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A06447 The sinners guyde A vvorke contayning the whole regiment of a Christian life, deuided into two bookes: vvherein sinners are reclaimed from the by-path of vice and destruction, and brought vnto the high-way of euerlasting happinesse. Compiled in the Spanish tongue, by the learned and reuerend diuine, F. Lewes of Granada. Since translated into Latine, Italian, and French. And nowe perused, and digested into English, by Francis Meres, Maister of Artes, and student in diuinitie.; Guía de pecadores. English Luis, de Granada, 1504-1588.; Meres, Francis, 1565-1647. 1598 (1598) STC 16918; ESTC S108893 472,071 572

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Remember also all the commendations of thys Vertue before sette downe of vs and howe greatly it is commended of God For if there be a liuely desire in thee to please God wilt thou not endeuour to performe thys one thing so acceptable vnto him Consider what the loue of one kinsman is to another for the onely participation of flesh and blood which is betweene them and let it shame thee if the grace of the spirituall vnion be not as forcible in thee as carnall parentage or kindred If thou shalt say that in this there is a communion and a participation in one and the selfe same roote and in the blood of eyther consider howe much more noble that coniunction and communion is which is betweene the faythfull as the Apostle showeth while we haue all the same Father the same mother the same Lorde the same baptisme the same hope the same fayth the same meate and the same spirit who quickneth vs. We haue all the same Father GOD the Church our mother and Christ Iesus our Lord. We haue one fayth which is that supernaturall light of which we all pertake and which seuereth vs and maketh vs differ frō all other Nations one hope which is the very glory of the heauenly inhearitance in which wee all shall be of one hart and one mind We haue one Baptisme by which we are all adopted the sonnes of the same father made one anothers brethren We haue one and the selfe same spirituall meate euen the blessed body of Christ Iesus which incar●ateth vs together and maketh vs one with him no otherwise then as one loafe is made of diuers cornes and one wine of many grapes Besides all thys we participate of one and the selfe-same spirit which is the holy Ghost who dwelleth in all the soules of the faythfull whether it be by faith or by fayth and grace together quickning and sustaining vs in this life If the members of the same body albeit hauing diuers duties and functions and differing also in forme doe so tenderly and mutually loue one another because they liue by one and the selfe same reasonable soule how much more mutually ought faythfull Christians to loue one another who are made aliue by that Diuine Spirit who by how much he is more noble by so much also he is more powerfull to knit and vnite those together in whom he dwelleth If onely the kinred of flesh blood can procure so great loue between kinsfolke how much more shall so great an vnitie procure it and the participation and communion of so noble and excellent things Let that notable rare example of that singuler loue wherewith Christ hath loued vs neuer slip out of thy minde vvho hath loued vs so strongly so sweetly so graciously so perfectly not for any profit or neede to himselfe not for any merrit of ours that we being strengthened by so noble an example and bound by so great a benefit may forth-with prepare our selues and as much as lyeth in vs dispose our selues to loue our neighbour with such loue that we may satisfie and obserue that commaundement which our Sauiour Iesus hath giuen vnto vs and so commended vnto vs when he ascended to his Father left thys earth saying This is my commaundement that yee loue one another as I haue loued you Of that which man oweth vnto God CHAP. XVI AFter that we haue showne and declared what we owe to our selues and to our neighbour now we will set down what we owe vnto God This is the chiefest and noblest part of Christian iustice and righteousnes vpon which three Theologicall vertues doe attend Fayth Hope and Charity which haue God for their obiect with that vertue which of Diuines is called Religion whose obiect is the Diuine worship A man shall satisfie all the bonds and obligations which are contayned vnder this vertue if towards God he hath such an hart as a sonne hath towards his father For euen as a man shall satisfie content himselfe if he hath the hart of a good Iudge and his neighbour if he hath the hart of a mother so after a certaine manner of speaking he shall satisfie God if he loue him with such an hart as a sonne is wont to loue his father for it is one of the especiall functions and operations of the Spirit of Christ to giue to man such an hart towards God Now therfore consider diligently what the hart of a sonne is towards his father what is his loue his feare his reuerence his obedience towards him and the zeale of his fathers honour how he serueth him freely with what affiance and boldnes he runneth vnto him in all his needs how patiently he beareth his correction and chasticement with all other duties and obseruances Of such an hart and mind be thou towards God and thou shalt absolutely fulfill this part of iustice and righteousnes To prepare and procure such an ha●t nine vertues seeme especially necessary vn●o me the first and principall of which is loue the second feare and reue●ence the third trust and confidence the fou●th 〈◊〉 of the honour of God the fift a pure intent in the ●●●rcise of the Di●ine worship the six● prayer and refuge to God in all needs and necessities the seauenth thanksgiuing for Diuine benefits the eight obedience and conformity of our will to Gods will the ninth humility patience in all scourges and tribulations which God sendeth vnto vs. According to this order the first and the especiall thing that we ought to doe is to loue God after that manner as he hath commaunded himselfe to be loued that is with all the hart with all the soule and with all our strength so that whatsoeuer is in man it is to worship and embrace God according to his kind the vnderstanding by meditating vpon him the will by louing him the affections by inclining the●selues vnto that which his loue requireth the strength and vigour of all the members sences by exercising themselues in those things which his loue hath appointed The second thing that is required after this holy loue is feare which springeth of this loue for by how much more we loue any one by so much we feare that we doe not onely not lose him but also that we doe not offend him This is manifest in the loue of a good sonne towards his father and of a wife towards her husband who by how much she more tenderly loueth him so much the more diligently she endeuoureth least any thing be found in the house that may offend her husband This feare is the keeper of innocency and therefore it is necessary that it take deepe rooting in our harts which thing the Prophet Dauid long agoe desired of God when hee sayde Pierce through my flesh with thy feare for I am afrayde of thy iudgments It was not inough for this most holy King to haue feare planted in his hart but also he
