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A63641 Antiquitates christianæ, or, The history of the life and death of the holy Jesus as also the lives acts and martyrdoms of his Apostles : in two parts. Taylor, Jeremy, 1613-1667.; Taylor, Jeremy, 1613-1667. Great exemplar of sanctity and holy life according to the christian institution.; Cave, William, 1637-1713. Antiquitates apostolicae, or, The lives , acts and martyrdoms of the holy apostles of our Saviour.; Cave, William, 1637-1713. Lives, acts and martydoms of the holy apostles of our Saviour. 1675 (1675) Wing T287; ESTC R19304 1,245,097 752

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Hypocrisie and vanities of the one and the Heresie of the other For Herod's leven was the pretence that he was the Messias which the Sect of the 〈◊〉 did earnestly and spitefully promote And after this 〈◊〉 of themselves by the way they came together to Bethsaida where Jesus cured a blind man with a collyrium of spittle salutary as Balsam or the purest Eyebright when his divine benediction once had hallowed it But Jesus staid not there but departing thence into the coasts of Caesarea Philippi out of Herod's power for it was in Philip's jurisdiction after he had prayed with his Disciples he enquired what opinion the world had of him and whom they reported him to be They answered Some say thou art John the Baptist some that thou art Elias or Jeremias or one of the Prophets for in 〈◊〉 especially the Sect of the Pharisees was mightily disseminated whose opinion it was that the Souls of dead men according to their several merits did transmigrate into other bodies of very perfect and excellent persons And therefore in all this variety none hit upon the right or fansied him to be a distinct person from the ancients but although they differed in the assignation of his name yet generally they agreed it was the Soul of a departed Prophet which had passed into another Body But Jesus asked the Apostles their opinion and Peter in the name of all the rest made an open and confident Confession Thou art CHRIST the Son of the living God 9. This Confession Jesus not only confirmed as true but as revealed by God and of fundamental necessity for after the blessing of Peter's person upon allusion of Peter's name Jesus said that upon this Rock the article of Peter's Confession he would build his Church promising to it assistances even to perpetuity insomuch that the gates of hell that is persecution and death and the grave should never prevail against it adding withall a promise to Peter in behalf of all the rest as he had made a Confession for them all that he would give unto him the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven so that whatsoever he should bind on earth should be bound in Heaven and whatsoever he should loose on earth should be loosed in Heaven a power which he never communicated before or since but to their successors greater than the large Charter of Nature and the donative of Creation in which all the creatures under Heaven were made subject to Man's Empire but till now Heaven it self was never subordinate to humane ministration 10. And now the days from hence forward to the Death of Jesus we must reckon to be like the Vigils or Eves of his Passion for now he began and often did ingeminate those sad predictions of his unhandsome usage he should shortly find that he 〈◊〉 be rejected of the Elders and chief Priests and Scribes and suffer many things at Jerusalem and be killed and be raised up the third day But Peter hearing that sad discourse so contrary to his hopes which he had blended with temporal expectances for he had learned the Doctrine of Christ's Advent but not the mystery of the Cross in great and mistaken civility took Jesus aside and began to rebuke him saying Be it far from thee Lord this shall not be unto thee But Jesus full of zeal against so soft and humane admonition that savoured nothing of God or of abstracted immaterial considerations chid Peter bitterly Get thee behind me Satan thou art an offence unto me And calling his Disciples to him told them a second part of a sad doctrine that not only himself but all they also must suffer For when the Head was to be crowned with thorns if the Members were wrapped in softnesses it was an unhansome undecency and a disunion too near an antipathy and therefore who ever will be the Disciple of Jesus must take up his Cross deny himself and his own fonder appetites and trace his Master's foot-steps marked out with bloud that he shed for our Redemption and restitution And that there be no escape from the participation of Christ's suffering Jesus added this Dilemma He that will save his life shall lose it and he that will lose it shall save it to eternity Which part soever we chuse there is a life to be lost but as the first are foolish to the extremest misery that will lose their Souls to gain the World so they are most wise and fortunate that will give their lives for him because when the Son of Man shall come in his own glory and his Father's and of his Angels he shall reward every man according to his works This discourse Jesus concluded with a Prophecy that some standing in that presence should not die till they saw the Son of Man coming in his Kingdom 11. Of the greater glories of which in due time to be revealed Jesus after eight days gave a bright and excellent probation For taking with him Peter and James and John he went up into the mountain Tabor to pray and while he prayed he was transfigured before them and his face did shine like the Sun and his garments were white and 〈◊〉 And there appeared talking with him Moses and Elias gloriously speaking of the decease which he should accomplish at Jerusalem which glory these Apostles after they had awaked from sleep did behold And the Interlocutors with Jesus having finished their embassy of death which they delivered in forms of glory representing the excellencies of the reward together with the sharpness of the passage and interval departed leaving the Apostles full of fear and wonder and 〈◊〉 insomuch that Peter talked he knew not what but nothing amiss something Prophetical saying Master it is good to be here 〈◊〉 us build three tabernacles And some devout persons in memory of the mystery did 〈◊〉 three Churches in the same place in after-Ages But after the departure of those attendent Saints a cloud incircled Jesus and the Disciples and a voice came from the excellent glory This is my beloved Son hear him The cloud quickly disappeared and freed the Disciples from the fear it had put them in So they attended Jesus and descended from the mountain being commanded silence which they observed till the Resurrection 12. The next day came to Jesus a man praying in behalf of his son Lunatick and sore troubled with a Devil who sought oft to destroy him in fire and water that Jesus would be pleased to deliver him For his Apostles tried and could not by reason of the want of Faith for this Grace if it be true though in a less degree is of power to remove mountains to pluck up trees by the roots and to give them solid foundation in the waters And Jesus rebuked the Devil and 〈◊〉 departed out of him from that very hour Thence Jesus departed privately into Galilee and in his journey repeated those sadnesses of his approaching Passion Which so afflicted the spirits of the Disciples that they durst
passions ready to over-run the banks not able to endure a thought that so much evil should befall his Master broke out into an over-confident and unseasonable interruption of him He took him and began to rebuke him saying Be it far from thee Lord this shall not be unto thee Besides his great kindness and affection to his Master the minds of the Apostles were not yet throughly purged from the hopes and expectations of a glorious reign of the Messiah so that Peter could not but look upon these sufferings as unbecoming and inconsistent with the state and dignity of the Son of God And therefore thought good to advise his Lord to take care of himself and while there was time to prevent and avoid them This our Lord who valued the redemption os Mankind infinitely before his own ease and safety resented at so high a rate that he returned upon him with this tart and stinging reproof Get thee behind me Satan The very same treatment which he once gave to the Devil himself when he made that insolent proposal to him To fall down and worship him though in Satan it was the result of pure malice and hatred in Peter only an error of love and great regard However our Lord could not but look upon it as mischievous and diabolical counsel prompted and promoted by the great Adversary of Mankind A way therefore says Christ with thy hellish and pernicious counsel Thou art an offence unto me in seeking to oppose and undermine that great design for which I purposely came down from 〈◊〉 In this thou savourest not the things of God but those that be of men in suggesting to me those little shifts and arts of safety and self-preservation which humane prudence and the love of mens own selves are wont to dictate to them By which though we may learn Peter's mighty kindness to our Saviour yet that herein he did not take his measures right A plain evidence that his infallibility had not yet taken place 5. About a week after this our Saviour being to receive a Type and Specimen of his future 〈◊〉 took with him his three more intimate Apostles Peter and the two sons of Zebedee and went up into a very high mountain which the Ancients generally conceive to have been Mount Thabor a round and very high mountain situate in the plains of Galilce And now was even literally fulfilled what the Psalmist had spoken Tabor and Hermon shall rejoyce in thy Name for what greater joy and triumph than to be peculiarly chosen to be the holy Mount whereon our Lord in so eminent a manner received from God the Father honour and glory and made such magnificent displays of his Divine power and Majesty For while they were here earnestly imployed in Prayer as seldom did our Lord enter upon any eminent action but he first made his address to Heaven he was suddenly transformed into another manner of appearance such a lustre and radiancy darted from his face that the Sun it self shines not brighter at Noon-day such beams of light reflected from his garments as out-did the light it self that was round about them so exceeding pure and white that the Snow might blush to compare with it nor could the Fullers art purifie any thing into half that whiteness an evident and sensible representation of the glory of that state wherein the just shall walk in white and shine as the Sun in the Kingdom of the Father During this Heavenly scene there appeared Moses and Elias who as the Jews say shall come together clothed with all the brightness and majesty of a glorified state familiarly conversing with him and discoursing of the death and sufferings which he was shortly to undergo and his departure into Heaven Behold here together the three greatest persons that ever were the Ministers of Heaven Moses under God the Instituter and promulgator of the Law Elias the great reformer of it when under its deepest degeneracy and corruption and the blessed Jesus the Son of God who came to take away what was weak and imperfect and to introduce a more manly and rational institution and to communicate the last Revelation which God would make of his mind to the World Peter and the two Apostles that were with him were in the mean time fallen asleep heavy through want of natural rest it being probably night when this was done or else over-powred with these extraordinary appearances which the frailty and weakness of their present state could not bear were fallen into a Trance But now awaking were strangely surprised to behold our Lord surrounded with so much glory and those two great persons conversing with him knowing who they were probably by some particular marks and signatures that were upon them or else by immediate revelation or from the discourse which passed betwixt Christ and them or possibly from some communication which they themselves might have with them While these Heavenly guests were about to depart Peter in a great rapture and ecstasie of mind addressed himself to our Saviour telling him how infinitely they were pleased and delighted with their being there and to that purpose desiring his leave that they might erect three Tabernacles one for him one for Moses and one for Elias While he was thus saying a bright cloud suddenly over-shadowed and wrapt them up out of which came a voice This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased hear ye him which when the Apostles heard and saw the cloud coming over them they were seised with a great consternation and fell upon their faces to the ground whom our Lord gently touched bade them arise and disband their fears whereupon looking up they saw none but their Master the rest having vanished and disappeared In memory of these great transactions Bede tells us that in pursuance of S. Peter's petition about the three Tabernacles there were afterwards three Churches built upon the top of this Mountain which in after times were had in great veneration which might possibly give some foundation to 〈◊〉 report which one makes that in his time there were shew'd the ruines of those three Tabernacles which were built according to S. Peter's desire 6. After this our Lord and his Apostle's having travelled through Galilce the gatherers of the Tribute-money came to Peter and asked him whether his Master was not obliged to pay the Tribute which God under the Mosaick Law commanded to be yearly paid by every Jew above Twenty years old to the use of the Temple which so continued to the times of Vespatian under whom the Temple being destroyed it was by him transferred to the use of the Capitol at Rome being to the value of half a Shekel or Fifteen pence of our money To this question of theirs Peter positively answers yes knowing his Master would never be backward either to give unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's or to God the things that are God's Peter going into the house
