Selected quad for the lemma: heaven_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heaven_n angel_n descend_v ladder_n 1,870 5 11.7110 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A06436 Of prayer, and meditation Wherein are conteined fovvertien deuoute meditations for the seuen daies of the weeke, bothe for the morninges, and eueninges. And in them is treyted of the consideration of the principall holie mysteries of our faithe. Written firste in the Spanishe tongue by the famous religious father. F. Lewis de Granada, prouinciall of the holie order of preachers in the prouince of Portugall.; Libro de la oraciĆ³n y meditaciĆ³n. English Luis, de Granada, 1504-1588.; Hopkins, Richard, d. 1594? 1582 (1582) STC 16907; ESTC S100761 342,485 696

There are 20 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

they crucified him and with him two theues one at the right hande and the other at the lefte And so was the scripture fulfilled that saieth And he was reckoned emōge the wicked And Pilate wrote also a title and put it vpon the Crosse And it was written Iesus of Nazareth kinge of the Iewes This title manie of the Iewes did reade For the place where Iesus was crucified was neare to the citie and it was written in Hebrewe Greeke and Lattin Then said the highe preistes of the Iewes to Pilate write not the kinge of the Iewes but that he saied I am kinge of the Iewes Pilate answered what I haue written I haue written Then the souldiars when they had crucified Iesus tooke his garmentes and made fowre partes to euerie souldiar a parte And they tooke his coate also which was without anie seame wouen frō the toppe throwghout Therefore they saied one to an other Let vs not deuide it but cast lottes for it whose it shal be This was done that the scripture might be fulfilled Psalm 21. that saieth They parted my garmentes emonge them and vpon my coate they cast lottes So the souldiars did these thinges indeede And they that passed by Math. 27. reuyled him wagginge theire heades and sayeinge Fye on thee thou that destroiest the tēple and buildest it in three daies saue thy selfe If thou be the sonne of God come downe from the crosse Likewise also the highe preistes mockinge him with the Scribes and elders and Pharisies saied He saued others but he cannot saue him selfe If he be the kinge of Israell let him now come downe from the Crosse and we will beleue him He trusteth in God Let him deliuer him now if he will haue him For he saied I am the sonne of God The verie same wordes also did the theeues who were crucified with him cast in his teethe But Iesus saide Father pardon them for they knowe not what they doe And one of the malefactors Luc. 23. that was crucified with him blasphemed sayeinge If thou be Christe saue thy selfe and vs. But the other answered and rebuked him sayenge Neither doest thou feare God beinge in the selfe same cōdemnation We are iustlye punnished for we receaue accordinge to our doinges But this man hath done nothinge amisse And he saied vnto Iesus Lord remember me when thou commest into thy kingdome Then Iesus saied vnto him Verelie I saie vnto thee This daie shalt thou be with me in paradise There stoode by the Crosse of Iesus Ioan. 19. his mother and his mothers sister Marie the wife of Cleophas and Marie Magdalene And when Iesus sawe his mother and the disciple whom he loued standinge by he saied vnto his mother Woman beholde thy sonne Then he saied to the disciple beholde thy mother And from that howre the disciple tooke her for his mother Math. 27. Abowte the ninthe howre Iesus cried with a lowde voice sayenge Eli Eli Lamasabacthani that is My God my God why hast thou forsaken me And some of them that stoode there when they harde it saied This man called Elias Some other saied let vs see if Elias will come and saue him Afterwardes Iesus knowinge that all thinges were fulfilled Ioan. 19. that the scripture might be accomplished saied I am a thirst And there was set a vessell full of vinegar and they filled a sponge with vinegar and put it abowt an hisope stalke and put it to his mouthe Now when Iesus had receaued of the vinegar he saied It is finished And he cried againe with a lowde voice Luc. 23. Matth. 27. and saied Father into thine handes I commende my spirite And from the sixte hower there was darkenes ouer all the earthe vntill the ninthe hower And the veile of the temple was rent in two partes from the toppe to the bothom And the earthe quaked and the stones were clouen And the graues opened them selues and manie bodies of the Sainctes which slepte arose And there were manie of his fryendes and acquaintance and women beholdinge him a farre of Emonge whom was Marie Magdalene and Marie the mother of Iames the yonger and of Iosephe and Salome who had folowed him out of Galilee ministringe vnto him with manie other women that came in his companie to Ierusalem MEDITATIONS VPON THESE POYNTES OF THE TEXT VE are now come o my soule to the holie mounte Caluarie and we be nowe arriued at the toppe of the misterie of our redemption O how wonderfull is this place Verelie this is the howse of God the gate of heauen the lande of promise and the place of saluation Here is planted the tree of life Here is placed that misticall ladder that Iacob sawe Genes 28. which ioyneth heauen with the earthe whereby the angells doe descende vnto men and men doe ascende vnto almightie God This is o my soule the place of praier Here oughtest thou to adore and blesse our Lorde and geue him most humble and hartie thanckes for this his most highe and excellent benefit sayenge thus vnto him We worshippe and adore thee ô Lord Iesus Christ and we blesse thy holie name forsomuch as thou hast by meanes of this holie Crosse redeemed the worlde Thankes be geuen vnto thee O most mercifull Sauiour for that thou hast thus loued vs and wass hed awaie our sinnes with thy most pretious bloude and hast offered thy selfe for vs vpon the same Crosse to the ende that with the most sweete sauour of this noble sacrifice enkendeled with the fier of thy most feruent loue thou mightest satisfie and appease the wrathe of almightie God Blessed be thou therefore for euermore which art the Sauiour of the worlde the reconciler of mankinde the reparer of Angelles the restorer of the heauens the triumphant conqueror of hell the vanquisher of the diuell the awthor of life the destroier of deathe and the redeemer of them Luc. 1. that were in darckenes and in the shadowe of deathe All yee therefore that be a thirst Esay 55. come vnto the waters and yee that haue neither golde nor siluer come and receaue all these pretious treasures freely without payinge anie thinge Yee that desier the water of life this is that misticall rocke that Moyses strooke with his rodde in the wildernes Exod. 17. out of which there sprange water in great abondance to satisfie the thirst of his afflicted people Yee that desiere peace and amitie with alinightie God knowe yee that this is also that rocke Genes 35. that the patriarke Iacob annointed with oyle and erected vp for a title of peace and amitie betwene almightie God and men Yee that are desirous of wyne to cure your woundes Num. 13. this is that cluster of grapes that was browght out of the lande of promise into this vale of teares which is now crusshed and pressed vpon the presse of the Crosse for the remedie and redresse of our offences Yee that desire the oyle of the grace
goodnes they liue and reigne in glorie O heauenly cittie O secure dwellinge place O blissefull countrey where all delightfull thinges are to be fownde O happie people without anie grudginge O quiet neighbours where no one is subiecte to anye wante or necessitie O that the striffe and contention of this present state were at an ende O that the daies of my bannishement might be finished O how longe is the time of my peregrination prolonged When shall this daie come When shall I come and appeare before the face of my sweite Lorde and Sauiour THE SIXTE TREATISE OF THE CONSIDERATION OF the glorie of Paradise Wherein the former meditation is declared more at large ONE of the thinges wherevpon it behoueth vs most to haue our eies alwaies fixed in this vale of teares is the blessed state of glorie in the kingdome of heauen For this consideration alone were able to encourage vs to susteine willingelye all labours and paines that are to be suffered for the atteyninge of it When almightie God promised to giue to the Patriarke Abraham the lande of promise he commaunded him to walke and vewe it all rounde abowte sayeinge Arise Genes 13.17 and walke all ouer this lande both in lengthe and breadthe and consider it one euerie side For I will geue it vnto thee Arise vp therefore ô my sowle aduaunce thy selfe on highe leaue all earthlye cares and affaires here benethe and flee vp with the winges of thy spirite vnto that most excellēte noble lande of promise and cōsider with good attention the lengthe of the eternitie the lardgenes of the felicitie and the greatnes of the riches with all the rest that is therein It is writtē of the Quene of Saba 3. Reg. 10. that when she hearde of the great fame of Salomon she went to Ieruzalem to see the great and wonderfull thinges that were reported of him Consideringe therefore that the fame of that heauenly Ieruzalem and of that supreme kinge that gouerneth it is no lesse than the renowme of Salomon was ascende thou now vp on highe with thy spirite vnto this noble cittie to contemplate the wisedome of this supreme kinge the bewtie of this temple the seruice of this table the orders of them that attende vpon it the liueries that the whole familie weare and withall the policie and glorie of this noble cittie For if thou be able to consider euerie one of these thinges it maie be that thy spiritie shal be lifted vp aboue it selfe and thou shalt perceiue that there hath not bene declared vnto thee so muche as the verie least parte of this glorie But for this purpose it shal be requisite to haue a spetiall lighte of almightie God as the Apostle signifieth sayeinge I beseache the God of glorie and the father of our Lorde Iesus Christ to geue you the spirite of wisedome Ephes 1.17.18 and to lighten the eies of your hartes that you maie vnderstande how great the hope of your vocation is and the riches of that enheritance and glorie which he hath prepared for the Sainctes And althoughe in this glorie there be manie thinges to contemplate vpon yet mayst thou now espetiallie consider these fiue principall thinges that we towched before to witt Fiue principall thinges to be considered in this meditation The excellencie and greatnes of the place The fruition of the companie of those blessed inhabitantes The vision of almightie God The glorie of the Sainctes bodies And the euerlastinge continuance and eternitie of all these so great and wonderfull benefites Of the goodlines and excellencie of the place § I. FIRST of all consider the goodlie bewtie of the place which S. Iohn describeth vnto vs in a figure in his Apocalips in these wordes Apoc. 12. One of the seuen Angels spake vnto me sayeing Come and I will shewe thee the spouse of the lambe and he caried me awaie in spirite to a highe and great mountaine and shewed me the holie cittie of Ieruzalem which descended from heauen and shyned with the clearenes of almightie God and the light thereof was like to the glisteringe brightnes of pretious stones This cittie had one great and highe walle in which were twelue gates and in the gates twelue Angels accordinge to the nomber of the gates The foundatiōs of the walles of this cittie were wholye wroughte with pretious stones and the twelue gates thereof were twelue pearles euerie gate made of one pearle and the streat of this cittie was of pure golde like vnto a verie cleare glasse and I sawe no temple therein because our Lorde God almightie and the lambe were the temple and the cittie had no neede of Sonne or Moone to geue light vnto it forsomuche as the clearnes of almightie God doth lighten it and the lampe that burneth there is the lambe Moreouer the Angell shewed me a floud of the water of lyfe as clear as the christal which issued out of the seat of almightie God and of the lambe Apoc. 22. In the middest of the streat and both on the one side of the floude and on the other was planted the tree of lyfe which brought forthe twelue fruites in the yeare euerie monethe his fruite and the leaues of this tree serued for the healthe of nations No maner of malediction shall euer be seene there but there shal be the seat of almightie God and of the ābe And his seruātes shall serue him and they shall see his face and haue the name of him written in their foreheaddes and they shal reigne for euer and euer worlde without ende Beholde here dear brother the bewtie of this cittie described vnto thee not that thou maist thinke that these thinges are there in such a materiall sort as the wordes doe sounde but that by meanes of these thou maist conceiue other more spirituall and more excellent thinges which are figured vnto vs by these materiall thinges The situation and greatnes of the heauenlie cittie The situation of this cittie is aboue all the heauens and the greatnes and largenes thereof exceideth all measure For if euerie one of the starres of heauen be so great as we haue before declared how great then must that heauen be that conteineth in it all the starres and all the heauens Suerlie there is no greatnes in the worlde that maie be compared vnto this For as a holie father saiethe from the west parte of Spayne vnto the vttermost borders of the Indiens a shippe maie saile if it haue a prosperous wynde in fewe daies but that region of heauen is so great that the starres which are more swifte than the sonne beames can not finishe their course in it in manie yeares The goodlie workemanshippe of the buildinge Now if thou demaunde of the workmanshippe of that buildinge there is no tonge able to expresse it For if that worke that appeareth outwardly to our mortall eies be so goodly and bewtifull what is to be supposed of all the rest that is there reserued
is receaued corporallie not that he is changed into men Note what a wonderfull operation this blessed Sacramente worketh in him that worthelie receaueth the same but men are changed into him by loue and conformetie of will for so much as this diuine meate worketh the same operation in him that doth worthelie receaue it that is wrowght and represented in it when it is consecrated For like a● by the vertue of the wordes of consecration that which was bread is conuerted into the substance of Christ euen so by vertue of this holie communion he that was man is by a merueilous maner transformed spirituallie into God So that like as that diuine bread is one thinge and appeareth an other and was one thinge before consecration and is an other thinge afterwardes euen so he that eateth the same is one thinge before the receauing and an other thinge afterwardes and he appeareth one thinge outwardlie but in verie deede is an other thinge and that farre more highe and excellent inwardlie for somuch as he hath the beinge and substance of man and withall the spirite of God Now then what glorie can be geater than this what gifte more pretious what benefitt of more valewe what greater showe of loue let all the workes of nature kepe silence A notable commēdatiō of this most blessed Sacramente and of the wounderful effectes it worketh in him that receaueth it worthelie let all the workes of grace geue place For this is a worke excellinge all workes and this is a singuler grace aboue all graces O most wonderfull sacrament what shall I saie of thee with what wordes shall I commend thee thou art the life of our soules the medecine of our woundes the comfort of our troubles the memorie of Iesus Christ the testimonie of his loue the most pretious legacie of his testament the companion of our peregrination the consolation of our bannishement the burninge cole to enkendle the fier of the loue of God in vs the meane whereby to receaue grace the pledge of euerlastinge felicitie and the treasure of the christian life By meanes of this diuyne meate the soule is vnited vnto her spouse by this the vnderstandinge is illuminated the memorie quickened the will ennamored the inward tast delighted the deuotion increased the bowelles mollified the founteine of teares opened the passions of the minde quieted the good motions awakened our weakenes fortified and by meane of this diuine meate we receue strength and lustines to ascend vp●euen to the hill of almightie God What tounge is able fullie to expresse the excellencie of this most blessed sacrament Who can geue worthie thankes for so great a benefit Who will not be altogether resolued into teares when he seeth almightie God vnited vnto him Assuredlie the more we