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A07626 Quadrivium Sionis or the foure ways to Sion By John Monlas Mr of arts Monlas, John. 1633 (1633) STC 18020; ESTC S102304 90,305 189

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The foure wayes to Sion I. The reward of Mercie MATH 5.7 Blessed are the mercifull for they shall obtaine mercie II. The praise of Purity MATH 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see GOD. III. The Crowne of Peace and Concord MATH 5.9 Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the Children of God IV. The honour of Obedience 1. PET. 2.7 Feare God and honour the King Quadrivium SIONIS OR The foure Wayes TO SION by John Monlas Mr. of Arts LONDON Printed by Augustine Mathewes 1633. TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE AND HIS singular good Lord EDVVARD Earle of Dorset Lord Chamberlaine to the Queene Lord Lieutenant of his Majesties Counties of Sussex and Middlesex One of the Lords of his Majesties most Honourable Privie Councell and Knight of the most Illustrious Order of the ●arter RIGHT HONOVRABLE THis Pilgrime of Sion having beene beaten with the stormes and tempests of a long persecution beyond the Seas after hee had learnt the sweetnesse and tasted the goodnesse and Debonayritie which makes your Nation and Nobility of England honourable and recommendable to all the foure corners of the Vniverse hee is at last arrived in your Ports and Harbours to shelter himselfe from the waves and windes which so cruelly had beaten and assayled him as they would not permit him either to feede or rest But casting anchor here in your Harbours I finde that Fame hath infinitely wronged her selfe in not having sufficiently discoursed and published the excellencie of your goodnesse and merits Shee seemes to be sparing of your prayses which are so justly due to you For Experience hath now made mee know a thousand times more therof thē heretofore I heard or understood because I find so much benignity and goodnesse among you and especially your Honours house that I should e●teeme my selfe to be guilty of a base ingr●titude if I consecrated not the remaynder of my dayes to the honour of your service and commands For I confesse that this small Present which I now present and proffer you cannot counter vaile or equalize those sublime favours whereby you have eternally made me your debter Th●se Philosophers which entreat and discourse of naturall causes doe affirme That the Sunne which makes the Raynebowe in the firmament by the darting and defusion of his rayes in a watry clowd disposed to receive it doth there forme and ingender this diversity of colours so pleasing to our sight Your Honour my good Lord is the Sunne of my happinesse and I am this clowd covered with the rayes of your favours which makes all the world admire in me the greatnesse of your Generosity and the excellencie of your goodnes But herein notwithstanding consists not my satisfaction but rather your honour and glory and as I desire to publish that so I likewise desire to finde this For I cannot live contented if I made not a publique acknowledgement of those many favours whereby you have perfectly purchased and made me yours and this Confession consisteth in the oath of fidelity and obedience which I have sworne to the honour of your service and to testifie the the immortality of my vowes wherein with all possible humility I present you my selfe and this small Booke to your Honours feete A worke proportionable to my weakenesse but meerely disproportionable to your Greatnesse If I am any way guilty herein your goodnesse is the true cause thereof in regard it makes me beleeve that you will rather excuse my zeale then accuse or condemne my presumption and I doe promise my selfe this hope and flatter my selfe with this confidence that your Honour will partly excuse this worke of mine if it be not accuratly or delicately polished and that the will remayning where the power wants is free and current payment with great and generous spirits Some perchance may affirme and say that I have discoursed treated those Matters with too much simplicity which indeede is my onely intent and designe Because my text and matter do● necessarily oblige and tye me thereunto as also in regard I ever finde the easiest way to be the best for that the thornes of Studie and Schollership doe but ingage and ingulph our Witts in the labyrinth of insupportable length and languishment and the which most commonly when wee have all done and ranne thorowe wee in the end finde but a Minotaur of doubts and a pensive melancholy anxietie which devoures them My Lord I have no other designe or ambition in this my Dedication but to pay this tribute to your Honour hoping that your charities will cover my defects and your goodnesse over-vayle and pardon my weakenesse and imperfections And my Lord it is with all manner of right and reason that I consecrate and inscribe this small Worke of mine to your Honour and place your Honourable name in the Frontispice thereof as a bright Phare and relucent torch which shall communicate and lend its lustre and light to make it see and salute the world And so my good Lord I will seeke my delights in the honour of your service my inclinations shall have no other centre but the execution of your commaunds My vowes and prayers shall bee incessantly powred forth for your prosperities and my Ambition shall never flye or soare higher then to conserue the honour of your favours and to be both to your Honour and to the young Noblemen your Sonnes Your most humble and truly devoted Servant IOHN MONLAS The first Way to Sion THE REVVARD OF MERCIE MATH 5.7 Bl●ssed are the mercifull for they shall obtaine mercie THat which in men changeth Reason courtesie and humanitie into a wilde fierce and brutish nature and which makes them lesse pittifull then Lyons and more to be feared then Tygers is crueltie that terrible vice the mother of cowardize the spring of disasters and the death of innocencie For after a Coward hath once tasted of blood he delights in no other spectacle It is the cause of mischiefes and of so manie fatall and mournefull accidents for there being a naturall Antipathy betweene that vice and reason shee expells reason and therefore will not hearken unto her in her furious violent and suddaine counsels In a word it is the death of innocencie for to satisfie her bloody appetite shee spareth neither age nor sexe but upon the altar of her furious and brutish passion sacrificeth as well the just as the guilty and would not spare her selfe if shee feared not the selfe same paines and torments which she inflicts on others Now this vice is detested by noble spirits and generous soules is abhorred by Angels and in great abomination to God himselfe so by the law of contraries mercie must be the subject and royall field where we must abundantly reape the honour of men the love of Angels the graces and blessings of our heavenly Father then must mercy be practised by men admired by Angels and bee delightfull to God and therefore we see in our Text that the beloved Sonne of
