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A54916 Sweete thovghtes of Iesvs and Marie, or, Meditations for all the feasts of ovr B. Saviovr and his B. Mother togeither with Meditations for all the Sundayes of the yeare and our Sauiovrs Passion : for the vse of the daughters of Sion : diuided into tvvo partes / by Thomas Carre ... Carre, Thomas, 1599-1674. 1665 (1665) Wing P2276; ESTC R12859 274,501 793

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refuge that there I may securely liue and dye and euen be buried to this vvicked vvorld in that glorious TOMBE that so I may ioyfully rise vvith thee and to thee eternally Amen IHS REFLECTIONS IN forme of prayer vpon the particular partes of our Sauiour vpon the Crosse To his feete I Giue thee thankes my most humble Iesu for thy incomprehensible loue and the great paines which thou didst suffer in thy wounded feete casting my selfe wholy into those holes togeither with all the sinnes and delightes of my life past especially My pride vaine glorie and arrogancie My selfe will disobedience and irreuerence to thee and thy vicars My impatience anger and rancour My tatling detraction and the like to th end they may be abolished and expiated by thy pretious bloud beseeching thee by thy humilitie obedience patience and admirable silence to daigne to bestow vpon me all the same and all Such other vertues that hence forth by the assistance of thy grace in all my thoughtes words and workes I may be truly Humble reduceing my selfe to nothing vnder the feete of all creatures Obedient renounceing myne owne will vnder thee and all men Patient most willingly receiuing all aduersitie from thy holy hand Moderate in speaking interiourly and in high silence giuing eare to thy words alone And that all my life long butt especially at the terrible houre of my death my most certaine Refuge may be in those most sacred wounds of thine To his heade I Giue thee thankes my most wise Iesu for the loue and dolour of thy sacred and most holy heade which was wounded and torne with such excesse of crueltie and inhumanitie hyding my infirme heade togeither with all my senses and powers as also all my sinns and transgressions in the multitude of those sacred wounds in particular All obstinacie in sticking to myne owne prudence and iudgement as also the dissolution and abuse of my senses The neglect of thy feare and the feare and flatterie of men My indiscretion and too great want of moderation My impuritie of intention and seeking of my selfe and all other vices of the like nature to th end they may be expiated by thy most pretious bloud And I humbly beseech thee by thy wisdome feare discretion and vnspeakable simplicitie that thou wouldst voutchsafe to bestowe vpon me those vertues and all other of the like kind That hence forth by the assistance of thy grace I may in all my thoughtes words and workes be truly Wise being vnited and conioyned to thee by a disinterressed vnderstanding and will Piously fearefull keeping an inward and outward watch ouer my selfe least I might offend thée Discreete making choyce of vertue which is placed betwixt two extreámes Simple and internall dwelling onely in thee and purely seeking thee alone And that all my life long especially in the agonie of death I may find a most assured Refuge in thy wounded heade To his hart I Giue thee thankes most amiable Iesu for thy infinite loue and for the sorowes of thy sweetest hart which was run through with a lance while thy most sorowfull mother looked on deposing resigning and plunging my whole hart into that fountaine of all blesse as also all my sinnes and transgressions especially All priuate and vicious loue to created thinges of what kind soeuer and the abuse and neglect of thy sacramentes and benefits bestowed vpon me Diffidence infidelitie and errour Timerousnesse pusillanimity and despaire My carelesnesse and inconstancie in the thinges which belong to my state and calling and all vice leading thervnto to be abolished expiated in thy pretious bloud And I beseech thee by that charitie faith hope and vn speakeable constancie of thyne be pleased to grant me a share in those and such other vertues that henceforth by thy grace I may be in all my thoughts words and workes truly Feruent still breathing after thee and louing thee alone with all my strength Full of faith and hope wholy relying vpon thee as well in prosperitie as aduersitie Constant aymeing at nothing els by all my earnest endeuours but my aduancement in vertue And that all my life long but especially at the houre of my death this sacred wound may be my assured Refuge To his right hand I Giue thee thankes my most iust Iesus for the incomprehensible loue and doulour which thou didest expresse and suffer by the wound of thy most holy right hand casting my selfe wholy into it togeither with all my sinnes and transgressions especially All my iniustice to thee and thy creatures Biternesse of hart displeasure and enuie Falshood lying and hypocrisie Ingratitude to thee for all thy benefits to th end that all may be abolished and expiated in thy most pretious bloud and beseech thee by thy ineffable iustice mercy truth and gratitude to please to indue me with these and such other vertues that hence forth by thy grace I may be in all my thoughtes words and workes truly Iust giuing euery one what is due to them Mercifull wishing and doing good to all creatures Zealous of thy honour with puritie of intention conforming my selfe in all thinges to thee Gratefull rendering dayly thankes to thee and all my benefactours And that all my life longe but especially at the dreadfull houre of my death I may find and assured Refuge in these sacred wounds To his left hand I Giue thee thankes most strong Iesu for thy incomprehensible loue and for the paines of thy left hand casting my selfe wholy into it togeither with all my offences especially All my slouthfulnesse and mispending of tyme. All impuritie of body and soule All intemperance in meate drinke and clothes All couetousnesse vnlawfull desires and the like to be abolished and expiated in thy pretious bloud And beseech thee by thy ineffable power puritie temperance and pouertie to grant me those and such other vertues that hence forth by thy grace I may be in all my thoughtes words and workes truly stronge and diligent c. Chaste conseruing my senses and soule in all puritie Sober seeking onely necessaries Poore in meanes and mynde wholy relying vpon thee And that all my life long but especially at the houre of my death I may haue my certaine refuge in this wounde Amen A CONTEMPLATION or Meditation for Good friday 1. HAVING with what recollection quiet of mind and compassion you possibly can placed before your eyes three crucified demand who they are that suffer in such ignominious wise especially that one in the midst who seemes to be the capitall criminall Aske St. Iohn and he 'le tell you that it is the Sonne of God Sic Deus dilexit mundum vt filium suum vnigenitum daret St. Paule vsque ad mortem mortem autem Crucis Dauid Isaias and other Prophets foretold this truth Aske his mournfull mother Marie and if she can speake for griefe she will mournefully answere you that alas yes it is euen her deare sonne Iesus God and man S. Marie Mag. will tell you the
