent mistery, how the sonne of God, with profound humility, washed the feet of his disciples, and gaue to them afterwardes, his body, and bloud for food of life. Commanding both them, and all It was his Apo­stles, and in their person to all lawfull Priests their suc­cessours, whomour Lord cō ­maunded to do the like, and not to lay persons, as the Protestāts imagine. preistes who were to follow, that they should doe the same in memory of him. Doe thou make thy selfe present at that admirable Lauatory, and in that most ex­cellent banquet; and then trust in God, that thou shalt not depart from thence, eyther defyled, or dead of hunger.

Thou shalt thinke on Friday, how our Lord was presented before the Iudge, and sentenced to death; and how he carried his crosse vpon his shoulders; and was after, crucified vpon it; with all that which passed there; till such time as he re­commended his spirit into the handes of his Fa­ther, and so dved. On Satturday do thou rest in thinkng vpon that cruell thrust of the lance into his sacred side; and how they tooke him off, from the Crosse, and layed him in the armes of his blessed [Page 366]Mother; and afterwardes in the sepulcher. And goe thou accompaning his soule, to that Limbus, of the holy Fathers, and be present at the ioy, yea the paradise, which there was grannted to them. Be carefull also, vpon this day, to thinke vpon the much greife, which the virgin Mother felt; and be a faithfull companion in taking part thereof, with her. For besides, that this office is most due to her from thee, it wilbe full of profit to thy selfe. Of Sunday I say nothing, because thou knowest already, that it is depu­ted to the consideration of the Resurrection, and of the glory, which the inhabitantes of heauen possesse; and in this, thou art to imploy thy selfe, vpon that day. In This may best be practi­sed, by persons who are of good health; & who liue not in cō ­munities; not are ordinarily of great pennance otherwise particuler I recom­mend to thee, that vpon Thursday night, thou take as little sleepe as possibly thou canst, to keepe company with our Lord; who (after those vexa­tions of his arrest; & the long way that he went, betweene the house of Annas and Caiaphas; and after many buffets and scornes, and other lewd impieties that were put vpon him) did consume the rest of that night, in excessiue affliction; & in a prison extreamely hard; & with so great abuse, by such as kept him, that neither had he a mind to sleepe, nor would any other man forbeare to lament, and weep, if he well knew what passed there. Which was so much, as, that S. Hierome saith, will not be knowne, till Our Lord graunt, that we may know it then, to our com­fortes, & not to our confusiō. the day of iud­gement. Demand of him a part of his paines, and take thou for him, euery thursday night, some [Page 367]such paine in particuler, as himselfe shall addresse thee to. For a great shame it is to any Christian, if he put no difference betweene that, and other nights. And there was a certayn person that said, Who is he, that can find in his hart, to sleepe vpon a Thursday night. And I belieue, also, if the truth were known, that the same person, did not sleepe much vpon Friday night.

CHAP. LXXIII.
Of the way which we are to hold in the consideration of the life and passion of Iesus Christ our Lord.

THIS exercise of thinking vpon the paces of the life, and death of Iesus Christ our Lord; may be performed in one of these two manners. Eyther How we are to thinke of the passiō of Christ our Lord. by representing to thy imagination, the corporall figure of Christ our Lord; or, by meerly thinking, without any imaginary representation. And Note. do thou know, that since the most high & inuisible God, did make himself a visible man, to the end, that, by meanes of that visible, he might conuey into vs the consideration of that which is inuisible; there is no question, but that it was a very profitable thinge, to behold him with cor­porall eyes, that so men might come to behold him, with the spirituall, which are of Faith; if the malice of the looker on, had giuen no impedi­ment. And without doubt, all that which in our Lord was corporall, was excellently ordered; & [Page 368]did carry a particuler efficacy, towards the hel­ping of a pious hart, to raise it selfe vp, towards spirituall thinges. Nor was it a small fauour, for them to enioy this sight, which many Kinges, and Prophets, desired to enioy, but obteyned it not. And although we, that come after, do not enioy this fauour, in so complete a manner; yet may we not forbeare to help our selues thereby, in the best sort we may. And to this purpose, our Mother, the holy Church, doth, with great reason, propose to vs, the images, or pictures of the body of our Lord; that so being stirred vp thereby, we may remember his corporall presence; and he may communicate to vs, by meanes of his resemblance some part of the much, which would haue been communicated to vs, by his presence. And since a picture which is painted without my selfe, vpon a piece of wood, doth bring me profit; without doubt, that which is painted within me, and in the imaginatiue part of my mind, will also profit me, by taking it, as a steppe, whereby I may be raised higher. For This is most certainly true▪ and our Lord be blessed, because it is so. all that, which hath relati­on to our Lord, and which concerneth, and re­presenteth him; doth carry a meruailous force, towards the conducting vs towards him.

And although these thinges may seeme meane to thee; yet because they are a way to hig­her thinges, these also must be esteemed, high. And by this meanesse, God will haue them to begin, who are humbled, and whome by his hand, he will aduance to greater matters. But [Page 369]they Take heed of too high flying at the first. who instantly giue themselues to such high flying thoughts, as seeming to be full of tast and more worthy of their consideration; may looke for a fall sure inough. For, as the Scripture Prou. 1 [...]. saith, He that goeth a pace, will stumble: And, Prou. 28. he that maketh hast to be rich, shall not be without sinne. And it happeneth to these men, that if they would afterwards returne to thinke of such things, as carry proportion with their poorenes, they cannot light vpon it; because they haue beene entred, with such a gluttonous appetit, v­pon greater matters. And so they runne, such a kind of hazard, as a bird may do, which maketh too much hast out of her nest; whither it cannot returne againe, nor yet proceed, by way of flight. Therefore it will be fit for vs, to beginne at the bottome; with the consideration of our sins, as hath beene sayd; and then, with the Meditation, of the sacred humanity of Iesus Christ our Lord; that so we may be exalted, to those altitudes of his Diuinity.

CHAP. LXXIIII.
Wherein the way of considering the life of Iesus Christ our Lord, to the end that it may be of greater pro­fit to vs, is prosecuted, in a more particuler manner.

BEING then retyred into thy Oratory, at the tyme which thou deputest to this Exercise; first make thy Accor­ding to that pious forme, which is vsed in the Holy Catholike Church, Confiteor Deo Ommui­potenti. Confession in generall; desiring [Page 370]pardon of our Lord for thy sinnes; and especially them, which thou mayst haue committed, since the tyme of thy last Confession; and thou shalt say a few vocall prayers, according to the for­mer aduice which I gaue, when I treated of the knowledge of ones selfe. Then read that mystery of the Passion (which thou art about to meditate) in some booke that treates thereof. This The manner of reading spirituall bookes. will serue thee for two purposes. The one, to teach thee, what did happen in that mystery, that so thou mayst be able to thinke vpon it; for as for the life, & death, of our Lord, thou art to know them, and that, soundly knowne. The other, for the recollecting of thy hart; to the end that when thou meanest to thinke vpon the Passion, thou mayst not haue wandring, or tepide thoughtes. And although thou do not read, at one tyme, all that which the booke deliuereth of that part of the Passion, thou wilt be at no losse thereby; be­cause vpon the same dayes of the weekes follow­ing thou wilt come to an end thereof. And, as I told thee before, thy reading must not be such, as to make thee weary; but to stirre vp the appe­tite of thy soule, and to prepare matter, for thee to thinke, and pray vpon.

The bookes which may profit thee, in the thought of the Passion, are amongst others, the Meditations of S. Augustine in Latin; and those of the Father Lewys de Granada in Spanish; and the Di [...]y­sius Car­thusianus. Carthusian, who writeth vpon al the Ghos­pells. When thou hast ended thy reading, cast [Page 371]thy selfe vpon thy knees, and (hauing first recol­lected thyne eyes) doe thou beseech our Lord, that he will send thee light of the Holy Ghost, which may impart to thee, an amorous, and compassiue feeling, of that, which Christ, with such dearenesse of loue, did suffer for thee. Be very Obser­ue this excellent discourse with great attention. importunate with him, not to permit in thee so great ingratitude, as that thou (being bound to imitate his passion) shouldest hardly find in thy hart, to thinke vpon it. Then place the image of that Mystery which thou wouldst me­ditate, within thy hart; and if this succeed not with thee, yet esteeme, at least, that thou hast it neere thee. And A ne­cessary ad­uice. this I say, to let thee know, that thou art not to carry thy thoughts to con­template our Lord, at Hierusalem, where the Pas­sion was accomplished; for this would do thy head great hurt, and dry vp thy deuotion. But make account that he is present to thee; and place thou the eyes of thy soule vpon his feet; or on the ground neere to him; and behold, with all reue­rence, that which passeth, as if thou wert pre­sent at it; and hearken to that, which our Lord did say, with all attention. Aboue all Our Lord, make v [...] fit to do so. thinges behould with a pure, and quiet sight, his most sa­cred hart; which so aboundeth with loue towards vs; and which did so much excell, in compari­son of that which he suffered exteriourly (thogh euen that were also vnspeakable) as the Heauen doth exceed the Earth.

But take heed, that thou doe not afflict [Page 372]thy hart, with any forced griefe, which vseth to fetch out some Take heed of forcing thy selfe to teares. few teares with violence; for this, doth hinder that quiet repose, which is wholy needfull, in the exercise of prayer, as the Abbot Isaac was wont to say; & they dry vp the hart, & make it vnfit for the receauing of the vi­sitation of Gods spirit, which requireth peace, and rest. Yea, and they vse to preiudice euen our bo­dily health; and to leaue the soule so frighted, with the disgust which therein it found, that it feareth to returne againe to praier, as to some painefull thing. But if, with a quiet thinking of these things, our Lord do giue thee teares, and compassion, & other deuout affections of mind, thou art to take them vnder this condition, That the excesse thereof be not such as to ouer­worke thee to wardes the notorious preiudice of thy health; or that thou becommest vnable ther­by, to resist them, and to hinder crying out; or, by other such exteriour signes, to make shew of what thou findest within. For yf thou doest vse thy selfe to this, thou wilt grow to make those expressions amongst others, and with greate note, to which thou art accustomed in thy Ora­tory, without being able to resist them; but from this, it is reason that thou fly.

So How we are to carry our selues, when we haue tears & tender motions of the mind. as, thou art to receaue these spiritual gustes, and teares, in such sort, as that thou do not greatly go after them; least That pious thought which was the cause of teares, is to be cherished, and the teares t [...]es lues neglected. in the pursuit thereof, thou loose that pious thought, or spi­rituall affection, by which they were caused. [Page 373]But vse thou great diligence, that the thought continue; and as for the other exteriour, and sensible feeling, let it take the chance; and by this meanes thou mayest continue a long tyme to­geather, in a spirituall, and deuout gust of mind. Whereas that other, which may be accompted but as corporall, & to touch vpon the sensible part of the soule, cannot last. Nor yet, will it suffer the spiritual affection to continue, vnles it be withheld, from following the other which is more corporall. Only Indul­gēce may be vsed towards begin­ners. to such as are new beginners, a little leaue may be allowed, that so they may taste of this sweet kind of milke, a little more then such as are proficient. For In this true deuo­tion doth consist. these later, haue an ayme to feele in their soule, the high dignity of him that suffers; and the deepe indignity of him for whom he suffers; and the mightily much that he suffers; and yet that the loue wherewith he doth it, is still greater; and Do this and liue. they desire to imitate this loue, and this passion, with all the strength, that our Lord shall giue. And if here­with, he giue them the aforesaid gustes, they driue them not away, nay rather they are thank­full for them; but not, as for the more principall. And Both these loues of God are excellent: but gene­rally spea­king, men excell in the for­mer, and women in the later. although I make no doubt, but that there is a certaine kind of loue of God, so infla­med, and so fyery, as that, it doth not only not prouoke teares, but it hindreth them, and dries them vp; so do I also aduertise thee, that there is another tender kind of loue, which procureth those aforesaid gustes, in the sensitiue part of the [Page 374]soule; and in the eyes of the body; which yet, is not blame-worthy, since the doctrine of Christ, is not a doctrine of Stoickes, who condemne euen the passions which are good. And because Christ our Lord did weepe, and was sad, that sufficeth to make vs belieue, that these thinges are good, yea euen in the most perfect men. O how much hurt, hath bin done by certaine vnlearned men, both to themselues and to others, by their taking the businesse, of directing soules in the way of spirit into their handes, and by making themsel­ues the Iudges thereof, whilst yet they do but fol­low their owne ignorant opinion. And this I say, by occasion of men who haue bin deceaued ther­by; and to whome those other thinges, haue bin displeasing.

CHAP. LXXV.
Wherein some directions are giuen for our greater pro­fit in the aforesaid exercise of Prayer: and for the auoyding of some inconueniences, which to ignorant persons are wont to arriue.

THOv art also to be adu [...]sed, that It im­porteth much that great care be had of this. And [...]ead this Chapter with great attention, for there is not any one, in the whole booke, more ex­cellent, & practicall then this. thou must not labour much, to fixe the image of our Lord too profoundly in thy imagination; for danger is wont to arise therby, vnto the soule. To which it seemeth sometymes, that it doth re­ally and exteriourly see the images, which it hath only within. And some fall into madnesse, and [Page 375]others into pride; & though neither of these two happen, yet doth it preiudice the health of the bo­dy, and that euen almost, without remedy. It is therefore fit, that thou performe this exercise, in such sort, that neither thou do wholy forbeare to represent the image; nor yet, that thou procure to haue it continually, or to be fixed in thy selfe, with paine; but by little, and little; and so as that it cost thee not, too much trouble. Thou maiest also haue neere thee some De­uout pi­ctures do both ad­dresse, & ease the i­magina­tiue part of man. deuout pictures, well proportioned to the seuerall partes of the pa­ssion; by looking vpon which sometymes, thou mayest be eased; and so enabled, without much difficulty, to imagine it without them.

Be also very carefull, that not only thou fly from the danger which I haue told thee of, in i­magining with too much trouble, but We must nei­ther be too extre­mely soli­citous, on the one side, nor sloathful, or negli­gent on the other. also from thinking, with too much earnestnesse of attentiō, and with too much employment of the head. For besides the hurt, which such a head will receaue thereby; it causeth a drienesse in the soule, which maketh it abhor prayer. Do not meditate in such sort, nor with so much force, that it may seeme as if, thou wouldst do it by thy selfe alone, or by the strength of thyne own armes. For this would carry more resemblance, to the nature of study, then of prayer. But vndertake this exercise, in such sort, as that thou rely, and rest vpon the strength of our Lord, who helpeth men how to thinke. And if thou yet know not how to do it; but that thou perceaue thy head or thy temples, find noto­rious [Page 376]trouble, do If thou wilt be sure, not to erre; take coū ­sayle, frō tyme to tyme, of thy gho­stly Fa­ther; ac­cording to the circ [...] ­stances, wherein thou shalt find thy selfe. not proceed forward, but quiet thy selfe, and cast away that affliction of mind, and humble thy selfe in the sight of God with simplicity, and peace; desyring grace of him, that thou mayst so thinke as he will haue thee; and do not, in any case, presume, in that high presence of God, to rely, and rest wholly vpon thyne owne reasons, or stiffe attention. But humble thy selfe before him, with a simple kind of affection, as a poore little Child, or an humble disciple would do, who carryeth a quiet kind of attention, to learne of his maister, though yet withall, he resolueth to help himselfe. And know, that this is a businesse, which dependeth more How highly true this is. vpon the hart, then vpon the head. For to loue, is the end why we are to thinke. And for want of vnderstanding this, and that kinde of peaceful mind, wherof I haue spoken; many haue much wearied, both their owne, and the heads of others, with preiudice of their health, & with im­pediment to much good which they might haue done. And They who vn­derstand what he sayth, do vnderstād the truth, of what he sayth. if God do vouchsafe the fauour, to make thee able to meditate in this quiet man­ner, that which thou feelest, will both continue longer, and thou wilt be able to spend more time in prayer, and without trouble. All which thou wilt find to be very contrary, if thou proceed o­therwise.

I haue already said, how thy dwelling is to be in thy hart; where (as a carefull Be [...], who makes her hony within her hiue) thou art to shut [Page 377]thy selfe vp; presenting to our Lord that which shall be brought to thee from abroad; beseeching him to giue thee fauour, and light, as Moyses did in the case of that materiall Tabernacle. And if the gall of any temptation, shall offer at thee, fly thou into thy hart; and then pull the doore v­pon thee; and so ioyning thy selfe to our Lord, thy enemyes will remaine out of doores with scorne inough. For as the hurt which they might do thee, must be by meanes of thy thought; when once that, is well shut vp from them, there is no meanes for them to enter.

And Note. because that thou mayst continue and profit in this exercise, it is fit, in any case, that thou do it with a quiet kind of rest, & peace; I aduertise thee, that if thou haue strength to re­maine vpon thy knees, during this conference with God, it will be fit to do so; because all reue­rence is due to that diuine Maiesty. And to this purpose, we haue the example of our soueraigne Lord and Maister, of whome the Euangelist re­cordes, that in the Garden of Gethsemani, he pray­ed to his Father, vpon his knees. But yet if the weaknes of thy body be such, as that in prayer which is long, thou canst not remaine kneeling, without preiudice to the peace of thy mind; and that it make thee vnfit to attend to our Lord; thou art to put thy selfe in some such posture, as may not hinder this quietnes. For though prayer carry the fruit of satisfaction with it, for the paine which we endure therby; yet because that fruit, [Page 378]is greater, which we gather by getting light, and spiritual gust, & other benefits, which God giueth in prayer; it must be imbraced at the fittest meanes, for the obtayning only of that which is best, if we be not able to comply withall.

It is also to be considered that, when in thy prayer, thou art thinking of some one thing, if thou find thy soule inuited to passe on towards somewhat It is impossible thus, by way of a generall rule, to say that which shal fit, in the particuler case of all men, the present matter, being so full of va­riety and difficulty; if therfore this be thy case, and that thou wilt not erre, aske coūsaile of thy Gho­stly Fa­ther. els; then (opening the gate to an­other good thought) thou art to dismisse the for­mer, and to take the latter, supposing yet, that both be good. Though notwithstanding, thou art to be well aduised, that this second thought may not come by some fraud of the Diuell, that so thou making the leap of a Pye, from one thing to another, he may depriue thee of the fruit of prayer. Or els, that it proceed not from the leui­ty of thyne owne hart; which, finding not that which it desireth in some one thought, disposeth it selfe to make triall of some other, and yet ano­ther. Thou art not therefore to forsake lightly, thy former thought, vnles thou be effectually in­uited to do it, from within; and that, with such a Thou must not faile to aduise heerein with thy Ghostly Pather. kind of satisfaction to thy selfe, as the hart vseth to feele, when God inuiteth it; and when he interposeth himselfe. And by asking light of our Lord, and by taking accoumpt afterward what profit thou hast gotten; & by often taking of experience, thou wilt grow to do thy duty, in this busines.

To this An aduise cōcerning reading, and vocal prayer. purpose it also maketh; that if [Page 379]thou be reading or praying vocally, and that our Lord do visit thee, with any profound internall feeling; thou art to cease from that which thou wert doing; and to feed vpon the bit, which our Lord hath sent thee; and when that is done, thou mayest begin againe, where thou didst leaue. For since this exteriour deuotion, doth serue but to stir vp the interiour, we must be sure not to vse it so, as that it may be a meanes to hinder the other. Nor would I speake of so many particulers, if I had not seene some people so tyed to certaine rules, and so resolued to taske themselues in such a fashion, that although there were reason for them to belieue, that our Lord would haue them interrupt a thought, yet they will not do it. And if he will conduct them by one way, yet they will needs go by another, relying vpon their owne prudence. Whereas Humi­lity is th [...] best dis­position towardes Prayer. notwithstanding, it is an infallible Truth, that nothing is more contrary vnto this Exercise, then for men to thinke, that they are able to play the maisters in it. And I haue seene many men abound in rules, cōcerning prayer, & to be talking of great secrets, and the same men to be very empty in the practise of it For to rest vpon those rules, and to reflect much vpon them, in tyme of prayer, depriueth them of that humility, and simplicity of a child; whereby this businesse is to be treated with God, as I haue said before. Yet Note. do I not deliuer this, to disswade men from vsing that reasonable dili­gence, which on our part we are to bring, especi­ally [Page 380]when we are beginners in it; but only that we may performe it, with such a kind of liberty as not to hinder vs from depending vpon God, in ex­pectation of his blessing; in such sort as he shal be pleased to giue it. And Who are sure to profit most, in being able to vse, mentall Prayer. be thou well assured, that in this exercise, he profits most, who doth humble himselfe more; and who doth vse more perseuerance; and who sendeth out, more deep sighes to our Lord; and not he, who hath more rules, without booke.

CHAP. LXXVI.
That the end of the Meditation of the Passion is to be the imitation thereof; and what is to be the begin­ning, and ground, of greater things which we are to imitate.

TO the end that thou mayst know, how to profit by this exercise, thou art to be aduer­tised, that the end of the meditation of the passion, is to be the imitation thereof, and the accompli­shment, of the law of our Lord. And A truth most ne­cessary to be knowne. this I tell thee, because some there are who make much reckoning of the houres which they spend in prayer; & of the gust, and sweetnesse which they find therein; but they take no accompt, of the fruit which they gather by it. They conceaue, with an erroneous iudgement, that he that pray­eth most, and with greatest sweetnesse of delight [...] that he, forsooth, is the greatest saint; wheras in­deed, that other man is so, who togeather with [Page 381]the profoūd The perfection of a Chri­stian con­sisteth in hauing profound humility, & ardent charity. contēpt of himself hath the greatest charity; wherin consisteth the perfection of Chri­stian life, and the fulfilling of the whole law. And he that liueth well, and he that prayeth well, must do it all to this end; and not content himselfe, with only hauing spent such a piece of his tyme well in confessing, or communicating, or deuout praying, or any other thing, of the like nature.

We read of Moyses, that hauing been four­ty dayes, and fourty nightes vpon the top of mount Sinay in continuall conuersation with the most high God; and descending afterward to con­uerse with men, he told them no storyes, or vist­ons, or reuelations, or curious secrets; but he carri­ed much light in his face, and two tables of stone in his handes. In the one whereof, those He deui­deth the comman­dements by three, & seauen, as we do, and as S. Augustin, did; and, not by foure and six as the Protestāts do. three com­maundements were written, which appertaine to the honour of God; and seauen in the other which belong to our duty towards, our neigh­bour. Giuing The right fruit of Prayer. thereby to vnderstand, that he that treates with God, by the tongue of prayer, must haue light in his vnderstanding; thereby to know what he is to do; and then a fulfilling of the will of God, put in execution, as if the law, were in his handes. And since he hath the office of one that prayes, he may also haue the life of one that prayes; which must be such, as that, in all his actions, it may appeare; If this proue not so in som proportiō thou dost loose thy labour. that some part of that soueraigne truth, and supreme purity, wherewith he had so much to do, hath stucke vnto him. For they who employ a fit of [Page 382]tyme in weeping, and in lamenting those buffetts, which they gaue our Lord, in his passion; if, departing from thence, vpon the offer of the least of those affronts, which were put vpon our Lord, they haue yet little pa­tience, (as if they had learnt nothing in prayer, but to be able to suffer nothing) I know not to whome I should compare them, but to such, as (when they are sleeping) do conceaue, that they are doing some great matter, who yet, when they wake, are found to haue done the expresse con­trary.

What A vici­ous, and a foolish thing. more absurd, and foolish thinge can there be, then that, when I do so much e­steeme the patience of our Lord, in his paine, I will yet haue none in myne. But I will say, Carry thy Crosse alone O Lord, though it be deadly heauy; for I haue no mind to help thee, by carrying of mine, though it he very light. The Apostles had compas­sion, and they shed teares, for the Passion of our Lord; but because they fled from the imitation thereof, they were cowards, and offended God thereby, like euill Christians. Thou art not ther­fore to consider the Passion, and to haue compassion of out Lord, as one that would looke vpon a busi­nesse in the nature of a meere looker on; but as one who is to accompany our Lord, in the point of sufferance. And by looking vpon him, pro­cure thou to get strength, to drinke of his Chalice with him, though it be neuer so bitter. Let He ad­uiseth to corporall pennance as a dispo­sition to the morti­fication of our pas­sions. the beginning, and foundation of greater matters, [Page 383]wherein thou art to imitate him, be in exteriour austerities, and the mortification of thy body. That so thou mayest carry some resemblance to his diuine flesh, which was so full of affliction, & tormentes; farre greater, then can be ex­pressed.

Behold him with stiffe attention, how he tasteth of vinegar, and gall; behold in how straite a bed he is lodged; and how bare he is of clothes; and how thicke he is apparelled, with torments, from head to foot; and get thou force from hence, to fly from the delicacies, and ornaments of thy body, in thy clothes, in thy bed, and in thy food. And in this, and in all the rest, (which thou canst do, without much inconuenience) afflict thy bo­dy, and make it liue vpon a Crosse; and that, which thou canst not do, let indeed, thy hart de­syre; and begge strength of our Lord, for it; and lament, in that he, being vpon the Crosse, thou deseruedst not to accompany, or to imitate him.

These must be the desires of a Christian, who exerciseth himselfe, vpon thinking on the Passion, if he haue a mind to imitate it. For If ther had beene any better way to Heauen, then that of the Crosse, our Lord Iesus, would haue taught vs how to find it but he taught no other. when our Lord came from heauen to earth, to conuerse with men, and to teach them the best, and most secure way to heauen; and when he was borne, did make choice of pouerty, of cold, and of ba­nishment; and as he increased in yeares, so did he increase in affliction; and the end of his life, was the addition of others, which were greater then they. He honoured these thinges, though [Page 384]of themselues they were base; and by ioyning them to himselfe, he gaue them such a stampe of greatnesse, and such tokens of security, & beau­ty, as to make them grow to be desired. For Note this com­parison, for is doth conuince. if a temporall king by apparelling himself in such or such a fashion, do instantly make it honou­rable, and to be thought worthy of imitation by all his vassalls; how much more shall this be done, by that soueraigne King of Kinges, whose worth is infinitely more, then of all the creatures how high soeuer. And he that followeth not this dicta­men, should be no true vassall of this Lord; since he holdes it not for a point of honour, to be like him. A delightfull thinge it is, as saith S. Bernard, to imitate the dishonour of him that was crucified; but this only belonges to such, as are not vngratefull to him.

And Note this excel­lent com­parison; & receaue that light, and heat, which God is willing to grant thee by means thereof. now tell me, if a King should go on foote, and that bare; and weary; and swea­ting, through the sharpenesse of the way; hauing his backe loaden with sackcloth, & his face with teares; and all this to mooue compassion, as D [...] ­nid did; what seruant of his could there be, who eyther for loue, or shame, would not also go on foote, and vnshod, and as like his King as h [...] were able? And so the Scripture saith, that all th [...] seruants of Dauid did, and all the people, that went [...] his company. But if such a King, should commaun [...] any of his seruantes, that wayted on him, to tak [...] horse, and to ride at ease; a cruell commaund [...] ­ment would that be, to such a seruant. And fro [...] [Page 385]the roots of his hart, he would beseech the King, not to put, such a huge affront vpon him; as that, a Royall Maiesty, being treated in such a fashion, his servant, should be seene so contrary to him. And if yet notwithstanding, the King should persist in the Commandment, the seruant indeed would obey him; but with so much payne, as that (placing his eyes vpon the affliction of the King) his hart would take no contentment in that ease, which exteriourly he was at; but (estee­ming himselfe for more weake, and lesse fauou­red then the rest) he would reckon it amongst the greatest of his misfortunes, that he might not go more like his Lord. And that which he should want to do indeed, he would not faile to perform with the deepest wishes of his hart; taking that ease of his owne, in patience, but in his desire, hauing sufferance.

Such doubtles, is Christ crucifyed to those harts, which imploy themselues in looking on him; if yet withall, they be gratefull (as S. Ber­nard sayth) for so great a benefit, as it is, for God to haue abased himselfe so far, as to walke throgh this desert, with such misery, as neuer man endu­red. For But it will fall downe, as we must do, by great aba­sement of our selues for the loue of our Lord Iesus. where there is this gratitude, no launce can remayne, in the Rest, any longer; and both within, and without, there is an internall profound desire, to clap this Crucifixe, as a seale v­pon his hart, and vpon his arme; as a thing whereby he is not only not afflicted, or to hold himselfe thereby lesse honoured; but (as S. Iames sayth) [Page 386] They haue it in the place of ent [...]re, and perfect i [...] that affliction may [...]e offered them for his sake.

Such The great no­bility of a true Chri­stian hart. is the height of thē, who are grateful to this Lord; as that, with the knife of the lous of him being crucified, they do valiantly, destroy those Exod. 22. Idolls of Aegypt, which worldly persons do so prize, & loue; whether they be honours, or treasures, or pleasures; giuing him thankes that he vouchsafes to admit them into his company. And they go in search (being all inflamed with l [...]ue) after as many wayes, as they can thinke on, to suffer more; like Elephants being, as it were, enraged, with seeing, that the bloud of their Lord, is spilt. And if it happen to concerne the seruice of the same Lord, that they take their ease, or possesse the honours, and riches of this life; they accept them only by obedience, and they vse them with feare. And you had need giue them much comfort, if you will make them content to go on horsebacke, when they see him on foot, whome they loue so much more, then their owne liues.

Such I say, is the altitude of the state of Christian men; and such a change hath Christ wrought in thinges, since the tyme of the crosse [...] as that the bitter, and the base, he maketh honou­rable and delightfull; and A cer­tayn truth nobly ex­pressed. he makes his seruants ready, to cast the gorge, when they are but [...] take a tast of that, for which worldlings, are v­pon the point to cut the throates of one another. This fruitfull, and firme loue, do I desire, that [Page 387]the thought of the sacred Passion (of which thou art so enamoured) should worke in thy hart, & As S. Pau [...] sayth he did▪ & he sayth he did it, in his bo­dy, by pu­nishing its & not on­ly in his thought, and in his tongue. that thou mayst carry the mortification of our Lord in thy body. And if, there be none, who fling stones at thee, or imprison thee, or scourge thee, as they did our Lord, and his Apostles, who Act. 5. went ioyfully suffering for his name; yet seeke thou al­so meanes to suffer, in what thou mayst. And giue No protestant will hold any such discourse. God many thankes, when he offereth thee any occasion; to the end that vsing well that little, our Lord may giue thee strength to suffer more, and may send thee more.

And consider well, that thou art not to esteeme little of these thinges, in respect that S. Paul 1. Tim. 4. sayd, That the exercise of these corporall thinges, is of little profit. For although we should grant, that Where of many are yet in doubt. he meaneth it of such thinges, as we haue heere deliuered; yet he will not haue vs esteem How this place of Scrip­ture is to be vnder­stood. little of them, in themselus; but only in comparison of greater matters. For the obtayning whereof, and for the satisfaction of the payne which is due in Purgatory; & yet further, for the acquiring of more grace, and glory; and for the seruing of God, both with the interiour, and exteriour mā; there is no doubt, but that, since we are debtours to him for all, these other thinges are very fit to be vsed. Whereof, our soueraigne Maister of light, did tell vs, what we were to thin­ke, when he sayd (speaking of greater matters) That is was necessary to do them; and speaking of the lesser, that is was fit not to emit them.

CHAP. LXXVII.
That the Mortification of our passions, is the second fruit which we are to draw out of the meditation of the passion of Christ our Lord; and how we are to vse this exercise, that so we may gather admirable fruit thereby.

THAT which, in the next place, thou art to procure by the meditation of the sacred passi­on (that so by litle, & litle, thou mayst go ascen­ding, from the lower, to the higher), is the curing of the woundes of thy passions, by the me­dicine of the passion of our Lord, whome Isay Isa. 11. calles the flower of the rodde of Iesse. For Such as are me­dicinal by being bru­ised. as flowers, vse to be the meanes of giuing health, so Christ Iesus being grinded vpon the Crosse, & applyed by our deuout consideration to our soa­res, how dangerous soeuer they are, they wilbe cured thereby. Of this S. Augustine Thou needest not feare to take S. Augustins word, in a more doubtfull matter then this is. had expe­rience, and he sayd, When I am assalted by any de­formed thought, I go instātly to the wounds of Christ▪ when the diuell layeth any ambush for me I run into the bowells of the mercy of my Lord; and so the diuel flyeth from me If the ardour of any dishonest conceit would put my body into disorder, it is quenched, by my remembrance of the woundes of my Lord, the sonne of God▪ In all my aduersityes, I haue not found any re­medy of so great force, as the woundes of Christ; wherein I sleep secure, and discharge my care, without feare.

The same did S. Bernard say, and know by experience; as all they do, who finding themsel­ues, as it were assalted by their Passions, as the stagge is by a kennell of dogges; do go with a pi­ous hart, to drinke of those sacred fountaynes, of our Sauiour; painfull indeed to him, but the causes of restauration, and ioy to vs. And there, they learne by experience, how great a truth that is, which Num. 21. Moyses, declared, in figure, by the commaundment of God, when he raised the bra­sen serpent vpon a staffe; to the end, that being beheld, by such as were stung by venemous ser­pents, it might free them from death, and restore them to health. This serpent, although by the shape, it would seeme to carry poyson in it, yet it had none indeed; for it was a serpent of brasse. And in the same manner, Iesus Christ our Lord, had true flesh, like the flesh of sinne, whereby it was subiect to paine; but indeed it is farre from all sinne, because it is the flesh of God; and fra­med by the holy Ghost; and kept, by him; and be­ing placed on high, vpon the The infinite power of the Crosse of Christ our Lord. Crosse, and be­ing dead vpon it, it deliuereth from death, and giueth health, to all such, as being bitten by temp­tations, haue recourse to him, with Faith, and Loue.

And since thou hast so powerfull a remedy for thy recouery, so neere at hand; there remai­neth no more, but that How necessary it is to be exact in making the Exa­men of our selus; & especi­ally cōcer­ning our passions. thou take a very par­ticuler accoumpt, to know what serpents they are, which sting thy soule; by dayly and leasure­ly [Page 390]examining what inclinations thou hast, in the very bottome of thy hart; what are the quickest passions that thou art subiect to; what are the faults, into which thou fallest sometymes; and such obseruations as these, whereby thou maiest be so perfect, and cleare in the knowledge of thy frailtyes; as that thou mayst haue them, not only in thyne eyes, but euen, at thy very fingers ends. Thou wilt not arriue, in short tyme to this; no nor yet, in long, vnles thou be assisted by light from heauen; whereby thou mayst discerne the very roots of thy hart; which is so deepe, that not thy selfe, but God alone can throughly sift it. It The most ex­cellent meanes, whereby we may come to know our selues ex­actly, is to consider diligently the ver­tues of our Lord Iesus ex­pressed, in his sacred passion. will helpe thee much, towards this know­ledge, to consider the vertues, which our Lord did exercise in his passion; since he is to be the glasse of thy soule, insteed of that other, by which women, that are married, vse to dresse themsel­ues, for the pleasing of their husbands.

Behold The vnspeaka­ble ver­tues of our Lord. his meekenes, his Charity, his inuincible patience; his profound silence; and so thy faultes will grow playne to thee, how hidden soeuer they may be. Yea and thy vertues being compared with his, will appeare to thee euidētly, to be faults. And thou wilt be ashamed both of the one, & of the other. Yet be not thou dismaid, but present thy selfe with them all, before ou [...] Lord; though not without groaning sighes; A sweet and significāt compari­son. as the Child would do, who letteth the mother see, where the thorne hath haspt it self into his hand; and he beggeth of her with teares, that she will [Page 391]pull it out; and so will our Lord do with thee. For, as he is a glasse to declare thy faults; so, by his example, and helping hand, he is the true re­medy thereof. And now, considering through how great shame he was content to passe, for the loue of thee, thy hart wilbe kindled, towards the casting away off, all affection to honour; and his patience, will kill thy anger; & his gall, & vine­gar, will cure thy glottony; and thy seeing him obedient to his Father, euen to the death of the Crosse, will tame thy necke, towards the obedi­ence of his holy will, euen in those thinges, wher­in thou mayst find the greatest difficulty.

And when thou shalt behold, how, that most high God, humaned, the Lord of the heauens, and of the earth, & all that which they conteine; did See heer whe­ther or no thou haue any reasō to be im­patient or proud. obey those wretches, when they were pleased to strip him starcke naked; and then to apparaile him againe; and when they bound him; and when they vnbound him; and when they commaunded him, to spread himselfe v­pon the Crosse; and to stretch out his armes, that they might be nailed thereunto; I am decea­ued, if it will not giue thee a desyre, (and that with the deepest sighes of thy hart) if it be ca­pable of any feeling) to be obedient, not only to thy betters, and equalls, but to thy inferiours al­so; and to submit thy selfe, for the loue of God, (as S. Peter 1. Pet. 2. sayth), to all the reasonable creatures in the world; and that, so farre, as euen to be ill v­sed by them. By this meanes also, will couetous­nesse [Page 392]come to dye in thee, if thou behold those handes boared through for the good of men; that they may accomplish that, which formerly he commaunded, when he said, Ioan. 13. Loue you one an­other, as I haue loued you. And, in a word, thou wilt find by experience, that S. Paul Rom. 6. said true, when he told vs, that our old man, was crucified with Christ.

Yf thou do not fynd this cure, and conquest ouer thy selfe, to grow instantly, as thou woul­dest desyre; be We are so wic­ked, that we had need to haue much pa­tience with our selues. not yet dismaid; and giue not ouer thy good beginnings. But If we haue little feeling of those thinges at the first, we must not yet despaire, but be humble, & diligent in prayer. as now thou art come to know, that the hardnesse of thy hart, and thy wickednesse, is greater, then thou couldst haue thought; so, do thou sigh out so many more groanes; and with so much the more humility, begge thou of our Lord; that his mercy may not permit thee to remaine sicke, since he, being God, did suffer and dye, to make thee whole. And haue thou hope, that he will not make him­selfe deafe, who hath commaunded thee to cry out vpon him; and that he will not carry such bo­wells of cruelty about him, as to see thee sicke, & to hear thee cry out, at that gate of the hospitall of his mercy, which are his wounds; but that, some one day, or other, he will take thee in, to cure thee. But The perfect cure of thy soule wil not be wrought vpon a suddaine. I aduertise thee of this, that it is not a businesse, to be dispatched, in so short a tyme. And, although S. Paul, Gal 18.9. said in few wordes, That they, who were of Christ, had crucified their flesh, with the vices and desires thereof; yet such, as [Page 393]are not content, with departing only from mor­tall sinne, but haue a desire to obtayne a perfect victory ouer themselues; by ouercomming those seauen generations of enemyes, which haue taken pos­session of the land of promise, do find by experience, that the thing which is sayd in one word, is not completely performed in many yeares. But our soueraigne Lord, is wont, to giue such persons hope of perfect health; vouchsafing them now, and then, the cure of some particuler infirmity.

We A place of Holy Scripture excellent­ly apply­ed. read of the Captaine Iosue, that hauing ouercome fiue Kinges, he sayd thus to his souldiars: Set Iosue 10. your feet vpon the neckes, of these Kinges; and do not feare; but take hart, and comfort; for, as our Lord hath ouercome these, so will he also, all those others, whome you fight against. Do If thou con­sider the reward euen in this life, which is heer men­tioned; thou wilt not think thy la­bour ill imploied, and there­fore resol­ue vpon the word of this holy Au­thour, which is, Either to conquer, of dye. thou, in this manner; and resolue either to conquer, or to dye; for if thou obtayne not the victory ouer thy passions, thou wilt not be able to proceed, in the exercise of this familiar conuersation, with our Lord. For it is not reason, that the most sweet repose, which is taken, with ioyfull peace, in the armes of our Lord; be affoarded, but to them, who first haue fought, and with difficulty haue ouercome themselues. Nor can they obtaine, to be the quiet Temples of that peaceable Salomon; if first they be not hammered, by the blowes, of the mortification of their passions; and by the breaking off their wills. For The smoake of the passi­ons de­priue the soule of being able to see that sweetnes and subli­menes Gods be­auty. the smoake, which vnmortified passions raise vp, in the soule, do not suffer the sight to be so cleare; as it fit, [Page 394] for the beholding of the King in his beauty. Nor doe they permit the soule, to haue that purity which is requisite for the vniting of it, with God; like a chast Spouse; and in a manner, which is parti­culer, and secret, & kept safe for them, to whom our Lord vouchsafes to giue it; after they haue laboured many yeares, as Iacob did, for Rachel.

CHAP. LXXVIII.
That the most excellent thing which we are to meditate and imitate, in the passion of our Lord, is the loue where with he offered himself to the Eternall Father.

