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A51685 A treatise of morality in two parts / written in French by F. Malbranch, author of The search after truth ; and translated into English, by James Shipton, M.A.; Traité de morale. English Malebranche, Nicolas, 1638-1715.; Shipton, James, M.A. 1699 (1699) Wing M319; ESTC R10000 190,929 258

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who is our life shall appear then shall ye also appear with him in Glory VII Of all the Exercises proper to promote the Efficacy of Grace there is no one more necessary than that of the Mortification of the Senses for it is our own Body alone that unites us to all other Bodies It is chiefly by the Senses that the Soul stretches it self as I may say to all the parts of the Body and by the Imagination and Passions it is carried abroad and extends it self to all the Creatures But as Objects are presented to the Mind by the Senses the Imagination and Passions suppose and depend on them For it is certain that the corporeal Image of a sensible Object I do not here speak of Mathematical Figures is nothing but the Impression and Motion which that Object hath made in the Brain by means of the Senses which Impression is renewed by the Action of the Imagination or the Course of the Spirits And as for the Passions they cannot be excited but by the Motion of the animal Spirits which always supposes that the Brain the Magazene of these Spirits is shaken either by the Senses or the Imagination So that he who mortifies his Senses attacks the very Foundation of the Union of the Soul with the Body or rather of its dependence on it he weakens the animal Life and diminishes the weight of Sin Concupiscence he promotes the Efficacy of Grace which alone can reunite us to our first Principle Finally he procures himself that kind of Death without which as the Scripture speaks it is not possible to see God VIII The most capacious of all the Senses that which ministers to all the rest and without which the Imagination and Passions would be but faint and languishing is the Sight We need but reflect a little on our selves and on the use we may make of our Eyes to be convinc'd that they expose us daily to a thousand Dangers One indiscreet look is certainly sufficient to throw us into Hell It made David fall into an Adultery which afterwards engag'd him in a Murder Eve suffer'd her self to be seduc'd by the Devil because she ventur'd to look fixedly on the forbidden Fruit and found it pleasant to the Eyes Gen. 3.6 If they had distrusted their Senses as fallacious and rejected their Testimony they had both of them preserv'd their Innocence I think it not much to my present purpose to enlarge on the mischievous effects of the Sight and from thence to prove the necessity of shutting our Eyes in many Cases I rather choose to examine Things in their first Principles and to shew the use we may lawfully make of all our Senses in general which I shall confine within the straitest Bounds that can possibly be set to it IX One of the Principles which I think I have demonstrated several ways in the First Book of the Search of Truth is this That our Senses are given us only for the preservation of our sensible Being In relation to this end they are perfectly well regulated but with respect to the use which the World makes of them there is nothing more false deceitful and irregular To prove this we must consider that we are compos'd of a Soul and a Body and that we have two sorts of Good to look after that of the Soul and that of the Body The Good of the Soul is found out by the Light for it is the true Good That of the Body is discover'd by Sense for it is a false Good or rather no Good at all If Men knew sensible Objects only as they are in themselves and without a sensible perception of that which is not really in them they could not possibly seek after them and fill themselves with them without regret and a kind of detestation and if they had a sense of the true Good different from what it really is and without knowing the true Nature of it they would love it sensually and not meritoriously For the Soul neither can nor ought to live but by the intellectual Substance of Reason and the Body cannot receive Nourishment and Growth but from Bodies Intellectual Goods do not suit with the mechanical Frame of the Body and sensible Goods disorder the Soul Thus Light and Evidence are to the Goods of the Soul what Sense and Instinct are to those of the Body This I think cannot be denied X. The reason of all this is that God created the Soul only for himself He did not make it that it should employ it self about sensible Objects nor that it should preserve and govern by Reason the Body which it Informs If we would know distinctly and rationally the infinite Relations that are between the Bodies which surround us and that which we animate if we would know for instance when we ought to eat how much and what kind of Food is precisely necessary to preserve our Health and Life we must do nothing else but study Physicks and certainly we should not live very long at least Children would not because they want Experience But Hunger informs us of the necessity of Food and thereby regulates the quantity of it pretty near the matter Once it did it truly and exactly and would do so still if we would eat the Fruits of the Earth just as God provides them for us The Taste is a short and unquestionable Tryal whether such and such Bodies are proper for Nourishment or not Without knowing the Texture of a Stone or a strange Fruit we need only present it to the Tongue the faithful Door-keeper at least before Sin of all that ought to enter into the House to be assur'd whether it will make any disturbance within The same may be said of all the other Organs of our Senses Nothing is quicker than the Touch to inform us that we are burnt when we touch a hot Iron without our Knowledge Thus the Soul leaving the Government of the Body to the Senses may apply it self to the search of the true Good contemplate the Perfections and works of its Maker study the Law of God and govern all its motions by that The Senses should only inform it with respect and cease to interrupt it when it imposes Silence on them Thus it was once but the Sin of our first Parent hath chang'd that admirable Order and the union of the Soul and Body remaining still the same the Soul is reduc'd to a dependence on the Senses and is check'd and controul'd by them because as I have often said it hath lost the power to command them XI The Senses then were ordain'd to furnish us with short and certain ways to distinguish Bodies with respect to the preservation of our Health and Life Therefore we may make use of them to unite our selves by the Body to sensible Objects or to separate our selves from them this is agreable to Order I say to unite or separate our selves Not to love or fear them For Love and Hatred are Motions of
must avoid every thing that takes up any room in the Mind unprofitably And as there is nothing that possesses it more than that which touches strikes and agitates it it is evident that we must carefully avoid all Objects that please our Senses and excite our Passions The Senses and Passions being certain Modifications of the proper substance of the Soul all intellectual Ideas which do not modify it must of necessity disappear in the presence of sensible Objects tho' we strive never so much to retain them and to discover their Relations Besides we are perswaded that it is in our own power to recal these intellectual Ideas but Experience assures us that our Wills are not the occasional causes of our Senses And therefore we readily lay hold of those Sensations by which we enjoy those Delights that pass away and cannot be recall'd and neglect the pure Ideas whereby we discover the Truth which remains fix'd and which we can contemplate whenever we please For we must resolve speedily as to those Goods which fly away from us but we may defer the examination of those that are stable and always present In short we would always be actually happy We would never be actually Miserable Actual Pleasure makes us actually Happy and actual Pain actually Miserable Therefore every Sensation which participates of Pleasure or Pain possesses the Mind Every motion of the Soul which hath actual good or evil for its Object governs the Will So that we must use very strong endeavours to contemplate Truth when our Senses are affected and our Passions stir'd And since we find by Experience that these endeavours are at that time very insignificant it is impossible but that the Soul being spent and tir'd must be discontented and discourag'd And therefore those who treat of Prayer give us this weighty Admonition to labour incessantly in mortifying our Senses and not to meddle with those things which do not concern us and which may in the sequel by our indiscreet engaging in them excite in us a Thousand troublesom Motions IX The next thing we have to do is to avoid as much as we can all those Sciences and Occupations which have nothing but shew and outward splendor those Sciences in which the Memory only is employ'd those Studies and Occupations in which the Imagination is too much exercis'd When a Man's Head is full he is content with his imaginary Riches and being swell'd with Pride he scorns the labour of Attention or if he owns the necessity of it it will cost him too much Pains to remove all those false Ideas which his Memory furnishes him with And when the Imagination is too much exercis'd the evidence of Truth doth not make a lively impression on us For it is certain that there is nothing more opposite to Reason than an Imagination too well furnish'd too nice too active or rather a malignant and corrupted Imagination For the Imagination ought always to be silent when Reason Speaks but when we have