disinteressed loue for by that meanes the God of loue or God-loue Deus est Charitas the holy Ghost is sent into our hartes The 4. fruite of Christs Ascension The taking possession of our inheritance II. POINT CONSIDER that if he be gone and gone to his father and our Father that cōmon father of all of vs it is but to take and keepe possession of that common inheritance which being his owne by birth-right he purchaced for vs his coheires at a huge rate at the price of his owne pretious bloud for we haue heard himselfe say by S. Iohn let not your hart be troubled I goe to prepare you a place Affection O thrice happie Christians yea thrice and a thousand tymes happie I say did we duely ponder and rightly value our owne happines Christ was borne for vs he was giuen to vs he laboured thirtie three yeares in our behalfe he spent his pretious bloud vpon the purchace of his fathers and our fathers yea his owne heauenly Kingdome for vs and now for a happie conclusion of all he is gone to take possession of what he has purchaced for vs. Be not troubled then my soule but reioyce with a greater ioy then euer he is gone to prepare vs a place a permanent place a place of ineffable delight of eternall abode in the bosome of his father and our father We are not seruants but friends but children but coheirs with Christ We are not now pilgrimes we are gott home in him We are citizens with the Saintes and God's Domestikes THE IV. MEDITATION The 5. fruite of Christs Ascension The opening of Heauen Gates I. POINT CONSIDER that if Iesus be gone it is still to be a Iesus to vs still to aduance the worke of our redemption Heauen gates were shutt against man euer since Adams disobedience and he hauing first past the gates of death to breake vp the brazen gates of Hell is gone with with power to command the potentates of that Celestiall Citie to open them saying Lift vp your Gates ô you princes and be you lifted vp ô eternall gates and the Kinge of glorie shall enter in That strong and mightie Lord is at hand who returnes from battell with victorie Affection Take courage then my soule the passage is layd open according to Micheas his Prophesie He ascended laying open the way before them Le ts but follow our Capitaine and the place is ours Heauen is ours He hath shewed vs the way Howbeit we must walke as he walked in humilitie meeknesse obedience chastitie pouertie patience c. Nor must we imagine that malice can ascende with the Authour of goodnesse nor luxurie and lust with the Sonne of a Virgine nor vice finally with the God of vertues The 6. fruite of Christs Ascension He goes our Aduocate into Heauen and sends another into the Earth II. POINT CONSIDER that he is gone indeede for while they all looked on saith S. Luke a cloud has taken him from the Apostles eyes But he is gone vpon a most honorable and profitable imployment for man He 's gone to carie vp man to heauen and to send downe God into the Earth establishing as it were a good intelligence by a mutuall embasie betwixt heauen and Earth Man to God in heauen as Aduocate to plead for man and God to man in earth to teach him all truth to inculcate to him againe and againe what Christ had alreadie taught to inflame our hartes with the holy fire which Christ brought downe into the earth c. Affection Yes my soule he is gone to carie vp that man Christ to be Mediatour betwixt God and man and to pleade the cause of man at Gods Tribunal My sinnes are many and great great I say and many but my Mediatour is infinite I am able to pleade nothing but guiltie dread Lord guiltie But my Aduocate hath wounds to shew and bloud which cryes lowder then the bloud of Abel and claymes mercy as hauing payd more then my malice was able to contract As often as that bloud lookes redd from the side of that sonne who is sett at thy right hand I beseech thee that the spotts of my corruption may be washed away THE V. MEDITATION The 7. fruite of Christs Ascension The presenting of freed Captiues to his Father I. POINT CONSIDER that our most Blessed Sauiour came downe from heauen to to wage warre against the world the flesh and the Diuell and now he returnes with victorie ouer them all and bringes backe the spoyles to the Court of Heauen in tryumphe leading Captiuitie it selfe captiue that is the captiue soules deteyned in Lymbo Patrum which he wrested out of a stronge hand and offers them to his heauenly Father as the first fruites of his longe and painefull labours and part of the purchace of the pretious bloud he had plentifully spent Affection O what tongue of man or Angell is able to expresse or what hart to conceiue how gratefull this returne and tryumph was to heauen how agreable this present was in the Almighties sight and how all the heauenly Israell reioyced to see our heauenly litle Dauid returned with such victorie so ample spoyles If the Conuersion of one poore sinner my soule cause such ioy among the Angells what accesse of ioy must the securitie of so many Saintes who are to be their fellow citizens for euer cause in those heauenly hartes The 8. fruite of Christs Ascension The raysing our affections from the Earth II. POINT CONSIDER that our Blessed Sauiour is ascended to heauen from which he descended to carrie vp our hartes thither from whence they were fallen by sinne and to waine our affections from earth and make them wholye Spirituall according to that of the diuine Apostle if you be rysen with Christ seeke the thinges that are aboue where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God mynde the thinges which are aboue not the thinges which are vpon the earth Affection O Deare Iesus since as well thy descention as thy Ascension yea all the mysteries of thy blessed life and Passion turne all to our vtilitie and vse grant that we may make a right vse of them and wholie turne our hartes from earth to thee that though our bodies be imprisoned in it for a time yet in harte and affection we may alwayes liue aboue with thee that we may truly say with S. Paule our conuersation is in heauen THE VI. MEDITATION I. POINT CONSIDER finally that since Iesus our deare Lord and Master is returned to heauen as we are assured by faithfull witnesses who deliuer by the mouth of S. Iohn noe other thinge then what they saw with their eyes what they looked vpon and what their hands had handled of the WORD of life there is indeede nothinge left vs in earth worthie to lodge a Christian hart vpon He is our true life and what liuing is there without life He 's our treasure and where should our hartes be but where our treasure is He is our crucified
worke that man or Angell is capable of since we we goe to pay to God the worshippe of Latria which is properly due to himselfe alone To receiue him into the narrow cottage of our hart whom the highest heauens cannot comprehend To eate the bread of Angells the body of the son of God This is the qualitie of the blessed worke we ayme at Affection Be wise then my soule and wisely discerning what thou goest about striue to imploy thy best and euen outmost endeuours vpon the best of workes Be iust withall and proue not a slow Creditour in paying what thou owest This God thou receiuest is the Lord of life and death and both are iustly due to him He giues himselfe all wholy to thee giue thy selfe wholy backe to him Man is but a sparing exchange for a God If thy hart be alreadie farre too straight to receiue him whom the heauens cannot conteyne let not the world at least possesse any part of it and make it yet more narrow lesse capable Striue to haue the hart of an Angell since thou eatest their foode yea a God like hart indeed since the son of a God is made thy foode THE FIRST MOTIVE Gods proper worshippe II. POINT