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A78099 A brief explication of the Office of The Blessed Virgin Marie Mother Of God together with a small treatise concerning the institution thereof &c. / composed by the R.F.E.VV. Priest and Monke of the Order of S. Benedict. Byfleet, John Edward, b. 1607. 1652 (1652) Wing B6401A; ESTC R203969 220,898 605

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the lib. 9. Confes c. 1. li. 4. de oratione c. 2. ● 10. saied hymnes of the orientall Church as S. Augustine affirmeth Suarez saieth that the holie Church was moued by the especiall prouidence of God to institute that the confession and glorification of the B. Trinitie by the accustomed Hymne Glorie be to the Father c. should be added to the end of euery Psalme because saieth he the vse of the Psalmes was of greater antiquitie then the law of grace and by this meanes they doe participate the proper perfection thereof and become compleate and consummate Cornelius à Lapide dilating vpon these words of the Apostle For of him and by Rom. 11. him and in him are all things to him be glorie for euer Amen doth expound this hymne of glorification in fauour of such who repeat it often Glorie saieth he be to the Father of whome all things are as of the prime origine Glorie to the Sonne by whome all things are made as by wisdome and men redeemed as by their mediator Glorie to the holie Ghost in whome are all things as it were in à bond and consummation Glorie to the Father of whome is all paternitie in heauen and vpon earth Glorie to the Sonne by whome is all filiation Glorie to the holie Ghost in whome is all holines and sanctification Glorie to the Father of whome is eternitie Glorie to the Sonne by whome is all forme beautie Glorie to the holie Ghost in whome is all felicitie and fruition Glorie to the Father of whome is all vnitie glorie to the Sonne by whome is all equalitie glorie to the holie Ghost in whome is all loue and concord Glorie to the Father of whome is all pow●r glorie to the Sonne by whome is all wisdome glorie to the holie Ghost in whome is all goodnes Glorie to the Father who created me glorie to the Sonne by whome I am redeemed glorie to the holie Ghost in whome I am iustified Glorie to the Father who hath predestinated me glorie to the Sonne by whose precious bloud I am washed and made cleane glorie to the holie Ghost in whome I shall be glorified for euer Amen Alleluia NEXT in order followeth the Angelicall Hymne Alleluia which is song frō Easter vntill Septuagesima not without good reason for holie Dauid Psal 146. Psa 99. exhorteth To our God let there be à pleasant and comely praise againe Make ye iubilation to God all the earth serue ye our Lord in gladnesse enter ye before his fight in exultation And this hymne signineth praise God with à heart dilated through excesse of ioye The holie Church therefore because we ought neuer to surcease from praising God noe not then when we recount the miserable estate of man by the fall of our first parents hath ordained that in lieu of this hymne of exultation the verse Praise be to thee ● Lord King of eternall glorie shall be recited from Septuagesima vntill Paster which is à tyme of mourning and pennance li. 2. de Ritibu● c. 20. Stephen Durantus disputeth this question at lardge why the holye Church should omitt Alleluia from Septuagesima and yet place in lieu thereof à praise which seemeth equiualent thereunto after many solutions at length he answereth with S. Thomas and the Glosse vpon the ninth of the Apocalipse that this Hymne Alleluia besides the ordinary praise doth insinuate à iubilation which cannot be expressed in words Leo the 9. saieth that these two Hymnes Cap. de Consecr Hi. duo Dist. 1. onely are mentioned in the New Testament to haue been song by the Angells that is to saie Alleluia and Gloria in excelsis both which are intermitted in Septuagesima to shew that for the sinne of our first parents we are banished from communicating with the Angells in Iubilation which Adam in the state of innocencie did enioy as S. Iohn Damascene li 2. de Paradis affirmeth in these words Adam in bodie was delighted in the terrestriall paradise but in mind he was present with the quires of Angells in the paradise of holie spirits The same alsoe in effect S. Gregorie the Great affirmeth in his Dialogues Dialog 2. to witt that man in paradise was accustomed to enioy the words of God and to be present with the blessed Angeliall Spirits in puritie of heart and hight of contemplation But we alas doe now Psal 64. sit and weepe in Babilon of this wretched life and vpon the bankes of the riuers thereof whilest we remember that Syon where the Prophet saieth An hymne becommeth God VVisupra ● S. Leo aboue named giueth this reason why Alleluia is intermitted for nine weeks precisely and reassumed in the tenth weeke There are saieth he nine quires of Angells and the tenth quire sell by the sinne of Pride and thereby disturbed the ioye of the rest vntill Man was created to supplie their number but when he fell alsoe by disobedience they were againe greatly discomforted vntill our Sauiours birth at which tyme they begane to reassume their songe of ioye and afterwards at his Resurrection and Ascension together with those blessed soules which accompanied him vnto his throne of glorie they conceiued full hope that their number should be made compleate and their praise perfect S. Augustine saieth that although this Li. 2. Hymne might be interpreted both in de doctrina Christiana c. 10. Greeke and Latin yet it hath remained intire because it relisheth best in its owne originall to witt in the Hebrew Whosoeuer out of curiositie shall desire to soe more of the signification of this Hymne let him peruse the 137. Epistle of S. Ierome to Marcella where he maie receiue satisfaction The Inuitatorie verse IN the diuine office the Inuitatorie verse is vsually varied according to the nature of the office appointed for each daie and it is thus defined by Peter Damian Tom. 3. c. 7. in his booke intituled Dominus vobiscum The Inuitatorie saieth he is that by which the communion of the faithfull is inuited to the praise of God Concerning which you must note that the communion of true beleeuers be they scattered abroad in neuer soe many seuerall countreys doe yet make but one mysticall bodie whereof Christ is the head in whome they maie and doe meete together in spirit in the diuine praises by the feete of their soules which are the affections and in this sort they are inuited to come and ioyne with vs in the praise of almightie God S. Augustine affirmeth that if two iust In Psal 94. men be placed one in the East and the other in the West yet maie they truely be saied to be together because they are both in God but although à iust man and à wicked man be linked in one chaine yet are they farre à sunder for the one by louing iniquitie hath seperated himself farre from God and the other by louing God is nearely adioyned vnto him and if two such should praise
inhabite the sea coasts the round world and they that dwell therein The riuers to wit the faithful regenerated in the waters of baptisme and filled with the riuers of grace Shall clappe with hand shall praise God by one assent with exultation of heart and good workes And the mountaines to wit contemplatiues sublime in the practise of all vertues shall reioyce at the sight of our Lord because he cometh to iudge the earth He will iudge the round earth in iustice and the peoples in equitie By iustice is here vnderstood the rectitude and vprightnesse of his iudgements and by equitie his fauour clemency I doe here but lightly touch some points for that I haue already saied something of them in the former explications Of versicles and the vse of them AT the end of euery Nocturne after the Antiphone id added à Versicle Our holie Father S. Benedict maketh frequent mention of them in his Rule They are certaine short but sweet and efficacious sentences accommodated to the nature of the office and for the most part are desumed out of the holie scriptures The holie Church hath placed them in the diuine office as they are here in this office of the blessed Virgin that is to saie In the Nocturne office after the Psalmes in Laudes and Vespres after the Hymnes and in the rest of the Houres after the Chapters They are called Versicles Durand l. 5 Rational c. 2. n. 40. and interposed in the office after this manner for two reasons The first because they signify that if perchance we haue gone à straie been distracted b● vaine thoughts in regard of the prolixitie of the Psalmes that we ought to returne to God or at least to our owne hearts according to the diuers aduertissements and significations of the Versicles Amalar ●●de ordine Antiph c. 1. The second is because by them the intention and affection of the mynd is turned from one thing to another that is to saie in the Nocturnes from singing or reciting of Psalmes vnto reading of Lessons from labour to rest from the praise of God to Praier They are vsually song by the shrillest voices that they maie the better reuiue the spirits of such as are performing the office and cause them to prosecute the rendue thereof with more alacritie Of Absolutions NExt in order followeth the Pater noster Or our Lords Praier after which is added à short praier to our Sauiour Christ which is called an Absolution that he will bee gratiously pleased to purify illuminate and prepare vs that we maie worthily reade the Lessons following The reason hereof is rendred l. 1. de diui no officio ● 11. by Rupertus to wit because we ought to aske the Lord of the haruest that he will bee pleased to send workmen to gather his fruits and open our hearts that we maie vnderstand his lawes and precepts least the seed of the word of God which we are about to heare bee deuoured by the birds of the aire choaked by thornes or frustrated of taking roote by the hardnesse of the rocks In this office of the blessed Virgin this is asked by her intercession and the rest of the Saints Of Benedictions THe Absolution being pronounced there is asked a Benediction and leaue to reade the Lessons because none are to vsurpe the office of preaching the word of God without the permission of their Superiours That the manner of asking and giuing these Benedictions maie l. Dominus vobiscu● c. 2. bee the better vnderstood I w●● here set downe the forme ●●ereof as I fynd it expressed by Peter Damian He that is about to reade the Lessons saieth he doth with à signe of great humi●itie ●owe his body and desire to bee blessed not by the Priest but rather by him whome the Priest shall appoint saying Iube Domne benedicere which in effect is as much as to saie Sir appoint some one to blesse me or maie it please you Sir to cause some one to blesse me The Priest therefore that he maie correspond on his part to soe great humiliation doth not delegate this office