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

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soe great Maiestie as thou art pleased to manifest vnto me by these thy wonderfull and magnificent workes I cannot conclude my song more fitly then as I begane saying O Lord our Lord how maruelous is thy name in the whole earth because c. The auncient holie Fathers grounding themselues vpon the words of S. Paul the 2. to the Hebrews and the first to the Corinthians the 15. as alsoe vpon the authoritie of our B. Sauiour himself in the 21. of S. Mathew doe applie the words of this Psalme wholly to Christ our Lord and his holie Church Wherefore I shall here vnfold the propheticall sense of this Psalme vsing as neare as I can the very self same words which I find set downe in the workes of the saied holie Fathers which are to this effect The propheticall sense of this Psalme IN this vale of teares we cannot see God for it is written Man shall not see Exo. 33. him and liue nor consequently can we come to know how admirable he is other wise then by his effects which are in two sorts that is to saie naturall and supernaturall By the first God appeared alwaies and euery where sublime for by the contemplation of his naturall effects all men might perceiue how incomprehensible à workman he was But by the second he cheefly shewed himself to be of infinite power and Maiestie in the tyme of the law of Moyses not to all the world but to some few people but in the tyme of the law of grace he hath shewed himself admirable in the whole earth in all the parts whereof he hath wrought wonderfull things and manifested to the inhabitants the hidden and secret things of his wisdome reuealing vnto them the mysterie of the Incarnation Passion Resurrection and Ascensian of Christ and other wonderfull testimonies of the Christian law and faith by all which the name of our Lord is made exceeding admirable and altogether inscrutable euen to the vtmost confines of the earth Dauid therefore foreseeing in spirit the supernaturall workes of God which were to bee wrought in the comming of Christ and manifested to the whole world stroken with admiration saied as followeth O Lord of all things and particularly Our Lord who with true Religion and due reuerence doe worship thee in faith of the Messias to come how maruelous by the future preaching of the Gospell is thy name shall thy fame and glorie be not onely in Iewry but alsoe in the whole earth in all the parts whereof thy holie Church shall bee dilated Because thy magnificence the humanitie of Christ that most noble sumptuous and magnificent worke of thyne is eleuated shall bee exalted from terrene humilitie and placed at thy right hand aboue the materiall heauens and aboue all the Angelicall or celestiall powers for then it shall bee diuulged through the world that thou hast giuen to Christ thy Sonne in his assumpted humane nature all power in heauen and vpon earth Yet soe inscrutable are thy iudgements that thou wilt not make choice of such as swell with humane learning greatnes to promulgate these thy diuine misteries neither wilt thou reueale thy perfect praise to them but out of the mouth of abiect simple and vnlearned people who not so much in regard of age as in respect of their resemblance to the propertie of children maie well bee tearmed Infants and sucklings thou hact perfected thou wilt perfect diuine praise to bee song to thyne and thy Sonnes holie name and wilt by them proclaime thy law wherein thy praise is contained And this thou wilt doe because of thy enemies to conuince the Priests of the Synagogue as alsoe the Priests of the Idoles and the professors of humane wisdome who by impugning thy new law will become thy enimies that thou maiest destroie disperse and cause to desist from their manner of religious worship the enimie the people of the Iewes who will be the prime enimies of the Messias and the reuenger the Gentils who by thy diuine ordinance shall reuenge the iniuries done by the Iewes vnto him Because I who am onely one of those Infants and sucklings as hauing been brought vp à poore simple sheep heard shall see thy heauens shall attentiuely consider those wōderfull subtile workes of thyne which thou didst make with exceeding facilitie as being the workes of thy fingers the moone and starres which thou hast founded which thou hast created of nothing to stable and incorruptible being I cannot sufficiently admire what is man the whole race of men what are they or what seruice are they able to doe thee that thou who art of soe great power and Maiestie as these thy workes shew thee to bee art mindfull of him of them preuenting them with thy diuine grace and heaping innumerable benefitts vpon them without any the least merit on their part but meerely moued therevnto by thy owne immense goodnes Or the sonne not of men that is begotten of men according to the ordinary course of nature but of man borne of the Virgin Mother of God Christ our Lord who in respect of his humanitie will bee in some sort à creature what is hee That thou visitest him that thou wilt visite him assuming his humane nature to the personall vnion of thy diuine nature Verily O Lord this thou wilt doe out of thy diuine grace alone not moued thereunto by any fore goeing merits of Christ as man Thou hast minished him vdzt Christ our Lord à litle lesse then the Angels If we consider his humane nature precisely abstracting from the graces which he shall participate by such hypostaticall vnion thou wilt make him in some respects inferiour to the Angells for thou wilt make him passible and mortall but if we consider him as he shall bee in that state of vnion he shall transcend them farre in dignitie and excellencie Indeed for à small tyme during his Passion thou wilt minish him à litle lesse then them but after his Resurrection with glorie with renowne and praise worthy fame and with honour with reuerence that shall bee exhibited in token of his vertue thou hast crowned him thou wilt crowne him and adorne him on all sides and hast appointed him ouer the workes of thy hands and wilt constitute him Lord and King ouer thy creatures and giue him all power in heauen and vpon earth Thou hast subiected all things except thy self alone vnder his feete vnder his humanitie by which his diuinitie will de●cend vnto vs. All sheepe simple deuout soules and oxen learned Doctors and Preachers who cultiuate the hearts of the faithfull Moreouer all the beasts of the feild sinfull loose liuing people who wander vp and downe without à guide in the broad way of the pleasures of this life following their owne concupiscence The birds of the aire proud men puffed vp with the wind of vaine glorie And the fishes of the sea that walke the pathes of the sea curious worldly men who imploy their w●ole study in search of temporall
vs the holie life and Passion of his deare Sonne Christ Iesus our Lord and Sauiour or the acts and vertues of the blessed Virgin and the rest of the Saints now in glory we maie hereby correspond on our part to soe great loue and in token of gratitude breake for●h into his praise with some sweet sentences expressing the affections of our hearts admiring his goodnesse glorifying his name for euer These sentences are vsually repeated in the Responsories that they maie make the deeper impression in our hearts as alsoe to shew that when we haue praised God all we can we maie beginne againe and againe and yet neuer bee able to praise him to the full The Lessons here being wholly of the blessed Virgin and insinuating vnto vs her Motherly care and sincere affection towards all mankind the Responsories are composed answerable to the Lessons and are certaine pious affections towards her extolling the immēse goodnesse of God for his wonderfull mercies shewed towards her his infinite graces bestowed vpon her aboue all pure creatures and his singular workes wrought in and by her to the benefit of all mankind The exposition of the Second Lesson ANd soe in Sion to wit in the holie Church speculating diuine things was I established made firme and powerfull as being replenished with all vertue and grace that I might bee able to succour and releeue all faithfull soules and in the sanctified Cittie to wit in the holie Church likewise I rested corporally and spiritually corporally soe long as I liued in the world in mortall flesh and afterwards euer since I was assumpted into heauen I cease not to rest spiritually in the holie Church recommended vnto my custody and my power was in Ierusalem in the triumphant and militant Church In the triumphant I am alotted à prime place of dignitie in respect of my maternall authoritie by which I am made the Mother of God and for which I am exalted aboue all the Angelicall spirits The Kingdome of mercy in the militant Church is alsoe conferred vpon me for which I am stiled the Queene of mercy and haue dominion ouer the inuisible enemies And I tooke roote in an honourable people to wit in the Christian people for whome I haue obtained that they maie take roote and bee established in all grace and vertue by frequent procuring them diuine gifts and pious reformation and by strengthening them in good And in the portion of my God his inheritance to wit the inheritance of the saied Christian people for by my intercession that portion which almightie God hath allotted to his beloued to wit eternal happinesse shall bee the inheritance of those faithfull Christians who are predestinate by him from all eternitie to enioye his essentiall vision and my abiding is in the full assembly of the Saints that is amongst the deuout and holie ones I am detayned and will perseuere for with such I am well pleased to remaine The explication of the Third Lesson I Am exalted as à Cedur in Libanus Like as the high tree called à Cedar is eleuated in mount Libanus sendeth forth à sweet sauour and is not subiect to putrifaction soe I am deuoutly honoured by all good Christians aboue all pure creatures highly reuerenced experienced sweet to euery one and am intire and free from all corruption of sinne and reprehension And as the fruit of the Cedar hath vertue to heale languishing people soe my fauour my praier and my consolations haue power to cure all diseased hearts And as à Cyprus tree in mount Sion Like as that most solide tree doth yeeld to noe burthen nor can bee suppressed by any weight but doth sublimely appeare in mount Sion Soe I remaine amongst Christian people most strong hardy neither did I euer yeld to any vice or was ouercome by any tentation but haue obtained for that people manifold comforts by my intercession and merits As à Palme tree in Cades I am exalted Like as the Palme tree in the towne of Cades doth appeare most gorgeously and in its top branches is most comely and pleasing to behold Soe I by the gifts and ornaments of grace and glorie am made most bright and delightfull to the veiw aboue all creatures And as à Rose plant in Iericho As the Rose is the most beautifull of all flowers soe the blessed Virgin is the most beautifull of all women and like as the water distilled out of Roses doth asswage paine and cleanse the eies soe the blessed Virgin doth mitigate all the anguishes sorrowes of this present life and illuminate the internall eies As à faire Oliue tree in the feilds Like as the oliue tree is euer greene and flourisheth produceth à sweet fruit and designeth peace pietie and mercie Soe the most illustrious and vnparalleld Virgin hath continually flourished in wisdome and vertue hath brought forth à most sweet fruit generated the restorer of peace to all mankind doth from tyme to tyme reconcile vs to almighty God and is the Mother of all mercie and the source of pietie And as à Plane tree by the water in the streets I am exalted By the Plane tree whose leaues are soft and broad is here expressed that the most blessed Virgin is altogether meeke gentle and curteous that her words and workes are most ample by the latitude of Charitie and that like as vnder the broad spreading branches of the saied tree people maie bee defended from the scorching beames of the Sunne or the violence of à suddaine storme soe all that shall flie for succour vnto the secure harbour of her power pietie shall bee graciously receiued and protected from the heate of persecution and boysterous stormes of tentations and tribulations I gaue an odour as Cinamon and aromaticall balme Like as Cinamon is sweet of tast hath à strengthening operation is good against indigestion and debility of the stomacke Soe I am sweet to those that loue me and doe strengthen them that they maie bee able to digest the foode of their soules and become ruminating and cleane creatures meditating daie and night of those things which appertaine vnto God I send forth alsoe à fragrant sauour of good fame Charitie Pietie and wisdome wherewith I recreate and delight those that reuerence and serue me And like as aromaticall balme that odoriferous royall exquisite and exceeding pretious tree hath the vertue or operation of warming strengthening Soe the incomparable and most pure Virgin singular most excellent sprong of à royall stemme solaceth all deuou● soules and procureth them the grace of fortitude and feruour of diuine loue As chosen Myrrhe haue I giuen the sweetnes of odour Like as the best Myrrhe is bitter preserueth from corruption scattereth abroad à pleasant odour Soe the blessed Virgin was replenished with the bitternesse of most vehement compassion when she beheld her beloued Sonne nayled vpon the Crosse and doth continually condole with sinners obtaining for innumerable people the grace of compunction she preserueth
that inuented the origine of all c. O all yee His elected people and the sheepe of his pasture whome he feedeth with his Sacraments and sustaineth nourisheth in mynd and body with his guifts and graces enter yee not so much with corporall steps as with aduancement of your mynds into the practise of vertues which are his gates through which you are to passe into eternall life enter I saie in Confession of your sinnes For proceeding according to order this ought to precede our other workes of vertue for by such confession sinnes are remitted grace giuen and men are fitly disposed to praise God But if we omit to doe this it will bee in vaine for vs to seeke to enter into his saied gates neither will any thing we doe seeme gratefull vnto him as he affirmeth by the mouth of the Prophet Isaie saying VVhen you shall stretch forth Isaie 1. your hands I will turne away myne eies from you and when you shall multiply praier I will not heare for your hands are full of bloud VVash you bee cleane and take away the euill of your cogitations from myne eies c. Being therefore thus prepared enter yee alsoe with humble confidence into his courts in Hymnes for your praises will then be most delightfull vnto him By the courts of our Lord diuers of the holie Fathers doe vnderstand the latitude of Charitie and other principal vertues which à soule soe cleansed by Sacramentall confession practised in inferiour vertues ought to aspire vnto by which they maie attaine to perfection in this life and acquire an answerable place of glory in the next but some others doe suppose the Prophet to allude to the Three Courts of the Temple whereof one was for the Priests another for laye men and the third for women Amongst the diuine Attributes for all which he is most praise worthy Praise yee his name here for three of them cheefly First because our Lord is sweet mild benigne and soone moued to pittie and compassion Which if you desire to make tryall of Tast ye and see that our Psal 3● 2. Cor. 1. Lord is sweet He is the Father of mercies and God of all comfort Secondly praise him because his mercy is for euer Our Psal 102. Lord is pittifull and mercifull long suffering and very mercifull As à Father hath compassion of his children soe hath our Lord compassion on them that feare him Thirdly and lastly praise him because his truth is euen vnto generation and generation As he is most mercifull promising benefits gratis soe he is most faithfull and true in constantly performing what he hath promised as he witnesseth of hymselfe saying Heauen and earth shall Luc. 21. passe but my words shall not passe Behold here à Psalme replete with Angelicall sweetnes which we ought to sing in the person of the holie Church with diligent attention rendering our selues efficaciously obedient to the pious exhortations therein contained by iubilating to our Lord seruing him with gladnesse attending to his presence incessantly and confessing him to bee our God by faith workes which we cannot by any meanes performe vnlesse we doe daily with intire hearts abhorre and detest the greater sort of vices and diligently to the vtmost of our power shunne correct deplore the lesser sort of sinnes by frequent confession firme purpose of amendement weighing carefully that saying of Salomon He that hideth Prouer. 28. v. 13. his wicked deeds shall not bee directed but he that shall confesse and shall forsake them shall obtaine mercie These things are requisite to the due performance of the acts where vnto we are inuited in this present Psalme for those acts are altogether deiforme celestiall Angelicall and of incomparable merit The title and argument of the 62. Psalme and third in the Laudes A Psalme of Dauid when he was in the deser● of Iuda called Ziph or of Idumea Holie Dauid when he was inforced to hide himselfe in the desert from the furious persecution of Saul and could not haue accesse to the Tabernacle of God nor to Ierusalem where he had à longing desire to bee in the inheritance of our Lord did take occasion by that his affliction to deplore his owne estate and the estate of all other iust men liuing in the exile of this present life and vale of teares whcih is repleate with vices and tribulations sterill of good things and true felicity and to expresse the exceeding great desire he had to passe out of this world vnto the celestiall countrey The exposiiion of the Psalme O God of all and in a speciall manner My God in regard of thy peculiar fauours graces aboundantly bestowed vpon me the vnworthiest of thy creatures protecting me from euill things promoting me in good things and directing me in à particular manner to my last end as alsoe in respect of the singular loue and reuerence wherewith I loue worship thee alone and aboue all things to thee ● watch from the morning light presently ●o● soone as the daie appeareth and the spendor of thy diuine grace doth illustrate m● soule I arise by erecting my mynd towards thee with à cordiall affection to contemplate loue and adore thee My soule hath thirsted after thee The appetite of my soule to wit my will hath coueted with an intellectuall and exceeding great desire to obtaine thee the fountaine of all goodnesse who alone canst satiate her and my flesh to wit my body or my sensuall appetite hath thirsted to thee very many waies by reason of diuers and manifold necessities Concerning these words of the Prophet you are to note that whether the Flesh bee taken for the body onely or for the sensitiue appetite it cannot fitly bee saied to thirst to God directly and immediatly for God being an immateriall and simple essence can onely bee attained with à sole immateriall appetite as he is onely comtemplated with a sole intellectuall eie neither can the flesh precisely taken according to it selfe desire properly speaking or thirst but for as much as it is informed with the soule for desire rather belongeth to the whole compound and to the soule then to the flesh Whereas therefore the flesh is here saied to thirst to God it maie bee vnderstood two waies First because it is an an occasion to the soule to t●irst to God For The body that is corrupted burdeneth the Sap. 9. soule and the soule by reason of her vnion with the body falleth into many necessities solicitudes afflictions and miseries and consequently t●ereby she hath soe many causes or motiues of sighing and longing after God as she experienceth in herselfe impediments which interpose themselues betweene her and God● and doe retract remoue her à farre of from him Such impediments as these the Apostle felt when he saied Vnhappy man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body Rom. 7. of this death Secondly it maie bee vnderstood thus My flesh to wit
