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A57460 Divine meditations and contemplations upon severall heads of divinity by G.R. compiled for his owne private use, and published for the common good. G. R. 1641 (1641) Wing R17; ESTC R25600 72,461 276

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that is great in the world think not then too highly of transitory things nor too basely of thy selfe remember what thou hast received and whereunto God calleth thee and thou shalt have no cause to complaine of thy lot Meditation 18. Suspition I Know not wherefore Suspition is good except on just cause and then it is providence but to make our idle conjectures the arrowes and other men the butts and to hit them which are not in our way because wee have a crooked aime this is for want of charity and from too much love of our selves wee love our selves so well that wee would have all men worse then our selves and so little doe wee love others that wee care not how bad wee make them If Suspition hunt like a yong dogge which knowes not his game it is taken oft with a lye and falls soone into a dead fault but if it worke an experience and triall it gives soone over where it is not good and never holds but where it should Vaine feares and vaine suspitions are much like for feare makes us suspect the helpes which might do us good and Suspition makes us feare friends which meane us no hurt and both betray their followers feare to danger and Suspition to shame the one by refusing her owne strength the other by discovering his owne weaknesse If Suspition come of weaknesse it is the more tolerable but if for want of charity and strengthned with malice it is intolerable and to be hated for it rangeth farre and runneth riot and will bee under no command you shall never satisfy it though you would neither can it satisfy it selfe but by complaints What poyson lieth hid under Suspition may appeare because it breedeth jealousy betweene man and wife for what is jealousy but the Suspition of a stranger In this cause the parties are so disquieted that the joy which they took by each other doth decay their society becomes odious and a cursed parting the bane of holy wedlock followes The suspitions man as he is no good husband so is he a bad neighbour and a worse friend an unruly servant and a crooked master he mistakes more then he takes in good part he will not lend a good turne for feare of losing his labour and and yet hath lost all judgment because he will not lend so much as a good opinion hee heares what men speak when they are silent and seeth them doing something amisse when they are asleepe he doth challenge the fairest proceedings of a foule intent he thinkes all men naught and is the worst himselfe he trusts no man in private and is publiquely noted he hath a window in every mans breast and an eye into every mans window a cleare minde thinkes of others as of himselfe at all times he doth passe over that which may have any good construction many times takes no notice of ill or offence he consults not with tales and opinions but out of discretion and observes both what humane society doth require and how far charity must bear and may win a stranger Meditation 19. Of Gaine A Desire of Gaine if wee have a greater desire of Gods glory and the common good if it be limited within the bounds of nature and honesty if it be our owne and not to gaine by anothers losse is not to be condemned yet are wee scarsly to desire Gaine by our Saviours rule That which wee may lawfully desire we may honestly seeke but Christ will not have us seeke the things belonging to Gaine but to the kingdome of God and to accept the other as it falleth out meaning that our whole purpose of living here should be set on our spirituall life with God to make our advantage that way and that our naturall and civill life should receive their convenient blessings from God without our cark or vexation though not without our employment without gaining our affections though commanding our meanes There is sometimes a fault in the desire when it is greedy and in the Gaine when it is filthy and commonly a greedy de●ire doth not refuse filthy Gaine and when they goe both together it is the worse Usury is not only a desire but a greedy desire of filthy Gaine yea unsatiable and cruell a Gaine and a staine to the Soule of him that useth it a Gaine and a paine to the heart of him that payeth it a Gaine and a traine of the Devill by the love of mony to bring men to perdition Yea but much good commeth to the Common-wealth by usury and the like is said of witch-craft men else will not lend as much to say as they will not be Christians but will you bee so bold as to condemne all usury I referre you to your conscience a little rectified deale as you would be dealt withall abuse not thy neighbours want use the honest meanes of some calling depend on Gods blessing and tell mee what course of usury is lawfull many lend not for themselves but for Orphanes A speciall cause and hath speciall rules of conscience many pay use the occasion of borrowing may accuse or excuse the greatest Gaine and the surest profit is God lives for it hath the promises of this life and that which is to come and joyneth piety with prosperity But what are promises worth say some who will stand on them promises are but debts and debts are not willingly paid though promised by forfeit under hand and seale True betweene man and man but betweene God and man not so because his promise is better then any mans performance think not small of the promise of his love But I see no experience I have no feeling of this promise David did when he said I never saw the