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A51685 A treatise of morality in two parts / written in French by F. Malbranch, author of The search after truth ; and translated into English, by James Shipton, M.A.; Traité de morale. English Malebranche, Nicolas, 1638-1715.; Shipton, James, M.A. 1699 (1699) Wing M319; ESTC R10000 190,929 258

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it self is absolutely incomprehensible XIII In like manner that a Beast is more valuable than a Stone and less valuable than a Man is true because a Beast bears a greater proportion or relation of perfection to a Stone than a Stone doth to a Beast and a Beast hath a less proportion of perfection compar'd to a Man than a Man hath compar'd to a Beast And he that sees these Relations sees such Truths as ought to regulate his esteem and consequently that sort of Love that is determin'd by esteem But he that esteems his Horse more than his Coachman or thinks that a Stone is in it self more valuable than a Flie or than the very least of organiz'd Bodies doth not see that which perhaps he thinks he doth it is not universal Reason but his own particular Reason that makes him judge after that manner It is not the love of Order but self-love which inclines him to love as he doth That which he thinks he sees is neither visible nor intelligible 't is a false and imaginary Relation And he that governs his esteem or love by this or the like Relation must necessarily fall into Error and Irregularity XIV Since Truth and Order are Relations of greatness and perfection real immutable and necessary relations relations comprehended in the substance of the Divine Word he that sees these relations sees that which God sees He that regulates his Love according to these Relations observes a Law which God invincibly Loves So that there is a perfect conformity of Mind and Will between God and him In a word seeing he knows that which God knows and loves that which God loves he is like God as far as he is capable of being so So likewise since God invincibly loves himself he cannot but esteem and love his own Image And as he loves things in proportion to their being amiable he cannot but prefer it before all those Beings which either by their nature or corruption are far from resembling him XV. See the 3. Discourse of the Treatise of Nature and Grace Man is a free Agent and I suppose him to have all necessary assistances In respect of Truth he is capable of searching after it notwithstanding the difficulty he finds in Meditation and in respect of Order he is able to follow it in spite of all the efforts of Concupiscence He can sacrifice his Ease to Truth and his Pleasures to Order On the other side he can prefer his actual and present Happiness before his Duty and fall into error and disorder In a word he can deserve well or ill by doing good or evil Now God is just he loves his Creatures as they are worthy of Love or as they resemble him His Will therefore is that every good action should be rewarded and every evil one punished that he who hath made a good use of his Liberty and by that means hath render'd himself in part perfect and like God should be in part happy as he is and the contrary XVI See the Remarks upon the seeming efficacy of second Causes or the 5 and 6 Christian Meditations It is God alone that acts upon his Creatures at least he hath a power of acting on them and can do what he pleases with them He hath power therefore to make spiritual Beings happy or miserable happy by the enjoyment of Pleasure and miserable by the suffering of Pain He can exalt the just and perfect above other Men he can communicate his Power to them for the accomplishment of their desires and make them occasional causes for himself to act by in a Thousand manners He can pull down the wicked and make them subject to the action of the lowest Beings This Experience sufficiently shews for we all as we are Sinners depend upon the action of sensible objects XVII He therefore that labours for his Perfection and endeavours to make himself like God labours for his Happiness and Advancement If he doth that which in some sort depends upon himself that is to say if he deserves well by making himself perfect God will do that which in no sort depends upon him in making him happy For since God loves all Beings proportionably as they are amiable and the most perfect Beings are the most amiable the most perfect Beings shall be the most powerful the most happy and the most contented He that incessantly consults his Reason and loves Order having a share in the Perfection of God shall have also a share in his Happiness Glory and Greatness XVIII Man is capable of three Things Knowing Loving and sensibly Perceiving of knowing the true Good of loving and enjoying it The knowledge and love of Good are in a great measure in his own power but the enjoyment of it doth not at all depend upon himself Nevertheless seeing God is just he that knows and loves him shall also enjoy him God being just must of necessity give the pleasure of enjoyment and by it Happiness to him that by a painful application seeks the knowledge of the Truth and by a right use of his Liberty and the strength of his Resolution conforms himself to the Law of God the immutable Order notwithstanding all the efforts of Concupiscence enduring Pain despising Pleasure and giving that Honour to his Reason as to believe it upon its Word and to comfort himself with its Promises It is a strange thing Men know very well that the enjoyment of Pleasure and avoiding of Pain do not depend immediately on their Desires They find on the contrary that it is in their own power to have good Thoughts and to love good Things that the light of Truth diffuses it self in them as soon as they desire it and that the loving and following of Order depends on themselves * This Age is so ill-natured or so nice that there are somethings which it is not sufficient for a Man not to say but he must also assure the World and that more than once that he doth not say them And therefore my Readers must pardon me if I seem to distrust their equity I still suppose those necessary assistances which are never wanting to those who have Faith but through their own negligence And yet they seek after nothing but Pleasure and neglect the foundation of their eternal Happiness that knowledge and love which resemble the knowledge and love of God the knowledge of Truth and the love of Order for as I said before he that knows Truth and loves Order knows as God knows and loves as he loves XIX This then is our first and greatest Duty that for which God hath created us the love of which is the Mother of all Vertue the universal the fundamental Vertue the Vertue which makes us just and perfect and which will one Day make us happy We are rational Creatures our Vertue and Perfection is to love Reason or rather to love Order For the knowledge of speculative Truths or relations of Greatness doth not regulate our