before of vs the power and force of the cause is knowne by the effects and work and by the power force the Essence is knowne What maner of power shall it be from whence so great a worke proceeded and if this power be such and so great what an one and howe incomprehensible is that Essence which is knowne by that power This contemplation without all doubt doth farre exceed all humane reach In this we must further consider that all these excellent and great workes not onely as they are but as they might haue beene are as though they were not in the viewe of that diuine power yea after an infinite manner they are lesser for that is infinitely greater to which this power doth extend it selfe Who then will not be astonished considering of the greatnes of such an Essence and of such a power which although a man cannot see with his externall eyes yet he may make a most certaine coniecture and gather of the foresaid reason how great it is how incomprehensible This wonderfull immensitie of God that great Schooleman Thomas Aquinas doth show in his Breuiarie of Diuinitie by this example We see sayth he in things corporall that by how much any thing is more excellent by so much also it is greater in quantitie for we see that the element of the water is greater then the earth and the ayre greater then the water and the fire then the ayre furthermore the first or lowest heauen is greater then the element of fire the second heauen greater thē the first and the third then the second and after the same manner by ascending euen to the tenth Spheare yea euen to that heauen which is aboue all the Spheares whose greatnes is incomparable That any one may plainly see if he haue any consideration how little the Globe and roundnes of the earth and water be if they be compared with the heauens The Astrologers also say that the whole circumference of the earth and water are but as a pricke or a poynt in comparison of heauen which they proue manifestly by their demonstrations For although the circle of the heauen be deuided into the twelue signes of the Zodiacke through which once in a yeere the Sun doth runne yet in eyther Horizon onely sixe are seene for the bignes and standing of the earth dooth take vp and possesse no more place of heauen then a leafe of paper or a tablet will being placed and sette in the Center of the world from whence the compasse of the heauen may be seene without let or impediment Seeing therefore that that heauen which is aboue all the Spheares which is the chiefest and the noblest body of the world is of such an inestimable magnitude aboue all bodies we may easily vnderstand sayth Thomas how God who is without any circumscription the chiefest greatest and best of all things as well of things corporall as spirituall who also is the maker of them ought must exceed all things with a certaine infinite magnitude not in quantitie for he is no body but in excellencie and noblenesse of his most perfect Essence But that we may returne from whence we are digressed after the same manner we may search in all other things how great and of what condition be the magnitudes perfections of this Lord. For it is necessary that they be such as his Essence is Ecclesiasticus confesseth that where he speaketh of Gods mercy According to his greatnes saith he so is his mercy of such sort are all the rest of his perfections Such is his goodnes such is his benignitie maiestie gentlenes wisedome sweetnes noblenes beautie omnipotencie and to be briefe such is his iustice He therefore is infinitely good infinitely sweet infinitely amiable and woorthy whom all creatures should obey feare and reuerence insomuch that if mans hart could containe infinite loue and feare and infinite obedience and reuerence all that should be obliged by the bond and rule of iustice to the dignitie and excellencie of this Lord. For if as euery one is more worthy more excellent so greater reuerence is due vnto him it followeth that seeing the excellencie of God is so infinite that also infinite reuerence is due vnto him Heereupon is inferred that all that which is wanting to our loue and reuerence whereby we doe not come to that measure is therefore wanting because it is indebted to a dignitie of such greatnesse Which thing seeing it is so how great I pray thee is that debt which this onelie title although there were no other doth request of vs in the loue obedience of this Lord What I pray thee will he loue who doth not loue so great a goodnesse What will hee feare who doth not feare so great a Maiestie Whom will hee serue who will not attend vpon such a Lord For what is thy will made if not to loue and embrace that which is good If then he be the chiefest good what is the cause that our will doth not loue embrace him aboue all that is called God And if it bee so heynous an euill not to loue or feare his Lord aboue all things what wil it be not to esteeme or regard him Who would haue euer supposed that the malice of man would haue come to so great impietie Neuerthelesse to that height of peruersitie they are come that for a little beastly pleasure or for a little honour or for a small gaine and filthy lucre doe offend and contemne so great a goodnesse O blindnes to be deplored ô insensiblenes more then bestiall ô deuillish rashnes and presumption What doth not he deserue who dareth such things with what punishment with what kind of torture shall the contempt of so great a maiestie be worthily satisfied It is certaine that it shall be punished with no lesser torment then that which is prepared for such an offence that is that whosoeuer hee be that contemneth God shall be tormented in hell fire euerlastingly and yet neither shall he worthily be punished This then is the first Title which bindeth vs to the loue and seruice of this Lord which bond is so great that all bonds by which by any manner of meanes in thys world we are bound to any person eyther for his excellency or for his perfection are vnworthy the name of bonds if they be compared with this For euen as the perfections of all other things being compared with the diuine are no perfections so neither the bonds which by reason of their perfections and excellencies are named such are bonds beeing compared with this as neyther all the offences made onely to the creatures cannot be called offences if they be compared to them by which the Creator himselfe is offended For which cause Dauid also in that paenitentiall Psalme sayth that he had offended the Lord onely and onely sinned against him albeit he had offended most grieuously against Vrias whō he had commaunded to be slaine being innocent and against
those things of which he should haue taken and receaued greater causes of louing his Creator of those he receaued and tooke greater occasion of treason and disloyalty Therefore he was thrust out of Paradice and cast into banishment yea and was adiudged to hell fire that as hee was made a companion with the deuill in sinne so hee might be his companion in punishment The Prophet Elizeus sayd to his seruant Gehezi Thou hast receaued siluer and garments of Naaman therefore the leprosie of Naaman shall cleaue vnto thee and to thy seede for euer Like was the iudgement of God against man who seeing that he had affected the riches and treasure of Lucifer that is his pride and ambition it was meete that he should be infected with the leaprosie of the same Lucifer which was the punishment of his pride Behold then man made lyke vnto the deuill being a follower of his fault Therfore when man was so abhominable in Gods eyes and had incurred so great displeasure our most gracious and most mercifull Lord did not disdaine to respect vs he did not looke to the iniurie done to his supreame Maiesty but to the misfortune of our owne misery more lamenting our errour then desirous of reuenge for the contumely offered vnto him he determined