righteous forsaken David many times beleeved without feeling and so doe thou if thou find it hard pray that thou maist for it is full of reward If thou be godly I permit thee to deale with the earth or naturall ready and ordinary Gaine shee takes no hurt thou much advantage thy diligence maketh her bountifull thou lendest a little and shee payes thee home with great store I know thou wilt as willingly deale with the poore an excellent usury God is the pay-master not according to thy merit but far above of his owne mercy for the interest of unrighteous Mammon behold a crowne of righteousnesse with Christ for him forsake Father Mother Brother Sister House and what not else and receive a hundred fold is not this Gaine enough will not such Gaine content thy desire this or none Two things hast thou oh my soule to avoid about worldly Gaine distrust if it come not security if it doe Doe thy meanes faile thou hast a father carefull of thee above all meanes Art thou not rich to the world it is better 〈…〉 rich towards God of a li●… give a little God respecteth according to that a man hath not according to that he hath not and loveth a cheerfull rather then a costly giver thou
DIVINE MEDITATIONS AND CONTEMPLATIONS upon severall heads of Divinity By G. R. Compiled for his owne private use and published for the common good PSAL. 1.1,2 Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsell c. But his delight is in the Law of the Lord and in his law doth he meditate day and night LONDON Printed by R. C. for Sam. Enderby and are to be sold at his shop at the signe of the Starre in Popes-head-Alley 1641. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE THE EARLE OF WARWICK c. Right Honourable IF having neither merit or other relation to usher the admittance I seeme to intrude this present of so meane condition whence ●…ver it came upon your Lordships favourable construction and acceptance the report of those many excellencies in you imploy'd for the honour of your Prince and good of your Country so eminently obvious to the eye and admiration of the vertuous hath imboldned mee to the attempt and must serve for excuse instead of a larger apologie I have not the will or skill to flatter my thoughts aime at no base ends in this presumption and were I not certaine your Honour were as much a lover of goodnesse as an enjoyer of greatnesse and no lesse humble than honourable and would be rather a gratious interpreter than strict censurer my penne should not have been so ambitious or dared to rest under so noble patronage nor so inconsiderate to have exposed my owne and others weaknesse to publique view And yet the honesty of the subject whiles it directs the mind to the consideration of spirituall and necessary concernments for the soules welfare and a Christians profit may thus farre presume as not unworthy the perusall of the religious of what degree soever at times convenient to bespeake protection for the matter and pardon for the author be hee what hee is and his expressions otherwise never so meane or deservings answerable Please it therefore your Lordship to beare with this challenge which I have not used in the way of my owne right nor to forestall your Lordships judgement to which I humbly submit in both but to intimate that by how much the present is the more considerable for any worth or value to be found in it by so much the more it belongs and is fit to such worthy patronage to be presented But herein your Honour must accept the will for the deed from him whose desires in the height of their ambition soare no higher in that respect than to become effectuall Orators for your Honors prosperity temporall and eternall and that he may be worthy Of Your Lordships command in any service G. R. Meditation 1. Of prosperity and adversity IN prosperity it may seeme we love God in adversity we feare God for prosperity doth cause us to praise God and adversity to pray unto him and yet in the end it doth then appeare wee neither love nor feare God A strange matter indeed that God should not be beloved of us then when he sheweth himselfe a friend or not feared when as a Judge he calleth us to account and therefore not to be beleeved without good proofe He that doth truely love God loves him for himselfe and hee that doth truely feare God feares him for himselfe and finding in him alwayes the same cause of feare and love doth never cease to feare or love love is his possession feare his Security what hee hath once gain'd by love by feare hee is willing to keepe and he doth as much feare not to lose as love still to enjoy May hee then bee said to love God in prosperity which in adversity doth not love him or to feare God in adversity which in prosperity doth not so If then wee cannot endure the change of a prosperous estate but are so much disquieted that we take no comfort in the favour of God this is a sure token we loved not God in prosperity though then we praysed him for a little of this love abiding in us though at first it should not be able to free us from feeling and passion yet at last would it so calme and settle us that not having the gifts wee would much more rejoyce in the giver for whose sake onely all things are worth the having Likewise if good successe and better credit doe but inable us to do wrong without looking to the will of God which awardeth right this is a sure token we feared not God in adversity for a little of this feare would stay us backe from such attempts though there were none in the world to control us If not God what loved wee then in prosperity what feared we in adversity Wee loved the gift not the giver wee feared the punishment not the Judge that is