us'd our selves to employ it much it continually interrupts and opposes it And therefore we see that those Men of Sense I speak of and your great Wits as they fancy themselves have not much Piety or Religion for indeed there are no Men more blind than they All the Light in them is extinguish'd by Pride for being always highly conceited of themselves and satiated or rather having no Appetite to Truth they cannot bring themselves to think of earning by the Sweat of their Brow the Bread of the Soul a Nourishment of which they have no manner of Relish X. A Man must labour with the Soul to maintain the life of the Soul this is absolutely necessary But nothing is more servile than to employ the labour of the Soul in getting Mony or Honour That a Mechanick should labour with the Body to maintain the life of the Body to get Bread this is conformable to Order at least while his Body is at Work he may feed his Mind and employ it in good Thoughts But for a Magistrate a States-man a Merchant to lavish away the strength of his Mind in getting those Goods that are many times of no use for the life of the Body and always dangerous to that of the Soul is a very great Folly And therefore we should in the third Place avoid all such Employments as deprive us of the liberty of the Mind except God engages us in them by an extraordinary Vocation For if Charity or the Laws of the Community in which we live oblige us to them and we take upon us no more than we are able to bear God will make up in us an equivalent to that which we might have obtain'd by the labour of Meditation And even then we shall find time enough to examine our selves in relation to our Duties if we are not govern'd by Ambition or Interest in the exercise of our Calling XI Every Man knows well enough what things are apt to agitate and distract his Mind at least he may be inform'd by consulting Experience or that inward Sense which he hath of himself And therefore I shall not dwell any longer in setting down particularly what we must do to make Meditation easy to us It is only the Body which makes the Soul dull and heavy This is the ground of our Stupidity Now all sensible Objects work upon us only by means of the Body Therefore it is evident that to hearken without Pain to the Answers which Truth pronounces within us we have nothing to do but to silence our Senses Imagination and Passions or in a Word to still that confus'd Noise which the Body makes in us Now every Man knows by his own Experience that the Body is quiet enough when nothing stirs it from without or hath not too much stir'd it before For since it retains a long time those impressions and motions which it hath receiv'd from sensible Objects I confess that the Imagination remains polluted and hurt when we have been so indiscreet as to be too familiar with Pleasure Notwithstanding the Wound will close up of it self and the Brain will return to its former state if we carefully avoid the action of all Objects that strike our Senses which we are always able to do at least in some measure with those necessary Helps which I all along suppose Let us do what we can on our part and we shall be so far from being out of love with Meditation that we shall find our selves so well rewarded that we shall not repent of our Pains provided nevertheless that we observe the following Rule without which notwithstanding all our Meditation we shall never be rewarded with a clear view of Truth My Design here is not to teach the Art of Thinking nor to deliver all the Rules by which the Mind ought to regulate every step in takes in the search of Truth The Subject of this Discourse is Morality a Science necessary for all Mankind and not Logick which only they who
But it is needless to prove here that to procure our own Death is a Crime which will be so far from reuniting us to God that it will for ever separate us from him It is lawful to despise Life and even to wish for Death that we may be with Christ as St. Paul does Having a desire to be dissolv'd Phil. 1.23 and to be with Christ But we are oblig'd to preserve our Health and Life and it is the Grace of Christ that must deliver us from Concupiscence or that Body of Death which joyns us to the Creatures The same Apostle cries our O wretched Man that I am Rom. 7.24 who shall deliver me from this Body of Death The Grace of God through Jesus Christ II. It is certain Exod 33.20 that we must die before we can see God and be united to him for no Man can see him and live saith the Scripture But we truly die so far as we quit the Body as we separate our selves from the World and silence our Senses Imagination and Passions by which we are united to our Body and by that to all those that surround us We die to the Body and to the World when we retire into our selves when we consult the inward Truth when we unite our selves and are obedient to Order Job 28.21 The eternal Wisdom is hid from the Eyes of all Living But those who are Dead to the World and to Themselves who have crucified the Flesh with its disorder'd Lusts who are crucified with Christ and to whom the World is crucified Blessed are the pure in Heart for they shall see God Mat. 5.8 1 Cor. 13.12 in a word those who have a clean Heart a pure Mind and an unspotted Imagination are capable of beholding Truth Now they see God but confusedly and imperfectly in Part through a Glass in a Riddle but they see him truly they are closely and immediately united to him and shall one day see him Face to Face for we must know and love God in this Life to enjoy him in the next III. But those who live not only the Life of the Body but also the Life of the World who live in the enjoyment of Pleasures and spread themselves as it were over all the Objects that are about them can never find out Truth Job 28.13 For as the Scripture saith Wisdom doth not dwell with those that live Voluptuously Non invenitur in terra suaviter viventium We must then procure our selves not that Death which kills the Body and puts an end to Life but that which brings the Body under and weakens Life I mean the Union of the Soul with the Body or its dependence on it We must begin and continue our Sacrifice and expect from God the Consummation and Reward of it For the Life of a Christian here on-Earth is a constant Sacrifice by which he continually offers up his Body his Concupiscence and Self-love to the Love of Order and his Death which is precious in the Sight of God is the day of his Victories and Triumphs in Jesus Christ raised from the dead the forerunner of our Glory and the model of our eternal Reformation IV. Rom. 6.6 St. Paul tells us That our old Man is already crucified with Christ for by the Sacrifice which Christ hath offer'd on the Cross he hath merited for us for us I say particularly who have been washed in his Blood by Baptism all the Graces necessary to balance and even to diminish by degrees the weight of Concupiscence so that Sin no longer reigns in us but by our own Fault Let us not therefore think to excuse our Slothfulness by imagining that we are not able to resist the Law of the Flesh which continually rebels against the Law of the Mind The Law of Sin would have an absolute Dominion over the Motions of our Heart if Christ had not destroy'd it by his Cross But we who are dead and buried to Sin by Baptism Rom. 6.4 v. 11. who are justified and rais'd to life again in Jesus Christ glorified who are animated by the influence of our Head by the Spirit of Christ and by a Power wholly Divine we I say ought not to believe that Heaven forsakes us in our Combats and that if we are overcome it is for want of Succours Christ never neglects those that call upon him 't is impious to believe it for all the Scriptures say Act. 2. ●1 Rom 10.13 Joel 2.34 That whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be sav'd V. It is certain that we could never be glorified and seated in Heaven with Jesus Christ we could not have eternal Life abiding in us we could not be Heirs of God and Joint-heirs with Christ Citizens of the holy City and adopted Children of God himself all which things the Apostles say of Christians if God were not faithful in his Promises if he suffer'd us to be tempted above our Strength 1 Cor. 10.13 which St. Paul also forbids us to believe But we may truly say That we are already glorified in Christ c. because in effect it depends only on our selves to preserve by Grace the Right which the same Grace gives us to future Blessings and it is a kind of brutish stupidity in a Man which one would think should astonish a rational and spiritual Being to lose infinite Happiness by his own Fault and incurr eternal Damnation through his own Negligence VI. This Truth being suppos'd as undeniable let us awaken our Faith and Hope let us search after the Means to secure our Salvation and let us Act in such sort that the Grace which God cannot infuse into us with any other design but to sanctify and save us may effectually sanctify us and make us worthy to enjoy the true Good Ye are dead saith St. Paul 〈…〉 and your life is hid with Christ in God Mortify therefore your Members which are upon the Earth We are dead to Sin because living in Christ our Head we should and by his influence may kill the old Man it lies in our own power to do it But to put this Design in execution according to the Advice which St. Paul here gives we must labour all our life in the Mortification of our Senses we must endeavour with the utmost Diligence to keep our Imagination pure and undefil'd we must regulate all the Motions of our Passions by Order in a word we must diminish the weight of Sin which by the actual Efforts of Concupiscence provok'd and stir'd up is able to balance the strongest Graces and to separate us from God Mortify therefore your Members which are upon the Earth If we do what depends on us Grace will work in our Heart with its full Efficacy we shall die in the sense of St. Paul and our life being hid with Christ in God shall appear with Glory when Christ himself shall appear cloth'd with Majesty and Honour Col. 3.4 When Christ
