Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n eternal_a life_n soul_n 14,602 5 5.1897 4 true
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
A12649 A short rule of good life To direct the deuout Christian in a regular and orderly course. Southwell, Robert, Saint, 1561?-1595. 1622 (1622) STC 22970; ESTC S106293 53,144 246

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

auoide the misery of an eternall death and deserue the vnspeakable happines of the life euerlasting For this cause saith Saint Iames Thinke you it all ioy my brethren when you shall fal into diuers tēptatiōs knowing that the triall of your faith worketh patience and patience hath a perfect worke that you may bee perfect intire failing in nothing Of the watchfulnesse and attention required in the care of our soule The third Consideration SEing this weighty affaire of our soules health is hemmed in and besette with so many and manifest perilles and troubles it standeth vs vpō most watch●ully to take he●d to euery thought word and d●ede tha● passeth lest through the number subtility of our enemies traines we be often intrapped for it is hard to touch pitch not to be defiled to liue in flesh a spirituall life to conuerse in the worlde without worldl●e aff●ctions Wherefore as a Legate that is to deliuer his embassage befor a great presence of Peers and Nobles hath not only regarde to his matter but also to his words voyce actions that all be sutable to the weight of his message So we hauing to worke this exploite of our soule befor the eyes of those that lay waite to take vs in any trippe ought to bee very warye euen in our least thoughts deedes for feare that we offend the presence of God and giue occasion of triumphe and vic●ory to our deadly foes And for this saieth the scripture keepe thy selfe very watchfully Secondly to attaine this diligent and attentiue care to all our actions let vs consider what men vse to doe that carry great treasure by places haunted by theeues how warily they see to their way how often they looke about them how many times they prepare thēselues some times to fight and otherwhiles to runne away Likwise how warily he walketh and how carefull he is neuer to stumble nor fall that carieth in each hande a thinne glasse of liquor verie pretious through stony and rough places And when wee haue marked these mēs carefulnes in these inferiour matters let vs remēber that much more respect is necessary in vs whose treasure is more pretious then any worldlie iewelles yet doe we carry it in earthen and fraile vessels in the middest of so many theeues as there are passions and disordered appetites in vs as there are Diuels in waire for vs and as there are stumbling stones occasions of sinne sette round about vs. To procure this attention the most effectuall helpes are these First to thinke how carefull we should be to doe all thinges wel if this presēt day were the last that euer we should liue in this worlde as peraduenture it may be and that at the end thereof we were to bee conuented before a most seuere and ●igourous iudge who according to the deserts of that daies actions should passe the sentence of life or death vpō vs. Secondly to remēber that God is in his owne substance power and true presence in euery place and seeth both our outward and inward actions more then we our selues and therfore let vs seeke in euery thing so to behaue our selues that we feare not to haue God a witnesse and behoulder of all that wee doe thinke or say and let vs aske him grace to doe nothing vnworthy his sight Thirdly we must consider the carlesnes of our life past remembring how often we haue fought against God with his owne weapons and abused the force that he hath afforded in euery part of our body and mind therefore as S. Paul Warneth as we haue exhibited our mēbers to serue vncleanes and iniquity to iniquitie So now let vs exhibite our members to serue iustice vnto sanctification Fourthly to procure this attention it is good oftentimes in the day when we are about our ordinarie actions to vse some shorte praiers or some one verse of a Psalme or any other shorte petition of Gods grace aide and assistance for these short prayers are fewell of deuotion causes of attention foode of the soule preparations against temptations and assured helpes to attaine anie vertues therefore it is good to vse them in lieu of sighes in the beginning of euerie chiefe action directing therin our intention and action to Gods glory and seruice and our good Of the necessity of perseuerāce in continuing watchfull ouer our selues The last consideration FIrst seeing the sūme and complemēt of al ver●ue consisteth in the cōtinuance and progresse in it perseuerance of all other things is most necessary in this busines to the better a●taining wherof these considerations may preuaile First to consider by whose instinct and motion I beganne to take speciall care of my soule and I shall find that being a thing contrary to the inclination of flesh bloud and aboue the reach of nature to resolue vpon so painfull and wary a course in hope of a reward and ioy that faith doth promise that I say God onely and no other was the author and mouer of my heart vnto it and therfore vnlesse I meane directly to resist God and run a contrary course to that which he prescribeth I must resolue my selfe to perseuer to the end in that which I haue happely begunne Secondly the ende of this enterprise was to serue God to bewaile my former sinns and to worke by Gods helpe the sal●a●ion of mine owne soule and when I resolued vpon these meanes I was in a state free from passion and as w●ll able to choose thinge● conuenient a● I could be any other time wholy bent to do that thing which was for my greatest good Wherfore seing I can neuer ayme at a better end nor be in better plighte to make a sounder ch●●●e my surest way is to perseuer