hast superadded Reason making those first propensities of Nature to be reasonable in order to Society and a conversation in Communities and Bodies politick and hast by several laws and revelations directed our Reasons to nearer applications to thee and performance of thy great End the glory of our Lord and Father teach me strictly to observe the order of Creation and the designs of the Creatures that in my order I may do that service which every creature does in its proper capacity Lord let me be as constant in the ways of Religion as the Sun in his course as ready to follow the intimations of thy Spirit as little Birds are to obey the directions of thy Providence and the conduct of thy hand and let me never by evil customs or vain company or false persuasions extinguish those principles of Morality and right Reason which thou hast imprinted in my understanding in my creation and education and which thou hast ennobled by the superadditions of Christian institution that I may live according to the rules of Nature in such things which she teaches modestly temperately and affectionately in all the parts of my natural and political relations and that I proceeding from Nature to Grace may henceforth go on from Grace to Glory the crown of all Obedience prudent and holy walking through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen SECT IV. Of the great and glorious Accidents happening about the Birth of JESVS The Angels appearing to the Shepherds S. LUKE 2. 14. Glory to God in the highest and on earth peace good will towards men The Epiphanie S. MAT 2. 11. When they had opened their treasures they presented unto him gifts Gold and Frank incense and Myrrhe 1. ALthough the Birth of Christ was destitute of the usual excrescences and less necessary Pomps which used to signifie and illustrate the birth of Princes yet his first Humility was made glorious with Presages Miracles and Significations from Heaven which did not only like the furniture of a Princely Bed-chamber speak the riches of the Parent or greatness of the Son within its own walls but did declare to all the world that their Prince was born publishing it with figures and representments almost as great as its Empire 2. For when all the world did expect that in Judaea should be born their Prince and that the incredulous world had in their observation slipt by their true Prince because he came not in pompous and secular illustrations upon that very stock Vespasian was nurs'd up in hope of the Roman Empire and that hope made him great in designs and they being prosperous made his fortunes correspond to his hopes and he was indeared and engaged upon that fortune by the Prophecy which was never intended him by the Prophet But the fortune of the Roman Monarchy was not great enough for this Prince design'd by the old Prophets And therefore it was not without the influence of a Divinity that his Decessor Augustus about the time of Christ's Nativity refused to be called LORD possibly it was to entertain the people with some hopes of restitution of their Liberties till he had grip'd the Monarchy with a stricter and faster hold but the Christians were apt to believe that it was upon the 〈◊〉 of a Sibyll foretelling the birth of a greater Prince to whom all the world should pay adoration and that the Prince was about that time born in Judaea the Oracle which was dumb to Augustus's question told him unask'd the Devil having no tongue permitted him but one to proclaim that an Hebrew child was his Lord and Enemy 3. At the Birth of which Child there was an universal Peace through all the World For then it was that Augustus Caesar having composed all the Wars of the World did the third time cause the gates of Janus's Temple to be shut and this Peace continued for twelve years even till the extreme old age of the Prince until rust had sealed the Temple doors which opened not till the Sedition of the 〈◊〉 and the Rebellion of the Dacians caused Augustus to arm For he that was born was the Prince of Peace and came to reconcile God with man and man with his brother and to make by the sweetness of his Example and the influence of a holy Doctrine such happy atonements between disagreeing natures such confederations and 〈◊〉 between Enemies that the Wolf and the Lamb should lie down together and a little child boldly and without danger put his finger in the nest and cavern of an Asp and it could be no less than miraculous that so great a Body as the Roman Empire consisting of so many parts whose Constitutions were differing their Humours contrary their Interests contradicting each others greatness and all these violently oppressed by an usurping power should have no limb out of joynt not so much as an aking tooth or a rebelling humour in that huge collection of parts but so it seemed good in the eye of Heaven by so great and good a symbol to declare not only the Greatness but the Goodness of the Prince that was then born in Judaea the Lord of all the World 4. But because the Heavens as well as the Earth are his Creatures and do serve him at his Birth he received a sign in Heaven above as well as in the Earth beneath as an homage paid to their common Lord. For as certain Shepherds were keeping watch over their slocks by night near that part where Jacob did use to feed his cattel when he was in the land of Canaan the Angel of the Lord came upon them and the glory of the Lord shone round about them Needs must the Shepherds be afraid when an Angel came arrayed in glory and clothed their persons in a robe of light great enough to confound their senses and scatter their understandings But the Angel said unto them Fear not for I bring unto you tidings of great joy which shall be to all people For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour which is Christ the Lord. The Shepherds needed not be invited to go see this glorious sight but lest their fancy should rise up to an expectation of a Prince as externally glorious as might be hoped for upon the consequence of so glorious an Apparition the Angel to prevent the mistake told them of a Sign which indeed was no other than the thing 〈◊〉 but yet was therefore a Sign because it was so remote from the common probability and exspectation of such a birth that by being a Miracle so great a Prince should be born so poorly it became an instrument to signifie it self and all the other parts of mysterious consequence For the Angel said This shall be a sign unto you Ye shall find the Babe wrapt in swadling-cloaths lying in a manger 5. But as Light when it first begins to gild the East scatters indeed the darknesses from the earth but ceases not to increase its 〈◊〉
they their Beneficiaries in receiving Tithes or other provisions of maintenance they owe for it to none but to God himself and it would also be considered that in all sacrilegious detentions of Ecclesiastical rights God is the person principally injured 4. The Turtle-doves were offered also with the signification of another mystery In the sacred Rites of Marriage although the permissions of natural desires are such as are most ordinate to their ends the avoiding Fornication the alleviation of Oeconomical cares and vexations and the production of Children and mutual comfort and support yet the apertures and permissions of Marriage have such restraints of modesty and prudence that all transgression of the just order to such ends is a crime and besides these there may be degrees of inordination or obliquity of intention or too sensual complacency or unhandsom preparations of mind or unsacramental thoughts in which particulars because we have no determined rule but Prudence and the analogy of the Rite and the severity of our Religion which allow in some cases more in some 〈◊〉 and always uncertain latitudes for ought we know there may be lighter transgressions something that we know not of and for these at the Purification of the woman it is supposed the Offering was made and the Turtures by being an oblation did deprecate a supposed irregularity but by being a chast and marital Embleme they professed the obliquity if any were was within the protection of the sacred bands of Marriage and therefore so excusable as to be expiated by a cheap offering and what they did in Hieroglyphick Christians must do in the exposition be strict observers of the main rites and principal obligations and not neglectful to deprecate the lesser unhandsomenesses of the too sensual applications 5. God had at that instant so ordered that for great ends of his own and theirs two very holy persons of divers Sexes and like Piety 〈◊〉 and Anna the one who lived an active and secular the other a retired and contemplative life should come into the Temple by revelation and direction of the holy Spirit and see him whom they and all the World did look for the Lord 's CHRIST the consolation of Israel They saw him they rejoyced they worshipped they prophesied they sang Hymns and old Simeon did comprehend and circumscribe in his arms him that filled all the World and was then so satisfied that he desired to live no longer God had verified his promise had shewn him the Messias had filled his heart with joy and made his old age honourable and now after all this sight no object could be pleasant but the joys of Paradise For as a man who hath stared too freely upon the face and beauties of the Sun is blind and dark to objects of a less splendor and is forced to shut his eyes that he may through the degrees of darkness perceive the inferiour beauties of more proportioned objects so was old Simeon his eyes were so filled with the glories of this Revelation that he was willing to close them in his last night that he might be brought into the communications of Eternity and he could never more find comfort in any other object this world could minister For such is the excellency of spiritual things when they have once filled the corners of our hearts and made us highly sensible and apprehensive of the interiour beauties of God and of Religion all things of this World are flat and empty and unsatisfying vanities as unpleasant as the lees of Vineger to a tongue filled with the spirit of high Italick Wines And until we are so dead to the World as to apprehend no gust or freer complacency in exteriour objects we never have entertained Christ or have had our cups overflow with Devotion or are filled with the Spirit When our Chalice is filled with holy oyl with the Anointing from above it will entertain none of the waters of bitterness or if it does they are thrust to the bottom they are the lowest of our desires and therefore only admitted because they are natural and constituent 6. The good old Prophetess Anna had lived long in chast Widowhood in the service of the Temple in the continual offices of Devotion in Fasting and Prayer and now came the happy instant in which God would give her a great benediction and an earnest of a greater The returns of Prayer and the blessings of Piety are certain and though not dispensed according to the expectances of our narrow conceptions 〈◊〉 shall they so come at such times and in such measures as shall crown the Piety and 〈◊〉 the desires and reward the expectation It was in the Temple the same place where she had for so many years poured out her heart to God that God poured forth his heart to her sent his Son from his bosom and there she received his benediction Indeed in such places God does most particularly exhibit himself and Blessing goes along with him where-ever he goes In holy places God hath put his holy Name and to holy persons God does oftentimes manifest the interiour and more secret glories of his Holiness provided they come thither as old Simeon and Anna did by the motions of the holy Spirit not with designs of vanity or curiosity or sensuality for such spirits as those come to profane and desecrate the house and unhallow the person and provoke the Deity of the place and blast us with unwholsom airs 7. But Joseph and Mary wondred at these things which were spoken and treasured them in their hearts and they became matter of Devotion and mental Prayer or Meditation The PRAYER O Eternal God who by the Inspirations of thy Holy Spirit didst direct thy servants Simeon and Anna to the Temple at the instant of the Presentation of the Holy Child Jesus that so thou mightest verifie thy promise and manifest thy Son and reward the 〈◊〉 of holy people who longed for Redemption by the coming of the Messias give me the perpetual assistance of the same Spirit to be as a Monitor and a Guide to me leading me to all holy actions and to the embracements and possessions of thy glorious Son and remember all thy faithful people who wait for the consolation and redemption of the Church from all her miseries and persecutions and at last satisfie their desires by the revelations of thy mercies and Salvation Thou hast advanced thy Holy Child and set him up for a sign of thy Mercies and a representation of thy Glories Lord let no act or thought or word of mine ever be in contradiction to this blessed sign but let it be for the ruine of all my vices and all the powers the Devil imploys against the Church and for the raising up all those vertues and Graces which thou didst design me in the purposes of Eternity but let my portion never be amongst the 〈◊〉 or the scornful or the Heretical or the profane or any of those who stumble at this Stone
be like his your Duty in imitation of his Precept and Example and then sing praises as you list no heart is large enough no voice pleasant enough no life long enough nothing but an eternity of duration and a beatifical state can do it well and therefore holy David joyns them both Whoso offereth me thanks and praise he honoureth me and to him that ordereth his conversation aright I will shew the salvation of God All thanks and praise without a right-ordered conversation are but the Echo of Religion a voice and no substance but if those praises be sung by a heart righteous and obedient that is singing with the spirit and singing with understanding that is the Musick God delights in 18. Sixthly But let me observe and press this caution It is a mistake and not a little dangerous when people religious and forward shall too promptly frequently and nearly spend their thoughts in consideration of Divine Excellencies God hath shewn thee merit enough to spend all thy stock of love upon him in the characters of his Power the book of the Creature the great tables of his Mercy and the lines of his Justice we have cause enough to praise his Excellencies in what we feel of him and are refreshed with his influence and see his beauties in reflexion though we do not put our eyes out with staring upon his face To behold the Glories and Perfections of God with a more direct intuition is the priviledge of Angels who yet cover their faces in the brightness of his presence it is only permitted to us to consider the back parts of God And therefore those Speculations are too bold and imprudent addresses and minister to danger more than to Religion when we pass away from the direct studies of Vertue and those thoughts of God which are the freer and safer communications of the Deity which are the means of entercourse and relation between him and us to those considerations concerning God which are Metaphysical and remote the formal objects of adoration and wonder rather than of vertue and temperate discourses for God in Scripture never revealed any of his abstracted Perfections and remoter and mysterious distances but with a purpose to produce fear in us and therefore to chide the temerity and boldness of too familiar and nearer entercourse 19. True it is that every thing we see or can consider represents some perfections of God but this I mean that no man should consider too much and meditate too frequently upon the immediate Perfections of God as it were by way of intuition but as they are manifested in the Creatures and in the ministeries of Vertue and also when-ever God's Perfections be the matter of Meditation we should not ascend upwards into him but descend upon our selves like fruitful vapours drawn up into a cloud descending speedily into a shower that the effect of the consideration be a design of good life and that our loves to God be not spent in abstractions but in good works and humble Obedience The other kind of love may deceive us and therefore so may such kind of considerations which are its instrument But this I am now more particularly to consider 20. For beyond this I have described there is a degree of Meditation so exalted that it changes the very name and is called Contemplation and it is in the unitive way of Religion that is it consists in unions and adherences to God it is a prayer of quietness and silence and a meditation extraordinary a discourse without variety a vision and intuition of 〈◊〉 Excellencies an immediate entry into an orb of light and a resolution of all our faculties into sweetnesses affections and starings upon the Divine beauty and is carried on to ecstasies raptures suspensions elevations abstractions and apprehensions beatifical In all the course of vertuous meditation the Soul is like a Virgin invited to make a matrimonial contract it inquires the condition of the person his estate and disposition and other circumstances of amability and desire But when she is satissied with these enquiries and hath chosen her Husband she no more considers particulars but is moved by his voice and his gesture and runs to his entertainment and sruition and spends her self wholly in affections not to obtain but enjoy his love Thus it is said 21. But this is a thing not to be discoursed of but felt And although in other Sciences the