Spiritual and consequently not Rational This is Life eternal to know the true God and Jesus Christ his only Son To have Sentiments worthy of the divine Attributes and Motions agreable to those Sentiments To know Jesus Christ who alone gives us access to the Father and diffuses Charity in our Hearts To be fully convinc'd that he alone is the High-Priest of the true Goods or the occasional cause of Grace that so we may draw near to him with Confidence and by his assistance excite in our selves such Motions as are suitable to the knowledge he hath given us of the true Worship which honours the divine Majesty But instead of this every one frames to himself a Theology a Religion or at least a Devotion apart of which Self-love is the Motive Prejudice and Possession the Foundation and Beginning and sensual Goods the End The Worship of God consists many times only in outward Sacrifices in verbal Prayers in Ceremonies which were at first ordain'd to raise the Mind to God but now serve only by their splendor and magnificence to refresh the Imagination in most People when they are tir'd and out of relish with the performance of their Duties to God Custom human Considerations or Hypocrisy carry their Bodies into the Church But their Minds and Hearts never come there And while the Priest offers up Jesus Christ to God in their Presence or rather while Christ offers up himself to his Father for their Sins on our Altars they on their part Sacrifice to Ambition Avarice or Pleasure spiritual Sacrifices in all the places whither their Imagination carries them CHAP. VI. Of the Duties of Society in general Two sorts of Society Every thing should be refer'd to the eternal Society Different kinds of Love and Honour The general heads of our Duties toward Men. They must be External and Relative The danger of paying inward Duties to Men. The Conversation of the World very dangerous I. HAVING explain'd in general the Duties which we owe to God we must now examine those which we owe to other Men as God hath made us to live in Society with them under the same Law the universal Reason and in a dependance on the same Power that of the King of Kings and supreme Lord of all things II. We are capable of forming Two sorts of Society with other Men A Society for some Years and an eternal Society A Society of Commerce and a Society of Religion A Society maintain'd by the Passions and subsisting in a communion of particular and perishing Goods whose end is the preservation and welfare of the Body and a Society govern'd by Reason supported by Faith and subsisting in the communion of the true Goods whose end is a happy Life to all eternity III. The great or indeed the only design of God is the holy City the heavenly Jerusalem where Truth and Justice inhabit All other Societies shall Perish tho' God be immutable in his Designs But this spiritual Society shall continue for ever The Kingdom of Christ shall have no end His Temple shall be eternal His Priest-hood shall never the chang'd Psal 110.3 The Lord hath Sworn and will not Repent Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedeck The House of God is built on an unshaken Foundation on that belov'd Son in whom God is well-pleas'd and by whom all things shall subsist to the Glory of him who gives them their Being IV. When we procure any settlement here below for our selves or our Friends we build on the Sand we place our Friends in a tottering House it will sink under us at the Hour of Death to be sure But when we enter our selves as Workmen in the building of the Temple of the true Solomon and cause others to come in we then labour for Eternity This Work shall last to all Ages This then is the good which we ought to procure for our selves and other Men This is the chief end of all our Duties toward them This is that holy Society which we must begin here below by the love which we owe to one another For since the design of God in these temporary and perishing Societies is only to furnish Christ the Architect of the eternal Temple with fit Materials for the building of his Church we cannot fail of performing essential Duties when we engage in the designs of him who would have all Men to be sav'd and employ all our Faculties in hastning his great Work and in procuring to Men those good things for which they were created V. So when our Saviour bids us Love one another we must not imagine that he absolutely commands us any other thing than to procure one another the true and spiritual Goods What kind of Blessings were those which he showr'd on his Apostles and Disciples Did he give them the fading and perishing Goods such as the pretended Friends of this World give to those that gratify their Passions Did he constantly deliver them out of the Hands of their Persecutors No certainly-Therefore the principal Duties of our Charity do not consist in such things as these We must assist our Neighbour and preserve his Life as we are oblig'd to preserve our own but we must prefer the Salvation of our Neighbour before his and our own Life VI. To Love therefore is an equivocal Term. It signifies Three very different things which we must carefully distinguish To unite our selves by our Will to an Object as our Good or the cause of our Happiness To conform our selves to any thing as our pattern or the rule of our Perfection And to wish well to any Person or to desire that he may be happy and perfect The love of Union is due only to the power of God The love of Conformity is due only to the law of God the immutable Order No Creature is capable of acting on us No Person can be our living Law or our perfect Model Christ himself tho' he was without Sin tho' he was Reason incarnate did some things which we must not do because the circumstances not being the same the intellectual Reason the inviolable Law the indispensable Model of all intelligent Beings forbids us to do them VII So then we must not love our Neighbour with a love of Union nor with a love of Conformity But we may and ought to Love him with a love of Benevolence We must Love him in that sense of the Word which signifies to desire his Happiness and Perfection and as our practical desires are the occasional causes of certain effects which conduce to that end we must use all our endeavours to procure him solid Vertue that he may merit the true Goods which are the reward of it This is the obligation that truly and absolutely lies upon us from that Commandment which our Saviour hath given us in the Gospel to Love one another as ourselves and as he hath loved us VIII To Honour is also an equivocal Word It denotes a submission of the
Duties It is principally the knowledge and love of the relations of Perfection or practical Truths wherein consist our Perfection Let us apply our selves then to know to love and follow Order Let us labour for our Perfection as for our Happiness let us leave that to the disposal of God on whom it wholly depends God is just and necessarily rewards Vertue Let us not doubt then but that we shall infallibly receive all the Happiness that we have deserv'd XX. The Obedience which we pay to Order and submission to the Law of God is Vertue in all Senses Submission to the divine Decrees or to the power of God is rather Necessity than Vertue A Man may follow Nature and yet walk irregularly for Nature it self is irregular On the other side he may resist the action of God without opposing his Orders for oftentimes the particular action of God is so determin'd by second or occasional Causes that it is not conformable to Order It is true indeed that God wills nothing but according to Order but he often acts contrary to it For Order it self requiring See the 7 and 8 Christian Medit. that God as the general cause should act in a constant and uniform manner according to certain general Laws which he hath establish'd the effects of that cause are many times contrary to Order He forms Monsters and is subservient as it were to the Wickedness of Men in this World by reason of the simplicity of those ways by which he executes his Designs So that he who should think to obey God in submitting to his Power and in following and observing the course of Nature would offend against Order and fall into Disobedience every Moment XXI If all the motions of Bodies were caus'd by particular acts of the Will of God it would be a sin to avoid the Ruins of a falling House by flight for we cannot without injustice refuse to render back to God that Life which he hath given us when he requires it again At this rate it would be an Affront to the Wisdom of God to alter the course of Rivers and to turn them to Places that want Water we should follow the Order of Nature and be quiet But since God acts in consequence of certain general Laws we correct his Work without injuring his Wisdom We resist his action without opposing his Will because he doth not will positively and directly every thing that he doth For example he doth not directly will unjust Actions tho' he alone gives motion to those that commit them And tho' it be only he who sends Rain yet every Man hath a liberty to shelter himself when it Rains For God doth not send Rain but by a necessary consequence of general Laws Laws which he hath establish'd not that such or such a Man should be wet through but for greater ends and more agreeable to his Wisdom and Goodness If the Rain fall upon Men upon the Sea or upon the Sand it is because he is not oblig'd to alter the uniformity of his Conduct for the uselessness or inconvenience of the consequences of it XXII The case is not the same between God and Men between the general cause and particulationes When we oppose