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A39122 A Christian duty composed by B. Bernard Francis. Bernard, Francis, fl. 1684. 1684 (1684) Wing E3949A; ESTC R40567 248,711 323

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prosperities he invites them to penance by summons and inspirations which would reclaim tygers and if they return to him he receives them he pardons them he embraces them with inconceivable Clemency and sweetness 14. Nevertheless He is so great and terrible in Iusticè that though the death and Passion of JESUS-CHRIST is capable to redeem a hundred thousand worlds He sees notwithstanding an infinity of Iews of Pagans of Turcks Hereticks of bad Catholicks in the mass of corruption in the way of perdition He draws them not powerfully out of it through a most profound and incomprehensible but most just judgement and he accomplisheth the verity of this word of this tunder-clap many are Mat. 20. 16 called but few elect 15. He is great and admirable in his independence and in the plenitude of his Being He is naturally sufficient to himself most content with himself most happy in himself and has no need of any thing without himself He had from all eternity power to produce creatures heaven earth and all that is in them and he hath not created them but in time for to shew that he had no need of them for to make known that since he hath been perfectly happy without them from eternity he created them not for any S. Austin● 12. de Civit. c. 17. sub fin want he had of them but by a free goodness and by a pure and disinteressed charity Let us make an end of speaking of Him whose greatness has no end who is infinite in his Essence and infinite in Perfections for 't is to mafle as infants 't is to obscure his perfections to speak of them so imperfectly and if He were not infinitely mercifull and condescendent it would be a punishable temerity to speak so lowly so grossly and so unworthily of Him Yet this is enough to make us see what a Majesty we offend and whom we make our enemy when we commit a mortal sin And after this shal we not endeavour to conceive a lively repentance of our sins shal we content our selves with a little sorrow and which regards nothing but our own interests if we detest our sins because they rob us of our merits subject us to the tyranny of the devill engage us to Eternal damnation if we have no other motive 't is to feel and resent a scratch of a pin which we have received and not a great stroake of a sword which we have given The injuries that sin does to the Creatour are without comparison greater then those which it does to the Creature 16. For to avoyd them then Let us remember that God is infinitely noble If a Prince tho' a stranger that appertains not at all to us were in this Country we would not abuse or injure him but would honor him and treat him with respect and shal we dare to offend our God our Sovereign the King of Kings This King who is so great that all the Kings of the earth in respect of Him are but slaves and wormes of the earth Let us consider that He is infinitely powerfull We fear to offend the Powers of this world because they can punish us deprive us of our liberty estates or temporal life and shal we dare to offend the omnipotent God who by one word one act of his Will can reduce us to dust who after He has killed the body will cast our soules into Eternal flames Let us consider that He is infinitely Wise that all things ly open to his sight that he can not forget any thing that whatsoever excuse we forge for to flatter our conscience and to diminish the greatness of our offenses He sees the greatness of them He knows all the circumstances of them and pierceth the bottome of our hearts He knows that 't is neither violence nor poverty nor necessity that makes us to commit sin but that 't is because we have not the fear of God nor the due love of him Let us consider that He is good and that He has always been so to us T is a great injustice a very unnatural malice to offend a person that has never given us any cause who has never disoblig'd us all his life We know that 't is God who created us who conserves us at present and hath preserved us from a thousand dangers He who hath given us more than we have desir'd more than we should dare to desire and what is above all desire who has given his own life and died upon the Cross by pure charity towards us After all these graces shal wee have the malice to commit a mortal sin which infinitely displeases Him Let us remember that He is infinitely just and that his justice ought to have its cours His Prophet sayd I feared all my Iob. 9. 82. works knowing that thou wouldest not spare the offender He leaves not unpunished the least failings what will he do then to mortal sins to great Crimes We must hold it then as most certaine that if we commit these sins we shal suffer soon or late most bitter and grievous torments in this world or in the other Let us in fine consider that He is independent that He depends not of any one in his Being nor in his designs nor in his operations that if He associate sometimes his creatures in the Execution of his designs 't is by an Excess of goodness and not out of indigence If He could have need of us we might thinke that He would be obliged to pardon us and to seek our amitie But he needs us not He has been well without us from all Eternity he will be well without us for all Eternity and if we honour not his mercy in heaven we shal honor his justice by our sufferances in hell from which I pray God to keep us by his mercy Amen DISCOURS II. OF THE FIRST ARTICLE The Father Almighty Creatour Of Heaven and Earth THe first verity expressed in these words requires as much vertue and strength of Faith as any other Verity revealed It obliges us to believe and adore a pluralitie of divine Persons in a most perfect Unitie of nature and to Confess that in the Diety there is a Person who intellectually produces a coeternal and consubstantial Son Hence the Apostles truly call Him Father and his Paternity or fatherhood is so proper to Him that 't is not an Attribute or Quality but that which enters the intrinsecal and individual constitution of Him Father also of us because he created us conserveth us at present and nourisheth us Father again because he redeemed us by his own Son makes us his Children by adoption governs and directs us and conducts us to the inheritance of eternal life 2. Almighty or Omnipotent This signifies a perfection not so proper to him as is that of Fathêr Omnipotence also is not his particular Attribute or Quality but to him appropriated and attributed You know that the faith of the church adores three Persons subsisting in the
account they do ill in believing that they being sinners can by Baptisme wash away the sins of others and do injury to the Son of God by going themselves or by carrying their children to their Ministers to have their sins remitted by this Sacrament since it belongs to the Son of God to wash away sins by Baptisme Heaven declar'd this Verity to S. Iohn Baptist Vpon whom thou shalt see the holy Ghost Iohn 1. 33. descending He it is that Baptizes But who is so weak that does not answer easily that they baptize on the part of God in his Name and by his Command that they go not to their Ministers as men but as God's Deputies and Vicegerents to be baptized I say the same of Absolution we absolve from sins not of our own selves but in the Name of God as his Deputies and Ministers by the Power Authority and Commission which He hath given us 3. Behold the Commissions and Patents of it Whatsoever You shal Matt. 18. unbind on earth shal he unbound in heaven and in Saint Iohn Whose sins you shal forgive they are forgiven them And whose You Iohn 20. shal retain they are retained These words of our Saviour are as clear as the Sun but let us suppose they have need of interpretation To whom shal we recurr for the interpretation of them To one that came a 100 or sixscore years ago or to the ancient Fathers of the first ages when according to Reformers themselves the Church was in her purity S. Chrysostom speaks great things vpon this subject Lib. 3 de Sacerdotio and seems to have foreseen all the evasions of Reformers First he says that the Son of God communicated to his Apostles the same power that He received from his Father and this great Saint speaks so after our Savior himself For in the same time He sayd to his Disciples whose sins you shal remit they are remitted He sayd to them I send you as my Father sent me But our Savior had not only power to declare that sins are remitted by faith but He had power also to remit them In the second place S. Chrysostom says If a king should give to a favourit power to imprison and to deliver prisoners what favour would this be Yet this would be nothing if compar'd with the power of Priests there is as much difference 'twixt these powers as between heaven and earth Thirdly he says that the Priests of the old Law had not power but to judg the leaprosie of the body and to judg of it only not to cure it ours have power to judg of sin which is the leaprosie of the soul and also to cure her of it Aug. hom 