terms must first be known and then the Rules and Conclusions scientifical here it is otherwise for first the whole experience of this must be obtained before we can so much as know what it is and the end must be acquired first the Conclusion before the Premises They that pretend to these Heights call them the Secrets of the Kingdom but they are such which no man can describe such which God hath not revealed in the publication of the Gospel such for the acquiring of which there are no means prescribed and to which no man is obliged and which are not in any man's power to obtain nor such which it is lawful to pray for or desire nor concerning which we shall ever be called to an account 22. Indeed when persons have been long sostned with the continual droppings of Religion and their spirits made timorous and apt for impression by the assiduity of Prayer and perpetual alarms of death and the continual dyings of Mortification the Fancy which is a very great instrument of Devotion is kept continually warm and in a disposition and aptitude to take fire and to flame out in great ascents and when they suffer transportations beyond the burthens and support of Reason they suffer 〈◊〉 know not what and call it what they please and other pious people that hear 〈◊〉 of it admire that Devotion which is so eminent and beatified for so they esteem 〈◊〉 and so they come to be called Raptures and Ecstasies which even amongst the A 〈◊〉 were so seldom that they were never spoke of for those Visions Raptures and Intuitions of S. Stephen S. Paul S. Peter and S. John were not pretended to be of this kind not excesses of Religion but prophetical and intuitive Revelations to great and significant purposes such as may be and are described in story but these other cannot for so Cassian reports and commends a saying of Antony the Eremite That is not a perfect Prayer in which the Votary does either understand himself or the Prayer meaning that persons eminently Religious were Divina patientes as Dionysius Areopagita said of his Master Hierotheus Paticks in Devotion suffering ravishments of senses transported beyond the uses of humanity into the suburbs of beatifical apprehensions but whether or no this be any thing besides a too intense and indiscreet pressure of the faculties of the Soul to inconveniences of understanding or else a credulous busie and untamed fancy they that think best of it cannot give a certainty There are and have been some Religious
all publick Societies of men one word or an intimation from Christ would have sounded an alarm and put us into postures of defence when all Christ's excellent Sermons and rare exemplar actions cannot tie our hands But it is strange now that of all men in the World Christians should be such fighting people or that Christian Subjects should lift up a thought against a Christian Prince when they had no intimation of encouragement from their Master but many from him to endear Obedience and Humility and Patience and Charity and these four make up the whole analogy and represent the chief design and meaning of Christianity in its moral constitution 11. But Jesus when himself was safe could also have secured the poor Babes of Bethlehem with thousands of diversions and avocations of Herod's purposes or by discovering his own Escape in some safe manner not unknown to the Divine wisedom but yet it did not so please God He is Lord of his Creatures and hath absolute dominion over our lives and he had an end of Glory to serve upon these Babes and an end of Justice upon Herod and to the Children he made such compensation that they had no reason to complain that they were so soon made Stars when they shined in their little Orbs and participations of Eternity for so the sense of the Church hath been that they having dyed the death of Martyrs though incapable of making the choice God supplied the defects of their will by his own entertainment of the thing that as the misery and their death so also their glorification might have the same Author in the same manner of causality even by a peremptory and unconditioned determination in these particulars This sense is pious and nothing unreasonable considering that all circumstances of the thing make the case particular but the immature death of other Infants is a sadder story for though I have no warrant or thought that it is ill with them after death and in what manner or degree of well-being it is there is no revelation yet I am not of opinion that the securing of so low a condition as theirs in all reason is like to be will make recompence or is an equal blessing with the possibilities of such an Eternity as is proposed to them who in the use of Reason and a holy life glorifie God with a free Obedience and if it were otherwise it were no blessing to live till the use of Reason and Fools and Babes were in the best because in the securest condition and certain expectation of equal glories 12. As soon as Herod was dead for the Divine Vengeance waited his own time for his arrest the Angel presently brought Joseph word The holy Family was full of content and indifferency not solicitous for return not distrustful of the Divine Providence full of poverty and sanctity and content waiting God's time at the return of which God delayed not to recall them from Exile out of Egypt he called his Son and directed Joseph's fear and course that he should divert to a place in the jurisdiction of Philip where the Heir of Herod's Cruelty Archelaus had nothing to do And this very series of Providence and care God expresses to all his sons by adoption and will determine the time and set bounds to every Persecution and punish the instruments and ease our pains and refresh our sorrows and give quietness to our fears and deliverance from our troubles and sanctifie it all and give a Crown at last and all in his good time if we wait the coming of the Angel and in the mean time do our duty with care and sustain our temporals with indifferency and in all our troubles and displeasing accidents we may call to mind that God by his holy and most reasonable Providence hath so ordered it that the spiritual advantages we may receive from the holy use of such incommodities are of great recompence and interest and that in such accidents the Holy Jesus having gone before us in precedent does go along with us by love and fair assistences and that makes the present condition infinitely more eligible than the greatest splendour of secular fortune The PRAYER O Blessed and Eternal God who didst suffer thy Holy Son to fly from the violence of an enraged Prince and didst chuse to defend him in the ways of his infirmity by hiding himself and a voluntary exile be thou a defence to all thy faithful people when-ever Persecution arises against them send them the ministery of Angels to direct them into ways of security and let thy holy Spirit guide them in the paths of Sanctity and let thy Providence continue in custody over their persons till the times of refreshment and the day of Redemption shall return Give O Lord to thy whole Church Sanctity and Zeal and the confidences of a holy Faith boldness of confession Humility content and resignation of spirit generous contempt of the World and unmingled desires of thy glory and the edification of thy Elect that no secular interests disturb her duty or discompose her charity or depress her hopes or in any unequal degree possess her affections and pollute her spirit but preserve her from the snares of the World and the Devil from the rapine and greedy desires of Sacrilegious persons and in all conditions whether of affluence or want may she still promote the interests of Religion that when plenteousness is within her palaces and peace in her walls that condition may then be best for her and when she is made as naked as Jesus to his Passion then Poverty may be best for her that in all estates she may glorifie thee and in all accidents and changes thou mayest sanctifie and bless her and at last bring her to the eternal riches and abundances of glory where no Persecution shall disturb her rest Grant this for sweet Jesus sake who suffered exile and hard journeys and all the inconveniences of a friendless person in a strange Province to whom with thee and the eternal Spirit be glory for ever and blessing in all generations of the World and for ever and ever Amen SECT VII Of the younger years of JESVS and his Disputation with the Doctors in the Temple The House of Prayer It is written My house shall be called of all Nations the house of prayer Mark 11. 17. If they return confess thy name and pray and make supplication before thee in this House Then hear thou in heaven and forgive 2. Chron 6. 24. 26. IESUS disputing with the Doctors S. LUKE 2. 46. 47. They found him in the Temple sitting in the midst of the Doctors both hearing them and asking them questions And all that heard him were astonished at his understanding answers 1. FRom the return of this holy Family to Judaea and their habitation in Nazareth till the blessed Child Jesus was twelve years of age we have nothing transmitted to us out of any authentick Record but that they went to
not of it and yet we neither breath nor move an artery but in him and by his assistance In him we live and move and have our being And All things are naked and open in his sight The iniquity of my people is very great for they say The Lord seeth not Shall not he that made the eye see To him the night and day are both alike These and many more to the same design are the voices of Scripture that our spirits may retire into the beholding of God to the purposes of fear and holiness with whom we do cohabit by the necessities of nature and the condition of our essence wholly in dependence and then only we may sin securely when we can contrive to do it so that God may not see us 30. There are many men who are servants of the eyes as the Apostle's phrase is who when they are looked on act vertue with much pompousness and theatrical bravery but these men when the Theatre is empty put off their upper garment and retire into their primitive baseness Diogenes endured the extremity of winter's cold that the people might wonder at his austerity and philosophical patience but Plato seeing the people admiring the man and pitying the susserance told them that the way to make him warm himself was for them to be gone and to take no notice of him For they that walk as in the sight of men serve that design well enough when they fill the publick voice with noises and opinions and are not by their purposes engaged to act in private but they who are servants of the eyes of God and walk as in the Divine presence perceive the same restraints in darkness and closets and grots as in the light and midst of theatres and that consideration imposes upon us a happy necessity of doing vertuously which presents us placed in the eyes of our Judge And therefore it was not unhandsomely said of a Jewish Doctor If every man would consider God to be the great Eye of the World watching perpetually over all our actions and that his Hand is indefatigable and his Ear ever open possibly sin might be extirpated from off the face of the earth And this is the condition of Beatitude and the blessed Souls within their regions of light and felicity cannot sin because of the Vision beatifical they always behold the face of God and those who partake of this state by way of consideration which is essential to the condition of the Blessed and derive it into practice and discourse in proportion to this shall retain an innocence and a part of glory 31. For it is a great declension of humane Reason and a disreputation to our spirits that we are so wholly led by Sense that we will not walk in the regions of the Spirit and behold God by our eyes of Faith and Discourse suffering our course of life to be guided by such principles which distinguish our natures from Beasts and our conditions from vicious and our spirits from the World and our hopes from the common satisfactions of Sense and corruption The better half of our Nature is of the same constitution with that of Angels and therefore although we are drenched in Matter and the communications of Earth yet our better part was designed to converse with God and we had besides the eye of Reason another eye of Faith put into our Souls and both clarified with revelations and demonstrations of the Spirit expressing to us so visible and clear characters of God's presence that the expression of the same Spirit is We may feel him for he is within us and about us and we are in him and in the comprehensions of his embracings as birds in the Air or Infants in the wombs of their pregnant Mothers And that God is pleased not to communicate himself to the eyes of our Body but still to remain invisible besides that it is his own glory and perfection it is also no more to us but like a retreat behind a curtain where when we know our Judge stands as an Espial and a watch over our actions we shall be sottish if we dare to provoke his jealousie because we see him not when we know that he is close by though behind the cloud 32. There are some general impressions upon our spirits which by way of presumption and custom possess our perswasions and make restraint upon us to excellent purposes such as are the Religion of Holy places reverence of our Parents presence of an austere an honourable or a vertuous person For many sins are prevented by the company of a witness especially if besides the ties of modesty we have also towards him an indearment of reverence and fair opinion and if he were with us in our privacies he would cause our retirements to be more holy S. Ambrose reports of the Virgin Mary that she had so much Piety and Religion in her Countenance and deportment that divers persons moved by the veneration and regard of her Person in her presence have 〈◊〉 commenced their resolutions of Chastity and sober living However the story be her person certainly was of so express and great Devotion and Sanctity that he must needs have been of a very impudent disposition and firm immodesty who durst have spoken unhandsome language in the presence of so rare a person And why then any rudeness in the presence of God if that were as certainly believed and considered For whatsoever amongst men can be a restraint of Vice or an endearment of Vertue all this is highly verisied in the presence of God to whom our Conscience in its very concealments is as a fair Table written in capital letters by his own finger and then if we fail of the advantage of this exercise it must proceed either from our dishonourable opinion of God or our own fearless inadvertency or from a direct spirit of reprobation for it is certain that this consideration is in its own nature apt to correct our manners to produce the fear of God and Humility and spiritual and holy thoughts and the knowledge of God and of our selves and the consequents of all these holy walking and holy comforts And by this only argument S. Paphnutius and S. Ephrem are reported in Church-story to have converted two Harlots from a course of Dissolution to great Sanctity and Austerity 33. But then this Presence of God must not be a mere speculation of the Understanding though so only it is of very great benefit and immediate efficacy yet it must reflect as well from the Will as from discourse and then only we walk in the presence of God when by Faith we behold him present when we speak to him in frequent and holy Prayers when we beg aid from him in all our needs and ask counsel of him in all our doubts and before him bewail our sins and tremble at his presence This is an entire exercise