CONSIDER that as this Sacrament and Sacrifice is the onely proper worshippe due to God so haue we noe other meanes to worshippe him according to his infinite dignitie but this Sacrament and Sacrifice wherin God the Sonne a person equall to him is offered to God the Father But the desire of our hart is to serue God in the best manner we can therfor we must needs frequently desire this Sacrament and Sacrifice Affection My soule my soule le ts not complement God with fictions and Sacryfice him with a lye If the desire of thy hart be indeede to serue him in the best manner we are able and to pay him the proper worshippe due vnto him thou hast in this Blessed Sacrament mett with the meanes to performe it What thou hast not of thyne owne he lends thee of his Hauing riches enough offered thee by him that became poore to inrich thee proue not slow in paying what thou owest If without him we confesse we cannot let vs not fayle to concurre with his blessings to the performance of our dutie And make resolutions accordingly THE II. MEDITATION THE SECOND MOTIVE Loue of vnion with God I. POINT IF we be the true children of Christ we desire truly and indeede to be true Christians and truly to loue Christ But loue leades to neerenesse familiaritie and vnion with the thing beloued therfor must we desire vnion Nor is there a more neere and deare vnion then to lodge him in our harte which is done by receiuing this Blessed Sacrament we must needes then earnestly desire often to receiue this Blessed Sacrament Affection In vaine my soule doe we vsurpe the name of Father if we haue not the hart of children In vaine pretend we to be Christians if we loue not Christ And falsely doe we seeme to haue or desire his loue whose companie we flye whose familiaritie we seeke not this our owne conscience and experience assures vs is true in all we loue saue him whom we should most of all loue For hauing alwayes the meanes at hand of a most neere and deare and blesse-full and glorious vnion if by coldnesse neglect or carelessenesse we make noe vse of it what doe we but declare to the world that we haue not indeede the hartes of children we haue not the Loue of Christians w● remayne in a lukewarme condition which God hates and reiects THE THIRD MOTIVE Gratitude II. POINT CONSIDER that if we be truly gratefull for the innumerably many and great benefits which we haue continually receiued and dayly doe receiue and expect still to receiue from the hand of God we truly desire some fitt meanes to shew our gratitude nor can we find any more worthy more acceptable more effectuall then to fall vpon the Psalmists conclusion when he was in the same care I will receiue saith he the cupp of my Sauiour That is I will offerre vp Christ to his heauenly Father I must be carefull then frequently to communicate Affection Ah my soule how long shall we remayne heauie harted how long shall we putt vniust rates vpon thinges and waigh benefits in deceiptfull ballances Are we not kindly sensible enough of the smale fauours which we receiue from mē and doe we not find our selues more then sufficiently liuely in point of requitall is it God alone who made the hart that can find noe fauour with it Must toyes from the hand of man be esteemed and extolled and must innumerable benefits from the hand of God be still vnderualued fall to the ground or be receiued as duties must we steale tyme from tyme to gratifie the one and let tyme slide idlely by lent to complie with the other could we pretend the want of abilitie our excuse were currant before men though as to God there can neuer be want where the hartes desires are admitted for payment but while we haue the most easie most acceptable most effectuall meanes and yet not make vse of it make we not our ingratitude to God euident to all men THE III. MEDITATION THE FOVRTH MOTIVE Our heauenly Fathers inuitations I. POINT CONSIDER that if we haue the true harts of children we can neuer turne a deafe eare to a louing fathers inuitations especially where they come home to our owne aduantages but our heauenly father earnestly inuites vs some tymes by promises of comfort come vnto me all you that are oppressed and I will refreshe you some tymes intices by hopes of life euerlasting he that eates my flesh c. shall liue for euer And sometymes he incites by pressing necessitie vnlesse you eate the flesh of the sonne of man c. you shall not haue life in you We must needs then be carefull to communicate frequently Affection Our hartes ake we are not able to dissemble the sense of our continuall anxietie nor yet can we preuayle with our selues to haue recourse to the milde Lambe who promises solace Our life runs dayly into decay we languish and dye nor yet can we resolue to run to the foode which giues sure hopes of life euerlasting We see our necessitie and cannot find in our hartes to fixe vpon the remedie To witt we are selfe murtherers we haue not indeede hartes of children we are deafe to his inuitations and cryes and to our owne aduantages and repose Alas what a miserable senselessenes is this solace life libertie God himselfe is presented And yet wearied dying inthraled man lookes vpon that vnspeakable benefite as a thing oblidging to losse THE FIFT MOTIVE The Saintes example I. POINT CONSIDER that if our absolute aymes and desires be to liue in euerlasting ioyes with the Saintes of God in heauen it were but fitting that we should begin now in earth to honour them to reioyce them and to ioy with them but that
so shall he be called and acknowledged to be the Sonne of the highest Iesus a Sauiour and shall raigne in the house of Iacob for euer And that therfor she is blessed amongst and aboue all women Affection O greatest astonishment to the Angells that euer they yet mett with since the Heauens Creation O greatest blisse to man that euer yet befell him since his first fathers fall O blessed effects of the flight of the world of silence of solitude of frequent prayer O Marie God Angell and man expecte thy consent O pious Virgine mournefull Adam with his whole miserable posteritie banished out of Paradice suppliantly crye to thee for it Abraham Dauid and all the ancient Fathers instantly begge it In a word all the world cast at thy feete humbly sues for it If that consent be giuen a passage to heauen is layd open to vs all THE II. MEDITATION I. POINT CONSIDER yet further and diligently ponder these pretious words which flow as heauenly pearles from the mouth of an Angell which man ought humbly to imbrace relish and locke vp not proudly and profanely to controle Blessed Marie is declared full of grace nor that in an ordinarie manner as diuers other Saintes were but according to the measure which Christ sorted out for his best beloued Mother who wisely sutes his giftes and graces according to the function place and dignitie to which he pleases to call euery one The fountaine the riuer the brooke are each one full so is the Sonne the Mother and the seruant But the Sonne as the sourse and sea whence all graces flow the Mother as neerliest ioyned to and most abundantly participating of the said sea the seruant as placed at a greater distance in a measure aggreable to a seruant in fine the seruant possesses it but by partes the Mother in the whole plenitude as saith S. Hierome Affection All hayle all hayle spotlesse Virgine mother of grace and mercy sith thou art the mother of my Lord and master I feare not to salute thee with an Angell full of grace since to speake wirh S. Athanasius