the action of Men we offend them for since they act only by particular motions of the Will we cannot resist their action without opposing their Designs But when we resist the action of God we do not at all offend him nay we often promote his Designs For since God constantly follows those general Laws which he hath prescrib'd to himself the combination of those effects which are the necessary consequences of them cannot always be conformable to Order nor proper for the execution of his Work And therefore it is lawful for Men to divert these natural effects not only when they may be the occasion of their Death but also when they are inconvenient or disagreeable Our Duty then consists in submitting our selves to the Law of God and following Order For to submit to his absolute Power is necessity This Order we may know by our union with the Word so that the immutable Order may be our Law and our Guide But the Divine Decrees are absolutely unknown to us And therefore let us not make them our Rule Let us leave that chimerical Vertue of following God or Nature to the Sages of Greece and the Stoicks But let us consult Reason let us love and follow Order in all things for then we truly follow God when we submit to a Law which he invincibly loves XXIII But tho' the Order of Nature be not precisely our Law and a submission to that Order be by no means a Vertue we must observe nevertheless that we ought oftentimes to have a regard to it Yet still this is because the immutable Order so requires and not because the Order of Nature is an effect of the Power of God A Man that suffers Persecution or rather one that is tormented with the Gout is oblig'd to bear it with Patience and Humility because being a sinner Order requires that he should suffer besides other Reasons which need not here be produc'd But if Man were not subject to Sin and the immutable Order did not require that he should suffer to deserve his Reward certainly he might nay and ought to seek his ease and avoid all sorts of inconveniences tho' he were persecuted if that were possible by the inclemency of the Seasons and by the Miseries which Sin hath brought into the World And a Man tho' he be a sinner may shelter himself from the Rain and the Wind and avoid the action of an avenging God because Order requires that he should preserve his Strength and Health and especially the liberty of his Mind to think upon his Duty and search after Truth And because Rain and Wind being consequences of the general laws of the Order of Nature it doth not plainly appear that it is the positive Will of God that he should suffer that particular inconvenience For it would be a hainous Crime in us to avoid the Rain if God should make it Rain on purpose to wet and punish us As it was in our first Parent to eat of a Fruit because of the express Prohibition and his formal Disobedience But if Vertue consisted precisely in living in that condition wherein we are plac'd in consequence of the Order of Nature he that is born in the midst of pleasure and abundance would be vertuous without pain and Nature having been happily favourable to him he would follow it with pleasure But Virtue must be painful at present that it may be generous and meritorious A Man ought to sacrifice himself for the possession of God Pleasure is the Reward of Merit and therefore cannot be the foundation of it as I shall shew hereafter In a Word Truth it self informs us of one that was commanded to sell his Goods and distribute them to the Poor if he would be perfect which was
Bodies and by their means in the Souls wihch are united to them certain effects which may promote the efficacy of Grace and keep Men from those Stumbling-blocks which the Devils continually lay in their way For as the Psalmist saith Psal 91.11 12. He hath given his Angels charge over thee to keep thee in all thy ways They shall bear thee up in their Hands lest thou dash thy Foot against a Stone XIII So then we may pray to the Angels and desire their protection against that roaring Lion who as St. Peter saith walketh about seeking whom he may devour Eph. 6.12 Or to use St. Paul's words Against those Principalities and Powers against the Rulers of the Darkness of this World those Princes of the World full of Darkness and Error against spiritual Wickedness in high places those evil Spirits which are scatter'd through the Air For we wrestle not against Flesh and Blood only But we must not look upon the Angels as distributive Causes of Grace nor give them that Worship which is due to Christ alone Col. 2.18 19. Be not deceiv'd saith St. Paul by those who in a voluntary Humility pay a superstitious Worship to Angels who meddle with those things which they do not understand being dazled by the vain Imaginations of their fleshly Mind and not keeping themselves united to the Head from which the whole body of the Church receives the Spirit which gives it Growth and Life v. 15. even to Jesus Christ who having spoil'd Principalities and Powers which he had vanquish'd by his Cross made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in it CHAP. X. Of the Occasional Causes of the Sensations and Motions of the Soul which resist the Efficacy of Grace either of Light or Sense The Vnion of the Soul with God is immediate not that of the Soul with the Body An Explication of some general Laws of the Vnion of the Soul and Body necessary for the right understanding the rest of this Treatise I. IN the Fifth Sixth and Seventh Chapters I have spoken at large of the occasional Cause of Light and in the two last I have endeavoured to shew what is the occasional Cause of the Grace of Sense and what we must do to obtain it And therefore seeing there is nothing beside Light and Sense which determines the Will or the tendency which the Soul hath toward Good in general all that now remains in relation to the Means of acquiring or preserving the habitual and ruling Love of the immutable Order is to explain the Laws of the Union of the Soul and Body or the occasional Causes of all those lively and confus'd Sensations and those indeliberate Motions which unite us to our Body and by that to all the Objects which are about us For to make us love Order and to acquire Vertue it is not sufficient to obtain the Grace of Sense which alone can stir the Soul and put it in Motion toward the true Good but we must also manage our selves so that this Grace may work in our Hearts with its full Efficacy For this end we must carefully avoid the occasional Causes of those Sensations and Motions which resist the Operation of Grace and sometimes render it altogether ineffectual This is the most general Principle of all that I shall say in the First Part of this Discourse II. The Soul of Man hath two essential and natural Relations one to God the true Cause of all that passes within him the other to his Body the occasional Cause of all those Thoughts which relate to sensible Objects When God speaks to the Soul it is to unite it to himself when the Body speaks to it it is only for the Body to unite the Soul to sensible Good God speaks to the Soul to enlighten and render it perfect the Body only to darken and corrupt it in favour of it self God by the Light conducts the Soul to its Happiness the Body by Pleasure involves the whole Man in its ruin and throws him headlong into Misery In a word tho' it is God that doth every thing and tho' the Body cannot act upon the Soul no more than the Soul can upon the Body but as an occasional Cause in consequence of the Laws of their Union and for the Punishment of Sin which without medling with those Laws hath chang'd the Union into a Dependence yet we may say that it is the Body which darkens the Mind and corrupts the Heart for the Relation which the Soul hath to the Body is the Cause of all our Errors and Disorders III. Notwithstanding we should be throughly convinc'd of this and never forget it that the Soul can have no immediate Relation but to God alone and that it cannot be united directly to any thing but to him for the Soul cannot be united to the Body but as it is united to God himself It is certain for very many Reasons that if I feel for instance the pain of a Scratch it is God that acts in me tho' in consequence of the Laws of the Union of the Soul and Body for those Laws derive their force from the Operation of the Divine Will which alone is capable of acting in me But the Body by it self cannot be united to the Soul nor the Soul to the Body They have no Relation to one another nor any one Creature to another I speak of Relations of Causality such are those which depend on the Union of the Soul and Body It is God that doth every thing his Will is the Union of all Unions the Modifications of Substances depend on him alone who gives and preserves their Being This is an essential Truth which I think I have sufficiently prov'd in another place IV. But tho' the Soul cannot be united immediately to any Thing but God yet it may be united to the Creatures by the Will of God who communicates his Power to them in making them occasional Causes for the production of certain Effects My Soul is united to my Body because on one side my Will is made the occasional Cause of some changes which God alone produces on it and in the other because the changes which happen in my Body are made occasional Causes of some of those which happen in my Soul V. Now God hath establish'd these Laws for many Reasons which are unknown to us But of those which we do know one is that God in following them acts in a uniform and constant manner by general Laws by the most simple and wisest ways in a word he Acts in such a manner as admirably bears the Character of his Attributes Another Reason is because the Body of Man is his proper Sacrifice for it seems to Sacrifice it self by Pain and to be Annihilated by Death The Soul is in a State of Probation in the Body and God who desires in some measure to be merited and to proportion Rewards to Merits doth by the Laws of the Union of the Soul and
