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B14844 Six excellent treatises of life and death collected (and published in French) by Philip Mornay, sieur du Plessis ; and now (first) translated into English. Mornay, Philippe de, seigneur du Plessis-Marly, 1549-1623.; Cyprian, Saint, Bishop of Carthage.; Ambrose, Saint, Bishop of Milan, d. 397.; Cicero, Marcus Tullius.; Seneca, Lucius Annaeus, ca. 4 B.C.-65 A.D. 1607 (1607) STC 18155; ESTC S94239 82,027 544

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to taste in liuing vnder thy protection Thou art admirable graciously good in time of affliction in that by such meanes thou healest our spirituall maladies and visiting vs thus in this world thou framest vs to meditate on a better life thou thy selfe hauing shewed vs a liuely example thereof It is true that I finde it hard to digest but thou wert brought to another maner of conditiō when to redeeme mee from hell thou didst descend thither and for the reconciling mee to thy heauenly Father diddest vnder-goe his curse By reason of my sinnes I haue so many times deserued hell and euerlasting fire and thou deliueredst mee I being secure that I haue a part in thy merit and obedience and that I am one of thy coheires to reigne one day with thee in thy kingdome and euen at this present in the middest of all afflictions to be seated neuerthelesse in heauenly places Hauing therefore my part in so many felicities why should I grudge to suffer a little time by meanes whereof thou meanest to awake improoue and drawe me neerer to thee But seeing thou knowest me better than I know my selfe if thou pleasest to make some triall of me grant me necessary power and patience to glorifie thee conuerting all the euill which may occurre vnto mee to my good and saluation And if in graciously supporting my debilitie thy benignitie doe vouchsafe to aduertise mee by some light affliction effect that this thy clemencie may drawe mee more and more to loue and honour thee to giue thee thanks for the care thou hast of thy poore humble seruant and by this meanes dispose me to attend and expect thee in death that after the same I may finde that life which I obtained by thy death and there bee made partaker with thee of perpetuall ioy and rest for euermore Amen Another O Lord God heauenly Father whē I consider howe many wayes I haue offended before thy presence and high Maiestie I abhorre my selfe in thinking howe many times I haue forsaken thee my fauorable and gentle Father I detest my ingratitude when I see into what seruitude of sinne I haue too often throwen my selfe headlong downe selling as farre as in mee lay the precious libertie which thy Sonne purchased for mee I condemne my folly I absolutely discouer my selfe I see nothing but death and malediction hang ouer my head my conscience rising vp against mee for a iudge and testimonie of mine iniquities But when I behold on the other side thy infinite mercie which surmounteth al thy other works and wherein if I may dare so to speake thou exceedest thy selfe my soule is then somewhat comforted And indeed why should I doubt to find grace in his sight that so often and gentlie calleth and summoneth sinners to repentance expresly protesting that hee desireth not the death of a sinner but that hee should bee conuerted and liue Moreouer thy onely Sonne hath so assured vs that wee shall finde grace in thy presence by the goodly parables which he himselfe propounded as of the mite of the lost sheepe and of the prodigall childe whose liuely image I acknowledge to be in my selfe as I should bee ingrate incredulous and verie wicked to recoyle and bee ashamed of thy presence though I be neuer so miserable seeing that thou puttest foorth thine hand with so mercifull an affection to drawe me to thee O louing Father I haue faintly forsaken thee I haue scattered thy graces most vnhappily in cleauing to the desires of my flesh and swaruing frō thy obedience I haue entangled my selfe in the base seruitude of sinne I am fallen into extreame miserie I knowe not whither to retire but to thee whom I haue forsaken Let thy mercie receiue thy poore suppliaunt whom during his error thou didst support I am vnworthy to lift vp mine eyes to thee or to call thee Father but I humbly beseech thee abase thine eyes to looke downe vpon me seeing thy pleasure is so and that otherwise I must needs fall into the power of thine enemies The regard of thy countenaunce will quicken and leade mee towards thee I already feele some effect therof seeing in some sort I plainly discouer my selfe I knowe thou doest beholde mee thou gauest me eyes to discerne the daungers wherein I stood thou diddest seek and finde mee out in the worlde and death and out of thy mercie hast graunted my desire to enter into thine house I dare not require that thou shouldest imbrace or kisse me or that thou shouldest weep for ioy in hauing found out thy poore seruant and slaue I look not for those precious ornaments