Bodies and by their means in the Souls wihch are united to them certain effects which may promote the efficacy of Grace and keep Men from those Stumbling-blocks which the Devils continually lay in their way For as the Psalmist saith Psal 91.11 12. He hath given his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy ways They shall bear thee up in their Hands lest thou dash thy Foot against a Stone XIII So then we may pray to the Angels and desire their protection against that roaring Lion who as St. Peter saith walketh about seeking whom he may devour Eph. 6.12 Or to use St. Paul's words Against those Principalities and Powers against the Rulers of the Darkness of this World those Princes of the World full of Darkness and Error against spiritual Wickedness in high places those evil Spirits which are scatter'd through the Air For we wrestle not against Flesh and Blood only But we must not look upon the Angels as distributive Causes of Grace nor give them that Worship which is due to Christ alone Col. 2.18 19. Be not deceiv'd saith St. Paul by those who in a voluntary Humility pay a superstitious Worship to Angels who meddle with those things which they do not understand being dazled by the vain Imaginations of their fleshly Mind and not keeping themselves united to the Head from which the whole body of the Church receives the Spirit which gives it Growth and Life v. 15. even to Jesus Christ who having spoil'd Principalities and Powers which he had vanquish'd by his Cross made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in it CHAP. X. Of the Occasional Causes of the Sensations and Motions of the Soul which resist the Efficacy of Grace either of Light or Sense The Vnion of the Soul with God is immediate not that of the Soul with the Body An Explication of some general Laws of the Vnion of the Soul and Body necessary for the right understanding the rest of this Treatise I. IN the Fifth Sixth and Seventh Chapters I have spoken at large of the occasional Cause of Light and in the two last I have endeavoured to shew what is the occasional Cause of the Grace of Sense and what we must do to obtain it And therefore seeing there is nothing beside Light and Sense which determines the Will or the tendency which the Soul hath toward Good in general all that now remains in relation to the Means of acquiring or preserving the habitual and ruling Love of the immutable Order is to explain the Laws of the Union of the Soul and Body or the occasional Causes of all those lively and confus'd Sensations and those indeliberate Motions which unite us to our Body and by that to all the Objects which are about us For to make us love Order and to acquire Vertue it is not sufficient to obtain the Grace of Sense which alone can stir the Soul and put it in Motion toward the true Good but we must also manage our selves so that this Grace may work in our Hearts with its full Efficacy For this end we must carefully avoid the occasional Causes of those Sensations and Motions which resist the Operation of Grace and sometimes render it altogether ineffectual This is the most general Principle of all that I shall say in the First Part of this Discourse II. The Soul of Man hath two essential and natural Relations one to God the true Cause of all that passes within him the other to his Body the occasional Cause of all those Thoughts which relate to sensible Objects When God speaks to the Soul it is to unite it to himself when the Body speaks to it it is only for the Body to unite the Soul to sensible Good God speaks to the Soul to enlighten and render it perfect the Body only to darken and corrupt it in favour of it self God by the Light conducts the Soul to its Happiness the Body by Pleasure involves the whole Man in its ruin and throws him headlong into Misery In a word tho' it is God that doth every thing and tho' the Body cannot act upon the Soul no more than the Soul can upon the Body but as an occasional Cause in consequence of the Laws of their Union and for the Punishment of Sin which without medling with those Laws hath chang'd the Union into a Dependence yet we may say that it is the Body which darkens the Mind and corrupts the Heart for the Relation which the Soul hath to the Body is the Cause of all our Errors and Disorders III. Notwithstanding we should be throughly convinc'd of this and never forget it that the Soul can have no immediate Relation but to God alone and that it cannot be united directly to any thing but to him for the Soul cannot be united to the Body but as it is united to God himself It is certain for very many Reasons that if I feel for instance the pain of a Scratch it is God that acts in me tho' in consequence of the Laws of the Union of the Soul and Body for those Laws derive their force from the Operation of the Divine Will which alone is capable of acting in me But the Body by it self cannot be united to the Soul nor the Soul to the Body They have no Relation to one another nor any one Creature to another I speak of Relations of Causality such are those which depend on the Union of the Soul and Body It is God that doth every thing his Will is the Union of all Unions the Modifications of Substances depend on him alone who gives and preserves their Being This is an essential Truth which I think I have sufficiently prov'd in another place IV. But tho' the Soul cannot be united immediately to any Thing but God yet it may be united to the Creatures by the Will of God who communicates his Power to them in making them occasional Causes for the production of certain Effects My Soul is united to my Body because on one side my Will is made the occasional Cause of some changes which God alone produces on it and in the other because the changes which happen in my Body are made occasional Causes of some of those which happen in my Soul V. Now God hath establish'd these Laws for many Reasons which are unknown to us But of those which we do know one is that God in following them acts in a uniform and constant manner by general Laws by the most simple and wisest ways in a word he Acts in such a manner as admirably bears the Character of his Attributes Another Reason is because the Body of Man is his proper Sacrifice for it seems to Sacrifice it self by Pain and to be Annihilated by Death The Soul is in a State of Probation in the Body and God who desires in some measure to be merited and to proportion Rewards to Merits doth by the Laws of the Union of the Soul and
unite our selves to corporeal Objects and separate our selves from them without loving or fearing them But the surest way is to break off all Correspondence with them as far as is possible p. 99. CHAP. XII Of the Imagination This Term is obscure and confus'd What it is in general Several sorts of Imagination Its effects are dangerous Of that which the World calls Wit That quality is very opposite to the Grace of Christ It is fatal to those who possess it and to those who esteem and admire it in others tho' they have it not themselves p. 109. CHAP. XIII Of the Passions What they are Their dangerous effects We must moderate them The conclusion of the first Part. p. 119. THE CONTENTS OF THE SECOND PART Of Duties CHAP. I. GOod Men often do wicked Actions The Love of Order must be enlightned to make it regular Three Conditions requir'd to make an Action perfectly Vertuous We should study the Duties of Man in general and take some time every day to examine the Order and Circumstances of them in particular Page 1. CHAP. II. Our Duties toward God must be refer'd to his Attributes to his Power Wisdom and Love God alone is the true Cause of all Things The Duties we owe to Power which consist chiefly in clear Judgments and in Motions govern'd by those Judgments p. 4. CHAP. III. Of the Duties we owe to the Wisdom of