the signification of the word Dauid maie most fitly bee applied for Dauid is by interpretation strong of hand or worthy to be desired Belogning to the end that is to Christ for The end of the law is Christ vnto iustice to Roma 10. euery noe that beleeveth who is the glorious perfectiō of al good things For Presses that is for the merits of his painefull passion wherein he was as it were troden vnder the feete of the Iewes and all his sacred bloud forced out of his veines Which Metaphor Isaias alsoe vseth demaunding Isa 63. of Christ VVhy is thy cloathing red and thy garments as theirs that tread in the vine presse answering in Christs person I haue troden the presse alone The word Presses maie be morally applied to the holie Church where Christ is the vine the Apostles are the branches and spreaders that is preachers of the Gospell Christians are the grapes Christian vertues the wine as namely Patience and Fortitude in afflictions whereby the good are purified and seuered from the midst of the reprobate as wine is pressed out of the grapes barrelled and layed vp in cellers and the huskes and carnells cast to hoggs or other beasts Theophilactus saieth that the Hebrewt In Comment super Ioh. did in auncient tyme sing this Psalme at the feast of Scenopegia in the month of September when they had gotten in their haruest thereby giuing thankes to God the bestower of all for their good haruest of corne and wine Christ Iesus the fruit of the wombe of the B. Virgin is our haruest of corne for he is the bread of life which descended from heauen he is likewise our vintage for he hath giuen vs his body for our foode and his precious bloud for our drinke Since the Iewes therefore gaue thankes by this Psalme to God the bestower of all good things for their carnall foode how much rather ought we to offer vp vnto him this Psalme by the hands of the B. Virgin in thankfulnes for our spirituall foode beseeching her to make intercession for vs that we maie conuert it to our soules benefit An historicall exposition of this Psalme O Lord of all by thy omnipotent power and particularly Our Lord for thou hast selected vs out of all the generations of the earth to be thy peculiar people and we alone haue chosen thee for our God vnto whome we will exhibite all honour diuine worship and to none but thee onely How maruelouse is thy name thy glorie and the fame of thy greatnes in the whole earth not onelye in Iurie where thou hast been pleased to manifest thy infinite goodnes and immense power by innumerable signes and miracles but alsoe in the vttermost bounds of the earth Because thy magnificence the confession of thy praise is eleuated not onely aboue the earth but alsoe aboue the heauens which with their continuall and ordinate circumuolution doe neuer cease to proclaime to all creatures thy incomprehensible maiestie which is more to bee admired euen Out of the Mouth of infants and sucklings thou hast perfected established and altogether made manifest the Praise of thy holie name because of thy enimies to witt that incredulous people who will not acknowledge thee for the author of all things but doe with great furie oppugne those that loue and honor thee and thee in them maie blush at their owne malice and grosse ignorance when they shall behold sucklings to set forth thy glorie moreouer that thou maiest destroy and confound the wisdome and subtilities of the enimie of all mankind and the reuenger alsoe of the iniuries done to thee executing the seueritie of thy iustice vpon misbeleeuers and such that acknowledge thee for the true God but denie thee in their actions and dishonour thee in their bad liues Because I shall see thy heauens those huge vast celestiall orbes the workes of thy fingers which thou hast made by the wisdome of thy diuine vnderstanding the goodnes of thy will and the actiuitie of thy creatiue power which are thy fingers the Moone and starres which thou hast founded placed fixed and disposed in their proper spheres I cannot sufficiently admire VVhat is man Adam the very first man that was created what is he That thou who art of such immense Maiestie as those thy stupendious workes doe shew thee to bee art mindfull of him furnishing him with all things necessarie in due season Or the sonne of man the ofspring of that first man Adam what is he that thou soe graciously visitest him with manifold fauours and benedictions Yet when I considere the excellencie of his nature I perceiue thou hast good reason to bee solicitous for him for Th●● hast diminished him à litle lesse then the Angell● in dignitie and excellencie of nature thou hast made him litle inferiour to them true it is whilest he remaineth in this life he is something inferiour to them in regard that he is clothed with à body subject to corruptiō they are pure immateriall substances but at the generall resurrection he shall be like vnto them impassible glorious and capable to behold thee cleerely as thou art Yea in this life with glorie and honour thou hast crowned him according to the soule thou hast formed him to thyne o●ne image and similitude and indued him with three Angelicall powers memorie vnderstanding and will and other graces which he en●oyed during the tyme he remained in originall iustice and according to the bodie thou hast adorned him with beautie comelinesse many other ornaments and hast appointed him ouer the workes of thy hands made him Prince and Soueraigne Lord ouer all thy creatures Thou hast subiected all things vnder his feete commaunded all thy creatures to doe him homage and obey his will All sheepe and oxen and other domesticall creatures Moreouer all the beasts of the feild vntamed and sauadge creatures the birds of the aire and fishes of the sea that walke the pathes of the sea This dominion ouer thy creatures man enioyed fully and absolutely before his fall noe one of them making the least resistance against him for as Saint Augustine saieth soe longe as lib. de Na. gra 15. raison in man remained subiect and obedient to God the inferiour powers of his soule were alsoe perfectly obedient and subiect to raison the bodye to the soule and all creatures to man But when man had once transgr●ssed thy holie precept and thereby became disobedient to thee the inferiour powers of his soule begane presentlye to bee rebellious to raison the flesh to the spirit and creatures though naturally subiect to him to disobey him And albert he still retained the dominion ouer them which through thy infinite goodnesse and clemencye thou didst againe alsoe confirme vpon him fully and intirely according to right yet according to exercise or power to execute his right thou hast iustly weakened him for his demerit Since therefore thou art our Lord soe potent and of
The Canticles of the old Testament might not bee song but onely in the land of Promise but such new songs as these of the new Testament maie bee song by all the inhabitants of the earth and therefore Sing to our Lord all the earth this new and most sweet song That for the excessiue Charitie Ephes 2. wherewith God the Father hath loued vs he hath sent his onely Sonne into the world Sing ye to our Lord and blesse his name praise him and recount his wonderfull benefits with iubilation of heart saying See what manner of Charitie the Father hath 1. Io● 3. giuen vs that we should bee named and bee the Sonnes of God Such sweete sentences as these are called à new song not onely in regard of the newnesse of tyme but alsoe in respect of the new and fresh deuotion of the mynd and for that they ought to bee song by renewed men in whome vaine and dishonest loue raigneth not any more but true Charitie Let vs therefore reforme the affections of our heart and out of the feruent loue we beare towards our Sauiour seeke for and inuent new songs in his praise according to the grace and internall light that God hath giuen vs as the fond louers of the world doe compose songs of him or her whome they loue carnally Shew forth his saluation praise ye and di●ulge ye Christ by whome in whome God the Father doth saue vs from daie to daie euery daie for as daie doth succeed to daie without ceasing soe it is meet that praise should succeed to praise O all ye Apostles and Disciples of our Lord and all others whosoeuer their lawfull successors that haue the zeale of the diuine honour and brotherly charitie Shew forth his glorie among the Gentils which shall bee conuerted that they may beleeue and to those that are already conuerted that they maie encrease in loue and shew forth his maruelous workes in all peoples his creation of the world Redemption of mankind sending of the holie Ghost all other his wonderfull workes It is most meet that ye doe this Because our Lord is great and exceeding laudable He is an infinite and immense goodnes and he is as laudable as good therefore cannot bee sufficiently praised by any creature he is terrible aboue all Gods more to bee feared then all those which the Gentils did adore as Gods Almightie God in himselfe is all sweet benigne and louely for as S. Iohn affirmeth 1. Ioh. 4. God is charitie Yet he is saied to bee terrible in regard that he is as it were constrained to seeme soe to proud stubborne and disobedient people who will not bee wonne by lenitie and sweetnes Moreouer he is saied to bee terrible because it is more greeuous to bee separated from him then from all the creatures or delightfull things in the world as alsoe for that none can inflict soe cruell torments as he can whence is that of the Euangelist Feare not them that kill the Math. 10. body and are not able to kill the soule but rather feare him that can destroy both soule and body into hell For all which reasons it is manifest that he is more to bee feared then the Gods of the Gentils as alsoe Because all the Gods of the Gentils are Diuels reprobate Angels who for their pride and disobedience were throwne downe by him from heauen and cannot hurt vs further then he shall please to permit but our Lord made the heauens It is generally knowne that many of the Gentils did worship certaine wicked men for Gods to wit Saturne Iupiter Mercury Priapus c. and that many others did adore the Sunne Moone Starres fire water and the beasts of the earth as S. Paul doth infinuate to the Romans How then can all the Gods of the Gentils bee saied to bee diuels To which maie be answered that those wicked men are called diuels by participation of diuellish wickednesse like as some men are called Angels by participation of Angelicall dignitie and office as S. Iohn calleth the Pastors or Apoc. 2. Bishops of the Seauen Churches in Asia Angels and the Prophet Malachias calleth Malach. 2. à Priest the Angell of the Lord of hostes as concerning the other things which were adored for Gods although they were not diuels yet because those that exhibited worship vnto them beleeuing certaine deities to bee in them did by such their worship serue the diuels therefore it is that all the Gods of the Gentils are saied to bee diuels and the things that are immolated to them to bee immolated to diuels Confession and beautie in his fight holinesse and magnificence in his sanctification This verse is expounded by the holie Fathers fower seuerall waies and in effect as followeth First that in contemplating God is seene all beautie and matter of praise holinesse and magnificence in his sanctuary Secondly that praise and puritie is exercised in his presence holinesse and diuine worship in his sanctuary Thirdly that praise is sung to God by his Saints in heauen for the beautie which they behold in him who is indeed the fountaine of all sanctitie puritie glory and Maiestie as is acknowledged by those blessed spirits of whome consisteth the triumphant Church wherein he doth manifest this his beautie which is here tearmed his sanctification or is sanctuary Fowerthly that in those whome God almighty is graciously pleased to behold with the eies of his mercie this his sight causeth remorse of conscience and confession or acknowledgement of their faults by which meanes they attaine to interiour beautie and puritie of heart Bring ye to our Lord ye families of Gentils bring ye to our Lord glorie and honour bring ye to our Lord glorie vnto his name The Prophet repeateth here Bring ye to our Lord three tymes and endeth with glorie to his name as in the beginning of the Psalme he repeated thrice Sing ye to our Lord ending with blesse his name thereby as the holie Fathers doe note obscurely insinuating the most high mistery of the B. Trinitie which afterwards in the new testament was to bee diuulged more clearely Take ye vp hoastes bring with you gifts and sacrifices not such bloudy sacrifices as are now offred in the Temple but such as the Apostles and their successors shall teach you to offer to wit the sacrifice of à contrite heart confession of sinnes praier fasting almesdeeds and the like according to that of S. Peter Bee ye Epist 1. c. 2. à holie priesthood to offer spirituall hoastes acceptable to God by Iesus Christ And enter into his courtes into the Catholike Churches and other places deputed to the diuine worship and especially into the Temple of your hearts descending into your interiour and there praising and adoring God within you by contemplation loue and watchfull custody of your senses for The temple of God is holie 1. Cor. 3. which you are Adore ye our Lord in his holie courts adore ye in his
my sensitiue appetite thirsteth to God not directly immediatly as if God were the obiect of its desire but because those things which it longeth for it desireth according to the will of God that is to saie according to the command of reason and the direction of morall vertues In à desert land and inaccessible and without water soe in the holie I haue appeared to thee The Prophet seemeth to signify by these words that the desert sterill place where he then remained barren of things necessary and much more of delightfull things was neuerthelesse profitable vnto him to fynd out God For the soule by how much more she is destitute of carnall delights or at least wise by how much more she remoueth her affection from terrene things and placeth herselfe in à certaine desert or abstraction of mynd by soe much the more easily she maie ascend to contemplate and relish heauenly things I saieth he remaining in à desert land and inaccessible and without water soe haue appeared to thee that is soe haue shewed presented my selfe before thee in ascensiō of mynd as in thy holie that is as if I were in thy sanctuary in Ierusalem where there are many motiues of pietie and the sollemne vse of Religion that I might s●e thy strength and thy glory thy power and Majesty S. Augustine doth expound this desert land to bee the world forsaken by true men and inhabited by beasts to wit by carnall or sensuall men which is saied to bee inaccessible because it is a difficult matter to passe through it and to fynd out the narrow way which leadeth vnto eternall life and to bee without water because although it hath some few puddles of putrified water to wit carnall wisdome yet it wanteth water from heauen to wit true wisdome vnlesse God of his singular grace doe vouchsafe to shew the way to those that wander in this desert and sprinkle his dewe from heauen vpon it In this desert land therefore saieth the Prophet I haue appeared to thee ô God as in thy holie For I haue not liued in this world after the manner of worldlings nor followed the steps of sinners but haue serued thee in ho●inesse and iustice that I might see clearely in the celestiall countrey thy vertue to wit thy omnipotency wherewith thou disposest all things in heauen and earth and thy glory to wit thy beatitude or thus that I might see thy vertue and thy glory to wit Christ our Lord. In both which waies by the vertue and glory of God is vnderstood God himselfe sublime and glorious soe that we ought to operate all things we doe to the end that we may attaine the diuine vision as being our finall reward for which reason our Sauiour saieth This is life euerlasting that they may know thee the onely true God and ● 17. whome thou hast sent Iesus Christ. Because thy mercy is better then liues my lippes shall praise thee The word because seemeth not to bee referred to that which goeth before but to that which followeth as thus My lippes shall praise thee because thy mercy to wit the presence of thy grace wherewith thou conseruest we in à spirituall being is better then liues that is to saie is better then all sorts of naturall liues for the gifts of grace doe farre excell those of nature and it is better not to bee not to liue à naturall life obnoxious to sinne then to bee without grace and charitie as our Sauiour affirmed of Iudas saying It Mar● 14. were good for him if that man bad not been borne Moreouer the mercy of God giueth vs life and the same mercy conserueth it and if we shall loose our life for his loue he will restore it vnto vs in à farre more happy manner but if we fall from his mercy to conserue our life we shall deseruedly loose both our life and his mercy according to that of the Euangelist He that loueth his life shall loose it and Ioh. 12. he that hateth his life in this world doth keepe it to life euerlasting Soe I will blesse glorify and superexalt thee in my life to wit all the tyme I shall subsist and remayne in this life as the Prophet saieth in another Psalme I will blesse our Lord at all tymes his praise alwaies in my mouth Or thus In my life that is I will frame my life in such sort that my conuersation shall bee à certaine benediction of thy name for I will ordaine and direct all my actions and words to the honour praise and glory of thy holie name and in thy name I will lift vp my hands that is in the inuocation of thy name I will lift vp my hands in praier expecting aide and comfort in aduersities from rhee alone and giuing thankes to thee in my prosperities S. Augustine vpon these words giueth this admonition to wit that all those who lift vp their hands to God in praier ought alsoe to lift vp their hands to good workes if they desire to obtayne their requests The words immediatly following seeme to bee the praier which Dauid made when he soe lifted vp his hands to God As with mar●ow and fatnesse let my soule bee filled and my mouth shall praise with lippes of exultation Let my soule o Lord bee replenished with spirituall marrow and fatnesse to wit with internall consolation ardent charitie and thy diuine grace which are not properly marrow and fatnesse for that is a certaine corporall thing but yet haue à certaine resemblance thereunto For as those who are adorned with marrow and solide fatnesse not with swollen and puffed vp fatnesse are healthfull strong faire well coloured and pleasant and contrariewise those that are very leane are aride weake sad and disfigured soe those that are replenished with spirituall grace as with wholsome fatnesse are deuout feruent and euer ioyfull and contrariewise such as want it are soone cloyed with spirituall things weake and ill disposed to doe good or to tolerate euill With this spirituall fatnesse therefore the Prophet desireth to bee filled then he doubteth not but he shall bee able to praise our Lord with such couradge sweetnes and alacritie that he shall bee inforced to discouer his mentall ioy and sweetnes by exteriour signes of exultation If I haue bein mindfull of thee in my bed in the night tyme in the morning I will meditate on thee and contemplate such things as will bee pleasing to thee because thou hast been my helper Let vs imitate this good example and place our selues in our bed as in our tombe for sleepe is à certaine resemblance of death and who knoweth when he layes him downe to rest whether he shall awake or noe vntill the sound of the trumpet doe summon him to the tribunall of God S. Augustine out of these words gatheret● this document to wit That they who desire to remember God to haue his loue feare before their eies whilest they are imployed or busied in
