Selected quad for the lemma: earth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
earth_n good_a lord_n praise_v 2,545 5 9.3917 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A38590 Catechistical discovrses in vvhich, first, an easy and efficacious way is proposed for instruction of the ignorant, by a breife summe of the Christian doctrine here delivered and declared : secondly, the verity of the Romane Catholike faith is demonstrated by induction from all other religions that are in the world : thirdly, the methode of the Romane catechisme, which the Councell of Trent caused to be made, is commended to practice of instructing in doctrine, confirming in faith, and inciting to good life by catechisticall sermons / by A. E. Errington, Anthony, d. 1719? 1654 (1654) Wing E3246; ESTC R8938 430,353 784

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

propper office with such parts and abilitys as are necessary for the dew performance of it some of them incorruptible others corrupting and those after a strange manner concealed from our vnderstandings when they are dead to reuiue againe to life by the corruption of their seede Soe from bodys we come to spirits that gouerne them and amongst spirits to some supreme cause and gouernour of them All which if we will attende vnto we cannot but reflect vpon the workman that made it and admire at his power and greatnesse That meruelous mother worthy of good mens memory seeing all her sonnes but one to haue passed through cruell torments to the crowne of martyrdome and the yongest of seauen to be brought to execution with a manly courageexhorted him Mach. 2.7 saying I beseech thee my sonne that thou looke vp to heauen and earth and to all thinges that are in them and vnderstande that God of nothing made them and mankind And Cicero sayth that there is nothing soe manifest when we looke vp to the heauens Gi● l. 2. de ●at deer as that there is a diuine power that made and gouerneth them Behold then amongst visible creatures first the heauens see their huge greatnes and capacity conteining not onely a thousand and twenty two starres which astronomers haue mentioned but an innumerable number which they cānot discerne to reckon and some of them may be thought to be a thousand times bigger then the whole globe of the earth how exceeding great then must the capacity of the heauens be to conteine them all Behold them of a nature incorruptible soe solid and strong that with that mighty violent motion which some of them haue they neuer breake nor corrupt nor weare away the least haire bredth See their great brightnes calmenes and quietnes without any noyse at all in that violence of motion Looke vpon the elements the fire next vnto the starry heauens vnder that the ayre and then the waters and the earth all of them of contrary natures yet agreeing together in those admirable effects which we see to result of their concord that all sublunary productions depende not onely of some one of them but of them all Looke now downe vnto the earth and behold there the many kindes of liuing and sensible creatures and amongst them all one onely endowed with reason as the Prince of the rest to order them and he inuested with such power and commande that by nature they feare and tremble at his voyce Behold them more in particular and first thy owne soule a spirituall creature which can moue in an instant to the furthest part of the earth or of the heauens and yet for the present is bounde to an earthly body whether it will or noe Consider then the disposition of thy body prepared as a seate sitte to receiue it and with parts conuenient for its operations and this not by its owne reason for that it hath none Behold the many diuerse natures of sensible creatures that moue themselues some flying some walking some creeping some swimming all liuing by the ayre some on the earth some within the earth some in the fire some in the waters all of them directed by some reason to loue that which is good for them and congruous to their nature Behold those creatures that liue without sense trees plants flowers and herbes producing fruits with admirable variety of tasts smells pleasant colours and profitable effects to delight the senses of higher creatures which are sensible and to serue them And lastly behold the earth with being onely yet susteining all liuing thinges in the life which they haue All these haue their limits set their perfections and operations and are bounde within them whether they will or noe and did not choose for themselues but haue onely that which another would giue them These are the testimonys which God hath left of himselfe and by these testimonys we must confesse the supreme power that caused all this and sett it in that order which we see it to haue And therefor it is natural to man when he looketh vp to the heauens with gladnes of hart to blesse God and if we haue a litle bird fly flower or any creature though neuer soe imperfect in our hands and consider attentiuely the parts and composition of it reason presently telleth vs that it could not make it selfe and by nature we blesse God that made it Say now according to reason and tell vs who it was that made the heauens and gaue them that huge vastnesse and capacity more then we can thinke that brightnes calmenes solidity and incorruptibility who gaue to the elements their mighty power by concorde to produce those great effects who gaue to man the principality ouer other creatures and made them by nature to feare and obey him and who was that superiour of mankind that commanded his spirituall and incorruptible soule to his corporall and corruptible body what reason was it that directed vnreasonable thinges to that which is good for them and made those which are vnsensible to yeeld such pleasure and profit to the senses and who gaue to the earth that hath not life power to conserue the liues of other thinges