AFTER hauing entred into the first exte­riour part of the Temple, of this true Salomon; which is, to consider Christ, in the exteriour man; and, after hauing sacrificed thy disordi­nate passions, by the knife of the word of God; (which office was executed in that part of the Temple, which was called Holy) it remaines (if we meane to proceed in our way) that we procure to enter into the Sancta Sanctorum, the Holy of Holyes, which is a more pretious place, and the period of all the rest. If now thou aske me, which is this place; The pretious hart of our Lord Iesus, is the Sancta Sanctorn̄. I answere, That it is the hart of Iesus Christ, our Lord, who is truly, the Holy, of Holyes. For as he did not content himselfe to suffer only in the exteriour, but with a cordiall loue; so thou art not to stay, vpon the seeing, and imitating that which exteriourly appeares; but [Page 395]thou must enter into his hart to behold, & imi­tate the same. And to the end, that this entry might be more easy for vs; and that, which was locked vp in his hart, more manifest; he permit­ted, after he was dead, that (howsoeuer he then, felt no paine) his hart should be By the point of a launce. disclosed; that so, as by an open gate, wherby we might di­scouer a world of admirable mysteryes, men might be induced to enter into it; & might be in­uited, as to a thing wherein they were to behold that strange beauty, which was there conteined.

But who is able, with a tongue, to speake therof, since he that hath entrance thither, and lookes vpon them, cannot reach to the greatnes. And euē that which he reacheth, he is not able to expresse. S. Iohn Apoe. 11. deliuereth, in figure of this, that the temple of God was opened, and that the Arke of the Testament, was seene therein; for in the hart of Christ, the law of God is fulfilled; and there, is kept the Manna of celestiall bread; and that pretious, and complete By the incarnati­on & pas­sion of Christ our Lord. sweetning of God, which was signified by that couerture of gold, of the ancient Arke. And all this, in so great excellency, that it far exceedeth the very highest pitch of all our thoughtes. Dauid Psal. 39. sayth, Many meruailes hast thou wrought, O Lord my God, and in those thoughtes which thou hadst for my good, there is none like to thee. Meruailous Marke this gra­dation. is all that which God hath done, and more meruailous is all that, which he hath suffered. But yet, if thou consider the thoughts of his O bot­tomles A­bysse, of the lou: of our Lord Iesus, to mankind. hart (which, euen whi­lest [Page 396]lest he was suffering; did (through his loue) think as it were but little of any thing, except the same very loue) thou wilt cry out, with a loud cry of thy soule There is none O Lord like to thee. Do thou desire him, O Virgin, when thou shalt see him suffer his handes, and necke to be tyed; when thou shalt see him endure buffets, thornes, nailes, and death; to do thee the fauour to let thee know, why being so strong, and so powerfull, he should suffer himselfe to be treated, as if he were so weake, & without ability of making resistance. To this, S. Iohn A [...]oc. 2. wil answeare thee in his name; He loued vs, and he washed vs from our sin, with his bloud. Ruminate well vpon these wordes; and lodge them deepely in thy hart; and entertaine thy selfe in thinking, what an admirable and ex­cessiue loue that is, which burneth so in his hart, as to flame out, by suffering such thinges in the exteriour. Say within thy selfe; What Obser­ue well the grada­tions of this chap­ter, which tend to­wards the making thee all e­namoured of our Lord Ie­sus; & it is the top of any thing, that I haue seene in this kind. person might there be in the world, for whom I, or such an one as I, would endure such miseryes; without pretending any proper interest, but only for pure loue of that other person; and thou wil see, that to suffer all that which our Lord suffered, is not such a kind of thing, as which we may looke to find elsewhere; for there would be no forces fit, for so heauy a burthen.

To endure some small part of what he endured, might perhaps be found betweens fathers, and sonnes; brother, and brother; friend, and friend; man and wife; or the like, to [Page 397]whō either necessity, or bloud, or friendship, may giue strength to suffer, yea and to dye; though this of dying, but very rarely. But to suffer for strangers without any interest of a mans owne; without being obliged to it; yea, and to dye; and that for nothing, but for meere loue; was a thing neuer seene. And yet, if it should be seene, that a slaue should offer to dye for a King; and that, before his death, he wold be scourged, & endure some of the many tormentes, which our Lord did suffer; it would be such an act of prowesse, as that the slaue, might deserue a Pardon, although he had committed many faultes. And all men would iudge, that he had merited many fauours, at that Kinges handes, if he were able to impart any, in the other life. Nor would this famous action de­part frō the mouths of men, for a long time; yea & the King himselfe, would recount it, both with much thankefullnes, and much tendernesse.

But Giue great at­tention. now let vs turne the story the other way, and conceaue, that the King himselfe (af­ter hauing suffered greiuous tormentes and ex­treame reproach), would needs dye for his slaue; from whom he had receiued no seruice, but great offences, which deserued a most cruell death; & that the cause of the Kinges dying, were the meere nothing but the loue, which he bare this slaue: This would be a thing neuer seene, and neuer heard before; and it would betoken such an ex­cessiue kind of loue, as would cast them that he­ard of it, into a horrible kind of amazement; and [Page 398]would furnish matter to men, for publishing the goodnesse of that King, al the dayes of their liues. And so admirable, so new, and so sublime a loue would this be; that some men, of superficiall vertue, and weake vnderstanding, would be scandalized thereat; and would not make such a iudgement, of this worke, as were conuenient▪ affirming it to be a kind of absurd excesse, that the maiesty of a King, full of all power and ver­tue, should so cast away his pretious life; to the end that his wicked slaue might liue, who had most iustly deserued death.

And Be still attentiue, for these are circū ­stances of high im­portance. if moreouer, it were added to this story, that this King were so wise, and so power­full, as that, with much facility, and without suffering the least inconuenience, and without doing the least iniustice to any, he could deliuer that slaue of his, from death; and that yet neuer­thelesse, he would make vp his loue, into so huge a heape; and would giue him to vnderstand, that he were resolued to endure such, and so many mi­series, as neuer any man endured; and all this, for no other reason, but because that so it would be better for the slaue; most certaine it is, that few eyes would be found in the world, which could be able to behold such a bright sunne of burning loue as this. And if any mā should haue so good an apprehension, as to thinke thereof, as the thinge deserued; he would escape well, if he kept his wittes, through the excesse of admiration, and a­mazement. And if this would happen, to such as [Page 399]in their owne person had not receiued this bene­fit from the King, but by the only thinking what he had done for another man; what may be be­lieued, that it would worke, in the hart of that very slaue, (vnlesse he were franticke) for whome that King, should so, haue dyed. Doest thou not thinke, that such a knocke of loue as this, would awake him; would change him; would so entitely captiue him, to the loue of that King, as that he could neuer get leaue of himselfe, to conceaue his prayses, nor thinke of his merits, but with teares? Nor employ himselfe vpon any other thing, then the expressing of supreme gratitude, and loue, by doing, and suffering for him, all that possibly he could?

Hast thou heard this Parable, which in the world did neuer take effect? Then A mi­serable man thou art, if this do not mouethee to the ve­ry soule. know; That what the Kings of the earth haue not done; that very thing, hath beene done by Christ Iesus, the King of heauen. Of whom, S. Iohn Apoc. 19. sayth, That in his thigh, he carryed this title written, King of Kinges, and Lord of Lordes. For euen, as he is man, & as he hath taken humane nature; (which is signifyed by the word Thigh) so great is his al­titude, as that it surmounteth all Lords, & Kings created; not only them of this world, but The celestiall spirits. also of heauen. Enioying a Name, which is a­boue all Names; and a height, and power of do­minion, aboue all the highest men, and Angells. Behold this height, which hath no equall; and cast downe they eyes, to behold that The infinite God, for base and sinnefull man. basenes, [Page 400]for which it suffers. And thou wilt see, as S. Paul sayth, That Rom. 1. we are weake, and wicked, and trai­tours against God, and his enemyes. Which titles, are of so much dishonour & basenes, as that they cast a man backe, and downe, into the hindmost place, and into the lowest price, that can be set vpon any creature. Since there is nothing so base as to be wicked; nor nothing so wicked, as a sin­ner is, in respect, that he is such.

Comparing therfore these extremes which are so different; of so high a king, and so wicked sla­ues; behold now, the much that he loued them. Come If thou refuse this inuitatiō, thou art vndone. hither, into the hart of our Lord; and if thou haue the eyes of an Eagle, heere in matter for them to worke vpon. Nay, they will not serue thy turne, to make thee sufficiently see, the brightly burning, & high heaped loue, which inhabited that most holy soule; with such extent, and latitude, that although those highest Angells of heauen, for the great power which they haue to Loue, are called Seraphims, (which signifyeth that they are set on fire;) yet if they had come to mount Caluary, at the time, when our Lord did suffer there, his excessiue loue would haue cast them into wonder; in comparison whereof, their owne, would haue bin no more, then meere tepi­dity.

For, as that most sacred soule, possesseth greater altitude, and honour, then can be had by any other, eyther in heauen or earth (for as much as, instantly vpon the creation thereof, it was [Page 401]vnited to the person of the Word of God;) so was the Holy Ghost infused into it, beyond all mea­sure; and such degrees of grace, and loue were giuen to it; that neither they could increase, nor could the soule contayne more. So that, it is with great reason applyed to this most holy soule, which is written, The Cant. 1. King did place me, in the cellar of wine; and in me he ordayned Charity. Or as we read in another translation, he placed his En­signe, or Banner of loue vpon me. For, in regard that this soule, as soon as it was created, did clearly see the Diuine Essence; and was carryed to it, with an vnspeakable force of loue, the banner of holy loue, was planted on it. To giue vs to vnderstand, that this soule, was the most ouercome by loue, that euer man, or Angell was, either in Heauen, or on Earth. And They only con­quer, who are capti­ued, by the loue of our Lord Ie­sus. because, in the warre, of the loue of God, he that is most ouercome, is most wor­thy, and most valiant, and most happy; therefore doth this most blessed soule, carry the Ensigne of loue, which standes vpon it. That al they may know who either on Earth, or in Heauen, do pretend to loue God, that they must follow the conduct of this Lord, if they meane to do it well; as the dis­ciple would do, his maister, or the soldiar his cap­taine; since he exceedeth them all in loue, as he exceedeth them otherwise, in dominion.

Now, since so great a fire of loue was lodged in that most sacred soule; it is If thy hart loue deeply, it will find meanes, to expres­se i [...] selfe. not strange, if the flame fly out, and scorch, and burne the cloaths, which are, his most sacred body, which was loa­den [Page 402]with such torments, as giue testimony of the interiour loue. For it is written, Who shallbe able to carry fire in his bosome, and that his garment should not be burnt? And when thou shalt see, that in the exteriour, they guide in his handes, with cruell ropes; thou art to vnderstand, that within, he is taken prisoner, by the nets of loue, which are so much stronger then those other, as chaynes of i­ron are beyond threeds of flaxe. This Shall we not pa [...] such loue with loue? loue, this was it, which defeated him; which ouer cam him; which tooke him; which tost him, from Iudge to Iudge; and from the torment of scourges, to the torment of cruell thornes; and which cast the Crosse vpon him first, and which carryed him to Mount Caluary, where he was after, cast vpon the Crosse.

There stretcht he out his armes abroad, to be crucifyed; in token that his hart had beene opened by his loue; and that so widely towardes all; as that the brightly burning, and puissant beames of loue, did sally out from the center of his hart; and went to determine themselues, v­pon euery wher­of thou, and I are two. man in particuler; both such as were past, such as were present, & such as were to come; offering vp his life, for the good of them all. And if Note. the high Priest do exteriourly carry the names of the E [...]d. 28. twelue Sonnes of Israel, written both vpon his shoulders, and vpon his breast; much more excellently, doth this Priest of ours, carry men vpon his shoulders, by suffering for men. And he carryeth them also, written in And our Lord make vs able to write him, i [...] [...]t [...]. his hart; [Page 403]for he doth so cordially loue them; that if the first Adam sold them all, for an apple; and if they sel themselues, at a base price; and if so they grow indeed to hate themselues, through the loue they haue of being wicked; this enamoured Lord, doth so highly prize them, & so much loue them; that to redeeme them, out of such a miserable captiuity, he gaue himselfe as a price for them. In testimony, that he loueth them more, then they are beloued by any other, or then they know, how to loue themselues.

CHAP. LXXIX.
Of the burning Loue, wherewith Christ Iesus loued God, and men for God; from which loue, as from a fountatine that did spring which he suffered in the exteriour; and that also which he suffered in the in­teriour; which was much more, then the other.

IF the hart of man be so wicked (as Ieremy Ierem. 17. sayd) as that God only can tell how to sift it; & that the more deep a man diggs in that rotten wall, the more abhominable filthines is discoue­red (as was shewed in figure, to Ezech. 8. Ezechiel;) with how much more reason may we say, that since the hart of Iesus Christ our Lord, is more good, then any other can be wicked; there is none who can wholy diue into it, but only the same Lord, whose it is. It is worthy of admiratiō, and which, in reason▪ ought to robbe vs, euen of [Page 404]our very soules, and to bind vs as slaues to God to consider the excessiue loue of his hart, which did expresse it selfe, in suffering the whole course of that Passion, and death for vs, as we haue shewed. But if thou digge yet deeper, with the light of heauen in thy hand, and do looke neere, into this The hart of our Lord Iesus, is the Reli­quary, & the loue, is the Re­lique. Reliquary of God, which is so full of vnspeakable secrets; thou wilt discerne such ef­fects of loue; as will cast thee into more wonder, then any outward thing belonging to the passion.

For this purpose, thou art to remember, how in the towne of Bethsaida, our Lord, being in the cure of a deafe man, the Ghospell sayth, That he cast vp his sacred eyes to heauen, and he sighed deeply, and that then he cured the patient. That groa­ning sigh, which carryed an exteriour sound, was but one; and it might passe in a short tyme; but it was a witnes, of another sigh; yea and of many profound internall sighes; and which lasted not only for a short tyme, but for months, & yeares. For thou art to vnderstand, how that most holy soule, in being created, and infused into the bo­dy, in that virgineall wombe of our Blessed Lady, did then behold the diuine essence, (which for the height therof, is called heauen, with great reason) as clearly as now it doth. And in seeing it, it did iudge that it was worthy of all honour, and ser­uice; and so it desired all honour to it; with that vnspeakeable force of loue, wherwith it was en­dued. And although the ordinary law, for such as see God clearly, be this, that they must be bles­sed [Page 405]both in body and soule; and be subiect to no kind of payne; yet, to the end that we might be redeemed by the pretious afflictions of our Lord; it See the inuentiōs of the loue the God. was ordeined, that felicity, and ioy, should remaine in the superiour part of his soule; & should not redound into the inferiour part, or into his body; renouncing all that sense of happines, which so iustly was due vnto it; for the accep­ting, and suffering of that paine, to which we, were liable.

Now, if that most holy soule, who cast the eyes of the vnderstanding vp to the heauen of the diui­nity, had not had any other thing but that, to looke vpon; it could not haue been capable of payne, since God is such a Good; that nothing can grow from the sight of him, but loue, and ioy. But, for as much as he saw all the sinnes, which then had bin committed by men, from the beginning of the world; and So that then, he saw all and euery of my sins and al thy sinnes. those also which would be committed euen to the end of it; his griefe was fully as internall, and as profound, to see, that heauen of the Diuine Maiesty, offended, as his desyre was, that it should be serued. And The infinite desire, which our Lord Ie­sus had, that God should be serued; & as infinite griefe that he is offē ­ded. as no man is able to reach to the greatnesse of that de­fire, so neither can any man arriue to the greatnes of that griefe. For the holy Ghost, which is figured in Note this griefe & loue. fyre, which was giuen him beyond all mea­sure, did inflame him to loue God with an incom­prehensible Ioan. 11. loue; and the same Holy Ghost, which is also figured in a Luc. 19. Doue, did make him bitterly lament, to see him offended, whome he [Page 406]loued after such an ineffable manner.

But to the end that thou maist see, how this knife of griefe, which passed through the hart of our Lord, did not only wound him, on the one syde, but that it was doubly, and most sharply edged; remember that the same Lord, who (looking vp to heauen, did deeply sigh) did also weepe, both ouer Lazarus, and ouer Hierusa­lem. And then, (as S. Ambrose saith) it is not to be wondred at, that he greiued for all since he wept for one. So that to see God offended, and to see men destroyed by sinne, was a Our Lord graunt vs one touch of this knife vpō our harts, by the merits of his. knife, with a double edge; which did most lamentably pierce his hart; through the inestimable loue which he bare to God, as God; and to men for his sake; desiring to make satisfaction to the honour of God, and to obtaine a remedy for men, how deerly soeuer it should cost him.

O The vn­speakable affliction of our Lord Ie­sus, in his sacred Passion. most blessed Iesus, to see thee tormen­ted exteriourly in thy body, doth euen breake the hart of a Christian; but to see thee so tormen­ted, and defeated inwardly, with such deadly griefe, there is no eye, there is no force, that can endure it. Three nayles, O Lord, did breake through thy handes, and feet, with excessiue paine; and more then seauenty thornes, they say, did pierce thy diuine head; thy buffetts and thy affrontes, were very many; and the cruell scourget, which that most delicate body of thyne, receiued, they say, did passe the number of fiue thousand. By occasion of these, and many other grieuous [Page 407]torments, which concurred in thy passion, (which no man arriueth to vnderstand, but thou that feltest them), it was said in thy person, long before, O all you that passe by the way, obserue, and see, if there be any griefe, like myne. And yet, nowithstanding all this, thou, whose loue hath no limit, didst both seeke and sind, new inuen­tions, for the drawing, and feeling within thy seife, certaine paynes, which exceeded those nailes, and scourges, and tormentes, which exteri­ourly thou didst endure; and which continued a longer tyme, and which had sharper pointes, wherewith to hurt thee. Isay Psal. 53. saith; Euery one of vs did loose himselfe, in his owne way; and God, did lay the sinnes of vs all, vpon the Messias. And this sentence of the diuine iustice, being so rigo­rous, thy loue, O Lord, did find to be both iust, and good; and thou didst take vpon thyne owne shoulders, and didst make a burthen for thy selfe, of all the sinnes (without the want of so much as one), which all the men, in the whole world, eyther had committed, or then did commit, or would commit, from the beginning thereof, vn­till the end; That thou O Lord, and our true lo­ner, mightst pay for them all, with the sorrowes of thy hart.

Who then shalbe able to count the number of thy soares; since Consi­der and know by this, what our Lord suffered for thee; or rather know, that thou canst ne­uer know so much of it, as is to be knowne. there is no meanes to count the number of all our sinnes which caused them, but only thou O Lord, who didst endure them. Thou being made for vs, the man of sorrow, and [Page 408]who knowest indeed, what affliction is, by sad experi­ence. One man alone doth say of himselfe Psalm. 3 [...]., That he had more sinnes, then bayres vpon his head; and besides that, he desyreth God to forgiue him those other sinnes, which he had committed, though be knew them not. Yf then one man, which was Dauid, had so many sinnes; who shalbe able to reckon vp all the sinnes of all men, amongst whome there were many, who committed both more, & more grieuous sinnes, then Dauid did.

Into what affliction didst thou cast thy selfe, O thou lambe of God, to take away the sinnes of the world; in whose person it was said, Psal. 3 [...]. Many calues haue come round about me; and the great bulls haue circled me about; they haue opened their mouth agaynst me, as a roaring lion, who is feasting vpon his prey. But although, into that garden of Gethsemani, there went a ful company of souldiers of the secu­lar power, (besids them, who were sent by the high Priests, & Pharisees, who with much cruelty came about to take thee, and did take thee) yet he that should haue beheld the multitude, and grieuous­nes of all the sinnes, of the world, which did hedge in that hart of thyne; will thinke, that the people who went that night to take thy person, were very few in comparison of these others, who came to seize vpon thy hart. What This is that, which gaue our Lord more tor­ments, a million of tymes, then the paynes, which ex­teriourly he suffe­red. horrible spectacle O Lord? What vgly representation & how painefull would it be for thee, to be com­passed in, by our great sinnes, which are signifi­ed by those Calues, and those others which are you [Page 409]more grieuous, and which are signifyed, by those Bulls? Who, O Lord, shall be able to recount, what vgly sinnes haue beene committed in the world? Which being set before thy vnspeakable purity, and sanctity, would put thee vpon asto­nishment; and like Bulls, with open mouths, set vpon thee; demanding at thy handes, O Lord, the payment of that torment, which so great im­piety had deserued. With how much reason is it sayd afterward, That thou wert spilt like water, by those exteriour torments, and, That thy hart, was melted a way like waxe, by that fire of inward an­guish. Who O Lord will say, that the number of thy sorrowes may be told, since the number of our sinnes is past-telling.

CHAP. LXXX.
Wherein is prosecuted the tendernes of the loue of Christ towards men; and of that, which caused his interiour griefe; and gaue him a Crosse to carry, in his hart, all the dayes of his life.

BY that which is sayd, thou wilt haue seene, how many, and how grienous, the sorrowes of our Lord were; since our sinnes, by which they were caused, were so many, & so grieuous. But if we will dig into the most deep part of that hart of our Lord, we shall find sorrow therein; not only for the sinnes, that men committed; but sorrow also, for the sinnes which they com­mitted not. For as the pardon of the former, [Page 410]fell We owe all to the passiō of our Lord; both the pardon of all those sinnes, which we haue cō ­mitted, & the pre­uentiō of all them which we haue not commit­ted; and al the gra­ces which we haue receaued; & all the good deeds that we haue done. vpon thee, O Lord; so the preseruation of men from the later, did cost thee dolours, and death. Since thy grace, and those diuine fauours, which preserue men from sinne, are not giuen to any soule, for any reason, but only vpon the price of thy pretious payne. So that all men lay heauy load on thee, O Lord; both great, and small, and past, and present, and they that are to come; They who haue sinned; and they also who haue not sinned; They who haue sinned much; & they who haue sinned little. For they all, being consi­dered in themselues, were the children of wrath; without the grace of God, enclined to all manner of sinne, and exiled from heauen. And if they be to receaue pardon; if they be to receaue grace; if to auoyd sin; if to be the Sonnes of God; if to en­ioy him in heauen for al eternity, al this, O Lord is to be done at thy cost; by thy enduring, bv thy paying, for our misery; and by thy purchasing of our felicity. Yea, and all this is to be at that cost of thyne, so far, as that thy sorrowes, are to be proportionable in number, and greatnesse, to that which these other thinges are worth. And yet further, is thy price to exceed the thing which thou doest buy, that so thou mayst shew vs thy loue, and that our redemption, and consolation may be more firme.

How Infinit is the glo­ry of our Lord, but it cost him deere extremely deare, O Lord, doth that name cost thee, which Isay Isa. 9. put vpon thee, of being, The Father of that age, which was then to come; since as there is no man, according to the [Page 411]generation of flesh, which is called, the first age, who commeth not from Adam; so neither is there any of the second generation, which is of grace, who commeth not from thee. But Adam was an ill Father; who, by wicked pleasure, did murther both himselfe, and his sonnes; whereas thou, O Lord, didst purchase the name of Father, at the price of those dolorous lamentations, wherby (as a Lyonesse that were roaring whilest she bringeth forth her yong ones) thou giuest life to them, whome the first Father killed. He drunke that poyson, which the serpent gaue, & so was made a Father of serpents; for by his en­gendring them, they became sinners. But yet all his sonnes (which being cōsidered in themselues are venemous serpents) did lay hold O Lord v­pon thy hart; & gaue thee such pinches of paine, as were neuer felt before, nor since, and that, not only during the space of eightteen houres (which passed in the tyme of thy sacred Passion) but for the whole course of three and thirty yeares, from one fiue and twentith of March, when thou didst become incarnate, till another fiue and twentith of March, and eight dayes after, when thy life did leaue thee, vpon the Crosse.

Thy The great loue of God to vs, is ex­empli [...]ied by diuers compari­sons, and proofs of holy Scripture. selfe, did call thy selfe a Mother, when speaking to Hierusalem thou didst say; How often Watt: 23. would I haue gathered thy children, vnder my winges, as the Hen doth her chickens, but thon wouldest not? And to giue vs to vnderstand, that thy hart, doth carry a particuler loue, and ten­dernes [Page 412]towards vs; thou didst compare thy selfe to a Hen, which is the creature, that is content, in extraordinary manner, to cast away her com­fort, and to afflict her selfe for that which con­cerneth her little ones. Nor only art thou like the Hen in this; but thou exceedest both that, & all other mothers in the world, as by Isa. 49. Isay, thy selfe didst say, A mother perhaps may forget the sonne of her wombe; well yet, though she forget him, I will not forget thee; for I haue written thee in my handes; and thy walles, do euer stand before me. Who, O Lord, shall be able, though he dig neuer so deep, to discouer those vnspeakable secrets, of loue and sorrow, which are in thy hart. Thou doest not content thy selfe, O Lord, with carrying the lone of a Father towardes vs, which might only be strong, and patient, in suffering the afflictions and troubles of a Father; but to the end that no delightfull comfort might be wanting to vs, not no vexation to thy selfe, thou wouldst needs, be also a Mother to vs, in the tendernes of thy affe­ction, which causeth an vnspeakable kind of loue towards her children. Yea, and more art thou to vs, then a Mother; for, of no Mother haue we read, that (to the end she might stil remember her sonne) she hath written a booke, whereof hard nayles of iron were the pen; and her owne handes the paper; and that by pressing those handes, and passing them through, with the nayles, bloud may issue out, insteed of inke; which with grie­uous payne, may giue testimony, of the great in­ternall [Page 413]loue, not suffering that to be forgotten, which still she carryeth in her hands.

And if this, which thou didst endure vpon the Crosse by hauing handes and feet so nayled to it, be a thing which exceedeth all loue of Mothers; who Christ lesus our Lord, be­came v­pon the Crosse, as it were a woman in trauaile. shall recount that great loue, and great griefe, wherewith thou drewest all men into the wombe of thy hart, groaning deeply for their sins, with the groanes of labour, like them of child­birth. And that, not for an houre, nor for a day alone, but for the whole tyme of thy life, which lasted three and thirty yeares; till, at length, like another Rachel, thou diedst of trauell, vpon the Crosse, to the end that Genes. 35. Beniamin, might be borne aliue. The serpents which thou carriedst with­in thy selfe, did giue thee, O Lord, such gripes, that they made thee burst vpon the Crosse, to the end, that, at the price of thy paines, those serpents might be conuerted, into the simplicity, & mild­nesse, of lambes; and that, in exchange of thy death, they might obtaine a life of grace. How iustly O Lord, mayst thou cal men (if thou consi­derest, what thou hast suffered for them) the Sonns of thy griefe, as Rachel called her sonne; since the griefe which their sinnes gaue thee, was greater, then the pleasure which they tooke by commit­ting them. And greater was thy humility, and that breach of thy hart; then the irreuerence, and pride was, which they expressed against the most high God, when they offended him, by breaking his law; that so, thy paines might ouercome our [Page 414]sinnes, as the greater do the lesse.

More, The in­compara­ble griefe of Christ our Lord, for sinne is excel­lently des­a [...]ibed. O Lord, did the sinnes of others grieue thee, then any man hath bin euer grieued, for his owne. And if we read of some, who had so great repentance for their sinnes; as that (their hart not being able to conteyne such griefe) it did cost them their liues; what sorrow was prouo­ked in thee, by that vnmeasurable loue, which thou didst carry both to God and man; since one sparke of the same lone, being cast into the harts of those others, did oppresse them in such sort, that it made them breake, as if they had bin blo­wen vp with powder. Of many we reade, and we know; that, by hauing heard a newes, which was very painefull to them, did loose their liues. And tell vs now O Lord, for thy mercy, how thou hadst force to out-liue such a bitter newes; when, all the sinnes of all mankind were first pre­sented to thee; thou louing men, much more, then any man, euer loued another, yea or euen himself. Especially, when thou didest cōsider, & know, that the misery which was hanging ouer thē for the same, was greater then any other that could happen. And where O Lord didst thou get strength, to endure, to see thy diuinity oftended; and yet to liue; since the loue which thou bearest both to it and men, did exceed all measure. Yet didst thou liue, O Lord, when thou heardst this newes; yea and thou didst liue with the griefe thereof, all the dayes of the life. But vnles par­ticuler force, had bin giuen thee for the enduring [Page 415]of such sorrow, it would not haue fayled, to haue brought death vpon thee, as lesse sorrow, hath brought it vpon others. So that, O Lord, they are many, and not one only debt, which I owe thee. And although, (in regard of these sor­rowes, which, as a mother, thou didst endure for men) with much reason, thou mayst tearme them, the sonnes of thy griefe, as hath bin said; yet as thou also art their Father, thou mayst call them also, the sonnes of thy right hand, as Gen. 35. Iacob did. Because The reforma­tion of men, doth manifest the power of the Crosse of Christ our Lord. in them, is expressed, and decla­red the greatnesse of thy hand, which is thy po­wer; since thou drawest them out of sinne, and dost place them in the state of grace, euen in this life; and at the later day shalt ranke them, vpon thy right hand, that so they may accompany thee in glory. Being seated there, in great security of repose, as thou art, O Lord, at the right hand of thy Father; where thou wilt esteeme all that which thou hast laboured, and suffered for them, to be well imployed.

CHAP. LXXXI.
Of other profitable Considerations which may be drawn out of the Passion of our Lord; and of other me­ditations which may be made vpon other pointes; and of some directions, for such, as cannot easily put that, which hath bin said, in practise.

YF thou haue well considered, that which hath bin said to thee, of the mystery of the Passion [Page 416]of Iesus Christ our Lord, thou wilt haue seene, how thou art to obserue, both his sufferance in the exteriour of his body; and the patience, and humility, and those other vertues, which were in his soule; and, aboue all, his amorous, and com­passiue hart; from which all the rest did proceed; & it will animate thee both to follow him in suf­ferance, and to imitate him also in other thinges. But thou art moreouer to vnderstand, that thou mayst intertayne many other profitable conside­rations, concerning the passion of our Lord. For thereby thou mayst know (as we are permitted We see not eleerly, but as in a cloud. to know it in this place of banishment) how glorious a thing, the ioy of heauen is; and how grieuous those infernall torments are; how pre­tious is grace; how hurtfull, and detestable is synne; since, for the purchasing of those bles­singes for vs; and the remoouing of these mis­chiefes from vs; Christ himselfe, (being what he is) was yet faine, to suffer so great miseries.

A booke The Passion of our Lord Iesus, is a booke, wherein we may read and learne all sauing know­ledge. this is, wherein thou mayst read the immense goodnesse of God, and the deare sweetnes of his loue; and so also, the wonderfull rigour of the diuine Iustice, which did so punish the sin of others, vpon the Iudge himselfe, being made man. And because I had, both a desire, & a purpose, to prosecute this matter more at large; and to passe on, to the consideration of the diui­nity, by this step of the most holy soule, of Ie­sus Christ our Lord; and that my little health doth keep me from all meanes to do it; I now say no [Page 417]more, and that which heere I write, is the last of this Of the Passion. discourse; sauing that I recommended to thee all perseuerance, in the Meditation of this sacred Passion. For Why we are to perseuere in the me­ditation of the pas­sion of our Lord Iesus. although I haue seene some persons, exercise themselues therein, for a yeare, and for more yeares then one, without gu­sting it much; yet by their continuance, our Lord was brought to pay them at last, whatsoeuer he had formerly deferred; in such sort, as that, whē they considered the reward, they thought their labour well imployed.

I Many other courses of deuotion, whereby a man may also profit in spirit. do also aduertise thee, that there are other exercises of Meditation, whereby we may walke on, towards our Lord; as wel by the consi­deration of the creatures; and of the benefits of God; and by way of recollecting the hart, that it may imploy it selfe vpon louing, which is the end of all thinking, and indeed of the whole Law. And as there are diuers wayes of exercises, so are there seuerall inclinations in men; and it is a very great blessing of our Lord, when he applyeth a man to that; which is to be of most profit to him. Which Light is to be asked of our Lord in the ad­dress: of our deuo­tions. euery one ought to begge of him, with great instance; and to procure (for as much as he sindeth in himselfe (when first, he shall haue giuen relation thereof, to such as know more then he) to iudge what exercise of prayer is fittest for him; for this is that, which he is to follow.

It is A gooddire­ction for such, as can not greatly frame to the recol­lecting of thēselues also fit for me to let thee know, that there are some, so imployed vpon exteriour things, that they cannot giue themselues (at least [Page 418]for any good space of tyme) to these interiour ex­crcises; at which they take discomfort & disgust. But now, if lawfully they cannot forsake those imployments, they must content themselues with that state, which our Lord hath giuen them; and with diligence, and alacrity, they are to comply with their obligation; and to endeauour (as much as they can) to haue our Lord A blessed thing, to haue, and keep the presence of God. euer pre­sent with them, for loue of whome they must performe their workes. And because there are some, who haue a kind of naturall inquietude in their soule; and who are wholy so vndeuout and dry, that although they imploy both much tyme, and care, vpon these inward exercises, yet they profit nothing; it is necessary to let them know, that since our Lord doth not giue them the spirit of large, and inward prayer, they must content themselues with praying vocally, vpon the partes of the passion; and so praying, let them thinke (al­though it be but brei fely) of that particuler my­stery. And let them haue some deuout picture to behould; and let them read some deuout books of the passiō, for it happeneth many tymes, that by these steps a man doth rise, to the exer­cise of inward thinking: & if our Lord be pleased, that yet they shall not rise; let them giue him thankes, for conducting them by that other way.

Let Con­cerning such as are scrupu­lous, and pusillani­mous. such also, as are scrupulous, and de­iected, vnderstand; That our Lord is not pleased, that they should euer be thinking of the sinnes, [Page 419]which they haue committed; & so to be buried in discomfort, and griefe, like a Lazarus in his graue. But it is his will, that after mortification be v­sed, and pennance done (wherin they imitate his passion) they may also receaue comfort, by the hope of pardon, whereby they may resemble his Resurrection. And when they shall haue kissed his most sacred feete (by lamenting their sinnes) they may raise themselues vp, to kisse his handes, for the benefits which they haue receaned; and let them walke on, between hope, and feare, which is the safest way of all others. And I conclude, with telling thee, that although there be some, who through ignorance, or pride, haue commit­ted errours; in the way of prayer, yet We must not giue ouer good things, by the ill vse that is made therof by some. thou art not to take occasion thereby, to leaue it; since the fault of others must not make vs giue ouer, that which is good; but only we must attend to our busines, with greater caution. And it ought more to encourage vs, towardes the following of it, to know that Iesus Christ our Lord, and his Saints, haue walked therein, for our exam­ple; then the few, who haue erred, must discou­rage vs. For hardly will there be found that thing, whereof ill vse, hath not beene made, by some.

CHAP. LXXXII.
How attentiuely our Lord doth heare vs; and how piteously he doth behold vs; if we manifest our in­firmityes to him, with that griefe which is fit; and how ready he is to cure vs, and to do vs many o­ther fauours.

THE great goodnesse of our Lord hath this; That to the end his Commandementes and Lawes, may be kept by vs, he maketh them easy in themselues, and more easy by his hauing been pleased to performe them first. He hath comman­ded vs (as hath beene sayd) that we should heare him, and behould him, and encline our eare vnto him, which is all most reasonable, and easy. For, such a maister, who will not heare? Who will not be delighted, in beholding such a delightfull light? Who will not encline his eare, to that infinite wis­dome? But The example of the ho­ly life of our Lord Iesus. to the end, that the thing which is light, might be yet more light, he was pleased to passe by the same law, which he hath imposed vpon vs; & he performed it with great diligence. He heareth vs, he seeth vs, he enclineth his eare to vs; to the end that we may no lōger say, there is none, who looketh towards me; none who hearkneth to my complaintes. A Look attentiue­ly to this considera­on. great comfort it is, for one that is in distresse to haue some body, who at all tymes of both day, and night, will be at good leasure, and in good humour, to heare his difficultyes re­lated; [Page 421]and if (without the fayling of any mo­ment) he stand looking vpon his miseryes, and infirmityes, and if he doe not so much as say, I am weary of seeing those afflictions; & thy wounds, and soares do turne my stomacke. And although such a person, were hard of heart, we would yet be glad, that he should euer heare, and see vs. For we would hope, that the gutter of our sorrowes (which would fall vpon his heart, by the conduit of his eares and eyes) would one day eate into him, and breed compassion; since how hard so­euer, he were, he would not be more hard then stone; which yet is wrought vpon, by the fall of water, although sometimes that water cease to fall. And although we knew, that he were not able to relieue our miseries, yet should we com­fort our selues much, by the only compassion which he might haue of our case.

Now The case, ap­plyed. if we should owe much gratitude to such a person; how great must that be, which we owe to our Lord? And how ioyfull ought we to be, in that his eyes, and eares, are bent vpon the sight of our afflictions; and that he doth not at a­ny tyme retire them from vs. And this is done by him, not with any hardenesse of hart; but with internall, and profound mercy; and not with mercy of the hart alone; but with entire power to relieue our necessities. Be God doth euer heare our cōplaints; he is incli­ned to pit­ty our ease, & he is highly able to help vs. thou O Lord eter­nally blessed, who art neither deafe, nor blind to our afflictions; since thou doest euer heare, and see them. Nor art thou cruell, since of thee it is said [Page 422] Our Lord is, a worker Psal. 10 [...]. of mercies, and he is of a mercifull hart, he expecteth vs, and he is very merci­full. Nor is he weake withall; since all the miseri­es, and sinnes of the world, are both weake, & few, if they be compared to his infinite power, which hath no end, nor measure. We read, that in tymes; past, God gaue a meruailous victory to King 4. Reg. 10. Fzechias, ouer his enemies; who as some relate, did not yield those thankes, and sing those praises to our Lord; which were both due, and accustomed; to be presented, in such cases. For which offence; God A great ex­ample of [...]ods mer­cy, and mans mi­sery. did cast him into a sicknesse, and that so dangerous, that (humane­ly speaking), it could expect no cure. And least, (through a vayne hope of life) he might forget to set his soule in order, the Prophet Isay was sent to him; and he said, by the commaundment of God, This saith our Lord; Dispose of the affayres of thy house; for know that thou shalt dye, and not line. The King, being frighted, by these wordes, turned his face towards the wall; and wept with great lamentation, imploring the mercy of our Lord. He considered, how iustly he had deserued death; since he had not bin gratefull to him, who had giuen him his life; and he reflected vpon the sentence, which had already passed on him, which said, Thou shalt not line.

Ho found not, that there was any thing superiour, to him who had passed that sentence▪ that so, he might procure to haue it reuersed. And although there had bin any such, yet would [Page 433]not his title haue bin good; For, from the man who is vngratefull, that is iustly taken away, which was mercifully afforded to him. He saw, that he was but a man of middle age; and that the line of Dauid was to fayle in his person; for then he was to haue dyed, without children. And be­sides all this, he was assalted, by all the sinnes of his life past; the feare wherof, is wont to presse men most, in that last houre. And by these things, his hart was euen broken with griefe, and trou­bled, like a tempestuous sea; and which way soe­uer he looked, he found reasons of sorrow and feare.

But They are sure of remedy, who haue recourse to prayer, especially if they re­sort to it, immedi­ately after the occa­sion is mi­nistred. yet in the middest of so many mi­series, the good King met with a remedy; and it was, to aske physicke at his handes, who had made him sicke; and security of him, by whome he had bin frighted; and to conuert himselfe to him by hope, and pennance, from whome he had fled before, through pride. Yea, and of the iudge himselfe, he desires, that he will become his ad­uocate; and he falls vpon an inuention, how to appeale from God, (not as to any other, more high then he) but from himselfe being iust, to himselfe being mercifull. And the reasons of his defence, are no other, then the accusations of himselfe▪ and the Rhetorike that he vseth, are but sighes, and teares. And by these meanes, he is able to preuaile so farre, in that court of Chancery of the diuine mercy; that before the prophet Isay (who was the proclaymer of the sentence, of his [Page 424]death) could go but ha [...]fe way ouer the Kings chamber, our Lord sayd to him, Returne, and say thus to King Ezechias, that Captaine of my people; I haue heard thy prayer; and I haue seene thy teares; & I grant thee health; and I giue thee moreouer, fifteene yeares of life; and I will deliuer this Citty, out of the handes of thine enemies.