of blessing ●nto any his inferiour neither doth he presume by himselfe to giue the Benediction but rather doth begge of almighty God who is blessed aboue all that he will bee pleased to giue it Thus farre are the words of Peter Damian Which manner of asking and giuing the Benedictions by him here declared hath been and is generally practised when the office is performed in publike by any number but w●en one alone reciteth the office the custome is insteed of Domne to saie Domine because the Benedictions are then asked immediatly of almightie God ●●e Bened●ctions in the Br●uiary are giuen in the name of the blessed ●rinitie but here in this office of the blessed Virgin the first Benediction is giuen in the name of our sweet Sauiour and his beloued Mother and the second and third are asked by her intercession Of Lessons and the profit that ariseth by them THe Benediction being giuen the Lector or Reader proceedet● to reade the Lessons which are here in this little office of the Blessed Virgin taken out of the foure and twentieth Chapter of Ecclesiasticus for all tymes of the yeare except Aduent when they are taken out of the Ghospel But in the other offices of the Breuiary the Lessons of the first Nocturne are taken out of the old or new Testament of the second out of the writings of the holie Fathers and Doctors of the holie Church and of the third out of the Homilies of the Fathers according to the nature of the office The institution of reading Lessons is verie auncient as maie appeare by the Acts of the Apostles where it is written That those that inhabited Ierusalem not knowing the voices of the Prophets that are Act. 13. read euery Sabbaoth iudging haue fulfilled them And it is cleare by the testimony of S. Paul that Lessons were vsed in the primitiue Church much after the manner as they are at this present VVhen you come 1. Cor. 14. together saieth he euery one of you hath à Psalme hath à doctrine hath à reuelation hath à tongue hath an interpretation c. It was ordained by the Councell of Laodicea Cap. 17. about twelue hundred yeares agone that Lessons out of the holie Scriptures should bee intermixed with the Psalmes and long before that Councell the saied custome was practised in the holie Church as Cass●an affirmeth It will not bee needfull l. 2. Insti●ut to insist much vpon the prouing of the antiquitie and vse of the Lessons for that it is manifest both by what hath been saied as alsoe by the Rule of our holie Father S. Benedict who liued aboue eleuen hundred yeares past and the authoritie of S. Augustine in his preface vpon the Epistles of S. Iohn and the generall practise of the holie Church in all ages The fruit that maie bee gathered thereby is manifold some of
whole world Attend therefore to him and he will attend to thee But the way how to make it is not yet shewed which notwithstanding is noe lesse needfull for the vnlearned to know Wherefore for the benefite of simple but well minded soules I will as plainly and breifly as I can sett downe à me●●ode how to prepare the mynd and keepe it well imploied which they maie make vse of and I hope with profitt vntill God almightie shall please to inspire them with à better and more agreeable to the affections of their soules CHAPT XI C●ntaininge à forme of Preparation before praier with Aspirations of diuers Kindes THe Ecclesrastes giueth this aduice Ecclesiastes c 5. Speake not any thing rashly neither let ●hy heart be swif to vtter à word before God Wherefore it will be good that when they come to pray they pause à while in silence and consider attentiuely what à waightie matter they goe about vizt to treate with God almightie concerning the busines of their saluation Next let them frame to themselues à firme bele●fe that God is there present before th●● though● disguised and that perhaps if they proue faithfull feruent and perseuerant he will if it be ●o ●●nie●● for them manifest himself vnto them as he did to S. Marie Magdal●●e and since hath often done to many holie S●ints Yet they ought not to frame vnto themselues any positiue cōceipt of him as p●re God supposing him to bee present in this or that forme or shape for he is à most simple Spirit and cannot be compreh ●nd●d vnder any corporall Specie● or Image but à negatiue that is that he is neither 〈◊〉 nor that nor any thing which their ●a●tafie can represent vnto them They are alsoe to beleeue that he vieweth all their externall comportment and all the internall desires and affections of their hearts proue cleanely ●●e● if their bodies ●er● composed of transparent ●●ri●● all ●and i●●●●●●d with the sonne beames This done let them ●●de●●our ●o g●● into thei●●●t 〈◊〉 by so●e ●●ou● A●piration For ●● the 〈◊〉 sai●th O●● mile will d●i●● out another Wherefore those that seeke to free 〈◊〉 ●●lu●s from distraction● and to ●●der the pass●●●● a●●e into their Interiour must ende●●our by some internall imployment such as is the exercise of Aspirations to expell the images of their externall affaires and by little and little to winne their minds 〈◊〉 their passions and draw neare to the image of God which he hath impressed or stamped in the Fund or bottome of their soules as the Prophet witnesseth The light of thy countenance o Psal 4. Lord is signed vpon vs where they may find him soe often as they will withdraw themselues from the m●●●●ltuous noise of exteriour busines and conuert their hearts towards him sweetly and with à filiall reuerence But least this tearme Interiour maie seeme to obscure it will be needfull to giue this short explication thereof Mysticall diuines doe ●●ach that whilest our minds are busied in any exteriour imployment although it be good and laudable 〈◊〉 not yet directly tending towards God almightie ● that the saied imploim●n● doth mediate or interpose it self betweene vs and hi● and doth as it were keepe vs out of ourselues that is doth hinder vs from working immediatly to the end for which we were created which is to haue our eies and hearts fixed vpon God and to direct all our actions and thoughts to praise and glorifie him immediatly Our first parents did performe this immediate tendance towards God and soe remained alwaies in their interiour vntill they did voluntarily extrouert and distract themselues to reflect vpon the forbidden fruit of which fruit after they had tasted both they and all that descend from them found and doe find great repugnance and difficultie to keepe themselues introuerted or to remaine in their Interiour for any long space and therefore God almightie who is most gracious and benigne hauing regard to humaine infirmitie doth not exact of vs the practise of this introuersion at all times out of praier but in à very imperfect manner Yet when we come to praier he doth expect that we practise it in some better measure that our praier maie be performed with due reuerence which we cannot well doe vnlesse we auert our minds from all exteriour things vnto which things whilst we remaine attent we are properly teamed to be extrouerted or out of ourselues and that we conuert of hearts to tend immediatly towards God where in whilest we continue we are tearmed to be introuerted or to remaine and dwell in our interiour This maie suffice for the explication of that tearme The Aspirations that I here speake of maie be these that follow or such like either in à few words or in many as they shall find most proper for them I desire that they may not be recited vocally but pronounced as it were mentally yet herein alsoe let such proceed as they shall experience themselues best recollected and moued to deuotion Aspirations in à few words INdeed our Lord is in this place and Gen. 28. I was not aware of it I will hold him I will not let him goe vntill he haue giuen me his benediction O Lord thou commaundest me to loue giue what thou commaundest and commaund what thou wilt O that I knew thee and knew my self What is there for me in heauen or what desire ● on earth besides thy self Heauen is not heauen to me without thee O Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest I loue thee When shall I come before the face of our 〈◊〉 I desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ Woe is me that my soio●rning is prolonged Praise our Lord o my soule let his praise be alwaies in th● mouth My beloued to me and I to him one to one all to all à creature to his Creator My beloued is all faire all swee●● all delightfull He hath wounded my heart If I maie find fauour in thy sight shew me thy face Let thy voice sound in myne eares for thy voice i● sweet and thy face beautifull Thou art worthy o Lord to receiue glory and honor and vertue and benediction Aspirations in more words Speaking to the soule DVst and ashes as I am how dare I appeare in the sight of my God before whome the powers of heauen doe tremble Yet be not dismaied o my soule He hath saied that he came to calumners and wh●t would he but they should come vnto him How sweetly and mildly did he absolue the woman that was taken in adultery who stood wholy abashed and confounded in his presence VVoman where are thy accusers Hath none of them condemned thee Neither doe I Goe thy way and sinne noe more O wonderfull me●●y O sweete answer I how can we feare to open our greifes vnto him He hath saied come all to me that are heauy l●aden and I will refresh you Be confident therefore o my soule heauen and earth may passe but he will not