we neither loved with feare nor feared with love Oh unworthy love which doth more respect the gift than the givers good will Oh vaine feare which observes the mighty but not the Almighty If Gods gifts bee better welcome to us than himselfe little is the love we beare to God if wee feare Gods punishment more than the losse of his favour such feare is not religious But will we give a true testimony of our love and feare towards God Let us doe that in adversity which even hypocrites do in prosperity let us I say praise God and be content Againe let us doe that in prosperity which even hypocrites do in adversity Let us I say pray heartily unto God and commend our selves and all our doings unto him In a word let us love him in adversity and feare him in prosperity to this purpose looke we in prosperity on the threats of Gods law beleeving that none of them shall fall to the ground In adversity on the promises of God firmely trusting to receive comfort and deliverance from him though as yet wee have no feeling thereof Shall we not feare such a God in our greatnesse who hath ever vengeance ready and that without respect of persons Shall wee not love such a God in our weaknesse who is so faithfull and kinde that he will never neglect them in their greatest distresse which put their trust in him Adde this to make us feare in prosperity that God doth but make us his Stewards hee may when he will and hee will when wee thinke least on it call us to reckoning the more we take the more will be required and negligence shall finde a streighter judgement than ignorance And wee shall love God the better in adversity if wee consider that evils are justly layd upon us because of our sinnes and yet from Gods mercy that chastising us as children we may repent and be saved and that it is sarre better that hee should take our estate from us than that our estate should take us from him Meditation 2. Of Love Faith is the assurance of Gods love to a Christian which faith breedeth in him a love answerable to his apprehension though not comparable to the object and it is a borrowed fire a
past have not refused to be Shepheards and they which at this day doe rule in the State have this as no meane title of their authority to be stiled Shepheards of the people yea God himselfe doth vouchsafe to expresse the Government which he taketh over his people under the title of Shepheard and Christ Jesus our Lord who died for mankind is called the great Shepheard of our Soules And indeed the charge over a flock or people are much like wee in England have a great desire to deale on Sheep and it is one of the chiefest commodities in the Countrey they are so profitable their Wool is in great request at home and with strangers their bodies are good for meat or medicine yea their very excrement have their use they are gentle of nature not dangerous to be handled as other beasts which are armed to defend or offend howbeit in this doth not the resemblance hold so well but if you respect the weaknesse and necessities of Sheep it may notably expresse the care the faithfullnesse the diligence which God useth in governing his people God is desirous to rule his servants as a flock of Sheep not for any great profit he can make of them neither is it intended of him which needs it not or lookt for there where it cannot be had for though their bodies were of excellent imployment by creation yet what are they of themselves since Adams Fall but cages of uncleane Birds nests of sinne grievously tainted with a sicknesse that in Sheep makes carcasse and Wool unprofitable It is alone then for our profit that hee will have us under government the Laws which he makes are not for his owne good which is infinite goodnesse in himselfe but for ours neither the courses which wee undertake under his direction for his happinesse who is eternall happinesse himselfe but for ours True it is that he addeth unto his Law authority to make us the rather yeeld unto that which is for our benefit and from his authority doth proceed reward or punishment that wee may know hee commandeth not in vaine Moreover the government of men as they best know which know State matters is the men themselves being so variable full of discontent and malice above all Creatures if wee will count them tame because of reason wee shall find them wild and savage by evill course and custome of life notwithstanding God doth make them so his owne whom he rules as his flock that none shall be able to pull them out of his hands he will not lose one of the least of them he leaveth the ninety and nine to seek out the wandring and lost Sheep and when he hath found him layeth him on his shoulders with joy and returning home maketh merry with his Neighbours for the Sheep that was lost but is found he knoweth his Sheep and is known of them he will lay downe his life for his Sheep and will not forsake them he bringeth them into the sweet pastures of his holy Word and refresheth them with the coole Waters of his Spirit he hath a rod and a staffe the rod keeps in his Sheep and the staffe keeps out the Wolfe by all which it commeth to passe that no flock is in such state as his they have a comely order in their going forth a provident provision of needfull things and sure safety all about them happy is he that can say The Lord is my Shepheard he that is not of this fold is of the Devils wast Christ hath many promises of good to be done unto his flock and for his flockes sake it is he cannot abide the Wolfe of which one is no good Neigbour and the other a deadly enemy to Sheep I count him the Wolfe which is the knowne adversary and the Goat is the loose Christian the adversary hath a