Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n body_n dust_n soul_n 5,391 5 5.7737 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A08035 A most learned and pious treatise full of diuine and humane philosophy, framing a ladder, wherby our mindes may ascend to God, by the steps of his creatures. Written in Latine by the illustrous and learned Cardinall Bellarmine, of the society of Iesus. 1615. Translated into English, by T.B. gent.; De ascensione mentis in Deum per scalas rerum creatorum opusculum. English Bellarmino, Roberto Francesco Romolo, Saint, 1542-1621.; Young, Francis. 1616 (1616) STC 1840; ESTC S115760 134,272 612

There are 10 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

without ceasing but there are innumerable Angels and holy men which heare them and are delighted therewith and they also with Hymnes and songes continually prayse their maker But to proceed The length of Gods essence is his eternitie Cap. 4 which neither hath beginning of duration nor euer shall haue end but is alwayes the same without any change Psal 101 Thou art saith Dauid the selfesame and thy yeares shall not fayle Tobyas also Tob 13 1 Tim. 6 and after him the Apostle calleth God The king of worlds because he onely was before all worlds is not subiect to worldes but ruleth and gouerneth them Other thinges haue beginning and end and neuer continue in the same state Or els they haue beginning without end or change of substance yet if their maker please they may cease to be Eternitie therfore is proper to God onely Nor was there euer any Prince so prowde that among his many other Tytles durst arrogate to himselfe the tytle of eternall except perhaps in an other sēce As Constantius who was called eternal Emperour because he was not Emperour for a certaine time but for terme of life But thou my soule mayst be numbred among both kindes of Creatures For thou hast a body which began to be when it was conceaued and borne and by degrees it grewe to that stature which God appointed then it began to decrease and shortly by death it shall cease to be Therefore it neuer wholy continueth in the same state but is euery hower subiect to change Of thy body the Prophet spake this sentence resembling it to Hay In the morning as an hearbe hee shall passe Psal 89 in the morning he shall flourish and passe in the euening he shall fall be hardened and withered For in the morning to wit in Childhood Mans body flourisheth like an bearbe and soone after followeth youth In the Noone-tyde of youth it flourisheth and soone after followeth olde age in the euening of olde age it falleth by death and in the graue it is hardened withered and turned to dust Beholde therefore O my soule how farre thy bodie is from eternitie But thou wast created in time where as before thou wast nothing and therein thou ●rt farre vnlike thy eternall Creator but being created thy duration is endlesse wherein thou dost resemble thy Creator And because whiles thou art in the body thou changest often from vice to vertue and from vertue to vice And according to the state in which thou shalt be found at thy departure from the body thou shalt be iudged either to raigne for euer with God or for euer to be tormented with the Deuill therefore thou oughtest to haue a very great care to eschew vice and to follow vertue Take heede then least thou be seduced by the allurements of thy flesh to the euerlasting perdition both of thy selfe and it Gal 5 but rather Crucifie it with the vices and concupiscences thereof that thou mayst hereafter liue eternally and thy flesh may rise in glory and in glory remaine with thee for all eternitie But although the Angells and soules of Saintes are to be partakers of eternitie in that high and happy Vnion with God by his beatifying vision and loue which vnion shall continue for euer without change yet may they alter change their thoughts affections and places after diuers manners therefore they shall alwaies reuerētly admire Gods eternitie aboue them in whom can be no change of thought affection or place for he wanteth nothing but hath all things present which in eternitie of time he might by diuers changings haue procured Therefore eternitie is a length without end no lesse proper to God then the breadth of his immensitie It followeth then Cap. 5 that we consider the Height of God of whom it is sayd Thou onely the Highest Psal 82 For God is most heigh in excellencie of Nature Other thinges are the more heigh and excellent the more pure they are and more free from matter This is euident first in corporall things For the Water is higher then the Earth because it is more pure and for the same cause the Ayer is higher then the Water and the Fire then the Ayer and the Heauen then the Fire The like also wee finde in Spirituall thinges for the vnderstanding is higher then the sence because the sence hath a Corporal organ which the vnderstanding needeth not Likewise the vnderstanding of Angels is higher then mans Because Mans vnderstanding needeth the helpe of Imagination and Phantasie which Angells need not and among Angells they are the Highest which vnderstand most by fewest Formes God therefore who is A pure Act needeth neither Organ nor Imagination nor Forme nor the presence of any Obiect without himselfe for his essence is to him all thinges Neither can he haue any thing which he hath not alwayes actually had and to haue Alwayes actually is alwayes to be a Pure and simple Act Therefore the Nature of God is most high and which cannot by any meanes haue an equall For which cause he who said I will be like to the Highest Isay 14 was suddainly cast downe from Heauen into the lowest Hell as Esay doth describe And Christ our Lord saith of him Luke 10 I saw Sathan as a lightning fall from Heauen God also is most High for that he is the first and Highest efficient exemplar and finall cause of all thinges He is the highest efficient cause for that there is no Creature which hath any working vertue but from God but God receiueth not from any other Againe no cause can worke vnlesse it be moued by God but God is mooued by no other Moreouer among Creatures such causes are said to be highest whiah are vniuersall and of whom particular causes depend As the Heauens and Angells which moue the Heauens but God made both the Heauens and Angells He therefore is the first and highest efficient cause And hee is the first exemplar cause for he made all thinges according to the Ideas or Formes which in him selfe he hath Lastly hee is also the first Finall cause For hee created all thinges for himselfe Pro. 16 to witt for manifestation of his glory as the wise man saith in the Prouerbes Moreouer God is most high because he sitteh in a most high Throne I saw our Lord saith Isay sitting vpon an high Throne and eleuated Isay 6 A seate hath two vses the one to Iudge the other to rest in let vs then consider each of them apart First God hath a most Throne because hee is the Highest Iudge For Abraham said vnto God Gen. 18 Psal 81 Thou doest iudge all the Earth And Dauid In the middes hee iudgeth goddes That is God iudgeth the Iudges themselues who in the Scripture are called Goddes And St. Iames saith plainly Iam 4 There is one Law-maker and Iudge That is to say God onely is the true Law-maker and Iudge For he onely giueth Lawes to all