borne Church is explicated the grace of Baptisme is commended the benefits of God recounted the Incarnation of Christ is designed the faithfull are inuited to the consideration of the diuine workes the diuine power is openly declared à most sweet and paternall admonition is contained the magnificence of our Sauiour is set forth and finally the most excellent benefit of his holie Incarnation is repeated to shew that it cannot bee to oft remembred Let vs therefore endeauour to sing this Psalme with all feruour of deuotion beseeching almightie God in our hearts to bee our refuge and comfort in all our necessities both corporall and spirituall The title and argument of the 86. Psalme and 6. in The Nocturne Office TO the children of Chore to the faithfull imitators of Christ à Psalme of Canticle à Psalme containing spirituall ioy In this Psalme is sung the praise of the Cittie of Ierusalem by which noe doubt the Christian Church ought to bee vnderstood For although that which is saied in the beginning of the Psalme to wit That the foundations thereof are in the holie mountaines maie bee applied to the terrene Cittie of Ierusalem yet the rest to wit That the Babylonians Aegiptians and Tyrians are in it doth not squarre therewith But to the Church militant or triumphant all that is saied doth fitly agree The exposition of the Psalme THe foundations thereof The Prophet expresseth not the name of the thing whereunto the word thereof hath relation for the same reason as it maie seeme which moued S. Marie Magdalene to saie vnto him whome she supposed to bee the gardiner Sir if thou hast taken him away tell me where thou hast layed him c. O excessiue loue She beleeued noe mans minde could bee ignorant of him with whose feruent loue hers was filled and wholly possessed In like manner the Prophet in regard of the ardent loue he bore towards the holie Church doth not expresse the name thereof and yet the words following doe shew that he had relatiō thereunto as being the thing he foretold in his heart His words are these The foundations thereof to wit of the holie Church which I contemplate in spirit are collected and established in the holie mountaines in Christ the mount of mountaines principally and secondarily in the Apostles and Prophets who doe sustaine the spirituall fabricke of the Church according to that of the Apostle Other 1. Cor. 3. foundation noe man can laye beside that which is layed which is Christ Iesus and in another place Build vpon the foundation of Ephe. 2. the Apostles and Prophets Our Lord loueth the gates of this spirituall Sion our Lord accepteth and approueth of the Sacramēts vertues Exorcisme Catechisme Baptisme of the holie Church which are as it were the gates entrances into à spirituall life aboue the tabernacles of Iacob before or rather then the rites and ceremonies obserued by the children of Israell whilst they liued in tents and Pauilions In the Prophecy of Malachias God almightie doth seeme to dislike and reiect the Synagogue and her manner of worship and to approue and gratefully accept of the Christian Church and the forme of seruice vsed therein I haue noe Malach. 1. will in you to wit the Synagogue saieth the Lord of hostes and gift I will not receiue of your hand But of the holie Church he saieth From the rising of the Sunne euen to the going downe great is my name among the Gentils and in euery place there is sacrificing there is offered to my name à cleane oblatiō Morally by Sion are vnderstood the speculators of celestiall things and by Iacob the supplanters of vices Our Lord therefore doth loue Sion to wit the vertues and good workes of contemplatiue men more or better then the tabernacles of Iacob to wit the inhabitants of the earth designed by Iacob who although they liue in the grace of God haue not as yet throughly mortified their coneupiscences and altogether subdued vice but haue need to combate daily against inordinate motions Nothwithstanding that these labour more then speculatiue perfect mē yet they merit à lesser guerdon or reward then they because their acts doe not proceede from such sincere perfect and feruent loue as the acts of contemplatiue persons neither doe they operate soe readily peaceably sweetly and delightfully as contemplatiues and speaking absolutely by how much the more readily quietly delightfully any man doth execute the worke of God by soe much the more doth he merit Glorious things are saied of thee ô Citty of God not onely of the triumphant Church but alsoe of the militant to wit that the Sonne of God shall visite her in person and that all nations tribes and peoples shall flocke vnto her from all parts of the earth and make suite to be admitted to inhabite within her walls which is insinuated by the words that follow I will bee mindfull of Raab and Babylon knowing me Raab in this place is not the proper name of that woman who hid the messengers of Iosue but according to S. Ierome it is here an apellatiue name designing as à propertie pride or proud whereby are designed the Pagans giuen to idolatrie and rebellious to God and Babylon is by interpretation confusion The sense therefore of these words seemeth to bee I will bee mindfull by shewing mercie of Raab and Babylon to wit of the proud Gentils and of those that liue in the confusion of sinnes knowing me by faith after I am soe mindfull of them This our Lord performed sending his Apostles to the whole world of whome S. Simon and Iude preached the Gospell to the Babylonians and conuerted the greatest part of them to the faith of Christ Behold the forreiners the Philisthians and Tyre and the people of the Aethiopians these were there to wit in the Citty of Christ These nations are here expressed by name because they bordered vpon the land of Iuda and did first embrace the Christian faith yet by them are designed all the infidels of the whole world which came o● shall come to ioyne in vnion of faith with the holie Church Shall it not bee saied of Sion Man and man is borne in her and the highest himselfe founded her As if he should saie yes it shall bee saied of Sion that many men or almost euery man shall bee regenerated in her by the Sacrament of Baptisme and that God founded her These words are otherwaies deliuered by very many of the most learned and auncient Fathers as followeth Shall not man saie to Sion and man is borne in her and he the most high hath founded her As if the Prophet had saied Yes verily Man shall saie to Sion to wit to the holie Church as followeth and Man is borne in her Christ God and man is borne of the B. Virgin the most worthy member in the Church and he to wit Christ our Lord soe borne in the Church according to his humane nature being the most high according to his
The Canticles of the old Testament might not bee song but onely in the land of Promise but such new songs as these of the new Testament maie bee song by all the inhabitants of the earth and therefore Sing to our Lord all the earth this new and most sweet song That for the excessiue Charitie Ephes 2. wherewith God the Father hath loued vs he hath sent his onely Sonne into the world Sing ye to our Lord and blesse his name praise him and recount his wonderfull benefits with iubilation of heart saying See what manner of Charitie the Father hath 1. Io● 3. giuen vs that we should bee named and bee the Sonnes of God Such sweete sentences as these are called à new song not onely in regard of the newnesse of tyme but alsoe in respect of the new and fresh deuotion of the mynd and for that they ought to bee song by renewed men in whome vaine and dishonest loue raigneth not any more but true Charitie Let vs therefore reforme the affections of our heart and out of the feruent loue we beare towards our Sauiour seeke for and inuent new songs in his praise according to the grace and internall light that God hath giuen vs as the fond louers of the world doe compose songs of him or her whome they loue carnally Shew forth his saluation praise ye and di●ulge ye Christ by whome in whome God the Father doth saue vs from daie to daie euery daie for as daie doth succeed to daie without ceasing soe it is meet that praise should succeed to praise O all ye Apostles and Disciples of our Lord and all others whosoeuer their lawfull successors that haue the zeale of the diuine honour and brotherly charitie Shew forth his glorie among the Gentils which shall bee conuerted that they may beleeue and to those that are already conuerted that they maie encrease in loue and shew forth his maruelous workes in all peoples his creation of the world Redemption of mankind sending of the holie Ghost all other his wonderfull workes It is most meet that ye doe this Because our Lord is great and exceeding laudable He is an infinite and immense goodnes and he is as laudable as good therefore cannot bee sufficiently praised by any creature he is terrible aboue all Gods more to bee feared then all those which the Gentils did adore as Gods Almightie God in himselfe is all sweet benigne and louely for as S. Iohn affirmeth 1. Ioh. 4. God is charitie Yet he is saied to bee terrible in regard that he is as it were constrained to seeme soe to proud stubborne and disobedient people who will not bee wonne by lenitie and sweetnes Moreouer he is saied to bee terrible because it is more greeuous to bee separated from him then from all the creatures or delightfull things in the world as alsoe for that none can inflict soe cruell torments as he can whence is that of the Euangelist Feare not them that kill the Math. 10. body and are not able to kill the soule but rather feare him that can destroy both soule and body into hell For all which reasons it is manifest that he is more to bee feared then the Gods of the Gentils as alsoe Because all the Gods of the Gentils are Diuels reprobate Angels who for their pride and disobedience were throwne downe by him from heauen and cannot hurt vs further then he shall please to permit but our Lord made the heauens It is generally knowne that many of the Gentils did worship certaine wicked men for Gods to wit Saturne Iupiter Mercury Priapus c. and that many others did adore the Sunne Moone Starres fire water and the beasts of the earth as S. Paul doth infinuate to the Romans How then can all the Gods of the Gentils bee saied to bee diuels To which maie be answered that those wicked men are called diuels by participation of diuellish wickednesse like as some men are called Angels by participation of Angelicall dignitie and office as S. Iohn calleth the Pastors or Apoc. 2. Bishops of the Seauen Churches in Asia Angels and the Prophet Malachias calleth Malach. 2. à Priest the Angell of the Lord of hostes as concerning the other things which were adored for Gods although they were not diuels yet because those that exhibited worship vnto them beleeuing certaine deities to bee in them did by such their worship serue the diuels therefore it is that all the Gods of the Gentils are saied to bee diuels and the things that are immolated to them to bee immolated to diuels Confession and beautie in his fight holinesse and magnificence in his sanctification This verse is expounded by the holie Fathers fower seuerall waies and in effect as followeth First that in contemplating God is seene all beautie and matter of praise holinesse and magnificence in his sanctuary Secondly that praise and puritie is exercised in his presence holinesse and diuine worship in his sanctuary Thirdly that praise is sung to God by his Saints in heauen for the beautie which they behold in him who is indeed the fountaine of all sanctitie puritie glory and Maiestie as is acknowledged by those blessed spirits of whome consisteth the triumphant Church wherein he doth manifest this his beautie which is here tearmed his sanctification or is sanctuary Fowerthly that in those whome God almighty is graciously pleased to behold with the eies of his mercie this his sight causeth remorse of conscience and confession or acknowledgement of their faults by which meanes they attaine to interiour beautie and puritie of heart Bring ye to our Lord ye families of Gentils bring ye to our Lord glorie and honour bring ye to our Lord glorie vnto his name The Prophet repeateth here Bring ye to our Lord three tymes and endeth with glorie to his name as in the beginning of the Psalme he repeated thrice Sing ye to our Lord ending with blesse his name thereby as the holie Fathers doe note obscurely insinuating the most high mistery of the B. Trinitie which afterwards in the new testament was to bee diuulged more clearely Take ye vp hoastes bring with you gifts and sacrifices not such bloudy sacrifices as are now offred in the Temple but such as the Apostles and their successors shall teach you to offer to wit the sacrifice of à contrite heart confession of sinnes praier fasting almesdeeds and the like according to that of S. Peter Bee ye Epist 1. c. 2. à holie priesthood to offer spirituall hoastes acceptable to God by Iesus Christ And enter into his courtes into the Catholike Churches and other places deputed to the diuine worship and especially into the Temple of your hearts descending into your interiour and there praising and adoring God within you by contemplation loue and watchfull custody of your senses for The temple of God is holie 1. Cor. 3. which you are Adore ye our Lord in his holie courts adore ye in his