2. ●ies haue seene thy saluation which thou hast prepared before the face of all people à light to the re●elation of the Gentils c. and in another place All flesh shall see the saluation Luc. 3. of God By this verse therefore the faithfull doe praie for the illumination of the holie Ghost that they erre not in the way of this present life but by working maie know and by knowing maie walke in the way of our Lord of which our Sauiour speaketh in the Ghospell Stra●●e Math. is the way that leadeth to life and few there are that fynd it and by these words in all nations thy saluation they praie that Christ maie be acknowledged and honoured by all nations Let people ô God Confesse to thee let all people Confesse to thee Let the worship and veneration of the false Gods cease and to thee alone the liuing God let all diuine honour be giuen by all people Let nations called to the faith of Christ be glad with interiour ioy and exult by shewing exteriour signes of their inward ioy and this because thou ô God by thy annoynted iudgest people in equitie that is the seruile yoake of the Prince of darknesse being taken away thou hast constituted à most iust Kingdome in thy holie Church and the nations in earth thou doest direct gouerning them and directing them by most wholsome lawes to the port of eternall saluation S. Augustine interpreteth the words of this verse in the future tense as thus Thou wilt iudge people in equitie and referreth them to the last iudgement And the nations in earth thou wilt direct referreth them to the direction of this present life according to whome the sense of this verse is Let nations bee glad and exult because if they happen to suffer any euill here from men the tyme will come when thou ô God wilt iudge people in equitie and in the meane tyme the nations in earth which are subiect and deuoted to thee thou wilt direct Let people ô God Confesse to thee let all people Confesse to thee Here the Prophet againe exhorteth all people to praise and giue thankes to God adding à new reason or motiue to wit because the earth hath yeelded her fruit This fruit is Christ our Lord borne of the terrene substance of the blessed Virgin à fruit of such excellency that in cōparison thereof all the fruit the earth hath heretofore brought forth maie well bee esteemed briers and thornes Of this fruit the Prophet Isaie maketh mention saying In that Isaiae cap. 4. daie the bud of our Lord shall bee in magnificenee and glory and the fruit of the earth high Yet taking the last words of this verse in à morall sense The earth is saied to yeeld her fruit when the holie Church doth spiritually instruct perfect and conserue her children and when our body liueth soberly and serueth to the aduancement of the soule obeying in all things The Prophet doth here as in many other places of the Psalmes vse the preterperfect tense for the future because in his prenotion that was now done which he foretelleth to bee done God our God blesse vs God blesse vs and let all the ends of the earth feare him This in effect is as much as if he had saied Since all people doe praise thee ô God and the earth hath yeelded her fruit let there henceforth bee a gratefull vicissitude betweene thee vs doe thou open thy liberall hand and fill vs with all benediction to wit with aboundance of all temporall and spirituall benefits and we as it is most meet will serue thee with à filiall reuerence and render thee the tribute of obedience and praise for euer The threefold repetition of the word God in this verse signifieth the affection of the Prophet Yet it seemeth likewise to insinuate the mystery of the blessed Trinitie which was afterwards manifested to the whole world by our Sauiour and his hole Apostles A certaine graue author vpon these words in the first verse of this Psalme to wit God blesse vs and illuminate his countenance vpon vs hath this obseruation Because saieth he many desire to bee blessed by God with aboundance of temporall benefits to wit with beautie power riches honour and the like all which indeed doe come from God but yet are common to the iust and vniust therefore the Prophet addeth what is proper to the iust to wit illuminate his countenance vpon vs. This is proper to the iust whereas the other mentioned things are common to all both good and euill almightie God soe disposing least if they should bee giuen solely to the good euill men would thinke that God were to bee worshipped for them and if to the euill onely infirme and fraise people would feare to conuert themselues to God least these things should bee wanting vnto them Behold here à short Psalme but full of feruour deuotion Let vs conforme the affections of our heart to the sacred words thereof with the whole forces of our mynd let vs implore the diuine mercy that he will bee pleased to inrich vs with the benedictions of Christ and instruct vs with the light of his countenance Let vs alsoe most heartely pray for the common good and for the generall soules health of all men that all men ma●e confesse to God honour and loue him The argument of the Canticle of the three children BY the insuing Canticle the three men Sidrach Misach and Abdenago who were throwne into the furnace of burning fire by the commandement of Nabuchodonosor because they refused to adore the golden statue he had erected as is at lardge related by the Prophet Daniel did inuite all creatures in their seuerall Daniel 3. degrees and natures to praise God and they themselues did praise and glorifie him who preserued their bodies that they were not touched by the fury of those flames and made their hearts inflamed with the fire of his loue Indeed by how much the more one is inflamed with his loue by soe much the more intensly doth he desire that God maie bee praised loued and honoured by all l. 1. de doctrina Christiana creatures according to that S. Augustine By how much the more feruent any one is in the loue of God by so much the more doth he endeauour by all the meanes he can diuise that God maie bee beloued of all men by how much the more sincerely any one doth cōtemplate God by soe much the more he doth vnderualue and humble himselfe esteeme the praise wherewith he doth set forth the glory of God to bee the more insufficient and therefore doth earnestly desire that God maie bee magnificently praised by all creatures and doth his best to procure it The exposition of the Canticle ALl workes of our Lord blesse ye our Lord praise and superexalt him for euer Although euerie Creature doth not blesse and praise almightie God with voice which is proper to Men nor mentally which is
there bee many mansions The exaltations to witt the highest praises of God in their throate If this bee vnderstood of the corporall throate it seemeth to follow that in the celestiall countrey there shall bee vocall praises which Dionysius the Carthusian doth most probably coniecture Yet saieth he it maie bee expounded of the spirituall throate of which we read in the Canticles His fruit was sweet vnto Cant. 2. Prouerb 8. my throate and in the Prouerbs of Salomon My throate shall meditate truth This is the throate by which the word of the heart is vttered and in which spirituall sweetnesse is tasted and two edged swords in their hands By these two edged swords is vnderstood the sentence of reprobation which shall bee pronounced against the impious in the daie of iudgement by the Saints of God especially by the holy Apostles such as haue for Gods sake giuen all they had to the poore and haue followed Christ our Lord not contenting themselues to obserue the commaundements onely but alsoe the Euangelicall counsells of which number are many of the Primitiue Church and all Religious that haue liued according to their holie Institutes labouring for perfection in the best manner they could of which our Sauiour saieth You which haue Math. 19. followed me in the regeneration when the sonne of man shall sit in the seate of his Maiestie you alsoe shall sit vpon twelue seats iudging the twelue tribes of Israel To doe reuenge in the nations chastisements among the peoples These words and the rest following in this Psalme doe shew to what end the Saints haue such swords in their hands to witt that together with Christ they maie take reuenge on peruerse people for the sinnes and iniuries done against God and themselues inflict due punishement vpon them Moreouer To binde their Kings to witt the vniust Kings of the impious in fetters and their nobles in iron manicles by saying with our Sauiour Bind his hands and feete and Math. 22. cast him into vtter darknesse And finally That they maie doe in them the iudgement written to witt that they maie soe iudge the impious as it is decreed in the diuine prescience ordered in the holie scriptures whence is that promise of our Lord to the iust You shall goe forth and Malac. 4. shall leape as Calues of the heard And you shall tread the impious when they shall bee ashes vnder the sole of your feete in the daie that I doe saieth the Lord of hostes This glory to witt to sit with Christ in iudgement and denounce sentence against the world and the princes thereof is to all the Saints belongeth to all the Saints by the ordinance of almighty God Behold here à Psalme inuiting vs to the diuine praise and spirituall gladnesse In it the beatitude of the elect is discribed and the paines of the reptobate are profitably set before vs that we maie bee excited thereby to doe our best to attaine to the society of the Saints and to abhorre the workes and flie the torments of the impious The title and argument of the 150. Psalme and last in the Laudes THe title is Aleluia The Prophet doth by the insueing Psalme inuite all creatures but principally those of the triumphant Church to praise the fountaine of their beatitude and author of their saluation In the precedent Psalme he hath vnfolded the translation of the Saints into the celestiall countrey and therefore he doth with good reason in this exhort the same societie to render thankes to our Lord for soe ineffable à benefit with all sorts of musicall instruments thereby expressing the ardour of his affection to haue the praises of God set forth by all the best meanes possible The exposition of the Psalme O Yee celestiall Cltizens Praise yee our Lord the obiect and cause of your felicity in his holies to witt in his heauenly sanctuary and in the blessed spirits which are his sacred temples rendring the tribute of thankes vnto him for the ineffable benefits he hath bestowed on them and ascribing vnto him all the dowers of blisse and glory where with they are happily inriched Praise yee him in the firmament of his strength to witt in the Imperiall heauen or in the stability of fortitude which he hath giuen to the blessed confirming them in grace and goodnesse Praise yee him in his powers to witt in his holie Angells which are called Vertues or powers or in his potent effects who hath done and suffered soe great things for men and hath soe wonderfully exalted his saints in iudgement in the celestiall countrey Praise yee him according to the multitude of his greatnesse according as he is diuersly great in himselfe and in his workes He is great in wisdome Psal 1●9 Luc. 1. of which there is noe number He is alsoe great in power because there shall not be impossible with him any word Moreouer he is great in Mercy great in Iustice great yea immense in all perfection But here ariseth à doubt how any man can praise God according to the multitude of his greatnesse in regard that he is infinitely greater and more worthy then all the praise that any creature can exhibite vnto him To which maie be answered That to praise God according to the multitude of his greatnesse is to praise him in the best manner wee can and with all our forces humbly acknowledging our selues altogether insufficient to sett forth his praise and this will suffice on our part that we maie be reputed to haue praised him in that sort The Prophet doth here nominate Seauen instruments wherewith he desireth the Saints should praise our Lord not that musticall instruments haue place in heauen but to designe the ineffable and manifold delectation and iollitie of the blessed in their praysing of God and therefore they are to bee vnderstood in à spirituall sense Praise yee him in the sound of the trumpet to witt with à magnificent praise as being the King of Kings and the giuer of all triumph by whose gracious assistance you haue happily passed the warfare with the world the Diuell and the flesh and obtained à full victory ouer them Praise yee him on Psalter to witt in thankfulnesse for that he hath effected by his grace that you haue been able to keepe his commaundements the obseruance whereof is the Psalter and Harpe to witt in thanksgiuing for the mortification of our flesh in this world Praise yee him on tymbrell to witt for the gift of immortalitie bestowed vpon your bodies sometymes corruptibile and in quire to witt in the quire or order of Angells whereunto you are vnited praise yee our Lord who hath made you equall to them praise yee him on strings to witt with the consonances of Vertues and Organ to witt ●n the sweet harmony of all things conducing to the diuine praise Praise yee him on well sounding Cymballs to witt with heart and mouth Praise yee him on Cymballs of iubilation to witt in the
whole world Attend therefore to him and he will attend to thee But the way how to make it is not yet shewed which notwithstanding is noe lesse needfull for the vnlearned to know Wherefore for the benefite of simple but well minded soules I will as plainly and breifly as I can sett downe à me●●ode how to prepare the mynd and keepe it well imploied which they maie make vse of and I hope with profitt vntill God almightie shall please to inspire them with à better and more agreeable to the affections of their soules CHAPT XI C●ntaininge à forme of Preparation before praier with Aspirations of diuers Kindes THe Ecclesrastes giueth this aduice Ecclesiastes c 5. Speake not any thing rashly neither let ●hy heart be swif to vtter à word before God Wherefore it will be good that when they come to pray they pause à while in silence and consider attentiuely what à waightie matter they goe about vizt to treate with God almightie concerning the busines of their saluation Next let them frame to themselues à firme bele●fe that God is there present before th●● though● disguised and that perhaps if they proue faithfull feruent and perseuerant he will if it be ●o ●●nie●● for them manifest himself vnto them as he did to S. Marie Magdal●●e and since hath often done to many holie S●ints Yet they ought not to frame vnto themselues any positiue cōceipt of him as p●re God supposing him to bee present in this or that forme or shape for he is à most simple Spirit and cannot be compreh ●nd●d vnder any corporall Specie● or Image but à negatiue that is that he is neither 〈◊〉 nor that nor any thing which their ●a●tafie can represent vnto them They are alsoe to beleeue that he vieweth all their externall comportment and all the internall desires and affections of their hearts proue cleanely ●●e● if their bodies ●er● composed of transparent ●●ri●● all ●and i●●●●●●d with the sonne beames This done let them ●●de●●our ●o g●● into thei●●●t 〈◊〉 by so●e ●●ou● A●piration For ●● the 〈◊〉 sai●th O●● mile will d●i●● out another Wherefore those that seeke to free 〈◊〉 ●●lu●s from distraction● and to ●●der the pass●●●● a●●e into their Interiour must ende●●our by some internall imployment such as is the exercise of Aspirations to expell the images of their externall affaires and by little and little to winne their minds 〈◊〉 their passions and draw neare to the image of God which he hath impressed or stamped in the Fund or bottome of their soules as the Prophet witnesseth The light of thy countenance o Psal 4. Lord is signed vpon vs where they may find him soe often as they will withdraw themselues from the m●●●●ltuous noise of exteriour busines and conuert their hearts towards him sweetly and with à filiall reuerence But least this tearme Interiour maie seeme to obscure it will be needfull to giue this short explication thereof Mysticall diuines doe ●●ach that whilest our minds are busied in any exteriour imployment although it be good and laudable 〈◊〉 not yet directly tending towards God almightie ● that the saied imploim●n● doth mediate or interpose it self betweene vs and hi● and doth as it were keepe vs out of ourselues that is doth hinder vs from working immediatly to the end for which we were created which is to haue our eies and hearts fixed vpon God and to direct all our actions and thoughts to praise and glorifie him immediatly Our first parents did performe this immediate tendance towards God and soe remained alwaies in their interiour vntill they did voluntarily extrouert and distract themselues to reflect vpon the forbidden fruit of which fruit after they had tasted both they and all that descend from them found and doe find great repugnance and difficultie to keepe themselues introuerted or to remaine in their Interiour for any long space and therefore God almightie who is most gracious and benigne hauing regard to humaine infirmitie doth not exact of vs the practise of this introuersion at all times out of praier but in à very imperfect manner Yet when we come to praier he doth expect that we practise it in some better measure that our praier maie be performed with due reuerence which we cannot well doe vnlesse we auert our minds from all exteriour things vnto which things whilst we remaine attent we are properly teamed to be extrouerted or out of ourselues and that we conuert of hearts to tend immediatly towards God where in whilest we continue we are tearmed to be introuerted or to remaine and dwell in our interiour This maie suffice for the explication of that tearme The Aspirations that I here speake of maie be these that follow or such like either in à few words or in many as they shall find most proper for them I desire that they may not be recited vocally but pronounced as it were mentally yet herein alsoe let such proceed as they shall experience themselues best recollected and moued to deuotion Aspirations in à few words INdeed our Lord is in this place and Gen. 28. I was not aware of it I will hold him I will not let him goe vntill he haue giuen me his benediction O Lord thou commaundest me to loue giue what thou commaundest and commaund what thou wilt O that I knew thee and knew my self What is there for me in heauen or what desire ● on earth besides thy self Heauen is not heauen to me without thee O Lord thou knowest all things thou knowest I loue thee When shall I come before the face of our 〈◊〉 I desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ Woe is me that my soio●rning is prolonged Praise our Lord o my soule let his praise be alwaies in th● mouth My beloued to me and I to him one to one all to all à creature to his Creator My beloued is all faire all swee●● all delightfull He hath wounded my heart If I maie find fauour in thy sight shew me thy face Let thy voice sound in myne eares for thy voice i● sweet and thy face beautifull Thou art worthy o Lord to receiue glory and honor and vertue and benediction Aspirations in more words Speaking to the soule DVst and ashes as I am how dare I appeare in the sight of my God before whome the powers of heauen doe tremble Yet be not dismaied o my soule He hath saied that he came to calumners and wh●t would he but they should come vnto him How sweetly and mildly did he absolue the woman that was taken in adultery who stood wholy abashed and confounded in his presence VVoman where are thy accusers Hath none of them condemned thee Neither doe I Goe thy way and sinne noe more O wonderfull me●●y O sweete answer I how can we feare to open our greifes vnto him He hath saied come all to me that are heauy l●aden and I will refresh you Be confident therefore o my soule heauen and earth may passe but he will not
that whosoeuer affirmeth that à Mother is Mother of the flesh but not Mother of the soule speaketh very superfluously the like we conceiue in the generation of Christ For the word of God is borne of the substance of God the Father but because he hath assumed flesh it is necessary that we confesse that he is borne of a woman according to the flesh Our of which words ●e cōcludeth that the B. Virgin is called the Mother of God not because she is Mother of the diuinitie but because she i● Mother according to the human●tie of the person hauing diuinitie and humanitie Praie for vs sinners now and at the hower of our Death Amen S. Thomas alleadgeth three reasons why 2. 2. q. 83 a. 4. it should seeme that we ought to praie to God alone The first is because praier is an act of religion and God alone is to be worshiped in that sort The Second is because it is proper to God alone to know our praier especially whē we praie mentally The Third is because if we doe praie to any of the SS it is not but onely in regard they are conioyned to God but there are some that yet liue in this world and others that remaine in Purgatory who are nearely conioyned to God by grace vnto whome notwithstanding we are not to praie nor consequently to the SS in Paradise Neuerthelesse this holy S● holdeth the contrary to be true which he confirmeth by that of Iob Iob. 5. Call therefore if there be that will answere thee and turne to some of the Saincts Next he explicateth the state of the question as followeth We offer our praier saieth he to any one in à two fold manner the one as to be fulfilled by him the other as to be impetrated by him In the first manner we offer our praier to God alone for that all our praiers ought to be ordained to obtaine grace and glory which God alone doth giue according to that of the Psalme Our Lord will giue Psal 83 grace and glory But in the Second mau●er we offer our praiers to the holie Angells and men not that God maie know our requests by them but that our praiers maie haue their desired effect graunted by their intercession and merits And therefore it is saied in the Apocalipse that Apocal. 83. The smoke of the incenses of the praiers of the Saints ascended from the hand of the Angell before God This is cleare alsoe by the forme of praier vsed by the holy Church for we beseech the blessed Trinitie to be mercifull vnto vs but we desire the Saints of what degree of glory soeuer to praie for vs. Finally this holy S● Answereth the former obiections as followeth To the first he saieth that we by our praier exhibit religious worship to him alone from whome we se●k● to obtaine what we praie for because in soe doing we acknowledge him to be the author of all our good but this we doe not to them whome we request to be our intercessors betweene him and vs. To the Second he saiet that the dead if we consider their naturall condition doe not know those things that passe in this world and especially the interiour motious 12. Moral of the heart but as Si Gregory affirmeth that which is meet for the Blessed to know conterning the things that are done in this world is manifested vnto them in the Word yea the very internall motions of the heart and indeed is doth exceedingly benefitt their excellencie to know such petitions as are exhibited vnto them whether they be made vocally or mentally and therefore they doe know the petitions we exhibit God manifesting them To the last obiection he answereth that those who are in this world or in Purgatory doe not as yet enioy the cleare vision of the Word that thereby they might know what ●e thinke or saie and therefore we doe not by praier implore their suffrages but of those that liue we aske by way of conference Hauing shewed that it is lawfull to praie to Saints and in what manner we ought to addresse our Petitions vnto them it will be needfull alsoe to proue that they both maie and doe praie for vs for otherwise if they neither could nor would interceed for vs it were in vaine to implore their assistance Concerning which S. Thomas aboue named frameth Fiue reasons why it should seeme that the Saints now in glory neither maie nor doe praie for vs. The First is because an act of any one is more meritorious for himself then for others but the Saints now in glory doe not merit nor praie for themselues because they are constituted in the end for which they were created nor consequently doe they praie for vs. The Second is because the Saints doe conforme their will perfectly to the will of God soe that they desire nothing but what God will but that which God will is alwaies fulfilled wherefore it seemeth in vaine that the Saints should praie for vs. The Third is because as the Saints in glory are in a more eminent degree then we soe likewise are those that are in Purgatory because they cannot now sinne but those that are in Purgatory doe not praie for vs but rather we for them nor consequently the Saints in glory The Fourth is because if the Saints in glory did praie for vs the praier of the superiour Saints would be of greatest efficacie and consequently we ought not to implore the suffrage of the praiers of the inferiour saints but onely of the superiour The Fift is because the soule of Peter is not Peter and therefore if the soules of the Saints did praie for vs whilest they are seperated from their bodies we should not intreat S. Peter but his soule to praie for vs the contrary whereof the holy Church doth practise and therefore it should seeme that the Saints at least before the resurrection doe not praie for vs. Notwithstanding this holy Saint doth hold the contrary to be true which he confirmeth by that of the Machabees This is he that praieth much for the people and for the whole Citie Ieremie the Prophet of God Afterwards he explicateth the state of the question as followeth S. Ierome saieth he doth affirme that it was the error of Vigilantius the heretike That whilest we liue we maie mutually praie for one an other but after we are departed this life no mans praier for an other is heard especially since that the Martyrs doe desire to haue their bloud reuenged and can not obtaine it But this opinion is altogether false for since that Praier exhibited for āother doth proceed from Charitie by how much the Saints in the celestiall countrey are of more perfect charitie by soe much the more doe they praie for vs that are but vpon the way to beatitude and maie haue help by their praier and by how much they are more immediatly vnited to God by soe much the more are their praiers of greater efficacie
