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

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eternall vnderstanding or my fruitfull memory out of the fulnesse of its infinite fecunditie and immense goodnes and out of the fountaine it selfe of my essence haue intellectually brought forth haue from eternitie saied and truely begotten an onely Sonne consubstantiall to me who is the Good word By that he is called good Mare 10. is shewed that he is God For none is good but one God I the eternall Father tell my workes to the King to Christ my beloued Sonne the King of Kings as Christ himself affirmeth The Father loueth the Ioh. 5. Sonne and sheweth him all things that himselfe doeth Whatsoeuer the Father knoweth in himselfe that he expresseth in his Word in such sort that whatsoeuer is contained in the essence of the Father that clearely shineth in the Sonne for he is the onely begotten of the Paternall mynd the eternall word the word of his vnderstanding and full expression of his wisedome Finally whatsoeuer the Father in order of things hath created euen from the beginning that he saied from eternitie in his word and made by him in conuenient tyme as S. Iohn witnesseth Ioh. 1. All things were made by him and againe That which was made in him was life My tongue my vnderstanding is the penne of à Scribe wri●ing swiftly maie bee compared to the penne of à Scribe writing swiftly in two respects First because as the word that is written with à penne doth not sound and passe away but is expressed in silence remaineth firmely soe the word of the Father is not sounding passing away and vnstable but secret firme immoueable and eternall Secondly because as the penne of à Scribe writing swiftly doth write à word without labour or notable delay soe the diuine vnderstanding speaking internally produced his word in the very instant of eternitie without motion labour or tarriance as the eternall wisedome who is the word and Sonne of God affirmeth saying Our Lord possessed Prouerb 8. me in the beginning of his waies before he had made any thing from the beginning from eternitie I was ordained The depthes were not as yet and I was now conceiued c. Moreouer he that writeth à great volume in à short tyme is not soe properly saied to write swiftly as he that comprehendeth that great volume in à few words and yet omitteth nothing God the Father in his eternall word comprehended all things that euer were are or shall bee and therefore he doth iustly affirme of himselfe that His tongue is the penne of à Scribe writing swiftly These two verses maie alsoe bee expounded as being the words of the Prophet and then the sense of them seemeth to bee as followeth My heart my vnderstanding out of the plenitude of diuine illumination Propheticall knowledge hath vttered hath produced saied internally and expressed with the mouth a good word this present Psalme which is à good word repleate with high most delightfull mysteries I tell my workes to the King I sing write and dedicate this present Psalme and all my other actions to the honour of the M●ssias the King of Syon of whose spirituall nuptials I purpose to treate My tongue is the penne of à Scribe writing swiftly My tōgue in writing this Psalme was the penne of one writing swiftly that is of my selfe who write it without premeditation or labour as I receiued it from the holie Ghost or of the holie Ghost who causeth those whome he doth inspire to write fast without searching for exquisite words to expresse what he dictateth O heauenly Spouse thou art Goodly of beautie aboue the Sonnes of men There was à threefold beautie in Christ The first eternall diuine and infinite which belongeth vnto him by reason of his diuine nature he being the figure substance of the Father whome the Angells behold with delight The second beautie of Christ was created and spirituall which consisted in the perfection of his wisedome the excellencie of his grace the eminencie of his charitie and other vertues and this his beautie was without comparison greater then of all the elect together The third beautie of Christ was created and corporall which consisted in the due proportion seate and quantitie of members and in the meet super infusion of liuely colour This beautie of Christ was exceeding great admirable First because noe naturall perfection was wanting vnto him Secondly because it was most fit that soe holie and faire à soule as his should bee infused into à body proportionate Thirdly because the body of Christ was assumed of most pure matter to wit of the purest bloud of the most worthy Virgin and Finally because it was formed and composed by à most skilfull infallible agent to wit the holie Ghost and therefore we maie piously beleeue that our Lord Iesus Christ in corporall beautie alsoe did excell all others euen Absolon himselfe Grace is powred abroad in thy lippes fruitfull and efficacious eloquence sweetnes affabilitie of speech is giuen thee that none shall bee able to resist thy words therefore in regard thou art soe powerfull to winne all hearts God hath blessed thee for euer The word Propterea in the latine text which here is Englished Therefore doth alsoe signify Because and being soe taken the sense of this verse is as followeth Thou art goodly of beauty aboue the Sonnes of men grace is powred abroad in thy lippes because God hath blessed thee for euer to wit with Hypostaticall vnion which shall remaine for euer and is the fountaine from which all gifts and graces doe flow most copiously into thy humanitie ô Christ The first sense is good and proper yet the Second seemeth to bee preferred Bee girded with thy sword vpon thy thigh ô most mightie ô Thou who art not onely most beautifull and gracious but alsoe most strong and ●aliant prepare thy selfe to combate with the vniust ryrant who hath by fraud circumuented thy beloued and detaineth her captiue for originall sinne The sword here mentioned is the doctrine of Christ who saieth of himselfe by the Prophet Isaie He hath made my mouth as à sharpe Isa 49. Ephe. 6. sword Take vpon you saieth the Apostle the sword of the spirit which is the word of God VVith thy beautie and fairenes not soe much with thy corporall beautie as with thy wisdome and Iustice which are the splendor of thy Soule Intend incline and haue pious regard to the saluation of thy people and endeauour to the vttermost to procure it Proceed prosperously aduance and march forwards with happy successe from the bosome of thy eternall Father into the wombe of thy immaculate Mother from her wombe into the manger from the manger to the Crosse and from thence extend thy dominion ouer the whole world and reigne in the militant Church placing thy throne in the hearts of thy people by faith and grace and in the triumphant Church by affording them the cleare vision of thy glorie And doe thou reigne in this sort Because of thy truth
Prophet promised vs in this Psalme that our Lord will not leaue the rod of sinners vpon the lot of the iust that we might haue confidence in all our afflictions that at length we shall be freed from them and in the interim that wee might expect with patience Math. 10. for He that perseuereth to the end shall be saued The argument of the 125. Psalme and first in None IN this Seuenth graduall Psalme according to the letter the Prophet expresseth the ioy and thankfulnesse of the Iewes for their deliuer●e from the Babilonian captiuitie Yet being expounded in à mysticall sense it treateth of the seuenth degree of internall ascension which consisteth in Exultation and thankfulnesse for the deliuerie of the elect from the bonds of sinne and seruitude of the diuell The mysticall sense of this Psalme VVhen our Lord turned the captiuitie of Sion when it pleased our good God the Father of mercie and consolation to conuert the Militant Church or any of the faithfull from à confused life from mortall sinne from present miserie to à well ordered life and the state of grace we were made as men comforted we felt soe great excesse of ioy and consolation that we durst scarcely beleeue soe singular a● happinesse was indeed arriued vnto vs. Then was our mouth replenished with ioy and our tongue with exultation Then was ioy soe aboundant in our soules that we haue exteriourly manifested it and made appeare by our Canticles of gladnesse Hymnes of thanksgiuing what interiour sweetnesse we experienced in that happie change of our condition Then shall they saie among the Gentils Then shall certaine secular men or other people whatsoeuer beholding the grace that God almightie hath bestowed vpon vs admiring saie Our Lord hath done magnifically with them exceeding benignely gratiously and potently For the louers of the world doe frequently extoll in others what they will not imitate they admire beholding many to bee conuerted to Christ to enter into religion to change their manners suddainely for the better praysing God in his effects yet they praie not that the same grace maie bee bestowed on themselues Our Lord hath done magnifically with vs This is the same with that we read in the Canticle of the blessed Virgin to witt He that is mightie hath done great things to Luc. 1. me Christ our Lord hath done magnificently indeed with vs assuming our nature conuerting our first and generall captiuitie satisfying for originall sinne conuersing amongst men vniting vs vnto him by grace congregating the Church of vs leauing vnto vs his body bloud in the holie Eucharist sending the holie Ghost and conferring innumerable benefits vpon vs. VVe are therefore Made ioyfull and serue him cheerefully Turne our captiuitie ô Lord free vs from all corruption of sinne constitute vs in the libertie of the sonnes of God and take from vs those sinnes by which we are daily circumuented and bound as it were in fetters turne this our captiuitie as à torrent in the south that soe we maie bee filled with the gifts and graces of the holie Ghost as à dried vp torrent is filled with water the south wind blowing They that sow in teares They that now exercise themselues in the sorrowes of pennance or teares of deuotion they that contemne transitorie delights and serue God with à contrite and humbled heart shall reape in ioyfulnesse the effects of grace in present and the fruit of glorie hereafter according to the quantitie and goodnesse of their seed for as the Apostle saieth He that soweth sparingly sparingly 2. Cor. 9 alsoe shall reape and he that soweth in blessings of blessings alsoe shall reape There are fiue sorts of teares The first are to obtaine pardon of our offences these purifie from the staine or blemish of sinne The Second are for the fearefull apprehension of the future Iudgement and hell these refrigerate the ardour of concupiscence and withdraw from all iniquitie The third are for our habitation in this present exile these minister soueraigne liquor to à thirsting soule The fourth are for the defects of our neighbours these fatten the soules of such charitable mourners The fift are for the desire of eternall life these render à soule fruitfull in all goodnesse The elect Going by the waie of this present life they went by the waie of the commandements of almightie God and wept according to some of the fiue sorts of lamentation afore saied casting their seeds doing meritorious workes which are tearmed seeds because as fruit springeth from seed soe of good workes ariseth the fruit of eternall life the infusion of diuine consolation They cast therefore their seeds they sent good workes before them and gathered à heape of merits which the layed vp in Chrih as he exhorteth vs saying Heape Math. 6 vp to your soules treasures in heauen c. and as the Apostle counselleth vs saying Gal. 6. Doing good let vs not faile for in due time we shall reape not failing But comming to the tribunall of Christ they shall come with exultation with a secure and ioyfull conscience carrying thei● sheaues the vertuous workes they haue soe collected for their workes shall follow Apoc. 14 them In this Psalme we are admonished to reuolue often in our minds the worke of our redemption We are taught alsoe what difference there is betweene the elect and the reprobate For the elect going in goodnesse doe make happie progresse by weeping but the reprobate doe glorie in this exile as if they were in the countrey of their inheritance making of à prison a paradise of delight and therfore comming to the tribunall of Christ they come with sorrow and heauinesse bearing nothing in their hands but the scedule of their damnation Whence it Luc. 6. is saied to them in the Ghospel VVoe to you that are rich because you haue your consolation woe to you that now doe laugh because you shall mourne and weepe c. Remember sonne saieth Abraham in the Parable of Luc. 16. the rich man that thou didst receiue good things in thy life time and Lazarus likewise euill but now he is comforted and thou art tormented Let vs then despise the pompe glorie and vanitie of the world represse the desires of the flesh and bathe our cheekes with holie teares considering that we can not now reioyce with the world and afterward reigne with Christ The title and argument of the 126. Psalme and Second in None A Graduall Canticle of Salomon Many of great talents who haue endeauoured to expound this Psalme doe confesse that they haue euer esteemed it exceeding obscure and haue not after long studie attained the literall sense thereof Yet they iudge the most probable exposition to bee that of the Greeke Fathers S. Iohn Chrisostome Theodoretus and Euthimius to witt That the propheticall exhortation therein doth appertaine to the people of the Hebrews after their returne from the Babilonian captiuitie when as they labouring to reedifie the house of God
and satisfied in this matter it will be necessary here in the beginning to take away such scruples and free the holy Church from falsly imposed errors superstition in the instititution and practise of saying the foresaid office The principall questions or doubts which may be made concerning it are these First by what authoritie and for what end it was instituted 2. ly why it was diuided into so many parts or howers and 3. ly why it is vsually said in the latine tongue by those who for the most part doe not vnderstand latine To all which I shall endeauour to giue soe cleare well groūded an swears that neither weake mynds shall haue occasion to complaine of hardnesse and obsuritie nor peruerse and froward iudgments if any such happen to peruse them shall iustly pretend any insufficiencie or want of soliditie in them After these generall points are clearely in their order discussed and some few slighter obiections of lesser moment answeared it will be easier both for me to proceed to the exposition of each particular part of the foremētioned Office and for the pious reader to vnderstand what I shall write Moreouer besides these I haue for the comfort and instruction of deuout but lesse learned Catholiks added some things to help such of them as recite this holy office that they may doe soe with due reuerence and spirituall profit This I conceaued necessary and hope will not proue vngratefull CHAPT II. Shewing that there hath beene euer both in the old and new law à publique forme of praier IT is easie to be demonstrated both out of the holy Scriptures Councells Fathers and the practise of the holy Church in all ages that besides mentall praier such vocall praier as euery one vsed priuatlie according to his owne necessitie and through pious particular instinct from God there was euer some more publique forme of praier instituted for the greater conformitie of all true beleeuers in their manner of praising almightie God and for the more solemne recounting of the benefits mercies shewed to his Church How many Psalmes Hymnes and spiritual Canticles do we find composed in the old Testament and accustomed to be said principally and generally by all those who were more particularly consecrated and addicted to the seruice of God and not onely by them but alsoe at tymes conuenient as their leasure did permitt by all sorts of people both men and women who although they were not obliged vnto any sett forme of publique praier yet they both might did vse it to the honor of God and with no small benefitt to their owne soules What hath bin said doth euidently appeare by the holy Scriptures first of the l. 1 Paralip c. 6 v. 31. old Testament These are they to witt the progeny of Leuj whome Dauid appointed ouer the singing men of the howse of our Lord since the Arke was placed and they mynistred before the Tabernacle of Testimony singing vntill Salomon built the howse of our Lord in Ierusalem And he King Dauid appointed before the Arke of our Lord of the Ibidem c. 16. v. 4. Leuites that should mynister and should remember his workes and glorifie and praise our Lord the God of Israel And the Priests stood in their offices and the Leuites with the instruments of the songs of our l. 2. Paralip c. 7. v. 6. Leuit. 8. v. 35 Lord which Dauid the King made to praise our Lord because his mercy is for euer Daie and night shall you tarrie in the Tabernacle obseruing the VVatches of our Lord which no doubt was à type of the Canonicall howers obserued in the Catholike Church Then sung Moyses the children of Israel Exod. 15. v. 1. this song to our Lord said Let vs sing to our Lord for he is gloriously magnified c. Marie Ibid. v. 20. therefore the prophetesse Arons sister tooke à timbrell in her hand and all the women went forth after her with timbrills and dances to whome she beganne the song saying Let vs sing to our Lord for he is gloriously magnified c. This laudable custome of reciting Psalmes was alsoe vsed by our Lord Sauiour Christ Iesus his Apostles as appeareth by the hymne they saied before they went forth vnto the Mount Oliuet Math. 26. v. 30. which was sung according to the custome of the Iewes after the eating of the Paschal lambe and as Paulus Burgensis writeth did containe Sixe Psalmes whereof the inscriptiō was Alleluia vz. The Psalme Laudate pueri with the fiue following Psalmes which the Hebrewes called the great Alleluia In the primitiue Church there was alsoe such a forme of publique praier euer obserued St. Paul in his epistle to the Ephesians did exhort them to the vse of singing Psalmes and Hymnes in these words Be you filled with the spirit speaking to Ephes c. 5. your selues in Psalmes and Hymnes and spirituall Canticles chaunting and singing in your harts to our Lord giuing thankes alwaies for all things in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ to God and the Father He expresseth singing in your harts because that is the cheifest of it self necessarie euen whilst we pray with our voice The same he doth admonish the Collossians saying Let the word of Christ dwell in you abondantly in all wisdome teaching Collos c. 3. and admonishing your owne selues with Psalmes Hymnes and spirituall Canticles c. Out of which sayeings of the Apostle we may gather with S. Augustine that the custome of the holy Church in singing of Psalmes and Hymnes hath had its beginning euen from Christ and his Apostles The custome saieth he of singing Hymnes Ep. 119. ad Ia. c. 18. and Psalmes may be defended by the Scriptures since we haue such profitable documents examples and precepts thereof both from our Lord himself and his Apostles S. Paul describing the manner of praier vsed by Christians of the primitiue Church hath these words VVhat 1. Ad Cor. 14. is it then Bretheren when you come together euery one of you hath à Psalme hath à doctrine hath à reuelation hath à tongue hath an interpretation c. In which place of the Apostle we haue à certaine type and example of the Canonicall praiers which the holy Church vseth at this prefent in which Psalmes and Hymnes are sung and the holy Scriptures are read togeather with their explications out of the holy Fathers According therefore to the foresaied custome of the primitiue Christians our mother the holy Church guided directed by the spirit of God hath conposed the office of the Breuiarye CHAPT III. Shewing the Antiquitie and by what authoritie the office of the B. Virrgin was instituted THe office of the B. Virgin is alsoe in euery point answerable to the forme of praier before mentioned as cōsisting principally of Psalmes Hymnes Canticles and Lessons out of the holy Scriptures and is in all things agreeing with the manner obserued in the
light which warmeth and illuminateth the spirituall life There remaineth yet one other reason and that none of the least which may seeme to haue moued the holy Church to elect this number of howers that is because in them as S. Athanasius S. Basill and Cassian affirme the principall works of our Redemption were wrought and therefore they are with good right celebrated in the holie Church that the memory of those mysteries may be the more frequently renewed the diuine loue become more feruent in our harts I will here breefly expresse those mysteries In the night tyme our Lord and sauiour Iesus Christ did assume humane flesh in the wombe of the B. Virgin and afterwards was borne in the night and did very often spend whole nights in praier In the first watch of the night he was apprehended by the Iewes and suffered much sorrow and contumely the third daie he rose againe about that tyme. After the Sunnerysing he was brought before Pilate whipped scoffed at spit vpon In the Third hower he was cloathed with à purple gatment crowned with thornes condēned to the death of the Crosse In the Sixt hower his sacred hands and feete were fixed to the Crosse with sturdy blunt and rough nailes In the Ninth hower he yeelded vp his spirit and his side being opened with à speare flowed bloud and water in testimony of his immense loue that had not leaft himself one drop of blood vnshed for our saluation In Vespres tyme he did the daie befere eate his last supper with his disciples and instituted the B. Sacrament of the holy Eucharist and the daie following was deposed from the Crosse And lastly about Compline tyme he was layed in the Sepulcher CHAPT V. Shewing the conueniency of r●citing the diuine office in the latin ton●ue and con●equentlye this office of the B. Virgin POpe Gregory the seuēth in his Epistle to the Duke of Bohemia did absolurely refuse to cōdescend to the request of the saied Duke who had desired to haue the diuine office recited in the Slauonian tongue returning him this answere That it would by that meanes not onely become of lesser esteeme with the people but alsoe would be exposed to euery ignorant mans censure and be an occasion that the vnlearned by their misunderstanding of it and sinister interpretation thereof might fall into errors Origen doth largely elegantly Homil. 20. in Iosue proue the great benefitt that the people may gather whilest they recite praiers or attend to those that recite them although they doe not vnderstand what is saied he sheweth alsoe that such praiers are pleasing to God delightfull to the Angells and terrible to the deuill and moreouer that sacred words though not vnderstood doe in à certaine hidden manner stirre vp deuotion in such as vse them Surius affirmeth in the life of S. Lutgard Surius in 16. lunij Virgin that althoug she vnderstood not the Psalmes yet neuerthelesse when she sung with diligent attention Deus in adiutorium meum intende c. in the beginning of the office and certaines Psalmes following she beheld the spirits of darknes to be replenished with exceeding horror and to desist from suggesting bad thoughts and take their flight And indeed the song which the litle Math. 21. children sung to our Lord Cryeing in the Temple and sayeing Hosanna to tho sonne of of Dauid was most pleasing vnto him as is manifest by the answer he gaue to the chief Priests and Scribes who chasing there at saied vnto him Hearst thou what these saie For IESVS replyed Verye well Haue you neuer read that out of the mouth of the Infants and suckings thou hast perfected praise If then out of the mouthes of those infants who did not vnderstand what they sung for they were infants indeed as S. Chrisostome others affirme did proceed the perfect praise of God how can any man haue the face to deny that the Canon call praiers are gratefull to God which are performed by holy virgins and other deuout soules that are vnskilfull in the latin tongue But some may obiect vnto mee how shall the ignorant and vnlearned come to know that what they saie is good and tending to the honor of God and what benefit or increase of deuotion and spirituall comfort shall such rec●aue by recyting what they doe not vnderstand To the first part of this obiection I answere that all which is contained in the d●uine office is either collected out of the holy Scriptures or out of the works of the most famous men for learning and pietie that euer liued and proposed by the authoritie of the holy Church which is directed by the spirit of God to all good Christians to be saied which may suffice to secure them Moreouer there is scarce one to be found so stupide but that he doth conceiue in generall tearmes at the least what is intended in the sayed office For by the sermons of his Pastor or spirituall instructor or by reading pious bookes he will come to know that the Majestie of God is praised thereby the B. Trinitie magnified and the assistance of the B. Virgin and the rest of the holy Saints implored To the second part I answere that pious Idiots who haue à good will and simple intention doe many tymes draw as much spirituall sweetnes from their diligent attention to the grauitie and decencie of Ecclesiasticall ceremonies and diuine praises as the greatest number of those whoe are skilfull in the latin tongue For such as are well seene in the plaine grāmaticall sense of the words doe not gather the choicest fruit out of the Canonicall howers but such as penetrate the mysteries and secret sense of the Scriptures of which number who is he that will presume to t●arme himself I doe not aske of Grammarians Rethoritians or Philosophers onely but euen of those whoe possesse high seats in diuinitie schooles Let all Religious Cannons and others of the Cleargy speake their mynds freely and I verily beleeue the greatest part of them will sincerely confesse their want of knowledge in this pointe and that great light from God much study and frequent meditation is necessary for the attayning thereunto In the liues of the auncient Fathers is lib. 16. de Humilitate declared that one Abbot Ioseph comming to Antony the Abbot to heare some words of edification the saied Abbot Antony did aske of his owne disciples how certaine obscure places of the holy Scriptures were to bee vnderstood whereunto when euery one had deliuered his opinion he answered that they had not giuen him satisfaction and addressing himself towards Abbot Ioseph he demaunded his opinion concerning the meaning of those places who answered I know not Whereupon Abbot Antony gaue sentence that Abbot Ioseph had found the onely true way to solue such doubts whoe knew how to acknowledge his owne ignorance The holy Apostles themselues notwithstanding that they conuersed with the Sonne of God soe long tyme did not