What is this (O Lord)? So soone doest thou sheath thy sword agayne; so soone doest thou turne thy anger into mercy? Can a few teares, which are shed, not in the Temple, but in the corner of a bed; whilest the eyes, looke not vp to heauen, but vpon a wal, make thee so soone reuoke that sentence, which thy maiesty had gi­uen, and commaunded to be notifyed, to that guilty person? What The pardon of God to man, is in­stant, and amorous without vpbray­ding. is then becom [...], of coppy­ing out the whole processe; what of the costes of the suite; what of the tearmes that haue bin giuen; what of the producing of the testimonies, both of the plaintiffe and defendant? and what can be said to this, That the iudge ought to esteeme himselfe to haue receiued an affront, if his sentence be re­uoked? Thou doest passe ouer it all, by the loue, which thou bearest; and by the desire which thou hast, to powre blessings downe vpon vs. And thou saidst, I haue heard thy prayer, and I haue seene thy teares. All tearms seeme long, till thou mayst free him that is faulty; for neuer did any man so desire to receaue pardō, as thou dost to giue it; and more doest thou ioy to pardon them, to whome thou desirest to giue life; then the sinner doth [Page 425]himselfe, for hauing escaped from death. Thou obseruedst no ordinary delayes, or lawes; but the law shallbe, That he who hath broken thy lawes, shall afflict his hart with griefe, for what is past; and shall purpose an amendment of life, for that which is to come; and shall apply the wholesome receites, of thy Sacraments, which thou didst leaue in thy Church; or at least shal haue intention to take them.

And the delayes shallbe these; That Ezech. 33. when­soeuer a sinner, shallbe deeply sorry for his sinnes, thou wilt remember them no longer. And to the end that sinners, may take hart in crauing thy pardon, for their offences; thou wert pleased to graunt this man more fauour then he asked of thee, by fifteene yeares of life; and the deliuery of his Citty, and the retraite of the Sunne, as far as it is wont to walke in ten houres; in token that v­pon the third day after that, the King should go vp into the Temple safe and sound. And thou wert mercifull, by vouchsafing him other secret fauours; who neither yet wouldst suffer sinne to approach to vs; but only for the bringing of grea­ter good from thence; letting vs see thy mercy, by our misery; and thy pardon, and goodnes, by our wickednes; and thy power, by our weake­nesse.

Therefore A con­clusionful ful of com­fort. thou, O sinner, whosoeuer thou be, who art threatned by that sentence of God, which Ezech. 18. sayth, The soule that sinneth, the same shall dye; be not yet all dismayed, vnder the [Page 426]burthen of thy great sinnes; and that insuporta­ble waight, of the wrath of God. But taking cou­rage, in the consideration of the mercyes, of him, who Ezech. 33. desireth not the death of a sinner, but that he may be conuerted, and liue, do thou humble thy selfe, by weeping in his sight, whome thou hast despised by committing sinne. And then receaue thy pardon, from the hand of that piteous Father; who Infinit goodnes of God. hath so very great desire to giue it, yea and to impart greater blessings to thee, then thou hadst before. As he did to this King, who rose vp sound in body, & sound [...]n soule, as appeared by the thankes he gaue in these wordes; Thou Isa. 38. O Lord, hast deliuered my soule, that it might not perish; and thou hast cast away my sinnes behind thy backe.

CHAP. LXXXIII.
Of two threats, which God vseth to expresse; One ab­solute, and the other conditionall; and of two kinds of promises, like those threats; and how we are to carry our selues when they arriue.

THov art not to be scandalized, in that the word, vvhich was spoken to this King, (Thou shalt dye, and thou shalt not liue) was not ac­complished. But thou art to know; That some­tymes our Lord commandeth that to be declared, which he hath determined to be effected, in his high counsell, and eternall will; and that vvillbe sure, without all fayle, to arriue. In this sort he [Page 427]commanded, that it should be told King Saul, That he would cast him off, and choose a better in his place. And so also, did he threaten Hely the Priest; and accordingly, it was fullfilled. And in the same manner, he also menaced King Dauid, That he would kill that sonne of his, whome in adultery he had begotten of Bersabee. And notwithstanding the earnest suit, which the King made for the life of the child; by prayers, by hairecloth, and by fastes; it was not graunted; for God had resolued that the child should dye.

But That which sometime may seem to be de­nounced by God as absolute, is but meant to be condi­tionall. at other tymes, he commandeth that to be published, vpon which he hath not absolut­ly resolued; but only vpon condition, of the men­ding, or not mending such a fault. And in this sort, he sent word to the Citty of Niniue, That, within fourty dayes, it should be destroyed. But after­ward by their pennance, he did reuoke that sen­tence; for he had not determined to destroy them, because he did it not. But he declared what their sinnes deserued, and what also would haue hap­pened, if their liues had not beene reformed. And although, considering thinges after an exteriour manner, it seemed to fauour of inconstancy, to say that it shalbe destroyed, and not to destroy it; yet is it not so, in that high will of God; because he did not absolutely meane to do it. For (as S. Augustine sayth) God varieth his sentence; but he changeth not his counsell. Which, in this case, was not, to destroy it; but not to destroy it, by means of their pennance; which he resolued to incite [Page 428]them to, by that menace. And this is that, which our Lord sayth by Hier. 18. Heremy, Suddainly will I say to Nations and Kingdoms, That I will destroy them, and roote them out; but if that people do pennance for their sinnes, I will also repent my selfe, of the euill, which I meant to bring vpon them; and I will instant­ly say of Nations, and Kingdomes, That I will plant them, and build them vp But if they worke wicked­nes in my sight, and do not hearken to my voice; I also will repent my selfe, of the good which I sayd, that I meant to do them.

The What vse we are to make of not know­ing, whe­ther any thing which God de­nounceth be an ab­solute sen­tence, or a cōditionall threat. vse which we are to make heerof, is this; That because we know not, when that, vvherewith God doth threaten vs, is but only a threat, or whether it be a finall determinatiō; we must not cast our selues vpon despaire; nor for­beare to implore his mercy, that so he may be pleased to reuoke the sentence, which he gaue a­gainst vs; as he did to this King, and to the citty of Niniue; who did, both of them get their suits. And though Dauid did not obtaine his; yet did he not sinne, in beseeching our Lord to reuoke the sentence, cōcerning him; because it appeared not to him, whether it were a decree or a threat. And in the same manner; if God make a promise to affoard vs any blessing, we must not vse ne­glect in seruing him, by saying, I haue a byll, that is written by the hand of God, which can deceaue no body. For the same Lord Hier. 18. saith, That if we depart from doing his will, he will also repent him­selfe of the good he promised. Not that God can re­pent; [Page 429]since he is not capable of any change; but his meaning is, That as one who repenteth himselfe; doth vndoe the thing which he had done, so will he discharge the sentence of punish­ment, which he had giuen against a man if he do pennance; and he will retract that promise which he made of doing him good, if that man depart from him.

CHAP. LXXXIIII.
What a man is, of his owne stock; and of the great be­nefits that we enioy by Iesus Christ our Lord.

RETVRNING then to our purpose, it is plaine; how well this law and practise, is ful­filled by Almighty God. He heareth and he seeth; since he did so soone heare the prayer, and see the teares of this Eze­chias. King. And did comfort him, & not only him, but the same he doth to others, as Dauid Psal. 33. saith. The eyes of our Lord, are vpon iust persons, and his eares are bent towards their prayers; to deliuer their soules from death, and to susteyne them in tyme of hunger. I well belieue that thou likest well this word; and yet I belieue also, that the cōdition vnder which it is said, doth put thee into some feare. A blessed thing it is, that the eyes, and eares of God, are present to vs. But yet thou wilt say, In what case am I, for he speaketh that, of such as are iust; and for my part, I am full of sinne. Thou saiest true; and see that thou do truly be­lieue [Page 430]it. For if there were any men, who had no sinnes; who should they, in all reason, be, ra­ther then the holy Apostles, of Iesus Christ our Lord; who as they were nearer to him in conuer­sation of body, so were they also in sanctity of mind; and so, as that none do equall them, ex­cepting only the blessed Mother of God, who e­qualleth, and exceedeth both them, and the An­gells.

And although S. Paul Rom. 8. do say both in his owne person, and in that of the Apostles also, That they receiued the first fruites of the spirit; which signifieth greater grace, and giftes, then were imparted to other men; yet neuerthelesse, our Lord commauded them, to say that prayer of the Pater Noster, whereof this is a part, Forgiue vs our debtes, or sinnes. And since this prayer, is for euery day; it is plaine, that we are told thereby, that Be not rash in mistaking, but read on, and thou wilt see, that this is meant of venial sins as distra­ction in prayer, idle words or thoughts, and the like, & not of such o­thers, as depriue the soule of grace. we haue faultes, and that euery day we commit one, or other. And therefore 1. Ioan. 1. S. Iohn said, Yf we say that we haue no sinne, we deceaue our selues, and truth is not in vs. Now if all men haue synne, excepting him alone, who is God, as well as man; and her, who is his true Mother, for whome were those wordes spoken, That the eyes of our Lord, are vpon iust persons, and his eares are in­clined to their prayers.

I answeare, that God is not humorous; nor yet doth he pay men with wordes alone; sines we see, that, as he said, so he performed with King Ezechias, and in numerable others also, [Page 431]whom he heard, and saw. But See heere the verity, & purity of Catholik doctrine concer­ning grace and sinne & works. do thou know, that he is a iust person, who is not in mortall sinne, since such an one is in grace; and is the friend of God; and of this sort there are many, although they haue veniall sinnes. But now when there is speach of these last, there is none, who can truly lay that he is wholy free. And to the end that thou mayst be thankefull for this grace and iustice; to that Lord, through whose merits they are giuen, to such as are well disposed; thou art to vnder­stand, that iust persons haue in them, two kinds of good; some of nature, & others of grace, though Pelagius be in a chafe at this last; who said, That a man is iust through the good workes, which he doth by the strength of his owne nature, without needing that grace, and strength, which is infused by God. This errour is condemned by the Catholike Church; which commaundeth vs to belieue, That of our nature, we are sinners; first, by originall sinne, and them by others also, which with our will we commit afterward; and that in those other workes, (which yet are, after their manner) good, but yet still, within the only latitude of morality (and these are the best, that we can worke by force of nature) true iustice doth no way consist.

For this it is, that S. Paul Rom. 3. saith, That no man is iust; that is to say, of himselfe; for we are all sinners of our selues. The being iust, is giuen to vs; it groweth not out of our soyle, or stocke; for to haue it Christ our Lord is only iust originally & of him­selfe; al o­ther crea­tures (yea euen the pure mo­ther of God her self) were to be iu­stifyed by his redēp­tion. She was secu­red from falling in­to the least sinne either o­riginall or actual, be­cause his passion wrought, in her holy soule by way of Preseruatiue; we are freed after falling, be­cause it workes in vs, by way of remedy. so, is the priuiledge of Christ our [Page 432]Lord alone; who not by meanes of any other, but of his only selfe, is the true iust person; and in whose workes, and death, is true iustice. For if in the workes which we can do by our nature did consist true Iustice; or that by them, we could de­serue it, Christ Iesus The protestāts will heere find that they haue no reason to slander vs in this point, ac­cording to their cu­stome. had died in vayne, as S. Paul saith, since we might haue obteined that, without his death, which he purchased, for vs therby. The same Apostle Galat. 3. saith, That Christ is made iustice to vs; and he saith it, because the me­rit of our iustice, doth consist in his workes, and death, which Suspēd your rash iudgment a while, if you be a Protestāt, and read the 88. chapter, which wil deliuer you from errour in this point. merit he communicateth to vs, by Faith, and by loue, which is the life thereo [...]; and by the Sacraments of the Church, as we decla­red before. And thus are we incorporated in Christ Iesus; and the grace of the holy Ghost, is gi­uen vs; by the infusion whereof, into our soules, we are made the adopted Sonnes of God, & plea­sing to him; and so we also receaue vertues, and giftes, to the end that we may worke agreeably, to the high state of the grace, which was giuen to vs. By all which, we are made, truly iust, in the sight of God, by a iustice which is ours, and which dwelleth in vs; and Note this. which is a distinct thing, from that, wherby Christ is iust. And from hence it commeth, that although the workes which we did before, were meane, and of a [...] imperfect kind of goodnesse; and which had no [...] in them any true iustice, (nor could deserue [...] haue it, as being of our owne stocke, and store) yet those thinges, which now we do, being o [...] [Page 433]in the state of grace, are of so high valew; and are workes so truely iust, as that they deserue an in­crease of iustice, according to that of Apoc [...] 22. S. Iohn, He that is iust, let him be yet more iust; and they are worthy to obtaine the kingdome of God; as it was sayd by 2. Tim. 4. S. Paul, That the Crown of iustice, was kept for him.

This vnspeakable benefit, do we owe to Iesus Christ; but See heer how honoura­ble to Christ our Lord, the do­ctrine of the holy Catholike Church, is in the point of workes. this is not all. For as it is the ordinance of God, that no man shall obtaine grace, and iustice, but by the merits of this Lord; so is it also, that none of them that haue it, is able to increase or euen to conserue it, but by their being vpheld by this Lord; as a liuing member is, by his head; & as the fruitful branch is, by his vine; and as the building is, by his foundation. For, al­though by gayning grace, and iustice for them, he gaue them (as hath beene sayd) a good Becau­se God through Christ our Lord would haue it so. title, by the way of merit, to the kingdome of heauen; as also that they should obtaine, by prayer, that which they would aske, as they ought; yet if they had a mind to enioy the same, and to vse it right­ly; they must not do it, like people which would disband from their captaine; or deuide themsel­ues from their head, or as if they could go vpon their owne feet alone, without the help of any o­ther.

No; a soule must rely vpon, and be vnited to this Christ Iesus our Lord. blessed head; to the end, that See the excellent & imma­culate do­ctrine of the holy Catholik Church. Grace may be conserued to it; and that from thence, a certaine spirituall strength, may come; which [Page 434]may proceed, and accompany, and follow the good works, that it shall do; and without which those good workes cannot be meritorious, as is declared by the Councell of Trent. And by this meanes, the prayers which that iust person shall make, will be worthy of the eares of God; and to obtaine that which the man desires. Salomon 2. Para. 6. did begge of God, That he who should pray in the Temple which he had made on earth, might be heard by God from heauen, granting that, which should be de­sired. And the true, and most excellent Temple of God, is Iesus Christ our Lord, in respect that he is man; in whome (as S. Paul sayth) The ac­complishment of diuinity, doth corporally remaine, That is, it remayneth in him, not only by way of grace, as it doth in the Angells, and in holy men; but in another fashion of more weight, and va­lew, by the way of the personall vnion, whereby that sacred humanity, is raised vp to haue the dig­nity of being personated, in the word of God, which is one of the three persons of the Blessed Trinity. This is that Temple, whereof Dauid sayd, God heard my voyce, from his holy Temple. And he, that in this Temple, shall vtter the speach of prayer, which is inspired by his spirit; and resting vpon him, as a liuing member, which demandeth suc­cour by the merits of his head, which is Iesus Christ; this man, I say, shall be heard by God, in the title of iustice; as Dauid was, and all iust men were, who vvere euer heard.

But, the prayer vvhich is made without this [Page 435]Temple That is, we must be members of Christ our head, by being in the state of grace; which re­quireth, that we resort to the sacra­ment of pennance, with har­ty sorrow for that sin which is past, & a firme purpose to cōmit no more; for other­wise in­steed of receauing a Sacra­ment, we should commit a sacriledg. (by whomesoeuer it be made) is a oarse and prophane prayer; and vnworthy of the ares of God. And not being inspired by Iesus Christ, it carryeth not that broad seale, whereby [...] should be warranted, and held for iust, in the [...]btaining of what it askes. And to the end that Christ, in the quality of our aduocate, may giue [...]ispatch to our petitions; it is necessary that on [...]arth, we be his liuing members, and inspired to [...]ray by him. For although his mercy is so great, [...]hat many tymes he maketh the petitions of his [...]ead members to be heard (which are they, that [...]old the fayth of his Church, but are not in state [...]f grace) yet heere we speak only of those which being made in Christ) haue the dignity, and the [...]erit, of obtayning what they aske. And the ho­ [...]y Church, our Mother, well knowing the necessi­ty that we haue of Christ, in our prayers, is wont [...]o say to the Eternall Father, at the end of hers, Graunt vs this, or that, O God, through Iesus Christ [...]ur Lord. This did she learne of her spouse, and maister, when he Ioan. 16. sayd, Whatsoeuer thing you aske the Father in my name, he will giue it you.

Let thankes, O Lord, be giuen to thy name; [...]ince through thee, we are heard. For thou doest not content thy selfe only with being our Media­tour, to merit that grace for vs, which we receaue by thee; nor with being our head, which instru­cteth, and moueth vs to pray by thy spirit, as we ought; but thou also wilt be our He ob­tayneth that we may be heard by our selues when we aske in his Name. Bishop, in hea­uen; that so, representing to thy Father that sa­cred [Page 436]humanity which thou hast, and the passion which thou didst receaue, thou mightst obtayne the effect of that, which we desire on earth, by our inuocation of thy Name. So that as the holy G [...]ospel sayd, When Matt. 3. Marc. 1. Luc. 3. our Lord was baptized, the heauens did open themselues to him; and although many haue followed in thither after him, yet they are opened to none, but by his meanes; so may we also say, that the bowels of his eternall Father which open themselues for the graunting our pe­titions, are opened to Christ. And he is the per­son heard by his Father; since the fauour, & grace, vvhere with we are heard, we haue by him. For if it were not for this; as no man would be iust in himselfe, so no man could be heard for himselfe. And, as through the great loue which our Lord did beare vs, he tooke our miseryes vpon himself as his owne; and he payed for them by his life, & death; so with the same loue vvhich he carryeth towards vs (although now he be in heauen) if a­ny little one of his, be either naked, or clad, or hungry, or wel fed, he sayth, it is Matt. 25. himself that is so. So that, As soone as we were, he was in vs, as S. Augustine sayth; and when we are heard by God, he sayth, that he is heard; through the The vnspeak­able vn [...]ō of Christ Iesus our Lord with his seruant [...]; and his infinite loue to them. vnspeakable vnion which is between him, and his; which is signifyed, by the name of the Spouse, & the fellow spouse; and of the head in respect of the body, which he loued so much; that howsoe­uer in ordinary course, we see that a man expo­seth his arme to receaue the blow for the sauing of [Page 437]the head, yet this blessed Lord, being the head, would needs meet that blow, which was giuen by the hand of the iustice of God; and so dyed v­pon the Crosse, to giue life to his body, which is our selues.

And after that he hath quickned vs, by the meanes of pennance, & of the Sacraments; he doth regale vs, and defend vs, and maintayne vs, as a thing so much his owne; that he is Note. not con­tent, with calling vs his seruants, and friends, & brothers, and sonnes; but to teach vs yet better, how much he loueth vs, and that so, he may rayse vs vp, to greater honour, he endueth vs with his An vnspeaka­ble ho­nour it is, if we had the grace to weigh it well, to be called Christiās: yea &, as it were, one Christ owne name. For by this vnspeakable vnion of Christ the head, with the body, which is the Church, he, and we, are called, one 1. Cor. 12. Christ. And this most sweet mystery, full of all consolation, doth S. Paul giue vs to vnderstand, in those wordes, when he said, That Ephes. 2. the heauenly Fa­ther did make vs acceptable in his beloned Sonne; and that we were created in good workes, in Iesus Christ. And to the Corinthians he said, You are, in Iesus Christ. Which manner of speach, by the word In, doth point vs out to this vnion, of Christ, and his Church. So also our Lord saith, by Ioin. 11. S. Iohn, He that is in me, and I in him, beareth much fruit, for without me, you are able to do nothing. Thanks A ho­ly conclu­siō of this chapter. be giuen, O Lord, to thy loue, and goodnesse; who by thy death didst giue vs life. And thankes be giuen to thee also, because by thy life, thou consernest ours; and thou doest imbrace vs, so [Page 438]close to thy selfe, in this exile of ours; that yf we will perseuere in thy seruice, thou wilt carry vs to geather with thy selfe; and wilt keep vs for e­uer in heauen where thou art, as thy selfe hath said, Where I am my selfe, there shall my seruant al­so be.

CHAP. LXXXV.
How lowd Christ cryed out; and doth euer cry out for vs, before the Eternall Father: and with how great speede, his Maiesty doth heare the prayers of men; and bestoweth benefitts vpon them, by meanes of this out-cry of his sonne.

THov mayst already see by what is sayd, how great necessity all men haue of the fa­uour of Christ Iesus, to the end that their prayers may be heard, as acceptable in the presence of God. But it is not so with Christ himselfe; for he hath no need that any other should speake for him. He it is, and he alone, whose voyce is heard, in respect of it selfe. For, as S. Paul Hebr. 8. saith, he is able to go to his Father himselfe, to pray for vs; he also saith, That Christ in the dayes of his mortall life, offering prayers to his Father with a lowd cry, and with teares, was heard for his reuerence. Christ desired his Father, that he would deliuer him from death; not suffering him to remaine therein, by raysing him vp, to a life immortall. And as he desired, so was it granted to him. He [Page 439]also offered vp teares, and prayers, to his Father many times; which proceeding from a hart which was full of loue, are said to haue bin made, with a loud cry. And although that loue which made him cry, was euer all alike in him, (for as much as euery teare he shed, and euery What infinite loue ther­fore was that, and what loue ought ours to be in answer of it. pace that he made, was performed with as much loue, as when he laid himself downe vpon the Crosse) yet considering the exteriour, and the nature of the worke it selfe, which was wrought; so much difference there was, betweene the offering of his most holy body vpon the Crosse, and the offering vp prayers for vs; as there is, betweene suffering, yea and suffering death, on the one side, and praying, or speaking on the other.

Remember that which God Gen. 4. said to Cain; The voyce of the bloud of thy Brother Abel, doth cry out to me, from the earth. And of that also, which S. Paul Hebr. 12. said, to vs, Christians; You are come to a [...]hed [...]ing of bloud, which cryeth out better, then that of Abel. For The difference betweene the bloud of Christ our Lord, and the bloud of Abel. that of Abel, cryed out to the diuine iustice, demaunding vengeance, against Cain who spilt it; but the bloud of Christ, which was shed vpon the earth, cryed out to the diuine mercy demaunding pardon. The former calleth for anger; the later for pitty; the former for in­dignation; the later for reconciliation; that of Abel asketh vengeance against Cain alone; this other, asketh pardon, for all the wicked men, that euer were, or will euer be; (so farre forth as they shalbe ready to receiue it, with Pen­nance, such a [Page 440]disposition as is fit) yea it asketh pardon, euen for them which shed it. The bloud of Abel, was able to profit no man, because it had no such po­wer, as to pay for the sinnes of others; but the bloud of Christ, did cleanse both the heauens, & the earth, and the sea, as the Church doth sing; and drew out such as were detayned in the very pittes of Limbus, as the Prophet Zachary af­firmes.

Without fayle, the cry of the bloud of Christ, desiring mercy, is a great cry; since it hindred the hearing of that other cry, which was made by the sinnes of the world, and which demaun­ded vengeance, against the committers thereof. Consider thou, O Virgin, if And thou also who art no virgin, consider of it; for it speakes to all the world. that one only sin of Cain, made such a noyse, by asking vengeance; what noyse, what cryes, what shouting out, do all the sinnes of all men make, demaunding the same, and greater vengeance, in the eares of the iustice of God. But yet neuertheles; how loud so euer they cry; incomparably more loud, crieth the bloud of Christ, in the eares of the diuine mercy, demaunding pardon. And it makes, that those o­thers are not heard; & that the noise of our sinnes may be so little, and so low, as that God may be to them, as if he were deafe. For incomparably more acceptable to God, was the voyce of Christ; and of his Passion, and death, which de­maunded pardon; then all the sinnes of the whole world, are offensiue, demaunding vengeance. What doest thou thinke, that The profound silence of Christ our Lord in his sa­cred pas­sion. the silence of [Page 441]Christ did procure; and that he made him selfe as deafe who did not heare, and as a dumbe man, who did not open his mouth, when he was accused? With­out doubt, since the sinnes of them, who by their mouth, accused Christ, did make a noyse which was full of lyes, against him who was not guilty, and when he, in the meane tyme, would needes hold his peace (who yet, might haue answered them, with all iustice) it is but due, that the rest of the world, may not be accused of their sinnes, by the Diuells (though of it selfe, this might be iustly done) but that they should be dumbe, be­cause they had accused him who was innocent. And that, since he would needs be Sic [...] mutus, non aperi­ [...]s os su­um. deafe (who yet was so well able to answere) it is but reason, that the diuine iustice (to which Christ offered himselfe for vs) should also make it selfe as deafe, though we haue done thinges, which require vengeance.

Reioyce therefore, O thou spouse of Christ, and let all sinners reioyce (if indeed they be sor­ry for hauing sinned, and if they dispose themsel­ues to take the Con­trition Confessiō and Satis­faction. remedyes, which are in the Catholike Church.) For God is deafe, towards the punishment of our sinnes; but hath his eares wide open, towardes the hearing of our prayers, with mercy. Feare not thy accusers, nor those outcryes (although thou haue giuen cause thereof) since Christ was accused, and by his silence did strike dumbe, the clamour of our sinnes. It was Isa. 35. pro­phesied, that he would be silent, as the lambe is be­fore [Page 442]the shearer. But The great pro­fit which we reape, by the si­lence that Christ our Lord did vse in his sacred Passion. when most he was silent, and did suffer most in the sight of men; so much greater were the out cryes, which he gaue to the diuine iust [...], by paying for vs. And these out cryes were heard as S. Paul Hebr. 5. sayth) for his reuerence; that is, for his great humility; and for the reue­rence wherewith he humbled himselfe to his Fa­ther, euen to death, and that of the Crosse; reuea­ring (in as much as he was man) that superex­cellent diuine Maiesty; and loosing his life, for the honour of it. He was heard (I say) by his Fa­ther; of whome it was written, He Psal. 102. regarded the prayer of the humble, and despised not their petiti­on. Now who is so humble, as our Blessed Lord, who sayd, Learne, Matt. 11. of me, for I am me [...]ke, and humble of hart. And therefore he was heard, as before it was prophesyed in his person, Our Psal. 21. Lord did not remooue his face from me; and when I cryed out, he heard me. And the same Lord of ours, sayth in the Ghospell, I giue Ioan. 21. thee thankes, O Father, because thou doest euer heare me.

Now since the Father doth heare him when he prayeth for thee; and that the obtayning of grace, whereby thou mayst be made iust (that so thou maist be heard by God) did cost him so dear; procure to get it, if thou haue it not; and if thou haue it, employ it in offering vp prayers to God; since to such prayers, his eares are open. And as we must heare our Lord, with the Prophet Samu­el, when he sayth, Speake 1. R [...]g. [...]. Lord, for thy seruant heareth; so doth our Lord say to vs, Speake ser­uant, [Page 443]for thy Lord heareth thee. And as we sayd long before, that our hearing the voyce of God, must not be the only hearing of the sound of the wordes; but to belieue them, and to be pleased in them; & to put them in execution; so the eares of our Lord, are opened by the loue of Christ, not only to heare what we say (for so also doth he heare the blasphemies which are spoken of him, and which offend him) but our Lord doth heare our petitions, in such sort, as to performe them. And to the end that thou mayst see, how true it is, that our Lord doth heare the deep sighes that we present to him, hearken thou to that, which the [...]a [...]e Lord sayth by Isa. 65. Isaias, Before they call, I will heare them. O blessed be that holding thy peace, O Lord; for both within, and without, didst thou hold thy peace, vpon that day of thy Passion. Out wardly, by not cursing, or so much as answearing; and in wardly, by not contradi­cting, but accepting, with great patience, those blowes, and cryes, and paynes, of thy passion. For thereby, thou didst so speake in the eares of God, as that we may be heard euen before we speake. Nor is this any great meruaile; for The inestima­ble proui­dence and goodnes of God, in Christ our Lord. as much as (we being yet nothing) thou didst make vs; and before we could aske thee any thing, thou didst maintayne vs, both within, and with­out the wombe of our Mother; and before we knew what it was, that might do vs good, thou gauest vs the adoption of Sonnes; and the grace of the Holy Ghost in holy Baptisme. And before we [Page 444]had beene ouerthrowne by sinne, thou didst keep vs; and when vve were fallen, through our own fault, thou didst raise vs vp; and thou didst seek vs when we sought not thee. And (that which is more) before we were borne, thou hadst alrea­dy dyed for vs; and prepared heauen for vs. It is not therefore any wonder that of whome thou hadst so much care, before they had any of thee, thou haue it also, in this particuler. And that thou dost giue vs that, many times, wherof thou seest vs to haue need, without expecting that we should weary our selues so much as to aske it; since thou didst weary thy selfe so much, both in asking, and procuring it for vs.

What shall we giue thee, O most blessed Iesus, for this silence, which thou didst vse before them, vvho did so hate, and hurt thee. And what shall vve giue thee, for those loud cryes so full of loue, vvhich thou gauest for vs, before thy Fa­ther. O A de­uout con­templati­on. that it were pleasing to thy infinite goodnes, to do vs so great a fauour, as that we might be so silent towardes the offence of thee; and so willing to suffer that which thou vvouldst do with vs, as if we vvere so many dead men. And that we vvere so full of life, towardes the vttering of voyces in thy prayse; that neither we whome thou hast redeemed, nor the heauens, nor the earth, nor that which is vnder the earth, nor any of that which is in them all, might euer cease with the very extremity of all our strength, and theirs, to sing thy prayses with great ioy, and [Page 445]to serue thee, with most ardent loue.

Nor doest thou content thy selfe, O Lord, to open thyne eares towards our prayers, so to heare them with attentiue speed; but as one that loues another, in all truth of affection, and doth take pleasure to heare him speake, or sing; so thou, O Lord, doest say to the soule, which is redee­med by thy bloud, Shew Can [...] [...] 2. me thy face, let thy voice sound in myne cares; for thy voyce is sweet, & thy face is very faire. What is this, O Lord, which thou sayest? That thou desirest to heare vs, and that our voyce is sweet. How doth our face seeme fayre in thyne eyes, which we (hauing defiled with many sinnes committed by vs euen whylest thou wert looking on) are a shamed to let thee see? In­fallibly it is true, that eyther we merit much in thy sight, or else thou doest loue vs much. But The true hu­mility which is taught by the do­ctrine of the holy Catholike Church. far be it from vs, O Lord, far be it frō vs, that out of thy mercifull proceeding, we should draw a reason of being proud. Since that, whereby we please thee, and are acceptable to thee, is thyne owne grace, which thou didst giue vs. And be­sides that, thou doest regale, and thou doest re­ward thy seruants, more aboundantly then be­comes any merit of theirs. Let glory therfore be­g [...]uen to thee, O Lord, from whom all our good proceedeth; and in whome all our good consi­steth; & to vs, & in vs let confusion be, for our vn­worthynesse and wickednes. Thou art our ioy, and thou art that glory, wherein we glory; and this we do not vniustly, but vpon great reason. [Page 446]For a high honour it is to be beloued by thee; and so beloued, as that thou wouldst deliuer thy selfe ouer for our sakes, to the tormentes of the Crosse, from whence all blessings, are deriued downe vpon vs.

CHAP. LXXXVI.
Of the great loue wherewith our Lord doth behold such as are iust; and of the much that be desyreth to communicate himselfe to creatures; and to destroy our sinnes, which we must behold with detestation, that God may looke vpon them with compassion.

NOvv that thou hast vnderstood the speed, wherwith God heareth the prayers of such as are iust; it remaineth for thee to know, the great loue, wherwith he behouldeth them; that God heareth & seeth our prayers, as he requi­reth vs to looke vp to him, & to giue eare to his holy in­spiratiōs. so he may entirely performe in himselfe, that of hea­ring, and seeing, which he commaundeth of vs. The eyes of our Lord, saith Dauid, are vpon the iust to deliuer them from death; but the face of our Lord is vpon the wicked, that he may cast out the memory of them from the earth. Heereby it appeares, that our Lord placeth his eyes, vpon the iust, as the pastour doth vpon his sheep, that they may not perish. And so also, doth he place them vpon the wicked, to the end that they may not passe, with­out the punishment which their sinnes deserue. Two What God made and what we make. thinges there are in vs; one which God made, and that is the creature, consisting of a [Page 447] Body and Soule, with all the good that we haue; the other, which our selues did make, and that is sinne. Now if we did not accompany that good which we haue of God, by somewhat else which is an euill of our owne, there could be nothing in vs, which our Lord would behold with the eyes of Anger, but only of Loue; since it is a naturall thinge for any cause, to loue the effect of it selfe. But now, though we haue defiled, and destroy­ed, that, which the beautifull God had made fayre in vs; yet will he not totally cast vs off. Nor can our wickednesse, hinder his supereminent good­nes; which (for the recouering of that which he made good▪ resolueth to destroy that euill, which our selues did make. For An ex­cellent compa­rison, set forth with great life of circum­stance. if we see, that this corporall sunne, do, with so liberall a hand, im­part it selfe; and goeth as it were inuiting men, to receiue it, & bestoweth light, and heat, vpon all them who giue no impediment thereunto; yea & when they do, yet doth it, as it were, euen be­come obstinate in making them, remooue the same; and if it meete with any chinke, or crany, how little so euer, it doth by that, con­uey it selfe, and fill the whole house full of light; what shall we say of that supreame diuine goodnesse, which, with so great anxiety, as it were, and force of loue, doth go circling round about the creatures; that he may bestow himselfe vpon them, and fill them with liuely, and diuine splen­dours? What occasions doth he seeke of doing good to mē? And to many, for some smal seruices, [Page 448]he hath vouchsafed to do no small fauours. What entreaties doth he vse to them, who depart, that they will returne againe? What imbracementes doth he giue them, when they come backe? What seeking of such as are lost? What addres­sing such as are gone astray? What pardoning of sinnes, without reproach? What ioy in resto­ring men to saluation? Letting them know, that he more desireth to graunt a pardon, then they care to sue it out. And therefore it is, that he sayth to sinners, Why Ezech. 33. will you needs dye? Know, that I desire not the death of a sinner, but that he may returne, and liue. Returne to me, and you shall liue.

Our Note this excel­lent consi­deration. death consisteth in our departure from God, and therefore to returne to him, is to liue. Whereunto we are inuited by Almighty God, whose principall intention, is not, to lodge the eyes of his wrath vpō the worke of his hands, which is our selues; but vpon the worke of ours, which are our sinnes. These would God faine de­stroy, if we did not hinder him; but this we do, when we loue our sinnes; giuing them life by our loue, which, by being loued, do murther vs. And so great is the hungar which that soueraigne bounty, hath towards the destruction of our wickednesse (to the end that so, his creature may not be de­stroyed) that Let all the Angels prayse our Lord, for so infinite goodnes. when soeuer a man will; and how oft soeuer he will, and how great soeuer the sinnes be which he hath committed; if he will dis­pose himselfe to do pennance, and to begge pardon of our Lord; for his part, he is ready to receaue [Page 449]vs. Forgiuing that which we haue deserued; cu­ring that which we made sicke; straightning that which we made crooked; and giuing vs grace to abhorre those thinges, which formerly were by vs beloued. Yea in such sort doth he destroy our wickednes, and deuide it from vs; that Dauid Psal [...]. 102. sayth, Looke what distance there is, betweene the ri­sing, and setting of the Sunne, so far hath he separa­ted our sinnes from vs.

So that the beginning, and first pace that the eyes of God do make, is not against the man, whome he created; but against the sinne, which we committed. And whensoeuer he looketh v­pon a man to his destruction; it is then, when the man will not suffer him, to execute his wrath against sinne, which he would By drawing that soule to pen­nance. fayne destroy. But man would needs continue in sinne; & giue life to that which destroyed himself, and displea­sed God. It is therefore but reason, that his death remaine aliue; and that his life be for euer dead; since he would not open the gate to him, who for loue, and with loue, both could, and would haue murthered his death, and endued him with life.

But some will say, what remedy shall I meet withall, that God may not behold my sinne, to punish; but that he may looke vpon his creature to saue it. S. Augustine Hear­ken to the great and good S. Augu­stine. doth briefly, and truely answere thus: Let thy selfe looke vpon thy sinnes; that is, do thou consider them, and do pennance for them, and God will not see them; [Page 450]but if thou cast them behind thy backe, then will God place them, before his face. Dauid did beseech our Lord, to forgiue his sinnes, saying thus: Haue Psal. 50. mercy on me, O Lord, according to thy great mercy; and he also sayd, Turne thy face O Lord from my sinnes. But what did he alleadge towards the obtayning of so great a fauour? Nothing lesse, then any seruice that he had done. For he wel knew, that if a seruant should commit a trea­son, against his Lord; his seruices would not be considered, though he should haue serued many yeares before, with diligence. For if he serued before, he was obliged so to do; and he brought not his Lord in debt thereby; but his treason is the thing, that must be thought of, which he was bound not to haue committed; and therefore by paying that which he did owe before, he came not to ransome himselfe from that penalty, which afterward he incurred. Neither yet did Dauid offer sacrifices; as well knowing, that God takes no pleasure Vnles it were accompa­nied by a penitent & Religi­ous hart; for if it were, it was ac­ceptable to God in the old law, for so himself had ordai­ned. in the burning of beasts. But he who could find no remedy, eyther in seruices that were past, or in pious external works which then vvere present, did find it, in an humbled, & contrite hart. And he desired to be pardoned, vpon this ensuing reason, For I know my wicked­nes, and my sinne doth euer stand before myne eyes. An admirable power, did God giue to this our beholding, and profoundly sighing for our sinnes; since Gods seeing of them, doth follow, to the end that he may dissolue them. And we conuerting [Page 451]our eyes with griefe, towardes that, which vve did wickedly commit; he conuerteth his, towards the saluation, and consolation of him, vvhome he did create.

CHAP. LXXXVII.
Of the many and great benefits which come to men, in that the Eternall Father, doth behold the face of Iesus Christ his Sonne.

BVT some wil say, whence commeth so great force, to our looking, and to our weeping, that so instantly it should draw after it, Gods seeing, and that, so, as to forgiue vs. It is far from com­ming, from our looking it selfe. For the theef, de­serueth not to be pardoned the gallowes, because he knowes that he did ill in stealing; and how much (and yet much more) soeuer, he lamenteth. But this proceedeth from another sight, which is more fauourable; and withall, so full of power, that it is the cause and fountaine of al our good. This is that, whereof Dauid Psal. 83. sayth, Behold, O God our defendour, behold the face of thy Christ. He twice beseecheth God to behold; to giue vs ther­by to vnderstand, with how much affection, we are to thinke of this; and how much it importeth vs to obtaine it. For as the sight of God vpon vs, doth bring all benedictions to vs; so Gods looking vpon Christ, doth draw the sight of God to vs. Do not thinke, O Virgin How Almighty God com­meth to loue man­kind. that the gracious, [Page 452]and amorous beames of the eyes of God, descend in a right line vpon vs, when he receaueth vs in­ [...]o his grace; or euen, when already we are in grace, that they descēd vpon vs, as vpon a differēt thing from Christ. For if so thou thinke, thou art no better then blind. But know, that first they ad­dresse themselues to Christ, and from thence, to vs, by him, and in him. Nor No creature can obtai­ne the least cast of an eye of [...]erev, from God but only for the loue of Christ our Lord. will our Lord vtter one word, nor cast one countenance of loue to any creature of the whole world, if he see it separated from Christ; but for the loue of Christ, he so behouldeth all them as to pardon them, who (although they be neuer so wicked) will behould and lament themselues; & in Christ he also beho [...]ldeth such persons, for their preserua­tion, and for their increase in the good, which already they haue receaued. Christ being belo­ued, is the cause that we are receaued into grace. And if Christ Iesus were not, no creature at all, would be acceptable, or beloued in the sight of God, as was sayd before.