him who hath been mindfull of you euen before you had existence in nature In this Psalme we are admonished to weigh diligently the horrour distriction and seuere rigour of the last iudgement and to consider from our heart how horred Hebre. 10. it will bee then to fall into the hands of the liuing God to behold him à furious iudge to see the world all in flames to see the whole troupes of Angels assisting Christ our iudge against the vniust before heauen and earth to render an account of all our words deeds and thougts to bee confounded and reproued before men Angels and diuels to heare that most bitter and irreuocable sentence of damnation pronounced Goe Math. 25. ye accursed into eternall fire to expect the vncertaine or rather certaine sentence of the iudge to behold the wide gaping Chaos of the infernall dungeon and lastly to bee separated for euer from the societie of the iust and throwne into the abisme of hell there to bee scorched with vnextinguible flames without any the least hope of euer departing thence Wherefore let vs recite this Psalme with feare and trembling and beg of our Lord grace to cōporte our selues in such sort in this life that we maie merit to behold him then as à gracious patrone and mild Father not as a seuere iudge The title and argument of the 97. Psalme and last in the Nocturne Office A Psalme to Dauid himselfe In the person of Dauid is prefigured Christ our Lord as hath been saied The Prophet doeth by this Psalme inuite all nations with heart voice and instruments ioyfully to celebrate the two foresaied commings of our Sauiour yet he cheefly treateth of his first comming to saue the world The Prophet doth in this as in many other of the Psalmes speake of things to come as if they were already passed for the infallible certainty of them all which we now behold to bee performed accordingly The exposition of the Psalme SIng ye to our Lord à new song because he hath done maruelous things farre surpassing mans capacitie which are at lardge recorded by the Euangelists His right band his diuine power hath wrought saluation to himselfe hath raised his mortall body from death to life or thus hath saued mankind for himselfe and his arme his vertue and fortitude is holie God the Father Our Lord hath made knowne his saluation hath proclaimed to Zachary and the shepheards by his Angels to S. Elizabeth S. Anne and holie Symeon by the holie Ghost afterwards to S. Iohn the Baptist and finally to the Apostles in the transfiguration of our Lord that Christ Iesus is his beloued Sonne whome he promised should come and worke saluation to all mankind In the sight of the Gentils he hath reuealed his iustice first by the starre which appeared to the three Kings and afterwards by the preaching of the Apostles he hath reuealed Christ our Lord who is tearmed his iustice because by him God hath redeemed the world not by his power onely but b● the way of iustice or thus hath reuealed the precepts coūsells of the Euangelicall law in which the plenitude of iustice is contained The words and sense of this most sweet verse are frequent in t●● Prophesie of Isa●● The Isa 40. glorie saiet he of our Lord shall bee reuealed and all flesh together shall see that the mouth of our Lord hath spoken And our Lord 52. hath prepared his holie arme in the sight of all the Gentils and all the ends of the earth shall see the saluation of our God and againe I 56. haue made my iustice neere it shall not bee farre of and my saluation shall not tarrie He hath remembred his mercy wherewith he mildly and sweetly not onely spared our first parents but alsoe promised that the seed of t●e woman should crush the serpents head and he hath remembred his truth to the bouse of Israel to performe faithfully what he promised to Abraham Iacob and his progeny according to that of S. Luke He hath receiued ●srael his child Luc. 1. being mindfull of his mercy As he spake to our Fathers to Abraham and his seed for euer All the ends of the earth haue seene the saluation of our God by saith in Christ our Lord diuulged by the holie Apostles Marc. 16. vnto whome our Sauiour saied Going into the w●ole world preach the Gospell to all creatures For which singular benefit the Prop●et doth here inuite all creatures to praise and giue thankes to our Lord saying Make ye iubilation to God all the earth O all ve inhabitants of the ear●h with excessiue and vnspeakable ioy of heart saie ye praise to Christ our God chaunt with your voices reioyce in your hearts and sing on instruments Sing to our Lord on harpe on harpe voice of Psalme on long dr●wne trumpets and voice of c●rnet of horne According to the letter the Heb●●wes did ●se ●uch musicall instruments as these therewith to set forth the praise of God But being taken in à spirituall sense by the harpe is vnderstood the workes of mercy or mortification of the flesh by the long drawne trumpets are signified the tribulations and aduersities o● this life and by the cornet of horne the contemplation or celestiall things by which all transitory things are transcended The sense therefore of this verse seemeth to bee Sing to our Lerd on harpe with mortification of your flesh and workes of mercy that your song ma●e bee acceptable and delig●tfull On harpe and voice of Psalme with life answerable and concording to your voice On long drawne trumpets in aduersities tribulations and tentations giue thankes to God esteeming it all ioy when you fall Iac. 1. into diuers tentations And voice of cornet of horne with vocall praise proceeding from diuine contemplation Make ye iubilation in the sight of the King our Lord to wit Christ Iesus Let the Sea bee moued and the fulnesse thereof the round world and they that dwell therein The riuers shall clappe with hand This is Bellarme in bunc locum Metaphorically spoken in regard that the noise of their motion compared with the roaring of the sea is like to that of clapping of hands The mountaines together shall reioyce at the sight of our Lord because he cometh to iudge the carth If this bee referred to the first comming of our Sauiour all these are saied to reioyce because he cometh to gouerne the world with most iust lawes not onely as in tymes past with the Majestie of his inuisible diuinitie but alsoe in a corporall and visible Philip. 2. forme Made into the similitude of men and in shape found as à man But if it bee referred to ●is second comming these are inuited to reioyce because God will then exterminate all sinners and renew all the elements Some expound the two precedent verses as followeth Let the Sea bee moued and the fulnesse thereof to wit those that negotiate on the sea and such as
signified the cōduits of grace and the preachers of Gods holie word and by lightnings the corruscation of miracles and the commination or threatning of the terrible iudgements of God according to that of the Prophet Isaie I will command the Clowds that they rayne Je. 5. noe shower vpon it and that of the Psalmist His lightnings shined to the round Ps●l 96. world c. Let the earth blesse our Lord. The earth is the lowest and least of the sower Elements and à greate part thereof is ouer flowne with waters neuerthelesse it doth afford aboundant matter of the Creators praise to all that shall rightly consider the quantity disposition fertility and other properties thereof as alsoe how it is as it were the center of the Vniuerse and remaineth firme and immoueable in its place notwithstanding its exceeding weight which is not supported by any thing but hangeth wonderfully in the middest of the world By the stability and fertility thereof is signified constant and vertuous men whome the holie Ghost doth make fruitfull with the celestiall seed of the word of God according to that of S. Luc. 8. Luke The seed is the word of God and that which fell vpon good ground are they who in à good and perfect heart hearing the word doe retayne it and yeeld fruit in patience Mountaines and little hills blesse yee our Lord. By them are designed those that are of great and of small power authority in the holie Church and especially Prelates and such as excell in the gifts of grace according to that of the Prophet Ioell Mountaines shall distill sweetnesse and Ioell 3. the hills shall flow with milke All things that spring in the earth blesse yee our Lord. If we attentiuely consider the value beautie sweetnesse delightfulnesse and other innumerable properties of the things that are produced within the earth and of those that spring out of it we cannot sufficiently admire in them the wisdome sweetnesse and beautie of the omnipotent Creator Blesse our Lord yee fountaines Fountaines are certaine euident representations of almightie God who by reason of his Munificence liberalitie and immense goodnesse towards mankind is often tearmed in holye Scriptures à Fountaine By thē are signified Doctors preachers and Priests vnto whome it belongeth Psal 67. to communicate and impart to others the streames of wisdome and knowledge to saluation and distribute the gifts of grace and the holie Sacraments and of whome it is written In Churches blesse yee God our Lord of the Isa 12. fountaines of Israell and in another place You shall draw waters in ioy out of the Sauiours fountaines Seas and Riuers blesse yee our Lord There is one great sea called the Ocean and diuers other particular seas as it were armes of the saied great sea From the sea ' as from the first fountaine or head all Riuers issue according to that of Ecclesiastes All riuers enter into the sea and the Eccl. 1. sea ouerfloweth not to the place whence riuers issue forth they doe returne that they muie flow againe By the sea is sometymes expressed the inquietude restlesnesse bitternesse and commotion of this world to witt of secular men according to that of the Prophet Isaie The impious are as it were Psa 57. the raging sea which cannot be quiet Sometimes alsoe by the sea are designed the hearts of