honor and praise of God which is principally intended by this and all other offices● secondarily did appointe Psalmes which speake in some of the verses of the B. Virgin as I shall shew hereafter in my explication of them And the same order is likewise obserued in all the feasts which are celebrated by the holie Church as for example in the feast of the Natiuitie of our Lord the second Psalme is ordained to be saied for the 7. verse The Lord saied to mee thou art my sonne I this daie haue begotten thee And in the Epiphany the 41. Psalme for the 10. verse The kings of Tharsis and the Ilands shall offer presents The kings of the Arabians and of Saba shall bring guifts And in the feasts of the Apostles the 18. Psalme for the 4. verse Their sound hath gone forth into all the earth c. And in the feasts of Martyrs the 115. Psalme for the 5. verse Pretious in the sight of our Lord is the death of his Saints And in the feasts of holy Virgins the 44. Psalme for the 15. verse Virgins shall be brought to the king after her And soe forth in all other feasts But the rest of the offices as the Inuitatories Antiphones Lessons Responsories Verses Chapters and Praiers are for the most part proper to the feasts CHAPT VII Shew●ng with what Reuerence the Canoni●all howe●s ought to bee reci●ed and vsually w●re recited by many Saints OVr glorious Father S. Benedict speaking in his holy Rule of the reuerence which is requisite to be vsed in Praier hath these words If when we desire to speake to any great person touching any busines we dare not doe it but with submission and reuerence with farre greater reason when we are to supplicate to God the Lord of all things we are to doe it with all humilitie and puritie of deuotion and in another place We beleeue saith he that Gods diuine presence is euery where and that in euery place the eies of our Lord behold the good and the euill Neuerthelesse we especially and without any doubt beleeue this when we present ourselues to the diuine office Wherefore let vs alwaies remember what the Prophet saieth Serue Psal 2. Psal 46. Psal 137. yee our Lord in feare againe Sing yee w●sely And In the sight of the Angells I will sing to thee Let vs therefore seriously consider with ourselues what our comportment ought to be in the presence of God and his Angells and let vs stand to sing in such manner that our mynd and voice may accord together S. Bernard in the 2. Tome of his works treating of the same subiect hath these words Let those that enter in to the Church put their had vpō the doore and saie Expect here all euill thoughts intentions and affections of the hearts and desires of the flesh but Thou my soule enter into the ioy of our Lord God that thou maiest see his will and visite his temple Concerning which aduice of S. Bernard of putting their hand vpon the Church doore we may note out of Nauar in his Enchiridion de Horis that Cap. 17 n. 4. the holie Church did ordaine that there should be placed à holy-water pot at the entry in to euery Church to the end that those who came to pray there might take holy-water in token that they ought to leaue behind them at the Church dore all thoughts which maie distract or hinder them in their praier Which laudable institution hath been carefully practised in Englād as may yet be seene in diuers Churches where the holy-water pot is placed in the Church porch but now serues to no other vse then to testify with what reuerence our forefathers were accustomed to enter in to those Churches whilst they were holy hauing holy Altars holy Priests and a holy Sacrifice in them of all which since they are now emptied the holy water pot hath little reason to complaine of its vacuitie S. Bonauenture writeth that S. Francis De act S. Frāc cap. 10. did beare such reuerence to the Canonicall howers that whilst he did recite them he would not leane to any place but stood vpright and bare headed that he omitted not this custome when he trauelled any iourney but would stay in that place where he happened to be when the tyme occurred that those howers were vsually recited and not remoue from thence although it rained neuer soe fast giuing this pious reason for his soe doing worthy of soe great à Sainte If the body doe quietly receiue its food which after wards will turne to wormes meate together with the body with what peace and tranquillitie ought the soule to receiue the food of life Moreouer he recited the Psalmes with such attention as if God were present and when the name of our Lord occurred in the office it relished most sweet with him and he was soe transported with interiour ioy when he pronounced the holy name of Iesus that he could not containe himself from manifestation thereof by exteriour signes Theodoricus de Apoldia in the life of Lib. 4. cap. 11. S. Dominike doth affirme that the face of this holy Saint was very frequently bedewed with teares whilst he was reciting the diuine office and that if he chanced to be forth of the Monasterie when the signe was giuen for the beginning of the office he would presently call the Religious together and performe it in that place Petrus Ribadeneira in the life of S. Lib. 5. cap. 1. Ignatius the Institutor of the famous and florishing Order of the Societie of Iesus writeth that when the said holy Saint did recite the diuine office he experienced such diuine consolations and shed teares in such aboundance that he was forced to stop at almost euery word by which meanes he was faine to imploy à good part of the daie in reading the Psalmes Horatius Turcellinus writheth alsoe Lib. 6. cap. 5. of S. Francis Xauerius the Apostle of Iaponia that before euery Canonicall hower he was accustomed to implore the assistance of the holy Ghost by saying the Hymne Veni Creator Spiritus which hymne he would pronounce with such feruour that his hart did seeme euen to leape in his body CHAPT VIII Shewing the necessitie of Atten●ion in praier what Attention is best and what will suffice ATtention is an intrinsecall and essentiall qualitie appertayning to praier that is to saie Attention is soe necessarily requisite whilst one praieth that Sotus affirmeth one is not esteemed to Sot lib. 10 de Iust. q. 5. à 5. praie any longer then his attention doth indure Which being à certaine truth it will be needfull in this place for the better instruction of the lesse learned and comfort of tender consciences to sett downe the diuersitie of Attentions which are described by the holy Doctors and to shew which of them will suffice that euery one may take his choise out of them as best futeth with his capacitie or the portion of
grace which God almighty hath giuen or bestowed on him The first diuision is into Interiour attention and Exteriour Interiour attention is that by which one applieth his mind either to the holie words that he maie recite them or harken to them with due reuerence or to the pious signification of those words that he maie recreate his spirit thereby Exteriour attention is that by which one doth actually pronounce the words distinctly and without errour keeping his eies and the rest of the parts of his body in modest and decent composition doeing nothing willingly which maie diuert or hinder his saied interiour attention The second diuision is taken out of S. Thomas of Aquine and consisteth of 2. 2. ● 43. à 13. three pars The first is Attention to the words which maie be fulfilled by taking care that you read not one word for another ouerpasse nothing nor make too much hast and endeauouring to pronounce euery word distinctly and reuerently The second is Attention to the sense of the words which may be obserued by attending to the sense or meaning of the words either literall or mysticall that your affections maie be inflamed thereby The Third is Attention either to God or to the thing wee demaunde of him which maie alsoe be kept by attending to the presence of God contemplating his infinite goodnes that is gratiously pleased to be euer present with vs beholding our actions rewarding what is well done and rectifying what is amisse or by conuerting our thoughts to our sweet Sauiour Christ Iesus calling to mind the infinite loue where with he wrought that admirable worke of our Redemption and taking for our subiect to ruminate vpon some one or more of the passadges of his holy life or bitter passion afterwards sometimes darting our affections and gratitude towards him by some short but efficacious or burning aspiration or by hauing attention to the benefitts ●e aske of God vizt either Chastitie Humilitue Patience Faith Hope the diuine loue euerlasting life or the like As for example whilest we recite the Psalme Venite exultemus to thinke vpon these words in the mystery of our Creation Let vs make mā to our image and likenes discoursing breifly there of in our interiour As thus O great dignitie to be like to God With what care ought I to conserue this thy image in my soule Graunt me my deare Lord that I neuer defile it or the like And whilest we recite the rest of the parts of the office to take to cōsideratiō some thing of the life passiō or death of our Sauiour beginning with the mysterie of his holy Incarnation discoursing thereof in our interiour As thas O my soule behold the force of loue That we might become the sonnes of God God became the sonne of à poore maide or the like sometimes praising almightie God sometimes giuing thankes vnto him and sometimes begging some grace or benefitt according to our necessitie at other tymes wishing that his will may be accomplished in and by vs and all creatures resigning our selues to be disposed of by him for tyme and eternitie as maie be for his greater glory In which imployment if we spend the whole tyme that we are reciting the office it will be very profitably spent notwithstanding that we be soe attent thereunto that we scarce perceiue that we are reciting the words of the office The first member of this diuision will suffice but yet it is the meanest Attention The second is better but yet is proper onely to schollers or such whome God almightie hath illuminated by extraordinarie fauour whoe can picke out here and there pious considerations to moue their affections The Third is generally held the best is indifferēt both to the learned and vnlearned Sharpnesse of witt and subtilitie of vnderstanding is not soe much required to performe this well as is à good will and pure intention for as S. Thomas affirmeth in the place à fore saied euen Idiotes by this attention are very often eleuated in spirit aboue themselues and all things created If those that are learned will vse their vnderstanding in this affaire noe further or other wise but to excite their will by proposing sweet and mouing considerations vnto her and helping her by prettie industries of loue to continue her holie desires and affections then they maie seeme to haue aduantage of the simple and vnlearned in the practise of this attention but if they doe vse their vnderstanding to search curiously into hidden Mysteries with quiddities of art and busie themselues more in speculation then in procuring and conseruing good affections then are they farre short of simple and ignorant but well minded soules for such their meditation will proue sterill and altogether voide of that fruit which should be sought by meditation which it pious holie and ardent affections and desires to inflame our soules with diuine loue Moreouer those that are learned are for the most part more subiect to distractions as hauing their heads filled with multiplicitie of conceipts caused by sciences and much speculation whereas the simple and vnlearned are free from such thoughts contenting themselues to admire high mysteries with an humble reuerence captiuating their vnderstandings to beleeue with all obedience simplicitie of heart whatsoeuer their Pastors and spirituall guides shall declare vnto them concerning almight●e God and how they ought to serue reuerence worship and loue him in noe sort presuming to search into high misteries further then he is pleased to reueale them either by this ordinarie meanes vizt by his substitutes or by himself when they are treating with him in their interiour and soe doe for the most part make lesse vse of their vnderstanding in pra●er and more vse of their will and consequently Caeteris paribus as they tearme it the praier of such simple poore wretches is as gratefull to almightie God and beneficiall to their owne soules as is the praier of à great Doctor and perhaps more In the Cronicles of S. Francis his order it is registred that one Brother Giles of the order of S. Francis an vnlearned but à holie man on à time spake to S. Bonauenture the Generall of the saied holy order and à great light of Gods Church in these words Great mercy hath God shewed to you learned men and great meanes hath he giuen you wherewith to serue and praise his diuine Maiestie but we ignorant and simple people whoe haue no parts of witt or learning what can we doe which maie be pleasing vnto him Vnto whome the holy Saint answered If our Lord did no other fauour to man then that he might be inabled to loue him this alone were sufficient to oblige him to do God greater seruice then all the rest putt together The good Brother Giles replied And can then an ignorant person loue our Lord Iesus Christ as well as à learned man Yea saied S. Bonauenture à poore old woman maie perhaps loue our Lord better then à great
Doctor of Diuinitie Where upon the good Brother transported with exceffiue feruour of spirit went instantly into that part of the garden which looked towards the towne and with à strong voice cried out O thou poore thou ignorant and simple old woman loue thy Lord Iesus Christ and perhaps thou shalt grow greater in heauen then Brother Bo●a●enture and hauing soe saied he fell into an extasie and remained in it without stirring from that place for three howers space together The Third diuision is into à formall attention and à vertuall which may be gathered alsoe out of S. Thomas in the Article à fore cited A formall Attention is that by which we keepe our minds actually busied about one of the saied three Attentions vizt either to the words to their signification to God or sonie other pious matter A vertuall Attention is that which is thought to remaine by force and efficacie of the purpose or intention framed in the beginning of our praier to attend by one of the saied three waies This attention doth morally perseuer and hath influence into our praier vntill by some other act wee doe expressely or implicitely recall or disanull it A formall attention is the best but such is our frailtie and weaknes that few are found who can continue any long tyme in it therefore God almighty vnto whome our infirmities are well knowne doth not exact it as absolutly necessary during our praier but is graciously well pleased with our vertuall attention as best agreeing with the condition of mankind since our fall by the sinne of our first parents Which S. Thomas affirmeth expresly in his answer to the first objection of the saied Article sayeing That man doth praier in Spirit and truth whoe cometh to praier moued by the instinct of the holy Ghost notwithstanding his mynd doth afterwards strave abcoade S. Thomas alsoe in the same Article saieth There are Three effects of praier The first is to merite And to obtaine this effect it is not necessary that our attention actually continue during the whole tyme of praier but the force and vertue of our first intention framed when we begane our praier doth render our whole praier merito●ions The ●econd is to impotrate or obtaine by 〈◊〉 and to this effect the first in 〈◊〉 doth suffice which God almightie doth principally regard but if this first intention faile or be wanting our praier is neither moritorious nor 〈◊〉 for God doth not harken to that praier to which he that praieth doth not 〈◊〉 The Third effect is à spirituall refection of the mind and to this effect an actuall ●ention is necessarily required according ●o that of S. Paul If I pray 〈◊〉 ● 〈◊〉 my Spirit remaines without 〈◊〉 CHAPT IX Shewing the causes of distraction the means to preuent them and how to ●●rite ●y reiecting them THe principall causes which as●● 〈◊〉 our minds in praier maie fitly be d●●ided into causes more immediate and causes remote 〈◊〉 doth expresse three remote causes L●● de 〈◊〉 ● 5. à ● of distractions The first whereof is the continuall infestation of the deuill suggesting 〈◊〉 and bad thoughts The second is our pronesse of nature to euill acts For the sense and 〈◊〉 of Gen. 8. mans heart are prone to c●●ll from their 〈◊〉 which pronesse to euill acts he and other Diuines doe tearme the habite of sinns or an ●●●●eterate custome of re●oluing in our minds fading and corrupt thinges For euen as à corrupt humor hauing once wrong●t it self à pastadge will not easily be hindred in its course euen soe our wauering and inconsiderate thoughts doe slide on in their course and draw our mynds to such things as we haue accustomed our selues vnto The Third remote cause is the instabilitie and feeblenes of our mynds which we haue contracted by the first staine of originall sinne and as the raies of the sunne are alwaies wauering and cannot rest thēselues vpon the wallowing wa●es of the sea soe the raies of the diuine light cannot easily fix themselues in an vnsetled and inconstant heart Thus farre Sotus The causes more immediate are very many but I will here specify onely 10. of the principall The first is the want of watchfulnesse ouer our hearts out of praier by which meanes our minds are filled and incombred with à rabble of vnpro●itable thoughts which ordinarily will represent themselues to our veiw in praier The Second is the ill custody of our eies eares during our praier through which as through two gates such things which are seene or heard doe violently presse and passe to our fantasie The Third is our naturall instabilitie of mind which cannot long continue fixt vpon one subiects but is much like in that propertie to à wanton horse that can stand on noe ground but mu●● still be trampling and pr●ncing here an● there The Fourth is an inordinate desi● of enioying something which like to ● Furie doth vex and disquiet our mynd● soe long at it is deferred and cannot b● attained The Fift is a vehement solicitude or care taking which hindreth internall peace The Sixt is anxietie of scruples fearing least something were omitted or not well pronounced or the like The Seauenth is the sense of the words we read which sometymes maie minister occasion of diuerting our mynds The Eight is varietie of imploiments businesses or studies where in our minds haue been too earnestly busied The Ninth is idlenes or sloth and the euill branches which proceed from them as ●epiditie satietie and the like The Tenth and last is subtraction of the diuine light or grace which happeneth sometymes either for that it was not well vsed or that it was remissely vsed or to make vs by feeling the want of it to seeke to recouer it with more feruour and earnestnes and to hold it in better esteeme when he is pleased to bestow it The seuerall roots or causes of distractions being sufficiently declared it will be needfull that I doe here sett downe some direction● how to preuent them Yet it will be in vaine for me or any other as I conceiue to goe about to prescribe à meanes how to preuent them in such sort that one by help there of maie be able to free himself wholy from them for noe man whilst he remaineth cloathed with mortall flesh can be soe cleared from them that they shall neuer occurre and therefore my intent hereby is onely to prescribe some few instructions how to preuent them that they maie not haue soe facile accesse into our mynds nor through our fault molest vs and that when they happen to assaile vs we maie conuert them to our benefite and increase of merite The best waie thē to auoide distractions in praier is to come vnto it with due preparation and during the time we continue in it to propose vnto our vnderstanding some pious cōsiderations where with to sett her profitably to worke which she can if she be disposed paint forth in such liuely and mouing