Know therefore, O Virgin, what necessity thou hast of Christ; and be thou Al woe will be to such, as are not so. internally and profoundly gratefull to him. For the good which thou hast, came towardes thee, by no o­ther meanes, then by Christ; and in him is it to be conserued to thee, and augmented by the eter­nall Father. And this is that, which was figured in the beginning of the world, when the iust Abel (that Pastour of sheep) did offer a sacrifice to God out of his flocke; which sacrifice was accepted, as [Page 453]the Scriptore sayth, For our Lord did looke on Abel. and his guifts. And this looking on him, doth im­port, that Abel was gratefull to him, and for that, agayne, his guifts were gratefull. And in testi­mony that so they were, God sent downe visible fyre, which consumed the sacrifice. Now this is a figure, of our iust▪ & soueraigne Pastour, who sayth himself, I Ioan. 10. am the good Pastour; and he is also a Priest; & consequently, as S. Paul Hebr. 5. sayth, he is to offer guifts, and sacrifices to God. But what can Leuit. 22. Deut. 22. he offer, that shall be worthy of him? Certainly not brute beasts; and much lesse sinfull men; for such do rather serue to prouoke the wrath of God, thē to obtayne his mercy. Nor without cause, did God commaund in the old law, that the beast which was to be offered, should be male, & not fe­male; and of such an age; & neither too little, nor too great; nor blind, nor lame, nor subiect to any of those conditions which are there described; to the end that the thing which was to be offered, for the taking away of sinne, might be subiect to no imperfection, or fault. Now The necessity which we were in, that Christ our Lord should be sacrificed for vs. because no man was without synne, this great Priest of ours, had nothing else to offer but himselfe; making him, that was the Priest, to be also the sacrifice, offering vp himselfe to himselfe, he being cleane, that he might cleanse vs, who were defiled; he who was iust, to iustify vs who are sinners; he who vvas acceptable, and esteemed; to the end that we might be receiued into fauour; Who, in our owne respects, were offensiue, and vnbe­loued. [Page 454]And this sacrifice, was of so high valew▪ both in regard of the thing it selfe, and in respect of him who did offer it, (which is al one) that we, who were separated from God like lost sheepe, were brought backe, all washed, and sanctify­ed, and made worthy to be offered vp to God. Not that we had any thing of our owne stocke, which was fit to please him; but being bedewed by the bloud of this Pastour, and being adorned with the beauty of his grace, and iustice, which is bestowed vpon vs for our Lords sake; and being incorporated to him, we are cleansed from our sinnes, and we are beheld by God, and made ac­ceptable to him, as a sacrifice offered vp, by this high Priest and pastour.

This did 1. Pet. [...]. S. Peter thus expresse, Christ dyed once for vs, to the end that he might offer vs vp to God, being mortifyed in the flesh, and quickned in the spirit. And so it appeares, how our Abel doth offer vp an oblation out of his flocke, which God beheld; because Ag­nus occisus ab origine inu [...]ds. first, he had beheld his most deare sonne. And as there visible fire came downe v­pon the sacrifice, so also did fire come heere, vpon the day of Pentecost in the forme of tongues. And this hapned, after Christ ascended vp to hea­uen, where he might appeare, to the face of God for vs. To the end that we might vnderstand, that from the cast of the countenance of God, v­pon the face of Christ, which, as it is said Hester. [...]wor [...]. of Hesther, is full of grace, came that fire of the holy Ghost, which burnt those giftes, which this great [Page 455]Pastour and Bishop offered vp to his Father; and they were his disciples, both such as were then present, and such others as were to follow after­ward. And as God promised to Noë, that when­soeuer it should raine much, he was to looke vpon the bow, which he placed in the cloudes, in token of the league which he made with men, not to destroy the earth any more by water; so, much more, God beholding his Sonne, being layd vpon the Crosse (hauing his armes spread abroad, in the forme of a bow) doth take the arrowes, which he was about to shoot, out of that other rigorous bow of his; and insteed of punishing, he doth imbrace vs; being more ouercome to shew vs mercy by this strong bow, which is Christ, then he was induced by our sinnes to punish vs.

And howsoeuer we went wandring away, with our backes turned towardes the light, which is God; and that we would not looke v­pon him, but passe our dayes in the darcknesse of sinne; yet we are brought backe by him, vpon his shoulders. And because it is It is only for the loue of Christ, that God behoul­deth sin­ners with mercy. he, that brin­geth vs, our Lord God looketh vpon vs; and he maketh vs also looke on him. And he hath so par­ticuler care of vs, that not for so much as any one moment of time, doth he remooue his eyes from vs, least other wise we should vndoe our selues. Whence dost thou thinke, did proceed this a­mourous word, which God did speak to a sinner, thereby to draw him to repentance, I will Psal [...]. 21. giue thee vnderstanding, and will teach thee the way, [Page 456]wherein thou art to walke; and vpon thee, will I place myne eyes; but only from that amorous counte­nance, wherewith God beholdeth Iesus Christ, who is the wisdome, which teacheth vs the true way, wherein we may walke without stumbling; and the true pastour (as he is man) by whome we are beheld; & who (as he is God) beholdeth vs. Re­moouing Note heere a liuely and deare des­cription, of the in­numera­ble wayes whereby Almighty [...]od sheweth mercy to­warde vs, through Christ our Lord. the daungers that are before vs, wherinto he knoweth that we would fall here­after; holding vs fast, against such as do assault vs at the present; and deliuering vs from them, into which by our fault we haue fallen; euer thin­king of that which importeth vs, though our selues be full of negligence; remembring our good, when we forget his seruice, watching o­uer vs when we sleepe; keeping vs close to him­selfe, when we would faine be gone; calling vs backe, when we fly; giuing vs imbracementes when we returne; being euer the last, in brea­king of friendship; and the first who begges the renewing of it, though he were the person offen­ded; and carrying, in all, and throughout all, such a watchfull, & amorous eye ouer vs, as or­daineth all thinges for our good. What shall we say, or what shall we do, for so great fauours, but giue thankes to this true Pastour? who, to the end that his sheep might not be estranged from the eyes of God; did offer his owne face to so ma­ny affrontes. That his Father seing him so affli­cted, and yet vvithout all fault; might behold such as indeed vvere faulty, vvith the eyes of [Page 457]mercy. And to the end, that we might carry this word, engrauen both in our harts, and vpon our tongues, Looke. O Lord, vpon the face of thy Christ. Knowing well, by great experience, that God doth much better, both heare, and see, and encline his care to vs, then we do to him.

CHAP. LXXXVIII.
How it is to be vnderstood that Christ is our Iustice; least otherwise we should fall into some errour, by conceaning, that iust persons haue not a distinct iustice, from that, whereby Iesus Christ is inst.

SO much I be­seech the Protestát reader v­pon my knees that he will reade this following discourse, without passion. is the cockle which our enemy hath sowed in their hartes, who will belieue him; that he induceth them, to draw peruerse o­pinions, out of the wordes of holy Scripture, which speak of this most sweet mystery, of Iesus Christ our Lord; and of the benefits, which we possesse by him, and in him. Whereof I thought it fit to aduertise thee, that so thou mightest be free from danger. Do not thou conceaue, that because Christ is called our iustice; or because it is sayd, That Ephes. 2. we are made acceptable to God, in him, or in fine, by such other wordes as these; that therefore I say, they who are in the state of grace, haue not a iustice in them which is theirs; whereby they become iust & acceptable to God; and which is distinct, from that, whereby Iesus Christ our Lord, is iust. For to belieue other­wise, [Page 458]were to imbrace a very grieuous errour; which The erroneous opinion of impu­ [...]tiue Iu­stice, doth extremly derogate, from the great, and tender loue of God to man, in Christ our Lord. proceedeth from the want of knowing the loue, which Iesus Christ doth beare, to such, as are in the state of grace. Whome his bowells of mercy, and loue, would not permit; that, why­left himselfe was iust, and full of all good things, he should say to such as he iustifyed, Content your selues with this, that I abound with these good things, and esteeme them for your owne as they are in me; although in your selues, you remayne vniust, impure, and naked.

There Think seriouly of this point. is no head, vvhich would hold such language as this, to his liuing mēbers nor one Spouse to another, if he should dearely loue her; and much lesse, will that celestiall Spouse say so; vvho is giuen for a patterne to the Spouses of this world; that after his resemblance, they may treat and loue their fellow-spouses. You men, sayth Ephes. 5. S. Paul, loue your wines as Christ loued his Church, who gaue himselfe ouer for it, to sanctify it and to cleanse it, by Baptisme, and by the word of life. If then he sanctify, and wash, and cleanse it; and that with his owne bloud (which is the thing, that giueth power to the Sacraments, to cleanse soules, by that grace of his, which they impart,) how can that soule, remaine vniust, and filthy, which is wa­shed, and cleansed, by a thing of so extreme effi­cacy. Now this cleanesse, God did promise, that he would giue, in the tyme of his Messias, when he sayd, I will powre forth cleane water vpon you, and you shall be cleansed from all your filth. And our [Page 459]Lord, in the last supper, did testify; That eleuen of his disciples were cleane; and not after an ordinary manner, but that they were wholy cleane. For the veniall faults which are caused in the soule by some inordinate affections (which sticke like dust vnto our feet) are remoued by help of the Sacraments; and their good disposition that re­ceaue them (as corporall feet) are washed by ma­teriall water; as our Lord then did vse it; wash­ing both without, and within, and leauing them cleane, from al sinne, according to this testimony of [...]. Io [...]. 1. S. Iohn, The bloud of Iesus Christ doth cleanse vs from all sinne.

This bloud was called by the Prophet Mich. 7. Mi­cheas (long before it was shed) the sea, wherein all our sinnes are drowned. And he sayd, God will shoot off all our sinnes, into the bottome of the sea. Now if these, and many other places of Scripture, do giue testimony, that a man is pardoned, and cleansed from all sinne; who is there, that will presume to say, That a man doth neuer come to be cleansed from it. For to say, that sinne remay­neth in a man, which really, and truly shalbe sinne; and that yet, for the loue of Iesus Christ our Lord, the payne which is due to that sinne, should be released to him; is no I be­seech our Lord that the truth of this discourse, may sin he as deeply into thy hart, as there is cause. such discourse, as wil serue, eyther towards the verifying of the Scrip­tures, or for the doing of Iesus Christ sufficient honour. For since the payne which is due to sinne, is a lesse euill to any man, then the guilt of the same sin, & the iniustice, and deformity which [Page 460]is caused thereby; it cannot be sayd, That Christ doth saue his people from their sinnes, if by his merit he only obtaine, that they may not be imputed to them, for their punishment; vnlesse first he take the guilt away; by the gift of his grace; nor yet that he obtayneth purity, and piety for men, that so detesting sinne, they may keep the law of God. And if the doctrine of the holy Scripture be well obserued, it wilbe found, that when the pardon of [...]inne is graunted, there is giuen with all, a newnesse of life; and a cleane hart, as if it were newly created, as Dauid did desire, according to that which it was Isa. 50. [...]ge [...]h. 11. prophesied that it should be, I will giue you a new hart, and I will place a new spirit, in the middest of you. And I will take away from you that hart of stone; and I will giue you a hart of flesh; and I will place my spirit in the middest of you; and I will make, that you shall walke in my commandments, and that you shall keep and worke my iudgementes.

This doth God promise, to such as for­merly he had told, that he would cleanse them, from all their filth. And afterward he sayth, I I will saue you from them all. To Be at­tentiue. giue vs cleare­ly thereby to vnderstand, That the sauing vs from our sinnes, is not only to free vs from the paine; but to impart an inward cleanesse; and such a hart, and such a grace, and such a spirit, as may haue power, to enable vs, to keepe the commaundements of God. S. Iohn Apec. 3. affirmeth, that our Lord saith; I stand at the gate, and I knocke; if any man open to [Page 461]me, I will enter into him; and I will suppe with him, and he with me Isay Isa. 55. inuiteth such as are hungry, in the behalfe of God, that they will eate, and such as are thirsty, that they will drinke. Our Lord saith by the mouth of 2. Cor. 6. S. Paul, Get you out from the middest of the wicked, and do not so much as touch any thinge that is vncleane; and I will receaue you, & I wil [...]e a Father to you, and you shalbe my Sonnes, & my daughters. By which places, and many others, it doth euidently appeare, that the benefittes which are imparted to vs, by iustification, are more, and better, then Gods not imputing to vs that punishment, which is due to sinne. Since withall, he giueth vs his grace, and cleanesse of hart, and vertues; and infuseth the spirit of our Lord, whereby we may keep his law; and so, that (vnder the title of being his children, and of exercising our selues in good workes,) we may eternally enioy him. And because Christ did pur­chase these blessings for vs, togeather with the pardon of the paine; he may well be proclaimed, with a full mouth, to be the Sauiour of vs, from our sinne; and We are infini­tely more bound to God, for freeing our soules from sin, then if he had only forg [...]uen vs the pu­nishment thereof. that much more, for the for­mer respect, then for the later. Because, in vertue of that former, he freeth vs from the guilt, and bringeth vs to a detestation of sinne; and obtei­neth for vs a kind of participation of God, at the present; and a good title, for our eternally posses­sing him in heauen. Whereby, he deliuereth vs from a greater mischeife, and obteineth blessings for vs of greater weight, then would haue been, [Page 462]if he had but freed vs only, from any payn [...] whatsoeuer.

CHAP. LXXXIX.
That sinne doth not remaine in iust Persons; but that the guilt of sinne, is destroyed in them; and that they are cleane, and acceptable to God.

IS it possible, that the blindnesse of some, can arriue so farre, as to thinke, that the fauour of Christ Iesus, reacheth to this; that from them, in whome they say, that sinne it selfe, doth still remayne, yet not only the punishment is remoo­ued; but that also (for as much, as they say, they are incorporated into Iesus Christ, (who is so be­loued by his Father) they are beloued, and are as­ceptable, and cleane, because Christ is so? Wel how­soeuer it may seeme to them, that it is to honour Iesus Christ, to Behold the plea­sing mask of this er­ [...]our [...] but looke on a little, & you shall see it, ta­ken off. thinke so higly of the loue, which his Father beareth him; as that it [...]uercometh the detestation which he carrieth to those persons, in whom sinne remaines; yet such honour as this, is wholy contrary to true honour, and to the truth of holy Scripture. It Note. would certainly be no honour, for a Iudge, that he should for beare to punish, or that he should fauour wicked persons, because they dwell with his Sonne. For it would appeare thereby, both that such a Sonne, were no perfect louer of vertue, in that he so lou [...]d wicked [...]ruants; and that the Pather, were no louer of [Page 463] Iustice, since he tolerated and loued them, whom he ought to punish, without any partiall res­pect.

They who are to be the acceptable seruant [...] of Christ our Lord, must not haue the guilt of [...]ortail sinne, in their harts; since he is the head which giueth the influxe into them (as into liuing members) of his spirit, and grace; whereby, they leade a life, estranged from sinne, and like to his. For a horrible corporall Monster, would that be; which should haue the head of a man, and the body of a brute beast. And They make ous Lord a kind of monster, who ma [...] his liuing member [...] vncleane & sinne­full. so would it be a kind of spirituall monster, that vnder a head, which were iust, and pure, and full of vertues, there should be liuing members, which yet were so ve­ry contrary to it. The branches are fresh, and full of fruit, when they liue in the vine. And by this comparison, our Lord was pleased, that we should vnderstand, that the members, which are incorporated to him by grace, are like those o­thers; enioying benefittes of their owne, which they receiue from him, and by him; that so it may be accomplished, which S. Paul Rom. 8. saith, That it is ordained by God, that they, who are to be saued, should be conforme to the image of his Sonne. But how can there now, be a resemblance be­tweene that head, which euer kept the com­maundements of his Father; and those members, which though, they may be pardoned, By im­putation only as the Prote­stants say; & not by any inhe­rent iu­stice. and iustifyed, are still breaking, with a perfect breach, the first, and the ninth commandment of God. [Page 464] Nor is there any participation, betweene goodnesse & wickednesse; nor betweene Christ, and such as breake the commaundments of his Father. For as much as himselfe did preach, That not euery one, who should call him, Lord, Lord, should enter into the Kingdome of heauen, but he that would do the will of his Father. And so far off is it from truth, that the fauour of Christ is to be thus vnderstood, That they who breake the commaundments, should be in the grace ey­ther of God, or of him; as that our Lord himselfe sayd, Yf Iean. 15. you keepe my commaundments, you shall remayne in my loue, as I haue kept the commaunde­ments of my Father, and do remayne in his loue.

Now who is he, that will hope, that whi­lest he breakes the commaundments, he is bele­ued by the Father, in respect of Iesus Christ; since Christ, by keeping those commaundments, doth remaine in the loue of his Father. But Protestāts would faine mak thēselues belieue, that there were no necessity of kee­ping the comman­dements, and yet forsooth, that God and they did loue one ano­ther, very hartily. Without doubt, the slaue shall not be loued, but by the same way, that the Sonne was loued; nor will God im­brace with his grace, and loue, but such as shall keep the commaundments, as hath euidently byn already shewed. And (to the end that no man may be deceiued in this,) when he had formerly said, Be Ioan. 15. you in me, and I wilbe in you; he added afterward, Be you, in my loue. And to declare what it was, to be in him, and in his loue, he said, Yf you shalbe in me, and my wordes be in you, whatso­euer thinge you would obteine, you shall aske, and it shalbe giuen you. So that whosoeuer disobayeth his wordes, must not thinke that he is in his loue; nor [Page 465]that he is incorporated into his body, as a liuing member. For this sentence of holy Scripture standeth fast, The Sap. 4. wicked man, and his wicked­nes, is abhorred by God. And to declare how they who are his, are not to be abhorred, but euen, in themseues, to be loued; he sayd to his disciples, I say not now, that I will pray to the Father for you; for The eternall Father doth not only par­don vs for the loue of Christ; but when we are iu­stifyed he doth loue our very selues. the Father himselfe doth loue you, because you haue loued, and haue belieued, that I came from him. As if he had sayd, A Ioan. 14. & 16. whyle since, I sayd, I will pray to the Father; and he will giue you another com­forter; but do not you conceaue, that I will so pray for you, as in the world a man desires his friend sometyms, to bestow somewhat vpon some others, to whome that friend is not a friend; & so that which he giueth them, is only because he loueth the man much, that intreateth him; and those others, are as far from being beloued, and accepted, as they were before. But heere it is not so; For the Father loueth you, in regard that you haue loued, and belieued me; and you are pleasing to him; and you haue leaue (as people which is beloued, by his loue of your selues; and which enioyeth grace, and iu­stice, which is your owne) to appeare in his high pre­sence, and to aske all that, whereof you haue need, in my name. And that, which I aske of him, for you, is, as for people that is beloued; and to which the Father, doth impart his blesings; both because I desire them, and because I desire them for you.

Such are they, whome Iesus Christ doth carry incorporated with himselfe, as liuing members; and for whome he obtained grace, [Page 466]whereby they might be pleasing to the Father, when they had it not; and after it was obteined that they might bring forth workes, which Al this originally by the on­ly good­nes and promise of God & through the meri [...]s of Christ our Lord carry a condignity to the deseruing of eternall life; as a iust reward of such seruices, and as an in­heritance duly deriued vpon sonnes. And if it seeme a thing disproportionable to the basenes and weakenes of mankind, to do a thing which carryeth a proportion of merit to the sublimity, and eternity of that heauenly kingdome; Note, and be no longer scandali­zed at thyn own conceits; for the Catholike doctrine, being rightly vnder­stood, will giue thee no cause. thou art not heere, to looke vpon a man, as of himselfe; but as being honoured, and accom­panied with that celestiall grace, which is infused to his soule; and so made These are great wordes; but it was the holy Ghost which spake thē. partaker of the diuine nature, as S Peter 2. Pet. 1. saith. And do thou consi­der him, as a liuing member of Iesus Christ our Lord; which being incorporated to him doth liue, and worke, by that spirituall inffluxe, which commeth from him, and whereby he doth par­take his merits. Now Note. these thinges are so high, as that they carry an equality with those other thinges, which are hoped for; and they are sufficient, to enable vs to say with truth, That such as liue so, do fullfill the law of God, and do that, which S. Paul required of the Col 1. Colossians, and the I h [...]s [...]. 1. Thessalonians, when he aduised them, To liue worthy of God. Of Note this infe­rence. whome, he would neuer haue expected the discharge of so that by the meanes aforesayd, it might be per­formed; and that it was more the worke of God, [Page 467]then of men. For instantly, the same Apostle gi­ueth thanks to God; For making them worthy of the portion of the Saints, in light. And what kind of portion this is, the Prophet Hieremy Thre [...] ­ [...]. declareth saying, My portion is our Lord; and therefore I will hope for him. And Dauid sayth of God, Thou art my portion for euer. Of this portion he is worthy, who doth Et fa­cere, & pa­ti magn, Christianis est. accomplish the law of God, by those workes aforesayd; and who is found faithfull, in those trialls that God doth send him; as it is written, Our Lord did try them, and he found them worthy of himselfe. And both for these, and those, it is also written, That God will giue them, the hire of the labours, of his Saints.

CHAP. XC.
That the graunting, that there is perfect cleanesse from sinne, in such as are iust, by the merits of Christ Iesus, doth not only not diminish his honour, but much more declare it.

LET no A wise & confor­table, and wel groū ­ded dis­course. man feare, to attribute the height of spirituall honour, and the aboundance of spirituall riches, and perfect cleanes from sinne, to them, whom the heauenly Father doth iustify, by the merits of Iesus Christ our Lord. Let no man thinke, that the qualifying of such persons so, doth put the honour of the same Lord, to any preiudice. For since all that which they haue, descendeth vpon them by his meanes, not only [Page 468]doth not their being so full of dignity dishonour him; but it doth publish, & magnify his honour. Since it is euident, that how much more iust, and more beautifull they are, of so much more valew do the merits of him, plainely appeare to be, who purchased so great a blessing for them, which of themselues, they neither had, nor could procure. The Scripture sayth, That Th [...]en. 14. where the manger is full the strength of the Oxe is made apparent; & the reason is, because by his labour, he filled the same full of meate. And S. Paul 1. Thes. 2. sayth, to some whome he had holpen forward, by his doctrine, and by his labours, That they were his honour, & his crowne, in the sight of our Lord. And then, how much more, will they be the crowne of our Lord Iesus himselfe? They, who by him are drawn to the honour, of being his sonnes; and to be full of treasures, and blessings; which honour is so much the more, as those blessinges are the greater.

Our Our aduersa­rves make him such a one; whē they conceaue that he al­loweth not that the Saints should be honoured by our in­u [...]cations whylest yet them­selues do giue the same ho­nour to sinnefull men. Lord, is not like some persons, who are in paine, or, at least, not greatly pleased with the honour, or vertue of their seruants▪ as con­ceauing that it doth obscure their owne; or like certaine vaine women, who fly from being at­tended by fayre seruants, least so the flowre of their owne beauty should be blasted. But make thou no doubt; but that Iesus Christ our Lord, hath a certaine kind of Charity, which exceedeth all humane conceit, as S. Paul sayth; in In in­f [...]itev [...]n chating of God. esteeming our good, as his owne; and to the end that we might be made rich in graces, he left his most [Page 469]worthy life, vpon the Crosse. The naturall sonne he is of God, and we are sonnes adopted through him; and he being the only sonne, did exalt vs to the title of brother hood; giuing vs his God, for our God; and his Father., for our Father, as himselfe said. I Ioan. [...]0. ascend to my Father, and to your Father; to my God, and to your God. And so, as Ioan. [...]. S. Iohn saith, (speaking of the same Lord) we saw the glo­ry of him, as the glory, of the only begotten sonne. And he saith also of him, That he is full of grace, & truth. Therfore the honour, and spirituall riches, of these adopted sonnes, must be such, as be­commeth the sonnes of a Father, who is God. And if grace, and truth, were made by Iesus Christ, as S. Iohn Ioan. 1. saith, it was not made, that it might remayne alone in him; but that it might be deri­ued downe vpon vs; and that we might take some part of his fulnesse; and this, in such abundance, that S. Paul 2. Cor. 9. calleth it a gift, which as now we are, cannot be related by vs. And to the end that we may know, the riches of that inheritance, which in his company we may hope to enioy; the same S. Paul Ephes. beseecheth God, To giue him the spirit of wisdome, and of reuelation; because that blessing, is greater, then our reason, is able to reach vnto.

Glory, and grace, and thankes, be to thee O Lord for euer; who so hast honoured, and en­riched vs with present giftes; and hast comforted vs, with the hope, of being the heyres of God, togeather with thy selfe; and who didst carry so [Page 470]great loue to vs, as that it wrought better with thee, then it did with Iob. 41. Iob; That thou mightst not cate thy bitte of bread alone, but that the orphane also, might take part thereof. And as in thee, there was the loue of a Father, and that no barren loue, but fruitfull of many blessinges; so thou O Lord, being pleased to make vs thy companions herein, didst pray Ioan. 17. the Father, in this manner; That If this be well penetra­ted, inough is sayd in few wordes. the loue▪ wherewith thou hast loued me, may be in them; and with this loue, those other blessinges, whereof, one, did (both for himselfe, and for those others, who were to enioy them) speake af­ter this manner, Reioycing, I will reioyce in our Lord; and my soule shall ioy in God. For he hath clad me with the robes of saluation, and he hath hemm'd me in with a garment of iustice; as the man who is a spouse, is honoured by wearing of a crowne; and as the spouse, who is a woman, may be adorned, with curious, and rich dressings.

Which Reade heere the true state of this question, betweene Catholiks and Pro­testants. Confession, with such others as are made in the holy Scripture, of those benefits, which come to vs, by Iesus Christ, doth certainly, ascribe more honour to him, then, That neither the vertue of his bloud; nor of his grace; nor the vse of his Sacramentes; nor the infusion of the holy Ghost; nor the incorporating a man to Christ him­selfe; are sufficient to deliuer him from sinne; but only, that he may not be condemned for it. What An o­pinion most iniu­rious to Almighty God. is this but to thinke wickedly of God the Fa­ther? Who (promising togeather with his only sonne) to send an entiere remedy against sinne; and, that sin, [Page 471]in his tyme, was to be brought to an end) doth not yet performe what he promised▪ Since, although his Sonne be come, yet sinne remaineth euen in ve­ry them, who participate with the same Sonne of his. How then can that word be accomplshed, which sayth, I Ezech. 36. will powre cleane waters vpon you; and you shalbe cleansed, from all your filth; if yet indeed, they cleanse me not; but that they cast a cleane mantle ouer me, by saying, That the iustice, and purity of Iesus Christ our Lord, is imputed to me, as myne owne. Now this is rather, to couer my vn­cleanesse, then to take it away. And he that affir­meth this vntruth, doth consequently deny, Iesus Christ our Lord An o­pinion most dis­honoura­ble to christ our Lord; for it allow­eth him, to be but a Sauiour by halues. to be the messias, who was promised in the law; and he must therefore expect an other, who may deliuer him, not only from the condemnation due to sinne, but from the sinne al­so it selfe. Since it is cleare, that he who should de­liuer vs from both, were to be a better Sauiour, then he that were to do it but from one. To these huge and headlong precipices, doth the blind­nesse of pride conduct such persons, as are gouer­ned by it.

CAAP. XCI.
How some passages of holy Scripture are to be vnder­stood; wherein it is said, that Christ Iesus is our Iustice; and such other propositions as that is, for the better declaration of the precedent Chapters.

THE Ho prosecu­teth the same dis­course, in excellent manner, and it conuin­ceth. manner which the holy Scripture hol­deth, in saying that Christ is made vnto vs, Wisdome, 1. Cor. 1. Iustice, Sanctification, and Redempti­on, should not giue, any body occasion to thinke, that iust men haue not a iustice in them, which is their owne. For if we be only iust, because Christ is iust; and not for the iustice which is in vs; as well may we say, that there is no wisdome in vs, whereby we are wise; neither yet any sanctificati­on, or redemption. S. Iohn 1. Io. 2. saith, That the vncti­on of the holy Ghost, which teacheth vs concerning all thinges, is in the Iust. S. Paul 1. Cor. [...]. saith, you are san­ctifyed. And S. Peter 1. Pet. 1. saith, you are redeemed from your vaine conuersation. Now He doth eui­dently shew, & at large, by many places of Scripture, that the Protestāt interpre­tation of this, con­cerning iustificati­on, is not only vn­true, but most ab­surd. for as much as Christ was not redeemed, (as hauing not commit­ted sinne) this redemption is to be in vs; whereby we are said to be redeemed, notwithstanding that the Scripture affirmeth, that to vs, Christ is made redemption. For in this, and those other manners of speach, the thing which it would say is this, That th [...]se thinges, are giuen vs by his merit. The A­postle Cole [...] 3. saith, That Christ is our life▪ but it will not [Page 473]follow heereupon that iust persons do not liue, in respect that our Lord sayth, he that eateth me, l [...]ueth by me. Nor should he haue the reason of a man, who, because he might heare it sayd, That God is the beauty of the Rose, or the strength of the Lyon, or the like; would therfore deny, that these creaturs haue a kind of beauty, or strength, which is distinct, from the strength, or beauty of God. The holy Deut. 30. Scripture sayth, God is thy life, and the length of thy dayes; which manner of speach doth but imploy, that God is the efficient cause of these thinges, and he that giueth them to vs.

Neither yet, must errour take away encou­ragement from this other speach of holy Scrip­ture, That we are made the iustice of God, in Iesus Christ; and, that the Father made vs accepta­ble to himselfe in his beloued senne; and the like. For this manner of speach, is but to make vs know (as was sayd before) the mystery of Christ his being the head; and that, iust persons, are his li­uing members who relye vpon him; to the end that the good which he bestowed vpon them, may both be conserued, and increased. For if, by such manner of speach, we would vnderstand, that iust persons had these good thinges in them, no otherwise then because Christ Iesus hath them, what could we answere to what S. Paul Rom. 3. sayth, That iust persons, are iustified, by the redemption which is, in Christ Iesus; whylest yet, as he was in no captiuity, so could not he be capable of redemp­tion; and therefore, it must be in them who are [Page 474]iustifyed, although it be procured for them, by our Lord. The same Apostle Rom. 8. sayth, Who shall separate vs, from the loue of God, which is in Christ Iesus; but it followeth not vpon this, that the loue of God is not in vs, and euen deeply in vs; since, he sayth elsewhere, That Rom. 5. the loue of God is powred into our harts, by the holy Ghost, which is giuen vs. The same manner of speach, doth he al­so hold, when he sayth, of naturall blessinges, That Act. 17. in God, we liue, and moue, and haue our be­ing. Yet will no man say, That we haue no be­ing, or life, or distinct operations, from them of God. The Scripture vseth this manner of speach, to make vs know, that neither we haue that bles­sing of our selues; nor yet that in our selues we can conserue it, & sometymes the Apostle sayth, That 1. Cor. 2. those blessinges are not ours; and that we do not obtaine them for our selues; as where our Lord sayth to his disciples; You Ioan. 15. chose not me, but I chose you. And in another place he sayth, It Matt. 10. is not you that speake, but the spirit of your Father, speaketh in you. And least any body might vnder­stand by this, that a man were not able to work [...] well, and with liberty, the Scripture sayth, in other places, That Ezech. 30. man, doth performe such a good work, without making mention of any thing which therein, is done by God. I (sayth God, by Ezech. 1 [...]. Ezechiel) will giue you a new hart; & the same Prophet sayth, Make to your selues, a new hart. S. Paul Rom. 9. sayth in one place, It is neither he that willeth, nor he that runneth. And yet elsewhere he [Page 475]sayth againe, I ( 1. Cor. 9. will, that which is good; and I runne, & not as to any thing vncertaine. And the like he sayth, often elsewhere, to giue vs therby to vn­derstand, That The true Catholike doctrine concer­ning this point, is heer sum­med vp, into one sentence. the good which we haue, we haue of God; & that both God & man, do concur to the accomplishment of a good worke; but yet so, as that the glory both of the one, and the o­ther, is due to God; since all that which is good doth come from him. And by the same manner of speach, our Lord expressed himselfe, when he sayd, My Ioan. 7. doctrine is not myne, but his that sent me. And so he might haue sayd, My workes are not myne; my iustice is not myne; but of him that sent me. And he that by this manner of speach, should inferre, that our Lord had not iustice, or doctrine, or other blessings in himselfe, would be easily dis­cerned, to be in a grosse, and wicked errour. His saying, My doctrine is not myne, doth but af­firme thus much, I haue it not of my selfe, but of my Father; and so, by the like wordes, it ought not to be inferred, That iust persons, haue no iustice in them, which is their owne. And with this a­greeth that, which is sayd in the Sess [...] ­de Iustif. Councell of Trent, That the iustice is ours because we are iustify­ed by it, whilst it is in our soules, as in a subiect. And that which our Lord sayth, both heere, and else­where also, by that speach of his, The word which you haue heard, is not myne, doth also agree with that which hath heere beene sayd; because how­soeuer iustice is in vs, yet haue we it not, of our selues; but it is imparted, by the hand of God; [Page 476]and therefore it is sayd to be the iustice of God.

CHAP. XCII.
That we must fly fast from pride, which is wont to grow vp apace, by occasion of good workes; conside­ring the much, which is merited by them; and of a particuler instruction which Christ hath giuen vs, whereby we may profit against this tentation.

THERE It it a good thing to know a truth, which it doth im­port vs to know; but it is better if we know how to vse it wel. is a great deale of difference, betweene the knowing of a Truth, and the knowing how to vse it rightly; for the first, without the later, will not only profit nothing, but do hurt. For as S Paul sayth, He that thinketh he knoweth somwhat, may perhaps not know it, as he ought. And this he sayd, because some Christians knew, that the thing which was sa­crificed vp to Idolls, might as well be eaten, as that which was not sacrificed; but they serued themselues ill of that knowledge, because they did eate thereof, in the presence of such, as were scandalized thereat. All The end that the Au­thor had, in ma­king this discourie. this haue I sayd to thee, to the end that thou mayst not content thy selfe with knowing this Truth, That such as are in the grace of our Lord, are iust, and accepta­ble, by that grace, and iustice which is in them; and that the valew of their good workes is so high, as to deserue, that this grace should be aug­mented in them, and that glory also should be im­parted to them; but that thou mayst also procure [Page 477]to lodge this truth in his true place. For men there are, who vse it ill, more or lesse; the for­mer running hazard of being proud, and the later of pusillanimity, and sloath.

Many It is often, more easy to come to pen­nance, frō sin, then for men of vertue, to mantaine themselus in humili­ty. haue I seene, who by the good­nes of God became free, in a short tyme, from great miseries, wherein they had remayned a long tyme; and the same men, haue not bin free in ma­ny yeares, from those dangers, which presented themselues by occasion of their good workes. Re­member that which Dauid Psalm. 139. said, That wicked persons, did spread a snare for him neere his way; yea and that also they did spread it, in the very way. For not only do our enemies pretend to draw vs out of the good way, by inciting vs to do ill; but euen in the very way it selfe of good workes, they pro­cure to do vs mischiefe; prouoking vs, not to vse the good, as we ought. And so that cometh to be verifyed vpon vs, which the Eccles. 5. Wise man saith, Another mischeife haue I seene, vnder the sunne; Great riches, heaped vp, in preiudice of the owner. For it were better for a man, not to haue a thing, then not to vse it as he ought.

To these men it happens, that seing the good workes which they do, and hearing talke of the much which they merit by them; their heades run round, with the vanity, and conceited de­light thereof, Consi­deration, which may seru [...] for the preuen­ting of pride; or at least for the curing of it. without considering the many faultes, which in those very workes they com­mit; and without acknowledging them to come from the mercy of God, as indeed they do; and [Page 478]without procuring to passe further on, like peo­ple of a little, and empty hart, which is satisfyed with small matters. Whereas on the other side, it is reason, as S. Bernard saith; That we should not be negligent, whilest we cōsider those things which God doth in vs; but sollicitous, to obtaine the much, which yet is wanting to vs. Some o­thers againe there are so blind, (through an igno­rant kind of Pride) as that, how soeuer This seemeth not so im­possible, as indeed it is true. their tongue be saying somwhat else, yet their hart doth really belieue, that God is bound to giue thē all such benefittes for their meritts, (without considering, that euen they, are giuen them by the grace of God) as they shall desyre, or may hope for, at his handes. And this they expect vnder such a title of more iustice, as that if he deny them any thinge, they are complaining in their hartes; and do hold themselues agrieued; why lest they forsooth seruing him so well, he doth them not iustice, by denying them any thing.

Let not this wicked pride seize on thee; for How God ab­horreth Pride. it is now long since God complaineth of it by Isay Isa. 58. saying, They demaund the iudgements of iu­stice at my handes; and they come to God and say, Why haue we fasted: and yet thou hast not behold vs; we haue humbled our soules, and thou hast not appreoued it. But, to the end that this so dangerous poison, may not infuse it selfe into thy soule, (with others, which do also flow frō thēce) thou art to lay hold, vpon that excellent doctrine, which our Lord Christ Iesus deliuered in S. Luke, after this manner. [Page 479] Which of you, hauing a seruant who goeth to plow & feedes the cattell; and your selfe comming from the field you say instantly to your seruant, Goe thy wayes, and take thyne ease; and doth not rather say, Go dresse my supper, and make thy selfe ready, to come and serue me, till I haue eaten and drunke; and then, thou also, shalt cate, and drinke? Doth peraduenture that mai­ster, stand thanking of his seruant, for doing those thinges, which he commaunded? I thinke not. Well then, let it be so in your case; and when you haue per­formed all those thinges, which are inioyned, say, We are vnprofitable seruants, and we did but that, which we were obliged to. From these wordes thou art to fetch a knowledge, of how profitable a conside­ration it is, for a Christian to hold himselfe, the slaue of God; since our Lord, commaundeth vs so to call our selues. And yet this must not be done, with that kind of hart, wherewith the slaue vseth to serue, which is a hart of feare, and not of loue. For as S. Paul Rom. 8. sayth, You did not againe receaue the spirit of seruitude in feare, but you receiued the spirit of adoption, of the sonnes of God, wherein you cry out to God & say, Father Father. For, as S. Augustine saith, the difference betweene the old law, and the Ghospell, in a word, is that, which is betweene feare, and loue. Leauing therefore a part, To ser­ue God; for feare, is lesse good; to do it for loue is ex­cellent. this spirit of seruility, (because it belongeth not, so pro­perly, to the sonnes of God) and the spirit also of He speaketh heere of filial fear. feare, (as lesse perfect though it be not cuill) since it is the gift of God to feare him, euen for the punishments which he inflicteth, do thou vn­derstand [Page 480]by the name of seruant, a person who is subiect to God, by more strong and iust obliga­tion, then any slaue can be to his Lord, how deare soeuer he haue cost him. And A faythfull and louing seruant, well des­cribed. looking euer v­pon this, whatsoeuer he doth well, eyther with­in himselfe, or exteriourly, he will do it for the glory, and to giue gust to God; as a true-harted slaue, will giue a iust account vnto his Lord, of whatsoeuer he is able to gaine. So also, wil he for­beare to be slack, or sluggish, in seruing him, v­pon the present day; notwithstanding that he had serued many yeares before. Nor will he hold him­selfe disobliged, from the doing of one seruice, in respect that he hath done another. But, as the ho­ly Luc. 17. Ghospell saith, he carrieth a continuall hun­gar, and thirst, after iustice. For he esteemeth all to be little, considering both the much that he hath receaued; and which the Lord, in whose ser­uice he is, hath merited. By this meanes, doth he accomplish that, which S. Paul Philip. [...]. saith of himselfe, That forgetting those things which were past, he gaue himselfe new spirites: towardes the pur­suite of that, which was then▪ to come. He doth al­so know, that from those thinges which he is able to do, how great so euer they may be, no profit accreweth vnto God; nor is God obliged to e­steem that, which he doth, if the works be consi­dered, as growing from our naturall power, and strength; since a man is not able to pay, euen what he oweth. And therefore doth the holy Luc. 17. Ghos­pell say, When you haue done all those thinges which [Page 481]you haue beene commanded, say, We are vnprofitable seruants; and we did but that, which we were bound to do. I say How the best man is in­deed an vnprofi­table ser­uant; and in what sense a­gaine he is not so. vnprofitable, in respect of God; but for as much as concerneth themselues, they gaine life eternall; as shalbe shewed in the next Chapter. And in this sort, vnderstanding the name of slaue, thou wilt find it to be a name of humility, of obe­dience, of diligence, and of loue. And this feeling thereof, had the sacred Virgin Mary; when, being taught by the Holy Ghost, she The vnspeake­able hu­mility of the incō ­prehensi­ble virgin Mary the B. Mother of God. answered, Be­hould Luc. 1. heere is the slaue of our Lord; let that be ful­filled in me, which is agreeable to his word. She con­fesseth her owne basenes; she offereth vp her loue and seruice, with a liberall hart; without ascri­bing any thing vnto her selfe, by way of any o­ther honour, or interest, then only, in being carefull, to serue as a slaue, in that, which our Lord was commanding her, for his glory. All this did she feele within, and this did she out­wardly expresse, by deliuering her selfe in the name of slaue. S. Paul doth call himselfe, and prize himselfe by this name, when he Rom. 1. sayth, Paul, the slaue of Iesus Christ. And, in a word, so are al they, who serue God, to acknowledg them­selues; whether they be high, or low; vnles they be content, that euen the seruice which they are doing, proue to be of more preiudice, then aduan­tage to them.

