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A54916 Sweete thovghtes of Iesvs and Marie, or, Meditations for all the feasts of ovr B. Saviovr and his B. Mother togeither with Meditations for all the Sundayes of the yeare and our Sauiovrs Passion : for the vse of the daughters of Sion : diuided into tvvo partes / by Thomas Carre ... Carre, Thomas, 1599-1674. 1665 (1665) Wing P2276; ESTC R12859 274,501 793

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the wisdome of the eternall father is lodged in a Caue to teach ignorant man another lesson to witt that felicitie is not to be found in vanitie in carnalitie in heapes of gold nay it cryes out as it were to all the world by this example Why doe you loue vanitie and seeke alye It is not it is not to be found in these follies No my wayes are as farre remoued from your wayes and my cogitations from your cogitations as is heauen from earth Aff. Seeke still what you seeke ô mortalls but seeke it not where you seeke it seeke it not in the follies of the world which knowes not Christ but seek it in the knowledge of Christ Seeke it not in the world which passeth away together with its concupiscences but seeke it in Christ the Word made flesh which remaynes for euer Nay seeke not Christ neither with hope to find him in pompe and state in the pallaces of Kinges but in the poore cribbe with the poore simple and vigilant shephards that is with vigilancie in simplicitie in pouertie in humilitie and abiection There may proud man being humbled surely find and Know humble Christ Resolution I will seeke then whom my soule loueth Not in vanities as I did when I found him not But c. And since the world neither receiues nor knowes nor cares for my Christ I will neither admitt into my hart nor know or care for the world c. 2. POINT Cons Looke vpon this caue or stable as the true sohoole of all vertues where the wisdome of heauen giues solide lessons of heauenly wisdome where the eternally begotten the onely begotten son of God Iesus Christ newly come downe from heauen is to frame in our hartes the impressions of Christianitie mhere the word which was in the begining with God and was euen God him selfe God of God true God of true God lying now dumbe in a poore manger for the loue of poore man who was become a brute beast should speake lowder to heauen-beloued Christan hartes then all the voyces of men and Angells Aff. O deare God! O great God! ô truë God! whom my soule with all its forces acknowledges and adores in this strange disguise what is it thou wouldst speake to my hart by these dumbe signes What is it I st that thou wouldst signifie hereby to the faithfull and louing soule that thou dost languish with loue and so in a loue-pause remaynest speechlesse Is it that neuer more loue is spoken betwene true Louers then when tongues keepe silence and giue hartes leaue to speake by the eyes such misteries as none but louers vnderstand Is it that man should waxe dumbe to the world while the word appeares dumbe in the world O speake thus speake thus Deare Lord to thy poore seruant who giues eare to thee And whilest thou speakest let the worlde keepe silence and turne as dead to me as I to it Let my tongue and all the tumultuous people of my interiour house keepe silence Let my hart be silent too and onely giue eare to this one necessarie Word saying I am thy saluation for I am Iesus thy Sauiour THE II. MEDITATION I. POINT CONS But what is this silent word That verie same by which all thinges were made and without which nothing was made while he himselfe was not made but was begotten by an eternall generation which none is capable to expresse That word from which all thinges had beeing as from a verie Ocean of beeing That word which was in the begining and in the begining began to worke vpon nothing and of it made all thinges created Heauen and earth for that litle word fiat was said and euery thing began to ryse out of the abysse of nothing and haue beeing life and motion c. By this word was said Let light be made and it presently was made c. Aff. O powrefull almightie Lord What humane wisdome is not strucke dumme with the wonders and prodigies wrought by this now silent word The wisdome of the world would teach vs by Philosophie that of nothing nothing is made but this word which is the Wisdome of heauē assures vs that of Nothing all thinges were made which while he is silēt all the creatures together crye outwith a loudevoyce we made not our selues but he made vs. O thou light of light who in the begining with a word made light in the world and now comest downe into it to enlighten all men daigne to be a light to my obscured hart that it may discerne as well the effects of thy word as the silence of the ●ame And clearely see that as in the begining that made all thinges of nothing so this in tyme comes to repaire all thinges made worse then nothinge And as that in the begining made all thinges right so this in tyme comes to rectifie all thinges disordered And grant that as we see all that we haue are flowed from thy Bountie so our firme resolution may euer be that all we either haue or are may returne to thee againe by our Iustice and gratitude Fiat fiat POINT 2. Conf. But yet what is this silent word The very son of God God the true God now the verie son of Mary the son of man true man flesh of our flesh bones of our bones God man man God God and man one and the same But if son heyre if son of God heire of the kingdome of God heauen If God man and heire to the kingdome of heauen then man hath gotten title to the kingdome of heauen If son and heire and to the kingdome of heauen the kinge of heauen man then begins to raigne since a part and portiō of him begins to raigne in him who raigned in the begining before the begining in tyme before tyme from all eternitie Aff. Yes my poore soule it is noe lesse excellent person then the son of God the heire of God the kinge of heauen true God of true God lyes before thyne eyes Who least he might haue bene a lesse deare obiect to thy contemplation and loue whyle he was lesse accessible of inuisible he becomes visible in flesh to thyne eyes of flesh And by an incomparable and inconceiuable transport of loue he who in the beginning made mā to his owne similitude and likenesse vouchsafeth in tyme to be made to the similitude and likenesse of man and to giue vs power therby to become the sonnes of his heauenly father the sonnes of God The sonnes of God the sonnes of thy heauenly father Ah what ioy ô Iesu we are thy brothers then and if brothers heires of God coheires with thee ô deare sauiour Iesus Christ dilate dilate my hart deare child from heauen the bulke of thy ouercharging dearenesse is too large to enter Ah make me not poore with too much heauenly plentie either bestowe thy giftes according to my measure and abilitie to receiue them or enlarge my hart and inable it to receiue them according to the proportion in which
from prayer to worke from worke againe to prayer and though the Angells of God come not to thee the God of Angells will not fayle to feede thee with thousands of deare delightes thy prayer shall be without intermission the odours of their sweetnesse shall flow from thy mouth and ●eo Gratias vpon all occasions shall continue alwayes II. POINT REPRESENT her yet further to your thoughtes out of S. Hieromes and S. Ambroses expressions of her ●he was at all tymes saith S. Hierome either reading Meditating or praying Againe in watching she was the first saith the one in speaking she was the last saith the other and most studious in reading especially the holy Scriptures concerning the coming of ●hrist which the frequently redd and imbraced In so much that when her body reposed her hart watched and euen often in her sleepe repeated what she had read or awaking from sleepe continued the same Affection Let vs by this blessed example ô my soule wholy applie our selues to read to Meditate to pray By reading we shall learne to know what we ought to doe by meditating and pondering the same we shall imprint it in our soules and inflame our hartes to the practice thereof and by prayer obteyne force to performe what we know and desire But let this reading be the word of God which will proue a light to our feete a cordiall to our hart sweeter then the honie combe Let our Meditation be his holy Law and his diuine grace our prayer And of all the Scriptures let that be most frequently in our hands mouthes and hartes which most relate to Christs coming life and Passion that we may indeede be sett vpon no other knowledge but Iesus-Christ and him crucified And in that blessed peace that verie peace le ts sleepe and repose Happie will that rest proue when our eyes are shutt with the sweet memorie of Christ and his Law in our mouth and harts THE III. MEDITATION For the Presentation I. POINT CONSIDER that allthough this blessed young Virgine was possessed and prepossessed with all the blessings of heauen and replenished with the plenitude of grace yet was not gtace idle in her or she idle in grace Grace is not giuen to worke all alone but graciously and freely to gayne our will and in it and with it to worke all So that this Blessed Virgine notwithstanding all these huge aduantages and prerogatiues of grace testified to s. Elizabeth a holy Nun that she prepared a place in her hart for God with labour continuall prayer ardent desire profound deuotion many teares and much affliction Affection Thus it is my soule that by her imitation we ought to prepare our hartes for heauen Without preuenting grace indeede we ryse in vaine it is in vaine to ryse before the light or rat he without it we should neuer ryse at all None comes to Christ vnlesse drawen by his heauenly father Yet in vaine too should the light shine if hauing light we did not walke in it If we were so drawen as we followed it not we should neuer arriue He that made vs without vs will not saue vs without vs. All our Talents are his free gifts t is true but we must negotiate with them and improue them We aske because we will we seeke because we will we knocke because we will and we are saued because we will and yet Gods grace workes both the will and performance Le ts adde then our carefull concurrence to his sweete drawghtes and be blessed for euer with that blessed amongst all women II. POINT CONSIDER that this Blessed Virgigins prayer in particular though otherwise full of grace was for grace Grace to be able to complie with those two great Christian duties The loue of God aboue all thinges and of our neighbour as our selfe wherin the whole Law and Prophetes consiste 2. Grace souueraignelie to hate and flye all that he hates whom she souueraignly loues 3. Grace to be truly humble patient mylde and to be adorned with all the vertues that so she might become wholy gracious in the diuine sight 4. Grace finally to be obedient to the high Preists commandes and ordonnances Affection Let vs poore wretches then learne of this most holy Virgine to be continually begging for Gods grace as being necessarie to euery good act and vertuous action of our whole life Say then my soule with S. Augustine Thou commandest vs ô Lord to loue thee aboue all thinges and our neighbour as our selues Giue graciously what thou commandest and commande what thou wilt Thou commandest vs continencie patience humilitie c. Giue what thou commandest and commande what thou wilt In fine say with the holy Church Let thy grace ô Lord we beseech thee both goe before and follow vs and make vs continually addicted to good workes c. THE FIRST MEDITATTION For the Announciation I. POINT CONSIDER that to this Virgine it was thus qualified that is remoued from the world and dwelling in her sacred solitude married to a holy man but to be conserued for the Sonne of the Holy of Holyes prepossessed and replenished by heauenly grace and happily concurring with it by continuall application and feruent prayer still begging more and more grace that an Angell was sent from heauen with an embasie importing greatest honour to her and ioy to all the world to witt to prepare a worthy mariagebedd for the most pure spouse to contract the Mariage betwixt a creature and her creatour and so to begin a happie league betwixt heauen and earth Affection If we desire indeede then my soule to drawe downe heauenly blessinges vpon vs if to haue foretastes of celestiall delightes if Spiritually to conceiue Iesus in our hart let vs flye the cheating corrupting world and betake our selues to the solitude of our chamber or celle There the Kinge of Heauen speakes to our hartes There we put questions and receiue answers of what we are to say and what we are to doe It s hard saith S. Augustine to see Iesus amidst a multitude Our mynde must inioy a certaine solitude That sight requires a secrete place Marie was alone when she spoke with the Angell Alone when the holy Ghost ouershaded her Alone when she conceiued the worlds Redeemour II. POINT CONSIDER the admirable contents of this heauenly embasie at which all heauen and earth may well stand amaysed since all their concernements are to be treated in it The eternall and onely begotten sonne of the eternall God is about to espouse humane nature in an hūble mayde Marie of the house and familie of Dauid The lost world wants a Sauiour and heauen is resolued to giue one Gabriel is dispatched to Nazareth to declare the mysterie and to announce the wounders to the espoused Virgine His first word presents her with plenitude of grace Hayle full of Grace Giues the reason of it Our Lord is with thee Assures her she shall coneeiue and bring forth a sonne a great Sonne a Sonne who as he is indeede