49. ex 50. S. Amb. Lib. 1. de Penit. c. 7. S. Austin says let no body flatter himself saying I confess in my heart I confess to God this is not enough and on this account in vain the Son of God would have sayd to Priests All that you shal unbind on earth And S. Ambrose speaking to the Novatians who sayd that men have not power to remit sins says Why baptize you if men have not power to remit sins for Baptisme is the remission of sins and what if Priests attribute to themselves the power that is given them either by Baptisme or by Penance Let us leave Dissenters and consider the wonders of this Power that we may with those in the Gospell glorify God who gave such power to men I confess that there are not many Misteryes in our Matt. 9. Religion which I more admire than this and you will admire it with me if you consider with me the circumstances of it 4. The first is that this Power is Divine it pertains not properly but to him who receiv'd an injury to remit and pardon it It belongs then to God to remit offences against him Wherfore the Pharisees hearing our Savior say to the Paralitick thy sins are forgiven thee and not believing that He was God thought that He blasphem'd What would they have then thought what wou●d they have sayd if they had known as we know that JESUS CHRIST would give to men and to sinful men this Power 5. A Power in the second place so soveraign that 't is definitive without appeal The sentences which Priests pronounce and all that they justly ordain on earth is ratifyd infallibly in heaven When you have confest with necessary dispositions if the Priest say to you I absolve thee c. fear not that God will condemn you He cannot fail in his promise and He promised to absolve you if the Priest absolve you legitimatly 6. And this is don with so much Authority and Majesty that this Power is perfectly Royal for the Priest absolves not praying If he should say over you the misereatur only or should pray God to absolve you you would not be absolv'd JESUS-CHRIST wills that he say I absolve thee and heaven and earth shal melt rather than you shal fail of absolution how ever great and enormous your sins may be 7. This is a fourth Circumstance of this Power that it is most ample absolute and general without exception restriction or modification For there is no sin which the Church cannot remit since the Son of God hath sayd absolutely and without reserve Whose sins you shal remit shal be remitted 8. But that which is to be admired most in this Power is the facility and convenience we have to vse it 'T is true that having committed a sin it is not so easy as some think to have a true repentance of it We must ask it instantly of God and indeavour to obtain it of him by good works But when we have obtain'd it what is more easy than to find a Priest who may absolve us Have we not great cause to be astonished and to cry out my God! How have you been so liberal as to give this Power to your Church and to so many Priests If you had given it but to the Pope or to Patriarks or to Bishops or for one only time of the life of each one the excess of liberality would not have seem'd so great but for always for so many times and to so many Priests What excess of love of grace and mercy ô how will a soul that considers well thi● Benefit melt with dilection how will she burn with the love of such a Benefactor How often will she kiss those sacred wounds How often will she bless that adorable Blood which purchased her so great a good How often will she say my soul bless thou our Lord. On the contrary What regretts shal we have in hell if we are damn'd for having neglected contemn'd or prophan'd so great a Benefit The devout Rupertus was wont to say he had no pity on Christians that were damn'd and when one sayd to him why have you not if a dog should be so afflicted we should be moved to compassion I have none sayd he for 't is
and suffers those torments voluntarily she knows how disagreable she is to the Sanctity and Purity of God that she is a debtour to his justice and that she deserves those torments she desires the justice of God should have its cours and as she loves God more than her own self she is glad the injury don to his Majesty is revenged also at her own cost she will remaine in that prison untill her debt be entirely payd either by her own sufferances or by the satisfactions and suffrages of others 4. For we may ayde those poor afflicted soules they are in communion of spiritual goods with us they are members of the same mystical Body children of the same Church Citizens of the same City and there is such an union such a simpathy and communication betwixt members of the same Body children of the same family inhabitants of the same City that we cauterize a member that is well to cure that which is ill that the labour of a child of a family profits his brother who labours not that one citizen ss 25. in Decret de purg can pay debts and satisfy for another We can then help these souls especially in three manners First by Prayers as the Councel of Trent declares For a good and devout praier is not only meritorious to him that makes it but also impetratory and satisfactory for others Secondly by the Sacrifice of Mass for this is the most See Dis XLVI n. 9. Tobie 4. 18. profitable suffrage that can be offered to God for the help of the dead as not only the aforesayd Councel but also the Fathers of the primitive Church declare Thirdly by Alms. Venerable Toby sayd to his son Put your bread and wine upon the Tomb of the just becaus in that time the Poor assembled in Cemeterys or Churchyards and alms of bread and wine were given them for the souls departed He sais upon the Tomb of the just becaus alms g●ven for souls that are in hell avail them not but those that departed out of this world in the state of grace they profit much wherefore S. Austin reproved the avaricious who excused themselves from such alms by the great Aug. lib de decem cordis c. 12. number of their children when we sayd he reprehend you for your auarice you say that if you give not so much as you desire 't is becaus you have many children It is a fals pretence wherewith you maske your avarice For if one of your children dye are you more charitable than you were if you keep your goods for them you would send a part to him he hath now more need of it then ever But if you have not means to give alms for the poor souls succour them by other workes 5. All vertuous actions don in the state of grace and especially the painfull if Offered for the dead give them great refreshment But those confort them most of which they are the Cause either by their instructions or by their good examples For Divinity ●eaches us that if we are the cause of any good as often as 't is don after our death our accidentall glory in heaven is increased and if we are in purgatory our torments are diminished as on the contrary our paines there are augmented if any sin be committed by our bad example 6. Let us give eare then to the dolefull lamentations of those poor souls who implore our help Meseremini mei Miseremini mei Saltem vos amici mei Have pity on me have pity on me at least you who are my friends she says twice Have pity on me Have pity on me Lest you increas my paines Have pity on me to ease me in my sufferances Have pity Be touched with compassion of so great miseries For judgment without mercy shal be don to him who shal not S. Iames 2. 13. have don mercy But on what will you exercise mercy but on misery and what greater misery then that of a poor creature who owes very much and is pursued and pressed by a rigorous Iustice and hath not wherewith to pay What greater misery then that of a poor soul upon whom the revenging hand of the Omnipotent is layed then of a poor soul in torments so Excessive that if a dog should be so tormented it would move you to compassion Of me a soul created to the image of God redeemed by the precious blood of IESUS marked with his character embellished with his graces designed to his glory He will say in iudgment I have been thirsty and you have given me drink I have been Matt 25 35. in prison and you have visited me I have been naked and you have clothed me I have been a stranger and you have received me into your house You do all these good workes of charity if you deliver a poor Soul out of Purgatory you are the caus that she is satiated with a torrent of pleasute you redeem her out of a very obscure and painfull prison you cloth her with the stole of glory and you make her to be received and lodg'd in heaven At least you who are the caus or occasion that this soul is in pain have pity on her you have made her to offend God by your impure words by your bad examples or by your sollicitations having so great part in the debt will you not contribute to the satifaction At least you friends what is becom of the affection you testifyd to your friend where are the offers of service where are the protestations so often made that you would never abandon her forget you her becaus she is seperated from you and turne you your back to her when she hath the greatest need of Succour It appears now that you were a friend of fortune only and the afliction of your friend is the touchstone which shews the falness of your friendship At least you my friends your Ancestours have made themselves debtours to the justice God by the sins which they committed to leave you goods will you be so ungratefull and so cruell as to refuse them a little part of them you swimme in delights and they are in torments you rest in feathers and they lie in flames You complain not of a large refection you give to J know not whom and you refuse your afflicted mother a little dinner which you might send her by the poore In fine if you be so mercenary as to seek your interest in all your actions remember that these poot Souls are in the gtace of God must go to heaven and you must one day succeed in their present place and if you shal deliver them they will not be ungratefull Blessed are the mercifull for they shal obtaine mercy If you give an amls for a soul in Purgatory you do at once two workes of mercy corporal mercy to the poor in want and Spiritual to the soul in paines you make the poor man your friend and the poor soul your debtour when you