God It is that alone which enlightens the Mind in consequence of certain natural Laws whose efficacy is determin'd by our Desires as occasional Causes The Judgments and Duties of the Mind in relation to the universal Reason p. 14. CHAP. IV. Of the Duties which we owe to the divine Love Our Will is nothing but a continual impression of the Love which God bears to himself the only true Good We cannot love Evil But we may take that for Evil which is neither Good nor Evil. So we cannot hate Good But the true Good is really the Evil of wicked Men or the true cause of their Misery That God may be Good in respect of us our Love must be like his or always subject to the divine Law Motions or Duties p. 21. CHAP. V. The three Divine Persons imprint each their proper Character on our Souls and our Duties give equal Honour to them all three Tho' our Duties consist only in inward Judgments and Motions yet we must shew them by outward Signs in regard of our Society with other Men. p. 30. CHAP. VI. Of the Duties of Society in general Two sorts of Society Every thing should be refer'd to the eternal Society Different kinds of Love and Honour The general heads of our Duties toward Men. They must be External and Relative The danger of paying inward Duties to Men. The Conversation of the World very dangerous p. 36. CHAP. VII The Duties of Esteem are due to all Mankind to the lowest of Men to the greatest Sinners to our Enemies and Persecutors To Merits as well as to Natures It is difficult to regulate exactly these Duties and those of Benevolence by reason of the difference of personal and relative Merits and their various Combinations A general Rule and the most certain one that can be given in this matter p. 42. CHAP. VIII Of the Duties of Benevolence and Respect We should procure all Men the true Goods and not relative Goods Who it is that fulfills the Duties of Benevolence The unreasonable Complaints of worldly Men. The Duties of Respect should be proportion'd to the greatness of participated Power p. 52. CHAP. IX Of the Duties due to Sovereigns Two Sovereign Powers The difference between them Their natural Rights Rights of Concession Of the Obedience of Subjects p. 61. CHAP. X. Of the Domestick Duties of Husband and Wife The Ground of these Duties Of the Duties of Parents toward their Children with relation to the Eternal and Civil Societies Of their instruction in the Sciencies and Morality Parents should give their Children a good Example They should govern them by Reason They have no right to use them ill Children owe Obedience to their Parents in all Things p. 69. CHAP. XI The original of the difference of Conditions Reason alone ought to govern but Force is now necessary The lawful use of Force is to make Men submit to Reason according to the Primitive Law The Rights of Superiours The Duties of Superiours and Inferiours p. 81. CHAP. XII Of our Duties toward our Equals We should give them the place they desire in our Mind and Heart We should express our inward Dispositions in favour of them by our outward Air and Behaviour and by real Services We should yield them the Superiority and Pre-eminence The hottest and most passionate Friendships are not the most solid and durable We should not make more intimate Friends than we can keep p. 90. CHAP. XIII A Continuatian of the same Subject If we would be belov'd we must make our selves amiable The Qualities which make a Man amiable Rules for Conversation Of different Airs Of Christian Friendships p. 100. CHAP. XIV Of the Duties which every Man owes to himself which consist in general in labouring for his own Perfection and Happiness p. 110. A TREATISE OF Morality PART I. CHAP. I. Vniversal Reason is the Wisdom of God himself All Men have some Communication with God True and False Just and Vnjust is the same in respect of all intelligent Beings and of God himself What Truth and Order is and what we must do to avoid Error and Sin God is essentially Just he loves the Creatures according as they are amiable or as they resemble him We must be Perfect to be Happy Vertue or the Perfection of Man consists in a Submission to the immutable Order and not in following the Order of Nature The Error of some of the Heathen Philosophers in this Matter grounded upon their Ignorance of the simplicity and immutability of the Divine Conduct I. THE Reason of Man is the Word See the first and second Christian Meditation or the Illustration on the Nature of Ideas Search after Truth Tom. 3. or the Wisdom of God himself for every Creature is a particular Being but the Reason of Man is Universal II. If my own particular Mind were my Reason and my Light my Mind would also be the Reason of all intelligent Beings for I am certain that my Reason enlightens all intelligent Beings No one can feel my Pain but my self but every one may see the Truth which I contemplate so that the Pain which I feel is a Modification of my own proper Substance but Truth is a Possession common to all Spiritual Beings III. Thus by the means of Reason I have or may have some Society with God and all other intelligent Beings because they all possess something in common with me to wit Reason IV. This Spiritual Society consists in a participation of the same intellectual Substance of the Word from which all Spiritual Beings may receive their Nourishment In
in truth certain modifications of our own proper Being but unknown to us cause us to will in such a manner that this Volition seems to depend wholly on our selves for we will so freely and readily that we think nothing obliges us to do it It is true indeed that nothing obliges us to will but our selves but then that which we call Our Selves is not our Being purely natural or perfectly free in respect of Good and Evil but our Being dispos'd toward one of them by certain Modifications which either corrupt or perfect it and render us in the sight of God either Just or Sinners and these Dispositions we should encrease or destroy by Acts which are the natural Causes of Habits IV. But to do this we must farther suppose that other important Truth that the Soul doth not always produce the Acts of its predominant Habit. For it is evident that if a Man whose ruling Disposition is Avarice should never act but by some Motion of Avarice he would be so far from ever becoming Liberal that his Vice would continually augment according to that Principle which we have before laid down that Acts produce and fortifie Habits Nay we must allow that it is in the power of a vitious Man to perform some Acts of Vertue in order to free himself from his vitious Habits and to become a good Man but this Proposition requires a little further Explication V. I say then in respect of particular Habits First That a covetous Man for Example may act by a motive of Ambition this is neither difficult to believe nor prove Secondly That a covetous Man may do an Action contrary to Avarice by which he is govern'd for a covetous Man may be also Ambitious This being suppos'd I say that if his Passion for Riches be not mov'd and his Ambition be or if his Avarice be less excited than his Ambition in a reciprocal Proportion of the force of these two Passions it is certain that the covetous Man will do an act of Liberality if at that instant he determines himself to act which is certainly in his own power to do For a Man can will nothing but Good and at that instant the