afflictions should neither be lessened nor taken away for the space of a longe life Yet what is the longest of liues compared to eternitie but a verie moment Affection It is not my soule for this present tyme for transitorie momentes that we liue and labour Our ayme is eternitie Nor are our sorrowes equall to the paines due to our sinnes nor beare they any proportion to the endlesse ioy we hope for and yet S. Paule assures vs that our tribulations which are for the present momentary and light worke a boue measure exceedingly an eternall waight of glorie in vs. Let vs then couragiously looke ouer the thinges we see or feele which are but temporall to consider what we see not but by ourpatience hope for an eternall waight of glorie THE SECONDE POINTE. I will see you againe and your harte shall reioyce and noe man shall take your ioy from you CONSIDER that though our good God may sometymes seeme to leaue vs yet he neuer forsakes vs but returnes againe to see vs to reioyce our hartes and double and trible our ioyes not those of the wicked which are alwayes attended and vshered out by sorrow but those of the true Disciples of Christ Gaudia Domini ioyes in Christ of Christ and for Christ and to giue vs assurance that it shall not be in the power of man to robbe vs of these Christian ioyes which are properly ours and none shall take your ioyes from you Affection Noe my soule our mercifull Lord forsakes vs not vnlesse we first forsake him he goes but comes againe to visite vs and by such his accesses he giues accession of ioyes to our hartes which he so fixes by his grace that they are not taken from vs nether in this world nor the next to witt they are not placed vpon transitorie thinges which passe but vpon Christ and are locked vp in our harts whither the tyrants sword cannot reach He may take our liues away but cannot our ioyes which liue in death and suruiue it Such were S. Paules ioyes with which he abounded in the midst of all his tribulations Such the Apostles who came reioycing from before the counsell Such S. Laurence whose ioyes burnt higher then the Tyrants tormenting flames Such finally are those of our Lord and Master who ioy being proposed to him sustayned the Crosse This my soule is our ioy which none can take from vs. THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE FOVRTH SVNDAY AFTER EASTER I goe to him who sent me Io. 16. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that if we were truly wained from the world from selfe loue and selfe consolation we should be so farre from hauing our harts filled with sorrow vpon the hearing of the words of Christ I goe to him who sent me that contrarily our harts would be replenished with ioy That deare Lord of ours had perfectly accomplished his heauenly Fathers will in the worke of mans saluation by puttinge downe that deare price of his redemption What then ought to be more delightfull to the redeemed slaue then to see his gracious Redeemour returne into the possession of his owne right to see him exalted to see him glorifyed Affection Returne then ô my dearest Redeemour into thy rest into thy heauenly Fathers bosome into that glorie thou hadst common with him by thyne eternall birth-right before the world was yet made for it is but iust that the innocent lambe which was slayne should receiue power and diuinitie and wisdome and strength honour glorie and benediction c. Be it euer farre from vs my soule to preferre the delightes of his presence and the ioyes we take while we are drawen on by the odour of his oyntments before the accomplishment of his blessed pleasure in what euer desolation and the aduancement of his glorie THE SECONDE POINTE. It is expedient for you that I goe Io. 16. CONSIDER that tho not so much the consolations of God as the God of all consolations and the pure loue of him for his owne infinite goodnesse sake ought to be the cheife Christian motiue in all our actions yet our mercifull God who best knew that man is all earthly earth and ledd by selfe interest sutes his motiues to what we are alwayes mixing the sweetes of consolations and our aduantage to moue vs to the loue we otherwise owe him And therfor to solace the Apostles sadnesse he sayth I tell you the truth it is expedient that is aduantagious or profitable for you that I goe for if I goe not the holy Ghost shall not come to you Affection Let vs putt downe my soule for a most sure maxime in point of our spirituall progresse that he is not Gods best seruant who seekes his will of God in the continuall inioyment of consolations in our prayers c. But he that desires that Gods will may be done in him by an absolute resignation in what drinesse and abandonmēts so euer Let vs learne thē to leaue God for God as here we haue occasion and vndoubtedly the holy Ghost will come and inhabite our disinteressed harts and blesse them with more solide and substantiall aduantages THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY But if I goe I will send him to you Io. 16. CONSIDER that wheras the holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the sonne it was but conuenient that the sonne should first be seated at the right hand of his heauenly Father in the Throne of his glorie according to that the holy Ghost was not yet giuen because Iesus was not yet glorified before the holy Ghost was sent that he might be ioyntly sent from them both to poore man as that best guift descending from aboue consubstantiall coequall coeternall with themselues and well becoming their infinite Maiestie and the excessiue loue of our deare Sauiour by the merits of whose death that perfect present was purchaced Affection It is but iust my soule that our eldest brother be first repossessed of his owne glorie which was his from all eternitie before the younger and adoptiue children lay claime to their share which is but his deare purchace and free guift who for a sure pledge of it sends vs one equall to himselfe to confirme in vs the hopes therof Happie thrice happie we Christians to haue so powerfull a Mediatour in the Court of heauen to preuayle with his Almightie Father for the sending of the holy Ghost to comfort instruct and confirme vs in all truth taking vp his residence in the Temples of our hartes THE SECONDE POINTE. He the holy Ghost shall teach you all truth Io 16. CONSIDER that as the donation and mission of the holy Ghost were the effects and fruites of the passion ascension and noble tryumphe of Christ wherin he ledd captiuitie it selfe captiue and in all of them glorified his heauenly Father so is that holy spirit sent to glorifie the sonn by teaching clearing and confirminge in the harts of the Apostles all that their diuine master had taught them belowe and making these heauenly
example and for his loue all others to whom Obedience may be due Our deare Lord loues it and puts so high a rate vpon it that he chuses rather to lay downe his life then to leaue it which he knowes to be more deare in his heauenly Fathers sight then victimes of sacryfices which yet are the speciall worshippe due to God alone Doe we resolue Christianly to ouercome the world the flesh and the Diuell Le ts humbly obey then For the humble and obedient man can indeede relate his victories The best effectes of victorie is but peace and the humble and obedient man conquers the hartes of all men and hath peace with all men yet he inioyes it especially in his owne litle world his owne hart where he continually feastes and raignes Christ came not from heauen into this world to doe his owne will but his that sent him nor come we out of the world into Religion to doe our owne wills but his will in theirs whom his prouidence places ouer vs. Resolution We will then continually say in our hartes vpon all occasions thy blessed will be donne ô heauenly father and with our blessed Sauiour not my will but thyne be done c. 2. POINT Consider that this stable is not onely the schoole of humilitie and obedience but of pouertie also since humilitie is neuer sure which loues not pouertie And where or how shall we euer learne it if not of him who when he was most rich became poore that we might be inriched by his aboundance Behold he is borne of a poore mother brought out in a poore stable wraped vp in poore clothes layd in a poore bedd accompained with a poore oxe and an asse visited by poore shephards destitute of all conueniences of all necessaries And yet it is euen he who so litle stood in neede of our assistance that he said by the Prophete If I be hungrie I will not tell thee because the vniuersall world is myne And yet it is euen he who feedes the birds of the aire who now is fedd with the milke of a poore Mayde Aff. Giue sucke Marie giue sucke to thy God thy son thy Creatour who feedes thee and all the world And yet now to manifest his extreame want daignes to be fedd by thee feede him I say holy virgine while we with admiration behold him and thee in this poore plight and learne the blessed examples of your humilitie obedience and pouertie And indeede what Christian harte will not resolue to be humble obedient and poore with humble obedient and poore Iesus and Marie And that with a good will too and without constraint for his sake who was not necessitated to it by misfortune or force but imbraced it by his owne free choyce Wisdome wanted not meanes to releiue himselfe That prouidence which feedes the birdes of the aire could haue shewerd downe a heauenly prouision of Manna clothed himselfe with the sunne and made a thousand celestiall mansions to haue lodged in Yet to teach the world pouertie he would depriue himselfe of all ordinarie commoditie Resolution What is the poorest and meanest then shall best please me because it most resembles my Lord and Master whose liuerie I will euer reioyce to weare c. THE FIFTH MEDITATION I. POINT CONSIDER that in this stable Virginitie is also taught Virginitie which is neuer more safe or euen safe indeede saue in the compainie of humilitie obedience and pouertie Virginitie which found not in earth what to imitate but had recourse to the example of the Angells till Iesus chused to be borne in Bethleem stable and to propose himselfe for the example and Doctor and giuer of it Iesus would be borne but of a virgine to putt the highest rate possible vpon virginitie Marie a Virgine was content to beare a son but he was to be à God a Sauiour of the world And thēce before in and after child-birth she remayned more pure then an Angell more pure then an Archangell more pure then Cherubin Seraphim and onely lesse pure then puritie it selfe by which she was made pure and which too by singular priuiledge she brought out to saue the impure and durtie world Aff Thou deare IESVS gauest the example and loe we are readie to imbrace it we haue heard thy heauenly voyce and we haue bene inabled by thy grace to bid A dieu to all and follow thee in the fairepathes of this Angelicall vertue But alas deare Rabboni t is our aymes onely that are aymes of Angells our performances are but the performances of men full of defectes and imperfections Our spirites are prompe but our flesh is infirme And who is able to render that cleane which is conceiued in vncleanesse saue thy selfe alone O God Thou commandest continencie giue what thou commandest for without thy gift we haue it not we cannot haue it or hauing it euen conserue it Nay the verie good desires we haue of it are thyne too Giue then deare Lord what thou commandest and commande what thou wilt And thou ô mother of puritie the fruite of whose virginitie makes the world happie to thee we exiled Children of Eue haue recourse praying to thee with grones and teares to obtayne for vs of thy virginall child true humilitie of hart obedience and loue of pouertie wherin alone we apprehend virginitie secure since euen thyne owne more then Angellicall virginitie had not pleased had it not bene accompaigned with humilitie as a great Father dares afferme And therfor Monstra te esse matrem Sumat per te preces Qui pro nobis natus Tulit esse Tuus 2. POINT Consid Let vs yet goe to this heauenly schoole the stable to learne the perfect contempt of the world Christ comes into the world and the world knowes him not nor will he know the world Christ comes into the world as into his owne propertie and it receiues him not nor will he receiue the world into his familiaritie but contrarilie doth himselfe and by his examble will haue all his to treade quite contrarie to it and to make continuall warre against it His pouertie exclames against its riches his virginall birth cryes out against its concupiscences his humble obedience decryes its ambition and pride of life These are the Christian documentes and cryes of this blessed stable Aff. The world ô Christian will not know thy Christ nor doe thou know it noe more then he did entertayne noe loue for it giue noe credit to it for it seekes but to ingage and seduce thee it tells the of I know not what pleasures but beleeue those that haue bene so vnhappie as to haue tasted what it could afford and they foūd them nothing els but vanitie of vanitie and affliction of spirite They foole but fill not they allure but feede not they swell but saciate not vpon the word of S. Augustine they are paynefull pleasures and are not like the ioyes of thy Lord beleeue it they are not nor beare they any proportion therwith The