to repaire man and to reconcile him vnto him his onlie begotten sonne being our Mediatour But how hath he reconciled man vnto him What humane tongue shall declare this vnto vs Christ hath procured so great friendship between vs and God that not onely God hath pardoned to man all his fault hath receaued him into his fauour hath made him one and that same with himselfe through a certaine vnion of loue but that which passeth all greatnes hath made such a likenes and similitude betweene himselfe mans nature that amongst all things created there can be found no greater conformity thē are the Deity and humanity for they are not one and the same through loue and fauour but also in person Who euer durst haue hoped that a wound so largely gaping should after this manner haue beene drawne together Who euer could haue thought that these two natures betweene which there was so great difference both of nature and of offence that euer they could haue beene so neerely ioyned together not in one house not at one table not in one loue but in one and the selfe same person What two greater contraries may be giuen then God and a sinner And what two things are now more straightly and narrowly combined together what more commixt then God and man There is nothing higher or nobler then God saith Bernard and there is nothing lower or baser then that clay of which man is formed Neuerthelesse with so great humility GOD descended vpon the earth to man and with so great sublimitie earth ascended to God that whatsoeuer God hath done earth may be said to haue done it and whatsoeuer earth hath suffered God may be sayd to haue suffered it Who would haue said to man when he was naked knew that he had incurred the wrath of God when he sought lurking holes and corners in Paradice wherein he might hide himselfe vvho I say would haue then said that the tyme should come when this vild substance should be vnited to God in one and the selfe same person Thys vnion is so neere straight and faithfull that when it was to be dissolued which was in the tyme of the Passion it would rather rent and breake then faint and forsake Death might seperate the soule from the body which was the vnion of nature but it could not pluck GOD from the soule nor frō the body for that vvas the vnion of the Diuine person For what it once apprehendeth with so strong a loue it neuer forsaketh This is that peace this is that health and saluation which wee receaue by the benefit of our Mediatour and Sauiour Although we are such and so great debtors for thys benefit that no mans tongue can vtter it yet we are not lesse bound to God for the manner of our Redemption then for the redemption it selfe O my Lord I am bound to thee in a high degree of dutie that thou hast deliuered me from hell and hast reconciled me vnto thee but much more owe I vnto thee for the manner it selfe by which thou hast deliuered me then for the liberty it selfe which thou hast giuen me All thy works are admirable in all things and although a man doth thinke when he hath considered one thing that not any thing remaineth which may be added to further admiratio● foorth-with all that wonderment vanisheth when he turneth his eyes to contemplate an other thing O lord the glory of thy greatnes is not diminished if one wonder dooth seeme to expell and put out another but these are tokens of thy greater glory But what was the meane ô my Lord by which thou wouldest take away my euils and wickednesses There were infinite meanes by which thou couldest haue helped me and giuen me perfect saluation without labour and without any price Notwithstanding so great and so admirable is thy liberalitie that to show me more manifestly the greatnes of thy loue goodnes thou wouldest helpe me with so great dolours that the onely cogitation of them was sufficient to extract bloody sweat from all thy members thy passion a little after through dolor to cleaue a sunder the hardest Rocks O my Lord the heauens doe praise thee and the Angels sette forth thy wonders What didst thou neede our good or were our euils any preiudice vnto thee If thou sinnest sayth Iob what doost thou against him yea when thy sinnes be many what doost thou vnto him If thou be righteous what giuest thou vnto him or what receiueth he at thy hand Thys GOD so rich so voyde of all euill he whose riches whose power whose wisedome cannot increase or be greater then it is he that was neither before nor after the creation of the world greater or lesser then he is now he that is neither more illustrious or lesse glorious because Angels sing his prayse and men doe glorifie him nay if all the creatures should curse and blaspheme him thys great Lord not of necessity but of meere charitie it not hindering him that we were his enemies he dyd not disdaine to incline and bend the heauens of his maiestie and to descend into this valley of misery to be clothed with the flesh of our mortalitie and to take all our debts vpon him to cancell them to suffer and vnder-goe greater torments then euer any suffered heeretofore or shall suffer heereafter Ah my Lord for the loue of me thou wast borne in a stable and layd in a Cratch for me thou wast circumcized the eyght day for me thou flying into Egipt liuedst there in banishment seauen whole yeeres and for mee thou diddest sustaine diuers persecutions and wast molested and vexed with infinite iniuries For the loue of
me thou didst fast thou didst watch thou didst run hether thether thou didst sweat thou didst weepe and thou didst proue by experience those miseries which my sinnes deserued and yet thou wast without any sinne neyther was there guile found in thy mouth neyther hadst thou offended but wast offended To be briefe for me thou wast taken forsaken of thine denied sold presented now before this Iudge now before that falsely accused before them beaten with fists spette vpon mocked whypped crowned with thornes reuiled with blasphemies hanged vpon the Crosse dead and buried At the length thou didst free me from all euill dying vpon the Crosse and ending thy life thy mother looking on at which time thou wast found in so great neede and misery that in that thine intollerable thirst a small drop of water was denied vnto thee by which thou mightest refresh and coole the heate of thy mouth Not onely thou wast forsaken of all externall things but also of thine owne Father What is worthy of greater admiration then that the God of so great a maiestie should end his lyfe vpon the cursed tree of the Crosse with the title of a malefactour When any man yea of meane estate commeth to that misfortune that he is to be punished with like death for his offence and fault and thou by chaunce dost know him seeing his countenaunce thou canst not sufficiently wonder considering into what an vnhappy estate his misery hath cast hym that hee must vnder-goe a death so cruell and ignominous Wherefore if it be an admirable thing to see a common man of inferiour degree to be compassed with so miserable calamitie what will it be to see not a man but the Lord of all creatures to be so plunged Can a thing be seene with greater admiration then God himselfe to be brought into so great misery for the offences of one malefactour And if by how much the person is more worthy and more noble who is slaine by so much hys case is more admirable and more miserable O yee Angels to whom the height and excellencie of this Lord is so perfectlie knowne vnderstood tel me what was your griefe and discruciatement What was your admiration astonishment when ye saw him hanging vpon the tree The