covetous Man will think it better to do that act of Liberality than not do it he will Sacrifice his love of Mony to that of Glory Thus it is evident that the Sinner may for Reasons of Self-love avoid following any certain determinate Motion of his Passions if he can but excite some contrary Passions and till then suspend the consent of his Will But still this is not sufficient to prove that he who Sins may help Sinning that the Sinner may rid himself of his vitious Habits and the just Man lose his Charity VI. Indeed the Case of particular Habits as Avarice or Liberality is not the same with that of the Love of Order or Self-love and tho' perhaps it may be granted that a covetous Man may do an act of Liberality yet without doubt it will not be so readily agreed that a Heathen can do an action conformable to Order or for Love of Order For my part I shall not dispute it but only endeavour to explain my own Sentiments clearly Let every one follow that which the Evidence of Reason and the Authority of Faith oblige him to believe and leave me when I go out of the Way which should lead me in the Search of Truth VII If Sinners or Heathens had no Love at all for Order they would be altogether incorrigible and if the Righteous had no Self-love they could not possibly Sin for according to my first Principle Habits are form'd and preserv'd by Acts. The Sinner being suppos'd to have no Love but for himself cannot act but by Self-love and therefore all his Actions must encrease the Corruption of his Heart On the other side if the righteous Man be suppos'd to have no Love but for Order he cannot act but by the Love of Order and then all his Actions must still encrease his Vertue So that upon this Supposition that a Sinner or a Heathen hath no Love but Self-love and a just Man no Love but the Love of Order the Sinner must be incorrigible and the just Man impeccable But I think I have sufficiently prov'd in the foregoing Chapter that the greatest Sinners have always some disposition to love Order and I think it cannot be doubted but that the best Men always retain some Relicks of Self-love VIII It is true indeed that a Heathen can never acquire Charity nor do any Action that may merit those Assistances that are necessary for obtaining the ruling Love of the immutable Order but he may do Actions conformable to Order he may perform good and meritorious Actions Chap. I. For a Heathen has always some Idea of Order this Idea is indeleble He hath always some Love for Order Chap. III. this Love is natural and immortal Now all Love is active when once it is excited And therefore if his Self-love do not oppose the Action of his Love of Order his Love of Order will act and produce its proper Acts Nay tho' his Self-love should oppose his Love of Order yet if his Love of Order be more excited than his Self-love in a reciprocal Proportion of the greatness of these two habitual Loves and their actual Motion his Love for Order would surmount his Self-love if at that instant he determin'd himself to act IX For instance an innocent Man is led to Execution This is contrary to Order A Heathen knows it and can by a word speaking prevent the breach of Order I suppose that his Self-love is not at all concern'd in the Life or Death of the Man Certainly he will prevent or at least will have Strength and Reason enough to speak and prevent this Offence against Order For my part I do not doubt upon the Supposition which I have made but that he would prevent it For all Men naturally love Order and are so united to it that one cannot violate Order without offending them in some measure The same things being suppos'd tho' this Man we speak of were covetous yet if his Passion for Mony were laid a sleep for a little while or tho' it were excited yet if only a Penny were desir'd of him to save the Life of that innocent Man certainly he would or at least might do an action contrary to his Self-love for in truth that opposition is but inconsiderable but it would be a very great Offence against Order which he is naturally dispos'd to Love if he should not offer that small Sacrifice to it X. Now those actions are good because they are conformable to Order and they are meritorious because they are accompanied with a Sacrifice of Self-love to the Love of Order But they are not meritorious in respect of the true Goods nor of any thing that leads to the Possession of them because those Sacrifices they offer are but inconsiderable and besides
intelligent Being to another 3. God by his Power is the cause of our clear Perceptions or Cognitions in consequence of our own Desires or Attention But the intellectual and common Substance of Truth alone is the Form the Idea and the immediate Object of them The Soul separated from Reason cannot attain to the knowledge of any Truth It may by the action of God upon it be sensible of its own Pain Pleasure Perception and all the other particular Modifications of which its substance is capable but it cannot engross to it self the knowledge of Truths which are common to all spiritual Beings For Man who depends on the Power of God to be happy and powerful must also be united to the Wisdom of God to become Rational Wise Just and compleatly Perfect 4. We do not derive from the Objects the Ideas which we have of them 5. Men whom we call our Masters are only Monitors 6. When we retire into our selves it is not we that answer our selves but the inward Master which dwells in us which presides immediately over all spiritual Beings and gives them all the same answers XI Mat. 23.8 See S Augustincts Treathe De M●gistro All those may be reduc'd to that general proposition of our Saviours that we have but one Master even Christ himself who illuminates us by the evidence of his Light when we retire into our selves and solidly instructs us by Faith when we consult the visible and infallible authority of the Church in whose custody the sacred Treasure of his written and unwritten Word is deposited XII From this great Principle the following Duties are deriv'd 1. Not to value our selves on our Knowledge but to return our humble Thanks for it to him who is the Fountain and Author of it 2. To retire into our Selves as much as we can and to hearken more readily to Reason than to Men. 3. To yield only to the Evidence of Reason and the infallible Authority of the Church 4. Whenever Men speak to be sure to compare that which they say to our Ears with that which Reason answers to our Mind never to believe them but in what concerns Matters of Fact and that too with a kind of saving and reservation 5. Never to speak to them at least not with an air of Confidence before Reason hath spoke to us by its Evidence 6. To speak to them always as Monitors not as Masters to question them often and in different manners and to lead them insensibly to our common Master the universal Reason by obliging them to retire into themselves There is no way to instruct them but this 7. Never to dispute for disputing's sake nor even to propose Truth to others when the Company they are in Passion or any other Reason give us sufficiently to understand that they will not retire into themselves to hear the decision of the impartial Judge 8. Never to consult Reason but about such Matters as are suitable to the dignity of it and useful to our selves either to conduct us to Good or unite us to Truth to regulate our Heart or procure us