bloudy mind and the loose Christian is offensive by an ill life Meditation 13. Dulnesse of Spirit THere is no disease more dangerous to a religious Soule then dulnesse or heavinesse of Spirit which makes the ground of the heart so cold that the seed of grace lyeth for a time as it were dead and hath no growth it makes the Christian either fearfull or slow to doe good and layeth him open to tentations it ariseth from the corruption of nature which is froward increaseth by diseases and discontentments and groweth to a head by particular doubts and uncertainties it hath strange Symptomes even in those which have beene well schooled and trained up in Christianity it suggesteth and would perswade them well-neare that it is all as well with the godlesse as the godly that he is in as good cause that sweareth as he that feareth an oath that an upright conscience is but a ceremonious scrupulosity formality and complement may serve as well that the world is not so unworthy a thing as lightly to be set by and the joyes of Heaven belong rather to Angels then men it is offended at hearing or reading Gods word prayers good workes holy meetings and hath some exception against them all it will perswade thee in particular that God doth not regard or so much as respect thy service and close with thee this at last if thy calling bee so worthy as thou wouldst make it yet art thou unworthy of thy calling unfit and so farre from speeding in it that it were better for thee to doe any other thing or just nothing I know not whereunto I may better compare this disease then to that which in women yong with child they call Longing when the stomach stopt with ill humours the appetite is altered and the Patient importunately desireth strange meats so in this cause naturall inbred corruptions striving against grace and abounding within doe alter the godly appetite making Gods servant loath his ordinary diet and exercises as being uncomfortable unsavory and to affect strange things contrary to the health of the Soule They which travell by Sea when they see it once calme and on a sudden to dance and shake and know no cause why looke for a tempest shortly after so this dulnesse or heavinesse which is so unquiet and out of order goeth many times before some greater sinne let it be considered whether such a kind of dulnesse came not on David before his adultery and numbring the people on the Disciples before they forsooke their master and specially on Peter before he denied his Lord. I put a difference betweene this heavinesse or dulnesse of spirit and that hardnesse of heart deadnesse or benumming which is proper to the wicked in cause for that proceeds from customes and habits in sinne from wilfull stubbernesse this from the reliques of corruption yet abiding in Gods children in degree that is without sense or feeling Like a lethargy this hath some resistance and like the fit of an Ague in event that doth make them worse and in the end overcome them this the godly doe overcome and after grow the better advised The meanes to avoid
must learne to wait on God from day to day it is thy obedience his glory if thou bee rich thy account will bee the harder to make Things themselves are not good to thee but in their lawfull use they serve not thy turne except thou serve God with them make not that a snare to entangle thee in vanity which is given thee for the exercise of vertue Alas why complainest thou when any crosse interrupts thy worldly proceedings and dost not feele the losse of spirituall grace whiles thou art thwarted in a good course by sinne why art thou so well pleased at good successe and dost not rejoyce rather for the good seedes of thy regeneration for the fruits of thy faith hope love zeale patience chastity meeknesse temperance sobriety and the rest for that thou hast found or art directed in the way to find the treasure of inestimable worth and value to wit the keeping of a good conscience this that thou dost not ought to make thee mourne and lament and thou shouldest not take comfort in that wealth which keeps thee from feeling thy dayly want and enjoying sound prosperity Meditation 20. Of Giving GAining is good if it bee to give for Giving is better God gaines nothing by any yet gives all that is his perfection the light of the Sun and Moone the influence of the Planets the sweetnesse of the aire the variety of seasons the fatnesse of the cloudes the fruitfulnesse of the earth the fulnesse of the Sea the vertue of herbes the beauty of flowers the profit of beasts and cattle the price of Gold Silver and pretious stones are nothing to him nay the redemption of mankind the gathering of the Saints the gifts of the Church the graces of men our regeneration sanctification prayers sacrifices and services are nothing to him for he is his owne perfection ours it is to gaine and give receive and bestow of all things besides God it may be said what have they which they have not received yea the creatures which have most as Angels and men have received most and are the more bound to the giver wherefore their first perfection is to receive but because to give to bestow is a farther extent of perfection and more answerable to the perfection of him which is the giver of all good therefore is it a better thing and as our Saviour said by Pauls report a more blessed to give rather then to receive a better good the chiefe good a better good that 's vertue the chief good that 's happinesse the life of every vertue is action and happinesse the perfection of actions and action of vertue is nothing else but a giving of good in some kind as the act of justice to give every one his owne of fortitude to give