Cherubins whom God in the old Testament commaunded to be placed at the two ends of the Arke of the Couenant theyr faces beeing turned one to another towards the Mercie-seate as though they beheld it admiring wondering doe signifie vnto vs that those high and supreame spirits were astonished when they did see and behold a worke of so great pietie when I say they did see God made the propitiatorie sacrifice of the worlde hanging vpon a tree Nature herselfe stoode astonished and all the creatures were suspended from theyr functions the principalities and powers of heauen were amazed considering this inestimable goodnesse which they knew to be in GOD. What then shall they doe who doe not swimme in waters of so great admiration of the Sea What shal they doe who are not drowned in the Ocean of this goodnes How cannot he but be amazed as another Moses astonished then in the Mount when the figure and patterne of this misterie was reuealed vnto him and he cryed out with a loud voyce The Lord the Lord strong mercifull and gracious slowe to anger and aboundant in goodnesse and truth Beeing able neyther to say nor doe any thing but to proclaime with a high voyce that mercy which God then shewed to him What shall hee doe that couereth not his face as Elias dyd when he saw God passe by him not in the figure of his maiestie but in the forme of his most lowly humility not ouerthrowing Mountaines renting in sunder Rocks by his infinite power but presented to the eyes of a froward Nation commaunding Rocks to be rent and clouen in sunder through his compassion Who then will not shut the eyes of his vnderstanding who will not open the bosome of his will that he may perceiue the greatnesse of thys loue and benefit and loue thys Lord without any meane or measure O the height of loue ô the depth of vnmeasurable humility ô the greatnes of mercy ô the bottomlesse pitte of incomprehensible goodnes O Lord if I bee so greatly indebted to thee because thou hast redeemed me what doe I not owe thee for that manner by which thou hast redeemed me Thou hast redeemed mee with most great dolours with contumelies and ignominies not to be borne in so much that thou wast made a reproch of men and the scorne of the whole vvorld Through thy reproches thou hast honored me through thy accusations thou hast defended me through thy blood thou hast washed me through thy death thou hast raysed me and through thy teares thou hast freed me from euerlasting weeping and gnashing of teeth O good Father who so tenderly louest thy chyldren thou art that good and true Sheepheard which giuest thy selfe foode for thy flocke O thou most faythfull Keeper who lavest down thy life for thy Sheepe which thou tookest to defend keepe vvith what rewards shall I recompence this so great a benefit vvith what teares shall I requite thy weeping vvith what lyfe shall I remunerate thy holy and pure liuing There is too huge and great a difference betweene the life of man and God betweene the teares of the Creator and the creature But if ô man it be apparent vnto thee that thou art not onlie indebted vnto God that hee dyed not onely for thee alone but for the whole world beware thou be not deceiued For so he dyed for all that also he dyed for euery one For by his infinite wisedome all they for whom he suffered were so present to his eyes that they were all comprehended as it were in one and with his vnmeasurable loue he embraced all in generall and euery one in particuler and he so shedde his blood for all as if it had beene for one To conclude his loue was so great and so exceeding that as the holy men of GOD doe say if but one onely amongst all men had been guiltie and faultie yea for him alone he would haue suffered all that which he suffered for all Marke therefore and ponder with thy selfe howe much thou art indebted to thys Lord who hath doone so great thinges for thee and would haue doone much greater if thy necessitie had required greater ¶ Of this afore-said it is gathered how great an offence it is to offend our Sauiour I Would that all creatures would tell mee if any benefit greater if a greater bond if greater fauour thē this may be found Let the whole assembly and company of Angels tell me if God did euer such things for them Who then is he that will refuse to offer himselfe vp wholy a sacrifice to GOD For three causes saith Anselme ô Lord I owe all that to thee that I am First because thou hast created mee
that vvee should be called but he addeth that we are that the base estate and small confidence of man might euidently know the bountifulnes and liberalitie of God and that we might see that it is not a name of honour or title but rather of the deed and thing it selfe But if it be so great an euill to be hated and reprobated of God what great good will it be to be beloued of him and to remaine in his fauour This truly is an Axiome of the Phylosophers that a thing is so much the better by howe much his contrary is worser And therefore it necessarily followeth that that is the chiefest good whose opposite is the chiefest euill as we haue said that that is to be hated of GOD. But if in this world it be esteemed a matter of great moment if any man bee had in honour estimation amongst his Superiors as with the Emperour King or Prince or such great honorable estates I pray thee what will it be to haue found fauour and grace with the highest Prince the supreame Father with the most glorious excellent and noble Lord in comparison of whom al the principalities and dignities of this worlde are as though they were not Which fauour also is so much the greater by hovve much more it is freely gȳuen for it is certaine that as it is vnpossible for a man to be able to doe any thing before hee vvas created whereby he might deserue to be created for then hee was not any thing so also without all doubt is it that he can do nothing after that he is fallen into sinne whereby hee may deserue Iustification not because he is not but because he is euill and hated of God Another benefit followeth this going before that it deliuereth and freeth a man from the condemnation of euerlasting punishment of which hee was guiltie by reason of his sinnes for sinne doth make a man abhominable vnto God no man can liue without Gods fauour without his owne extreame harme Hence is it that the sinners forsaking God because they sinne and contemne him that they deserue to be contemned to be remoued out of the sight of God beeing banished from his company and from his beautifull dwellings and because they forsaking God doe loue the creatures with an inordinate loue it is meete that they should be punished in all things and be tormented with eternall payne to which visible punishments being compared they rather seeme paynted then true To this so great vnhappines that euerlasting worme doth also come which alwayes gnaweth the bowels and conscience of the wicked But what shall I say of the society of those cursed spirits and of all the damned What shall I speake of that obscure and lamentable Region full of darknes and confusion Where there is no order but where continuall horror abideth where no ioy is found no peace no rest no content no hope but perpetuall complayning and euerlasting gnashing of teeth exceeding outragiousnes and fury continuall blasphemy and eternall malediction From all these euils the Lord hath deliuered all them whom he hath iustified who after that they are reconciled to him and receaued into his fauour they are free from this wrath and from the punishment of his vengeance Behold an other benefit more