glorieth let him glory in our Lord. And Psal 33 My soule shall be praised in our Lord. For I aske when a man doth some excellent worke of what matter doth he make it by what vertue and by whose direction and help doth he it surely of a matter which God not man created and by that vertue which God gaue vnto him not he to himselfe by Gods direction and help also he doth it without which he could doe no good For God doth many good things in Man without Man but Man doth no good which God doth not cause Man to doe as it is said in the second Arausican Councell c. 20. God therefore doth vouchsafe to vse the ministery of man in doing good the which he could doe without him that Man may thereby acknowledge himselfe more indebted vnto God and not be proude of himselfe but glory in our Lord. Therfore my soule if thou be wise sit downe alwaies in the lowest place steale not Gods glory neither in little nor in much descend to thy Nothing which onely is thine all the world cannot make thee proud But because this pretious vertue of humility was almost gon out of the world and not to be found either in the bookes of the Philosophers or manners of the Gentiles the master of humilitie came from heauen Phil. 2 And when he was in the forme of God equall to the Father he exinanited himselfe taking the forme of a seruāt he humbled himselfe made obedient vnto death And to Mankinde he said Learne of me Mat. 11 because I am meeke humble of hart you shall finde rest to your soules wherfore my soule if perhaps thou art ashamed to imitate the humility of men yet be not ashamed to imitate the humilitie of God who deceaueth not nor can be deceaued And Who resisteth the proud and giueth grace to the humble Iam. 4. It followeth now that we consider the forme which is the third cause Cap 4. And truly by how much the matter whereof man is made is more base by so much the forme giuen to man is more excellent I omit the outward shape of his body which surpasseth all earthly liuing creatures in feature yet that is not his substantiall but accidentall Forme For his substantiall forme which maketh him a man distinguished from other liuing creatures is his immortall soule indued with reason and free will which is Gods Image made to his owne likenes For so we reade that God said when he made man Let vs make man to our Image and likenes Gen. 1. And let him haue dominion ouer the fishes of the Sea and the Foules of the ayre and the beastes and the whole earth and all creeping creatures vpon the earth Man therefore is Gods Image not because of his body but of his soule for God is a Spirit not a body Et ibi est imago dei c. Hom. in exam 10 And there is the Image of God saith St. Basill where that is which commandeth ouer other liuing creatures But man commandeth ouer beastes not by the members of his body the which are stronger in many beastes then in Man but by his minde endued with reason and free-will For not by that which hee hath cōmon with them doth he rule them but by that whereby he is distinguished from them and made like vnto God Lift vp thy minde my soule to thy example and remember that the cheife commendation of the Image is to be like thereunto For although the example be deformed as the Deuil is vsually made yet the commendation of the image is aptly to represent that deformed example Therfore deformity in the example shall still be deformity but in the image it shall be beautie And if the example also be beautifull the image shall be most pretious if it imitate as neere as may be the beautie thereof the image likewise if it had vnderstanding would desire nothing more then continually to beholde the example to fashion and frame it selfe to become most like thereunto Thy example O my soule is God an infinite beautie 1 Ioh. c. 1 A light in whome there is no darkenesse whose beautie the Sunne and Moone admire That thou mayst therefore imitate an example of such beautie and desire as much as thou canst to be like him wherein consisteth thy highest perfection profit honor ioy rest and happinesse consider that the beauty of God thy example consisteth in Wisdome and Holines For as the beauty of the body ariseth from proportion of members and an amiable colour so in the beauty of the minde an amiable colour is the Light of Wisedome and the proportion of members is Iustice but by Iustice no particular vertue is vnderstood but that vniuersall which comprehendeth all vertues That soule therefore is most beautifull whose minde doth shine with the light of Wisdome and whose will is confirmed in the fullnes of perfect Iustice But God thy example O my soule is Wisdome and Iustice and therefore Beautie it selfe And because both this goodnesse is signified by the name of Holinesse in the Scriptures Isay 6. therefore in Isay the Angels crye vnto God Holy holy holy Leuit. 11 Lord God of Sabaoth And God himselfe cryeth vnto his Images Be you holy because I your Lord God am holy And our Lord in the Gospell Math. 6. Be you perfect as your heauenly Father is perfect If therefore thou desire O my soule as the true image of God to be like thy example thou must loue Wisdome and Iustice before all things It is true Wisdome to iudge of all things according to the highest cause the highest cause is the will of God or the law which doth make knowne the will of God vnto men Therefore if thou loue Wisdome thou must not in any wise giue eare what the lawe of the flesh doth teach what the senses doe esteeme what the world doth approue what thy kinds folks perswade and much lesse what flatterers propound but be deafe vnto them all and onely attend the will of thy Lord God iudging that wholy good profitable glorious and to be desired of thee which is according therunto This is the Wisdome of Saints whereof the wiseman writeth Wisd 7 Aboue health and beauty did I loue her and purposed to haue her for light because her light cannot be extinguished And all good things came to me together with her Moreouer Iustice is an other part of spirituall beautie and comprehendeth all vertues which adorne and perfect the Will but especially Charitie the Mother Roote of vertues Whereof St. Augustine in his last booke of Nature and grace speaketh thus Inohoata charitas c. De Natura grat●a c. 70 vnperfect charitie is vnperfect iustice Charitie increased is iustice increased Perfect Charitie is perfect Iustice For He that loueth hath fulfilled the law because Rom. 13 Loue worketh not euil And therefore Loue is the fulnesse of the Lawe as the
first storme of rayne winde or flouds it is cast downe and the fall thereof is great Thy house my soule hath diuers powers and faculties as it were Chambers or parlors and if it be built vpon God as vpon a Rock that is if thou dost firmely beleeue in God if all thy trust be in God and thou be grounded in the loue of God that thou mayst say with the Apostle Who shall seperate vs from the charitie of Christ Ephes 3 Rom. 8 Then be assured that neither the spirituall wickednesse which is about thee nor carnall concupiscence which is vnder thee nor thy domesticall enemies which are on the side of thee to wit thy kinsfolkes and acquaintance shall euer by their temptations preuaile against thee Great surely is the force and subtiltie of the spirituall powers but greater is the power and wisdome of the holy Ghost who ruleth in that house which is founded on God The flesh also fighteth eagerly against the spirit and sometime ouercommeth the strongest but the loue of God doth ouercome the loue of the flesh and the feare of God doth vanquish the feare of the world Those also of a mans houshold are his enemies and with their peruerse councells drawe his soule into the company of sinners But that soule which trusteth she hath a Lord a Father a brother and spowes in heauen will easily contemne and in that respect hate her carnall friendes and kinsfolkes and say with the Apostle Luke 14 Rom. 8 I am sure that neither death nor life nor other Creature shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. But that soule is indeede miserable whose house being built vpon the sand cannot continue long And the fall therof will be great because it beleeueth lyes and trusteth to a staffe of Reede Whose God is the belly or money or the smoake of honour all which things passe away and perish very speedily drawe the soule which followeth them into eternal distruction It is also an other property of the earth like a good Nursse Cap. 3 plentifully to bring forth hearbes and fruites for the sustenance of men and beasts This propertie directeth vs to our maker as to our true Nursing Father For not the earth but God in the earth bringeth forth all good things So speaketh the holy ghost by the mouth of Dauid Psal 103 Who bringeth forth grasse for be astes and hearbe for the seruice of men And againe All expect of thee that thou giue them meate in season Thou giuing to them they shall gather it thou opening thy hand all thinges shall be filled with boun●ie And our Lord in the Gospel Math. 6 Behold the foules of the ayre that they sowe not neither reape nor gather into barnes and your heauenly Father feedeth them And the Apostle Act. 14 And truely not without testimony hath God left himselfe bestowing benefites from heauen giuing raine and fruitfull seasons filling with foode and ioy our harts