courage against death of temperance to give a measure to pleasures of prudence to give order to affaires of liberality to give gifts where and when it is convenient and therefore as wee say there is a kind of justice in all vertues so is there a kind of liberality though one kind of giving for his use and excellency be so specially called for he which giveth of his owne to relieve another doth it most freely without any consideration to move him besides the love of vertue and for the good which comes thereof is deemed a God amongst men for which cause Princes are by a speciall title termed Gods because as their places require them to doe all vertuous actions more then others so above all they are enabled to give liberally and by giving to helpe many he that doth good unto his neighbour according to the action of any vertue gives him his helpe more worth then goods and therefore gives in the true nature of giving and if his helpe be for the soule and the life to come the gift is greater then if it pertained to this life only and yet I know not how they which give out their goods freely to the comfort of others win a more deep affection and excellent reputation then they which doe good according to any other vertue yea a liberall man hath the commendation of all vertue hee is thought wise because he knowes the true use of riches valiant because he can overcome the covetous desire which rules too many just because hee willingly makes that to be anothers which is his owne because he thinkes it more due unto him for the good which may come thereof temperate because hee doth withdraw much from superfluity and excesse that he may have wherewith to doe others good and hee will spend the lesse to give the more Wee must gaine then that wee may give and wee must receive that wee may bestow and doe good with that wee have the one is blessed for the other and therefore the latter rather blessed then the other but hee which thinkes that to keepe in his gaines is the only way to doe himselfe good as if they were all lost if others should occupy with him hath as poore a trade as he which hid his talent in a napkin of which came no advantage for lack that it was not put out every Christian must know himselfe to bee as it were the stomach to digest and disperse those gifts which he receiveth to the good of Christs body Christ emptied himselfe to fill us hee being rich saith Paul for your sakes became poore that you through his poverty might bee made rich What he got of his Father by his holy life or patient death he bestoweth on us and what he might justly claime at our hands for his gifts bestowed on us he leaves to bee disposed by us to the good of our mother as the Tithes of our goods on the Ministers which watch not for his but our good Almes of our goods which the poore receive and hee accepteth and rewardeth as if they were bestowed on himselfe and if he bestow a spirituall grace on mee he looks not for the returne but puts it over to the brethren as when he said I have prayed for thee Peter that thy faith faile not strengthen thy brethren and for the good instruction which wee receive in the Church to our soules health hee bindes us to teach and exhort one another A Christian then hath a life both active and passive the one all in receiving the other all in giving he doth receive faith hope charity and all this while nature doth nothing grace doth all then after by grace he liveth in doing good according to his faith hope and love the first life brings him into the favour of God the second into the possession of his kingdome to doe thy selfe most good is to depart with thy goods unto others and in this cause they are kept better to serve thy turne then if they were in thine owne keeping for if thy treasure be in the hand of the poore Christ is thy treasurer who will make thee good account of all such expenses I speak strange things to the eares
carelesly and idlely bestow themselves on all occasions of sinne whence it is that the good man though he be many waies hardly tempted to sinne by the Devill and wicked men doth alwaies resist and becomes the better but the bad man having many faire occasions offered to amend doth prove the worse and lightly assaulted doth yeeld to vice to wish our selves such as wee ought to be to desire vertue and goodnesse to purpose well to adde to our purpose care and industry is not only a beginning but a going forward and procureth constancy in goodnesse If thou wilt not so much as wish to thy selfe the thing that good is if thou make not speciall choice therof above Gold and thine own appetite how canst thou labour for it and if thou wish the contrary how canst thou not chuse but hate it and in this cause who is in fault but thy selfe doe not ill and say I cannot doe better but rather I will not change thy purpose adde thy indeavours heartily beg and desire for it and hee which commands will give thee grace to turne and obey Meditation 35. Selfe deceit TWo motives there are why men sinne the more boldly because it will be longer as they thinke before they be called to account and when the account must be made amongst so many what hard matter is it for thee or one to escape scot free Thus use they to dally with their owne dangers which have made sinne their inheritance and seek shifts to avoid sounder causes wherin they are the lesse to bee pitied because they grosly deceive themselves Be it that it is long before we be called to account yet the length takes it not away but makes it the more heavy when it comes wee abusing the meane time unto sinne which God hath granted for our repentance so that wee should rather feare to sin because wee shall be