exercise this deuotion towards the B. Virgin and encouradge others to the like office of pietie In the first Tome of the flowers of examples is related out of diuers graue authors that à certaine venerable Archbp of Canterburie returning from the court of Rome did take vp his lodging in the famous and Princely Monasterie of Saint Bertin in the Citie of Saint Omers of the holie Order of Saint Benedict and the daie following was conducted into the Chapter howse where he made à speech to the Religious in which amongst other remarkable things he declared vnto them that when he was at Benenentum he vnderstood of à certaine Religious man who was accustomed to recite daily Fiue Psalmes in the honor of the B. Virgin which began with the fiue letters of her name The Psalmes were these Magnificat Ad Dominum Retribue In conuertendo and Ad te leuaui before euery one of which he saied the Angelicall Salutation or Aue Maria. There was present at this Sermon one Ioseius à Monke of the saied Monasterie of S. Bertin who gaue diligent attention to what was saied and did from that tyme daily when he had ended Mattins recite the saied Psalmes in the manner aboue saied It happened one night about the feast of S. Andrew the Apostle that the rest of the Religious rising to the night office the saied Ioscius was absent The Subprior therefore looking about the Quire as the manner is to see who was absent perceaued him wanting and went straight to his chamber and found him dead wherevpon returning to the Quire he called together the Religious and brought thē to their deceased Brother where after they had vncouered his face they beheld this wonderfull spectacle Fiue Rofes did issue out of his face one whereof sprong out of his mouth and tongue one out of each eie and one out of each nostrill There former sorrow therefore being changed into excessiue ioy at the sight of this soe great à mi●acle they carried him into the Quire and laying him with his face open they againe more curiously veiwed the saied Roses and found the word Maria written as it were in the Rose which issued out of his mouth whereupon they kept him vnburied Seuen daies in which space three Bishops and very many of the Clergy Laietie beheld this admirable worke of God This happened about the yeare of our Lord 1162. Leo being Abbot of the saied Monasterie and Theodoricus Earle of that I rouince Cantiprat in his second Booke of the Vniuerse relateth à wonderfull miracle not vnlike to the former of à certaine auncient souldier who being admitted into the Nouiship in à Monastery of Cistercians proued soe indocible that he could not be brought to learne our Lords Praier wherefore his Maister endeauored with much labour to reach him the Angelicall Salutation which likewise proued soe difficult à taske vnto him that he could not after much tyme and industry retaine in memory any more of it then these words Aue Maria gratia plena Dominus tecum These words therefore by aduice of his Maister he volued and reuolued and ruminated in all places yea euen at meale tyme and at length by long continuance conceiued soe great sweetnes in them that the sole memory of the Mother of God did possesse his heart and mouth in what busines soeuer he was imploved Some yeares being passed in this deuotion this holie man exchanged this life for à better and being buried in the Church yard shortly after there grew out of his graue à tree of such à sort of wood which was not vsuall in those parts in the leaues where of were ingrauen in golden letters Aue Maria gratia plena The Bishop of the Diocese hauing notice giuen him hereof by the Abbot of that Monasterie came to the graue accompanied with à great multitude of people and after he had veiwed the saied tree caused some to digge about it and found that it tooke roote in the mouth of the saied holie man The saied tree hauing as it should seeme performed the office for which it grew vdzt to giue restimonie of the sanctitie of that holie man and how gracious the B. Virgin is to such as are deuoted vnto her as alsoe how pleasing it is to almightie God that we honor his blessed Mother did wither and consume in the sight of them all then present like as the Iuie tree we read of in Ionas the Prophet Wherefore by this holie Praier let vs often renew in our memory the benefit of our Redemption which began with this holie Salutation and let vs beseech her who was is and euer shall remaine most gracious in the sight of God to be our aduocate and patronesse in our greatest extremities A praier appointed by the holie Church to be saied before the diuine office OPen my mouth o Lord to praise thy holie name cleanse my heart from all vaine peruerse and impertinent thoughts illuminate my vnderstanding inflame my affection soe that I maie be able to recite this office worthily attentiuely and deuoutly and maie merite to be heard before t●e face of thy diuine Maiestie through Christ our Lord. Amen Pope Leo the X.th to such as after the office shall deuoutly recite the ensuinge Praier hath graunted pardon of all the defects and faults contracted out of human frailtie in the performance thereof TO the sacred and vndeuided Trinitie to the humanitie of our Lord Iesus Christ crucified to the fruitfull integritie of the most Blessed and glorious Virgin Marie and to the generalitie of all the Saints be sempiternall praise honour vertue and glorie from all creatures and to vs remission of sinns for infinite worlds of worlds Amen And blessed be the bowells of Marie the Virgin which bore the sonne of the eternall Father and blessed be the brests that gaue sucke to Christ our Lord. Pater noster c. Aue Maria c. A praier to be saied after the office of the B. Virgin approued by Pope Pius the fift of that name REceaue most mild God for the praiers and merits of B. Marie euer à Virgin and of all the Saints the office of our seruice and if we haue done any thing praise worthy behold it propitious but what hath beene negligently performed doe thou benignely pardon who liuest raignest in perfect Trinitie for all worlds of worlds Amen An other Praier or oblation before the diuine office Ludouicus Blofius declareth that it was Moni spi c. 3. reuealed to S. Mecthild as à most gratefull thing to God that those w●o are about to recite the Canonicall howers doe vnite them with the praiers of our Sauiour For saieth he by this meanes they will be reputed one exercise with his like as à small quantitie of water mixed with à great Vessel of Wine is noe more reputed water and therefore he aduiseth such to recite this short Praier to that end O Lord in vnion of the perfect attention wherewith thou vpon earth didst offer
the lib. 9. Confes c. 1. li. 4. de oratione c. 2. ● 10. saied hymnes of the orientall Church as S. Augustine affirmeth Suarez saieth that the holie Church was moued by the especiall prouidence of God to institute that the confession and glorification of the B. Trinitie by the accustomed Hymne Glorie be to the Father c. should be added to the end of euery Psalme because saieth he the vse of the Psalmes was of greater antiquitie then the law of grace and by this meanes they doe participate the proper perfection thereof and become compleate and consummate Cornelius à Lapide dilating vpon these words of the Apostle For of him and by Rom. 11. him and in him are all things to him be glorie for euer Amen doth expound this hymne of glorification in fauour of such who repeat it often Glorie saieth he be to the Father of whome all things are as of the prime origine Glorie to the Sonne by whome all things are made as by wisdome and men redeemed as by their mediator Glorie to the holie Ghost in whome are all things as it were in à bond and consummation Glorie to the Father of whome is all paternitie in heauen and vpon earth Glorie to the Sonne by whome is all filiation Glorie to the holie Ghost in whome is all holines and sanctification Glorie to the Father of whome is eternitie Glorie to the Sonne by whome is all forme beautie Glorie to the holie Ghost in whome is all felicitie and fruition Glorie to the Father of whome is all vnitie glorie to the Sonne by whome is all equalitie glorie to the holie Ghost in whome is all loue and concord Glorie to the Father of whome is all pow●r glorie to the Sonne by whome is all wisdome glorie to the holie Ghost in whome is all goodnes Glorie to the Father who created me glorie to the Sonne by whome I am redeemed glorie to the holie Ghost in whome I am iustified Glorie to the Father who hath predestinated me glorie to the Sonne by whose precious bloud I am washed and made cleane glorie to the holie Ghost in whome I shall be glorified for euer Amen Alleluia NEXT in order followeth the Angelicall Hymne Alleluia which is song frō Easter vntill Septuagesima not without good reason for holie Dauid Psal 146. Psa 99. exhorteth To our God let there be à pleasant and comely praise againe Make ye iubilation to God all the earth serue ye our Lord in gladnesse enter ye before his fight in exultation And this hymne signineth praise God with à heart dilated through excesse of ioye The holie Church therefore because we ought neuer to surcease from praising God noe not then when we recount the miserable estate of man by the fall of our first parents hath ordained that in lieu of this hymne of exultation the verse Praise be to thee ● Lord King of eternall glorie shall be recited from Septuagesima vntill Paster which is à tyme of mourning and pennance li. 2. de Ritibu● c. 20. Stephen Durantus disputeth this question at lardge why the holye Church should omitt Alleluia from Septuagesima and yet place in lieu thereof à praise which seemeth equiualent thereunto after many solutions at length he answereth with S. Thomas and the Glosse vpon the ninth of the Apocalipse that this Hymne Alleluia besides the ordinary praise doth insinuate à iubilation which cannot be expressed in words Leo the 9. saieth that these two Hymnes Cap. de Consecr Hi. duo Dist. 1. onely are mentioned in the New Testament to haue been song by the Angells that is to saie Alleluia and Gloria in excelsis both which are intermitted in Septuagesima to shew that for the sinne of our first parents we are banished from communicating with the Angells in Iubilation which Adam in the state of innocencie did enioy as S. Iohn Damascene li 2. de Paradis affirmeth in these words Adam in bodie was delighted in the terrestriall paradise but in mind he was present with the quires of Angells in the paradise of holie spirits The same alsoe in effect S. Gregorie the Great affirmeth in his Dialogues Dialog 2. to witt that man in paradise was accustomed to enioy the words of God and to be present with the blessed Angeliall Spirits in puritie of heart and hight of contemplation But we alas doe now Psal 64. sit and weepe in Babilon of this wretched life and vpon the bankes of the riuers thereof whilest we remember that Syon where the Prophet saieth An hymne becommeth God VVisupra ● S. Leo aboue named giueth this reason why Alleluia is intermitted for nine weeks precisely and reassumed in the tenth weeke There are saieth he nine quires of Angells and the tenth quire sell by the sinne of Pride and thereby disturbed the ioye of the rest vntill Man was created to supplie their number but when he fell alsoe by disobedience they were againe greatly discomforted vntill our Sauiours birth at which tyme they begane to reassume their songe of ioye and afterwards at his Resurrection and Ascension together with those blessed soules which accompanied him vnto his throne of glorie they conceiued full hope that their number should be made compleate and their praise perfect S. Augustine saieth that although this Li. 2. Hymne might be interpreted both in de doctrina Christiana c. 10. Greeke and Latin yet it hath remained intire because it relisheth best in its owne originall to witt in the Hebrew Whosoeuer out of curiositie shall desire to soe more of the signification of this Hymne let him peruse the 137. Epistle of S. Ierome to Marcella where he maie receiue satisfaction The Inuitatorie verse IN the diuine office the Inuitatorie verse is vsually varied according to the nature of the office appointed for each daie and it is thus defined by Peter Damian Tom. 3. c. 7. in his booke intituled Dominus vobiscum The Inuitatorie saieth he is that by which the communion of the faithfull is inuited to the praise of God Concerning which you must note that the communion of true beleeuers be they scattered abroad in neuer soe many seuerall countreys doe yet make but one mysticall bodie whereof Christ is the head in whome they maie and doe meete together in spirit in the diuine praises by the feete of their soules which are the affections and in this sort they are inuited to come and ioyne with vs in the praise of almightie God S. Augustine affirmeth that if two iust In Psal 94. men be placed one in the East and the other in the West yet maie they truely be saied to be together because they are both in God but although à iust man and à wicked man be linked in one chaine yet are they farre à sunder for the one by louing iniquitie hath seperated himself farre from God and the other by louing God is nearely adioyned vnto him and if two such should praise
knowledge necessary to saluation and the like nor sworne to his nighbour in guile hath not promised any thing which he intended not to performe hath not constantly auerred for truth what he could not prooue nor confirmed any thing with an oath with intent to deceaue his neighbour by which meanes he will neither haue sinned in thought word nor deed against God himself or his neighbour He whosoeuer he bee that obserueth these things he it is that shall receaue blessing diuine guifts and graces together with increase of them and prosperous successe in all he vndertaketh and mercie the grace of perseuerance of God his Sauiour to wit of our Lord Iesus Christ. This is the generation of them that seeke him Such iust and innocent men as this are the generation that seeke God their Sauiour by faith holie desires and good workes of them that seeke by Praier and contemplation in present with confidence hereafter clearely to behold the face of the God of Iacob incouradged by those words of our Sauiour Blessed are the cleane of heart for they shall see Math. 5. God Behold what is required of such as desire once to enioy the cleare vision of God from which we are as farre distant as we faile of this innocencie The words following are esteemed to bee the voice of the Angells that attended vpon our Sauiour after the separation of his blessed soule from the body vpon the Crosse and first to the Princes of darknes when they descended with him into Lymbo Patrum Lift vp your gates yee Princes desist yee Princes of darkenes from further exercising the right and power you haue hitherto had to detaine the soules of the elect for the guilt of originall sinne and hee yee lifted vp ô eternall gates which haue been shut from the beginning of the world that none could depart thence and shall remaine shut for euer to the damned for as much as concerneth their freedome and the King of glorie shall enter in and set free the captiue soules whose ransome he hath paied vpon the Crosse The deuills strucken with admiration at this voice demaund of the Angels VVho is this King of glorie that descendeth vnto vs in soe vnusuall à manner with such splendor and securitie Vnto whome the Angels make answer it is Our Lord strong in regard of his diuinitie and mighty in regard of his humanitie our Lord mighty in battle in his Passiō wherein as in à new sort of combate not by force and contention but by suffering innumerable indignities reproaches scoffes stroakes wounds and finally an ignominious death he hath vanquished Goliath subdued the Prince of the world bound him cast him forth and taken from him his spoiles Againe the Angels attending vpon our Sauiour at his Ascension into heauen doe call to the celestiall powers saying Lift vp your gates yee Princes set open the passadge into heauen ô yee celestiall powers The tyme that God prefixt by his inuiolable decree that none should enter Heauen till his Iustice were satisfyed is now happily expired the dreadfull schedule of mans condemnation is cancelled Open therefore your gates at lardge and the King of glory will enter in triumph attended with à specious trayne the trophies of his glorious victory ouer theirs and our mortall enemies being the first fruits of his painefull labours and an earnest penny that he will infallibly repaire our ruine bring vs daily à blessed sort of Citizens into the vacant habitations of Lucifer and his adherents that rebellious crue that once disturbed our ioy And bee yee lifted vp ô eternall gates and bee yee layed open ô yee gates of eternall life and the King of glorie shall enter in The celestiall powers hearing this voice and beholding Christ to ascend with such brightnes and Majestie doe inquire of the superiour Angels VVho is this King of glorie vnto whome the Angels attending vpon our Sauiour doe make answer The Lord of powers the onely Sonne of God the Father who is the Lord of the Sabbaoth and of all the celestiall powers He is the King of glorie the Prince of ioy the fountaine of eternall felicitie who is of such excellencie that euen according to his humanitie all power Math. 23. is giuen him in heauen and vpon earth Behold how excellently and breifly the holie Prophet doth teach vs by this Psalme to contemplate the diuine Majestie to the end to excite vs to reuerence and holie feare He teacheth alsoe how we must dispose our selues if we desire to be numbred in the list of the elect thereby exhorting vs to puritie cleanenesse of heart finally he vnfoldeth vnto vs the happy mystery of Christs Ascension thereby to erect our hearts to the loue of heauenly things according to that of the Apostle Seeke the things that are aboue where Christ is fitting Collos 3. on the right hand of God mynd the things that are aboue not the things that are vpō the earth The exposition of the 44. Psalme and 4 in number in the nocturne Office The title an exposition thereof VNto the end for them that shall bee changed to wit for Gentils and Iewes who shall bee conuerted to Christianitie and other sinners who shall bee changed here in this world by iustification and in the next by glorification To the sonnes of Chore to those that shall imitate Christ crucified on Mount Caluary for Chore is by interpretation Caluaria for vnderstanding for their instruction in the mysteries treated of in this Psalme A Canticle for the beloued for Christ of whome God the Father affirmed This is my welbeloued Math. 17. sonne THE ARGVMENT THis Psalme is à Epithalamy or wedding song composed in honour of the spirituall nuptialls betweene Christ the Spouse and the holie Church the Espoused The two first verses maie bee vnderstood in two senses The first and most profound sense which is set downe by S. Augustine in his exposition of this Psalme is to suppose them as spoken by God the Father and then they importe the incomprehensible generation of the Sonne of God before all world The second sense is that they bee vnderstood as spoken by the Prophet of himselfe and then they seeme to bee à Preface or dedication of this worke of his to the Kingly Spouse whose vertues and excellencies he setteth forth most elegantly in the following verses shewing how the daughters of Kings and euen the Queene herselfe inamoured of his beautie and exquisite vertues doth couet to assist in his presence Next he proceedeth to celebrate the praise of the Espoused describing her ornaments and instructing her how to comport herselfe that she maie become most pleasing in his sight And lastly he sheweth what ofspring they shall haue and how pious and diligent they shall bee to promote the honour of the Spouse and the Espoused The exposition of the Psalme MY heart hath vttered à good word my Paternall mynd or I my selfe who am the paternall mynd most simple and pure or my