Neither is that false which is said in the beginning of Genesis Gen. 1 Let the earth shoote forth green hearbes and such as may seede and fruit trees yeilding fruite after his kinde For although the earth shoote forth hearbs and fruit trees yet it is by the vertue which God gaue vnto it and God by it keepeth and increaseth them Therefore Dauid inuiting all creatures to prayse their maker ioyneth with the rest Psal 140 Fruitfull trees and all Cedars And the three children in Daniel are exhorted with all other thinges to blesse Dan. 3 prayse and magnifie him for euer And if all creatures after their manner praise God with what affection oughtest thou my soule to prayse him for all his benefites which thou dost dayly enioy acknowledging in them his fatherly loue which neuer ceaseth to prouide all things for thee But this is not much in the eyes of thy Lord God For he produceth in thee as in his spirituall field the noble branche of Charitie For Charitie is not of the world but of God 1 Iohn 4 as the most beloued Disciple speaketh in his Epistle From Charitie also as from a heauenly tree spring the white and odoriferous flowers of holy cogitations the greene leaues of profitable wordes for the saluation of Nations and the ripe fruites of good workes by which God is glorified our neighbour edified and merits increased and kept for eternall life But woe to those who after the manner of foolish beastes desire to be filled with the fruites of the earth not thinking of their giuer nor thanking him for them their soules are like the earth which God did cursse that bringeth forth nothing but thorns thistles For what do they think in whose minds God soweth not chaste intentions but of adulteries homicide sacriledge theftes trecheries and the like And what doe they speak but blasphemies periuries reproches heresies detractions contumelies false testimonies and lyes which they haue learned of their father the deuil finally what fruites do they bring forth but those whereof we haue spoken and which the Apostle calleth The workes of the fl●sh Gal. 6 These indeed are the thornes which first pricke the minde which bringeth them forth with bitter thoughts of feares and cares And then they pricke the fame mindes and bodies of others with vncurable woundes whereby great hurt often times ensueth But leauing this my soule if thou wilt be the Garden of God take heed that thornes and thistles be neuer found in thee but with all diligence cherish the tree of Charitie the Lilly of chastitie and the Spiknard of humilitie Take heede it neuer enter into thy minde to thinke that these braunches of heaue●ly vertues come from thy selfe and not from thy Lord God who is the Lord of vertues Neither attribute to thy selfe the keeping increase and ripenesse of the fruite of good workes but as much as thou canst commend them vnto God There remaineth the last Cap. 4 commendation of the earth for that in her bosome are conteyned gold siluer and precious stones but truely the earth doth not by her owne vertue bring forth such precious kindes of thinges but he who by Aggeus saith Mine is the siluer Agg. 2 and mine is the gold O louer of men did it please thy goodnesse not onely to produce stones wood yron brasse lead and such like thinges necessarie for the building of houses shippes and other instruments but also gold siluer and precious stones for beauty and ornament And if thou giuest these thinges to Pilgrims on earth and often also to thy enemies which blaspheme thy name what wilt thou giue to thy friendes who shall prayse thee and raigne with thee in heauen Thou wilt giue them doubtlesse not some little peeces of golde and siluer or some fewe precious stones but that Cittie whereof Iohn the Apostle speaketh in the Apocalips when he saith Apoc. 21 And the building of the Wall thereof was of Iasper
a step by which through prayer and meditation wee may Ascend vnto God For surely it is more easie to Ascend with Elias in a Chariot of Fire then of Earth Water or Ayre to make a Ladder Let vs therefore consider the properties of the Fire The fire is of such a nature that in diuers thinges it worketh after a diuerse and often after a contrary manner Wood Hay and stubble it burneth presently Gold Siluer and precious stones it maketh more pure and bright Iron which of it owne nature is blacke colde hard and heauy the Fire so changeth into contrary quallities that forthwith it becommeth white hot soft and light yea to shine like a starre to burne like fire to melt like water and to bee so light that the Smith may easily mooue and remoue it as he pleaseth All these thinges doe manisestly agree vnto Almighty God For Wood Hay and stubble according to the Apostle in his first Epistle to the Corinthians signifie Euill workes which cannot indure the fire of Gods Iudgement 1 Cor 3 And truly it is vncredible how greatly all sinne displeaseth God who is a Most pure Fire and with what zeale he consumeth and destroyeth it if by repentance it may be destroyed that is If the sinner bee in state to repent But if hee be not capable of repentance as the Deuils are not nor men after this life then is Gods wrath turned vpon him For to God the impious and his impiety are odious alike saith the wise man Wis 14 And how exceeding great this hatred is the Deuill can witnes who sinned once and being a most noble Angell Greg. lib. 32 moral c 24 alias 18 and as St. Gregory saith Prince of the first Order and the most excellent of Gods Creatures was notwithstanding presently cast downe from Heauen depriued of all beauty and supernaturall grace changed into a most deformed monster and condemned vnto eternall punishment Our Sauiour Christ can witnesse who descended from Heauen to destroy the Workes of the Deuill to wit sinnes Ioh. 3 and therefore hee is called The Lambe of God that taketh away the Sinnes of the world Ioh. 1 But who is able to declare or conceiue what our Sauiour suffered to destroy the workes of the Deuill and perfectly to satisfie the iustice of God Who when hee was in the forme of God tooke the forme of a Seruant Being made poore for vs when as he was rich Hee had not where to repose his head albeit hee made Heauen and Earth He came into his owne Phil. 2 2 Cor. 8 Luk. 9 Ioh ● 1 Pet 2 and his owne receaued him not Who when hee reuiled did not reuile When hee suffered he threatned not but deliuered himselfe to him that iudged him vniustly Who himselfe bare our Sinnes in his body vpon the tree Phil 2 1 Pet 2 He humbled himselfe made obedient vnto death euen the death of the Crosse By whose stripes wee are healed Lastly hee was mocked spitten on whipped crowned with thornes and being crucified with exceeding ignominy and paine he rendred vp his life to destroy the workes of the Deuill and to wipe away our sinnes The Law of God can witnes which prohibiteth and punisheth all sin yea leaneth not one idle worde vnpunished Mat 12 How greatly then doth God abhorr enormious crymes that cannot indure one idle worde Psal 18 The Law of our Lord is imaculate the precept of our Lord lightsome detesting sinne and darkenesse for betweene light and darkenesse 2 Cor. 6 iustice and iniquitie there can be no society Hell also can witnesse which God hath prepared for sinners who when as they had time neglected or refused to be washed with the blood of the immaculate Lambe For it is iust that they who haue committed Eternall sinnes should haue eternall punishments But what and how great the paines of Hell are is horrible to thinke Whereof we wil speak more in the last step Therefore my soule since Gods hatred is so great against sin if thou louest God aboue all thinges thou oughtest also to hate sinne aboue all thinges Take heed they deceaue thee not who vse to extenuate or excuse sinne Looke also that thou deceaue not thy selfe with false reasons for if sinne displease thee not both in thy selfe and others thou louest not God and if thou louest not God thou art vndone Againe if thou bee not vngratefull vnto Christ how greatly mayst thou reckon thy selfe indebted to his loue laboures blood and death Who hath washed thee from sinne and reconciled thee to his father And shall it then be greeuous vnto thee to suffer somewhat for Christ or for his sake by his grace to resist sinne euen vnto blood Lastly if thou canst not patiently indure the Hell of eternal fire surely thou oughtest not patiently to indure sinne but As from the face of a Serpent flye from it Eccle. 