Strength or liberty of Mind 9. To lay up carefully in our Memory as far as it is possible to be done none but certain Principles and such as abound in Consequences none but necessary Truths or the precious answer of the inward Truth 10. For the most part to neglect Matters of Fact especially those that have no certain Rules to be judg'd by such as are the Actions of Men. They give no light to the Mind and often corrupt the Heart 11. Our inviolable Law is Order not Custom which is many times opposite to Order and Reason To follow Example without confronting it with Order is to act like Brutes and by Mechanism only Nay it is better tho' that be bad enough to make our own Pleasure our Law than foolishly to obey pernicious and wicked Customs Our Life and Actions should do honour to our Reason and be answerable to the illustrious Characters we bear 12. We should set no value on Subtilty Beauty or even Strength of Imagination nor esteem any of those Studies which cultivate that part of us which makes us so valuable and acceptable in the Eye of the World An over-nice or over-stock'd Imagination doth not willingly submit to Reason It is always the Body which speaks by the Imagination and whenever the Body speaks it is an unhappy necessity that Reason must be silent or not regarded 13. To confirm us in this dis-esteem we should frequently and with a particular Application examine by the inward Light that which appears bright and sparkling to the Imagination that so we may dissipate that false and bewitching Lustre with which it hides its Follies We should very seldom regard Mens outward Behaviour which passes for current Payment in the World 14. We should carefully stop up the Passages by which the Soul gets away from the presence of God and wanders among the Creatures A Mind continually distracted by the action of sensible Objects cannot pay that respect and attendance which it owes to Reason It is a Contempt to Reason to give our Senses their full liberty 15. We should ardently love Truth Wisdom or the universal Reason We should esteem all the Gold of Peru but as a Grain of Sand in comparison of it Wis 7.9 All Gold in respect of Wisdom is as a little Sand saith the wise Man We should continually pray to it by our Attention My delights were with th● Sons of Men Prov. 8.31 We should place our whole Delight in consulting it in hearing its Answers and obeying its Commands as that delights to converse with us and to be always among us CHAP. IV. Of the Duties which we owe to the divine Love Our Will is nothing but a continual impression of the Love which God bears to himself the only true Good We cannot love Evil But we may take that to be Evil which is neither Good nor Evil. So we cannot hate Good But the true Good is really the Evil of wicked Men or the true cause of their Miseries That God may be Good in respect of us our Love must be like his or always subject to the divine Law Motions or Duties I. WE depend on the power of God and do nothing but by his Efficacy We are united to his Wisdom and know nothing but by his Light But this is not all we are also animated and inspir'd by his Love in such a manner that we are not capable of loving any Good but by the continual impression of the Love which he bears to himself This is what I must now explain in order to give a general view of our Duties toward God II. It is certain that God cannot act but for himself He hath no other Motive but his Love of himself He cannot Will but by his own Will and his Will is not like ours an impression proceeding from and tending toward something else As he is his own
Good his Love can be no other but Love of himself His end is himself and can be nothing but himself Therefore he doth not produce in spiritual Beings a Love which hath a different tendency from his own for the love of Good in spiritual Beings proceeds only from the Will of God which is nothing else but the Love he bears to himself But further there are not Two or more true Goods there is but one alone for there is but one true Cause Therefore there is nothing amiable I mean with a love of Union but God So then since God cannot will that we should Love that which is not amiable or not Love that which is amiable supposing that we are capable of Loving our Love proceeding from God must necessarily according to the primitive institution of its Nature tend toward him and be refer'd to him alone III. God having created our Souls with a design to make them happy continually imprints on them a Love for Good and as he acts only for himself and Good neither is nor can be in any but in him this natural Love of Good doth of it self carry them toward God alone For this Love is like that which God bears to himself It is also invincible and irresistible because it is a powerful and continual Impression of the divine Love and it is the same thing with our Will for it is only by the particular determinations of this Love that we are capable of loving all Objects that have the appearance of Good IV. From hence it is plain that we cannot love Evil and that we have no Motion ordain'd for that end Notwithstanding we may mistake Evil for Good and so we may love Evil by loving Good we may love Evil out of choice by loving Good naturally we may love Evil or rather that which is neither Good nor Evil by a horrid abuse of that love for Good which God continually imprints on us to make us Love him as being our only Good or alone capable of making us happy For we must take particular notice that the Creatures tho' they are all Perfect or Good in themselves are neither Good nor Evil in respect of us because they have not really the power to do us either Good or Harm As they are occasional causes of Good or Evil of Pleasure or Pain we may unite our selves to them or separate our selves from them by the motion of our Body But we cannot reasonably Love or Fear them because every Motion which doth not tend toward God the beginning and end of it is irregular and if it be free and voluntary deserves to be Punish'd V. It is also evident that we cannot hate Good for since we invincibly desire to be happy we cannot separate our selves from that which makes us so but we may mistake Good for Evil and so hate Good from the hatred we have for Evil. And even this hatred is at the bottom a motion of Love We fly from Evil only by the motion of the Love we have for Good For God having created us to be happy by loving him hath given us no motion to separate us from him but only to unite us to him The wicked or the damn'd hate God with an invincible and irreconcilable Hatred but this proceeds from the very Love which God hath given them for himself For since God is not their Good but their Evil or the cause of their Punishment according to the Psalmist Psal 18.26 With the Pure thou wilt shew thy self Pure and with the Froward thou wilt shew thy self Froward they hate him by that irresistible Motion which God who is immutable in his proceeding gives then for their Happiness VI. For the right understanding of this it is sufficient to observe that actual Pleasure is the formal cause of actual Happiness as Pain is of Misery Now the Damn'd feel Pain the harden'd Sinner fears it The Damn'd know that God alone is the cause of Pain the Sinner believes he is Therefore both of them from the very desire they have to be Happy must of necessity make a wrong use of that Motion