penitents mouing themselues with bitternesse and the waues of internall compunction By the riuers are signified the copious gifts of grace according to that of our Sauiour He that Ioh. 7. beleeueth in me out of his belly shall flow riuers of liuing waters and sometymes the excesse of tribulations according to that of Psal 92. the Psalmist The riuers haue lifted vp their waues about the voices of many waters VVhales and all things that moue in the waters blesse yee our Lord. These are the principall ornaments of the element of water and what mortall man is able to explicate the variety profit strength and other properties of the fishes of the sea Verily if we attend to what is written by Philosophers concerning the Whale we shall find an ample subiect of the Creators praise By that our Sauiour speaking to S. Peter and S. Andrew Mat 4. saied Come yee after mee and I will make you to bee fishers of men it should seeme that by fishes are vnderstood men in such sort that by the VVhale are designed the great powerfull men and by the other creatures mouing in the waters are signified the lesser simpler sort of people all regenerated by the waters of Baptisme receiuing thereby infused vertues and life of grace Blesse our Lord all yee foules of heauen to witt of the aire where birds flie Who can worthily admire the wisdome perfection and Maiesty of God in the diuersity sweet modulation swift motion and other proprieties of birds By them are sometymes signified proud men raysing themselues vnto the height of vanity and diuells flying in the aire of whome our Sauiour saied The fowles of the aire did eate Luc. 8. it that is did take away the seed of the word of God Yet in this place by the fowles of the aire some doe vnderstand Contemplatiues eleuated aloft by the wings of Praier and Meditation vnto whome maie fitly be applied that of the Psalmist VVho will giue me the wings of Psal 54. à doue and I will fly and rest and that of the Prophet Isaie VVho are these that Isa 60. fly as clowds and as doues to their windowes and againe in another place They that hope in our Lord shall change their Isai 40 strength They shall take wings as Eagies they shall runne and labour they shall walke and not faint All beasts and cattell blesse yee our Lord. In these alsoe the magnificence of the most high artificer is vnspeakably commended who to declare his singular wisdome in these his effects doth speake many things of them to his seruant Iob. S. Augustine affirmeth that those creatures which haue the least of quantity haue the most admiration for we more admire the workes of the Ante and Bees thē the vast bodies of other beasts Hugh alsoe of S. Victor conformably speaking saieth That the creatures which we admire for their littl●nes are soe artificially and wisely formed that we can scarce discerne whether we ought rather to admire the tushes of the Bore or the wings of the Moath the wings of the Griffon or of the Gnat the head of à Horse or of à Locust the thigh of an Elephant or of an Eagle c. For in these small bodies God almighty hath soe fully distributed all manner of lineaments sutable to their seuerall natures that nothing seemeth to bee wanting to them which nature hath formed in the greatest By beasts and cattell are signified men following sensuality who are inuited to blesse our Lord in that he hath soe gratiously spared them and with such pacience expected their amendment These
after their conuersion for the most part are accustomed to praise our Lord with à gratefull heart saying with the Psalmist But that our Lord hath holpen me within very Psal 9● litle my soule had dwelt in hell Yet in regard that bruit sauadge and vntamed creatures are properly called beasts and bruit tame domesticall creatures cattell by beasts may fitly bee vnderstood carnall cruell vntractable men by cattell gentle courteous and tractable men Sonnes of men blesse yee our Lord. Reasonable and intellectuall creatures as the Sonnes of Men are ought to blesse our Lord not onely by affording matter of the diuine praise to such as rightly consider them but by considering their owne excellencie and perfection as alsoe the perfections in other creatures to magnifie and extoll with heart and mouth the infinite goodnesse wisdome and power of almigtie God acknowledging him by words and deeds the author and fountaine of all perfection cordially giuing thankes vnto him for all benefits gifts bestowed either vpon them or vpon other creatures Indeed if we will attentiuely consider Man as touching his body and soule and other circumstances concerning him we shall find soe much the more copious and excellent matter of the Creators praise by how much man is of à more high and excellent nature then the rest of the forenamed creatures For in the body of Man how great goodnesse of God how great prudence of soe mighty à Creator doth appeare Are not the places of the senses and the rest of the members soe disposed the forme shape and stature of the whole body soe delineated that they clearely shew they were made for the seruice of à reasonable soule Man is not created as we see irrationall creatures inclining towards the earth but with the forme of his body bolt vpright towards heauen whereby he is admonished according as the Apostle exhorteth To mynd the things that are aboue and not the things that Collos 3. are upon the earth By how much the more and greater benefits therefore are bestowed vpon him by soe much the more he is obliged to praise God and by soe much the more seuere and terrible shall his doome of reprobation bee if he bee found defectiue herein Let Israel blesse our Lord. Amongst all the generations of men the Israelits are most obliged to God almighty for his especiall graces and singular patronadge and consequently are bound by all the lawes of gratitude to render him due praise VVho declareth his word to Iacob his Psal 147. iustices and iudgements to Israel He hath noe done in leke manner to any nation and his iudgements he hath not made manifest to them Yet in respect that the people of Israel for their incredulity and obstinate blindnesse are become vnworthy of that name of whome the Apostle saieth Behold Israel 1. Cor. ●0 according to the flesh by Israel is now to bee vnderstood the people that are Christians by faith and workes of whome the same Apostle saieth Peace vpon the Israel of Gal. 9. God for they are frequently designed in the Prophets vnder the names of Ierusalem Sion and Israel especially in regard that the Primitiue Church consisted of the saied people Priests of our Lord blesse yee our Lord. These holie men hauing in generall tearmes inuited all Israel to blesse our Lord doe now here especially nominate the Priests on whome greater gifts are bestowed then vpon the vulgar and who in respect of their office or function are peculiarly obliged to spirituall exercises and the praise of God vnto whome Ezechias saied My children be not negligent 2. Paralip 29. our Lord hath chosen you to stand before him and to minister to him and to worship him and to burne incense to him and of whome our Lord hath saied I will replenish the soules of the Priests with fatnesse and in Exodus it is alsoe saied that The Priests shall be holie to their God If then the Priests Exod. 29 of the old law were bound to liue soe spiritually continently and soberly whose priesthood was but as à type and figure of the priesthood of Christ and his holie Church how spiritually continently and temperately are the Priests of the holie Church obliged to liue Verily so much the more perfectly ought they to frame their liues by how much their priesthood is more spirituall and diuine and the sacrifice they offer more excellent and the Sacraments they handle of greater value Seruants of our Lord blesse yee our Lord. These words doe seeme to bee spoken to those cheefly who ministred to the Priests in the diuine worship to witt to the Leuites vnto whome Deacons doe succeed in the holie Church yet they maie alsoe be vnderstood as spokē to all the faithfull for they are all properly stiled the seruants of God as being Created by him redeemed with the pretious bloud of his most deare and onely sonne Christ Iesus Spirits and soules of the iust praise yee our Lord. You are to know that these words Spirit soule doe expresse one the same essence of à reasonable soule which in as much as it informeth and giueth life to the body is called Anima that is à soule and by reason of its simplicity and in as much as it contemplateth heauenly things it is called à Spirit Holie and humble of heart blesse yee our Lord not attributing your vertues and merits to your owne proper power labour or industry but to the piety and grace of the holie Ghost who operateth in you both à good will and ability to performe your duties Ananias Azarias and Misael blesse yee our Lord. These holie men hauing inuited all creatures to praise our Lord doe now prouoke themselues thereunto in consideration of their present benefit being miraculously preserued from the fire of that flaming furnace The verse following is not in the Text but hath been added by the holie Church in the praise of the most blessed Trinity in the place of Gloria Patri which Pope Damasus by the perswasion of S. Ierome did institute to be recited or sung at the end of euery Psalme as hath been saied heretofore Let vs Blesse that is Let vs with heart and mouth exhibite deuotion praise honour reuerence and diuine worship in spirit and truth to the Father our Creator and the Sonne our Redeemer with the Holie Ghost our Comforter and for that these trhee persons are one vndiuided and most amiable God Let vs praise him in three persons with one praise and superexalt him for euer speaking well of him thinking well of him and ascribing vnto him all that is good Thou art blessed o Lord in the firmament of heauen and laudable and glorious and superexalted for euer The argument of the 148. Psalme intituled Alleluia that is to saie Praise our Lord. THe Prophet intending to inuite all creatures to praise our Lord doth reduce them to two Classes to witt Heauen and earth for these are the two principall