faile of his promise Here Imagine that you behold our Sauiour nailed to the crosse and discourse with your selfe in this or the like manner O My soule behold the effect of loue Loue drew him from the bosome of his eternall Father loue caused him to conuerse with vs poore wretches loue hath nailed him vpon the crosse in this cruell manner loue hath done all this But what loue Verily noe other but that immense loue which he bore towards thee euen from eternitie Why tremblest thou at this Take courage his mercies are about all his workes Come let vs fall downe at his feete let vs weepe in his presence let vs open the secrets of our hearts vnto him he will gladly giue vs audience His feet are fast nailed he will not shrinke from vs. His armes are spred abroad to receiue and embrace vs. His precious bloud doth flow from all the parts of his body to cleanse and refresh vs His head is bowed downe to giue vs the sweet kisse of peace and reconciliation His heart is open to giue vs free entrance to his loue These tormēts these wounds and all ar● ours Come let vs offer him to his eternall father let vs beseech him to shew his precious wounds to his beloued father and what he hath suffered for vs and nothing will be denied Aspirations in forme of à Dialogue betweene Christ Iesus and à deuou● Soule Christ Iesus O My sonne behold how I haue loued thee I haue knowne thee in my offence from all eternitie I haue created thee and infused into thee à soule wherein I haue liuely impressed my owne image and that thou mightst know how noble à creature I haue made thee I haue not refused to assume the self same nature and to become vested with flesh and blood that I might redeeme thee Here it will not be needfull that I expresse all the signes of loue which God hath manifested by the admirable worke of our Redemption and the good inspirations and callings where by he hath withdrawne vs from bad courses and hath as it were lead vs by the hand vnto the way of life but it is much better that euery one call to mind excogitate the good motions and benefites he hath receiued and where with he finds himself best moued and suppose God almightie to haue charged him with these graces and testimonies of his loue answering in this or the like manner The Soule IT is most true my deare Lord thou didst create me and redeeme mee but I haue defiled my self and am not worthy now to looke thee in the face It was in thy power to haue made me à stone or à tree or what els had been thy pleasure but such was thy immense goodnes that thou hast made me one of thy most noble creatures I know most sweet Lord that thou hast made nothing in vaine Tell me then I beseech thee tell me thy poore seruant for thy owne sake what is it thou requirest of me Thou hast giuen me grace and light to decerne that I am not made for my self for I haue oft experienced that when I ha●e giuen way to my owne desires and affections they haue lead me into manifold inconueniences Vouchsafe therefore to tell me what thou wouldst haue me to doe Behold I am ready to performe whatsoeuer thou shalt please to commaund Then saie vnto yourself these words of the Psalmist I will heare what our Lord will speake in me because he will speake peace to his people and listen in silence supposing him to answer thus your pious request Christ Iesus O My deare sonne I haue giuen thee all that thou art or hast yet I haue giuen thee one thing soe free at thy owne disposing that thou maiest giue it to whome or to what thou pleasest If thou art as thou saiest ready to doe whatsoeuer I commaund my will is that thou giue me this one thing and I freely permitt thee to vse all the rest of my gifts as best liketh thee This alone will content me and although thou shouldest giue me all the rest and detaine this from me I shall esteeme them all as nothing Thy Heart it is I aske Sonne giue me thy heart The Soule O My deare Lord who doth better deserue it then thy self who can more enrich it I wish it ●ere in my power to giue thee all mens hearts What doe I desire more then that my heart maie be inflamed with the fire of thy diuine loue Behold I giue thee my self doe thy will in me for tyme and eternitie O Lord such is thy gracious clemency and benignitie that thou despisest noe man reiectest noe man that desireth to come to thee yea thou callest euery man thou allurest euery man and vnto euery man thou shewest the way to come to thee for it is thy delight to be with the sonnes of men What is this o Lord but à most euident proofe that thou art soe good that thou art not able to denie thy self to them that seeke the with all their heart What greater loue dan one shew then ●o giue his owne self ●s thou ar● al●●●● ready and desirous to doe to all 〈◊〉 seeke after the● with à sinceere ●●ynd Let vs therefore if it shall soe stand with thy blessed will make à couenant betweene vs. Thou shalt take care of my welfare and remedy and I will take care of thy honor and seruice and thou shalt doe with me what thou wilt and shall see to be expedient for thy greater glory and my saluation and I will be wholy thine and depend vpon thee alone Graunt me sweet Iesus that I may desire nothing but thee and that I maie soe intirely and absolutely resigne my self vnto thee without all reserhation that I maie neuer hereafter take my self from thee O fire vouchsafe to burne me o charitie vouchsafe to inflame me o light vouchsafe to illuminate me O my Repose o my Consolation o my Hope o my Treasure o my Life o my Loue that alwaies burnest and art neuer consumed When shall I perfectly loue thee When shall I embrace thee with the armes of my soule When shall I for the loue of thee contemne both myself and all the world When shall my soule with all her powers be perfectly vnited vnto thee When shall she be wholy drowned and immerged in the bottomelesse abisse of thy diuine loue O most benigne sweet beautifull wise rich noble precious and most worthy to be beloued and adored when shall I loue thee in such sort that I shall be wholy conuerted into loue O life of my soule who to giue me life didst suffer death O good Iesu o my sweet Lord and Sauiour Graunt me I beseech thee that I maie altogether shunne and detest all manner of sinne and that in all sinceritie of heart I maie conuert my self to thee in such sort that all my thoughts my desires my memory and all the powers of my soule and body maie be fixed on the alone I
to themselues the others part which custome is much to be disliked both for that it occasioneth scruples as alsoe for that such whispering doth often disturbe others hinder their owne attention and tacitly infringe the common practise of alternation Wherefore such are to know that it is farre better for them to attend diligently to what the other part doth recite and spare such their super fluous and preiudiciall labour But perhaps they will saie that they cannot sometymes heare distinctly what the other doth recite to which maie be answered that they are not bound to heare euery word distinctly pronounced but it sufficeth that they perceiue the others are not negligent in performing their part and they themselues haue lisse●ed attentiuely For as much as concerneth the manner of reciting in priuate the diuine office and consequently the office of the B. Virgin by one alone the practise in all ages doth likewise shew it to be both sufficient and conuenient Yet because some clauses or passages in the saied offices seeme to suppose more then one person concurring as for example the Benedictions which are giuen in the plurall number and Venite exultemus Come let vs reioyce the word Oremus Let vs pray which is vsually recited before euery Praier Benedicamus Domino and diuers others where in the plurall numbers expressed In answer there vnto I will here set downe what Peeter Damian in his booke entituled Dominus vobiscum answereth in generall to such like obiections vz. That the rule of Ecclesiasticall tradition is to be vniformely obserued whether the office be recited by one alone or more For saieth he if the Doctors of the Church had iudged it meet they would haue prescribed one forme of the diuine office for one alone and an other for two or more which since they haue not but haue taught vs to keepe one order with inuiolable obseruance we are to obey their holie institution which is founded vpon good reason deduced out of the authoritie of the holie Scriptures For they foresaw that whatsoeuer is offered with due reuerence in the diuine office by euery particular member of the holie Church the same is exhibited vniuersally by the faith and deuotion of the whole Church for the Spirit of the Church is one where with one body is viuificated or quickned which is gouerned by Christ the head thereof Moreouer the whole Church doth consist of à coniuncture of diuers members yet it is without doubt but one body founded vpon the soliditie of one faith and anoynted with one vertue of the viuificating Spirit whence it is that the Apostle saieth One body and one Spirit as you are called in one hope of your vocation Wherefore he concludeth ●t is meet that whatsoeuer is particularly done in the sacred offices by any one whomesoeuer that the holie Church herself should be esteemed to doe it with one consent by vnitie of faith and loue of Charitie THE EXPLICATION OF OVR LORDS PRAIER IT maie seeme great Presumption in me to attempt to explaine this holie Praier it being in it self most perfect as hauing been composed by the VVisdome of God the second person of the Trinitie our deare Redeemer Christ Iesus and besides it hauing been already explicated at large by very many of the holie Fathers who haue compiled whole treatisses therevpon Notwithstanding in regard I haue vndertaken to saie something concerning every part of the office of the B. Virgin as God almightie shall please to inspire me with for that the saied office is vsually begun with this holie Praier as alsoe for that few or in à manner none of the saied expositions of the auncient Fathers are extant in our vulgar tongue confiding in the assistance of our B. Sauiour whose honor I principally intend I will endeauour after my vnskilfull manner to open this rich casket and expose the pretious gemmes therein contained to the veiw of well minded soules Our Father ALmightie God who in the law of Moyses would be stiled Lord and appeared alwaies to the children of Israel with such exceeding terror that they desired that Moyses might speake vnto them and not he being in the law of grace sweetly inclined to mercy by the perfect conformitie of his onely and well beloued sonne our deare Redeemer Christ Iesus to his holie will in all things was graciously pleased to take vpon him à more familiar name that deposing all seruile feare we might be incouradged to treat with him with filiall reuerence loue and confidence S. Ianes ●aieth That we m●st aske in Ia. 1. saith nothing doubting if we will receaue any thing of our Lord. And what is there soe efficacious to increase confidence inflame the affect on and reioyce an humble soule as to be assured that the true liuing and almightie God is soe benigne that he is not onely willing but al●oe desirous to be called Father by the faithfull Our Sauiour therefore by this sweet and louing name of Father inuiteth vs to come to God wit● à filiall loue and firme confidence in his benignitie assuring vs that he will embrace vs with à tender affection and that he ●ill be solicitous that nothing be wanting vnto vs. VVhat man is there of you saieth he Math. 7 whome if his child shall aske bread will he reach him à stone or if he shall aske him à fish will he reach him à serpent if you then being naught know how to giue good g●ifts to your children how m●ch mo●e will your Father who is in heauen giue good things to them that aske him And in another place Be not carefull for your life what you shall eate neither for your body what rayment you shall put o● c. For your Father knoweth that you neede all these things Seeke therefore first the kingdome of God and the iustice of him and all th●se things shall he giuen you Although by the word Father in this Praier may be vnderstood the first Person of the blessed Trinitie whoe is properly in the saied Trinitie God the Father yet according to S. Augustine by the word Father the whole Trinitie is here designed to whose Image we are created by whose prouidence we are gouerned by whose grace we are adopted and by w●ose infinite mercy we are redeemed By that our Sauiour would haue vs to saie our Father rather then m● Father he signifieth that all the faithfull are fellow brethren all sonnes of one and the same Father and therefore bound to reuerence loue and praie for one an other Yea that we are his brethren as being by him adopted the sonnes of God and coheires with him of the euerlasting kingdome and made by grace what he is by nature Moreouer thereby is signified that God is the vniuersall good with whome there is no acception of persons who loueth and seeketh the common good VVhich are in Heauen THat is in the Imperiall Heauen where he is pleased to glorifie those whome he hath ordained to eternall happinesse It may alsoe
sinne and sinne when it is consummate that is when our mind doth deliberatly fully and perfectly yeld to the committing or liking of the act or motiō whereunto the saied concupiscēce doth moue or incite vs ingendreth death And therefore our blessed Sauiour did warne his beloued disciples and in them all others to watch and praie that they might not enter into this sort of tention saying VVatch yee and praie that Math. 26. yee enter not into tentation The Spirit indeed is prompt but the flesh weake Yet God almightie tempteth his elect with the temptation of probation or triall which is ordained to the good or benefit of them that are tempted of which sort was that where God is saied to haue tempted Abraham and in the Gen. 22 Sap. 3. booke of VVisdome where God is saied to haue tempted the iust and to haue found them worthy of himself And this he doth not that he himself by such triall maie come to know any thing concerning them which he doth not know already for the beloued Disciple of ou● Lord affirmeth of him that He know all and that It was not needfull for him Ioh. 2. that any should giue testimony of man for he knew what was in man and the Prophet Dauid saieth God knoweth the Psal 4. secrets of the heart But he doth it First that they maie be purified according to that of holy Iob He hath proued me as Iob 23. gold that passeth through the fire Secondly that it maie appeare how they loue him according to that of Deuteromomie The Deut. 13 Lord your God tempteth you that it maie appeare whether you loue him or no with all your heart and with all your soule Thirdly that he maie make knowne their sanctitie to others Lastly that they maie know themselues the better We doe not therefore desire that we maie not be lead into this temptation because it moueth vs not directly to sinne as alsoe for that we are taught by the holy Apostles to reioyce when such temptations happen vnto vs. You shall reioyce saieth S. Peter Ep. 1 c. 1 à litle now if you must be made heauy in diuers ●smptations c. And S. Iames saieth Esteeme it all ioy when you shall fall unto diuers Iaco. 1. tentations c. But we praie that God almightie will graunt vs the grace of patience and constancie that we maie make good vse of it But as concerning the other tent●tion which commet● from the enimies of our soule vdzt the deuill the world and the flesh we praie thereby that although it be induced into vs by imp●gnation that is although it take hold of vs mouing vs internally to euill that we maie not be induced into it by consent that is that we maie not be soe cunningly i●ueigled and soe forcibly incited that we shall be drawne to yeeld thereunto By these words therefore Lead vs not into tentation we desire that God will not permit vs to be tempted aboue our strength nor leaue vs destitute of his assisting grace but will graunt vs fortitude to resist and make alsoe with tentation issue or fruit● that we maie be able to sustaine it to his hono● and glory and the benefit of our soules Iob was tempted but could not be induced to speake any thing foolishly against God and Ioseph was alsoe tempted as we read in Genes●s but neither of them can Genes 39. properly be saied to haue been lead into tentation because they gaue not consent to what was suggested Snarez affirmeth li. de eratione vocali c. 8. that neither the deuill hath power to lead vs into tentation neither can we consent vnto him farther then God almightie is pleased to permit Wherefore saieth he we aske that God almightie will not permit this to be done in vs no● by vs God is saied to lead vs into tentation when by subtracting his assisting grace he permitteth vs to be lead In which manner he is saied to haue hardned the heart of Pharao not that he did indeed harden his heart but rather Pharao hardned his owne hear● by neglecting to concurre with that suff●●iency of grace which God had bestowed on him and refusing to let the children of Israel depart after so many admonitio●s And therefore our Lord left him to himself as likewise the children of Israel afterwards when they refused to heare his voice as the Prophet ●●uid recounteth Psal 80 And my people heard not my voice and Israel attended not to me and I let them alonè accordi●g to the desires of their heart they shall goe in their owne inuentions For the more full and cleare vnderstanding of this petition and of all that hath been saied of it you must know that we can doe nothing that is good of ourselues but all by the help and assistance of Gods grace as it is written VVithout me you can doe Ioh. 15. 1. ad Cor. 12. nothing and in another place No man can saie Our Lord Iesus but in the Holie Ghost By these words therefore Lead vs not into tentation wee demaund that we maie neither be denied his grace and helpe nor suffered to abuse our liberti● by reiecting such wholsome inspiration●●nd motions as he shall please to graunt vs. But deliuer vs from all euill SOme there are who thinke that the word But doth shew that this Petition is not different from the former but is rather an explication thereof Collat. 9. Of which opinion Cassian doth seeme to be where he expoundeth these words But deliuer vs c That is saieth he Suffer vs not to be tempted by the deuill aboue our strength or abilitie to make resistance Yet the common opinion is t●●t ther● are seauen Petitions contained in this praier which Snarez doth learnedly proue in the Chapter aforesaied where he distinguisheth this Petition from the Si●t Petition as followeth In the Sixt saieth he we praie that we maie not be permitted to be tempted but in the Seauenth that if we be permitted to be tempted that we maie be deliuered from the euill thereof that is from consenting thereunto S. Bonauenture in his explicatiō vpon this praier saieth That in the 5. Petition we aske to be deliuered from euills past in the 6. from euills to come and in the 7. from all present euills Amen THat is let it be done This word neither the Greeke nor Latin interpreter hath translated for the reuerence thereof because our Sauiour vsed it soe frequently It is à fruitfull signet of praier procuring recollection of the mind for by saying Amen the mind is born breefly to all before recited and the affection of impetrating is renewed and soe the praier is ended with feruour and hath à more full effect S. Thomas of Aquine affirmeth that 2. 2. q. 89 à 9. in Cor. this praier is the most perfect of all others which he proueth out of the 121. Epist of S. Augustine to Probus in the 12. Chapter where
in the Canticles Thou art all f●ire o my beloued and there is no blemish in thee but alsoe she did and doth procure puritie in others by her exemplar life Blessed art thou among women THree maledictions did sinne bring vpon mankind from all which the B. Virgin was most free The first was layed vpon the woman that with corruption she should conceane with greife she should beare her burthen and with paine she should bring forth But the B. Virgin conceaued of the holie Ghost bore and bred with comfort and brought forth our Sauiour with ioye Springing it shall spring saieth the Prophet Isai 35. and shall reioyce ioyfull and praising The second Malediction was giuen to the man In the sweat of thy face thou shall eare bread from which the B. Virgin was free whoe attended to those things that appertaine to our 1. Cor. 7 Lord that she might be holy both in body and Spirit The Third Malediction was common to both sexes vd●t that 〈◊〉 should returne to dust and frō this the B. Virgin was alsoe free for we beleeue that he was raised after her death and assumpted into heauen which the holy Prophet foretold Psal 131. saying A●ise Lord into thy rest thou and the Arke of thy sanctification Blessed is the fruit of thy wombe Iesus IN the fruit which Eue did eate she sought for three things and was defrauded of her expectation in them all but the B. Virgin found in her fruit all she could desire The First thing which Eue sought for in her fruit was that which the deuill did falsly promise vd●t that she should be like vnto God but he lied for she by eating that fruit was not made like but vnlike vnto God for by sinning his image in her soule was much defaced and she estranged from God and banished out of Paradise But the B. Virgin the true mother of the liuing and all that by her meanes doe liue in spirit did and doe experience this in the sacred fruit of her wombe for through Christ both she and they are made like vnto God VVe k●ow saieth the Euangelist Ioh. 1. c. 3. that when he shall appeare we shall be like vnto him The Second thing which Eue expected was delectation because it seemed good to eate but alas it proued à bitter sweet for she knew he self straightwaies to be naked and had great serrow But in the fruit of the B. Virgin we find sweetnes and saluation He that eateth my flesh hath life euerlasting Ioh. 6. The Third thing which Eue sought in her fruit was the delight in beholding it because it was faire to the eye but of this alsoe she was soone defrauded when she considered with the eyes of her mynd that the beautie thereof 〈◊〉 false and deceiptfull But the fruit of the B. Virgin was most beautifull to behold as the Prophet witnesseth Psal 44 Goodly of beautie aboue the sonnes of men and most delightfull to contemplate as being the glory of the eternall Father whome the Angells behold with excessiue ioy and admiration Eue could not find in her fruit what she longe● for neither can à sinner in any sinne whatsoeuer Let vs therefore detest those false deceiuing fruits which exteriourly appeare faire and pleasant but interiourly are full of corruption and breed the worme of conscience and let vs seeke in the fruit of the B. Virgin the fulnesse of our hearts delight in which truely and onely it maie be found Holie Marie MOst fitly was the name of Mar●e giuen vnto her for 〈◊〉 is by interpretation Stella mari● that is the starre of the sea and as those that saile by sea are directed by the starre of the sea vnto their desired hauen soe all Christians are directed by the B. Virgin ●arie vnto eternall rest Moreouer as that starre doth send forth it's raies without hurt to it self soe did the B. Virgin bring forth her sonne the light of the world without preiudice to her Virginitie The raies of à starre doe not diminish the brightnes of the starre neither did the Sonne of the B. Virgin diminish her integritie S. Bonauenture speaking of this holie pag 430 Lect. 1. name of Marie hath words to this effect This most holie most sweet and most worthy name saieth he was most sitly giuen to soe holie soe sweet and soe worthy à Virgin for Marie is by interpretation à bitter sea or the starre of the sea Marie signifieth illuminated or illuminatrice and Marie signifieth likewise Lady Marie is à bitter sea to the deuill drowning his power and brusing his head against the rocke which is Christ Marie is the starre of the sea to men guiding them through the turbulent waues of this world vnto the celestiall hauen Marie is illuminated by the glory of her diuine sonne Marie is an illuminatrice to the Angelicall spirits by the glory wherewith she is soe illuminated and vnto men by her exemplar life and exquisite vertues And Marie is the Lady of all creatures by being Mother to their Lord. O Marie thou bitter sea help vs that in true repentance we maie become bitter totally O Marie thou starre of the sea help vs that we maie be directed through the sea of this world spiritually O Marie thou illuminatrice help vs that we maie be illuminated in heauen eternally O Lady Marie help vs that we maie be gouerned by thy direction and power filially Mother of God S. Thomas of Aquine saieth that in the 3. p. q. 35. a. 4. sedcon Chapters of S. Cyrill approued by the Ephesine Councell is read I hat if any one doe not confesse Emanuel which is God Amoungst vs to be God in very truth and which followeth the B. Virgin to be the Mother of God for she carnally or according to the flesh conceiued and brought forth the word of God made flesh let him be Anathema that is excommunicated ad 1. In the same Article be further saieth That although it cannot be expressely found to be affirmed in the holy Scriptures that the B. Virgin is the Mother of God yet is expressely found in them that Iesus Christ is true God as in the first and in the 20. chapt of S. Iohn and that the B. Virgin is the Mother of Iesus Christ as appeareth in the first of S. Mathew wherefore it necessarily followeth out of the words of the holy Scriptures that she is the Mother of God Moreouer S. Paul teacheth That Christ who is aboue all things God ●d Rom 9. blessed for ●uer is according to the flesh of the Iewes but he is not otherwise of the Iewes then by the meanes of the B. Virgin therefore he who is aboue all things God blessed for euer is truely borne of the B. Virgin as of his Mother Alsoe in the same Article he alleadgeth these words of S. Cyrill in his first ●d 2. Epistle As the soule of man is borne together with it's body and is reputed to be one therewith soe