21 and from euery light occasion or suspition thereof Endeauour therfore all thou mayst to hate sinne aboue all things and to loue God aboue all things The fire also destroyeth not but perfecteth and purisieth golde Cap. 2 siluer and pretious stones For as the same Apostle doth there declare those mettalls signifie good workes which are approoued by the fire of Gods iudgement 1 Cor. 3 These workes God doth approoue because they are his guiftes And when he crowneth our merits saith St Augustine Con. 2. in psal 70 he crowneth his guiftes For they are done by his commandement asistance and powre and by the lawe and precepts which he hath appointed Gold also signifieth the Werkes of Char●● 1 Ioh. 4 and how can the workes of Charitie but please God since God himselfe is Charitie Siluer signifieth the workes of Wisdome Dan. 12. to wit of them that instruct mony vnto iustice And they also are very pleasing and acceptable vnto God For the Wisdome of God saith Mat. 5 He that shall doe and teach he shall be called great in the kingdome of heauen Pretious stones are the workes of a continent soule of which Ecclesiasticus speaketh Eccle. 26 All Weight is not worthy a continuent soule And that is the cause why in the office of the Church the Gospell of One pretious Pearle found is read in the praise of holy virgins Math. 13 And how greatly the puritie of virginitie is pleasing to God may be vnderstood by the Prophet Esay who by Gods appointment and in his name prophesied vnto such Eunuches as haue gelt themselues for the Kingdome of heauen Math. 19 I will giue vnto them in my house and with my walles a place Isay 56 and a name better then Sonnes and Daughters An euerlasting name will I giue them which shall not perish Which place St. De Sanct virg c. 21 24 Augustine in his booke of holy virginitie excellently declareth to be vnderstood of holy virgins of either sex And these three sortes of workes by the consent of
to be of their nearenesse subiection and coniunction with God the Father of Light The Moone signifieth Man the Sunne God When the Moone is opposite against the Sunne then with her light borrowed from the Sunne she onely beholdeth the Earth and turneth her backe as it were to Heauen Therfore she then appeareth very beautifull to the Inhabitants of the Earth but very deformed to those in Heauen Euen so Men when they are farr from God as that prodigall Son that departed frō his Father went into a far Countrey then doe they abuse the light of reason which they receiued frō him to behold the earth onely are altogether occupied in getting the wealth therof And then of the children of this world they are accounted wise and happy But of the heauenly Cittizens they are esteemed Poore Apoc. 3 and blinde naked deformed and miserable Againe when the Moone is vnder y● Sun or very near it she then shineth in the higher part and onely beholdeth Heauen turning as it were her back to the Earth vanishing from the eyes of men Euen so when a sinner beginneth to returne vnto virtue and to be truely subiected vnto God the true Sunne of Soules by Humility and ioyned vnto him by Charity then will he fulfill that which the Apostle aduiseth Col 3 Seeke the thinges that are aboue where Christ is sitting on the right hand of God and minde the thinges that are aboue not the thinges that are vpon the E●rth And then shall hee be dispised by fond Worldlings and accompted a dead man For indeed he is dead to the world And his life is hid with Christ in God But when Christ shall appeare his Life Then he also shall appeare with Christ in Glory as the same Apostle saith in that place And this is the cause as St. Epist 19 c. 4 5 6 Augustine in his Epistle to Ianuarius hath noted why the Pasch of our Lord neither in the olde or new Law could be rightly Celebrated vntill the full Moone were past to wi●t vntill the Moone which at the full is opposite beginneth by conuersion to returne to coniunction with the Sunne For God by this coelestial Planet would shew how by the Passion and Resurrection of Christ Man that was opposite vnto God by his iniquity should begin to returne vnto God and by the merites of Iesus Christ seeke to vnite himselfe vnto his grace But thou my soule if perhapps by Gods grace thou finde thy selfe subiected in true humility vnto the Father of Light and ioyned vnto him in feruent Charity doe not imitate sooles who Are changed as the Mo●ne Eccle 27 but emulate Wise men which remain● as the Sunne as Ecclesiasticus witnesseth For the Moore increafeth quickly and decreaseth But if thou be wise abandon not grace once receiued depart not from it for nothing canst thou finde better in any place Neither knowest thou hauing once lost it whether thou shalt returne to it any more for hee that promised pardon and grace vnto the penitent hath not promised the Guift of repentance or a long life vnto thee Therefore thou mayest without feare turne thy backe to the Earth and behold thy Sunne R●st delight and remaine in him Say with the Apostle St. Mat. 17 Peter It is good for vs to be here Epist Ad Com. And with the Martyr Ignatius It is better for me to liue with Christ then to rule the Earth Care not what they thinke of thee which loue the world for he is not approued whom the world cōmendeth but whom God cōmendeth The Moone hath also an other property Cap 5 which God is accustomed to vse towardes his elect For the Moone gonerneth the night as the Sunne the day saith Moses in Genesis Gen. 7 and Dauid in the Psalmes Psal 135 but the Sun shineth all day long the Moone somtime in the night casteth a great light somtimes a small and sometimes none at all So God like the Sunne alwayes shineth vpon the holy Angels and blessed Soules which inioy perpetuall day For theresh all be no night there saith St. Iohn in the Apocalips but in this night of our Pilgrimage and banishment Apoc. 21 2 Cor. 5 In which we walke by Faith and not by Sight And Attend to holy Scripture as to a candle shining in a darke place as St. Peter saith in his last Epistle 2 Pet 1 God like the Moone doth sometime visite and illuminate our hearts and sometime leaueth vs in the darknes of desolation Yet thou oughtest not my soule to be too sorrowfull albeit thou enioy not the Light of consolation nor reioyce too much if shortly after thou breathe in the Light of comfortable Deuotion For God is as the Moone and not as the Sunne in the night of this world Neither doth hee onely appeare vnto vs poore and vnperfect creatures sometimes as a Moone full of the Light of Consolation and sometimes without Light leauing vs in the darke night of Desolation For the Apostle St. Paul the vessell of election who was rapt into the Third Heauen 2 Cor. 12 and heard secret wordes which is not lawfull for a man to speake saith sometimes 2 Cor. 7 I am replenished with Consolation I d●e exceedingly abou●d in ioy in all our tribulation And sometimes he sigheth and lamenteth saying Rom 7 I see another Law in my members repugning to the Law of my minde and captiuing me in the Law of sinne that is in my members Vnhappy man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death 21 Cor. 1 And in his last vnto the Corinthians We will not haue you ignorant Brethren concerning our tribulation which hath happened in Asia that we were pressed aboue measure aboue our power so that it was teadious vnto vs euen to liue And thus as St. Iohn Chrysostome noteth God dealeth with all his Saints Hom. 8 in Math. to wit not suffering them to haue continuall tribulations nor to enioy continuall consolations but in an admirable varietie of prosperitie and aduersitie to spend as it were their liues Thus much of the moone The Starres also are numbred among the ornaments of heauen Cap. 6 of which Ecclesiasticus saith The glory of the starres is the beau●y of heauen but he presently addeth Eccle. 43 Our Lord illuminating the world on high For all the beauty of the Starrs Sunne and Moone proceedeth from God the Father of light neither doth the Sunne by day or Moone and starrs by night giue light but it is Our Lord that dwelleth on high who by the Sun Moone starrs giueth light to the world For it is he who as the Prophet Baruch speaketh Baruch 3 Sendeth forth light and it goeth hath called it it obeyeth him with trembling And the starrs haue giuen light in their watches and reioyced they were called and they sayd here we are they haue shined to him with checrefulnesse