He that had power to doe all this we will confesse him to be God and we will praise and blesse him For of themselues they could not be at all nor would haue bene with the imperfections which they haue Here now reason is sufficiently satisfyed and the malice of man conuinced that shall deny God For the reason of euery man of it selfe presently consents if by malice and liberty it be not forced to the contrary vnto some superiour power that caused these thinges And that power all though we cannot comprehende it because it is aboue vs and must needes be infinite in perfection but of what nature soeuer that supreme power be meaning the supreme we say God and blesse him All this is breifly formed out of S. Thomas and Aristotle after this manner Wheresoeuer we see motion and alteration in any thinge there we must grant a cause of that motion and alteration but we see motion and alteration in the productions of creatures which beginne to be and before were not therefor we must grant some cause of that motion and alteration by which they are produced and come to be This doth S. Thomas call a demonstration and Aristotle with the rest of Philosophers call it a Metaphysicall Euidence that is to say an euidence which is not onely deduced by Physical principles of nature but that the contrary conteineth repugnance in it selfe and that it is the first euident certainty from which all natural euidences are deduced And to contradict it is either to say that all the world came by chance or els to runne from cause to cause without end into insinites which in substance commeth to be the same noe cause at all being assigned First the alterations which we see can not come by chance for
the whole world and what more could theeues robbers and all wicked malefactors desire to exempt themselues from all humane lawes and obligation of conscience then to deny all obseruations as of the autority of man and to referre all to the tribunal of God which they know that they can not escape but must stande to whether they will or noe You may see what reuerence is here to the word of God and how easily that sacred word is abused by those that will stande against the whole Church First therefor I tell them that they cannot but see those words to haue the same force against fasting in generall which commonly they allow of as against the fasts of the Church which now they reiect but that is indeede noe force at all the circumstances being altered in which Christ spoke them to reprooue the fasts of vaine and hypocryticall men who fasted without order and humility for shew onely Secondly I tell them that the authority of the Church is the authority of God as I haue sufficiently prooued and therefor the Praecepts of the Church are not onely the obseruations of men but the Commandements of God Thirdly I tell them that God by his Church commanded fasting in the Law of Moyses and in the Law of grace euen in the Apostles times the Councell of Hierusalem prohibiting some meates Act. 15. as is specifyed in the fifteenth of the acts Fourthly I tell them that fasting as it is a Praecept of the Church is vsed as a corporall affliction to subdue the euill inclinations of our flesh and corporall afflictions vsed with order as the Church praescribeth them are pleasing to God therefor fasting as it is a Praecept of the Church is pleasing to God Cor. 1.9 S. Paul saith I chastize my body and bring it into seruitude least perhaps when I haue preached to others my selfe become reprobate Fiftly I tell them that Aërius was condemned as an haeretike many hundreds of yeares since Haer. 53. and S. Augustine hath taken the paines to put him into his catalogue of haeretiks for this very doctrine for that allowing of fasting in generall he disallowed of it as a Praecept of the Church and would haue none to fast but as they liked themselues He that should reade the second booke of S. Hierome against Iouinian the haeretike that denied fasting should finde there much more then I haue said or can say in commendation of it And it is admirable to reade the sentences of Scriptures and the erudition which this holy Doctour hath drawne there together for this purpose shewing by seuerall authors how much this vertue was esteemed of euen by heathens in the best ages of the world who saw by reason and founde by experience the force of fasting in the tempering of our bodys in refreshing and quickening of our vnderstandings and by consequence in disposing vs vnto Morall vertues And writing to the Virgin Demetrias he hath this high expression that fasting is not onely in it selfe a perfect vertue but the foundation sanctification purity and Prudence of the rest without which none shall see God Now for the particular fasts or abstinences which the holy Church commandeth There are the forty dayes fast of Lent the fast of Ember dayes of Rogation dayes of Vigils of Frydayes of S. Marke Lent and of Saturdayes We haue for the forty dayes fast of Lent the examples of Moyses of Elias and of Christ himselfe Moyses fasted forty dayes and receiued the Law enioying in that time the familiar conuersation of God Elias fasted forty dayes and then wrought miracles reuiuing the dead Christ fasted forty dayes in the beginning of his miraculous preaching soe preparing himselfe to deliuer his ghospell and to redeeme the world And although we can not fast soe strictly and perfectly as our blessed Sauiour did eating nothing all that time yet it is fitting that we should doe our endeauour in honour and imitation of him And it is not vnlikely that Christ commended the fast of Lent as well by word and expresse commande as by example to his Apostles in those forty dayes space betwixt his Resurrection and Ascension in which he often appeared to them and taught them concerning the Church and therefor the auncient and holy fathers commonly call it the institution of the Apostles by the Commandement