a participation of his felicities for he is strangely covetous who would enjoy the Sun or the Air or the Sea alone here was treasure sor him and all the world and by lighting his brother Simon' s taper he made his own light the greater and more glorious And this is the nature of Grace to be diffusive of its own excellencies for here no 〈◊〉 can inhabit the proper and personal ends of holy persons in the contract and transmissions of Grace are increased by the participation and communion of others For our Prayers are more effectual our aids increased our incouragement and examples more prevalent God more honoured and the rewards of glory have accidental advantages by the superaddition of every new Saint and beatified person the members of the mystical body when they have received nutriment from God and his Holy Son supplying to each other the same which themselves received and live on in the communion of Saints Every new Star gilds the firmament and increases its first glories and those who are instruments of the Conversion of others shall not only introduce new beauties but when themselves shine like the stars in glory they shall have some reflexions from the light of others to whose fixing in the Orb of Heaven themselves have been instrumental And this consideration is not only of use in the exaltations of the dignity Apostolical and Clerical but for the enkindling even of private charities who may do well to promote others interests of Piety in which themselves also have some concernment 4. These Disciples asked of Christ where he 〈◊〉 Jesus answered Come and see It was an answer very expressive of our duty in this instance It is not enough for us to understand where Christ inhabits or where he is to be found for our understandings may follow him afar off and we receive no satisfaction unless it be to curiosity but we must go where he is eat of his meat wash in his Lavatory rest on his beds and dwell with him for the Holy Jesus hath no kind influence upon those who stand at distance save only the affections of a Loadstone apt to draw them nigher that he may transmit his vertues by union and confederations but if they persist in a sullen distance they shall learn his glories as Dives understood the peace of Lazarus of which he was never to participate Although the Son of man hath not where to lay his head yet he hath many houses where to convey his Graces he hath nothing to cover his own but he hath enough to sanctifie ours and as he dwelt in such houses which the charity of good people then afforded for his entertainment so now he loves to abide in places which the Religion of his servants hath vowed to his honour and the advantages of Evangelical ministrations Thither we must come to him or any-where else where we may enjoy him He is to be found in a Church in his ordinances in the communion of Saints in every religious duty in the heart of every holy person and if we go to him by the addresses of Religion in Holy places by the ministery of Holy rites by Charity by the adherences of Faith and Hope and other combining Graces the Graces of union and society or prepare a lodging for him within us that he may come to us then shall we see such glories and interiour beauties which none know but they that dwell with him The secrets of spiritual benediction are understood only by them to whom they are conveyed even by the children of his house Come and see 5. S. Andrew was first called and that by Christ immediately his Brother Simon next and that by Andrew but yet Jesus changed Simon' s name and not the other 's and by this change design'd him to an eminency of Office at least in signification principally above his Brother or else separately and distinctly from him to shew that these Graces and favours which do not immediately cooperate to eternity but are gifts and offices or impresses of authority are given to men irregularly and without any order of predisponent causes or probabilities on our part but are issues of absolute predestination and as they have efficacy from those reasons which God conceals so they have some purposes as conccal'd as their causes only if God pleases to make us vessels of fair imployment and of great capacity we shall bear a greater burthen and are bound to glorifie God with special offices But as these exteriour and ineffective Graces are given upon the same good will of God which made this matter to be a humane Body when if God had so pleased it was as capable of being made a Fungus or a Sponge so they are given to us with the same intentions as are our Souls that we might glorifie God in the distinct capacity of Grace as before of a reasonable nature And besides that it teaches us to magnifie God's free mercy so it removes every such exalted person from being an object of envy to others or from pleasing himself in vainer opinions for God hath made him of such an imployment as freely and voluntarily as he hath made him a Man and he no more cooperated to this Grace than to his own creation and may as well admire himself for being born in Italy or from rich parents or for having two hands or two feet as for having received such a designation extraordinary But these things are never instruments of reputation among severe understandings and never but in the sottish and unmanly apprehensions of the vulgar Only this when God hath imprinted an authority upon a person although the man hath nothing to please himself withal but God's grace yet others are to pay the duty which that impression demands which duty because it rapports to God and touches not the man 〈◊〉 as it passes through him to the fountain of authority and grace it extinguishes all 〈◊〉 of opinion and pride 6. When Jesus espied 〈◊〉 who also had been called by the first Disciples coming towards him he gave him an excellent character calling him a true Israelite in whom was no guile and admitted him amongst the first Disciples of the Institution by this character in one of the first of his Scholars hallowing Simplicity of spirit and receiving it into his Discipline that it might now become a vertue and duty Evangelical For although it concerns us as a Christian duty to be prudent yet the Prudence of Christianity is a duty of spiritual effect and in instances of Religion with no other purposes than to avoid giving offence to those that are without and within that we cause no disreputation to Christianity that we do nothing that may incourage enemies to the Religion and that those that are within the communion and obedience of the Church may not suffer as great inconveniences by the indiscreet conduct of religious actions as by direct temptations to a sin These are the purposes of private Prudence to
hand is heavy and his sword is sharp and pierces to the dividing the marrow and the bones and he that considers the infinite distance between God and us must tremble when he remembers that he is to feel the issues of that anger which he is not certain whether or no it will destroy him infinitely and eternally 4. But if the whip be given into our hands that we become executioners of the Divine wrath it is sometimes worse for we seldom strike our selves for emendation but add sin to sin till we perish miserably and inevitably God scourges us often into Repentance but when a Sin is the whip of another sin the rod is put into our hands who like blind men strike with a rude and undiscerning hand and because we love the punishment do it without intermission or choice and have no end but ruine 5. When the Holy Jesus had whipt the Merchants in the Temple they took away all the instruments of their sin For a Judgment is usually the commencement of Repentance Love is the last of Graces and 〈◊〉 at the beginning of a new life but is reserved to the perfections and ripeness of a Christian. We begin in Pear The fear of the Lord is the beginning of Wisdom 〈◊〉 hen he smote them then they turned and enquired early after God And afterwards the impresses of Fear continue like a hedge of thorns about us to restrain our dissolutions within the awfulness of the Divine Majesty that it may preserve what was from the same principle begun This principle of their emendation was from God and therefore innocent and holy and the very purpose of Divine Threatnings is that upon them as upon one of the great hindges the Piety of the greatest part of men should turn and the effect was answerable but so are not the actions of all those who follow this precedent in the tract of the letter For indeed there have been some reformations which have been so like this that the greatest alteration which hath been made was that they carried all things out of the Temple the Money and the Tables and the Sacrifice and the Temple it self went at last But these mens scourge is to follow after and Christ the Prince of the Catholick Church will provide one of his own contexture moresevere than the stripes which 〈◊〉 felt from the infliction of the exterminating Angel But the Holy Spirit of God by making provision against such a Reformation hath prophetically declared the aptnesses which are in pretences of religious alterations to degenerate into sacrilegious desires Thou that abhorrest Idols dost thou commit sacriledge In this case there is no amendment only one sin resigns to another and the person still remains under its power and the same dominion The PRAYER OEternal Jesu thou bright Image of thy Father's glories whose light did shine to all the world when thy heart was inflamed with zeal and love of God and of Religion let a coal from thine Altar fanned with the wings of the Holy Dove kindle in my Soul such holy flames that I may be zealous of thy honour and glory forward in Religious duties earnest in their pursuit prudent in their managing ingenuous in my purposes making my Religion to serve no end but of thy glories and the obtaining of thy promises and so sanctific my Soul and my Body that I may be a holy Temple fit and prepared for the inhabitation of thy ever-blessed Spirit whom grant that I may never grieve by admitting any impure thing to desecrate the place and unhallow the Courts of his abode but give me a pure Soul in a chaste and healthful 〈◊〉 a spirit full of holy simplicity and designs of great ingenuity and perfect Religion that I may intend what thou commandest and may with proper instruments 〈◊〉 what I so intend and by thy aids may obtain the end of my labours the rewards of obedience and holy living even the society and inheritance of Jesus in the participation of the joys of thy Temple where thou dwellest and reignest with the Father and the Holy Ghost O Eternal Jesus Amen DISCOURSE VIII Of the Religion of Holy Places 1. THE Holy Jesus brought a Divine warrant for his Zeal The selling Sacrifices and the exchange of Money and every Lay-employment did violence and dishonour to the Temple which was hallowed to Ecclesiastical ministeries and set apart for Offices of Religion for the use of holy things for it was God's House and so is every house by publick designation separate for Prayer or other uses of Religion it is God's House My house God had a propriety in it and had set his mark on it even his own Name And therefore it was in the Jews Idiome of speech called the Mountain of the Lord's House and the House of the Lord by David frequently God had put his Name into all places appointed for solemn Worship In all places where I record my Name I will come unto thee and bless thee For God who was never visible to mortal eye was pleased to make himself presential by substitution of his Name that is in certain places he hath appointed that his Name shall be called upon and by promising and imparting such Blessings which he hath made consequent to the invocation of his Name hath made such places to be a certain determination of some special manner of his Presence For God's Name is not a distinct thing from himself not an Idea and it cannot be put into a place in literal signification the expression is to be resolved into some other sence God's Name is that whereby he is known by which he is invocated that which is the most immediate publication of his Essence nearer than which we cannot go unto him and because God is essentially present in all places when he makes himself present in one place more than another it cannot be understood to any other purpose but that in such places he gives special Blessings and Graces or that in those places he appoints his Name that is himself specially to be invocated 2. So that when God puts his Name in any place by a special manner it signifies that there himself is in that manner But in separate and hallowed places God hath expressed that he puts his Name with a purpose it should be called upon therefore in plain signification it is thus In Consecrate places God himself is present to be invok'd that is there he is most delighted to hear the Prayers we make unto him For all the expressions of Scripture of God's 〈◊〉 the Tabernacle of God God's Dwellings putting his Name there his Sanctuary are resolved into that saying of God to Solomon who prayed that he would hear the Prayers of necessitous people in that place God granting the request expressed it thus I have sanctified the House which thou hast built that is the House which thou hast designed for my Worship I have designed for your Blessing what you have
he did and the expresses of his power saying He saved others himself he cannot save others saying Let him come down from the Cross if he be the King of the Jews and we will believe in him and others according as their Malice was determined by phancy and occasion added weight and scorn to his pains and of the two Malefactors that were crucified with him one reviled him saying If thou be the CHRIST save thy self and us And thus far the Devil prevailed undoing himself in riddle provoking men to do despite to Christ and to heighten his Passion out of hatred to him and yet doing and promoting that which was the ruine of all his own Kingdom and potent mischiefs like the Jew who in indignation against Mercury threw stones at his Image and yet was by his Superiour judged idolatrous that being the manner of doing honour to the Idol among the Gentiles But then Christ who had upon the Cross prayed for his enemies and was heard of God in all that he desired felt now the beginnings of success For the other Thief whom the present pains and circumstances of Jesus's Passion had softned and made believing reproved his fellow for not fearing God confessed that this death happened to them deservedly but to Jesus causelesly and then prayed to Jesus Lord remember me when thou comest into thy Kingdom Which combination of pious acts and miraculous Conversion Jesus entertained with a speedy promise of a very great felicity promising that upon that very day he should be with him in Paradise 33. Now there were standing by the Cross the Mother of Jesus and her Sister and Mary Magdalen and John And Jesus being upon his Death-bed although he had no temporal estate to bestow yet he would make provision for his Mother who being a Widow and now childless was likely to be exposed to necessity and want and therefore he did arrogate John the beloved Disciple into Marie's kindred making him to be her adopted Son and her to be his Mother by fiction of Law Woman behold thy son and Man behold thy Mother And from that time forward John took her home to his own house which he had near mount Sion after he had sold his inheritance in Galilee to the High Priest 34. While these things were doing the whole frame of Nature seemed to be dissolved and out of order while their LORD and Creator suffered For the Sun was so darkened that the Stars appeared and the Eclipse was prodigious in the manner as well as in degree because the Moon was not then in Conjunction but full and it was noted by Phlegon the freed man of the Emperor Hadrian by Lucian out of the Acts of the Gauls and Dionysius while he was yet a Heathen excellent Scholars all great Historians and Philosophers who also noted the day of the week and hour of the day agreeing with the circumstances of the Cross. For the Sun hid his head from beholding such a prodigy of sin and sadness and provided a veil for the nakedness