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B00457 The art of dying well. Deuided into tvvo books. / Written by Roberto Bellarmine of the Society of Iesus, and Cardinall. ; Translated into English for the benefit of our countreymen, by C.E. of the same Society.; De arte bene moriendi. English Bellarmino, Roberto Francesco Romolo, Saint, 1542-1621.; Coffin, Edward, 1571-1626. 1621 (1621) STC 1838.5; STC 1838.5; ESTC S90457 138,577 338

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Attourneyes now to the Iudges now to the friends and allyes of all these to haue the definitiue sentence giuen in their fauour at our death the cause of all causes being brought before the supreme Iudge to wit of euerlasting life or death the defendant that is guilty oftentimes foūd vnprouided so oppressed with sicknes as he is not his owne man and is then compelled to giue an account of these things of which perhaps whiles he wa● in good health he neuer so much as thought vpon Hence it cometh that miserable mē do fall so fast headlong into hell fire truly as S. Peter sayth If the iust mā shall scarce be saued 1. Pet. 4. where shall the wicked and the synner appeare VVherefore I esteeme it a matter of speciall moment first to admonish my selfe then my brethren that they duly regard this art and if there be any that haue not learned it of better maysters at least that they contemne not these thinges which we haue laboured to collect or gather togeather out of the holy Scriptures the writings of our ancient maisters But before we come to the rul●s or precepts of this Art I haue thought it expedient to search somewhat into the nature of death and to se● in what ranke it is to be placed eyther amongst the thinges that are good or else the contrary amongst the euill And truly if death be absolutly takē without any other respect or relation then doubtlesse is it to be esteemed euill as being that priuation which is opposed to life which life no man can deny to be a good thing Agayne we may add that God is not the Authour of death for as the VVise man teacheth vs Through the enuy of the Diuell Sap. 1. 2. death entred into the world which is confirmed by Saint Paul when he sayth By one mā synne entred into the world Rom. 5. by synne death in whome all haue synned hence I cōclud that if God made not death then is not death in it self good because al that God hath mad is good as Moyses sayth God saw all things that he had made and they were all very good Genes 1. Notwithstanding although that death be not good yet hath the wisdome of God so found out a meanes as it were to temper or season the same as that out of this bitter root much sweet sruit may growe Hence it comes that Dauid sayth The death of the Saints of our Lord is precious in his sight Psal 115. and the Church in the preface of the Masse of the Resurrection speaking of Christ sayth Who by dying destroyed our death by rising agayne repayred our life Truly that death which destroyed ours repayred our life cannot be otherwise then very good and therfore albeit euery death be not good yet we must graunt that some are therfore Saint Ambrose feared not to entitle one of his bookes De bono mortis of the good of death in which he cleerly demonstrateth death although begotten of synne to bring with it many and no small vtilityes Finally the same is confirmed by reason which doth shew death howsoeuer in it selfe ill by the grace of God to worke and procure much good for first we reape great good by death in that it riddeth vs from all the miseryes of this life which are both very many Iob. 14. and very great Holy Iob in playne words lamenteth of these miseries thus Man born of a woman liuing but a short tyme is replenished with many myseryes Eccles 4. And Salomon sayth I haue commended more the dead then the liuing haue iudged him more happy then both who is not ye● borne nor hath seene the wickednesse committed vnder the sunne And Ecclesiasticus addeth saying Ecl. c. 40. A great turmoyle is made for all men and a heauy yoke is layed on the children of Adam from the day of their issuing forth from their mothers wombe vntill the day of their buriall or returne to the common mother of all to wit the earth which finally as the parent of all receaueth them into her bosome and turneth them into corruption The Apostle in like māner cōplaineth of the miseryes of this life and sayth Vnhappy man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death By these testimonyes of sacred VVrit is sufficiently proued death to haue this good annexed vnto it that it deliuers a man from infinit miseryes of this life Moreouer it yieldeth vs another farre more eminent good then this because it is the gate by which we enter and passe from a prison to a Kingdome This was reuealed by our Lord to Saint Iohn the Apostle and Euangelist whiles for the fayth of Christ he liued in banishment in the I le of Pathmos Apoc. 14. I heard sayth he a voyce from heauen saying vnto me Blessed are the dead who dye in our Lord from hence foorth now sayth the spirit they may rest from their labours for their workes doe follow them Blessed truly is the death of Saints which at the commaund of the heauenly King deliuereth the soule from the prison of the flesh bringeth it to the Kingdome of heauen where the holy soules now free from all labours doe sweetly repose and for reward of their works do receaue the crown of a Kingdome and euen vnto the soules which are caryed to Purgatory death yieldeth a great benefit whiles it deliuereth them from the feare and danger of hell and makes them secure of their future euerlasting felicity yea euen vnto the damned death seemeth to yield some good when deliuering them the sooner from their bodyes it maketh that the measure of their torments shal no more increase by the synnes they would haue committed in their longer life For these so notable vtilityes death sheweth not a dreadfull but a smiling not a terrible but an amiable countenance towards the good hence it proceeded that the Apostle so securely cryed out Christ is my life and death my gayne Phil. 1. being desirous to be dissolued and to be with Christ in his first Epistle to the Thessalonians he warneth the good Christians not to be contristated with the deaths of their deerest friends neyther to bemoa● them as dead but rather to behold thē resting as it were in a sleepe And there liued not long since a holy woman called Catharine Adorna of the Citty of Genua who was so enflamed with the loue of Christ that shee had an incredible desire to dye and go to her beloued Sauiour for this cause transported with the loue of death shee did often prayse the sam as most fayre and beautifull only misliking that she fled from such as sought her and sought for such as fled from her The Reader may see more hereof in the 7. Chapter of her life Out of these things which we haue sayd we see that death as it is the childe of sin is euill but
securely meet with our Sauiour at his retourne from the marriage There remayneth the third office or duty of a faithfull seruant that he alwayes watch because he is vncertayne when his maister will come Blessed are those seruants saith Christ whome their maister when he shall come shall fynde watching God Almighty would not haue all men at a certeyne tyme or period of their age to depart this life least they should bestow all the tyme of their life til then in gluttony and drunkennes plaies and desportes or in other ill works and then afterwards a little before their death to recal themselues retourne vnto God wherefore his diuine prouidence hath so ordeyned that nothing should be more vncerteyne then the houre of our death whiles some as we see dye in their mothers wombe others as soone as they are borne if not in their very birth some in hoary old age others in the very flower of their youth againe some we see by long lingring to languish away others to dye sodenly some to recouer from a most desperate sicknes others to be but a little sicke whiles they seeme free from death the disease increaseth and they depart this life and to make vs the better see this vncertaynty our Sauiour sayd Et si venerit c. Luc. 12. If he shall come in the second watch or if in the third watch so shall fynd his seruants to wit watching blessed are those seruants for know you this that if the maister of the house shold know at what houre the theefe would come truly he would watch and not suffer his house to be ransacked and be you prepared because the Sonne of man will come at such an hower as you thinke not on Moreouer that we might vnderstand of what weight this matter is to be well perswaded of the vncertainty of our life of the houre in which our Lord will call vs to iudgement eyther in the death of euery particuler or else at the later day the Scripture doth repeate nothing so often as that one word Vigilate watch and the similitude of a theefe who vseth not as you know to come but at such a tyme and place where and when he is least expected the word watch is in many places repeated in the Ghospells of S. Mathew Marke and Luke and the similitude of a thiefe is not only in the Gospels but also in the Epistles of the Apostles Apocalyps of S. Iohn Of all which we may euidently perceaue how great the negligence and ignorance not to say madnes and folly of most men is that so often admonished by the spirit of truth by the pens of the Apostles who could not lye nor deceaue vs that we be still prepared for death as a thing most great and difficult and on which dependeth our greatest and euerlasting happines or our greatest and euerlasting destruction and yet that there be so few that are stirred vp by these wordes or rather thunderings of the holy Ghost to prepare themselues thereunto Heer some will say what counsaile do you giue vs that we may watch as we should and by watching be prepared to make a happy end I can thinke of nothing better then that we often prepare our selues to death by a serious and due examination of our conscience and truly Catholike people when they come euery yeare to confession omit not to examine their consciences and againe when they begin to be sicke and the Phisitians by the decree of Pope Pius V. are forbidden to come the second tyme vnto them vnlesse after the examination of their conscience they haue also made a confession of their syns finally there are none in the Catholike Church but neere the hower of their death examine their consciences and confesse their synnes But what shall we say of such as are taken away by soden death What of such as become mad or leese their witts before they can make their confession