the holy Ghost descended into thee with all his essentiall vertues which he stands possessed of by title of his diuine principalitie and therfor thou art most iustly stiled gratia plena as being replenished with the abundance of all the graces of the holy Ghost Many many daughters haue gathered riches togeither t is true but thou hast outstripped them all and art inriched with that peculiar grace which gaue glorie to the heauens a God to the earth faith to the gentils c. Dearest Lady mother daigne to Conueye some dropes of that ouer-flowing grace of thyne vpon my weake and languishing soule II. POINT CONSIDER that if Marie be full of grace it is noe wonder sith the same Angell assures her and vs that our Lord is with her Dominus tecum Noe saith S. Bernard it is noe wonder that she is full of grace with whom our Lord is not our Lord the Sonne onely whom she clothes with humanitie but our Lord the holy Ghost of whom she conceiues and our Lord the Father who begott him whom she conceiues Nay rather should we wonder that he that dispatched the Angell to her should be arriued to her before the Angell and be found with her by the Angell Affect Our Lord is with thee dearest Lady that eternall and draynelesse sourse of all graces and so the fulnesse of grace cannot be wanting to thee Our Lord is with thee the Angell is onely the Messēger of that good newes but the God of Angells who sent him preuents him and is alreadie thy guest Our Lord is with thee I say nay with vs too by thee ô thou Mother of mercy who broughtest forth our mylde Emmanuel that is our God with vs our Iesus thy Sonne whom who-euer loues he is loued by his heauenly father who with the Sonne and the holy Ghost will come vnto him and take vp their mansion with him O excessiue happines which accreues to vs by the meanes of Blessed Marie THE III MEDITATION For the Announciation I. POINT CONSIDER further that it is noe wonder that she that is replenished with all grace and hath our Lord with her and in her should be tearmed blessed amongst and aboue all women Since others haue but that by partes which she possesses in plenitude and since he that is with others onely in a generall manner by Presence power and essence is with her in all the fulnesse of the Diuinitie corporally Whence it is that she inioyes the aduantages and is freed from the incommodities of all the states of women to witt of Virgines wiues and widdowes She hath the ioys of a mother without corruption the honour of a Virgine without sterilitie the libertie of a widdowe without solitude She is therfor deseruedly blessed among and aboue all women Affectio Le ts vs then my soule say and neuer be wearie in saying with the Angell Hayle Marie full of grace our Lord is wit thee blessed art thou amongst all women and incomparably aboue and before all women for thou art indeede the Glorie of Hierusalem the ioy of Israël the honour of thy nation race and sexe for he that is powerfull workes wonders in thee and for vs poore lost sinners by thee Ah vse thy powerfull prayers to him for vs now and in the houre of our death Amen II. POINT CONSIDER the Blessed Virgines bashfulnesse prudence and retaynednesse in speech She is saluted by an Angell hayle full of grace accompaigned with her Lord and Master blessed among all women and yet she feares euen an Angell in the shape of a man she resalutes him not and in lieu of complacence finds trouble in hearing so great commendations of her selfe and falls a considering what kind of salutation that might be She eyes her selfe as one who was dayly begging for grace and she wonders to heare herselfe declared full of grace Her companions vse to be the poorer sort of Virgines and she admires to vnderstande she is accompaigned with her Lord and Master She lookes vpon her selfe as the least of women and cannot therfor conceiue how she should be blessed amongst all women Affection Ah my soule doe we obserue this Virgine full of grace blessed amongst all women startled at the presence of an Angell while yet we poore frayle Creatures miserable sinners feare not the presence of men where we may haue experienced much danger And when she returnes noe answer but is troubled at her owne prayses euen from an Angell prudently considering what they might import shall we vainely fall in loue with the prayses which men fawningly bestow vpon vs and therby vnconsideratly fall into questions and answers and ingagements which leade we know not whither Ah saith S. Ambrose it is the part of a Vingine to quake and tremble at euery approche of a man and to feare euery word he speakes THE IV. MEDITATION For the Announciation I. POINT CONSIDER that while the
be made accordingly THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER That if the approche of the iudge proue so dreadfull what will his finall doome be If we haue not courage enough to stand to behold his dreadfull face how shall we be able to stand to heare his reuengefull sentence which is without repeale And yet truth tells vs as saith S. Paul without excepting any one that we must all stand before his Tribunal And heare that dismale curse pronounced against the wicked Begone you accursed of my father into eternall fire c. Affection Heauen and earth shall passe my soule but the word of God remaynes inuiolable and vnchangable for euer We shall all heare this dismale sentence pronounced against the sinner Begone cursed of my father but whither into euerlastaing fire O horrour of an eternally damning Doome Ah who shall be the obiect of this endlesse wroth Who shall be the accursed subiects vpon whom this reuengfull sentence shall be executed This lyes hidd in the abisse of Gods iust iudgementes But who ought to be so secure as that he should not freely bestowe all his substance to buy out his pardon Who would not abandon all pleasures to auoyd this eternitie of fire who would not imbrace all paines and pressures to purchace securitie against that day of anger Yet why art thou sadd my soule and why dost thou trouble me Our God is the God of mercy and his mercy out-speakes all his workes we are yet in the tyme of mercy He wiskes not the death of a sinner but that be should be conuerted and liue Resolution THE THIRD POINTE. But when these thinges begin to come to passe look vp and lift vp your heades because your redemption is at hand CONSIDER that as the horrour of the sentēce pronounced against the wicked is most dismale so is that which the iust shall heare most comfortable and blisfull Come you blessed of my father receiue the Kingdome prepared for you c. Then shall appeare in the face of the whole world the difference there is betwixt the iuste and vniust the sainte and the sinner Then shall the iust man with excesse of ioye lift vp his longe deiected heade and see his redemption accomplished Affection O my soule what harte is yet capable to conceiue with what transports of blisse we shall be replenished vpon the hearing of this heauenly inuitation come saith our Sauiour you blessed But of whom of my heauenly father O rauishing benediction come receiue But what nothing that is light and momentanie but exceedingly aboue measure an eternall waight of glorie Come and receiue a kingdome an heauenly kingdome prepared for you purchaced by the merites of my passion Come enter into the ioy of your lord Ah my soule should we vpon the purchace of this bestowe all our tyme all our care all our substance we should then repute it as nothinge in comparison of the ineffable happinesse