for thy loue for he is the Lord thy God and they to wit all that shall beleeue in him shall adore him according Daniel 7. to that of the Prophet All peoples Tribes and tongues shall serue him And the daughters of Tyre of that great cittie neare to the land of Iuda called Tyre by whome are signified the Gentils shall present him with gifts all the rich of the earth shall beseech thy countenance shall with humble praiers and gifts seeke to winne thy fauour that they maie bee admitted to bee of thy traine and by thy meanes bee brought vnto his presence All the glorie of that daughter of the King who sometymes is called the Queene the spouse of Christ and the Church is within in interiour vertues and beautie of her mynd not in exteriour vaine fading things in borders of gold in workes of charitie clothed round about with varieties with the acts of diuers vertues In these consisteth her glorie and with these she trimmeth and adorneth herselfe that she maie appeare amiable in the eies of her spouse who is not delighted with exteriour vaine dressings and attyre Virgins shall bee brought to the King after her in the first principall place after her Virgins shall bee brought to thee ô Christ and next after them her neighbours holie widowes and such as lead their liues in lawfull wedlocke vsing it for the true end for which marriage was instituted and not for carnall delectation shall bee brought to thee They shall bee broug●t in ioy and exultation of body and spirit they shall bee brought into the temple of the King into the Kingdome of heauen after their passadge out of this place of banishement For thy Fathers in the place of the holie Patriarks and Prop●ets thy Fathers ô holie Church ô spouse of Christ there are borne to thee sonnes Apostles Bishops and Priests thou shalt make them Princes ouer all the earth and they shall prescribe lawes to the whole earth which neuer yet any temporall Monarch could doe They and all those they shall begett in Christ Iesus shall bee mindfull of thy name in all generation and generation shall seeke to dilate thy glorie in all ages Therefore shall peoples of all nations ●●ome the holie Apostles and their successors haue taught and inst●ucted Confesse vnto thee for euer shall praise thee vnto the end of the world and for euer and euer for eternitie This their praise shall beginne in this world and continue in the future without end By the espoused here mentioned all Expositors doe vnderstād the holie Church because the Apostle in the 5. to the Ephesians doth most clearly teach that the holie Church is the espoused of Christ Notwithstanding all that is here spoken of her in this Psalme maie alsoe bee fitly applied to euery perfect soule and principally to the Blessed Virgin who although she bee the Mother of Christ according to the flesh is neuerthelesse the espoused of Christ according to the spirit and amongst the members of the holie Church is deseruedly alotted vnto her the cheifest place of dignitie which is the reason that this Psalme is appointed to bee song in all her feasts and in the feasts of the other holie virgins The title and argument of the 45. Psalme and fift in the Nocturne Office VNto the end to the Sonnes of Chore A Psalme directing to the end which is Christ to the faithfull who shall imitate Christ crucified For secrets for hidden mysteries which shall bee reueiled in the later daies This Psalme is fitly placed next to the former for in the former was foretold the exaltation of the holie Church by the spirituall nuptialls with Christ our Lord in this is foreshewed the persecution which shall happen vnto her after the departure of her beloued spouse vnto his heauenly Kingdome her deliuery from those afflictions which shall principally come to passe towards the end of the world The exposition of this Psalme OVr Lord is à refuge vnto vs when we are inforced to fly persecution and strength when we tollerate it and in both flying and tollerating he is an helper and comforter in tribulations which haue found vs exeeedingly which haue happened vnto vs aboue measure Therefore will wee not feare when the earth shall bee troubled although the earth bee wonderfully shaken and mountaines transported into the heart or middest of the sea with great violence Or thus therefore we that hane placed our confidence in God will not feare when earthly men who haue had their affections wholly bent vpon terrene transitory things shall tremble with great horror in the daie of iudgement and the proud and mightie men of the world shall bee throwne into the very depth and middest of hell Or thus as being the words of the Primitiue Church hauing placed her hope in our Lord Iesus Christ Therefore we will not feare with à carnall humane and inordinate feare when the land of Iuda or the people of the Iewes shall bee troubled labouring in vaine to extirpate the young plants of Christ and blot out the memory of him in mens hearts neither will we then feare when the Apostles and disciples of Christ shall bee inforced to leaue Iewrie and passe to the Gentils inhabiting the middest of the earth Their waters haue sounded the clamours false accusations of the Iewes and Gentils haue sounded before the tribunalls of the Presidents Kings whither they haue conuented the disciples of Christ and were troubled to behold that they laboured in vaine to hinder the propagation of the Christian faith the mountaines were troubled the high Priests and the Princes and Potentates of the earth were moued some to impatience and persecution and others to Pennance and imitation in his strength beholding his diuine power in whose name the Apostles wrought wonderfull signes and miracles for confirmation of the doctrine which they promulgated The two following verses are expounded diues waies and first of the Militant Church The violence of the riuer the fountaine of sacred Baptisme maketh the militant Church the Citty of God ioyfull with spirituall gladnesse The highest God who alone can make cleane him that is conceiued of vncleane seed hath sanctified his tabernacle the Church of the elect or the elect themselues who according to the Apostle are the temple of the liuing God in whome he will dwell walke God is in the middest thereof of the foresaied temple as à strong pillar sustaining it on all sides who saieth of himself that VVhere there bee two or three gathered Math. 18. together in his name there he is in the middest of them It shall not bee moued the holie Church shall not faile in her faith nor bee suppressed or ouerwhelmed by tentation and tribulation because God will help it in the morning presently soe soone as she shall call vpon him for aide early in the spirituall Aurora to wit in the instant of infusion of grace or illumination of the holie Ghost Secondly they are
expounded of the Triumphant Church as followeth The fountaine of wisdome or the inundation of the holie Ghost maketh the triumphant Church ioyfull with the ioy of beatificall fruition the highest Hath sanctified the hearts of the blessed which is h●s tabernacle God is in the middest of the triumphant Church therefore it shall not bee moued from the state of beatitude In the instant that any of the blessed thall bee receiued into the Kingdome of glorie God will confirme them in grace Thirdly they are applyed to the Blessed Virgin as followeth The word of God Christ Iesus our Lord in whome is the originall source immense plenitude of all true delight hath filled his blessed Mother with ioy exultation assuming humane nature in her sacred wombe Christ hath sanctified her and preserued her from all impuritie He hath rested nine monthes in her wombe and euer since in the Center of her immaculate soule She shall not bee moued from good to euill but shall remaine stable and immoueable in God because he will sanctifie her and fortify her in perfection of grace euen in her Mothers wombe Nations are troubled by the preaching miracles of the disciples of our Sauiour some to Pennance admiration others to obstinacy and opposition and Kingdomes are inclined are humbled to faith and holie obedient conuersation learning of Christ who was mild and humble of heart He Christ gaue his voice by himselfe his disciples and their successors and the earth was moued The saied humiliation of Kingdomes was foretold bythe Prophet Isaie in these words He to wit Christ Isa 26. will how downe them that dwellon hight thé high cittie he will abase By the high cittie is vnderstood Rome which at that tyme was Lady of the world of which the same Prophet à litle after ●aieth The foote shall tread it downe the feete of the poore mai● the steps of the needy By the poore man is vnderstood S. Peter à poore fisher man and by the steps of the needy the preaching of S. Peter and Paul who liued in voluntary pouertie for by their preaching the vnbeleeuing glorie and magnificent ostentation of the Romans was brought to embrace Christian humilitie The Lord of hostes is with vs Christ the King of glorie the vertue and wisdome of the Father who is stiled Emanuel that is God with vs hath come vnto vs and dwelled with vs in his assumpted humane nature the God of the Patriarke Iacob is our defender Come ye that desire saluation come not soe much by corporall motion as by faith and affections of the heart and see the workes of our Lord and consider and ponder seriously in your mynds what wonders he hath put vpon the earth to wit the Incarnation of his onely sonne the making of à Virgin to conceiue bring forth à Sonne and yet remaine à Virgin innumerable other admirable workes farre transcending the ordinary course of nature taking away warres euen vnto the end of the earth causing an vniuersall peace ouer all the world at the tyme of the birth of Christ our Lord as à figure of the spirituall peace which our Sauiour brought vnto all mankind to wit peace betweene God and man according to that of the Apostle God was in Christ reconciling 2. Cor. 5. the world to himselfe peace alsoe betweene the Iewes and Gentils He is our Ephes 2. peace who hath made both one c. He shall destroy the bow and breake weapons and shields he shall burne with fire This peace which Christ shall bring shall bee soe vniuersall and endure for soe long à space that men shall conuert their weapons and warlike engins to other vses according to that of the Prophet The Isa 2. law shall come forth of Sion and the word of our Lord from Ierusalem and he shall iudge the Gentils and rebuke many peoples they shall turne their swords into coulters and their speares into sithes c. This verse maie bee expounded in à more spirituall sense as followeth He shall destroy the bow Christ shall laie open and destroy the hidden deceits of the wicked endeauoring by flatery and faire promises to seduce the good and breake the weapons to wit open persecutions manifest diabolicall inuasions And the shields to wit the fallacies wherewith peruerse men doe couer and defend their errors he shall burne with fire by condemning the peruerse to hell fire or illuminating and inflaming the hearts of the faithfull to discerne resist their machinations Bee quiet abstract your hearts from vaine euill and vnprofitable things adhere to me with your whole mind attend to me fixe your desires vpon me and simplify your actions and see by affectionate contemplation and experimentall gust that I am God your Creator prouisor Sauiour gouernour that neuer cease to haue care of you that am alwaies ready to helpe you and to infuse consolation in such sort that you maie euen by experience acknowledge that I am your God Whosoeuer hath à desire to tast and proue this experimentall gust of God must of necessitie keepe à diligent watch ouer his heart flie concupiscence contemne pleasures shunne dissolution or loosenes of life repell and quit himselfe from superfluous imployments of body and minde seeke and sigh incessantly after that one thing onely necessary Make vnto you new fallow Ierem. 4. ground saieth the Prophet and sow not vpon thornes bee circumcised to our Lord and take away the prepuces of your hearts I shall bee exal●ed among the Gentils I the onely sonne of God and Sauiour of the world by the preaching of my disciples shall bee ackowledged honoured and worshipped by the Gentils according to that of the Prophet From the rising of Malach. 1. the sunne euen to the going downe great is my name among the Gentils I shall bee exalted in the earth in the peoples of the Iewes neare the end of the world when the fulnes of the Gentils hath entred The Lord of Hostes is with vs c. This verse in regard of the sweetnes of the signification and dignitie thereof is iterated for to imprint it the better in the heart of the Chanter What I haue saied before maie suffice for explication thereof with this obseruation That whereas Exod. 3. in Exodus we read that God almightie stiled himselfe the God of Abraham the God of Isaac and the God of Iacob affirming that this is his name for euer the Prophet here expresseth onely the God of Iacob for this reasō as it maie seeme because as Iacob supplanted his brother of the benediction and inheritance soe the sonne of God who alone assumed humane nature supplanted the disobedient Angels of the benediction inheritance which was as it were due to them by prioritie of Creation and obtained it for man kind Behold how full this Psalme is of diuine misteries in which faith is corroborated hope in God is established fortitude is excited the beginning of the new
respect that he permitteth wicked people to liue for the most part in great plentie ease pompe and delicacy and suffereth vertuous holie men to liue in want affliction contempt and misery but when he cometh to the generall iudgement that he maie render to euery one according to his workes his seate shall bee as it were corrected Fire which shall burne the whole world shall goe before him and inflame his enimies round about but shall not touch nor contristate his elected friends as is prefigured in the three children which the King of Babylon caused to bee throwne into ● furnace Daneil 3. of burning fire who were not touched by the flames but the Chaldeans burnt whoe were about the furnace The things that follow are denounced by the Prophet as though they were already done for the assured certaintie thereof His lightnings shined to the round world the earth s●w and was moued The inhabitants of the earth shall see his lightnings and the other terrible precedent signes of his dreadfull comming wither for feare and expectation of what shall come vpon the world The mountaines melted as wax before the face of our Lord before the face of our Lord all the earth Some expound these words literally of the materiall mountaines which shall bee dissolued the earth made plaine and perspicuous but others expound them morally of proud ambitious and vaine glorious men who shall bee confounded and dissolued in their hearts at the sight of our Lord and not onely they but alsoe terrene auaritious and sensuall men saying one to another VVhat hath pride profited vs Sap. 5. or what commoditie hath the vaunting riches brought vs all those things are passed away as à shadow and as à messenger running before and as à ship that passeth through the surging wanes whereof when it is past the trace cannot be found c. The heauens haue shewed forth his iustice the Sunne Moone and starres in which shall appeare great testimonies of the indignation of God shall as it were proclaime to the whole world with what seueritie rigour of iustice he will take reuenge of mankind for sinne and all peoples haue seene his glorie shall see his glorie in these all other his wonderfull workes And therefore since that our Lord is of such power and Majestie Let them bee confounded that adore sculptils statues and images as Gods framed by the hands of men which neither can hurt nor helpe them and let them blush for shame that glorie in their Idoles as though there were diuine power in them for they shall then behold that those things which they adored for Gods are mere painted blocks and engrauen stones and that our Lord whome they would not here acknowledge is the onely true God vnto whome all adoration and diuine worship is due Adore him all yee his Angels To the greater confusion of Idolaters doe ye ô ye his Angels adore Christ our Lord your Maker sitting vpon his tribunall This place is alleadged by the Apostle to the Hebrewes to proue Hebr. 1. our Sauiour to bee true God And when againe he bringeth in the first begotten into the world to wit at the daie of iudgement for he speaketh à litle before of his first comming he saieth And let all the Angels of God adore him Sion heard was glad The militāt Church shall heare all that hath been before mentioned concerning the Majestie of our Lord comming to iudgement the confusion of Idolaters the adoration of the Angels and shall exult with spirituall ioy And the daughters of Iuda reioyced because of thy iudgements ô Lord All particular Churches mēbers of the vniuersall or all the soules confessing to our Lord in spirit and truth for Iuda is by interpretation confession shall reioyce being moued thereunto by the consideration of thy iust iudgements ô Lord who wilt leaue nothing neglected doe iniury to none nor let passe the oppression or violence vsed towards any vnreuenged but wilt exalt all those that haue been contemned afflicted and tormented for iustice sake and wilt condemne to eternall flames those that placed their felicitie in the pompes and delights of this world And they shall reioyce alsoe Because thou Lord art most high ouer all the earth thou art exalted exceedingly incōparably without measure aboue all Gods both aboue those that by participation of thy diuine power are called Gods and aboue those alsoe whome the Gentils falsly worship as Gods You that loue our Lord hate ye euill since that sinne is soe odious in the sight of our Lord that he will come with such furie and indignation to take reuenge thereof All you deuout soules that make profession to feare and loue him abhorre it in your hearts yet not in regard of the paine it induceth but because it is displeasing vnto him and contrary to his diuine will and then you maie bee confident that you shall not onely experience him à mild iudge towards you in that dreadfull daie but alsoe your protector and comforter in all your present dangers afflictiōs For Our Lord keepeth the soules of his Saints in this present life by infusion of grace and the ministry of his Angels and in the daie of iudgement out of the hand of the sinner from the power of the first transgressor Lucifer and his complices he will deliuer them he will perfectly free them and wipe all teares from their eies for after that last sentence sinners shall noe more molest the iust with their malicious pretensions and false accusations Light is risen to the iust and ioy to the right of heart The light of iustice the Sunne of vnderstanding shall arise to iust men and direct them in the way of truth without errour teaching them to discerne betweene iust and iniust good and euill and exciting them to elect in all things what is most conforme to the diuine will whence will follow exceeding peace of conscience and vnspeakable ioy of heart to the righteous that shall walke simply and humbly therein or thus The light of glorie illuminating the vnderstanding or Christ our Lord the Sunne of Iustice shall then arise to the iust man directing him towards the cleare vision of God ineffable delight proceeding from the vision of God which he shall eternally enioy shall arise to the right of heart Wherefore Bee glad yee iust in our Lord your most pious Redeemer and most liberall benefactor who shall come to the last iudgement with such preparation and for soe great benefit vnto you and with confession of praise and thankfullnesse Confesse ye to the memory of his sanctification praise him that hath soe gratiously been mindfull of you that he might sanctify you and bring you to eternall felicitie for which his singular clemency and mercy shewed towards you without any merit on your part but meerely of his owne immēse goodnesse you are obliged by all the lawes of gratitude to glorify his name incessantly and neuer to forget