stil● in my resolution to the end neuer altering my designemēt vnlesse it be ●o a better and further my course Thirdly I must cōside● who he is that that would make me forsake it For if God moued me vn●o it doubtles it is the D●u●ll would remoue me from it for God cannot be c●ntrary to him selfe neither vseth he to alter our mindes but only from euil to good or frō good to better therefore vnles I meane to yeeld wittingly vnto the Diuel and to follow mine enemies counsaile vnto mine owne perdition I must perseuer vnto the end For with what pretext soeuer the Diuel seeketh to couer his motion sure it is that his drifte is to drawe me from God and goodnesse and to damne my soule for how can he intend any thing to my good that beareth me such a cancred malice that hee careth not to encrease his owne paine so that he may worke me any spiritual yea or corporal harme Fourthly I must print that saying of Christ in my mind He that perseuereth vnto the end shal be saued For not he that beginneth nor he that continueth for a moneth or a yeare or a shorte time but onely he that perseuereth to the very end of
perfection thou acquaint thy selfe with an other Booke entituled The Exercise of a Christian life or such other-like lest thou attempt to builde a great house with slender foundation and climing to the toppe of a high ladder without passing by the middle steppes at vnawares thou receiue a fall Vale. A SHORT RVLE OF GOD LIFE THE FIRST CHAPTER of the foundations of a Good life The first foundation THE first foundation of a good life is often and seriously to consider for what end and purpose I was created and what Gods designement was when he made mee of nothing and that not to haue a being only as a stone nor withall a bare kinde of life or growing as a plant or tree nor moreouer a power of sence or feeling only as a bru●t beast but a creature to his owne likenes indued with reason vnderstanding and freewil Also why he now preserueth me in this health state and calling Finally why he redemed me with his owne bloud bestowed so infinite benefites vppon me and still continueth his mercy towards me The end of man The end of my being thus made redeemed preserued and so much benefited by God is this and no other that I should in this life serue him with my whole body soule and substance and with what else soeuer is mi●e and in the next life enioy ●im for euer in heauen Rules that follow of this foundation ● Was made of nothing by God and receiued body and soule from him and therfore am I only his not mine owne neither can I so binde or giue my selfe to ●●y creature but that I ought ●ore to serue loue and obey God then any creature in this world Secondly I committe a ●●●de of theft and do God g●eat wrong so often as I ●●ploy any part of my body 〈◊〉 soule to any other ende thē to his seruice for which only I was created Thirdly for this do I liue and for no other ende but for this doe all creatures serue me and when I turne the least thing whereof God hath giuen me the vse or possessing to any other ende then the seruice of God doe God wrong and abuse his creatures The second foundation Seeing I was made to serue God in this life and to enioye him in the next the seruice of God and the saluation of mine owne soule is the most weighty and important busines and the most necessary matter wherin I must employ my bodie minde time and labour and all other affaires are so farre foorth to be esteemed of me waighty or light as they more or lesse tend to the furtherance of this principall most earnest busines For what auaileth it a man to gaine the whole world and loose his owne soule Rules that follow of this foundation FIrst what diligence labour or cost I would emploie in any other temporall matter of credit liuing or life all that I am bound to employ in the seruice of God and the saluation of my soule and so much more as the weight or worth of my soule passeth al other things Secondly I ought to think the seruice of God and saluation of my soule my principall busines in this world and to make it my ordinary study and chiefe occupation and day and night to keepe my minde so fixed vpon it that in euery actiō I stil haue it before mine eies as the onely marke I shoote at the third foundation I Cannot serue God in this world nor go about to enioye him in the next but that Gods enemies and mine will repine and seeke-to hinder me which enemies are three the Worlde the Flesh and the Deuill Wherefore I must resolue my selfe and sett it downe as a thing vndouted that my whole life must be a continuall combate with these aduersaries whom I must assuredly perswade my selfe to lie hourely in waite for me to seeke their aduantage And that their malice is so vnplacable and their hatred against me so rooted in thē that I must neuer looke to haue one hower secure from their assaultes but that they will ●rom time to time so long as there is breath in my body still labour to make me forsake and offend God alure me to their seruice and drawe me to my damnation Rules following of this foundation I Must prepare my body and mind to all patience and thinke it no newes to be tempted but a point annexed necessarily to my profession and therfore neuer must I be wearied with the difficultie considering the malice and wickednesse of mine aduersaries and my professed enmitie with thē Secondly I must alway stand vpon my guarde and be very watchfull in euery action seeing that whatsoeuer I doe they wil seeke to peruert it and make it offensiue to God euen my very best indeuours Thirdly I must neuer looke to befree from some trouble or other but knowing my life to be a perpetuall warfare I must rather comefort my s●lfe with hope of a glorious crowne for my victories then of any long or assured peace with mine enemies The fourth foundation The thing which these enemies endeuour for to drawe me vnto is sinne and