which we shall then be possessed of for euer and euer THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE II. SVNDAY IN ADVENT And when Iohn Baptist in prison had heard the workes of Christ c. Matt. 11. THE FIRST POINT CONSIDER that though there was none amongst the sonns of women either greater or better or dearer to the sonne of God none more innocent more austere or none imployed in a more diuine and necessarie function to witt to forerun Christ and to preach his coming to the people none hauing lesse commerce with the world yet we find him in persecution in prison in chaynes to manifeste to all men this diuine truth that all they which desire to liue piously in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution Affection Let vs then ô my soule be so farre from lookeing strangely vpon or falling out with the persecutions temptations contradictions and crosses be they of what kind soeuer which Gods sweete and euer iust prouidence permitts euen strangely sometymes to fall vpon vs that contrariwise they may euen proue matter of ioy to vs. We are not better then S. Iohn more saintly more innocent but contrarily miserable sinners and yet behold him in persecution in prison in chaynes We ayme at a pious life and Truth assures vs this is the way because thou wast aggreable to God euen there for it was necessarie that temptation should trye thee Our designe is to raigne with Christ and to raigne with him we must suffer with him Resolution Say then be thou euer blest ô lord If we haue receiued good thinges from thy bountifull hand why shoud we not suffer euill thinges Sit nomen Domini benedictum THE 2. POINTE. CONSIDER that though they can keepe his bodie captiue in chaines yet his better parte is at libertie his mynde is still free and imployed about what he was sent for He cannot now in person preach to the people and with that he has patience but he can send his Disciples to heare Christ preach and in that he fayles not There is noe restraint noe want of commoditie of tyme or place that can hinder a right harte to goe out to seeke Christ to heare him speake to it and it to him to stay with him reioyce in him and happily in fine performe its dutie Affect My soule neuer be perplexed and troubled that thou canst not actually performe what thou truly desirest It is our heart not our body which God desires Our workes without our wills may want rewards but our true desires neuer Canst thou performe what thy obligation oblidges thee to Be ware to fayle in it Art thou hindred by the malice of men by sicknesse by obediēce by charitie Neuer murmure at it None is lesse perfecte for omitting what he cannot mend for what Gods prouidence hinders for what obedience inioynes for what charitie commands Let thy heart stand right and all will goe right in all places tymes and occasions THE II. MEDITATION For the same day Art thou he who is to come or must we expect an other THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that S. Iohns Disciples were sent to Christ to know frō him selfe by word of mouth whether he were the true Messias or not but he in lieu of words makes his workes answer the question Goe saith he and relate to Iohn what you haue heard and seene The blind see the lame walke the lepers are made cleane the deafe heare the deade ryse againe to the poore the Gospell is preached c. This silent answer is more full more forcible more satisfactorie then words could euer make it according to that if you beleeue not me beleeue my workes Affect My soule let vs striue alwayes to make our workes speake who we are and what doctrine we follow Let vs doe the workes of Christ and they will declare we are Christians without the helpe of words which alone gett litle credit Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good workes and glorifie your heauenly father saith our diuine master Let our endeuours be imployed to helpe the blind the lame
the dumme and our hearts and purses be open to our poore bretheren and such workes will preach louder to their eares and proue more effectuall to conuert their hearts then all the eloquence of wordes imaginable THE II. POINTE. CONSIDER that though Christ now a dayes doth not ordinarily worke the forsaid miracles amongst vs corporally and visibly yet doth he daylie and hourely worke greater ones spiritually and inuisibly in our soules for haue we not bene blind and followed the blind as wel in doctrine as manners and he enlightened vs haue not our peruerse willes bene lame to good and he excited vs therto haue we not bene leprous and defiled with the infection of sinne and he washed vs in the bloud of the lambe haue we not bene deafe to his diuine inspirations and he by his multiplyed graces broke through our deafenesse haue we not bene deade by mortall crymes he by his holy Sacraments raysed vs to life againe So that while we receiue not the same we fayle not of farre greater benefits Affection It s true my soule its most true that while we seeme to want exteriour miracles we dayly meete with greater and more profitable ones in our owne soule For alas is it not true that the continuall miracles of Gods mercys to our deade soules ought farre more to be valued then the greatest infirmities of our corruptible bodies which when they are at the fairest are but dust and ashes and about to proue wormes-meate Let vs then putting iuste rates vpon thinges most admire magnifie and loue those which come most home to our aduantage and make vs appeare liuely beautifull and louely in the sight of God THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE THIRD SVNDAY IN ADVENT The Iewes sent Priest and Leuites from Ierusalem into the Deserte to interrogate Iohn Luc. 1. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that true vertue is of that nature that the more it hides it selfe the more it comes to be knowne and admired S. Iohn ledd a life that litle aymed at any humane estimation His conuersation was rather with wild beasts and birds then men His habitation from his youth was a vaste vnpeopled Desert His habit rough camels haire his diet locusts Yet loe while he hardly appeares a man of this world the Preists and Leuites are almost readie to ascribe the dignitie of a God to him Affection Doe we then my soule desire to be truly greate Let vs take our ryse from our owne litlenesse nothing Let vs loue to be vnknowne and to be reputed as nothing Le ts striue to hide our selues from the eyes of the world and the eyes of God and his Angells will be vpon vs. Our lord is high yet beholds lowe things Let honour seeke vs not we honour for if we seeke it it flyes vs. if we flye it it followes vs. Or if we will needs seeke it let vs seeke it in God who honours his friends exceedingly If we will needs seeke it let vs seeke it where is true and is giuen to none vnworthy of it So seeke it my soule and greedily seeke it and feare not to offend THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER S. Iohns profounde humilitie He was sanctified in his mothers wombe Liued in the wildernesse like an Angell of heauen Had testimonie euen from the mouthe of truth it selfe that he was sent out before him as an Angell to prepare his way Was conceiued by the preists and Leuites to be the Elias nor a Prophete in theit sense nor Messias neuer the lesse he humbly confesses that he is not Christ that he is noe more in verie deede but the voyce of one crying in the Desert that in fine he is not worthy to loose the latchet of his shoe