of Christ S. Ambrose that it was not inuented by any earthly cogitation but commanded by the heauenly maiesty Amb. de quadrag ser 36. Igna. ep 5. Aug. ser 69. de temp S. Ignatius who was the Disciple of S. Iohn Euangelist saith contemne not Lent for it conteineth the imitation of our Lords conuersation and S. Augustine saith that by the due obseruation their of the wicked are separated from the good Infidels from Christians haeretiks from faithfull Catholikes He then that honoreth the name of a Catholike and Christian will honour Lent and obserue it It is instituted to be kept against the Passion of Christ that we who professe ourselues his seruants and souldiers may in some sort suffer with our master and captaine It were a preposterous mirth and absurde in a seruant to laugh and make merry when he saw his master full of paine or for a souldier to take his ease in bedd when his captaine were enduring hardnesse in the field Good Vrias comming out of the campe to the court the King badd him to goe home and rest himselfe but he refused to doe soe Reg. 2.11 saying the arke of God c. And my Lord Ioah abide vpon the face of the earth and shall I enter into my house to eate and drinke I will not doe this thinge Neither did he it but went out and slept before the gates of the Kings house with the other seruants of his Lord because he would not pamper himselfe and ly within doores when the arke and his Lord laid without Our blessed Lord the King of heauen and earth the Sauiour of the world is suffering many blowes he is bleeding vpon the Crosse his meate and drinke is vinagre and gall and is it then a time for vs to make merry and to feast our selues is this like a seruant and souldier of Christ or is it not rather most vnseasonable preposterous and spirefull vnworthy of the name and profession of a Christian how preposterous then is the malice of those who choose the time of Lent of all the times of the yeare and Good Friday of all the dayes in lent to make their feasts on is this a good preparation to receiue the benefit of Christs Passion and Resurrection if they were Iewes or professed enemyes of Christ they might doe soe indeed in despite of him but being Christians they should be ashamed of it Saint Augustine commendeth the fast of Lent as a preparation for Easter and saith as you haue heard that the breaking of it is wicked and proper to Infidels and Haeretiks This they may glosse with some pretence and finde some thing to say
it as by reason a most efficacious motiue and conuincing argument fully to satisfy their vnderstandings and to draw them to beleeue in him First Christ would soe notify the mystery of his resurrection in his life time as that his very enemys might stande in expectation afterwards to see the performance of it and that by it he might not onely encourage his disciples and reinforce them who as faint harted souldiers had forsaken him in his Passion but also that it might serue as a testimony to the world of the verity of his doctrine and that his sufferings were voluntarily vndergone and of his owne good will that soe the scandall of the Cros might be taken away and all seeing his power might beleeue in him And therefor he spoke of it and promised it first whilst he liued and would in his Passion be publikely accused of it vntill he had made it soe knowne that the Priests of the Iewes and Pharisees hearing ofit might labour all they could to hinder it and that all their labour might appeare to be in vaine When therefor they had gotten their malice fullfilled and according to their desire had procured his death they came together to Pilate and said Sir Mat. 27. we haue remembred that the seducer said yet liuing after three dayes I will rize againe Commande therfor the sepulcher to be kept vntill the third day least perhaps his disciples come and steale him away and say to the people he is rizen from the dead c. And Pilate said you haue a guard g●e guard him as you know And they departing made the sepulcher sure sealing vp the stone with watchmen Thus would Christ haue his resurrection to be taken notice of and to be opposed before it came to passe and would permitte his enemys to vse what meanes they could to preuent and hinder it or to conceale it But what is man to compare with God or who can hinder the diuine ordinance by these meanes the resurrection of Christ became better testifyed and was made more apparent afterwards when he made good his word and performed it On the third day early in the morning the deuout women being come to the monument Mat. 28. Behold there was made a great earth quake For an Angell of our Lord descended from heauen and comming rolled backe the stone and sate vpon it and his countenace was as lightening and his garment white as snowand for feare of him the watchmen were affrighted and became as dead And the Angell answering said to the women feare not you For I know that you seeke Iesus that was Crucifyed He is not here for he is rizen as he said Come and see the place where our Lord was laid All these thinges the watchmen were made witnesses of and testifyed them to the cheife Priests who consulting together gaue them a great summe of money to say that his disciples had come by night and had stolne him away when they were a sleepe and promised to them that if the President should come to heare of it they would perswade him and secure them Who notwithstanding would not be perswaded by them but taking the particular examination of it from the watchmen themselues informed Caesar of the truth of it and by his information and other motiues the Emperour was soe moued in affection towards Christ that he proposed in the senate for diuine honour to be giuen to him by the Romanes and being offended that he obtained it not he protected those that were deuoted vnto him and commanded vnder paine of death that none should hinder their deuotion But Christ would