goe about to consider the excellencie and vertues of this diuine souereyne misterie the more doe we want wordes to expresse it and the more doth our vnderstanding faile vs therein Now what pleasure what sweetnes what delightfull sauours of good life doth the soule of the iust man feele at that time when he receiueth this diuine sacramant There is none other sownd harde at that time but onely sweete songes of the inwarde man vehement burstinge out of holie desires yeelding of thākes and vtteringe most sweet wordes all tending to the praise of our sweete sauiour Christ her beloued There the deuout soule throwghe the vertu of this most holie and reuerent sacrament is altogether inwardlie renewed and replenished with ioye There she is recreated with deuotion fed with peace fortified in faith confirmed in hope and tied fast with bandes and knottes of charitie vnto her most sweete sauiour and redeemer Whereby she waxeth dailie more feruent in loue more stronge in resistinge temptation more prompt and readie to susteine labour and trauaile more carefull and diligente to doe good workes and more desirous to frequent this most holie misterie Such are thy giftes o sweete Iesus such are the workes and delightes of thy loue which thou art wont to communicate vnto thy frendes by meanes of this diuine sacrament And this thou doest to the end that we beinge filled with these so great and mightie delightes should dispise all other vaine and deceitfull delightes Now therefore o most mellifluous loue open the eies of thy faithfull Catholicke people open them I beseach thee o most diuine light that with the bright beames of liuely faith they maie knowe thee and dilate there hartes that they maie receathee ue thee into them that beinge instructed by thee they maie seeke thee by thee and repose and rest them selues in thee and fynallie by meanes of this most blessed sacrament be vnited with thee as members with theire head and as braunches with theire vyne that so they may liue throwgh thy vertue and enioye the influences of thy grace for euer and euer worlde without end Amen The meditation being ended there followe immediatlye thankes geuinge and petition as hath bene before declared THIS DAIE WHEN THOV hast made the signe of the Crosse and prepared thy selfe hereunto thou hast to meditate vpon these two poyntes to witt vpon the praier of our sauiour in the Garden and vpon his apprehension The text of the holie Euangelistes VHEN supper was done Christ went with his disciples into a garden which is called Gethsemanie And he said vnto them Sit ye here whilest I goe and praie yonder And he tooke with him Peter and the two sonnes of Zebedee And he begane to be in a great feare and heauines And he said vnto them My soule is heauie euen vnto death Tarie yee here and watch with me So he went a litle further from them where he cast him selfe downe prostrate on the earth and fell on his face and praied sainge O my Father if it be possible let this cuppe passe from me neuerthelesse not as I will but as thou wilt This done he came to his Disciples and fownd them a sleepe And he said to Peter what coulde ye not watch with me one howre watche and praie that ye enter not into temptation The spirite is readie but the fleshe is weake Againe he went awaie the seconde time and made the same praier saying O my Father if this cuppe cannot passe awaie from me but that I must needes drinke it thy will be done And he came the second time and founde his Disciples a sleepe for theire eyes were heauie So he left them and went awaie againe and praied the third time sayinge the same wordes Luc. 22. And there appeared an angell to him from heauen comfortinge him And beinge in an agonie he praied more at lengthe And his sweate was like droppes of bloude trickeling downe to the grownde Math. 26. Then he came to his Disciples and said vnto them Sleepe from hence forth and take your rest Behold the howre is at hand and the sonne of man shal be deliuered into the handes of synners Arise let vs goe beholde he is at
awake them out of theire heauie and drowsie sleepe Note also of what importance the saluation of mankinde is sith it is able to make him to sweate droppes of bloude by whose power the heauens are susteined And consider on the other side how little accompt men them selues make of theire owne saluation sith at such time as almightie God him selfe is so carefull and watchfull for them they are in a deepe heauie sleepe and vtterlie careles thereof Assuredlie nothinge could more liuely expresse both the one and the other than the consideration of these two pointes being so strange as they are For if almightie of others howe happeneth it that the verie persons them selues to whom euen the charge and traueille of the affaires apperteineth together with the profit commoditie losse and damage of the same do liue with such carelesnes and negligence therin By this same care of our Sauiour and carelesnes of his disciples thou maist vnderstand how trewlie this Lorde is our father and how he hath indeede towardes vs the verie bowelles and hart of a true and louinge father How often times chaunceth it trowe ye that the daughter sleepeth verie sowndlie and quietlie when her father watcheth all the night carckinge and carynge for her releefe and prouision And euen so doth this our most louinge and mercifull father for vs whiles we be soheauie a sleepe and are vtterlie careles of our owne saluation as by this example is liuelie set out before our eies in that he continueth all the night watchinge and sweatinge and in great agonie to take order for the redēption he intended to bestowe vpon vs. HOW OVR SAVIOVR WAS APPREHENDED Non est seruus maior domino suo si me persecuti to sunt et vos persequentur Johan 15.20 § II. Of Iudas pressinge before all the rest to apprehende our Sauiour CONSIDER moreouer how when our sauiour had finished his praier Iudas that counterfait and false friende of his came thither with that hellishe cōpanie where renouncinge the office of an Apostle he became now the verie principall ringeleader and Captayne of Sathans armie Consider howe without all shame he pressed and set himselfe euen the verie formost before all the rest of his malicious rowte and comminge to his good maister solde him with a kisse of most treyterous and deceitfull fryndeshippe It is certaynelie a great miserie that a man should be solde for money but yet it is much more miserable if he be solde of his friendes and of such as to whom he hathe bene greatelie beneficiall before Now our sweete Sauiour Christ is solde of him whom he had made not onelie his disciple but also his Apostle yea he is solde of him by deceite ád plaine treason he is solde of him to most cruel merchantes that couete you may be sure nothing els of him but onelie his bloud and life to satisfie theire greadie honger But for what price trow ye is he sold the basenes and smalnes of the pryce increaseth the greatnes and malice of the iniurie Tell me O Iudas thou nowghtie traitor at what price doest thou set the Lord of all creatures At thirtie pence O what a vile and slender pryce is this for a Lorde of such maiestie Certeinlie a verie beast in the shambles is commonlie solde for more And doest thou o traitor sell for so smalle a pryce almightie God him selfe He settethe not thee at so smalle a pryce forsomuch as he byeth thee with his owne most pretious bloude O what a great price and estimation was that of man and how base an estimation and pryce was this of God God is solde for thirtie pence and man is bought euen with the verie pretiouse bloud of almightie God him selfe At the same tyme our sauiour said vnto them that came to laie handes vpon him Luc. 22. Math. 26. Ye become out as it were ageinst a theife with swordes and speeres and I satte daylie emonge you teachinge in the temple and ye neuer laid handes vpon me but this is your howre and the power of darkenes This is suerlie a misterie of great admiration For what thinge is more to be wondered at then to see the verie sonne of almightie God to take vpon him the Image and shape not onelie of a sinner but euen also of a condemned person Our sauiour was giuen vp to the power of the diuelles from the tyme of his apprehension vntill his deathe vpon the crosse Iob 2. This sayethe he is yowr howre and the power of darkenes The which wordes geue vs to vnderstande that from that time that most innocent lambe was geuen vp into the power of the princes of darckenes which are the diuells to the intent that by meanes of theire members and cruell ministers they might execute vpon him all the furious tormentes and cruelties they could deuise And like as holie Iob was by the permission of almightie God geuen vp into the power of Sathan that he might vse vpon him all the crueltie he woulde this onelie excepted that he should not bereiue him of his life euen so was there power geuen to the princes of darknes without anie exception either of life or death that they might fullie extende vpon that sacred humanitie all theire surie and rage to the vttermost they cowld Hereof rose those despightfull tauntes those slaunderous and reprochfull wordes such as the like were neuer harde before that tyme wherewith the diuell pretended to satisfie his vnsatiable rancre and malice to reuenge his iniuries and to cast that blested soule downe into some kinde of impatiencie if it had bene possible Almightie God saith the Prophet Zacharie shewed Iesus the highe preist vnto me Zach. 3. apparelled with a spotted garmente and Sathan stoode at his right hande readie prepared to speake against him But our Sauiour answered for his parte sayinge I did alwaies set God before myne eies Psalm 15. who standeth at my right hande that I be not remoued Consider then now o my soule how much that highe and diuine maiestie abased himselfe for thy sake sithence he vowchesaffed to come to the last extremitie of all miseries which is to be geuen vp to the power of deuilles And because this was the paine that was due to thy synnes it pleased him to put euen himself to this paine that thou mightest remaine quite and free from the same Psalm 8. O holie Prophet why doest thou wonder to see almightie God become inferior to his angells thou hast now farre greater cause to wonder to see him geuen vp into the power of deuilles Vndowtedlie both the heauens and the earthe trembled and quaked at this so passinge great humilitie and charitie of our Sauiour So soone as these wordes were spoken foorthwith all that hellishe rowte and malitiouse rable of raueninge wolues assaulted this most meeke and innocent lambe and some verie furiouslye haled him this waie and some that waie eache one to the vttermost of his power O how
trouble O how farre do these mattins differre from those which the orders of angells sounge at the same time in heauen vnto thee There they synge Holie Holie but here these caitifes crie out put him to death put him to death crucifie him crucifie him O ye angelles of Paradise that heard both these voices what thowghte ye when ye sawe him so despitefullie contemned in earthe whom ye honoure with so greate reuerence in heauen What thowght ye whē ye sawe almightie God himselfe suffer such despites euen for theire sakes who did all this villanie vnto him Who hath euer heard of such a kinde of charitie that one woulde suffer death to deliuer the verie same persons from death that were the procurers of his death Assuredlie the malice of man coulde not anie further extende it selfe in committinge a more wicked deede than thus to presume to laie handes vpon almightie God him selfe neither coulde the goodnes and mercie of almightie God appeare more plainlie in anie thinge than in this that he was content to suffer such a cruell death for that verie creature that conspired his deathe The painfull greifes and turmoyles of this troublesome night were increased farre the more by the denyall of S. Peter For he Of the deniall of S. Peter who was so familiare a frende of our Sauiour he whom our Sauiour chose to see the glorie of his transfiguration and he who aboue all the rest of his Apostles was honoured ād chosen by our Sauiour Christ promised S. Peter in Math. 16. vers 18. that he woulde buylde his Church vpon him And in Luke 22. vers 32. he was bid after he shoulde repent his denyall to confirme his brethren And in Iohn 21. vers 17. Christ after his resurrection made S. Peter pastor of all his sheepe to haue the pincipalitie and cheife rule of the whole Christian Churche this verie cheife Apostle I saie first before all others not once but three seuerall tymes together euen in the verie presence of his Lorde and master sweareth and forsweareth that he knoweth him not and that he wist not who he is O Peter is he that standeth there by thee so wicked a man that thou accomptest it so great a shame onelie to haue knowen him Consider that this is a condemnation of him by thee before he be condemned by the high preistes sithence by this deniall thou geuest the worlde to vnderstande that he is such a maner of man that euen thou thy selfe doest accompt it as a greate reproche and dishonour vnto thee euer to haue knowen him Now what greater iniurie coulde be done than this Our Sauiour then hearinge this deniall turned backe and behelde Peter and cast his eies vpon that shepe which there was lost from him O looke of wounderfull vertue O silent looke but yet full of misterie and signification Peter vnderstode right well the langwage and voice of that looke and althowgh the crowinge of the Cocke was not able to awake his spirites yet was this able as indeede it did For the eies of our Sauiour Christe doe not onelie speake but also worke as it plainlie appeared by the teares of Peter which albeit they gushed from the eies of Peter yet did they much more proceide from the looke and eies of Christe Wherefore when thou shalt at anie time awake againe out of thy sinfull lyfe and with greife and sorowe call thy sinnes to minde wherein thou hast offended almightie God thou must vnderstande that this benefit proceideth from the mercifull eies of our Lorde which doe then looke vpon thee The Cockes had alreadie crowed but Peter remembred not himselfe because our sauiour had not as yet looked vpon him But when our Sauiour Christ looked vpon him then he remembred him selfe and repented and bewailed his offence For the eies of Christ doe open our eies and those are the eies that doe awake such as are a-sleepe The holie Euangelistes S. Mathew and S. Luke saye that Peter went out forthwith Math. 26.75 Luc. 23.62 Peter after his deniall of Christe wente forthewith out of the place and wepte bitterlie and wept bitterlie to geue thee to vnderstande that it is not enowghe for thee to be sorie and bewaile thyne offence but that it is requisite also to auoyde and eschewe the verie place and occasions of sinne For otherwise to lamente and be sorie alwaies for thy sinnes and alwaies to reiterate and commit the same sinnes againe is to prouoke alwaies the wrathe and anger of almightie God against thee And note well and diligentlie this poynt espetiallie A disciple of Christ must not be ashamed nor afearde openlic to confesse Christ and his Catholike religion that the principall sinne that Peter had committed was for that he shronke backe and feared to be accompted one of Christe his disciples and in this his doinge he is saied to haue denied Christe Now if this be to denie Christe how manie Christians trowe ye maye ye now finde in the worlde that doe after this sorte denie Christ Alas how manie be there at this daye that refuse to confesse their synnes to communicate to praye to talke of God and of spirituall matters to vse conuersation with suche as be good and vertuous and to suffer iniuries and trowbles because the worlde shoulde not the lesse estieme them or haue them in contempte for the same And what is this els but euen to be ashamed to appeare to the worlde to be a disciple of Christe and a keper of his commaundementes And what is this els but to denye Christe as S. Peter denied him when he was ashamed to be accompted his disciple What other thinge maie those that behaue them selues after this sorte hope and looke for at the dreadfull daie of Iudgment but that punnishement and sentence threatened by our sauiour Christe himselfe sayeinge He that is ashamed to be accompted my disciple before men Luc. 9. 12. Math. 10. Marc. 8.2 Tim. 2. the sonne of the virgin wil be ashamed to acknowledge him as one of his when he shall come in his maiestie and in the maiestie of the father and his holie Angelles HOW OVR SAVIOVR WAS BROWGHT BEFORE KINGE Herode and mocked and accompted for a foole by him and his cowertiers Si mundus vos odit scitote quia me priorem vobis odio habuit Johan 19.28 A●t● Reges et praesides stabitis propter me in testimonium illis Marc. 13.9 VHEN this painfull and troublesome night was ended they led our Sauiour forthewith to the howse of Pilate the president And Pilate vnderstandinge that he was borne in Galilee sent him vnto Herode that was kinge of that countrie who tooke him for a foole and as such a one caused him to be appareiled in a white garmente and so returned him backe to Pilate againe Whereby it appeareth that our Sauiour was taken in this worlde not onelie for a malefactor but also for a verie foole O misterie worthie of great reuerence The