since all the right will be on God's side and all the wrong on ours IESUS will take his Fathers part and espouse his quarrell will do him justice for the injuries He received and judg us without favour or acceptance of persons ●phes 6. 9. 5. He will rejoyce exceedingly to satisfy his Father becaus his interests are dear and precious to him Impious and Idiots censure the Providence of God becaus they know not the reasons and the end of it they murmure that the just are humbled the poor afflicted the bad honoured and glutted with riches and delights they are astonished that the child of a devout woman dies without Baptisme and is reproov'd the child of a dishonest woman is predestinated and dies after Baptisme our Savior will justify his Father He will make clearly seen the Wisdom of his conduct the uprightness of his judgments the equity of his decrees and the admirable Economie of his Providence This rejoyces souls that love our Saviour this nourishes their hope and is the object of their devotion Let us elevate then our selves to God and say with the Psalmist make jubilation in the sight of the king our Lord becaus He coms to judg the earth Psal 97. 6. In the second place it is convenient there should be another Judgment besides that which is made in the hour of our death becaus in this the soul is judged only and the body ought to be judged also For The body contributs much to the merit and demerit of the soul it cooperats vsually to the good and to the evill which she practises it is the cause that a reprobate soul offends God by intemperance drunkennesse luxury idleness vain ornaments it is rhe cause that an elect soul pleases God in fasting whatching wearing hair cloath kneeling travelling keeping Virginity induring death for defense of Faith since then in the particular judgment these bodies receiv'd not the salary nor the paine which they merited in this life there ought to be another judgment which recompences or punishes them according to their deserts 7. In fine it is expedient that the elect may be praised honoured glorifyd and the reprobate dispraised reproched and confounded in the face of the whole world Our Lord will then give 1. Cor. 4. 5. to every one the praise which he deservs says the Apostle He will praise you for your Charity you for your patience you for your humility He will discover your secret penances your alms given to the poor your hidden hair shirt your nightly and early rising to prayers And consequently He will give also to the reprobate the blame and infamy which they deserve 8. To this effect he will enlighten the hidden things of darkness 1. Cor. 4. 5. and will manifest the counsells of the hearts as the Apostle says He will discover all thoughts words and actions of the reprobate in in the sight of that great assembly He will confound the hippocrisie of those that deceive the world reprove the craft and subtility of them who supplant the simple and thunder against the calumniators and diffamers of the innocent He will shew how unjustly the elect are contemn'd derided vilefied neglected and abused and how vainly and foolishly the reprobate are admired praised honored and preferr'd He will shew that He is good not only by praising approving and recompencing good but also by dispraysing condemning and persecuting the enemies of good 9. Cheer up then ô chosen Souls cheer up and rejoyce when we speak of judgment lift up your heads for behold your Redemption Luke 21. 28. is at hand What consolation what joy what gladness and what assurance for you when the whole world shal be moved at the terrible sound of the trumpet when the Iudg shal be in a throne of glory and of Majesty amidst thunders and lightnings when the rocks themselus shal tremble and people shal shake and shiver for fear when you shal see Hercules and Alexanders Cesars and Pompies Plato's and Aristotles the great Conquerors and Wise of the world dragg'd as Criminalls to the Tribunal of the Iudg reduced to an extream dispair not daring so much as to lift up their eyes expecting with horrour the sentence of their condemnation Then Then if you will believe me if you will indure a little here and keep exactly the commandements of God Then I say you will rejoyce heartily you who are esteem'd the lees and the scum of the world the objects of a thousand incommodities you will laugh with a celestial laughter you will be filled with a solid assurance you will acknowledg him whom you have so well serv'd and whilst others tremble you shal go to meet him in the Air obviam Thes. 4. ●6 Christo in aere you shal approach to him with confidence saying with joy which cannot be exprest behold my good Master that was crucifyd behold my Saviour whom I loved so ardently Look upon him now you worldly souls Is not this the Savior whom you so much despised heretofore you mocked us you called us hyppocrits scrupulous and superstitious people you held it simplicity to pardon injuries to indure affronts to deprive your selves of sensual pleasures to mortify your flesh and passions to contemn temporal goods through the hopes of eternal which you esteemd uncertain You see well now that we were not deceived you see it by experience O God! what extream favour to have serv'd well a king now so honour'd Sacred labors happy mortifications and persecutions which are now so divinely recompenced sweet austerities How great and admirable are the joyes you breed me Then Then ô Christion souls these bodys so often bowed and humbled before God shal be exalted and replenished with glory then you shal be justifyd from the faults of which at present you are so unjustly accused you shal be deliver'd from the persecutions they raise against you 9. But you on the contrary ô worldly soul you ought to tremble and shake when we speak of judgment You ought to consider that you must render an account to a Iudg infinitely powerfull to whose anger none can make resistance To a judg infinitely Wise and knowing who searches the bottom of the heart from whose knowledg you cannot hide your most secret thoughts to a Iudg infinitely good who is oblig'd by his nature to be mortal enemie to sin Hear then and put in practise his divine Words by which He vouchsafs to instruct you how to avoid the rigour of his justice behold how He concluds the sermon which He made of the last judgment Look well to your selves lest perhaps your hearts be aggravated Luke 21. with surfetting and drunkenness and cares of this life Watch therefore praying at all times that you may be accounted worthy to escape the things that are to com and to stand before the Son of man Amen DISCOURS X. OF THE SEUENTH ARTICLE From thence He will com to judg the quick and the dead 1. IT is