alsoe very many from falling into sinne poureth forth a fragrant odour in so much that whosoeuer shall piously call her to mynd shall experience himselfe sprinkled there with Of the Canticle or Hymne Te Doum laudamus THe auncient custome of recyting this Canticle or Hymne in the diuine Office maie bee proued by the Rule of our holie Father S. Benedict where he appointeth that after the fouerth Responsory to wit of the third Nocturne the Abbot doe beginne the Hymne Te Deum laudamus Concerning the originall institution of this Hymne S. Darius Bishop of Milan who liued in the tyme of Iustine the elder about the yeare of our Lord. 540. as S. Gregory affirmeth in his 3. Booke of dialogues the 4. Chap. in his Chronicles writeth as followeth By l. 1. c. 10. Chronic● blessed Ambrose saieth he Augustine was baptised and confirmed in the name of the holie and vndiuided Trinitie all the faithfull of the Cittie being present and beholding it at which tyme according as the holie Ghost gaue them to speake they pronounced the Hymne Te Deum Laudamus all that were present hearing seeing and admiring which hath been generally receiued and religiously sung euer since by the vniuersall Church in all ages euen vnto these our daies The Title and argument of the 92. Psalme and first in the Laudes PRaise of Canticle to Dauid himselfe in the date before the Sabbaoth when the earth was founded It seemeth t●at he who appointed this title was desirous that the insuing Psalme should bee sung vpon the Sixt Feria or Fryday which is the daie before the Sabbaoth because therein is declared that the earth was founded or according to some bookes inhabited Which is fitly saied to haue been done on the Sixt Feria for on that daie mā was formed who should bee Lord of the earth and by this the earth was first established which was created for man On this daie not onely man but alsoe all liuing creatures were created which inhabite the earth and therefore on this daie the earth began first to bee inhabited On the same daie alsoe by the Passion and death of Christ Iesus our Lord and Sauiour the earth was renouated and the Kingdome of Christ established the Prince of the world being cast forth All which notwithstāding the holie Church doth appoint this Psalme to bee sung at Laudes vpon Sunday about Sunne rising or daie breake because although our Sauiour purchased his Kingdome with the price of his most pretious bloud shed for mankind on the Sixt Feria and thereby layed the foundation of the new earth yet he receiued possession of his Kingdome at his glorious resurrection early in the morning vpon Sunday at which tyme he put on beauty and strength The words of this Psalme maie bee applied both to the Creation Reparation of the world as followeth The exposition of the Psalme OVr Lord hath reigned he hath put on beautie glorie and regall Majestie Our Lord hath alsoe put on strength power and fortitude which are equally requisite to support à Kingly diademe and hath girded prepared armed and setled himselfe to reigne If these words bee referred to the Creation of the world Christ as God is saied to haue begun to reigne when he had created the world for then he first of all began to haue subiects vpon the earth ouer whome he might exercise dominion But if they bee referred to the reparation of the world Christ as man at the tyme of his Resurrection did receiue the gouernment of the Vniuerse put on the beautie of à glorified body and put on fortitude all power being giuen him in heauen and vpon earth and girded or setled himselfe earnestly to ptopagat● his Kingdome to the vtmost confines of the earth It is manifest that our Lord hath reigned in this sort For he hath established firmely fixed the round world as the center of the vniuerse which shall not bee moued according to that of Ecclesiastes Generation passeth and generation Eccle. 1. cometh but the earth standeth for euer Christ likewise by his dolorous passion and glorious resurrection hath founded and established the Militant Church spred through all the regiōs of the earth in one faith and religion which shall not bee moued but shall perseuer in the same faith and worship vnto the end of the world for Christ shall reigne in the house of Luc. 1. Iacob for euer and of his Kingdome there shall bee noe end Thy seat ô Lord is prepared from that tyme to wit from the Creation of the world or the resurrection of Christ Yet thou didst not thē beginne to haue à being for thou according to thy diuine nature art from euerlasting from eternitie Concerning which you are to note that the word art doth not here signify the simple existence of the diuine nature but the fulnesse of his being wherein all things are contained For God was not poore or had need of any thing before he created the world neither was he more wealthy or better stored after he had created it for he created not the world that himselfe might encrease thereby but that he might communicate his goodnesse to vs therefore he created not the world as being compelled by any necessitie but as being moued thereunto by his infinite charitie and mercy and with the same charitie and mercy he hath repaired it for Soe God loued the Ioh. 3. world that he gaue his onely begotten Sonne that euery one that beleeueth in him perish not but maie haue life euerlasting The riuers ô Lord haue lifted vp the riuers haue lifted vp their voices The riuers haue lifted vp their waues aboue the voices of many waters The surges of the Sea are ma●u●lous maruelous is our Lord on high If the words of these verses bee referred to the first sense they signify the manner whereby God almightie made the earth habitable that it might bee à firme seate for all liuing creatures For i● the beginning of the Creation the waters couered the superficies of the Vniuerse and the inundations of the waters were eleuated with à terrible motion but God who is infinitely more high more excellent and powerfull repressed their furie closed part of them in the concauities of the earth and appointed limits to the rest which they shall not transcend In the Second sense by the riuers which lifted vp their voices is vnderstood the Apostles and other principall planters of the Christian faith who being filled with the waters of life did passe through the world like vnto soe many heauenly riuers and eleuate their voices preaching the Ghospell of Christ with great freedome By the riuers which lifted vp their waues is vnderstood the Iewes who euen in the very beginning contradicted the Ghospell in all places raised persecutiō against the disciples of Christ By the surges of the Sea which are farre greater thē the waues of the riuers is vnderstood the persecutions of the Infidels other aduersaries of the
exteriour affaires must of necessity meditate on him and consider seriously his benefits and promises before when they are in bed that is in rest or tranquility of mynd and body For the cheefe onely reason why most men doe behaue themselues in exteriour imployments as if there were noe God that tooke notice of their actions is because they doe not take some tyme of respite wherein to recollect themselues and attend to the consideration of the end for which they were created And in the couert of thy winges I will reioyce I will not confide in my owne strength neither will I reioyce in my selfe but vnder the protection shelter and safegard of thy power mercy I will ioyfully rest and securely reioyce for vnder thy eagles wings I need not feare the gleade My soule hath clea●ed after thee hath adhered to thy footsteps obeyed and kept thy commandements not with an aride affection but with the strong glew of feruent charitie in such sort that noe force of tentation hath been able to seperate me from thee and thou most graciously not onely hast not reiected me but thy right hand hath receiued me to wit thy preuenting grace hath drawne me vnto thee as if he had saied Therefore I follow thee because thou hast drawne me and therefore I loue thee and adhere to thee because thou hast first loued me and by louing me hast caused me to loue thee But they in vaine haue sought my soule I being thus sheltred vnder thy wings and receiued by thy right hand my enimies haue in vaine endeauored to extinguish my spirituall life seduce my soule or otherwise to hurt me for they shall not onely not preuaile against me but alsoe They themselues for their sinne and malice shall enter into the inferiour parts of the earth to witt in to Hell which the Prophet Isaie tearmeth The deeepe lake Isa 14. They shall bee deliuered into the hands of the sword to witt into the hand of the tormentors they shall be the portions of foxes that is they shall noe more dominere ouer iust men but shall be subiect to the vniust deuills as their part and inheritance The deuills are here rather tearmed foxes then wolues or Lions because they doe more circumuent and ouercome sinners by foxelike subtilitie then by Lionlike force and strength for they cannot inforce our will yet they maie suggest alluring tentations But the king Dauid himselfe of whome he speaketh in à third persō who shortly after Saul was slayne receiued the gouernement shall reioyce in God that hath reuenged him of his enimies aduanced him to soe great glory and all shall be praised that sweare by him to witt by the health or life of the king because the mouth is stopped of those that speake wicked things that heretofore haue falsly accused him as though he should conspire the death of his soueraigne Some doe expounde these last words of all Reprobates whose mouthes in the daie of iudgement shall be stopped for all eternitie when as truth shall be manifested and none shall bee able to denie it in soe much as their owne consciences shall then accuse them and they shall then confesse and acknowledge despairing VVe haue erred from th way of Sap. 5. truth and the light of iustice hath not shined to vs. Behold here à most sweet and affectionate Psalme the vertue and sweetnesse whereof à deuout and piously amorous soule maie relish spiritually with vnspeakable contentment Let vs therefore endeauour to be euer mentally attent to God according to that of the Apostle to Timothy But bee thou Vigilant labour in 2. Timo. 4. all things bee sober and of Christ to his Disciples VVatch yee and pray that yee Math. 26. enter not into tentation Let our soule thirst to God and liuing in flesh let vs not conuerse according to the flesh following the tracts thereof but let vs exhibite ourselues in the presence of our Lord God in holie desires and l●t vs aboue all things be most sollicitous to remaine in the state of grace rather wishing not to haue being then to be without the mercy charitie and grace of God To conclude let vs praise God at all tymes in all places and in our conuersation lifting vp pure hands vnto him and labouring to the vtmost of our power to profit in his diuine loue The title and argument of the 66. Psalme and 4. in the E●udes VNto the end in Hymnes à Psalme of Canticle to Dauid According to the letter this Psalme is an inuocation and thankesgiuing for the Incarnation of our Sauiour or an expression of the vehement desire holie Dauid had to behold the comming of the Messias It consisteth cheefly of three parts In the first he beseecheth God to blesse and illuminate him with his grace that he maie know his waies In the Second he exhorteth all people to praise God for his directiō and iust iudgements in the Third to praise God fo● the fruit which the earth bath brought forth to wit Christ Iesus the happy fruit of the wombe of the blessed Virgin The exposition of the Psalme O God haue mercy on vs blot out our offences and remoue all impediments which maie delaye the comming of him whome thou hast promised to send to worke our redemption a●d blesse vs not onely with pl●nty of all temporall benefits but much rather illuminate thy counteuance vpon vs. These words are taken in diuers senses for first God almighty is saied to illuminate his countenance vpon vs when ●e remoueth the clowds of his indignation and beholdeth vs midly as his Sonnes as his freinds and as being reconciled to his fauour Secondly when he illuminateth vs by infusion o● wisdome and charitie and disposeth vs to contemplate his diuine vnderstanding Thirdly and lastly when he as it were vnmasketh himselfe that we maie behold him which he cheefly performed when by the mystery of the Incarnation he was seene vpon earth and conuersed amongst men This manner of illumination the Prophet doth seeme to aske for in this place that God will bee graciously pleased to shew vnto vs his countenance if not in the forme of God yet at least in the forme of man which request he likewise maketh Psal 79 in another Psalme saying Thou who fittest vpon the Cherubs bee manifested before Ephraim Beniamin and Manasses raise vp thy might and come to saue vs. And haue Mercy on vs preserue vs from future euills least by loosing thy grace we become vnworthy to receine the Messias That we liuing in the banishment of this life Maie know thy way vpon earth leading vnto our true countrey to wit how to walke in t●e precepts of thy diuine law Or thus That we maie know thy way to witt Christ our Lord who saieth of himselfe I am the way and the veritie and the life no man cometh to the Father but by me who is alsoe in all nations thy saluation according to that of S. Luke Myne Luc.
common onely to Angells and Men yet in as much as all creatures being the workes of God are good the diuine goodnesse doth shine in them each of them is as it were à certaine rave of its Creators perfection which thereby is knowne and made manifest for as the Apostle witnesseth The inuisible things of God are seene being vnderstood by those things which are made his power alsoe and diuinitie Consequently in this respect all creatures whatsoeuer are truely saied to blesse and praise their Creator All the workes of God therefore are here inuited to blesse praise and superexalt our Lord euery one according to its nature Angells mentally Men with their voice mynd and both Angells and Men as alsoe all other creatures the workes of God by exciting and stirring vp the minds of those that shall rightly consider their natures actions and proprieties to extoll the Creator and acknowledge his infinite glory and magnificence Blesse our Lord yee Angells of our Lord After the generall inuitation of all creatures they descend to particulars beginning with the Angells who are most immediate to God and most like vnto him as being pure immateriall substances By the name of Angells in this place are vnderstood all the celestiall and blessed spirits which as S. Gregorie sheweth out of the holye scriptures are diuided into nine quires or orders and although sometymes the name of Angells bee appropriated to those blessed spirits which are ranked in the lowest quire yet all the nine quires of them are alsoe truly and properly called by that name which as she saied S. Gregorie doth saie is imposed vpon them by reason of the functions and chardges wherein they are employed by almightie God concerning which the Apostle speaking of them in generall sayeth Are they not all ministring spirits sent to minister for them which shall recerue the ininheritance of saluation Yee Heauens blesse our Lord. By the Heauens are vnderstood the celestiall orbes of which by reason of their greatnesse beautie actiuitie motiōs seueral● other properties the Prophet Dauid doth in particular and expressely ass●uere That Psal 18. they shew forth the glorie of God All waters that are aboue the heauens blesse yee our Lord. Here it is c●earely saied that there are waters aboue the heauens and it agreeth with that we read in Genesis Gen. 1. to wit that God made à firmament and diuided the waters that were vnder the firmament from those that were aboue the firmament and God called the firmament Heauen It agreeth alsoe with that of the Psalmist Praise him ye heauens of heauens Psal 148. Psal 103. and the waters that are aboue the heauenes and in another place Stretching out the heauen as à skin which couerest the highest parts the●eof with waters Which although it maie perhaps seeme at the first veiw contrary to naturall reason the sayings of the Philosophers yet as S. Augustine writeth vpon Genesis The authority of that part of holie writ is farre to bee preferred aboue the perspicacity or capacity of humane vnderstanding But what manner of waters they are it is not certaine The common opinion is that they are corporall waters and morally by them are vnderstood the eleuated and illuminated mynds of the Saints in which as in à mirrour diuine things are clearely represented Blesse our Lord all ye powers of our Lord. By these Powers some doe vnderstand the mouers of the celestiall orbes whome the Philosophers called Intelligences and S. Thomas in his Summe affirmeth to bee of the middle Hierarchy of Angels of the quire of Vertues of whome holie Dauid maketh mention saying Blesse our Lord Psal 148. all yee his vertues you his mynisters that doe his will Others by these powers of our Lord doe vnderstand the efficient vertues in the celestiall orbes which at their first Creation God almighty ingrafted in them or which are naturally in them whereby they gouerne and worke vpon the elements and mixt bodyes according to that of the Philosopher Man and the Sunne ingender man for the celestiall bodies by these vertues are generall causes of all motions and alterations generations and corruptions in these inferiour things Sunne Moone blesse yee our Lord These are the two great lights of which is made mention in Genesis the greater of them to wit the Sunne to gouerne the daie and the lesser to wit the Moone to gouerne the night In the diligent consideration of which lights especially of the Sunne the Majesty of God doth wonderfully appeare according to that of S. Denis This li. de diuinis n●minibus c. 4. visible Sunne saieth he is an euident representation of the diuine goodnesse who is the eternall intellectuall Sunne the Sunne of wisdome and iustice Yea in the greatnesse swiftnesse of motion brightnesse power and influence of the Sunne we cannot sufficiently admire the eminency of the diuine power and wisdome By the Sunne is spiritually signified the vnderstanding of truth and goodnesse and the splendor of Reason aboue the other powers all which are subiect to it illuminated and directed by it least erring in the lubricity of vice they fall violently to their owne destruction B● the Moone is signified the inferiour portion of the soule as is is gouerned and ruled by the superiour portion thereof and obedient to its direction Starres of heauen blesse yee our Lord The starres doe manifold waies represent the magnificence of their Creator in their beautie motion vertue pluralitie situation order influence They seeme indeed vnto vs but small yet the least of them is affirmed to bee greater then the whole earth and the cause of their appearing soe small is onely in regard they are situated most remote from vs. The glory of the starres saieth Ecclesiasticus is the beautie of heauen our Lord illuminating the Eccles 43. world on high By them are designed vertuous men indued with wisdome who shine to others in words of edification example fame and good life according to that of the Apostle Doe yee all Philip. 2. things without murmurings that you maie bee without blame and the simple children of God without reprehension in the middest of à crooked and peruerse generation amongst whome you shine as lights of the world and Daniel 12. that of Daniel the Prophet They that instruct many to iustice shall shine as starres vnto perpetuall eternities Euery shower and dew blesse yee our Lord. These are produced in the aire and are very profitable for the making fertile all such things as spring out of the earth and the conseruation of the life of man A shower or raine is caused by heate reuerberating vpon à clowd and dissoluing it into drops of water The shower saieth the Prophet Isaie commeth downe from Isai 55. heauen and returneth noe more thither but inebriateth the earth and watereth it and maketh it to spring and giueth seed to the sower and bread to him that eateth In the manner of the descending whereof
parts of the world according to that of Genesis In the beginning Gen 1. God created heauen and earth Heauen is the seate of the Angels and therefore he beginneth with Praise our Lord from the Heauens and referreth to it all superiour things and the earth is the seate of men and therefore he addeth in the 7. verse Praise our Lord from the earth referring vnto it all inferiour things The exposition of the Psalme PRaise yee our Lord from the Heauens praise yee him in the high places Praise yee him all his Angells praise yee him all his hostes S. Augustine well noteth vpon this place that the Prophet doth not by these words commaund the Angells to praise our Lord or exhort them to praise him as though they were slacke and remisse in this happy office or did euer cease or desist from praising him for as S. Iohn affirmeth The Apocalip 4. Psal 83. fower beasts had noe rest daie and night saying holy holy holy Lord God omnipotent and the Psalmist saieth Blessed are they that dwell in thy howse ô Lord for euer-and euer they shall praise thee But he doth hereby congratulate them in this their praising God like as we are accustomed to congratulate those whome wee see doing some worke with ioy wherewith we are well pleased saying courage goe too my Masters or the like which words we vse vnto them not that they stand in need of our incouragement to moue them to beginne that worke but that we are delighted with that they are already in hand with Praise yee him Sunne and Moone praise yee him all Starres and light The Sunne Moone Starres and light are saied to praise our Lord when by their beautie efficacy swittnesse and other proprieties they doe induce intellectuall creatures to admire praise their Creator Praise him yee heauens of heauens to witt the greatest and highest heauens and the waters that are about the saied heauens let them praise the name of our Lord as hath been saied in the precedet Cantic●e Because he saied intellectually within himselfe to witt in his practical vnderstāding that they should bee created and they were made of nothing that which they now are he commaunded by his diuine will and they were created for according to the Apostle God almighty calleth those Rom. 4. things that are not as those things that are as alsoe that of Genesis And God saied Gen. 1. bee light made bee à firmament made c Soe by saving all things were created for God is the cause of all things by his vnderstanding according to that Thou Psal 103. Psal 134. hast made all things in wisdome and by his will according to that All things whatsoeuer our Lord would he hath done in heauen and earth He established them to witt the Angels Sunne Moone Starres and the heauens for euer and for euer and euer for he hath giuen them an incorruptible being Notwithstanding we beleeue that the heauens and the lights of the heauens in as much as concerneth their accidentall forme shall bee changed and renewed for the better as hath been saied in our former explications He put à precept he prefixed them à certaine forme or manner of working and it shall not passe but remaine as he hath decreed He put à precept to the Sunne that it should shine by daie and behold in soe many yeares this hath been obserued to the Moone that it should increase and decrease for thirty daies and this course hath not been altered to the Sea that it should not transcend its limits