Affection O admirable humilie worthy to be looked vpon and imitated by all that loue Christ O admirable humilitie which whilst it makes S. Iohn appeare as litle or as it were lesse then nothing in his owne eyes he appeares more then a prophete nay a verie Angell in the eyes of God Angells and men O admirable humilitie which canst find out thyne owne nothing in the midst of sanctitie While multitudes of crymes which make vs indeede lesse then nothinge cannot preuayle with our proude hearts to humble them selues O my soule how desparatly are we lost since miserie it selfe cannot make vs acknowledge that we are miserable THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME THIRD SVNDAY OF ADVENT Who art thou Gospell THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDFR that S. Iohns humilitie was not so much grounded vpon the examine of himselfe and the dignitie he found in himselfe who was sanctified in his mothers wombe as by comparison to the Word the sonne of God wherof he was the voyce whose shoetye he acknowledged by the light of faith he was not worthy to loose For in that sight he truly beleeued he was nothing in the order of nature but by his gift who is because he is nothing in the order of grace and sanctitie but onely by participation with him who is sanctitie it selfe And therfor in that comparison he truly and iustly humbled himselfe and acknowledged himselfe to be lesse in substance worth and sanctitie then a droppe compared to the whole ocean Affection Let vs thus looke vpon on selues my soule and we shall not fayl to fall to nothinge that is to be truly humble Let vs learne to knowe our selues with relation to the knowing God and our selues ioyntly with Sainte Augustine and pride can finde noe groud to worke vpon He is the sole fountaine of all beeing grace and glorie We haue nothing of all this but by his free gift and without it vniuersall vanitie vniuersa vanitas omnis homo viuens What haue we which we haue not receiued And why then doe we glorie in it as though we had not receiued it Resolution Put downe therfor this truth for certaine from S. Cyprian and S. Augustine We must glorie in nothing because nothinge is ours THE SECONDE POINTE. Let euery vallie be filled and euery montaine and hill be made lowe because all flesh shall see the saluation of God CONSIDER how S. Iohn goes still on teaching vs a fitt disposition to receiue the Messias or Sauiour sent from God by preparing his way which is done by leuelling vallies and throwing downe mountaines and hills our leuelling of vallies consists in erecting our hearts from pusillanimitie and despaire by the confidence of seeing the saluation of God or God our Sauiour now neere at hand whom all flesh shall see And mountaines and hills we shall throw downe by diffidence in our owne strength which is meere weaknes by depressing of our high flowen thoughtes and falling downe into the knowledge of our nothing with our humbled lord Affection O my poore perplexed soule why art thou sadd and why dost thou afflict me It is not vpon our owne workes that we builed our hopes but vpon the infinite mercy of that Sauiour who comes by death to giue life to all men And who trusts
faithfull who are to raigne in that Kingdome to a mustardseede which is saith he the least or the least kinde of all the seedes What are we to learne hereby but that to be truly of the number of the faithfull to be fitt to raigne for euer in that celestiall Kingdome we ought to be litle and euen the least that may be in our owne esteeme and in our owne desires of being esteemed by others for knowing indeede our owne weaknesse miserie and nothing with what iustice would we haue others who know vs not to esteeme vs some thinge contrarie to our owne certaine knowledge and truth Affection Marke my soule how our humble Sauiour seemes to labour to imprint deeply into our soules that great litle vertue of humilitie which S. Paule qualifies Christs owne proper vertue virtus Christi This he doth by word and worke at all tymes and places in his birth life and death He neuer taught any other greatnesse in earth then to be litle He amongst you saith he who desires to be the greatest let him be the least Vnlesse you become like these litle ones pointing to the children you can not enter into the Kingdome of Heauen You must belike grains of mustard seed saith he here O saith S. Augustine so great a thinge it is to become litle that had not the great God of heauen taught it vs by his owne example we should neuer haue learnt it THE SECONDE POINTE. But when it is growne it is greater then all hearbes and becomes a tree CONSIDER that from the smale beginings of Christ and his fruitefull spouse the Catholike Church which appeared so abiect and contemptible in the eyes of the world that it was deamed a scandall to the Iewes a follie to the Gentils grew so great in the tract of tyme that noe woode brought out so faire a tree for its flowers for it fruite for its large branches which extend themselues all the world ouer So that as farre as the sunne spreads its light the light of the Gospell is spredd the faithfull preach and dye for Gods truth Affection Dost thou desire to be great indeede my soule begin from being the least So did thy Sauiour Christ and his Church wherof thou haste the happinesse to be a member Was there a mother to be choysen for the sonne of God The Highest looked downe vpon the litlenesse of Marie and was pleased in her Is that sonne to be lodged in earth A litle caue is prepared for his Louure Is he to subdue the world to his heauenly fathers seruice He exinanites himselfe and becomes a litle child Must this heauenly child haue Apostles to send to conuert the world He makes choyce of a litle troupe of sillie fishermen And yet by these and by this conquering litlenesse the world is vanquished Proud Philosophers fall into their netts Royall Diademes fall at their feete The ignominie of the Crosse turnes honorable and is planted ouer all the face of the earth O may these examples of prosperous litlenesse confound our pride and conuert vs. THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY So that the foules of the aire come and dwelle in it CONSIDER that as this tree sprunge frō this smale graine or mustardseede affords a place as well of repose as repaste to the smale innocent birds of the aire not to the great ones which being more earthly feede on carion and liue by rapine So doth the goodly large spredd Tree of the Catholike Church giue as well shelter as nourishement to those birds of Paradice the faithful of Christ who hauing their thoughts continually aboue affecte noe more vpon earth but a meere liuelyhoode wheras those that are great in their owne eyes and heauie harted are drouned in earth and earthly cogitations and can neuer be saciated Affection There is noe place my soule vpon this tree of the Gospell for those rauinous birds and soules of earth who can neuer be glutted with the base pleasures and grosse fare of the oynions and garlike and flesh potts in this Egipt of ours who by how much more they abound by so much more they starue while those other birds of Paradice feede deliciously and lodge securely vnder the sweete shade of the glorious tree of the Catholike Church whose fruite is sweete to their throte There those chaste turtles intertayne themselues with their belowed mates and singe one to one dilectus meus mihi ego illi my beloued is myne and I am his THE SECONDE POINTE. The Kingdome of heauen