What of those who are so ouerburthened with the extremity of sicknes as they cannot so much as thinke how many or what sins they haue cōmitted What of those who in dying do synne or in synning doe dye as those who fight in vniust warre or in single combat or are taken in adultery To auoid therefore prudently and religiously these and the like inconueniences nothing better can be deuised then that all those who esteeme and make account of their saluation do twice euery day to wit at noone and night diligently discusse their conscience what the night or day before they haue done what they haue sayd what they haue desired what they haue thought in which any spot of synne may be found and if they fynd any such especially any thing that may seeme a mortall synne let them not delay the remedy of true contrition with firme purpose at the first opportunity to come to the Sacrament of pennance wherefore let them aske of God the gift of true compunction and sorrow let them call to mynde the grieuousnes of synne let them detest from their hart the fault committed let them seriously discusse who it is that doth offend whome he hath offended to wit a vile wretch Almighty God an vnprofitable seruant the Lord of heauen and earth let not their eyes cease from teares nor their hands frō knocking their brest and finally let them make a true and resolute purpose neuer more to prouoke Gods wrath nor to offend their most louing Father This examination if it be well made morning and euening or at least once in the day it can very hardly happē that any one in dying should synne or in synning dye or be preuented with giddines madnes or other like misfortunes and so being well prepared to dye neyther the vncertainty can hurt vs or we be depriued of the glorious reward of euerlasting life CHAP. V. Of the fifth precept or rule of the Art of dying well in which is detected the errour of the Rich men of this world TO that which hath been sayd we are to adioyne the refutation of a certeyne errour very vulgar amongst the rich men of this world and it much hindereth the good life and death we haue spoken of The errour consisteth in this that rich men do esteeme the goods which they possesse to be absolutely and truly their owne if they possesse them by due clayme tytle and therefore that they may lawfully wast them giue them as they list neyther may any man say vnto them why do you thus Why go yo● so braue in apparell Why do you fa●● and feast so daintely Why are you so prodigall and lauish in feeding doggs o● hawkes or in play at d●ce or cardes o● in like delighting pastimes For the will forth with answere you what 〈◊〉 that to you May I not do with my●● owne goods what I list or must I ask●● your leaue and counsaile how to bestow them This truly is a most grieuous and pernicious errour For suppose the rich
which belong vnto that tyme in which Death might seeme to be further off in this other which we haue now in hand we will lay downe those which apperteyne vn●o Death when it is present or neere at hand Death is said to be at hand or expecting v● at the gate when we are eyther worne out with old age the Apostle telling v● Quod antiquatur senescit prope interitum est That which groweth auncient waxeth old is neere vnto death or destruction Heb. 8. or else are taken with some great sicknes in the iudgement of Phisitians very dangerous whether this do befall an old man or a young a youth or a child Of this second ranke it seemes to vs the first precept to be the meditatiō of death for although Death be thought vpon and considered with neuer so great diligence or attention whiles we are in our youthfull yeares yet doth it very little moue vs because we apprehend it as farre off and therefore lesse dreadfull but when we see it so present as it may in a manner be felt with our handes then it stirreth vs vp indeed and the consideration thereof is very profitable all Artes are better attayned by practise then by teaching and those who if not more often did twice at least dye as Saint Christine Drithelmus the English man of whome I made mention in my booke De gemnitu Co●umbae of the mourning of the Doue the noble woman raysed by Saint Malachy of whome I shall speake in the 8. chapter and that Hermite whose history Climacus doth relate of whome also we in the end of this Chapter will say somewhat it is euident that they died cheerfully but for vs who are permitted to dye but once there is no better way then to meditate to thinke often of what is done or to be done in that houre First then we are to thinke that then there shal be a separation made of the soule from the body that neyther the soule is to be extinguished nor the body to fall be resolued to dust without hope of rising againe and being reunited vnto the soule for in case the soule should be annihilated and the body be subiect to eternal corruption as the Atheists do surmize then shold they seeme to haue spoken well who contemned death and sayd Edamus bibamus eras enim moriemur Let vs eate let vs drink for to morrow we shall dye which prouerbe is most ancient as we may see in the Prophet I say Cap. 22. Cap. 15. and in the first of S. Paul to the Corinthians and surely there are some euen amongst Christians who in wordes say that they do belieue but deny it by their deeds which may be proued out 〈◊〉 this principle that very many euen i● their old decrepit age neuer thinke vpon death as though that they were neuer 〈◊〉 dye or as if they thought with the death of the body the soule also did perish and resolue to nothing but whatsoeuer such men do dreame the separation of the body from the soule as it were of th● spouse from her husband is but an absenc● for a while not a perpetuall diuorce for the soule is immortall and the flesh without all doubt shall rise againe at the later day We must therefore if we be Christians and haue any wit dayly thinke of death at hand in this standeth the totall summe of all our weale that we dye well In this life the passage is not hard fro● vertue to vice and with the grace of God from vice vnto vertue for he who is now heir of the Kingdom of God may to morrow by synne fall from the inheritance o● God and become guilty of hell fire co●trarywise he who is a slaue of the Diuell may be deliuered from that bondage and be againe enrolled amongst the children ●f God and heyres of the heauenly King●ome But he who dyes the enemy of God ●nd guilty of euerl●sting fire he shall alwayes remayne the enemy of God tyed to these torments and on the other side he who dyeth the friend of God and heir of the Kingdome of heauen shall neuer fall from grace and that most excellent glory wherefore all our felici●y or infelicity dependeth vpō our good or bad death who then that hath not lost all is wit and iudgement will aduenture to depart out of this life vntill withall diligence he hath learned and prepared also himselfe to dye well Another consideratiō that most profitable touching death may be to conceaue well that although death be most certeyn the prophet worthily demaunding VVho is the man that liueth and shall not see death Psal 88. with whome Saint Paul agreeth saying It is decreed for all men once to dye Heb. 9. Yet is there nothing more vncerteyne then the day and houre of our death which the Scripture cleerly pronounceth saying VVatch because that you do not know the day nor houre many are taken away in their infancy some arryue arryue vnto crooked old age some dy● young some at matures yeares and which is more miserable some do dy so sodēly as they haue no leasure left then to call vpo● God or to commend their soules to his mercy and these thinges doth the diui●● prouidence of God according to the treasures of his wisdome for no other cause ordeyne after this manner but to the end that none of his elected children and seruaunts should presume or be so hardy as to remayne for one moment plunged i● the durt of deadly synne and therefore whosoeuer thou be that doest reade thes● thinges if perhaps thy conscience giue testimony against thee of a deadly synne be not so bold as to stay till to morrow in it nor yet to expect till the end of this day or houre but presently with a contrite and humble hart before God detest and be sorrowfull for the same The third Consideration no lesse profitable then the former may be if in the morning before thou go out to thy daily busines at night before thou goest to bed least soden death should tak● thee at vnawares that thou diligently examin thy conscience what thou hast done the night past what the day immediately ●efore especially whether there be any ●ing that may seeme a deadly syn and if ●ou find nothing yield thanks vnto God ●e Authour of all good and it thou fynd ●●y thinge committed against God seri●usly repent thee from thy hart and at the ●rst occasiō prostrating thy selfe at the feet of the Priest confesse the same receaue willingly the pennance imposed faithfully performe it ●his method of exami●ing our selues twice in the day wonder●ully helpeth that death neuer take vs hēce ●nprouided The fourth consideration may be that which Ecclesiasticus setteth downe that In euery thinge thou doest remember the last things ●nd thou shalt neuer synne For how can he o●●end in any worke who first doth weigh ●ll his works in the ballance