For the fuller the Brain is of Spirits the more rebellious the Imagination is the Passions are the more violent the Body speaks in a higher Tone which never speaks but in favour of the Body to unite and subject the Soul to the Body and to separate it from him who alone is able to give it that perfection it is capable of We should therefore endeavour to silence our own Imagination and be upon our guard against those that please and excite it We should as much as is possible avoid the Conversation of the World For when the Lust either of Pride or Pleasure is actually provok'd Grace cannot operate in us with its full efficacy XXII Man is subject to Two sorts of Concupiscence one of Pleasure and the other of Grandeur This is a thing not sufficiently taken notice of When a Man enjoys sensual Pleasures his Imagination is polluted and carnal Concupiscence exerts and fortifies it self In like manner when he goes abroad into the World and seeks to advance himself in it when he procures Friends and gains Reputation the Idea which he hath of himself stretches and grows larger in his Imagination and the concupiscence of Pride gains new and greater Strength There are some impressions in the Brain naturally form'd for maintaining civil Society and advancing a Man 's private Fortune as there are others relating to the preservation of his Life and the propagation of his Species We are united to other Men by a thousand Relations as really as we are to our own Body and every union with the Creatures disunites us from God in the State we are now in because the impressions of the Brain are not subject to our Wills XXIII All Men are well enough convinc'd of the pravity of carnal Concupiscence they have some fear and abhorrence of it and in some measure avoid every thing that may provoke it But there are very few that seriously reflect on the concupiscence of Pride or apprehend the danger of raising and augmenting it Every one rashly throws himself into the Conversation of the World and embarks without fear on that tempestuous Sea as S. Augustine calls it We suffer our selves to be govern'd by the Spirit that reigns in the World we aspire to Greatness and pursue Honour For indeed how is it possible to remain unmov'd in the mid'st of that Torrent of People that surrounds us who insult and domineer over us if they leave us behind them In fine we get a Name but it is such a Name as makes a Man the more a Slave the more Pains he hath taken to deserve it a Name which straitly unites us to the Creatures and separates us from the Creator a Name illustrious in the esteem of Men but a Name of Pride which God will destroy CHAP. XIII Of the Passions What they are Their dangerous effects We must moderate them The conclusion of the first Part. I. THE Senses Imagination and Passions go always in company together We cannot examine and condemn them apart That which I have said of the Senses and Imagination naturally reaches the Passions also So that the Reader may easily judge what I am going to say by what I have already said For I shall only explain a little more at large what I have been already oblig'd to say in part by reason of the close union that is between all the parts of our Being II. By the Passions I do not mean the Senses which produce them nor the Imagination which excites and keeps them up But I mean those notions of the Soul and animal Spirits which are caus'd by the Senses and Imagination and act reciprocally on the cause which produc'd them For all this is nothing but a continual circulation of Sensations and Motions which mutually produce and fortify one another If the Senses produce the Passions the Passions in return by the Motion which they excite in the Body unite the Senses to sensible Objects If the Imagination stirs up the Passions the Passions by a Counter-motion of the Spirits raise the Imagination and each of them is reciprocally supported or produc'd anew by the effect of which it is the Cause so admirable is the oeconomy of Man's Body and the mutual Relation of all the parts which compose it But this matter deserves a fuller Explication in respect of the Consequences which we should draw from it III. The Passions are Motions of the Soul which accompany that of the Spirits and the Blood and produce in the Body by the mechanical Frame and Constitution of it all the dispositions necessary to support and keep up the Cause from whence they arise At the sight of any Object which moves the Soul we will suppose that Object to be some Good the animal Spirits which come from the Brain to the other parts of the Body divide themselves into two Branches or Courses One of these Courses runs or hath a tendency to run to the external parts the Legs and Arms or if they are unserviceable then to the Lungs and Organs of the Voice in order to dispose us and those that are with us to unite us to the Object The other part of the Spirits goes into the Nerves belonging to the Heart Lungs Liver and other Viscera to proportion the Fermentation and Course of the Blood and Humours to the quality of the present Good By this means the Impression which the presence of any Good or the Imagination forms in the Brain and which determines the two Courses of the Spirits is preserv'd and maintain'd by new Spirits with which the latter Course endeavours to supply the Brain by the repeated and violent Shocks wherewith it shakes the Nerves that encompass the Vessels containing the Humours and Blood the Matter of which the Spirits are continually made IV. The Nerves which are distributed into the Limbs being full of Spirits from their origine in the Brain even to their extremities and the Impression of the Object forcibly driving the Spirits into all the parts of the Body to give them a violent and extraordinary Motion or put them into a forc'd Position the Blood must of necessity ascend up to the Head speedily and in great abundance by the Action of the Nerves which surround and compress or dilate the Vessels wherein it is contain'd For if the Brain did not send a sufficient quantity of Spirits into the Members of the Body we could not long preserve the Air Posture and Motion necessary for the acquisition of Good and the avoidance of Evil. Nay we should fall into Swounings and Faintings for this constantly happens when the Brain wants Spirits and when the Communication which it hath by their means with the other parts of the Body is interrupted V. Thus the Body is an admirable Machine compos'd of an infinite number of Pipes and Cisterns which have all innumerable communications with one another The wonderful operation of this Machine depends wholly on the Course of the Spirits which is differently determin'd by the
none but God in the Creatures Jer. 17.7 5. Blessed is the Man that trusteth in the Lord and cursed is the Man that trusteth in Man and maketh flesh his Arm. IX This probably was the Philosophy of the noble Mordecai which he taught his adopted Daughter Esther For the Jews had a more divine Philosophy than that which the Heathens have left us In a Motion conformable to the Principles of that Philosophy without doubt it was that she makes this Prayer to God and lays before him the true Sentiments of her Heart Deliver us O Lord with thine hand Esther 14.14 c. and help me that am desolate and which have no other helper but thee Thou knowest all things O Lord thou knowest that I hate the Glory of the Unrighteous and abhor the Bed of the Uncircumcised and of all the Heathen Thou knowest my necessity for I abhor the sign of my high Estate which is upon mine Head in the days whereon I shew my self and that I wear it not when I am private by my self And that thine Hand-maid hath not eaten at Haman's Table and that I have not greatly esteem'd the King's Feast nor drunk the Wine of the Drink Offerings Neither had thine Hand-maid any joy since the day that I was brought hither to this present but in thee O Lord God of Abraham This great Queen takes God to witness That she had no joy but in him alone Tho' she were Wife to a Prince that commanded a Hundred and seventeen Provinces and liv'd in the midst of Pleasures yet she despises her Greatness and abhors the Delights of a voluptuous Court She remains unmov'd in the midst of so many Allurements and God alone is the Object of all the Motions of her Soul Thine Hand-maid never had any joy but in thee O Lord God of Abraham What constancy of Mind what greatness of Soul This is it which the Law of God teaches us and this also is demonstrated by that Principle that God alone doth every thing and that the Creatures are only the Occasional Causes of that Splendor which seems to environ them and of those Pleasures which seem to flow from them But the Duties we owe to Power which is in none but God require a more particular Explication X. All our Duties consist properly in nothing but certain Judgments and Motions of the Soul as I said before For God is a Spirit and will be worship'd in Spirit and in Truth All our outward Actions are but Consequences of the Action of our Mind This clear Perception That God alone hath Power obliges us to form the following Judgments 1. That God alone is the Cause of our Being 2. That he alone is the Cause of the duration of our Being or of our Time 3. That he alone is the Cause of our Knowledge 4. That he alone is the Cause of the natural Motions of our Will 5. That he alone is the Cause of our Sensations Pleasure Pain Hunger Thirst c. 6. That he alone is the Cause of all the Motions of our Body 7. That neither Men nor Angels nor Devils nor any other Creature can of themselves do us either good or harm That they may nevertheless as Occasional Causes determine God in consequence of certain