called to account then be bold because of the delay for look how much scope the one giveth to our sinnes no lesse revenge doth the other take when they are growne to ripenesse and it is indeed as dangerous for the wilfull sinner that it is long before there be an account as that there is one Now what if that time which men count long bee very short to omit that no sinne is committed but the conscience doth call us forthwith to a reckoning though the act passe yet the guilt is eternally recorded in that booke as also that the life of man is but short after which every one hath his particular judgment and put it over as farre as may be to that generall Inq●…est and the latter end of the world what can be long which hath an end and is alwaies running to that end when the end is once come what is all that worth which past before whether they be 1000. or 2000. yeares and what is that continuance worth which is so full of ends that every part thereof passeth away whiles thou hast it minute after minute and houres after minutes daies after houres monthes after daies and yeares after moneths and after some few yeares which as they begin in a minute so end they in a minute perchance not a yeare not a moneth not a day not an houre in a moment comes death when most unlooked for Hast thou spent 7 yeares in sinne if thou be not a man past all shame thou art by this time much the sorier Why then should the hope of living so much longer make bold againe to sinne will not thy sorrow be doubled when thou commest to fourteen and what use returnes to thee of all these fourteen yeares are they not quite lost by following sinne and thou hast now more to doe if ever thou thinke to bee saved then when thou didst first hegin to say then I will sinne because the time of account is farre of as if one would say because I have much wealth I will spend all as though prodigality could find no bottome He that hath a long time by spending it in sinne doth barre himselfe from all time for if thou continue at all times in thy sinne what time can there be betweene sinne and the time of account and if not at first yet at last by a continuall course of sinne let the time of sinning be never so long sinne and judgment will come together and then thou wilt change thy voice and say Oh this long time is past and the account is at hand now that there will be much to doe at this time and where there are so many it is not likely but that some may escape without their triall though God doe teach us familiarly as men by such ordinary matters amongst us as wee may best understand his meaning as when he setteth downe unto us in his word the forme of a judgment yet must wee not tie him to these necessary circumstances whereunto mans judgment is subject for he executeth his judgment as God and not according unto mans weaknesse he is not bound to time or place or examination of witnesses all things are present before him which shall be our Judge as every mans conscience doth condemne him so shall he feele and know the sentence of the Judge neither shall one prevent or interrupt the other If thou canst not run from thy owne conseience how canst thou escape his judgment who is greater then thy conscience A sheep may stray from the flock amongst strangers but he beares a marke which tries him from the rest and discovers him to the owner in like manner the conscience hath its mark which wheresoever thou runne or thinkest to hide thy selfe will dog thee back to judgment and there lay open thy most secret crimes sins and enormities But these the former surmises of thine proceed not so much from ignorance as infidelity and impiety and doe sound in their true meaning this farre The day of account will never come therefore wee may well say it will bee long in comming it is impossible there should be such a generall judgment therefore some must needs escape This is that bitter root which springeth up now and then amongst carnall professors first to sinne and then to deny God against whose majesty wee sinne for if there be a God which were the greatest blaspemy to think otherwise there must needs be a judgment and his judgment cannot be just which were most wicked to imagine if he be partiall to any or not able to punish all and marke to this purpose the order of Gods workes first that is the creation then there followed the fall of man after a generall corruption of man and last of all the deluge and desolation of sinners the old world is a figure of succeeding ages the law was published by Moses betweene God and the people the covenants broken on the peoples part the punishment of the disobedient to the utter rooting our of that people and their Temple which was the visible signe of Gods presence amongst them the
as necessary there should be a judicious and discreet hearer as a wise and learned speaker for to what end is seed cast into the ground if the soile be not apt to receive it weeds may choak and a barren ground yeelds bad increase So to what end are words committed to those eares which by reason of troubles and other affections can make no use of them It hath beene observed of our time that wee have much Preaching and little knowledge and yet more knowledge then conscience much teaching and little faith and yet more faith then charity the fault perhaps is not in the matter or manner of Preaching but unsufficiency of hearing whereas if wee had every of us as great care to be good hearers as to meet with good Preachers it would be sooner remedied for a well prepared hearer may profit by a teacher of meane gifts and yet Paul himselfe cannot profit a bad hearer Let us not therefore thinke that the whole efficacy of