Procure therefore to profit by this truth; and thou shalt find a powerfull remedy against the danger, which groweth by occasion of good [Page 482]workes; not There is no dan­ger in good workes; but in the vanity of mans hart who doth them. from the workes themselues, but by the imperfection of such as do them. And vse thou to say, both with thy mouth, and with thy hart, very often, I am A iust and true acknow­ledgeme­nt which ought to be made by the hart and tongue of all true Christiās. the slaue of God; and I am so, because God, is that which he is; and for a thousand millions of benefits, which I haue receaued from his hand. And how much soeuer I might do for him, I should neuer be able to pay the least of those paces, which he, being made man, did make for me; nor the least of those torments which he endured for me; nor the least sinne which he hath pardoned; nor any other, which he hath preuented; nor any good purpose which he hath giuen me, towardes his seruice; nor one day of heauen, which I expect heereafter; and, as Gen. 31. Iacob affirmed, I am lesse, then any of the mercyes of God. And if our Lord do say, that they who do all that which they are commanded, are yet to humble themselues; and affirme, that Luc. 17. they are vnprofitable seruants, & that they did but that which they were bound to do; how much more then, am I to humble my selfe; since I fall into so many faults, by ignorance, by weak­nes, or by malice. A slaue I am, and a wicked slaue; and I serue not God, so much as I am able; and much lesse, as much as I owe him. And if he had cast his eye vpon that which I haue deserued of him; a long tyme is past, since he would haue throwne me into hell, for the sinnes which I haue committed, and for many other also, into which he might iustly haue permitted me to fall.

Let this be therfore, the feeling which thou hast of thy selfe; let this be the place wherein thou [Page 483]mayst put thy selfe; since this is that, which, for thy part, thou dost deserue. And let thy care be, to serue our Lord, the best thou canst, without reflecting greatly vpon how much it is; and without conceauing that God is bound to thank thee for it; or that thou art able, as Iob Iob. [...]. sayth, To answere him one for a thousand, of what thou oughtst him. And when thou hearest men speake of the much, that good workes deserue; let not thy hart grow vaine vpon it; but say, It is thy mercy O Lord thankes be giuen to thee; who hast im­parted such dignity, to our vnworthy seruices. And by such meanes as this, be thou euer sure to re­mayne, in thy true place, of being a negligent, & vnworthy slaue.

CHAP. CXIII.
That a man being humbled and abased by the contents of the last Chapter, may enioy that greatnes which our Lord vouchsafeth to impart, to the workes of such as are iust, with confidence, and gratitude.

THY soule being thus secured, from the a­foresayd daungers, by this consideration, which our Lord doth teach vs, thou mayst secu­rely enioy the greatnes, and dignity, which he giueth to such, as are his, and thou art to blesse him, in regard that, euen to such as naturally are but slaues, he infuseth his grace, whereby they are made the adopted sonnes of God; and if sonnes, they [Page 484]are heyres togeather with Christ, as S. Paul Rom. 8. sayth. Now because it is reason, that such as are receaued for the sonnes of God, should liue, and worke, according to the condition of the Father; our Lord giues them the Holy Ghost, and many guiftes, and vertues, whereby they may serue him, and performe his law, and giue him gust. And they, who for any seruices which they could do, how great soeuer they were (being conside­red in themselues) did not passe aboue the roofe of their owne houses, haue now drunke deeply of the water of grace. And How grace doth dignify our works & by what meanes this growes. this is so power­full, that it maketh a fountaine, euen in the bowells of them, which sproutes vp, as high as eternall life; by the valew whereof, their good workes (how little soeuer they be) do also rise vp, & reach to eternall life; because they deserue it, for the reasons which are already touched. And now, reflect vpon the difference, that runs between thee, being considered in thy selfe, and thee, when thou art considered in God, and in his grace. Of thy selfe, thou art but a huge bill of debt; and how much soeuer thou doest, thou art not only vnable to deserue eternall life; but not so much as to pay what thou owest; whereas, in God, & in his grace, the selfe same seruice which thou art bound to do, is receaued into accompt for merit of eternall life. And our Lord, without being obliged, so much as to thanke thee, and much lesse to pay thee, for that which thou doest for him; doth yet ordayne thinges in such [Page 485]sort, as that, the good workes of his seruantes, may be rewarded by their possessing him in hea­uen. And though God owe nothing to any man, for that which man is able to do for him; yet he oweth it How diuinely did S. Au­gustin ex­presse this by saying that Deus is debitor bonitati suae; I he debtour to his own goodnes. to himselfe, whose ordination is, in all iustice, and reason, yea and that, most entire­ly to be accomplished.

Giue therefore glory vnto God, for these fauours; and know, that if he had not bin a Fa­ther of mercy to S. Paul, in giuing him a life, which was full of merits; S. Paul would not haue presumed to say, when he was neere his death, That the iust iudge, was to giue him a crowne of iustice. God God sheweth his mercy in first gi­uing his grace, and then his iustice, in rewar­ding it, ac­cording to his pro­mise; and it all re­doundeth to his glo­ry. crowned him by iustice; but first he gaue him the merites of grace; and so doth all redound to the glory of God; eyther vnder the title of a iust Rewarder, of that which we haue done well; or as a mercifull, and primitiue Im­parter, of the good which we haue done; and no man can deny this, but he that will depriue God of his honour. Put thy selfe therefore into thyne owne true place; and esteeme thy selfe worthy of hell, and of all miseries, and vnworthy of the least good. And See heere the excellent immacu­late do­ctrine of the holy Catholik Church. yet be not dismaied by this consideration of thyne owne basenes; but dischar­ging all kind of pusillanimity, hope thou in the mercy of God; that since he hath placed thee, in his way, he will strengthen thee so farre, as to pro­ceed therein; till thou mayst gather the fruit of eternall life, from those good workes, which heere by his grace thou didst performe.

CHAP. XCIIII.
That from the loue which we beare our selues, we must draw a reason of louing our neighbours.

SINCE already thou hast vnderstoood, with what eyes thou art to looke, both vpon thy self, and vpon Christ our Lord; it remaines for the fulfilling of the prophets wordes, which bid thee See, that thou know with what eyes thou art to looke vpon thy neighbours; that so, on all sides, thou maiest haue light; and that no darknes may find thee out. And for this purpose, thou art to note that he beholdeth his neighbour well, who beholdeth him with eyes, which The only good payre of spectacles through which we are to looke v­pon our Neigh­bours. first did passe both though himselfe, and through Christ our Lord. My mea­ning is this. When a man findeth trouble, and paine, for as much as concernes his body; or else affliction, ignorance, and frailty, for as much as concernes his soule; it is playne, that he fee­leth incommodity, and his sicknes troubleth him; and he desireth nothing lesse, then to be despised, or cast of for his infirmityes, but to be endured, pittied, and relieued. Now by that which passeth in himselfe, as well in suffering afflictions, as in desiring the redresse thereof; let him learne to know, what his neighbour feeleth, who is made of the same frayle nature; and let him behold, and support, and releeue him, with the same compas­sion, wherewith he beholdeth, and desireth, that [Page 487]himselfe may be releeued in like case, and so shall that be accomplished, which the Eccles. 31. Scripture sayth, The thinges of thy neighbour, vnderstand thou of thy selfe; For otherwise, what thinge can be more abhominable, then for a man to haue pitty of his owne infirmities, and to shew rigour to­wards them of others; to desire that al men should endure him with a great deale of patience, his owne errours seeming small; whylest himselfe, will haue no patience with others, but make of euery moate of theirs, a beame.

A man who desireth, that all men would looke on him, and comfort him, whylest himselfe will be carelesse, and curst to others, deserueth not to be called a man; since he beholdes not men, with the eyes of a man, which, it becomes, to be full of pitty. The holy Scripture Prou. 10. sayth, To haue a weight, and a weight; a measure, and a mea­sure, is an abomination before God. Giuing vs so to vnderstand, that he who hath Note. a great measure, wherewith to receaue, and another little one, wherewith to giue, is disagreable to the eyes of his diuine Maiesty. And his punishment shall be, that since he would not measure to his neighbour, with that mercy wherewith he would be measu­red to; God will measure to him, with that cruell, and straite measure, wherewith he measured to his neighbour. For it is written, That Matt. 7. with the same measure, wherewith you measure, it shalbe measured to you agayne; and iudgement without mer­cy, shalbe shewed to him, who sheweth not mercy. And [Page 488] An ex­cellent aduice. therefore thou, O Virgin, in whatsoeuer con­dition thou seest thy neighbour, consider what thou wouldst feele in thy selfe; and what thou desirest that others should feele concerning thee, if to thee that thinge should happen; and with the same eyes, which passe through thy selfe, haue thou compassion of him: and giue him remedy in what thou mayst; and so God will measure vnto thee, with the same measure of piety, wherewith thou measurest to him. According to his owne wordes, Blessed Matt. 5. are the mercifull, for they shall obteine mercy. And thus shalt thou draw, the know­ledge of thy neighbour, out of the knowledge of thy selfe, and thou wilt be compassionate towardes all men.

CHAP. XCV.
That from the knowledge of the loue, which Christ bea­reth to vs, we are to draw a reason, for louing our neighbours.

CONSIDER By the conside­ration of the loue of Christ our Lord to our Neigh­bours, we shall be dra [...]n to loue them te [...]derly. now, how thou art to draw this loue of thy neighbours, out of the knowledg of Christ. Consider with how great mercy, the sonne of God made himselfe man, for the loue of men; and with how great care, he did (through­out his whole life) procure their good; and with how excessiue, both loue, and griefe, he offered his life for them, vpon the Crosse. And as, by re­flecting vpon thy selfe, thou didst behold thy [Page 489] neighbour, with humane and gentle eyes; so con­sidering Christ, thou wilt behould him An ex­cellent considera­tiō, sweet, and solid. with Christian eyes; that is, with such eyes, as wher­with he was pleased to behould thee. For if Christ remaine in thee, thou wilt haue the same sense or feeling of thinges, which he had; and thou wilt see with how great reason, thou art o­bliged to tolerate thy Neighbours fraylty, whom he loued, and esteemed, as the head doth, his body; as the spouse, his fellow-spouse; as a brother, his bre­thren; and as an indulgent Father, his children. Beseech thou our Lord, that he will open thyne eyes, wherewith thou mayst see, that inflamed fire of loue, which burnt in his hart, when he went vp to the Crosse, for the good of all men; little, and great; good, and bad; past, present, and to come; yea euen for them, who then, were in the act of crucifying him. And consider again, that this loue of his, is not growne cold; but that, if the first death were not sufficient for our re­medy, with the same loue, would he dye againe, wherwith then, he dyed. And as he offered him­selfe corporally once to his Father; so doth he often make this oblation, by actes of will, and with the selfe same loue.

Come He l [...] ­ueth not Christ, who lo­ueth not his neigh­bour, whome Christ did so deerely loue. now, and tell me, who is he, that can find in his hart to be cruell to them, to whome Christ was so full of pitty. How shall he find a way to desire euill, to one whose good, and saluation is so desired, by God. It cannot be spo­ken, nor written, what a profound, and tender [Page 490]loue, is engendred in the hart of a Christian, who considereth not his neighbours, according to externall respects (such as are riches, or kin­red, or the like) but as parts of the very bowels of Christ Iesus; and as a thing knit to Christ, by all the bandes, both of kinred, and friendship. How then can it seeme much to thee, that a man, who is a louer of Christ, shold loue his neighbours, considering, that they are his very mysticall body; and that the same Lord hath sayd, by his owne mouth, That the good, or bad, which he shall do to his Neighbour, our Lord receaueth it, as done to himselfe. And from the deep consideration of these words, the A man that con­sidereth christ our Lord in his neigh­bour, will not only loue that Neigh­bour, but reuere him. good Christian growes to conuerse amongst his neighbours, with a certaine profound reuerence; and with a deep and tender loue; and with a smooth kind of meeknes; by hauing patience with them; and by a watchfull care, not to offend, or hurt them; but rather to profit, and please them. For it seemeth to him, that he is conuersing with Christ himselfe; since he beholdeth him in them, to whome, in his very hart, he doth esteeme himselfe more a slaue, then if they had bought him, by some mighty summe of money. For, considering that deere price which Christ Iesus payd for man (when he pur­chased him vpon the Crosse, with his precious bloud) what can such an one be able to do, but to offer himselfe all, to the seruice of Christ; de­siring, that some occasion were presented, wher­in he might expresse the gratitude, and loue, he [Page 491]beareth to him. And when he heareth this from the mouth of God, If thou loue me, feed me sheep; and againe, He that receaueth one of these little ones, receaueth me; and, He that sheweth workes of mercy to one of them, doth shew them to me; he, I say, doth esteeme it, for An in­compara­ble fauour of God. an incomparable fa­uour, that he hath so close at hand, so fit a means to shew, and exercise, the loue which he beareth to Christ Iesus; the He al­ludeth to Iacob ser­uing for Rachel. labour seeming small which he endureth for his Neighbour; and the yeares seeming short; through the strength of that loue, which he carryeth to Christ, for himselfe; and to others, for the loue of him, and in him. And euer doth he carry at his hart, that to which our enamoured Lord, did so straitly enioyne vs, when he sayd, My Ioan. 13. commandement is this, that you loue one another, as I haue loued you.

CHAP. XCVI.
Of another consideration which teacheth vs, in ex­cellent manner, how we are to carry our selues with our Neighbours.

ADD thou to this, another consideration, of how thou art to behold thy Neighbours; and it is, That although, on the one side, it be a most certaine truth, that our Lord doth not seek, or expect, any returne of retribution for the be­nefites that he bestowes; yet, in other respectes, we find it true, that he giueth nothing at all, for [Page 492]which he expecteth it not. Yet this, is not in re­gard of himselfe, who is so rich, and who cannot increase in being so; and what he giueth, he gi­ueth men, for pure loue; but the returne that he desires, is in respect of our Neighbours, who haue necessity to be esteemed, beloued, and succou­red. Iust as if a man, had lent much money to an­other, and done great matters for him; and then should say; For all that, which I haue done for thee, I haue no need that thou shouldest make me any pay­ment; but all the title that I make against thee, I transferre, and passe ouer, to the person of such an one, who is in necessity; or who is my kinsman, or my seruant. Pay that to him, which thou owest to me, & I shall hold my selfe, for well satisfyed.

In this A con­sideration of great force to­wardes charitable conuersation with our neig­hbours. manner, let a Christian enter into accoumpt with God; and let him consider what he hath receaued of him, as wel, by the affli­ctions, and death, which the sonne of God endu­red for him, as by the other particuler mercyes, which, since his creatiō, were powred vpon him. Not punishing him for his sinnes, nor driuing him a way for his infirmityes; but expecting him to come to pennance; & pardoning him as oft as he desired it; giuing him benefits in requitall of the sinnes, that he cōmitted; with other innumerable blessings, which exceed, all possibility of being reckoned. And let him thinke, that this way of amorous trafficke of God towards him, is to be a kind of A good rule whereby we may grow to esteem & loue our Neigh­bours. patterne, & rule, for the conuersation which a man ought to hold with his neighbour. [Page 493]And that the intentiō, wher with God imparted to him so many fauours, was to giue him to vnder­stand, that howsoeuer his neighbour might not perhaps deserue, to be tolerated, or beloued, or relieued for his owne respect, yet God is pleased, that the benefit, which the other deserueth not for himselfe, should be imparted to that other, for the obligation, whereby he is bound to God; and that he should esteeme himselfe to be in­debted, and euen a very slaue to others, whi­lest he looketh vpon God. For God looking vpon men, did not fynd that he ought any thing to a­ny body; and he will haue that person who is in necessity, to demaund succour vnder this title, Do thou this for me, since God hath done the same for thee. And Apoint which it much cō ­cerneth men to consider. let such a person, be sure to take heed, how he be vnkind, or cruell to­wardes one that hath need of help; least God be so towardes him; depriuing him of the benefits, which already he had imparted, and punishing him as vngratefull for the pardon of his former sinnes; as he proceeded with that wicked ser­uant, who hauing receiued at the handes of his Lord, a release for the debt of ten thousand talentes; was of a cruell hart towards his neigh­bour, casting him into prison, because he ought him a trifle; being neyther content, to let him keep his liberty, or yet to giue him day. And that Lord, of whome it is not read, that he was so much as angry with his seruant, for imbeze­ling so great a summe, as that of ten thousand ta­lents [Page 494]is, but did shew such mercy towards him, (as that desiring time he gaue him time, and liberty, yea and he pardoned him his debt) is now in so great indignation, at the cruelty which he vsed towards his neighbour, that seuerely he rebuked him, saying thus, Thou wicked seruant, I pardoned thee all that which thou owedst me, because thou didst desyre it at my handes; How displea­sing it is to God, that we be hard-har­ted, one to ano­ther. had it not therefore bin reason, that thou shouldst haue shewed mercy to thy neighbour, as I shewed it to thee? And in this wrath of his, he deliuered him ouer to the tormentours, till he should pay euen that whole debt, which already he had relea­sed to him. Not that God doth punish the sinnes, which he hath once forgiuen; but he punisheth the ingratitud of the man who is forgiuen; which ingratitude, is so much the greater, as his sinnes forgiuen, were greater, and more enormous. And although it may well be thought, that the seruant of whome I haue spoken, did cry out for pardon vnto his Lord; yet is it likely, that he would answeare, as it is written, The man, who shutteth his cares against the cry of the poore, shall cry out, himselfe, and not be heard. Resolue therefore thou, O Virgin, that ( beholding thy selfe, and be­holding in Christ, both what he is, and the bene­fittes which thou hast receiued at his handes) it is reason, that in thy hart there be engendred, an estimation of loue towardes thy neighbour, so very great, as that nothing may be able to re­mooue it. And when the inclination, of flesh & bloud, shall say to thee, What The practise of this doct­rine is of great force, to­wards the indaming vs to the loue of our neigh­bours. do I owe that [Page 495]person, that I should affoard him this benefit? or how can I loue him, who hath done me such a mischiefe? Make thou this answeare, That perhaps thou wouldest giue eare to the motion, if the cause of thy loue were no other, then thy neighbour, as he is considered in himselfe; but since it is Christ, who receiueth any benefit, or pardon, which is giuen vnto a mans neighbour, as if it were giuen to him­selfe; what reason, I pray you, is there, why my neighbours being this, or doing that, should haue power to hinder my affection, & the fruites there­o [...], which are good workes; since therein, I pretend not, to haue any thing to do with him, but with Christ. And by this meanes, will thy hart burne in charity; in such sort as that the many waters, of the euill turnes that shal be done thee, may not be able to quench it; but it will prooue victorious, and as­cend vpward, as a flame doth, which liues in­deed; & thou wilt conuerse with thy neighbours, without stumbling vpon them; and without loo­sing thy vertue, by desiring their preiudice▪ And so Dauid saith, Great peace haue they, O Lord, who loue thy law, and The true ser­uants of God turn all to good. they stumble at nothing. Which law, is that of charity; whereby indeed the whole law is completely performed, as S. Paul Rom. 1 [...]. Galat. 5. saith; He that loues his neighbour, hath fulfilled the law. And this estimation of our neighbour, whereby we honour him, as an adopted sonne of God; and as a brother of our Lord Iesus Christ; and this loue which we are to carry to thinges, which do so truly belong to Christ, is that which S. Paul re­commendeth [Page 496]to the Philip. [...]. Philippians, and in them to vs; saying, Conceaue your selues humbly, to be in­feriours to one another; & make no reckoning of your owne interest, or ease; but consider what it is fit to do, for your neighbours; and do this, after the example of Christ Iesus; who hauing the substance of God, did, for our benefit, humble himselfe so farre, as to take v­pon him the forme of a seruāt. And these two things, namely humility, and loue of our neighbours, our Lord himselfe did teach, and recommend to vs, in that admirable action, which he was pleased to performe so neare his death; by loan. [...]. washing the feete of his disciples. For Humi­lity and Charity are the bottome, & the top of all Christian buildings. therein, humility was expressed to vs, by the basenes of that office; and charity by the help it gaue to others. His will is, that we should learne these two thinges of him; we, who are little seruants, and disciples of his; when he, who was the Lord and maister, would needes shew vs the way.

Being therefore encouraged by this example, & by the rest which hath bin said; do thou weigh thy neighbours with the These are true scales which wil neuer de­ceaue vs. scales of their being the adopted sonnes of God; and consider, that Christ Iesus, gaue himselfe for them vpon the Crosse; and do thou prize, and honour them, whome God hath honoured so much, and loue them who are ioyned to him, as a most beloued spouse, might be; and as the partes of the body, are vnto the head. And so thou shalt carry a strong, and firme loue tow ards them; for whatsoeuer springeth not from this fountaine, is but weake, and wilbe quickly [Page 497]weary, & dry; & it falleth instantly to the ground, vpon the least occasion of encounter that offers it selfe; as a house would do, whose foundation had beene layd vpon sand.

CHAP. XCVII.
He beginneth to treate of that word of the verse which sayth, Forget thy people. And of the two sorts of men which there are; good, and bad; and of the names which are giuen to euill men, and of their seuerall significations.

HEERE followeth now, this other word, which sayth, Forget thy people, and the house of thy Father. For the declaration whereof, it is to be noted, That all mankind, is deuided into one of these two different parties, or Cittyes; one of the good, and the other of the bad. Which Cittyes are not diuersified, by any difference of place; for the inhabitants of them both, do liue in the same towne, yea and euen in the same house; but they are distinguished, by the diuersity of affe­ctions. For as S. Augustine sayth, Two A con­sideration most wor­thy of the great S. Augustin. Loues, did build vp two Cittyes. The loue of a mans selfe, which maketh a man despise God, doth erect the earth­ly Citty. The loue of God, which maketh a man des­pise himselfe, doth build vp that Citty which is cele­ [...]tiall. The first is raysed vp in it selfe; the second, not in it selfe, but in God. The first, will needs be honou­red by men; the second, holdes it for honour inough, to [Page 498]haue a conscience, which is cleare in the sight of God. The first, doth lift vp the head, in the glory of it selfe; the second, sa [...]th to God. Thou art my glory, and he that doth exalt my head The first, is desirous of commaund, and dominion in the second one serueth another, for charity; the superiours do benefit the infe­riours; and the inferiours, obey their superiours. The first, doth attribute the [...]rength to his owne forces, & doth glory in them; The second sayth, Let me loue thee, O Lord my strēgth. In the first, they who hold themselues for wise, do seck for no other good thinges, then such as are created; or if they knew the Crea­tour, they did not honour him as such; but be­came giddy-headed in their own vayn thoughts; and saying that they were wife, turned fooles; but in the second, there is no wisedome, but the true seruice of God; which expecteth no other reward, but to honour the same God in company of the Saints, and Angells, that so God may be, all in all. Of the first, all the sinners of the world, are inha [...]itantes. Of the second, all the iust.

And because all they, who descend of A­dam (excepting only the Sonne of God, and his Bl [...]sed Mother) became sinners, euen by their very being begotten; we must all therfore go, for naturall inhabitants of this Citty of ours, out of which Christ draweth vs by grace, that so we may be the inhabitants of his. This Of the na [...]es & properties of the ci [...] ­ty of ig­norance and sinne. wic­ked Citty, which is no vniting of streets, or hou­ses, or market places, but of men that loue them­selues, and presume vpon themselues, is called [Page 499]by seuerall names, which signify the wickedne­thereof. It is called Sinne leades, or keeps vs, in darke­nes. Aegypt, which signifyeth darcknes, or misery; because they, who dwell in this Citty, either haue not the light of the know­ledge of God, through the want of fayth; or if they haue it (as those Christians haue, who liue wickedly,) yet is it dead, through want of chari­ty, which is the life thereof. For this, doth S. Iohn [...]. Ioan. 4. say, That he, that loues not God, knowes not God, because God is loue. He meaneth, That such an one, hath not that kind of enamoured The knowledg of God, will not saue vs, vnles it be accompa­nyed by loue. knowledge, which is necessary for saluation. And so (one sort of them, liuing in the darknes of infidelity; and the other, in the obscurity of other sinnes) they haue no ioy at all, but all is anguish, and affliction For, as Tobias Tob. 5. sayth, What ioy can I haue, who cannot see the light of heauē.

It is also called Sinne leades vs into con­fusion. Babylon, which signify­eth confusion This name was imposed on it, whē that proud people, had a mind to erect a Tower, which might reach, as it were to heauen; so to defend it self from the wrath of God, if he should descend to drowne it a second tyme; and that al­so by the setting vp of such a building, their name might be celebrated, throughout the world. But our Lord did hinder their folly, by giuing them different Gen. 17. languages, that so they might not vnderstand one another. Whereupon they fell into brawles; euery one conceauing, that the other mocked him; one man saying one thing; and another answering him another; and so the [Page 500]end of their pride, was confusion, vnquietnes, and diuision.

Most Why the name of confu­sion, a­greeth to sinners. properly doth this name, agree to the Citty of wicked persons; For they would fayne sinne, and not be punished; and they wil not auoyd the iudgments of God, by forbearing to offend him; but if they could sinne, & decline the punishment, either by force, or sleight, they would attempt it. Proud people they are; and al their end, is but that their name may be renow­ned in the world; and if they can, they set vp the towers of vaine workes; and if they cannot do it in deed; at least they do it in desire. God dest­royeth such men as these, euen when they are tasting the sweetest bit. As it is written, God Iac. 4. resisteth such as are proud. And because they would not liue, in the vnity of one language, perfor­ming obedience to God; they are punished so far, as that they shall neither vnderstand themselues; nor vnderstand God; nor vnderstand one ano­ther; nor any one of the creatures; for as much as when the wisedome of God is wanting, they vnderstand nothing, for their good, as they ought.

How A liue­ly description of the vayne & variable hart of sin­full man. many thinges do worke in the hart of wicked men, which put them past their owne skill; and they know not how to helpe them­selues. Sometimes they desire one thinge, some­times another; yea sometimes they desire a thinge, that is the contrary of the former. Now, they do, and then they vndoe; they weepe, and they re­ioyce, [Page 501]and all to no purpose. Now, they are rea­dy to despaire, and soone after, they are vainely puffed vp. They seeke a thing with much labour; and when they haue obteyned it, they are sorry, that they did, so much as seeke it. They find not that, which they imagined; yea they desire one thinge, and they do another; being gouerned, not by reason, but passion. And from hence it growes, that man being a reasonable creature, whose principall part is his soule, whose office is to liue vnder reason, (whereas these men wil liue according to appetite) it is plaine, that they turne the wrong side outward; since they lead a kind of life of beasts; which is a life of bodies; and not a life, that is reasonable, which is proper to men. And vpon this it riseth, that as God is a spirit, and must be serued, not by a beastiall maner of life, but by a spirituall; such persons as these, do not serue him, as hath bin said; for their life is contrary, to his law. And since the vnion of Christians, grow­eth from the vnion of themselues within them­selues, & from the vnion of themselues with God; these Cittizens, being deuided from How true do we find this by ex­perience, God, cannot haue any good, or stable peace with one another; but rather, certaine paltry quarrelles, do spring from their discourses, from their works, and conuersations; euery one liuing according to his owne fancy, without caring to content any other body. And on the other side, they haue a quicke sense of any affront, or iniury, which is done to themselues, without regarding that of o­thers.

These Selfe loue is the bane of Charity. are the men, who neither vse them­selues, nor other thinges, to that end, for which they were created; but they vse both themselues, and all other thinges, to their owne aduantage; making themselues the last end of all thinges. And therefore with reason they are called, by the name of Babylon, since all goes contrary to the creatour.

They are also called sometimes, Chald [...]ans; sometimes of Sodome; and sometimes of Hedom; with a thousand other names, which decipher the wickednes of this people; which names are yet all vnable, to declare the malice thereof. This is that people, which is called world (not because God created it so) for the world is good, as being crea­ted by him, who is supremely good; but because these men, (who are such as I haue, heere descri­bed) haue no other feeling, nor no other loue, but of the visible world; which, by 1. Ioan. [...]. S. Iohn, is called the pride of life; the desyre of the flesh; and the concupiscence of the eyes. He that loueth these thinges, shall perish, as saith the same S. Iohn; but he that will do the will of God, shall remaine for euer. And S. Paul Rom. [...]. saith, He that hath not the spirit of Christ, is not of Christ; and consequently, he is to be of the world; and S. Iames Iac. 4. saith, That the amity of the world, is e [...]nity with God.

CHAP. XCVIII.
That it doth much import vs, to fly from this Citty of the wicked, which is the world; and how ill it treateth the cittizens therof; and of the sad end which they all shall haue.

THOV hast already heard sufficient reason, to abhorre this people; and to vnderstand how much God desireth, that thou shouldst depart frō thence, to saue thy selfe. For this is that true spi­rituall Aegypt, out of which God commaunded Israel to depart with speed; and to go on, though it were, with a great deale of paines, towards the Land of promise. And this is that people, out of which, God commaunded Abraham Gen. 12. to depart; Go out of thyne owne countrey, and from thy kinred, and from thy Fathers house, and come into the land that I will shew thee. Which he accomplished with a simple and sincere obedience; without know­ing whither he was going, as S. Paul Hebr. 11. affir­meth. Out of this very people, and Citty, God commaunded Let to go; that so the punishments which he was resolued to inflict vpon that place, might not lay hold vpon him; and he commaun­ded him to saue himselfe in the mountayne, by which the height of Christian Faith, & of good life may be vnderstood. Finally, How the people of God is to carry it selfe, and why. this is the people, whereof God saith, to such as he will haue to be his owne, Do 2. Cor. [...]. not keepe company with in­fidells. [Page 504]For what conuersation, can goodnesse, and wic­kednes, or light, and darknes, haue togeather; and what society can there be, betweene Christ, and Belial; betweene a faithfull man, and an infidell; or what com­position, or agreement, can there be, betweene the Temple of God, and that of Idolls. For you are the Temple, of the liuing God, as God saith. And I wil dwell amongst them, and I will conuerse amongst them; and I will be their God, and they shalbe my people; and therefore I haue come out of the middest of them. And, Depart, sayth our Lord, and touch not any thing that is vncleane; and I will receiue you, and I will be your Father, and you shalbe my Children, saith our Lord omnipotent.

Hauing heard these promises, thou art to procure, with courage, to make thy selfe a meer [...] stranger, to this people, both for the good which is promised, and for the euill, which thereby thou shalt auoyd. It The extreame danger, of ill cōpany. is no safe thing for thee, to re­mayne vnder a house, which infallibly will fall, and ouerwhelme, as many as are in it. And we would not giue him meane thankes, who should aduertise vs of such a danger, which we might decline. Well Hear­ken well; for heere it is the Angell of God that speakes. then, know thou for certayne▪ (and I aduertise thee of it, on the part of God) that the day will come, wherein that vision shalbe spiritually accomplished, which S. Iohn Apoc. [...]8. saw, concerning this wicked people, when he said; I saw another Angell, that descended from heauen, who had great power, and he made the whole earth become all light, by his bright splendour; and he vttered a [Page 505]voyce, with great strength; and sayd; Babylon the great is fallen; it is fallen; and it is made the habitati­on of Diuells; and of euery impure spirit, and of euery horrible, and vncleane bird. And afterward he sayd. That an Angell tooke vp a huge stone, like such an one as they vse in milles, and threw it into the sea, and sayd; with this force shall the great Citty of Babylon, be plunged into the sea; and it shalbe heard of no more. And to the end that such as haue a desyre to saue themselues, may not grow carelesse, by concea­uing perhaps, that the scourge of God will not lay hold vpon them, whilest they are in compa­ny with the wicked; the same S. Iohn affirmeth, that he heard another voyce, which sayd thus, from heauen; Get thee out from Babylon, O my peo­ple, and be not partaker of her sinnes; and do not re­ceaue of her markes; for her sinnes, haue reached vp to heauen, and our Lord hath remembred her impietyes.

And In what mā ­ner the so­ciety of the wic­ked is to be fled. although it be a thing very pro­fitable, to a good man; euen corporally to fly the company of the wicked; and for such an one, as is but a beginner in goodnesse, it is euen neces­sary (vnlesse he meane to vndoe himselfe); yet that going out of the middest of Babylon, which heere is commanded by God, is to be vnderstood (as S. Augustine saith) for a going out with the hart, from amongst the wicked, louing that which they abhorre; and abhorring that which they loue. For if wee looke but vpon that which is externall, Hierusalem, and Babylon, may be not only in the same Citty (for as much as concer­neth [Page 506]corporall presence) but euen in the same house. But if we respect their harts, they wil be found to be far a sunder; and Hierusalem which is the Citty of God, wilbe found to be in the one; & Babylon, the Citty of the wicked, in the other.

Forget therefore thy people; and get thee vp to the people of Christ; being well assured, that thou shalt neuer be able to begin the leading of a new life, vnlesse with griefe thou first forsake thy old. Remember how S. Paul Heb. [...]3. saith, That our Lord Iesus, for the sanctification of his people, by his bloud, suffered death without the gates of Hieru­salem. And since that is so, let vs goe towardes him, out of our tentes, and let vs imitate his dishonour. This saith S. Paul; giuing vs this lesson thereby, That Christ did therefore suffer without the Citty, to giue vs to vnderstand, that if we meane to follow him, we must also go our of the Citty, whereof we haue spoken, which is the congrega­tion, of such persons, as The very root of all sin. loue themselues, after an inordinate manner. Christ our Sauiour could easily haue cured the blind man in Marc. [...]. Bethsaida; but he chose to draw him out, and so to giue him his eyesight; and thereby to make vs al­so know, that when we shalbe retyred, from that common life, which is lead by the multitude, we are to be cured by Christ, in following that Matt. 7. straite way, wherein, truth it selfe hath told vs, that few do walke.

Let If we pretend to serue christ our Lord, we must for­sake and forsweare the seruice of the wicked world. no man deceiue thee. Christ will none of them, who will both performe his will, [Page 507]and the will of the world. And by his owne blessed mouth, he hath assured vs, That Matt. 6. no man, can serue two maisters. And since he sayd, That he was not of the world; & that his disciples, were not of the world; and that his kingdome was not of the world; it is not reason, that thou be of it; if it were but for feare of not comming to such an end, as ouertooke the disobedient 2. Reg. 1 [...]. Absolom. Who being hanged by his hayre, vpon an oak, was transpierced with three lances, by the hand of Ioab, and so, as he was hanging, he dyed. For thus shall it happen to the man, who is disobedient to our Lord of heauen. Which Lord, he doth euen persecute by his wicked life; and whose affections & thoghts, like so many haires of the head, do hold him han­ging, vpon this world. For all his ambition is, how he may be made great vpon earth; and that he may haue faire dayes, in this transitory life of his. But what can he get by this, since the tree, whereon he hanges, is an Re­member the story of the pro­digal son. Oake, which yealdes no fruit, but for swine. And so this world, giues no contentment, or fruit at all, but to bestiall men, whome the Diuell doth passe through, with three lances; pride of life; the desires of the flesh; and concupiscence of the eyes, the How miserably sinners at treated by the di­uell, not only in the next life, but euen in this. Diuell, I say, who is called the prince of this world; because he ruleth, and commandeth wicked men; whilest yet he treateth his followers, in such a fashion; as that he fills them not, with so much as the food of swine; but like as to another Iud. 1 [...] Adonibesech, he cutteth off the endes of their feet, and of their hands; [Page 508]to disable them, from doing any thing that is good; and then he casteth them vnder the table, that they may feed; yet still, not vpon full dishes, but vpon the crumms that he knoweth not how to bestow elsewhere. He keepeth them hungry for the present; and he will carry them afterward with himselfe, to a place where there will be eternall hunger; in company of other tor­ments, for that is all that he can giue. Such is the entertainment that he makes; which were sufficient (if men would but looke vpon it) to make them fly from the Diuell, and the World; and to draw neere to God; as the prodigall sonne did; who finding himselfe put to so base an im­ployment, as to keep swine; and that he could not haue inough euen, of the very food which they fed vpon; he grew at last, to get his wits againe; and to obserue the difference which there was, between being in the house of his Father, and in that other house of the World; and he left the ill condition wherein he was, turning home, and demāding mercy of his Father, which he quickly found.

Do How we must carry our selues to­wardes God, if we desire to take com­fort in his seruice. thou also, in like manner; and if thou haue a mind, that our Lord should receaue thee, Forsake thy people. And if thou wilt haue him re­member thee, forget thou it; & if thou wilt haue him loue thee, do not inordinatly loue thy selfe; and if thou wilt haue him take care of thee, do not thou confide, in the care of thy selfe; and if thou wilt be acceptable to his eyes, take no plea­sure [Page 509]in thine owne; and if thou resolue to please him, do not feare to displease the whole world, for him; and if thou desire to find him, make no difficulty to giue away thy Father, thy Mother, thy Brothers, thy house, and thy very life for him. Not, for that thou art to abhorre these thinges; but because it is fit for thee, to looke with truth, and with entire loue vpon Christ; and The iust obli­gation of a Christiā. not to faile of one haires breadth, in pleasing of him, though it be with the displeasing of that creature, of the whole world, which is most beloued by thee, yea and of thy very selfe. S. Paul 1. Cor. 3. requi­reth, That We must do nothing, nor haue any thing so much at the hart as to est­range vs from con­uersing with al­mighty God. they who haue wiues, should haue them, as if they had them not; That they who purchase, should be as if they possessed not; That they who sell, should be, as if they had not sold; They that weepe, as if they wept not; and, They that reioyce, as if they reioyced not. And the cause that he addeth, is this, Because the figure of the world passeth quickly. So then, do I say to thee, O Virgin, that thou art to put the world, and thy selfe, away. The Note. first, because it passeth quickly; and the second, because it is none of thyne. And so, haue thou thy parents, thy brothers, thy kinred, thy house, and thy people, as if thou haddst them not. Not but that thou art to reuerence, obey, and loue them, since grace doth not destroy the order of nature; (yoa and euen in heauen it selfe, the child shall carry reuerence to his Father) but How this dis­course is to be vn­derstood. to the end that it may not take vp, and employe thy hart, and diuert it from the loue of God. Loue [Page 510]them in Christ, and not in themselues. For Christ did not giue them, as meaning that they should be impediments, to keep thee from that which thou shouldest euer be doing, which is, to serue him. S. Hierome relateth, of a certayne Virgin, who was so mortified in the point of affection to­wardes her kinred, that she cared not much to see a sister, which she had, though she also were a Virgin; but contented her selfe to loue her in God. Belieue me; A so­ueraigne truth; and most fit to be so. that as thou canst not write in parchment, if it be not well, and cleane taken off from the body of the beast that wore it; so is not that soule prepared, for our Lord to write parti­culer fauours in it, till such time as the affections which rise from flesh and bloud, be very well mortifyed. We read, how that in times past, They placed the Arke vpon a carre; to the end that two kine, being yoaked in front, might lead it on, and the calues were shut vp, in a certayne place. And although the kine, did low in the way of sighing, for their calues; yet did they neuer leaue the high way, nor turne back, nor degresse, as the Scripture saith, eyther to the right hand, or to the left; but, by the will of God, who so disposed therof, They carryed the Arke to the land of Israel, which was the place where God dwelt.

They A figur of the old testament excellent­ly apply­ed. who haue placed the Crosse of Iesus Christ our Lord, vpon their shoulders, (which is the Arke where he remaineth, and wherein he is truly to be found) must not giue ouer, nor so much as slacke their pace, for these naturall affe­ctions, of the loue of parentes, or children, or [Page 511]houses, or such other thinges, as these. Nor are they to be giddy-headed, vpon the enioying of prosperity, nor to be afflicted for aduersity. For the former of these two, is to turne out of the way, on the right hand; and the other, on the left. But thou art to follow on in the straight way, with feruour; beseeching our Lord to guide both the one, and the other to his glory; and to be as dead to such thinges as these, as if they did no­thing concerne thee; or, at least, not to suffer thy selfe to be ouercome, eyther with ioy, or griefe, howsoeuer they may be felt a little. This was fi­gured by those 1. Reg. 6. kine, which though they vttered certaine shewes of tendernes, towards their calues, yet did they not, for all that, giue ouer to con­duct the Arke of God. And if Fathers do see their Sonns serue God in some good As when they make thē ­selues Re­ligious men or women. fashion, (which yet is not pleasing vnto them) they must consider, what is pleasing to God. And although they may sigh deeply, for the loue of their childrē, yet let the loue of God, ouercom that loue. And let them offer them vp to God; wherin they shalbe like to Gen. 22. A­braham, who in obedience to God, was resolued to kill his only Sonne; not caring what his sensuali­ty could say, to the contrary. And How good is God? only he wilbe serued as God. the natu­rall griefe which is felt in such traunces as these, is to be endured with patience, which yet shall not be without reward. For as much as, our Lord hath ordeined vs to carry those affections, and for the loue of him it is, that we ouercome them; & it is like the case of him, that suffereth Martyr­dome.