and recouer life Thirdly she was most secure by the presence of God Our Lord is with thee Saint Bernard saieth that not onely our Lord the Sonne was with her whome she clothed with her flesh but alsoe our Lord the holie Ghost by whome she conceiued and our L●rd the Father who begat whome she did conceiue Fourthly she was most worthy for the reuerence due vnto her person Blessed art thou among women The saied S. Anselme seeming to be astonished at this benediction saieth O B. and more then B. Virgin by whose benediction not onely all creatures are blessed by the Creator but euen the Creator himself is blessed by this creature Fiftly she is most profitable for the excellencie of her ofspring Blessed is the fruit of thy wombe For she brought forth that most excellent and potent fruit which gaue saluation to the whole world Saint Anselme vpon these words saieth By the fecunditie of the B. Virgin the impure sinner is iustified the condemned is saued and the banished man is restored for her happy child-birth redeemed the inthralled cured the diseased and raised to life the dead world Saint Iames in his Liturgy hath words to this effect Let vs make commemoration of our most holie most immaculate most glorious and most B. Lady Mother of God Marie euer à Virgin and of all the Saints and iust men that all of vs maie obtaine mercy by their praiers and intercession à little after he addeth Haile Marie full of grace our Lord is with thee c. because thou hast brought forth the Sauiour of our soules It is meet we call thee truely B. euer B. Mother of God more honorable then the Cherubins and more glorious then the Seraphins who hast brought forth the Word of God without corruption O full of grace all creatures the companies of Angels and generations of men doe congratulate thee who art à sanctified Temple à spirituall Paradise a glory to Virgins of whome God assumed flesh and our God is made à child who is before all worlds He hath made thy wombe his throne and thy bowells more lardge and ample then the heauens O full of grace all creatures doe congratulate thee Glory be to thee Saint Chrisostome in his Liturgy saieth It is truely meet and iust to glorify thee the Mother of God and euer most blessed and altogether incontaminate Mother of God more honorable then the Cherubins and more glorious then the Seraphins who didst bring forth without corruption We magnify thee the truely Mother of God Haile Marie full of grace c. because thou hast brought forth the Sauiour of our Soules S. Augustine affirmeth that the Angell descended from heauen sent by God the Father to giue the beginning to our Redemption by saluting B. Marie Haile full of grace our Lord is with thee She is therefore filled with grace and the fault of Eue euacuated the malediction of Eue is changed into the benediction of Marie after he hath leardnedly handled the rest of the words of this holie salutation he addeth O blessed Marie who is able worthily to repaie thee thy due of thanks and renowne of praises who hast succoured the perishing world with thy peerelesse assent what praises can humaine frailtie render vnto thee who with thy sole commerce hast found out the waie of recouery Accept neuerthelesse our thanksgiuing of how small value soeuer or how farre soeuer inferiour to thy merites and when thou shalt receiue our desires by thy praiers excuse our faults Admit our praiers into thy holie place of audience and bring vs backe the Antidote of reconciliation Accept what we offer returne what we request excuse what we feare By thee we hope to haue pardon of our offences because thou art the sole hope of sinners and in thee most blessed is the expectation of our rewards Holie Marie succour the afflicted help the weake minded cherish those that weepe praie for the people be à meane for the Clergy make intercession for the deuout feminine sexe Let all feele thy assistance whosoeuer doe celebrate thy commemoration Let it be thy care to praie incessantly for the people of God who hast deserued to beare the Redeemer of the world Saint Ambrose vpon the 2. of Saint Luke saieth That she alone is fitly stiled to be full of grace who alone did obtaine that grace which none other had euer merited vdzt that she should be filled with the author of grace Saint Athanasius a soe vpon Saint Luke saieth That since he is King Lord and God who is borne of the B. Virgin the Mother that bore him is properly and truely esteemed Queene Lady and Mother of God This new Eue is stiled the Mother of life wherefore we call her againe and againe and alwaies and euery way most blessed We crie vnto her be my●ndfull of vs most holy Virgin Haile full of grace our Lord is with thee The Hierarchies of all the Angels and men doe promulgate thee Blessed art thou among women and blessed is the fruit of thy wombe Mistresse and Lady and Queene and Mother of God intercede for vs. Petrus Chrisologus Archbishop of Rauenna saieth That an Angell did treat with Marie concerning Saluation because an Angell had treated with Eue concerning Ruine in another place he saieth She is truely blessed who was greater then heauen stronger then the earth and more spacious then the world for she contained God whome the world is not able to containe she bore God who beareth the world she brought forth her Creator and nourished the nourisher of all the liuing Fulgentius Ruspensis in à Sermon in the praise of the B. Virgin hath these words When saieth he the Angell pronounced All Haile he gaue her a celestiall salutation whē he saied Full of grace he shewed that the indignation of the first sentence was fully excluded and the full grace of benediction restored when he saied Blessed art thou among VVomen he expressed the blessed fruit of her Virginitie in vertue whereof all women but especially those who shall perseuer in Virginitie maie become blessed Eue was accursed whome we beleeue to haue passed to the benediction of glory through Marie Come therefore all you that are Virgins to the Virgin Come all you that conceiue to her that conceiued Come all you that bring forth to her that did bring forth Come all you that giue sucke to her that gaue sucke and you little young maids come alsoe to her that was à little young maid for the B. Virgin Marie hath for this cause vndergone in our Lord Iesus Christ all these courses of nature that she might be able to comfort and assist all sorts of women that should haue recourse vnto her It will not be needfull that I insist any longer vpon this subiect for that the studious reader will find nothing more frequent in the writings of most of the auncient Fathers and therefore I will onely set downe two examples which maie be à meanes to confirme such as
exercise this deuotion towards the B. Virgin and encouradge others to the like office of pietie In the first Tome of the flowers of examples is related out of diuers graue authors that à certaine venerable Archbp of Canterburie returning from the court of Rome did take vp his lodging in the famous and Princely Monasterie of Saint Bertin in the Citie of Saint Omers of the holie Order of Saint Benedict and the daie following was conducted into the Chapter howse where he made à speech to the Religious in which amongst other remarkable things he declared vnto them that when he was at Benenentum he vnderstood of à certaine Religious man who was accustomed to recite daily Fiue Psalmes in the honor of the B. Virgin which began with the fiue letters of her name The Psalmes were these Magnificat Ad Dominum Retribue In conuertendo and Ad te leuaui before euery one of which he saied the Angelicall Salutation or Aue Maria. There was present at this Sermon one Ioseius à Monke of the saied Monasterie of S. Bertin who gaue diligent attention to what was saied and did from that tyme daily when he had ended Mattins recite the saied Psalmes in the manner aboue saied It happened one night about the feast of S. Andrew the Apostle that the rest of the Religious rising to the night office the saied Ioscius was absent The Subprior therefore looking about the Quire as the manner is to see who was absent perceaued him wanting and went straight to his chamber and found him dead wherevpon returning to the Quire he called together the Religious and brought thē to their deceased Brother where after they had vncouered his face they beheld this wonderfull spectacle Fiue Rofes did issue out of his face one whereof sprong out of his mouth and tongue one out of each eie and one out of each nostrill There former sorrow therefore being changed into excessiue ioy at the sight of this soe great à mi●acle they carried him into the Quire and laying him with his face open they againe more curiously veiwed the saied Roses and found the word Maria written as it were in the Rose which issued out of his mouth whereupon they kept him vnburied Seuen daies in which space three Bishops and very many of the Clergy Laietie beheld this admirable worke of God This happened about the yeare of our Lord 1162. Leo being Abbot of the saied Monasterie and Theodoricus Earle of that I rouince Cantiprat in his second Booke of the Vniuerse relateth à wonderfull miracle not vnlike to the former of à certaine auncient souldier who being admitted into the Nouiship in à Monastery of Cistercians proued soe indocible that he could not be brought to learne our Lords Praier wherefore his Maister endeauored with much labour to reach him the Angelicall Salutation which likewise proued soe difficult à taske vnto him that he could not after much tyme and industry retaine in memory any more of it then these words Aue Maria gratia plena Dominus tecum These words therefore by aduice of his Maister he volued and reuolued and ruminated in all places yea euen at meale tyme and at length by long continuance conceiued soe great sweetnes in them that the sole memory of the Mother of God did possesse his heart and mouth in what busines soeuer he was imploved Some yeares being passed in this deuotion this holie man exchanged this life for à better and being buried in the Church yard shortly after there grew out of his graue à tree of such à sort of wood which was not vsuall in those parts in the leaues where of were ingrauen in golden letters Aue Maria gratia plena The Bishop of the Diocese hauing notice giuen him hereof by the Abbot of that Monasterie came to the graue accompanied with à great multitude of people and after he had veiwed the saied tree caused some to digge about it and found that it tooke roote in the mouth of the saied holie man The saied tree hauing as it should seeme performed the office for which it grew vdzt to giue restimonie of the sanctitie of that holie man and how gracious the B. Virgin is to such as are deuoted vnto her as alsoe how pleasing it is to almightie God that we honor his blessed Mother did wither and consume in the sight of them all then present like as the Iuie tree we read of in Ionas the Prophet Wherefore by this holie Praier let vs often renew in our memory the benefit of our Redemption which began with this holie Salutation and let vs beseech her who was is and euer shall remaine most gracious in the sight of God to be our aduocate and patronesse in our greatest extremities A praier appointed by the holie Church to be saied before the diuine office OPen my mouth o Lord to praise thy holie name cleanse my heart from all vaine peruerse and impertinent thoughts illuminate my vnderstanding inflame my affection soe that I maie be able to recite this office worthily attentiuely and deuoutly and maie merite to be heard before t●e face of thy diuine Maiestie through Christ our Lord. Amen Pope Leo the X.th to such as after the office shall deuoutly recite the ensuinge Praier hath graunted pardon of all the defects and faults contracted out of human frailtie in the performance thereof TO the sacred and vndeuided Trinitie to the humanitie of our Lord Iesus Christ crucified to the fruitfull integritie of the most Blessed and glorious Virgin Marie and to the generalitie of all the Saints be sempiternall praise honour vertue and glorie from all creatures and to vs remission of sinns for infinite worlds of worlds Amen And blessed be the bowells of Marie the Virgin which bore the sonne of the eternall Father and blessed be the brests that gaue sucke to Christ our Lord. Pater noster c. Aue Maria c. A praier to be saied after the office of the B. Virgin approued by Pope Pius the fift of that name REceaue most mild God for the praiers and merits of B. Marie euer à Virgin and of all the Saints the office of our seruice and if we haue done any thing praise worthy behold it propitious but what hath beene negligently performed doe thou benignely pardon who liuest raignest in perfect Trinitie for all worlds of worlds Amen An other Praier or oblation before the diuine office Ludouicus Blofius declareth that it was Moni spi c. 3. reuealed to S. Mecthild as à most gratefull thing to God that those w●o are about to recite the Canonicall howers doe vnite them with the praiers of our Sauiour For saieth he by this meanes they will be reputed one exercise with his like as à small quantitie of water mixed with à great Vessel of Wine is noe more reputed water and therefore he aduiseth such to recite this short Praier to that end O Lord in vnion of the perfect attention wherewith thou vpon earth didst offer
stealth but our Lord made vs wherefore we are the people of his pasture and sheepe of his hands which he of his ineffable goodnes hath vouchsafed to make vnto himselfe Our Sauiour saieth My sheepe heare my Ioh. 10. voice If therefore you will be his sheepe To daie that is euery daie whilest it is saied to daie for the daie here mentioned shall endure vntill tyme shall cease If you shall heare his voice that is come to know his will either by the lawfull preachers of his holie word or by reading the holie Scriptures or the writings of the holie Fathers or by his interiour motion or otherwise in what manner soeuer he shall please to manifest his will vnto you Doe not harden your hearts be not disobedient to his gracious inuitation and call but receiue it thankfully and put it in execution without delaie The Hebr. 4. Apostle did exhort the Hebrews by these words to embrace the doctrine of Christ shewing that the daie was then come whereof the Prophet spake soe many yeares before For sa●eth he if Iesus that is Iosue had giuen them rest the Prophet would not haue mentioned another daie In tymes past our Lord spake vnto his people by the mouth of Moyses and other his holie Prophets but now in the law of grace by his onely Sonne Christ Iesus Let vs therefore mollifie our hearts let vs not be As in the prouocation according to the daie of the tentation in the desert at the waters of contradiction and other places in the desert VVhere our Lord saieth your fathers tempted me proued me and saw my workes They doubted in their hearts whether I we●e of power to giue them food defend them from their enemies and bring them to the land of Promise but they experienced me by my wonderfull workes to be the onely true God What should moue my people to be soe incredulous and obdurate What could I haue done more to shew my loue vnto them then that I haue done I brought them from Aegipt where they were oppressed I dried à passadge in the red Sea that they might passe without difficultie drowned their enemies in their sight I went before them in forme of à clowde by daie and like à piller of fier by night I fed them with Manna for Fortie yeares space in all which tyme neither the garments they wore nor their shooes were the worse for wearing Fortie yeares was I nigh to this generation guiding them teaching them working wonders amongst them and experiencing alwaies to winne their hearts And saied by my Angel to Moyses by him to them These alwaies erre in heart They erre not through ignorance they know what they ought to beleeue what they maie lawfully desire and what to doe to please me but they will not know I haue often instructed them in my waies by my seruant Moyses But they haue not knowne my waies that is they haue disliked would not approoue of my waies and therefore all remedies fayling I haue sworne to them in my wrath We must not conceiue by these words that the passion of anger is in God but onely that he swore to proceed to punish them as if he had been possessed with anger and wrath against them for S. Thomas saieth Anger is attributed to God metaphorically If they shall enter into my rest that is into the land of Promise I will cease to be that I am as I liue they shall not enter for their incredulitie These oathes are vertually included in the former words which doe seeme to be spoken by the figure Aposiopesis wherein something is not formally expressed which yet is vertually included in the sense of the words By the place of rest here mentioned is signified eternall happines for the land of Promise was à figure of the celestiall countrie It is not here expressed who shall enter into that rest but in the booke of Numbers we read that our Lord Num 14. saied My seruant Caleb who being of another spirit hath followed me him will I bring into this land and Iosue and the litle ones whome they saied should be à prey to the enemies By Iosue and Caleb maie be vnderstood the small number of the Iewes who filled with the spirit of God did follow the doctrine of our Sauiour and by the multitude of those litle ones the fulnes of the conuersion of the Gentils whome the holie Church brought forth in the last age litle ones indeed because they entred by the gate of humilitie The Apostle speaking of the Rome 11. Gentils saieth that they were wild oliues were taken and grafted in some of the oline branches wich were broken and soe made partakers of the roote and fatnesse of the oliue The faithfull therefore of the Iewes w●ich are signified by the boughes of that oliue which were not broken all true Christians who shall perseuer in the vnion of the Catholike Apostolicall doctrine who are ment by the wild oliues which were inserted into the oliue tree these shall enter into that place of rest We hope alsoe that those broken branches shall againe be reunited to the naturall oliue towards the end of the world Beho●d à Psalme full of ioye and sweetnes à Psalme apt to inflame à pious soule with the fier of the holie Ghost It importeth vs to sing or recite it in the beginning of the morning office with all attention and spirituall feruour that soe by beginning the worke of God with ardour we maie passe the rest of the daie with profitt Let vs therefore doe that whereunto we are inuited in this present Psalme and when we rise to the morning office let vs beginne with couradge and alacritie let vs banish from our hearts all vaine thoughts impertinent fansies let vs carefully busie our hearts with God alōe saying to ourselues in our interiour or to such as are present Come let vs exult to our Lord c. and with à recollected and amorous mind let vs put in practise those most noble acts whereunto this Psalme doth inuite vs which are these that follow vdzt To exult and make iubilation to our Lord To preuent ●is face in confession of praise and confession of our sinns with teares of contrition To fall downe before him and adore our maker VVhat is vnderstood by Hymnes Psalmes and Canticles AFter the Inuitatorie Psalme followeth an Hymne by which is signified that the mind being now inflamed with the diuine loue cannot containe it self any longer but must needs breake forth into à more sweete expression of its interiour affections An Hymne maie be thus defined an Hymne is à Poeme declaring certaine workes of God benefits shewed towards mankind or thus An Hymne is à Poeme recounting the vertues and praise worthy actions of the holie Saints or exhorting vs to amēd our liues The vse of Hymnes is most auncient S. Ierome affirmeth that all the Psalmes of Dauid before or after which Alleluia is placed are
note that the Iewes in reuerence of their Sabbaoth did number the daies of the weeke from that daie calling the daie immediatly following the first of the Sabbaoth and soe forth of the rest The Gentils called the daies of the weeke by the names of the Planets to wit Sūnedaie Moonedaie c. but the holie Church doth call our Sabbaoth which was the first of the Sabbaoth according to the Iewish accoūt our Lords daie in honour of the Resurrection of our Sauiour on that daie and the daie immediatly following the first Feria and soe forth of the rest signifying thereby that all good Christians ought euery daie to feriate that is to liue holily abstayning from sinne vaine vnnecessary imployment yet not desisting from lawfull labours The sense therefore of this title is The Psalme written by Dauid for the glorie of the Resurrection of Christ which was to bee vpon the first of the Iewish Sabbaoth when Christ rysing on that daie should haue all power giuen him in heauen and vpon earth THE ARGVMENT HOlie Dauid by this Psalme doth intend to shew how of the innumerable multitude of men onely Christ and some few few indeed I maie saie in respect of the multitude of others shall enter into the celestiall house of our Lord. And therefore least perhaps any should beleeue that the residue of mankind did not belong to God but were created by some other Principle as afterwards the Marcionists and Manichees did suppose he declareth and prooueth in the beginning of this Psalme that man and all things else whatsoeuer are our Lords as being their Creator and conseruer which being soe he admireth the inscrutable iudgements of almightie God that out of the plenitude of the earth soe small à number compared with the rest should ascend in●o the mount of our Lord that is into his holie Church and that euen of those all should not perseuer in his holie place and dispose themselues to receaue the benediction and the mercie from their Sauiour that is to bee made partakers by him of the merits of his death and Passion but onely such as should haue the fower conditions he there specifieth Next the Prophet addresseth himself towards the Princes of darknes commaunding them to open their gates that Christ maie enter and set free the captiue soules whose ransome he hath paied vpon the Crosse And lastly he speaketh ●o the celestiall powers to open their gates that Christ and his blessed traine and all others that shall euen vntill the end of the world take vp their Crosse and follow him maie enter and keepe an eternall Sabbaoth The exposition of the Psalme THe earth is our Lords and the fulnes thereof all things therein contained to wit men beasts all that groweth thereon or is within her bowells the round world the circumference of the earth and all that dwell therein all these are our Lords as being their Creator gouernour conseruer Because he hath founded firmely placed it the earth or round world vpon the sea vpon certaine armes of the Ocean which inuiron it Yet this is not to bee vnderstood as though the earth properly speaking were aboue the sea for the earth is the Center of the vniuerse whence it is necessarie that it bee in the middest of the world and consequently according to its naturall seate incompassed by the waters and for the greatest part in the middest of them but it is saied to bee placed aboue the sea because by the diuine prouidence it is not wholly ouerwhelmed by the waters but that part which boundeth vpon the sea and the superficies thereof is higher then the sea that creatures maie liue and feed thereon Me then saieth our Lord will Ierem. 5. v. 22. you not feare who haue set the sand à limit for the sea an euerlasting precept that shall not passe the waues thereof shall swell and shall not passe ouer it And vpon the riuers hath prepared it made it an habitation fit for men and other liuing creatures The two precedent verses as likewise the rest of this Psalme maie bee explained in à more spirituall sense as followeth The earth the Church militant remaining vpon earth producing plentifull fruit of holie conuersation is our Lords and the fulnes thereof the whole vertue grace perfection of the faithfull ought by all right to bee ascribed vnto him as being the author and giuer thereof the round world the holie Church spread through all the confines of the earth or collected of people from all the ends of the earth and all that dwell therein all the true beleeuers established in Ecclesiasticall vnitie of faith and operation All these belong to our Lord Iesus Christ who hath purchased them with his pretious bloud That he might present to himself Ephe. 5. à glorious Church not hauing spot or wrinkle Because he hath founded it vpon the Sea vpon secular men wallowing and wauering as the Sea from one vanitie and inconstancie into an other or thus He hath founded it he hath strengthned his Church vpon the Sea vpon the persecutions tribulations bitternesses and inconstances of the world Yet this is not to bee vnderstood that these before named are the bases or foundations of the Church but that Christ hath established his Church in such sort against them that although they should neuer soe much endeauour to subuert her as the vast billowes of the sea doe menace to inuolue and swallow vp the earth yet she shall subsist and neuer bee altogether ouercome by them And vpon the riuers vpon vices gliding like riuers inordinately and without ceasing from one sensuall pleasure to another but neuer satiating hath prepared it disposed the holie Church to combate against them VValking in flesh saieth the Apostle we 2. Cor. 10. warre not according to the flesh for the weapons of our warfare are not carnall but mightie to God Since therefore all things are our Lords as hath been proued VVho shall ascend into the Mount of our Lord who from the seruitude of sinne shall ascend to the obedience of the holie Church who shall forsake the world and enter into religion who from imperfection shall ascend to perfection who from this vale of teares shall ascend into the Kingdome of heauen Or who shall stand in his holie place who shall perseuer to the end in the saied mount of our Lord verily all men shall not It is true indeed that many wicked and reprobate people doe ascend into the mount of our Lord but they stand not there for that belongeth onely to them in whome are found the fower properties following The innocent of hands who hath not iniured any man by his actions and of cleane heart who hath his heart purified from the staine or guilt of sinne and affection thereunto that hath not taken his soule in vaine that hath not neglected to fulfill those things for which his soule was created and infused into the body to wit to adorne it with vertues