all chasts lone And therefore the mysterie of the Trinitie doth surpasse all naturall knowledge neither can a learned Philosopher attaine thereunto without supernaturall light For the soule of Man produceth a Word and a loue which are not substances but accidents and therefore no persons But God the Father did beget the word consubstantiall to himselfe And the Father and the word breathed out the holy Ghost consubstantiall likewise to them both Therefore the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost are truely three persons The soule of Man also produceth a Word which continueth not long and the Will produceth a loue which lasteth not long but God the Father did beget The Wordeternall and the Father and the Word did breath out the holy Ghost eternall For God cannot be without his Word and Spirit Furthermore the soule of Man by one Word representeth but one thing and therefore it multiplyeth the wordes not onely of the Minde but also of the mouth The will of Man likewise must produce many actes of Loue if it will loue many thinges but God with one Word speaketh all truth and with one Acte of loue loueth all good thinges Tenthly and lastly Cap. 10 the soule of man whiles it is in the body is not seene heard mooued nor scarce conceiued to be there and yet from it all good thinges are deriued to the body as sense motion speech subsistence beauty strength and the like For how could a man see heare speake walke subsist and be strong faire and amiable vnlesse his soule were in him And why doth he not after he is dead see heare speake and mooue but because his soule is departed from whence these benefites proceeded Euen so thy God O my soule whiles he liueth in thee by his Grace maketh thee to see what Faith sheweth thee and to heare what he speaketh in thee That thou mayest walke in the Way of the Commaundements towardes the Heauenly Hierusalem and speake in prayer to God and in good exhortations to thy neighbour and subsist perseuering in good workes and be strong in battaile against thy inuisible enemies and thereby become beautifull in the eyes of the inuisible God and his Angells But take heede least Gods grace departing from thee which is the life of thy soule thou fall into the losses of the First death And from it be carried to the second death frō whence is no Resurrection O that thy God would open the eyes of thy minde that thou mightest behold the beauty of a Soule that is vnited to him in Charity What place hee prepareth for it What ioyes hee promiseth it How louingly hee looketh on it And with what longing it is ezpected by the Angells and blessed Soules Then wouldest thou not endure that so great beauty should be blemished with the least spott And if it should so happen thou wouldest endeauour to wash it away with floudes of teares For so did St. Francis as Saint Bonauenture reporteth who although he could not follow the immaculate Lambe without some spot endeauoured notwithstanding to purge and clense his soule with daily shewers of teares from all spottes of offences whatsoeuer Againe if thy God would open thy inward eyes that thou mightest see the deformity of a Sinfull soule how it slinketh like a rotten carcasse and how both God and his Angells reiuse to looke thereon although perhaps it dwell in a beautifull body very pleasing to the eyes of men surely thou wouldst be so affrighted that by no meanes thou wouldest become such a one nor long continue in such estate THE NINTH STEPP From the Consideration of Angells WE are come to the highest Stepp of Ascention vnto God Cap. 1 from created substances For if wee speake onely of Naturall perfection there is no created substance higher then that of Angells First therefore we will consider Angells according to their excellency of Nature Secondly according to their sublimity of Grace And lastly according to the Offices which they execute For it is not our meaning to enter into a full Disputation about Angells but onely to touch such thinges as may helpe vs to eleuate ou● mindes to God If an Angell then be compared vnto Mans reasonable Soule it may fitly be called a perfect Soule euen as the soule may be called an vnperfect Angell For so of man spake the Prophet by reason of his Soule when he said Thou hast minished him a little lesse then Angells Psal 8 An Angell is a Perfect Spiritual Substance the Soule an Vnperfect Spirituall Substance because it is the Bodyes Forme and but one part of Man Therefore an Angell is all Spirit Man partly Spirit and partly flesh or partly an Angell and partly a beast As if one should say An Angell is all of golde Man partly of golde and partly of clay The Prophet then said truely Man is minished little lesse then Angells And it is also true that the soule of man because it is a part of man is little lesse then an Angell Whereupon it followeth that an Angell is more like to God then a man or his soule for God is a Spirit and not a Body or Forme of of a body And yet notwithstanding this resemblance of an Angell vnto God God is a spirit infinitely excelling the dignity of an Angel For God is a Sp●rit vncreated eternall immense Almighty onely Good onely Wise onely High If then my soule thou wilt confesse that thou doest with reason admire the Nature of Angells How much more oughtest thou to admire and reuerence the Nature of God who without all comparison excelleth them Neither in Nature or substance onely may an Angell be called a perfect M●n Cap. 2 and Man an vnperfect Angell but also in knowledge and vnderstanding For man because hee vseth the ministery of his sences and discourseth from effectes to causes and from causes to effectes vnderstandeth with l●bour and by degrees attaineth vnto knowledge whervpon he oftentimes doubteth oftentimes is deceiued and seldom findeth out the Truth But an A●gell beholdeth a● once the effectes and causes together seeth the Substance with the Accidentes and spirituall thinges with corporall Man therfore whiles hee is a P●grim on carth in vnderstanding is not a little lesse but much lesse then Angells So that albeit hee excell in Witt and in the study of Philosophy Yet in comparison of an Angell he may truely be accounted a Childe or sucking Infant Not vntruely therfore spake that Prophet of vs mortall Men O●● of the mouth of Infantes Psal 8 and Sucklings thou hast perfited praise Heare what the wise Salomon iudged of our Wisdome wherewith we are so puffed vp All thinges are hard saith he Man cannot explicate them in Worde Bccle 1 Bccles 3 And againe God hath deliuered the World to their disputation that man cannot finde ●he Worke which God hath ●rought from the beginning to the end If all thinges then are hard and which man cannot explicate And if man vnderstand nothing in this visible
world from the first Creature to the last I say nothing so perfectly as that hee is able to explicate the Nature Propertyes Accidents and secret virtues thereof Into what errors shall he fall if hee vndertake to search out the thinges which are aboue Heauen Therefore if thou be Wise my soule follow the knowledge of Saluation and Wisdome of Saintes which consisteth in fearing God keeping his Commaundements Delight more in prayer then in Disputatiō and in edifying Charity then in proud knowledge For that is the way which leadeth vnto life Eternall where we little ones shal he made equall with Angells which alwayes see the face of their Father which is in Heauen Luk ●0 Mat. 18 There is also a third thing wherein Mans soule is not a litle lesse but much lesse then Angells to witt in the power and commaund ouer Bodyes For Mans soule moueth the body by commaundment of the Will but other Bodyes it cannot so moue And it moueth the body by Progressiue motion vpon the Earth but cannot suspend it vpon the Water cleuate it aboue the Ayer or carry it whether it will But Angells onely by Force of Spirit and commaundment of Will eleuate heauy bodyes and carry them whether they lift So an Angell tooke vp Abachue Dan. 14 and in a very short time carried him to Babilon to bring Daniel his ●inner recarried him again to Palistine