offence of God which is so odious hatefull and abhominable that God doth more detest and dislike it then he did the cruell vsage the woundes the tormentes and the death it selfe that for vs he suffered of the Iewes and it maketh our soules more vgly then the plague leprosy or any other moste filthy disease doth the body Rules following this foundation SO carefull as I woulde bee not to wounde torment or murther Christ so carefull must I bee not to commit any mortall sinne against him yea and much more seeing that he hate●h sinne more then death hauing voluntarily suffered the one and yet neuer committed the other Secondly when I am tēpted with any sinne let me examine my selfe whether I would buy the fulfilling of mine appetite with being a leaper or full of the plague or with death presently to ensue after it if not then much lesse ought I to buy it with the leprosie losse and death of my soule which is of far more worth then my body The fift foundation Being Gods creature made to serue him in this life my body soule and goods and all things any way appertaining vnto me are but lent or onely let me for this end and I am only as bailiffe tenaunt or officer to demaine or goue●ne these thinges to his best seruice and therfore when the time of my stewardship is expired I shall be summoned by Death to appeare before my Land-lorde who with most rigorous iustice will demaunde account of euery thing and creature of his that hath beene to my vse yea of all that I haue receiued promised omitted committed lost and robbed and as I can then discharge this account so shall I be either crowned in eternall ioy or condemned to perpetuall damnation Rules following of this foundation FIrst I must vse all thinges in this life as an other bodies goods for which I
but the barke rhine of a man and our equality vppon the soule which is mans maine substaunce thinke it I pray you no dishonour to your person if with all humilitie I offer my aduise vnto you One man can not be perfect in all faculties neither is it a disgrace to the Goldsmith if hee be ignoraunt of the Millers trade Many are deepe Lawyers and yet shallowe Diuines many very deliuer in feates of the bodie and curious in externall complements yet little experimented in matters of their soule and farre to seek in religious actions I haue studied and practised these many yeeres spiritual phisick acquainting my selfe with the beating temper of euery pulse and traueling in the scrutiny of the maladies and medicines incident vnto soules If therfore I profer you the fruits of my long studies and make you a present of my profession I hope you will constre it rather as a duetifull part than anie point of presumption He may be a father to the soule that is a sonne to the body and requite the benefit of his temporall life by reuiuing his parent from a spirituall death And to this effect said Christ these words My mother and brethren are they that doe the wil of my father which is in heauen Vpon which place S. Iohn Climacus shewing to what kindred a Christian ought chiefly to rely draweth this discou●se Let him be thy father that both can and will lay his labour to disburden thee of thy packe of sinnes Let holy compūction be thy mother to depure thee from thy ordure and filth Let him be thy brother that will be both thy partner and compeditor to passe and perfite thy race towardes heauen Take the memory of death for thy perpetual phere and vnseparable spouse Let thy childrē bee bitter sighs of a sorrowfull heart and possesse thy body as thy bondman Fasten thy friendshippe with the Angelicall powers with which if thou closest in familiar affiaunce they will be patrones vnto thee in thy finall passage This saieth he is the generation and kindred of those that seeke God Such a father as this Saint speaketh of may you haue of your owne sonn to enter you farther in the fore recited affinity Of which happily it was a significāt presage aboding the future euent that euen from my infancy you were wont in merriment to call me father R. which is the customary stile now allotted to my present estate Now therfore to ioine issue and to come to the principal drift of my discourse most humbly and earnestly I am to beseech you that both in respect of the honour of God your duety to his church the comfort of your children and the redresse of your owne soule you would seriously cōsider the tearmes you stand in and weigh your selfe in a Christian ballance taking for your counterpose the iudgements of GOD. Take heede in time that the woord Thecel writtē of old against Baltazar interpreted by Daniel Dan. 5. be not verified in you whose expositiō was You haue been poised in the scale found of too light weight Remember that you are in the waining and the date of your pilgrimage is wel neer expired now it behooueth you to look towards your countrey Your force languisheth your senses impaire and your bodie droupeth and on euerie side the ruinous cottage of your faint and feeble flesh threatneth fal And hauing so many herbingers of death to premonish your end how cā you but prepare forso dreadful a strāger The young may die quickely but the old can not liue long The yoūg mās life by casualty may be abri●ged but the old mans by no phisicke can be long adiourned therfore if g●een yeares sometimes must think of the graue the thoughtes of sere age should continually dwel in the same The prerogatiue of infancie is innocēcy of childhood reuerence of manhood maturitie of age wisdom And seeing that the cheife properties of wisdome are to be mindfull of things passed careful of thinges present prouident of thinges to come vse now the priuiledg of natures talēt to the benefitte of your soule and procure hereafter to be wise in well doing and wa●chsull in foresight of future harmes To serue the world you are now vnable and though you were able you haue litle cause to