spirituall which is the reformation and renouation of the inward man which was defiled and polluted through sinne For sinne doth not onely depriue the soule of God but also doth spoile and rob it of all supernaturall strength and fortitude and of all other riches and gifts of the holy Ghost with which it was adorned beautified and enriched by and by after that it is depriued of these graces it is wounded maymed and depriued also of the naturall blessings For seeing that man is a reasonable creature and sinne is a work done against reason and seeing that it is naturall that one contrary should destroy an other the consequent is that by how much more sinnes are multiplied by so much more the faculties of the soule are destroyed and disturbed not in themselues but in their aptnes to worke By these meanes sinnes doe make the soule miserable weake sluggish and instable to euery good worke but procline prompt and ready to all euill weake and feeble to resist temptations and flow to walke in the wayes of Gods commaundements They depriue her also of the true liberty and rule of the spirit and they make her the captaine of the deuill the world the flesh and of her owne appetites And by this meanes shee liueth in captiuity more hard and intollerable then that of Babilon and Aegipt Furthermore all the spirituall powers of the soule are made also sluggish and slothfull so that they doe not heare diuine inspirations and heauenly voyces they doe not see the great euils prepared for them they doe not smell the sweete fauour of Vertue nor the most beautifull paths and examples of the Saints they doe not tast how sweet the Lord is neyther doe they feele the scourgings nor acknowledge the benefits by which they are prouoked vnto his loue and besides all these they take away the peace and ioy of the conscience they doe extinguish the heate and seruour of the spirit and doe leaue a man filthy blemished deformed and abhominable in the sight of God and in the sight of all his Saints From all these euils this benefit doth deliuer vs. For so bottomlesse are the mercies of God that he is not content to haue pardoned our faults and to haue receaued man into fauour vnlesse also hee expell all these euils which sinnes bring with them reforming and renuing our inward man By this maner he healeth our wounds he washeth away our spots blemishes he breaketh the bonds of sinne destroyeth the yoake of euill concupiscences deliuereth vs from the seruitude of the deuill mitigateth and aswageth the fury and rage of our peruerse affections and perturbations and doth restore vnto vs the true liberty beauty of our soule doth giue vs the peace and ioy of a good conscience doth reuiue our inward sences doth make them prompt and fit to euerie good worke and slow to any euill Maketh them strong and valiannto resist the temptations of the deuill and doth inrich vs with all good works To be briefe he doth so absolutely renue and repaire our inward man with all his powers that the Apostle calleth such men iustified renued yea new creatures This renuing is so great that when it is made by Baptisme it is called regeneration but when by repentance it is called a resurrection and rising againe not onely because the soule is raysed from the death of sinne to the life of grace but because after a certaine manner it also imitateth the beauty of the future resurrection This is so true that no tongue of man is sufficient to expresse the beauty of a iustified soule This onely knoweth that Spirit that maketh it beautifull and his Temple
for a moment causeth vnto them a farre more excellent and an eternall waight of glory These then are the benefits which this one benefit of iustification comprehendeth in it which iustification Saint Augustine maketh greater account of them he doth of creation for God created heauen and earth with his onely word but that he might sanctifie man he shed his blood and vnder-went many and great torments If therefore we owe so many and so great duties to this Lord for our creation how many moe doe wee owe to him for our iustification Which benefit by how much it was got by greater labours and afflictions by so much it doth more bind vs vnto him Although there be many great notable marks and signes by which a man entring into himselfe may examine and know whether he be iustified or no yet in my iudgement the renouation and renuing of mans life is not the least when a man hath so reformed himselfe that he hath ouerthrowne the regiment of sinne hath cut off the head of it and from day to day still groweth to further purity and perfection of life Hee that is such an one let him be mindfull by how iust a title he is bound to serue such a Sacrificer who hath redeemed him and deliuered him from so many euils and hath heaped so many blessings vpon him which hetherto we haue remembred But if he doth still cleaue and sticke in his corrupt and depraued estate I doe not know howe God may better mooue him to forsake that estate then if he set before his eyes all the euils discommodities and dangers which sinnes bring with them and which we a little before haue reckoned vp and also showe vnto him the treasury of those great blessings which doe arise of this incomparable and vnspeakeable benefit ¶ Of many other effects which the holy Ghost worketh in a iustified soule THose things which hetherto we haue spoken of doe not as yet comprehend all those kinds of benefits which the holy Ghost worketh in the soule of a iustified man neyther is the bountifulnes of GOD circumscribed within those limits For it is not enough that the holy Ghost should haue brought man through the gate of Righteousnesse and entred him into the schoole of Vertue but after that he is entred that he should be ayded of the same Spirit and ledde as it were with the hand in all his wayes vntill all the waues of this stormy sea being ouercome he enter safe and sound into the hauen of saluation For after that the holy Ghost hath entred into a iustified soule by the meditation of the precedent benefit he doth not sitte there idlely for it suffiseth him not to beautifie the soule with his presence but also he sanctifieth it by his vertue working in it and with it whatsoeuer is necessary vnto saluation He sitteth there as an housholder in his house gouerning it he sitteth there as a schoolemaister in his schoole teaching it as a Gardiner in his garden tilling and trymming it as a King in his kingdom ruling it as the Sunne in the world enlightning it to be briefe as the soule in the body giuing to it life sence and motion not as the forme in the matter but as an housholder in an house What then is more happy what more to bee desired then to haue within him such a guest such a guide such a companion such a gouernour and tutor and such an helper Who seeing that he is all things doth worke all things in that soule in which he remaineth and dwelleth Especially as fire hee enlightneth our vnderstanding he enflameth our will and exalteth it from the earth euen to heauen He like a Doue doth make vs simple gentle peaceable and friends to all He as a cloude dooth refresh and coole vs and defend vs from the heate of the flesh doth asswage and moderate our madnes and the furie of our passions To conclude he as a vehement and strong wind doth moue and incline our will to all good seperating it and drawing it from all euill inclinations vntill at length the iustified bee brought to that passe that all vices are odious vnto them which before they loued and they loue all vertues which before they hated as Dauid plainly