A man also cannot fight in spirit onely with his enemies but with his handes and weapons but an Angel by power of spirit without hands or weapons can encounte● and ouercome a whole army of men So one Angel ●●ew at once a hundred fourescore and fiue thousand Assyrians 4 Reg. 19 And if Angels can do these thinges what can the Lord and maker of Angels doe He truely made all thinges of nothing and can reduce all thinges to nothing Mans soule moreouer can by the art of paynting with industry and labour make the image of a man so lively that it may seeme to liue and breath But an Angell can without labour of handes or instruments almost in a moment of time assume in such sort a body Elementarie that wise men will iudge it to be the true body of a man because it can walk speake eate drinke be touched handled and washed So Abraham prepared meate for the Angells Gen. 18 and washt their feete For as the Apostle declareth Ieb 13 He receaued Angels to harbour thinking they had bene men Which also happened to his nephew Loth when he receaued two Angels as strangers into his house Gen. 19 The Angell Raphael in like manner remayned with young Tobias many-dayes walking speaking eating and drinking as if he had bene a man indeede yet notwithstanding being after to depart he said I seemed indeede to eate with you and to drinke Tob. 12 but I vse an inu sible meate and drinke and sodainly he vanished from their sight Surely it is admirable and proceedeth from great power so to frame a body on the sodaine as that it may seeme to differ in nothing from the liuing body of a Man and againe at pleasure on the fodaine so to dissolue the same body that nothing therof remayne If then the power of Angels be so great how great is the power of the maker of Angels who gaue them that power Truely as the knowledge of Angells and men being com●ared with the knowledge of God is ignorance and as the iustice of Angells and men being compared with the iustice of God is iniustice so the power of Angells and men being compared with the power of God is infirmitie Therefore it is truely said Rom. 16 ●uke 18 1 ●●m 6 Cap 4. Our God onely wise onely good and onely migh●ie Lastly if we consider the place of Angels and of men we shall finde mans soule in that respect also Not a little lesse Heb. 2 but much lessened vnder A●gells I willingly vse that word which the Apostle v● s●th For God hath app●inted a place on earth for the soule of man and in heauen to wit in his Pallace a place for Angels Psal 113 For the heauen of heauen is to our Lord but the earth he hath giuen to the children of men Whereupon our Lord in St. Math 24 Mathew calleth them The Angels of heauen And in St. Luke he saith There shall be ioy in heauen vpon one sinner that deth penance Luke 15 And a little after There shall be ioy before the Angels of God vpon one sinner that doth penance God also hath so tyed the soule to the body that it cannot without it remoue from place to place but Angels are not tyed to any body but ha●e power giuen them to p●sse from heauen to earth and from earth to heauen or whether soeuer they will with very great speede so that Angels being next vnto God in dignitie of Nature doe also in some sort by their celerity immitate his vbiquitie For God is euery where by immensitie of Nature and therefore needeth no change of place Angels by swiftnesse of motion passe so speedily from place to place and so exhibit their presence in cuery place that they seeme after a sort to be euery where But my soule if thou wilt heare the Lord of Angels there is no cause why thou shouldest enuy that Angels haue so high a place and so vnsatigable a motion For not onely thou my soule when thou art loosed from the body shalt be equall vnto Angels but when thou shalt returne vnto thy body which Christ Will corfigure to the body of his glory Phil. 3 with that body shalt thou possesse heauen as thy owne-house it being made spirituall shall without labour or wearinesse be presently there wheresoeuer thou the soule shalt will and command it 1 Cor. 5 Thy Lord doth not deceaue thee who saith in his Gospel Ioh. 14 In my Fathers house there be many Mansions And I goe and prepare you a place And If I go and prepare you a place I come againe and will take you to my selfe that where I am you also may be Father I will that where I am Ioh. 17 they also ma● be with me and that they may see my glory which thou hast giuen me But thou art not ignorant where Christ is and what body he hath For thou dost confesse euery day and say On the third day he rose againe from the dead he ascended into heauen thou knowest also that his body after the resurrection did sometimes enter in among his Disciples the dores deing shut ●ch●●o L●k 24 and departed from them not walking but vanishing that is he transferred his body from them so speedily as if it had beene a Spirit and not a body But if thou secke after this glory thou must first Consigure thy body Phil. 3 to the body of the humilitie of Christ And then Christ will configure thy body to the body of his glory For
which none can sufficiently admire vnlesse he could number all the Creatures which God hath made shall make or can make And who is able so to doe but hee whose knowledge is Infinite This Power also may seeme the greater when wee imagine how great a thing it is to destroy thinges made so many ages in one moment or as Iudas Machabaeus saith To destroy with one becke Mach 8 Let vs therefore say with Mases Exod. 15 Who is like to thee among the strong O Lord The length of Gods Power is seene by continuall cooperation with all thinges made Cap. 2 yet neither is nor euer shall be wearied For it cannot be lessened weakened or decayed by any meanes because it is truely eternall or rather the true eternity of the Diuinity Some wonder how the Sunne Moone and Starres can mooue so long time with such speed from East to West and returne again to their courses without any intermission And surely it were much to be wondred at but that we know they are carried by God Almighty Who carrieth all thinges by the worde of his Power Heb 1 Others wonder how it can be that in Hell the fire is not consumed which burneth euerlastingly nor the bodyes of those wretches dissolued which are for euer scorched in those flames And this may be thought not onely admirable but also vnpossble were it not that God who is Almighty and Euerlasting causeth that fire so to burne that it is neuer quenched and so preserueth the bodyes of those wretches in that fire that they are alwayes tormented and neuer consumed Others wonder moreouer how God Carrieth and sustaineth all thinges and yet is not wearied with so huge a burthen For a strong Man Horse Oxe or Elephant can carry a great weight a little while or a very great weight a very short while But to carry a most great burthen an euerlasting time without wearinesse surpasseth the strength of any Creature But indeed they had cause to wonder if the Power of God were in Weight and Measure as the power of Creatures is But since his power is Infinite it is no meruaile if it can beare a great burthen an infinite time without wearinesse Let vs say therefore with the holy Prophet Moses Exod. 15. Who is like to thee among the strong O Lord. The Height of Gods power consisteth chiefly in two thinges Cap. 3 First in that it onely hath made Most high things Sublunary thinges God made in the first Creation yet may they by Action of Creatures be ingendred altred or corrupted For the Elementes are in part mutually changed Hearbes and Plantes spring from the Earth Beastes are bred of Beastes Fishes are ingendred in the Water cloudes and rayne in the Ayer and Cometts in the Fire But the Heauens Starres which are the highest bodyes God onely created and he alone doth so preserue that no creature hath power to make change alter or corrupt them I shall see saith the Prophet thy Heauens Psal 8 the workes of thy Fingers the Moone and Starres which thou hast founded For he that is most High hath kept the highest workes for himselfe onely he began to frame them from their foundation and hath brought them to their perfection Hee also by his Infinite power created preserueth and for euer will preserue thinges Spirituall as Angells and the soules of men which are his noblest and highest workes from death For