general Laws to do us good or harm by means of the Body to which we are united 8. That in like manner we can do neither good nor harm to any one by our own strength but only oblige God by our practical Desires in consequence of the Laws of the Union of the Soul and Body to do good or harm to other Men For we indeed have the Will to move our Tongue or Arm but it is God alone who can and doth actually move them XI These Judgments require of us the following Motions 1. To love none but God with a Love of Vnion or Conjunction because he alone is the Cause of our Happiness either small or great transitory or durable I say with a Love of Vnion for we must love our Neighbour not as our Good or the Cause of our Happiness but only as capable of enjoying the same Happiness with us The word Love is equivocal and therefore we must take care of it 2. To have no joy but in God alone for he that rejoyces in any other thing judges that that other thing can make him happy which is a false Judgment and can cause only an irregular Motion 3. Never to unite our selves to the occasional Causes of our Happiness contrary to the Prohibition of the true Cause for that would be to oblige God in consequence of his Laws to promote Iniquity 4. Not to unite our selves to them without a particular necessity for the Sinner ought to avoid Pleasure because actual Pleasure gives actual Happiness and Happiness is a Reward which the Sinner doth not deserve besides the Pleasures which we enjoy by the means of the Body fortify Concupiscence disturb the Mind and corrupt the Heart a thousand ways This is the Ground of the necessity of Penance 5. To fear none but God because he alone can Punish us We must fear God in this life to keep us from offending him The happy day will come which excluding Sin shall also banish Fear 6. To be sorry for nothing but our Sin because nothing but Sin can oblige a just God to make us miserable He that grieves at the loss of a false Good gives Honour to it and considers it as a true Good And he that grieves at a Misfortune which he cannot remedy afflicts himself in vain Self-love enlightned is griev'd only for its own Disorders and Charity for those of others 7. Tho' God alone can make us miserable yet we must not hate him tho' we may fear him Only he that is harden'd in Sin hates God out of Self-love for being sensible that he will not obey God or knowing as the damn'd do that in the condition which he likes and is pleas'd with he hath no means of access or return to God the invincible love of Happiness inspires him continually with an invincible hatred against him who alone can be the cause of Misery 8. We must not hate nor fear the occasional causes of physical Evil or Misery We may separate our selves from them But we must not do that neither against the Will of the true Cause I mean contrary to Order or the Law of God 9. We should will nothing but what God wills because we can do nothing but what God doth If we have not the Power to act it is plain that we should not have the Will to act Order or the divine Law should also be our Law or the Rule of our Desires and Actions because our Desires are efficacious only by the power and action of God I cannot move my Arm by my own Strength And therefore I ought not to move it according to my own Desires The Law of God should govern all the effects of Power not only in God but
Good his Love can be no other but Love of himself His end is himself and can be nothing but himself Therefore he doth not produce in spiritual Beings a Love which hath a different tendency from his own for the love of Good in spiritual Beings proceeds only from the Will of God which is nothing else but the Love he bears to himself But further there are not Two or more true Goods there is but one alone for there is but one true Cause Therefore there is nothing amiable I mean with a love of Union but God So then since God cannot will that we should Love that which is not amiable or not Love that which is amiable supposing that we are capable of Loving our Love proceeding from God must necessarily according to the primitive institution of its Nature tend toward him and be refer'd to him alone III. God having created our Souls with a design to make them happy continually imprints on them a Love for Good and as he acts only for himself and Good neither is nor can be in any but in him this natural Love of Good doth of it self carry them toward God alone For this Love is like that which God bears to himself It is also invincible and irresistible because it is a powerful and continual Impression of the divine Love and it is the same thing with our Will for it is only by the particular determinations of this Love that we are capable of loving all Objects that have the appearance of Good IV. From hence it is plain that we cannot love Evil and that we have no Motion ordain'd for that end Notwithstanding we may mistake Evil for Good and so we may love Evil by loving Good we may love Evil out of choice by loving Good naturally we may love Evil or rather that which is neither Good nor Evil by a horrid abuse of that love for Good which God continually imprints on us to make us Love him as being our only Good or alone capable of making us happy For we must take particular notice that the Creatures tho' they are all Perfect or Good in themselves are neither Good nor Evil in respect of us because they have not really the power to do us either Good or Harm As they are occasional causes of Good or Evil of Pleasure or Pain we may unite our selves to them or separate our selves from them by the motion of our Body But we cannot reasonably Love or Fear them because every Motion which doth not tend toward God the beginning and end of it is irregular and if it be free and voluntary deserves to be Punish'd V. It is also evident that we cannot hate Good for since we invincibly desire to be happy we cannot separate our selves from that which makes us so but we may mistake Good for Evil and so hate Good from the hatred we have for Evil. And even this hatred is at the bottom a motion of Love We fly from Evil only by the motion of the Love we have for Good For God having created us to be happy by loving him hath given us no motion to separate us from him but only to unite us to him The wicked or the damn'd hate God with an invincible and irreconcilable Hatred but this proceeds from the very Love which God hath given them for himself For since God is not their Good but their Evil or the cause of their Punishment according to the Psalmist Psal 18.26 With the Pure thou wilt shew thy self Pure and with the Froward thou wilt shew thy self Froward they hate him by that irresistible Motion which God who is immutable in his proceeding gives then for their Happiness VI. For the right understanding of this it is sufficient to observe that actual Pleasure is the formal cause of actual Happiness as Pain is of Misery Now the Damn'd feel Pain the harden'd Sinner fears it The Damn'd know that God alone is the cause of Pain the Sinner believes he is Therefore both of them from the very desire they have to be Happy must of necessity make a wrong use of that Motion which God gives them to unite them to himself and must separate themselves from him for the more they are united to God the more God acts on them the more sensible they are of their Misery The Blessed on the contrary for a like reason cannot cease to love God And those that have access to God those that expect to find their Happiness in him Sinners who by Faith in Christ have hope of returning and finding favour with God may by the invincible desire of Happiness love and fear God This is our condition in this Life VII Now that the natural Love which God continually imprints on us may still continue Love and not be turn'd into Hatred that the love of Happiness may make us Happy that it may carry us toward God and unite us to him instead of separating us from him In a word that God may be or continue Good in respect of us and not become Evil our Love must always be conformable to or resembling the divine Love we must love Perfection as well as Happiness we must remain united to the wisdom of God as well as to his Power For God when he created Man gave him in the love of Good and by the impression of the Love which he bears to himself as it were two sorts of Love one of Happiness and the other of Perfection By the love of Happiness he united him to his Power which alone can make him Happy and by the love of Perfection he united him to his Wisdom by which alone as his inviolable Law he ought to be govern'd God if I may so say is divinely inspir'd with both these Loves They are inseparable in him and they cannot be separated in us without destroying us utterly For the power of God is Wise and Just His Wisdom is all Powerful and he that thinks to retain the love of his Happiness without the love of his Perfection without the love of Wisdom Justice and the immutable Order that love of Happiness will only serve to make him eternally Miserable God by his Power will not be the Good of Men but their Evil if by his Wisdom he is not their Law or the principle of their inward Reformation For Happiness is a Reward It is not enough to desire the enjoyment of it but we must also deserve it And we cannot deserve it if we do not govern the motions of our Heart by the inviolable Law of all intelligent Beings and regulate them according to the Model by which Man was first form'd and by which he must be form'd anew In a word the love of Conformity which relates to the immutable Order or the Wisdom of God must always be joyn'd with the love of Union which relates to his Power that so our Love being like the divine Love may carry us to all the Happiness and all the Perfection that