so strucke him O man how doth this action confounde thy pride and discouer thy selfe to thy selfe we easily committ sinne euen in the sight of God but blushe to appeare sinners in the sight of men c. Or if we chance to haue that humilitie and iustice in vs as patïently to suffer reprehension reproche or punishement when we see we are in fault yet are their any to be found who knowes what it meanes to suffer where we either indeede are or at least where we apprehend our selues innocent That euen best Christians are content to leaue to Christ alone THE SECONDE MEDITATION For the same day II. POINT CONSIDER Virgines consider Christians old and young and all that hope to be saued by the blood of Christ what these sacred dropes which fall from our Christ say to our hartes What doe they say vnlesse our harts be of stone but I will and begge by this example without example where noe law obliged noe debt was due your patience your mortification your resignation your obedience your humiliation You call me Abba pater father father and I am so show the dutie of children then by following your fathers footstepps You call me Lord and I am so make good then the dutie of seruantes in accomplishing the will of your Lord. I will obedience c. not will-worshippe not sacryfices of your owne inuention and choyce And this irreuocable will and Conuenant of myne I write downe in letters of myne owne blood that louinge children may neuer forgett it Affect Noe my soule ther was indeed noe connection betwixt an innocent Sauiour and the markes of a sinner noe necessitie for a God to imploy this paynefull and shamfull meanes who had a thousand other ways in his wisdome to haue performed the worke of mans redemption but to teach vs patience with what euer might befall vs seem it neuer so litle sutable to the thoughtes we may haue of our owne innocencie Mortification by suffering some corporall payne be it by our owne or some other hand be it by accident sicknesse or otherwise Obedience whether to our superiours as we are bounde c. Or euen to euery creature for charities sake where there appeares noe other obligation And conceiue we alwayes heare Christ by this example say vnto our hartes what great matter is it c. if you being but durt and askes subiect your selues to man for Gods fake since I who am omnipotent became humbly subiect to man for your sakes O dust learne of me to obey Learne of me ô earth and clay to humble thy selfe and caste thy selfe vnder the feete of all men for my Loue. Consider Yet further that the heauenly dropps of blood which fall from a God speake more powerfully to pious hartes then Malachie to the people of Israel saying dilexi v●s I haue loued you That is I haue doe and shall loue you since there is neither tyme past nor tyme to come with God I haue loued you from eternitie and thence I am come in tyme to saue you I doe loue you in tyme present and thence I giue the first dropps of my bloud for you I wil loue you in tyme to come and will powre out my hartes bloud for you in earnest wherof I now lay downe these dropps I haue loued you and so called you by preuenting grace while you thought not of it I doe loue you and so assiste you by cooperating grace I will loue you and so make my subsequent grace accompaignie you to the end and for assurance of this I now pay downe these dropps Affec O how wonderfully thou hast loued vs ô heâuenly Father since for our sakes thou didst not euen spare thyne owne onely sonne How tenderly didst thou loue vs ô dearely beloued sonne of the Almightie who for our sakes didst not refuse that paynefull imployment but dost euen so airely testifie the excesse of thy loue by the loss of thy blood By which deare pledges being partes of the price of my Redemption I apprehende it euen neere at hand Let Israel now say that he is good that his mercy is for euer Let the house of Aaron now say that his mercy is for euer Come le ts loue him le ts loue him we that are redeemed by his bloude because his mercyes are for euer Let our tongues publish his loue and mercy let our hartes loue and prayse him and let our verie bowels pronounce ô Lord who is like to thee Inable vs deare Iesus to vnderstand descerne and reuerence with due honour this admirable misterie of pietie which is manifested in the flesh hath appeared to the Angells is preached to the gentils is beleeued by the world and this day is signed in bloud Venite adoremus THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE. Day after new yeares-Day of the name of IESVS I. POINT COnsider That though all the names vsed by men to signifie the Deitie were from all eternitie are in tyme and shall for euer be most worthily blessed praysed and admired by men and Angells yet to vs Christians the name of our Christ IESVS by which he was called this day is by iustest right most deare and praise-worthy For whether we vse the word Elin which signifies God and is interpreted strong Elion which signifies High or Adonai which we interprete Lord or Saddai which may be called Almightie or els Iehouah which the Hebrewes esteemed ineffable none of them intimates so much and so present consolation to vs poore sinners as doth our myld Emmanuel which signifies our God with vs our Iesus a Sauiour who begins euen to powre out his pretious bloode for vs. Affection Be all thy names ô great Lord God praysed preached admired magnified sanctified for euer by men and Angells and all thy creatures in generall whether they signifie strength power Maiestie Omnipotencie immensitie infinitie or what euer els which we can in noe sorte expresse nor euen by imagination conceiue so vastly great so ineffable so inconceiuable is the Lord and Master whom we serue Yet most deare Sauiour Iesus be thy most mellifluous name as neerer to my eyes and interests so alwayes neerer and dearer so my hart Be that sauing and sanctifying name cherished and sanctfied by vs poore miscrable sinners aboue all other names because thou o deare lambe who wast slayne for me is most worthy of glorie and honour and benediction and all that euer my narrow hart is able to deuise c. 2. POINT Consider that all the names we reade intimate either power and Maiestie or grace and mercy according to that of the Royall Prophete I haue heard these thinges Power is Gods and mercy is thyne ô Lord. According to his Maiestie his name is holy and terrible But this new name IESVS which is giuen to him in earth signifies nothing but mildnesse mercy and saluation for the name of IESVS saith your holy Father is a sweete name a delightfull name a name of deare consolation and blessed hope to the sinner Nay it
can neuer be done more highly more dearely more ioyfully more acceptably or more honorably then by offering this Sacrament to God in their honour with care and feruour therfor let vs frequently receiue this Sacrament Affection Ah my soule is it placed in our power by a graciousnesse which the heauens could neuer haue conceiued to reioyce and make glad the verie Saintes in heauen and yet can our coldnesse refuse them this comfort and honour whose prayers we dayly begge certes we may well conclude that they are blotted out of our Callender and are as deade to vs as we to our owne vtilitie We desire to liue with them in eternall ioyes and yet hauing the most acceptable and honorable meanes in our hands we can haue hartes to deney them temporall obseruances may we not iustly feare that we may find them but cold intercessours for vs to whose accidentall glorie we might so easily and yet doe so coldly contribute THE IV. MEDITATION The sixt Motiue Our imperfections and miserie I. POINT CONSIDER that what is said by S. Iames as it is most true so we all most willingly acknowledge it to witt that we all offend in many thinges and our negligences imperfections and omissions can scarcely be numbred But we are not by Gods grace fallen in loue with our sinnes and imperfections or resolue to liue in them but truly desire and labour to be freed from them nor is there any thing so powerfull to expiate crymes as this Sacrament and Sacryfice of which the Councell of Trent affirmes that our Lord being appeased therby grantes grace and the gift of pennance and pardons euen huge crymes and sinnes To this therfor ought we to haue an humble confident and frequent recourse Affection O my soule my soule were our case that of some of our poore persequuted parentes and friends whose fortunes libertie and life run hazard to be lost for a communion what excuses would not our negligence find But to slipp ouer the occasions of so great and necessarie a good to our selues where the performance is lyable to noe losse yea is ledd on with so much facilitie and called vpon by God and man and laudable custome what reply can be made to this We grant we neede to be purged we find grace not too strong in vs we acknowledge the souueraigne vertue of the remedie presented And yet must cold cras crases Be still taken for payment Ah my soule Is a longer lying sicke likely sooner to cure the desease Le ts not deceiue our selues we doe not indeed so much desire our cure as loue our languishment THE SEAVENTH MOTIVE True Consolation II. POINT CONSIDER that we all find that this worldly pilgrimage of ours is longe and teadious That such as are subiect to sinne find thēselues wearied and worne out in the paynefull wayes of iniquitie That such as are louers of vertue and striue to approch neerest to God are not exempt from temptations nay the tribulations of the iust are many though the Spirit be prompt yet the body is infirme and doth waigh downe the soule and they are forced to crye out mournefully with S. Paule who will deliuer vs from this mortall body We all then both desire and neede consolation and in this Sacrament we confesse we may receiue the God of all consolation Ought we not then ioyfully and frequently haue recourse to him therin Affection Le ts still my soule seeke what we seeke but le ts not seeke it where we seeke it True and permanent consolations are not found beleeue it my soule they are not found saue in God alone that father of mercyes and God of all consolation who comforts vs in all our tribulations Nor can we euer find God more happily or more comfortably then when we receiue him really and truly possesse him Heauen possesses him not more truly where he is the eternallioy and beatitude of all the Blessed By how much more then my troubles and temptations are multiplyed by so much more will I run to that sourse of solace that fountaine of grace as the wearied Hart to the fountaines of fresh water That we ought to receiue the B. Sacrament with reuerence feare and Loue as the best dispositions THE V. MEDITATION The I. Motiue Of reuerence and feare c. I. POINT CONSIDER the greatnesse of his Maiestie whom we are to receiue whose essence or beeing is ineffable It cannot be expressed by any definition because it transcends or outstripps all thinges He 's a bottomelesse sea and none is able to sound it saith Salomon His iudgements are incomprehensible his wayes not to be found out saith S. Paule He 's higher then the Heauens and what will you doe deeper then Hell and how should you know him saith Iob. And yet he is that then which nothing is either greater or better concludes S. Augustine with all the world Affection If the blessing I am about to receiue from thy bountifull liberalitie ô Lord be so excessiue greate that workes cannot reach it that words cannot speake it that thoughtes cannot comprehend it or euen arriue to it If sight taste and touche be all deceiued in it and bring in euidence of bread onely what rests but infallible faith which comes into our ayde assuring that it is God indeede which we receiue who is so the greatest that he is immensitie it selfe and so the best that he is goodnesse it selfe a vaste Ocean which can neuer be sounded and so leaues vs as it were in that blessefully vnsatisfactorie satisfaction that a Christian hart is capable of more happines then it hath capacitie to comprehend Prone layd then in our owne incapacitie and miserie let vs feare reuerence and loue that immense Maiestie which we haue the happines to receiue into our breastes but haue not power to comprehend it THE II. MOTIVE Of feare c. II. POINT CONSIDER yet the greatnesse of his Maiestie by the words and comportments of the Saintes and Angells who see and know him For it is euen he whom that greatest among the sonns of women feared to touche It is he whom the Prince of the Apostles through feare put a way from him saying Goe from me ô Lord for I am but a sinfull man It is he in whose presence the pillers of heauen quake the Dominations adore and the Powers tremble and in his sight the Cherubins and Seraphins fall downe and hide their faces Affection And yet my soule it is to this Maiestie so venerated so dreaded so adored by the most holy among men by the greatest among the Apostles by the burning Cherubins and Seraphins of the heauenly Court that thou aduenturest to approch Yea it is this Maiestie that graciously inuites himselfe and resolues to enter and remayne vnder this litle poore Zacheus his roofe What are we to doe then but without delay with Zacheus to stoope downe from our high thoughtes to looke vpon our smale stature our noe abilitie our nothing worthy to appeare in his sight
know that she was wholy his and so ought to be wholy at his dispose II. POINT CONSIDER that by how much our Blessed Lady is more exalted though euen by an Angell by how much she is made more sure of heauenly prerogatiues and graces by so much she growes lesse and lesse in her owne eyes and be she neuer so certaine to be the Mother of God she will still remayne the humble handmayde of her Lord and for his sake become the seruant of his seruants and to make it good in effects as well as inwords she goes with speed into a citie of Iuda to visite her cosen Elizabeth Affection Obserue my soule how this Blessed Virgine still proues a diuine Mistresse to vs by word and worke first crying out to vs all by how much thou art the greater by so much more humble thy selfe 2. Suspect the fauours we may seeme to haue from heauen if we waxe not more humble by them 3. That humble words alone are not proofes of true humilitie vnlesse workes followes them for she finds it not enough to haue professed herselfe to be the handmayd of our Lord vnlesse in practise she proue herselfe to be the humble handmayde of the handmaydes of our Lord according to that of S. Peter be subiect to euery humane creature for Gods sake THE FIRST MEDITATION For the Visitation I. POINT CONSIDER with what Blessed and glorious effects this humble and religious officiousnesse of Blessed Marie was accompaigned Noe sooner had she saluted her cosen Elisabeth with the ordinarie Salutation of the Land Paxtecum but the child in her wombe sprung with ioy and both the child and the Mother were replenished with the Holy Ghost He begun to preach the presence of his master by ioyfull exultations which he could not yet performe by words and she with exclamations to Prophecie to prayse to magnifie the Mother and the fruite of her wombe Iesus who spoke by his Mothers mouth as S. Iohn heard by his Mothers eares Affection O my soule neuer neuer can we loose by humbling our selues be we neuer so great and illustrious but still what we seeme to cast away comes multiplyed home honour and esteeme continually most following him who most flyes it Marie was indeede the Mother of God though she had not stirred from Nazareth But the heauens onely knew that But when humilitie once brings her to Elizabeth the world begins to be acquainted with the Mysterie the Mother 's magnified the Sonne glorified S. Iohn sanctified in his Mothers wombe and S. Elizabeth replenished with the holy Ghost and by vertue therof publishes her to be the Mother of God and vtters a blessed word which all the world till this day neuer ceaseth to repeate Blessed blessed is the fruite of thy wombe O glorious effects of Maries humilitie