of Jesus that the women might be present and himself die with modesty 35. The Eclipse and the Passion began at the sixth hour and endured till the ninth about which time Jesus being tormented with the unsufferable load of his Father's wrath due for our sins and wearied with pains and heaviness cried out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me and as it is thought repeated the whole two and twentieth Psalm which is an admirable Narrative of the Passion full of Prayer and sadness and description of his pains at first and of Eucharist and joy and prophecy at the last But these first words which it is certain and recorded that he spake were in a language of it self or else by reason of distance not understood for they thought he had called for Elias to take him down from the Cross. Then Jesus being in the agonies of a high Fever said I thirst And one ran and filled a spunge with vinegar wrapping it with hyssop and put it on a reed that he might drink The Vinegar and the Spunge were in Executions of condemned persons set to stop the too violent issues of bloud and to prolong the death but were exhibited to him in scorn mingled with gall to make the mixture more horrid and ungentle But Jesus tasted it only and refused the draught And now knowing that the Prophecies were fulfilled his Father's wrath appeased and his torments satisfactory he said It is finished and crying with a loud voice Father into thy hands I commend my spirit he bowed his head and yielded up his spirit into the hands of God and died hastning to his Father's glories Thus did this glorious Sun set in a sad and clouded West running speedily to shine in the other world 36. Then was the veil of the Temple which separated the secret Mosaick Rites from the eyes of the people rent in the midst from the top to the bottom and the Angels Presidents of the Temple called to each other to depart from their seats and so great an Earthquake happened that the rocks did rend the mountains trembled the graves opened and the bodies of dead persons arose walking from their coemeteries to the Holy City and appeared unto many and so great apprehensions and amazements happened to them all that stood by that they departed smiting their breasts with sorrow and fear and the Centurion that ministred at the execution said Certainly this was the Son of God and he became a Disciple renouncing his military imployment and died a Martyr 37. But because the next day was the Jews Sabbath and a Paschal Festival besides the Jews hastened that the bodies should be taken from the Cross and therefore sent to 〈◊〉 to hasten their death by breaking their legs that before Sun-set they might be taken away according to the Commandment and be buried The souldiers therefore came and brake the legs of the two Thieves but espying and wondring that Jesus was already dead they brake not his legs for the Scripture foretold that a bone of him should not be broken but a souldier with his lance pierced his side and immediately there streamed out two rivulets of Water and Bloud But the Holy Virgin-Mother whose Soul during this whole passion was pierced with a sword and sharper sorrows though she was supported by the comforts of Faith and those holy Predictions of his Resurrection and future glories which Mary had laid up in store against this great day of expence now that she saw her Holy Son had suffered all that our necessities and their malice could require or inflict caused certain ministers with whom she joyned to take her dead Son from the Cross whose Body when she once got free from the nails she kissed and embraced with entertainments of the nearest vicinity that could be expressed by a person that was holy and sad and a Mother weeping for her dead Son 38. But she was highly
little irregularities and so many great imperfections that it will appear the more necessary to repair the breaches and lesser ruines by such acts of Piety and Religion because every Communication is intended to be a nearer approach to God a 〈◊〉 step in Grace a progress towards glory and an instrument of perfection and therefore upon the stock of our spiritual interests for the purchase of a greater hope and the advantages of a growing Charity ought to be frequently received I end with the words of a pious and learned person It is a vain fear and an imprudent 〈◊〉 that procrastinates and desers going to the Lord that calls them they deny to go to the fire pretending they are cold and refuse Physick because they need it The PRAYER O Blessed and Eternal Jesus who gavest thy self a Sacrifice for our sins thy Body for our spiritual food thy 〈◊〉 to nourish our spirits and to quench the flames of Hell and Lust who didst so love us who were thine enemies that thou desiredst to reconcile us to thee and becamest all one with us that we may live the same life think the same thoughts love the same love and be partakers of thy Resurrection and Immortality open every window of my Soul that I may be full of light and may see the excellency of thy Love the merits of thy Sacrifice the bitterness of thy Passion the glories and virtues of the mysterious Sacrament Lord let me ever hunger and thirst after this instrument of Righteousness let me have no gust or relish of the unsatisfying delights of things below but let my Soul dwell in thee let me for ever receive thee spiritually and very frequently communicate with thee sacramentally and imitate thy Vertues pionsly and strictly and dwell in the pleasures of thy house eternally Lord thou hast prepared a table for me against them that trouble me let that holy Sacrament of the Eucharist be to me a defence and shield a nourishment and medicine life and health a means of sanctification and spiritual growth that I receiving the body of my dearest Lord may be one with his mystical body and of the same spirit united with indissoluble bonds of a strong Faith and a holy Hope and a never-failing Charity that from this veil I may pass into the visions of eternal clarity from eating thy Body to beholding thy face in the glories of thy everlasting Kingdom O Blessed and Eternal Jesus Amen Considerations upon the Accidents happening on the Vespers of the Passion The Prayer in the Garden Luk 22. 41. And he was withdrawn from them about a stones cast kneeled down prayed 42 Saying Father if thou be willing remove this Cup from me nevertheless not my will but thine be done 43 And there appeared an Angel from heaven strengthening him Iudas betrayeth Christ Mat 26. 47. And while he yet spake Lo. Iudas one of the twelue came and with him a great multitude with swords and staves from the chief Preists Elders of the people 48. Now he that be trayed him gave them a sign saying whomsoever I shall kiss that same is he hold him fast 49. And forthwith he came to Iesus and said Haile Master and kissed him 1. WHen Jesus had supped and sang a Hymn and prayed and exhorted and comforted his Disciples with a Farewell-Sermon in which he repeated 〈◊〉 of his former Precepts which were now apposite to the present condition and re-inforced them with proper and pertinent arguments he went over the brook Cedron and entred into a Garden and into the prologue of his Passion chusing that place for his Agony and satisfactory pains in which the first scene of humane misery was represented and where he might best attend the offices of Devotion preparatory to his Death Besides this he therefore departed from the house that he might give opportunity to his Enemies surprise and yet not incommodate the good man by whose hospitality they had eaten the Paschal Lamb so that he went like a Lamb to the slaughter to the Garden as to a prison as if by an agreement with his persecutors he had expected their arrest and stayed there to prevent their farther enquiry For so great was his desire to pay our Ransom that himself did assist by a forward patience and active opportunity towards the persecution teaching us that by an active zeal and a ready spirit we assist the designs of God's glory though in our own sufferings and secular infelicities 2. When he entred the Garden he left his Disciples at the entrance of it calling with him only Peter James and John he withdrew himself from the rest about a stone 's cast and began to be exceeding heavy He was not sad till he had called them for his sorrow began when he pleased which sorrow he also chose to represent to those three who had seen his Transfiguration the earnest of his future Glory that they might see of how great glory for our sakes he disrobed himself and that they also might by the confronting those contradictory accidents observe that God uses to dispense his comforts the irradiations and emissions of his glory to be preparatives to those sorrows with which our life must be allayed and seasoned that none should refuse to partake of the sufferings of Christ if either they have already felt his comforts or hope hereafter to wear his crown And it is not ill observed that S. Peter being the chief of the Apostles and Doctor of the Circumcision S. John being a Virgin and S. James the first of the Apostles that was martyred were admitted to Christ's greatest retirements and mysterious secrecies as being persons of so singular and eminent dispositions to whom according to the pious opinion of the Church especially Coronets are prepared in Heaven besides the great Crown of rightcousness which in common shall beautifie the heads of all the Saints meaning this that Doctors Virgins and Martyrs shall receive even for their very state of life and accidental Graces more eminent degrees of accidental Glory like as the Sun reflecting upon a limpid fountain receives its rays doubled without any increment of its proper and natural light 3. Jesus began to be exceeding sorrowful to be sore amazed and sad even to death And because he was now to suffer the pains of our sins there began his Passion whence our sins spring From an evil heart and a prevaricating spirit all our sins arise and in the spirit of Christ began his sorrow where he truly felt the full value and demerit of Sin which we think not worthy of a tear or a hearty sigh but he groaned and fell under the burthen But therefore he took upon him this sadness that our imperfect sorrow and contrition might be heightned in his example and accepted in its union and consederacy with his And Jesus still designed a farther mercy for us for he sanctified the passion of Fear and hallowed natural sadnesses that we might not
think the infelicities of our nature and the calamities of our temporal condition to become criminal so long as they make us not omit a duty or dispose us to the election of a crime or force us to swallow a temptation nor yet to exceed the value of their impulsive cause He that grieves for the loss of friends and yet had rather lose all the friends he hath than lose the love of God hath the sorrow of our Lord for his precedent And he that fears death and trembles at its approximation and yet had rather die again than sin once hath not sinned in his fear Christ hath hallowed it and the necessitous condition of his nature is his excuse But it were highly to be wished that in the midst of our caresses and levities of society in our festivities and triumphal merriments when we laugh at folly and rejoyce in sin we would remember that for those very merriments our Blessed Lord felt a bitter sorrow and not one vain and sinful laughter but cost the Holy Jesus a sharp pang and throe of Passion 4. Now that the Holy Jesus began to taste the bitter Cup he betook him to his great Antidote which himself the great Physician of our Souls prescribed to all the world to cure their calamities and to make them pass from miseries into vertue that so they may arrive at glory he prays to his heavenly Father he kneels down and not only so but falls flat upon the earth and would in humility and fervent adoration have descended low as the centre he prays with an intension great as his sorrow and yet with a dereliction so great and a conformity to the Divine will so ready as if it had been the most indifferent thing in the world for him to be delivered to death or from it for though his nature did decline death as that which hath a natural horrour and contradiction to the present interest of its preservation yet when he looked upon it as his heavenly Father had put it into the order of Redemption of the World it was that Baptism which he was straitned till he had accomplished And now there is not in the world any condition of prayer which is essential to the duty or any circumstances of advantage to its performance but were concentred in this one instance Humility of spirit lowliness of deportment importunity of desire a fervent spirit a lawful matter resignation to the will of God great love the love of a Son to his Father which appellative was the form of his address perseverance he went thrice and prayed the same prayer It was not long and it was so retired as to have the advantages of a sufficient solitude and opportune recollection for he was withdrawn from the most of his Disciples and yet not so alone as to lose the benefit of communion for Peter and the two Boanerges were near him Christ in this prayer which was the most fervent that he ever made on earth intending to transmit to all the world a precedent of Devotion to be transcribed and imitated that we should cast all our cares and empty them in the bosom of God being content to receive such a portion of our trouble back again which he assigns us for our spiritual emolument 5. The Holy Jesus having in a few words poured out torrents of innocent desires was pleased still to interrupt his Prayer that he might visit his charge that little flock which was presently after to be scattered he was careful of them in the midst of his Agonies they in his sufferings were fast asleep He awakens them gives them command to watch and pray that is to be vigilant in the custody of their senses and obervant of all accidents and to pray that they may be strengthened against all incursions of enemies and temptations and then returns to prayer and so a third time his Devotion still encreasing with his sorrow And when his Prayer was full and his sorrow come to a great measure after the third God sent his Angel to comfort him and by that act of grace then only expressed hath taught us to continue our Devotions so long as our needs last It may be God will not send a Comsorter till the third time that is after a long expectation and a patient 〈◊〉 and a lasting hope in the interim God supports us with a secret hand and in his own time will refresh the spirit with the visitations of his Angels with the emissions of comfort from the Spirit the Comforter And know this also that the holy Angel and the Lord of all the Angels stands by every holy person when he prays and although he draws before his glories the curtain of a cloud yet in every instant he takes care we shall not perish and in a just season dissolves the cloud and makes it to distill in holy dew and drops sweet as Manna pleasant as Nard and wholsome as the breath of Heaven And such was the consolation which the Holy Jesus received by the ministery of the Angel representing to Christ the Lord of the Angels how necessary it was that he should die for the glory of God that in his Passion his Justice Wisdom Goodness Power and Mercy should shine that unless he died all the World should perish but his bloud should obtain their pardon and that it should open the gates of Heaven repair the ruine of Angels establish a holy Church be 〈◊〉 of innumerable adoptive children to his Father whom himself should make heirs of glory and that his Passion should soon pass away his Father hearing and granting his Prayer that the Cup should pass speedily though indeed it should pass through him that it should be attended and followed with a glorious Resurrection with eternal rest and glory of his Humanity with the exaltation of his Name with a supreme dominion over all the world and that his Father should make him King of Kings and Prince of the Catholick Church These or whatsoever other comforts the Angel ministred were such considerations which the Holy Jesus knew and the Angel knew not but by communication from that God to whose assumed Humanity the Angel spake yet he was pleased to receive comfort from his servant just as God receives glory from his creatures and as he rejoyces in his own works even because he is good and gracious and is pleased so to do and because himself had caused a voluntary sadness to be interposed between the habitual knowledge and the actual consideration of these discourses and we feel a pleasure when a friendly hand lays upon our wound the plaister which our selves have made and applies such instruments and considerations of comfort which we have in notion and an ineffective habit but cannot reduce them to act because no man is so apt to be his own comforter which God hath therefore permitted that our needs should be the occasion of a mutual Charity 6. It was a great season for