of Gods iudgement as they shal be weighed at his death To which purpose we may apply that remarkeable saying of a man twice dead which Climacus in his booke entitu●ed the Ladder recoūteth for thus he saith Grad 6. Non omittā c. I wil not pretermit to recoūt the history of that Anchoret who dwelled in Choreb this man after that he had liued most negligently for a longe tyme togeather and had had no care at al of his soule taken at length with sicknes and by ●●●nes with the death when as he was p●●fectly departed after the space of an ho● the soule retourned againe to the bod● 〈◊〉 then he desired vs that were present 〈◊〉 incontinently we would all depart 〈◊〉 then stopping vp the dore of his cell wi●● stones he remained there for twelue year● neuer speaking one word to any or 〈◊〉 tasting any other thing then bread w●ter and sitting with great amazement 〈◊〉 reuolued in his mynd the thinges whi● in the tyme of his departure he had seene and that with so stedfast apprehension a● he neuer changed his countenāce but remayning alwayes astonished he shed in silence great abundance of teares but when the tyme of his departure was at ha●● breaking downe the wall and opening the dore we went in vnto him and humbly intreating him to speake somewhat for our instruction this only we heard fro● him Nemo qui reuerà mortis memoriam agn●●rit peccare vmquam poterit No man who indeed shall throughly conceaue the remembrance of death can euer synne Hitherto Climacus Now let the Reader consider ●ell and know that this is a true history ●d no fiction or fable written by one ●ho was a very holy man and he wrote 〈◊〉 otherwise then he saw with his owne ●●s heard with his eares Out of which it is easy to perceaue ●w important a thinge it is daily to me●ate vpon death alwayes to haue the s●●e present in our remembrance this mā had beene before very negligent in procuring his owne saluation but out of the great mercy of God he tasted death and risi●g againe vnto life for twelue yeares togeather he did daily thinke vpon death moreouer bewayled his synnes with con●i●uall teares and those thinges which be●e his first death he accounted light and ●iall matters hauing tasted the bitter● of death he iudged to be most grieuous ●nd such as required the penitential teares ●welue yeares to blot thē out This then ●he true commentary of these wordes of 〈◊〉 Scripture Remember the last thinges to wit ●th iudgement heauen and hell and 〈◊〉 shalt neuer synne if the remembrance 〈◊〉 one only of these foure was so auailable 〈◊〉 this Monke as that for twelue yeares pennance he redeemed the euerlasting to●ment of hellfyre and gayned the glory 〈◊〉 a neuer ending Kingdome what will 〈◊〉 perpetuall memory of al foure work in 〈◊〉 in case we wold exercise our selues theri● I would to God men would but know 〈◊〉 try this short and compendious way to 〈◊〉 great and vnspeakable a gaine CHAP. II. Of the second Precept of dying well whe● our Death is neere which is of the last day of Iudgment THE second of the foure last thinges i● Iudgment which is twofold the one particuler in which euery soule in particuler is iudged at the departure from the body the other generall which shal be of altogeather in the later day both are most horrible and dreadfull vnto the wicked delightfull and glorious vnto the good And often and attentiuely to thinke of t● one and other is most profitable for s●● as desire to atteyne a happy death No 〈◊〉 can doubt but that the particuler Iudgement of euery man alone is to be made pre●●ntly at his death when as in the Coun●ell of Florence it is declared against the he●etiks that such as depart out of this life in ●eadly sinne streight wayes to descend in●o hell fire and those who dye out of the ●tate of deadly synne but with the debt of ●emporal punishment to be caried to purgatory and finally such as after baptisme are free from synne and debt of punishment presently to ascend into heauen to receaue euerlasting felicity And it is very credible as Deuines do hold S. Tho. in 4. dist 47. Dom. Soto in 4. dist 45. the iudiciall sentence of Christ eyther to be signifyed vnto them by Angells or to be reuealed immediately vnto their soules by God himselfe and the soules of the vertuous guarded by Angells either to ascend into heauen or to descend into Purgatory but the soules of the dāned to be carryed by the Diuells and by them to be cast headlong into hell This iudgement may be dispatched in a moment because the Iudge is present who being God and man according to his diuine nature is euery where and as he is man doth know all things For most truly did Saint Peter say vnto our Sauiour Domine tu omnia nosti Ioan. 21. O Lord thou knowest all thinges the accuser which is the Diuell called in the Apocalips Accusator fratrum nostrorum the accuser of our brethren is at hand he runneth to such as are sick and ready to dye as a wolfe lion or dogg to his prey The witnes is also ready the cōscience it selfe of the soule which now separated from the body can no more be deceaued by ignorance or obliuion but throughly knoweth it selfe and incontinently seeth whether it be gratefull or hatefull vnto God and therefore nothing hindereth but that this iudgement may presently be made and put in execution this iudgement is to be called priuate if it be compared with the iudgement at the the later day which shal be publike generall before all the Angells and men of the world But heere briefly is to be yelded a reason why it is required that such shold be iudged againe who not only are iudged already but are also eyther punished in hell 〈◊〉 rewarded in heauen for this point no● one reason alone but six may b● allead●●● The first is in respect of God for in this li●● there want not many who seeing many vertuous men to be vniustly af●licted and punished by the wicked on ●he other side many wicked mē to abound with temporall wealth prosperityes do ●uspect that eyther God doth not see these ●hinges or else that he hath no care of ●hem therefore that all mankind may ●now this world to be most prudently ●uyded by God he hath determined at ●he later day before all the Angells and men to manifest his iustice and to render vnto euery man according to his deserts rewards to the good punishments to the wicked Apoc. 16. that all may be compelled to auouch and say Iustus es Domine vera iusta iudicia tua thou art iust o Lord thy Iudgements are true and iust The second reason is that Christ who before men was so vniustly iudged ●nd suffered so many grieuous and most vnworthy torments
cheerfully we do the same where the dāger is both corporall and spirituall temporall euerlasting Lastly there remayneth a consideration for these men who are so carnal sensuall that they esteeme not the losse of eternall life and that glory which surpasseth all vnderstanding these men are to be warned that in case they esteeme not the glory of heauen which they neuer saw at least they contemne not the fire brimstone and other corporall punishments which they know and which in hell are found to be most outragious truly carnall pleasure which in this life is light and momentary doth worke in the wicked aboue measure an euerlasting weight of misery And truly our Lord Sauiour Christ in the last day in few words will make this euident saying go ye accursed into euerlasting fire prepared for the Diuell his Angells But S. Iohn i● his Apocalips hath expressed more fully what māner o● torments are prepared for the Diuell and his Angells for men circumuented seduced by these Apostata spirits of the Diuell Prince of the wicked thus we reade in the Apocalips Apoc. 20. Et Diabolus c. And the Diuell who seduced them was cast into the sake of fire and brimstone where the beast the false Prophet shall be tormented day and night for euer in the next Chap. of others condemned to hell he sayth Cap. 21. to the fearfull vnbelieuing and to the execrable murtherers fornicatours and sorcerers idolaters al lyars their part shal be in the lake that burneth with fire brimstone which is the second death of which words the very first only needeth explicatiō for the other sins are manifest cleere S. Iohn calleth the fearefull those who dare not resist the tempter be he Diuell or man but presently yield and consent to the tentatation to such S. Iames sayth resistite Diabolo fugiet à vo●is resist the Diuell he will fly from you there are not a few but rather innumerable who haue not learned to fight in our Lords warfare but without all resistance receaue the wounds of the Diuell dy the first death which is deadly syn because they are fearfull also in doing pennance whiles they dare not chastise their body bring it in subiection they fall vpon the second death which is hell therfore S. Iohn put the fearefull in the first place because this timidity drawes infinit men into hell What heere will carnall men say For that all temporale moluments whatsoeuer are momentary light we haue all learned by our owne and other mens experience that the torments of hell fire are most weighty to ēdure for euer the holy Scripturs in which no falsity can be cōteyned do cleerly testify Out of which it followeth that the total summe of this Art of dying well is that which is comprized in the three ensuing propositions or which is euinced in the sillogisme following in the next and last Chapter of this booke CHAP. XVII The Summe or Abridgement of the Art of dying well AS well the comfort as the tribulation of this life is momentary and small the comfort and tribulation of the next life is for durāce euerlasting for greatnesse without measure therefore they are fooles who contemne the comfort tribulation of the next life The first proposition of this argument is cleere by experience the assumption is more cleare in the Scriptures which are penned by the holy Ghost the conclusion followeth ineuitably out of them both if thē any one will easily and soone learne this art let him not content himselfe with the reading of this or the like bookes but let him attentiuely consider not once but often not of curiosity to learne but out of sincere intention to liue and dye well what distance there is betweene momentary things and euerlasting betweene thinges of no moment and such as are of most importance most weighty and if he desire to be throughly grounded in this most profitable perspicuous truth let him call to mynde the examples of such as haue beene before vs whether by good life they came to a good end or by their il behauiour haue euerlastingly perished to case him of the labour of seking after examples I will help him to three payre of them one of Kings one of priuate men the last payre of Clergy men and all these I wil take out of the holy Scripture The first shall be of Saul and Dauid Saul whiles that he was a priuate man poore was so honest and good as that the Scripture testifyeth there was not a better then he amongst the children of Israel being made King he changed his behauiour 1. Reg. 9. in so much as there was not found a worse then he for he persecuted Dauid who was innocent euen vnto death and that for no other cause but for that he suspected that Dauid should be a King raigne after him and when he had raygned 20. yeares he was slayne in warre descended to hell Dauid a faythfull and vertuous man after a long persecution procured by Saul was declared King and for forty yeares raygned gouerned his Kingdome most prudently and iustly in which tyme he endured many tribulations at length rested in peace Now let vs compare togeather the comforts and tribulations of them both see whether of thē had better learned the art of liuing dying well Saul whils he liued had not that cleere and perfect delight which yet of all others is wont to be greatest in Kings and men of supreme authority whiles he swayed the scepter that for the great hatred wherwith he pursued Dauid therfore he tasted not in the twenty yeares of his raign the sweetnes of his crowne without the gall of enuy those yeares being expired all the pleasure of this life left him and there succeeded a perfect and euerlasting calamity and now for the space well neere of two thousand threescore ten yeares his chiefest part to wit his soule liueth in vnspeakable torments that which is more miserable these torments are to endure for euer Dauid on the other side liued 70. yeares and raigned of that number forty and although he tasted of tribulations and these neyther few nor small yet found he very frequent singular comforts out of the reuelations he had from God which he expressed in his most sweet and heauenly psalmes after his death descended not into tormēts but with the holy Fathers into repose the bosome of Abraham and after the resurrection of our Sauiour he ascended with Christ into the euerlasting Kingdome of heauen Let the Reader now iudge whether the passadge of the wicked frō their body be not most miserable although it be of Kings and Emperours and the passage of the iust most happy be it also eyther of Kings or Emperours Saul as I sayd raygned twenty yeares and now after his death for