we are capable of VIII For we must observe that in the condition we are now in our Happiness and our Perfection often clash and we cannot avoid engaging on one side or the other either we must Sacrifice our Perfection to our Happiness or our Happiness to our Perfection the Love of Order to our Pleasure or our Pleasure to the Love of Order Now when we Sacrifice our Happiness to our Perfection or our Pleasure to the Love of Order we Merit for then we obey the Divine Law though we suffer by it and thereby we give Honour to the Wisdom of God or the universal Reason we leave that to God which depends wholly on him our Happiness and by that Submission we give Honour to his Power For Obedience to the Divine Law is partly in our own Power but the enjoyment of Happiness no way depends on us Therefore we should give up our Happiness to the disposal of God and to apply our selves wholly to our Perfection giving this honour also to God to believe him on his Word to rely on his Justice and Goodness and to live contented by Faith in the Strength of our Hope according to those words of the Scripture Heb. 10.38 Justus 〈…〉 Virg Lat. The just shall live by Faith God is certainly just and faithfull he will give us all the Happiness we deserve our Patience shall not be Fruitless But how great soever our Desire be and our Application in the Search of our Happiness yet this will not move God to give us the Enjoyment of it without we deserve it This excessive Desire will perhaps one day render us unworthy of it according to those admirable Words of our Saviour himself Mat. 16 24. If any Man will come after me let him deny himself and take up his Cross and follow me For whoever will save his † Soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 life shall lose it and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it For what is a Man profited if he shall gain the whole World and lose his own Soul Or what shall a Man give in exchange for his Soul For the Son of Man shall come in the Glory of his Father with his Angels and then shall he reward every Man according to his Works IX Now this contrariety which we find at present between our Happiness and our Perfection proceeds from the Union of the Soul and Body which is chang'd into a Dependance as a Punishment of Sin For the involuntary Motions of the Fibres of the principal part of the Brain are the occasional Causes of our pleasant or painful Sensations and consequently of our Happiness or Misery The Body to which we are join'd hath not the same Interests with Reason It hath its particular Wants to be supplied it makes its Demands with boldness and insolence and treats the Soul roughly if it refuses to grant them Whereas Reason uses only Threatnings and Reproaches which are not so lively and pressing as actual Pleasure and Pain We must therefore bravely resolve to be miserable in this Life that we may retain our Perfection and Integrity we must Sacrifice our Body or rather our actual Happiness that we may remain inseparably united to Reason and obedient to the Divine Law being contented with a foretaste of the true Enjoyments and having a firm hope that that Divine Law that Reason which was made Flesh sacrificed and glorified in our Nature or our Nature in that will certainly restore to us all that we have lost for our Obedience to it X. This clear perception that our Will or the natural and necessary Motion of our Love is only a continual Impression of the Love of God who unites us to his Power to make us conformable to his Wisdom or obedient to his Law obliges us to form these Judgments 1. That every Motion of Love which doth not tend toward God is prejudicial and leads to Evil or makes the Cause of our Good to be the Cause of our Evil. 2. That every Motion of Love not conformable to the immutable Order which is the inviolable Law both of the Creatures and of the Creatour himself is irregular and since God is Just that Motion obliges him to become our Evil or the Cause of our Misery 3. That we cannot unite our selves to God as our Good if we do not conform our selves to him as our Law The Converse of this is also true we cannot conform our selves to the Law of God and by that conformity become Perfect but we must also unite our selves to his Power and by that Union be made Happy XI This Truth may be also express'd thus according to the Analogy of Faith We have no way of access to God no society with him no share in his Happiness but by the universal Reason the eternal Wisdom the divine Word who was made Flesh because Man was become Carnal by his Flesh was made a Sacrifice because Man was become a Sinner and by the offering up of his Sacrifice was made a Mediatour because Man being corrupted and no longer able to consult or obey Reason purely intellectual it could not be the Bond of the Society between God and Him But yet we must take particular notice That Reason by becoming incarnate did not at all change its Nature nor lose any thing of its Power It is immutable and necessarily exists it is the only inviolable Law of spiritual Beings and hath the sole Right to command them Faith is not contrary to Truth it leads us to Truth and by it establishes ur Society with God for ever We must conform our selves to the Word made Flesh because the intellectual Word the Word without Flesh is a Form too abstracted too sublime and too pure to fashion or new-mould gross Spirits and corrupt Hearts Spirits that can take hold of nothing but what hath a Body and are disgusted at every thing that doth not touch and sensibly affect them Every High Priest is ordain'd to offer Gifts and Sacrifices wherefore it is of necessity that the Man have somewhat also to offer Heb. 8.3 The Word was made a Sacrifice because without a Sacrifice he had nothing to offer he could not be a Priest nor give Sinners any Communion with God without an Atonement and an Oblation We must be conformable to him in this Circumstance also for besides that it is we who are the Criminals we are also a part of the Sacrifice which must be purified consecrated and offer'd up before it can be glorified and consummated in God to all Eternity But the life of Christ is our Pattern only because it was conformable to Order our indispensable Pattern and our inviolable Law We must follow Christ even to the Cross because Order requires that this Body of Sin should be destroy'd for the Honour of Reason and the Glory of him from whom it separates us Order requires that by voluntary Pain of which the Body is the occasion we should deserve
Merits consist in eminent Qualities of Mind and Body Civil and Religious Merits arise from the Offices Men bear either in Church or State and from such Qualifications as are proper for the discharge of those Offices All Perfection is valuable in it self but many times it is much more comparatively or relatively A Diamond is not so perfect as a Fly but it is a great deal more valuable because of the Use Men make of it Also those Beings which have no other Perfection but that of their own Nature are preferable to those which have acquir'd Perfections A rough Diamond hath not so much Beauty as Glass well cut and polish'd but it hath much more Value as Things go So that a Man might justly be counted a Fool who would play the Philosopher so much as to prefer a Fly before an Emerald and to look upon a rough Diamond of very great Value as no better than a Pebble XII For to judge rightly of the Esteem we ought to make of Things and Persons it is not sufficient to consider them in themselves but we must also examine the several Relations which they may have to others of far greater Value The favour of the Prince gives a lustre to the vilest Persons and the Esteem Men have for Things should regulate their Price and consequently our outward and relative Esteem unless we resolve to despise Men too and make our selves ridiculous and contemptible Only we must take care not to let our Mind to be corrupted by the Judgments that are commonly made of Things Our Esteem must be only relative if the worth of the Thing be but relative for tho' Men esteem Gold and Silver more than Copper and Iron or the organis'd Bodies of Flies yet we must not pay the Duty of Esteem to Gold and Silver but to Men who make a wrong Judgment of them We must not judge of Persons or Things as Men do who attribute to the Objects of their Passions imaginary Perfections But whether they are deceiv'd in their Judgments or not we should have a relative Esteem for that which they esteem perhaps without Reason because in human Society the Worth of Things is generally measur'd by the Esteem Men have of them XIII The relative Merit of Men is many times much greater than their personal Merit and since our Duties are to be govern'd as well by the former as the latter I say again That nothing is more difficult than to judge rightly of what we ought to do in the infinite combinations of these different Merits Things may fall out so sometimes that we must unavoidably come short in the Payment of what we owe either to a Relation in such a degree or to a Man that hath done us such a Service or who bears such an Office in the Society and is serviceable to the State in such a capacity What must we do in this Case What is the common Measure whereby we may precisely discover the Proportion of our Duties For tho' it be certainly contain'd in the immutable Order yet it is not exactly known to us and if it were yet many times there are so many Relations to compare that we should never know what to resolve on if we staid till Evidence precisely noted to us every thing that we ought to do XIV We know well enough that all other things being equal we should prefer some Relations before others our Relations before our Friends and our Prince before them both But must we prefer one Relation before six or eight Friends A Relation who is our Enemy before a particular Friend Herein lies the difficulty For we must at the same time