and weightie burthen his knees tremblinge vnder him his bodie crowchinge vnder the crosse his modest eies and face all blouddye with that dolorous garlande of thorne vpon his heade and besides all this annoyed with those most shamefull opprobrious exclamations and outcries which they gaue out in the waye against him But now in the meane tyme o my soule withdrawe thyne eies a little while from this cruell sight The sorowfull tydinges hereof to the blessed virgin Marie and hye thee with quicke speede with heauines of harte and greate store of teares trickelinge downe by thy checkes towardes the howse of the blessed virgine Marie And when thou art come thither cast thy selfe downe at her feete and speake these wordes in most dolefull and lamentable wise vnto her O Ladye of angells and Quene of heauen O gate of paradice and aduocate of the worlde O refuge of sinners and health of the iust O ioye of the Sainctes and teacher of vertues O mirrour of cleannes O patterne of patience and example of all perfection Woe is me O blessed ladie woe is me why am I preserued aliue to see this present howre How can I liue hauinge now seene with myne eies that dolefull sight which I haue seene What neede more wordes Alas deere virgine and most blessed mother I haue left thy onely begotten sonne my sweete Lorde and Sauiour in the cruell handes of his malitious ennemies with a crosse vpon his shoulders where vpon he shal be crucified Now what vnderstandinge is able to comprehende how deepely these sorowfull newes pearced the most tender harte of that most blessed virgin Here her sowle beganne to waxe fainte Her face and all the partes of her vnspotted maydenlie bodie were couered all ouer with a deadlie sweate which might haue sufficed to ende her life sauinge that by diuine dispensation she was reserued for greater angwishes and so consequentlie for a greater crowne and rewarde in the kingdome of heauen Now the holie virgin walkethe towardes her sweete sonne and the great desire she hath to see him restoreth vnto her againe the force and strengthe which sorrowe and greife had taken awaie She hearethe a farre of the classhinge of armour the trowpes of the people and those most shamefull exclamations and outcries which in most dispitefull wise were thundered by his outragious cruell enemies against him And incontinentlie she seethe the glisteringe speares and halbardes which were holden vp a loft She fyndethe in the waye the droppes and traces of bloude whereby she might easelie tracke him which waie he had gone and she needeth none other gwide to conducte her vnto him She approcheth nearer and nearer vnto her deerlie beloued sonne she openeth her eies which were verie sore dymmed with sorowfull weapinge to proue whether she might see him whom her soule so exceadinglie loued O what a strange combatte was there now of feare and loue in the dolorous harte of the most blessed virgin Marie In one respecte she had a desiere to see him and in an other she was vnwillinge to see him thus miserablie and most cruelly disfigured At the lengthe when she was come where she might see him indeede then those two lightes of heauen doe beholde one an other and theire hartes embrace sweetly together by meanes of theire eies How beit the sight of one an other in this dolefull wise was a verie great corsie to bothe theire afflicted soules Theire tongues were dōme so that neither of them both for a while spake one worde but the naturall affection of that most sweete sonne spake priuely to the heauie hart of the most blessed virgin and saied vnto her Why commest thou hither my doue my beloued and my deere mother Thy sorowe increaseth myne and thy tormentes do augment my paines and be a great torment vnto me Departe my deere mother departe I beseach thee and retourn home againe to thy howse For it is not seemelie for thy virginall shamefastnes and puretie to be here in the companie of murderers and theeues And if it woulde please thee so to doe it woulde certeinly asswage both thy sorrowe and myne And I will remaine here to be sacrificed for the worlde For this office apperteineth not to thee but vnto me and thy innocencie deserueth not this torment Genes 8. Retourne therefore my doue to the arcke vntill such time as the waters of the floude doe cease forsomuch as here thou shalt finde no place where thou mayst rest thy feete There mayst thou attende to thy accustomed diuout praier and contemplation And there by liftinge vp thy soule in godlie meditations aboue thy selfe thou shalt passe ouer more easely this thy dolefull sorowe and greiffe Now this beinge saide the sorowfull heauie harte of the holie mother made answere to her sonne and saied vnto him Why doest thou commaunde me to doe thus my deere sonne Why wouldest thou haue me to depart awaie from this place Thou knowest o my Lord God that in thy presence each thinge is lawfull vnto me and that there is non other Oratorie but where thou arte How can I then departe awaie from thee vnles I shoulde departe from my selfe This griefe and sorrowe so possesseth my harte that trewlie I can not thinke vpon anie other thinge I can goe no whither without thee neither can I seeke or receaue comfort of any other but of thee Vpon thee is fixed all my whole harte Within thee haue I made my habitation And my life whollie dependeth of thee Seinge therefore thou hast vowchesaffed for the space of nine monethes to inhabite within my bowels and to take my bodie for thy dwellinge place why maye not I for these three daies take thy bowels for my habitation If thou wilt thus receaue me within thee when thou art crucified then shall I be crucified with thee and when thou arte buried then shall I be buried also together with thee With thee woulde I drinke of the gaule and vineger With thee woulde I suffer vpon the crosse And with thee woulde I yeelde vp my ghost Such wordes as these spake the blessed virgin in her dolefull harte as she went And after this sort she passed ouer that painfull and ircksome waie vntill she came to the place of the Sacrifice I H S FRIDAIE MORNINGE THIS daie when thou hast made the signe of the crosse and prepared thy selfe hereunto thou hast to meditate vpon the misterie of the crosse And vpon these seuen wordes which our Sauiour spake beinge crucified on the same Vere filius dei erat iste Math. 27.54 Peccata nostra ipse pertulit in corpore suo super lignum ut peccatis mortui iustitiae viveremus pet 2.24 The text of the holie Euangelistes THEY came saieth the holie Euangelist to the place called Golgotha Math. 27. that is to saie the place of dead mens skulles And they gaue him vinegar to drinke mingled with gaule And when he had tasted thereof he woulde not drincke It was then three a clocke And
of God knowe yee likewise 4. Reg 4. that this is that pretious vessell of the widowe of Elizeus full of oyle wherewith we must all paie our dettes And albeit the vessell seeme verie little to serue so manie yet looke not to the quantitie but to the vertue thereof which is certeinlie so great that so longe as there be vessels to fille so longe will the vayne of this sacred licour alwaies ronne and neuer ceasse A CONTEMPLATION VPON the misterie of the Crosse § I. AWAKE I praie thee now o my soule and beginne to contemplate vpon the misterie of this holie Crosse by the fruite whereof the hurte of that poisoned fruite is repared which the forbidden tree caused vnto vs throwgh the offence of the first man Adam As the bridegrome hath signified to his spouse in the canticles When he saied cantic 8. I haue raised thee vp my spouse from vnder the tree because vnder an other tree thy mother was corrupted when she was deceaued by the auncient serpente Consider then how when our Sauiour came to this place his cruell ennemies to make his deathe the more reprochefull stripped him of all his apparell euen to his innermost garment which was wholie wouen throwghout without anie seame Beholde now here with what meekenes this most innocent lambe suffereth himselfe to be thus stripped of all his garmentes without openinge his mowthe or speakinge so much as one worde against them that handeled him with such villanie But shewed himselfe rather verie willinge and readie to be spoiled of his garmentes and to remaine naked to the shame of the worlde to the intent that the nakednes of such as had throwgh sinne lost the garmente of innocencie and grace receaued might be be couered after a better sorte Genes 3. than with the leaues of the figtree Some holie fathers reporte that the tormentors in pluckinge of our Sauiours garmentes toke of his crowne of thorne which then stucke fast on his head and that afterwardes when they had stripped him starcke naked they set it on agayne and fastened the sharpe thornes to the brayne panne afreshe and so made newe holes and woūdes therein which was an exciedinge great griefe and payne vnto him And vndowtedlie it is to be thought that they woulde vse this kinde of crueltie against him forsomuch as we are well assured that they vsed manie others and those verie strange in all the proces of his passion especially consideringe that the holie Euangelist sayeth Lucae 23. that they did vnto him whatsoeuer they woulde Agayne by reason of his garment that stucke fast to the woundes of his scourginges and bloude which was now congealed vnto the same at what tyme they pluckt it of from his bodie as those caitiffes were farre from all pietie and mercie they haled it of with such furious haste and force that they loosed and renewed all the soores of his whippinges in such ruefull wise that his blessed bodie was in all partes open and as it were flaine and became all one greate wounde out of which distilled bloude on all partes Consider now here o my soule The nakednes of our Sauiour vpon the crosse the excellencie of the goodnes and mercie of almightie God which sheweth it selfe so euidentlye in this misterie Consider how he that clotheth the heauens with cloudes and adorneth the feildes with flowers and bewtie is here spoiled of all his garmentes Consider how the bewtie of the Angells is here defiled how the height of the heauēs is here browght lowe how the maiestie and omnipotencie of almightie God is here abased and put euen to open shame and reproche Beholde how that roiall bloude distillinge out from his brayne trickeleth downe all alonge by the heare of his head and by his sacred bearde insomoche as it watereth and dyeth the verie grownde vnder him Consider what extreme colde that holie tender bodie of his suffered standinge as he stode all rente and spoyled not onelie of his garmentes but also euen of his verie skynne hauinge withall so manie gappes and wyde holes of open soores and deepe woundes throughout all his blessed bodie For if S. Peter Ioan. 18. notwithstandinge he was both clothed and shodde felt colde the night before how farre greater smarte and colde did that most tender bodie of our sauiour abyde beinge so naked and full of soore bruses and woundes as it was Whereby it appeareth that albeit our Sauiour in all the whole cowerce of his life gaue vnto vs so wounderfull examples of nakednes Our Sauiour Christ was a most perfit patterne of pouertie vnto vs vpon the crosse and pouertie yet at his deathe he gaue himselfe vnto vs as a most perfit patterne and spectacle of this vertue Forsomuch as at that tyme he was in such a poore case that he had no place wherevpon to rest his head And to geue vs to vnderstand that he had taken nothinge of the worlde he died naked vpon the crosse and had nothinge of the worlde to cleaue vnto him Accordinge to this example S. Francis was a perfit folower of the pouertie of our Sauiour Christ we reade of the blessed holie father S. Francis who was such a perfit and trewe folower of this pouertie of our Sauiour Christe that at what time he shoulde geue vp the ghost he stripped him selfe starcke naked of all he had vpō him and threwe himselfe from his bed vpon the bare grounde and beinge thus naked he embraced the earthe to imitate herein as a faithfull seruante the nakednes and pouertie of his Lorde and Sauiour Awake therefore o my soule awake now I praye thee and learne thou also hereby to imitate our Sauiour Christ poore and naked Learne to despise all such thinges as this transitorie worlde maye geue vnto thee that thou maist be worthie to embrace our Lorde naked with naked armes and be vnited vnto him by loue which ought also to be naked without mixture of anie other strange loue HOW OVR SAVIOVR WAS NAILED VPON THE CROSSE § II. CONSIDER after this how our Sauiour was nailed vpō the Crosse and how passinge great griefe and tormente he suffered at that time when those great and square nailes were driuen in and pearced through the most sensible and tender partes of his most blessed bodie which was of all bodies most tēder and delicate And consider also what an extreme grieffe it was to the blessed virgin when she sawe with her eies and hearde with her eares the mightie and cruell harde strokes which were so often and so thicke laied on and iterated one after an other vpon his diuine members For certainlie those hammers and nailes as they passed throwghe the handes of the sonne so did they also pearce the verie harte of his most tender and louinge mother Consider moreouer how they lifted vp the Crosse on highe and how when they went about to ramme it in the hole which they had made for that purpose such was the crueltie
of those tormentinge raginge ministers that at the verie time of rearinge it vp and placinge it therein they let it falle furiouslie from them with a iumpe into the hoole with all the weight thereof and so all his blessed bodie was sore shaken and iogged vp and downe in the aier and thereby his woundes were wydened and enlarged and his paines and grieffes more encreased Now therefore o my sweete Sauiour and redeemer what harte is so stonie harde that will not ryue in sunder for verie sorrowe and griefe sith the verie stones them selues were ryuen the same daie consideringe the extreme paine that thou sufferedest on the Crosse The sorrowes of deathe ô Lorde Psalm 17. Psalm 68. haue compassed thee about and the waues of the Sea haue ouer whelmed thee Thou art myred in the depthe of the bothomles goulfes and fyndest nothinge wherevpon to staie thy selfe Thy father ô Lorde hath forsaken thee what hope maist thou haue of men Thy ennemies make outcries against thee thy fryendes breake thy harte thy soule is afflicted and for the loue thou bearest to me thou wilt not admit any maner of comforte Vndowtedlie ô Lorde my sinnes were verie greate and haynous and that doth thy penance well declare I see thee ô my kinge fastened to a tree and there is nothinge to susteine thy bodie but onelie three iron nailes wherevpon thy sacred fleas he hangeth without anie other staie or comforte When the weight and swaie of thy bodie staieth vpon thy feete then are the woundes of thy feete the more torne and enlarged with the nailes wherewith they are pearced Againe when the weight of thy bodie staieth vpon thy handes then are the woundes of thy handes the more rente and enlarged also with the poyce of thy bodie One of thy members cannot succour an other but with equall preiudice either of the one or of the other Now as touchinge thy holie head beinge thus tormented and weakened with the sharpe crowne of thornes what pillowe hath it to rest vpon O how well might thy armes ô most excellent virgin be here employed to supplie this office But alas thine armes maye not serue at this present but onely the armes of the Crosse Vpon them must our Sauiour staie his sacred head when he will rest and yet so that the ease he taketh thereof is nothinge els but a further driuinge in of the thornes and fasteninge of the same deeper into the braine Besides all this I see those foure principall woundes as it were foure fountaines alwaies distillinge out bloude I see the grownde all besprinckled and bedewed rounde about with bloude I see that most pretious licour all betrampled and shed vpon the earthe which crieth much better then did the bloude of Abell Genesis 4. Heb. 12. For his bloude cryed for vengeance ageinst the murderer but this most pretious bloude of thine O sweete Iesus craueth pardon for synners OF THE COMPASSION THE SONNEHAD