his life And the Psalmist says expresly The Lord hath Sworn 3. It is true then that absolutely speaking an Oath that is accompanied with all its circumstances is neither mortal nor venial sin on the contrary it is a vertuous and meritorious action It is an Act of the vertue of Religion which hath for its object the payment to God and his divine Perfections the honour and homage that we owe him When an oath is well made we honor the Immensitie Science and Veracity of God Calling him to witness what we say we acknowledg him to be in all places present with all his creatures to know all that passeth in this world and to be the Soveraign and infallible Verity Source and Origin of all verity who authorizes by his testimony all truthes 4. There are divers sorts of oathes But that I may not burden your memory I will distinguish them into 3. kinds only which Divinity calls Assertory Promissory Execratory 5 First the Assertory is when you ascertain any thing that is past or present calling God to witness what you say calling him I say either by himself as when you say by God before God I say this in the presence of God or by some creature S. Matt. 5. that hath relation to him as when you say by my soul by this light by this fire so JESVS-CHRIST says in the Gospell that to sweare by heaven is to sweare by the Throne of God to sweare by the earth is to swear by the footstool of his feet 6. Secondly the Promissory is when you promis under oath to do or not to do any thing And You commit perjury and offend God mortally if you have not an intention to do or not to do what you promis or if you know that you cannot do it or if afterward you voluntarily fail to do what you promised in a matter of importance 7. In the third place the Execratory or oath of imprecation is then when to assure any thing you call God not only to witness what you say but you call him moreover to reveng the ly in case you say not true as when you say God punish me may I die presently never may I go out of this place Never may I see God the Divell take me if this be not true it is as much as if you sayd if I say not true I will that God permit that I die that I never depart from hence that the Divell carry me away c. 8. And it happens sometimes that God takes such swearers at their word and sends them the evill which they wished Niceforus Calixtus says that three Calumniators accusing the Bishop Narcissus of Adultery one of them sayd that he would dye if what he affirmed was not true another that he would be burnt the third that he might never see The first died suddenly the second was burnt with his house by a spark of fire that fell from his lamp the third having seen the punishment of his complices repented of his fault and wept so bitterly that he lost his sight 9. The Prophet Hieremiah above cited marks out to us the conditions wherewith an oath must be accompanied that it be not vitious but vertuous and meritorious Iurabis vivit Dominus in veritate in justitia judicio He permits you to sweare by the life of God or other oath provided that it be with truth with justice and with discretion 10. First with truth this circumstance is so absolutely necessary to an oath that if you swear an untruth or are not sure of what you sweare it is a perjury though it should be about the vallue of a pin I say though it should be upon the matter of a pin for it is not in this sin as in other kinds of crimes wherein the levitie of the matter makes the sin to be but venial here the levitie of the matter diminishes not the sin but encreases the malice of it for it is a greater contempt of God to abuse his authority and to call him to witness an untruth for a thing that is friyolous and of little consequence 11. And we must not only not sweare to assert an express and formally But not also to confirm a disguised and palliated untruth I call palliated lyes equivocations ambiguous words and of a double meaning for these deceive men they are subtil and crafty cheats And is it not a great evill to make use of the name of God and his credit to cheat and deceive men S. Isidore and S. Bernard tell us that what ever artifice of equivocation we use in swearing God who sees our conscience S. Isod lib. 2. sent 6. 31. S. Ber. lib. de mod bene vivendi ser 32. Aug. Ep. 224. ad Alipium takes our words according to the sense that he to whom we sweare does understand them S. Augustine concludes the same I doubt not says he but you ought to keep the fidelity of your promise according as he to whom you swore did understand it and not according to the ambiguity of your word whence it follows that those are perjured who contenting themselves to perform their words according to their own concealed sence of them have deceived the thoughts and expectations of him to whom they swore and consequently shal not be saved since the Prophet says that to go to heaven one must not in swearing deceive his Neighbor Qui jurat proximo suo non decipit 12 Secondly you must sweare with justice that is to say you must not sweare but that which is just and lawfull And therefore they sin grievously who swear to reveng themselves or to do any thing displeasing to God They are not at all oblig'd to keep such oathes since nobody can be oblig'd to do ill Nay they are oblig'd not to keep them becaus the Law of God obliges them not to do such things 13. In the third place it must be with judgment that is with prudence and maturity for things necessary and of importance and by reason of some obligation grounded in a vertue as charity justice or obedience For to sweare lightly rashly without just cause or necessity though it be for verity is a sin and moreover the cause of many inconvenients It is an irreverence and a dishonour of God to call him for witness in things that are frivolous or of little or no importance 'T is as if Lackeys playing in the court of Whitehall should call the King to be Arbitrator in all their childish disputes and differences 14. But take the inconveniences which do follow this accursed language from Ecclesiasticus or rather from the holy Ghost A man that is given to swearing shall be filled with iniquity and Ecclus. 33. 12. his house shal be always afflicted He shal be filled with his own sins which he commits by swearing lightly and also with those of others who will learn to sweare by his example and through the force of custome forsweare also themselves
so abominable to God Yet fails it not to be most general For t is the source of an abundance of sins of an abundance in regard of the divers Species of it of an abundance in respect of the individuums or particulars 3. There is no kind of vice that hath so many Circumstances which chang the Species or kinds as this The other commonly have but three or four at most this hath seven which we must express in confession if we have fallen into them either in effect or will The first species or kind is simple Fornication when you are not married and do ill with a persone that is not bound neither by Vow nor marriage And though this be the least crime amongst the species of this vice 't is nevertheless a mortall sin for S. Paul declares to us at least three times that this sin excludes 1. Cor. 6. Gal. 5. Ephes. 7. 5. us out of the kingdom of Heaven 5. The second is Stupration when yon defloure or dishonour a Virgin you ruine in her soul the grace of God which is the greatest good she can have in this world and in her body a precious treasure the loss of which is the more deplorable becaus it is irreparable 6. The Third is Incest when 't is with any of your Relations by blood or by affinity unto the fourth degree inclusively 7. The fourth is Adultery when you are married or do ill with a persone that is bound in marriage a sin which violates divine natural and humane Lawes a sin which Pagans ot Infidells themselves have punished with death or exquisite torments some by fire others by wild horses some by the halter others in pulling out their eyes cutting off their noses and in the law of Moses it was punished by stones so great appears this disorder by the light of nature and so enormous in the sight of God 8. Nevertheless this sin is now incomparably more black and criminal than it was in the law of Moses or in that of nature For you break as much as lies in you the indissoluble bond of marriage you violate a bond which represents the Vnion of IESUS CHRIST with his Church 'T is as if you sayd that JESUS ●ath divorsed the Church his Spouse or that his Spouse hath quitted him notwithstanding his promises to the contrary More yet the bodyes of Christians are worthy of honour and ought to be treated with respect and reverence not only becaus they are the members of Christ and Temples of the holy Ghost but moreover becaus they have been sanctifyd by Baptisme by the sacred Chrisme in Confirmation by the most holy Body of JESUS in Communion by being the matter of a Sacrament which S. Paul calls Great and by the nuptial benediction when they married And they soil them by adulteries prostitute them as prophane things to black infamous shamefull and abominable actions Wherefore the Emperours Constantine Constantius and Constance sons of the great Constantine published an Edict against adulterers condemning them to the punishment of paricides which was to be butnt or drown'd becaus say they such are sacriligi nuptiarum abusers and prophaners of marriage 9. The fift Species of this Vice is Rape when you force one or you draw consent by deceits lyes promises or perswasions so powerfull that they are equivalent to constraint 10. The six is Sacriledge when you commit an impurity being a persone sacred by solemne or particular Vow or by holy Orders or when you permit such a persone to take carnal pleasure in you 't is in some manner to rob him if it could be of consecration 't is the highest pitch of malice in the matter of fornication sayes S. Chrysostome S. Chry. Hom. 76. in Matt. 11. The seventh in fine is the sin against nature which is so abominable that we name it not and which nevertheless is committed sometimes also amongst married persones Remember that S. Briget did see in extasie many married people in hell for having abused marriage Remember what S. Austin sayes that you may be drunk with your own wine as well as with anothers S. Aug. ser 14. de diver Gen. 38. 