be willing seeing that it neuer gaue you but an vnhappy welcom a hurtful entertainment now doth abandon you with an vnfortunat farwel You haue long sowed in a field of flint which could bring you nothing forth but a crop of cares and affliction of spirit rewarding your labours with remorse and affording for your gaine eternall domages It is now more then a seasonable time to alter the course of so vnthriuing a husbandry and to enter into the filde of Gods Church in which sowing the seeds of repētant sorow watering them with the teares of humble contrition you may reape a more beneficiall haruest and gather the fruites of euerlasting comforte Remember I pray you that your spring is spent and your summer ouerpast you are now ariued to the fall of the leafe yea and winter colours haue alreadie stained your hoarie head Be not carelesse saieth S. Austen though our louing Lord bear long with offenders for the longer he staieth not finding amendement the sorer wil he scourge when hee comes to iudgement and his patiēce in so long expecting is onely to lend vs respite to repent not any way to enlarge vs leisure to sinne He that is tossed with variety of stormes and cannot come to his desired port maketh not much way but is much turmoiled so hee that hath passed many yeeres and purchased litle profite hath had a long beeing but a short life for life is more to bee measured by merites than by nūber of daies seeing 〈◊〉 most men by many daies doe but procure many deathes and others in a short space attaine the life of infinit ages What is the body without the soule but a cor●upt carcase what the soule without God but a sepulchre of sinne If God bee the way the life and the trueth he that goeth without him strayeth hee that liueth without him dieth and hee that is not taught by him erreth Well saieth saint Austen that God is our true and chiefest life from whom the reuolting is falling to whome the returning is rising in whom the staying is sure standing God is he from whom to depart is to die to whom to repaire is to reuiue in whom to dwel is to liue Be not you therefore of those that beginne not to l●ue vntill they bee ready to die and then after a ●oes desert come to craue of God a frends entertainment Some thinke to snatch heauen in a moment which the best scarce atteined in the mountenance of many yeeres and when they haue glutted thē selues with worldly d● lites they would iumpe from Diues his diet to Lazarus croune and from the seruice of Satan to the solace of a Saint
A SHORT RVLE OF GOOD LIFE To direct the deuout Christian in a regular and orderly course Newly set forth according to the Authors direction before his death Set me downe O Lord a law in thy way Ps. 118. I said O Lord that it is my portion and al my riches to keepe thy law Ibid. At S. Omers by IOHN HEIGHAM An. 1622. THE PREFACE TO the Reader WHen that great seruāt of God S. Benet had in most seruent and deuout prayers ●eelded vp his soule vnto God two of his religious followers as reporteth S. Gregorie being ignorant altogether of his death although in places far distant had the like vision They saw out of their godly Fathers cel●e directly towards the East a most beautifull way adorned with gorgeous Tapestry and shining with a multitude of innumerable lampes to proceed euen vnto heauen At the toppe wherof there standing a notable person in a venerable habite and demaunding of them whose way it was which they behelde they answered they knew not But he incontinently said vnto them these w●rdes Haec est via qua dilectu● Domino coelum Benedictus ascendit This is the way by the which Gods wel-beloued seruaunt Benedict went vp to heauen meaning thereby as S. Bernard noteth the holie Rule of a religious life instituted and practised by the same Saint by which not hee alone was passed as by a most readie and pleasant way to heauen but whosoeuer of his followers would trauell by the same should with like securitie arriue to the end of a most happie iourney The Author of this little Booke gentle Reader I nothing doubt but is verie well knowne vnto thee as also for his learning pietie zeale charitie fortitude other rare and singular qualities but ●speciallie for his pretious death he is renowned in the world abroad neither needeth there any extraordinarie vision but the sound and certaine Doctrine of the Catholike Church is sufficient to perswade that he is a most glorious Saint in heauen hee being such an one as hath confessed a good confession before many w●tnesses and made as Saint Iohn saith his garments white with the blood of the immacula●e Lambe But because thou shouldest not be ignorant of the way by which this valiant Champion of Christ arriued vnto so happie a Countrey he himselfe hath left behinde him for thy benefite and euen amongst the least of his fruitfull labours for the good of soules had designed to publish vnto the world the description of this most gainefull voyage to heauen be-decked with the most pre●ious ornaments of all Christian vertues and with the most pleasant and comfortable brightnesse of notable rules of spirituall life euery one of which may be as it were a Lanterne vnto thy feete and a continuall Light vnto thy steppes This therefore doe I nowe deuout Reader present vnto thy sight affirming vnto thee that which thou thy selfe wilt not denie as being both true and manifest that Haec est via qua dilectus Domino N. caelum intrauit This is the way by which the wel-beloued seruant of God N. went vp into heauen For in what estate soeuer he liued in this worlde hee ranne the way of Christian perfection in an ordinarie course of a secular life 〈◊〉 from his very infancie he was a spectacle to all that knewe him in the state of Religion the which he imbraced from his childehood he was a rare example of religious perfection and discipline and finally in his manie seueral and most cruell