knowledge necessary to saluation and the like nor sworne to his nighbour in guile hath not promised any thing which he intended not to performe hath not constantly auerred for truth what he could not prooue nor confirmed any thing with an oath with intent to deceaue his neighbour by which meanes he will neither haue sinned in thought word nor deed against God himself or his neighbour He whosoeuer he bee that obserueth these things he it is that shall receaue blessing diuine guifts and graces together with increase of them and prosperous successe in all he vndertaketh and mercie the grace of perseuerance of God his Sauiour to wit of our Lord Iesus Christ. This is the generation of them that seeke him Such iust and innocent men as this are the generation that seeke God their Sauiour by faith holie desires and good workes of them that seeke by Praier and contemplation in present with confidence hereafter clearely to behold the face of the God of Iacob incouradged by those words of our Sauiour Blessed are the cleane of heart for they shall see Math. 5. God Behold what is required of such as desire once to enioy the cleare vision of God from which we are as farre distant as we faile of this innocencie The words following are esteemed to bee the voice of the Angells that attended vpon our Sauiour after the separation of his blessed soule from the body vpon the Crosse and first to the Princes of darknes when they descended with him into Lymbo Patrum Lift vp your gates yee Princes desist yee Princes of darkenes from further exercising the right and power you haue hitherto had to detaine the soules of the elect for the guilt of originall sinne and hee yee lifted vp ô eternall gates which haue been shut from the beginning of the world that none could depart thence and shall remaine shut for euer to the damned for as much as concerneth their freedome and the King of glorie shall enter in and set free the captiue soules whose ransome he hath paied vpon the Crosse The deuills strucken with admiration at this voice demaund of the Angels VVho is this King of glorie that descendeth vnto vs in soe vnusuall à manner with such splendor and securitie Vnto whome the Angels make answer it is Our Lord strong in regard of his diuinitie and mighty in regard of his humanitie our Lord mighty in battle in his Passiō wherein as in à new sort of combate not by force and contention but by suffering innumerable indignities reproaches scoffes stroakes wounds and finally an ignominious death he hath vanquished Goliath subdued the Prince of the world bound him cast him forth and taken from him his spoiles Againe the Angels attending vpon our Sauiour at his Ascension into heauen doe call to the celestiall powers saying Lift vp your gates yee Princes set open the passadge into heauen ô yee celestiall powers The tyme that God prefixt by his inuiolable decree that none should enter Heauen till his Iustice were satisfyed is now happily expired the dreadfull schedule of mans condemnation is cancelled Open therefore your gates at lardge and the King of glory will enter in triumph attended with à specious trayne the trophies of his glorious victory ouer theirs and our mortall enemies being the first fruits of his painefull labours and an earnest penny that he will infallibly repaire our ruine bring vs daily à blessed sort of Citizens into the vacant habitations of Lucifer and his adherents that rebellious crue that once disturbed our ioy And bee yee lifted vp ô eternall gates and bee yee layed open ô yee gates of eternall life and the King of glorie shall enter in The celestiall powers hearing this voice and beholding Christ to ascend with such brightnes and Majestie doe inquire of the superiour Angels VVho is this King of glorie vnto whome the Angels attending vpon our Sauiour doe make answer The Lord of powers the onely Sonne of God the Father who is the Lord of the Sabbaoth and of all the celestiall powers He is the King of glorie the Prince of ioy the fountaine of eternall felicitie who is of such excellencie that euen according to his humanitie all power Math. 23. is giuen him in heauen and vpon earth Behold how excellently and breifly the holie Prophet doth teach vs by this Psalme to contemplate the diuine Majestie to the end to excite vs to reuerence and holie feare He teacheth alsoe how we must dispose our selues if we desire to be numbred in the list of the elect thereby exhorting vs to puritie cleanenesse of heart finally he vnfoldeth vnto vs the happy mystery of Christs Ascension thereby to erect our hearts to the loue of heauenly things according to that of the Apostle Seeke the things that are aboue where Christ is fitting Collos 3. on the right hand of God mynd the things that are aboue not the things that are vpō the earth The exposition of the 44. Psalme and 4 in number in the nocturne Office The title an exposition thereof VNto the end for them that shall bee changed to wit for Gentils and Iewes who shall bee conuerted to Christianitie and other sinners who shall bee changed here in this world by iustification and in the next by glorification To the sonnes of Chore to those that shall imitate Christ crucified on Mount Caluary for Chore is by interpretation Caluaria for vnderstanding for their instruction in the mysteries treated of in this Psalme A Canticle for the beloued for Christ of whome God the Father affirmed This is my welbeloued Math. 17. sonne THE ARGVMENT THis Psalme is à Epithalamy or wedding song composed in honour of the spirituall nuptialls betweene Christ the Spouse and the holie Church the Espoused The two first verses maie bee vnderstood in two senses The first and most profound sense which is set downe by S. Augustine in his exposition of this Psalme is to suppose them as spoken by God the Father and then they importe the incomprehensible generation of the Sonne of God before all world The second sense is that they bee vnderstood as spoken by the Prophet of himselfe and then they seeme to bee à Preface or dedication of this worke of his to the Kingly Spouse whose vertues and excellencies he setteth forth most elegantly in the following verses shewing how the daughters of Kings and euen the Queene herselfe inamoured of his beautie and exquisite vertues doth couet to assist in his presence Next he proceedeth to celebrate the praise of the Espoused describing her ornaments and instructing her how to comport herselfe that she maie become most pleasing in his sight And lastly he sheweth what ofspring they shall haue and how pious and diligent they shall bee to promote the honour of the Spouse and the Espoused The exposition of the Psalme MY heart hath vttered à good word my Paternall mynd or I my selfe who am the paternall mynd most simple and pure or my
for thy loue for he is the Lord thy God and they to wit all that shall beleeue in him shall adore him according Daniel 7. to that of the Prophet All peoples Tribes and tongues shall serue him And the daughters of Tyre of that great cittie neare to the land of Iuda called Tyre by whome are signified the Gentils shall present him with gifts all the rich of the earth shall beseech thy countenance shall with humble praiers and gifts seeke to winne thy fauour that they maie bee admitted to bee of thy traine and by thy meanes bee brought vnto his presence All the glorie of that daughter of the King who sometymes is called the Queene the spouse of Christ and the Church is within in interiour vertues and beautie of her mynd not in exteriour vaine fading things in borders of gold in workes of charitie clothed round about with varieties with the acts of diuers vertues In these consisteth her glorie and with these she trimmeth and adorneth herselfe that she maie appeare amiable in the eies of her spouse who is not delighted with exteriour vaine dressings and attyre Virgins shall bee brought to the King after her in the first principall place after her Virgins shall bee brought to thee ô Christ and next after them her neighbours holie widowes and such as lead their liues in lawfull wedlocke vsing it for the true end for which marriage was instituted and not for carnall delectation shall bee brought to thee They shall bee broug●t in ioy and exultation of body and spirit they shall bee brought into the temple of the King into the Kingdome of heauen after their passadge out of this place of banishement For thy Fathers in the place of the holie Patriarks and Prop●ets thy Fathers ô holie Church ô spouse of Christ there are borne to thee sonnes Apostles Bishops and Priests thou shalt make them Princes ouer all the earth and they shall prescribe lawes to the whole earth which neuer yet any temporall Monarch could doe They and all those they shall begett in Christ Iesus shall bee mindfull of thy name in all generation and generation shall seeke to dilate thy glorie in all ages Therefore shall peoples of all nations ●●ome the holie Apostles and their successors haue taught and inst●ucted Confesse vnto thee for euer shall praise thee vnto the end of the world and for euer and euer for eternitie This their praise shall beginne in this world and continue in the future without end By the espoused here mentioned all Expositors doe vnderstād the holie Church because the Apostle in the 5. to the Ephesians doth most clearly teach that the holie Church is the espoused of Christ Notwithstanding all that is here spoken of her in this Psalme maie alsoe bee fitly applied to euery perfect soule and principally to the Blessed Virgin who although she bee the Mother of Christ according to the flesh is neuerthelesse the espoused of Christ according to the spirit and amongst the members of the holie Church is deseruedly alotted vnto her the cheifest place of dignitie which is the reason that this Psalme is appointed to bee song in all her feasts and in the feasts of the other holie virgins The title and argument of the 45. Psalme and fift in the Nocturne Office VNto the end to the Sonnes of Chore A Psalme directing to the end which is Christ to the faithfull who shall imitate Christ crucified For secrets for hidden mysteries which shall bee reueiled in the later daies This Psalme is fitly placed next to the former for in the former was foretold the exaltation of the holie Church by the spirituall nuptialls with Christ our Lord in this is foreshewed the persecution which shall happen vnto her after the departure of her beloued spouse vnto his heauenly Kingdome her deliuery from those afflictions which shall principally come to passe towards the end of the world The exposition of this Psalme OVr Lord is à refuge vnto vs when we are inforced to fly persecution and strength when we tollerate it and in both flying and tollerating he is an helper and comforter in tribulations which haue found vs exeeedingly which haue happened vnto vs aboue measure Therefore will wee not feare when the earth shall bee troubled although the earth bee wonderfully shaken and mountaines transported into the heart or middest of the sea with great violence Or thus therefore we that hane placed our confidence in God will not feare when earthly men who haue had their affections wholly bent vpon terrene transitory things shall tremble with great horror in the daie of iudgement and the proud and mightie men of the world shall bee throwne into the very depth and middest of hell Or thus as being the words of the Primitiue Church hauing placed her hope in our Lord Iesus Christ Therefore we will not feare with à carnall humane and inordinate feare when the land of Iuda or the people of the Iewes shall bee troubled labouring in vaine to extirpate the young plants of Christ and blot out the memory of him in mens hearts neither will we then feare when the Apostles and disciples of Christ shall bee inforced to leaue Iewrie and passe to the Gentils inhabiting the middest of the earth Their waters haue sounded the clamours false accusations of the Iewes and Gentils haue sounded before the tribunalls of the Presidents Kings whither they haue conuented the disciples of Christ and were troubled to behold that they laboured in vaine to hinder the propagation of the Christian faith the mountaines were troubled the high Priests and the Princes and Potentates of the earth were moued some to impatience and persecution and others to Pennance and imitation in his strength beholding his diuine power in whose name the Apostles wrought wonderfull signes and miracles for confirmation of the doctrine which they promulgated The two following verses are expounded diues waies and first of the Militant Church The violence of the riuer the fountaine of sacred Baptisme maketh the militant Church the Citty of God ioyfull with spirituall gladnesse The highest God who alone can make cleane him that is conceiued of vncleane seed hath sanctified his tabernacle the Church of the elect or the elect themselues who according to the Apostle are the temple of the liuing God in whome he will dwell walke God is in the middest thereof of the foresaied temple as à strong pillar sustaining it on all sides who saieth of himself that VVhere there bee two or three gathered Math. 18. together in his name there he is in the middest of them It shall not bee moued the holie Church shall not faile in her faith nor bee suppressed or ouerwhelmed by tentation and tribulation because God will help it in the morning presently soe soone as she shall call vpon him for aide early in the spirituall Aurora to wit in the instant of infusion of grace or illumination of the holie Ghost Secondly they are
diuine nature hath founded her By the man that shall saie these admirable things to Sion Some doe vnderstand S. Iohn the Baptist of whome is Ioh. 1. saied There was à man sent from God c. For he was the first that announced to Sion that Christ was come of whome the Prophet Isaie saieth Vpon an high mountaine Isa 40. get thee vp thou that euangelizest to Sion exalt thy voice in strength say to the Citties of Iuda behold your God Others vnderstand Christ to bee that man because he very often saied to the Iewes and to his disciples that he himselfe was the man whome they expected should bee borne the Sauiour of the world Our Lord will declare in Scriptures of peoples and of Princes of those that haue been in her By this verse the Prophet doth seeme to make answer to the interrogation made in the precedent verse And according to the first interpretation thereof to wit Shall it not bee saied of Sion c. he seemeth here to answer Yes truely it shall bee saied for our Lord will declare it c. But according to the second interpretation to wit Shall not man saie to Sion c. he seemeth to answer Yes truely man shall saie that which followeth in the verse to Sion and not onely one that is à pure man but that man who is both God and man our Lord shall declare it in à more perfect manner in the Scriptures of peoples and Princes that all ages to the end of the world maie take notice that the onely Sonne of God Christ Iesus God and man is borne in her accord●ng to his humane nature and that he hath founded her according to his diuine nature And moreouer he shall declare and write downe the names of those that haue been in her who are soe many that he alone is able to doe it By Scriptures of the peoples some doe vnderstand the new testament others the bookes wherein the names of the elected people are registred which shall not bee published vntil the daie of Iudgemēt when the booke of life shall bee opened and by the Princes are vnderstood the Apostles who as it is written were constituted Psal 44. Princes ouer all the world The habitation in thee holie Church designed here by Sion is as it were of all reioycing is like to that habitation where all doe reioyce This verse maie in some respects bee applied to the militant Church by reason of the exceeding ioy peace of conscience which true Christian Catholickes doe possesse who reioyce in hope as being of that number vnto whome the Apostle saieth Reioyce Philip. 4. in our Lord alwaies againe Isaie Reioyce yet it cannot properly bee applied thereunto where we are to worke our Saluation with feare and trembling but it agreeth most properly with the happy estate of the triumphant Church where the blessed spirits doe securely enioy what neither eie hath seene nor eare hath heard nor hath entred into the heart of man without the least feare of euer being depriued thereof Behold how excellently the holie Church is praised in this compendious Psalme how clearely the mysterie of the incarnation of our Sauiour is insinuated and the ioyes of the celestiall countrey commended It behoueth vs to sing it by soe much the more deuoutly and affectionately by ●ow much the more clearely the calling of the Gentils is foretold in it And in regard it is something intricate it behoueth vs to study to vnderstand the true sense thereof and consider it attentiuely for otherwise we shall not bee able to recite it with such deuotion as the misteries therein contained doe require we should The title and argument of the 95. Psalme and 7. in the Nocturne Office A Canticle to Dauid himselfe when the howse was built after the captiuitie This title was prefixed by Esdras and the Psalme was appointed by him to bee song when the Temple was reedified after the Babylonian captiuitie but the Psalme was composed by holie Dauid vpon occasion of the bringing backe of the Arke into Ierusalem and ordained by him to bee sōg at that tyme. Which notwithstanding it is certaine that the principall intention of the Prophet and of the holie Ghost himselfe was to foreshew the cōming of Christ and his Kingdome when as the Apostle witnesseth ●oloss God did deliuer vs from the power of darkenes and translated vs into the Kingdome of the Sonne of his loue For as S. Augustine doth well note there is noe mention at all made through out the whole Psalme either of the bringing backe of the Arke or of the building of the Temple after the captiuitie but of the thing signified by the building of the Temple at that tyme Therefore of necessitie we must either g●aunt that there is noe coherence betweene the Title and the Psalme or els expound them spiritually as all the auntient holie Fathers doe to this effect As by the captiuitie saie they wherein the Iewes were lead away and detained prisoners by the Chaldeans is figured the captiuitie wherein all mankind was ouercome held in thraldome and slauery by the deuils Soe likewise by the building of the Temple in Ierusalem after that captiuitie is designed the building of the holie Church which is the howse of God not with insensible stones but with liuing stones congregated and polished by Christ and founded in him In Ephe. 2. whome as the Apostle saieth all building framed together groweth into an holie Temple in our Lord in whome you alsoe are built together into an habitation of God in the holie Ghost The sense therefore of the title is A Canticle to Dauid himselfe written for that tyme when the Church of Christ began to bee built by the preaching of Christ and his Apostles after the freeing of mankind from captiuitie which was done by the Incarnation and passion of the Sonne of God who redeemed mankind from the power of the deuill and the seruitude of sinne as our Sauiour witnesseth of himself saying Now the Prince of this world shall bee cast forth and I if I bee exalted from the earth will draw all things to my selfe The Psalme speaketh litterally of the two fold comming of Christ to wit to saue and to iudge the world it speaketh alsoe of the building and sacrifice of the Church The exposition of the Psalme SIng ye to our Lord à new song sing ye such à song as the new Master the fountaine of wisdome Christ our Lord hath brought with him and proposed to the whole world ●o wit A Hymne composed of his counsells some whereof were vnknowne before his comming Such à new sōg is One thing is necessarie If thou wilt bee perfect goe and sell the things Luc. 10. Math. 19. that thou hast giue to the poore Call none Father to your selfe vpon earth for one is your Father he that is in heauen innumerable others like to these which are frequent in the new Testamènt