10. Remember that in Genesis Onan was grievously punished by God becaus he offended him in marriage eo quod rem detestabilem faceret Confessours are very reserv'd and ought to be so in this matter of carnality Preachers and good Writers treat sparingly of such subjects lest the very articulate sound or characters in this matter should offend chast eares or cause wors effects in the hearts of others if than you do not help your selves if you confess not these ordures unless you be examin'd you may remain in them ' til death 12. These are the seven heads of this Monster seven heads by which we may sin by this Vice But the Individuums or particulars of it are infinite There is no kind of vice wherein men commit so great a number of mortal sins as in this vice of Luxury a Drunkard is not drunk but once or twice a day a Robber robbs not every day a murtherer kills not very often But he that gives himself over to impurity commits dozens of mortal sins a day it happens very often that he takes delight interiourly ten twelve or twenty times a day in impure objects and the voluntary delectation is a sin though he has no will to do it in effect 13. Wherefore I would counsell him that is a slave to this Passion to make to himself the same reply which heretofore the Buffoon or Iester of Francis the first of France did make The King having assembled his Counsell to deliberate what way was best to go to Pavie some sayd one way others another and others a third the Buffoon who heard all behind the tapestry when they were gon cryed-out they have all consulted by which way the King shal go but they have not consider'd by what way he shal return And the event made appeare it had been an important counsell for the King was there made prisoner When temptation flatters the hearts of them they consult not but of the means to content it and how they may find a fit occasion to satisfy their passion But they consider not how they may get out of the inconveniences which they bring upon themselves by it they consider not the certaine loss of spiritual life the danger of the temporall and of their fame and that by begetting illegitimate children they deprive unjustly the legitimate and oblige themselves to restitutions which will be very hardly made These things well consider'd will be a bridle to their passion and make them also fly those conversations dispositions affections and occasions of falling into a snare so prejudicial and into a labyrinth so inextricable for we must fight in this war as the Parthians flying and therefore S. Paul bids us not to struggle or graple with this vice but to fly it fugite fornicationem 14. Consider in the second place
he does wish it otherwise if his consent be any ways extorted either by force or fear it excuses you not from robbery for there is nothing so contrary to a free consent as force or fear He then is a robber who to do justice to a Party that hath right receives a bribe or present He is a robber who wearyes another with suits and expences to the end he quit that which he may pretend to justly He is a robber who makes his dependents to do him services to which they are not oblig'd w●thout paying them well for them He is a robber who forces his Creditors to composition for fear of inconveniences which he may bring upon them becaus the consent to these and the like actions is not free and voluntary so far these palliated injustices are from being justifiable in the sight of God that on the contrary they add to simple theft a circumstance which changes the species of it and which is called Rapine 9. To have a horrour of these and the like disorders Consider that this vice engages you in an ocean of sins and precipitates you in a manner-irreperably into eternal damnation For t is not so in this sin as in others You are not quit of it by repenting confessing and doing penance for it it obliges moreover to Restitution And see here what Divines say of it 10. They teach us in the first place that restitution is an act of commutative Iustice and consequently that there must be an equality between the dammages which you have caused and the reparation which you make of it In Vindicative Iustice if mercifully you relax a little the rigour of the Law if you make not the greatness of the pain precisely equal to the grievousness of the crime the mercy of God excuses easily your fault But in Commutative Iustice if having stolen 50. shillings you restore but 48. you are stil a theef 11. Secondly they assure us that Restitution is necessary to salvation that without it sorrow confession and absolution are unprofitable that nothing can excuse you from it but only impossibility to make it 12. But to restore all must I fall from my estate and Condition You are oblig'd to it having built your fortune upon the ruine of your neighbour it is most reasonable you repair that of your neighbour by the ruine of yours ought not the condition of the Innocent to be better then that of the Criminal 13. But I cannot make restitution without defaming my self for he to whom J shal restore will see that I have injured him and will decry me You must give it in this case to your Confessor or to a faithfull friend who may render it without naming any personne take an acquittance of him and shew it to you that you may be sure of your discharg from this obligation an obligation so strict that no power on earth can free you from it Death it self which dissolves consummate marriage delivers you not from it and if God should raise you up again you would not be oblig'd to retake your wife but you would be to pay your debts and your heires ought to do it in your defect 14 Divines inform us further that not only he who does an injury but moreover all that cooperate or concurre to it are oblig'd to Restitution as Receivers fals Witnesses makers of antidates and fals contracts Counsellours who counsell you to prosecute a suit which they know to be uniust or they who by notable negligence make their Clients lose a just one and Notaries who by ignorance or malice change the intention of the Testatour 15. Infine they conclude that this commandement obliges always and incessantly becaus it is not an affirmative precept only that commands us to restore but also a negative that forbids us to retaine and as such it is expressed commonly by negative terms in the Bible 'T is the property of negative commandements to oblige always and for always and therefore we sin at least so often as the thought of paying satisfying restoring coms into our minds if having power we neglect it 16. Do better injure no man commit not sins which oblige to restitution for you will make it or not if you make it you will have contracted sin and obligation to punishment without receiving the profit of it since you must restore the principal and make good all prejudice and dammage and if you make it not being in capacity to make it you are undon you are lost for ever 17. If then you have been so unfortunate as to oblige your selves to it doe as a rich man of our age who going from a Sermon distributed his goods to those he had injured saying Pereant mihi ne ego Peream may I lose these goods lest I lose my self these goods are for the earth my soul is for heaven these goods are perishable my soul is immortal these goods will stay here my soul will go with me they will be the possession of my heires my soul will be my owne these are not true goods however great and abundant they be since they make not good so many bad men that possess them they are not true riches since they make not rich nor content those that are flaves to them I must leave them one day necessarily and without merit t is better then that I quit them now voluntarily and with merit 18. This good man did very well to cure his wounds But I advise you by flying avarice which was the cause of them to prevent all wounds Hear then what the holy Ghost hath sayd of it Nothing is more wicked than to love money Hear our Saviour Eccli 10. 10. mark 10. 24. Tim. 6. 9. How hard it is for them that trust in money to enter into the kingdom of God! Hear also his Apostle They that will be made rich fall into temptation and hurtfull desires which drown men into destruction and perdition For the root of all evills is avarice Root out then covetousnes says S. Austin and plant charity the root of all good This will make you feed Christ in the hungrie refresh him in the thirsty harbour him in the stranger cloath him in the naked visit him in the sick comfort him in the prisoner and this will make you one day hear this most joyfull word which will put Matth. 25. 34. you in Possession of all good com yee blessed of my father possess t● kingdome prepar'd for you from the foundation of the world Amen DISCOVRS XXXVIII OF THE EIGHT COMMANDEMENT Thou shat not bear fals witness against thy neighbour IF the fifth commandement ougth to be much respected becaus it forbids us to assault the life of our neighbour and the sixth which forbids us to dishonour his wife and the seventh which prohibits us to steal or to hurt him in his goods with more reason the eighth commandement ought to be looked upon as of the greatest importance since it forbids fals witness which