conflicts with the enemies of Christ he sheweth how stronge and vnconquered the loue of God is whose burning heate neuer so manie waters or gustes of moste mayne floudes may either quench or smother and whose power the most power-able thing of all which is Death can not ouercome Thou therefore my deare brother heholding according to the ex●ortation of this victorious triumpher see thou imitate his faith Fashion thy life and manners according to these deuoute rules which are a most perfect mirour of his godlie life in so doing thou mayest hapilie attaine thy self to the like crowne of glorie For though Martirdome be a most speciall gifte of God and he freelie bestoweth it where hee liketh neyther is it an ordinarie rewarde due vnto neuer so great merites of neuer so holie personages and it is to his excellent power a moste easie thinge subitò honestare pauperem euen from the middest of a sinnefull life to exalt vnto Martirdome yet is there a certaine disposition in those which are chosen to so high a dignitie ordinarilie required of God which is first to haue killed their passions before they be killed by persecutors first to haue beene exercised in a spirituall conflict of mortification before they be tried in the fornace of Christian confession first to haue become the towne butchers before they be deliuered to the hangmans shambles Otherwise as our Sauiour saieth Qui amat animam suam perdet eam Who so loueth his life or soule disordinately shall loose it and neuer be able to stand in that combatte wherein not flesh and bloud not pride ambition and vaine glory not malice and rancour but a mortified ●inde and a resigned heart into Gods handes obtaineth the victory Which disposition and ready preparation for this so happy a crowne was most perfectly found in this our Authour whereupon iusued that he might truely ●ay with holy I. B. Elegit suspendium anima mea mortem ossa mea Desperaui nequaquam vltra iam viuam My soule bath made choice of hanging and my bones of death I am become desperate I will now liue no longer because long before he had hanged vp his soule by perfect estranging of it from earthly affections and keeping it fixed and ioyned to God thence did it pooceed that his earthly bo●es abhorred not that death which was to be suffered for Christ. And because he had wi●hdrawne his hopes from the base desires of this life therefore did ●e contemne this life for the loue of this heauenlie life and he thought he had liued long enough when he might die to liue for euer Enioy therefore these rules deuout Reader and ioyfullie treade the pathes of this most pleasant way to heauen and if by the compendious commoditie thereof thou shalt see thy iorney toward thy euerlasting countrie to be forwarded giue glorie vnto God and vnto this his faithfull seruaunt and assiste with thy deuoute prayers those which haue beene meanes to prepare it for thee Yet doe I aduise thee of two especiall thin●es first that whereas in these Rules thoushalt sometimes reade that thou must doe this or that thou must not vnderstand that worde must as though thou wert bound to the performance of any thinge there expressed but onely that those actions doe belong vnto the exercise of perfection without anie further bond then either the lawe of God or holie church do impose Secondlie that before thou begin to practise these Rules containing in them great
But be you well assured that God is not so penu●ious of ●rendes as to hold him selfe his kingdome salable for the refuse and reuersion of their liues who haue sacrificed the principall therof to his enimies and their owne bru●ishe appetites then onely ceasing ●o offend when habilitie o● offending it taken from them True it is that a theefe may be saued vpon the crosse and mercy found at the laste gaspe But well saieth S. Augustine that though it be possible yet is it scarce credible that his death should find fauour whose whole life hath earned wrath and that his repentance should be accepted that more for feare of heil and loue of him selfe then for loue of God or lothsomnes of sinn crieth for mercy Wherefore good Sir make no longer delaies but being so neere the breaking vp of your mortal house take time before extremitie to satisfie Gods Iustice. Though you suffered the bud to the blasted and the flower to fade though you permitted the fruit to perish and the leaues to drie vp yea though you let the boughes wither and the body of your tree growe to decaie yet alas keepe life in the roote for feare least the whole become fuell for hell fire For surely where soeuer the tree falleth there shall it be whether it be to south or north heauen or hell and such sap as it bringeth such fruite shal it euer beare Death hath already filed from you the better part of your naturall fores and hath left you now to the lees and remissailes of your wearish dying daies the remainder whereof as it cannot be long so doth it warne you speedilie to ransome your former losses For what is age but the calendes of death what importeth your present weaknes but an earnest of your aproaching dissolution You are now impathed in your finall voiage and not far of from the stint and period of your course therfore be not dispurueied of such appartenances as are behoofull in so perplexed perillous a iorney Death in it selfe is very fearefull but much more terrible in regard of the iudgement that it sōmoneth vs vnto If you were laied on your departing bed burdened with the heauy loade of your former trespasses goared with the sting and pricke of a frestred conscience If you felt the cramp of death wresting your hart stringes and ready to make the rufull diuorce betwene body soule If you lay panting for breath and suiming in a colde and fatall sweate wearied with strugling against your deadly panges O how much would you giue for an hower of repentance at what rate would you valew