have regard to the Rights of Kindred of Friendship and of Society So that it often happens that we are oblig'd to prefer an Enemy before a Friend an Enemy who is a Friend of our Relations esteem'd by the Prince and serviceable to the State before a Friend who is a Person useless to the Publick or hath little or no affection for those who ought to be most dear to us Therefore there is no general Rule for the Government of our selves in the Duties of Esteem Respect and Benevolence which we owe to other Men but what is liable to a great many exceptions And that which extremely perplexes all that can be said in this Matter is That the Duties of Esteem Respect and Benevolence are of different kinds and many times in the same kind we ought to prefer one Man as to the Duties of Benevolence before another to whom we absolutely owe the Duties of Esteem and Respect XV. Seeing then the Order of our Duties is chang'd and govern'd by the different Circumstances of Things which it is not possible to foresee every Man should carefully examine them and retire into himself to consult the immutable Law without regarding those false Interests which the Passions continually represent and when he finds himself at a loss he should have recourse to such as are better skill'd than I in these matters he should consult Persons of the greatest Charity Prudence and Capacity rather than those who have their Memory only fill'd with general Rules which are insufficient to give a decision in particular circumstances and many times have neither Sense nor Charity The only general Rule that I shall venture to give at present a Rule which is not much follow'd but which seems to me to be the most certain one that can be given is this That we should prefer the Laws of Friendship in Jesus Christ and of the eternal Society before the common Rights of a Friendship and a Society which must end with our Life I shall explain my self more particularly XVI That which is finite how great soever it be hath of it self no proportion to infinity Ten thousand Ages in respect of eternity is nothing The proportion of the Universe to immense and boundless Spaces can be express'd only by a Cypher An Unite divided by a thousand Millions of Cyphers by a progression from one to a thousand Millions instead of from One to Ten would be a Fraction infinitely too great to express this proportion for indeed there is none this is my Position Now we shall enjoy God in the other life and enjoy him for ever Therefore the possession of the Empire of the Universe in respect of the possession of the true Good and the time of the enjoyment of this Empire compar'd with the eternity of the life to come are Cyphers there is no proportion between them They are totally eclips'd and annihilated by the presence of Eternity Human Greatness and Pleasures which pass away with our life nay let us join whatever we can think of for our Satisfaction all this disappears when we reflect a little and consider that we are immortal It is nothing and ought to be counted for nothing This I think every one will allow XVII Now let us observe this Principle and we shall see that he who is an occasion of falling
the Soul which should never be determin'd by confus'd Sensations they ought to be guided by Reason and not by Instinct It is indifferent to the Body whether the Soul loves Bread or not If we Eat it without loving it the Body will nevertheless be nourish'd by it and if we love it without eating it the Body will be never the stronger but the Soul will thereby be corrupted and disorder'd For every motion of the Soul which instead of tending towards him who continually imprints this Motion on it that it may love him alone tends toward Bodies dead inferiour and impotent Substances is blind irregular and sensual These are not abstracted Chimeras but necessary Truths immutable Laws and indispensable Obligations XII But what Can we unite our selves to Bodies without loving them Can we fly from our Enemy without fearing him Yes without doubt we may For I speak principally of free and voluntary Motions which certainly we may hinder from following the natural Motions But supposing we could not What then must we conclude from thence but that the Heart of Man is so Corrupted that his Disease is incurable and that he cannot make use of his Senses without inflaming and renewing his Wounds and consequently that the mortification of the Senses is the most necessary thing in the World in that condition to which Man is reduc'd For after all can it be doubted that God acts only for himself that he imprints no motion on the Soul but for himself alone that all love of corporeal Objects is Vitious and Irregular in a Word that we are indispensably oblig'd to love God with all our Heart with all our Soul and with all our Strength XIII When the Soul is penetrated with the presence of God and beholds him Working continually in the Objects which strike the Senses when the Mind is actually convinc'd of the impotence of the Creatures in general and applies it self to govern the Heart according to the Light it hath receiv'd without doubt it may at that instant unite it self to Bodies or separate it self from them without loving or fearing them Indeed this time of Reflection cannot last long The Mind is soon tir'd with attention to its Duty and when the Senses come to be touc'h with any Object that pleases them the Soul being struck with the first appearance of Good and contented with it constantly follows by its own Motion that of the Humours and Blood All Pleasure excites and determines the natural motion of the Soul and because Man would always be happy the free motion of the Will readily conforms it self to the natural Motion which is excited by the Senses We must resist if we would not follow that Motion But we are soon tir'd with resisting we lose our beloved ease and become Miserable when we cease to follow the attraction of Pleasure which makes us happy XIV It is better to get out of a Stream which carries us away with it if we cease but one Moment to strive against it than to remain there in continual action at least this is the surest way It is better to break off as far as we can the correspondence which we maintain by the Senses with sensible Objects than to expose our selves to innumerable Dangers by relying on our own Strength which is vain and deceitful The Imagination may magnify it the Pride of Man may defend it but Experience overthrows it Faith condemns it and makes it weak and despicable At least let us take the safest course The thing in question is Eternity the dreadful alternative of the Felicity of the Saints or the punishments of the Devils for infinite Ages We may successfully stop the Passages by which this dangerous Correspondence between the Senses and false Goods is maintain'd The motion of our Hands and Feet is subject to our Will It is in our own Power to bend our Eyes downward to turn our Head and Fly Thus we may avoid the Blow level'd at us by a murtherous Object But if we stand to receive it it wounds the Brain it defiles the Imagination it penetrates and corrupts the Heart Whatever effects the force of that Blow produces in the Brain and in the Nerves which excite the Passions they are in no wise subject to our Will So that we may without much difficulty prevent the Mischief by the mortification of our Senses but we cannot cure it without infinite Conflicts How happy should we be if we would learn so much Wisdom by costly Experience as to hinder it from spreading and throwing us headlong into Hell XV. Let us endeavour then to convince our selves throughly that our Senses are false Witnesses which constantly give their Testimony against us in favour of our Passions That if we are permitted to hearken to them for the good of the Body nothing is more dangerous than to consult them for the good of the Soul That if it be very ridiculous to go to prove by Reason that Gold for instance or precious Stones are not proper for Nourishment it is also contrary to Order and good Sense to examine by the Tast whether Wine be an Object worthy of our Love and Application That the motions of the Soul should be govern'd by Light and the motions and position of the Body by Pleasure and Instinct That Light never deceives and that it leaves the Mind at liberty without driving it forcibly toward the Good which it presents that so the Mind may love it with Freedom and Reason that Pleasure on the contrary is always deceitful that it takes away or abridges the liberty of the Mind and carries it naturally not toward God the true Author of that Pleasure but toward the sensible Object which seems to be the cause of it Let us remember these Principles and draw this consequence from them that the mortification of the Senses is the most necessary exercise for him that designs to live by Reason to follow Order to labour for Perfection and to secure to himself a solid Happiness and an eternal Felicity XVI Having prov'd at large in the first Book of the Search of Truth that our Senses generally speaking deceive us in every thing I think I need not insist any longer on demonstrating what I have here laid down I rather fear that those who have read and consider'd my other Writings will find Fault with me for repeating the same things over and over But this Treatise being design'd for all sorts of People it could not be avoided For all these Truths have a connexion and relation to one another We must know the Nature of Man and his Diseases at least in some measure before we can comprehend the Remedies of them and understand Morality by Principles If I should lay down as known all those Truths which I have elsewhere prov'd every Reader would not understand what I meant by them many perhaps would be afraid of them as dangerous and this Book would in all probability have the same Fate with the