not leaue his resurrection with these onely although sufficient testimonys of the good women and euill watchmen but would appeare aliue vnto many more and remained forty dayes after it vpon earth that by many apparitions in which he often shewed himselfe he might giue sufficient proofe of it Mar. 16. We haue how that first he appeared to Mary Magdalene after that to two disciples going to Emaus after that to all the disciples together except Thomas who then was not with them after that to them all againe when Thomas was with them and permitted him to be incredulous of his resurrection and not to beleeue the rest of the Apostles affirming it that he might both see him and feele him to be rizen againe and should confesse him in those circumstances to be his Lord and his God Cor. 1.15 And S. Paul mentioneth to the Corinthians how that he appeared to more then fiue hundred brethren together Thus would our Sauiour take still more and more witnesses of his resurrection before that he would ascende into heauen Act. 1. s●ewing himselfe aliue after his Passion by many arguments For he was seene heard felt and did eate with the liuing And the mystery of his resurrection was soe manifest and certaine that all our Euangelists in their ghospels would record it without feare of either Iew or Gentil disproouing them in it and soe certaine that Iosephus the best historiographer of those times and who flouri●hed immediatly after them could not with his honour although a Iew question the truth of it or omitte to speake of it but hath recorded it for true amongst the publike and remarkeable thinges that then happened commonly knowne and vnquestioned and hath left in his history this worthy saying of Christ There was in these times Iesus a wise man if it be lawfull to call him a man Iosl 18. antiquit c. 6. for he was a worker of miraculous thinges and a teacher of those that desired the truth and adioyned vnto himselfe many both of the Iewes and Gentils This was Christ him did Pilate crucify at t●e accusation of the cheife of our nation But those that lou●d him yet forsooke him not for ●e appeared againe vnto them the third day aliue Because the Prophets by the inspiration of God foretold these and other innumerable miracles of him In which words of this authour is conteined the summe of all that which I haue said of the miracles of Christ to wit that he confirmed his doctrine with miracles and his miraculous life by his resurrection from the dead the Prophets being inspired to foretell these thinges of him And as Christ himselfe first founded the ghospell of our beleefe in the fanctity of his owne life and miracles The Apostles preaching soe also would he haue the same faith to be propagated afterwards by the sanctity and miracles of his Apostles First their holines of life was admitable euen to their enemys They were contented with shame pouerty hungar cold heate imprisonment banishment whipps and all kind of disgraces and crueltys that they might honour Christ and enioy him And soe willingly did they suffer without euer repenting them of that which they had done for Christs sake that after persecution they still beganne againe to preach him carrying his ghospell from place to place and proclaiming it amongst all sorts of
long as they liue soe the damned are setled in that state of desperation rage and horrible torment to endure it and to endure it still and can neuer change or alter from it In all thy works remember thy latter ends Eccli 7. and thou wilt not sinne for euer This is the last thinge which the Apostles would mention of Christ in the Creede and which ought to leaue a great feare and vehement horrour in the mindes of the wicked to whom he shall come as to his enemys that can expect noe fauour from him And therfor this day is called the day of our Lord. Because Christ shall come as a terrible Lord to them and shall call them to a strict account for the neglect of their seruice to him and they hauing receiued good thinges in this life but wickedly imployed them haue then euill to receiue but the iust who haue serued God duely and haue not sought after the pleasures and goods of this world but haue then good thinges to receiue haue reason to reioyce and to be comforted at the thought of this day and therefor at the departure of Christ in his Ascension from the Apostles the Angels were sent to comfort them with the remembrace of his second comming saying Ye men of Galilee why doe you stande looking into heauen Act. 1. this Iesus which is assumpted from you into heauen shall soe come as you haue seene him going into heauen He commeth as a spouse full of ioy to the iust and blesseth them with euerlasting blessings because they haue prouided the light of good works Let vs doe soe and we shall be admitted into his ioyfull nuptials and receiue blessings of him Thus you vnderstande what is meant by the quicke and the dead to wit the state of the good and of the euill the one of them liuing spiritually with the life of grace the other being dead in sinne But perhaps it may be vnderstoode also of corporal life with which some shall be then liuing on earth when Christ shall come and shall be iudged with those that were dead before that day And who knoweth but he himselfe may liue to see the terrible appearence of Christ comming to iudge him and that presently dying he shall rize againe to receiue the sentence of his iudgment for Christ himselfe hath said that of that day or hower noe man knoweth Mar. 13. neither the Angels in heauen How much then ought we to feare and preuent it and not to remaine one day noe nor one hower in mortall sinne THE EIGHT ARTICLE I Beleeue in the Holy Ghost Hitherto the Apostles in all the former articles haue deliuered those thinges which concerne the first and second person of the B. Trinity the Father and the Sonne now they professe the third Person in the Holy Ghost S. Act. 19. Paul