a daies contrition Then worldes would be worthles in respecte of a litle respitte A shorte truce would seeme more pretious then the treasures of Empires nothing would be so much esteemed as a trice of time which now by monthes yeeres is lauishly mispent O how deeply would it wound your hart when lookinge backe into your life you considered 〈◊〉 faults committed and 〈◊〉 confessed manie good workes omitted and not recouered your seruice to God promised and not performed How inconsolable were your case ●our frends being fled your senses frighted your thoughts amazed your memory decaied your whole minde agast and no part able to performe that it should but onely your guilty conscience pestred with sinne that would continually vpbraid you with most bitter accusations What would you thinke when stripped out of you mortall weede and turned both out of the seruice and how 's roome of this world you were forced to enter into vncouth and strange pathes and with vnknowen and vgly compan● to be conuented before a most seuere iudge carying in your owne conscience your inditement written and a perfit register of all your misdeeds When you should see him prepared 〈◊〉 the sētence vpon you against whō you had transgressed and the same to be your vmpier whom by so many offences you had made your enimie When not onely the diuels but euen the Angels should pleade against you and your selfe maugre your will be your sharpest appeacher What would you do in these dreadful exigents when you saw that gastly dungeon and huge gulfe of hell breaking out with most fearfull flames When you saw the weping gnashing ofteeth the rage of those hellish mōsters the horrour of the place the rigour of the paine the terrour of the company the eternity of all these punishments W●uld you thē think them wise that would delay in so weighty matters and idly play away the time allotted to preuēt these Intollerable calamities Would you then account it secure to nurse in your bosom so many s●rpēts as sinnes or to foster in your soule so manie malicious accuser as mortall faults Would you not then thinke one life too litle to doe penance for so many iniquities euery one wherof were enough to cast you into those euerlasting vnspeakeable torments Why then do you not at the least deuote that small remnant and surplusage of these your latter daies procuring to make an attonement with God and to free your conscience from such corruption as by your schisme and fall hath crept into it Those verie eyes that read this discourse and that ve●y vnderstanding that conceiueth it shal be cited and certaine wi●nesses of the rehearsed things In your owne body shall you experience those deadly agonie and in your soule shal you feelingly find those terrible feares yea and your present estate is in danger of the deepest harmes if you doe not the sooner recouer your selfe into the fold and family of Gods Church What haue you gotten by being so lōg customer to the world but false ware sutable to the shoppe of such a marchant whose trafick is toile whose welth trash and whose gaine miserie What interest haue you reaped that may equall your detrements in grace and vertew or what could you finde in a vale of teares parageable to the fauour of God with the losse whereof you were contented to buy it You cannot be now inueigled with the passions of youth which making a partiall estimate of things sette no distance betweene counterfeit and currant For they ar now worne out of force by tract of time or fallen in reproofe by triall of their follie It cannot be feare that leadeth you amisse seeing it were too vnfitting a thing that the crauant cowardice of fleshe and blood should daunte the prowesse of an intelligent person who by his wisdome cannot but discerne how much more cause there is to feare God then man and to stand in more awe of perpetuall then temporal penalties If it be an vng●oūded presūption of the mercy of God and the hope of his assistance at the last plunge the ordinary lure of the Deuell to reclaime sinners from the pursuite of vertue it is to palpable a collusiō to misleade a sound sensed man howsoeuer it preuaile with sicke affected iudgements Who would rely ete●nal affaires vpon the gliding slipperines and running
streame of our vncertain life Or who but one of distempered wits would offer fraud to the discipherer of al thoughts with whome dissemble wee may to our cost but to deceiue him it is impossible Shal we esteeme it cunning to robbe the time from him and bestow it on his enemies who keepeth tale of the least minutes of our life and wil examine in the end how each momēt hath been emploied It i● a preposterous pollicy in any wise conceit to fight against God ●ill our weapons bee blunted our forces consumed our limmes impotēt and our breath spent then when we fall for faintnes haue fought our selues almost dead to presume of his mercy the wounds both of his sacred body so often rubbed ● renued by our sinnes and euery parcel of our own so sundry and diuerse waies abused being so many whetstones and incen●iues to edg and exasperate his reuenge against vs. It were a strange peece of art and a very exorbitant course while the shippe is sound the Pilote well the Sailers strōg the gale fauou●able and the Sea calme to lie idle at rode burning so seasonable wea●her and when the shippe leaked the Pilot were sick the Ma●iners saint the stormes boisterous and the Sea a turmoile of outragious surges then to lanch foorth to hoise vp sailes to set out for a voiage into farr countries Yet such is the skill of these euening repenters who though in the soundnesse of health and in the perfit vse of reason they can not resolue to cut the gables and weigh the anckers that withhold thē from God neuerthelesse they feed them selues with a strong perswasion that when their senses a● astonied their witts distracted their vnderstanding dusked