Forget therefore thy people, O thou Virgin; and be thou like to another Melchisedech, of whome we reade not, that Heb. 7. he had any Father, or Mother, or any kinred; whereby, as S. Bernard saith, an example is giuen, to the seruants of God, that they must so truly forget their people, & their kinred; that, in their hartes, they may be a kinde of Melchisedech, in this world; without hauing any thinge in those hartes, which may captiue them, or so much as foreslow the pace, which they make in the way of God.

CHAP. XCIX.
Of the vanity of being nobly borne; and that such per­sons must not bragge thereof, as desire to be of the kindred of Christ.

I would not haue thee blinded, by that vanity, which blindeth many, whilest they presume v­pon the extraction of their bloud. And therefore I will tell thee, what S. Hierome saith, to a cer­tayne virgin: I will not (saith he) haue thee behold those Virgins, who are Virgins of the world, & not of Christ. And who, not remembring their good pur­pose begunne, do take ioy in pleasure; and do please themselues in vanity; and glory in corporall thinges; and in the antiquity of their descent. Who if The extreme valew of temporall nobility, sheweth that men vnderstād not the true va­lew of that nobility which is spirituall. they did, indeed, hold themselues for the Children of God, they would neuer, after they had bin borne diuinely of him, make any estimation of this temporall nobility. [Page 513]And if they felt, that God were become their Father, they would not valew the nobility of other parents. Why dost thou glory in such nobility of descent? God, made one man, and one woman, in the beginning of the world; from whome the multitude of mankind, descendeth. This In na­ture there is no dif­ference of nobility. Nobility of linage, is not giuen by na­ture, which is alike to all, but by the appetite of ambi­tion. Nor ought there to be any difference That in spiritu­all nobili­ty, there is also no difference betweene one and another. between them, who are begotten, according to this second spiri­tuall birth▪ whereby as well the poore, as the rich, the slaue, as the free man, may be accoumpted to be of noble linage; and without which, they are neuer made the sonnes of God. The descent of flesh and bloud, is wholy obscured by the brightnes of this heauenly honour; and appeareth not to be any thing at all; now that they w [...]o, before were vnequall, in respect of worldly ho­nour, are equally apparelled, with the Nobility of that ot [...]er honour, which is spirituall, and diuine. No place is there left for this vaine kind of linage; & none of them can be thought, to be without Nobility, who are beautifyed by the height of a heauenly birth. And if that former be esteemed, it is but in the mind of them who valew temporall thinges, more then eter­nall. Which temporall aduantage although the [...] haue, how vainely do they proceed, who esteeme themselues more for lesse thinges; then they esteeme others, whom they know to be equall to themselues in greater things; and who esteeme others, as men creeping vpon the ground and far inferiour vnto themselues▪ whome yet they belieue to be their equalls, in celestiall thinges. But whatsoeuer thou be of birth, O Virgin, (thou who [Page 514]art of Christ, and not of the world) fly away from all glory of this present life, that thou mayst obtayne all that, which is promised in the life to come. All this is sayd by S. Hierome.

Heereby thou mayst see, how necessary it is, for thee, To forget thy people, and the house of thy Father; remembring well, that the priuiledge which thy parentes gaue thee, was to be conceaued in sinne, and filled full of many miseryes; and to be borne in the wrath of God, by the first sinne of Adam, which we inherit by our conception. A The basenes of the body. body they bestowed vpon vs, which was begotten in such a loathsome māner, that it would cost a man shame to speake of it, and makes him loath, to thinke of it. Into which, the soule be­ing infused, after the creation thereof, doth grow to be spotted with originall sinne; which yet by the hand of God, was created without it. Our body is besides, full of a thousand necessi­tyes; and subiect to sicknesses, and death; and made fit to do pennance by suffering it. Such a body it is, that Consi­der seri­ously of this. if thou shouldst take of, but the first thynne skinne, that couers it, the most beautyfull creature, would be abhominable. A body, which if thou obserue to be exteriourly white, & yet consider the trash which is shut vp within; thou wilt say, it is some dunghill, ouer cast with snow. A body whereof I would to God, the worst condition were, to be full of paine, and shame; but this is the least matter, of all the rest. That The emni [...]y of a sinnefull body to a soule. which importeth, is, that it [Page 515]is the greatest enemy which we haue, and the greatest traytour it is, which was euer seene; who goeth vp and downe in pursuite, how to plunge that The soule. thing into death, and death eternall, which giues it bread to eate, and whatsoeuer else is necessary for a body. And which, for the en­ioying of a little pleasure, doth set, at nothing the giuing of any offence to God, and the casting of the soule into hel fire. A body; which is as sloath­full as an asse; and as malicious as a mule. And if thou belieue not me, let it but goe a while, without a bridle, and do thou but neglect a little, to keep it in order; and thou shalt see, whether it be a wicked thinge or no.

O Vanity, which deserues to be despised, in them, that presume vpon their descent; where­as all the soules of men, are created immediately by God; and we haue not them, by inheritance. And as for the flesh, which is inherited; it ought to serue vs, but for matter of shame, and feare. Let such giue eare, to that which God hath said by Isa. 4. Isaias. Cry out; and what shall I cry out vpon, sayth the Prophet. Our Lord made this answere, That all flesh, is but withred grasse; and all the glo­ry therof, as the fading flower, of the field. God com­manded his Prophet, to cry out; but yet deaf men did not heare him, who resolued to A pre­posterous & absurd kind of pride. glory more, in that filth which they drew from their flesh; then in that height of dignity, which by the holy ghost was graunted to them.

Be not thou blind, be not vnthankefull, O [Page 516]thou spouse of Christ. The estimation which God maketh of thee, is not for thy birth of bloud▪ but for thy being a Christian: not because thou wert borne in that sumptuous Chamber; but because thou wert borne againe, by holy Baptisime. The former of these births, was of dishonour; the later was of honour; the former of basenes, the later of nobility; The first of sinne, the second of Iustifica­tion from sinne; The first of flesh, which kills, the second of spirit, which quickens. B [...] the first, we are made the sonnes of men; by the second, the sonnes of God; By the first as we be out Fathers heires to their estates; we are also there heires in being made sinners by them, and full of many other miseryes; but by the second, we are made the brethren of Christ, and ioyntly the heires of heauen, with him. For the present, we receyue the holy ghost; but we hope hereafter, to see God face to face.

Well An ig­norant & most in­excusable errour. then; and what dost thou thinke that God will say to that person, who shall prize himselfe more, as being borne of men, wherby he became a sinfull and miserable creature; then for the being borne againe of God, wherby he presently becommeth iust, and may, afterwar­des, be happy These Note this com­parison. men are like to some one who being begotten by a King, vpon the body of some most vgly slaue, should prize himselfe, for being her sonne, and should talke much there­of; and should neuer consider, or remember him­selfe, to be the sonne of the King▪ Forget therefore [Page 517]thy people; that so thou mayst be of the people of God. The wicked people is thyne owne, and therefore it is sayd, Forget thy people; for of thy selfe thou art a sinner, and a very vile one. But if thou wil [...] shake of, that which is thyne, our Lord will receaue thee into that, which is his; into his nobility: into his iustification; into his loue; but as long as thou wilt cleaue to thy selfe, thou shall not be inriched by him. Christ will haue thee all naked; for he meaneth to giue thee a dowry; and he hath where withall Of thy selfe thou hast no­thing but to be full of debts. Forget We must for­get our people, more wayes thē one. thy people; That is, forget to be a sinner; and grow a stran­ger, to thy ancient faults Forget thy people, and set not so high a price vpon Nobility of bloud. Forget thy people, by casting all kind of tumult out of thy hart; and make account, that thou art in some desert, hand to hand with Almighty God. Forget, in fine, thy people, since there are so many, & solide reasons, why thou shouldst forget it.

CHAP. C.
Wherin he beginneth to declare that other word, And forget the house of thy Father. And how much it importeth vs, to fly from our owne will, in imi­tation of Christ our Lord; [...]or the auoyding of those inconueniences which grow from thence.

THERE followeth heere, another word, which saith, And forget the house of thy Father. [Page 518]This Father is the How the diuell may be called the Father of sinnefull men, & why. Diuell; for as S. Iohn saith, He that committeth sinne, is of the Diuell; for the Diuell did sin from the beginning. Not that he did create, or beget wicked men; but because they i­mitate his workes; and he, according to the holy Ghospell, is said to be anothers Sonne, who imi­tates the workes of that other. This wretched Fa­ther, liueth in the world; that is, in wicked men, as it is written in Iob. 4. Iob, He sleepeth in the shaddow, and in the hollow part of a reed, and in moyst places. A A place of holy Scripture excellent­ly ponde­red. shaddow, are the riches of this world. For they giue not that rest which they promise; but pric­king the hart which cares, like so many thornes; the owners of them do find by experience, that they are not true riches, but they are a meere shad­dow of riches; and they are, true pouerty; and no­thing lesse, then that which their name doth pre­tend.

A The vanity of transitory honour & glory. cane or reede, is the glory of this world; and how much the fairer and bigger it appeares exteriourly, so much the more hollownes doth it hold. Yea, and euen that very exteriour, is so ve­ry subiect to change, that with reason it may be called a reede which declines, at the commaunde­ment of euery wind.

Moist The basenes & weaknes of men, giuen o­uer to worldly pleasures. places, are those soules which are dissolued by carnall pleasures, after which they runne, without any bridle. Iust contrary to them, of whome the holy ghospell saith, That Matt. 11. the vn­cleane spirit, departing out of that man, whome he had formerly inhabited, goes seeking where he may be, [Page 519]and he walkes his round, through dry places, desiring entertainment but findeth none. For in soules, which keepe a loofe from these carnall appetites, the di­uell cannot find a lodging; but his place of aboad, is in couetousnes, ambition, and sensuality. There­fore is it, that he is called the Prince of this world; the ruler and the Lord thereof; not still, in any respect of his hauing created it; but because wicked men, who are of God by creation, will needes be of the Diuell by imitation. Conforming themselues to his will, that so, with iustice, they may also be made conforme with him, in the tor­ments of hell; as, at the latter day, it wil be sadly, and plainly said to them, by the mouth of Christ; Go Matt. 25. you cursed, into euerlasting fire; prepared for the Diuell, and for his Angells. And if we consider well, what kind of thing this house of the Diuell is, we shall find, that it is, the lewd will, of wic­ked men; wherein How the Diuell is seated, in a sinne­full will. the diuell takes vp his seate, as he would do, in a chaire, commaunding from thence, the whole man.

To forget therefore, thy Fathers house, is no other thinge, but to forget, and to forsake thyne owne will; wherein thou maiest haue sometimes giuen entertainment to this wicked Father; and to imbrace, insteed thereof, the will of God, with an entire, and faithfull hart, saying to him, Thy will O Lord, and not myne, be done. This ad­monition, is one of the most profitable, that can be giuen vs. For by casting away our will, we shall put away our sinnes, as The will is the root; and the sinne is the braunch. braunches, are cut off [Page 520]from the roote. This 2. Tim. 3. S. Paul doth note, when recounting the multitude of sinnes, which These dayes of ours. in the latter day, would be committed; he saith, That men would be louers of themselues. Giuing vs thereby to vnderstand, as the commentary decla­reth; That the inordinate loue of a mans selfe, is the head, and root of all sinnes; and that vpon the taking away thereof, a man growes to be in subiection to God, from whome, all his good pro­ceedeth.

Againe, A most pro­fitable considera­tion. the cause of all our disgustes, our melancholies, and our affliction, is no other thinge, then our owne will, which we would faine haue to be accomplished; and when it is not, we are in paine; but this being taken away, what is there that can trouble vs? For Note. as much as, sadnes doth not necessarily rise, from the very comming of any troublesome thing, towards vs; but from our vnwillingnesse, that it should come. Nor is the paine alone of this world, put away, by the putting away of our will, but of the other also. For, as S. Bernard saith, Let the will of man cease to do ill, and there wilbe no more vse of hell. But as it is the most profitable of all thinges, to deny a mans owne will; so There is no ta­ming of the will, but by the hand of God. is it also, the hardest of the whole world. Yea, and how much soeuer we may labour, we shall neuer arriue to the obtai­ning of it; if that Lord, who commaunded the grauestone of the dead, and buryed Lazarus, to be remooued, do not also remooue this hardnes, (which oppresseth such as it lieth vpon) and vn­lesse [Page 521]he kill this strong Golias, whome none can conquere, but only he, who is inuincible.

But though we are not able, of our selues, to retyre our neckes from vnder these massy chaines; yet Our owne en­deauour must not be wan­ting. must we not fayle to vse our best endeauour; according vnto that propor­tion of strength, which our Lord shall giue vs. Whome also with our hartes we must inuoke for his assistance; and withall consider, the mischief that we fall into, by following it; and the bles­singes that we obtaine by flying it. Consider al­so, the sublime example of Christ our Lord, who sayth thus of himselfe; I Ioan. 6. came downe from hea­uen, not to do myne owne will, but his that sent me. And this he did not, in matters only, of smal im­portance, as some do; but in cases of great af­front, which might euen arriue to the very soule. Such was Christs enduring of the Passion for vs; but therein he conformed himselfe, to the will of his Father, casting away the inclination of flesh, and bloud, which might haue beene, not to suffer. To giue vs an example heereby, that no­thing ought to be so beloued by vs, which if God do so command, we will not be ready to cast a­way; and that nothing also may be so painefull, which we may not for loue of him, imbrace.

CHAP. CI.
Of a kind of practise, in the denying of our owne will; and of the obedience that we owe to our Superiours; which is a way, how to obtayne the abnegation of our will; and how a superiour is to carry himselfe, with his subiects.

Now because we cannot get vp to the top, if we begin not below, I do aduertise thee, that to the end thou mayst arriue to the height of denying thy will, in greater matters; thou must accustome thy selfe to do it in thinges, that are small. Not to rest therein, but to passe on, by them, to such others, as are of more importance. Doe not performe, or say, yea There is great difference betweene a bare thinking; & a thin­king with consent. or thinke, any thing with consent, which may be directed to the end, of performing thyne own will, & pleasure. But, as soone as thou findest thy selfe, carryed with much mind to any thing; let that serue thee for a rule, that thou art not to do it. For An ex­cellent truth, & which en­richeth that soule, by which it is faith­fully put in practi­se. exteriour thinges, ought not to take, and carry thee pri­soner to them; but thou, with This is another manner of Christi­an liberty then that of Prote­stants. Christiā liberty, art to bring them home, to thy selfe. Before thou eatest, thou art to A di­rectiō full of profit, and fit for practise. mortify, any appetite which thou mayst haue to gluttony; and ordaine thy meale, as an act of obedience to God, who com­mandeth thee to eate, for the maintenance of thy life. So before thou go about any businesse of gai­ne, thou art first to mortify thy couetousnes; and [Page 523]then, to goe about thy businesse, because God commaundeth it, towardes the reliefe, eyther of thine owne necessityes, or of thy neighbours. And by these examples, thou mayst learne how to put away the propriety of thy will, in all thinges; and to do them because God, or thy Su­periours, command them.

Remember, that this is the manner, wher­in those old Fathers of the wildernes, did breed vp their disciples; depriuing them of that, which they desired; and making them do that, which they misliked; to the end that they might who­ly grow to an abnegation of their will. And such persons, as they had satisfaction of, in this parti­culer, they hoped would arriue to perfection; and of others, they had an ill opinion; as thinking, that they, who would faile in t [...]fles, would doe it more, in greater matters. For a will, which is accustomed, to doe what it hath a mind vnto in thinges of little moment, will find it to be very rebellious, when in greater matters, it should contradict it selfe. I would therefore haue thee, abase thy selfe; and become subiect to This doctrine is very high and hard; but it is most true. all creaturs, as S. Peter sayth; and be content that any one might passe ouer, and tread vpon thee, and con­tradict thy will; and vse thee like a handfull of durte. And whosoeuer shall assist thee most in this; him loue, and be gratefull to him; because he helpeth thee to ouercome thyne enemyes, which are thine owne opinion, and thy will.

Make therefore account, that He speaketh heere to such as are religious, professed by vow. thy Ab­besse, [Page 524]is thy mother whome thou art to obey, with profound humility, and without being weary. And be not as some are, who in taking a kind of grauity vpon them grow vnruly, and cast off all that obedience, which they owe to their parents, and Superiours; not submitting themselues to them, euen whylest they are in house togeather. Yea some do part house, without leaue; and all, vnder pretense, of seruing God; whereas in­deed there is nothing more contrary to that, then the thing which these persons doe.

Christ The admirable obedience of Christ our Lord. our Lord, was obedient to his Father, both in life and death; and so also, did he obey his most holy Mother, yea and S. Ioseph also, as is related by Luc. 2. S. Luke. And let no man think, that without obedience, he shalbe able to please him, who was so great a friend to this vertue; as that rather then loose it, he would lay downe his life, vpon a Crosse. And do not wonder, that I so ear­nestly recommend obedience to thee; For as the greatest danger that thy state is subiect to, is, that thou art not in religious clausure; so vnlesse thou prouide well for thy selfe, by denying thyne own will, & to be subiect to anothers, thou wilt haue added one danger to another; and it will go ill with thee in the end; for Neither wil al this serue, vn­les extra­ordinary recollecti­on be vsed withal according to the iud­gement of this Au­thour in diuers pla­ces of this booke; & of S. Am­brose, S. Hierome, and all the Fathers. thy security must consist in the renunciation of liberty. Do not therefore content thy selfe, with obeying thy parents only; but do it also, to the rest of the house, who are thy elders. And if perfectly thou wilt be obedient, obey also thy inferiours; so that [Page 525]yet the gouernement and order of the house, be not disturbed thereby. But yet if there be a ne­cessity, that thou shouldst command exteriourly, at least, hold thy selfe for inferiour, in thy hart.

And for the doing of this with the more courage; remember, how our soueraigne Lord, & Maister, did Ioan. 13. kneele downe to the ground, as if he had been an inferiour, and subiect to wash the feet, not only of them that loued him; but of him who imployed those very feet being washed, to giue vp, into the hands of death, that very man who had washed them, with The ineffable humility and cha­of our Lord Ie­sus. so great humility, and loue. Call this passage many tymes to mind; and let the word, which then he sayd be rooted in thy soule; If I, being your Lord, and Maister, haue washt your feet; how much more ought you to wash the feet of one another? And so loue thy inferiours, which are in thy house, as if thou wert their Fa­ther or Mother; and labour for them, as if thou wert their slaue; taking the impertinency of their conuersation, the superfluity of their speach, yea and the iniurious works of their hands, with pa­tience. Be not humble towards them who liue a­broad, and proud amongst them whome thou hast at home. Practise vertue with them, whome thou hast vnder thyne eye, and neare at hand; and make triall of thy selfe at home; that thou mayst know how to conuerse abroad. And remember that holy woman, S. Catherine of Siena, who was instructed by God; and whose life I desire that thou shouldst read; not to make thee couet her [Page 526] reuelations, but to breed in thee an imitation of her vertues. For although her parenas, did hin­der her in the way which she had taken, towards the seruice of God; she did neither trouble her selfe, nor abandon them. They cast her out of her little Oratory, where she vsed to performe her deuotions; and they appointed her to serue in the Kitchin. But because she humbled her selfe, and obeyed them, she found God in the God is euery where the rewarder of humili­ty. Kitchin, as well, or better, then in her Oratory.

Do not torment thy selfe, if at the time when thou hast a mind to pray, thy parents, or He seemeth heere, to meane the Ghostly Father. Pre­lates would haue thee do somewhat else. But offe­ring that desire of thine to our Lord, do that which is enioyned; by thy Superiours, with much humility, and peace of mind; being confident, that in obeying thy superiours, thou obeyest God; it being so appoynted by him, in his fourth com­maundement. Neyther yet, is it forbidden here­by, but that, with humility, thou mayst beseech thy parentes, to allow thee some retired place, & some vacant time for thy spirituall exercises. And first hauing begged it of our Lord, haue thou so firme a trust in his goodnesse, that whether it be graunted thee or no, it shalbe all for thy profit, if thou take at from the hand of God, with Two partes, worth the labouring for. o­bedience, and peace of mind. And as for thy pa­rentes, they shall giue account to our Lord, of that which they commaund thee, and it shall be no superficiall account. But thou art not to con­sider that; let them looke to it; for, as S. Ambrose [Page 527]sayth, It is a fauour of God, and full of profit, for a man to haue a sonne, or daughter, who will serue his diuine Maiesty, in state of Virginity; with contempt of the world, by a particuler vocation to a spirituall life.

CHAP. CII.
That, not all those thinges which we desire to do, or demaund to haue; are to be called a mans proper will; & how we may know what our Lord demaun­deth at our handes.

IF thou haue well considered, that which hath bin said to thee, in those former wordes; thou wilt easily haue perceiued, that two thinges were recommended to thee. The one, The flying of thine owne will; The other the following of the will of God. Now for the declaration of these two thinges, I must let thee know; that for thee to de­sire, or begge in particuler manner of Almighty God, that he will deliuer thee out of any spirituall inconuenience, whereof thou art most in danger; or, that he will impart some vertue to thee, wher­of thou art in particuler need, is not any vicious act, of thine owne will, but it is a meanes, & that a good one, to enable thee to fulfill the will of God; who commaundeth vs, to depart from euill, and to do good. For, if thou obserue it well, thy begging of a thing in particuler, through It is good to beg any particuler grace of our Lord in a parti­culer manner, for so it will be done with more zea­le. the particuler necessity thereof, wherein thou art; [Page 528]doth help thee to aske it, with greater efficacy; and with a more profound sigh of thy hart; which are meanes, whereby God is induced the more easily to grant that which is desired. Which ve­ry thing would not perhaps be graunted, if it were asked with that tepidity, which vseth to ac­company requestes which are made in generall tearmes. And this doctrine is agreable, to the ho­ly Scripture. since our Lord himself doth teach vs, in that prayer of the Pater Noster, to aske things in particuler manner. And so also, did the Pro­phet Dauid, as his particuler necessities did pre­sent themselues; and so haue other Saints vsed to do, when they asked any thing, eyther for them­selues, or others. And although, the same may also be done, whylest we are desiring temporall thinges, of God, (as we reade of the Marc. 10. blind man, who begged his sight, and of many others) yet because nothing that is temporall, deserueth to be much esteemed; (and the loue whereof, doth vse to carry danger with it, (and the contempt whereof, deserueth praise) so great liberty is not giuen vs, to discharge our hartes wholy in the de­sire, and suite for such thinges, as for spirituall; although it be not ill done of vs, to demaund tem­porall thinges; so that it be without excesse of ear­nestnes, and vnder this condition, if it so be plea­sing vnto our Lord.

Concerning the accomplishment of the will of our Lord, (wherein consisteth all our good) thou wilt aske perhaps, How may I know, what [Page 529]that is? To which I answeare, That A cer­tayne rule how to know what is the will of God. whenso­euer the word, or commaundement of God, or of his Church, doth ordaine any thinge, thou art to make no further inquiry; but to rest assured, that it is the will of our Lord. And when there is no such expresse commaundment, esteeme that to be of the same ranke, which is imposed on thee by thy superiour; if it do not euidently appeare to be against the law of God, or of his Church; or the light of Nature. For since S. Paul Rom. 1 [...]. saith, That although the superiour be an infidell; yet the Christian man must obey him; and that, not only to auoyd pu­nishment, but by obligation of conscience; how much more then, must this be true, in the case of Chri­stian superiours; of whome we are to Vnles, we do ex­presly see the con­trary. belieue, that God will enable them to commaund iust things And when any of all these commaunde­ments shalbe wanting to thee; thou shalt imbrace and follow (as the will of our Lord) that coun­sell which any such person shall giue, of whome thou oughtest to take it. And do not thinke, for all this, that thou art exempted, from the necessi­ty of begging the light of the Holy Ghost; that so thou mayst take right, to the seruice of God. For our necessityes are so many, and do presse vs in so particuler manner; that no Maister, without this, will serue the turne. And so, The King will grow to desire thy beauty.

CHAP. CIII.
Wherein he beginneth to declare that word, which sayth, And the King, will desire thy beauty. And how great a matter it is, that God should be content to place his loue, vpon a man. And that this is no corporeall beauty; and how dangerous such kind of beauty is.

A Strang thing it is, that there should be any such beauty in a creature; as to draw the blessed eyes of God vpon it; so far, as to be desired by him. It is a most happy thing, for a soule to be enamoured vpon the beauty of God; but neither is it strange, that an vgly thing, should loue the perfection of al beauty or is it worthy of thanks, if a creature, doe loue his Creatour; since he owes him all that, and doth yet further, receaue for it, an eternall reward. But, for God to be enamou­red, and delighted in any of his creatures; this in­deed is to be admired, and most soueraingly to be acknowledged; and it giueth vs reason, of in­comparable glory, and ioy. If A strange thing it is that the great God should be takē with the loue of the base creature, Man. it be matter of much honour for a man to be imprisoned for Iesus Christ (and S. Paul did call himselfe, as by the most noble title he could haue, a Eph. 1. Phil [...]p. 1. Prisoner of Iesus Christ, hauing his body restrained by chains of iron, and his soule by chaines of loue;) what kind of thing shall we say it is; for man, to haue taken God prisoner, by the loue of God. If it be [Page 531]great riches, for a man not to haue any hart of his owne, but wholy to haue giuen it to God; what kind of thing will it be, for vs to haue the hart of God, as our owne; which he giues to them, to whome he giues his loue; and after his hart, he sendeth all that, which he is; for theirs without doubt we are, to whome we giue away our harts.

Many, and great are those benefits, which that infinite diuine goodnesse, imparteth to men. But yet as if all the rest deserued to be little esteemed, in respect of this, Iob Iob. 7. sayd. O Lord, what thing is man that so thou shouldst magnify him, and place thy hart vpon him. Giuing vs so to vnder­stand; that since, by Gods giuing his hart to man, he giueth himself; there A so­ueraigne cordiall, against all the coro­siues of this life. is as much difference, between giuing the hart for loue, & the giuing of other things, as there is, between giuing of God, & giuing of creaturs. And if we owe our thanks to him for other of his guiftes; the principall reason is, because he imparteth them with loue. And if we ought to reioyce by occasion of the benefits themselues, much more ought we to do it, in regard that we haue found fauour, and loue, in those most sublime eyes of God.

This The true glory of a Chri­stian. indeed, is our true greatenes wherein we may glory, and not because we loue him. For And now let Protestāts consider, what shrewd presump­tuous people these Pa­pists are. cursed is that man, who maketh any account of himselfe, and who prizeth himselfe, for the workes he doth; but only, in regard that so high a King, (whome all those quires of An­gells do adore) would, through the excesse of [Page 532]his goodnes, be content to lone so base thinges, as our selues. Consider therfore now, O virgin, if it be not reason for thee to heare, and to see, and to encline thyne care to God; since the reward therof, is, that he will desire thy beauty. Certainly, although the thinges that he should require, were full of difficulty, they would grow easy, to be ac­complished, by the addition of such promises as these. And how much more then must it be easy, since the thing it selfe, which he commaundeth, is, by his grace, not hard. But thou wilt say per­haps, how commeth the soule to haue beauty, since of it selfe, it is sinfull? and of sinners it is Th [...]en. 4. written, That the face of such, is more black, then coales.

If this Lord of ours, went in search of the beauty of bodyes, it were no miracle if he should find such a kind of beauty as were corporeall. For as himselfe is beautyfull, so did he create all thinges beautyfull; that so they might carry with them, some little obscure trace, of his owne in­comprehensible beauty; in comparison whereof, al other beauty, is meere deformity. But we know, that Dauid speaking of the spouse, of this greate King, Psalm. 44. saith, That all her beauty is interiour, and in her soule. And this he saith, with great reason. For What a toy ex­teriour beauty is. the beauty of a Body, is a meere toye; and may be enioyed by him, who is the owner of an vgly soule. Now for what doth it serue, if a man haue deformity in that, which is of more valew; and if he haue beauty, in that which is of [Page 533]no importance? For what doth that beauty serue, which the eyes of men may looke vpon; when yet there is deformity within, which is penetra­ted by the eyes of God? On the outside an An­gell, in the inside a Diuell.

Not Beau­tifull per­sons haue no such great bar­gaine of it as they conceaue. only, doth this corporeall beauty not profit a person, towards the making him beloued by God; but for the most part, it giueth occasion of making him, vnbeloued. For, as spi­rituall beauty giueth vnderstanding and wisedo­me; so is the other wont to take it away. It is no small warre, which many times is waged, between Chastity, humility and recollection on the one side; and beauty of the body, on the other. And much better had it beene for many women, to haue had a countenance extremely deformed (that so they might not haue beene fought with­all) then great beauty with great vanity, whereby they were vanquished. God deliuereth it thus, for no small mischiefe, when he sayth, to such a soule, Thou Ezech. 16. & 28. hast lost thy wisedome, by thy beauty. And he saith elswhere, Thou hast made thy beauty abho­minable. And this he affirmeth; because when lew­denes of mind is accompanyed with beauty of bo­dy; such beauty becomes abhominable, and grow­eth to be true deformity.

I well see, and confesse, if the mindes of men and women, which looke vpon obiects of beau­ty, were Di qui­bus in ter­ris. pure in seeking God, and none but God in his creatures; that how much more beau­tifull the obiects were, so much more, would it be [Page 354]to them, a bright glasse, wherein they might be­hold Gods beauty. But where now liueth he, or she, who hath not cause to feare, what the Scrip­ture saith; That Sap. 14. the creatures are growne to be as a snare, and as a trappe for the feete of fooles? such, as they are, who vse them towardes the offence of God; & who remayne & rest, only in them; wher­as they were created, to the end that we might the better serue God, and ascend to him, by their meanes, as by a ladder. Of this troope was S. Au­gustine, for a while; but he lamented it And so, as that neuer mā, I thinke, did it more bit­terly, and yet more sweetly, then he. after­ward; and said, I rushed, O Lord, vpon those crea­tures, which thou hadst made faire; and I, the while, was deformed. And where, is now so great purity, in any woman of beauty, as that she will so much more carefully keep cleane her soule, as men dis­cerne more beauty in her body?

We do, naturally, more fly, from defiling our selues, when we are very cleane, then when we are not altogether so; and yet many, proceed in contrariety to this rule; who if they were foule, would And so much the more will they haue to answere for. not sinne so much; and euen from their being cleane, they fetch a kind of reason, to be­come filthy. Of these it is, that the Prou. 11. Scripture saith, As the ornament of gold, is in the snowt of a boare, so is the faire woman, who is foolish. Little ho­nour, would the boare thinke that he receiued, by hauing that gold in his snowt; nor would he, for all the shining thereof, forbeare to foule it, and to thrust it into stinking durt. Iust so, is the sen­suall woman, who imployeth her beauty, (with­out [Page 535]so much as the rising of her stomacke), in a thousand dishonesties, and loathsome actions, both of body and soule.

Now He growes on to an­other ex­cellent considera­tion. if beauty do not helpe, but hinder the keeping of ones owne soule cleane, what thin­kest thou that it procures, in the soules of them that looke vpon it? O how happy a thinge it were, for them, not to haue eyes, wherewith to looke, nor feete wherewith to go; nor handes wherewith to adorne themselues; nor humour eyther to see, or to be seene; since by occasion of these thinges, there groweth a resolute desire, of an vniust delight; & the giuing of so many mor­tall woundes, to their soule, as they entertaine such resolute desires. And of these who shalbe able to count the number?

What will heere, these wretched men; and these miserable women be able to say, (who in appearance are so faire, and in very deede so de­formed) when that beauty of their body, shall once faile, whereupon they haue imployed so much paines? And when they shal be growne to stinck, as truly in their sepulchers, as their soules did tru­ly stincke, whilest heere they went, vnder the co­uer of their faire bodyes. And when they shalbe presented, wholy naked, & destitute of all graces, before the eyes of him, whome they tooke no care to please; & when they shalbe confounded, with the shame of their secret sinnes. Finding then, by experience, that the day is come, wherewith God threatned them thus so long before, I destroy the [Page 536]names, of the Idolls, of the earth. An An I­doll she is more wayes thē one. Idoll, is this beautifull and sinfull woman, who will needs be counterfayting the true God, and painting her selfe as God did not make her; & procuring that the hartes of men may wickedly be imployed on her; and executing, to this purpose, all she can; and desiring, euen to do that, which she cannot. The names of those men, who are so often mentio­ned by these women, God will destroy; and they shall know, that it serues for nothing, to be so mentioned in the mouthes of flesh and bloud; if withall, their names be razed, out of the booke of God.

Concerning this kind of beauty, I admo­nish thee, O Virgin of Christ, that thou do not so much, as call it to mind. For Note this reasō, which is so well set of, by an excellent compari­son. if euen women, who are vayne, do passe without any great care thereof, (where they are not seene by men) & do (as it were) lay vp, their beauty, against such a time, as when it may be seene, either by store of people, or some renowned Prince; how much more, is the Virgin of Christ to proceed thus? Ex­pecting that day, when she is to be seene, by all the Angells of God, at once; yea, and by the Lord, both of Men and Angells. Then, will a face of lamentation, shew fairer, then a counte­nance of gamesome pleasure; and a meane gar­ment, then a pretious; and vertue of mind, then beauty of body. Yet do not thinke, that it sufficeth, if thou keep thyne owne hart free from this va­nity; for it concerneth thee also, to take heed, [Page 537]and heed againe, that thou giue no occasion, that such as looke vpon thee, may diuert their hart, one houres breadth from God.

The vaine Virgins of this world, desire to seeme handsome in the eyes of men; but the Vir­gin of Christ, ought to feare, and fly, from no­thing so much, as to seeme pleasing and hand­some. For How true is this and yet how little conside­red. what greater folly can there be, thē to desire that, which is dangerous, both to them­selues, and others Remember, what S. Hierome sayth to a Virgin, Take heed, that thou giue no oc­casion to any, of conceauing any ill desire. For thy spouse is iealous; and a worse thing it is to commit a­dultery, against Christ, then against a husband. And elsewhere, he sayth, Remember how I haue told thee that now thou art made the sacrifice of God. And the sacrifice, is the thing which giueth sanctification, to other thinges; and whosoeuer shall worthily partake of this sacrifice, shallbe also partaker of the sanctification. Procure An aduice & the reason of it; which well be­commeth the wise­dome, & sanctity of that great Doctour. therefore in this manner; that (by occasi­on of thee, as of a diuine sacrifice) other women may also be sanctifyed, with whome thou art so to liue, that whosoeuer shall touch thy manner of life, either by loo­king on it, or hearing of it, may feele in themselues the force of thy sanctification; and desiring to behold thee, may become worthy, of being made a sacrifice. All this is sayd by S. Hierome.

CHAP. CIIII.
That the dignity of being a spouse of Iesus Christ, re­quireth, that great care be had in all thinges▪ and of the example which they, are to lo [...]ke vpon, both in the exteriour, and in the interiour of their soule; who haue a desire to enioy this dignity.

HEREBY thou wilt haue seene, that the great honour, which it is to be a spouse of Christ, doth not go alone; nor is it to be conserued with­out care. But as, in it selfe, it is the most high Title that can be expressed; so doth it exact a gre­ater circumspection, then any other, for the kee­ping therof, as it is fit. Do The great obligation of a soule which professeth to be es­poused to God. not thinke, that because thou hast not a husband of this world, that therefore thou mayst liue, after thyne owne fancy. But rather know, that thou art obliged to take heed to thy selfe so much more, & yet more, by how much thy Spouse is greater; and the par­ticuler respects, which he demaundeth at thy handes, are of many kindes. A woman may comply with her husband, and yet still, be full of faultes; but it proues not so, with the celestiall spouse, vnles thou loue him withall thy hart, and withall thy force. And one fit of time idly spent, yea or a word, that shalbe vndecent, is not to passe without punishment. Nor yet let this seeme rigorous vnto thee. For, euen Note. in this infe­riour [Page 539]world, it goeth somewhat after this māner; and a woman, is bound, to be so much the more punctually a good wife, as she obtaineth a more noble spouse.

Well now, consider if thou canst, who that is, whom thou hast taken for thy spouse; or rather who hath taken thee, for his; and thou wilt see, that What­soeuer cō ­meth frō God, by way of comman­dement; and what­soeuer goeth to wardes him, by way of of­fence, is after a sort infinitely great, how little soe­uer it be, in it selfe. although the thing which he commaunded were smal, yet, because it is he who commaundeth it, no commaundement is small; and no sinne also is small, which is committed against it, as S. Hierome saith. And to the end, that thou mayst not possesse, such a dignity as this, vnworthily; and that thy honour may not grow into shame; I will set a patterne before thee, whereupon I would haue thee looke; and according to which, I wish that thou wouldst draw thy selfe. It A faire patterne of a noble Roman Virgin. is of a Roman virgin called Asella, of vvhome S. Hierom speaketh thus: There was nothing more cheerefull, then her grauity; nor nothing more graue, then her alacrity. Nothing was more sweet then her sorrow; nor more sorrowfull then her sweetnes. Her face was growne wane, which gaue a signe of her great abstinence▪ but it was not to make any ostentation. Her speach was silent, and her silence was speaking. Her pace, was neither very swift, nor very slow; her habit was euer after the same māner. Her cleanlinesse, was without being studyed; she was clad without curiosity & adorned without any ornament of dressing. And for the pure, and perfect goodnes of her life, she deserued, that, in euen the Citty of Rome, [Page 540]where there And yet, in the middest of all this pompe, and loxe, S. Hierom affirmed the church communicating with the church of Rome, to be euen then, the only true Church of Christ; and that whosoeuer should be found out of that Arke, would infallibly de drowned; & he that should eate the paschall Lambe, out of that house, was a profane person; so as dissolutenes of manners in any particuler place or person, is not alwayes a good argument, against that entire truth of Religion. is such aboundance of pompe; & where humility is esteemed for misery; good men speake well of her; and wicked men dare not presume to do other­wise. This is that patterne, which I would haue thee behold, for as much as concerneth the exte­riour. For, as for the interiour, there is no other, but that of Iesus Christ, as he is placed vpon the Crosse. To whome thou art to conforme thy self, so much the more, as thou enioyest the name of a straiter vnion, which ariueth to be euen that of marriage.

CHAP. CV.
That the dignity of this State, must not dismay Vir­gins; for as much as their Spouse, who is our Lord, doth giue them that, which is necessary for it. And of the aduise, by which they are to vndertake it; and of the cheerefullnes, wherewith they are to vn­dergoe it: and of the great blessings which are con­tayned in it.

BVT take heed, thou be not dismayd, by the consideration of that great sanctity, which thy state requires, by hauing more feare, then ioy therein. When thou hearest men aduise thee, to such high things as these; thou must not deiect, [Page 541]but encourage thy selfe. For as the obligation, and vndergoing the charge, which is incident to marriage, doth not chiefly rest vpon the wiues shoulders; but she complyeth with her duety, if she keep that wel which her husband hath gotten (especially if she also labour, according to the lit­tle strength she hath) so We cannot confide too litle in our owne strength, nor too much in the good­nes of God. do not think, that our Lord tooke thee for his spouse, so to leaue vpon thyne owne shoulders, the labour of keeping thy soule aliue; for neither wouldst thou be able to effect it; nor will he be content, that the honour, of thy being that which thou oughtest to be, Make thou this prayer, to our Lord Iesus, frō thy very hart, and he will mak thee happy. shallbe thyne. I beseech God, that thou mayst know, how to giue him thy hart: and to answere the inspirations which he will send thee; & that thou mayst not, either by tepidity, or negligence, or indiscreet feruours, or pride, pollute that pure water, which he will raine downe v­pon thy soule. And as for the rest, let thy hart re­pose, not in the confidence of thy selfe, but of thy spouse; who hath skill, and power, and will, to mainteine thee well; if voluntarily thou wilt not leaue his house. Yea, & concerning those things, which before I sayd that thou wert to do; do not expect them of thy selfe alone; but beseech our Lord that he will help thee. For in all thinges, thou shalt find him, to be both a piteous Father, and a tender Spouse.