VPON HIS mother and the mother vpon her sonne hanginge vpon the Crosse § III. THE sorowes of the sonne were much increased by reason of the presence of his most blessed mother wherewith his dolefull harte was no lesse crucified within than his holie bodie without Two crosses be here prepared for thee ô good Iesus this daie The one for thy bodie and the other for thy soule The one is of passion and the other of compassion The one pearcethe thy most blessed bodie with nailes of iron th' other pearceth thy most holie soule with nailes of sorowe Who is able to declare ô sweete Iesus what an vnspekeable greife it was vnto thee when thou diddest cōsider the greate anguishes of the blessed soule of thy holie mother which thou knewest so certeinlie was crucified with thee on the crosse Luc. 2. When thou sawest her pittiefull harte pearced and thrust throughe with the knife of heauines and sorrowe When thou diddest open thy blouddie eies and beheldest her diuine face whollie ouercast with palenes and wannes of death When thou sawest those most grieuous paynes and anguishes of her minde which was not resolued with deathe and yet abode greater paines then the verie paines of deathe it selfe When thou beheldest those riuers of teares which gusshed out from her most pure eies and hardest those so lamentable deepe sighes and sobbes which burst out of her sacred brest beinge enforced with the vehemencie of her most grieuous heauines and sorowe Certeinlie ô Lorde it can not be expressed with wordes how muche this inuisible crosse tormented thy most pittiefull harte And who is able to declare also o most blessed mother the greatnes of the sorrowes and anguishes of thy dolefull harte When thou sawest him dye with such grieuous tormentes whom thou sawest borne with so great ioye When thou sawest him scorned and blasphemed of men whom there thou sawest praised of the angells When thou sawest that holie bodie which thou haddest handeled with so great reuerence and browght vp with such motherlie tendernes and cheres hinges so cuill entreated and tormented by most wicked persons When thou beheldest that diuine mouthe of his which thou haddest nourished with the milke of heauen distempered with the bitter tast of gaulle and vynegar When thou diddest also beholde that diuine head which thou haddest so often times laied and rested on thy virgines brest all to begored now with bloude and crowned with thornes O how often diddest thou lift vp thyne eies on highe to beholde that diuine shape that had so often times reioysed thy soule in beholdinge the same And how often agayne did thyne eyes turne aside from him because the tendernes of thy harte coulde not abide to see that dolefull sighte What tonge is able to expresse the greatnes of this sorrowe If the soules that loue our Sauiour Christe truelie and vnfaynedly when they meditate vpon these sorowes beinge now past haue such a tender compassion vpon him what diddest thou then o most blessed virgin beinge his mother yea and more than a mother when thou sawest presentlie with thine eies such a sonne suffer such a most cruell and painfull passion If those women that accompanied our sauiour when he went with his Crosse towardes his death beinge neither of kinne nor of acquaintance vnto him did weape and lamente to see him goe after such a pittiefull sorte How great then was the abondance of teares that fell from thine eies O blessed mother when thou sawest him who was so deerelie beloued vnto thee not onelie carryenge the Crosse on his shoulders but nailed also fast vnto it and hoysed vp alofte vpon the same And albeit these thy griefes and sorrowes were so great yet diddest not thou ô blessed virgin refuse the companie of the Crosse neither wouldest thou turne thy backe but stoodest there euen harde and fast by the same and not fallinge downe in sowndes nor yet ouerthrowen to the grounde but like a stronge pillar standinge vpright vpon thy feete Genes 3. beholdinge with inestimable sorrowe and
armes And so she wryngeth her handes verie pittiefullie and requesteth of those noble men with great humilitie and instancie that forsomuch as she had taken no leaue of her deerelie beloued sonne nor receaued those last embracinges of him vpon the crosse at the tyme of his departure they woulde now suffer her to come vnto him and not encrase her discomforte on euerie syde She beseacheth them that they woulde not deale so straitly with her as the enemies had done takinge her sweete sonne from her beinge now dead as the enemies did whiles he was yet aliue O blessed Ladie how voide of comforte arre thou on euerie syde For if they denie thee thy request thou wilt be sore discomforted and if they graunte thee thy petition accordinge to thy earnest desire yet shall thy discomfort be neuer a whit diminished Thy miseries haue no comfort at all but onely in thy patience If thou goe about on the one side to diminishe thy sorrowe on the other side it increaseth dowble Now ye holie men what will yee doe in this case What is your best aduice and counsell in this matter To geue a flat deniall vnto such lamentable teares and to so blessed a Ladie in so iust and reasonable a request were certainlie an vnseemlie acte and to graunt her the thinge she demaundeth were to ende her life You are afrayd on the one syde to discomfort her and on th' other syde you feare also least perhappes you shoulde be murderers of the mother as the enemies were of the sonne In conclusion the pittiefull earnestnes of the holie virgin ouercōmeth them and those noble men thought best that consideringe her great dolefull bewailinge and lamentation it shoulde be a greater crueltie to take her owne deare sonne frō her than to bereiue her of her life And so they were enforced to graunte her request Now when the blessed virgin had by her pittiefull intercession gotten the bodie of her deare sonne into her armes what tonge is able to expresse the greate inwarde anguishe and sorrowe which then she felte O ye angells of peace weepe with this holie virgin O ye heauens lament with her O ye sterres of heauen and all creatures of the worlde accompanie the blessed virgin Marie in her great heauines and dolefull lamētation The blessed mother embraceth the torne and rent bodie of her sweete sonne She huggeth and clippeth him fast to her brest her strengthe seruinge her to this thinge onely She putteth downe her face betwene the thornes of his sacred head She ioyneth countenāce with countenance The face of the mother is embrued with the bloude of the sonne and the face of the sonne is bathed with the teares of the mother O sweete mother is this happly thy sweete sonne Is this he whom thou conceauedst with so great glorie and broughtest fourthe with so great ioye Where are now thy former ioyes become Whither is thy wonted gladnes gone Where is now that mirrour of beawtie wherein thou diddest so often times beholde thy selfe Now thou takest no pleasure to beholde him in the face because his eies haue lost their light Now it auayleth thee not to speake and talke with him because his eares haue lost their hearinge Now that tonge moueth not which was wont to vtter the wordes of heauen Now are those eies dimmed which were wont with theire sighte to reioyce the whole worlde How is it that thou speakest not now ô Quene of heauen How happeneth it that verie sorrowe and heauines hath thus tyed vp thy tōge Trew it is that the tonge of the blessed virgin was as it were domme for a tyme but her harte might secretly with inward greife speake vnto her sweete and dearelie beloued sonne and saie vnto him THE PITTIEFVLL LAMENTATION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARIE Tuam ipsius animam pertransiet gladius reuelentur ex multis cordibus cogitationes Luc. 2.35 O life dead ô light obscured ô bewtie defyled Note that the intention of the awthor is not to represent here exactly and precisely the affections of the blessed virgin but onelie by expressinge her doleful griefes to moue the readers to deuotion and pietie What blouddie handes were those that haue so disfigured thy diuine shape What crowne is this that my handes do feele vpon thy head What wounde is this that I see in thy syde O highe preist of the worlde What dolefull markes and signes are these that my eies doe see in thy bodie Who hath bespotted the cleare glasse and bewtie of heauen Who hath disfigured the face of all graces Are these the eies that were wont to dymme the sonne with theire bewtie Are these the handes that raised vp the dead whom they towched Is this the mowthe out of which the fower Riuers of paradice issued Haue the handes of men such power against God O my sweete sonne and bloude of my bodie from whence arose this terrible tempest What raginge storme hath this bene that hath so bereued thee from me O my deere sonne what shall I doe now without thee Whither shall I goe Who shal be able to helpe me Manie fathers and brothers when they were afflicted came to entreat thee for theire children and brethen that were dead and thou with thy infinit vertue and clemencie diddest comforte and helpe them But I alas that see myne owne deere sonne my father my brother and my Lorde here dead before me to whom shall I make sure for him Who shall comfort me Where is the good Iesus of Nazareth the sonne of almightie God which cōforteth the liuinge and restoreth life vnto the dead Where is that great Prophet so mightie both in wordes and worckes O my sweete sonne which heretofore hast bene my comfort and rest but now a verie sharpe knyfe to my sorowfull and heauie harte What hast thou done why the Iewes shoulde thus crucifie thee on the crosse What cause had they to put thee to so cruell and shamefull a death Is this the thankes for so manie good workes as thou hast wrought emonge them Is this the rewarde that is giuen vnto vertue Is this the recompence for such diuine doctrine Hath the wickednes of the worlde extended it selfe so farre Hath the malice of the deuill bene so furiouslie bent Hath the goodnes and clemencie of almightie God yealded so farre forthe Is the horror and hatred which almightie God beareth against synne so passinge great What was so great a satisfaction requisite to satisfie for the synne of one Is the rigour of godes iustice so streit Doth almightie God make so great accompt of the saluation of men O my sweete sonne what shall I doe with out thee Thou arte my sonne my father my spouse my maister and all my companie I am now become as it were an Orphan without a father a widowe without a husbande I am now alone and depriued of such a maister and of such a sweete companion Now shall I not see thee anie more to enter in at my gates wearied with the
vnto so highe a maiestie Is this the thanckfulnes that thou yeeldest for his so manifolde and so great benefits Is this the recōpence that thou makest vnto him for the pretious bloude which he hath shed for thee vpon the crosse Is this the repaiment for those lashes and buffettes which he suffered for thy sake O miserable and wretched creature that thou art Wretched vndowtedlie in consideration of that thou hast lost and more wretched in respect of the sinnes thou hast committed but most wretched and miserable if thou be so blynded that euen yet for all this thou perceaue not thyne owne perdition and damnation Consider moreouer what a wonderfull hatred almightie God beareth against sinne and what great punnishementes he hath sent to the worlde for the same that hereby thou mayest more clearlie vnderstande how great and how abhominable the wickednes thereof is as it shal be declared hereafter When thou hast considered all these thinges aforesayd the next poynte is we must thinke verie basele of our selues that thou thinke of thy selfe as basely as thou canst possibly Thinke that thow art no better than a verie waueringe reede which is blowen vp and downe with euerie light blast of wynde without weight without strengthe without firmenes without staie and without anie maner of beinge Ioan. 11. Thinke that thou art a Lazarus that hath lyen dead fowre daies together and that thou art a stinckinge and abhominable carcas so full of wormes and of so vyle a stentche and sauour that as manie as passe by thee doe stoppe their noses and shutte their eies that they maye not beholde thee Thinke with thy selfe that thou doest stincke in this wise in the sight of almightie God and of his holie angels And esteeme thy selfe as vnworthy to lift vp thy eies towardes heauen vnworthy that the earthe shoulde beare thee vnworthie that anie creature shoulde serue thee vnworthie of the verie breade that thou eatest and vnworthie euen of the light and aier that thou receauest And if thou be vnworthie hereof consider how much more vnworthie thou art to speake and talke with almightie God Luc. 15. Luc. 18. yea and farre more vnworthie of the comfortes and consolations of the holie Ghost and of the cheryshinges and delightes of the children of God Accompte thy selfe for one of the most poore and miserable creatures of all the worlde and that none doth so much abuse the benefites of almightie God Marc. 11. as thou doest Thinke that if almightie God had wrought in Tire and Sidon that is in other verie greate sinners those thinges which he hath wrought in thee they woulde haue done penance ere this euen in sackclothe and ashes Acknowledge thy selfe to be farre more wicked than thou canst imagin and that notwithstandinge thou doest sincke verie deepe into this myer and howsoeuer thou imaginest thy selfe to be at the verie bottome yet maist thou fynde euerie daye how to sincke deeper and deeper therein Crie out therefore earnestlie vnto almightie God and saie vnto him O Lorde I haue nothinge I am worthe nothinge I am nothinge and nothinge can I doe without thee Luc. 7. Cast thy selfe downe prostrate with the publike sinner at our Sauiours feete and coueringe thy face for verie shame and cōfusion looke with what shame a womā will appeare before her husbande when she hath committed treason and adulterie against him with the verie same presente thy selfe before that heauenlie spouse against whom thou hast committed so manie and so shamefull adulteries And with great sorrowe and repentance of hart desire him to pardon thy synnes and offences and that it maye please him of his infinite pittie and mercie to receiue thee againe into his howse THE FIRST TREATISE OF THE CONSIDERATION OF SYNnes Wherein this former meditation is declared more at lardge THE first table after shipwracke as S Ierome witnesseth is penance This is the first steppe of this ascendynge and the first stone of this spirituall buildinge Now to obteine this vertue of pennance besides the grace of God whose gifte true penance is it helpeth verie much to consider the multitude of our sinnes aswell present as past and withall the greiuousnes and malice of them For of this consideration proceedeth the compunction and repentance for synnes And out of this consideration proceedeth not onely the vertue of pennance but also manye other vertues yea and those verie excellent For hereof commeth the knowledge of our selues of which pointe we minde to treat in the meditation nexte followinge Of this cōsideration also commeth the contempt of our selues the feare of God the abhorringe of sinne with diuers and sundrie other like affections wherein consisteth a verie great parte of perfection Now that this exercise maie be the more profitable vnto thee thou must applie and direct the same vnto all these endes and labour to sucke all these sweite fruites out of the bitter roote of this consideration But because towardes the obteyninge of such fruites it is nedefull to haue the grace of God which is principallie geuen to such as be humble and deuoute it shal be requisite for thee to desire of our Lorde this gifte of humilitie and deuotion to the ende that recollectinge thy selfe in the inwarde parte of thy harte Esa 38. thou mayest imitate that holie kinge who said I will recite before thoe ô Lorde all the yeares of my life in the bitternes of my harte OF THE MVLTITVDE OF THE SINNES THAT THOV HAST committed in thy former life § I. NOW if thou wilte knowe the nomber of thy synnes that thou hast committed in tymes past ronneouer briefly all the commaundementes and deadly sinnes and vndowtedly thou shalt finde that there is scarsely a commaundemente that thou hast not broken nor a deadly synne wherein thou hast not offended Of breakinge the commaundementes The first commaundemente is to honor almightie God who as S. Augustine saieth is honored with those thre Theologicall vertues FAITH HOPE AND CHARITIE Faythe Now what maner of Faith had he that hath liued so loosely as if he had beleued that all those thinges which his faith teacheth him had bene starke lyes What Hope had he Hope that neither remembred the life to come neither knewe what it was to call vpon almightie God in his troubles and aduersities nor yet how to put his assured trust Charitie and affiance in him What Charitie had he that hath more loued a pointe of honor more accompted of the chaffe of his worldly lucre and commoditie and more regarded the filthines of his pleasures and delites than almightie God him selfe syth that for euerie one of these thinges he hath contemned and offended almightie God Of reuerence vnto almightie God What reuerence hath he borne to that most highe and diuine maiestie that hath bene accustomed to rente that name of so great reuerence and to teare it in peeces in swearinge Of swerynge and forswerynge and forsweringe by it