Creatures haue no part in doing these thinges neither can they all ioyned together Create or destroy one Angell or one soule Secondly the height of Gods power is seene in Miracles which as St. Tract 24 in Ioh. Augustine teacheth Are workes beside the vsuall course and order of Nature whereat the very Angells and Nature her selfe doth wonder Which of the Angells did not wonder to see the Sunne and Moone which runne their course so speedily stand still at the commandment of Iosue Ios 10 And that wee may not thinke it fell out casually for none can imagine how a thing so vnusuall could be donne by a mortall man the holy Ghost saith Our Lord obeying the voyce of a Man ●●dem For Iosue did not properly speake vnto the Sunne and Moone which he knew could not heare his commandement but he prayed to God as if he should say Thou Sunne by the commandement of God against Gabaon moue not And thou M●one against the valley of A●alon And our Lord obeyed the voyce of a Man That is Caused those Lights to obey the voyce of a Man For often times in holy Scripture God is said to do those things whereof be is the Cause that they are done As in Genesis when our Lord said to Abraham Now haue I knowen that thou fearest God Gen. 22 the meaning of those wordes is Now haue I caused that both thy selfe and others know that thou truely fearest God The like also was that worke signifying the height of Gods power at the Passion of our Lord When the Moone which was very farre distant from the Sunne approached with vncredible speed vnto the Sun Ecclipsing it three houres Math. 27 caused darknesse vpon the whole earth after with like speed returned to the place from whence she came All which St. Denis in his Epistle to St. Policarpe doth witnes that he saw and obserued And this truely is a wonder cōtrary to the former though no lesse strange For it is as vnusuall and as much aboue the whole power of Nature to make the Moone runne her course more speedily then she is accustomed as it is to make her stand still I omit the giuing sight to the blinde the raysing of the dead and many such like miracles which God hath done and doth by his Prophets Apostles and other his faithfull seruantes All which doe crye Who is like to thee among the strong O Lord But I cannot omitt that cheife and greatest Miracle which God shall shew at the day of Iudgement when all the dead shall rise together albeit the bodyes of many of them haue beene burned to ashes and scattered in the Windes or deuoured by beastes and changed into other bodies or buried in fieldes and Orchards and altred into sundry hearbes Which of the Angells but will wonder to behold in the twinckling of an eye so many Millions of Millions of Millions of men at the commandement of the Almightie to take againe their bodies albeit they haue lyen hidd for many ages and after diners manners haue bene dispersed and consumed This therefore is the higth of Gods power in regard whereof it may likewise be said Who is like to thee among the strong O Lord. There remaineth the depth Cap. 4 of his power which seemeth to me to consist in the manner which God vseth in making thinges For who can conceaue how somthing is made of nothing They could not sound this depth who held it for a certaine and approued Principle That of nothing nothing is
teares that while time serueth they may be clensed and washed away by thy grace Amen THE THIRTEENTH STEPP From the Consideration of Gods practicall Wisdome WE haue considered the speculatiue Wisdome of God Cap. 1 Let vs now consider his practicall wisdome which also we may call Effectiue This Wisdome hath her Bredth Length Height and Depth The bredth is knowne by the Creation the length by the Preseruation of thinges created the height by the worke of Redemption the depth by Prouidence predestination And to begin from the Creation Psal 103 God hath made all thinges in wisdome as it is said in the Psalme Ecclus 1 And hath powred her out vpon all his workes as Ecclesiasticus writeth As therefore by the Creation of all thinges of nothing wee knowe the power of their Maker So likewise by the admirable work-manshippe which we beholde in euery one of them we wonder at the wisdome of the same Maker Wisd 11 For he hath disp●sed all thinges in me●sare ●nd number and weight as the wise Man saith And with this sauour God hath season●● al● things that thereby we may 〈…〉 to knowe 〈…〉 a●●able and des●●●able W●sdo●● it selfe is All creatures therefore haue a certaine measure number and weight First to distinguish them from God who hath no Measure because he is immense nor Number because he is most perfectly and simply One in Essence Nor Weight because his prise and value exceedeth all estimation Secondly for that they are good and beautifull as Moyses truely sayd Gen 1● God saw all things that he had made and they were very good All thinges therefore haue that Measure which is needful for them to obtaine the end for which they are made in such sort that there can be no addition or substraction therein but forthwith the thing becommeth deformed vnprofitable and lesse good then before Eccle 3 God made all thinges good in their time saith the Preacher Wee cannot add any thing nor take away any from those thinges which God hath made that he may be feared God therfore hath giuen to the heauen a most large Measure that it might containe all thinges belowe within the compasse thereof To the ayre much lesse then to the heauen yet greater then to the earth and waters which make one Globe enclosed round about by the ayre To an Elephant he hath giuen a great measure of body that he might be able to carry great burthens and Castles full of men To a Horse a body somewhat lesse because he is to carry but one ryder Birdes he hath made small that they might hang their Neastes vpon the boughes of Trees Bees and Antes the least of al that they might ●ide themselues in their Hiues or in holes of the earth The like we may say of Number God hath made but one Sunne because one Sunne suffised to giue light to the whole earth and with his brightnesse to make the day He made also but one Moone because one Moone suffised to giue light in the night Yet would he haue many starres that when as the Sunne and Moon were both absent as at their comunction it happeneth they might in some sort put away the darkenesse of the night Neither hath he onely assigned a necessary Number to all thinges ingenerall but also hath appointed to each thing in particular such Number of partes that there can nothing be added or taken away God hath giuen a man two eyes two eares two handes two feete one nose one mouth one breast one head And he hath appeared a very beautifull and comely creature Change this order Let a man haue one eye two noses one ●are two mouthes one hand one foote two breastes or two heades and nothing can be more vnseemely or more deformed Moreouer God hath giuen Weight to wit that estimation to euery Creature as the Nature thereof doth require By the name of Weight or price we vnderstand such qualities as make thinges good and pretious And they are in number three Necessary partes that nothing be superfluous or defecture Commensuration or an apt proportion of partes And an externall amiable colour of the body with such internall vertues as shall be profitable and necessary for diuers actions But it is merueylous to consider what vertue God hath giuen to sundry very small and slender Creatures that as his power is in great so his wisdome might be seen in small-thinges Who can conceaue what vertue is in a graine of Mustard-seede which is the least of all seeds so that the eye can hardly discerne it and yet so great a tree lyeth hidden therein That the Foules of the 〈◊〉 come and dwell in the braunches thereof as the Truth speaketh in the Gospell Math 3 Neither is this proper to Mustard seede onely but common to all other seedes in whose vertue lyeth hidd the roots st●mms branches leaues blossomes and fruite of great trees Truely if we did not know this by experience we should not easily perswade men that from so small a seede so many sundry great thinges could euer spring Who likewise would imagine that an Ant a Ghat a Hea and such small c●●atures had seete which speedily mooue a head a hart inward and outward senses and prudence and iudgement after their manner