which God gives them to unite them to himself and must separate themselves from him for the more they are united to God the more God acts on them the more sensible they are of their Misery The Blessed on the contrary for a like reason cannot cease to love God And those that have access to God those that expect to find their Happiness in him Sinners who by Faith in Christ have hope of returning and finding favour with God may by the invincible desire of Happiness love and fear God This is our condition in this Life VII Now that the natural Love which God continually imprints on us may still continue Love and not be turn'd into Hatred that the love of Happiness may make us Happy that it may carry us toward God and unite us to him instead of separating us from him In a word that God may be or continue Good in respect of us and not become Evil our Love must always be conformable to or resembling the divine Love we must love Perfection as well as Happiness we must remain united to the wisdom of God as well as to his Power For God when he created Man gave him in the love of Good and by the impression of the Love which he bears to himself as it were two sorts of Love one of Happiness and the other of Perfection By the love of Happiness he united him to his Power which alone can make him Happy and by the love of Perfection he united him to his Wisdom by which alone as his inviolable Law he ought to be govern'd God if I may so say is divinely inspir'd with both these Loves They are inseparable in him and they cannot be separated in us without destroying us utterly For the power of God is Wise and Just His Wisdom is all Powerful and he that thinks to retain the love of his Happiness without the love of his Perfection without the love of Wisdom Justice and the immutable Order that love of Happiness will only serve to make him eternally Miserable God by his Power will not be the Good of Men but their Evil if by his Wisdom he is not their Law or the principle of their inward Reformation For Happiness is a Reward It is not enough to desire the enjoyment of it but we must also deserve it And we cannot deserve it if we do not govern the motions of our Heart by the inviolable Law of all intelligent Beings and regulate them according to the Model by which Man was first form'd and by which he must be form'd anew In a word the love of Conformity which relates to the immutable Order or the Wisdom of God must always be joyn'd with the love of Union which relates to his Power that so our Love being like the divine Love may carry us to all the Happiness and all the Perfection that
we are capable of VIII For we must observe that in the condition we are now in our Happiness and our Perfection often clash and we cannot avoid engaging on one side or the other either we must Sacrifice our Perfection to our Happiness or our Happiness to our Perfection the Love of Order to our Pleasure or our Pleasure to the Love of Order Now when we Sacrifice our Happiness to our Perfection or our Pleasure to the Love of Order we Merit for then we obey the Divine Law though we suffer by it and thereby we give Honour to the Wisdom of God or the universal Reason we leave that to God which depends wholly on him our Happiness and by that Submission we give Honour to his Power For Obedience to the Divine Law is partly in our own Power but the enjoyment of Happiness no way depends on us Therefore we should give up our Happiness to the disposal of God and to apply our selves wholly to our Perfection giving this honour also to God to believe him on his Word to rely on his Justice and Goodness and to live contented by Faith in the Strength of our Hope according to those words of the Scripture Heb. 10.38 Justus 〈…〉 Virg Lat. The just shall live by Faith God is certainly just and faithfull he will give us all the Happiness we deserve our Patience shall not be Fruitless But how great soever our Desire be and our Application in the Search of our Happiness yet this will not move God to give us the Enjoyment of it without we deserve it This excessive Desire will perhaps one day render us unworthy of it according to those admirable Words of our Saviour himself Mat. 16 24. If any Man will come after me let him deny himself and take up his Cross and follow me For whoever will save his † Soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 life shall lose it and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it For what is a Man profited if he shall gain the whole World and lose his own Soul Or what shall a Man give in exchange for his Soul For the Son of Man shall come in the Glory of his Father with his Angels and then shall he reward every Man according to his Works IX Now this contrariety which we find at present between our Happiness and our Perfection proceeds from the Union of the Soul and Body which is chang'd into a Dependance as a Punishment of Sin For the involuntary Motions of the Fibres of the principal part of the Brain are the occasional Causes of our pleasant or painful Sensations and consequently of our Happiness or Misery The Body to which we are join'd hath not the same Interests with Reason It hath its particular Wants to be supplied it makes its Demands with boldness and insolence and treats the Soul roughly if it refuses to grant them Whereas Reason uses only Threatnings and Reproaches which are not so lively and pressing as actual Pleasure and Pain We must therefore bravely resolve to be miserable in this Life that we may retain our Perfection and Integrity we must Sacrifice our Body or rather our actual Happiness that we may remain inseparably united to Reason and obedient to the Divine Law being contented with a foretaste of the true Enjoyments and having a firm hope that that Divine Law that Reason which was made Flesh sacrificed and glorified in our Nature or our Nature in that will certainly restore to us all that we have lost for our Obedience to it X. This clear perception that our Will or the natural and necessary Motion of our Love is only a continual Impression of the Love of God who unites us to his Power to make us conformable to his Wisdom or obedient to his Law obliges us to form these Judgments 1. That every Motion of Love which doth not tend toward God is prejudicial and leads to Evil or makes the Cause of our Good to be the Cause of our Evil. 2. That every Motion of Love not conformable to the immutable Order which is the inviolable Law both of the Creatures and of the Creatour himself is irregular and since God is Just that Motion obliges him to become our Evil or the Cause of our Misery 3. That we cannot unite our selves to God as our Good if we do not conform our selves to him as our Law The Converse of this is also true we cannot conform our selves to the Law of God and by that conformity become Perfect but we must also unite our selves to his Power and by that Union be made Happy XI This Truth may be also express'd thus according to the Analogy of Faith We have no way of access to God no society with him no share in his Happiness but by the universal Reason the eternal Wisdom the divine Word who was made Flesh because Man was become Carnal by his Flesh was made a Sacrifice because Man was become a Sinner and by the offering up of his Sacrifice was made a Mediatour because Man being corrupted and no longer able to consult or obey Reason purely intellectual it could not