parts of the world according to that of Genesis In the beginning Gen 1. God created heauen and earth Heauen is the seate of the Angels and therefore he beginneth with Praise our Lord from the Heauens and referreth to it all superiour things and the earth is the seate of men and therefore he addeth in the 7. verse Praise our Lord from the earth referring vnto it all inferiour things The exposition of the Psalme PRaise yee our Lord from the Heauens praise yee him in the high places Praise yee him all his Angells praise yee him all his hostes S. Augustine well noteth vpon this place that the Prophet doth not by these words commaund the Angells to praise our Lord or exhort them to praise him as though they were slacke and remisse in this happy office or did euer cease or desist from praising him for as S. Iohn affirmeth The Apocalip 4. Psal 83. fower beasts had noe rest daie and night saying holy holy holy Lord God omnipotent and the Psalmist saieth Blessed are they that dwell in thy howse ô Lord for euer-and euer they shall praise thee But he doth hereby congratulate them in this their praising God like as we are accustomed to congratulate those whome wee see doing some worke with ioy wherewith we are well pleased saying courage goe too my Masters or the like which words we vse vnto them not that they stand in need of our incouragement to moue them to beginne that worke but that we are delighted with that they are already in hand with Praise yee him Sunne and Moone praise yee him all Starres and light The Sunne Moone Starres and light are saied to praise our Lord when by their beautie efficacy swittnesse and other proprieties they doe induce intellectuall creatures to admire praise their Creator Praise him yee heauens of heauens to witt the greatest and highest heauens and the waters that are about the saied heauens let them praise the name of our Lord as hath been saied in the precedet Cantic●e Because he saied intellectually within himselfe to witt in his practical vnderstāding that they should bee created and they were made of nothing that which they now are he commaunded by his diuine will and they were created for according to the Apostle God almighty calleth those Rom. 4. things that are not as those things that are as alsoe that of Genesis And God saied Gen. 1. bee light made bee à firmament made c Soe by saving all things were created for God is the cause of all things by his vnderstanding according to that Thou Psal 103. Psal 134. hast made all things in wisdome and by his will according to that All things whatsoeuer our Lord would he hath done in heauen and earth He established them to witt the Angels Sunne Moone Starres and the heauens for euer and for euer and euer for he hath giuen them an incorruptible being Notwithstanding we beleeue that the heauens and the lights of the heauens in as much as concerneth their accidentall forme shall bee changed and renewed for the better as hath been saied in our former explications He put à precept he prefixed them à certaine forme or manner of working and it shall not passe but remaine as he hath decreed He put à precept to the Sunne that it should shine by daie and behold in soe many yeares this hath been obserued to the Moone that it should increase and decrease for thirty daies and this course hath not been altered to the Sea that it should not transcend its limits and behold the surging billowes of the Ocean come wallowing to the shore burst and returne Praise our Lord from the earth all you that any wise appertaine thereunto Yee Dragons and all depthes By Dragons are here vnderstood great fishes which some call Leuiathans or VVhales and by the depthes are vnderstood the deepe placee where such fishes remaine according to that Thou hast crushed the heads of the Dragons in Psal 73 the waters Yet some in this place by Dragons doe vnderstand great serpents rough with scales which dwell in dennes caues and hollow moist places to temper their naturall heat and doe not creepe vpon the earth but fly in the aire and doe exceed other creatures in vast quantity and horrid aspect Fire haile snow yee spirit of stormes to wit tempestious winds exciting suddaine whirl winds and stormes at Sea VVhich doe his word doe obey his diuine will performing that for which they were ordained Mountaines and little hills trees that beare fruit and all Cedars Beastes wild and vntamed and all cattell tame domesticke Serpents and fethered fowles All these the Prophet doth inuite to praise our Lord according as hath been explicated in the precedent Canticle Finally the Prophet inuiteth Man to praise our Lord for whome all things were created saying Kings of the earth all that haue independent temporall authority and absolute right to gouerne and all peoples that owe fealty homage and obedience to their lawfull Soueraignes Princes that haue absolute right to gouerne their subiects within their principalities but yet are subordinate themselues to the saied Kings in some respects and all Iudges of the earth that haue authority from Kings Princes to determine differences betweene party and party and to pronounce sentence of death in criminall causes And that he might comprehend all sorts of people of what age sexe condition soeuer he addeth Yong men and Virgins old with yong All people therefore whether they bee Kings Princes or priuate persons men or women old or yong let them praise the name of our Lord because the name of him alone is exalted that is he himselfe alone doth infinitely surpasse all things in nobility and perfection Eccles 1. Whence Ecclesiasticus saieth There is one most high Creator omnipotent and mighty King and to bee feared exceedingl● and M●yses saieth Neither is there other God Deut. 3. either in heauen or on earth that is able to doe thy workes and to bee compared to thy strength The Co●fession of him aboue heauen and earth to witt His praise is song in the triumphant and militant Church His glory saieth the Prophet shall couer the heauens and the earth is full of his praise Yet in neither of them can he be praised to the full for all the tongues of men and Angells are altogether in sufficient to expresse Abacuc 3. his immense goodnesse and infinite perfection He hath exalted the horne of his people to witt the power and glory of the people of Israel electing them amongst all the generations of the earth giuing them diuine lawes written with his owne finger protecting them miraculously against the fury of their enimies and gouerning them with singular prouidence and vnspeakable loue An Hymne which is the praise of God with à spirituall song properly belongeth to all his Saints in heauen and earth for they are worthy of all praise and they praise God incessantly to the Children
our Lord by their voice that would be verified on the part of the vicked man which Isaie the Prophet writeth This people Isaie 29. honoreth me with their lipps but the heart is farre from me The argument and diuision of the Inuitatorie Psalme which is the 94. in number THe Prophet doth inuito all men that loue God to come and reioyce and praise our Lord with him Secondly he assigneth diuers reasons to moue them thereunto Lastly he exhorteth them that when soeuer or in what manner soeuer God almightie shall be pleased to reueale his will vnto them that they giue diligent attention thereunto and put it in execution without delay least being disobedient to his holie inspirations they receaue the same sentence with our fore fathers in the desert where of Six hundred thousand men fit to beare armes onely two vdzt Iosue and Caleb did enter to possesse the land of promise The explication of the Inuitatorie Psalme COme all you that beleeue in the true God in what part of the world soeuer you reside come in spirit by the feete of your affections Let vs reioyce not as vaine worldlings doe whose greatest delights end in sadnesse but To our Lord the Creator and conseruer of vs all Let vs make iubilation to God our Sauiour let vs expresse with our voice to God our protector our Sauiour and tower of refuge what we conceiue towards him in our hearts but want words to explaine Let vs preuent his face in confession Let vs hasten by thanksgiuing and attributing all our good vnto him to preuent him least he come and taking vs vnprouided to receiue him doe iustly taxe vs with neglect and slothfull ingratitude Let vs vpon the first touch of his diuine grace accuse ourselues condemne the euill we haue done that when he shall come he maie find something to approue and like well of but nothing to condemne or cause his displeasure And in Psalmes let vs make iubilation t● him and in spirituall songs let vs expresse our intime thoughts and affections Let vs doe this first Because our Lord is à great God not like the Gods of the Gentils which are framed of gold and siluer by the hands of men hau●ng mouthes and cannot speake eares and cannot heare feete and cannot walke but God who is of himself from all eternitie and who is soe great à God that he maketh Gods not Gods by nature but by grace for he hath giuen power to those that beleeue in his name to be the Sonnes of God And he is alsoe à great King aboue all Gods for he exerciseth acts of soueraignitie not onely ouer all the former false Gods and those that are Gods by grace but alsoe ouer all Kings Princes and Iudges of the earth who are called Gods by participation of his diuine authoritie Our God infinitly surpasseth all these denominatiue Gods in greatnesse and therefore with good reason ought we to make iubilation vnto him as alsoe Because he repelleth not his people although he seeme to be angrie with them for à tyme pern●tting great afflictions to fall vpon them and seeming to neglect their petitions when they call to him for releife for indeed he is soe benigne and mercifull that he cannot vtterly abandon them or refuse to receiue them when they recurre vnto him by true contrition and confidence in his goodnes and clemencie but will conuert all to their benefitt Neuerthelesse he maie seeme since to haue repelled the Iewes who were then his sole elected People but indeed he hath not repelled any of them but such as would by noe meanes be wone for the residue being many thousands of both sexes who would harken to his voice were receiued to mercie by his onely Sonne Christ Iesus who was the angular stone that ioyned the two walls of the Iewes and Gentils in one The chaffe onely was repelled but the good corne laied vp in the graneries His dominion is not limited within the land of Israel but is extended to the vttermost confines of the earth Because in his hands in his power are the ends of the earth and he beholdeth the hights of the mountaines not onely the highest places of the earth but alsoe the Emperours Rulers of the earth These high mountaines for a tyme did oppose his Church and endeauour to roote out the Christian faith but shortly after they humbled themselues vnder his mightie hand Moreouer let vs reioyce to our Lord Because the sea is his and he made it and placed limitts thereunto which it shall not ouerpasse his hands formed the drie land and made it fit for habitation Come let vs adore fall downe before God for he regardeth those a farre of that are high in their owne conceits but he beholdeth the humble with a gracious aspect Come therefore with reuerence and submission all you whose sinns haue made you remote from God come with humble but yet firme confidence in his mercies Let vs weepe before our Lord that made vs Come securely for he will not contemne the worke of his hands which he hath formed to his owne image and similitude Since that we burne inwardly and are scorched