THE ART OF DYING WELL. Deuided into tvvo Books WRITTEN By ROBERT BELLARMINE of the Society of Iesus and Cardinall Translated into English for the benefit of our Countreymen by C. E. of the same Society ●imortui qui in Domino moriuntur TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE THE L. M. M. the Translatour wisheth all true Honour and Happynes HAVING nothing of myne own worthy of your Honorable Acceptance or any way proportionable to your Merits I present you with a Strangers Labour in an English attyre which although for quantity it be one of the least for tyme the last that hath come from that learned Pen yet for generall profit it may proue the best as treating a more familiar Argument then any of his other spirituall Books haue done Nothing is more certayne nothing more vsuall then Death which hath consumed all that haue gone before vs and we whether we will or nill must tread the same path and follow them There is no exemption from this passage to which such is the swift and short course of our life we doe not so much runne as fly and yet for the most part come to it before we would yea altogeather against our will and that specially for the great horrour we conceaue thereof which for the most part is grounded on the guylt of Conscience For as the Wiseman saith Sap. 17. timida est nequitia wickednesse is full of feare and condemnes it selfe and where the soule is surcharged with synne hel fire prepared to receiue the sinner no meruayle though he feare and trēble or els for want of Fayth of the future life For such as make their soules as mortall as their bodyes and stretch their thoughts no further then to that which like beasts they see with their eyes do easily with the Philosopher esteeme of death as if it were Arist 3. Moral 6. Maximè omnium rerum horribilis of all things the most dreadfull in regard that it depriues them of their temporall Emoluments their Friends Honours Disports and all esteemed Happines so as the first for feare of what is to come these for griefe of that which is past esteeme death dreadfull Or finally this falls out for want of due consideration thereof of death I meane which to such as haue it still before their eyes as it is a bridle from sinne and spur to vertue so is it an encouragement against the poyson thereof For the sting of this snake as the Apostle sayth is synne Stimulus mortis peccatum 1. Cor. 15. which by continuall meditation thereon is taken away memento mortis tuae sayth Saint Hierome non peccabis Hier. ad Cypr. Greg. 13. Moral c. 10. remember thy death and thou shalt not sin or as Saint Gregory sayth culparum laqueos euadent such shall walke so warily as they shal not fal into the snares of the enemy or sting of death and consequently shal be free from al feare which the morall Philosopher did rightly obserue and therfore gaue this aduise to his friend Lucilius Seneca ep 30. Tu vt mortem numquam timeas semper cogita that thou mayst neuer feare death be alwayes thinking on it Which contemplation is so soueraigne and effectuall as our worthy Bishop of Canterbury S. Anselme writing to one Ansel ep 113. whome he very dearly esteemed in England who had demaunded his counsayle for spirituall direction he gaue him only this aduyse saying So liue euery day as thou doest desyre to be found at the last houre of thy life and so euery day prepare thy selfe as if to morrow thou wert to dye and to giue account vnto God by this meanes thou shalt proceed from vertue to vertue So he Which graue aduise little needs any Commentary your Vertuous Disposition as little needes my incitement I know you are not vnmyndfull heerof I know your Zeale and Constancy in Gods cause I know your Charity towards the afflicted and cannot doubt of the continual vse of prayer and vertuous actions wherwith now for many yeares you haue beene so well accustomed which so dispose you to this end as you need not feare but with desire expect this passage which will open heauen which will take you from the world and restore you to God which will loose the bands of this corruptible clogge and inuest you for euer with immortall glory and which finally frō the sight of these transitory things the meere shaddows of true pleasure will bring you to the full sight of the Blessed Trinity the maine ocean of all true delights and there as the Apostle sayth semper cum Domino erimus 1. Thess 4. we shall for euer be with our Lord. This is the happynesse of the Vetuous for euer in the next life to be with our Lord who neuer in this life would forsake him but still continued in his feare and fauour vntill the end These with triumphant security tread Death vnder their feete whiles the wicked surprized conquered by his force are made a prey to his Tyranny who is not moued at all with their teares cryes or any intreaty but no lesse scornes this their fruitlesse griefe then he doth the frayle power of the most potent Monarch of the world whome he ouerthrowes with as great facility as the poorest beggar and that without all regard of degree age strength riches or what els soeuer the earth affoards This did Clotharius King of France to name one for all acknowledge when being dangerously sicke as Saint Gregory of Towers doth recount Greg. Tu. l. 4. hist or cap. 21. he sayd vnto such as stood about him Vah quid putatis qualis est ille Rex caelestis qui sic tam magnos Reges interficit What thinke you my maysters How great is the King of heauen who in this manner doth kill so potent Kings Death is the instrument of execution which to such as prepare themselues vnto it is a sleep and quiet repose to others a most dreadfull bitternes and vexing torment a Lambe where it is subdued a lyon where it doth ouercome The good wish for it the bad abhorre it but both the one the other must of necessity vndergo it and I know not what greater folly or frenzy can be imagined then to be watchfull in light matters and to forget this to behould with attentiue affection the thinges that fly from vs and not to fee whither our selues by the swift wings of tyme are incessantly carryed to see others euery where to dye and yet to liue in such careles neglect as if euen in this life we were immortall to belieue that there is a Hell Heauen neither to feare the one or to desire the other to know that euery one shall receaue according to the workes he hath done good or euill Referet vnusquisque sayth the Apostle propria corporis prout gessit 2. Cor. 5. siue bonum siue malum Euery one shall receaue according to that he hath done
Saint Ambrose in his Epistle to the Church of Versells This vtility also doe the Fathers extoll Saint Cyprian in his sermon of fasting and Saint Basil in his oration of the same S. Chrysostome in his first homily on Genesis Saint Hierome in his Epistle to Eustochium of the keeping of virginity Saint Augustine in his first booke of Confessions the 21. chapter and the whole Church in the office of the first houre out of the hymne of Saint Ambrose doth sing carnis terat superbiam potus cibiue parcitas Let the parsimony of meat drink tame the prid of the flesh The third vtility is to worship God for God esteemeth it as honour done vn●● him when we fast for so sayth the Apostle in his Epistle to the Romans 1. Rom. 12. Obsec● vos c. I beseech you that you yield you● bodyes a liuing sacrifice holy pleasing to God your reasonable seruice for whic● in the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luc. 1. which 〈◊〉 reasonable worship and of this worshi● S. Luke speaketh when he sayth of An● the widow Shee did not depart from the Tē● seruing God day and night in fasting and prayer● and the great Councell of Nice in the fif● canon calleth the fast of Lent a cleane a●● solēne gift that is offered of the Chur● vnto God and Tertullian speaketh after t●● same manner in his booke of the resurrec●on of the flesh where he calleth stale d● meates acceptable sacrifices vnto God Saint Leo in his second sermon on the fa● of the 10. moneth sayth For the full rece● of all the fruites of the earth the sacrifice of abstinence is most worthily offered to God the bestowe● of them Last of all Saint Gregory in his 16. homily writeth that by the fast of Lent are offered vnto God the tythes and first fruites of our life The fourth vtility is satisfaction of our synnes and this first of all doe the examples of holy Scriptur demonstrate Ioan. 3. the Niniuites as Ionas writeth pacified God by fasting 1. Reg. 7. the same did the Iewes who fasting with Samuel asswaged Gods wrath and got the victory ouer their enemyes Achab a wicked King by fasting and hair-cloth in part mitigated Gods displeasure against him Iudith 4. Hester 4. the Iewes in the tyme of Iudith and Hester by no other sacrifice then by fasting weeping mourning found mercy with God this doctrine haue the ancient Fathers alwayes taught Tertullian in his book of fasting sayth As first of all the vse of meat did destroy vs so let fasting make satisfaction vnto God S. Cyprian Serm. de lapsis Orat. 1. de leiunio Hom. 1. in Genes Lib. de Elia ieiunio Com. ad 3. cap. Ionae Let vs appease the wrath offēce of God as himself warneth vs with fasting is fruitelesse and vayne by fasting do thou satisfy God S. Iohn Chrysostome God as an indulgent Father hath sound out this cure which is affected by fasting Saint Ambrose Fasting is the death of synne the destruction of vices the remedy of saluation Saint Hierome Haircloth and fasting are the armour of penitents the helpes of synners Saint Augustine Let no man fast for humane prayse Serm. 60. de tempor but let him fast to obteyne pardon 〈◊〉 his synnes Saint Leo affirmed God to be pacifyed with the sacrifice of fasting la● of all Saint Bernard Leo. serm 4. dé ieiun 7. mensis Bern. serm 66. in Cant. I sometymes do make a●stinence but my abstinence is a satisfaction for 〈◊〉 synnes not a superstition for impiety Finally the fifth vtility of fastin● is that it is meritorious and very much auaileable to obteyne benefits from God Anne the wife of Elcana being barren by f●sting obteyned a sonne for so doth Sain● Hierome in his second booke against Io●●nian interpret these wordes of the Scripture 1. Reg. 1. Porrò illa stebat non capiebat cibu● But she wept and tooke no meate Anna saith this Father inanem cibo ventrem f●lio meruit implere Anne merited to fill h● belly empty from meate with a Sonn● Sara by three dayes fasting is deliuer● from the Deuil as is recorded in the boo● of Toby Tob. 3. And there is a notable place f● the merit of fasting in the Gospell fo● thus speaketh our Sauiour Matth. 