sentence That there is nothinge more certaine than deathe nor nothinge more vncertain than the houre of deathe And therefore a certaine philosopher compared the liues of men to the belles or bubbles that are made in water pittes when it raineth of the which some doe vanishe awaie sodenlie euen at their verie risinge others doe endure a litle longer and out of hande are decaied others also doe continewe somewhat more and others lesse So that although they doe all endure but onely some litle time yet in that littell there is great varietie Wherefore if the ende of our lyfe be so vncertaine If it be so vncertein also when the dreadfull houre of our accompt shall come why doe we liue with such loosenes and negligence Why doe we not consider those wordes of our Sauiour where he sayeth vnto vs Matth. 24. watche because ye knowe not when the sonne of man shall come Marc. 13. O that men woulde waighe the force of this reason Luc. 12. Because ye knowe not the howre sayeth our Sauiour watche ye and be alwaies in a readines As if he had sayed in expresse wordes because ye knowe not the howre watche euerie howre because ye knowe not the moneth watche euerie moneth and because yee knowe not the yeare be still in a readines euerie yeare For although ye knowe not certainly what yeare he will call you yet most certaine it is that a yeare shall come in which vndowtedlie he will call you But that the force of this reason maie the better be perceaued let vs put an example Tell me if there were set before thee vpon a table thirtie or fourtie seuerall disshes of meat and thou haddest a certaine warninge geuen thee by some of thy friendes that in one of them there were poison durst thou geue the aduenture to eate of anie one of them althoughe thou were verie muche a hungered Vndowtedlie thou wouldest not doe it For the verie feare thou wouldest haue least thou mightest peraduenture light vpon that dishe that were poysoned woulde make thee to abstaine from all the rest Now let vs examin how manie yeares at the vttermost thou mayst hope yet to liue Thou wilt saie peraduenture after thou hast well considered the matter that thou mayest liue thirtie or fourtie yeares Well then if it be certaine that in one of these yeares thou art assured to die and thou knowest west not in which of them why art thou not then affraide in euerie one of them seinge thou art well assured that in one of them thy lyfe shal be taken from thee Thou wouldest not be so hardie as to put thy hande into anie one of the foresaied fourtie disshes although thou were in a verie sore honger because thou knowest that in one of them there is death present And wilt thou not also be affraide of euerie one of these fourtie yeares seinge thou art so well assured that thou shalt die in one of these yeares What answere canst thou make to this reason Harken yet to an other reason which is of no lesse efficacie than the other Tell me why doe men keepe a continuall watche in a Castell that standeth in the frontiers vpon the enemies Is it for anie other cause but onely for that they knowe not when the enemies will come to assaulte it Assuredlie for none other So that because they knowe not certainly at what time the enemie will come therefore doe they continuallie watche it at all tymes For if they knewe certainlie the time of their comminge they might be careles in the meane while and reserue the diligēce of their watche vntill that verie time Now I require thee hartely for the loue of God to be an indifferent Iudge towchinge that which I shall saye vnto thee Let vs consider well this poynte If thou watche thy Castle euerie nighte because thou art vncertain when thy enemie will come whether to daie or to morrowe this yeare or the next why doest thou not then kepe a continuall watche ouer thy soule seinge thou knowest not what howre death shall come to geue the assault vpon thee The verie same vncertaintie that is in the Castle is in thy soule also yea this vncertaintie is farre more and the matter is without all comparison of greater importance Now what iudgement haue they that are alwayes so vigilant in watchinge their castle and so careles alwayes abowt their soules so careles I saie as to sleepe alwaies without euer thinkinge vpon them What thinge can be more against reason Cōsider that thy soule is of greater valewe than all the castels and kingdoms in the worlde Yea if thou consider the price wherewith it was bought thou mayest well iudge that it is of more valewe than all the angels in heauen Cōsider also that thou hast greater enemies that doe endeuour cōtinuallie both daie and night to assault it Consider that thou canst by no meanes vnderstand the daye or the houre of assault Consider that the whole substance of the saluation or damnation of thy soule consisteth in this point whether thou be taken prouided or vnprouided at that dreadefull howre Forsomuch as accordinge to the parable of the Gospell the virgins which were founde readie and prepared entered into the mariage with the bridegrome Math. 25. and such as were founde vnprouided taried without To conclude therefore what cause is there why thou shouldest not alwaies watche as well ouer thy soule as ouer thy castell seinge the vncertaintie is greater the daunger greater the cause greater and all the rest without anie comparison farre greater and of more importance Of the frailtie of our lyfe § IIII. HOWBEIT our lyfe is not onely vncertaine but also verie fraile and brickle For I praie thee what glasse is so brickle and so subiecte to knockes and breakinge as the lyfe of man Some times the verie aier and heat of the sonne if it be vehement is able to spoyle vs of our lyfe But what speake I of the sonne seinge the verie eies yea the onely lookinge of some persone is able sometimes to bereaue a creature of his lyfe It shall not neede to drawe anie sworde or to vse anie kinde of armour or munition for the matter seinge the onely looke of some one man is able to bereeue an other of his lyfe Consider now what a sure castell this is wherein the treasure of our lyfe is kept seinge the onelie beholdinge of it a farre of is able to batter it cleane downe to the grownde But this were not so much to be wondered at in the age of infancie when the buildinge is as yet but newe and griene but the greater wonder is that after that the worke is setled and hath continued manie yeares together there happeneth some accident of no greater importāce than these beforenamed that is able vtterlie to ouerthrowe it If thou enquire and aske whereof dyed this man or whereof died that man they will answere thee that he died by drinkinge a cuppe of
suerlie not without good cause when he saide Iob. 14. The tree after it is cut hath hope to reuiue and springe againe and if the roote of it doe rott in the grownde and the stocke be dead in the earth yet with the freshenes of water it springeth againe and bringeth forth leaues as if it were newlie planted But man after he is once dead withered and consumed what is become of him Great vndowtedlie was the tribute that was laide vpon the children of Adam for sinne And the euerlastinge Iudge vnderstode verie well what penance he gaue vnto man when he saide Thou art dust Genes 4. and into dust thou shalt retourne againe Of the great feare and dowte the sowle hath at the hower of deathe what shall happen vnto it after it is departed out of the bodie § III. HOWBEIT this is not the greatest cause of feare that a man hath at the hower of his death but there is yet one farre greater and that is when the sowle casteth her eies further and beginneth to thinke vpon the daungers of the life to come and imagineth what shall become of her hereafter For this is now as it were to depart from the hauen mowth and to launche into the mayne Sea where none other thinge is to be seene on what side so euer ye looke but onely heauen and the water the which is woūte to be occasion of greater feare in such as are but newe Seamen For when a man considereth that eternitie of worldes which followeth after death and withall casteth his eie into that newe ād straunge region which was neuer knowen nor traueyled by anie man aliue where he must now beginne to take his iourney when he considereth also the euerlastinge glorie or paine which there must fall to his lotte and seeth that wheresoeuer the tree falleth Eccles 11. there it shall remaine for euermore and knoweth not on which of the two sides he shal falle whē he considereth I saie all these thinges he cannot but be in a verie great feare and trouble of minde We reade that when Benadad kinge of Siria was sicke 4 Reg. 8. he was in so great anguishe and greife of minde for that he knewe not whether he should die of that sicknes or not that he sent the generall of his armie with fowertie Camels loden with treasure vnto the Prophet Elizeus requestinge him with wordes of great humilitie to rid him out of that perplexitie he was in and to put him out of all dowt whether he shoulde recouer of that sicknes or not Now if the loue of so short a lyfe as this is be able to cause a man to be in such a greate care and pensiuenes how great care will a Wiseman take when he perceiueth him selfe to be in such a case as that he maie trulie saie that within two howres he shall haue one of these two lottes to witt either lyfe euerlastinge or death euerlastinge and that he knoweth not certainlie whether of theise two shall come vnto him What martirdome maie be compared to such a painfull angwishe and greife as this is Put the case now that a kinge were taken prisoner emonge the Turckes and when his Embassadours shoulde come to raunsome him the Turckes woulde propounde that the matter shoulde be determined by castinge of lottes and that if he happened to haue a good lotte he shoulde be raunsomed and goe home with his Embassadours to his kingdome but if contrariewise that thē immediatly he should be throwē into a great fyerie furnace which were there prepared burninge and flaminge before him Tell me I praie thee at the time when they shoulde be castinge the lottes and puttinge their hande into the vessell to take them out and all the worlde in great expectation waitinge what shoulde be the ende thereof and the kinge him selfe standinge there present beholdinge the doutfull happe that must be alotted vnto him in what a dolefull case thinkest thou woulde he then be How troubled How fearfull How quakinge and tremblinge And how readie to promise and vowe vnto almightie God all he cowlde possiblye doe to be quite ridde out of that terrible angwishe Now what is all this be it neuer so great but as it were a shadowe if it be compared with this daunger that we speake of How farre greater is the kingdome that we seike How farre greater is the fierye furnace that we doe feare How farre more greiuouse is the perplexitie ād doutefulnes of this matter thā of the other For on the one side the angels shal be there expectinge for vs to carrie vs to the kingedome of heauen and on th' other side the deuills to cast vs into the horrible furnace of hell fier and no man knoweth whether of these two lottes shall happen vnto him which shal be determined eyther the one waye or the other within the space of one houre after his death Consider therefore in what a heauie plight thy harte shal be at this last instant how fearfull how humble how abased before the face of him who onelie cā deliuer thee out of this daunger Suerlie I am of this opinion that there is no tonge in the worlde able to declare this matter as it is indeede How we come to vnderstande hereby the errours and blindnes of our lyfe past § IIII. AFTER this anguishe there followeth yet an other as great as it namelye in such persons as haue liued a wicked and dissolute lyfe which is to come so late to thinke vpō the accōpt they haue then forthwith to make of all the disorders and offences of their former lyfe At the houer of deythe it is a great greife to a sicke man if he haue liued licentiouslie that he thinketh so late vpō his accompte O how wōderfullie shall the wicked be confounded at that time when the griefe of their paine shall cause them to open their eies which heretofore the delight and pleasure of sinne had closed vp insomuch as they shall then clearlie perceiue what false goddes those were which they haue serued and how deceitfull those riches were which they haue so greidelie gaped after and how by followinge that waie whereby they thought to haue fownde rest they finde in conclusion their vtter ruin and destruction The seruantes of the kinge of Siria came to apprehende the Prophet Heliseus and when almightie God had stricken them all blinde by meanes of the praier of the Prophet the Prophet said vnto them Come goe with me and I will shewe you him whom you seeke 4. Reg. 6. And when he had thus said he caried them with him vnto Samaria and brought them into the market place of the cittie in the middes of al their enemies And then made his praier againe and saide O Lorde open the eies of these miserable men that they maie see where they are Now tell me I praie thee when those men opened their eies and sawe whither they were come beleuinge certainlie before that
is called not onely the daie of Anger but also the daie of our Lorde as the Prophet Ioel tearmeth it Ioel. 1.15 why the daye of iudgemente is called the daye of our Lorde Geauinge vs thereby to vnderstāde that all other daies haue bene the daies of men in which they haue fulfilled their owne willes against the wil of god but this daie is called the daie of our Lorde because vpō this daie our Lorde will doe his will against the will of men Thou doest now sweare and forsweare and blaspheme and almightie God in this meane while holdeth his peace and sayeth nothinge vnto it but be thou well assured the daie shall come when almightie God will breake of his lōge silence of so manie daies and of so manie iniuries ād will answere for his owne honour There be but two dayes the one is the daye of our Lorde and the other is the daye of men 2. Paral. 18. So that there be no more but two daies in the worlde the one is the daie of our Lorde and the other the daie of men Man whiles his daie endureth maye doe whatsoeuer he listeth and almightie God will holde his peace and as it were wincke at all his doinges Vpon this daie the Kinge Sedechias maie commaunde the Prophet of God to be cast into a well and breade to be geuen vnto him by vnces He maie vse and abuse the Prophet at his pleasure and at all those iniuries almightie God will holde his peace But after this daie there will come an other daie and almightie God will take kinge Sedechias and depriue him of his kingedome he will destroie Ierusalem and bringe kinge Sedechias in fetters before the kinge of Babilon and there shall all his sonnes and friendes be murdered before his face There shall he commaunde his eies which were preserued to see so manie miseries to be plucked out of his head which done he shall cause him to be caried in fetters to Babilon and confyne him into a prison there to remaine all the daies of his lyfe So that as man hath libertie to doe vpon his daie whatsoeuer he listeth without anie restraint or impediment at all euen so will almightie God haue free libertie to doe vpon his daie whatsoeuer his will and pleasure shal be and no man shal be able to let or disturbe him Of the signes that shall goe before the daie of the generall Iudgemente § II. FINALLIE if thou desire to vnderstande what maner of daie this shal be consider what signes shall goe before it For by the signes thou shalt perceiue what the thinge shal be that is signified as by the eueninge and Vigile thou mayste vnderstande what the feast of the daie shal be First of all when that daie shal be no man knoweth Marc. 13. no not the Angels in heauen nor yet the sonne himselfe to reueile it to anie other but the father onely Howbeit certaine signes shall goe before it whereby men maie prognosticate not onely of the nearnes of the daie but also of the greatnes and dreadfulnes thereof Math. 24.7 For as our Sauiour saieth Before the comminge of this daie there shal be great warres and troubles in the worlde Nation shall rise against nation and kingdome against kindome And there shal be great earthquakes in manie places and pestilence and famine and terrible thinges appearinge in the aier and other great signes and wonders And which is more dreadfull than all this there shall come that great horrible persecution so oftentimes mentioned in the holie Scriptures The horrible persecution of Antichrist The Iewes shall receiue and worship Antichrist for their Messias as appeareth in Iohn 5. vers 43. ād 1. Iohn 2. vers 22. which shal be executed by the most crewell persecutor that euer the Catholike Churche hath had to witt by Antichrist who shall impugne the Catholike Churche most malitiouslie not onelie with most crewell warres and horrible tormentes but also with apparant and feyned miracles Consider now therefore with thy selfe as the blessed holie Pope S. Gregorie saieth what a terrible time that of Antichrist shal be when the godlie martir shall offer his bodie to the tormentor and the tormentor shall worke miracles before his face Math. 24. vers 21.22 Marc. 13. vers 19.20 To conclude the tribulation of these daies as our Sauiour saieth shal be so great as the like was neuer since the beginninge of the worlde Antichristes raigne and persecutiō shall not continewe but three yeares and a halfe as appeareth in Daniell 7. vers 25. Daniell 12. vers 7. 