heathless body become fuel to a fever and increase the distemperature from indisposition to a sharp disease and from thence to the margent of the grave But it was otherwise in Saul whom Jesus threw to the ground with a more angry sound than these persecutors but Saul rose a Saint and they persisted Devils and the grace of God distinguished the events The PRAYER O Holy Jesus make me by thy example to conform to the will of that Eternal God who is our Father merciful and gracious that I may chuse all those accidents which his Providence hath actually disposed to me that I may know no desires but his commands and his will and that in all afflictions I may fly thither for mercy pardon and support and may wait for deliverance in such times and manners which the Father hath reserved in his own power and graciously dispenses according to his infinite wisdom and compassion Holy Jesus give me the gift and spirit of Prayer and do thou by thy gracious intercession supply my ignorances and passionate desires and imperfect choices procuring and giving to me such returns of favour which may support my needs and serve the ends of Religion and the Spirit which thy wisdom chuses and thy Passion hath purchased and thy grace loves to bestow upon all thy Saints and servants Amen II. ETernal God sweetest Jesu who didst receive Judas with the affection of a Saviour and sufferedst him to kiss thy cheek with the serenity and tranquillity of God and didst permit the souldiers to bind thee with Patience exemplary to all ages of Martyrs and didst cure the wound of thy enemy with the Charity of a Parent and the tenderness of an infinite pity O kiss me with the kisses of thy mouth embrace me with the entertainments of a gracious Lord and let my Soul dwell and feast in thee who art the repository of eternal sweetness and refreshments Bind me O Lord with those bands which tied thee fast the chains of Love that such holy union may dissolve the cords of vanity and confine the bold pretensions of usurping Passions and imprison all extravagancies of an impertinent spirit and lead Sin captive to the dominion of Grace and sanctified Reason that I also may imitate all the parts of thy holy Passion and may by thy bands get my liberty by thy kiss enkindle charity by the touch of thy hand and the breath of thy mouth have all my wounds cured and restored to the integrity of a holy Penitent and the purities of Innocence that I may love thee and please thee and live with thee for ever O Holy and sweetest Jesu Amen Considerations upon the Scourging and other Accidents happening from the Apprehension till the Crucifixion of JESUS Christ brought before the Highpreist Iohn 18 12. Then the Band and the Captain and the Officers of the Iews took Iesus and bound him 25. And lead him away to Annas first for he was Father-in-law to Cajaphas which was Highpreist that same yeare Christ arraigned before Herod Luk. 23. 7. 8. 11. And assoone as he knew that he belonged to Herods jurisdiction he sent him to Herod 8. And when Herod saw Iesus he was exceeding glad 11. And Herod with his men of war set him at nought and mocked him and arrayed him in a gorgeous robe and sent him againe to Pilate 1. THE house of Annas stood in the mount Sion and in the way to the house of Caiaphas and thither he was led as to the first stage of their triumph for their surprise of a person so feared and desired and there a naughty person smote the 〈◊〉 Jesus upon the face for saying to Annas that he had made his Doctrine publick and that all the people were able to give account of it to whom the Lamb of God 〈◊〉 as much meekness and patience in his answer as in his answer to Annas he had 〈◊〉 prudence and modesty For now that they had taken Jesus they wanted a crime to object against him and therefore were desirous to snatch occasion from his discourses to which they resolved to tempt him by questions and affronts but his answer was general and indefinite safe and true enough to acquit his Doctrine from suspicions of secret designs and yet secure against their present snares for now himself who always had the innocence of Doves was to joyn with it the prudence and wariness of Serpents not to prevent death for that he was resolved to suffer but that they might be destitute of all apparence of a just cause on his part Here it was that Judas received his money and here that holy Face which was designed to be that object in the beholding of which much of the celestial glory doth consist that Face which the Angels stare upon with wonder like infants at a bright Sun-beam was smitten extrajudicially by an incompetent person with circumstances of despight in the presence of a Judge in a full assembly and none reproved the insolency and the cruelty of the affront for they resolved to use him as they use Wolves and Tigres with all things that may be destructive violent and impious and in this the injury was heightned because the blow was said to be given by Malchus an Idumaean slave and therefore a contemptible person but far more unworthy by his ingratitude for so he repayed the Holy Jesus for working a Miracle and healing his ear But so the Scripture was fulfilled He shall give his body to the smiters and his cheeks to the nippers saith the Prophet Isay and They shall smite the cheek of the Judge of Israel saith Micah And this very circumstance of the Passion Lactantius affirms to have been foretold by the Erythraean Sibyll But no meekness or indifferency could engage our Lord not to protest his innocency and though following his steps we must walk in the regions of patience and tranquillity and admirable toleration of injuries yet we may represent such defences of our selves which by not resisting the sentence may testifie that our suffering is undeserved and if our Innocency will not preserve our lives it will advance our title to a better and every good cause ill judged shall be brought to another tribunal to receive a just and unerring sentence 2. Annas having suffered this unworthy usage towards a person so excellent sent him away to Caiphas who had formerly in a full council resolved he should die yet now palliating the design with the scheme of a tribunal they seek out for witnesses and the witnesses are to seek for allegations and when they find them they are to seek for proof and those proofs were to seek for unity and consent and nothing was ready for their purposes but they were forced to use the semblance of a judicial process that because they were to make use of Pilate's authority to put him to death they might perswade Pilate to accept of their examination and conviction without farther enquiry But such
new sins the other to make some emendations of the old the one to fortifie him against special weaknesses and proper temptations of that estate and the other to trim his lamp that by excellent actions he may adorn his spirit making up the omissions of his life and supplying the imperfections of his estate that his Soul may return into the hands of its Creator as pure as it can every degree of perfection being an advantage so great as that the loss of every the least portion of it cannot be recompensed with all the good of this World Concerning the first The Temptations proper to this estate are either Weakness in Faith Despair or Presumption for whatsoever is besides these as it is the common infelicity of all the several states of life so they are oftentimes arguments of an ill condition of immortification of vicious habits and that he comes not to this combate well prepared such as are Covetousness unwillingness to make Restitution remanent affections to his former Vices an unresigned spirit and the like 8. In the Ecclesiastical story we finde many dying persons mentioned who have been very much afflicted with some doubts concerning an Article of Faith S. Gregory in an Epistle he writ to S. Austin instances in the temptation which Fusebius suffered upon his Death-bed And although sometimes the Devil chuses an Article that is not proper to that state knowing that every such doubt is well enough for his purpose because of the incapacity of the person to suffer long disputes and of the jealousie and suspicion of a dying and weak man fearing lest every thing should cozen him yet it is commonly instanced in the Article of the Resurrection or the state of Separation or re-union And it seems to some persons incredible that from a bed of sickness a state of misery a cloud of ignorance a load of passions a man should enter into the condition of a perfect understanding great joy and an intellectual life a conversation with Angels a fruition of God the change is greater than his Reason and his Faith being in conclusion tottering like the Ark and ready to fall seems a Pillar as unsafe and unable to rely on as a bank of turf in an Earth-quake Against this a general remedy is prescribed by Spiritual persons That the sick man should apprehend all changes of perswasion which happened to him in his sickness contradictory to those assents which in his clearest use of Reason he had to be temptations and arts of the Devil And he hath reason so to think when he remembers how many comforts of the Spirit of God what joys of Religion what support what assistences what strengths he had in the whole course of his former life upon the stock of Faith interest of the Doctrin of Christianity And since the disbelieving the Promises Evangelical at that time can have no end of advantage and that all wise men tell him it may have an end to make him lose the title to them and do him infinite disadvantage upon the stock of interest and prudence he must reject such fears which cannot help him but may ruine him For all the works of Grace which he did upon the hopes of God and the stock of the Divine revelations if he fails in his hold upon them are all rendred unprofitable And it is certain if there be no such thing as Immortality and Resurrection he shall lose nothing for believing there is but if there be they are lost to him for not believing it 9. But this is also to be cured by proper arguments And there is no Christian man but hath within him and carries about him demonstrations of the possibility and great instances of the credibility of those great changes which these tempted persons have no reason to distrust but because they think them too great and too good to be true And here not only the consideration of the Divine Power and his eternal Goodness is a proper Antidote but also the observation of what we have already received from God To be raised from nothing to something is a mutation not less than insinite and from that which we were in our first conception to pass into so perfect and curious bodies and to become discursive sensible passionate and reasonable and next to Angels is a greater change than from this state to pass into that excellency and perfection of it which we expect as the melioration and improvement of the present for this is but a mutation of degrees that of substance this is more sensible because we have perception in both states that is of greater distance because in the first term we were so far distant from what we are that we could not perceive what then we were much less desire to be what we now perceive and yet God did that for us unasked without any obligation on his part or merit on ours much rather then may we be confident of this alteration of accidents and degrees because God hath obliged himself by promise he hath disposed us to it by qualities actions and habits which are to the state of Glory as infancy is to manhood as 〈◊〉 are to excellent discourses as blossoms are to ripe fruits And he that hath wrought miracles for us preserved us in dangers done strange acts of Providence sent his Son to take our Nature made a Virgin to bear a Son and GOD to become Man and two Natures to be one individual Person and all in order to this End of which we doubt hath given us so many arguments of credibility that if he had done any more it would not have been lest in our choice to believe or not believe and then much of the excellency of our Faith would have been lost Add to this that we are not tempted to disbelieve the Roman story or that Virgil's AEneids were writ by him or that we our selves are descended of such Parents because these things are not only transmitted to us by such testimony which we have no reason to distrust but 〈◊〉 the Tempter cannot serve any end upon us by producing such doubts in us and therefore since we have greater testimony for every Article of Faith and to believe it is of so much concernment to us we may well suspect it to be an artifice of the Devil to rob us of our reward this proceeding of his being of the same nature with all his other Temptations which in our life-time like fiery darts he threw into our face to despoil us of our glory and blot out the Image of God imprinted on us 10. Secondly If the Devil tempts the sick person to Despair he who is by God appointed to minister a word of comfort must fortifie his spirit with consideration and representment of the Divine Goodness manifest in all the expresses of Nature and Grace of Providence and Revelation that God never extinguishes the smoaking slax nor breaks the bruised reed that a constant and a hearty