6. Tu autem cù● ieiunas c. Bu● when thou doest fast annoynt thy head and wash thy face that thou mayst not seeme to men to fast and thy Father which seeth thee in secret will repay thee Where the wordes will repay signify that he wil pay them their reward for they are opposed to those other They disfigure their faces that they may appeare vnto men to fast Amē I say vnto you they haue receaued their reward So as the hypocrites receaue the reward of their fasting to wit the prayse and applause of men and the iust also receaue their reward giuen them not by the tongues of the people but by the handes of God neyther doe there want most euident testimonyes of the ancient Saints S. Iohn the Euangelist being to write his Ghospel appointed solemne fasting that he might obteyne the grace of writing well as Saint Hierome auoucheth in the preface of his commentaries on S. Matthew and out of him Venerable Bede on the first of Saint Iohn and Tertullian insinuateth the same in his booke of fasting Fastings do merit of God euen the knowledge of mysteryes New maisters Saint Ambrose in his Epistle to the Church of Versells sayth VVho be these new maisters that will haue no merit to be in fasting S. Athanasius Whosoeuer is vexed with an vncleane spirit Ath. lib. d● ieiunio Bas or 1. de ieunio must be fully perswaded these wicked sprits tormented with fasting to leaue their hold as fearing the force thereof Saint Basil Fasting is profitable both for the eschewing the miseries of this world also for the atteyning of the things that be good S Gregory Nazianzen explicating with wha● weapons a certayne holy virgin repelle● the Diuell from her sayth that she opposed against him the remedy of fastin● and lying on the bare ground Chry. serm 1. de ieiun Saint Ioh● Chrysostome sayth Fast because thou hat● synned fast that thou mayst not sinne fa●● that thou receaue spiritual blessings fa●● that those thinges which thou hast receaued may not be lost Saint Hierome in hi● booke against Iouinian doth of set purpose dispute and proue the merit of fasting S. Augustine sayth serm 62. Fasting is eyther a remedy or 〈◊〉 reward that is eyther is procureth vs pardon o● our synnes or the reward of the Kingdome of he●uen Last of all Saint Leo By the humility of fasting we doe merit Gods assistanc● agaynst all our enemyes Ser. 1. de ieiunio 7. mensis We haue then the necessity fruit of fasting there remayneth only the manner that we also briefly shew how we
are to fast that our fasting may auayle vs to good life thereby also to dye wel Many there be that doe fast on all the dayes appointed by the Church to wit on eues on ember dayes and in Lent and there are some who also voluntatily fast in Aduent ●●reby deuoutly to prepare themselues 〈◊〉 celebrate the fast of our Sauiours natiuity some on euery friday for the memo●● of his passion and some on the saturday in the honour of the Blessed Virgin ●nd mother of God but whether they do 〈◊〉 fast as that they reape the fruites of fasting may well be doubted The first and principall fruite of fasting is mortification of the flesh that our spirit may becom more stronge and to attayne this end it is necessary that we feed on sparing and course diet and truly our mother the Church insinuateth this when she commandeth vs to eat not twice but one in the day and to eat not flesh and white meate but hearbes pease beames fish and the like this Tertullian explicateth in two words when he calleth lenten fare ser as aridas escas stale and dry meates Lib. de res Carnis ce●teinly they do not obserue this who when they do fast eate as much at one dinner as in other dayes they do at dinner and supper togeather and who in that dinner dresse so many dishes of all sortes of fish and other meates as they seeme not to prepare a dynner for mourners and penitents but a marriage supper that 〈◊〉 last for a great part of the night such 〈◊〉 so fast without question reape not 〈◊〉 fruites of fasting Neyther in like manner attayne th● this fruit who though they feed not ●daintily but much more moderately y● on the fasting dayes do no more refra●● from plaies and sportes from brawlin● wranglings from wanton songs ●cētious mirth that which is more g●●uous from synnes naughtines then ●pon other dayes which are not faste● heare what the Prophet Isaias sayth 〈◊〉 such fasters Isay 58. Behold in the day of your fast y● selfe-will is found and you call all your debters to● count behold you fast to make debates and wr●lings and wickedly strike with your fist fast no● you haue done hitherto that your cry may be he●● on high This kinde of fasting did Go● mislike in the Iewes because in the f●sting dayes which are dayes of pennan● they would follow their owne wills a● not the will of God and that they wou●● not only not forgiue their poore debtours as they desired to be forgiuen o● God but that they would not so much a● graunt them any respit in the payment againe for that the tyme which those who truly fast ought to haue bestowed on prayers vnto God they bestowed in prophane wrangling and contention last of all that not only as was requisite in fasting dayes did not attēd vnto spirituall matters but adding syn to sinne they did wickedly beate their neighbours abuse them Vertuous men must beware and auoyd these and the like offences if they desire indeed to haue their fasting gratefull vnto God and profitable vnto themselues that f●om thence they may be able to hope for a good life a pretious death There remayneth of the three workes Almes which the Angell Raphael praysed proposed vnto all to imitate CHAP. IX Of the ninth precept of the Art of dying well which is of Almesdeeds OF Almesdeeds three things briefly are to be explicated as in the former the necessity fruite and manner That there is a precept of giuing almes no man hath euer doubted of for in case we had no ●ther testimony the sentence of the 〈◊〉 iust supreame Iudge might abund●ly suffice who in the last iudgement 〈◊〉 say vnto the wicked Matt. 25. Discedite à me ●ledicti in ignem aeternum c. Depart from ye accursed into euerlasting fire whic● prepared for the Diuell and his Ange● for I was hungry and you gaue me n● eate I was thirsty and you gaue me● drinke I was a stranger and you en●teyned me not I was naked and you 〈◊〉 not cloth me I was sicke and in pris● you did not visit me And a little aft● added As long as you did it not to one of 〈◊〉 lesser ones you did it not vnto me Our of wh● we do gather that none are bound to g● almes but such as are able for our L● himselfe is not recorded to haue giue●●ny but only to haue commaunded 〈◊〉 part of the money that was giuen h●● 〈◊〉 be bestowed on the poore as may appear out of that place of the Ghospell wh●● when our Lord had sayd vnto Iudas Q● facis fac citiùs That which thou doest d● quickly the Apostles did thinke that 〈◊〉 had commaunded him out of the pu● which he did beare to giue somewha● the poore But the deuines will haue this precept 〈◊〉 conteyned in that commandement not a parentes honour thy parents others that non occides thou shalt not kill but it not necessary that this precept be con●yned in the ten commandments When 〈◊〉 almes belongeth vnto charity and the ●ommandements of both tables vnto iu●ice but if all morall precepts be to be ●educed to the ten commandements the ●pinon of Albertus the Great is probable ●ho will haue this commaundement of ●iuing almes to belonge vnto that non fu●aheris thou shalt not steale for it is a kind ●f theft not to giue that vnto the poore which we owe vnto them but more pro●able is the opinion of Saint Thomas of A●uin who assigneth it to the first commandement of the second table Honora parentes honour thy parents for by the honour of our parents in this place is not vnderstood only a reuerentiall honour or dutifull respect but also the prouision of all necessaryes for their life and sustenance which is a certeyne almes which special●y we do owe to our principall neigh●ours as Saint Hierome saith In com ad 15. Matth. of which we ●nfere that this almes is due also vnto other neighbours that are in want m●ouer for that the precept of giuing a● is not negatiue but affirmatiue bu●●mongst all the commandements of th●●cond table there is none affirmatiue 〈◊〉 only the first Honour thy parents but to ●pute more of this matter stādeth not 〈◊〉 my purpose in this place this may ●fice for the necessity of almes Now for the fruite of this v● that is most copious and abundant 〈◊〉 first is that Almes deliuer a man from e●●sting death whether this be done by w● satisfaction or by way of disposition 〈◊〉 to grace or by any other way this 〈◊〉 haue cleerly in the Scriptures Tob. 12. in Toby 〈◊〉 reade Almes doth deliuer a man from all 〈◊〉 and from death and permitteth not a soule to g● to darkenes And in the same booke the ●gell Raphael sayth in expresse wordes 〈◊〉 deliuereth from death and it is almes whic●●geth synnes and makes a man fynde mercy