is like to a mustardseede CONSIDER that the Kingdome of heauen which by some Fathers is said to be the word of God in the holy scriptures is compared to a mustard seede and that most fitly Looke vpon a graine of mustarde slightlie and you shall neither find sauer nor taste in it so is fares also with the word of God which looked vpon curserily without due reflection makes smale impression in mans harte Marrie let that smale graine be brused and a strange firie vertue is felt which affects the braines and drawes teares from the eyes And doth not the word of God being diligently pondered blesse the hart with a strange sweetnesse aboue that of honie and the honie combe And is it not according to the Prophete vehemently burning and delightfully inflaming and drawing teares of heauenly delight from our eyes Affection Thus it happened to the two good Disciples in their way to Emaus where Iesus discoursed with them of which they said to each other did not our harts ardently burne when he Christ spoke to vs in the way and opened the scriptures to vs Thus fared it with him who hauing stript himselfe of his clothes said pointing at the bible it was this booke that robbed me And thus it will fare with vs my soule if we doe not onely reade but seriousy ponder and ruminate the word of God for it was in the meditation of it that the deuoute Dauid testified his harte was sett on fire MEDITATIONS FOR SEPTVAGESIME SVNDAY THE FIRST MEDITATION Of the great and wonderfull benefite of mans vocation to the knowledge of God THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER how the Almightie God that great Master of the familie of the whole vniuerse began earely in the morning to call workemen into his vineyard that is from all eternitie before tyme yet was being moued thervnto by noe other motiue then his owne immense goodnes and most iust will According to that of Ieremie In euerlasting charitie hane I loued thee and therfor haue I drawen thee taking compassion And S. Iohn not as though we haue loued him but because he hath loued vs and againe because he loued vs first Affection We were nothing my soule from all eternitie and in tyme so many thousands of yeares run ouer and still we lay in our nothinge There was nothinge then to moue that excesse of goodnesse to take me into consideration and call me to his seruice because I was nothinge at all Nothing
then he cries out that intrauerunt aquae vsque ad animam meam the waters of bitternesse haue entred into my very soule Affect O my soule how happie were we if we could once haue the true sense and zeale of Gods honour and haue lesse sense and feeling of our owne short and light sufferances though for our owne defaults We see what a lesson our Sauiour giues vs who is able to looke ouer all that reflects vpon himselfe and only eyes his heauenly fathers honour to witt all the waters of tribulation are not able to extinguish the liuely flame of his charitie But we my soule are selfe louers and selfe flatterers and farre too delicate and tender soldiers to liue vnder a Captaine who with a thornie helmet on his head exposeth his naked body to deadly blowes for his fathers honour Whereas wee if we can sleepe at ease in a whole skinne seeme little concerned when we heare and see our Masters name and fame vilified blasphcamed and euen torne in peeces Is this to be followers of Christ He commends his mother to S. Iohn and S. Iohn to his mother 2. Point Consider that though the waters of bitternesse and a sense of inward sorrow had possessed his hart yet did mildnesse filiall care dutie and dearenesse still raigne therein for with blubbered bloodie and dyeing eyes espying his mother and the Disciple whom he loued he said to his mother pointing at S. Iohn behold thy sonne and then to his Disciple behold thy Mother O how heauenly loue is able to liue and raigne amidst our greatest anguishes And where loue liues and raignes what anguish is able to make vs faile of our dutie Affect Obserue my soule the order and dutie of charitie Christs greatest care is his heauenly Fathers honour and consequently he feeles the greatest torment where he findes it violated and thence his first praiers are imployed for pardon for those that violate it and his first pardon is granted to the good theife that acknowledged him with a repentant hart In the next place he paies the honour which hee owes to his parents and the loue which he owes to his friends Mother behold thy sonne Disciple behold thy Mother Thus are vve taught my soule to loue God incomparably aboue all things and to seeke his glorie euen before and aboue the loue of our parents Next vve are to loue and honour those authors of our beeing and lastly to loue our friends and our neighbours as our selues c. Resolution Zeale of Gods glorie c. and loue of our parents THE XXIV MEDITATION Of the sorrovves of Iesus and Marie 1. Point COnsider and ponder well the circumstances of this sonne and this Mother and this standing and if there be anie sense of Christianitie or euen humanitie left our harts cannot misse to melt with pittie The sonne the most louely the most louing the most beautifull child that euer heauen knew the Mother the most gracefull most gratefull most louing and most beloued virgine that euer the earth produced or can produce The sonne innocencie it selfe and the Mother the most innocent Lady that euer the world beheld And that virgine Mother stands neere the Crosse to behold that sonne that man that God dying vpon that most accursed and ignominious wood in all the circumstances of greatest torment and contempt of body and soule imaginable dying I say for her for vs for those that put him to death for all mankind Affect O my soule stand astonished at this saddest spectacle that euer the amayzed heauens beheld and let the same nayles which through the innocent sonns hands peirced the dolorous mothers hart wound thine also The sonne is plentifully powring out for sinners that pure and harmelesse blood which he receiued in that mothers chast wombe without all spott of sinne and she the most innocent and louing and most beloued of all mothers stands to behold it Ah what swords of sorrow doe not pearce her tender hart Well may we conceiue she paies the panges of childbirth with huge vsurie which she felt not in his immaculate natiuitie She now indeede brings forth Iesus the most painefull waie that euer woeman experienced since the child must absolutly dye and the mother hardly escape The sunne is eclipsed the earth quakes the rockes burst in sunder 2. Point COnsideration But while hard and vngratefull and vnnaturall man wil bestow no compassion neither vpon the dying sonns blood nor vpon the dolorous mothers teares the senselesse elements may seeme to turne sensible to mans confusion and acknowledge the master who made them while he litle considers the God that redeemed him euen in the painfull and ignominious act of his redemption The sunne withdrawing its light for three howres space couers his shame the veyle of the temple burstes in peeces the very rockes rend and all the earth is in a commotion to wit saith S. Iohn Chrysostome the creatures could not indure the wrong done to their Creator Affect Ah sonns of men and may I not adde sonns of God too Christians brothers of Christ Spouses of Christ vsque quo graui corde how longe how longe will you remaine heauie harted and appeare lesse sensible then the verie rockes themselues O God vouchsafe I beseech thee in vertue of the pretious