The Perpe­tuall cha­stity must not be vowed but with maturity, and after good ex­perience of ones selfe; es­pecially by such as stil do liue in the world; for as for such Religious as are inclo­sed, the meanes of keeping chastity are so great, as that they may sooner vndertake that course, though still great prudence must be vsed heerin. state of virginity, which thou hast [Page 542]imbraced, ought not to he lightly vndertaken, vpon euery fit of deuotion, which may happen; nor yet, because thou knowest not, where to find a husband. But as a thing of mighty importance, it must be considered of, with much aduise; and experience is to be taken, of ones selfe; and one must practise first, the seruice of Christ; and must haue recommended it to God, and that very cor­dially, both dayes, and yeares; least that be ne­gligently performed, which was not grounde [...]ly intertayned. But when it is once vndertaken, both in that manner, and for the end that is fit; the person who imbraceth it, is to grow cheare­full vpon it; because it is a state of incorruption, & yet a state also it is, of fertility. For, as the Blessed Virgin Mary, (who through her excellent, and incomparable pure Virginity, is called the Virgin of Virgins, and is the patronesse of Virgins) did both giue fruite, and yet retained the floure of her purity; so other Virgins, if indeed they be true Virgins, do giue fruit in their soules; and yet haue en [...]iernesse in their bodies. For this celestiall spouse of Christ Iesus, is not like them of this world, who despoile their spouses, of their true beauty, and integrity; but he is so truely a conseruer of their beauty; and so great a louer of their purity, as that they may say to him, with The sweet S. Agnes, virgin & Martyr sayd so, when she was but 13 yeares of age. S. Agnes; To him alone, do I keepe my Faith; to him alone do I recom­mend my selfe, with entiere deuotion; whome when I loue I am chast when I touch him, I am pure; and when I receiue him, I am a Virgin.

Nor will there be wanting children, as the fruit of such marriages as these; wherof, they are deliuered without torment, and their fruitefull­nes is euery day increased. And this did S. Agnes say, as one who had tasted the suauity of this ce­lestiall espousall. And It is a shame to Virgins if they as­pire not to the im­bracemēt of their heauenly Spouse. a confusion, (and that no small one) it ought to be, to a Virgin, who cal­leth her selfe the spouse of Christ, to haue no more taste of the qualities, and sweet condition of her spouse, then if she were a meere stranger to him.

O how many afflictions doth virginity pre­uent; how many cares, how much vnquietnes? Some, which the very state it selfe of Matrimony, betweene persons who are made of flesh & bloud, doth necessarily bringe with it; and others, which grow from that vntoward disposition, which is so often found, eyther in the husband, or in the wife. Others agayne, from the ill proofe of the children. But The great dif­ference betweene a spiritual & corpo­rall mar­riage. in our case, all the children, are, Ioy, Charity, Peace, and such others (like to these), which are recounted by Gal. 5. S. Paul. This spouse, is full of goodnes; he is peaceable, rich, wise, beautifull; and, as his fellow Spouse, saith in the Cant. [...]. Canticles, He deserueth, to be wholy desired. Doth it not therefore seeme to thee, that this King, doth an incomparable fauour, to the persō whom he taketh, I say not for a slaue, or seruant, but for a spouse? Doth it not seeme to thee, a good ex­change, of a birth with torment, into a birth with ioy; of Children, which afflict with care; to Chil­dren, which are full of comfort; yea, and such as [Page 544]bring their dowry in their handes, which is, both honour, and pleasure. Verily, (sayd S. Hierome, (when he was speaking to the mother of a cer­taine virgin) I cannot vnderstand the reason, why thou shouldst be angry with thy daughter; for refu­sing to be the wife of a particuler Cauallier, that so she might be espoused, to a Christ our Lord. King; by meanes whereof, she hath made thee, the mother-in law, of Christ.

It doth therefore now, but remaine, O Vir­gin, that thou take comfort, in the state, which our Lord, of his goodnes, hath called thee to. And that thou haue care, to be that very thinge to him, which thou shouldest be. And be no more fearefull, of thine owne weakenes, then thou art confident in our Lord; that he will perfect that in thee, which he hath begunne. That The middle way is the right way betweene feare and hope, till we arriue to the ior­neyes end which is perfect loue. so, neither the fauour that he hath done thee, do in­toxicate thee, with any giddy kind of gladnesse; nor yet, the thought, of the much thou owest him, draw thee down into any dismay. But walke thou on, betweene feare, and hope; till the feare be taken away, by that perfect loue, which is found in heauen. And hope also, may be then dismissed, when we shall haue The very visiō of God, and that for euer. that thing present with vs, which heere we hoped for; and so, as that we haue no more feare, to loose it.

CHAP. CVI.
Of foure conditions, which are requisite for the making of any thinge beautifull; and how all of them, are wanting to a soule, that is in sinne.

VVE haue made a long digression, from the question that we asked, How the soule could come, by such beauty, as that God should be drawne to a desire of it. But the cause of this di­gression, was the doubt, of our conceauing, that the King perhaps might care for the beauty of the Body. Let vs now returne to our purpose.

Thou art to know, that for the making a thing to be of perfect beauty, foure conditions are necessary. The first, That it must haue all the parts that belongeth to it; for if any of them be wanting; as a hand, or foot, or the like, it cannot be tear­med beautyfull. The second is, that one part haue proportion with another; and if it be the picture of any life, it must be made, very like the originall. The third is, that it must haue purity of colour. The fourth, that it must haue a competency of greatnes. For that which is little, though it be well proportioned, will not arriue to be absolut­ly accompted beautifull.

Now, if Euery soule that is in state of sinne, is out right defor­med. we consider all these conditions in a soule, that is sinfull; we shall finde that it hath no one of them. Not completenes; because if it want either faith, or charity, and the giftes of the [Page 546] holy Ghost, which it was to haue; that cannot be called beautifull, to which so many thinges are wanting. Againe, one part thereof carryeth no proportion to another; for neither doth sense, obey reason; nor reason, God. Especially, conside­ring, that the soule, being created after the image of God; it was reason, that for the preseruation of her beauty, she should haue resembled her Ori­ginall, in vertue, as shee doth in the naturall being which she hath. But now God, being good, and the soule being wicked; God being pure, and the soule polluted; God being milde, and the soule impatient; and so in the rest; how can there be beauty, in that image, which is so vnlike to the originall? As for the third, which is, a certaine spiritual light of grace, & the notions which are to refresh, & as it were reuiue the beauty of the soule ( as colours do of the body) they are also wanting to it; for it walkes in darknes; and it is obscured, beyond Thren. 4. the black of coales, according to that la­mentation of Hieremy. Least of all, hath it, the fourth condition; since there is nothing so mise­rably little, as to be a sinner; who is nothing, and lesse then nothing. So that, all the conditions of beauty being wanting, to such a soule, it will not faile to be deformed. And because all those soules which are infused into the bodyes that descend of Adam, be Christ our Lord & our B. Lady, are excepted; and there­fore he v­seth the word or­dinary, to oppose it to that o­ther way which is extraordi­nary. ordinarily sinners, it will follow, that they are all deformed.

CHAP. CVII.
How the deformity of sinne, is so wicked a thing; as that no force, or law of Nature, or of Scripture, were sufficient to abolish it; but only Iesus Christ; in vertue of whome sinne was euer taken away, and grace was giuen.

THIS deformity of sin, is so hardly, or indeed so impossibly to be taken away, by the force of any creature; that all of them togeather, are not able, to beautifye any one deformed soule. Our Lord declareth this by the Prophet Hier. 2. Hieremy saying, If thou shalt be washed with salpetre, and with abundance of sope, yet art thou defiled in my presence. The meaning whereof is, That for the taking away of sinne; neither the salpetre, or the repre­hensions, of the Prophets; nor the rigorous punish­mentes of the old law; nor yet the faire speaches and promises which God did make, at that time, were sufficient. Men were defiled then, in the middest, both of their punishmentes, and of their comfortes; of threatninges, and of promises; For no man was iustified, in the sight of God, as S. Paul Gal. 3. sayth, by the works of the old law; and ther­fore the soule could not haue such beauty in it, as to make it desirable by Almighty God; because there was a want of iustification, which is the cau­se of beauty in a soule.

Now if, in that law, and in those sacrifices, which were giuen by God himselfe, beauty could [Page 548]be imparted to the soule; it is euident, that it must lesse haue bin, in the law of Nature; for as much as that, had not so great remedyes against sinne; and in particuler it had no written law. But No soule was euer pur­ged for sinne, but by the precious bloud of our Lord Jesus. the beauty, which then inhabited the soules of men, (as well vnder the law of Nature, as that other, which was written) was obtained, by the shedding of the bloud, of that pretious lambe, Iesus Christ our Lord: who (as S. Iohn Apoc. 13. doth teach vs) was slaine from the beginning of the world. For although he dyed vpon the crosse, in the latter dayes there­of (for so the Apostles, doe call the time, of the comming of Christ) yet is he sayd, to haue beene slaine from the beginning of the world, because, euen from that tyme, did How the bloud of our Lord thē did worke before it was shed. his death beginne to ob­taine pardon, and grace, for them, who grew to haue it. So taking that vp (as a man would say) vpon trust; which he would after pay, vpon the crosse. For God ordeined, that as there was one Father, who was the head and fountaine of sinne, and death, to all such as were to descend from him, in an ordinary course; so in like māner, there should be one, by whome all such, as desired, might be free, both from that mischiefe, wherin the other had placed them; and from those others also, which they should bring vpon themselues.

So saith Saint Rom 5. Paul, That as by the in­obedience of one, many were made sinners; so by the obedience of one, many should be made iust. And Let the Protestant note this truth, without passion. as the obedience, which Iesus Christ per­formed to his Father, euen to the death, yea and the [Page 549]death of the Crosse, doth not only make men iust, by a kind of resemblance, but by giuing of true iustice; so the hurt that Adam did vs, was not by giuing vs an example only of sinne, but by making vs, through his sinne, true sinners. And so, that which Act. 4. S. Peter sayd, That there is no other name vnder heauen, then that of Iesus Christ, wherein we may thinke of being saued, is not only to be vn­derstood, from the time that God became incar­nate, but from the beginning of the world, as hath beene sayd. Since they, who, at any time, haue beene in grace with God, were so, by the merits of this our Lord, by Fayth, & pennā ­ce, are the meanes of applying the merits of Christ our Lord, to a soule. meanes of fayth & pennance.

And although, by the circumcision of Chil­dren, Grace were giuen, whereby they became iust, and their originall sinne was pardoned; yet was it not, the circumcision alone which gaue the grace (for that precious gift, was reserued for the Sacramentes of the new law) but What that was which gaue grace in the old law. it was, A pro­testation of Faith, in the Messias, who was after­wards to come; which protestation, was to be made vnto him, then. And when, after, being growne in yeares, they came to loose their grace, by any mortall sinne; they offered vp some such beast, as God commaunded; the bloud whereof, was to be shed in the Temple. Not, to the end, that it might iustify, (for that, it had no power to do) but that the sinner, might protest the Faith which he had, in that Lord, who was to come. And by this saith, and by that inward sorrow, for his sinns, [Page 550]which God inspired; he was made partaker of that pretious bloud of Christ, which for the pardon of sinnes, was to be shed.

Not The same bloud of our Lord, was the remedy also of sinne, vn­der the law of Na­ture. only, was there a remedy, in the written law, against sinne, by faith and internall pennance (as we haue said), but also in the law of nature, although it were not then required, that their faith in our Lord, should be so explicite. But so also were there, such exteriour protestations of their Faith as our Lord (who would haue all men saued) did inspire. To the end, that although the nations were diuers, and their In se­uerall places, seuerall externall rites may be vsed, by the members of the same Church, so that the Church allow the same; as we see it is in Milan, and many other places; but the do­ctrine, must be euery where a­like. externall rites were different; yet the Sauiour and Mediatour, betweene God and man, as 1. Tim. 2. S. Paul affirmeth, might be but one.

CHAP. CVIII.
That Christ our Lord, taketh away the deformity of the soule, by his bloud; and that it was conueni­ent, that rather the Sonne, should become man, then either the Father, or the holy Ghost; and of the great force of the bloud of Christ our Lord.

CONSIDER then, how deformed the spot is, which sinne doth cause; and how farre we are to fly from it; since being once receiued, into the soule, it could neither be washed away by the shedding of so much bloud, as was offered in the Temple, by the commaundment of God himselfe; nor could all the force of man, arriue [Page 551]vnto it. And if that, beautifull, and deare Christ our Lord. Word of God, had not come downe to beautify vs, the deformity of sinne, would for euer haue remained in vs. But that lambe, without spot, comming downe, he had the power, and he had the way, and he had the will, to put away these spotts; & he destroyed our deformity, and he endewed vs with beauty.

And to the end that thou mayest see, with how much conueniency the Sonne of God, rather then God the Father, or the holy Ghost was to be he, that should beautify our deformed soules with his bloud; Consider, that as Eternity is attribu­ted to the Father, and Loue to the holy Ghost; so, to the Sonne of God, as God, is attributed Beauty; because he is most The first quali­ty of Be­auty. prefect, and without the least defect; and he is the The se­cond qua­lity of Be­auty. image of the Father, as S. Paul Heb. 1. saith; and so liuely an one, that in re­gard he is engendred, by way of the vnderstan­ding, he is, to all purposes, as his Father; who gaue him the same essence that himselfe hath; in such sort, as that he, Ioan. 14. who seeth him, seeth the Father, as the holy ghospell saith. Now by reason of this proportion, betweene the Sonne, and the Father, which is so absolute; most iustly, is beauty ascribed to him, since the image is taken, in so liuely a ma­ner, out of the originall.

Light The third qua­lity, of Beauty. is not wanting to him; for he is called the Worde, which is a thing engendred by the vnderstanding; and in that vnderstanding, as S. Iohn Ioan. 1. saith, which was true light. Greatnes [Page 552]is not The fourth quality of beauty. wanting to him; since he is infinitly im­mense; and therefore was it conuenient, that this beautifull God, by whom we were made whē we were not, should come to restore vs when we were lost; and who, apparaylling himselfe with our flesh, should take vpon him, the resem­blance of our deformity; and so imparte to vs, the excellency of his owne beautie. And although, neither our being punished, or spoken faire, was able to free vs, from our spots; yet was the va­lew so great of the punishing of that beautiful per­son, that the sharp salpetre of his passion, falling vpō his shoulders, there distilled downe vpon vs, the sweet dew of his whitnesse. And howsoeuer God doth say, to the sinner, Although Hier. 12. thou wash thy selfe with salpetre, & with the Fullers hearbe, thou shalt not be cleane; yet telling vs, that he would send a remedy, against this spot, he sayth, in ano­ther place, If thy sinnes, be as red as scarlet, they shalbe made white like snow; and if they shalbe as red as bloud, they shall become whyte like woll.

Very truly well, did Dauid belieue this, when he Ps. 50. sayd; Thou shalt sprinkle me, O Lord, with The in­ward meaning of this place, deliuered. [...]yssope, and I shalbe cleane; thou shalt wash me, and I shall become more white then snow. Hyssope is a litle hearbe, and somewhat hot, and hath the property to purge the lunges, wherby we breath. This hearbe they brought to a wand of Cedar, & they tyed it thereunto, with a string of crimson, double died. And so being bound togeather, they [Page 553]called it that Hyssope, wherewith, (when first it had beene steeped in bloud, and water; and then with water, and ashes) they sprinkled both lea­prous persons; and such as had touched any dead body; and thereupon they were held for cleane. Full well knew Dauid, that neither the herbe, nor the Cedar, nor the bloud of birdes or beastes, nor yet water or ashes, could giue any cleannesse, to the soule; although it were figured by them. And therfore, he desired not God, that he would take into his hand, a branch of Hyssope, & sprinkle him with it; but That hysop was a figure of the humi­lity and Passion of Christ our Lord. he sayth so, in res­pect of the humanity, and humility of Iesus Christ our Lord, which is called an herbe, because it grew from the earth of the Blessed Virgin Mary; and because he was begotten, without the help of man, as the flower springeth in the field, which is neither plowed, nor sowed. For this it is, that he sayth, I am Can. 2. the flower of the field. And this her be is called little, for the meanenesse which he tooke vpon himselfe in the world; so far forth, as to say, A Psal. 21. worme I am, and no man; the dishonour of men, and the very out-cast of the people.

This The passion of our Lord is the only soueraign cure of pride. humbled flesh of our Lord, is such a remedy, against the puffe of our foolish pride; as that it may be cured, by this so great humility; since there is no colour, for a worme, to exalt it self, when the King of Maiesty is so abased. And forget not, that Hyssope is hot. For Christ, by the fire of that loue, which was burning in the roots of his hart; was pleased to abase himself, to purge [Page 554]vs; thereby to make vs know, that if he who was so high did abase himselfe, how much reason there is, why we (who haue so true cause to abase our selues) should not, by our selues, be exalted. And if God be humble, how much more should a man be so.

This Of our Lord Ie­sus. flesh, so full of true phisicke, was then put to the sticke of a Cedar, when it was placed vpō the crosse; & tyed by that delicate thrid of wooll, twice died. For, although the nayles which fastned thereunto his handes, and feete, were hard, and great, and long inough; yet, if the thrid of his ardent loue had not fastned him to that crosse; and vnles he had been willing, to deliuer vp his life, for the killing of our death; those nayles, would not haue beene strong i­nough, for such a businsse. So that, it was not they, but the loue he bare vs, that held him there. And The double as­pect which was carryed by the loue of our Lord; the repa­ration of Gods ho­nour; and the remis­sion of mans sin. this loue carryed a double aspect, as crimson which is double died: for he suffered, that which he suffered, to satisfy for the honour of his father, who was offended by our sinnes; and for the loue of sinners, who were lost thereby.

CHAP. CIX.
That the sacred humanity of Christ our Lord, was figured in the ga [...]ent of the high Priest; and in the veyle which God commaunded Moyses to make. And what that was, which Dauid begged, when he desired to be sprinckled with Hys [...]ope, that he might so be cleansed.

THE garment, which the high Priest, of the old Law did weare, was to be double died in crimson; because How the figurs of the old Testamēt, were per­fected, & fullfilled in the per­son of our Lord Ie­sus. the holy Humanity of Christ, which is the garment of his soule, was to be dyed in bloud, being shed, both for the loue of God, and man. And this flesh, being nayled vpon the Crosse; is that veyle which God commaunded Moyses to make, of the Exod. 18. colour of Hyacinth, Crimson, and Purple, double died; and of whyte, and well and strongly wouen linnen, made with the nee­dle; and curiously diuersified by seuerall workes. For, this holy Humanity, is died with bloud, like crim­son; it is of a fiery colour, which is signified by the purple, as hath been said; and it is white like fyne linnen, through Chastity and Innocency; and it is well and strongly wouen, for it is not loose or weake, but firmely, and fast put togea­ther, vnder all kind of vertuous discipline, and much affliction. And The colour of the floure hiacinthus is blew, though the colour of that stone, which we know by that name is of a deep yel­low. this is well signifyed by the Hyacinth, which is of a celestiall colour; be­cause his body, was framed by the supernatural [Page 556]worke of the holy Ghost. For this reson, is it cal­led celestiall; and for many other vertues, & per­fections thereof, which were contriued by the admirable knowledge, of the wisedome of God! The commaundment was, that this veyle should be hung, vpon foure pillars, which were to vp­hold it; which signifieth, that Christ was to be placed, vpon the The crosse was made of foure parts. One was the length, two the breath, & the other, wherupō the litle was writ­ten. foure armes of the Crosse; and foure Ghospells they also be, which doe pu­blish and preach it, throughout the world.

Now, for as much as Dauid (being a Pro­phet so illuminated by God, in the knowledge of those mysteries which concerned Christ, who was to come) seeing, how deformed himselfe was growne, by the foule sinne, of The murther which he commit­ted, vpon the persō of Vrias, that so he might cō ­tinue to enioy Bersabee his wife. stealing the sheep, and murthering the sheepheard; & fearing the wrath of the Omnipotent God, wherwith he was threatened, by the mouth of the Prophet Nathan; he beseecheth God, to take away his The deformity of sinne & the beauty of grace. deformity; and to giue him beauty; not with materiall Hyssope, since the same Dauid sayd to God, That he tooke no Not in any thing that was only ex­ternal, but the exter­nall sacri­fices were to be ac­compani­ed by in­ternall sorrow for sinne. delight in the sacrifice of beasts; but he beggeth to be sprinckled by the flesh & bloud of Iesus Christ, being tied with the strings and cordes of loue, vpon the Crosse. Beleeuing that though his deformity were great; and that other­wise it was impossible to remoue it; yet he should grow white, beyond the whitenesse of snow, by the bloud, which was to fall from the crosse.

O Beautifull bloud of Christ our Lord who art so Beautiful. For although thou be as red as Rubies, [Page 557]thou hast power to make a thing more white thē snow. O At the least, we must now consider it and lamēt the cause thereof, which is our sinne. if a man had seene, with what vio­lence it was drawne downe by those wretches, & with what loue it was shed by thee, O Lord, when thou didst stretch forth thyne armes, and feete, to be let bloud therein, for the remedy of that so lewd disorder, and distemper, which we made by our ill desires, and deedes? With great force, did thyne enemies come vpon thee, but with much more violence, did thy loue assault thee; for it was that, and not they, which ouer­came thee. Dauid, did stile Christ Psalm. 44. beautifull a­boue all the sonnes of men. But this beautifull crea­ture, who surpassed not only men but Angells, would needes as it were dissemble that beauty of his; and he apparailed the exteriour of his body, with the resemblance of that deformity, which possest our soules. That so, the same deformity might be swallowed vp, in the Abysse of his beau­ty; as some little straw would be consumed, in a huge fire; and that he might giue vs his owne beautifull Image, and make vs so resemble him.

CHAP. CX.
How Christ did as it were dissemble those foure condi­tions of his beauty; so to make vs beautifull; to which purpose there is a passage of the Prophet Isay declared.

YF we do well consider the conditions, which haue bin shewed to be requisite for the ma­king [Page 558]a man beautifull, (al which, are in the diuine word after a most excellent manner) we shal find, that he dissembled, and hid them all; that so being concealed in him, they might grow to be disclo­sed in vs. Most The first con­ditiō that any thing must haue if it will be beautifull was hid­den by Christ Ie­sus our Lord in his sacred passion. entire, and perfect, and full, is the word of God; which wanteth nothing, nor can it want, and which remooueth the want of all thinges. But yet, though in the bosome of his Father he be so rich; (if thou looke vpon him, be­ing made man, in the wombe, and in the armes of his mother, as also throughout the whole course of his life, and death) thou wilt see, how he wanted both to eate, and drinke; yea and a bed wheron to lye, when the Virgin layd him in the manger. For neither was there any bed for him in the stable of Bethleem, nor any other place then that. How often did he want meanes, to put away both heate, and cold; and nothing he had, if they gaue him nothing. And if in his life tyme, he had not a place where to lay his head (as him­selfe affirmeth) what shall we say, of that extre­mity of pouerty, to which he was subiect in his death; at which tyme, neither had he any thing, whereupom so much as to lay his head. For ey­ther he was to haue leaned backe with it, vpon the Crosse (and so to endure excessiue paine, by the thornes which might pricke him so much the dee­per) or else he must let it fall, & so remaine with­out a rest; but not without exceeding paine.

O sacred head, whereof the Spouse Cant 5. saith, That it is of purest gold; as being the head of God; [Page 559]and how much to thy cost, dost thou pay for that resting place, which (in preiudice of the loue that we owe to thy selfe) we procure to find vpon thy creatures; both How true is this and how truly ought it to be re­formed. louing them, and desi­ring to be beloued, and praised by them; making that to be our lodging, which should be only our high way, whereby we might ariue to repose in thee? Now the reason, why he passeth through such want, and pouerty, is declared by S. Paul, who saith, You know well, O brethren, the grace which our Lord Iesus Christ, imparted to vs; who be­ing rich, did make himselfe poore, for vs; that so we might grow rich, by his pouerty. And the while, thou seest, that the first condition of beauty, which was to be complete, is altogeather hidden, and as it were dissembled by him, since to him, there was so much wanting, vpon earth, who in hea­uen, was abundance it selfe.

If now thou wilt consider, the second con­dition of the Beautifull word of God, which is to be The second condition of the be­auty of our Lord was hid­den by him, in the passiō. the most perfect image of his Father, and pro­portionable to him, and equall to him; thou wilt find, that on earth, he dissembled this condition, no lesse then the former. For tell me; what is the Father but Strength, Wisdome, Honour, Beauty, Bounty, Ioy, and such other excellencies; which all togeather, do make vp, an infinite Good. Well then; do thou place, on the one side, this admi­rable Originall, which is all glorious in it selfe; & adored by the Angells; and If euer thou wilt, lend me thy atten­tion, and thy com­passion, I beg it now. then call to mind, that passage, (which in reason, ought to passe, [Page 560]yea and passe through, the most internall partes of our very soules) when this beautiful image of the Father, Iesus Christ our Lord, was brought out from the Tribunall of Pilate, most cruelly scour­ged, and vested with a purple robe; and tormen­ted with that crowne; which was of scorne, in their eyes that saw it, and of insufferable payne, in him that felt it. His hands, in the meane tyme, were bound; and a Cane or Reed, was put into them; His eyes full of teares, and of bloud with all; which ran downe from his head. His cheeks, pale and wanne, and full also of bloud, and defi­led vvith filthy spittle, vvhich they had darted out vpon his face. And vnder this paine, and shame, vvas he brought out, to be seeme by all the people, and thus it vvas said, Behold the man. And this vvas done, to the end, that his shame might in­crease, in being seene by them; and that, com­passion might once grovv in their hartes, vvhen they perceaued in vvhat case he vvas; and so, they might giue ouer the persecution, of a man, vvhō they saw, in such a passion. But Infinit patience and loue of our Lord, and inscru­table ma­lice of the wicked Iewes. O, vvith hovv wicked eyes, did they behold the paines of him, (vvho yet did feele more paine for their perdition, then for those very paines of his owne;) since insteed of quenching that fire, of their frantike malice, with the water of the dis­honour which they saw him in, it burned, but more, and more, like wild-fyre which burnes in water. They would not hearken to that worde, which was said to them, by Pilate, Behold the [Page 561]man; for they cared not for seeing him there; but sayd, that they would see him vpon a Crosse.

But thou, at least, O soule which art redee­med by the torments of Christ, do thou hearken, and let all of vs hearken to this word, Behold the man; least otherwise we grow aliens from the redemption of Iesus Christ; if we cannot find in our harts, to be mindfull, and gratefull to him in respect of them. When we A con­sideration which wil pierce the harts of al such as hauethen [...] not of flint. bring forth any thing, to the end that it may be seene, we are wont to dresse it, the best we can; that so it may enamoure the lookers on. And when we bring forth any thing, that we would haue to be feared; we set it out, with a shew of Armes, & Trophees; and we accompany it with such other thinges, as may make them tremble, that behold it. And when we make any representation that should moue a man to tears; we apparail it in mourning, and we giue it all those additions, that may in­duce men to sorrow. Then tell me, what was the intention of Pilate, in drawing Christ our Lord, into the view of the people? It was certainely, not to make them loue him; nor to make them feare him; and therefore they did neither beauti­fy him, nor set him out with Guardes & Caualliers; but he brought him forth, to appease the cruell harts of the Iewes, by that spectacle of our Redee­mer. And this was not to be done, by the way of loue; For well did Pilate know, hovv cordially, and profoundly they abhorred him; but he had a desire to pacify them, euen by the pure force of [Page 562]those excessiue torments; which were indured by that delicate body of his, so much to his cost. For this it was, that Pilate did dresse Christ, our Lord, with such a dressing of torments; which were both so many, and so great, as might haue serued to moue compassion in al such as saw him, how much soeuer they did detest him.

It No Christian soule can doubt of this. is therefore to be belieued, that he brought him forth, the most afflicted, the most abased, and the most dishonoured, that he could deuise. Making it his study, how to deforme him (as one would study, to beautify, and a­dorne some gallant birde) that so, he might ap­pease the wrath of such as hated him; since he found by experience, that he could not do it, by other meanes.

And now tell me, if Christ was brought forth in such a fashion, as might haue serued to quench the fire of hate, in their harts that abhor­red him; how It is more thē reason. mightily, is it reason, that the sight, and shew of him, should kindle the fire of loue, in their harts, who know him to be God, and who confesse him to be their Redeemer. Isay the Isa. 5 [...]. Prophet, saw this passage long be­fore, it was brought to effect. And, being in con­templation of our Lord, he sayd; He Heere giue thyn eares, and thy hart to God. hath no beauty, nor delicacy; we haue seene him, and there was nothing to be seene in him; and we desired to haue him despised, and the most abased thing amongst men; a man of griefe, and who did euen possesse the knowledg of torments. His face was, as if it were hidden, and [Page 563]despised; and therefore, we had him in no estimation. It was truely he, that bare our infirmityes; and himselfe did suffer our paynes, and we esteemed of him, as some leaprous person, and as stroken, by the hand of God, and so deiected. If thou wilt weigh these wordes of Isay, one by one, thou wilt easily see, how the beauty of Christ, was all concealed, in that day of his affliction, for the beautifying of vs.

The Heere see the different christ our Lord, grew to be from him­selfe; and it was all, for our sakes. Spouse speaking to Christ, doth say in the Cant. 5. Canticles, Thou art faire, thou art sweet O my beloued; and heere Isay sayth, That he hath nei­ther sweetnes, nor beauty; and he, whose face is beheld with such attention and ardent desire by the Angells, is heere affirmed, not to be worth the looking on. And he, who at his entrance into the world, was (by commaundment of the Father) adored Heb. 9. by all the Angells, is now (at his going out of it) despised, by the basest of men. Dauid sayth of Christ, That Psalm. 88. he is exalted, aboue all the workes of the handes of God; and Isay sayth, That he is the most abased amongst men. And Be at­tentiue. if this had beene yet deliuered, by way of com­paring him, with some worthy persons; the re­proach would not haue beene so great. But what wilt thou say, if being put in ballance with a Barabbas; that robber, that murtherer, that sedicious man, they hold him better then Christ, who is the giuer of life it selfe, and the maker of all the peace, that is made, betweene his Father, and the world? And so farre off, he was, from taking away any thing which belonged to others, [Page 564]as that he payed, what he had neuer taken.

There was no cause, why Christ should suffer any payne; since the cause of payne, is the sinne, which came into the world; but yet Isay calleth him heere, The very man of greife; which signifyeth, that he did strangely abound therein. For although, by experience he knew not vvhat belonged to vvicked pleasure; yet vvas he the man, who knew vvell, vvhat did belong to ri­gorous payne, because he felt it. And that, in so full a measure; as that he sayth, by the mouth of [...]auid, My soule is very full of payne. Christ, is called The third con­dition of beauty, was all hidden in christ our Lord, in the tyme of his sa­cred pas­sion. light, because he did by his admirable vvordes, and works, giue ioy, and driue darke­nesse, out of the vvorld; but this light▪ sayth Isay, had the countenance thereof, almost all hidden. For if he be looked vpon, vvith the eyes of flesh and bloud, I know not vvho wilbe able to reco­uer him, by his countenance, through the ex­cessiuely yll, that they had treated him before. Which is the lesse to be marueyled at, because al­though the virgin. (vvho be blessed for euer (and vvho was vpon that day the most The vnspeaka­ble griefe of our B. Lady; whose ho­ly soule was pier­ced thro­ugh with the sword of sorrow according to the prophesy of S [...]m [...]ō. afflicted of vvomen) had brought him forth into the vvorld, and swathed him; and vsed to behold her selfe in his face, (as in a most pure, and perfect glasse) yet I easily belieue, that if she was present, at that spectacle, of so excessiue sorrow, she would looke, and looke againe, (with as great attention, as the teares of her eyes, and the bitter greife of her wounded hart, would giue her leaue) to see, if [Page 565]that were her most blessed Sonne; who now was growne to be of a complexion, and a fashion, so very different, from that which formerly she had obserued in him.

And Ano­other point, which is also high­ly to be conside­red. if they, who saw our Lord, had belie­ued, that he endured all that; not because him­selfe did owe it, but because he loued them, who were true debters to the iustice of God; it might haue giuen some ease, to the paynes of Christ; but what shall wee be able to say, since Isay tel­leth vs, That they held him, for a man, who was deie­cted, and stroken, by the hande of God. For they thought, that God abased him so for his sinnes; and that he deserued all that, and a great deale more; and therefore they desired, that he might be crucifyed. So that (for as much as concerned his exteriour), they tooke off their eyes, from looking on him. For they did loath the sight, as of a leaprous person; and in their harts they held him for a most wicked man; and worthy both of that misery and more. A strange, and lamentable thing it was, that if they looked towards him they did spit, withal; if they looked not, it was because they had some mighty auersion; as men would haue, from the sight of some vgly thing. That which they spake of him, was most reproachfull language, which might afflict him no lesse, then his very paines; and yet they said, that he had not all which he had deserued, and that therefore he was to be nailed to the Crosse.

CHAP. CXI.
Of the many and wonderfull thinges, which our Lord did draw out of that greatest wickednesse, which they committed who murthered Christ and of the seueral effects which these wordes Behold the man, being spoken by Pilate, and preached by the A­postles, haue brought to passe, in the world.

VVHO is he, that will not wonder, and giue praise to God, for his infinite wis­dome; who by so strange a meanes, could redeeme the world; drawing the greatest blessinges, out of the most wicked sinnes, that euer were com­mitted by men? What more impious thinge, ey­ther was, or euer can be committed in the world, then to dishonour, prophane, torment, and cru­cify, the Sonne of God. But yet, on the other side, from what other thinge, hath there growne so much benefit to the same world, as by this blessed Passion, there hath done. It was then con­ceaued, that when Pilate bestowed such a dressing of torments vpon this spouse, that he had dressed him only, but to haue bin seene by the eyes of that people. But he dressed him, as it proued, to be seen by the eyes of the whole world; God can serue himselfe as well of them that offend him, as of them that loue him. doing seruice thereby, (although himselfe knew not of it) to that, which God had promised so Isa. 52. long before, by saying, All mankind shall see the salua­tion of God: And this saluation, is Christ Iesus, to [Page 567]whome the Father said, I do not much esteeme that thou shouldst awake the tribes of Iacob to serue me, and conuert the dregges of Israel to me. I Isa. 49. gaue thee, for a light to the Gentills, that so thou mightst be my That is, the Sa­uiour of my peo­ple. saluation, to the vttermost partes of the earth.

Christ Iesus, in person, did only preach, to the sheepe of the house of Israel, which had perished; and afterward, his holy Apostles, did beginne to preach to the same people of Israel; and they con­uerted some, but not all the Iewes; and therefore, they are called dregges. But the saluation of the Fa­ther, which is Christ, did not stay only with the people of the Iewes; but The fayth of Christ, was spred into the world by the Apo­stles; and it is still spreading in the fur­thest cor­ner there­of by A­postolicall men. sallied out into the world, when it was preached by the Apostles; & so also, at this day, is the preaching of the name of Christ, stretching it selfe out to the Nations, which are furthest of; that so, he may be a light, not only to the Iewes who belieued, vpon his preaching to them in person; but to the Gentills also, who liued in idolatry, far off from God. And then was it fulfilled, which Luc. 2. Simeon, that holy Swanne, did singe; when he said, out of his desire to dye, Now Lord, thou lettest thy seruant depart in peace, according to thy worde; for myne eyes haue seene thy saluation; which thou hast prepared, in the sight of all Nations; A light to the Gentills, and a glory to thy people of Israel

If we consider, that Christ was placed by the hand of Pilate, to be seene first by that people, in his owne house; and afterward from the top of the Crosse in Mount Caluary; it wil be euident to vs, [Page 568]that although, (in respect there came to the Pas­chall, men of all conditions, and Tribes (as well of naturalls, as strangers) there must needes be great store of people; yet was not Christ, there­fore placed in the view, and presence of all people, as Simeon, in his Canticle, had sunge. And there­fore Christ, was placed in the view, and pre­sence of them all, when he was preached through the world, by the Apostles, and their successours. Of whome, Dauid Psalm. 18. said, That their sound went out through the whole earth; and that their wordes did reach to the very endes thereof. For Our Lord is the light, both of Iewes and Gentills: Of the Iewes he is more particu­lerly the honour, because he tooke their flesh in the pure wombe, of the per­petuall Virgin. Christ, be­ing thus preached, was light then, and is so now, to those Gentills who will belieue in him; and so he is both light, and honour, to the Iewes, who al­so will belieue in him; as S. Paul expresseth, spea­king of them, of whome Christ came, according to the flesh, who is God, being blessed, aboue all thinges, for all eternity.

Let vs now consider, how farre otherwise, this was ordeined by God, from that, which Pi­late did intend. He conceaued, that he but placed Christ in the presence of that people, & no more; and he said, Behold heere the man; and he thought, when they would not let him dismisse him, but demaunded that he might be crucified, that he should neuer more, haue byn seene by any. But, How different the thoughts of God, are from the thoughts of men. because the eternall Father, saw it was not rea­son, that such a spectacle as that was, of his on­ly begotten Sonne (being the image of his owne beauty), should be beheld by so few, and those, [Page 569]so wicked eyes; or should be presented only to so hard hartes as theirs; he ordained, that another voyce, more loud then that, should be sounded forth, throughout the world, by the mouth of many; and they most holy publishers thereof, who should also say, Behold the man. The voyce of Pilate, could not sound far off; for it was but one, and a wicked one; inspired by feare, thro­ugh which, he sentenced Christ to death. He deserued not to be the proclaimer of this word, Behold the man; and therefore, did God com­mand it to be proclaimed by others. And that, so far from any feare of theirs, that rather they did desire, and rather they do resolue to dye, then to faile of one The courage of the A­postles, & of Apo­stolicall men. tittle, in preaching, and confessing, the truth, and glory of Christ Iesus.

Pilate, was a prophane, and foule person, for he was a sinnefull and an vnbelieuing man. But of the other proclaymers of this word, Behold he man, I say prophetizeth Isa. 52. saying, How beauti­full vpon the mountaynes be their feet, who preach the good newes of peace, and of benediction, and who say, In Sion thy God shall raigne. The God of Sion, is Christ Iesus; in whose person Dauid prophetizeth saying, Psalm. 2. I am made King, by the handes of God ouer Sion, that holy mountaine of his, preaching his com­mandment. And this King, who preacheth the Fa­thers commandment (which is the word of the Holy Ghospell) began to raigne in Sion; and he was receaued vpon Palme-Sunday, for the King of Israel in the Temple, which was placed vpon [Page 570]Mount Sion. And to the end we may vnderstand, that this Kingdome was to be, ouer spirituall things; it is said, by Dauid, that he was made King ouer Mount Sion; which is the mountain, where that Temple stood, wherein the worship of God was performed. And How the spiri­tual king­dome of Christ our Lord, grew to increase. afterward, when vpon the same Mount Sion, our Lord sent the Holy Ghost vpon his disciples, and he was preached publi­kely in the middest of Hierusalem, and in the eares of the High Priests, and Pharisees; and when, by the first sermon of S. Peter Act. 2. vpon the point of three thousand men were conuerted; then was this Kingdome of his increased. And when more people were yet cōuerted, the Apostles did preach and say to Sion, Thy God shall raigne. As if a man had sayd, Though yet, this Lord of ours, be knowne but by a few; yet shall his kingdome euer go increasing; till such tyme, as that at the end of the world, he may raigne ouer all men; rewarding the good with mercy; and punishing the wicked, with the iron rodde, of his rigorous iustice.

This is the voyce of the preachers of Christ, which saith, Thy God shall raigne. And If a preacher will profit others, he must be­gin with himselfe. because Christ raigneth not in the hart of an vncleane person (for as much, as sinne raigneth therein) it is not fit that he should preach the Kingdom of Christ to others, who will not giue him leaue to raigne in his owne soule. Therfore is it, that Isay Isa. 5 [...]. sayth, The feet of such as preach peace vnto vs, are beautifull. By the feete which are to be beautifull, are signifyed the desires of the soule. And therfore [Page 571]Christ would not haue the feet of those preachers couered with shoes, on These are San­dalles which still are vsed, by many holy Or­ders in the Ca­tholique Church. the vper part, because God doth place the beauty of them in publike, for the example of many. But yet, whosoeuer hath his feet cleane, is to be very carefull not to thinke, that himselfe made them so; but he must giue thankes to him, that washt the feet of his dis­ciples, with visible water, vpon Holy Thursday; and who washeth the soules, of all them, which euer come to be washed, with his sacred bloud.