him who hath been mindfull of you euen before you had existence in nature In this Psalme we are admonished to weigh diligently the horrour distriction and seuere rigour of the last iudgement and to consider from our heart how horred Hebre. 10. it will bee then to fall into the hands of the liuing God to behold him à furious iudge to see the world all in flames to see the whole troupes of Angels assisting Christ our iudge against the vniust before heauen and earth to render an account of all our words deeds and thougts to bee confounded and reproued before men Angels and diuels to heare that most bitter and irreuocable sentence of damnation pronounced Goe Math. 25. ye accursed into eternall fire to expect the vncertaine or rather certaine sentence of the iudge to behold the wide gaping Chaos of the infernall dungeon and lastly to bee separated for euer from the societie of the iust and throwne into the abisme of hell there to bee scorched with vnextinguible flames without any the least hope of euer departing thence Wherefore let vs recite this Psalme with feare and trembling and beg of our Lord grace to cōporte our selues in such sort in this life that we maie merit to behold him then as à gracious patrone and mild Father not as a seuere iudge The title and argument of the 97. Psalme and last in the Nocturne Office A Psalme to Dauid himselfe In the person of Dauid is prefigured Christ our Lord as hath been saied The Prophet doeth by this Psalme inuite all nations with heart voice and instruments ioyfully to celebrate the two foresaied commings of our Sauiour yet he cheefly treateth of his first comming to saue the world The Prophet doth in this as in many other of the Psalmes speake of things to come as if they were already passed for the infallible certainty of them all which we now behold to bee performed accordingly The exposition of the Psalme SIng ye to our Lord à new song because he hath done maruelous things farre surpassing mans capacitie which are at lardge recorded by the Euangelists His right band his diuine power hath wrought saluation to himselfe hath raised his mortall body from death to life or thus hath saued mankind for himselfe and his arme his vertue and fortitude is holie God the Father Our Lord hath made knowne his saluation hath proclaimed to Zachary and the shepheards by his Angels to S. Elizabeth S. Anne and holie Symeon by the holie Ghost afterwards to S. Iohn the Baptist and finally to the Apostles in the transfiguration of our Lord that Christ Iesus is his beloued Sonne whome he promised should come and worke saluation to all mankind In the sight of the Gentils he hath reuealed his iustice first by the starre which appeared to the three Kings and afterwards by the preaching of the Apostles he hath reuealed Christ our Lord who is tearmed his iustice because by him God hath redeemed the world not by his power onely but b● the way of iustice or thus hath reuealed the precepts coūsells of the Euangelicall law in which the plenitude of iustice is contained The words and sense of this most sweet verse are frequent in t●● Prophesie of Isa●● The Isa 40. glorie saiet he of our Lord shall bee reuealed and all flesh together shall see that the mouth of our Lord hath spoken And our Lord 52. hath prepared his holie arme in the sight of all the Gentils and all the ends of the earth shall see the saluation of our God and againe I 56. haue made my iustice neere it shall not bee farre of and my saluation shall not tarrie He hath remembred his mercy wherewith he mildly and sweetly not onely spared our first parents but alsoe promised that the seed of t●e woman should crush the serpents head and he hath remembred his truth to the bouse of Israel to performe faithfully what he promised to Abraham Iacob and his progeny according to that of S. Luke He hath receiued ●srael his child Luc. 1. being mindfull of his mercy As he spake to our Fathers to Abraham and his seed for euer All the ends of the earth haue seene the saluation of our God by saith in Christ our Lord diuulged by the holie Apostles Marc. 16. vnto whome our Sauiour saied Going into the w●ole world preach the Gospell to all creatures For which singular benefit the Prop●et doth here inuite all creatures to praise and giue thankes to our Lord saying Make ye iubilation to God all the earth O all ve inhabitants of the ear●h with excessiue and vnspeakable ioy of heart saie ye praise to Christ our God chaunt with your voices reioyce in your hearts and sing on instruments Sing to our Lord on harpe on harpe voice of Psalme on long dr●wne trumpets and voice of c●rnet of horne According to the letter the Heb●●wes did ●se ●uch musicall instruments as these therewith to set forth the praise of God But being taken in à spirituall sense by the harpe is vnderstood the workes of mercy or mortification of the flesh by the long drawne trumpets are signified the tribulations and aduersities o● this life and by the cornet of horne the contemplation or celestiall things by which all transitory things are transcended The sense therefore of this verse seemeth to bee Sing to our Lerd on harpe with mortification of your flesh and workes of mercy that your song ma●e bee acceptable and delig●tfull On harpe and voice of Psalme with life answerable and concording to your voice On long drawne trumpets in aduersities tribulations and tentations giue thankes to God esteeming it all ioy when you fall Iac. 1. into diuers tentations And voice of cornet of horne with vocall praise proceeding from diuine contemplation Make ye iubilation in the sight of the King our Lord to wit Christ Iesus Let the Sea bee moued and the fulnesse thereof the round world and they that dwell therein The riuers shall clappe with hand This is Bellarme in bunc locum Metaphorically spoken in regard that the noise of their motion compared with the roaring of the sea is like to that of clapping of hands The mountaines together shall reioyce at the sight of our Lord because he cometh to iudge the carth If this bee referred to the first comming of our Sauiour all these are saied to reioyce because he cometh to gouerne the world with most iust lawes not onely as in tymes past with the Majestie of his inuisible diuinitie but alsoe in a corporall and visible Philip. 2. forme Made into the similitude of men and in shape found as à man But if it bee referred to ●is second comming these are inuited to reioyce because God will then exterminate all sinners and renew all the elements Some expound the two precedent verses as followeth Let the Sea bee moued and the fulnesse thereof to wit those that negotiate on the sea and such as
which I will here particularize First the mynd which is perhaps as it were tired with the intense study of praier maie by this meanes haue tyme to breath and gather new forces Secondly the mynd will bee much recreated and delighted with the gratefull variety profitable vicissitude of praier and reading Thirdly those who perhaps would not otherwise haue the opportunity by reasō of their many exteriour imployements to heare the Scriptures read by this meanes doe participate of that benefit and Fowerthly the mynd is by such reading furnished with aboundant matter to moue holie affections becometh fattened strengt●ned with good desires in vertue where of it maie with much facilitie passe through the rest of the office according to that of the Psalmist As with marrow and fatnesse let Psal 62. my soule bee filled and my mouth shall praise with lippes of exultation Notwithstanding that the words of the insuing Lessons are literally applied to our Sauiour yet are they placed in this office by the holie Church which is directed by the holie Ghost according to that of the Euangelist The holie Ghost Ioh. 14. whome the father will send in my name he shall teach you all things and suggest vnto you all things whatsoeuer I shall saie to you and are mystically expounded of the blessed Virgin both by the auncient moderne Fathers in effect as followeth The explication of the First Lesson THe most blessed Virgin the immaculate Mother of the eternall wisdome saieth as followeth In all these things to wit which are before rehearsed in the saied Chapter I sought rest for indeed the most pious Aduocatrix of mankind doth aboue all the blessed spirits and next vnto her deare Sonne our Lord and Sauiour Christ Iesus couet the saluation of all people and desire to inhabite haue her place of residence and repose in all mens hearts by holie remembrance vertuous imitation and sweet louingnesse and I shall abide in the inheritance of our Lord to wit in the faithfull and vertuous elect who are the inheritance and Church of our Lord. Then the Creator of all commanded and saied to me that which immediatly followeth in the next sentence and he that created me to wit the eternall word hath rested in my Tabernacle to wit in my wombe where he assumed humane nature and being made an infant did reremaine for the space of nine moneths He hath alsoe most graciously rested in the tabernacle of my mynd euen from my first conception And he saied to me commanding that which followeth Inhabite in Iacob to wit in the Primitiue Church consisting of the Iewish elect for in it our most blessed Lady was corporally conuersant liued most exemplarily and holily and afterwards did and doth spiritually remaine in the whole militant Church possessing protecting gouerning the hearts of the faithfull and in Israel to wit contemplatiue religious and spirituall persons and eminent in the practise of all vertues inherite that thou maiest as it were by right of inheritance possesse them as being their Mother their Queene and their Aduocatrix and they alsoe maie possesse thee by incessant most pure and feruent loue as thy seruants and Sonnes and take roote in myne elect by impetrating for them the gifts of grace and vertues that soe they maie bee radicated in Christ and euer cohere and cleaue to thee At the end of this Lesson as like wise of the rest is added Tu autem Domine miserere nobis that is to saie But thou ô Lord bee mercifull vnto vs which custome is obserued at the end of the Lessons in all other offices except those of the faithfull departed By which words is signified as Rupertus affirmeth that euen the office l 1. de diuinis officijs c. 12. of shewing forth the diuine word cannot bee performed by vs without contracting some small dust of blame For as S. Augustine saieth The word of predication is heard with more securitie then pronounced and the reason thereof is because when the Preacher or denouncer of the word shall perceaue that he saieth well and deserueth praise it is à very hard matter if he bee not touched in some slight manner with the spirit of elation and therefore in respect that he walketh vpon the earth and hath his feete soiled with dust although he bee otherwise wholy pure and cleane yet in regard hereof it will bee needfull for him to implore the diuine mercy that soe he maie bee washed in that part and become altogether neate and pure After the Reader hath pronounced the foresaied words to wit But thou ô Lord bee mercifull vnto vs the whole quire answereth Deo gratias that is to saie l. ●itato c. 14. Thākes to God which as Rupertus affirmeth is not referred to the saied last praier of the Reader but to the whole precedent Lesson the quire thereby giuing thankes to God for that he hath graciously vouchsafed to breake vnto them the bread of his diuine doctrine least they should haue perished with famine of hearing the word of God S. Augustine Ep. 77. Alipio Aurelio doth extoll this manner of thankes giuing as followeth What better thing saieth he can we beare in our mynd or pronounce with our mouth or expresse with our penne then Deo gratias there can noe sentence bee saied more breefly neither is there any thing more ioyfull to bee ●eard nor more loftie to bee vnderstood nor more fruitfull to bee done then this c. This it is which S. Paul doth soe frequently inculcate vnto 1. Thessal 5. vs in his Epistles saying In all things giue thankes for this is the will of God This the Prophet Dauid was most carefull to obserue Psalm 33. I will blesse our Lord saieth he at all tymes his praise alwaies in my mouth The holie Church therefore with good reason doth ordaine this manner of thankesgiuing to bee often iterated in the diuine office that thereby we maie ascribe to God vnto whome doth belong all that is best whatsoeuer is well done in our praier and render him thankes therefore Of Responsories NExt in order after euery Lesson there followeth à Responsory which is soe called because one alone hauing song à Lesson all the quire doth answer and sing that which followeth which vsually is taken out of the same part of the holie Scriptures as the Lesson or otherwise is composed of certaine amorous affections towards God and sweet sentences corresponding to the nature of the office of that daie The institution of them is very auncient and most authors are of opinion that the greatest part of the Responsories which are placed in the Breuiary were collected composed by S. Ambrose They seeme to bee ordained for this reason to wit that whereas in the Lessons we doe as it were heare God almighty most gratiously to speake vnto vs and put vs in mynd of his wonderfull workes and of his excessiue loue towards the saluation of mankind or to propose vnto
that inuented the origine of all c. O all yee His elected people and the sheepe of his pasture whome he feedeth with his Sacraments and sustaineth nourisheth in mynd and body with his guifts and graces enter yee not so much with corporall steps as with aduancement of your mynds into the practise of vertues which are his gates through which you are to passe into eternall life enter I saie in Confession of your sinnes For proceeding according to order this ought to precede our other workes of vertue for by such confession sinnes are remitted grace giuen and men are fitly disposed to praise God But if we omit to doe this it will bee in vaine for vs to seeke to enter into his saied gates neither will any thing we doe seeme gratefull vnto him as he affirmeth by the mouth of the Prophet Isaie saying VVhen you shall stretch forth Isaie 1. your hands I will turne away myne eies from you and when you shall multiply praier I will not heare for your hands are full of bloud VVash you bee cleane and take away the euill of your cogitations from myne eies c. Being therefore thus prepared enter yee alsoe with humble confidence into his courts in Hymnes for your praises will then be most delightfull vnto him By the courts of our Lord diuers of the holie Fathers doe vnderstand the latitude of Charitie and other principal vertues which à soule soe cleansed by Sacramentall confession practised in inferiour vertues ought to aspire vnto by which they maie attaine to perfection in this life and acquire an answerable place of glory in the next but some others doe suppose the Prophet to allude to the Three Courts of the Temple whereof one was for the Priests another for laye men and the third for women Amongst the diuine Attributes for all which he is most praise worthy Praise yee his name here for three of them cheefly First because our Lord is sweet mild benigne and soone moued to pittie and compassion Which if you desire to make tryall of Tast ye and see that our Psal 3● 2. Cor. 1. Lord is sweet He is the Father of mercies and God of all comfort Secondly praise him because his mercy is for euer Our Psal 102. Lord is pittifull and mercifull long suffering and very mercifull As à Father hath compassion of his children soe hath our Lord compassion on them that feare him Thirdly and lastly praise him because his truth is euen vnto generation and generation As he is most mercifull promising benefits gratis soe he is most faithfull and true in constantly performing what he hath promised as he witnesseth of hymselfe saying Heauen and earth shall Luc. 21. passe but my words shall not passe Behold here à Psalme replete with Angelicall sweetnes which we ought to sing in the person of the holie Church with diligent attention rendering our selues efficaciously obedient to the pious exhortations therein contained by iubilating to our Lord seruing him with gladnesse attending to his presence incessantly and confessing him to bee our God by faith workes which we cannot by any meanes performe vnlesse we doe daily with intire hearts abhorre and detest the greater sort of vices and diligently to the vtmost of our power shunne correct deplore the lesser sort of sinnes by frequent confession firme purpose of amendement weighing carefully that saying of Salomon He that hideth Prouer. 28. v. 13. his wicked deeds shall not bee directed but he that shall confesse and shall forsake them shall obtaine mercie These things are requisite to the due performance of the acts where vnto we are inuited in this present Psalme for those acts are altogether deiforme celestiall Angelicall and of incomparable merit The title and argument of the 62. Psalme and third in the Laudes A Psalme of Dauid when he was in the deser● of Iuda called Ziph or of Idumea Holie Dauid when he was inforced to hide himselfe in the desert from the furious persecution of Saul and could not haue accesse to the Tabernacle of God nor to Ierusalem where he had à longing desire to bee in the inheritance of our Lord did take occasion by that his affliction to deplore his owne estate and the estate of all other iust men liuing in the exile of this present life and vale of teares whcih is repleate with vices and tribulations sterill of good things and true felicity and to expresse the exceeding great desire he had to passe out of this world vnto the celestiall countrey The exposiiion of the Psalme O God of all and in a speciall manner My God in regard of thy peculiar fauours graces aboundantly bestowed vpon me the vnworthiest of thy creatures protecting me from euill things promoting me in good things and directing me in à particular manner to my last end as alsoe in respect of the singular loue and reuerence wherewith I loue worship thee alone and aboue all things to thee ● watch from the morning light presently ●o● soone as the daie appeareth and the spendor of thy diuine grace doth illustrate m● soule I arise by erecting my mynd towards thee with à cordiall affection to contemplate loue and adore thee My soule hath thirsted after thee The appetite of my soule to wit my will hath coueted with an intellectuall and exceeding great desire to obtaine thee the fountaine of all goodnesse who alone canst satiate her and my flesh to wit my body or my sensuall appetite hath thirsted to thee very many waies by reason of diuers and manifold necessities Concerning these words of the Prophet you are to note that whether the Flesh bee taken for the body onely or for the sensitiue appetite it cannot fitly bee saied to thirst to God directly and immediatly for God being an immateriall and simple essence can onely bee attained with à sole immateriall appetite as he is onely comtemplated with a sole intellectuall eie neither can the flesh precisely taken according to it selfe desire properly speaking or thirst but for as much as it is informed with the soule for desire rather belongeth to the whole compound and to the soule then to the flesh Whereas therefore the flesh is here saied to thirst to God it maie bee vnderstood two waies First because it is an an occasion to the soule to t●irst to God For The body that is corrupted burdeneth the Sap. 9. soule and the soule by reason of her vnion with the body falleth into many necessities solicitudes afflictions and miseries and consequently t●ereby she hath soe many causes or motiues of sighing and longing after God as she experienceth in herselfe impediments which interpose themselues betweene her and God● and doe retract remoue her à farre of from him Such impediments as these the Apostle felt when he saied Vnhappy man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body Rom. 7. of this death Secondly it maie bee vnderstood thus My flesh to wit
after their conuersion for the most part are accustomed to praise our Lord with à gratefull heart saying with the Psalmist But that our Lord hath holpen me within very Psal 9● litle my soule had dwelt in hell Yet in regard that bruit sauadge and vntamed creatures are properly called beasts and bruit tame domesticall creatures cattell by beasts may fitly bee vnderstood carnall cruell vntractable men by cattell gentle courteous and tractable men Sonnes of men blesse yee our Lord. Reasonable and intellectuall creatures as the Sonnes of Men are ought to blesse our Lord not onely by affording matter of the diuine praise to such as rightly consider them but by considering their owne excellencie and perfection as alsoe the perfections in other creatures to magnifie and extoll with heart and mouth the infinite goodnesse wisdome and power of almigtie God acknowledging him by words and deeds the author and fountaine of all perfection cordially giuing thankes vnto him for all benefits gifts bestowed either vpon them or vpon other creatures Indeed if we will attentiuely consider Man as touching his body and soule and other circumstances concerning him we shall find soe much the more copious and excellent matter of the Creators praise by how much man is of à more high and excellent nature then the rest of the forenamed creatures For in the body of Man how great goodnesse of God how great prudence of soe mighty à Creator doth appeare Are not the places of the senses and the rest of the members soe disposed the forme shape and stature of the whole body soe delineated that they clearely shew they were made for the seruice of à reasonable soule Man is not created as we see irrationall creatures inclining towards the earth but with the forme of his body bolt vpright towards heauen whereby he is admonished according as the Apostle exhorteth To mynd the things that are aboue and not the things that Collos 3. are upon the earth By how much the more and greater benefits therefore are bestowed vpon him by soe much the more he is obliged to praise God and by soe much the more seuere and terrible shall his doome of reprobation bee if he bee found defectiue herein Let Israel blesse our Lord. Amongst all the generations of men the Israelits are most obliged to God almighty for his especiall graces and singular patronadge and consequently are bound by all the lawes of gratitude to render him due praise VVho declareth his word to Iacob his Psal 147. iustices and iudgements to Israel He hath noe done in leke manner to any nation and his iudgements he hath not made manifest to them Yet in respect that the people of Israel for their incredulity and obstinate blindnesse are become vnworthy of that name of whome the Apostle saieth Behold Israel 1. Cor. ●0 according to the flesh by Israel is now to bee vnderstood the people that are Christians by faith and workes of whome the same Apostle saieth Peace vpon the Israel of Gal. 9. God for they are frequently designed in the Prophets vnder the names of Ierusalem Sion and Israel especially in regard that the Primitiue Church consisted of the saied people Priests of our Lord blesse yee our Lord. These holie men hauing in generall tearmes inuited all Israel to blesse our Lord doe now here especially nominate the Priests on whome greater gifts are bestowed then vpon the vulgar and who in respect of their office or function are peculiarly obliged to spirituall exercises and the praise of God vnto whome Ezechias saied My children be not negligent 2. Paralip 29. our Lord hath chosen you to stand before him and to minister to him and to worship him and to burne incense to him and of whome our Lord hath saied I will replenish the soules of the Priests with fatnesse and in Exodus it is alsoe saied that The Priests shall be holie to their God If then the Priests Exod. 29 of the old law were bound to liue soe spiritually continently and soberly whose priesthood was but as à type and figure of the priesthood of Christ and his holie Church how spiritually continently and temperately are the Priests of the holie Church obliged to liue Verily so much the more perfectly ought they to frame their liues by how much their priesthood is more spirituall and diuine and the sacrifice they offer more excellent and the Sacraments they handle of greater value Seruants of our Lord blesse yee our Lord. These words doe seeme to bee spoken to those cheefly who ministred to the Priests in the diuine worship to witt to the Leuites vnto whome Deacons doe succeed in the holie Church yet they maie alsoe be vnderstood as spokē to all the faithfull for they are all properly stiled the seruants of God as being Created by him redeemed with the pretious bloud of his most deare and onely sonne Christ Iesus Spirits and soules of the iust praise yee our Lord. You are to know that these words Spirit soule doe expresse one the same essence of à reasonable soule which in as much as it informeth and giueth life to the body is called Anima that is à soule and by reason of its simplicity and in as much as it contemplateth heauenly things it is called à Spirit Holie and humble of heart blesse yee our Lord not attributing your vertues and merits to your owne proper power labour or industry but to the piety and grace of the holie Ghost who operateth in you both à good will and ability to performe your duties Ananias Azarias and Misael blesse yee our Lord. These holie men hauing inuited all creatures to praise our Lord doe now prouoke themselues thereunto in consideration of their present benefit being miraculously preserued from the fire of that flaming furnace The verse following is not in the Text but hath been added by the holie Church in the praise of the most blessed Trinity in the place of Gloria Patri which Pope Damasus by the perswasion of S. Ierome did institute to be recited or sung at the end of euery Psalme as hath been saied heretofore Let vs Blesse that is Let vs with heart and mouth exhibite deuotion praise honour reuerence and diuine worship in spirit and truth to the Father our Creator and the Sonne our Redeemer with the Holie Ghost our Comforter and for that these trhee persons are one vndiuided and most amiable God Let vs praise him in three persons with one praise and superexalt him for euer speaking well of him thinking well of him and ascribing vnto him all that is good Thou art blessed o Lord in the firmament of heauen and laudable and glorious and superexalted for euer The argument of the 148. Psalme intituled Alleluia that is to saie Praise our Lord. THe Prophet intending to inuite all creatures to praise our Lord doth reduce them to two Classes to witt Heauen and earth for these are the two principall