II. POINT BVT consider how the humilitie which brought her thither leaues her not there but leades her to a most Christian acknowledgement and profession of her owne nothing She heares her selfe proclamed with a lowd voye blessed aboue all women and the fruite of her wombe blessed blessed as beleeuing what was said to her by the Angell blessed as being the Mother of God and yet amidst those highest and withall truest commendations that heauen or earth could bestowe vpon a pure creature she deuestes her selfe of all as being of her selfe nothing at all ascribing the whole to the Ocean of all goodnes saying My soule doth magnifie our Lord. Affection O admirable and incomparable humilitie and abiection of the Mother of God which neuer had in earth any thinge like to it saue onely the abismall humiliation of her Sonne Iesus which noe honours noe prerogatiues noe blessings from the mouthes of men could euer swell or make her forgett that all was Gods and that all glorie which is not taken in him is meere vanitie You may she seeme to say magnifie me aboue all women for my faith for the fruite of my wombe for the dignitie of being the Mother of God but I the while looke ouer all these priuiledges to looke vpon and laude the authour of them all and my verie soule doth magnifie our Lord that is doth publish his greatnes his magnificence his sanctitie wisdome and mercy in all those heauenly giftes of his free liberalitie THE II. MEDITATION For the Visitation I. POINT CONSIDER that it was not with her tongue onely that she magnified her Lord by speaking glorious thinges of him or abiect thinges of her selfe as that she was his handmayde whose Mother indeede she was Or by her hands and feete that is by her workes and labours onely especially those of mercy exercised vpon her cosen Elizabeth or yet by her memorie onely or her vnderstanding or will alone but euen with her whole soule that is with workes memorie vnderstanding and will all ioyntly offered vp in one sacryfice of prayse and thankes giuing and that too with huge ioy and iubilie of hart and my verie Spirit saith she exults in God my child my Iesus my Sauiour Affection O my soule thus it is indeede that we are to magnifie our Lord withall our hart with all our strength with all our soule who payes not this payes lesse then he owes All that we haue and all that we are whether corporally or spiritually in tyme or eternitie all issues originally from his free bountie and all ought to be ascribed to his mercy and goodnes we may law fully exult and reioyce my soule but it must be in our Lord. we may glorie and we haue good reason for it but le tit be with our B. Lady in Deo salutari nostro in God our Sauiour II. POINT CONSIDER for what it was that our B. Lady so magnified her Lord and Master and she herselfe will giue the cause because saith she he hath mercyfully looked vpon the humilitie abiection or pouertie of this handmayde That is to speake with Theophilact while I looked not after him he looked vpon my litlenesse and was mercifull to me while I sought him not Ponder this well it is not because he hade made her the most illustrious and blessed among all women and euen greater in qualitie of Mother of God then the greatest Cherubins and Seraphins but because he looked vpon her humilitie and abiection with the eye of mercy and pittie that is he approued loued imbraced and pleased himselfe in it and mercifully preuented her by his grace Affection Our first acknowledgements my soule following our B. Laydies example must be for that which was first in Gods fauours to wards vs when his vn compelled and free mercy had nothing to looke vpon but our miserie when he looked downe and found all mankind at a losse none doing well not one Fayle not then my soule what euer the world may conceiue and publish to our prayse how glorious and happie soeuer our presente state of life may be what euer perfections grace may seeme to vs to haue wrought in vs fayle not I. say to
Thou art the liuing booke wherein the word of the eternall father was written by the pen of the holy Ghost Thou art the authenticall Instrument of the peace made betwixt God and man c. what shall I say words fayle my Conceptions are langui hing and answer not to the ardour of my soule II. POINT CONSIDER her againe in qualitie of the Mother of God and as such you will find that God is truly caro ex carne eius flesh of her flesh That Word which in the begining was with God and and was God was in this tyme made flesh of her flesh So that as God the Father can onely say thou art my Sonne this day I begott thee by an eternall generation so this B. Virgine alone can onely say I am thy Mother this day I brought thee forth by a temporall birth Affection Good God to what a high flight doth this call the thoughtes of man What strange relations and connections-hath this Virgine Mother in qualitie of Mother of God with God himselfe He in eternitie had a Sonne without a Mother She in tyme a Sonne without a father He a Sonne consubstantiall or of the same substance with him selfe she the same Sonne of her substance I saith S. Augustine God gaue that verie onely begotten Sonne to Marie who as being begotten of hi owne hart equall to himselfe he loued as himselfe that God and Marie might naturally haue one and the same Sonne God who made all made himselfe of Marie to restore all that he had made He who could of nothing make all thinges would not without Marie reforme the thinges that were deformed Ah my soule what an ineffable dignitie is this what helpes may not we expect from one so neere to God by so singular prerogatiues THE III. MEDITATION In qualitie of Mother of God I. POINT CONSIDER her againe in qualitie of Mother and say If Mother and that Mother of the Sonne of God then compartner and comparent or common parent with God the Father if Mother of a most louing and best beloued Sonne then the best beloued of Mothers or creatures and consequently indowed with the best gifts amongst and aboue all creatures in heauen and in earth since loue is but a well wishing and Gods loue giues what it wishes vs. Affection O the blessed connection alliance and neerenesse in bloud contracted betwixt God and man in the person of Marie and by her meanes and mediation O my soule they that were farre out are now by her meanes nere at hand She has found fauour with God and credit to bringe vs into fauour too She is his mother and our Mother and so we are his brethren and if brethren coheires with her Christ Hence we are an elect generation a kingly preisthoode a holy Nation a people of purchace Marke these great titles my soule and learne to value thy selfe accordingly II. POINT CONSIDER her yet againe in qualitie of the Mother of God and say if the Mother of God then her sacred wombe was the Blessed Paradise to which our seconde Adam was restored and wherin he was lodged for nine monthes space for which tyme she happily possessed all the riches of heauen the riches of the wisdome and k●owledge of God Finally if the Mother of God she was the faithfull Guardian of his tender yeares the inseparable companion of his flight into Egipt and returne home She bore him in her armes she clothed him with the worke of her hands and fedd him with the riches of her chast breastes Affection O Iesu who will make me so happie as that I might find thee my brother sucking my Mothers breastes that I might kisse thee and that none hereafter might despise me And that I might discouer with what faith feruour tendernesse obedience humilitie and charitie she performed those pious offices about thee that in imitation therof I might at least exhibite some smale parte of them to those litle ones my Christian brethren whom thou hast left me in lieu of thy selfe and so earnestly and effectually commendest to me saying what euer you doe to those litle ones you doe to me We haue yet then my soule meanes left vs to keepe to accompanie to cloth to feede our poore brother Iesus For the Purification of our B. Lady THE FIRST MEDITATION I. POINT CONSIDER that it is a Virgine-Mother who this day presents her first begotten being the God of the Temple in the Temple of God and as such neither child nor Mother could be subiect to the Law of Purification she being free from all spott of sinne or corporall impuritie he being puritie it selfe How is she moued then to subiect her selfe to that Law saue onely to leaue vs a rare example of a singular obedience Affection Noe noe chaste Virgine thou hadst noe neede of Purification who wast wholy faire and hadst noe stayne in thee But thou art the Mother and best imitater of that Sonne who while he was subiect to noe Law neither would yet humbly vndergoe the Law of Circumcision and so wilt thou that of Purification Thou hadst noe neede I say but we had neede of noe lesse then thy Sonns and thyne owne example to induce vs to the humble and obedient obseruance of the most iust and laudable Lawes and duties vnder which we liue For doe we not my soule doe we not sometymes repine at them dispute them and seeke holes to euade them II. POINT CONSIDER that this Immaculate Virgine subiected herselfe to the Law of Purification not onely to teach vs obedience but also to ingraue true humilitie still deeper and deeper into our harts She had taught it by word when she said to the Angell who declared her the Mother of God the handmayde of our Lord. She taught it in fact in going to visite one lesse then herselfe S. Elizabeth But now she teacheth it in an occasion where honour seemes to be ingaged where her sanctitie and puritie may be suspected Affection Ah my soule how farre do we poore sinners fall short of this great perfection Alas how vnwillingly and rarely doe we stoope downe in fact or giue place to one that is belowe vs Nay if we humble our selues in words onely if we doe not rather extolle and preferre our selues before our betters or being blamed or reprehended for any litle fault if we doe not excuse ourselues yea with choller and inuentions ad excusandas excusationes in peccatis it is much But to suffer while we are innocent especially if our honour and reputation be neuer so litle in question is a thing we find not patience to disgest Alas my soule we Christians seeme quite to forgett that we are schollers in Christs and Maries schoole and what lessons they haue deliuered vs. THE FIRST MEDITATION For the Assumption That her life was spent in heauenly aspirations I. POINT CONSIDER with many of the holy Fathers that our B. Lady from her deare Sonns Ascension to this present day of her glorious Assumption
troupes and aduance euen to the Throne of the souueraigne Kinge Affection Yes ô thou Souueraigne Queene saith S. Augustine seconded by S. Anselme the King thy Sonne raysed thee to the the same seate where he had placed what he tooke of thee it being but sutable to reason that thou shouldst be there where that is which was borne of thee How honored II. POINT CONSIDER what honour accrues to her in that Throne of Glorie and we shall find that she is honored by God the Father in qualitie of his dearest daughter Of God the Sonne as his dearest mother and of God the holy Ghost as his dearest Spouse Of all the Angells and Saintes of heauen as the best beloued Mother of their Master and the most glorious Queene of their heauenly Court Affection All hayle thou glorious Queene of Heauen it is not now all the generations of mē or one Angell that salutes thee full of grace but all the Quires of Angells which pronounce thee blessed and full of glorie Yea the whole Trinitie doth in rich thee with incomparable prerogatiues of honour and glorie farre aboue all the rest FINIS MEDITATIONS FOR ALL THE SVNDAYES IN THE YEARE DRAWNE OVT OF THEIR RESPECTIVE GOSPELLS Composed by the same Authour THE SECONDE PARTE Lex tua meditatio mea est PARIS Printed by VINCENT DV MOVTIER M. DC LXV THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE FIRST SVNDAY IN ADVENT There shall be signes in the sunne and the moone and the starrs and in the earth distresse of nations for the confusion of the sound of the sea and waues c. Luc. 21. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that there are two Aduents or comings of Christ intimated in this Gospell and celebrated in the holy Catholike Church The one of feare when he shall come in dread full maiestie to iudge the vniuersall world to th end that by whosome feare the forerunner of wisdome the heartes of her children may the better be prepared to receiue hym by loue in his first coming by his gracious Incarnation when he comes in humilitie and infirmitie Nor is there a better way to secure our selues against his dreadfull maiestie in that then by imitating his abismall humilitie in this Affection Let vs then my soule vpon the first sommons of that dreadfull day rowse vp our selues from the sleepe of negligence and sinne and without further dallying and delay fall seriously vpon the studie of our Master Christ his first lesson humilitie knowing with S. Paule that now it is the houre that we ought to ryse being called vpon by our holy mothers care Now I say euen now at this verie houre because the youngest the strongest the wisest of vs all knowes not whether the next houre will be allowed him yea or noe THE SECONDE POINTE CONSIDER the dreadfullnesse of that second coming by the astonishing forerunners of it as they are put downe by the pen of the holy Ghost Ther shall b● signes in the sunne and in the moone and the starrs and vpon the earth distresse of nations through the confusion of the sound of the sea and waues Behold the wrothfull iudge doth not yet appeare and yet the sunne is obscured the moone refuseth to afford its light the starrs fall from the heauens the earth quakes the sea rores all is in confusion on all sides to witt what was fore told by wisdosme begins to be fulfilled The round world shall fight with him against the senselesse and he will arme his creatures to the reuenge of his enemyes Affection I haue sinned against thee ô my dread lord I haue donne impiously in the sight of thee my deare father I haue committ iniquitie before the face of all thy creatures Noe wonder then they all ryse vp against me disloyall wretch that I am Alas there is nothing in me but confusion and rottennesse nothing that is able to abide the strickt tryall of thy sterne