wherwith thou honorest thy greatest seruaunts and best affected children it sufficeth mee to be in the troupe of the least in thine house amongst the greatest sinners that haue obtained pardon of thee and that are vouchsafed some retiring place in thy heauenly palace where ther are so many seuerall habitations And that euen in thy house I may be as the least that pleaseth thee so thou doe but auow mee thine owne for euer O mercifull Father I beseech thee for the loue of thy best beloued Sonne my onely Sauiour to vouchsafe mee thy holy Spirit for the cleansing of my heart and strengthening of mee after such a sort that I may alwayes remaine in thine house there to serue thee in righeousnesse and holinesse all the dayes of my life Amen Another WHat doe wee in this worlde but heape sinne vpon sinne So as the present day is euer somewhat worse than the day before and we neuer cease to draw vpon vs thy wrath and indignation But when wee shall be out of this worlde in thine inheritance wee shall bee wholly assured of perfect and eternall felicitie the miseries of the bodie being layd apart and the vices and contaminatiōs of the soule quight annihilated O heauenly Father encrease in vs thy faith that wee may cast no doubt of things so infallible Imprint thy grace and loue in our heartes for the raising vp fortifying of vs in thy fear And because thou hast seated vs in this worlde there to remaine so long as pleaseth thee without manifesting vnto vs the day of our departure which is only knowen to thy selfe I beseech thee take mee from hence when thou seest the fit time come and then to vouchsafe mee this fauour that I may willingly acknowledge the same and in the meane while that I may dispose of my selfe as thou hast ordained in thy most holy word Amen Another THis bodie is the soules prison and a prison that is obscure close and vncomfortable Wee are as banished men in this world and our life is but griefe and miserie But contrariwise O Lord it is in thy heauenly kingdome where we shall finde our libertie our naturall countrey and most perfect contentment Rowse vp our soules by thy Worde to the remembraunce and apprehension of such a good engraue in our hearts the desire of goods eternall and which onely are to bee sought after affoord our consciences some taste of this ioye wherewith the blessed in heauen are fully replenished that I may esteeme that which worldlings account so beautifull and so earnestly couet retaining the same with obstinate auarice and euen adoring it with such mad frenzie but filth and dyrte And procure that I feeling no taste but in thy veritie and grace calling continually vpon thy Name I may attend the day of my true deliuerance by IESVS CHRIST thy Sonne to whome with thee and the holie Ghost bee ascribed eternall glorie and prayse Amen Another LOrde IESVS the onely sauing health of the liuing and the eternall life of those that die I wholly submitte my selfe to thy will whether it shall please thee yet a little while to suffer this soule in my bodie to serue thee or that thou mindest to take it out of this prison I being assured whatsoeuer thou wilt preserue can not perish I am content with a very good heart that my bodie should returne to the earth out of which it was taken beleeuing in the last resurrection which shall make it immortall incorruptible and full of glorie I humbly beseech thee to strengthen my soule against all temptations couer me with the buckler of thy mercie to holde out Sathans dartes As for mee I am but weaknesse it selfe but yet I will relie on thy goodnesse and power I can alleadge nothing good before thee wherin to glorie but contrariwise alas my sins in infinite number accuse and torment mee but yet doe thy merits assure mee that I shall bee saued For I holde this for most certaine that thou wert borne for me that thou wert tempted and wert obedient to GOD the Father and that thou hast bought and purchased eternall life for mee Seeing therefore thou hast bestowed thy selfe on mee with all other thy benefites suffer not such a donation to prooue voide and vnprofitable Let thy blood wipe away the corruption of my offences and thy righteousnesse couer mine iniquities Let thy merites procure me grace and fauour before thy heauenly throne If my sinnes encrease augment thou also in mee thy grace that neither Faith Hope nor Charitie may growe dead but bee corroborated in mee that the apprehension of Death discourage mee not but euen when this my bodie shall bee as it were cleane dead cause the eyes of my soule to looke vp vnto heauen and let my heart then feruentlly crie out to thee and say O Lord I commend my soule into thy handes accomplish thine owne worke for thou diddest redeeme mee I am thine by thy Fathers gift to whome with thee and the holy Spirit bee giuen all glorie and prayse Amen FINIS AT LONDON Imprinted by H. L for Mathew Lownes and are to bee sold at his shoppe in Pauls Church-yarde at the signe of the Bishops head 1607.