or industrie doth flourish not being sowed or cultiuated soe the wombe of the Virgin did flourish soe the inuiolate chast intire bowells of Marie brought forth the flower of eternall viriditie whose beautie and glorie shall neuer fade Yet least it might seeme impossible to any that à Virgin should bring forth Christ the Prophet sheweth the manner of his generation to witt that it is not effected by humane but diuine power For our Lord certes will giue benignitie to witt supernaturall fecunditie to the preelected Virgin and plenitude of grace as the Angell declared vnto her saying Haile full of grace our Lord is with thee c. And our land the blessed Virgin Marie our saluatrix and aduocatrix shall giue her fruit bring forth Christ our Lord of which fruit S. Elisabeth prophesied saying Blessed Luc. 1. is the fruit of thy wombe But in a spirituall sense our Lord will giue benignitie when as he filleth our hearts with grace giueth mercifull audience to our praier iustifierh vs gratis preuenteth the impious conserueth the iust and perfecteth proficients and our land giueth her fruit when as our body becometh obedient to the spirit and imploieth it selfe in pious exercises for then we fulfill that of the Apostle I beseech you exhibite your bodies à Rom. 12. liuing host pleasing to God Iustice shall walke b●f●re him Christ our B. Sauiour shall teac● nothing of Christ but what is iust and holie and shall set his stepps in the waie he shall accomplish in worke whatsoeuer he shall soe teach for à Doctor is then saied to set his steps in the waie when by liuing well he sheweth the doctrine to be true which he proposeth to others and is the waie to eternall life S. Augustine expoundeth these three last verses in effect as followeth Truth is risen out of the earth truth of confession of sinnes and the praise of God begane to arise through Christ out of the mouthes of terrene men and then Iustice hath looked downe from heauen that it might iustify them soe confessing their sinnes and rendring praise Yet this truth of confession of sinnes shall not arise out of the saied earth through the proper forces thereof but through the aide of the preuenting grace of God for it is our Lord that will giue benignitie who will make iustice shine in the hearts of sinners and by this meanes Our earth will giue her fruit Moreouer man soe iustified by the grace of Christ will alwaies haue iustice before his eies that he maie performe all things according to the rule of iustice and soe Iustice shall walke before him bearing the law of God before him as a torch that he maie not walke in darknesse and soe secure and ioyfull ●e shall set his stepps in the waie that he maie happily attaine to the celestiall countrey in the end What vnderstanding is able to conceiue much lesse expresse the dignitie and praise of this present Psalme wherein first the diuine benefits are most deuoutly called to remembrance and afterwards this most efficacious praier is annexed Conuert vs ô God our Sauiour Which verse is with good reason appointed to be saied at Compline against the darkenesse of the night the deceits of deuills and infinite necessities of man to the end that daie light then departing our mynd being conuerted to God maie bee illustrated on all sides with the light of grace and being abstracted from all sensible things maie bee immerged in the intelligible immutable and cheifest good least soe singular à grace should bee denied vs in regard of our sinnes it is most fitly added And auert thy wrath from vs Let vs therefore recite this verse especially at Compline with feruent affection and firme confidence In the following verses hope of obtaining mercie is inflamed and all pusillanimitie and diffidence is eradicated To conclude the verse Shew vs ô Lord thy mercie and giue vs thy saluation doth farre exceed in sententious sweetnesse all the delights of carnall things The title and argument of the 116. Psalme and last in Prime THe title is Alleluia fitly agreeing with the Psalme for therein the Prophet doth inuite all men both Iewes and Gentils to praise our Lord for the singular benefitt of the Incarnation of Christ for the accomplishing of what was foretold of him and for the conuersion of the Gentils Christ is the Corner Eph. 2. stone in whome the Gentils and Iewes are ioyned together constituting one Church wherein there is noe distinction of à Iewe and à Grecian for as the Apostle saieth In Iesus Christ neither Circumcision Galath 6. auaileth ought nor prepuce but à new creature Yet because there are more of the Gentils conuerted then of the Iewes the Prophet foreseeing this doth in the first place inuite them saying The explication of the Psalme PRaise our Lord all yee Gentils called to the faith praise him all yee peoples conuerted from Iudaisme Because his mercie is confirmed vpon vs the sweet effect of his diuine clemencie or his grace is more copiously then formerly conferred and roborated vpon the whole race of men by the comming of Christ And the truth of our Lord to witt the fulfilling of his promisses and the mysteries of Christ remaineth for euer in as much as concerneth the fruit acquired thereby that is the freedome of mankind of which truth S. Iohn maketh Ioh. 1. mention saying Veritie was made by Iesus Christ who fulfilled all that was foretold of him and therefore hanging vpon the Crosse saied It is consummate Or thus Ioh. 19. The truth of our Lord to witt the doctrine of Christ remaineth for euer as he himselfe witnessed saying Heauen and Luc. 21. earth shall passe but my words shall not passe Or finally thus The truth of our Lord Christ the Sonne of God who saied I am the veritie remaineth for euer which Iob. 14. the Iewes confessed saving to our Sauiour we haue heard out of the law that Christ abideth for euer This Psalme little in words but great in sense is exceedingly commended by the holie Doctors for it containeth summarily what is treated of at lardge in the rest of the Psalmes To bee briefe what can bee saied more delightfull to the Gentils almost destitute of hope or to such as are in miserie blindnesse and the state of perdition then this That the mercie of God is confirmed vpon vs Let this Psalme therefore be pronounced by vs with à certaine flame of holie deuotion The explication of the Chapter at Prime VVhat is she that cometh forth as Au●ora Cant. 6. rising To witt from her infancy wherein she begane to haue the vse of reason making incomparable progresse in à very short space preceding producing Christ the true daie of holie soules Faire as the Moone as the Moone next to the Sunne doth shine most resplendently in heauen and gouerneth the night soe the most illustrious Lady next to Christ our Sauiour the Sunne of Iustice
could in noe so●t haue withstood But God is faithfull who 1. Cor. 10 〈◊〉 will no● suffer vs to be tempted abou● that which we are able Yea he will make alsoe with tentation issue that we maie be able to sustaine 〈◊〉 Blessed praised and glorified be our Lord for euer who hath not giuen vs à pre● to their teeth who hath not withdrawne his helping hand from vs nor left vs to the mercie lesse rage of our enimies who persecuted vs as it were with open mouthes pretending alreadie to teare vs in peeces with their venimous teeth In deed he hath giuen them power to afflict our bodies for our future reward but he hath not in any sort permitted them to hurt our soule for Our soule as à sparrow is deliuered from the snare of the fawlers By these fowlers or hunters are vnderstood wicked men instruments of the Deuill who seeke to deceiue soules according to that Euery Micheas 7. one hunteth his brother to death and by the snares are vnderstood all such things whereby the soule is induced to sinne 〈◊〉 made subiect to the power of the Deuill whence is that of the Apostle God gi●e them repentance to know the truth and they 2. ad Ti●o 2. recouer themselues from the snares of the Diuell of whome they are held captiue at his will c. From these snares our soule is dis●neangled by the grace of God and escapeth out of them as à sparrow out of the net making vonderfull expressions of ioy at the recouerie of her freedome The snare is broken God almightie giuing the light of his grace to discouer the sub 〈…〉 ties and suggestions of the euill enemie and fortitude to resist them and we are deliuered the Diuel being ouercome consent to sinne being denied aduersitie hauing noe power to hurt vs. This we cannot perfectly sing in this life by reason that tentations endure euc● to the expiration thereof yea they are sometimes most impetuous at the very houre of our departure At what tyme then maie we sing it perfectly but in the life to come when we maie pronounce with à ioyfull heart that of the Apostle Death is swallowed vp in victorie Death 1. Cor. 15 where is thy sting Yet we maie in some sort sing it in this life when we haue ouercome some tentation or escaped sinister occurrences by the assistance of the diuine goodnesse for the Apostle saieth Thankes be to God that hath giuen vs victorie by our Lord Iesus Christ Our help is in the name of our Lord to witt in his power not in our strength for it is written Lord thou wilt giue peace to vs onely in thee let vs remember thy name In him therefore our help is placed who made heauen and earth In this Psalme we are taught to ascribe to God with true humilitie all our triumph spirituall progresse and gifts of grace to recount his diuine benefits deuoutly rendring him the tribute of our thankfulnesse According to Hugh of S Victor The diuell doth inuade men by suggestion touch them by deliberation swallow them by consent transmisse them to the stomacke by operation concoct them by custome and digest them to death by damnation for by these degrees men descend into all The argument of the 124. Psalme and last in Sext. IN this Sixt graduall Psalme the Prophet treateth of the Sixt degree of internall ascension which is à certaine immoueable confidence in the goodnesse of almightie God drawne out of the consideration of manifold benefits already receiued For by how much the more frequently any doe experience his singular fauours by soe much the more their confidence in him is established in such sort that they are in à manner assured he will conuert all things sweetly to their eternall benefitt The explication of the Psalme THey that trust in our Lord as mount Sion Those that shall place all their confidence and entirely resigne themselues into the all powerfull hands of our Lord shall be noe more subiect to commotion then is that holie Mountaine of Sion by the shocke of the winds which is enuironed with diuers other hills He shall not be proued for euer that dwelleth in Ierusalem He that maketh his constant aboade in the militant Church and continueth therein shall not be moued for euer from the Catholique faith not that he is confirmed in goodnesse according to the ordinarie proceeding before he hath runne the course of his life but in as much as being à member of the Church and endeauouring to keepe the commaundements of almightie God he maie confidently hope to be defended and conserued in it through the merits of our blessed Sauiour Mountaines to witt the Angels of God who in respect of their excellencie of nature and grace are tearmed Mountaines are round about it the militant Church as being ordained and sent for the custodie of men Yet least any should thinke this to be sufficient or place their confidence finally in them the Prophet addeth and our Lord round about his people from hence forth now and foreuer Because our Lord will not leaue alwaies or finally the red of sinners the power persecution and tyramie of the reprobate vpon the lot part or portion of the iust or vpon iust men who are the portion and inheritance of almightie God that the iust reach not their hands to iniquitie least they be ouercome and sinne For although he doe for à time seeme to leaue the elect permitting them to be afflicted by peruerse men that soe they might be purified and meritt glorie yet he leaueth not them finally Doe well o Lord to the good in worke and right of heart in intention giuing vnto them encrease of grace in this life and beatitude in the next Those are saied to be right of heart whose affections are agreeable to the will of God to iustice whose eies are simple and intentions directed towards God But those that decline from the waie of iustice into obligations into sinnes which oblige to punishment our Lord will bring in the daie of iudgement on his left hand wards or after before into hell with them that worke iniquitie with the diuels whose pr●de ascendeth alwaies who sinne from the beginning who when they had fallen did not adde to rise againe but remained obstinate in euill Peace vpon Israel In this Psalme we are taught how happie à thing it is to confide in our Lord and how exceeding potent the protectors of the holie Church are to witt the Angels of God who doe enuirone Christians on all sides passing hither and thither as it were soe many laborious Bees that they maie prouide for our soules health by restraining the diuels suggesting good things reioycing at our progresse praying for vs and bringing Isa 62. vs many graces Whence is that which our Lord saieth by the Prophet Isaie Vpon thy walls Ierusalem I haue appointed watchmen all the night for euer they shall not hold their peace Moreouer the
and repaire the holie Cittie were hindred and molested by the bordering nations in such sort that they were constrained to build with one hand and hold their sword in the other Which expositiō seemeth to accord with the title This exhortation therefore is giuen by the Prophet to Salomon because he first of all built the house of God and amplified the Cittie of Ierusalem in respect whereof he is fitly introduced as who should admonish Zorobabel that was as it were another Salomon how he ought to comport himselfe in reedifying keeping and inlardging the house of God the holie Cittie But in à higher sense the true Salomon to witt the peace maker Christ Iesus who is our peace doth admonish vs that aspire to true peace aspiring doe ascend from this vale of teares to the vision of peace the celestiall Ierusalem how we ought to build and gard the house or Cittie of the holie Church and exhorte euery man in particular by good workes to erect himselfe à house in heauen and keepe it carefully that he maie when time cometh ascend to inhabite and possesse it for euer according to which later sense I purpose to proceed In this Eight Graduall Psalme the Prophet treateth of the Eight degree of internall ascension to witt of the manner houre and order of rising to adore God A morall exposition of this Psalme VNlesse our Lord Iesus Christ or God the holie Trinitie build interiourly by faith Charitie and grace the house the holie Church or euery member thereof in whome God doth reside as our Sauiour saied we will come to him Ioh. 14. and make abode with him c. They the Prophets Apostles and their successors haue laboured in vaine that build it that by preaching teaching liuing exemplarily and working miracles haue endeauored to conuert soules informe the faithfull and erect the saied house For vnlesse God almightie infuse internall light externall preaching will profitt litle if any thing at all whence is that of the Apostle Neither he that planteth is any thing nor he 1. Cor. 3. that watereth but he that giueth the encrease God Vnlesse our Lord keepe the Cittie the holie Church which is tearmed à Cittie in respect of the vnion of the faithfull He euerie Doctor Pastor or Prelate watcheth Philip. 2. in vaine that keepeth it For not onely the beginning of our good but alsoe our conseruation protection and perfection is of God and therefore as he alone doth build the holie Church interiourly by infusing faith Charitie hope and the gifts of the holie Ghost to which infusion holie Prelates Pastors whome he hath called to that function doe dispose the minds of men soe he alone doth keepe it by himselfe by conseruing those gifts in being which he hath soe infused and the Angells and men to whome he hath recommended the chardge or gouernmēt of his Church doe keepe it instrumentally and dispose it exteriourly by exhorting to goodnesse and remouing the impediments of liuing well It is in vaine for you Prelates Pastors of the holie Church to rise before light to applie your selues with all diligence to build and gard this house this Cittie of our Lord before the infusion of grace before the irradiation and reception of the diuine assistance As if he should saie Your labour will produce noe effect or profitt nothing at all vnlesse the grace of God bee propitiously present both with you and your audience Rise ye therefore to execute the office recommended vnto you after ye haue sitten after you haue humbly implored the diuine assistance and with drawing your selues from exteriour affaires haue rested for some space at the feet of à Crucifix meditating contemplating and praying that you maie bee admitted to enter into the wine Cellar of the holie Ghost and into the treasurie of the wisdome of God Being therefore spiritually inebriated with the ardour of diuine loue and ir●adiated by the light of veritie you maie arise and passe to instruct others communicate with them of your plenitude for then God will graunt à blessing to your labours and one word of your mouth shall make deeper impression in the heart of your audience then whole sermons will otherwise doe Rise then bouldly after you haue sitten in this sort VVho eate the bread of sorrow vnto whome the teares of fraternall compassion are food daie and night For it behoueth you daily to condole with your subiects and not alone to bewaile your owne but their offences alsoe Thou Ezech. 5 shall beare saieth the Prophet Ezechiel the iniquitie of tho house of Israel whence 2. Cor. 11 the Apostle saieth of himselfe VVho is weake and I am not weake VVho is scandalized and I am not burnt and holie Iob I Iob. 30. wept sometime vpon him that was afflicted and my soule bad compassion on the poore VVhen he shall giue sleepe to his beloued when our Lord who is the prime architect of this spirituall fabricke shall after you haue faithfully cooperated with his grace graunt you and the residue of his chosen friends à long desired rest from your labours that is à happie death Behold the inheritance of our Lord are children the reward of the fruit of the wombe Then to witt at the daie of iudgement it shall appeare that you and they who haue been regenerated to God by Baptisme and adopted his children are his inheritance for then both you and the rest of his selected friends shall passe into his eternall possession and inheritance and become the reward of Christ Iesus the sweet fruit of the wombe of the blessed Virgin who by his passion and death hath purchased grace and glorie for you and them As arrowes in the hand of the mightie soe are the children of them that are shaken By these children are vnderstood all the elect who are the inheritance and reward of Christ and by that comparison of them with arrowes in the hand of the mightie is designed the spirituall power of the seruants of Christ which was apparent and manifest both in their actions as conuerting infidels to the Catholicke saith or sinners to pēnance with the efficacie of their doctrine splendor of sanctitie and force of miracles alsoe in their passions as suffering all sorts of torments with incredible patience and fortitude euen to the last gaspe for the defence of the truth These are alsoe tearmed The children of them that are shaken because they are the disciples and followers of the Prophets and Apostles whome the world did persecure euen to death it selfe Blessed is the man Christ true God and true man that hath filled his desire of them of the saied children That is to saie He is truely blessed because he hath brought his desire to the end he aimed at which was to behold the saluation and glorie of his children for whome he hath done and suffered soe exceeding much Therefore he shall not be confounded when he shall speake to his enemies in the gate When