with the conscience of our offences it is meet that with flouds of teares we seeke to extinguish those flames Alas such is our wretched state that we can blemish and defile the sacred image of God in our soules but we are altogether vnable to restore it to its primitiue luster and beautie with out the helpe of him that formed it Come therefore let vs humble ourselues in his presence and deplore the lamentable estate whereunto we haue brought ourselues through our manifold iniquities and then we maie be confident of pardon for he hath saied he will not despise an humble and contrite heart He is both willing to remitt all how exorbitant soeuer and powerfull to effect his will Because he is the Lord our God and we are his people and sheepe of his pasture In the text of the holie Bible the last part of this clause is placed in this order And we the people of his pasture and sheepe of his hands vpon which words S. Augustine in his explication of this Psalme saieth Behold how elegantly the Prophet hath changed the order of these words placing them as it were improperly that we might vnderstand those to be the sheepe which are the people For he saieth not the sheepe of his pasture and the people of his hands which might seeme to sute better with those words because sheepe doe properly belong to the pasture but he saieth the people of his pasture to shew thereby that the people are his sheepe for there are sheepe which we buye but not which we haue made He had saied before let vs fall downe before him that made vs and therefore he fitly tearmeth vs here the sheepe of his hands for noe man can make himself sheepe He maie buye sheepe or haue sheepe giuen him or maie come by them by
things to embrace vertue and from vaine fading things to thirst after the cheife immutable good Secondly The testimony of our Lord is faithfull true and most worthy to bee credited reuealing and testifying the will of God what his pleasure is we should know what he requireth we should doe and what we should refraine from what paines and torments he will inflict vpon such that trangresse his cōmandements and what reward he hath prepared for those that obserue them giuing wisedome the light of spirituall prudence to litle ones to wit to simple and humble men that they may by the help thereof know how to decline from euill and doe good for to such God almightie vnfoldeth many high mysteries according to that of our Sauiour I confesse to thee ô Father Math. 11. of heauen and earth because thow hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast reuealed them to litle ones Thirdly The iustices of our Lord be right iust and full of equitie leading vs to beatitude without error and therefore making hearts ioyfull which obserue them for loue For it is naturally delightfull to à man to behold that he liueth well according to the rules of vertue and procureth internall peace securitie of conscience and firme hope of saluation but contrariwise it is à corrosiue to à mans heart to see himself à slaue to sinne and vice and procureth horror sadnesse and despaire if God doe not mercifully moue him to teares of repētance whereas A secure mind is as it were à continuall Prouerb 15. feast Fourthly The precept of our Lord is lightsome cleare and manifest illuminating the eies of our interiour to wit our vnderstanding and Memorie that we bee not immerged in the darknes of vice but maie remaine alwaies in God Fiftly The feare of our Lords is holie That seruile feare by which we tremble to offend God out of the consideration of the seueritie of his iustice is good but that filiall feare which ariseth out of the consideration of his goodnes and mercie by which we dread to displease God because we loue him tender his honour as being our benigne Lord and Father is truely holie and permament for euer and euer for it beginneth here and remaineth euen in the next world habitually and actually alsoe according to reuerentiall subiection but not according to flight which pertaineth to feare because the blessed are confirmed in grace and assured that they cannot bee auerted and therefore doe not feare any future euill but are subiect to God with à reuerentiall feare Sixtly The iudgments of our Lord be true iustified in themselues The commandements of our Lord which are called his iudgments because by them he will iudge mankind and which are the square or rule to discerne vertue from vice and good workes from euill these commandements I saie are most true and iustified in themselues that is they need not bee demonstrated to bee iust by any one for in respect they are the commandements of God they are sufficiently prooued to bee iust Moreouer the ten commandements of which Dauid cheifly speaketh in this place in regard they are all as principles of the law of nature doe containe in them such iustice that they are iust in all places times and particular cases and admit noe dispensation whereas other lawes doe often want the circumstances of time place and persons that they maie bee iust and therefore are to bee desired aboue gold and much precious stones to bee preferred before riches in what quantitie soeuer for the iust shall haue an hundred fold in this world in the world to come life euerlasting and enioy such blisse as farre exceedeth all terrestriall treasure and happines which either eie hath seene or eare hath heard or hath entred into the heart of mā They are alsoe more sweet pleasant and delightfull to our soules then honie or the honie combe is to our tast which contayneth plentie of the purest honie as I can saie by experience For thy seruant keepeth them in keeping them is much reward Many fauours and blessings are obtained euen at this present besides what may iustly bee expected hereafter relying vpon thy faithfull promises Sinnes who vnderstandeth who is able to perceiue or marke euery sinne truely noe man for such indeed is mans frailtie that he is in noe sort able to know shunne and deplore his daily defects and ignorances He hopeth but not without some feare for he doth not certainly know whether he bee worthy of loue or hatred for man cannot bee iustified compared with God If he will Iob. 9. contend with him he cannot answer him one for à thousand Which being soe what better or more present remedy then to haue recourse to God by humble praier saying from my secret sinnes which either when I commit I am ignorant I doe commit or else doe not know to bee such cleanse mee ô Lord by causing me to remember them in as much as is expedient by infusing such sorrow as maie suffice in generall and graunting me grace from hence forth to beware of them as much as is possible and from other mens spare thy seruant and permit him not to bee seduced by their bad example or instigation nor to giue them iust cause of scandall or to doe any thing by which he maie be guiltie of their failings For such is my confidence in thy immense goodnes that notwithstanding I happen to fall into these secret defects and ignorances and that the euill enimie and wicked men doe suggest occasions of sinne vnto me Yet If thou mercifully aiding me they shall not haue dominion ouer me in such sort that wittingly and willingly I doe giue consent and yeeld myselfe subiect vnto them then shall I bee immaculate and shall bee cleansed although not altogeather for that cannot bee expected during this mortall life yet without doubt from the greatest sinne from pride which is the roote of all vice and most odious in thy sight And then exteriourly the words of my mouth shall bee such as maie please thee and interiourly the meditation of my heart gratefull in thy sight alwaies Which I beseech thee O Lord happily to bring to passe who in prosperous things art my light and fortitude and in aduerse my helper and redeemer In this Psalme are wonderfully expressed by the Prophet the grounds of the Christian faith the preaching of the Apostles the Incarnation of the diuine word the praise of the Euangelicall law an acknowledgment of his owne frailtie and an inuocation of the diuine mercie Let vs therefore sing it or recite it with all feruour of heart beseeching our sweet Sauiour who for our sake humbled himselfe soe low as to become the sonne of à poore maid to extinguish all pride in vs and to graunt vs his holie feare The exposition of the 23. Psalme and 3. in number in the Nocturne Office THE TITLE The first of the Sabbaoth the Psalme of Dauid COncerning which you must
2. ●ies haue seene thy saluation which thou hast prepared before the face of all people à light to the re●elation of the Gentils c. and in another place All flesh shall see the saluation Luc. 3. of God By this verse therefore the faithfull doe praie for the illumination of the holie Ghost that they erre not in the way of this present life but by working maie know and by knowing maie walke in the way of our Lord of which our Sauiour speaketh in the Ghospell Stra●●e Math. is the way that leadeth to life and few there are that fynd it and by these words in all nations thy saluation they praie that Christ maie be acknowledged and honoured by all nations Let people ô God Confesse to thee let all people Confesse to thee Let the worship and veneration of the false Gods cease and to thee alone the liuing God let all diuine honour be giuen by all people Let nations called to the faith of Christ be glad with interiour ioy and exult by shewing exteriour signes of their inward ioy and this because thou ô God by thy annoynted iudgest people in equitie that is the seruile yoake of the Prince of darknesse being taken away thou hast constituted à most iust Kingdome in thy holie Church and the nations in earth thou doest direct gouerning them and directing them by most wholsome lawes to the port of eternall saluation S. Augustine interpreteth the words of this verse in the future tense as thus Thou wilt iudge people in equitie and referreth them to the last iudgement And the nations in earth thou wilt direct referreth them to the direction of this present life according to whome the sense of this verse is Let nations bee glad and exult because if they happen to suffer any euill here from men the tyme will come when thou ô God wilt iudge people in equitie and in the meane tyme the nations in earth which are subiect and deuoted to thee thou wilt direct Let people ô God Confesse to thee let all people Confesse to thee Here the Prophet againe exhorteth all people to praise and giue thankes to God adding à new reason or motiue to wit because the earth hath yeelded her fruit This fruit is Christ our Lord borne of the terrene substance of the blessed Virgin à fruit of such excellency that in cōparison thereof all the fruit the earth hath heretofore brought forth maie well bee esteemed briers and thornes Of this fruit the Prophet Isaie maketh mention saying In that Isaiae cap. 4. daie the bud of our Lord shall bee in magnificenee and glory and the