acknowledgeth that it hapned to him for he sayth in a certaine place That hee did hate and abhorre iniquitie And in another place That hee had as great delight in the way of the testimonies of the Lord as in all riches The reason was because the holy Ghost had instilled and infused into his soule the vvormewood of earthly things and the honny of the heauenly commaundements vvherein thou seest plainly that wee owe all our good to this diuine Spirit insomuch that if we decline from euill he is the cause of it and if we doe good we doe it through him if wee perseuere in goodnesse wee perseuere through him and if a reward be gyuen for our good it is giuen through him Therefore it is euident that it is most truly spoken of Augustine that when as God recompenceth our seruices he rewardeth his owne benefits in vs and so hee rendereth grace for grace seeing the deserts are of grace The holy Patriarch Ioseph was not content to giue to hys brethren corne which they came to buy in Egipt but he moreouer commaunded that the money which they brought to buy the corne should be put in theyr sacke mouthes After the same manner the Lord dealeth with his for he giueth vnto thē life euerlasting and he also gyueth them grace and a lawdable lyfe by which they may come to this eternall life Here-vnto agreeth that which Eusebius Emissenus sayth hee therefore is worshipped that he may haue mercy and hee hath had already mercy that he might be worshipped Therefore let a man diligently examine his life let him consider as the same Doctour admonisheth him what great good hee hath doone from howe many euills adulteries rapines thefts fraudes and sacriledges the Lord hath deliuered him and then he shal know by how many meanes he is bound vnto him For as Saint Augustine sayth all sinnes are to be accounted as forgiuen from the which God doth keepe thee least they be committed Therefore sayth hee doe not loue him a little as from whom a little was forgiuen but rather loue him much from whom much is gyuen vnto thee For if hee loue to whom it is giuen that hee may not repay how much more ought he to loue to whom it is gyuen that he may haue and possesse For whosoeuer from the beginning remaineth honest hee is gouerned of him and whosoeuer of one dishonest is made honest of him he is amended and whosoeuer is dishonest to the end of him he is forsaken Which seeing that it is so what other thing shall we doe then cry out with the Prophet Let my mouth bee filled with thy praise that I may sing of
thy glory and of thy greatnesse euery day Vpon which wordes Saint Augustine dooth thus comment What is this euery day Without intermission in prosperitie because thou doost comfort mee in aduersity because thou doost correct mee Before I was because thou madest mee when I was because thou gauest mee health when I dyd offend because thou pardonest me when I was conuerted because thou helpest me when I perseuered because thou crownest me So fully let my mouth be filled with thy praise that I may sing of thy glory euery day and all the day long If the sonne of God himselfe dyd gyue thankes to hys Father for a fewe Barley loafes as it is in the Gospell what great thanks ought we to giue for thys great benefit that wee are so sanctified by his holy Spirit that we are made his Temple and the dwelling and seate of the most sacred Trinitie If wee are bound to giue thanks for our nourishment whereby our Being is vpholden how great thanks are wee bound to giue him for this our well Being For we doe not prayse a horse because he is a horse but because he is a good horse nor wine because it is wine but because it is good wine nor a man because hee is a man but because he is a good man If therefore so many wayes we be bound to him who hath created vs how much more are wee bounde to him that hath made vs good If wee owe so much vnto him for the gyfts of our bodies how much more doe wee owe for the gyfts of our mindes if so much for the gyfts of nature how much more for the gyfts of grace To conclude if so great things be due vnto him because he hath made vs the sonnes of Adam how much more that he hath made vs of the vnhappy sonnes of Adam the sonnes of God For much better is the day in which wee are borne to eternitie as sayth Eusebius Emissenus then in which we are borne to the dangers of thys world Behold brother another chayne and linck which with the former benefits may binde tye thy hart to desire vertue to serue the Lord thy God THE SIXT TITLE That the inestimable benefit of the diuine Predestination doth binde vs vnto Vertue CHAP. VI. AMongst all the benefits before remembred that also of Election is numbred which pertaineth onely to them whom GOD from euerlasting hath elected to eternall life for the which benefite the Apostle as well for himselfe as for all the Elect doth giue thankes to him in these words Blessed be GOD euen the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which hath blessed vs with all spirituall blessing in heauenly things in Christ as hee hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the world that wee should be holy and without blame before him in loue who hath predestinated vs to be adopted through Iesus Christ vnto himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will The same benefit the kinglie Prophet commendeth when he sayth Blessed is he whō thou chusest and causest to come to thee he shal dwell in thy courts Therefore woorthily thys benefit may be called a benefit of benefits and a grace of graces A grace of graces because it is gyuen before all desert of the onely infinit goodnes and liberalitie of God who dooing iniurie to none yea giuing a sufficient helpe to euery one to saluation but to some hee extendeth more largely and bountifully the greatnes of his mercy as an absolute and bountifull Lord of his riches It is also a benefit of benefits not onely because it is greater then the rest but because it is also the cause and foundation of all the rest For vvhen as man is elected vnto glory by the meanes of thys benefit by by the Lord doth bestow vpon him all other benefits which are required to the attaynement of thys glory as hee testifieth by his Prophet saying I haue loued thee with an euerlasting loue therfore with mercy I haue drawen thee Thou oughtest not to be ignorant that I haue called thee to my glory that by it thou maiest obtaine my glory The Apostle more plainly doth tell this when he sayth For those which he knewe before hee also predestinate to be made like to the image of his sonne that hee might be the first borne among many brethren Moreouer whom hee predestinate them also he called and whom he called them also hee iustified and whom he iustified them also hee glorified The reason of this is that the Lord disposing of all things sweetly and orderly after that hee hath vouchsafed to elect any man to his glory for that fauour he bestoweth many other vpon him for he giueth all things which pertaine to the obtaining of thāt first fauour For euen as a father who bringeth vp his sōnne that hee may bee a Minister of Gods holy word or a Doctour of hys Church doth accustome him from his young yeeres to ecclesiasticall matters and causeth him to apply his studie directeth the whole course of his life to the proposed end so our heauenly Father after that he hath elected any man to the participation of his glory hee directeth him by his fatherly care to the way of righteousnes which leadeth to that glory and hee fatherly leadeth him in it vntill he come to his wished end For this so auncient and so excellent