vs conclude that death in it self is not an euill thing for there is no death either for those in this world or those out of it For the liuing it is nothing to them because they liue and for the dead they are out of his clouches And so it is no euill or discommoditie to the liuing who haue nothing to do therwith nor to those which in respect of the bodie are insensible and in their soules freely deliuered from the same CAAP. 8. That it is not Death it selfe of which men are afraid the opinion and apprehensiō therof only terrifies IF death be redoubted of the liuing I say it is not death it selfe but the apprehension thereof as euery one applies the same to his owne affections or in respect of his conscience as it is touched therwith whose wounds we may well accuse and not the sharpnes of death For the rest death is the gate of repose to the righteous as on the contrary it is the shipwracke and ruine of the wicked Out of question it is not the passage of death that offendeth them that feare to die but it is the apprehension and horrible conceit of this passage that thus tormenteth them In briefe as I saide before death greeues vs not but the apprehension thereof Now this terrible apprehension is grounded vpon a precedent opinion of our infirmitie and contrarie to trueth for veritie encourageth opinion daunteth vs. I will further auerre opinion it selfe hath a reference to life and not to death and we shal find that it is life it self which we iudge grieuous wher upon it appeares that the apprehensiō which we haue of death must not be referred to death it selfe but to life for if we haue done nothing in our liues whereof to be afeard wee haue no iust cause to feare death for punishment deserued by reason of offences committed feareth those of true iudgemēt and to commit sinne is an action of the liuing and not of the dead Life therefore hath relation to vs and the vigor and propagatiō of the same is supposed to be in our power but death which is the separation of the soule frō the body doth preiudice vs nothing at all The soule is deliuered and the bodie returnes vnto dust from whence it came The deliuered part reioiceth the body which goes to the earth feeles nothing and consequently hath no apprehension therof But if death bee an euill thing how comes it to passe that young men feare not to growe old and flie not the neighbour age vnto death From whence proceeds it that one which foresees his owne death dieth more willingly than another whom death surpriseth of a sudden So that I suppose they are very well satisfied which tooke death to be an euill thing and it were but for this onely reason amongst many others that by life we passe to death and by death we return to life for none can rise again except he first die It is true that fooles feare death as the worst thing that can befall them but the wise desire it because it is the ease of their labours and the end of their trauels For that which otherwise may bee said there are two reasons why fooles feare death one is that they call it death annihilation which in deed cānot be cōsidering that the soule liues when the body is reduced to ashes besides the bodie it selfe also must rise againe Another is because they fear the torments punishments wherof Poeticall books make often mention that is to say the barkings of Cerberus the terrible profunditie of the riuer Cocytus the Ferri-man Caron the troups of Furies the Infernall depths wherein the monster Hydra remaines that deuoures all where wee may see Titius whose intrailes renew growe again after they haue been eaten by a great huge Vulture which neuer ceases to torment him In like manner Ixion who rowles incessantly the great stone with the huge rock hanging iust ouer their heads that make good cheare beeing ready to fall vpon them These be the Poets fables But so that wee must not denie but there is punishment after death And if wee referre that to death which happens after it let vs also referre vnto life that which fals out after life Punishment therefore must haue no relation vnto death the which as before was deliuered is but a separation of the soule from the bodie And this separation is not euill seeing that to be dissolued Phil. 1. and liue with Iesus Christ is the best thing of all others saith the Apostle It followeth then that death of it selfe is not euill True it is that the death of sinners is euill From whence I collect that therefore all death in generall is not bad but that only of sinners in particular for Psal 14. 116. the death of the righteous is precious the which once more declares that the euil lies not indeath but in sinne The Grecians expressed death by a word which imported to haue end because it is the end of this earthly life The Scripture also calleth death a sleep witnesse hereof that which IESVS CHRIST sayde Iohn 10. Our friende Lazarus sleepeth but I will goe and wake him Sleepe is a good thing for then wee take repose according vnto that which was written Psal 3. I slept tooke my rest awaked againe because the Lord receiued mee into his protection The sleep of death therfore is a sweete repose Furthermore the Lord awakes and raiseth vp them that sleepe for he is the resurrection Ther is also a notable sentēce in the Scripture which sayth Eccle. 