Cap. omnis de Panit. remiss where expounding the fourth Chapter thus he writeth As it is lawfull for vs euer to fast or euer to pray and without intermission hauing receaued the body of our Lord ioyfully to celebrate the sonday so is it not lawfull for the Iewes to sacrifice their lambe c. And this opinion liked well Saint Thomas in the third part of his Quaest 80. art 10. theologicall Summe As touching the other point of preparation to receaue so great a Sacrament that it may be receaued to the health of our soule and not to our iudgement an● condemnation first of all is required tha● our soule be liuing with the life of grace not dead with the death of mortal sin because for this respect it is called meat giuen vnder the forme of bread for that it is not the meate of the dead but of the liuing as sayth our Sauiour in S. Iohn He that eateth this bread shall liue for euer in the same place my flesh is truly meat the Coūcell of Trent addeth further that it is not a sufficient preparation to receaue duly this celestiall food that he who is defiled with mortall synne content himselfe with cōtrition alone but that he be carefull to purge his synnes by the Sacrament of pēnance in case he can haue a Ghostly Father Againe for that this Sacrament is not only bread but also a medicine and that an excellent one and most wholsom against all the diseases of vices therefore secondly is required that a man do desire perfect health and to be cured from all the maladyes of synne and principally from ●he chiefest of them as leachery couetousnes pride That this Blessed Sacrament is a medicine Saint Ambrose cleerly auoucheth Lib. de Sac. Cap. 4. He that is wounded sayth he seeketh for a me●icine the wound we haue is because we are vnder ●ynne the medicine is the heauenly and venerable ●acrament So he and Saint Bonauenture He ●ho reputeth himselfe vnworthy let him thinke ●hat so much the more he needeth and hath necessary occasion to seeke for the Phisitian by how much more he feeleth himselfe to be sicke And Saint Bernard warneth his brethren that they attribute it to the grace and vertue of this Sacrament that they fynd their bad inclinations other infirmityes of the mynd to be diminished Lastly this most holy Sacrament is not only the food of trauellers and medicine of the sicke but is also a most learned and most louing Phisitian and therfore when he cometh to visit vs he is to be receaued with all ioy and reuerence and the howse of our soule is to be adorned with all manner of vertues and in particuler with the ornaments of faith hope Charity Deuotion Piety and with the fruites of good works as of prayer fasting and almes For these ornaments doth this sweet guest of our soule require who yet wanteth nothing of that which we ar● able to giue him againe consider that thi● Phisitian who cometh vnto vs is bot● King and God whose purity is infini● and requireth a most cleane tabernacle 〈◊〉 our brest Let vs heare Saint Iohn Chrysostome in this matter Then what should not he be more pure who enioyeth this sacrifice Serm. 66 ad pop Antioch then wh●● sunne beame ought he not to be more resplenden● who deuideth this flesh The mouth that is replenished with this spirituall fire Now let any one who is desirous to liu● and dye well make recourse to his owne soule and shutting the dore against all distractiue businesses let him consider alone with his owne hart before God who searcheth the reynes and harts of all how often and with what preparation he doth cōmunicate receaue this Sacrament of our Lords body and if he fynde that by Gods grace he doth often and with fruit receaue it and thereby in spirituall life to be nourished and by little and little to be cured from the diseases of synne and morouer that he doth more and more daily profit and proceed in vertue and good deeds let him reioyce with trembling go on to serue God in feare not with that seruile of slaues but with that sincere and chast which is of children But if he be one of those who contented with communicating once in the yeare do neuer more thinke on this most wholsome Sacrament but forget to eate this bread of life by how much more they grow fat broad in body by so much the more are their soules weakened and do wither away and let such a one know that he wāteth wit and is farre of from the Kingdome of God the yearely communicating is not decreed by the holy generall Councell for this end that none should communicat but once in the yeare but that once in the yeare they should be compelled thereunto vnlesse they would be cast out of the Church and deliuered ouer to Sathan And Such men for the most part do not receaue their Lord in the Sacrament with filiall loue but with seruile feare soone after returne to the huskes of hoggs to the pleasures of the world to temporall commodityes and ambitiously to gape after false fugitiue honours that so at the day of their death they may heare with the rich Glutton Memento fili quia recepisti bona in vita tua Remember so● that thou hast receaued good thinges 〈◊〉 this life therefore must not expect f●● any more in the next and if any be foun● who maketh oft recourse to the mistery● of this most holy Sacrament and that e●● uery Sonday or else euery day if perhap● he be Priest and yet neyther refrayneth from mortall synnes nor seriously exercyseth himselfe in good workes nor 〈◊〉 not yet truly gone out of the world but a●other men who are of the world thirste●● after riches is caryed away with carnall delights seeth and sigheth after higher degrees of honours and dignityes he truly eateth the flesh of our Lord to his iudgment and by how much the more he vnworthily frequenteth these mysteryes by so much the more neerly doth he imitate Iudas the traytour of whome our Lord sayd Melius erat eisi natus non fuisset homo ille it had been better for him if ho had neuer beene borne Let no man despayre of his saluation whiles yet he liueth and therfore let him with himselfe cal to account his yeares and workes and then he shall fynd that hitherto he hath runne much astray out of the path of saluation let him know that yet there is tyme left to returne so that he will seriously do pennance come againe into the way of ●ruth I thinke it conuenient to end this ●hapter withall that I adioyne what S. Bonauenture writeth in the life of the holy Father S. Francis I meane of the admirable deuotion and loue of this most holy man towards this diuine Sacrament that by the example of his feruour our tepidity or coldnes rather may be kindled
sonnes of Iudas the Patriarcke is ●●arply reprehēded for that whē he knew is wife he cast out the seed on the earth ●●at no child might be born for this is not ●o vse but to abuse Matrimony and if sō●●mes it happen that the vertuous parents ●re ouerburdened with multitude of their ●ssue in so much as by reason of their po●erty they cannot mainteyne them there 〈◊〉 a remedy in it selfe good and gratefull vnto God by continuall consent to sepa●ate thēselues from the bed knowledge of each other and for the tyme to come to attend vnto prayer and fasting for it it be gratefull acceptable vnto God for man and wife to continew stil euen vnto their old age in virginity after the example of the mother of God and Saint Ioseph whose example Saint Henry the Emperour and Chunegunda his Empresse Saint Edward the Confessour King and Editha his Queene Elizearius Earle and his Lady Dalphina many others did follow why shold it displease God or men that marryed folke hauing now children by mutuall consent should refraine from copulation that they may bestow what resteth their life in fasting prayer Moreouer it is a grieuous synne for any in the state of Matrimony to ●●glect his children and let them want eyther vertuous education or necessary maintenance of clothes diet and the li●● many examples there are extant of th● matter at well in sacred as prophane historyes but for that I intend to be briefe 〈◊〉 will content myselfe with one which 〈◊〉 in the first booke of Kings Thus in that place doth God himselfe speake In that 〈◊〉 I will raise vp all these thinges which I haue spoke● against the house of Heli. I will begin and I will end For I foretold him that I was to iudge his house for euer for the iniquity thereof because he knew that his children did wickedly behaue themselues he did not correct them therefore haue I s●●orne to the house of Heli that the iniquity of his houses shall not be blotted out for euer with victimes or gifts This did our Lord fortell and a little after did execute for the children of He●● were slaine in warre and Heli himselfe s●ting on his seat fell backeward brake his necke dyed miserably if then Heli who was otherwise a good man iust Iudge of the people for the synnes of his children which he had not brought vp so wel as he should haue done and when afterwards they became worse and worse he ●ad not cheked and amended them came ●ith his Children to a miserable end and 〈◊〉 the gouernment or principality ouer ●he people what shall become of them ●ho not only do not endeauour to bring vp their children well but by their own example of bad life teach them to do ill Surely they can expe●● nothing else for themselues or their children but a dreadful death vnlesse they amend be tyme and do pennance condigne to their former offences Another good of matrimony is fidelity which consisteth in this that ech of the maried couple do know that their bodyes are not their owne but that the body of the wife is the husbands and the body of the husband is the wiues and as the one cannot deny coniugall duty vnto the other so can neyther of them both yield their bodyes to be vsed by any other the signe of this fidelity is the ring giuen in the solemnity of Marriage this doctrin is cleerly deliuered by the Apostle saying Let the husband render duty to his wife shee likewise to her husband the woman hath not power ouer her but the husband 1. Cor. 7. and likewise the husband hath not power ouer his body but the woman defraude not one another vnlesse it b● mutuall consent for a tyme that you may atten● prayer This is the Apostolicall doctri●● which all Christian maried folkes m●● diligently obserue if they desire to liue dye well if there be any publike adulterers eyther the Iudges do iustly puni●● them or else the friends and kinsfolk● of the party reuenge the wronge offered by that disgrace but for secret adulterers who are many more then the open the Almighty and most iust Iudge from whome no secrets lye hid will doubteles in the end condemne them to euerlasting torments The third good or perfection of Matrimony and that most noble is the grace of the Sacrament which God powreth into the harts of the marryed couple if in the tyme of their Marriage they be duly disposed and prepared thereunto this grace besides other good which it bringeth with it is of wonderfull force to effect mutuall loue betweene both the partie notwithstanding that different iudgemēts maners diseases diuersitys of dispositions of body mind may easily sow dissensions betweene them but aboue all the ●mitation of the wedlocke or Marriage ●hat is betweene Christ and his Church maketh this corporall Marriage most ●weet and blessed of which matter thus writteth S. Paul Viridiligite vxores vestras c. Ephes 5. Husbands loue your wiues as Christ hath loued his Church and deliuered vp himselfe for it that he