and behold the surging billowes of the Ocean come wallowing to the shore burst and returne Praise our Lord from the earth all you that any wise appertaine thereunto Yee Dragons and all depthes By Dragons are here vnderstood great fishes which some call Leuiathans or VVhales and by the depthes are vnderstood the deepe placee where such fishes remaine according to that Thou hast crushed the heads of the Dragons in Psal 73 the waters Yet some in this place by Dragons doe vnderstand great serpents rough with scales which dwell in dennes caues and hollow moist places to temper their naturall heat and doe not creepe vpon the earth but fly in the aire and doe exceed other creatures in vast quantity and horrid aspect Fire haile snow yee spirit of stormes to wit tempestious winds exciting suddaine whirl winds and stormes at Sea VVhich doe his word doe obey his diuine will performing that for which they were ordained Mountaines and little hills trees that beare fruit and all Cedars Beastes wild and vntamed and all cattell tame domesticke Serpents and fethered fowles All these the Prophet doth inuite to praise our Lord according as hath been explicated in the precedent Canticle Finally the Prophet inuiteth Man to praise our Lord for whome all things were created saying Kings of the earth all that haue independent temporall authority and absolute right to gouerne and all peoples that owe fealty homage and obedience to their lawfull Soueraignes Princes that haue absolute right to gouerne their subiects within their principalities but yet are subordinate themselues to the saied Kings in some respects and all Iudges of the earth that haue authority from Kings Princes to determine differences betweene party and party and to pronounce sentence of death in criminall causes And that he might comprehend all sorts of people of what age sexe condition soeuer he addeth Yong men and Virgins old with yong All people therefore whether they bee Kings Princes or priuate persons men or women old or yong let them praise the name of our Lord because the name of him alone is exalted that is he himselfe alone doth infinitely surpasse all things in nobility and perfection Eccles 1. Whence Ecclesiasticus saieth There is one most high Creator omnipotent and mighty King and to bee feared exceedingl● and M●yses saieth Neither is there other God Deut. 3. either in heauen or on earth that is able to doe thy workes and to bee compared to thy strength The Co●fession of him aboue heauen and earth to witt His praise is song in the triumphant and militant Church His glory saieth the Prophet shall couer the heauens and the earth is full of his praise Yet in neither of them can he be praised to the full for all the tongues of men and Angells are altogether in sufficient to expresse Abacuc 3. his immense goodnesse and infinite perfection He hath exalted the horne of his people to witt the power and glory of the people of Israel electing them amongst all the generations of the earth giuing them diuine lawes written with his owne finger protecting them miraculously against the fury of their enimies and gouerning them with singular prouidence and vnspeakable loue An Hymne which is the praise of God with à spirituall song properly belongeth to all his Saints in heauen and earth for they are worthy of all praise and they praise God incessantly to the Children
saied manner with great ioy exultation and gladnesse Let euery spirit praise our Lord. VVhat is vnderstood by the Chapters in this and the diuine office THe next in order followeth à Chapter The Chapters in this and the diuine office are nothing else but short Lessons taken out of the holie Scriptures by which name our holie Father S. Benedict maketh mention of cap. 12. 13. them in his Rule The holie Church well knowing the benefitt which is acquired by hearing the word of God read in due manner hath intermixed with all the houres of the diuine office Lessons out of the sacred Scriptures yet in such proportion that to the longer Nocturnes she assigneth longer Lessons and to the short daie houres shorter which she hath tearmed Chapters because they are short sections of Lessons which maie serue for refection of the mynd in all the daie houers The explication of the Chapter at Laudes taken out of the Canticles Cap. 6. Ver. 8. THe daughters of Sion haue seene her and declared her to bee most blessed All reasonable and intellectuall creatures vnited to God by Charity as well in the Militant as in the triumphāt Church doe frequently if not incessantly behold the most glorious Virgin and by how much the more eminent and illuminated they are by soe much the more profoundly and clearely doe they contemplate her dignity excellency and glory and deseruedly proclame her to be most blessed that conceiued and brought forth the Sauiour of all and the fountaine of true beatitude And the Queenes the soules of the Saints which haue gouerned themselues laudably and kept their flesh in due subiection to the spirit haue praysed her confessing her to bee the most pure of Virgins and the example of all perfection The exposition of the Canticle of Zachary commonly called Benedictus Luc. 1. BLessed bee our Lord God of all but in peculiar manner of Israel his elected people not onely of the progeny of Iacob according to the flesh but alsoe according to the Spirit because he hath visited assuming humane nature and wrought the redemption of his people freeing them from their inuisible enimies from eternall damnation from the guilt contracted by originall finne yea euen from all sinne in as much as is requisite on his part according to that of the Prophet Out of the Osee 13. hand of death I will deliuer them from death I will redeeme them The Incarnation of Christ is the beginning of our saluation which he accomplished by his passion for almightie God did not determine to saue vs by the Incarnation alone of his onely Sonne but he ordained to consummate our redemption by his passion What therefore Zachary saied He hath wrought is to be vnderstood as spoken in à propheticall manner for He will worke because he was afterwards compleatly to worke our saluation blot out our offences and reconcile vs to God according to that of Isaie He was wounded for our iniquities be was broken for our sinnes and againe Our Lord hath put vpon him the iniquity of vs all By his people are vnderstood not onely the Iewes but alsoe the elected people of what nation soeuer which are the people of God by eternall predestination and spiritually Israelites to witt the people seeing God or contemplating him by faith of whome the Apostle saieth Peace and mercy vpon the Gal. 6. Israell of God And bath erected the horne of saluation to vs. By à Horne is sometimes signified à publike denuntiation of some matter of momēt according to which interpretation these words of the Prophet may be thus expounded And hath published made knowne the Incarnation of Christ our Sauiour Sometimes alsoe by à Horne is designed power and strength particularly in diuers places of holy scriptures Royall Power and according to this sense the saied words are to bee vnderstood as followeth And hath erected that is hath raised vp the horne of saluation to vs to witt Christ his onely begotten sonne the King of Kings whome he sent into the world not to iudgs the world but that the world may bee saued by him In the house of Dauid his seruāt in the tribe familie of Dauid of whose seed progenie Christ was borne Some doe referre the erection of this horne of saluation to the Resurrection and Ascension of Christ because he did then clearely demonstrate the power and glory of beatitude by rysing to an immortall life bringing forth the Fathers out of Limbo ascending to the celestiall Kingdome This God almighty hath not done improuisedly but As he spake by the mouth of his holie Prophets that are from the beginning that is as he foretold by the Saints that haue been euer since the creation of the world who with words signes figures or deeds haue spoken of Christ and foreshewed his mysteries For as S. Augustine declareth Prophesie concerning Christ was not wanting in any age euen Adam by words and deeds did speake of him and in like manner the rest of the Patriarkes and Prophets haue done whence is that of S. Peter God who foreshewed by the mouth Act. 3. of all the Prophets that his Christ should suffer hath soe fulfilled it and againe To him all Act. 10. the Prophets giue testimony Indeed it was most me●t that soe great à mistery should bee foreshewed long before and diuers waies that the dignity thereof might bee knowne and being performed might bee proned more credible bee more firmely beleeued In this therefore our faith is most certainely confirmed that all things which we beleeue and hold concerning Christ we can proue to haue been in such manner foretold It is here saied in the singular number by the mouth of his holy Prophets because all of them with one spirit did prophesie of him and with one assent that he should come and worke saluation to vs. Saluation from our enimies especially from our inuisible enimies according as it is written For this ●ppeared the Sonne of God that he might dissolue the workes of the diuell Iob. 3. And from the hand of all that hate vs. By which words maie bee vnderstood our Sauiours deliuery securing of his elect from the power and wicked designes of peruerse men Not that he hath soe deliuered and secured the iust and righteous that they shall not bee afflicted persecuted or killed by them in this life but because our Lord by his death and passion hath obtained such grace for his beloued seruants that they shall not become subiect to the wills of bad men nor bee induced by them through inordinate feare to commit vice and doe vniustly but shall by patiently sustaining the tribulations and persecutions which they suffer by their meanes bee brought to eternall glory soe for euer freed from their infestation This is that which was promised by Micheas to the primitiue Micheat 4. Church Thy hand shall bee exalted o●er thyne enimies and all thyne enimies shall perish Thus therefore the God of
Israel hath erected saluation to vs and deliuered vs from our enimies To worke mercie to our Fathers to witt to the end that he might procure impart compleat felicity to the Patriarks Prophets and other iust men long since departed this life transporting them out of Limb● and placing them in the celestiall pallace as it is saied of Christ Thou al●o● Zacha. 9. in the bloud of thy testament hast let forth the prisoners out of the lake wherein is not water Or To worke mercie to our Fathers to witt to the end that he might mercifully fulfill what he hath foretold he will performe vnto them For this reason alsoe these words are saied because Christ assumed humane nature not moued thereunto by our iustice but of his owne immen●e piety as the Apostle writeth to Titus The ad Titū 9. beuig●●ty and kindnesse towards man of our Sauiour God appeared not by the workes of iustice which we did but according to his mercie he hath saued vs. And to remember his holie testament to witt that by this worke of our deliuery he might shew that he was mindfull of his holie couenant and firme league which he entred into with the Patriarkes and Prophets vnto whome Christ as God promised he would bee incarnated come into the world according to that of Isaie For this cause shall my people know my name in that daie because I Isaie 52. my selfe that spake loe I am present Of this testament therefore he shewed himselfe mindfull by assuming humane nature in the wombe of the blessed Virgin The oath which he sware to Abraham our Father Of this oath we read in Genesis By Gen. 22. my owne selfe haue I sworne saieth the Lord because thou ●ast done this thing and hast not spared thyne on●ly begotten sonne for my sake I will blesse thee and I will multiplie thy seed as the ●●arres if heauen and in thy seed shall bee blessed all the nations of the earth Where by the seed of Abraham according to the Apostle Christ is vnderstood 〈◊〉 Abraham saieth he were the promise● saied Galath 3. and to his seed He saieth no● And to seeds as in many but as in one And in thy seed which is Christ By this oath therefore the eternall Father promised that his onely Sonne should be incarnated of the seed of Abraham Who by giuing his Sonne vnto vs in the mistery of the Incarnation did also● bosto● himselfe vpon vs by ●●●●●●ple 〈◊〉 hence it followeth in this place That he would giue ●onself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Sonne hath gi●●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 ting ●imselfe ou● br●ther our Sauiour c our aduocate 〈◊〉 ●is hath communicated himselfe vnto vs diuers waies for being borne ●o●mersing in the world he hath made● himselfe à companion of men in his l●st s●●●●●s he gaue himselfe for our so●●●●e dying ●e gaue himselfe for the price of our redemption a● r●igning in the celestiall to 〈◊〉 for our b●atificall re● 〈◊〉 God a brighty ●s alsoe 〈◊〉 to giue himselfe 〈◊〉 into 〈◊〉 he infuseth charity and diuine grace be●●●●● such haue and possesse God as the obiect of the 〈◊〉 light and occupation ●nd which wonderfull ●dignation the aboundant liberality exceeding fauour and 〈◊〉 of God towards vs is clearely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because giuing vnto vs his gifts he imparteth himselfe withall to bee had possessed be held beloued enioyed to bee our conseruer helper and protector euer at hand Yet in this place Zachary speaketh literally of the donation wherein the onely begotten Sonne of God is giuen to vs by this that he hath assumpted our nature to worke and consummate our saluation whence is that of the Prophet A litle child is borne Isa 9. to vs and à Sonne is giuen to vs. That without feare to witt inordinate earnest secular or semile being deliuered by the intarnation and Passion of Christ from the hand of our enimies both visible and inuisible We maie serue him the true God with the seruice of diuine worship In holinesse in purity of body but much more of the mind all terrent and carnall affection being excluded that is to saie in à perfect conuersion of the heart all affections of the soule being reformed rectified and reduced towards God for in this sort God ought to bee serued according as he exacteth of vs its Leuit●●us Doe not contaminate your soules 〈…〉 for I am the Lord your God bee holie because I am holie and our Sauiour Christ reacheth vs Bee you perfect as alsoe your heauenly Ma● 5. father is perfect It is therefore requisite that wee doe not onely exhibite our selues reuerently purely towards God rendring what is due vnto him to ●itt all thankfulnesse and praise all honour and glory but alsoe that wee comport ourselues iustly towards our neighbours rendring to our Superiours equalls and inferiours respectiuely what belongeth to all and euery of them and giuing them good example and edification in all things according to that of the Apostle The things that are of peace let vs pursue and Roma 14. the things that are of edifying one towards another let vs keep Put not a stumbling block or à scandall to your Brother doe not destroy him for whome Christ died Whence it followeth here and iustice to witt that we maie not onely serue him in holinesse but alsoe in iustice rendring vnto him for his immense goodnesse and mercie shewed towards vs all obedience and loue praise and thankfulnesse and to our neighbours respectiuely what is due vnto each one before him to witt with à pure intention and internall attention placing our selues as in his presence considering him as the King and iudge beholding all things and soe desiring to please him alone seeking his honour and glory in all things and doing all things freuerently wit● a filiall ●●are and simple heart not like vnto hypocrites doing good workes before men for humane respects and to bee praised and rewarded by them that foe we maie truely saie with the Psalmist I haue kept thy commaund●●neurs and thy testimonies Psal 118. because all my waies are in the fight All our daies to witt incessantly and perseuerantly There is noe greater folly then to spend this tyme not onely vnfruitfully but alsoe vitiously which is alotted vnto vs wherein to worke our saluation with feare and trembling for after this life there will be noe occasion offered of merit or demerit Let vs therefore now whilst we haue health ability of bodie and mynd and many other meanes to serue our Lord labour to performe our dutie towards him and our neighbour and to increase in perfection and his diuine loue Let vs doe this I saie not one daie or seldome or for à small tyme but continually perseuering therein to our last breath for He that shall ●ath 10. perseuer vnto the end he shall be saued and the Apostle saieth Doing good let vs not Gala. 6. faile for in due tyme we shall reape
not failing According to Origen Zachary being replenished with the Holie Ghost did declare two prophesies The first concerning Christ which extendeth it selfe thus fa●re and the Second of S. Iohn as followeth And thou child shalt be called the Prophet of the highest to witt of Christ who according to the Apostle is aboue all things Rom. 9. God blessed for euer There maie two questions bee asked cōcerning these words The first how this prophesie was verified in S. Iohn in respect that he being asked if he were à Prophet did answere that he was not Concerning which you are to note that S. Iohn did not absolutely denie himselfe to bee à Prophet which was very manifest by the authoritie of this place as alsoe by the words of our Sauiour who saied That à greater Prophet Lu● 7. among the children of women then Iohn the Baptist there is noe man but he denied himselfe to bee such à Prophet as the Pharisees intended by their interrogation to witt one of the common sort of Prophets of the old testament which indeed was true he being as our Sauiour witnessed more 〈◊〉 à Prophet whoe did not onely foretell that Christ should come but alsoe did demonstrate shew him present The Second question is why Zachary spake to à child of eight daies old who could not according to the course of nature haue the vse of reason Whereunto S. Ambrose maketh answere That Zachary knew the infant did supernaturally vnderstand his words as he vnderstood the incarnation of the Sonne of God his corporall presence being in his Mothers wombe For saieth he S. Iohn being now bot●●e could heare the words of his Father who did heare the salutation of the blessed Virgin Marie before he was borne and had sense to vnderstand who had affection to exult Yet others with venerable Bede seeme to hold that Zachary foretold these things not in respect of S. Iohns taking notice of them but for the instruction of those that were present For we speake to vnreasonable creatures and things without life inuiting them to set forth the praises of God not that they haue vnderstanding but that we and those intelligible creatures that heare this inuitation maie bee excited thereunto For thou shalt goe before the face of our Lord to prepare his waies By these and the following words Zachary sheweth the reason why he hath saied that S. Iohn shall bee called the Prophet of the highest to witt because he shall goe before the fate of our Lord that is before his corporall and manifest presence to prepare his waies to dispose the hearts of men to faith charitie and receauing of Christ This 〈◊〉 fulfilled by S. Ioha● for he was borne before our Sauiour he beganne to preach and baptize before him and he went before him into Ly●bo He prepared the waies of Christ likewise for the meanes whereby Christ came into the hearts o● men was the preaching and baptisme of S. Iohn or if by his waies bee vnderstood the preaching and baptisme o● Christ the doctrine and baptisme of S. Iohn was à disposition to them both To giue knowledge of saluation to his people to witt to exhibite or preach to the people of the Ie●es knowledge by which true felicity maie bee acquired knowledge concerning Christ who is our saluation and knowledge disposing vnto remission of their sinnes for this knowledge was of force vnto remission of sinnes as à disposition and incitement in respect that the people were induced thereby to pennance and the explicite faith of Christ Through the b● wells of the mercie of our God to witt through the intime secret and amorous mercie of the onely sonne of God Charity and mercie are metaphorically called the bowells through which God was graciously moued to worke our saluation according to that of the Apostle God for his exceeding charitie wherewith be loued vs euen when we were dead by sinnes quickned vs together in Christ These bowels of God in tymes past did as it were lve hid from vs according to that of the Prophet Isaie The multitude of thy bowells and of thy mercies they haue held backe themselues towards me In which to witt bowels of his mercie the orient Christ our Lord who is the brightnesse of the eternall light and splendor of his Fathers glory from on high hath visited vs descending from the bosome yea from the heart of his eternall Father into the wombe of the blessed Virgin Christ is called Orient by the Prophet Zachary Zach. 6. where he saieth Behold à man Orient is his name And indeed that name is fitly appropriated vnto him for like as the light of the sunne doth arise from the orientall part of heauen soe the light of grace doth arise from Christ who shined vnto vs by his humanitie Whence it followeth here that this diuine Orient hath visited vs To illuminate them that sitt in darknesse of ignorance and error or insidesitie and in the shadow of Death to witt to impletie of life which is called the shadow of Death because it seperateth the m●nd from God as naturall death doth se●ere the soule from the bodie according to that of the Prophet Your iniquities haue Isa 59. deuided betweene you and your God By the shadow of Death maie alsoe be vnderstood this present world which in respect that it is a vale of teares and à place of peregrination and exile maie be tearmed à shadow or solitude of death being compared with the celestiall countrey Moreouer some by them that sitt in darknesse doe vnderstand the Fathers that were detained in Lymbo whome Christ descended to illuminate presently after his death vpon the Crosse yet properly by them that sitt in darknesse the Gentils are designed for whose illumination our Sauiour descended as appeareth by that of S. Iohn And other sheepe I haue that are Ioh. 10. not of this fold them alsoe I must bring c. by diuers places in the Prophesie of Isaic where it is saied The people that walked an darknesse hath seene à great lightt to them Isa 9. that dwelt in the countrey of the shadow of death light is risē The eternall Father alsoe speaking to Christ saieth I haue giuen thee for à light of the Gentils that thou mightest Isa 42. open the eies of the band and bringforth the prisoners out of prison and them that sitt in dar●nesse out of the prison house To direct our feete to witt our affections into the way of peace that is into iust and vertuous conuersation which is the way to peace of heart in present and to peace of eternitie in tyme to come Christ came into this world and suffered death cheefly that he might impart vnto vs this twofold peace for which reason he saied to the Apostles Peace I leaue to you my peace Ioh 14. Eph. 2. I giue to you and the Apostle saieth of Christ And comming he Euangelized peace to you that were farre of and peace to them