2. Praise no man before his death for euery one is knowen at the end of his life and he is iudged in his children if he haue taught and instructed them in his owne knowledge for the childrens misgouernment is euer ascribed to the fathers negligence And because euery liuing man is subiect to offend old age it selfe not being exempted here-from we read that Abraham died in a good old age because hee continued still constant in the good affection which he had to serue God Death therfore serues for a restimonie to a precedent life For if the Pilot be not worthy of his commendation before he hath brought his ship secure into the Porte what reputation can we holde a man in before the houre of his death Hee is his owne Pilot amongst the stormes and waues of this life as long as here hee soiournes he is in danger to perish The Captaine receiueth not his triumphaunt Crowne before the victorie be wonne the Souldier layeth not aside his Armes nor hath his due recompense before the ouerthrowe of the enemie The conclusion is that death is the full and entire payment of the faithfull mans wages it is the summe of his rewarde and his finall Quietus est Let vs also consider what Iob sayth Iob 29. That the blessing of the dead came vpon him for though ISAAC blessed his children dying and
SIX EXCELLENT TREATISES of LIFE and DEATH Collected and published in French by PHILIP MORNAY Sieur du Plessis And now first Translated into English Imprinted at London by H.L. for Mathew Lownes and are to be sold at his shop in Pauls Church-yard at the signe of the Bishops head 1607. The Treatises and Discourses contained in this Volume PLATO his Axiocus a Dialogue entreating of Death A Discourse of TVLLIVS CICERO'S concerning Death Collections out of SENECA'S Works touching Life Death A Sermon of mortality made by S. CYPRIAN Bishop of Carthage and a Martyr of IESVS CHRIST A Treatise of Saint AMBROSE Bishop of Milan touching the benefit happinesse of Death Certain places of Scripture Prayers Meditations concerning Life and Death The Translator to the Reader Here knowe that the first Discourse mentioned in the Aduertisement ensuing is none of these sixe here set down but another precedent to these and formerly translated by the Countesse of Pembroke The French Authors Aduertisement to the Reader COncerning the Argument of this discourse it tēdeth principally to the abating of that hope and presumption which wee vsually haue to obtain in this life that which neuer was enioyed here since the transgression of our first Parēts nor neuer shall be as it is very well inferred especially in the first Discourse by the description of man frō his beginning while he leaues this world As for this word Fortune the which ye shal here meet withall in diuers passages entertain it out of the toleration of Custome and Vse or rather indeed out of the necessity of our tōgue the which in stead of quite abolishing doth too stiffely retaine the vse hereof because those things which commonly happen without it being known why or wherfore vnto men they were referred by our Ancestors according to the heathen phrase to Fortune And to conclude wheras Plato Cicero and Seneca who were called Philosophers are brought in speaking by way of Dialogue after the first Discourse let not this be vnderstood of any want we had of more Authentike Authors that is to say amōgst the ancient Christians vpon this argumēt seeing we haue in like maner produced two in this second edition which are Saint Cyprian and S. Ambrose but this was onely thought a better meanes to awake vs thorowly by the crie of these strāge witnesses who tasting only but out of their naturall iudgement and some knowledge and experience which they had of the vanities of man it seems they would fain hail vs along to some better Port and Retrait than themselues haue attained for them or witnessed vnto others by their example AXIOCVS A Dialogue written by PLATO or by some other heathen Philosopher conteining a discourse against death between SOCRATES CLINIAS and AXIOCVS SOCRATES MInding to goe to Cynosarges and being come neer to Elissus I heard a mans voice calling me out alowd by my name and so turning backe to see who it was I might perceiue Clinias Axiocus his sonne together with Damon the Musician and Charmides the sonne of Glaucon running towards the faire fountaine I presently left my owne way to go meete them to the end we might more conueniently discourse talk together Then Clinias weeping bitterly sayd vnto me Socrates now is the time wherin thou mayest put that great wisedom in triall which makes thee so highly esteemed of euery one For my Father is suddēly fallen so grieuously sicke that wee looke rather for his death than life for which cause he seemes to bee wonderfully perplexed although when he was in perfect health he laughed at them that feared death as though it had bin some hideous Hobgoblin or grisly Antick taunting and scornfully mocking them for the same I pray you therefore come and see him that he may be fortified by your good instructions as you know very well how to doe it that hee may patiently and acceptably attend his death And for my part this will bee one of the last dutifull offices which I shall performe towards my Father For me Clinias then