blood of thy deare sonne which so plentifully streames downe either to smite this fleshly hart of mine with thy feare and with thy loue or turne this senselesse fleshly hart of mine into a very rocke that that rodd of Moyses may draw waters out of it that these hammers may bruse and burst it a sunder Smite ô Lord smite I beseech thee this hard hart of mine with the pious and powerfull dart of thy loue that I may be sensible at least among the senselesse creatures and testifie that it is my God that 's dying Resolution I vvill continually lament the hardnes and vnsensiblenesse of myne ovvne hart as to any respects of God c. THE XXV MEDITATION My God my God vvhy hast thou forsaken me 1. Point COnsidera And well might all nature stand astonished well might the dumme elements crye out by earthquakes and prodigious signes to stupid man whose crimes had brought the God of nature the true sonne of God to such extreamitie of all kind of torments that the most lamentable and daunting voice that euer was heard vnder the sunne broke out from his mouth My God my God vvhy hast thou forsaken me To witt our eyes were witnesses of greatest exorbitancie and vniuersalitie of torments inflicted vpon him that euer creature suffered but his owne tongue alone was able to expresse his inward sense and sorrow of his soule Affection O eternall God the father of my Lord Iesus Christ dispose graciously and looke downe towards vs not vpon me but vpon the glorious face of thy Christ that coeternall sonne of thine in whom thou hast testified thou wert alwaies well pleased who cryes out to the worlds astonishment that thou hast
thee is all my confidence Thou art the drainlesse fountaine of mercies who dost not repulse but wash those stayned soules who flye to thee Behold ô my dearest refuge behold I the verie scumme of all thy creatures approche vnto thee bringing nothing along with me but the heauie loade of my sinnes lowly layd at the feete of thy pietie I humbly implore thy mercy Pardon me I beseech thee ô my surest hope and for thy names sake saue me who beleeue that noe crymes are so great and enormious that by the merites of thy most holy Passion may not be forgiuen O sweete Iesu I offer vnto thee for remission of all my sinnes that admirable charitie of thyne which made thee not disdaigne being the God of eternall Maiestie to become man and for the space of more then thirtie yeares to be molested with many labours calamities and persecutions I offer vp that heauinesse that bloudie sweate those hard exigents which afflicted thee in the garden when thou prayedst to thy heauenly Father with Knees bowed downe to the ground I offer that excessiue desire of suffering wherwith thou didst burne when thou wentest voluntarilie out to be apprehended by thyne enemies I offer thy bonds stripes contumelies blasphemies blowes spittings and diuers other kindes of iniuries which thou didst suffer all the night longe in the house of Annas and Cayphas All this I offer vp to thee rendering thee harty thankes and humbly beseeching that infinite bountie of thyne and boundlesse pietie that by thy merites thou wouldst fully purifie my soule render it aggreeable to thee and conduct it to life euerlasting O sweete Iesus I offer vp vnto thee for all my sinnes the vnheard of ignominie which thou didst suffer when being strucken spitt vpon and bound thou wert ledd to Pilate in the morning from Pilate to Herode and from thence to Pilate againe I offer that sacred silence of thyne which made thee humbly hold thy peace at those contumelies and iniuries which were offered thee I offerre the contempt thou sufferedst when Herode opprobriously scorned thee in a ridiculous garment I offer that most cruell paine which thou sufferedst when they barbarously scourged thee being bound to a Pillar I offer thee the goarie markes of thy scourging and the streames of bloud which run downe from all thy sacred members All this I offer thee in thankesgiuing beseeching that immense pietie of thyne that by the merites of these thou wouldst fullie purifie my soule render it pleasing to thee and conduct it to life euerlasting O sweete Iesu I offer vnto thee for all my sinnes that humilitie and patience which thou didst shew when clothed in a purple garment for thy greater scorne thou wert crowned with thornes and saluted in a scoffing manner impiously spitt vpon smitten with a reede c. and buffeted Brought out before the Tribunall iniuriously condemned and last of all haled out to Mount Caluarie bearing thyne owne Crosse vpon thy shoulders I offer that greiuous toyle of thy sacred bodie the many wearie stepps of thy holie feete and the heauie waight vpon thy shoulders I offer thy sweate thy thirst and all the rest of thy torments which with a most meeke and readie hart thou sufferedst for my sake All this I offer thee beseechinge that immense clemencie of thyne that by the merits therof thou wouldst fullie purifie my soule render it pleasing to thee and conduct it to life euerlastinge O sweete Iesu I offer vnto thee for all my sinnes those most horrible paines thou sufferedst when thy wounds were renewed by plucking off thy garmentes when thy hands and feete were fastened to the Crosse when the ioyntes of thy body were all dissolued when thy pretious bloud came gushing out as from so many fountaines I offer these rosie dropps of thy pretious bloud that in effable meeknesse and benignitie wherby thou didst patiently suffer the intolerable insolencies of those who insulted ouer thee euen whilst thou didst pray for them to thy heauenly Father All this I offer thee beseeching that immense pietie of thyne that by the merite therof thou wouldst fully purifie my soule render it pleasing to thee and conduct it to life euerlastinge O sweete Iesu I offer vnto thee for all my sinnes vanities negligences and distractions those incomprehensible tormentes which thou sufferedstw when being exposed to such anguishe destitute of all consolation thou didst hange in a miserable manner on the Crosse betwixt two theeues and when burninge with excessiue thirst they gaue thee noe thinge but vineger and gale to drinke I offer that exceeding charitie and gracious mercy with which inclyninge thy venerable heade thou rendredst vp the Ghost I offer that saueing bloud and water which flowed from thy pierced side All this I offer thee beseeching that immense clemencie of thyne that by the merite therof thou wouldst fullie purifie my soule render it pleasing to thee and conduct it to life euerlastinge O sweete Iesu for the perfect remission of all my offences which in all my life tyme I haue in any wise committed I offer vnto thee the whole worke of mans redemption performed by thee I offer thy Incarnation thy birth conuersation death and Passion I offer what euer els may haue bene gratefull to thee at any tyme in thy most glorious Mother the Blessed Virgine Marie and in those other Saintes of thyne O most sweete Iesu I beseech thee may thyne innocencie fullie satisfie thy Father for my guiltinesse Shroud in the purest syndon of thy merites all my too vnworthy and sinfull life that what is vncleane in me by being conioyned to them and what is imperfect by being vnited to them may be perfected that so during this life I may be pleasing to thee and hauing-finished the course of this miserable pilgrimage I may presently arriue home to thee who art eternall saluation to glorifie thy B. Name for euer Amen VIVE IESVS A IAMAIS Dilectus meus mihi ego illi Amen IHS