comming to Ephesus found certaine disciples soe ignorant that asking them if they had receiued the Holy Ghost they answered that they had not soe much as heard that there was a Holy Ghost This had bene indeede a very great ignorance in them if they had bene Christians which they were not and the mystery of the blessed Trinity was to be but obscurely deliuered to the Iewes as I haue shewed in another place treating of it They were the Disciples of S. Iohn Baptist baptized by his baptisme which could not giue the Holy Ghost and were not as yet baptized with christian baptisme in which the Holy Ghost is giuen and therfor it was a lesse ignorance in them But for any of vs not to know what the Holy Ghost is were an extreame ignorance And therefor we will first declare who the Holy Ghost is and why he is soe called The Holy Ghost is the third Person of the B. Trinity and is as much as to say The holy spirit And although the Father and the Sonne and the holy Angels are holy spirits yet they are not The Holy Ghost of whom we are speaking When therefor we say the Holy Ghost we meane the diuine Person of the Holy Ghost as when Christ commanded baptisme in the name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the Holy Ghost The first Person of the blessed Trinity is called The Father because the Sonne and the Holy Ghost proceede from him The second Person is called The Sonne because he proceedeth as sonne from the Father The third Person is called the Holy Ghost or holy spirit because he proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne by way of mutuall inspiration The Holy Ghost is true God omnipotent eternall and infinite in all perfections the very same in essence and nature with the Father and the Sonne And therefor S. Peter threatening Ananias for his deceit and ly which he had told said Ananias why hath Satan tempted thy hart Act. 5. that thou shouldst ly to the Holy Ghost t●ou hast lyed to God And therefor in the words of baptisme he is commanded to be named as the same in Godhead with the Father and the Sonne and S. Iohn saith There be three which giue testimony in heauen the Father the Word Io. 1.5 and the Holy Ghost And these three be one Three in destinction of Persons one in the vnity of nature and essence And because the Holy Ghost proceedeth both from the Father and the Sonne therefor he is sometimes said in the Scriptures to be the spirit of the Father and sometimes the spirit of the Sonne THE NINTH ARTICLE THe holy Catholike Church the Communion of Saints The Apostles hauing professed their beleefe in God the Father almighty maker of heauen and earth and in Iesus Christ his onely Sonne our Lord borne and crucifyed in the nature of man and their beleefe in the Holy Ghost they had giuen vs in breife the mysterys of the B. Trinity and of the Incarnation The next thinge which they minded was to make an article of beleeuing the Catholike Church Which article was noe lesse necessary then any of the former nay in this it was the most necessary of all that by beleeuing the Church we come to haue the truth of the former and to vnderstande rightly all the articles of the christian faith And therefor as S. Augustine hath obserued the Prophets haue spoken planelyer of the Church then they haue done of Christ himselfe Aug. in Is 30. because the authority of the Church is the rule and guide by which we are to be directed in all thinges which we beleeue of him and all true beleeuers are kept in the vnity of true faith and that faith which was founded by him continueth allwais inuiolated by continuall obedience to the Church This then being the end and intention of this article let vs now come to the declaration of it Quest What is the Catholike Church Answ The Catholike Church is the congregation of all faithfull Pastors and people vnited together as a body with its head S. Augustine defineth the Church to be the congregation of all
God because God sheweth himselfe there in glory as a King reigning in the mindes and hearts of his Saints who are in perfect loue and subiection to him And supposing here that which we prayed for before to wit that it be for the honour of God we may be vnderstoode to pray that our soules may be freed out of the prison of our bodys Phil. 1. and come soone to that happy state as the Apostle desired to be dissolued and to be with Christ The Kingdome of Heauen is the first thing Mat. 6. which we ought to aske for our selues Seeke first the Kingdome of God and the iustice of him and all these things shall be giuen you besides Christ said this to his disciples after that he had delinered the Pater noster to them in which he taught them first to aske the honour of God and then those things which were good for themselues and amongst all those things in the first place the kingdom of heaven Tract 102. This is saith saint Augustin that full and perfect ioy which we ought to pray for and which oll our prayers ought to aime at as the only true ioy Here the Romane Catechisme admonisheth Pastors to excite their people to the loue of that Kingdome by the sentences of holy Scriptures which are indeede frequent enough for it But in order to this it ought to be sufficient that Christ hath said in few words Aske and you shall receiue that your ioy may be full For what ioy should we desire but that which is full ioy and fullnesse of ioy is not to be had but in heauen Euery thing aspireth to that in which its cheife and full ioy consisteth Sensible things to that which pleaseth the senses liuing things to the conseruation of life and those things which haue onely being and noe life delight in that which is according to their nature and seeke to it because there is the fulnes of their ioy And shall the soule of man which is reasonable aboue all these things forsake that which is its cheife and full ioy All corporall things tende with violence thither where their cheife ioyes are