fruit of the earth high Yet taking the last words of this verse in à morall sense The earth is saied to yeeld her fruit when the holie Church doth spiritually instruct perfect and conserue her children and when our body liueth soberly and serueth to the aduancement of the soule obeying in all things The Prophet doth here as in many other places of the Psalmes vse the preterperfect tense for the future because in his prenotion that was now done which he foretelleth to bee done God our God blesse vs God blesse vs and let all the ends of the earth feare him This in effect is as much as if he had saied Since all people doe praise thee ô God and the earth hath yeelded her fruit let there henceforth bee a gratefull vicissitude betweene thee vs doe thou open thy liberall hand and fill vs with all benediction to wit with aboundance of all temporall and spirituall benefits and we as it is most meet will serue thee with à filiall reuerence and render thee the tribute of obedience and praise for euer The threefold repetition of the word God in this verse signifieth the affection of the Prophet Yet it seemeth likewise to insinuate the mystery of the blessed Trinitie which was afterwards manifested to the whole world by our Sauiour and his hole Apostles A certaine graue author vpon these words in the first verse of this Psalme to wit God blesse vs and illuminate his countenance vpon vs hath this obseruation Because saieth he many desire to bee blessed by God with aboundance of temporall benefits to wit with beautie power riches honour and the like all which indeed doe come from God but yet are common to the iust and vniust therefore the Prophet addeth what is proper to the iust to wit illuminate his countenance vpon vs. This is proper to the iust whereas the other mentioned things are common to all both good and euill almightie God soe disposing least if they should bee giuen solely to the good euill men would thinke that God were to bee worshipped for them and if to the euill onely infirme and fraise people would feare to conuert themselues to God least these things should bee wanting vnto them Behold here à short Psalme but full of feruour deuotion Let vs conforme the affections of our heart to the sacred words thereof with the whole forces of our mynd let vs implore the diuine mercy that he will bee pleased to inrich vs with the benedictions of Christ and instruct vs with the light of his countenance Let vs alsoe most heartely pray for the common good and for the generall soules health of all men that all men ma●e confesse to God honour and loue him The argument of the Canticle of the three children BY the insuing Canticle the three men Sidrach Misach and Abdenago who were throwne into the furnace of burning fire by the commandement of Nabuchodonosor because they refused to adore the golden statue he had erected as is at lardge related by the Prophet Daniel did inuite all creatures in their seuerall Daniel 3. degrees and natures to praise God and they themselues did praise and glorifie him who preserued their bodies that they were not touched by the fury of those flames and made their hearts inflamed with the fire of his loue Indeed by how much the more one is inflamed with his loue by soe much the more intensly doth he desire that God maie bee praised loued and honoured by all l. 1. de doctrina Christiana creatures according to that S. Augustine By how much the more feruent any one is in the loue of God by so much the more doth he endeauour by all the meanes he can diuise that God maie bee beloued of all men by how much the more sincerely any one doth cōtemplate God by soe much the more he doth vnderualue and humble himselfe esteeme the praise wherewith he doth set forth the glory of God to bee the more insufficient and therefore doth earnestly desire that God maie bee magnificently praised by all creatures and doth his best to procure it The exposition of the Canticle ALl workes of our Lord blesse ye our Lord praise and superexalt him for euer Although euerie Creature doth not blesse and praise almightie God with voice which is proper to Men nor mentally which is
vertue of true humilitie doe euen from the fall of Lucifer acknowledge all their excellencie as receiued from him and mankind depressed by the Serpent alsoe in particular such as resigne themselues to his holie will and for his loue doe submitt themselues vnder all creatures Raising vp from the earth from carnall life from the loue of transitorie things and terrene thoughts the needie such as are voide and destitute of spirituallitie inriching them with diuine gifts with the loue of heauenly things and the contemplation of high mysteries and lifting vp to the Kingdome of glorie the poore the humble out of the dung of this corruptible bodie To place him there with Princes with the holie Angels with Princes of his people with the cheifest of his elect for the Triumphant Church is one vnited of good men and holie Angels Or thus That he maie place him on his right hand in the daie of iudgement with the Princes of whome the Prophet Isaie speaketh saying Our Isa 3. Lord shall come to iudgement with the ancients of his people and his Princes VVho maketh the barren woman the congregation of the Gentils to dwell in à house in the militant Church à ioyfull Mother of spirituall children whome she regenerateth of water and the holie Ghost In this sense the Apostle alleadgeth Gala. 3. that of the Prophet Isaie Reioyce thou barren that bearest not breakeforth and crie that trauailest not because many are the children of the desolate to witt of Gentilitie then of her that hath à husband to wit the Synagogue whose spouse husband was God almightie but he left her for her incredulitie as the Prophet Ieremy Iere. 12. doth manifestly declare saying I haue forsaken my house I haue left my inheritance I haue giuen my beloued into the hands of her enemies myne inheritance is become vnto me as à Lyon in à wood The Prophet tearmeth Gentilitie or the people of the Gentils Sterill and deso●ate because they were long forsaken by almightie God for their Idolatrie in such sort that they brought forth noe fruit of the holie Ghost nor generated any children to Christ whence is that of Amia the Prophetesse The barren woman bare verie manie and she that had manie children was weakened It is meet that we sing this Psalme with spirituall ioy it being composed wholly in the diuine praise It importeth vs alsoe to striue to become children that is pure innocent and humble that soe we maie merit to praise God worthily and to bee beheld by him with a gratious eie for Praiso is not comely Eccles 15 in the mouth of the vitious The third Psalme in Vespres which is the last in Tierce as alsoe the fourth Psalme which is the second in None are alreadie expounded in the saied Houres The title and argument of the 147. Psalme and last in Vespres THe title is Allel●ia In this Psalme the Prophet doth exhort the people of God both of the Triumphant and Militant Church to sing his praise incessantly giuing thankes for his singular benefits showred vpon them in particular for that he hath fortified them on all sides placed peace in their borders blessed their of spring fed them with the bread of life and manifested his hidden mysteries vnto them aboue all other people The explication of the Psalme O Ierusalem praise our Lord render the tribute of praise thankfulnesse to the Soueraigne Monarch of heauen and earth you Cittizens of the holie Ierusalem the Cittie of peace and vnitie of blessed spirits that see him face to face Praise thy God ô Sion ô all you that are called to the vnion of the holie Catholicke Church and doe contempla●e God your Creator redeemer conseruer by the eies of faith praise him in the best manner you can excogitere to witt in puritie of heart and conuersation without blame And that you maie praise him the more worthily remember the singular testimonies of his good will shewed towards you Because he it is that hath strengthned the lockes of thy gates to hinder the enemie from surprising thee at vnawares and moreouer he hath blessed thy children in thee If this bee referred to the celestiall Ierusalem by the Gates here mentioned is vnderstood the admission where by any of the elect are admitted to the fellowship of the blessed by the Lockes is vnderstood the confirmation whereby the elect are firmely established in God and soe the sense of those words He hath strengthned the lockes of thy gates is that God hath made the confirmations of the celestiall Cittizens soe immoueable and secure that they cannot bee broken à sūder by any slight or force The lockes of the gates of this Ierusalem are metaphorically saied to bee confirmed because as à Cittie of this world whilst it is fortified with strong lockes boults and barriers is held secure neither the enemies being of power to make forceable entrance nor the inhabitāts willing or able to depart out of it soe the holie Cittie is altogether most secure in respect that neither the reprobate can enter it nor the blessed will or can abandon it But if they bee referred to the Militant Church by the Gates thereof are vnderstood Vertues especially Faith hope and charitie and by the Lockes are vnderstood the Sacraments which our Lord hath fortified by giuing the efficacie of sanctification vnto them in vertue of the Passion of our Sauiour in such sort that noe man soe long as he shall remaine within the fortresse of the Catholike Church and keep himselfe in the shelter of the infused vertues through the force of the Sacraments which he therein receiues need to feare the machinations of the euill enemie VVho hath sett thy borders peace ô celestiall Ierusalem He it is that hurld downe to the abisse of hell like to à flash of light●ing that mutinous crue that once to disturbe thy peace and in an instant begirt thee with à wall of concord of warreproofe which noe dissention shall euer penetrate And filleth thee with the fatte of corne with the fruition of his diuinitie For the superessentiall diuinitie is the foode of the blessed whose vision or fruition maie well bee tearmed the fatte of corne that is to saie the sweet refection of the eternall bread which refection is the essentiall reward of the blessed wherewith they are soe fully enriched that they can desire noe more I● is his paternall prouidence likewise that hath established within thy circuits ● Militant Church that happie peace which the world cannot giue to witt tranquillitie of conscience which all those enioy who remaine within thy precincts Christ alsoe doth daily fill thee with that Soueraigne foode the holie Sacrament of his owne bodie vnder the species of the purest wheat bread VVho sendeth forth his speech to the earth He it is who sendeth his onely Sonne the eternall word into the world to assume humane flesh for the saluation of mankind Or thus He it is who sendeth forth by