galled with the iron at his heels and nailed even before his Crucifixion But this and the other accidents of his journey and their malice so crushed his wounded tender and virginal body that they were forced to lay the load upon a Cyrenian fearing that he should die with less shame and smart than they intended him But so he was pleased to take man unto his aid not only to represent his own need and the dolorousness of his Passion but to consign the duty unto man that we must enter into a 〈◊〉 of Christ's sufferings taking up the Cross of Martyrdom when God requires us enduring affronts being patient under affliction loving them that hate us and being benefactors to our enemies abstaining from sensual and intemperate delight forbidding to our selves lawful festivities and recreations of our weariness when we have an end of the spirit to serve upon the ruines of the bodie 's strength mortifying our desires breaking our own will not seeking our selves being entirely resigned to God These are the Cross and the Nails and the Spear and the Whip and all the instruments of a Christian's Passion And we may consider that every man in this world shall in some sence or other bear a Cross few men escape it and it is not well with them that do but they only bear it well that 〈◊〉 Christ and tread in his steps and bear it for his sake and walk as he walked and he that follows his own desires when he meets with a cross there as it is certain enough he will bears the cross of his Concupiscence and that hath no fellowship with the Cross of Christ. By the Precept of bearing the Cross we are not tied to pull evil upon our selves that we may imitate our Lord in nothing but in being afflicted or to personate the punitive exercises of Mortification and severe Abstinencies which were eminent in some Saints and to which they had special assistances as others had the gift of Chastity and for which they had special reason and as they apprehended some great necessities but it is required that we bear our own Cross so said our dearest Lord. For when the Cross of Christ is laid upon us and we are called to Martyrdom then it is our own because God made it to be our portion and when by the necessities of our spirit and the rebellion of our body we need exteriour mortifications and acts of self-denial then also it is our own cross because our needs have made it so and so it is when God sends us sickness or any other calamity what-ever is either an effect of our ghostly needs or the condition of our temporal estate it calls for our sufferance and patience and equanimity for therefore Christ hath suffered for us saith S. Peter leaving us an example that we should follow his steps who bore his Cross as long as he could and when he could no longer he murmured not but sank under it and then he was content to receive such aid not which he chose himself but such as was assigned him 3. Jesus was led out of the gates of Jerusalem that he might become the sacrifice for persons without the pale even for all the world And the daughters of Jerusalem followed him with pious tears till they came to Calvary a place difficult in the ascent eminent and apt for the publication of shame a hill of death and dead bones polluted and impure and there beheld him stript naked who cloaths the field with flowers and all the world with robes and the whole globe with the canopy of Heaven and so dress'd that now every circumstance was a triumph By his Disgrace he trampled upon our Pride by his Poverty and nakedness he triumphed over our Covetousness and love of riches and by his Pains chastised the Delicacies of our flesh and broke in pieces the fetters of Concupiscence For as soon as Adam was clothed he quitted Paradise and Jesus was made naked that he might bring us in again And we also must be despoil'd of all our exteriour adherencies that we may pass through the regions of duty and divine love to a society of blessed spirits and a clarified immortal and beatified estate 4. There they nailed Jesus with four nails fixed his Cross in the ground which with its fall into the place of its station gave infinite torture by so violent a concussion of the body of our Lord which rested upon nothing but four great wounds where he was designed to suffer a long and lingring torment For Crucifixion as it was an excellent pain sharp and passionate so it was not of quick effect towards taking away the life S. Andrew was two whole days upon the Cross and some Martyrs have upon the Cross been rather starved and devoured with birds than killed with the proper torment of the tree But Jesus took all his Passion with a voluntary susception God heightning it to the great degrees of torment supernaturally and he laid down his life voluntarily when his Father's wrath was totally appeased towards mankind 5. Some have phansied that Christ was pleased to take something from every condition of which Man ever was or shall be possessed taking Immunity from sin from Adam's state of Innocence Punishment and misery from the state of Adam fallen the fulness of Grace from the state of Renovation and perfect Contemplation of the Divinity and beatifick joys from the state of Comprehension and the blessedness of Heaven meaning that the Humanity of our Blessed Saviour did in the sharpest agony of his Passion behold the face of God and communicate in glory But I consider that although the two Natures of Christ were knit by a mysterious union into one Person yet the Natures still retain their incommunicable properties Christ as God is not subject to sufferings as a man he is the subject of miseries as God he is eternal as man mortal and commensurable by time as God the supreme Law-giver as man most humble and obedient to the Law and therefore that the Humane nature was united to the Divine it does not infer that it must in all instances partake of the Divine felicities which in God are essential to man communicated without necessity and by an arbitrary dispensation Add to this that some vertues and excellencies were in the Soul of Christ which could not consist with the state of glorified and beatified persons such as are Humility Poverty of spirit Hope Holy desires all which having their seat in the Soul suppose even in the supremest 〈◊〉 a state of pilgrimage that is a condition which is imperfect and in order to something beyond its present For therefore Christ ought to suffer saith our Blessed Lord himself and so enter into his glory And S. Paul affirms that we see Jesus made a little lower than the Angels for the suffering of death 〈◊〉 with glory and honour And again Christ humbled himself and became obedient unto
shame and unworthiness he submitted to the death of the Cross and by his voluntary acceptation and tacite volition of it made it equivalent to as great a punishment of his own susception he shewed an incomparable modesty begging but for a remembrance only he knew himself so sinful he durst ask no more he reproved the other Thief for Blasphemy he confessed the world to come and owned Christ publickly he prayed to him he hoped in him and pitied him shewing an excellent Patience in this sad condition And in this I consider that besides the excellency of some of these acts and the goodness of all the like occasion for so exemplar Faith never can occur and until all these things shall in these circumstances meet in any one man he must not hope for so safe an Exit after an evil life 〈◊〉 the confidence of this example But now Christ had the key of Paradise in his hand and God blessed the good Thief with this opportunity of letting him in who at another time might have waited longer and been tied to harder conditions And indeed it is very probable that he was much advantaged by the intervening accident of dying at the same time with Christ there being a natural compassion produced in us towards the partners of our miseries For Christ was not void of humane passions though he had in them no imperfection or irregularity and therefore might be invited by the society of misery the rather to admit him to participate his joys and S. Paul proves him to be a merciful high Priest because he was touched with a feeling of our infirmities the first expression of which was to this blessed Thief Christ and he together sate at the Supper of bitter herbs and Christ payed his symbol promising that he should that day be together with him in Paradise 12. By the Cross of Christ stood the Holy Virgin Mother upon whom old Simeon's Prophecy was now verified for now she felt a sword passing through her very soul she stood without clamour and womanish noises sad silent and with a modest grief deep as the waters of the abysse but smooth as the face of a pool full of Love and Patience and Sorrow and Hope Now she was put to it to make use of all those excellent discourses her Holy Son had used to build up her spirit and fortifie it against this day Now she felt the blessings and strengths of Faith and she passed from the griefs of the Passion to the expectation of the Resurrection and she rested in this Death as in a sad remedy for she knew it reconciled God with all the World But her Hope drew a veil before her Sorrow and though her Grief was great enough to swallow her up yet her Love was greater and did swallow up her grief But the Sun also had a veil upon his face and taught us to draw a curtain before the Passion which would be the most artificial expression of its greatness whilest by silence and wonder we confess it great beyond our expression or which is all one great as the burthen and baseness of our sins And with this veil drawn before the face of Jesus let us suppose him at the gates of Paradise calling with his last words in a loud voice to have them opened that the King of glory might come in The PRAYER O Holy Jesus who for our sakes didst suffer incomparable anguish and pains commensurate to thy Love and our Miseries which were infinite that thou mightest purchase for 〈◊〉 blessings upon Earth and an inheritance in Heaven dispose us by Love Thankfulness Humility and Obedience to receive all the benefit of thy Passion granting unto us and thy whole Church remission of all our sins integrity of mind health of body competent maintenance peace in our days a temperate air fruitfulness of the earth unity and integrity of Faith extirpation of Heresies reconcilements of Schisms destruction of all wicked counsels intended against us and bind the hands of Rapine and Sacriledge that they may not destroy the vintage and root up the Vine it self Multiply thy Blessings upon us sweetest Jesus increase in us true Religion sincere and actual devotion in our Prayers Patience in troubles and whatsoever is necessary to our Soul's health or conducing to thy Glory Amen II. O Dearest Saviour I adore thy mercies and thy incomparable love expressed in thy so voluntary susception and affectionate suffering such horrid and sad Tortures which cannot be remembred without a sad compassion the waters of bitterness entred into thy Soul and the storms of Death and thy Father's anger broke thee all in pieces and what shall I do who by my sins have so tormented my dearest Lord what Contrition can be great enough what tears sufficiently expressive what hatred and detestation of my crimes can be equal and commensurate to those sad accidents which they have produced Pity me O Lord pity me dearest God turn those thy merciful eyes towards me O most merciful Redeemer for my sins are great like unto thy Passion full of sorrow and shame and a burthen too great for me to bear Lord who hast done so much for me now only speak the word and thy servant shall be whole Let thy Wounds heal me thy Vertues amend me thy Death quicken me that I in this life suffering the cross of a sad and salutary Repentance in the union and merits of thy 〈◊〉 and Passion may die with thee and rest with thee and rise again with thee and live with thee for ever in the possession of thy Glories O dearest Saviour Jesus Amen SECT XVI Of the Resurrection and Ascension of JESUS The Burial of Iesus Mat 27 57 When the even was come there came a rich man of Arimathea named Jo seph who also himself was Jesus Disciple he went to Pilate beggd the body of Jesus Then Pilate commanded the body to be delivered And when Ioseph had taken the body he wrapped it in a clean linen cloth layd it in his own new tomb which he had hewen out in y e rock The Resurrection of Iesus Mat 28 2 And behold there was a great earthquake for the Angel of the Lord descended from heaven came rolled back y e stone from the doore and sate upon it And for feare of him the keepers did shake became as dead men And the Angel sayd unto the woman Fear not ye for I know that ye seek Iesus that was crucified He is not here for he is Risen as he sayd 1. WHile it was yet early in the morning upon the first day of the week Mary Magdalen and Mary the mother of James and Salome brought sweet spices to the Sepulchre that they might again embalm the Holy Body for the rites of Embalming among the Hebrews used to last forty days and their love was not satisfied with what Joseph had done They therefore hastned to the grave and after they had expended their money and bought the
Praef. n. 40. Recidivation or Relapse into a state of sin unpardonable and how 156. Reproachful Language prohibited 247. Reprehension of evil Persons may be in Language properly expressive of the Crime ibid. Resisting evil in what sence lawful 225. Reverence of posture to be used in Prayer 271. 23. Remedies against Anger 248. 35. Repetition of Prayers 270. Relations secular must be quitted for Religion in what sence 320. They must not hinder Religious Duties 236. Reformation begins ill if it begins with Sacrilege 171. 5. Reward propounded in the beginning and end of Christian Duties 222. It makes the labour easie 295. 1. Restitution to the state of Grace is divisible and by parts 314. Restitution made by Zacchaeus 346. 4. Resurrection proved and described by Jesus 348. 11. All Relations of Kindred or 〈◊〉 cease then ibid. Resurrection of Jesus 393. Given for a sign 160. 279. It is the support of Christianity 428. Resignation of himself to be made by a dying or sick person 405. 17. Rich men less disposed for reception of Christianity 29. Riches are surest and to best purposes obtained by Christianity 301. 10. Rites of Burial among the Jewes lasted Fourty days 419. S. SArabaitae great Mortifiers but not obedient 49. 24. Sacrilege a robbing of God 52. Saints to inherit the Earth in what sence 224. 9. Sacraments ineffectual without the conjunction of something moral 97. They operate by way of Prayers ibid. Sacrament of the Lord's Supper instituted 349. 17. It s manner ibid. To be received Fasting 272. Of the Presence of Christ's Body in it 370. 3. Sabbath of the Jewes abolished 327. 28. 243. 25. Primitive Christians kept both the Sabbath and the Lord's Day 243. 24. Second Sabbath after the first what it means 290. 2. Sabbatick pool streamed onely upon the Sabbath 327. 28. Salome presented John Baptist's Head to her Mother 169. She was killed with Ice ibid. Samaritans were Schismaticks 182. 3. They hated the Jewes ibid. They were cast in their Appeal to Ptolemy ibid. Samaritan 〈◊〉 a Concubine after the death of her fifth Husband 187. 1. Scandal cannot be given by any thing that is our Duty 328. 334. 13. Sin of Scandal and the indiscretion of Scandal 330. 6. Scandalous persons who 328. 334. 13. No Man can say that himself is scandalized 333. 10. The Rules Measure and Judgement of Scandal 328. Between a Friend and an Enemy how we are to doe in the question of Scandal 334. 12. Scandal how to be avoided in making and executing Laws 334. 14. State of Separation 423. 429. 15. The Pool of Siloam 325. 21. Scorn must not be cast upon our calamitous Brother 339. Secular Persons tied to a frequent Communion 379. 19. Secular and Spiritual Objects their difference 380. 21. Serapion's Reproof of a young proud Monk 366. 7. Sepulchre of Jesus sealed 501. 39. Sermon of Christ upon the Mount 183. 11. His Farewell-Sermon 350. 19. Severity to our selves and Gentleness to others a Duty 324. 17. Sensuality Vide Temptations Simon' s name changed 151. 2. His Wifes Mother cured 184. 12. Simeon Stylites commended for Obedience 49. 24. Simon Magus brought a new Sin into the world 104. 6. Sins of Infirmity Vide 〈◊〉 Sins small in themselves are made great when they come by design 44. 12. When they are acted by deliberation ibid. When they are often repeated and not interrupted by Repentance ibid. 13. When they are 〈◊〉 45. 14. Sin pleasant at the first bitter in the end 159. It carries a whip with it 170. They are forgiven when the Punishment is remitted 184. After Pardon they may return in guilt 211. It is more troublesome than Vertue is 297. 4. Not cared for unless it be difficult 299. 6. It shortens our lives naturally 305. 19. It made Jesus weep 359. To be accounted as great Blemishes to our selves as we account them to others 365. 6. Sinners Prayers not heard in what sence 266. 13. Sinners in need are to be relieved 258. Sinners are Fools 310. 28. State of Sin totally opposed to the Mercies of the Covenant 200. Sin against the Holy Ghost what it is 201. 10. Simplicity of Spirit a Christian Duty 157. Shame of Lust more violent to Nature than the Severities of Continence 295. The good Shepherd 325. Shepherds by Night watchful had a Revclation of Christ 29. Spiritual Shepherds must be watchful ibid. Spiritual Sadness is often a Mercy and a Grace 236. When otherwise 160. Spiritual persons apt to be tempted to Pride 86 100. Spiritual Mourning 224. Spiritual Pleasures distinguished from Temporal 191. Spiritual good things how to be prayed for 266. 