11. Apoc. 11. vers 2. 3. Apoc. 13. vers 5. Ezech. 32. nor neuer shal be insomuche that if almightie God of his great mercie did not prouide to shorten these daies all fleashe shoulde not be saued But for the electes sake the daies of Antichrist shal be shortened After these signes as this daie of the generall iudgment draweth nearer and nearer there shall appeare other signes more dreadfull than these in the Sonne in the Moone and in the Sterres Of which dreadfull signes our Lorde spake by his Prophet Ezechiel sayeinge I will cause the sterres of heauen to be darckened ouer thee and I will couer the Sonne with a clowde and the Moone shall not shewe fourthe her lighte And I will cause all the lightes of heauen to mourne and lamente ouer thee And I will sende darcknes ouer all the lande Now when these great signes and alterations shall appeare in the heauens what maie we looke for vpon the earthe which is wholly gouerned by the heauens We see in a common weale that when the heades that gouerne it are in anie tumulte all the other members and partes thereof are also in a like tumulte and vprore and the whole common-weale is tossed and tormoyled with armes and dissention Now if all this bodie of the worlde be gouerned by the vertues and influences of the heauens in case both the heauens and this bodie be altered and out of their naturall order in what ruthfull case thē shall all the members and partes be that depende of them The aier shal be full of lighteninges whyrlewindes and blasinge sterres The earthe shal be full of wyde yawninge cleiftes fearfull tremblinges and quakinges And these earthquakes as it is thought shal be so great and violent that they shal be able to ouerthrowe not onely the sumptuous pallaces highe towers and stronge Castels but euen the verie mountaines and rockes them selues shal be also shaken and ouerwhelmed by them and quite remoued out of their places But most of all other elementes the Sea shall at that tyme shewe greatest rage and furie and the waues thereof shal be so highe and so furious that it shall seeme that they will vtterlie ouerwhelme all the whole earthe Such as dwell by the Sea side shal be in great dread and terror by reason of the great rysinge of waters and such as dwell further of shal be wounderfullie afraide
of the horrible roringes and noyces of it which shal be so extremelie outragious that they shal be hearde manie myles of In what a pittiefull case then I praie you shall men be in these daies How shall they be astonied confounded yea vtterlie bereued of their senses of their speach and of their tast of all thinges Luc. 21. Our Sauiour saieth that at this time the people shal be in great anguishe and distres and that men shall goe as thoughe they were withered and dried vp and had no lyfe in them by reason of the great feare of those thinges that shall happen to the worlde Then shall they saie one to an other What meaneth this What doe these terrible prognostications signifie What will the worlde at the length bringe forthe that it now swelleth and rageth in such furious wise What shall the ende be of all these so great tossinges and alterations of all thinges Now after this sort shall men goe vp and downe sore afraide and dismaide their hartes failinge them and carienge their armes a crosse and one of them lokinge pittiefullie vpon an other And they shal be in so great dread and feare beholdinge one an other to be so farre chaunged and disfigured that euen that alone were enoughe to dismaie thē although there were nothinge els to be feared All occupations and trades of the worlde shall then ceasse euerie where and so shall in like maner all studie and desire of purchasinge and gayninge For the greatnes of the feare shal holde mens hartes so throughly occupied that they shall not onely forget these thinges but they shall also forget euen to eate and drinke and to doe suche thinges as are necessarie for the maintenance and sustentation of their liues Their cheifest care shal be where to seike out sure and safe places to defende them selues from earthquakes and from the tempesteous stormes of the aier and from the inundations of the Sea And so men shall goe to hyde themselues in the caues and dennes of wylde beastes And the wylde beastes shall seike likewise to saue them selues in the lodgynges and howses of men And so all thinges shal be tossed and turmoiled vpside downe and be full of terror and confusion The present calamities shall afflicte them verie sore but the greate dread and feare of those that are to come shall vexe them worse because they knowe not what the ende shal be of such dolefull and lamentable beginninges I wāte wordes to declare this matter as it were requisite to be declared And all that is saied is much lesse then that which shal be in deede We see euen now by experience when anie outragious tempest riseth in the Sea or when anie stormy whirlwinde or earthquake happeneth vpon the lande how wonderfullie men are dismaide how they tremble and be astonied and how bothe their strengthe and wittes doe faile them Now then when the heauen the earthe the Sea and the aier shal be whollie distempered and disordered when in all regions and elementes in the worlde there shal be peculiare stormes and tempestes when the Sonne shall threaten with mourninge the Moone with bloud and the Sterres with their fallinges who shal be able to eate Who shal be able to sleepe Who shal be able to take so muche as one minute of rest beinge compassed on each side with so manie outragious stormes and tempestes O how miserable and vnhappie is the state and condition of the wicked who are threatened with all these fearefull prognostications And contrariewise how blessed is the state of the good and Godlie vnto whom all these thinges are fauours comfortes and good tidinges of the happie prosperitie so neare at hande approchinge then vnto them How ioyefully shall they then singe with the Prophet God is our refuge Psalm 45. and our strengthe and therefore we will not feare thoughe the whole earthe be tossed and tormoyled and the mountaines be remoued and falle into the bothome of the Sea Luc. 21.30.31 Like as you vnderstande saieth our Sauiour when the figge tree and all other trees beginne to blossome and to bringe fourthe their frute that then the springe time draweth neare at hande euen so when ye shall see these thinges come to passe then maie ye perceiue that the kingedome of God is at hande Then maie ye open your eies and lift vp your head because the daie of your redemtion approcheth How ioyefull shall the good and vertuous then be How well shall they thinke all their trauels and labours employed And contrariewise how woefull and sorowfull shall the wicked be and how sore shall they then condemne all the steppes and waies of their sinfull liues Of the ende of the worlde and of the resurrection of the dead § III. AFTER all these signes shall the comminge of the Iudge approche neare at hande before whom there shall goe an vniuersall floude of fire There shal be an vniuersall floude of fyer before the comminge of the Iudge which shall burne and consume to ashes all the glorie of the worlde This fire shal be to the wicked a beginninge of their paine to the good a beginninge of their glorie and vnto them that haue not made full satisfaction it shal be a purgatorie for their offences Then shall all the glorie of the worlde haue an ende Then shall the mouinges of the heauens the course of the planettes and the generation of thinges ceasse Then shall the varietie of times with all other thinges that depende of the heauens haue an ende And so S. Iohn writeth in the Apocalippes Apoc. 10. That he sawe a mightie Angell clothed with a bright cloude His face was like the sonne he had a rainbow for a crowne on his head his feete were like pillers of fier of the which one he sette on the Sea and th' other vpon the lande And he saieth that this Angell lifted vp his arme towardes heauē and sware by him that liueth euerlastinglie worlde without ende that from thenceforthe there shoulde be no more time That is to saie that there shoulde be no mouinge of the heauens nor of anie other thinge that is gouerned by them And which is more than all this no place of penance nor anie time to merite or demerite for the lyfe to come After this fyre there shall come as the Apostle saieth an Archangell with great power 2. Thes 4. and maiestie and he shall sownde a trompette to wit At doomes daye an Archangell with the sounde of a trompette shall sommon all nations to come to the generall iudgmente a great and terrible voyce whose sounde shal be hearde ouer all the partes of the worlde and with this trompette he shall summon all nations to come to the generall iudgemente This is that fearfull voyce whereof S. Ierome speaketh sayeinge Whether I eate or drinke or whatsoeuer I doe me seemeth alwaies that I heare that voyce soundinge in mine eares which shall saie rise vp all yee that are
the whole earthe yea and which is more meruailous that there be some starres emonge them of such notable greatnes that they be nyntie times greater then all the whole earthe when a man hearethe these thinges and lifteth vp his eies to heauen and seeth in the same such a multitude of starres and so manie voyde spaces where manie more starres might be set how can he but wonder How can he but be astonied and in a maner besides himselfe consideringe the passinge greatnes of that place and much more of that mightie Soueraine Lorde that created it of nothinge The goodlie bewtie of the heauens Then as towchinge the goodlie bewtie of that place it is a thinge that can not be expressed with wordes For if almightie God hath created thinges so wonderfull and so bewtifull in this vale of teares and place of bannishement what wonderfull bewtifull thinges hath he created trowe ye in that place which is the seate of his glorie the throne of his mightie power the pallace of his maiestie the howse of his electe and the paradise of all delightes After thou hast considered the excellencie of the place The fruition of the companie of the blessed inhabitantes in heauen Apoc. 7.9 The number of the electe The nomber of the Angelles in heauen consider also the great worthines of those blessed inhahitantes that dwell in it whose nomber holines riches and bewtie are greater than anie man can imagin S. Iohn saieth that the nomber of the electe is so great that no man is able to counte them S. Dionysius saithe that the nomber of the Angels is so great that they exceede without comparison all corporall and materiall thinges in the earthe S. Thomas agreinge with this opinion saithe that like as the greatnes of the heauēs exceedethe the greatnes of the earthe without anie proportion euen so doth the multitude of those glorious spirites exceede the multitude of all corporall and materiall thinges that are in this worlde with the like aduantage and proportion Now what thinge can be imagined more wonderful than this Certainlie this is such a matter that if it were well considered it were able to astonishe all men Againe if euerie one of the Angels yea thoughe it be the verie leaste Angell emonge them all be more goodlie and bewtifull to beholde than all this visible worlde what a glorious sighte shall it then be to beholde such a nomber of bewtifull Angels and to see the perfections and offices that euerie one of them hath in that highe and supreme cittie There the Angels goe as it were in ambassages Angels The Archangels are occupied in their ministerie Archāgels Principalities Powers Dominations Vertues Thrones Cherubins Seraphins The Principalities triumphe The Powers reioyce The dominations gouerne The Vertues shyne The Thrones glister The Cherubins geue light The Seraphins burne with loue And all of that heauenlie cowert doe singe lawdes and prayses vnto almightie God Now if the companie and conuersation of good and vertuous persons be so sweite and amiable a thinge what a blessed thinge shall it be to conuerse and kepe companie with so so manie good and blessed Sainctes as be there to speake with the Apostles to be conuersant with the Prophetes to communicate with the Martirs and to dwell and haue a perpetuall familiaritie with all the electe Now if it shall be so greate a glorie to enioye the companie of the good The vision of almightie God what shall it be to enioye the companie and presence of him whom the morninge starres doe praise at whose excellente bewtie the Sonne and moone doe wonder before whose maiestie the Angels bowe downe and at whose presence men doe meruailouslie reioyce What a glorie shall it be to beholde that vniuersall goodnes in whom are all good thinges That greater worlde in whom all worldes are conteyned What a ioye shall it be to see him who beinge one is all thinges and yet beinge one and most simple in himselfe comprehendeth the perfections of all things If to heare and see kinge Salomō were thought so great a matter that the Quene of Saba saied of him 3. Reg. 10. Blessed are they that stand before thy presence and enioye thy wisedome what a thinge shall it be to beholde that most highe Salomon that euerlastinge wisedome that infinite greatnes that inestimable bewtie that exceedinge goodnes and to enioye the same for euermore This is the essentiall glorie of the Sainctes This is the last ende and center of all our desires The glorie of the Sainctes bodies in heauen After this consider the glorie of the bodies in which there shal be no parte but shal be glorified For there euerie one of the members and senses shall haue his particuler glorie and obiect wherein to take delighte There the bodies of the Sainctes shal be endued with those fower singuler qualities and dowries The fower dowries of glorified bodies to witt with subtilitie swiftnes impassibilitie and clearenes And this clearenes shal be so great that euerie one of the Sainctes bodies shall shyne like the sonne in the kingdome of their father Now if this sonne that standeth in the middest of the firmamente beinge but one be sufficient to geue lighte and comfort to all this worlde what a lighte shall so manie sonnes and lampes make as shall shyne so brightlie in that place altogether The perfecte fruitiō of all good thinges in heauen To conclude in this glorie all good thinges shal be fownde wholye together and all euill thinges shal be bannished from thence There shal be healthe without infirmitie libertie without bondage bewtie without deformitie immortalitie without corruption aboundance without necessitie quietnes without vexation securitie without feare knowledge without error fulnes without lothsomenes ioye without heauines and honour without contradiction There as S. Augustine saieth shal be true glorie S. Augustine For there shall non be praised either by error or flatterie There shal be true honour For there it shall neither be denied to suche as deserue it nor geuen to suche as deserue it not There shal be true peace For there shall no man be molested neither by him selfe nor by others The rewarde of vertue shal be euen he that gaue the vertue and hathe promised himselfe for a rewarde of the same who is the greatest and best of all thinges to witt almightie God He shal be the ende of our desires He shall there be seene without ceassinge loued without lothsomenes and praised without wearines There the place is large bewtifull bright and secure The companie verie good and delightfull The time alwaies after one sorte not distincted into eueninge and morninge but continued with a simple eternitie There shal be a perpetuall springe which throughe the freshnes and sweite breathinge of the holie Ghost shall florishe for euermore There shall all reioyce all shall singe and geue continuall praise to the cheife geuer of all thinges throughe whose bountifull