might sanctifye it cle●nsing it by the lauer of water in the word of life that he might present or exhibite vnto himselfe a glorious Church not hauing spot or wrinkle Which Blessed Apostle also admonisheth women saying Let women be subiect to their husbands as vnto our Lord because the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the Church But as the Church is subiect to Christ so let the women be subiect in all thinges to their husbands and in fine thus he concludeth Let euery one loue his wife as himselfe and let the wife feare or reuerence her husband This doctrine if it be so considered and practised as is requisite will make the Marriages happy both in earth heauen Let vs in briefe explicate this Apostolicall doctrine of Saint Paul first of all he exhorteth husbands to loue their wiues as Christ loued his Church Truly Christ loued his Church Amore amicitiae with a fi●endly loue as Schooles do speake and ●more concupiscentiae with the loue of desiring any thing for himself he sought the goo● of the Church the profit of the Church the saluation of the Church not any profit or pleasure of his owne And therfore they do not imitate christ who loue their wiues for their great beauty allured with the loue of her fairenes or for her dow● of many thousand crownes or for some rich and wealthy inheritance for such do not loue their wiues but themselues desiring to satiate or satisfy the concupiscence of the flesh the concupiscence of the eyes which is tearmed couetousnes So S●lomon wise in the beginning and a foole● the end loued wiues and concubines not for the loue of them but for the loue o● his owne lust desiring not to gratify a●● do them good but to fulfill his owne carnall desire with which he was so blinded as he
pure most per●ect and to continew for all eternity and ●his may suffice in this place for the foure ●ast thinges Death Iudgement Hell and Heauen CHAP. V. Of the fifth Precept of the Art of dying well when our Death is neere which is of making our last will and Testament THE consideration of Death at hand and the foure last thinges being premised it followeth that he who maks himselfe ready to go out of the world doe dispose of his house Isay 38. for so the Prophet Isay warned King Ezechias saying Dispose of thy house for thou shalt not liue from which trouble all Religious men are discharged who can say with the Apostle Ecce nos reliquimus omnia secutisu●●s te Be hold we haue left all and haue followed thee Matt. 19. of which number Saint Augustine was one of whome Possidius writeth th●● in his life He made no will or testament because the poore seruant of Christ had not whereof to make it for albeit he were a Bishop yet according to the custome of Religious men he kept nothing as his owne But this Wil is to be mad at the beginning of the sicknes in case the patiēt haue not prudently preuented it by making it whiles he was in good health they doe much hurt hinder themselues who neuer thinke on making a Will vntill their sicknes still increasing they be forced thereunto by their friendes at what tyme they eyther beginne to leese their senses or certainly cannot then dispose of their thinges with that wisdome iudgement and maturity as they had disposed them had they made their Wills whiles they were in good health First of all before the sicke men make their wills they must think of paying their debts if so be that they be charged with any then to leaue their good vnto them to whome of right and equity they shall know them to appertayne not suffer themselues to be caryed away with affectiō towards those persons whō they most loue in case this be any way repugnant to iustice In such thinges as depend on their owne free gift let them first lay before their eyes the glory of God and then the necessityes of their neighbours and if they be very rich those thinges which before they ought to haue giuen to the poore let them not now thinke to haue satisfyed their conscience if with their other synnes they confesse also this vnto the priest their ghostly Father vnles they take order that the same thinges be giuen to the poore or rather vnlesse that they themselues do presently giue them For it is a common opinion of the holy Fathers and chiefe schoole Doctours that all superfluous thinges which the rich enioy are due vnto the poore of which thing we haue writen in the former book and ninth chapter and it is not needfull heere againe to repeate what I haue there sayd but of thinges which they may dispose of at their pleasure let them conferre with vertuous discreet men which be the workes of charity that then for the tyme and place are more acceptable vnto God somewhere perhaps it will more import to buyld a Church or place for common buriall elswhere to place poore maydes in honest wedlocke elswhere to ●uyld an Hospitall to help the number of sicke persons elswhere to bestow almes on such as begge in the streets elswhere to redeeme captiues and the like and finally in such distributions there if no better rule to be obserued Lib. 3. off Cap. 48.3 p. Past adm 21. then as Saint Ambrose sayth sincere Fayth and discreet prouidence or as Saint Gregory sayth Charity with prudence or prudence conioyned with charity This in my iudgement is of speciall moment and seriously to be considered that the almes which are giuen by the liuing or else are appointed to be giuen by such as are to dye that then they be specially giuen or appointed when as he that giueth or appointeth them is gratefull vnto God for then both to the one other they are very meritorious and such bountifull almes-giuers are receaued of their good friendes into the euerlasting tabernacles according vnto Christ his promise in S. Luke for if they be giuen or appointed to be giuē by a wicked man the almes auaile nothing to euerlasting life whatsoeuer it doe in respect of other merits neyther for them are the giuers receaued into the euerlasting tabernacles wherefore the party that is guilty of mortall synne and hath made his last will and testament in that state is to aske counsaile of a discreet ghostly Father or some other of his vertuous frends that after a Confession entierly and perfectly made he confirme allow and ratify whatsoeuer he had disposed in his former will especially for the bestowing of almes on the Church or poore people after his death Hereunto last of all is to be added that he who in his last will and testament hath beene liberall vnto his neighbours that he be not vnmyndfull of his owne soule when as it may very well fall out that he go not directly after his death into heauen but first passe through the place of purging fire wherefore he shall do both prudently and religiously if he command one part of the almes to be giuen vnto Priests who may offer vp sacrifices vnto our Lord for his soule for as the Scripture testifyeth It is a holy and wholsome thought to pray for the dead 2. Mach. Cap. 12. that they may be deliuered from their syns so in the second of the Machabees out of which place Saint Augustine gathereth à fortiore that the soules of faythfull Christians departed this life are much more holpen by the sacrifyce of the body bloud of Christ in the Masse then they other were by the sacrifices of beasts in the old testament CHAP. VI. Of the sixt Precept of this Art of dying well when our Death is neere which is of the Confession of our sinnes AFTER the consideration of the former points it is necessary that a man gone in yeares or taken with a dangerous sicknes do seriously casting aside all other cares apply his mynd duly to receaue the Sacrament of Pennance for it often happens that at what tyme the Sacrament of Pennance is most necessary that then it is with lesse disposition receaued of the Penitent such as are grieuously sicke or hindered with sorrowes or weakenesse or want of iudgement or horrour of death at han● or loue of their deere frends whō vnwillingly they leaue make a very maymed and imperfect confession for being in those ●nguishes they can hardly stirre thēselues vp vnto true and sincere contrition or sorrow for their offences My selfe can be a witnesse of this difficulty which such for the most part doe fynd for when at a tyme I visited a frend a rich Gentleman who by reason of a great synne he had committed fell into a deadly disease told him that there was nothing better for him to seeke
two testimonyes which shew the order obserued betweene the two Sacraments Extreme Vnction and ●he holy Eucharist there may be produced ●wo other which shew the Blessed Sacra●ent to haue beene the last although no ●ention be made in them of extreme Vnction In the life of Saint Ambrose which Paulinus wrote there is mentioned that he at the point of death receaued this heauēly food and hauing receaued it presently departed this life and the same writeth Methaphrast of Saint Iohn Chrysostome in his life so as it is cleere that this was the last Sacrament that was giuen to the sicke in ●ncient tymes Now a day●s we first arme the sicke with the Blessed Sacrament then after some dayes the disease continuing or encreasing we anneyle them with holy oyle both customes haue their reasons for approuance the ancient Fathers did cōsider the Sacrament of Extreme Vnction to be instituted both for the recouery of perfect health and to take away synnes or the relikes that remayned of them for so speaketh Saint Iames Is there any sicke amongst you Iac. 5. Let him fetch the Priests of the Church and let them pray ouer him annoynting him with oyle in the name of our Lord and the prayer of faith shall saue the sicke and our Lord shall rayse him vp and if he be in sinns they shall be forgiuen him The ancients then hoping by this sacred Vnction the corporall health of the diseased delayed not this Sacrament vntill that tyme when in the iudgement of Phisiti●ns the disease was desperate but as soone ●s it seemed in their iudgement to be dan●erous presently they made recourse vnto ●he holy vnction which also may be gathered of that which Saint Bernard writeth in the life of Saint Malachy the same Saint being sicke came downe on his feet from his chamber which was in the top of the howse to the Church that first he might receaue the holy Vnction then the Blessed Sacrament and hauing receaued them both he returned againe on his feet without the helpe of any to his chamber bed But now a dayes when they heare any mention to be made of extreme Vnction they thinke all at an end that the sicke man cannot escape for which cause the kinsfolkes and friendes of the partyes that be sicke not to terrify them with the apprehension of present death do delay as long as they can