a benefit they ought to gyue thanks to this Lord who feele in themselues some euidence of this benefite For let vs grant that thys secret is hid from mans eyes yet seeing that certaine marks and tokens of iustification are alwaies knowne certaine signes also of the diuine predestination and election may be had For as amongst the signes of iustification the amendment of life is not the least so amongst the signes of election this is the greatest a perseuerance continuing in a good life Because he that hath lyued many yeeres in the feare of the Lord and with all care and diligence escheweth sinne he may godly and religiously perswade himselfe that as the Apostle sayth the Lord will strengthen him euen to the end that hee may be blamelesse in the day of our Lorde Iesu● Christ and that as he hath begunne so hee shall make an end Surely it is true that no man ought to be carelesse of his estate and that no man ought to be secure of his perseuerance seeing that the most wise Salomon after that he had liued many yeres godly and religiously in the end of his life failed and playd the back-slider and fell very filthily But thys is but a particuler exception from that generall vse and custome which we brought out of Paule and which Salomon himselfe teacheth in his Prouerbs saying It is a prouerbe teach a child in the trade of his way and when he is old he shall not depart from it So that if hee be a dilligent follower of vertue in his youth he
his life These therefore sufficiently prooue that saying of the Wiseman to be true Remember thy end and thou shalt neuer doe amisse Goe to therefore if this consideration doth so surely draw a man from sinne let vs carefully runne ouer those things which are wont to be spoken of death that we may obtaine that excellent and notable good Remember therfore my brother that thou art a Christian and a man because thou art a man it is certaine that thou must die because thou art a Christian it is certaine that thou must giue an account of thy lyfe after that thou art dead Heere the fayth that we hold and professe excludeth all doubt and thus the experience teacheth vs vvhich we daily see before our eyes So that no man is free from thys cup but all must drinke of it whether he be Emperour King or whatsoeuer he be That day sometime will be when as thou shalt liue in the morning but shalt not lyue at night That day at the length wil come but when it will be whether to day or to morrowe it is altogether vncertaine in the which thou thy selfe who novve readest these things which we write beeing strong and lustie measuring thy life with longnes of desires and thy dayes vvith multitude of businesses thou shalt see thy selfe lying in a bedde expecting the blow and sentence of fearefull death spred ouer all mankinde from which no man can appeale to any other Iudge But most of all we must consider how vncertaine that houre is for that is wont to come for the most part when it is least looked for and when as man is secure in all things doth least thinke of it but beeing busied and earnest about the businesse and necessities of this life doth cast with himselfe to lyue and ouer-passe many dayes For which cause it is sayde that it commeth like a theese in the night who is wont then to come when as men doe soundly sleepe and beeing secure doe thinke of nothing lesse then of the theft so neerly hanging ouer them Before death come great and grieuous infirmities goe before which are to be considered with all their accidents griefes vexations molestations loathings decocted syrrups fumigations pills gargarismes and other medicines and also of the long nights which at thys time bring much teadiousnesse and wearinesse For euen as he that would conquer a Castle at the first doth make way to the ruine with his greater shot after he doth assault inuade and possesse it so before death great infirmitie is sent which doth so vanquish and breake the naturall strength that it giueth no rest to man whether it be by day or by night but without intermission shaketh and wringeth all the chiefe members of the body so that the soule can no longger defend her Castle neither can any longer be preserued in it wherefore the relinquisheth the body hauing escaped flyeth out of it and goeth to another place But when as the infirmitie doth draw to that passe that eyther the sicke partie or the Phisition beginneth to doubt despaire of lyfe good God what streights what oppressings what griefes doe then crush teare the miserable hart For then the whole race and processe of thy precedent life dooth come in●o thy minde then is it represented vnto thee that thou must leaue all those things which heere thou so deerly louest vvife chyldren friends parents riches honours titles offices and other things which leaue off to be and take end with thy lyfe After these things those last accidents grow on which are ioyned with death it selfe which are much greater then these going before The forehead waxeth hard the skinne is stretched out from whence cold sweat breaketh foorth the eyes vvaxe dimme sayle and are writhen about with intollerable payne the eares grow deafe the nose doth sincke downe the nosthrils are filled with filth the countenaunce waxeth pale the mouth is disturbed the tongue is vnmoueable and ceaseth to doe his dutie any more the tast perrisheth the lipps waxe blewe and wanne the breath gathering it selfe from the bottome of the breast faileth the hands waxe cold the nayles waxe black the pulse languisheth and is very little but very thicke sometime it ceaseth and sometimes striketh softly the feete die and loose theyr naturall heate What neede I many wordes all the flesh is turned to corruption and all the members and all the sences are disturbed troubled by reason of theyr too hastie seperation After thys maner a man must at his departure out of thys life recompence the labors and sorrowes of those by whom he entred into thys world bearing those griefes at his end which his mother bare when shee brought him forth And so the proportion of mans departure and entrance into this world is notable for both is full of sorrowes his ingresse hath the sorrowes of another his egresse his owne Whilst man is tost in this straight sodainly the agony of death is at hand the ende of life is presented to the memorie the horrour also of the graue and the infelicity of his body which straightwayes is to be meate for wormes but especially the soule is plunged which as yet remayneth in the body but after an houre or two being seperated from the body it knoweth not what entertainement or dwelling place it shall haue Then thou wilt thinke that the iudgement of God is present at hand then thou shalt see before thee all thy sinnes which will accuse thee before the iudgement seate of the Diuine iustice then thou at the length too late wilt acknowledge how filthie the crimes were which thou so easily didst commit then with many cursings and execrations thou wilt banne that day in which thou didst offend thou wilt bitterly curse the pleasures and delights which moued thee with their enticements to sinne In that houre thou canst not sufficiently wonder at thy selfe and thy lenity who for things so vaine and of no moment as those were which thou wast wont to loue with so inordinate loue hast cast thy selfe in danger to suffer so intollerable paines of the which in that most sorrowfull houre thou shalt make no small experiment For the pleasures passing away the iudgment of them approching that which before of it selfe was but little and now ceaseth to be shall seeme to be nothing but that which is great of it selfe and present at hand thou shalt suppose that it is greater then it is because at the length thou shalt manifestly know it with all the circumstances When as therefore thou shalt see that for matters so vaine and light I will not say filthy thou hast depriued thy selfe of so great blessings and casting thy eyes heere and there thou shalt see thy selfe on euery side compassed about with griefes and tribulations because longer thou canst not liue and for repentance there is neyther place nor time the number of thy dayes are come to an end they cannot helpe thee whom