and rest not contented vntill they enioy them The Sunne Moone and Planets reioyce in their courses the Starres in their stations and keepe themselues in them because there is the fullnes of their ioy The creatures of the earth are some aboue the earth some within it and some part within and part without it as trees and herbes and will not liue otherwise because there is the summe of their delight The fishes of the Seas and fresh waters seeke allways to be there and striue by violence to that place Light thinigs tende vpwards and heauy things to the centre of the earth because there they haue the fulnesses of their ioy The fulnesses of our ioy is noe where but in Heauen and why doe not we then seeke to it and abhorre all that hindereth vs of it We liue in this world as it is were out of our element in a place most lothsome to our soules a deadly prison condemned to dy continually and in danger of eternall death Rom. 7. What ioy can we take in this condition Vnhappy that I am saith the Apostle who shall deliuer mee from the body of this death The Kingdome of God is diuersely vnderstoode First it is general ouer all the world as he gouerneth and prouideth for his subiects which are the multitude of all creatures Secondly it is more particularly ouer the Catholike Church as the people of a Kingdome gathered together to worship him as their true King Thirdly more particularly yet his Kingdome is with the iust in whose harts he reigneth by grace of whom Christ the Kingdome of God is with you Luc. 17. Lastly his Kingdome is most especially ouer the blessed to whom at the day of iudgement he shall say Mat. 25. Come the blessed of my Father possesse you the Kingdome prepared for you Here we aske that we and all people may soe liue in the Communion of the Catholike Church by Faith and good works that in the end we may obtaine the glory of Heauen For this Kingdome is not otherwise obtained but by such faith as S. Gal. 5. Paul requireth which worketh by charity as by those who haue giuen meate drinke and cloths for Gods sake and they shall be excluded that come with the profession onely of Catholiks saying Mat. 7. Lord Lord open vnto vs but bring not with them the light of good workes Not euery one that sayeth Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of Heauen but he that doth the will of my Father of which point Saint Augustine wrote a booke de fide operibus in which he sheweth that the Epistles of S. Paul were misconstrued by some of those times as though he required not good works after baptisme cap. 14. but that faith alone did iustify And therefore saith he the other Epistles of Peter Iames and Iude were written to auouch vehemently that fait without good works profiteth nothing THE THIRD PETITION THY will be done in Earth as it is in Heauen Man hath not a greater enemy then his owne will when it is not gouerned by the will of God All good things which we haue come by the goodnesse of the diuine will and all euills that befall vs come through the malice of our owne wills The ignorance of our vnderstandings neuer hurteth our soules but when it is voluntary and all our sinnes proceede from thence that either we will not doe what we know is to be done or will not know what we are to doe Esa 5. Hence is that curse of the Prophet Woe vnty you that call euill good and good euill putting darknesses light and light darknesse putting bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter This curse commeth by the euill of our wills because we will follow our owne blindnes and not the will of God which ought to be our rule and guide in all things The malice of men beganne presently to be much vpon earth and the cogitations of their hart were soe bent vpon vpon euill that a deluge of waters was sent to destroy them This euill was in their harts that is to say in their wills because they followed not the will of God which is sweet and lightsome but their owne wills which are darke and bitter in effect and so haue all the euils of the world come Therefore we are topray and to labour with ourselues for conformity with the will of God Besides we not knowing what is best for vs aske that some times which is hurtfull as sicke folkes in a feauer desire that which hurteth them and as children who would take poison for treacle if they had there owne wills and therefore sicke folkes and children haue keepers whose wills they must follow and be directed by We are as children in our wills and vnderstandings both deficient by sinne God is our
vse them Thirdly they obiect that our B. Lady is farre distant from vs and it is absurde to salute one at such a distance But this is noe absurdity because distance of place hindereth not the intelligence of glorious soules It were indeede absurde formen here vpon earth to salute one another in absence because in absence they vnderstande not but if they vnderstoode it were ●ather absurde to hinder their communication when it were for a good end The blessed Virgin vnderstandeth in heauen our deuotions vpon earth for although in body she be absēt from vs yet in spirit sheis presēt with vs as Elizeus was absent in body from his seruant but was present in spirit with him and saw all that passed betwixt him and Naaman and told him afterwards Reg. 4.5 Was not my hart present when the man returned out of his chaire to meete thee S. Paul also wrote to the Corinthians that he was absent in body Cor. 1.5 but present in spirit with them But the blessed Virgin seeeth by the light of glory the deuotion of those that pray to her and is much more present with them then Elizeus or S. Paul were whilst they liued vpon earth absent from them Fourthly they obiect against the often repeating of the Haile Mary that God heareth as well at once as at many times but to repeate it a hundred and fifty times to what purpose Yes for many good purposes First to pray with more feruour secondly to obtaine