and both the body and minde racked and tormented with the throbs and gripes of a mortall sicknes then forsooth will they think of the weightiest matters become sodaine Saintes when they are scarce able behaue themselues like resonable creatures If neither the canon ciuil nor commō law allow●th that a mā perished in iudgement should make any testament or bequeste of his temporall substaunce being then presumed to be lesse then a man how can he that is amated with the inward ga●boils of an vnsetled consciēce distrained with the wringing fi●tes of his dying flesh mained in al his habilities circled in wi●h so strāge encōbrances bee thought of due discretion to dispose of his chiefest iewell which is his soule to dispatch the whole menage of all eternity and of the treasures of heauen in so stormy short a spurt No no they that wil loiter in seed time begin only to sowe when others reap They that will riot out their health and cast their accountes when they can scarcely speake They that will slumber out the day enter their iorny when the light doth faile them let them blame their owne folly if they die in debt and eternall beggars and sall headlong into the lapse of endlesse perdition Let such harken to S. Cipriās lesson Let saieth he the grieuousnesse of our sore be the measure of our sorrowe Let a deepe wounde haue deep and diligent cu●e Let no mans contrition bee lesse thē his crime Thinkest thou that our Lord can be so soone appeased whom with perfidious words thou hast denied whom lesse then thy patrimony thou hast esteemed whose temple with sacrilegious corruption thou hast defiled Thinkest thou easely to recouer his fauour whome thou hast auouched not to be thy Master We must rather most instātly intreat we must passe the day in mourning the night in watching and weeping our whole time in painfull lamēting We must fall prostrate vpon the groūd hūbling our selues in sack-cloth ashes And hauing lost the garment of Christ we should be vnvnwilling to be clothed with any other hau●ng fa●sed our stomackes with the ●iand of the Deuell wee should now desire to fast from all earthly food We should ply good workes to purge our offences wee should be liberall in almes to auoid the death of our soules that Christ may receiue that the persecutour would haue spoiled neither ought that patr●mony to be kept or fansied with which a man hath bene ensnared and vanquished Not euery short sigh will bee a sufficient satisfaction nor euery knocke a warrant to get in Many cry Lord Lord and are not accepted The foolish Virgin knocked and were not admitted Iudas had some sorow and yet died desperate Forslowe not saieth the holy Ghost to be conuerted vnto God and linger not off from day to day for sodainly will his wrath come and in the time of reueng he wil destroy thee Let no man seiourne long in sinfull securitie nor post ouer his repentance till feare enforce him vnto it Lette vs frame our premises as wee would find our conclusion endeuour to liue as we are desirous to die Shall we offer the maine crop to the Diuel set God to gleane the reproofe of his haruest Shall wee gorge the D●uil with our fairest fruits and turne God to feede on the filthy scraps of his leauings How great a foly were it when a man pineth away in a perillous lāguor to prouide gorgeous apparell to bespeak sūptuous furniture take order for the rearing of stately buildings neuer thinking of his owne recouery to let the discase take roote within him Were it not the lik vanity for a Prince to dote so farre vppon his subiect as neglecting his own regaltie to busie him selfe wholy in aduancing his seruant Thus saith S. Chrisostome do they that whē their soule hath surfeited with all kind of sinne is drenched in the depth of infinit diseases without any regard therof labour their wits in setting forth her garment and in pampering the body with all possible delights And wheras the soule should haue the soueraignitie and the body follow the sway of her direction seruile senses and lawlesse appetites doe rule her as superiours and she is made a vassall in her owne dominions What is there say●th S. Augustine in thy meanest necessaries that thou wouldest not haue good Thou wouldest haue a good house good furniture good aparel good fare good cattell and not so much but thy hose and thy sho●s thou wilt seek to haue good Onely thy life and poore soule thy principal charge of all other things the most worthy to be best thou art content should be nought ly cankering and rusting in all kind of euelles O vnspeakable blindnes Can we prefer our shoes before our soule refusing to weare an euell shoe and not careing to cary an vgly and deformed soule Alas let vs not set so litle by that which God prised so much Let vs not rate our selues at so base a peniworth being in truth of so peerles dignity If the soule be such that not all the gold treasure of the world nor any thing of lesse worth the the blood and life of almighty God was able to buy it If not all the
gathered of this that all other matters are in●rea●ed with men or some other creatures but this busines of our soule is with God him selfe who by how much he ●s nobler and worthier than any of his creatures so much more is the weight of this matter that can not be dealt with any without him and so much more diligence ought there to be imployed therein especially in this time wherein God is still ready to farther our endeuours in this behalfe where as when time is expired condemne he may for our negligence or reward vs for our carefulnes but not helpe vs any more to alter the estate of our soule be it neuer so badde or miserable Fourthly we may gather how material and important this matter is by the life of Christ and his Saintes who withdrawing thē selues from all other worldly affaires thought it worke enough to attend to this businesse of their soule and whosoeuer are now