be the Bond of the Society between God and Him But yet we must take particular notice That Reason by becoming incarnate did not at all change its Nature nor lose any thing of its Power It is immutable and necessarily exists it is the only inviolable Law of spiritual Beings and hath the sole Right to command them Faith is not contrary to Truth it leads us to Truth and by it establishes ur Society with God for ever We must conform our selves to the Word made Flesh because the intellectual Word the Word without Flesh is a Form too abstracted too sublime and too pure to fashion or new-mould gross Spirits and corrupt Hearts Spirits that can take hold of nothing but what hath a Body and are disgusted at every thing that doth not touch and sensibly affect them Every High Priest is ordain'd to offer Gifts and Sacrifices wherefore it is of necessity that the Man have somewhat also to offer Heb. 8.3 The Word was made a Sacrifice because without a Sacrifice he had nothing to offer he could not be a Priest nor give Sinners any Communion with God without an Atonement and an Oblation We must be conformable to him in this Circumstance also for besides that it is we who are the Criminals we are also a part of the Sacrifice which must be purified consecrated and offer'd up before it can be glorified and consummated in God to all Eternity But the life of Christ is our Pattern only because it was conformable to Order our indispensable Pattern and our inviolable Law We must follow Christ even to the Cross because Order requires that this Body of Sin should be destroy'd for the Honour of Reason and the Glory of him from whom it separates us Order requires that by voluntary Pain of which the Body is the occasion we should deserve
Duties It is principally the knowledge and love of the relations of Perfection or practical Truths wherein consist our Perfection Let us apply our selves then to know to love and follow Order Let us labour for our Perfection as for our Happiness let us leave that to the disposal of God on whom it wholly depends God is just and necessarily rewards Vertue Let us not doubt then but that we shall infallibly receive all the Happiness that we have deserv'd XX. The Obedience which we pay to Order and submission to the Law of God is Vertue in all Senses Submission to the divine Decrees or to the power of God is rather Necessity than Vertue A Man may follow Nature and yet walk irregularly for Nature it self is irregular On the other side he may resist the action of God without opposing his Orders for oftentimes the particular action of God is so determin'd by second or occasional Causes that it is not conformable to Order It is true indeed that God wills nothing but according to Order but he often acts contrary to it For Order it self requiring See the 7 and 8 Christian Medit. that God as the general cause should act in a constant and uniform manner according to certain general Laws which he hath establish'd the effects of that cause are many times contrary to Order He forms Monsters and is subservient as it were to the Wickedness of Men in this World by reason of the simplicity of those ways by which he executes his Designs So that he who should think to obey God in submitting to his Power and in following and observing the course of Nature would offend against Order and fall into Disobedience every Moment XXI If all the motions of Bodies were caus'd by particular acts of the Will of God it would be a sin to avoid the Ruins of a falling House by flight for we cannot without injustice refuse to render back to God that Life which he hath given us when he requires it again At this rate it would be an Affront to the Wisdom of God to alter the course of Rivers and to turn them to Places that want Water we should follow the Order of Nature and be quiet But since God acts in consequence of certain general Laws we correct his Work without injuring his Wisdom We resist his action without opposing his Will because he doth not will positively and directly every thing that he doth For example he doth not directly will unjust Actions tho' he alone gives motion to those that commit them And tho' it be only he who sends Rain yet every Man hath a liberty to shelter himself when it Rains For God doth not send Rain but by a necessary consequence of general Laws Laws which he hath establish'd not that such or such a Man should be wet through but for greater ends and more agreeable to his Wisdom and Goodness If the Rain fall upon Men upon the Sea or upon the Sand it is because he is not oblig'd to alter the uniformity of his Conduct for the uselessness or inconvenience of the consequences of it XXII The case is not the same between God and Men between the general cause and particulationes When we oppose the action of Men we offend them for since they act only by particular motions of the Will we cannot resist their action without opposing their Designs But when we resist the action of God we do not at all offend him nay we often promote his Designs For since God constantly follows those general Laws which he hath prescrib'd to himself the combination of those effects which are the necessary consequences of them cannot always be conformable to Order nor proper for the execution of his Work And therefore it is lawful for Men to divert these natural effects not only when they may be the occasion of their Death but also when they are inconvenient or disagreeable Our Duty then consists in submitting our selves to the Law of God and following Order For to submit to his absolute Power is necessity This Order we may know by our union with the Word so that the immutable Order may be our Law and our Guide But the Divine Decrees are absolutely unknown to us And therefore let us not make them our Rule Let us leave that chimerical Vertue of following God or Nature to the Sages of Greece and the Stoicks But let us consult Reason let us love and follow Order in all things for then we truly follow God when we submit to a Law which he invincibly loves XXIII But tho' the Order of Nature be not precisely our Law and a submission to that Order be by no means a Vertue we must observe nevertheless that we ought oftentimes to have a regard to it Yet still this is because the immutable Order so requires and not because the Order of Nature is an effect of the Power of God A Man that suffers Persecution or rather one that is tormented with the Gout is oblig'd to bear it with Patience and Humility because being a sinner Order requires that he should suffer besides other Reasons which need not here be produc'd But if Man were not subject to Sin and the immutable Order did not require that he should suffer to deserve his Reward certainly he might nay and ought to seek his ease and avoid all sorts of inconveniences tho' he were persecuted if that were possible by the inclemency of the Seasons and by the Miseries which Sin hath brought into the World And a Man tho' he be a sinner may shelter himself from the Rain and the Wind and avoid the action of an avenging God because Order requires that he should preserve his Strength and Health and especially the liberty of his Mind to think upon his Duty and search after Truth And because Rain and Wind being consequences of the general laws of the Order of Nature it doth not plainly appear that it is the positive Will of God that he should suffer that particular inconvenience For it would be a hainous Crime in us to avoid the Rain if God should make it Rain on purpose to wet and punish us As it was in our first Parent to eat of a Fruit because of the express Prohibition and his formal Disobedience But if Vertue consisted precisely in living in that condition wherein we are plac'd in consequence of the Order of Nature he that is born in the midst of pleasure and abundance would be vertuous without pain and Nature having been happily favourable to him he would follow it with pleasure But Virtue must be painful at present that it may be generous and meritorious A Man ought to sacrifice himself for the possession of God Pleasure is the Reward of Merit and therefore cannot be the foundation of it as I shall shew hereafter In a Word Truth it self informs us of one that was commanded to sell his Goods and distribute them to the Poor if he would be perfect which was