makes our neighbor often lose his life honour temporall goods and sometimes also his spirituall To handle this subject fully and to make it more universall we will consider three sins or falsities which oppose this commandement falsities of heart which are rash judgments falsities of mouth which are lyes falsities of workes or actions which are cheats or impostures 1. An Ancient sayd that there is no art nor occupation of which so many make profession as that of Phisitians so soon as you complain of the toothake collick or gravel you will find fourty who prescribe you remedies all as they think very effectual all or the most part in effect very unprofitable that Ancient had hitt better yet had he sa●d that 't is the office of a judg that all the world will exercise there is nither vertuous nor vicious person that is not often tempted to judg the actions of their neighbour and the Son of God forbids it when he says Will not to S. Iohn 7. 24. judg according to the exteriour appearance In which words our Saviour expresses 3. circumstances which are necessary to make rash judgment a mortal sin in a matter of importance 2. In the first place 't is necessary that a judgment be voluntary and deliberate for if it be but a thought and a promptitude which we renounce when we perceive it 't is not a sin IESUS sayd not do not judg but he sayd will not to judg It is not in our power not to judg by a sudden motion but 't is in our power not to consent to this judgment and to cast it out of our mind 3. In the second place 't is not a mortall sin when one judges not absolutely but doubts only of a thing makes not a form'd and fixt judgment but suspects only he says not in himself surely it is so but it may be so I fear lest it be so And IESUS did not say suspect not He nevertheless who should suspect voluntarily of a Prelate or such like persons an evill of great importance I know not if one may excuse him from a mortal sin 4. In the third place 't is not a mortall sin nor also often venial when you judg of that which cannot be palliared nor excused by any reason if you see a man kill his neighbor to do ill with a married woman to blaspheme the holy name of God 't is not a rash judgment to thinke that he is a murtherer an adulterer a blasphemer but to judg upon weak appearances is contrary to the word of the Son of God judg not according to appeanance It is an evill effect which proceeds from divers causes and all bad and vicious 't is sometimes lightnes and emptines of spirit when one hath not good entertainments within himself nor in his own house he seeks entertainments without himself wanders about in companies cannot be mute in them tells newes heares other knowes not enough invents more 5. An Ancient in Plautus compares them to waspes which make no hony buzz inceslantly fly up and down upon Altars Miters Crownes and leave nothing but filth upon them so those Idlebees droanes and lazie people who know not how to employ themselves pass their time in judging and detracting Prelats Kings Iudges Priests Religions and since they are light and shallow they believe easily all that comes into their mind with never so little appearance be it good or evill 6. S Paul teaches us another cause of rash judgments the defect of charity 'T is becaus you have in your heart some secret envy bitterness or aversion from your neighbour Charity thinks not ill says the Apostle there needs no other proof of it than experience If a personne that you love well did the actions which you censure in your enemy or corrival you would not judg them criminall as you do those of others you would interpret them in a good sense As he that looks through a red glass all that he sees seems to him red so you judg the actions of your neighbor according to the passion of love or hatred you have for him We believe easily what we desire and see willingly says S. Thomas You have no repugnance but great inclination to believe the vice of your neighbor becaus you wish him ill becaus you are subject to the crimes and imperfections which you imagin to be in him The foole conceives that all others are like himself says the holy Ghost by the mouth of the wise man Eccl. 10. 15. And again the heart of a wise man is in his right side and that of a fool in the left It is certen that all men have the heart in the same place but He does signify that a vertuous man judges in good part the actious of all men the ill man measures every one by his own ell he makes sinister judgements of the most part of men the Bee drawes hony from the most bitter flowers the cantharides makes poyson of the most sweet the same raine falling upon a Vine is changed into pleasant and wholsome wine ●t watering hemlock is changed into mortall poison a good stomack makes good blood of the grossest meats a bad stomack makes peccant humours of the best nourishment 7. And from thence comes the bad effects which these rash judgments produce against God our neighbors and our selves 'T is to usurp the office of the Son of God and to do him injury since the Father hath given to him all judgment Note all Iohn 5. 22. Rom. 14. 4 S. Paul looking upon it as a horrible usurpation cryes-out Who art thou that juggest another mans servant To his own Lord he stands or falls 'T is likewise to be injurious to our neighbor For 't is detraction and injustice to ruine his reputation though it be in the opinion of one man only but when you judg ill of your neighbour upon weake conjectures you ruine his reputation in your self you do to another that which you would not have don to you you do as the Pharisee who disdain'd another only within himself and the Son of God reprehends him for it In fine you do not only injure God and your neighbour by rash judgments but you hurt much also your own self for they fill you with pride vanity iealousy suspicion unquietness and contempt of your neighbour 8. S. Bernard gives us for a remedy of these judgments a most salutary advice If you see your neighbor to do ill think perhaps he does it with a good intention or out of ignorance or through great weakness and without malice or that he was surprized but if the action be so black that it admits none of these excuses think it was à very strong and violent temptation that made him fall and say within your self if God had permitted the like to have assaulted me perhaps J had yielded to it as well as he perhaps he hath many great vertues which counterbalance the fault which he committed perhaps
body The spiritual is the union of grace with the soul And the civil is the union of a man with his neighbors and a good repute amongst them Now the detractor sometimes takes away the first life often the second and very frequently the third The first sometimes either by creating mortal enemies against the poor absent person or by representing him as dishonest and unfaithfull whereby he loses those employments without which he cannot nourish himself nor his The second often for soon or late the detracted person heares of the Detractor he conceives a hatred of him and resolves upon reveng ah he sometimes dyes in this disposition and with the Devills is damn'd for ever The third frequently for generally speaking detraction takes effect and deprives the detracted of the good opinion others have of him which is the cement of the commerce that is between them so the detractor takes away his civil life and obliges himself to restitutions and reparations both of the honor and good name and of all the expences dammages and interects caused by his detraction which will be very hardly made 8 To avoyd a vice so pernicious both to you and others follow the counsell of the holy Ghost Weigh your words in a just Eccl. 28. 29. ballance before you utter them Remembet that in the judgment of God they shall be all exactly weighed examined judged punished or recompenced we must render an account in judgment of a word which hurts not how much more of those which blacken our neighbor rob him of his honour and are the caus of so many enmities and dissentions Remember when you are in passion and quarelling with your neighbor That you utter not the Prov. 25. 