this Sacrament There is also another reason hereof which moued the ancients first to an●eyle the sicke then to giue them their ●eauenly foode because in the Sacramēt of Extreme Vnction the synnes are forgiuen as we haue heard out of the Apostle Sain● Iames and therefore of some ancient writers Extreme Vnction is called Po●nitenti● infirmorum the pennance of the sicke and remission of synnes togeather with pennance are most worthily premised as a preparation or dispositiō to the most high diuine Sacramē● of the Eucharist which requireth the greatest p●●ity that can be gotten in this life Finally all the Sacraments are ended and as it were sealed vp with the Sacrament of the body of our Lord and so we see that such as are of rype age when they are baptized as Turkes Iewes the like are presently after their baptisme confirmed admitted to be present at the sacrifyce of the Masse and to receaue the holy Eucharist so likewise such as did publike pennance after their pennance performed at least according to the auncient custome al wayes receaued the Blessed Sacrament and they who take Orders whether the lesser or greater after they haue taken them come to the holy communion and lastly such as are marryed doe strengthen and confirme the Sacrament of Marryage with the Sacrament of the Altar now in our dayes this order is alte●ed and that not without a iust cause For oftentymes it happynes that Extreme Vn●tion that the sicke person may not be a●frighted is put of for a longe tyme and there is danger least he leese his senses or vse of ●eason or for some other cause become vnfit if not vnable to receaue the B. Sacrament and ther●fore this wholsome food is giuen before for it is better that the order of giuing these Sacraments be changed then that the sicke should be depriued of the one that also most wholsome and comfortable and Extreme Vnction may be giuen vnto the sicke albeit he be in his agony or last pangs and conflicts with death although he neyther vnderstand or feele what is done so as yet he be aliue for the dead are capable of no Sacraments and so much of the order of ministring these Sacraments to the sicke Now I come to speake of the pretious body of Christ to be fruitfully giuē to the sicke and first I will briefly explicate what the sicke man is to doe before this Sacrament be brought vnto him then what the same sicke man is to do whē the body of Christ is present lastly how he ought to behaue himself after that he hath receaued it As for the first my counsayle shol● be vnlesse his Ghostly Father should suggest some other thinge according to the present occasions more necessary that the sicke man diligently ponder these wordes of Saint Thomas O sacred banquet in whi●● Christ is receaued the remembrance of his pass●●● is recounted the soule is filled with grace a pledge is giuen vs of the glory to come First then he shal attentiuely consider the holy Eucharist to be giuen to vs trauellers which tytle by Deuines is applyed vnto all mortall men by way of food that we faint not in the way in which we trauell towards out countrey especially at that tyme in the which we being wearyed with a longe iuorney we become weake and feeble this food is called a banquet and a sacred bāquet for although it be giuē vnder the forme of bread alone yet is it an entiere great banquet a banquet not prophane but sacred not of the body but of the soule and therefore it is added In quo Christus samitur in which Christ is receaued for vnder the formes or accidents of bread is the true body of Christ not separated from his soule and diuinity and for that it is a most great most excellent and most pretious thinge a great and most sweet banquet farre exceeding the tast of all earth●y sweetnes but fit to feed and delight the ●oule not the body What the fruites or commodityes are of this food is added when it is sayd The remembrance of our ●auiour his passion is recounted the soule is filled with grace and a pledge is giuen vs of our future glory The first fruite then is the remembrance of our Sauiours passion for which cause the body bloud of our Lord are consecrated vnder the twofold formes of bread and wyne that the forme of breade may represent his body separated from the bloud and so consequently dead and the forme of wyne represent his bloud separated from the body although that
through the grace mercy of Christ who vouchsafed to dy for vs to become many wayes profitable and wholsome amiable and delightfull THE CONTENTS THE FIRST BOOKE Chap. 1. Of the first Precept which is That he who desireth to dye well doe liue well pag. 1. Chap. 2. Of the second Precept of dying well which is to dye first to the world pag 5. Chap. 3. Of the third Precept of the Art of dying well which is of the three Theologicall Vertues p. 17. Chap. 4. Of the fourth precept of the Art of dying well which conteyneth three Euangelicall documents 26. Chap. 5. Of the fifth precept in which is detected the errour of the Rich mē of this world pag. 39. Chap. 6. Of the sixth precept of the Art of dying well in which are explicated three Morall Vertues 47. Cap. 7. Of the 7. precept which is of Prayer 57. Cap. 8. Of the eight precept which is of fasting 71. Cap. 9. Of the 9. precept which is of almesdeeds 72. Chap. 10. Of the tenth precept of dying well which is of the Sacrament of Baptisme pag. 97. Ca. 11. Of the 11. precept of Cōfirmation 107. Chap. 12. Of the twelfth precept which is of the Eucharist or Sacrament of the Altar pag. 113. Cap. 13. Of the 13. precept of Pennance 122. Chap. 14. Of 14. Precept of Order pag. 132. Chap. 15. Of the 15. Precept which is of Matrimony pag. 142. Chap. 16. Of the 16. precept which is of Extreme Vnction pag. 154. THE SECOND BOOKE Chap. 1. The first Precept of dying well when our death is neere at hād which is meditatiō of death 181. Chap. 2. Of the 2. Precept is of Iudgment 199. Cap. 3. Of the third precept which is of Hel. 204 Chap. 4. Of the fourth precept which is of the glory of the Saints pag. 213. Chap. 5. Of the 5. precept when our Death is neere which is of making our last will testament pa. 223 Cap. 6. Of the 6. precept which is of Cōfessiō 228 Cap. 7. Of the 7. precept which is of receauing th● B. Sacramēt giuē vs for our Viaticum pag. 234 Chap. 8. Of the 8. precept which is of Extrem● Vnction pag. 250 Chap. 9. Of the first Tentation of the Diuell 〈◊〉 wit of Heresy pag. 256 Cap. 10. Of the 2. tentation to Desperatiō 162 Chap. 11. Of tēptatiō to the hatred of God p. 269 Chap. 12. Of the first Remedy against the temptations of the Diuell pag. 270 Cap. 13. Of the 2. Remedy against Tēptatiōs 283. Ca. 14. Of such as dy not of an ordinary death 290 Chap. 15. Of the happy death of such as haue learned well this Art of dying well pag. 296 Chap. 16. Of the vnfortunate death of such as hau● neglected this Art of dying well pag. 304 Chap. 17. The sūme of the Art of dying well 320 THE ART HOW TO DYE WELL. THE FIRST BOOKE CHAP. I. Of the first Precept of this Art of Dying well which is That he who desyreth to dye well do liue well I Begin now to treat of the precepts or rules of this Art which I will deuide into two parts In the first we wil set downe rules which men should obserue whiles they are in good health In the second others which shall be necessary when they are dangerously sicke and by all probability in danger to dye soone In the first part we shall deliuer the precepts which appertayne vnto the vertues then those which appertayne vnto the Sacraments For by these two wayes we are most of al holpē both to liue and to dye well But before both these this generall rule is to be premised to wit that he liu● well that desires to dye well for since that death is the end of our life certainly euery one who liueth vertuously vntil the end doth dye well and he cannot dye ill who neuer liued ill As on the other side he who hath alwayes liued ill doth so dye and he cannot but dye ill who neuer liued well and so it fareth in all other like things For euery one who keepeth on the right way to the place where he goeth arryueth without any missing or going out of the way but he who mistaketh the right way shal neuer come to the end he would he who studyeth diligently to attayne learning wil soone become learned doctor also in that he professeth and he who goeth alwayes to schoole but applyeth not his mynd vnto learning doth but le●se both tyme and labour Some perhaps will alleadge the example of the good theefe who alwayes liued ill and dyed well and made a happy end But it is not so For that good theefe rather liued deuoutly and religiously and therfore dyed also so saintly For notwithstanding that he spent the greatest part of his life wickedly yet he so well bestowed the other as he easily blotted out all former offences attayned vnto great singular merits For enflamed with charity towards God he openly defended Christ from the flaunders of the Iewes and hauing the like loue towards his neighbour he warned and checked his blaspheming companion and endeauored all he could to recall him to a better life for as yet he was in this mortall life when he said vnto his fellow neque tu times Deum qui in eadem damnatione es Et nos quidem iustè nam digna factis recipimus hic verò nihil mali gessit Neyther doest thou feare God who art in the same condemnation and we indeed iustly for we receaue according to our deserts but this mā what hath he done amisse Neyther was the same theefe as yet departed this life whē he spake those noble words in which he confessed Christ Luc. 23. and inplored his help Domine memento mei cùm veneris in regnum tuum O Lord remember me when thou shalt come into thy Kingdome and therefore this good theefe seemeth to be one of those who came last into the vinyard receaued his reward before the first Matth. 20. True then generall is this principle he who liueth well doth dye well And this other in like manner he who liueth ill doth dye ill Neyther can it be denyed that it is a very dangerous matter to delay the change of our life frō vice to vertue vntill the last cast and those to be far happier who begin to beare the yoke of the law of God Thren 3. as Hieremy saith ab adolescentia sua from their youth and those in euery respect to be happiest of all Apoc. 14. who as the Apostle saith empti sunt ex hominibus primitiae Deo et Agno were bought from among men the first fruites vnto God and the Lambe who not only were not defiled with women but neither was there any lye found in their mouth they are without spot before the throne of God Such was Hieremy the Prophet S. Iohn Baptist aboue al the Mother of our Lord and many other Saints of both