iustice vnlesse thy mylde mercy come out before to preuent it Mercy deare lord mercy Permitt not the poore soule which thou hast daigned to loue and which has noe other hope but in thee perishe in thy anger mercy mercy mercy THE THIRD POINTE. CONSIDER further the dreadfulnesse of the same coming by the wonderous effects it seemes to worke in men and Angells In the Angells for the heauenly powers goes on our text that is the Angells themselues though otherwise secure in themselues and absolutly possessed of beatitude are moued with a certaine admiration and reuerentiall feare by the apprehension of the approch of the wrothfull iudge the exactnesse of his iustice ād the multitudes of those that are to be iudged And in men since they shall euen wither away with a dreadfull expectation of what will become of them and the whole world Affection O poore sinfull man o thou who finds thy conscience ouer burdened with so many disloyalties against thy deare lord tortured with such multitudes of crymes against thy dreadfull all-sceing euer-liuing iudge Alas What will then become of thee when the verie Angells shall quake with feare the Angells who are neither guiltie of sinne or euen can sinne the Angells who alwayes performed the will of their lord the Angells who are in the sure possession of his glorie What will become of vs my soule who are guiltie of so many imperfections palpable negligences and heynous crymes makaing a short reflection vpon the course of our whole lise Resolution I will therfor iudge my selfe while there is yet tyme c. THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY And then shall the sonne of man appeare in the clouds of heauen in much power and Maiestie THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that if the signes and prodigies which fore run the coming of the all-powrefull all-sceing and most iust and wroth full iudge be so dread full with what astonishment horrour and vtter confusion must his presence needs strike sinfull man his mortall enemye who crucified him againe and againe with his vices and concupiscences and trode the sonne of God vnder foote His presence I say accōpaigned with such daunting circumstances Clouds and fogges shall inuiron him saith the Royalle Prophete and fire shall streame out before him and fire his enemyes round about while the mountaines melt like waxe before his angrie face Affection Alas who will haue assurance enough to be able to stand to see this dreadfull coming who would not sue to the mountaines to fall vpon them and hide them from so daunting an aspect Or euen pray with Iob to find protection in hell till his furie be past because the furie and anger of that man shall spare none in that day Ah my soule He sees all that hath past from the begining of the world He is most iust and will spare none he is all powerfull and none can resist his decrees It is horride to fall into the handes of a luing God Yet all this we must all stand to see How necessarie is it then to prouide in tyme Let my resolution
in him shall not be confounded for euer Hearke how comfortably he cryes to vs loose the shakles of thy necke captiue daughter of sion Why art thou worne away with sorrow for nothing were you sold and without syluer you shall be redeemed But are our proud hearts happly raysed into mountaines of presumption vpon the view of our owne vertue Downe with them vpon the sight of a God humbled fall downe groueling vpon him and protest to him since omnipotencie is become impotent as it were and lyes at our Feete miserie rottennesse wormes meate shall not dare to aspire Resolution Humbly begge of him that all weake and lowlie soules may be filled with the multitudes of the blissings he bringes downe for man and that all swollen hearts may share in the same and learne of him who is myld and humble of heart That both of them may meete with the ioyes of these blessed tymes and find rest to their soules ✚ IHS THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE FOVRTH SVNDAY IN ADVENT Prepare the wayes of our Lord. THE WORDS OF THE GOSPELL THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER how this voyce of one crying in the Deserte this holy Euangellicall preacher S. Iohn teacheth vs how worthily to prepare our selues against the coming of his and our diuine Master saying prepare the way of our Lord. And how doth he teach vs First by his example by an absolute retreate from the world to liue in a vaste wildernesse by austeritie in meate drinke and clothes secondly by his preaching the penance which he had first practised admirable humilitie and contempt of honour publikly professing himselfe to be nothing Affection None my soule is duely prepared to receiue our diuine Sauiour who doth not first renounce the world at least in affection if not in effect and exercise acts of a penitentiall life Vnlesse we doe pennance we shall all perish togeither None is fit y prepared to receiue the humble sonne of the hūble mother but he that feares not to make publike professiō of humilitie and contempt of honours with S. Iohn saying I am not Christ I am not Elias I am not the Prophete whom you seeke nay contrarily my soule we for our parts are poore miserable sinners We are not worthy that thou ô Sauiour of the world shouldst enter vndter our roofes THE SECONDE POINTE. The voyce of God was made vpon Iohn the sonne of Zacharie in the Deserte CONSIDER that it was in the Deserte that the word of God descended vpon this great Prophete that is there it was that he was replenished with diuine inspirations sacred conferences and heauenly doctrines And there it is too that we ought to heare our lord as he doth promise by O see I will leade her the sinfull soule into the wildernesse and I will speake to her heart Affection If we desire in good earnest my soule to be instructed from heauen and to haue diuinelie sweete conferences with our heauenly spouse our hearts must turne deserts that is things forsaken by the world and freely forsaking it that in solitude and silence we may truly say speake ô lord for thy seruant heares say to my soule I am thy saluation but say it so that I may heare it That good God ceases not amidst the multituds of our follics and vanities to speake to vs but it reaches but to our eares onely the noyse of the world hinders our heart to heare those heauenly inuitations come my loue my doue my spouse and thence it is we answer not as we ought my beloued is myne and I am his THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY OF ADVENT Make his pathes straight Luc. 3. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that the great kinge of heauen is daigning to come to vs and it is butt fitting that we prepare his way by making his wayes right and straight that nothing may hinder his gracious accesse to our hearts nothing doth more hinder his coming to vs then our duplicitie and crookednesse of hart our indirectnesse of intention for a double tongued mouth he doth detest but loues to meete with the simplicitie of a doue I know saith Dauid my God that thou prouest the hearts and louest simplicitie Who walkes simply walkes confidently and our lord protects him and directs his wayes Affection It is the great kinge of heauen my soule who by an excesse of goodnesse is readie to come into the earth to comfort vs to instruct vs to redeeme vs. Not now in Maiestie to fright vs but in humilitie in simplicitie in abiection in the forme of a seruant to teach vs in his owne person to be simple and right and fearing God Let euerie mountaine and hill then be humbled all lightnesse of harte be subdued all harshnesse be banished all duplicitie be corrected The humble mylde and simple lambe will onely lodge in an humble mylde and simple breast THE SECONDE POINTE. Who art thou the Gospell CONSIDFR that howeuer this question was put by the Pharisies to S. Iohn captiously it may be or out of some curiositie yet may it be profitably proposed to each one of vs for our spirituall aduantage Who art thou A Christian or one honored with the name of Christ Further who art thou An English Christian Catholike that is one who is not onelie honored with the name of Christ but also blessed for being called to suffer for that name But who art thou finally Not onely a Christian an English Catholike Christian but euen one by a singular dignation called to be the spouse of Christ Affection Good god my soule what titles of honour and dearenesse has not heauen bestowed vpon vs which haue not bene granted to thousands of others But alas may not these honours rather cause feare then ioy for as gifts are increased doe not also our accompts ryse higher By the title of Christian we are bound to be imitatours of Christ and to expresse his life in ours By English Catholikes we are pointed out as the peculiar champions of Christs truth And by spouses we ought to be intirely and without reserue his Alas haue our liues bene answearable therto Haue we not fayld in such and such thinges c. with firme resolution of amendement THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE FIRST SVNDAY AFTER THE EPIPHANIE Iesus remayned in Ierusalem and his parents knew it not Luc. 2. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that as it happened here to Marie and Iosephe so it chanceth often not onely to sinners by mortall sinne but euen to most vertuous and deuoute soules that Iesus some tyme seemes to be lost while he absents himselfe without their knowledge that is while he withdrawes for a tyme the delicious consolations of his presence to trye whether their loue be chaste that is free from selfe interest in that they loue not for any temporall commoditie or any spirituall solace but for his owne infinite goodnesse alone Nor can they oftentymes whithout much patience labour and sorrowe find him againe Affection Here in it is my soule that
Augustine though such as vowe Virginitie to God hold a more ample degree of honour and dignitie in the Church of God yet are not they without mariage for they belonge to the mariage with the whole Church wherin Christ is the spouse Affection O admirable dignitie of the Virgine where the humble handmayd is raysed to the honour of a Bride to Christ himselfe the Bridegroome whom whē she loues she is chaste whom when she touches she is pure whom when she takes in mariage she is a Virgine O supercelestial mariage from whence fidelitie and fertilitie is expected as well as in other mariages for such as breake this first faith haue damnation saith the Apostle and the happie state of Virgines assures S. Augustine is more fruitfull and fertile not to haue bigge bellies but great mynds not to haue breasts full of mylke but harts full of candour and in lieu of bringing forth earth out of their bowells they bring forth heauen by their prayers Hence issues a noble progenie puritie iustice patience mildnesse charitie followed by all her venerable traine of vertues This is the Virginns worke to be sollicitous of what belongs to God and to haue her whole conuersation in Heauen THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY CONSIDER yet a third sort of mariage wherin the whole Catholike Church that is all faithfull soules are espoused to Christe in faith hope and charitie but especially by charitie which as Queene drawes a longe with her all the powers and affections of the soule to conforme and subiect them to the pleasure of her diuine spouse making but one will and nill of two wills to witt that of God and man And this conformitie saith the deuoute S. Bernard maries the soule to God Whence results an ineffable content and pleasure and such a heate of diuine loue that the soule and all her affections are absorpt therin Affection Let the world then my soule boast as much as it will of the pleasures and contentements which it inioyes they are not like to the lawe of the Lord thy God that sweete law of loue in comparisō of which the most prosperous earthly pleasure is but vile and base The cheife Good is our Good of which Tertulian saith excellently soome goods as well as some euills bring an intolerable waight with them and most dearely and deliciously oppresse the soule Hence it was that that holie Apostle of the Indies cryed out Satis est Domine satis est It is enough ô Lord it is enough THE SECONDE POINTE CONSIDER yet a fourth sorte of Mariage which is made euery day to all kinds of faithfull soules which approche to the B. Sacrament Wherin we are made one with that diuinely deare spouse of ours not onely by charitie but euen in realitie and in verie deede we are mingled with that sacred flesh of his in that celestiall banket which he bestowes vpon vs to shew vs the excesse of his loue Whence S. Christome saith therfor it was that he ioynd himselfe with vs and mixed his body into vs to the'nd we might be come one with him as the body is ioyned to the heade for euen as one who powres melted waxe saith Cyrill into other waxe must necessarily wholy mixe the one with the other so he that receiues the body and bloud of our Lord is so ioyned with him that Christ is found in him and he in Christ Affection O excesse of goodnesse ô ineffable delightes of that most chaste and sacred mariage betwixt the kinge of heauen and poore man Here in this mariage banket is serued in the foode of Angells nay the kinge of the Angells himselfe becomes the whole feaste Nor is there neede there of any other wine then the precious bloude of the Lambe who dyed for our loue say then my soule and let all that loue and feare our Lord Iesus say with vs quoniam bonus quoniam in saeculum misericordia eius that he is infinitly good and his mercys are without end THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE THIRD SVNDAY AFTER THE EPIPHANIE If thou wilt said the Leper to our sauiour thou canst make me cleane Matt. 8. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that the poore Leper had found by a longe and painfull experience that there was noe hope of cure by the power of man all his owne and others endeuours prouing vneffectuall and therfor he wisely resolued in an humble confidence to haue recourse to him whom he knew by faith to be able to doe all that he would in heauē and in earth By adoration he acknowledges him to be God and by his words he publishes him to be all powerfull He came and adored him sayinge Lord If thou wilt thou canst and the present effects proue that his faith is powerfull and gratefull to Christ who graciously replyes I will Be thou made cleane and forth with his leprosie was made cleane Affection Our great and good Lord my soule neither wants power nor good will to cure all our infirmites if we aske as we ought If he some tyme delaye vs it is but the better to trye vs and more euidently to acquainte vs with our owne want of abilitie till he putt his powerfull hand to the worke for then our leprosie is forth with cured If he delaye vs and sometyme permitt vs for a longe space to languish and euen to be ouerspredd with our leprosie it is but the more perfectly to humble vs and throughly to cure the more dangerous desease of pride Finally if he delay the cure till we waxe more desparatly sicke it oblidges vs being at length cured the more highly to magnifie his mercy and publish his power to all men THE SECONDE POINTE. CONSIDER that there is noe stayne so deeply setled which Gods power is not able to fetch out noe leprosie of body or soule so inueterate and incurable which God with a word doth not cure Our application or addresse is onely to be looked to We must approche to the Lord of life and death as to one such with a liuely faith with an absolute confidence that with a word he can worke what he will his power being onely limited by his will as the faithfull leper plainly expresses Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me cleane Affection Be then my soule thy leprosie and other spirituall deseases neuer so peremptorie Be it that they haue growne on with thee since thy youth Seeme they rather to be another nature then natures defects yet haue but a frequent confident humble recourse to this souueraigne Physitian with a true acknowledgement of thyne owne miserable and otherwise desparate estate crying out with afirme faith O Lord if thou wilt thou canst cure all myne infirmities and infallibly in his good tyme we shall heare I will be thou made cleane THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Of the Centurion or Capitaine of an hundred Soldiers who sued to our Sauiour for the cure of his seruante THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that we may
most iustly admire him whom our Sauiour the wisdome of God seemed to admire how euer he could not indeede be subiecte to admiration to whom nothing was vnknowne His great faith being but yet a gentile then which our Sauiour testifies he found none greater in Israell His tender care of his sicke seruant whom he tearmes his child His greate humilitie iudging himselfe vnworthy to haue our Lord come to him His true sense of his power or omnipotencie who he knew could cure at any distance by his word alone saying say but onely the word and my boy shall be healed Affection Iustly I say my soule may we admire those many and great vertues in that poore gentile but much more that mercyfull Lord who first freelie gaue what he pleased afterward to admire for faith is not ours by nature but is a heauenly light sent from aboue wherby he and we are taught to loue and serue the meanest as our children or brethren humbly to deferre to our Superiours to haue high thoughts of Gods omnipotent power and with an absolute confidence to flye to his ayde in all our owne and our neighbours necessities We will therfor not so much admire as striue to imitate the good Centurion in our approches to our almightie Lord. THE SECONDE POINTE. I haue not found so great faith in Israel CONSIDER that our Sauiour makes well appeare that God is not the God of the Iewes onely but of the Gentils too For how euer the Iewes bragged that God was onely knowne in Iuda and that his name was great in Israel yet Truth reproches to them that he had not mette with so great faith in Israel as he found in that poore gentile and with a dreadfull minace leaues them in a doubtfull expectation what might become of them who esteemed themselues alone Gods chosen people with exclusion of all others saying many shall come from east and weste and shall sitt downe with Abraham Isaac and Tacob in the Kingdome of heauen but the children shall be cast out into exteriour darknesse where shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth Affection Who thinkes himselfe to stande my soule let him beware that he fall not Ther is noe assurance in mans fayling force Be our vocation neuer so holy and angell-like there is noe securitie the brightest Angells fell Seeme we to sayle neuer so prosperously yet we haue iust cause to dreade a storme and oftentymes we meete with shipwrake euen in the harbour Blessed therfor saith a holy Father is the man who is alwayes fearfull and diffident of himselfe Accursed is he who places his confidence in man If none know then who is worthy of loue or hate let vs labour the more that by good workes we may make sure our vocation and election as saith that blessed Pope S. Peter being taught that wholsome lesson by his owne fall THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE FOVRTH SVNDAY AFTER THE EPIPHANIE When he Iesus entered into the boat his Disciples followed him and loe a great tempeste arose c. Matt. 8. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that there could neuer appeare more securitie then when good Disciples followed their good Master Iesus nor hope of a more happie nauigation then when they were imbarked in the same boate with Christ And yet loe a greate tempeste arose in the sea so that the boate was couered with waues which threatened present shipwracke Affection Ah my soule let vs neuer esteeme our selues secure while we sayle on this dangerous sea of the world at noe tyme in noe place in noe companie The whole life of man is a temptation vpon earth How euer we haue the happinesse to be Christians that is to be Disciples and followers of Christ Though we haue otherwise the singular grace to be Catholike Christians and to sayle in Peters shippe where Christ is the souueraigne Pilote yet stormes often arise and we are readie to perish and perish we shall infallibly vnlesse we fixe our whole confidence as a sure anker in his power who is able to make the windes and sea obedient to his orders THE SECONDE POINTE. The boate was couered with waues but he Iesus slept CONSIDER that as our Sauiour deales here with his deare Disciples so doth he ordinarily with his dearest friends The Disciples are readie to sinke while he as though he were not concerned in their danger quietly sleepes The faithfull soule finds her selfe surrounded with all sortes of temptations which so violently make heade against her that she seemes euery moment readie to perish And yet Iesus sleeps that is leaues her to her selfe readie to be swallowed vp in those raging stormes of her poore afflicted conscience So that whether she sinkes or swimmes she scarce knowes because Iesus seemes asleepe to her Affection And yet my soule all is safe Iesus is in the boate with vs. While we remayne in his blessed companie and adheare to his ayde we may be tossed but sinke we shall not for the God that keepeth Israël shall neither slumber nor sleepe but assures vs that if we place our confidence in him he will be with vs in tribulation that he will deliuer vs and glorifie vs. For the rest it is good for vs to be thus tryed that we may learne by longe experience and neuer forgett that our strength is weaknesse that our danger is in our selfe-confidence and our assurance in the great God of all consolation Inte Domine sperabo non confundar in aeternum THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY The Disciples came to Christ and wakened him saying Lord saue vs we perish THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that as in the Disciples iust feare of perishing we ought to apprehend our owne danger in tymes of temptation so by their example we may find securitie They trust not to their owne strength or skill but run presently to Christ for ayde they crye out and awake him they acknowledge in his eares the hazard they run saue ô Lord saue vs say they we perish Affection Let vs not then my soule amidst our frequent temptations and stormes of soule fall to distrust disquiete and perplexitie of mynde nor yet hope by disputes and as it were by force of armes to vanquish them But let vs vpon the verie first rysing of such tempests imitating the Disciples run to Iesus and cast our selues into his secure bosome wherin alone is our safe sanctuarie Crye out so lowde that you may awake him that man-louer loues to be importuned and is wonne therby Tell him with all humilitie and resignation to his blessed will the danger you are in your feare of falling in your selfe with firme hope of standing by his grace saying saue ô Lord saue vs we perish THE SECONDE POINTE. Why are you fearefull ô yee of litle faith CONSIDER as well our Sauiours mylde reprehension as present deliuerie of his fearefull Disciples It is not a moderate feare that he reprehends in them which is the begining of wisdome but their infidelitie or lacke
of my future merits which he foresaw in his prescience could moue him neither for these were his owne free mercyes gifts and graces non ex operibus Not to vs then ô Lord not to vs but to thyne owne name giue glorie It was thy charitie moued thee to thinke vpon vs. Thy all powerfull will drew vs out of nothing thy owne graces made vs gratefull to thy heauenly eyes For of him and in him and by him are all things To him be glorie for euer Amen Must we conclude with S. Paule THE SECONDE POINTE. He sent them into the vineyard CONSIDER how that great God who out of his infinite goodnesse and chartie had thoughtes of mercy for me from all eternitie did in tyme as his prouidence had appointed rayse me out of the abisse of nothinge and gaue me this noble beeing capable to knowe feare loue and serue him in his vineyard and to gayne the day pennie that is eternall felicitie Affection O my soule what a fauour of preference is it to haue had a light sent from heauen to witt the light of faith which was not granted to all men therby to haue accesse to the great God who inhabites an inaccessible light whom none knowes but feares nor knowes and feares as being infinitly powerfull but he also ought to loue because he is infinitly good or good nesse it selfe serue as being his creature whose seruice is true libertie whom to serue is truly to raigne Let vs therfor my soule know that this is our whole businesse here belowe to feare loue and serue that good God who without hauing any neede of vs made vs to inioy himselfe eternally THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Hauing made couenant with the workemen for a penie a day c. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER further how graciously that Almightie maker of all thinges dealt with man in this proceding who though he had absolute power ouer all his creatures by right of creation and might ther-for most iustly haue exacted all their labours as they had all their abilities and euen all that they are from his free gift yet would not his goodnesse make vse of his prerogatiue with man by exacting all his labours as due to him from his slaues but pleased to couenante with him for a reward or hire as with a free man Affection All is thyne all is thyne indeede my deare Lord my God and my Creatour absolutly and without reserue as issuing freely out from the drayneles sourse of thy bountie Let all be thyne too by my free choyce and surrender all my words all my thoughtes all my workes and by how much more all being thyne owne by iustice thou yet daignest to spurre on my slowenesse by hope of rewards by so much more feruently make me spring after thee for pure lou'es sake because thou art infinitly good and louely and vnspeakably worthy of the loue of all men and Angells THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME DAY THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that English Catholikes are not onely called to the Knowledge of God and to worke in his vineyard but further to a higher degree of honour to be the speciall champions of his truth To you saith S. Paule in the way of congratulation to his deare Philipians it is giuen for Christ not onely to beleeue in him but also to suffer for him Thus doe Monarkes vse to honour their commanders when out of the confidence they haue of their fidelitie worth and valour putt them in the greatest places and occasions of danger Affection Let vs not therfor my soule here after looke vpon persecutions tribulations and temptations as afflictions but speciall fauours from heauen and esteeme them all ioy with sainte Iames since S. Chrystome and Theophilacte assure vs that the gift of suffering for Christ is greater then the gift of raysing the deade and working of wonderfull miracles for by this last say they I become a debter to God but by that other God becomes my debter O admirable thinge It s he who giues me the grace to suffer and yet by this he himselfe be comes my debter Let vs therfor say with that admirable seruant of Christ S. Teresa aut pati aut mori lets either suffer or dye that is the sure and royall roade which our Capitaine Christ tooke to his owne Kingdome THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR SEXAGESIME SVNDAY The sower went out to sowe his seede Luc 8. And it fell by the way side THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that though the seede which was sowen was noe lesse then the word of God as our Sauiour himselfe declares to his Disciples saying the seede is the word of God in that his diuine commentarie yet three partes of it by the peruersitie of man falls fruitlesse vpon the ground to witt one parte of that good seede fell by the way side that is vpon harts which lye open exposed as a through-fare to all the rumours follies and vanities of the world whence it s troden as it were vnder foote and so neuer getts tyme to take any roote at all Affection Is it not true my soule that it often happens that when the word of God is either proposed to the eare of our body by the preacher or to the eares of our harte by diuine inspirations we haue noe eares to heare or els that hearing we heare not that is we vnderstand not because our hartes are alreadie prepossessed and wholy taken vp by wordly dreames and imaginations so that there is noe place left for the word of God O what pittie it is to let that seede of heauen sent vs to produce the fruites of eternall glorie be negligently lost Le ts therfor emptie our harts of such pernicious toyes that we may truly say speake ô Lord because thy seruant heareth THE SECONDE POINTE And other some fell vpon the Rocke CONSIDER that an other parte of that good seede fell vpon the rocke which hauing the superficies or out-side of some good earth is capable to receiue the seede and to make it sprout out too but yet so hastily that it takes noe firme roote and thence as soone withers as appeares So it fares with those who heare and receiue the word of God with ioy and are often thetby moued to compunction and teares yet their harts being rockie it makes noe great impression therin and thence vpon the first temptation or difficultie they easily forgett that they were moued at all Affection Doe we happly my soule perceiue our hartes so hardened that they are litle apte to conceiue this good seede Despaire not for all that Gods word is a hammer that is able to split rockes in peeces His grace is powerfull enough to make the soyle fertile be it neuer sostonie and barren Pray hard then that these harts of rockes may be turned into harts of flesh supple and apte to receiue good seede saying with S. Augustine giue me ô Lord that conquering grace which is repulsed by noe hard harte