It was not therfore reason, that so cleane a king as Christ was, should be proclaimed by such a filthy mouth as that of Pilate; or that there should be, but such a proclaimer, as could speake no lou­der, (and who was but one) to publish a spe­ctacle, wherein so many, and so great wonders, were to be declared, as were, in Christ; when he was brought forth, to be seene by the people. And though The difference betweene a Pilate, and a pi­ous Chri­stian. Pilate, might conceaue, that quickly, there would be no more thought of Christ; nor any, that would haue compassion of him; yet God ordained, that insteed of those few, who did spit vpon him, there might be, & may be, & shalbe, many, who are with reuerence to adore him. And that, insteed of them who, for the loath­somnesse of the spectacle could not endure to look vpō him; there should be many, who might ioy in beholding that most blessed face, as a most pure, and perfect glasse, though it were placed, vpon a The place of the grea­test re­proach, that could be tho [...]h [...] of. Crosse. And insteed of thē, who thought him to deserue, all that which he suffered, there should [Page 572]be so many, who might confesse, that he com­mitted no euill for which he ought to suffer; but only that themselues had sinned; and that he suffe­red for the loue of them. And lastly, if their cru­elty were so great, as not to haue compassion of him; but demanded, that he might be murthered vpon the crosse; God was pleased, that there should be many, who would desire to dye for Christ; and who with all their soules would say, I see The wordes of a soule, which is the spouse of Christ our Lord. O thou my friend, that thou art wounded, and full of payne, and I would to God I could suffer it for thee. Let not therfore Pilate thinke, that he dressed Christ so, in vayne; though he could not moue them, who then were present to compassi­on; since now, so many, vpon the remembrance of those afflictions of Christ, haue so great pitty of him; that in their harts, they are scourged, & crowned, and crucified togeather with him; as S. Paul affirmeth, both of himselfe, and, in the person, of many others.

CHAP. CXII.
How great reason it is, that we should behold this man Christ, with those eyes, wherewith many of them to whome the Apostles preached, did behold him: that so we may grow beautifull. And that this beauty is giuen vs, through his grace, and not through our owne merits.

A Most reasonable thing it is, O Virgin, that these motiues, which are so pregnant; and [Page 573]these examples which are so full of life, should moue thee (thou hauing first, cast away all te­pidity) to fixe him in thy hart, with a profound, and cordiall loue, who, so much to his torment, was placed, & nayled, vpon the Crosse, for thee. And that thou be none of those hard-harted per­sons, who heard those wordes spoken in vayne; but of those others, to whome the hearing there­of, hath beene a cause of saluation. Be none of them, who had not the grace to esteeme that, which was present to them; but of those others, in whose person, Isay sayth, We desired to see him; for many Kinges, and Prophets, haue desired, to see the face, and to heare the voyce of Christ our Lord.

Behold How necessary it is for vs to behold Christ our Lord, crucifyed. therefore, O Virgin, this man, Christ Iesus, who is published by the voyce of one, that is not worthy to proclaime him thus. Behold this man; that thou mayst then come to heare his wordes, for he is that maister, which the Father gaue vs. Behold this man; that thou mayst imitate his life; for there is no way, whereby thou canst be saued, but he Behold this man; that thou mayst haue compassion of him; for he was brought to such a passe, as might haue mooued, euen his e­nemies to compassion. Behold this man, to lament ouer him; for it is we, who by our sinnes, haue brought him, to the case he is in. Behold this man; that thou mayst loue him, for he hath suffered in­finitly for vs. Behold this man; that thou mayest beautify thy selfe by him; for in him, thou shalt find all the colours of beauty, that thou canst de­sire. [Page 574] Red, by the new buffetts which they gaue him; Blew, by those which he had receiued the night before; Yeallow, by the abstinence of his whole life, and by the affliction which he had pas­sed through, in that night. White, by the spittle which they had discharged vpon him; and Blacke, by those blowes, wherwith they had new moul­ded his sacred face; his cheekes all swelled, and of as many colours as those wretches could paint vpon them. For Isay Isa. 50. prophesied thus, in the person of Christ, I gaue my cheekes to those that would pull them; and my body to them that would af­flict it. What waters, what enamells, what white, and red, mayest thou find heere, wherewith to beautify thy selfe, if, by thy negligence, thou leaue them not.

Behold this man, O Virgin; for whosoeuer beholdeth him not, shall not escape from death. For, as Moyses did exalt the serpent in the desert v­pon a staffe, that they who were wounded, might re­couer by looking on it, and those others, dye, who did not looke; so It is not with fayth a­lone, that we must looke v­pon our Lord, but with faith & loue. whosoeuer shall not looke with faith, and loue, vpon Christ, (who is placed v­pon the wood of the Crosse) shal dye for euer. And, as I told thee before, that we must beseech the Fa­ther by saying, Looke, O Lord, vpon the face of thy Christ; so also doth the Eternall Father cōmaund, and say to vs, Looke O man, vpon the face of Christ our Lord is not on­ly, the Christ of God, but of vs also. thy Christ; and if thou wouldst haue me looke vpon his face, to pardon thee; looke thou vpon his face, that, by him, thou mayest desyre me, to giue thee pardon.

In The great God and this wretched man, can only be made to meet in Christ our Lord. the face of Christ, our Mediatour, the Fathers sight, and ours doe come to meete. There, do the beames of our belieue, and loue; there do the beames of his grace, and pardon, de­termine themselues. Christ, is called the Christ of the Father, because the Father engendred him, & gaue him what he hath. And Christ is called our Christ, because he offered himselfe for vs, besto­wing vpon vs all his merits. Behold therefore, the face of thy Christ; belieuing in him; confiding in him; and louing him; and all others, for him. Behold the face of thy Christ, by meditating on him; and by comparing thy life with his; that so, as in a glasse; thou mayest see thy faultes; and how far thou art off, from him; & so knowing the sinnes which deforme thee, thou mayest take, of his tears, & of his bloud, which streame downe, o­uer that beautifull face of his; and, with griefe, mayest wash away those spotts, and so thou mayst become beautifull, and iust. But as the Iewes tooke off their eyes from Christ, because they saw him so ill handled; so doth Christ take his eyes off, from that soule which is wicked, and which as leaprous, is abhorred by him.

But when he hath beautifyed it, by the grace that he gained for it, by his afflictions, he placeth his eyes vpon it, saying; How Cant. 4. beautifull art thou O my Friend, how beautifull art thou. Thyne eyes, are as of a doue, besides that, which is hidden within. He saith, two seuerall times, That she is be­autifull; because The soule that serueth God must haue, both good desires, & good deeds. she must be so, both in body, [Page 576]and soule; within, by desires, and without, by deeds. And because that which is within, is to exceed that which is without; he therefore saith, Besides that, which is within. And for that, the beauty of the soule, as S. Augustine saith, doth consist in lo­uing God, he therefore saith, Thyne eyes, are as of a doue. Whereby is noted, that syncere, and amou­rous intention, which only aymes at the plea­sing of God, without any mixture of proper inte­rest.

Then, Behold thou Christ, that Christ may behold thee. And We must giue all glory to God; & take the shame to ourselues. as thou must take heede of thinking, that he had done any thing for which he might deserue, to take vpon him, the shew of being deformed; so be sure, thou haue no imagi­nation, that thou hast deserued the beauty, which he gaue thee, of meere grace. For without any o­bligation, did he vest himselfe with our deformi­ty; and without any obligation, but of meere grace, he hath apparailed vs with his beauty. Of such men, as thinke that the beauty which they haue in their soules, they haue of themselues, God saith by Ezech 16. Ezechiel, thou wert perfected by the beau­ty which I had placed vpon thee; and yet hauing con­fidence, in that beauty As if it had beene his owne, & not only imparted by God. of thine, thou didst commit fornication, in thyne owne name; and thou didst ex­pose thy selfe in that sinne to all such as passed by, to be made theirs. This God doth say; For when a soule, ascribeth to her selfe, the beauty of Iustice, which God gaue her; she doth, after a sort, com­mit fornication with her selfe. For as much as, [Page 577]she desireth to ioy in her selfe, and not in God, who is her true spouse; and from whome she hath all her being beautifull; and she resolueth ra­ther to glory in her owne name, (which is to com­mit fornication in that name) then to glory in God, who gaue her that which she possesseth.

For this cause, doth God, with great rea­son, take away the beauty which he gaue her; since she rebelled from him, by occasion thereof. And because this vaine and wicked complacence, which she taketh in her selfe, is pride, and the beginning of all mischeife; therefore it is said, Thou didst offer thy selfe, in the way of fornication, to euery passenger. For A iust punish­ment. the proud man, leaning & resting vpon himself (who is but a meere vanity) is carried away with euery winde, & taken priso­ner by euery sinne, that passeth by; and that, most iustly; because he would not humble himselfe so, as to be established, by putting his confidence in God. Behold therfore this man Christ Iesus in him­selfe; and behold him, in thy selfe. In thy selfe, that so thou mayst see, who thou art. In himselfe, that so thou mayst see, who he is. Those igno­minyes, and abasements of his, thou didst de­serue, and therefore they are thyne; The good which is in thee, is his; and he gaue it, without any merit in thee.

CHAP. CXIII.
Wherein is prosecuted, the way that we are to take in beholding of Christ; and how he is beautifull in all thinges; and that those thinges, which in our Lord seeme vgly, to the eyes of flesh & bloud (such as are troubles, and torments) be of great beauty.

IF thou know how to make the right vse of that which hath been sayd, thou wilt employ all thy intention, in beholding this Lord of ours, with thy spirituall eyes; & thou wilt find it to be of more profit to thee, then if thou didst see him, with the only eyes, of flesh and bloud. For to these eyes, Christ was made deformed; but in the eyes of fayth, he was full of beauty. Isay sayth, That, to the eyes of the body, his face was, as if it had beene hidden; but How cleare and piercing are the eyes of Fayth. nothing is hidden, from the eyes of fayth; but like the eyes of a Leopard (which looketh as it were through walles) they passe through all exteriour impediments; and striking in, they find diuine strength, vnder that humane weaknes; and vnder contempt and di­shonour, they find beauty with glory. So that the wordes which Isay sayd. We saw him, and he had no beauty, were spoken in the person of such, as beheld him, with the only eyes, of their bo­dy.

But thou, O Virgin, take in thy hand, the light of fayth, and looke further in; and thou wilt perceaue, that he who comes forth, in like­nes of a sinner, is both iust, and a iustifyer of sin­ners; and that he, who is murthered, hath in him the innocency of a lambe. And he that hath his▪ face all discoloured, is of himself most beautifull; and did but dresse himselfe so, for the making of them beautifull, who were deformed. And There is nothing that ought so to ena­mour a soule vpō the beau­ty of christ out Lord, as to consi­der, that our sinnes and his loue, did cause his deformi­ty. how much the more, the spouse doth suffer, and abase himselfe for his fellow-spouse; so much the more is she to exalt him; and how much the more he com­meth wounded, and steeped, as it were, in sweat & bloud; so much the more beautifull is he, in her eyes; considering the loue wherwith he resolued to suffer those afflictions for her. And in fine, it is cleare, that if we ponder the cause, why Christ tooke vpon him this deformity, so much the more beautifull will he seeme to be, as he shall seeme to be more deformed.

Tell The foure cō ­ditions of beauty recapitu­lated. The first. me therefore now, if the first con­dition of beauty, were hidden in him; when be­ing rich, and aboundant, he abased himselfe, to the want of many thinges; what cause can be assigned thereof, but that he did it to preuent e­uery want of ours. And The second. if he grew to seem vn­like the image of his beautyfull Father; it was for no other reason, but because the Father, resolued not to giue vs beauty, but by the sonnes taking vpon him, our deformity. And The third. if the third condition, which is light or heat, did hide it selfe [Page 580]from that sacred face, which was obscured, and mortifyed; and those bright shining eyes were darkned, when he was dying, and after he was dead; why was it, but to giue light, & to put a li­uely colour vpō our obscurities. According to that which himselfe figured, when, of spittle (which signified himselfe, as God; and of earth which signifyed his humanity) he made durt (which sig­nifyed his contumelious passion) and so the blind man (who signifyed, mankind) receaued sight? And The fourth condition of beauty. if, when he made himself man, and that, the most abased of men, he hid the fourth condi­tion of beauty, which is to be great; why was it, but to make his greatenesse stick to vs, by con­forming himselfe to our littlenesse, as it was figu­red, in the great 4. Reg. 4. Elizaeus. Who, to reuiue the little boye, that was dead, did shrincke vp into the making of himselfe, a iust measure, for the other; and so he restored him, to life? For, if as Saint Augustine sayth, by louing of God, we are made beautyful, it is cleare that we are made more beautyfull, by actes of greater loue. Now wherein did Christ Iesus, so much shew the loue which he carryed to his Father, as in suffering for his honour, as himselfe hath sayd; That the world may know, that I loue the Father: rise vp, let vs go hence. But whither went he? It is euident, that he went to suffer. And This is excel­lently, & most truly inferred. there­fore, since so much the better as a worke is, so much is it the more beautifull (for good is faire; & bad is foule) it is plaine, that the more Christ [Page 581]suffered, so much the better was his worke. And therefore, the more abased, and deformed he see­med; the more beautyfull he is, in the eyes of such as know him. For he was not obliged to what he suffered, but he endured it for the honour of his Father, and for the good of vs.

These, are then the eyes, wherwith thou art euer to Behold this man, that he may euer seeme beautifull to thee, as indeed he is. As also, to the end, that Pilate may know in hell, (where he now remaines) that God doth giue a kind of eyes to Christians, wherewith (they, looking vpon Christ) he appeareth so much the more beautifull to them, as he endeauored to deforme him. And now heare, how all this is said by S. Au­gustine was able to say this and more, for in ano­ther place he affir­meth of himselfe that God had shot his hart quite through, with the loue of him. S. Augu­stine. Let vs loue Christ; and if we find any thing in him, that is deformed, (though he found many defor­mities in vs, (and yet vs he loued) but still I say, if we finde any thing deformed in him, let vs not loue him. For whereas he was apparailled with flesh, for which it is said of him, We saw him, and he had no beauty; if thou confider the mercy, wherewith he became man, he will then appeare beautifull in thine eye. For that which Isay Isa. [...]1. said, we saw him, and he had no beauty; he said, in the person of the Iewes. But why did they see him without beauty? be­cause they saw him not, with vnderstanding; But they who vnderstand, that the Word is made man, doe hold it for a high point of beauty. And so it was said by one of the The great S. Paul. friendes of the spouse, I glory in nothing but in the Crosse of our Lord Iesus [Page 582]Christ. Doth it seeme a small matter to thee, O Paul, that thou, art not ashamed of the dishonours of Christ, but that further, thou wilt needes glory in them? But yet agayne, why had Christ no beauty? Because Christ crucified, is a scandal to the Iewes, and seemeth folly, to the vnbelieuing Gentills. But now, on the other side, How can Christ be said to haue had any beauty, vpon the Crosse? How, but because the thinges of God God is infinite in all thinges. which seeme fol­ly, are more full of wisedome, then the wisedom it selfe, of all mankind. And the thinges of God, which seeme weake, are more stronge, then the strength, of all mankind. And since this is true, let Christ thy spouse appeare beautifull in thyne eye, since God is beautifull, and that he is the Word of his Father. Beautifull he also was, in the wombe of his mother, where he tooke his Humanity with­out losse of his Diuinity. Beautifull, was the Word, when he was borne an infant; for although he were an infant that spake not; yet euen whilst he sucked, and when he was carried, in his Mothers armes; the heauens did speake; the Angells sung his praises; the starre lead on the three wise Kinges; and he was adored by them in the manger, where he was layed, as the food Men who haue mortifyed affecti­ons; and to such our Lord becometh food, af­ter an ad­mitable māner. It is S. Au­gustine who spea­keth thus. of innocent, and quiet beastes. Beautifull then, he is in heauen; Beautifull, vpon earth; Beautifull, in the wombe of his Mother; Be­autifull, in her armes; Beautifull, in miracles; Be­autifull, in those scourges; Beautifull, when he inui­teth vs to life; Beautifull, in despising of death; Be­autifull, in leauing his soule, when he expired; Be­autifull, [Page 583] when he tooke it againe in his resurrection; Beautifull, in the Crosse, and Beautifull in the se­pulcher; Beautifull, in heauen; and Beautifull, in the vnderstanding of man, on earth. He is in fine the true, and soueraigne Beauty, and Iustice. All this S. Augustine saith.

And certainly, if thou wilt behold Christ our Lord, with such eyes as these, he will not seeme deformed to thee; as he did, to those carnall persons, who put reproach vpon him, in the pas­sion. But as it hapned to the holy Apostles, who Luc. 9. beheld him in Mount Thabor, his face will seeme to thee, as bright as the Sunne; and his garments, as white as the snow; yea so white, as S. Marke re­cordeth, That no earthly Dyer, could haue raised them, to such a height of whitenesse. Which signi­fyeth, that we, who are the A noble and comfor­table ap­plication, of that place of Scripture. garmentes of Christ (because we go round about him (and be­cause we adorne him, by belieuing and louing & praysing him) are so whitened by him, as that no man on earth, could haue giuen vs that beauty of grace, & iustice, which he gaue vs. Let him seeme to thee, as a Sunne; and the soules redeemed by him, to be white as snow. Those soules I say, which confessing, and with griefe abhorring, their owne deformity, desire to be beautified in this The precious bloud of our Lord Iesus, is that only true Pisci­na, which is able to recouer vs out of all diseases. Piscina, or Poole, of the bloud of our Saui­our; from whence they issue out, so beautifull, so iust, and so rich, through the grace and other gifts which they receyue by him, that they are able to enamoure, euen the very eyes of God. So that [Page 584]these wordes aforesaid, may be sung, with great ioy, and much truth, The King will desire thy beau­ [...]ty.

FINIS.

THE TABLE OF CHAPTERS, Conteyned in this Cabinet.

  • CHAP. I. Wherein is treated, How necessary it is for vs, to giue eare to God; & of the admirable Langua­ge, which our first Parents spake, in the state of Inno­cency: Which being lost by Sinne, many ill ones, did suc­ceed in place thereof. pag. 1.
  • Chap. 2. That we must not hearken to the Lan­guage of the World, and Vaine-glory; And how ab­solute dominion it exerciseth ouer the hartes of such as follow it; and of the punishment that they shall incurre. pag. 4.
  • Chap. 3. Of what remedies we are to serue our selues, towards the contempt of the Vayne-glory of the world; And of the great force, which Christ our Lord doth giue, for the ouercomming thereof. pag. 8.
  • Chap. 4. In what degree, and to what end, it is lawfull for a man to desire Honour in the world; and of the extreme danger which there is, in holding places of Authority, and Commaund. pag. 13.
  • Chap. 5. How much we ought to fly from the plea­sure of flesh and bloud; and what a most dangerous E­nemy this is: & of what helpes we are to serue our selues, for the subduing thereof. pag. 20.
  • [Page] Chap. 6. Of two causes that there are, of sensuall ten­tations; & what meanes we must vse against them, when they rise, from the Malice of the Diuell. pag. 25.
  • Chap. 7. Of the great peace, which our Lord God gi­ueth to them that sight manfully against this Enemy; & of the much that it importeth vs, for the ouercomming of him, to fly from familiarity with women. pag. 30.
  • Chap. 8. How the Diuell, vseth to deceaue spirituall men, by meanes of this enemy of our Flesh, and Bloud; & of the course that we are to hold, in keeping our selues from errour. pag. 33.
  • Chap. 9. That one of the principall remedies for the conquering of this Enemy, is the exercise of deuout and feruent Prayer, whereby we many find gust in diuine con­siderations, which maketh vs abhorre all worldly plea­sures. pag. 39.
  • Chap. 10. Of many other meanes, which we are to vse when this cruell Enemy doth assault vs, with his first blowes. pag. 44.
  • Chap. 11. Of other meanes, besides the former, wher­by some grow to loose their Chastity; that we may fly from them, if we also will not loose ours; and by what meanes we may strengthen our selues. pag. 49.
  • Chap. 12. That God vseth to punish such as are proud [...] by permitting them to loose the treasure of Chastity, thereby to humble them; and how necessary it is to be humble, for the ouercomming of the enemy to this vertue. pag. 55.
  • Chap. 13. Of two other dangerous meanes, which are went to make way for the losse of Chastity, in such as endeauour not to auoyd them. pag. 60.
  • [Page] Chap. 14. How much we ought to fly from the vaine confidence of obteyning victory against this enemy, by our owne only industry, and labour; and that we must vnderstand it, to be the guift of God; of whom, it is to be humbly asked; by the intercession of the Saintes; and in particuler of the Virgin, our Blessed Lady. pag. 63.
  • Chap. 15. How our Lord disposeth not, equally of the guist of Chastity, vnto all; because to some, he gi­ueth it only in their soules; and of the great profit which the temptations against Chastity, do bring, if they be well borne. pag. 67.
  • Chap. 16. How the guift of Chastity, is graunted to some, not only in the interiour part of the soule, but in the sensuall part also; & this, after two manners. pa. 71.
  • Chap. 17. Wherein he beginneth to discourse of the languages, spoken by the Diuell; & how much we ought to fly them; & that one of them, is to make a man proud, & so to bring him to great mischeife and errour; and of the meanes, how to auoyd this language of Pride. pag. 77.
  • Chap. 18. Of another snare all contrary to the for­mer, which is Despaire, whereby the Diuell procureth to conquer Man; and how we shall carry our selues against him. pag. 87.
  • Chap. 19. Of the much which God the Father gaue vs, in giuing vs Iesus Christ, our Lord; & how thanke­full we ought to be, & to help our selues by this fauour; and to strengthen our selues thereby, for the excluding of all desperation, wherewith the Diuell is wont to as­sault vs. pag. 92.
  • Chap. 20. Of some meanes, which the Diuell vseth [Page]against the remedy that is spoken of, whereby to fright vs; & how for this, we must not faint; but animate our selues the more, considering the infinite mercy of our Lord. pag. 96.
  • Chap. 21. He proceeds in the discourse of Gods mercy, which he sheweth to them that cordially aske pardon. This is a consideration, of power to conquere all De­spaire. pag. 100.
  • Cap. 22. Where he prosecutes the treaty of the mercy of God, which he vseth towards vs; his Maiesty ouercom­ming our enemyes, after an admirable manner. pag. 106.
  • Cap. 23. Of the great mischeife which despaire doth worke in the soule; and how we must ouercome this ene­my, with spirituall alacrity, and diligence, and feruour in the seruice of God. pag. 110.
  • Chap. 24. Of two remedies for the getting of Hope, in the way of our Lord; and that we must not turne coward, although the remooue of the temptation be differred; and how there be certayne hartes, which know not how to be humbled, but by the knocks of tribulation; and therefore, that they must so be cured. pag. 118.
  • Chap. 25. How the Diuell procureth to draw vs to despayre, by tempting vs, against fayth, and the di­uine mysteries; and of the remedies that we must vse, a­gainst these temptations. pag. 122.
  • Chap. 26. How the Diuell endeauours, by meanes of the aforesaid temptations, to remooue vs from our deuo­tion and good exercises; & that our remedy is, to increase therein; laying aside all superfluous desyre of feeling spi­rituall sweetnesse in the soule; and to what end these also may be desyred. pag. 126.
  • [Page] Chap. 27. That the conquest of these temptations, doth consist more in hauing patience to beare them; and in the hope of the fauour of our Lord; then in procuring forcibly that they may not come. pag. 132.
  • Chap. 28. Of the great remedy which groweth against these tentations, by seeking a wise and well experienced ghostly Father, who must be entirely informed and cre­dited; and how the ghostly Father ought to proceed with such persons; & of the fruit which riseth from these temp­tations. pag. 135.
  • Chap. 29. How the Diuell procureth, by exteriour meanes, to make vs giue ouer good exercises; And how we must strengthen our hart by confidence in our Lord, for the ouercomming of him; And of other things, which help to free vs from this feare; and of the fruite of this temptation. pag. 139.
  • Chap. 30. Of many reasons which there are, why we must hope that our Lord will deliuer vs, out of all tribu­lation, how greiuous soeuer it be; & of two significations, which this word Belieue, may be accounted to haue. pag. 150.
  • Cap. 31. That the first thing which we are to heare, is diuine Truth, by meanes of Faith, which is the begin­ning of all spirituall life; and which teacheth vs so high things, as that they exceed all humane discourse. pa. 159.
  • Chap. 32. How agreable to reason it is, to belieue the Mysteries of our Fayth, although they exceed all hu­mane reason. pag. 163.
  • Chap. 33. Of, how firme, and constant, and autho­rized witnesses, our faith hath had, who haue giuen their liues for the truth thereof. pag. 166.
  • [Page] Chap. 34. That the perfect life of such as haue belie­ued our fayth, is a great testimony of the Truth therof; and how farre Christians haue exceeded all other Nati­ons, in goodnesse of life. pag. 169.
  • Chap. 35. That the very conscience of him, that de­syreth to obtaine vertue, doth testify, that our Faith is true; and how the desire of leading an euill life, doth both procure the loosing of Faith, & hinder the getting it. pag. 175.
  • Chap. 36. That the admirable change which is made in the hart of sinners, and the great fauours which our Lord doth do them, who follow him with perfect vertue, and do call vpon him in their necessityes, is a great testi­mony to the truth of our Fayth. pag. 179.
  • Chap. 37. Of the many, and great good things, which God worketh in the soule that followeth perfect vertue; & that this is a great proofe, that our Fayth is true; be­cause that, did teach vs meanes, how to obtaine those graces. pag. 183.
  • Chap. 38. That if the power & greatnes of the worke of Belieuing, be well pondered, we shall find great testi­mony, to proue, that it is much reason, that the vnder­standing of man do serue God, by imbracing of Fayth. pag. 188.
  • Chap. 39. Wherein answere is giuen to an obiection which some make against our Fayth; by saying, that God teacheth things, which are too high. pag. 191.
  • Chap. 40. Wherin answere is made to thē who obiect against the receauing of Fayth, that it teacheth meane, and low thinges of God; and how in these meane thinges which God teacheth, most high glory is contayned p. 193.
  • [Page] Chap. 41. That not only the glory of our Lord doth shine in the humble thinges, of God, which our Faith teacheth, but also our owne great profit, our strength, and vertue. pag. 200.
  • Chap. 42. VVherein it is proued, that the Truth of our Fayth is infallible, as well in respect of them that haue preached it, as of them who haue receaued it; and of the manner how it was receaued. pag. 203.
  • Chap. 43. That such is the greatnesse of our Fayth, that none of the aforesayd motiues, nor any other, that can be deliuered, are suff [...]cient to make a man believe with this diuine Fayth; vnles our Lord doe incline a man to belieue by particuler fauour. pag. 207.
  • Chap. 44. That we must giue our Lord great thanks, for the guift of Fayth; and that we must vse it, to the end for which it was giuen; in such sort, as that we attri­bute not that to it which it hath not; and what both the one, and the other is. pag. 214.
  • Chap. 45. Why our Lord did resolue to saue vs, by the meanes of Fayth, and not of humane Reason; & of the great subiection which we must yield to those thinges which our Fayth doth teach; & of the particuler deuoti­on which we owe, in especiall manner, to that which our Lord Iesus taught vs by his owne sacred mouth. pag. 223.
  • Chap. 46. That the holy Scripture must not be de­clared by what sense one will; but by that of the Church of Rome; and where that declareth not, we must follow the vniforme exposition of the Saints; And of the great submission, and subiection, which we must performe to this holy Church. pag. 227.
  • Chap. 47. VVhat a terrible chastisement it is, when [Page]God permitteth men to loose their Faith; and that it is iustly taken away from them, that worke not, in confor­mity of what it teacheth. pag. 232.
  • Chap. 48. VVherein the former discourse is more par­ticulerly prosecuted; and it is declared what dispositions are requisite, for the beginning to read, and vnderstand the diuine Scripture, & the holy Doctours. pag. 237.
  • Chap. 49. That we must not grow in pride, for not hauing lost our Fayth, as others haue done; but rather we must be humble, with feare; and the reasons which we haue for being so. pag. 244.
  • Chap. 50. How some vse to be much deceaued, by gi­uing credit to false Reuelations; and it is particulerly declared, wherein true liberty of spirit doth consist. pag. 249.
  • Chap. 51. Of the way wherein we are to carry our selues, that we may not erre by such illusions; and how dangerous the desire is of Reuelations, and such things as those. pag. 256.
  • Chap. 52. VVherein some signes are giuen of good, & bad, or false Reuelations, or Illusions. pag. 260.
  • Chap. 53. Of the secret pride, Whereby many vse to be much deceiued in the way of Vertue; and of the dan­ger that such are in, to be ensnared by the illusions of the Diuell. pag. 264.
  • Cap. 54. Of some propertyes which they haue, whō we sayd to be deceaued in the last Chapter; & how necessary it is to take the opinion of others; and of the mischiefe that men are brought to, by following their owne. pag. 267.
  • Chap. 55. That we must fly fast from our owne opini­nion; & chuse some person to whome for the loue of God, [Page]we must be subiect, and be ruled by him, and what kind of man he must be, and how we must carry our selues with him. pag. 274.
  • Chap. 56. Wherein he beginneth to declare the se­cond word of the verse, and how we are to consider of the Scriptures; and how we must restayne the fight of our eyes, that we may the better see with those of our soule, which the freer they are from the sight of creaturs, the better shall they see God. pag. 279.
  • Chap. 57. That the first thing which a man must see, is himselfe; of the necessity which we haue of this know­ledge, and the inconueniences that grow vpon vs, through want thereof. pag. 284.
  • Chap. 58. That we must be diligent to find out the knowledge of our selues: & by what meanes this may be done; & that it is fit for vs to haue some priuate place, into which we may dayly retire our selues for a tyme. 291.
  • Chap. 59. Wherin he prosecuteth the exercise which conduceth to the knowledge of ones selfe; and how we are to profit in the vse of reading, & of Prayer. pag. 296.
  • Chap. 60. How much the Meditation of death, doth profit towards the knowledge of a mans selfe; and of the manner how it is to be meditated, for as much as con­cerneth the death of the body. pag. 299.
  • Chap. 61. Of that which is to be considered in the meditation of Death, about that which shall happen to the soule; that so we may profit the more, in the know­ledge of ourselues. pag. 302.
  • Chap. 62. That the dayly examination of our faults, helpeth much towards the knowledge of our selues & of other great benefits which this practise of Examen doth bring; and of the profit which commeth to vs, both [Page]by the reprehension of others, and those also which our Lord doth interiourly send vs. pag. 308.
  • Chap. 63. Of the estimation which we are to make of our good works, that we may not fayle thereby, in the knowledge of our selues, and of true Humility; and of the meruailous example, which Christ our Lord doth giue vs, for this purpose. pag. 313.
  • Cha. 64. Of a profitable exercise of knowing the be­ing which we haue in Nature that by it we may obtayne Humility. pag. 316.
  • Chap. 65. How the exercising of our selues in the knowledge of the supernaturall being which we haue of grace, doth serue towards the obteyning of Humili­ty. pag. 321.
  • Chap. 66. Wherein the aforesaid exercise, is prosecu­ted in particuler manner. pag. 326.
  • Chap. 67. Wherein he prosecuteth the former exer­cise: and of the much light which our Lord is wont to giue by meanes thereof, whereby they know the greatnes of God, and as it were the Nothing of their litlenes. pag. 332.
  • Chap. 68. Wherein he beginneth to treate of the con­sideration of Christ our Lord, and of the mysteries of his life and death, and of the great reason we haue to exer­cise our selues in this consideration; and of the great fruites which grow from thence. pag. 336.
  • Chap. 69. Wherein he prosecuteth, that of the for­mer Chapter; & pondereth this passage of the Canticles; in contemplation of the passion of Christ. pag. 343.
  • Chap. 70. That the exercise of prayer, is most im­portant; and of the great fruit which is reaped thereby. pag. 350.
  • [Page] Chap. 71. That the pennance due to our sinnes must be the first pace, whereby we come to God; conceauing true griefe for them, and making true Confession there­of, and satisfaction. pag. 361.
  • Chap. 72. How the second pace towardes the bringing vs to God is the giuing of thankes which we owe him, for his hauing so deliuered vs; and of the manner how this is to be done, by meanes of diuers Misteryes of the Passion, which are to be meditated, in diuers dayes. pag. 363.
  • Chap. 73. Of the way which we are to hold in the con­sideration of the life and passion of Iesus Christ our Lord. pag. 367.
  • Chap. 74. Wherein the way of considering the life of Iesus Christ our Lord, to the end that it may be of grea­ter profit to vs, is prosecuted, in a more particuler man­ner. pag. 369.
  • Chap. 75. VVherein some directions are giuen for our greater profit in the aforesaid exercise of Prayer; and for the auoyding of some inconueniences, which to ignorant persons are wont to arriue. pag. 374.
  • Chap. 76. That the end of Meditation of the Passion is to be the imitation thereof; and what is to be the be­ginning, and ground, of greater things which we are to imitate. pag. 380.
  • Chap. 77. That the Mortification of our passions, is the second fruit which we are to draw out of the medita­tion of the passion of Christ our Lard; and how we are to vse this exercise; that so we may gather admirable fruit thereby. pag. 388.
  • Chap. 78. That the most excellent thing which we are to meditate and imitate, in the passion of our Lord, [Page]is the loue wherewith he offered himselfe to the Eternall Father. pag. 394.
  • Chap. 79. Of the burning Loue, wherewith Christ Iesu [...] loued God, and men for God; from which loue, as from a fountaine, that did spring which he suffered in the exteriour; and that also which he suffered in the interi­our; which was much more, then the other. pag. 403.
  • Chap. 80 Wherein is prosecuted the tendernes of the loue of Christ towards men; and of that, which caused his interiour griefe; and gaue him a Crosse to carry, in his hart, all the dayes of his life. pag. 409.
  • Chap. 81. Of other profitable Considerations which may be drawne out of the Passion of our Lord; and of o­ther meditations which may be made vpon other points; and of some directions, for such, as cannot easily put that, which hath bin said, in practise. pag. 415.
  • Cap. 82. How attentiuely our Lord doth heare vs; & how piteously he doth behold vs; if we manifest our infir­mityes to him, with that griefe which is fit; and how ready he is to cure vs, and to do vs many other fauours. pag. 420.
  • Chap. 83. Of two threates, which God vseth to ex­presse; One absolute, and the other conditionall; and of two kinds of promises, like those threats; and how we are to carry our selues when they arriue. pag. 426.
  • Chap. 84. What a man is, of his owne stocke; and of the great benefits that we enioy by Iesus Christ our Lord. pag. 429.
  • Chap. 85. How lowd Christ cryed out; and doth euer cry out for vs, before the Eternall Father: and with how great speede, his Maiesty doth heare the prayers of men; and bestoweth benefittes vpon them, by meanes [Page]of this out-cry of his sonne. pag. 438.
  • Chap. 86. Of the great loue wherewith our Lord doth behold such as are iust; and of the much that he desy [...]eth to communicate himselfe to creatures; and to destroy our sinnes, which we must behold with detestation, that God may looke vpon them with compassion. pag. 446.
  • Chap. 87. Of the many and great benefits which come to men, in that the Eternall Father, doth behold the face of Iesus Christ his Sonne. pag. 451.
  • Cap. 88. How it is to be vnderstood that Christ is our Iustice; least otherwise we should fall into some errour, by conceauing, that iust persons haue not a distinct iustice, from that, whereby Iesus Christ is iust. pag. 457.
  • Chap. 89. That sinne doth not remaine in iust Per­sons; but that the guilt of sinne, is destroyed in them; & that they are cleane, and acceptable to God. pag. 462.
  • Chap. 90. That the graunting, that there is perfect cleanesse from sinne, in such as are iust, by the merits of Christ Iesus, doth not only not diminish his honour, but much more declare it. pag. 467.
  • Chap. 91. How some passages of holy Scripture are to be vnderstood; wherein it is said, that Christ Iesus is our Iustice; and such other propositions as that is, for the better declaration of the precedent Chapters. pa. 472.
  • Chap. 92. That we must fly fast from pride, which is wont to grow vp apace, by occasion of good workes; con­sidering the much, which is merited by them; and of a particuler instruction which Christ hath giuen vs, wher­by we may profit against this tentation. pag. 476.
  • Chap. 93. That a man being humbled and abased by the contents of the last Chapter, may enioy that great­nes which our Lord vouchsafeth to impart, to the works [Page]of such as are iust, with confidence, & gratitude p. 483.
  • Cap. 94. That frō the loue which we beare our selues, we must draw a reason of louing our neighbours. p. 486.
  • Cap. 95. That from the knowledge of the loue, which Christ beareth to vs, we are to draw a reason, for louing our neighbours. pag. 488.
  • Chap. 96. Of another consideration which teacheth vs, in excellent manner, how we are to carry our selues with our Neighbours. pag. 491.
  • Chap. 97. He beginneth to treate of that word of the verse which sayth, Forget thy people. And of the two sorts of men which there are; good, and bad; & of the names which are giuen to euill men, and of their seuerall significations. pag. 497.
  • Chap. 98. That it doth much import vs, to fly from this Citty of the wicked, which is the world; and how ill it treateth the cittizens therof; and of the sad end which they all shall haue. pag. 503.
  • Chap. 99. Of the vanity of being nobly borne; and that such persons must not bragge thereof, as desire to be of the kindred of Christ. pag. 512.
  • Chap. 100 VVherein he beginneth to declare that o­ther word, And forget the house of thy Father. And how much it importeth vs, to fly from our owne will, in imitation of Christ our Lord; for the auoyding of those inconueniences which grow from thence. pag. 517.
  • Chap. 102. Of a kind of practise, in the denying of our owne will; and of the obedience that vve owe to our Superiours, which is a way, how to obtayne the abnega­tion of our will; and how a superiour is to carry himselfe, with his subiects. pag. 522.
  • Chap. 102. That not all those thinges which we de­sire, [Page]to do, or demaund to haue; are to be called a mans proper will; & how we may know what our Lord de­maundeth at our handes. pag. 5.7.
  • Chap. 103. VVherein he beginneth to declare that word, which sayth, And the King, will desire thy beauty. And how great a matter it is, that God should be content to place his loue, vpon a man. And that this is no corporall beauty; & how dangerous such kind of beauty is. pag. 530.
  • Chap. 104. That the dignity of being a spouse of Ie­sus Christ requireth, that great care be had in all things, & of the example which they are to booke vpon, both in the exteriour, & in the interiour of their soule; vvho haue a desire to enioy this dignity. pag. 538.
  • Chap. 105. That the dignity of this State, must not dismay Virgins; for as much as their Spouse; vvho is our Lord, doth giuē them that, vvhich is necessary for it. And of the aduise, by which they are to vndertake it; & of the cheerfulnes, wherewith they are to vndergoe it; & of the great blessings vvhich are contayned in it. pag. 540.
  • Chap. 106. Of foure conditions, vvhich are requi­site for the making of any thing beautifull; & how a [...]t of of them, are wanting to a soule, that is in sin. pag. 545.
  • Chap. 107. How the deformity of sinne, is so wick [...]d a thinge; as that no force, or law of Nature, or of Scrip­ture, were sufficient to abolish it; but only Iesus Christ; in vertue of whome, sinne was euer taken away, & grace was giuen. pag. 547.
  • Cha [...]. 108. That Christ our Lord, taketh away the de­formity of the soule, by his bloud; & that it was con­uenient, that rather the Sonne, should become man, then either the Father, or the holy Ghost; & of the [Page]great force of the bloud of Christ our Lord. pag. 550.
  • Chap. 109. That the sacred humanity of Christ our Lord, was figured in the garment of the high Priest; & in the veile which God commaunded Moyses to make. And what that was, which Dauid begged, when he de­sired to sprinckled with Hyssope, that he might so be cleansed. pag. 555.
  • Chap. 110. How Christ did as it were dissemble those foure conditions of his beauty; so to make vs beautifull; to which purpose there is a passage of the Prophet Isay de­clared. pag. 557.
  • Chap. 111. Of the many & wonderfull things▪ which our Lord did draw out of that greatest wickednes, which they committed who murthered Christ, & of the seuerall effects which these wordes, Behold the man, being spo­ken by Pilate, & preached by the Apostles, haue brought to passe, in the world. pag. 566.
  • Chap. 112. How great reason it is, that we should behold this man Christ, with those eyes, wherewith many of them, to whome the Apostles preached, did be­hold him; that so we may grow beautifull. And that this beauty is giuen vs, through his grace, and not through our owne merits. pag. 572.
  • Chap. 113. Wherein is prosecuted, the way that we are to take in beholding of Christ; & how he is beauti­full in all thinges; and that those thinges, which in our Lord seeme vgly, to the eyes of flesh & bloud (such as are troubles, and torments) be of great beauty. pag. 578.
FINIS.

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