it in the blood of the spotlesse Lambe that bare the sinnes of the world on the Altar of the Crosse. This sweet Iesus whose simplicity and meekenesse are both peerelesse inexplicable this good Saviour following the example of Isaack by whom during the shadowes of the law hee was figured goeth freely to his death bearing the wood which was to bereave him of l●fe upon him and within him the burning fi●e of love that inflamed him with an infinite affection to save the Elect Hee was brought saith the Prophet Isaiah as a Lamb to the slaughter so opened he not his mouth to complain he is conducted as a dumbe Sheepe before her Shearer but in that we see nothing but part of his simplicity appearing in the catastrophe of his actions when he was neare his death but if we should curiously view the acts of his life beginning from his birth we should be ravished in admiration of these infinite wonders but let us consider only in generall that he is borne of a pure virgin espoused to a Carpenter was that befitting his excellent Majestie who was the King of the world Hee was borne in a Stable amongst beasts judge if that were the Royall Pallaces and honourable company which hee had in heaven among the Angels He was swadled in clowts and laid in a Manger for want of a Cradle to keepe him from the injuries of the weather were those the delights of his Paradise He was fugitive here and there to shunne the envie and furious rage of Herod who fought to kill him In a word considering diligently all the course of his life from the moment of his birth to the last period of his death wee shall finde all his actions framed in humility and guided by meekenesse and simplicity This example and no more he did not goe chuse within the Pallaces of Kings the goodliest and gallantest Courtiers hee did not elect the sonnes of Princes to be his Apostles but went to the receipt of custome to the Cottages and Boats of Fishermen to call that honourable company of his twelue Apostles who like well instructed Disciples followed the steps of their loving Lord and Master so well did they imitate and follow his examples and especially that of his simplicity that they may be patterns of it themselues as the History of their life sufficiently sheweth and as the duty of their place required for men and being deepely plunged in malice pre●umption and arrogancie there was no way to vanquish them but wholy by contrary weapons to them unknowne that they might the more easily be subdued and vanquished To their arrogancie they opposed meekenesse to their pompe and vaine glory humility and simplicity ever remembring the command of their good Master Be ye simple as Doves Now it is remarkable that the faithfull and such as walke uprightly before God are called by the wicked and by the children of the God of this world Poore and simple people because they addict not themselves to fra●d and deceit so spake Iobs wife to her husband being yet in affliction upon his dunghill Doest thou still retaine thine integrity But Iesus Chris● to shew us that hee approoveth those whom the world rejecteth speakes as if he had said See you those simple and base people they shall see God So Christ gives them hopes of the blessed vision of God as if hee had promised light to the blinde knowledge to the ignorant and wisedome to fooles for so this wicked world calleth those that will not drinke the cup of his malice nor tread in his pathes full of sinne and iniquity Blessed then are the pure in heart c. He doeth not onely say they shall be blessed but he speaketh in the present tense saying they are already blessed for God having given them that holinesse which they possesse and upon all occasions practise hath also given them two strong and well feathered wings to soare and flie aloft to heaven whereof she one is faith by the which the just trusting and reposing himselfe wholy in the promises of Christ takes his flight towards Paradise to have a tast of them for it is the nature of faith as appeareth by her definition to know how to assure it s●lfe how to aske the grace of God promised in his word how to embrace salvation offered by Iesus Christ and during this life how to possesse in part that eternall and blessed life And because faith beginneth here to tast the delights of the vision of God she is yet upheld and fortified by Hope which is the second wing that makes her expect heaven and promiseth her absolutely to fill her abundantly with those swee● pleasures whereof the hath shee yet had but a tast and to make her perfectly know that which now she seeth but obscurely and like a shadow Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see GOD. Vpon these words there is an objection to be resolved why Christ saith here the pure in heart seeing the Scripture in many places is directly opposite to this justice to this purity to this cleanenesse as we read Prou. 20.9 Who can say I have made my heart cleane I am pure from my sinne And in the first booke of Kings the 8. Chap. There is no man that sinneth not And in the 1. Epist. of Saint Iohn 1. Chap. If we say that we have no sinne we deceive our selues and the truth is not in us And in the 25. Chap. of Iob How can man be justified with God or how can he be cleane that is borne of a woman Although these places and many more that we purposely leave to avoyd prolixity seeme to be opposite to our Text notwithstanding we will reconcile them together For when the Spirit of God calleth heere those that live justly and holily pure in heart we must not understand it so as if they were totally and absolutely cleane from the filthinesse of sinne for in that sence the royall Prophet David saith There is none just no not one But we must understand here those that strive to walke in the sacred pathes of Gods commandements that live holily before God and without reproach before men that have beene purified like gold tried seaven times in the fire and that fire is the word of God that enters and penetrates to the most secret thoughts there to consume the wood and chaffe of our wicked inclinations This cleansing and purification is clearely set forth unto us in the 15. Chap. of Saint Iohn in these words of Christ Now ye are cleane through the word which I have spoken And in the 13. Chap. ver 10. of the same Gospell Hee that is washed needeth not save to wash his feete but is cleane every whit and ye are cleane but not all In a word the faithfull that live holily may be called just and pure in heart Secundum quid non-simpliciter Iust in that degree of Iustice that may fall on man whilest he is here below fighting against flesh