not temptation then ô my soule be looked vpon hereafter as an occasion of sollicitude vexation and desolation but rather as a profitable exercise of vertue humilitie and ioy according to that of blessed S. Iames esteeme it all joy when you fall into many and diuersitie of temptations The seruant is not greater then the master it s he that hath giuen vs an example and his will is that we should follow it that by this meanes his vertue humitie may be obteyned and the necessitie of a continuall dependance of his assistance may be learnt THE SECONDE POINTE. WHEN WAS IESVS TEMPTED When he had fasted fortie dayes and fortie nightes c. the tempter approched c. Matt. 4. CONSIDER that Iesus in whom there neither was nor could be any guilt of sinne was then tempted when he was imployed in most holy workes and holy circumstances to witt in fasting prayer watching and that too euen in solitude in the wildernesse in that sacred retreate of his To teache vs that we neuer ought to esteeme our selues secure from the diuells assaults be we neuer so well imployed and in the best circumstances imaginable Affection Let vs not fayle my soule to fast watch and pray with as much retirement from the world as we are able as being the best meanes to strengthen vs against temptation but let vs not amidst those holy exercises promesse our selues securitie peace or truce The Diuell sleepes not but roues about seeking whom he may deuoure And most assaults those whom he finds best imployed in the Quire at their Meditation in frequenting the holy communion as hauing least hopes to bring such pious soules to his seruitude yet be not perplexed my soule he durst aduenture vpon Christ himselfe but he putt him to confusion as we shall also doe by fixing a firme faith in his singular mercy and goodnes who put him to slight THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME DAY How was Iesus tempted If thou be the sonne of God command that these stones be made breade Matth. 4. CONSIDER that the Diuell tempted Iesus in three kinds of temptations most dangerous and detestable First with mouinge his heauenly father to worke miracles as though he had noe other meanes to feede his people then by turning stones into breade secondly by despaire in castinge himselfe downe head longe Thirdly by riches and honours boldly promising to giue all wheras indeede he could performe nothing at all of his proude promesse Affection Let vs then my soule in imitation of our deare Sauiours sufferances and remptations and with an absolute submission to his good pleasure in what ere he may permitt to fall vpon vs let vs I say comfortably and couragiously say with the Psalmist trye me ô Lord and proue me My drosse must be burnt away to be come pure Gold fitr for the Tabernacle whether it be with vaine suggestions of desiring to know more then we ougt to know or with the ambition of the honours and riches of this world or finally by representations of the most horride despaire in Gods mercy c. Or the most base impurities imaginable desiring onely to heare with S. Paule my grace is sufficient for thee with resolutiō to begge it earnestly and without intermission THE SECONDE POINTE How did Iesus ouercome the Diuell Not in bread alone doth man liue c. Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God c. Auant Satan the Lord thy God thou shalt adore Matth. 4. CONSIDER how our sweete Sauiour hath not onely giuen vs an example of humble patient suffering of the Diuels assaults in almost all manner of temptations in all tymes places and circumstances but he doth also in his owne words teach vs how to make resistance and how to ouer come It is not in bread alone that man liues thou shall not tempt the Lord ihy God ¿ but thou shalt adore him Affection It is not then my soule in confidence of our owne vertue strength which alone will be found verie weaknesse that we are to incounter with and vanquish the Diuell but in the onely power and mercy of God by putting on a firme faith that we serue a Master who is able if he please to secure vs and confound him But if his blessed will be to leaue vs to that hard tryall his blessed name be praysed for euer the seruant may well follow the master hauing alwayes in our mynds for our stronge defence the diuels assaults Thou shalt adore thy Lord thy God and serue him alone THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE SECONDE SVNDAY IN LENT He brought them to wit Peter Iames and Iohn into a high mountaine and was transfigured before them Matth. 17. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that as all who are alreadie saued from the begining of the world or shall be saued to the end therof were to be saued by faith in Christ it was most necessarie that the said faith should be most firmely established His humanitie was alreadie made too too credible by his natiuitie by his teares by his bloode in his circumcision by his suffering of heate and cold c. It onelie rested then that his diuinitie should be made good by some conuincing arguments And to demonstrate this he ascends into the Mount Thabor with Peter Iames and Iohn and is transfigured in their sight that is he takes another forme vpon him his face appearing as resplendant as the sunne to giue them and vs a scantling or foretaste of his glorie Affection Must we not needs confesse then ô my soule that the good Master of the vineyard leaues nothinge vndone to his vineyard which might conduce to its aduantage We haue found him man he hath conuersed amongst vs like one of vs. We haue heard his cryes we haue seene his teares we haue beheld his blood But now we see the face of the same man as bright as the sunne transporting the harts of the three Apostles with heauenly rauishments We must needs then with the Apostles firmely beleeue in hart and professe with our mouthes that he is truly the sonne of the liuing God whom we hartily adore THE SECONDE POINTE CONSIDER that the prouidence and goodnesse of God euidences this most important truth of Christs diuinitie beyond all exception by causing it to be testified by all kinds of most reprochlesse witnesses By the whole old lawe in the person of Moyses the Law-giuer By the prophecies in Elias that diuine Prophete By the new lawe or Gospell in Peter Iames and Iohn finally by God almightie himselfe by a voyce out of à bright cloud which ouershawed them the Apostles saying with much terrour to them who fall downe vpon their faces This is my beloued sonne in whom I am well pleased Affection If according to S. Paule My soule in the mouth of two or three witnesses euery truth shall stand how firmely and inuiolably ought this truth to stande engrauen in all Christian hartes which hath such clouds of witnesses to attest it where young and
that he chuses rather to want his owne proper worshippe sacryfice then that thy brother should want thy loue Thy offeringes of thyne austerities thy prayers thy communions will neuer proue gratefull to him as longe as thou willingly harbours grudging in thy breast against that poore brother of thyne for whom through loue he dyed The Meditations for this 6. sunday are the same with the 4. sunday in Lent pag. 100. THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE SEAVENTH SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY Take great heede of false Prophetes who come to you in the clothing of sheepe but inwardly are rauening wolues Matt. 7. CONSIDER that we oft proue false Prophetes or teachers to our selues and consequently our owne seducers while we vse the fawning perswasion of our owne vertue and goodnesse drawen from outward apparances from the barke leaues or flowres that is from the clothing of sheepe Wheras we are taught by Wisdome it selfe that the true and certaine decernement of solide from seeming vertues is placed in the fruites they produce that is the subduing of the great sinne pride the mortification of our passions Finally the vanquishing of our selfe loue selfwill and selfe interest Affection Le ts then my soule diligently and impartially examine our selues in pointe of our aduancement in these vertues and so we shall beware indeede of false Prophetes and be sure not to proue selfe-seducers Doe we make it our businesse to subdue pride which doth then most assault vs when we most aduance in vertue Are the passions which we obserue most to domineare in vs brought lowe Is selfe loue and self-will those pernicious sourses of all our miserie vanquished Is selfe interest subiected to the common good Humbly hope then in our Lord that all goes well with vs. If not knowe that vertue is not yet solidly rooted in vs. THE SECONDE POINTE. Euerie good tree yealdeth good fruites and the euil euill fruites Matt. 7. CONSIDER the good or bad fruites of the tree of our harte and thence we shall be able by the Euangelicall maxime to decerne whether If we meete with grapes and figues that is with mild and meeke thoughts words and comportments know for certaine the tree is good they are not the fruites of thornes and brambles marrie if we are true or false teachers or guides to our selues while we seeke for grapes and figues we meete with thornes and thistels that is with distaynefull bitter and sharpe thoughtes words and behauiour know that the roote is depraued the fruites viciated they are the productions of the badd tree which cannot bring out good fruite Affection Doe we my soule fast watch pray much doe we discipline vse great austerities and communicate often They are indeede excellent meanes for the produceing good fruites yet are they not for all that the fruites themselues They are certainely the clothings of the sheepe yet may a wolfe lye vnder them Our fruite saith S. Aug. is charitie see then whether coming from ours prayers c. we finde our selues patient benigne without enuie without peruersitie not puffed vp not ambitious not seeking our owne not prouoking to anger not thinking euill not reioycing vpon iniquitie but rejoycing at truth suffering all thinges beleeuing all thinges hopeing all thinges bearing all thinges and remayne assured thence that our hart is right and that we are happily tendinge towards our Beatitude THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY Euery tree which brings not forth good fruite shall be cutt downe and cast into the fire THE FIRST POINT CONSIDER that euery reasonable creature of what qualitie soeuer is a vine or tree planted in the vineyearde or orcharde of Christ Iesus against whom this dreadfull doome is pronounced it shall be cutt downe and cast into the fire in case it answer not to his expectation but in lieu of true grapes yealde nothinge but wilde grapes that is in lieu of true and solide vertues thinke to pay with apparances and in lieu of the sweete and agreeable fruites of charitie yeald nothing but bitternesse animosities and auersions amongst the citizens of heauen and Gods domestikes who should but all haue one hart and one soule Affection Let vs daylie and diligently my soule examine what fruites this tree of our hart produceth It importeth noe lesse then a blessed or cursed eternitie If sowre grapes bitternesse of hart enuie emulation dissension ah then Truth affirmes it shall be cutt downe and cast into the fire Alas it was not planted so that such fruites should be expected from it It was planted by the hand of God watered which the pretious bloud of Chr. let nothing then but the sweet fruites of Christianitie proceede from it THE SECONDE POINTE He that doth the will of my Father which is in heauen he shall enter into the Kingdome of heauen CONSIDER that here the wisdome of heauen in a few words layes vs downe the abridgement of all perfection and the blessed imitation of his whole life and passion to witt an absolute and louing resignation to the holy will of his heauenly father as well in all that he did as all that he suffered I come not saith that sweete Sauiour to doe myne owne will but the will of my father who is in heauen the thinges that please him I doe alwayes not as I will but as thou wilt Fawning words and Lord Lord may please fooles who desire to be flattered but the actuall complying with the will of God is onely gratefull in his eyes who sees hartes Affection Let vs then my soule absolutly and for euer renounce our owne will that disturber of our life and depriuer of our rest peace and true libertie and yeild it vp into the secure guidance of Gods holy will hauing alwayes vpon all occasions in all our doinges and sufferings in our harte and mouth thy blessed will be done my deare Lord and Master who best knowes what is most behoofull for me I am most willingly in thy holy hands turne me and winde me when thou wilt where thou wilt and how thou wilt thatthy will and myne may be but one Represse in me ô Lord that vnhappie libertie by which I am able to will any other thinge then what thou willest THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE EIGTH SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY There was a certaine rich man who had a Bailife Luc. 16. CONSIDER that this rich man was God the greate Maker and Master of all the earth and the Bailife man euery one of vs be we Masters or seruants rich or poore who hold all that we haue of that great Land-Lord the goods of our body the goods of our soule and those of fortune all is his and all proceeds from his bountifull hand we haue the stewardshippe of them to worke therby our saluation but the propertie remaynes still his Affection Let vs not then my soule mistake our selues apprehending that we are Lords and Masters while we are but indeede farmers and remoueable at pleasure of what seemes to be ours Be it farre from vs to vaunt