I answered you shall euer finde mee ready to endeuour my selfe for you in any thing within my power but especially in a respect so deuout and religious Wherfore let vs goe quickly for if it be so we must not delay time Clin. I am sure that your very presence will much comfort my Father if he be yet aliue for by such good means he hath oftē-times escaped of dangerous maladies Socr. Well wee found Axiocus in reasonable good state of bodie but in his minde so afflicted that he stood in great neede of some consolation for he neuer left turning sometimes on the one and then on the other side sighing and lamenting with a great agitation motion of his armes Seeing him in this state I began thus to breake with him Why Axiocus what meanes this what 's become of your dayly brags and commendations of Vertue where is now your inuincible courage when you haue shewed your selfe so valiant throughout the whole combat now drawing neer to the end whē you should receiue the reward and recompence of your trauailes silly Champion doe you now faint why doe you not better obserue the condition of all mankind you being a man well experienced by your yeares and an Athenian Doe you no more remember what all men haue often in their mouthes that this our life is but a Pilgrimage and that after hauing honestly passed ouer our dayes we must then chearfully and merily remoue out of this present life But to be thus deiected and to leaue this world with as much grief as a little childe would doe this ill beseemes that wisedome and prudence which is expected to be in men of your yeeres Axio It is true Socrates and you do aduertise me for my good but I knowe in what maner for when it comes to the point and to be apprehended indeed all this brauery of wordes closely slinkes away without so much as a cogitation theron and in stead therof a certain feare takes place which surpriseth my minde when I think that I must bee depriued of this light of so much worldly goods to lie and rot I knowe not where in a place where I shall not not be seen or heard of any body there to bee changed into wormes and loathsome creatures Soc. This falles out vnto thee Axiocus because through incircumspection and without thinking well thereupon you couple sense and the state of death together so that your wordes and deedes are one repugnant to the other For you consider not that at one instant you grieue for the losse of sense and the putrefaction which you fear to feele together with the preuention of the delights of this life euen as if after death you were to leade another earthly life and to enioy the senses which now you doe whereas your body shall bee dissolued as it was before your conception And as you felt no kind of euill in that time when Draco and
this life wee are afrayde to see so quicke an ende of this our earthlie course wherin notwithstanding there is more gall than honie Vertuous men such as feare God haue alwaies done otherwise for the long continuāce of their trauels in this world made them to mourne and think it much better to bee separated from this body Phil. 2. to bee with Iesus Christ so that some of them haue growen to such a point as to detest the day of their birth witnes he who said Iob 3. And let the day wherin I was borne perish For what pleasure is ther here in this life ful of anguish care replenished with a million of calamities miseries with the tears and lamentations of the afflicted wholly destitute of all consolation Therefore it is that Salomon in his booke of Ecclesiastes rather cōmends the conditiō of the dead than of the liuing Eccles 4. and further addeth Nay and I thinke him better than them both that neuer was borne for he neuer sawe the wicked workes that are committed vnder the Sunne In another place hee holds opinion that the dead infant is in better state and condition than an olde man by reason hee neuer sawe the euils that are wrought in the world hee neuer came into this darknes he neuer walked in the vanities of this present life and therefore he that neuer entered into the worlde enioyes more peace repose thā he that is come into the same And in deed what good can a man reape in this world that walkes therein but as an image and can neuer be satisfied with the desires thereof If there be any wealth to deuoure hee loseth his peace being constrained to haue his eye alwaies ouer that which with miserable greedines he sought after most miserably to possesse that which can stād him in no true stead could there be a greater slauery thā to see a man labour to amasse and heap those goods together that bring him no profit If this present life then be a continuall and insupportable burden we must needs coūt the same for a great cōfort This end is death and comfort is a good thing it followes therefore that death is a good thing That was the cause why Simeon so reioyced who knowing that hee should not die before he had seene the annointed of the Lord when they brought Iesus into the Temple he tooke him in his armes and sayd Lord thou lettest now thy seruant depart in peace as if hee before had remained in this life rather by compulsion then of his own free-will hee requiring to be set at libertie as if being hampred in some bonds he had then gone to take possession again of his freedome