by perseuering in prayer that which at first is not allwais obtained thirdly to imploy ourselues in the consideration of holy mysterys such as I haue declared to be conteined in the Rosary Christ hauing deliuered to his disciples the Pater Noster as a patterne of prayer shewed them also how it was to be vsed to wit with much earnestnes and importunity not presently desisting from prayer when we obtaine not our desire but perseuering still to aske For this he immediatly annexed the parabole of a man who asking to borrow bread at first it was denyed him but perseuering to aske by his importunity he obtained as many loaues as he needed And he did not onely teach this by word but also by example praying with much feruour and repeating in the garden the same prayer ouer Mat. 26. and ouer and ouer againe as S. Mathew hath noted He was heard as well at the first as at the last but he would teach vs to perseuer in prayer and that God granteth for our importunity and therefor he had at last the comfort of an Angell appearing to him which at first it is not likely that he had The blinde man sitting by the way when he heard the noyse of the multitude and vnderstoode that Iesus of Nazareth was passing by cryed out Iesus sonne of Dauid haue mercy vpon mee Luc. 18. And when they rebuked him he cryed much more Sonne of Dauid haue Mercy on mee Christ heard him as well at the first as at the second time yet at first he granted not his desire because he would haue him to perseuer asking that he might commende his faith grant for his perseuerance and propose him as an example to teach vs how to pray The holy Kingin the 137. psalme repeateth in euery verse the very same words ouer againe soe that there being 27. verses the same thinge is repeated 27. times and take vp about halfe of the psalme An haeretike might aske what neede there was of soe much repeating the same thinge To whom I answere that Dauid was a holy man according to the hart of God and would sing the diuine praises with much feruour of spirit repeating the same words ouer and ouer againe many times and soe we repeate the praises of the B Virgin and double and redouble our prayers to her Christ sayeth it behoueth allwais to pray Luc. 8. Thes 1.5 and not to be weary And S. Paul biddeth Pray without intermission but we can not allwais pray new prayers If the prayer be a good prayer the more we repeate it the more loue we shew and more desire of obtaining and that which is to the honour of God cannot be asked too often vntill we obtaine it If it be good to say a good prayer once euery month it is better to say it once a weeke and if it be good to say it euery weeke it is better to say it euery day and better yet to say it euery hower so that we hinder not more necessary imployments l. 4. c. 28. Lactantius who liued about a thousand and three hundred yeares since and was master to Constantine the Great hath a discourse of purpose to commende the often repeating of the Aue Mary Fiftly they obiect that it tasteth of superstition to obserue such a number of prayers I answere that it tasteth of superstition to none but such as are out of tast with pious things and with the deuotions of the Catholike Church what superstition was it in saint Bartholomew and in saint Paul the Ermite to obserue a certaine number of prayers euery day An haeretike may call it superstition in Christ to choose twelue Apostles corresponding to the twelue Tribes of Israel or to pray thrice the same prayer in the Garden for that the number of three is often vsed in the Scriptures to signifie the firmnesse and stability of any thing or in a Catholike to say three Pater nosters in honour of the three persons of the blessed Trinity or siue in honour of the fiue wounds of our Lord. All which are as much superstitious as to obserue a certaine number of the Aue Marys in the Rosary And much more superstitious doth it outwardly appeare for Iosue to commande twelue men to take vp twelue stones out of lordan and to lay downe other twelue in their places to signify the twelue Tribes then to say a hundred and fifty Aue Marys in imitation of Dauids hundred and fifty Psalmes Yet who dare say that any of these things are superstitious We must not goe by the outtward appearance but by the intrinsecal to iudge of the malice of things Christ must not be iudged a sinner because he had the outward habite of a sinner The reasō why none of these things are superstitious is because there is nothing done in them but which hath conexion and proportion to a good end for which it is intended and therefore to obserue a certaine number of prayers in relation to some holy mistery not any of the actions aboue mentioned are in the species of superstitiō nor haue the malice of it because they haue proportion to a good end which is to stirre vs vp to deuotion by the representation of pious things Thus you see that the deuotion of the Rosary is well grounded vpon good and holy misterys and that all obiections against it are vaine and groundles as all must needes be that are obiected against the blessed Virgins honour Blessings are giuen to Beades