solemnized and honoured in Gods Church they are honored only in this that they haue with a glorious Conclusion happily and constantly accomplished this busines to Gods glory and their owne saluation And who so considers the intollerable torments of Martyres the extreame austerity sharpe life and penance of Confessours the painefull agonies and conflicts of Virgins the rough stormes and troubles of all Gods Saintes and doth remember withall that they vndertook them for no other respect but onely for the better bringing this businesse of their soule to an end it wil soone apeare how weighty a thinge and how pretious the saluation of the soule is which they did think not too deere bought with all the miseries sorrowes and paines that this worlde coulde afford Let vs also consider that what soeuer moued thē to such care and earnestnes in this behalfe hath no lesse place doubtlesse in vs than in thē seeing that our soule is as deere bought as much worth created to as great glory as theirs the danger of our saluation rather more than any way lesse than theirs God hath as much right in vs as in them and we as many titles of bond and duetie to serue him as they Finally we are assaulted by the same ennemies enuironned with the like hazzardes and subiect to as many yea more occasions of sinne and allurements to damnation than they Who therefore see●h not that we ar in euery respect to account the care of our soules as important and necessary to vs as euer it hath beene to any Wherefore let not the wise man glorie in his wisedome nor the strong man in his might nor the rich man in his riches saith God by his Prophet Hiere 9. But let him that glorieth glorie in this that he knoweth me for I am the only Lord that worketh mercy iudgement and iustice vpon the earth these thinges please me saith our Lord as who woulde say it is folie and vanitie to glory and reioyce in any other thinge then in the knowledge and seruice of God and procuring mercie and milde iudgement for our soule How wee ought to arme our mindes against temptations that happen when we seek earnestly to serue God The second consideration FIrst seing this businesse of our soule is of so great moment hee that earnestly goeth about the same must offer him selfe vp vnto God and bee most ready to endure constantly all the daungers cumbers and difficulties that shall happen and resolue neuer by Gods grace to be dismayed and beaten backe from his purpose by any trouble or encounter what soeuer knowing that glorious and honourable enterprises can neuer be atchiued without many contradictions Wherefore let him perswade him selfe that when he hath setled his minde seriously to follow this businesse hell it selfe and all the ennemies of God and mans soule will conspire against him the flesh to allure him to the dilightes of the senses to recall him to the vomite of his abandoned pleasures the world to intise him with pomps and vanities with ministring occasions of sinne and prouoking by euill examples yea if that will not serue by terrifying him with persecutions extortions obloquies slaunders and torments and with all kind of disgrace Finally the deuill a professed enemy of all those that take care of their soules will seek to entrappe him with a thousande traines passions and subtile temptations leauing nothing that hee thinketh may remooue a man from these endeuours tending to his saluation Secondly the case standing thus let that saying of Scripture come to our mind My sonne comming to the ●●ruice of God stand in iustice and feare and prepare thy sou●e vnto temptation Wherefore he that entereth into the way of life must remember that he is not come to a play pastime or pleasure but to a continuall rough battell and fight against most vnplacable and spightfull enemies and let him resolue him self neuer in this worlde to look for quiet and peace no not so much as for any truce for a time but arme him self for a perpetual combate and rather think of a multitude of happie victories which by Gods grace he may obtaine then of any repose or quietnesse from the rage assaultes of his ennemies Let him see and peruse the paterne of his capitains course who frō his birth to his death was in a restlesse battell persecuted in his swadling clowtes by Herod annoied the rest of his infancy by banishment wādring and neede In the flower of his age slaundered hated pursued whipped crucified and most barbarously misused In the same sort were all his Apostles and all his principall souldiers handled for whom he loueth he chastiseth and prooueth like golde in the fornace And therefore no man must think it a new thing to be tempted and troubled when hee once runneth a vertuous course contrarie to the liking of his enemies For the disciple is not aboue his master nor the seruant aboue his Lorde who as we see had the same intreaty Thirdly lest we should be agast and discouraged at the expectation and feare of so many discomfortes and the incessant malice of so spitefull ennemies let vs remember the wordes of Elizeus that more stand with vs then against vs. Against the corruption of nature we haue grace Against the diuel wee haue God who will neuer suffer vs to be tempted aboue our force Against the power of hell we haue the prayers of Saintes Against the miseries of the body the spiritual comfort of the minde which God allotteth in such measure as our necessitie requireth and if there were nothing else this were enough to make troubles welcome in this case for that therby we purchase an inestimable glory for a short and passing combate the comfort wherof nether eie hath seen nor eare heard nor heart conceiued And on the other side by the same wee auoid other intolerable and externall torments of Hel the least wherof passeth all those that can be suffered in this worlde And therfore is our chaunge most happy that by the paine of a short life