This bodie is as it were chained yea and which is worse with the chaine of temptations which shackles bindes torments outragiously by reason of the cruelty of sinne For we see in dying how the soule of man loseth it selfe by little and little from the bands of the flesh and beeing let out by the mouth flies away being deliuered out of the dungeon of this body Dauid made haste to go out of this temporall course saying I am a stranger Psal 39. and pilgrime before thee on the earth as all my Fathers were wherfore as a stranger he ranne speedily towards the common countrey of all the Saints requiring before death pardon of his sinnes wherewith he was defiled while he soiourned on the earth For hee that obtaines not pardon of his sinnes in this world shall neuer attaine to eternall life And therefore Dauid addes Let me retire my selfe suffer that I may bee refreshed before I goe and be no more Why pant we therfore after this life wherin the lōger any one remains the more he is surcharged with sin The Lord himselfe sayth Euery day is content with his owne miserie Mat. 6. And Iacob complained that the hundred thirty yeeres of his life Gen. 47. were short and irksome not that the dayes were tedious of thēselues but because malice here increaseth as the dayes passe away For there is not a day that passeth ouer our heads wherein wee doe not offend And therefore the Apostle sayde very well Phil. 1. Christ is gain vnto me both in life and death in the one hauing relation to the necessity of his life for the seruice of the Church and in the other to the particular benefit which he receiued by dying as wee also liue in seruing of Christ towards whō his seruants must needs shew their good affection in deliuering vnto others the doctrine of his Gospel And as for Simeon who said Now thou sufferest thy seruāt hee stayed because of Christ who is our King so that wee may not omit nor reiect his commandements How many men were there that the Romane Emperors caused to remaine in remote and strange Regions in hope of future recompense and honors Came they from thence without their masters leaue and without all comparison is it not a more excellent thing to obey the will of God than of men CHRIST therefore is gaine to the beleeuer as well in life as in death for in the qualitie of a seruant hee refuseth not to serue in this life and as a wise man hee embraceth the gaine of death It is a great gayne to bee out of the haruest of sinne to be remooued from euill and in full possession of good Saint Paul also addeth My desire is to remooue and be with Christ which were far better for me but for you it is more necessary that I should remaine in the flesh Hee set down this word necessary by reason of the fruit of his trauels and the worde better by reason of his celestial grace and thrise happie coniunction with Christ CHAP. 3. What death is and what life according to the Testimony of the holy Scriptures and of spirituall death SEeing then the Apostle teacheth that whosoeuer leaues this mortall bodie goes to Christ if he hath truely knowen serued him let vs a little consider what death what life is We knowe because the holy Scriptures auerre it that death is a loosing of the soule frō the body and as it were the separation of a man For in dying the soule is disioined frō the bodie Dauid therefore seems to allude hereunto when he sayes Thou hast broken my bonds Psal 116. I will offer thee sacrifice and praise The precedent verse of this Psalm because the death of the Saints is precious in the eyes of the Lord sheweth that by these bonds is vnderstood the coniunction of our bodies with the soule And therefore foreseeing euen then that hee was in the number of those faithfull that had deuoutly rendred their liues into the handes of Christ he reioyceth on his part hee also faithfully offring vp himselfe for the people of God to fight with huge Goliath hand to hand and by himselfe alone to remoue the opprobrie peril which then threatned the
aside of imperfections and putting on of that grace which is imparted to all the faithfull which bear the mortification of our Lord Iesus in their soule and bodie Now this mortification consists in the remission of sinnes in the wiping away of offences in the obliuion of error and in the participation of mercie what can we say further of the benefit of death except wee should also once more adde that the world was thereby redeemed CHAP. 5. BVt I pray you let vs deliuer somwhat of the death which is common to all Why should we feare it seeing it procures no hurt or preiudice vnto the soule For it is written Feare not them which kill the bodie and cannot kill the soule Now by the meanes of this death the soule is deliuered being separated from the bodie and disintangled from these troublesome snares For which cause while we are in this body let vs prepare our selues for death let vs rayse our soules aboue the bedde of our flesh and to speake aptly let vs rise out of this sepulchre let vs retire from the coniunction of the bodie let vs leaue all earthly things to the ende that the aduersary cōming hee may find nothing that belōgs to him in vs. Let vs cheerfully march towards this eternal happinesse let vs mount vp with the flight of loue charity soare vp from hence