mortall sinne is as opposite to the diuine grace as poyson wounds and sicknesse are to health and as darknes is to light which can not be both together and therefor he that knoweth himselfe to be in mortall sinne and cleereth not his conscience before he receiueth any Sacrament doth as a sicke man that should desire health and yet willfully keepe poyson at his hart or as one that should shutte vp the windows to let in light and doth not onely hinder the effect and fruit of the Sacrament which he receiueth but committeth also a new mortall sinne in soe receiuing and there for we are bounde to cleere ourselues by a good confession from mortall sinne before we receiue either the Eucharist Extreme-Vnction Holy Orders or any other Sacrament baptisme onely excepted because by it we must be made christians before we can receiue any of the christian Sacraments if we did but consider the benefits which we gette by the Sacrament of Pennance we should not neede to be commanded to it First we ●ette the forgiuenesse of our sinnes by which we are as it were in a moment freed from the most painfull and lothsome sicknes that can be We gette the diuine grace the least degree of which is better then all this visible world we gett pardon from a horrible and euerlasting ●ame for the future we gett ourselues admitted into the Communion of Saints and to the fellowship of the blessed soe as to haue then a condignity through the merits of Christ to their euerlasting reward Lastly we exhilarate and make glad the whole court of heauen and we contristate and make sad the spirits of hell with our conuersion to God We are commanded to confesse to our ordinary Pastour and that with good reason that our Pastors who haue the particular charge of vs may haue a more destinct and particular knowledge of the state of our consciences And this is intimated in the words of Christ when he said that the good Pastour calleth his sheepe by name and leadeth them forth that is knoweth them all in particular and hath a care of euery one of them Besides Pastors and people are thu● ●ngaged to each other to be good Pastors and good people But because Pastors in their parishes haue many imployments and can not allwais attende to hearing of confessions therefor the Church licenceth other Priests and religious men who are not ordinary Pastors to heare confessions and to such we may lawfully confesse because our Pastors licence is supposed to confesse to them THE FOVRTH PRAECEPT TO receiue the Eucharist at Easter time I haue sh●wed in its propper place how oftne of deuotion we may receiue this the most blessed of all Sacraments But that none may be depriued of the benefits and graces of it the Catholike Church hath commanded that all should receiue once euery yeare and that about Easter time because it was then instituted and bequeathed as a legacy to the Apostles to be deliuered by them to the christian world and to remaine as an euerlasting testimony of the loue of Christ towards vs and as a memoriall of the worke of our redemption And therefor it is sitting that euery christian should commemorate the mystery of it about that time by humbly and thankefully receiuing it We are bounde also to receiue it against our deaths because it is the most comfortable Vyande and strengthening bread which God hath prouided against that last and irreuocable voyage Of which we haue a figure in the third booke of Kings When Iesabel persecuted the Church and killed soe many Prophets that Elias in Israel was as it were left alone and he also was threatened by a messenger that the next day his soule should follow them he fledd into the desert committing himselfe to the diuine prouidence in that barren and solitary place And God who neuer faileth to prouide for his freinds prouided for him sending him bread by an Angell who badde him eate for that he had a great way to goe Reg. 3.19 And eating of the Angels bread he walked in the strength of that meate forty dayes and forty nights vnto the mount of God Horeb. The Angels bread was the blessed Sacrament in mystery the Angell that brought it signifyeth the Priest tho great way which Elias had to goe is the iourney of death which all haue to goe Horeb the mount of God representeth heauen and thither we artaine by vertue and strength of this comfortable bread We are bound then to receiue the Eucharist at Easter time and at our deaths THE FIFT PRAECEPT TO pay tithes This Praecept obligeth partly by Law of nature and partly by the authority of the Church By the Law of nature we are bound to allow a maintenance for our spirituall Pastors and the Church hath determined that this allowance should be the tithes In the holy Law of Moyses God chose to himselfe the tribe of Leui to attende vpon his s●ruice and to labour for the spirituall good of the people and being soe imployed in that charge that they could not attende to tilling of Land nor to worke for their owne maintenance he ordained that the people whom they susteined spiritually should susteine them corporally and should pay to them the rithes of the fruits of the earth as a competent allowance for them By the same ●ty of God and of nature we are bounde as they were to mainteine our spirituall Pastors and Christ not hauing specifyed any allowance in particular but hauing left it to the determination of the Church what could the Church of Christ more reasonably determine then that which God had determined before in the same case to wit the tithes a● a competent maintenance for Pastours Saint Paul indeede would receiue nothing of the Corinthians but would worke with his hands on the night time to maintaine his labour on the day rather then he would be burder some to them But although he would doe this with the Corinthians yet with others he did not soe but receiued a liuelyhood of those to whom he preached and of the Corinthians also he challenged it as due although for some reasons he would take nothing of them Luc. 10. Our Sauiour instructed his Apostles to take their maintenance of the people and declared it as due to them as wages are to workemen For the workman saith he is worthy of his hyre Tim. 1.5 And Saint Paul alleadging this sentence to that purpose hath assured vs of the sense of it and of the authority of Christ in that sense The same Apostle speaking of it saith Whoeuer playeth the souldier at his owne charges in the law of Moyses those that serued the Altare participated of the Altare And so also our Lord ordained in the Law of grace for them that preach the Ghospell to liue of the Ghospell Thus doth S. Paul discourse vpon th● By all which it doth appeare that the tithes being appointed by the Church for the labors of the Clergy