Creator of heauen and earth Giue he not I beseech him thy feete to be moued let him not permitt thee to slippe and fall in the waie by yeelding to sinne or tentation but let him strengthen thy feete that they maie perseuer firme and stable in their course to the celestiall countrey Neither doe he slumber that keepeth thee I beseech him likewise vnto whome thou hast recommended thyselfe and who hath taken thee into his protection that he doe not depose the care of thee be it for n●uer soe short à time Courage thou holie pilgrime Loe he shall not slumber nor much lesse sleepe that keepeth Israel Although it seemeth sometimes as men then beleeue that in the time of affliction God doth dissemble the anguish of his elected and the tyranny of wicked men who persecuted them as if he did not see and obserue what passed much like to one à sleepe Yet credit me he is not capable of sleepe but is euer soe watchfull that he will alwaies be found vigilant for their defence Our Lord keepeth thee in particular conseruing thee in good and preseruing thee from euill in the waie of this present exile Our Lord is thy protection vpon thy right hand Some read aboue thy right hand and expound it That our Lord is thy protection of farre greater strength and assurance then thy right hand Others read it as it is here translated and expound it That our Lord is as it were à buckler vpon thy right hand or à Canopie borne on thy right hand couering thy head and body in such sort that By daie the Sunne shall not burne thee nor the moone by night For the grace of God shall keepe those that confide in him both in the time of prosperitie and aduersitie the Sunne or daie of prosperitie being vsually as dangerous and hurtfull in à spirituall course if not more preiudiciall then the Moone or night of aduersitie vnlesse it be vsed with due circumspection Our Lord doth keepe thee from all euill that it preuaile not against thee Indeed he sometimes permitteth tentations persecutions and afflictions to happen vnto thee yet he hath euer à vigilant eie towards thee that they take not effect against thee for he permitteth them either for his greater glorie or thy conuersion and amendment or some other reason which can be none other then the very best as thou wilt experience in due season according to that of the Apostle Rom. 8. To them that loue God all things cooperate vnto good To whome then can I more fitly recommend thee then into the armes of his immense goodnesse Our Lord therefore keepe thy soule that it be not depriued of his grace nor the flesh preuaile against it Our Lord keepe thy coming in and thy going out all thy actions both internall and externall Or thus Thy comming in to witt the beginning when thou attemptest any good worke and thy going out the consummation thereof that soe euery one of thy workes maie take beginning from him and being begun maie be perfected by him Or finally thus Our Lord Lord keepe thy comming in thy conuersation in this world whereby thou entrest into the place of this peregrination and thy going out thy departure out of this world when thy soule is separated from the body This thy coming in and going ou● I beseech our Lord to keepe and conserue thee to be lodged with him in eternitie of which comming in and going out our Sauiour saied I am the dore by me Ioh. 14. if any enter he shall be saued and he shall goe in and shall goe out and shall find pastures The argument of the 121. Psalme and third in Tierce IN this Psalme the Prophet describeth the beautie nobilitie and felicitie of the Cittie of Ierusalem whereunto the Hebrewes desired to returne from the captiuitie of Babilon But as that Cittie was à type of the celestiall Ierusalem soe the Hebrewes returning from that captiuitie to the terrene Ierusalem were à figure of our peregrination and ascension to that supernall Ierusalem and therefore the whole Psalme maie be vnderstood of each captiuitie of the pilgrimes of each of them Yet certainly the prime intention of the holie Ghost is directed to the principall end and indeed the words doe best agree therewith as I shall endeauour to shew in the insuing explication The Prophet hath placed this third Graduall Psalme very fitly after the two former For the first degree of internall ascension was to depart from vice the Second to implore the diuine assistance and the third which is here treated of is Hope to attaine the last end or life euerlasting Therefo●e speaking in the person of a man little regarding the delights of this world but most intensely attending the ioyes of the celestiall mansion he saieth The exposition of the Psalme I Reioyced with à spirituall ioy in the consideration of these thing which were saied to me by internall inspiration to witt that we shall goe after this life when we are cleansed from all guilt of sinne into the house of our Lord into the triumphant Church the countrey of the blessed the Kingdome of God VVe know saieth the Apostle that if our earthly house 2. Cor. 5. of this habitation be dissolued that we haue à building of God à house not made with hand eternall in heauen Concerning which you are to note that the celestiall countrey is tearmed à Kingdome à Cittie and à house in diuers respects for in regard of the multitude and varietie of the inhabitants it is called à Kingdome in regard of the Societie and familiaritie amongst the blessed it is called à Cittie for although the number of the elect be almost infinite yet they know and loue each other and are Cittizens of the fame Cittie and finally in respect that all the elect haue one and the same father one and the same inheritance it is called à house where all shall be brethren vnder one father God almightie In this house Cittie or Kingdome God is seene face to face and eternall securitie accompanied with compleat beatitude is found There men shall be as the Angels and haue their desires satiated to the full Notwithstanding when death approacheth which putteth à A period to our peregrination all men doe not reioyce with the Prophet in these things that were saied vnto him to witt that we shall goe into the house of our Lord but such alone as haue disposed ascensions in their hearts whilest they had health leasure abilitie and meanes to doe it and truely saie with him Our feete were standing in thy courts ● Ierusalem to witt our desires contemplations and affections of our hearts were fixt and established in thy mansions o celestiall Kingdome ●n such sort that our conuersation was in thee and all our actions were ordained by vs to attaine eternall life These maie reioyce vpon good ground when others that haue been wedded as it were to their senses and sensualitie shall be repleat with horror
endeauour to make good progresse in the true loue of God and our neighbour weighing and fulfilling carefully that of the Apostle I beseech you that you walke Ephes 4. worthie of the vocation in which you are called with all humili●●e and r●●dnesse with patiencee supporting one another in charitie carefull to Keepe the vnitie of the spirit in the bond of peace for conuersing in the Militant Church in this sort they will bee esteemed worthie to bee introduced into the triumphant Church as being vpon earth imitators of the celestiall Cittizens Concerning the Exp●cation of the Chapters as well of this Houre as of Sext and None I referre the Reader to what hath alreadie been 〈◊〉 in the explication of the lessons out of which the Chapters of these three Houres are taken The rule and argument of the 122. Psalme and first in Sext. IN this fourth Graduall Psalme is treated of the fourth step of internall ascension to witt To haue an vndaunted confidence in the diuine mercie amidst all aduersities and distresses in such sort that one maie bee able to saie with holie Iob. 13. 〈◊〉 Although he shall kill me I will trust in him The Prophet therefore speaking in the person of a man extreamely afflicted yet confiding immoueably in our Lord saieth The explication of the Psalme TO thee ô my God my sole comforter in tribulation I haue lifted vp ●yne eies attending succour who dwellest in the heauens where thou art pleased to manifest thy selfe in an ine●●able manner is thou art indeed in thy selfe Behold as the eies of seruants are as it were fixt On the hands of their Maisters obseruing their commounds expecting their fauour and assistance and receiuing with humble thankfulnesse what benefitt or recompense soeuer they shall please to bestow vpon them and As the eies of the handmaid on the hands of her Mistresse in like sort soe are our eies to our Lord God imploring and hoping for aide pardon and grace Vntill he haue mercie on vs by graunting what wee require or at least wise doing what he knoweth to be most expedient for vs and this not onely in one or two necessities but vntill the houre of our death for during our whose life wee shall stand in need of his mercie Haue mercie on vs o Lord haue mercie 〈◊〉 vs because we are much replenished with contempt The elect indeed are despised by the reprobate Religious men by seculats humble men by the proud and poore men by the wealthie and as Iob af●●rmeth The simplicitie of the iust is derided Iob. 12. The reason of this is manifest because good and euill are contraries and contraries cannot be at peace and vnitie one with another and therefore in respect that the iust are mild and patient as hauing learnt of our Sauiour not to resist but contrary wise when they are buffeted an one cheeke to turne the other they are contumeliously handled troden vnder foote vexed and scorned Because our soule is much replenished to witt with confusion and is made reproach to them that abound and contempt to the proud Yet a time will come that this reproach will be conuerted to their eternall benefitt and fall heauie vpon their aduersaries when at the daie of iudgement the Sap. 5. impious shall saie These are they whome we had sometime in derision and in à parable of reproach we senselesse esteemed their liues madnesse and their end without honour behold how they are counted among the children of God c. In this Psalme we are taught to raise the eies of our heart towards God in all our necessities and not to desist vntill we haue obtained mercie for it behoueth vs to praie alwaies and not to faile but to perseuere therein soe long as we are vested with mortalitie We are alsoe induced to this confident and holie eleuation by the example of our Sauiour of whome it is written That lifting vp his Ioh. 17. eies to heauen be saied Father the houre it come c And againe Iesus lifting his eies Ioh. 11. vpward saied Father I giue thee tha●kes c. The argument of the 123. Psalme and Second in Sext. ALthough this Psalme maie very fitly bee expounded in the person of the holie Martyrs now triumphing with Christ or of any other of the Saints now in glorie who haue entred into the eclestiall Kingdome by many tribulatione yet it maie noe lesse properly be applied to them that are vpon the waie to●ards eternall life who being by the diuine goodnesse freed from the euill of tentations passions and persecutions doe render thankes hereby for their deliuerie In this fift graduall Psalme is treated of the fift degree of internall ascension to witt Not to relie vpon our owne forces but to ascribe our deliuerie to the grace of almightie God whence our Lord saieth Least Israel glorie against ●ud 7. me and saie by my o●ne force I am deliuered The Prophet therefore in the person of such as haue experienced the gratious assistance of almightie God amidst their most greeuous tentations and mortall dangers saieth The explication of the Psalme BVt that our Lord was in vs let Israel saie let the people seeing God by faith acknowledge with à gratefull heart saying but that our Lord was in vs with vs and for vs directing and protecting vs in all occurrences VVhen men to witt infidels heretiks tyrants and maleuolent people rose vp against vs conspiring our ruine in●licting seuere punishments and endeauoring to the vtmost of their power to induce vs to the euill of fault perhaps they had swallowed vs aliue we hauing noe meanes to escape their furie for noe humane succour could protect or secure vs. This properly suteth with the persecutiō of the holie Martyrs whome Tyrants sought by all the waies they could cogitate to induce to Idolatrie 〈◊〉 the deniall of our Sauiour Christ whereunto if they had yeelded consent their soules had been absorpt not the bodie and soe they had been swallowed aliue for liuing in bodie they had been dead in soule and retaining the life of nature they had lost the life of grace and glorie VVhen their furie was angrie against vs perhaps waters of tribulations vehement persecutions had swallowed vs had prouailed against vs. By waters are signified great tribulations according to that of the Prophet Isaie Our Lord will bring vpon Isa 8. them the waters of the riuer strong and many the King of the Assirians and that of Ieremie Thren 3. The waters haue sti●ed euer my be●d Isaied I am vndone c. Our soule hath passed through à torrent to witt suddaine great troubles and ●entations patiently sustaining them and refusing to consent to what was suggested perhaps our soule had passed through 〈◊〉 intollerable water that is to saie Vnlesse 〈◊〉 Lord had succoureth vs we had been ●●presse drand tēpted aboue our strength ●o 〈◊〉 ou● soule had been inforced to passe through a● intollerable water to suffer such à persecution as we
of the highest the first begotten of all creatures Our Lord sware God the Father firmely promised and sealed it with an oath and it shall not repent him he shall not retract what he hath soe auerred for he hath well weighed all circumstances before he soe sware to witt that thou ô Christ as man art à Priest according to the order of Melchisedech The office of a Priest is to be à Mediator and aduocate betweene God and his people to offer their praiers vnto him to pacifie him and blesse them All which are found in Christ and therefore he is à Priest Of him it is written If any man shall sinne we 1. Ioh. 2. haue an aduocate with the Father Iesus Christ the iust and againe VVhen we were enemies Rom. 5. Ephes 2. we were reconciled to God by the death of his sonne who by the Crosse killed the e●mities in himselfe Moreouer he is à Priest for euer according to that of the Apostle Christ for that he continueth for euer hath an Heb. 7. euerlasting priesthood whereby he is able to sa●e alsoe for euer going by himselfe to God alwaies liuing to make intercession for vs. Finally he is à Priest according to the order of Melchisedech First because as Melchisedech offered to almightie God bread and wine soe he did offer or giue to his disciples his body and bloud vnder the formes of bread and wine by conuerting the bread into his bodie and the wine into his bloud Secondly because as Melchisedech is affirmed to be with out Father Mother and genealogie not that he had none of these but because the holie Scriptures for some hidden reason doe passe them ouer in silence soe Christ is borne out of the naturall course of humane generation in heauen without à Mother and vpon earth without à Father and VVho shall declare his generation Isa 53. Hebr. 6. Whence the Apostle to Hebrewes saieth Iesus the precursor for vs is entred made à high Priest foreuer according to the order of Melchisedech Our Lord on thy right hand Christ our Lord sitting on thy right hand ô God the Father Hath broken kings in the daie of his wrath such as haue opposed his holie Doctrine and persecuted him in his members These he hath broken by depriuing some of the life of grace others of their corporall life alsoe and condemning many to hell fire He shall iudge in nations he shall iudge nations themselues in his first comming with the iudgement of discretion mercifully assisting some and iustly relinquishing others and in his Second comming with the iudgement of remuneration rendring to euerie one according to his workes as the Euangelist witnesseth saying The houre cometh wherein all that Ioh. 5. are in the graues shall heare his voice and they that haue done good things shall come forth into the resurrection of life but they that haue done euill into the resurrection of iudgement He shall fill ruines supplie humane defects in his first comming by infusion of grace into emptie hearts and enriching voide minds with spirituall benedictions and in his Second comming he shall fill ruines to witt of the Angels with them that are saued repairing the celestiall mansions made vacant by the fall of the rebellious spirits He shall crush the heads he shall humble the hearts in the land of many in many places and habitations of men For in euery land he hath humbled some hautie spirits and at the last iudgement he shall by the sentence of eternall death crush the heads in the land of many captaines and potent men reigning with much ambition in many lands according to that of the Prophet The Lord of hostes hath Isa 23. thought it that he might plucke downe the pride of all glorie and bring all the glorious of the earth to ignominie Of the torrent in the waie ●e shall drinke Christ in this world shall suffer paine tribulation and most bitter death of which torrent he spake to S. Iohn Iames saying Can you drinke of the cuppe that I shall drinke of Therefore he shall exalt the head he shall glorifie and erect himselfe by rising in à glorified bodie and ascending to the Father that he maie sitt with him as iudge and Lord of all for Christ as God raised exalted and glorified himselfe as man according to that I haue power to yeeld my life and I haue power Ioh. 10. to take it againe Behold here à Psalme short in words but infinite in sense In it the twofold nature and simple personalitie of Christ is shewed Moreouer in it the session of Christ on the right hād of his Father the deiection of his enemies the promulgation of the Christian faith and the coetermitie and consubstantialitie of the Father and the Sonne is described and finally in it is declared the Priesthood and iudiciarie power of Christ We ought therefore to sing this Psalme with much reuerence singular deuotion and profound contemplation in regard of the dignitie sweetnesse and sublimitie of the sense thereof The Title and Argument of the 112 Psalme and Second in Vespres THe title is Alleluia which fitly agreeth with the Psalme it being wholly composed in the praise of almightie God cheefly for that he being of such excellencie as therein is declared doth not despise poore abiect and simple soules but contrary to the proceeding of worldlie Potentates doth elect them for his peculiar friends aduance them to great honours and showre his singular benefits vpon them The explication of the Psalme PRaise our Lord yee children pure and innocent people of what age soeuer The Apostle doth exhort vs to become such children saying Bretheren be not made 1. Cor. 14 children in sense but in malice be children and in sense perfect and our Sauiour saieth Math. 18. vnlesse ye be conuerted and become as litle children you shall not enter into the Kingdome of heauen Praise the name of our Lord to witt his infinite power and g●orie or himselfe who is signified by his name Be the name of our Lord blessed from henceforth now for euer from this instant with out delay and for eternitie let his name be celebrated From the rising of the Sunne vnto the going downe From morning vntill euening or from the East to the West the name of our Lord is laudable is à subiect worthie of all praise Our Lord is high aboue all nations of greater dignitie and excellencie then all the generations of men according to that of the Prophet Isaie All nations as if Isa 40. they were not soe are they before him and they are reputed of him as nothing and à vaine thing c. And his glorie aboue the heauens aboue the celestiall cittizens VVho is as our Lord who maie be found of soe great Maiestie and sublime nature that he maie be paralelled with the Lord our God VVho dwelleth on high and beholdeth the low things in heauen and vpon earth the blessed Spirits who by the