Heart and with all thy Strength and thy Neighbour as thy self And of which St. Paul hath given us the elogy in that admirable Chapter of his first Epistle to the Corinthians which begins thus 1 Cor. 13.1 Tho' I spake all Languages even that of Angels themselves yet if I had not Charity I should be but like sounding Brass or a tinkling Cymbal The ways of Speaking are different according to the diversity of Persons spoken to The Scripture which is written for all the World expresses the Truths it contains in such Terms only as are authoris'd by the most common Use But he that would convince and inform the most obstinate Persons I mean those Men of strong Reason as they fancy themselves and those whom they call Philosophers People that find difficulties in every Thing must endeavour to explain his Sentiments by Terms that as far as may be are free from an equivocal Signification II. These Words Thou shalt Love God with all thy Strength and thy Neighbour as thy Self are clear but it is chiefly to those who are inwardly Taught by the Unction of the Spirit For as to others they are more obscure than is commonly imagin'd To Love is an equivocal Term It signifies two Things among many others First to unite our selve by the Will to any object as to our Good or the cause of our Happiness and Secondly to wish Well to any one We may love God in the first Sense and our Neighbour in the Second But it would be Impiety or at least Stupidity or Ignorance to love God in the latter Sense and a kind of Idolatry to love our Neighbour in the former III. The word God is likewise Equivocal and much more than it is thought to be A Man may fancy he loves God when indeed he loves only a vast immense Phantom which he hath form'd to himself He may think he loves God when at the same time he lives in Disorder or without loving Order above all Things But he is mistaken for he is so far from loving him that he doth not so much as know him 1 Joh. 2.4 5. For he that saith I know him and keepeth not his Commandments is a Lier and the Truth is not in him But whoso keepeth his Word in him verily is the love of God perfected or he perfectly loves God v. 3. saith St. John Hereby we do know that we know him if we keep his Commandments IV. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy Strength The word all is clear enough but thy Strength may Minister occasion of Error to those who either have no Humility or a false and mistaken one The former may draw from it some ground of Vanity and the latter of a sinful Negligence And thy Neighbour as thy self Our Saviour tells us in the Parable of the Samaritan that all Mankind is our Neighbour So that the word Neighbour is not very clear and so we find the Jews always took it in a wrong Sense As thy self Certainly there are none but those that love the true and real good who fulfil this Commandment in loving their Neighbour as themselves For a Father who loves his Son with the greatest Tenderness and carefully procures for him all sensible good Things what love soever he may have for him is very far from loving him as God commands us to love our Neighbour V. These words then Thou shalt love the Lord thy God c. are obscure But in Truth they are obscure only to those who have a mind to Dispute or who will not retire into themselves to behold this Commandment written there with the Finger of God The Holy Scripture is a clos'd Book only to those who are not instructed by the unction of the Spirit For pious Men tho' never so Dull and Stupid understand this Precept very well They know that all the application of our Mind and all the motions of our Heart ought to tend toward God that we should employ our Thoughts on nothing but him as far as it is possible That we do not truly Love him if we are not nice and exact in doing our Duty And that to violate the order of Justice or the immutable Order is in effect to offend against the Divine Majesty They are so far from loving Men as capable of doing them Good that they are afraid to come near great Persons and are only pleas'd to be amongst those who stand in need of their Assistance They love Men not as their Good nor as capable of enjoying transitory Goods with them Goods which only serve to cause division every where But they Love them as Co-heirs of the true Goods true Goods because they are possess'd without division enjoy'd without satiety and lov'd without any fear of losing them like the Pleasures of this present Life The Father loves his Son but he had rather see him Deform'd than Disorderly He had rather see him Sick Dead or at the Gallows than see him Dead in the Eyes of him who never had a more agreable Sight than that of his only Son fasten'd to the Cross to re-establish Order in the World Pious Men understand the Law of God because they are instructed by the same Spirit that dictated it But because this Discourse is intended chiefly for Philosophers and it lies not in my Power to communicate that holy Unction which produces Light in the Minds of Men I think my self oblig'd to endeavour to prove by Reason and explain as far as I am able in clear Terms those Truths of which perhaps they are not sufficiently Convinc'd VI. I think then I may say that justifying Charity or that Vertue which renders the possessors of it truly Just and Vertuous is properly a ruling Love of the immutable Order But that I may clear those Obscurities which ordinarily attend abstract Ideas I must explain these Terms a little more at large VII I have already said that the immutable Order consists in nothing else but in those proportions or relations of Perfection which are between the intellectual Ideas comprehended in the substance of the eternal Word Now we ought to esteem and love nothing but Perfection And therefore our esteem and love should be conformable to Order From hence it is evident that Charity or the love of God is a consequence of the love of Order and that we ought to esteem and love God not only more but infinitely more than all other Things for there can be no finite relation between infinite and finite VIII There are Two principal kinds of Love a Love of Benevolence and a Love which may be call'd Love of Vnion A sensual Man Loves the object of his Passion with a Love of Vnion because he looks upon that Object as the cause of his Happiness and therefore he desires to be united to it that it may act upon him and make him Happy He is carried towards it as well by the motion of his Heart or by his Affections as