for the sighte onelie of immortall eies And if we see that by the handieworke of men certaine workes are made here so sightlie and so bewtifull that they astonishe the eies of them that doe beholde them what a worke must that be which is wrought by the hande of almightie God himselfe in that royall howse in that sacred pallace in that howse of ioye and solace which he hath built for the glorie of his electe Psal 83.1 O how amiable are thy tabernacles saiethe the Prophet ô Lorde God of vertues My sowle desireth and feinteth in beholdinge the pallaces of our Lorde The state and condition of the citizens of heauen The thinge that most principallie commendeth a cittie is the state and condition of the cittizens to witt if they be noble if they be manie if they liue in peace and concorde emonge them selues Now who is able to declare the excellencie of this cittie in this behalfe All the inhabitantes therein be noble personages there is no one emonge them of base linage forsomuch as they be all the sonnes and children of God They be so frendly and louinge one towardes an other that they be all as it were one sowle and one harte And they liue in so great peace and concorde that the verie cittie it selfe is called Ieruzalem that is to saie the vision of peace If thow desire to vnderstande the nomber of the inhabitantes in this cittie vnto this desire S. Iohn maketh answere in his reuelations Apoc. 7.9 The nomber of the blessed inhabitantes in heauen where he saieth that he sawe in spirite such a great companie of blessed Sainctes that no man was able to recken them gathered together of all kindes of nations people and tonges which stode before the throne of almightie God and of his lambe appareiled in white garmentes and with triumphante palmes in their handes singinge vnto almightie God songes of praise And vnto this sayeinge of S. Iohn doth that agrie verie well which is signified by the Prophet Daniell concerninge this holie nomber where he saieth Dan. 7.10 Thowsande thowsandes serue the Lorde of maiestie and tenne hundered thowsande thowsandes stande before him And thinke not because the nomber is so great that they be therefore disordered For there the multitude is no cause of confusion but of greater order ād harmonie For almightie God that hath with such a wonderfull consonance and agrement disposed the mouinges of the heauens and the courses of the starres Euerie one of the Sainctes hath his place and glorie in heauen accordinge to the degrie of euerie one of their merites in this lyfe callinge them euerie one by his proper name hath also ordeined all that innumerable armie of blessed Sainctes with a most wonderfull goodlie ordre and disposition appointinge to euerie one his place and glorie accordinge to his merite And so there is one place for the virgins an other for the Confessors an other for the holie Martirs an other for the Partiarkes and Prophets an other for the Apostles and Euangelistes and so forthe in all the rest And in like sorte as men are there diuided There be nine orders of Angels in heauen and placed euen so after their maner are the Angels also which be diuided into three Hierarchies and those three Hierarchies into nine orders And aboue all the Sainctes and Angels is placed the throne of that most excellent Quene of Angels The blessed virgin Marie is placed in heauen aboue all the Angels and Sainctes the mother of almightie God who alone is an order by her selfe forsomuch as she hath no peere nor anie one that is like vnto her And aboue thē all the holie humanitie of our Sauiour Christ hath the cheife place and preeminēce who sitteth at the right hande of the maiestie of almightie God in the highest Now thou Christian sowle take a vewe of all these orders walke through these streates and waies consider the order of these cittizens the bewtie of this cittie and the noblenes and worthines of these inhabitantes Salute them euerie one by their names and desire them to helpe and succour thee with their praiers Salute also this sweite and pleasaunt countrey and as a pilgrime beholdinge it as yet a farre of directe thine eies and withal thy harte vnto it and saie Alhaile sweite countrey the lande of promise the hauen of securitie the place of refuge the howse of blessinge the kingdome of all worldes the paradise of delightes the garden of eternall flowers the market place of all treasure the crowne of all iust persons and the ende of all our desires Alhaile our mother and our hope After thee haue we sighed a longe time For thee haue we mourned and doe mourne euen at this presente For the loue of thee haue we foughte and doe still fighte a longe battell in this our transitorie lyfe For we knowe assuredlie 2. Tim. 2.5 that none shal be rewarded and crowned in thee but onely such as haue here fowghten faithfullie Of the seconde Ioye that the sowle shall haue in the kingedome of heauen which is the enioyinge of the companie of the Sainctes § II. VHO is able after this great ioye to declare what a further ioye the sowle shall haue by beinge in this most happie and blessed companie For there the vertue of charitie is in her full perfection the propertie of which vertue is to cause all thinges to be common There shall that petition be perfectlie fulfilled which our sauiour made sayeinge I beseech thee ô father Ioan. 17.11 All the electe in heauen shal be more streitlie vnited together in one than the members of one bodie because all shall participate of the spirite of God that they maie be one by loue as we are one by nature For there shall the electe be more streitlie vnited together in one than the members of one same bodie because all shall participate of one same spirite which geueth vnto all one same beinge and withall one blessed lyfe If thou imagin it to be otherwise tell me what is the cause why the members of one bodie haue so great a vnitie and loue one towardes an other The reason is because they all are partakers of one same forme that is of one sowle which geueth one same beinge and one lyfe to them all Now if the spirite of a man liaue power to cause so great a vnitie betwene members that are so different in offices and natures is it anie wonder if the spirite of almightie God by whom all the electe doe liue which spirite is as it were the cōmon sowle to them all shoulde cause a farre greater and more perfecte vnitie emonge them espetially consideringe that the spirite of God is a more noble cause and of a more excellent vertue and power yea and geueth also a more noble beinge Well now if this maner of vnitie and loue doe cause all thinges to be cōmō as well good as euil as we see in the
members of one bodie and in the loue of mothers towardes their children who reioyce as much at their felicitie as at their owne what a wonderful ioye shal one of the electe there haue of the glorie of all the rest consideringe that he shall loue euerie one of them as well as him selfe For as S. Gregorie saiethe S. Gregorie That heauenly inheritance vnto all is one and vnto euerie one is all forsomuch as euerie one of the blessed Sainctes reioyceth as muche at the ioyes and felicities of all others as if he were him selfe in possession of the same But what can we inferre of all this Marie thus much that as the nomber of the blessed Sainctes is after a sorte infinite euen so the ioyes of each one of them shall also after a sorte be infinite and that euerie one of the Sainctes shall haue the excellencies of all forsomuch as whatsoeuer anie one of them shall not haue in himselfe he shall haue it in others These be spiritually those seuen sonnes of Iob Iob. 1.4 emonge whom there was such a greate loue and cōmunicatinge one to an other that euerie one of them in his order made a feast one daie of the weke vnto all the reste whereby it came to passe that euerie one of thē was no lesse partaker of the goodes of others than of his owne proper goodes And so that which was proper to one was cōmō to all and that which was common to all was proper to euerie one This effecte wroughte loue and brotherly affection in those holie brethern Now how much greater shall the brotherly loue of the electe be in the kingdome of heauen How much greater shall the nomber of brothers be there How much more treasure and riches shall they haue to enioye Luc. 19. Seraphins Now by this accompte what a feast shall that be which the Seraphins shall there make vnto vs who are in the highest degree of all blessed Spirites and most neare vnto almightie God when they shall discouer vnto our eies the noblenes of their state and condition the cleerenes of their contemplation and the most feruente burninge heate of their loue What a feast also shall the Cherubins make Cherubins in whom the treasures of the wisedome of almightie God are enclosed What a feast likewise shall that be of the Thrones Thrones Dominations Ierem. 31. Martirs and Dominations and of all the other blessed spirites What a ioye shall it be to see and haue the fruition of that glorious armie of Martirs clothed with white garmentes with their palmes in their handes and with the glorious ensignes of their triumphes What a ioye shall it be to beholde there those eleuen thowsande virgins altogether Virgins and those tenne thowsande Martirs which were the true followers of the glorie and Crosse of Christ with other innumerable multitudes of them What a ioye shall it be to see there that glorious Deacon S. Laurence with his greedyron in his hāde S. Laurence shyninge nowe much brighter than the flames wherewith he was burned hauinge defyed the cruell tirantes and wearied the tormētors with an inuincible patiēce What a ioye shall it be to beholde there the bewtifull and glorious virgin S. Catherine crowned with roses S. Catherine and lilies who ouercame the wheele of their rasers with the weapons of faith The holie Machabees and hope What a ioye shall it be to see those seuen noble Machabees with their godly and valiant mother hauinge contemned all kinde of deathes and tormentes for kepinge the lawe of almightie God What chaine of golde and pretious stones are so goodly to beholde as the necke of the glorious forerunner of Christ S. Iohn Baptist S. Ihon Baptiste who chose rather to lose his head than to dissemble the filthines of the adulterous kinge What purple shal shyne so brighte as the bodie of blessed S. Bartholomewe S. Battholomewe who had his skinne fleyd from his fleashe for our Sauiour Christ his sake What other thinge shall it be to see the bodie of S. Stephen that was brused with the strokes of the stones S. Stephen than to beholde a riche longe robe trimlie garnished and sett all ouer with goodlie precious rubies and diamondes What a ioyful sighte shall it be to see those two glorious princes of Christes Churche S. Peter S. Peter S. Paul and S. Paule shyninge there verie brightly the one with his sworde and the other with the glorious standarte of Christ to witt the Crosse wherewith they were crowned Now what a ioye shall it be to enioye the glories of each one of all these blessed sainctes as if they were properly our owne O glorious feaste ô royall bancket ô table meet for almightie God and his electe Wherefore let these worldlinges get them to their filthie and carnall banckettes let them burste their bellies with their gluttonous excesse and superfluities Such a feast as this is where such excellent meates are serued is conuenient for almightie God and his electe Ascende yet vp higher aboue all the orders of Angels and there shalte thou finde an other singuler glorie that doth wonderfullie reioyce all that supreme Courte and maketh the cittie of God as it were dronke with meruailous delighte Lift vp thine eies The blessed virgin Marie mother of God and beholde the most blessed virgin Marie that Quene of mercie full of clearenes and bewtie at whose glorie the Angels doe wonder and in whose excellencie men doe glorie This is the Quene of heauen crowned with starres clothed with the sonne shodde with the moone and blessed aboue all women Consider now what a greate ioye it shal be to beholde this our blessed Ladie and mother not kneelinge now vpon her knees before the maunger not troubled and molested now with the fryghtes and feares of such thinges as holie Simeon prophesied vnto her Luc. 2. not lamentinge and seekinge now her lost childe in all partes but with inestimable peace and securitie placed at the righte hande of her deere sonne without all feare of euer leesinge that her most pretious treasure Now hathe she no neede to seeke the deade time of the secrete night to deliuer the childe frō the cōspiracies of Herode by flyenge into Egipte Math. 2. Now dothe she no more stāde at the foote of the crosse receyuinge vpō her head the droppes of bloude that fel from aboue and caryenge in her vpper garmente a perpetuall remenbrance of that her greate greife Ioan. 19. Now she feelethe no more the greife of that dolefull exchaunge when she had assigned vnto her the disciple in steede of the master and the seruante in steede of the lorde Now are those sorowfull wordes to be hearde no more which she vttered with great weepinge and lamentation vnder that blouddie tree sayeinge O that I might die for thee Absolon 4. Reg. 18.33 my sonne my sonne Absolon Now is all this sorowe at an ende and
she that was more afflicted in this worlde thā anie other mere creature is now seene there exalted aboue al creatures enioyinge for euer that cheifeste goodnes and sayeinge Cant. 3.4 I haue founde him whom my sowle loueth I will holde him and will not let him goe And if this be so great a ioye The sacred humanitie of Christe what a ioye shall that be to beholde the most sacred humanitie of our sauiour Christ and the glorie and bewtie of that bodie which was so fowlie disfigured for our sakes vpon the crosse S. Bernarde It shal be vndowtedlie as S. Bernarde saithe a thinge full of all sweitnes and delighte when men shall there see and beholde a man the creator of men and Lorde of all thinges created We are wonte to esteime it for a singular honour to our whole familie to see some one of our kinred to be made a Cardinall or a Pope Now how farre greater honour shall this be vnto vs to see that Lorde who is of our fleashe and bloude sittinge at the righte hande of the father and made kinge both of heauen and earthe With what a passinge great ioye shall men stande emonge the Angels It shal be a greate ioye to men in heauen to see the Lorde and creator of all thinges to be not an Angell but a man when they shall see that the Lorde of the whole howse and the vniuersall creator of all thinges is not an Angell but a man For if the members doe accompte that to be an honour vnto them that is done to their head by reason of the great vnion that is betwene them and it what shall it be there where there is suche a strayte vnion betwene the mēbers and the head What shall it be els but that euerie one of the sainctes shall accompte the glorie of their Lorde as their owne peculiar glorie This ioye shal be so passinge great that no wordes are able to expresse it accordinge to the worthines thereof Now who shal be so happie as to be thowghte worthie to enioye so great a blysse and felicitie Cant. 8. O that thou were as my brother suckinge the brestes of my mother that I mighte finde thee without and kisse thee with the lippes of deuotion and embrace thee with the armes of loue O most sweete louinge Lorde When shall this ioyefull daie come When shall I appeare before thy face When shall I be filled with thy excellente bewtie When shall I see that countenance of thyne wherevpon the Angels are desirous to beholde Of the thirde ioye that the sowle shall haue in the kingdome of heauen which is the enioyinge of the cleare vision of almightie God § III. In the cleare vision of almightie God consistethe the essentiall glorie of the Sianctes NOW what a ioye shall it be aboue all this to haue a cleare sighte of that diuine face in the sighte of whō consisteth the essentiall glorie of the Sainctes All the thinges we haue hitherto spoken of are certainly great motiues towardes the accomplishemente of glorie but they all are litle in comparison of the cleare vision of almightie God Of Issachar it is written That he sawe that rest was good Gen. 49.15 and that the lande was best and therefore he put his shoulders to labour and made him selfe subiecte to tribute The rest and glorie of the Sainctes is good but the lande that