8. things which your eyes have seen lest afterward you cannot amend it when you have dishonoured him says the sacred text And in effect a detractive word is soon let forth but not so soon recalled words have not handells to be pulled back again when they have eschaped but they have wings which makes them fly away irrevocably if you would repair the honor of your neighbor whither will you go to seek all those to whom you have spoken and all those who have spoken of it after you and if you find them how will you raze out of their minds the bad opinion of their neighbor which you have imprinted in them And yet 't is a thing absolutely necessary unless you go to the person whom you detracted and pray him to pardon you and to free you from the obligation of restoring But if he does not 't is a verity avowed by all Doctors that you stand oblig'd to repair his honor in defect whereof the Pope himself cannot absolve you Calumniate not nor detract then any person but have charity which as the Apostle says Covers a multitude of sins so you will enjoy quiet in your self and peace with others you will obtain the grace and favour of God in this world and glory in the other Amen DISCOURS XL. OF THE SACRAMENTS IN GENERAL AS Creation is attributed to the Father Redemption to the Son So sanctifieation of souls is attributed to the holy Ghost becaus 't is an effect of particular love and goodness The more usuall way He takes for this work is the administration of Sacraments which are the instrumental causes of his graces chanells and conduits of his benedictions Before we speak of each one in particular 't is good to treat of them in general and to consider what is common to all the Sacraments of the Law of Grace Wherefore I will put before your eyes their causes the nature and effects of them 1. T●e Efficient Caus who instituted the Sacraments is IESVS lib. 4. c. 4. de Sacramēt Trid. ss 7. can 1. CHRIST Who is the Authour of the Sacraments but IESVS our Lord these Sacraments came from heaven says S. Ambrose And the holy Ghost by the mouth of his Spouse assembled in the Councel of Trent If any one shal say that all the Sacraments of the new Law were not instituted by CHRIST our Lord let him be anathema IESVS hath given his Apostles and his Church commission to institute Feasts Fasts and the Ceremonies of the Office but the institution of Sacraments He reserv'd to himself 't is He alone that b●queathed them to the faithfull as the magasins of his merits chanells of his graces and authentick proofs of his Divinity Yes of his Divinity 2. For in the institution and administration of Sacraments IESUS shews that he is God since He exercises and makes appear divine perfections His Power Wisdom Goodness Mercy Iustice and Providence 3. His Power They say usually in Philosophy that no creature however noble and eminent it may be can serve the Creator as an instrument to draw out of nothing another creature that a Seraphin cannot create no not instrumentally a drop of water or one only grain of sand Let them change now their tone and praise the power of IESVS CHRIST who makes use of common creatures to produce so excellent of material to to produce Spiritual of dead and inanimate creatures to create a divine life who makes use elements which are in the lowest order of nature to produce that which is most high and more excellent than all that is in nature who makes use of a little water to produce grace which is a participation of the life of God himself 4. He shews in this his Wisdom disposing of all things sweetly leading his creatures to their last End by means convenient and fitted to their nature If you had not bodys if you were as Angells S. Chryhom 60. ad Pop. Antioch separated from all corporeall matter God would give you his gifts purely spiritually and invisibly but becaus your souls are cloathed with terrestrial and materiall bodys God gives you his graces in material elements and in sensible signes 5. He exercises his Goodness for by the malediction thundred against the first man and his posterity corporeal creatures are Wisdom 4. becom to us temptations stumblingblocks and snares But by the Benediction of IESUS they are the matter of Sacraments conduits of his graces organs of our sanctification and instruments of our salvation 6. And whereas He is both mercifull and just in shewing us mercy he exercises his justice for man being by sin unjustly elevated against God who is infinitely above him he is justly punished and humbled seeing himself oblig'd to receive his salvation by corporal creatures which are so much below him 7. His Providence in sine herein does shine He foresaw that men are naturally inclin'd to an exterior worship and He provided Sacraments and Sacrifice which consist in exterior actions lest they should employ themselves in superstitions He sees that Vnity is necessary amongst his faithfull and to make them uniform in the exercise of Piety and divine service to unite them togeather in th● same Religion and the same Church He institutes exteriour actions
which the Sacrament excites And it would restore also health of body more effectually for when you are in or neere your agony and dispaired of by Phisicians if the Sacrament should repaire your force and strength this would be a miracle which God who disposes althings sweetly does not usually or without necessity But if you receive it sooner He would dispose second causes by the secrets of his providence to renew your health in case He should judg it necessary for your salvation 6. The third effect which the Apostle atributes to this Sacrament is the remission of sins And if he be in sins they shal be remitted him He says expressy If he be in sins becaus he supposes the Sicke hath already received Penance and that by absolution his sins have been remitted But if he hath not rightly accomplished Confession and Communion and knows it not or if by humane frailty he hath committed a mortal sin after his Confession and is ignorant of it such remainders with all venial sins would be remitted and a good part of the temporal punishment due to them relaxed by this Sacrament If then we are depriv'd of it by our fault or if we receive the Sacrament unfruitfully or if by our negligence a Soul depart out of this world without receiving the grace of it 't is a great fault and God does make this complaint of it The wound is not sured nor mollifyd with oyle 7. S. Bernard writes that S. Malachy was intreated to visit and Vitâ S. Malach. carry the holy oyles to a Gentlewoman dying near his monastery who so reioyced in the presence of the holy Prelate that she seem'd to be quite reviv'd she demanded the Sacrament but the Assisstant seeing her so changed desired the Prelate to forbeare The Saint condescended to their request and returned with the holy oyles No sooner he arrived at the Monastery but he heard the Cryes of divers who sayd that she was dead he runns and coms to her and finds her dead Behold him in the greatest sorrow in lamentations tears groans and complaints of himself for a fault whereof he was not guilty T is my fault Lord 't is my fault since she desired it I should not have defer'd it he protests to all the Assistants that he will weep in consolably that is Soul should never rest til he had restored to the dead the grace which she had lost he remains by the corps and instead of holy Oyle waters it all night with his precious tears This holy water frightens and puts death to flight for the next morning the dead opened her eyes as if she had been wakened out of sleep then sits up and making a low inclination to the Bishop says The prayer of faith hath saved the infirme By which you see how solici●ous we should be to receive the effects and reap the fruits of this Sacrament 8. And to reap them with full hands and in abundance we must receive it with necessary dispositions and 't is certaine that Sacramental Confession must if possible precede it becaus this Sacrament is one of those which Divines call Sacramenta Vivorum that is which ought not to be received but by the faithfull who are already in the life of grace I say if possible for if one should be so depriv'd by a sudden accident that he cannot Confess we must neuertheless administer to him this Sacrament But there are three other dispositions which a devout soul should have in receiving it One in respect of God another in respect of himself and the third in respect of his neighbor 9. First you must offer to God a sacrifice of your life accepting death with resignation to his holy Will with great submission to the Orders of his Providence and to render honor and homage to his divine Perfections and say my God I submit with all my heart to the sentence of death you have pronounced against me from the beginning of the world I offer my life to you to do homage to your Souveraintie and Justice I acknowledg and protest that I have most justly deserv'd it not only by teason of original sin but as often as I have sinned in all my life 10. He that is in this disposition of a Victime and a Holocaust in the sight of God will have also the necessary spirit of humility He will renounce all pride ambition vain glory and ostentation he will abhorr the spirit of those vain souls who disire passionately to be praised in gazetts celebrated in histories that their hearts or bodys be em●au●med put into ledden coffins carried to the grave with pomp with famous and magnificent obsequies and funeral discourses who build for themselves or make to be built high and glorious tombes who fix their names and armes upon the walls of Churches and cause Epitaphes to be composed Aug. lib. 9. confess c. 13. in their praises S. Austin praises his Mother for that she had not the least thought of such a Vanity And the Scripture blames the ambition wherewith they buried the king Asa They buried him in his sepulcher which he digged for himself in the City of David and they layd him upon his bed full of Spices and odoriferous 2. Paral. 16. 14. oyntments and they burnt it upon him with exceeding ambition says the sacred Text. 12. In fine the holy oyle minds you of the Parable of the Virgins that they who had kept Virginity were not saved becaus they wanted the oyle of mercy with much more reason they cannot be saved who having committed impurities and other sins shal be presented to their Judg not having redeem'd their crimes by the workes of Charity You ought to do it all your life but if you have failed if you have not made the lamp to be carried before you make it at least to follow after you that you may not be wholy in darkness when you go into the other world JESUS having given us his sweat blood and life deserves well that you give him a good part of your goods also during your life when they are more necessary for you But since you have omitted it give him a little part of them at least in the houre of your death when your goods are useless to you 't is He who gave them to you who is the Proprietor of them and nevertheless desires for your good to receive of them in the persone of the Poor 13. I conclude with these words of S. Salvian You are avaricious But you are not enough I exhort you to be yet more you love Lib. 2. con Av. a ritiam in fine riches love them at your death as well as in your life you fear the poverty of this life fear also that of the other carry your riches with you into the other world they will be more necessary there than here to avoyd the paines of Purgatory in the way to redeem you in case you are cast in to that Prison and to make