Christians know but too much to doe solitle Ignorance may some tymes excuse but luke warmenesse idlenesse and negligence can neuer We know what a deare price was putt downe at Ierusalem for our ransome and what an inestimable reward is prepared for vs in the heauenly Ierusalem We knowe what endlesse torments are threatened if we liue not according to the knowledge and light of faith we haue We know that this day is yet ours an acceptable tyme a day of saluation wherin more may be done for a sith a teare a contrite and humbled harte then can be purchaced by the prayers of all the saintes in heauen this day of our life being once past Affection And is it yet possible my soule that after all these wholsome and certaine knowledges we still liue in a cold carelessnesse as tho there were nothing after this life either to be feared or hoped for Is it possible that we dare idly spend this day of ours lent vs to worke our saluation in and still make bold to take new dayes with God which were neuer promised vs for our couersion Is there any of vs so resolute as would not weepe were he assured that within three dayes he should be cited before the dreadfull Tribunall of a wrothfull Iudge and yet while we haue but one daye we can call ours or one present houre according to S. Paule we dare passe it in laughing languishing sleeping c. which leade to death and be like those hazardous soules who spend their dayes in delights and in a moment descende into Hell THE SECONDE POINTE. Because thou hast not knowne the tyme of thy visitation CONSIDER that our B. Sauiour declares that the cause of the vtter destruction of Ierusalem was because they did not know that is through ingratitude obstinacie and blindnesse they acknowledged not the speciall fauour of hauing the son of God sent to them in person to visite them to make them heare his sacred word from his owne mouth to worke multitudes of miracles in their sight c. Affection Alas my soule I feare we know but too much to performe so litle as we doe Ah! the seruant who knowes the will of his Lord and doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes And dare we deney that we knowe his will to be our sanctitie and that we ought to be perfect as our heauenly Father is perfect and yet how coldly doe we creepe on in that way Haue we not frequently had the honour of his heauenly visites heard his sugerred words and experienced in our deade soules the miracles of his grace Ah my soule let vs diligently call to mynde the tymes of those gracious visitations with the thankfulnesse of our whole hartes and singe those sweete mercyes for euer and euer THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE TENTH SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY The Pharisie standing prayed thus with himselfe Luc. 18. CONSIDER in this Parable the true discription of a proud Petitioner or rather of one that goes not so much to the Church to pray as to prayse himselfe He gaue God thankes indeede but with taking a vaine complaceance in his giftes esteeming himselfe so rich that he asked noe more nay he euen insulted at the poore publicane who asked He is not like the rest of men excepting none extortioners vniust adulterers nor is he like that publican wherin he addes rashe iudgement to his pride In fine halfe the lawe is but declining from euill and all that if you beleeue him he has performed Affection Beware my soule of this proud prayer which prouokes Gods wroth vpon vs. What haue we of grace or nature which we haue not receiued and if they be Gods gifts why doe we vainely glorie in them as though we had not receiued them Why doe we glorie in them and preferre our selues before poore sinners whom we looke upon with disdaigne who are happly farre better then we in the sight of God Let such as stand looke that they fall not Let our eyes be fixed vpon our owne defects leauing God to iudge our neighbour to whom he stands or falls THE SECONDE POINTE. I fast twice a weeke I giue tythes of all I possesse c. CONSIDER that pride still ascends and gaynes ground The Pharisie had alreadie in his owne esteeme freed himselfe from all stayne of sinne what rests for his pride but to preach his owne vertues that so Christian iustice might appeare accomplished in him I faste twice a weeke saith he I giue tithes of all I possesse not of the fruites of the earth onely according to the prescript of the lawe but euen of all without exception Affection Looke vpon this vaine boasting my soule with horrour and carefully striue to auoyde that dangerous shelfe of presumption vpon which so many apparently deuoute soules perish What euer good workes we doe how vertuous resolutions soeuer we make finde we neuer so much feruour facilitie and spirituall delight in the practise of vertue and goodnesse let vs still distruste in our selues hartily acknowledging that we are nothing we haue nothing we can doe nothing of our selues not so much as thinke one good thought but all our sufficiencie is from God hauing all-wayes in our mouthes with the holy Church Deus in adiutorium meum intende Domine ad adiunandum me festina THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY The Publican standing a farre off would not so much as lift vp his eyes towards heauen THE FIRST POINT CONSIDER in this poore Publican the perfect picture of a true penitent He stands a farre off as iudging himselfe vnworthy to come neere the Altar he dares not so much as lift vpp his eyes to heauen because shame and confusion had couered his countenance to haue offended so great a Maiestie he knockes his breast where sinne was conceiued and seemes to take reuenge of himselfe He beseeches God to be mercyfull to him a sinner exposing his miserie onely for Gods mercy to magnifie it selfe vpon Affection Let vs not my soule be ashamed to learne of this poore publicane what dispositions we ought to bringe with vs when we goe to sue to the dreadefull maiestie of God for remission of our sinnes Nay rather let vs blush that after so longe practise in spiritualitie we fall short of that poore sinner after so much light so many heauenly inspirations so many helpes and assistances which he neuer had And yet while our eyes lye open to euery distraction his with confusion are fixed vpon the ground not daring to looke vpon the heauens he takes reuenge vpon the breaste wherin sinne was conceiued and makes humbly confessed miserie alone pleade for mercy THE SECONDE POINTE. Be mercyfull to me a sinner CONSIDER the contrarie effects of the farre contrarie proceedings of the proude Pharisie and humble Publican The Pharisie came with his hart full swolne with proud iustice and returned with his hands emptie The publican came loaden with humble iniustice and an emptie hart and he returnes with
to our selues too to be dying or deade in spirit whilst in truth and in the neuer fayling sight of God we are in perfect health and doe but onely slumber and a litle forgett our selues Or els if being truly deade through infirmitie we presently run to Iesus for succour while we are in his hands in whom all thinges doe liue he being indeede resurrection and life we cannot be said so much to be deade as to sleepe for a while till he interpose his powerfull hand to rayse vs to our spirituall life againe Affection Alas my soule the litle skill we haue to discerne betweene suggestion deliberation and consent causes in vs more doubts then deathes more fearfull apprehensions then true crymes Be our harte brim-full of disloyall and abominable representations they are but yet suggestions none can auoyde them they want deliberation they want consent the mayde is not yet deade this infirmitie is not to death but to Gods glorie But doth suggestion begett pleasure and pleasure procure deliberate consent through infirmitie and ignorance yet is she not irrecouerably or finally deade nor is this varie death to death since presently she has recourse to Christ for helpe who interposeth his hand and suffers her not to be brused in her fall but teacheth her therby her owne weaknesse and miserie his power and mercy by which alone she sees she is able to stand THE SECONDE MEDITATION FOR THE SAME SVNDAY And behold a woman who was troubled with an issue of bloud twelue yeares came behind him THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER with what dispositions this poore woman came to our Sauiour And first tho we may easily conceiue that twelue yeares sufferance of that wasting desease had brought her lowe enough yet she with as much courage of mynde as weaknesse of body pressed through the thronge to gettneere Christ Secondly she approched with as much modestie humilitie and vnderualuing of her selfe as high conceipt of his power and Maiestie before whose face she would not presume to present her selfe but onely came behind him to touch him c. Affection O my soule let vs place the example of this poore woman before our eyes And let vs but vse the same care courage modestie abiect conceipt of our selues and high esteeme of God for the cure of our spiritual infirmities be they not of twelue yeares grouth onely but euen farr more inueterate and we may certainly harbour in our soules many comfortable hopes that our care courage modestie abiect conceipt of our selues and high esteeme of God will be agreeable in his diuine sight thar he will looke vpon them with pittie and say to vs as he did to her take a good harte daughter thy faith hath made the safe and the woman became whole from that houre THE SECONDE POINTE. She said within her selfe if I shall touch onely his garment I shall be safe CONSIDER further two other dispositions which this good woman brought with her To witt a huge esteeme of Christ his power and an vnspeakable confidence in his goodnesse The first plainely appeares in that she dares venture her cure in the onely touching not of himselfe but euen of any thinge which toucheth him to witt the verie hemme of his garments And the seconde is manifested in these few confident words If I shall touch onely the hemme of his garment I shall be safe Affection Alas my soule when we compare our cold confidence to the great faith of this good woman we may well say we beleeue ô Lord yet helpe our incredulitie and increase this deade faith of ours For loe she neither couets to speake to Christ nor to haue him speake to her neither to touch him nor to be touched by him but onely in silence to touche the hemme of his garment and she is presently cured O conquering modestie O soule speaking silence Thou haste a more facile accesse to him who heares hartes then the lowdest importunities of those too sollicitous and perplexed soules who seeme to endeuour as it were by force of armes to obteyne their requestes My soule le ts onely humbly hope in our Lord and he will giue vs the desires of our harte THE FIRST MEDITATION FOR THE XXIV SVNDAY AFTER WHITSVNDAY When you shall see the abomination of desolation which according to Daniel shall appeare in the Temple c. Matt. 24. THE FIRST POINTE. CONSIDER that by the abomination of desolation which Daniel foretold was meant the deplorable destruction of Ierusalem by Titus and Vespasianus and by that againe the dismale conflagration of the vniuersall world in the last day when Christ shall come to iudge the same in great power and maiestie But by these two againe the day of the accursed eternitie is pointed out where there shall be weeping wayling and gnashing of teeth for euer The first is past with extreame horrour and disaster to the incredulous Iewe the seconde shall passe with vtter consternation both to Iewe and gentile but the third shall proue the abomination and desolation indeede among the damned and shall neuer passe Affection Great my soule astonishing greate was the desolation of those accursed Iewes when they sawe the Temple of God that wonder of the world vtterly destroyed and beheld Ierusalem that lady of all nations buried in her owne ruines her inhabitants famished and buchered finally her matrons deuowring the fruite of their owne wombes Greater yet will it be when we shall behold not Ierusalem alone but the whole world on fire at the day of Doome when the powers of heauen shall quake with reuerentiall feare and men shall wither away with dreade But greatest of all when we behold the day of the cursed eternitie which shall neuer haue end I conceiue in mynde a thousand yeares I adde to those a thousand thousand yeares yea as many thousands and millions as piles of grasse on the earth or sands in the sea And yet I haue nothing comparable to eternitie O Eternitie Eternitie Alas how rarely thou are considered by miserable man THE SECONDE POINTE. When you shall see the abomination of desolation standing in the holy place to witt in the Temple c. CONSIDER that the abomination of desolation which Daniel foretold was in particular the idolatrous erecting of the statues of Caesar and Adrian the Emperours in the Temple of Ierusalem But the abomination of desolation wherin we are all more concerned as being of farre more danger to each of vs is that of the sinners setting vp the Idoles of pride couetousnesse luxurie in the liuing Temples of God to witt in the hart wherin the holy Ghost should inhabite and raigne Affection O my soule what a strange peruersitie is this so to prophane the liuing Temple of the Almightie Mans harte was made by God capable of God for God in whom a lone it is able to find rest while the holy Ghost doth inhabite it as his Temple But alas what agreement hath the Temple of God with the base Idolls we sett vp There