bringeth forthe this rest is best in the superlatiue degrie For this lande is the face and bewtie of almightie God of the vision and beholdinge of whom proceedeth the rest and glorie of the Sainctes This cleare vision of almightie God is the thinge that of it selfe alone is able to geue perfecte rest vnto our sowles The harte of man can neuer be fullie satisfied and filled but onelie with the vision of almightie God For all the sweetnes and pleasantnes of creatures well maie it geue delighte to the harte of man but it can neuer wholye satisfie and fill it Now if all these good thinges before reheresed shall so much delighte vs how much then shall that good thinge delighte vs that conteineth in it selfe the perfection and somme of all good thinges And if the onely sighte and beholdinge of creatures be so glorious what a glorie shall it be to beholde that diuine face that most brighte lighte and that most excellente bewtie of almightie God in whom all bewties doe shyne What a glorious sighte shall it be to beholde that essence so wonderfull so simple and so communicable and with one sighte to beholde in the same the misterie of the most blessed Trinitie The glorie of the father the wisedome of the sonne and the goodnes and loue of the holie Ghost There shall we see God and in God bothe our selues S. Fulgentius and all thinges S. Fulgentius saithe that like as he that hath a glasse before him seeth the glasse and him selfe in the glasse and all other thinges that are before the glasse euen so when we shall haue that vnspotted glasse of the maiestie of almightie God present before vs we shall see him and our selues in him and withal whatsoeuer is without him accordinge to the knowledge greater or lesse that we shall haue of him The vnderstandinge There shall the appetite of our vnderstandinge rest and shall not desire to knowe anie thinge els because it shall haue before it all that can be knowen There shall the appetite of our will rest in louinge that vniuersall good thinge in whom are all good thinges The will and out of whom there be no more good thinges to be enioyed There shall our desire rest The desire and be fullie satisfied with the morsel of that supreme ioye which shal in such wise fill the mouthe of our harte that there shal be nothinge els for it to desire There shall those three Theologicall vertues How faithe hope and charitie shal be rewarded in heauen to witt Faithe Hope and Charitie wherewith almightie God is here honored be perfectly rewarded when vnto faithe shal be there geuen for a rewarde the cleare vision of almightie God vnto hope the possession of him and vnto charitie imperfect charitie in all her perfection There shall the electe see loue enioye and prayse almightie God There shall they be filled without gluttinge and be hōgrie without necessitie There is the place where that songe is alwayes songe that S. Iohn hearde in his reuelations which songe he tearmeth Apoc. 14.3 Quasi canticum nouum As it were a newe songe For that althowghe the songe be alwayes after one maner forsomuche as it is one cōmon prayse answerable to one common glorie which all that blessed companie enioyeth yet is it alwaies newe as concerninge the taste and delighte it hath For loke what taste it had at the beginninge the same verie tast also shall it haue for euer and euer without ende The ioye of the Sainctes in heauen shall neuer diminishe
nor decaye neither shall their bodies euer decaye or waxe olde For he that causeth the heauens to be alwaies freshe and newe after so manie thowsande yeares as haue passed since they were created shall also cause the flower of the glorie of the Sainctes alwaies to be liuelie and florishinge and neuer to wither or decaye in anie one poynte Of the fourthe ioye that the sowle shall haue in the kingdome of heauen which is the enioyinge of the glorie of the bodie § IIII. The bodies of the Sainctes shall also be glorified in heauen THE cleare vision of the diuine maiestie is as hathe bene declared the essential glorie of the blessed sowles in heauen Howbeit our most iust iudge and bountifull father thinkethe it not enoughe to glorifie the sowles onely but for the honour of them extendethe his magnificence and liberalitie yet further euen to glorifie their bodies also geuinge thus a rowme and place vnto beastes in his royall and euerlastinge heauēlie pallace O louer of men O honorer of the good and vertuous What hath this rottē and stinckinge fleashe of ours which like a beast followeth alwaies his appetites to doe with the sanctuarie of heauen What shall this fleashe which shoulde rather be tied vp in a stable emonge beastes be placed emonge the Angels in heauen Let dust ô Lorde continewe with dust for it is not seemely that earthe shoulde be placed aboue the heauens But he that saiede vnto Abraham I will honour and multiplie Ismael Gen. 17.20 notwithstandinge he is the sonne of a bondslaue because he appertaineth vnto thee will also shewe this fauour to the bodies of the Sainctes for the nighe kinred that is betwene the sowles and thē It is our Lordes pleasure also that he that hath holpen to beare the burthen Note here the reason why the Sainctes bodies shall as well be glorified in heauen as their sowles shall likewise be partaker in the diuision of the glorie and that like as the sowle by conformynge it selfe in this lyfe vnto the will of God commeth afterwardes to be made partaker of the glorie of God euen so the bodie which contrarie to his nature was conformable and obedient vnto the will of the sowle shall also be made partaker of the glorie of the same sowle And thus shall the iust be glorious both in bodie and sowle And as the Prophet saieth Esa 61.7 They shall possesse in their countrey dowble riches Whereby is vnderstoode the glorie of the sowles and the glorie of the bodies The glorie of the senses The eies Now what shall I saie of the glorie of the senses Eache one of them shall there haue his owne proper delighte and glorie The eies shal be renewed and made more cleare than the lighte of the sonne They shall see those roiall pallaces those glorious bodies and those bewtifull feildes with other infinit goodlie thinges that are there to be seene The eares The eares shall alwaies heare that wounderfull musicke which is so exceedinge sweite and pleasant that one onely fownde of it were able to bringe all the hartes of this worlde a-sleepe The sense of smellinge shall also be recreated with most sweite and pleasant sauours The smellinge not of such vaporous thinges as we haue here but of such as be proportionable to the glorie that is there The taste In like maner the taste shal be satisfied with incredible sweitenes and delightes not for sustentation of lyfe but for accomplishemente of all glorie Now what an exceedinge ioye shall the blessed sowle conceyue at that time when for the mortification and diligente lookinge vnto the senses which continued so shorte a time she seeth her selfe so wholie drowned in that most deepe fountaine of glorie without findinge anie bothom or ende of so manie and of such passinge great ioyes O labours and paines well employed O seruices well rewarded O treasure not so much to be spoken of as to be wisshed and desired and to be purchased with a thowsande liues if we had so manie to geue for the same Of the fyfte ioye in the kingdome of heauen which is the euerlastinge continuance of the glorie and felicitie of the the Sainctes § V. BVT now let vs see for how longe time this great glorie and felicitie is to be enioyed This is a pointe that were able alone to cause vs euen to crie out and desire that all maner of tribulations afflictions paynes and labours might rayne and powre down vpon vs as thicke as hayle so that we might serue and please almightie God in this transitorie lyfe who is to bestowe so great and inestimable benefites vpon vs in the euerlastinge lyfe to come This rewarde of so great glorie and felicitie in the kingdome of heauen shal endure so manie thowsande yeares as be starres in the firmament yea and a greate deale longer It shall endure so manie hundered thowsande milliōs of yeares as haue fallen droppes of water vpon the earthe yea and a greate deale longer yea to conclude it shal endure so longe as almightie God him selfe shall endure which shal be euerlastingelie worlde without ende Psal 145. For it is written thus Our Lorde shall raigne for euer and euer And in an other place Psal 144. Thy raigne is the raigne of all worldes and thy dominion endurethe from generation to generation Wherefore ô father of mercies and God of all consolation I humbly beseech thee by the bowels of thy mercie that I maie not be depriued of this supreme glorie and felicitie O Lorde my God that hast vowchsaffed to create me after thyne owne image and likenes and to make me capable of thy selfe fill this harte of mine which thow hast created with thy selfe sith thow hast created it for thy selfe Psal 141. Let my portion ô my almightie God be in the lande of the liuinge O Lorde I beseech thee geue me not in this transitorie lyfe either rest or riches but reserue all in store for me for the euerlastinge lyfe to come Num. 32.6 I desire not to enherite with the children of Ruben in the lande of Galaad and to lose my right and title of the lande of promise Psalm 26. One thinge onely ô Lorde haue I demaunded of thee and this will I alwaies require that I maie dwell in the howse of our Lorde all the daies of my lyfe SONDAIE NIGHTE OF THE BENEFITES OF ALMIGHTIE GOD. 〈…〉 THIS DAIE WHEN THOV HAST MADE THE SIGNE OF the Crosse and prepared thy selfe hereunto thou hast to meditate vpon the benefites of almightie God that in so doinge thou mayst geue him thankes for them and enkendle in thy selfe a more feruente loue of him who hath shewed himselfe so bountiefull towardes thee and withall procure thereby more greife and sorowe for the sinnes and offences that thou hast committed against such a louinge benefactor AND albeit the benefites of almightie God towardes vs be innumerable yet they all maie be reduced to
fiue kindes to witt to the benefites of creation conseruation redemption vocation and to the secrete benefites that euerie one hath receyued particulerly in him selfe As concerninge the first benefite which is of creation The benefite of creation Consider first with great attention what thou wast before thou were created and what almightie God hath done for thee and bestowed vpon thee before thou diddest merite or deserue anie thinge at all to witt he gaue thee thy bodie with all thy members and senses and thy sowle which is of so great excellencie created after his owne image and likenes for so highe and excellent an ende as to haue the fruition of almightie God And withall he gaue thee those three noble powers also of thy sowle which be Vnderstandinge Memorie and Will And cōsider well with thy selfe that to geue thee this sowle was to geue thee all thinges For it is cleare that there is no perfection nor habilitie in any of all the inferior creatures but that man hath the same in him in a farre more highe and greater perfection and by meanes of the vertue and habilitie of his sowle he is able to attaine vnto it Whereby it appeareth that by geuinge vnto vs this thinge alone to witt our sowle he gaue vs therewith at once all thinges together As concerninge the benefite of conseruation The benefite of conseruation consider how all thy whole beinge dependethe of the prouidence of almightie God How thou art not able to liue one momente nor to steppe so much as one steppe were it not by meanes of him Consider also how he hath created all thinges in this worlde for thy vse ād seruice insomuche as he hath appointed euen the verie Angels of heauen for thy garde and defence Consider moreouer how he hath geuen thee healthe strengthe lyfe sustenaunce with all other temporall helpes and succours And aboue all this consider well the manifolde great miseries and calamities into which thou seest other men falle euerie daye and how thou thy selfe mightest also haue fallen into the same had it not bene that almightie God of his greate mercie preserued thee As concerninge the benefite of redemption thou mayst consider therein two thinges The benefite of redemption First how manie and how great benefites almightie God hath geuen vs by meanes of the benefite of redemption And secondlie how manie and how great miseries he hath suffered in his most holie bodie and sowle to purchase these benefites vnto vs. As concerninge the benefite of vocation consider first of all The benefite of vocation what a great benefite it was of almightie God to make thee a Christian to calle thee to the Catholike faith by meanes of the holie Sacramente of Baptisme and to make thee also partaker of the other sacramētes And then if after this callinge of thee thou hast fallen into deadlie synne and thereby loste thyne innocencie in case now our Lorde haue raised thee vp from synne and receyued thee againe into his grace and fauour and set thee in the state of saluation how canste thou be able to geue him sufficient praises and thāckes for this so inestimable a benefite What a great mercie was it to expecte thee so longe time to suffer thee to committe so manie synnes and in the meane time to sende thee so manie diuine inspirations and not to shorten the daies of thy lyfe as he hath done to diuerse and sundrie others that were in the verie same state and laste of all to calle thee with so mightie a grace that thou mightest ryse vp againe from death to lyfe and open thyne eies to beholde the eternall lighte What a great mercie was it also after that thou wast conuerted to geue thee grace not to returne vnto deadlie synne againe but to stande and vanquishe thyne enemie and to perseuere in good lyfe This is that morninge and eueninge dewe that almightie God promised by the Prophet Ioel sayeinge And yee sonnes of Sion reioyce Ioell 2.23 and be glad in our Lorde God for he hath geuen you a teacher of iustice and he shall cause the morninge and eueninge dewe to rayne and poure downe vpon you Meaninge hereby that almightie God geueth vs firste his preuentinge grace 1. Grace preuentinge wherewith we beginne to sowe the seede of vertues and afterwardes he geueth vs his grace subsequent 2. Grace subsequente and finall and final which bringeth this seede to his full rypenes and happie ende These are the publike and knowen benefites Of secrete benefites But besides these there be other secrete benefites which no man knoweth but he onely that hathe receiued them Agayne there be other benefites also so secrete that euen he himselfe that hathe receiued them knoweth not of them and he onely knoweth them that is the geuer of them How manie times hast thou deserued in this worlde either throughe thy pride negligence or vnthankfulnes that almightie God shoulde haue withdrawen his grace from thee we falle frō God eyther throughe our pride negligēce or vnthankefulnes and vtterlie forsaken thee as he hath done to manie others for some one of these causes for whosoeuer they be that doe falle from God they falle by some of these meanes and yet hath not almightie God dealte thus with thee How manie euilles and occasions of euilles hath our Lorde prevented and turned awaye by his prouidence in ouerthrowinge the snares of the deuill thine enemye and stoppinge him of his passage and not permittinge him to execute his wylie practises and deceites vpon thee How oftentimes hath he done for euerie one of vs as he saiede he did for S. Peter Luc. 22. Beholde saiede our Sauiour how Satan goeth busilie aboute to sift you as corne in the barne but I haue praied for thee that thy faith faile not Now who knoweth these secretes Benefites positiue but onely almightie God The positiue benefites be such as a man maie sometimes vnderstāde and knowe them but those benefites that are called priuatiue Benefites priuatiue which consiste not in doinge benefites vnto vs but in deliueringe vs from hidden and secrete euilles that were comminge towarde vs who is able to vnderstande Wherefore as well for these benefites as for the others it is reason we shoulde alwaies shewe our selues thankefull to our Lorde and vnderstande how farre in arrerages we be in our reckeninge with him and how much more we be indetted vnto him than we are able to paie consideringe we are not able so much as to vnderstande what they are THE SEVENTHE TREATISE OF THE CONSIDERATION OF the benefites of almightie God Wherein the former meditation is declared more at large ONE of the greatest complaintes that almightie God maketh against men and wherewith he will most charge them at the daie of their accompte Almightie God will charge vs at the daye of our accompte with our vnthankefulnes and ingratitude for his manifolde benefites Esa 1. is their vnthankfulnes and