than Tyrants 257 they censure althings 259 Confirmation obliges us to endure their censures and derisions 259 D Detraction defined 234. T is a mortal sin in a matter of importance 234. 'T is a greater sin than Robbery 235. It kills also the hearers if they oppose it not 335. It kills the Detracted by a triple murder 236. Remedies of detraction 237. E Eucharist containes really the Body and Blood of Christ Dise 44. It is compared to milk in its Production 268. In the manner it ought to be received 269. In the manner of its Operation 271. Communion in one kind defended 271. Examples move more than words 281. F Faith necessary to believe sins may be remitted 72. The Excellency and Necessity of it 88. Divers sorts of it 88. None suffices to salvation but living Faith 89. Many practise not according to their Faith 91. How a good Christian regulates his actions by Faith 91. Exhort to true Faith 92. Fasting necessary 148. The Lent was instituted by the Apostles 149. The motives to institute it 149. Objections against fasting solved 150. It s lawfullness demonstrated 153. Vertues that must accompany it 153. The ends and intentions we ought to have in it 154. Frauds are very common and pernicious 231. G God is necessarily One only 2. He is ineffable 2. Great in Nobility 3. In Power 3. In Wisdom 4. In Goodness 4. In justice 5. In indepedence 5. Documents from these Perfections 6. He is Father for divers reasons 8. He shews an infinite Power in Creating 9. Incomprehensible Wisdom in Governing 9. Ineffable Goodness in designing the Creatures to our service 10. We are obliged to thanke him for all the good He has don to them 11. Motives to Gratitude 11. Grace divided 113. What is actuall Grace 114. In how happy a state man was created and how he fell from it 114. How necessary Grace is and how freely given 115. We must distinguish carefully its motions from those of Nature 117. How they may be distinguished 118 We must be gratefull for it 118. We must not be proud when it had produced good in us but live in feare 118 Sanctifying or Habitual Grace What and how Excellent 113 241. H Heaven How great are the Goods of it 83. Four considerations to guess at their Greatness 84 motives and meanes to obtain them 86 Hell has divers significations 38 What it is to be damned 85 Hope stands with fear 95 What we ought to hope 95 of whom we ought to hope 97 Catholicks are not touched with the malediction of those that trust in men 97 who are subject to it 97 Relyance on our selves is caus of many inconveniences 97 We must hope with great Confidence 98 Exhor to confidence in our Lord 99 Holy Ghost why so called 60 Why called Gift 6 The necessity an excellency of this gift 62 We offend the holy Ghost in divers manners 6● I Idolatry cannot be imputed to the Romane Church 169. She adores not Saints nor Relicks nor Images 170. 171. She prayes not Saints to give things desired 172. Builds not Temples Erects not Altars nor offers Sacrifice to them 172. 173. Images are not absolutely forbidden to be made but only to the end they may be adored 167. 168. Imitatours of the world reproved and their objections answered 211 212. Iudgment Particular and General 49. Reasons for a Generall Iudgment 50. This is a great Consolation to the Elect 52 Description of the general Iugdment Disc 10. What things will be therein Examined 57. Paraphrase of the Sentence of condemnation 58 Rash Iudgment Three Circumstances necessary to make it a mortal Sin 228 Causes of r●sh Iudgment 22● It s bad effects 229. Remedyes for it 330. L Love of God the most Excellent Vertue 100. It s necessity 101. It s necessary qualities 102 motives to love God 10● Love of Neighbours very necessary vertue 107. Every reasonable Creature is our Neighbor 108. How we truly love our Selves and neighbors 108. 109. How ill this command is observ'd by many 110 The first and most necessary Effect of the love of our Ennemys is to pardon them 111 Motives to love and pardon them 111 112. Lyes of three Sorts 230 We ought not to speak an officious or Idle ly to save a man 231 Mass See Sacrifice M Matrimony a true Sacrement 303. A great One 304. Dutyes to which it Obligeth 305. Honour we owe to it 307. Merit Catholick Doctrine concerning it 12● See good Works O Oathes Sometimes lawfull 181. Division and Description of them 181. 182. Conditions requisite to make them lawfull 182 183. We cannot Swear to confirm a palliated untruth 183 Divers bad causes of Swearing 185. Order a true Sacrament 298. It Confers to Priests two singular favours 299 300. P Parents Why God has not recommended to them in the Decalogue their duty in respect of children 198. They owe them Nourishment 198 Instruction 200. good Examples 201. correction 202 Exhort to educate well children 202. Penance Necessary 134 279 Conversions it makes 137 138 Two dangerous Errours concerning Penance into which we are apt to fall 138 Fruits of true Penance 140 means to obtain true Penance 140 Exhort to do Penance in the present time 136 Prayer Very necssary 141 What things are to be asked in Prayer 141 How we ought to pray 142 143 144 Excuses of indevout removed 146 R Religion Vertue may be practised in all Occasions and Times 175 The practise of it by the Vnderstanding 176 By the Will 176 by exteriour Actions 176 177 The practise of it in respect of Gods Attributes 177 It obliges us to honour God also in his Friends and Servants in Times and Places particularly consecrated to his service 177 Irreligion indevotion and irreverence reprehended 178 Exhort to honor God c. 178. Restitution must be perfect 224. 'T is absolutely necessary 224. All that concurr to an injury are obliged to it 225. It obliges always 225. Motives to avoyd injustice 225. Resurrection proved 79. the words of the article declared 80 We shal rise in the same Bodys but without defect 81 The Resurrection of the Elect and that of the Rep●o●ate very different 81. Robbery defined and its definition explicated 222. It obliges to perfect Restitution 224 S Sacraments all instituted by Christ 238 He shews therein divine Perfections 239 They represent their effects very properly 240 They conferr sanctifying grace more or less according to the disposition of the Receiver 241 They give also auxiliary graces 242 Exhort to frequent them 242 Sacrifice in the new Law 273 T is very accepta●le and glorious to God 275 greatly advantagious to men 276 Very beneficial to Souls in Purgatory 277 How to be offered 278. Salvation of men earnestly desired by God and the most important worke Epist to the Reader 'T is to be procured by the securest way 43. Satisfaction third Part of Penance must be made according to the multitude Enormity and diversity of our offences 283 We may satisfy the divine Iustice by all Crosses that befall us 28● Motives to fly sin and to returne to God by true Penance 285 Scandal What properly 210 'T is sometimes a Word 211 Often Actions 211 Othertimes Omissions 213 What Actions are not to be omitted and what are to avoyd Scandal 214 Motives to avoyd it 215 Sin the greatest evill 245 248 In Christians t is far greater than io infidells 248 By sinnlng mortally we hazard Salvation 76 Carnal sins Contrary to mans nature and abominable to God 216 Species or Kinds of them 217 218 Individuums or particulars innumerable 219 Remedies of them 219. Sunday why instituted 189 How to be observed 189 190 Exhort to observe it well 191 T Tradition necessary to excuse Christians from observance of the Iews Sabbath 187 188 189 V Vnction of the Sick a true and proper Sacrament 292. It s Saving Effects 203. 294. 295. Dispositions requisite in the Receiver 296 297. Exhort to Charity 297. W Works of supererogation proved 121 good Works necessary to Salvation 122 123 Why God requires them 123 'T is necessary to be fruitfull in them 124 We must apply our Talents in them faithfully 124 Many Christian● lofe or abuse them 125. Exhort to practise good workes 127 We must not defer our Conversion and the practise of good Works Discours 22. FIN