Preaching doth depend on the ability of the Preacher for besides that God hath his ordinary blessing going forth with his word It is given unto you to know the mysteries of the kingdome of Heaven they that come with true hearts provide eares which are more fruitfull then others by a hundred fold and as there is an art of speaking so also is there an art of hearing wherefore take heed how you heare and howsoever let Ministers be instant in season and out of season which if they be dumb or idle they cannot doe Meditation 41. Greatnesse subject to flattery ALl praise the rich man to the skies yet none of these praises are his owne for either it is his Prince which doth grace him or his house which is descended unto him his stately buildings which others have plotted and perfected for him or his goodly furniture which money hath procured or his long traine and attendance which the world lends him or his parkes ponds pastures mannors walkes all which though they be parcell of his riches yet are they no part of the man neither abide they long with him without change but who almost dares praise a good man yet all his praises are meerly his owne and within him and when thou praisest a man for his honesty who can deny but that thou praisest the man for himselfe yet loath wee are to praise a man for honesty without the accesse of authority wealth honour and rather these without the other therefore I say that rich men have about them more flatterers then friends yea in the abundance of all things they want some to tell them the truth When wee heare praises wee should suspect them not to bee ours but some matter of circumstance when wee heare reprehension let us make account of it as our owne for either it is a fault or may be and in this cause it is better with the good then with the rich for the good have many about them which will rather slander then want matter to lay against them they will rather spite them with deeds then smooth them with glosing speches backbite rather then beare with them pick quarrels rather then live at peace with them which crossing course of theirs makes the good better it causeth them all the while to look more warily to themselves but the rich man is taken in the flatterers net like a Larke whiles he playeth with the glasse of vaine glory Meditation 42. Content ABsolute Content to which no degree of perfection can be added is in God only who hath it everlastingly in himselfe of himselfe for himselfe and is not any thing distinct from him but his nature and essence There is a Content qualified according to the state and degree of the creature as in Angels and men who have reason to know and will to desire and meanes to be possessed of their good whence this content doth grow so that this Content is not so in the creature but that he must seek it elsewhere it is not so of him but that he must be beholding to a higher cause it is not so for him that he should rest there but be moved thereby to glorify God it is not so one with him but that there is great ods betweene them Content as it is in man may be said to be true or false the false is but a picture or counterseit of Content without the thing without life proceeding from the enjoying of good which seemes so but is not either because it is abused or is in his owne nature evill and they which have this Content are alwaies miserable because of false opinions which blind reason and unruly affections suggest unto them and therewith so pervert their will that they are not long of one judgment or resolution but like a troubled and running streame in which may be seene no constant image of Content and this notwithstanding is the only Content which most part of men doe finde and therefore at last when they think to be most at ease they grow weary of themselves and all things else shewing well by their labours and paines taking that they did much desire the true Content but tooke not a right course for it The true Content therefore is a calmnesse or quietnesse of the soule resting and setling it selfe on true good and is either begun or increasing as in good men whiles they live or consummate and full as when they goe hence to that other life for men which receive Content receive it not all at one time but by certaine degrees of growth and as is the spring of vertue so of Content Neither have they it so that this clearnesse and calmnesse is alwaies in them alike for as long as they live they shall find alteration but in the other life nothing shall trouble their Content as evill and offences shall be taken away for they shall receive the full measure of every part of their Content and that without mixture of any object which might procure discontent here there is sinne remayning and miseries which follow the condition of sinners but there they that come shall leave sinne and misery behind them here there are but few Sabbaths in respect of the common daies there it is a continuall Sabbath in which freed from all necessities which this life requireth wee shall wholly bestow our selves on our chiefe good and this chiefe good shall be bestowed on us and hence will spring out unto us living and over-running streames of content The content which doth begin and increase with good men while they live may be said to be particular or generall the particular proceedeth from the particular fruition of divers good things as they are successively attained and do every one tend to generall content which is caused from the fruition of happinesse it selfe such as may man obtaine in this life that is when all the causes of content meet and are knit together though in a meaner degree and with imperfection whereas that which wee