which is to say from these fraile and worldly things hearing this exhortation frō the Lord Rise vp depart from hence minding that euery one should leaue the earth reforme his soule which hangs backward lift it vp to heauen rouse vp his Eagle-flight that hee may enioy the benefit of this promise Psal 103. Thy youth shall be renewed as that of the Eagle this was spoken to the soule Let our soules therfore soare vp aloft like the Eagle for she flies aboue the cloudes she glitters shines again by the renouation of her plumes she raises her flight euen vp to the skies where she cannot be intrapped by any snare for the bird which descends frō aloft downeward is often-times takē with the whistle and snare or by some other subtil deuise And so let our soules also take heed of descending downe vpon the earth There is a snare in gold and siluer is limed there be nets in possessions and prickes in the pleasures of this world In running after golde the snare layes holde on our neckes in seeking after siluer wee are taken in the lime and setting downe our feete in possessiōs the nets catch vs. Why contend wee after that gaine which serues for nothing but to ruine the soule that is so precious All the world is nothing in cōparison of the losse of one soule for what benefites it a man Luk. 10. to haue wonne all the world lost his his owne soule What wilt thou giue in exchāge of thy soule It cānot be redeemed neither by gold nor siluer and yet it is golde that makes it to perish Adulteries wrath choler and all other passions are so many spikes which are fastened in our soules and that pearce our very bowels and intrailes Let vs therefore shun these euils raise vp our soules to the image and similitude of God To flie sinne is a resemblance vnto God whose image similitude is purchased by pietie and righteousnes CHAP. 6. That all the world is full of ginnes and snares THere be Principallities of the ayre Powers of the world that labour to throwe vs downe headlong from the rāpire of the soule either they hinder vs frō marching vpright or seeke the meanes to ouerthrowe vs if we flie a little aloft beating vs downe againe to the earth but euen then let vs striue the more to mount vp our soules to heauē hauing the word of God for our guide These Principalities do blowe into thy eyes the vanities of the world to make thee stumble but oh faithfull soule the more zealouslie guide thy steps towards Iesus Christ If they solicite thee by the auarice of gold siluer or of possessiōs for the purchase of which thing they would haue thee excuse thy selfe from his banquer that inuites thee to the marriage of his Sonne which is his eternall worde take heede of making any excuse but contrariwise put on thy marriage garment bee at the banquet of this rich man for feare if thou deferrest and intanglest thy selfe in the affaires of this worlde hee call others and shut thee out of doores The powers of the world propounde also vnto thee the desire of honour that thou mightst grow proud like Adam and so comparing and equalling thy selfe to God thou mayest contemne his commaundements and begin to lose the true riches which thou didst enioy for he which hath not shal lose euē that which he hath How oftē in our praiers wherin we drawe neeter vnto God than by any other meane are our thoughts seized vpon by wicked and vile cogitations to the ende to hinder our affections from striuing to God-ward How often doth carnall concupiscence lay hold of vs How often are wee encountred with wanton eyes to assault a modest heart to pearce it suddenly with the dart of wicked desires How often are bad words fixed in thy wil and secret thoughts of no value against the which God speaks Take heed of harboring in thine heart wicked thoughts lest the Lord say vnto thee Why thinkest thou euill in thine hart or else when thou hast heaped together gold siluer and riches enough thou mayest say vnto me my vertue Deu. 8.13 and wisedom hath purchased this and so thou forget the Lorde thy God Behold the obstacles which that soule meets withal that bends her flight vp to heauen But for thee louing brother fight like a good souldier of Iesus Christ forgetting base matters and contemning earthly things aspire to those celestiall and eternal raise vp thy soule that it bee not allured with the baite of the snare The pleasures of this worlde are baits and which is worse they are the baites of sinne and temptations In seeking after delights thou lightest on the ginne for the eye of lust is the snare which entrappes him that treadeth on the same as also her wordes are another snare which for a time taste as sweet as honie but when sinne comes to be feelingly prickt in a vanquished Conscience then is it but gall and sharp bitternes Other mens goods alluring the eye are likewise a ginne ther be no paths throughout the whole course of our life which are not layde all ouer with thē And therfore righteous Dauid sayd they haue layed snares for me Psal 142. in my waies but see that thou follow the way which sayth I am the way Iohn 14. the truth and the life to the end that thou mayest affirme I restore my soule and shee conducts me by the paths of righteousnes for the loue of his name Let the world therefore bee dead vnto our eyes let vs die to the wisedome