the old law was à figure of the holie Eucharist soe i● our euening sacrifice of praier a memoriall of the same Secondly it representeth our Blessed Sauiours buriall which must needs haue been before the sunne setting by reason that the Iewes Paschall Feast on which the were not permitted to burie the dead begane presently vpon s●●ne setting The argument of the 109. Psalme and first in Vespres THe Psalme following hath this Title prefixed to witt A Psalme of Dauid for it belongeth to Dauid as the author thereof and to Christ as the person signified by Dauid In it the Prophet treateth literally of our Sauiour as maie be proued by our Sauiours words For when he demaunded of the Pharisees saying VVhat is your opinion of Christ VVhose sonne is he and they answering Dauids he added How then doth Dauid in Spirit call him Lord saying The Lord saied to my Lord sitt on my right hand c. The Apostle alsoe by this place doth shew that Christ is greater then the Angells and coequall with his eternall father saying To which of the Angels hath God almightie saied at any tyme Sitt at my right hand c. This Psalme therefore treateth of Christ according to both natures and of his magnificent Ascension of his coeternitie and consubstantiall identitie with the Father of his vniuersall dominion and eternall Priesthood and of the iudiciarie power which he shall exercise ouer all creatures in the last daie and the Prophet vnto whome God hath made manifest the vncertaine and hidden things of his wisdome saieth as followeth The exposition of the Psalme OVr Lord saied to my Lord God the Father omnipotent Lord and father of all creatures saied intellectually to Christ Iesus my Sauiour who according to his diuinitie is my Lord and according to his humane nature assumed of my seed is my sonne Sitt on my right hand that is After the labours of thy abo●de vpon earth and the consummation of that worke for which I haue sent thee into the world come and seate thy selfe on my right hand as being God and man and reigne in my throne with coequall power and authoritie with me Till I make thyne enemies incredulous and vniust people especially the Iewes the footestoole of thy feete subiect to thy power and dominion in à seruitude soe absolute that they shall be as footestooles and stepping blocks to be disposed of for euer at thy pleasure Our Lord God the Father will send forth by his seruants the holie Apostles the rod of thy strength the doctrine of the Euangelicall law or the power of thy regall dignitie o Christ from Sion from the place soe called in Ierusalem For Sion was a mountaine in Ierusalem where on the Temple was built and the Conclaue likewise stood wherein Christ celebrated his last supper and appeared to his Disciples after his resurrection and where the Apostles and the rest which were congregated with them receiued the holie Ghost From this conclaue therefore and the Temple situated on mount Sion our Lord sent forth the saied rod of thy strength ô Christ into the whole vniuerse for when the Apostles had receiued the holie Ghost they presently issued out of the saied conclaue where they remained inclosed for feare of the Iewes like to à swarme of bees entred the Temple and begane to preach the Ghospell of Christ which from thence was deriued through out the whole world as our Sauiour did foreshew saying You shall be witnesses vnto me in Ierusalem and Act. 1. in all Iewrie and Samaria and euen to the vtmost of the earth c. and alsoe was foretold by the Prophet Isaie saying The law Isa 2. shall come forth of Sion and the word of our Lord from Ierusalem At this sending forth of the rod of the strēgth of Christ followed the conuersion of the world vnto him and therefore it is here added Rule thou ô Christ In the middest of thyne enemies in the heart or thickest of the infidels who during the time of their infidelitie are thyne enemies but being conuerted shall be constituted thy friends and thou rule in them by thy selfe and thy substitutes the Prelats and Pastors of the holie Church Of this dominion of Christ the Zach. 9. Prophet Zachary saieth His power from Sea euen to sea and from the riuers euen to the end of the earth There is noe want of power in thee to subdue thyne enemies and dilate thy dominion For VVith thee the beginning God the Father the fountaine of all being is one and the same beginning prime cause and author of all things iointly with thee Therefore to thee is attributed by nature absolute principalitie power and soueraignitie ouer them which although it appeared but in à very obscure manner to vs mortalls in the daie of thy infirmitie in the time of thy peregrination vpon earth vested with à seruile and humane forme yet In the daie of thy strength of thy victorious triumph when thou shalt be seene in the brightnes of the holie things vested with the raies of à holie Deitie the elect shining through participation of that beatificall light shall liuely and plainly see and acknowledge that thou art in the Father and the Father in thee From the wombe before the daie starre I begatte thee If these words be vnderstood as spoken by the Prophet of himselfe they import the generation of Christ as man and the sense seemeth to be as followeth I Dauid haue begotten thee yet not according to the ordinary course by coniugall embraces but from the sole wombe of the most pure Virgin and this before the daie starre arose for Christ was borne in the night This Dauid might well saie as venerable Bede affirmeth vpon this place for if Dauid saieth he begatte lesse lesse Marie and Ma●●e brought forth Christ Dauid alsoe begatte Christ But if these words be vnderstood as spoken by God the Father they import the eternall generation of Christ as God which is noe other then à begetting of light from light act from act God from God For in the Father Essence power and operation are one and the same and soe the Father by vnderstanding himselfe doth produce à word most like to himselfe distinct frō him in this one point that it proceedeth from him and as the Father by one veiw or reflecting vpon himselfe doth fully know himselfe and all things that haue already been created soe by one internall conception he begetteth eternally one word within himselfe wherein his whole nature and perfection is altogether most intirely contained and shineth and wherein all other things are comprehended and doe shine For this reason this Word is tearmed the Image of the Father and exemplar of euerie creature and proceedeth immediatly from the vnderstanding of the Father Christ therefore as God is begotten from eternitie like as if the sunne had been from eternitie● brightnesse had issued out of it from eternitie Whence it is Eccles 24. written I come forth from the mouth
not bee able to helpe themselues Lett them be made as grasse in the toppes of houses which is withered before it bee plucked vp VVhereof the Reaper hath not filled his hand and he that gathereth the sheaues his ●osome And they saied not that passed by The blessing of our Lord bee vpon you Wee haue blessed you in the name of our Lord. They are seated now in high places of authoritie sucking the bloud of innocents oppressing the poore or wallowing in Gluttony obscene delights They seeme to grow and florish but they want the roote of Charitie and dewe of grace being euen condemned before the daie of doome Of which contemptible stuffe the Angell will not gather into the barne of our Lord but to cast into vnquenchable flames nor to such à haruest gathering will the passengers of this life trauelling towards the celestiall countrey say God speed the worke The Title and Argument of the 129. Psalme and second in Compline THis is the eleuēth Graduall Psalmes short but repleat with wholsome doctrine and vsed by the holy Church more frequently then the rest It is likewise one of the seuen Penitentian Psalmes teaching the way of true pennance It is recited alsoe frequently for the faithfull departed and properly because if it bee saied in the person of à Soule detained in Purgatorie the contents doe fitly square therewith such à Soule being in à certaine depth longing to ascend and expecting Gods mercie through the price of its Redeemer To be short it containeth à heartie praier to God an exhortation to the people and à predictiō of their then future redemption The explication of the Psalme FRom the depth I haue cried to thee ô Lord Lord heare my voice From this place of exile and vale of teares and from the low condition and abysse of miserie the weight of my sinnes haue sunke mee vnto all disconsolate I lowdly call to thee for help Lord heare my voice Let thyne eares bee intent to the voice of my Petition Doe not lissen vnto mee like such as mind not their suppliants plaint being before resolued to shew no fauour but lend à gratious eare vnto mee and graunt my request If thou shalt obserue iniquities ô Lord Lord who shall sustaine it If thou shalt take strict account of what offences are done and proceed to iudgement with rigour what man may be found with soe chast a heart that dares presume to iustifie himselfe in thy presence As for my part I am conscious of my insufficiencie in this point yeelding my seife conuicted and casting my selfe wholly vpon thy mercie Pardon mee for thy goodnesse sake and draw mee vp vnto thee Because with thee is propitiation and for thy law I haue expected thee ô Lord. I know thou art not delighted with seueritie but easily inclined to mercie for which reason and for thy law not of Iustice but of Charitie which thou hast of thy ineffable goodnesse prescribed to thy selfe That thou wilt first offer mercie and inuite sinners to doe workes worthie of Pennance afterwards proceed to iudgement if they perseuer impenitent I haue hoped in thee not doubting of performance My soule hath expected in his word my soule hath hoped in our Lord. My soule that was defiled by mee with enormious crimes and remaining long impenitent was deseruedly reduced to exceeding sad extremities did yet expect in his word That he would not remember the iniquities of such as repent from the bottome of the heart and was not frustrated of her expectation our Lord affirming by his Prophet vpon the expression of the intense sorrow I internally conceaued for myne offence That my sinne was trāferred My soule I say that after innumerable select fauours was most vngrate fully disloyall did yet hope in our Lord and found mercie Let no man then how greeuous à sinner soeuer despaire of pardon The mercies of our Lord are aboue all his workes From the morning watch euen vntill night● let Israel hope in our Lord. From the beginning of the daie till the end of night let all men and the faithfull people of God especially hope in our Lord. There is no time during life wherein the couersion and pennance of à sinner will not be accepted whether it be in the morning at noone or at night that is to saie in youth at mans estate or old age or whether it be by daie or night that is to saie in prosperitie or aduersitie Because with our Lord there is mercie and with him plenteous redemption With our Lord is mercie it selfe Vpon earth indeed in many places persons may be found remedies for particular miseries being as it were little streames of his mercie but the oceā that can redresse all is with him and in his eternall counsell and decree is the meanes and price to satisfie his Iustice to the full for our transgressions And he shall redeeme Israell from all his iniquities And this redemption which whilest I write this Psalme is thus with him I foresee shall in the fullnesse of time be made manifest to the whole world and he shall redeeme the people of God from the tyrannicall captiuitie of the infernall powers and shall satisfie for all their iniquities as we now behold happily performed our ransome being paied not with corruptible coine of siluer or gold but with the inestimable treasure of the dearest heart bloud of the immaculate Lambe Christ Iesus his onely Sonne our Lord. The Title and Argument of the 130. Psalme THis Psalme is à Graduall Psalme wherein Dauid doth modulate the vertue of Humilitie not before two or three but vpon the theather of the vniuerse and yet whereas in this he is the Trumpet of his owne praise doth he not transgresse that Precep●t Let another praise Prouer. 20. thee and not thy owne mouth For as it is vnseemely to praise ones selfe when necessitie doth not require it soe is it foolishnesse to bee silent when iust cause doth occurre Whēce S. Paul whē he saied Not he that commends himselfe is appro●ued but 2. Cor. 10. he whome God commends did highly commend himselfe finding it expedient to retort the calumnies of Pseudo Apostles Dauid doth then attribute to himselfe the 1. Reg. 22. vertue of Humilitie not for ostentation but for that he was often taxed of Pride ambitiō which vice he chiefly abhorred to vindicate himselfe dot ●inuoke God the searcher of all hearts to bee a witnesse of his singular modestie laying à heauie imprecation vpon himselfe if he write not truth This is one of the Graduall Psalmes it teaching wherein true humilitie doth cōsist and indeed there is no securer way whereby to ascend then it our Lord himselfe affirming that euery one who humble the himselfe shall bee exalted Lord my heart is not exalted neither are myne eies los●ie O Lord to thee my heart lyes opē Thou doest both see and know that what I write is not to praise my selfe but to cleare some sinister aspertions I call
thee to witnesse whome no subtile glosses can deceaue and may doe it with securitie I haue no internall pride neither doe I expresse any by externall gestures Neither haue I walked in great matters nor in maruelous things aboue mee Neither haue I vainely bragged of any matters of consequence I haue done can yet performe or inted to archieue affecting popular applause or being ambitious of glorie neither haue I presumptuously attempted any worke beyond my power to accomplish If I was not humbly minded but exalted my soule If I haue not composed my selfe ●o equalitie with others but haue had an higher esteeme of myselfe then was fitt or haue arrogated any thing to my selfe as of my selfe my soule not acknowledged her sufficiencie to haue been frō thee As the weaned child is towards his Mother s●e retribution in mysoule As it fareth with an Infant by some bitter oyntment newly forced to forsake the Mothers brest sitting sadly on her lap now with a longing appetite looking towards the teat and straite with drawing his waterie eies with à loathing disdaine beating the place he chiefly loued lamenting to bee depriued of the pleasant food he sucked fromthence soe let it bee with my soule Let her bee debarred of the delightfull influence of thy diuine comforts remaine respectiuely to her capacitie a like discōsolate A more vnhappie punishment I cannot conceiue the greatnesse of which miserie he alone doth know to whome thou hast graciously afforded à tast of their excessiue sweetnesse Let Israel hope in our Lord from hence forth now and euer Since I then whome thou hast aduanced to such high dignitie as to bee the King of Israel and hast enriched with such exquisite dowries of nature grace dare not eleuate my selfe aboue the vulgar nor presume any thing of my selfe as of my selfe but haue the eie of my hope euer fixed on thee let my people of Israel doe the like both at this present from this time forward for eternitie The Exposition of the Chapter in Compline I Am the Mother of beautifull loue and of feare and of knowledge and of holie hope These words spoken by Ecclesiasticus of the eternall and increated Wisdome are fitly applied by the Catholique Church to our blessed Ladie not onely as being Mother to Christ whoe is the Word Wisdome of his eternall Father but alsoe as being an especiall singular Mediatrix for al faithful soules She is therefore saied to be Mother of beautifull loue which is the prime act of perfect charitie in as much as by her mediation and intercession wee begge and obtaine that guift of almightie God 〈◊〉 in like fort of filiall feare whereby wee are deterred from doeing ●uill because it is dipleasing to God whome wee truly loue and of Knowledge to witt the guift of vnderstanding which the Prophet begged of almig●tie God thereby to direct him else in the search of his law and could act himselfe in the path of his commaundements and of holie hope which is à pious confidence in God from whose goodnesse and mercie wee may with out presumption expect to receiue eternall happinesse in the future life if soe bee wee loue and feare him in this present and endeauour to conforme our wills to his by obseruing his precepts The Argument of the Canticle of Symeon ALthough this Saintlike old Father reputed himselfe very vnworthie to touch the holie of holies yet excesse of loue ouercame reason imboldening him to receaue the child Iesu frō the armes of his blessed Mother whome when he had embraced with much affection deuotion and reuerence like to the Swan before her departure he sung this Canticle blessing praysing and giuing thankes to God that had now been better vnto him then his promise which was that he should not die till he had seene Christ our Lord he now not onely beholding Christ Luc. 2. but being vouchsafed the comfortable honour to beare him in his armes This Canticle is fitly placed at the end of Compline it happily crowning that houre which compleateth the rest of the diuine office In religious Conuen●s recited it is last at night because at that time chiefly men ought to lay aside all thoughts but of God and their saluation that with internall peace they may dispose themselues to rest piously in our Lord bearing with holie Symeon Christ Iesus if not in their armes yet with much feruour in their deuoutly amorous hearts The Exposition of the saied Canticle 1. Now thou doest dismisse thy seruant ● Lord according to thy word in peace 2. Because myne eies haue seene thy saluation 3. VVhich thou hast prepared before the face of all peoples O Lord I haue languished long in restlesse expectation longing for that happie day wherein trusting in thy promise I might solace my heart and delight myne eies in beholding myne and the worlds Sauiour the onely thing that strengthned my Soule patiently to sustaine her wearisome confinement in the dangerous prison of this bodie of death but now I hope thou wilt not prolong her enlardgement thy promise being fulfilled for thou doest dismisse thy seruant according to thy word in peace my desires being amply satisfied Because with my corporall and intellectuall eies I haue beheld Christ God and man by whome thou hast decreed to saue all mankind Which saluation of thyne thy onely begotten Sonne who according to his Diuinitie is incomprehensible and with thee doth in 〈…〉 light inaccessible thou hast maruelously by the operation of the holie Ghost rendred manifest and visible to men and disposed fitly to conuerse and dwell amongst them he assuming our humane nature to his Diuinitie in the vnitie of his person that he might be seene and knowne both by the Iewes and Gentils dispensing his ineffable mercie betweene them as agreed b●●t with their condition respectiuely A light to the reuelation of the Gentils who sitt in the darknesse of infidelitie shaddow of death ignorant in the sauing knowledge of the true God A light illuminating them internally by infusion of diuine grace and externally by word and example And the glory of thy people Israel And the glorie of the progenie of Iacob the peculiar elect people of God whome he hath honored with that high prerogatiue as of their line to take humane flesh whome he now visiteth in person and for whose redemption he is princip 〈…〉 descended à glorie not graunted to any other people of the world wherein they excell all other how potent rich or magnificent soeuer By what is saied in this small treatise it will appeare I hope to the indifferent and courteous Reader that all things in this office of our blessed I adie are instituted ordained and disposed according to right reason true prudence diuine wisdome which I doe heartily wish and humbly begge may be vsed frequently recited deuoutly by all euerie one as well to the great honour and glorie of almightie God and of the blessed Virgin as to the singular profit and spirituall benefit of themselues FINIS
praise to thy eternall Father I desire to performe these howers Another praier or oblation after the diuine office BEnigne Iesus I with humble confidence recommend all that I haue here vndeuoutly done in thyne and thy deare Mothers praise to thy sweet heart there to be rectified and perfected I offer it in vnion of that immense loue wherewith thou didst accomplish the admirable worke of our Redemption desiring that it maie redound to the eternall praise of thy holie name to the increase of glorie of thy immaculate Mother to the increase of glorie of my Angell Guardian and all the Angells and Saints and in particular of N. N. and to the soules health of all the liuing and of the faithfull departed according to thy holie will Amen HERE BEGINNETH THE EXPLICATION OF THE OFFICE HAuing now by Gods grace performed one part of what I promised in my Preface to this worke I will proceed to the other and explicate according to my poore talent euery part of this holie office as they occurre in their seuerall order wherein if I seeme ouer tedious I desire it maie be imputed to the care I haue taken to make all things cleare and plaine sutable to the capacities of them for whose sake I haue spared for noe paines to procure their comfort and satisfaction The two first Verses O Lord thou wilt open my lipps And my mouth shall shew forth thy praise O Lord intend vnto my help Lord make hast to help me IN the Roman Breuiarie which is Lib. 2. offic Eccles cap. 6. vsed by the secular Clergy these Verses are placed as they are here in this office of the B. Virgin Which Hugh of S. Victor saieth was soe ordained because in Compline we haue recommended ourselues to God and shutt vp our mouthes remaining euery one as it were at rest in our sepulchers attending to God alone vnto whome we need not words to expresse our affections but now for that we againe conuert ourselues to praise him with our lipps we beseech him to open them This forme of praier is very aūcient as maie appeare by the booke of the Iewes intituled Berachoth where it is declared that the Iewes did vsually recite the verse O Lord thou wilt open my lipps c. before all and euery of their praiers Notwithstanding our holie Father S. Benedict prescribing à forme of the diuine office for all such as wage spirituall warre vnder his holie standard placed the second verse O Lord intend c. in the forefront of the office and appointed the first verse to be repeated three tymes afterwards The reason which seemed In Rationa li. 5. c. 2. num 8. to moue him thereunto is set downe by Durandus vdzt because we are not able to open neither our heart nor our mouth to praise almightie God with out aide from him which reason agreeth with that of the Apostle No man can saie 1. Cor. 12. our Lord Iesu Christ but in the holie Ghost Both these waies are very good and approued by the Sea Apostolike and by both of them we desire that we maie be assisted by Gods grace to begin and prosecute our praier to his honour for without his aide as S. Iohn saieth we can Ioh. 15. can doe nothing and moreouer that he will be pleased to repell the deceits of the eu●ll enimie for as the Glosse well In Psal 69. noteth when we set ourselues to praie then doe the deuills cheifly goe about to molest vs like to flies which corrupt the sweetnes of an odoriferous ointment Abulensis Durandus and others doe affirme that the holie Church in prescribing In 10. num loco cit n. 7. the beginning of t●e diuine office and the beginning of Compline by which hower the office is consummated doth imitate the custome which we read of Moyses who when the Arke was lifted vp saied Arise Lord and be thy enimies Li. num cap. 10. dispersed and let them flie that hate thee from thy face when it was set downe he saied Returne Lord to the multitude of thy host of Israel By which forme of praier Moyses did beseech God who seemed before as it were to rest with the Arke and Campe of the Hebrews to arise and direct them on their waie and by his omnipotent power to disperse and put to flight their enimies which were vpon the frontier on all sides and afterwards when they fixed their tents that he would conuert himself vnto them that they might remaine in safegard vnder the shadow of his wings But what reason soeuer moued the holie Church thereunto it is certaine that those Verses in the beginning of the office and in the beginning of Compline being pronounced with sincere affection and confidence in Gods goodnes are of wery great power to profligate the euill enimies and frustrate Colla. 10. c. 10. Tom. 3. in 16. Iun● their machinations as doth appeare by what maie be read clegantly expressed in Cassian and Surius vnto whome for breuitie sake I remitt the studious reader Glorie be to the Father and to the Sonne and to the holie Ghost c. AFTER the diuine assistance hath beene thus implored this Hymne of glorification doth follow in good order as à thanksgiuing considing that our Lord hath heard and graunted our petition Our Lord hath heard the desire of Psal 9. Psal 144. the poore saieth the Prophet he hath heard the preparation of their heart in another place He will doe the will of them that feare him and will heare their praier When therefore this Hymne is recited it is the custome to bow downe and adore God then and there present for the Prophet affirmeth God is neare to all that Ibidem inuocate him S. Ierome in his Epistle to Pope Damasus which is registred amongst the acts of the saied Pope in the first Tome of Councells did desire him to ordaine that this Hymne might be recited at the end of euery Psalme in the diuine office that soe the faith of Three hundred and eighteene Bishops in the Nicene Councell might be declared by his voice alsoe which was accordingly performed by the decree of the saied Pope in à Councell held at Rome Some are of opinion that this Hymne was composed by the saied Nicene Councell to distinguish li. de Sp. Sancto c. 29. thereby the true beleeuers from the Arians but S. Basill affirmeth that the author thereof is not certainly knowne Baronius saieth that this Hymne was vsed Tom. 4. in A. D. 382. euen from the tyme of the Apostles which maie be confirmed by the Litburgy of S. Iames where the Preist coming to the Aulter beginneth with these words Glorie be to the Father and the Sonne and the holie Ghost three and one that it was recited by the orientall Church at the end of their Hymnes as now it is in the Hymnes of the diuine office which were composed for the greatest part by S. Ambrose in imitation of