although very vnperfect Who also would suppose that in these and such like small creatures there should be such force to pierce and enter the quicke flesh that they become not onely very troublesome to men but also to Elephantes and Lyona whome they terrifie Great therefore is our Lord and great is his Wisdome both in great thi●ges and in small The Prince of Phisitions although an Ethnicke did sometimes wonder at the cunning workmanship which God hath wrought in a mans hand Gal inlib depart and cryed out in praise of the Maker What oughtest thou then O Christian to doe who seest that not onely the bodies of men and other liuing creatures but also the heauens the starres the Angells and the immertall soul●s of men are made with vncredible Wisdome by the same most w●se Creator Moreouer the length of his Practicall wisdome appeareth in the prese●●ation of things Cap. 2 as the breadth therof in their Creation but especially of such as are corruptible First then if any one will but consider how God nourisheth and causeth hearbes plantes beastes and the bodies of men to growe and preserueth them to the vttermost he cannot but with astonishment wonder at Gods Wisdome For with earth and water he nourisheth hearbes and plantes and causeth that the nourishment doth passe from the roote to the stock and from the stock it is drawne vp by a certaine vertue to the boughes leaues and fruite so that it ●unneth into euery part after an admirable manner Men likewise and some beastes he nourisheth with hearbes Aples and with the flesh of beastes and causeth the nourishment to enter and passe through all partes of the body with such facilitie and delight
as may seeme vncredible God dealeth like a learned and gentle Phisition who tempereth his medicines in such sort that the Patients may receaue them not onely easily but also willingly For meates doubtlesse are Medicines which vnlesse men receaue often they cannot escape death But God our most louing and skilfull p●isition hath first giuen a taste vnto meates that they may be taken with delight then he hath multiplyed them with infinite variety to take away yerksomnesse And lastly after diuers alterations in the mouth stomach liuer and hart he changeth the meate into so thinne a iuyce that it passeth without s●ission or paine through all the veynes and pores of the body vnto all the partes of the flesh bones and synnowes euen when we sleepe and feele it not The Philosophers wonder at the Wisdome of Nature when they consider these thinges But what Wisdome can there be in thinges without life sence and reason Therefore not the wisdome of nature bur the wisdome of God is to be admired who made nature and found out the way how these merueilous thinges might be done Heare the wisdome of God speaking in the Gospell Math 6 Consider the Lillies of the field how they growe They labour not neither doe they spinne and God doth so clothe c. Therefore not the wisdome of Nature but God maketh the Lillies to growe and as it weare clotheth them with so comely garments Which also may be said of the nourishment and growth of all liuing creatures as the Apostle witnesseth saying 1 Cor 3 Neither he that planteth is any thing nor he that watereth but he that giueth the increase God And if the Wisdome of God doth feede nourish and preserue Plantes and Beastes in this mortall life after so admirable a manner thinke if thou canst O my soule how God doth feede the mindes of Angells and Men in eternall life For on Earth wee are fedd with earthly meates albeit they are seasoned by Gods Wisdome But in Heauen Wisdome it selfe is the meate and drinke of those that liue for euer O Happy shouldest thou be if thou couldest throughly vnderstand what it is God shall be all in all 1 Cor 15 what I say it is that God the chiefe Happinesse shall be to all the Saintes meate drinke cloath life and all thinges whatsoeuer Surely thou wouldest loathe all thinges present Coloss 3 and onely Minde and seeke the thinges that are aboue But let vs proceed It also resembleth a Miracle that for the preseruation and continuance of Mans life God hath giuen to very small thinges a very long and continuall motion without intermission Men take great paines to make the wheeles of a Clocke runne by force of weights foure and twenty houres How great then is the Wisdome of God who causeth the nourishing Facultie to worke without ceassing so long as men beastes or trees doe liue And the longues and pulses to mooue continually seauenty yeares and more For of necessitie the ●ourishing facultye must worke and the longues and pulses must mooue from the first entrance into life vntill the end thereof Those therefore that liue vntill sourescore or ninetie yeares of age must of necessitie haue their longues and pulses mooue all that while And before the sloud when men liued nine hundred yeares their longues and pulses which are thinges very small and soone out of temper wrought nine hundred yeares without rest or intermission Truely they that wonder at these thinges and doe not reuerence and adore Gods Wisdome in them are doubtlesse depriued of all light of Wisdome Moreouer albeit Gods Wisdome can without the labour of men and beastes and without the ministerie of the Sunne or other secondary causes produce and preserue herbes and trees so that all liuing creatures might haue meate in readinesse yet it pleased him to vse the seruice of secundary causes and the labour and industry of men and of beastes that none might be idle but that euery one might exercise their strength He would also that among men some should be rich and some poore that they all might haue occasion to loue vertue and to be tyed together in the bond of Charity For the rich may therefore vse Mercy and Liberality and the poore Patience and Humility The Rich also need the labour of the Poore to till their fieldes to feede their Cattle and by diuers trades to prouide such things as euery one hath neede of The Poore againe want the helpe of the Rich to giue them money and meanes to prouide for themselues meat drinke cloath and other necessaryes Neither is there any canse why the poore should complaine of Gods Wisdome For God who knoweth all and loueth all hath giuen to euery one what hee fore-saw to be most conuenient for them to obtaine euerlasting life As earthly Phisitions commaund some of their Patients to be let bloud others to drinke wine eate flesh and vse recreation Many poore folkes doubtlesse shall now be saued who if they had bin rich had perished eternally And although the rich may also be saued if they seeke to be rich in Good workes and giue that willingly which they receiued of our common Lord not to hide but to bestow Yet it cannot be denied but that pouertie is a safer plainer and shorter way to heauen then wealth Our heauenly master doth not deceaue vs who saith Amen I say to you Math 6 that a rich man shall hardly enter into the kingdome of heauen And againe Blessed are yee poore for yours is the ●ingdome of God Luk. 6 and woe to you that are rich because you haue your consolation Neither doth the Apostle deceaue vs who in his first Epistle to Timothie saith 1 Tim 6 They that will be made rich fall into tentation and the share of the deuill and many desires vnprofitable and hurtfull which drowne men into destruction and perdition And what our Lord and his Apostles taught by word they confirmed also by example For our Lord saith of himselfe Luk. 9 The Foxes haue holes and the Foules of the ayre neastes but the Sonne of Man hath not where to repose his head And the Apostle saith of himselfe his fellow Apostles Vntill this houre 1 Cor 4 we doe both hunger and thirst and are n●ked and are beaten with buffets and are Wanderers That is haue no bouse of our owne Neither ought we to doubt but that the wisdome of Gods Son of his Disciples chose the plainest and safest way vnto life But because Eccles 1 the number of fooles is insinite Few choose this way willingly but many declyne from it with all their affection and power Lastly the length of Gods wisdome is seene in that as it is it selfe eternall so it hath engrafted in all thinges a most liuely instinct to preserue themselues and to prolong their life and being as long as they can Wee see men when they perceaue themselues to be in danger of their liues endeauour