262. Spiritual 〈◊〉 360. 8. Spirit makes Religion 〈◊〉 295. It is the earnest of Salvation 316. Spirit of Adoption ibid. It is quenched by some ibid. Spirit is 〈◊〉 to be offered to God 176. Solemnities of Christ's Kingdom 392. Souldiers plunged Jesus into the Brook Cedron 388. 11. They pierced his Side 355. They mock and beat Him 351. 353. They cover his Face at his Attachment 351. They fell to the ground at the glory of his Person ibid. Sun's Eclipse at the Passion miraculous 354. Stones of the Temple of what bigness 348. 12. Star at Christ's Birth moved irregularly 27. 9. That the Star appearing to the Wise Men was an Angel the Opinion of the Greeks 27. 8. Swine kept by the Jews and why 194 Statue of Brass erected by the Woman cured of her Bloudy issue 185. 20. Success of our endeavours depends on God 196. 5. Sudden Joys are dangerous 196. 7. Schism to be avoided in the Occasions 194. Swearing in common Talk a great Crime 304. By Creatures forbidden ibid. Suits at Law with what Cautions permitted 264. Syrophoenician importunate with Jesus for her Daughter 321. 6. Solomon's Porch a fragment of the first Temple 327. 29. Sweat of Christ in the Agony as great as drops of Bloud 350. 20. 385. 6. T. TAble with Nails fastned to Christ's Garment when he bore the Cross 413. 2. Teachers of others should be exemplary 33. 79. They should learn first of their Superiours 75. Not to make too much haste into the Imployment 79. Teresa à Jesu her Vow 235. 22. Temporal Priviledges inferiour to Spiritual 292. Temporal good things how to be prayed for 261. Temptation not alwayes a sign of immortification 91. Not to be voluntarily entred into 91. 110. Not alwayes an argument of GOD's Disfavour 97. 361. It is every Man's Lot 105. Not alwayes to be removed by Prayer 102. The several manners of Temptation ibid. Remedies against it 112. 29. seq 1. Consideration 1. Of the Presence of God 112. 29. 1. Consideration 2. Of Death 114. 34. 2. Prayer 115. 37. Temple of Jerusalem how many High-Priests it had in Succession 303. 14. Transmigration of Souls maintained by the Pharisees 321. 8. Tribute to be paid 347. Traitor discovered by a Sop 350. Trinity meeting at the 〈◊〉 of our Blessed Lord by some manners of exteriour
being written by Symeon Bishop of Jerusalem exploded A concurrence of circumstances to entitle S. Peter to it 〈◊〉 things in it referred to which he had preached at Rome particularly the destruction of Jerusalem Written but a little before his death The spurious Writings attributed to him mentioned by the Ancients His Acts. Gospel Petri Praedicatio His Apocalypse Judicium Petri Peter's married relation His Wife the companion of his Travels Her Martyrdom His Daughter 〈◊〉 1. HAVING run through the current History of S. Peter's Life it may not be amiss in the next place to survey a little his Person and Temper His Body if we may believe the description given of him by Nicephorus was somewhat slender of a middle size but rather inclining to tallness his complexion very pale and almost white The hair of his Head and Beard curl'd and thick but withall short though S. Hierom tells us out of Clemens his Periods that he was Bald which probably might be in his declining age his Eyes black but speckt with red which Baronius will have to proceed from his frequent weeping his Eye-brows thin or none at all his Nose long but rather broad and flat than sharp such was the Case and out-side Let us next look inwards and view the Jewel that was within Take him as a Man and there seems to have been a natural eagerness predominant in his Temper which as a Whetstone sharpned his Soul for all bold and generous undertakings It was this in a great measure that made him so forward to speak and to return answers sometimes before he had well considered them It was this made him expose his person to the most eminent danger promise those great things in behalf of his Master and resolutely draw his Sword in his quarrel against a whole Band of Souldiers and wound the High-Priests Servant and possibly he had attempted greater matters had not our Lord restrained and taken him off by that seasonable check that he gave him 2. THIS Temper he owed in a great measure to the Genius and nature of his Country of which Josephus gives this true character That it naturally bred in men a certain fierceness and animosity whereby they were fearlesly carried out upon any action and in all things shew'd a great strength and courage both of mind and body The Galileans says he being 〈◊〉 from their childhood the men being as seldom overtaken with cowardize as their Country with want of men And yet notwithstanding this his fervor and fierceness had its intervals there being some times when the Paroxysms of his heat and courage did intermit and the man was surprised and betrayed by his own fears Witness his passionate crying out when he was upon the Sea in danger of his life and his fearful deserting his Master in the Garden but especially his carriage in the High-Priests Hall when the confident charge of a sorry Maid made him sink so far beneath himself and not withstanding his great and resolute promises so shamefully deny his Master and that with curses and imprecations But he was in danger and passion prevailed over his understanding and fear betrayed the succours which reason offered and being intent upon nothing but the present safety of his life he heeded not what he did when he 〈◊〉 his Master to save himself so dangerous is it to be left to our selves and to have our natural passions let loose upon us 3. CONSIDER him as a Disciple and a Christian and we shall find him exemplary in the great instances of Religion Singular his Humility and the lowliness of mind With what a passionate earnestness upon the conviction of a Miracle did he beg of our Saviour to depart from him accounting himself not worthy that the Son of God should come near so vile a sinner When our Lord by that wonderful condescension stoopt to wash his Apostles feet he could by no means be perswaded to admit it not thinking it sit that so great a person should submit himself to so servile an office towards so mean a person as himself nor could he be induced to accept it till our Lord was in a manner forced to threaten him into obedience When Cornelius heightned in his apprehensions of him by an immediate command from God concerning him would have entertained him with expressions of more than ordinary honour and veneration so far was he from complying with it that he plainly told him he was no other than such a man as himself With how much candor and modesty does he treat the inferiour Rulers and Ministers of the Church He upon whom Antiquity heaps so many honourable titles stiling himself no other than their fellow-Presbyter Admirable his love to and zeal for his Master which he thought he could never express at too high a rate for his sake venturing on the greatest dangers and exposing himself to the most imminent hazards of his life 'T was in his quarrel that he drew his Sword against a Band of Souldiers and an armed multitude and 't was love to his Master drew him into that imprudent advice that he should seek to save himself and avoid those sufferings that were coming upon him that made him promise and engage so deep to suffer and die with him Great was his forwardness in owning Christ to be the Messiah and Son of God which drew from our Lord that honourable Encomium Blessed art thou Simon Bar Jonah But greater his courage and constancy in confessing Christ before his most inveterate enemies especially after he had recovered himself of his fall With how much plainness did he tell the Jews at every turn to their very faces that they were the Murderers and Crucifiers of the Lord of Glory Nay with what an undaunted courage with what an Heroick greatness of mind did he tell that very Sanhedrim that had sentenced and condemned him that they were guilty of his murder and that they could never be saved any other way than by this very Jesus whom they had crucified and put to death 4. LASTLY let us reflect upon him as an Apostle as a Pastor and Guide of Souls And so we find him faithful and diligent in his office with an infinite zeal endeavouring to instruct the ignorant reduce the erroneous to strengthen the weak and confirm the strong to reclaim the vicious and turn Souls to righteousness We find him taking all opportunities of preaching to the people converting many thousands at once How many voiages and travels did he undergo with how unconquerable a patience did he endure all conflicts and trials and surmount all difficulties and oppositions that he might plant and propagate the Christian Faith Not thinking much to lay down his own life to promote and further it Nor did he only do his duty himself but as one of the prime Superintendents of the Church and as one that was sensible of the value and the worth of Souls he was careful to put others in mind of
causes the Grass to grow for the Cattel and Herb for the service of Man that he may bring forth food out of the Earth and Wine that maketh glad the heart of man and Oil to make his face to shine and Bread which strengthneth man's heart that beautifies the Lilies that neither toil nor spin and that with a glory that out-shines Solomon in all his pomp and grandeur From Land let us ship our observations to Sea and there we may descry the wise effects of infinite understanding A wide Ocean fitly disposed for the mutual commerce and correspondence of one part of mankind with another filled with great and admirable Fishes and enriched with the treasures of 〈◊〉 deep What but an Almighty arm can shut in the Sea with doors bind it by a 〈◊〉 tual decree that it cannot pass and tye up its wild raging waves with no stronger 〈◊〉 dage than ropes of Sand Who but he commands the storm and stills the 〈◊〉 and brings the Mariner when at his wits-end in the midst of the greatest dangers to his desired Haven They that go down to the Sea in ships and do business in great waters these see the works of the Lord and his wonders in the deep So impossible is it for a man to stand in any part of the Creation wherein he may not discern evidences enough of an infinitely wise gracious and Omnipotent Being Thus much I thought good to add to illustrate the Apostles argument whence he strongly infers that 't is very reasonable that we should worship and adore this great Creator and Benefactor and not transfer the honours due to him alone upon men of frail and sinful passions and much less upon dumb Idols unable either to make or to help themselves An argument which though very plain and plausible and adapted to the meanest understandings yet was all little enough to restrain the people from offering Sacrifice to them But how soon was the wind turned into another corner The old spirit of the Jews did still haunt and pursue them Who coming from Antioch and 〈◊〉 exasperated and stirred up the multitude And they who just before accounted them as Gods used them now worse not only than ordinary men but slaves For in a mighty rage they fall upon S. Paul stone him as they thought dead and then drag him out of the City Whither the Christians of that place coming probably to interr him he suddenly revived and rose up amongst them and the next day went thence to Derbe 7. HERE they preached the Gospel and then returned to Lystra 〈◊〉 and Antioch of Pisidia confirming the Christians of those places in the belief and profession of Christianity earnestly perswading them to persevere and not be discouraged with those troubles and persecutions which they must expect would attend the profession of the Gospel And that all this might succeed the better with fasting and prayer they ordained Governours and Pastors in every Church and having recommended them to the grace of God departed from them From hence they passed through Pisidia and thence came to Pamphilia and having preached to the people at Perga they went down to Attalia And thus having at this time finished the whole circuit of their Ministery they returned back to Antioch in Syria the place whence they had first set out Here they acquainted the Church with the various transactions and successes of their travels and how great a door had hereby been opened to the conversion of the Gentile World 8. WHILE S. Paul staid at Antioch there arose that famous controversie about the observation of the Mosaic Rites set on foot and brought in by some Jewish Converts that came down thither whereby great disturbances and distractions were made in the minds of the people For the composing whereof the Church of Antioch resolved to send Paul and Barnabas to consult with the Apostles and Church at Jerusalem In their way thither they declared to the Brethren as they went along what success they had had in the conversion of the Gentiles Being come to Jerusalem they first addressed themselves to Peter James and John the pillars and principal persons in that place By whom they were kindly entertained and admitted to the right hand of fellowship And perceiving by the account which S. Paul gave them that the Gospel of the uncircumcision was committed to him as that of the circumcision was to Peter they ratified it by compact and agreement that Peter should preach to the Jews and Paul unto the Gentiles Hereupon a Council was summoned wherein Peter having declared his sence of things Paul and Barnabas acquainted them what great things God by their Ministery had done among the Gentiles A plain evidence that though uncircumcised they were accepted by God as well as the Jews with all their legal Rites and Priviledges The issue of the debate was That the Gentiles were not under the obligation of the Law of Moses and that therefore some persons of their own should be joyned with Paul and Barnabas to carry the Canons and decrees of the Council down to Antioch for their fuller satisfaction in this matter But of this affair we shall give the Reader a more distinct and particular account in another place SECT III. Of S. Paul from the time of the Synod at Jerusalem till his departure from Athens S. Paul's carrying the Apostolick Decree to Antioch His 〈◊〉 with Peter The dissention between him and Barnabas His Travels to confirm the new-planted Churches The conversion of Lydia at Philippi The Jewish Proseuchae what the frequency of them in all places The dispossessing of a Pythonesse S. Paul's imprisonment and ill usage at Philippi The great provision made by the Roman Laws for the security of its Subjects His preaching at Thessalonica and Beraea His going to Athens The fame of that place His doctrine opposed by the Stoicks and Epicureans and why The great 〈◊〉 and Superstition of that City The Altar to the Unknown God This Unknown God who The Superstition of the Jews in concealing the name of God This imitated by the Gentiles Their general Forms of 〈◊〉 their Deities noted The particular occasion of these Altars at Athens whence S. Paul's discourse to the Philosophers in the Areopagus concerning the Divine Being and Providence The different entertainment of his Doctrine Dionysius the Areopagite who His Learning Conversion and being made Bishop of Athens The difference between him and S. Denys of Paris The Books published under his name 1. SAINT Paul and his Companions having received the Decretal Epistle returned back to 〈◊〉 where they had not been long before Peter came thither to them And according to the Decree of the Council freely and inoffensively conversed with the Gentiles Till some of the Jews coming down thither from Jerusalem he withdrew his converse as if it were a thing unwarrantable and unlawful By which means the minds of many were dissatisfied and their Consciences very much ensnared Whereat S. Paul being