thou hast loued with so an inordinate loue much lesse the Idols which thou adoredst what doe I say that they cannot helpe thee Yea those things which thou louedst most and which were in the greatest estimation with thee these then most of all shall vexe and torment thee tell me I pray thee when thou seest thy selfe left in this danger what minde or what courage wilt thou haue Whether wilt thou goe What wilt thou doe Whom wilt thou call vnto To returne to lyfe it will be vnpossible but to depart out of life it will be intollerable to stay longer in this life it shall not be giuen vnto thee what then wilt thou doe In that day saith the Lord God by his Prophet I will euen cause the sunne to goe downe at noone and I will darken the earth in the cleere day and I will turne your feasts into mourning and all your songs into lamentation and I will make it as the mourning of an onely sonne and the end thereof as a bitter day O fearefull words ô dreadfull sentence shaking all harts In that day sayth he the sunne shal goe downe at noone for in that houre the multitude of their offences shall be set before sinners and they seeing the deuine iustice to cut off the thred of their life some of them shall be strucken with so great feare and trembling and shall be so destitute of all hope and trust that they shall suppose themselues to be reprobate and vtterly excluded from the diuine mercy Be it that as yet they are in the noone mid-day that is that they are in the course of their life which is time as yet to for sake their sinfull wayes and to lay hold on Christ yet they shall perswade themselues that this time is ouer-past and that all grace and fauour is shut vp from them The most powerfull and mightiest perturbation of the minde is feare which supposeth euery small thing to be great and alwayes dreadeth things absent as present If a small feare of any thing doth this what shall that true feare doe conceaued of so fearefull and capitall dangers Be it that yet they suruiue and that they are placed in this life in the midst of their friends neuerthelesse they suppose that they as it were experiment and feele the dolours and punishments of the damned At one and the selfe same time they thinke themselues aliue and dead and they being caught with the sorrow of present things which they are to leaue they begin to feele the future euils which they feare They iudge them blessed and happy who are left in this world and of this enuy new sorrowes arise and increase Therfore then the sunne goeth downe at noone vnto them when they casting their eyes euery way shall see euery where entrance into heauen to be shut and denied vnto them neyther any beame of light shall appeare or shine vnto them For if they looke vnto the mercy of God they shall suppose themselues vnworthy that God should haue mercy on them if they flye vnto the diuine iustice they shall suspect that all cruell tortures are prepared for them and that hetherto their day hath beene but now that the day of the Lord doth hang ouer them yea they shall thinke that euen now it beginneth If they call to minde their life past euery part of that doth reprehend them if they behold the present time they see that now they are dying if the future time which is now at hand they see the Iudge sitting vpon his tribunall and expect iudgement from him Being compassed with so many causes of feare what will they doe whether will they goe The Prophet proceedeth And I will darken the earth in the cleere day that is those things which heeretofore were wont sweetly to delight thee now they shal exceedingly torment thee and shall strike and thrust through thy soule with intollerable stings and pricks of griefe It is pleasant and delightfull to a man liuing and in health to see his children to enioy his friends to gouerne his houshold to haue much riches and to possesse with pleasure whatsoeuer the minde desireth But then all that pleasure shall be turned into sorrow For all these afore-sayde with most bitter torments shall rend and cut in peeces thy miserable conscience and they shall be sharpe speares to wound their louers It is naturall that as the possession and presence of a thing which we loue doth ioy vs and make vs merry so the absence of the same thing doth bring heauines and sorrowe Hence it is that the sonnes doe flie the presence of their dying father and the louing and religious wife being full of anguish doth hide her selfe from her husbands face least by her presence she might encrease his dolours For although the soule being by and by to be seperated from the body hath a long and dangerous iourney to goe yet the great greefe doth not permit any obseruation of the termes of humanity and ciuility neyther doth it graunt the soule euen now iourneying before her departure to bid farewell to her friends If thou my Reader at anie time shall come to this passe thou shalt surely vnderstand that I speake nothing but truth but if thou as yet neuer camst into this danger at least beleeue them which haue had experience of these things For they that saile ouer the Sea as the Wiseman sayth tell of the perils thereof If therefore they be such and so great which goe before this dolorous and lamentable seperation what manner and how great doest thou thinke that they will be which shall follow after If the preparation be so great what shall the solemnity it selfe be For straight-wayes after death the account shall follow which that most iust Iudge shall require of the soule which how mightily it is to be feared I would not haue thee to learne of the men of this world who as they dwell in Egipt that is in a Land of darkues so they liue in great blindnes and intollerable errours But in this matter aske counsaile of the Saints of God who dwell in the Land of Goshen in which alwayes the light of truth shineth and they will teach thee not onely with words but also by examples how greatly this account is to be feared Without doubt King Dauid was a most holy man neuerthelesse so great was his feare which he conceaued being mindfull of rendring this account that he sayd in his prayer to the Lord Enter not ô Lord into iudgement with thy seruant for in thy sight shal none that liueth be iustified Arsenius was a holy man who yet when he should dye began to weepe and to tremble after that manner that his Schollers who stoode about him being moued at this his trembling asked and sayd vnto him Father why weepest thou Why doest thou tremble What doest thou also feare To whom he aunswered I feare in truth and verity and this feare which now is
it enlightneth the vnderstanding it inflameth our will it strengtheneth our memorie it tempereth and moderateth our part concupiscible least it runne into all euil it cōfirmeth the part irascible least it be slow too sluggish to work well Moreouer because all our natural passions which are found in these two inferiour powers of our appetite are as it were step-dames vnto vertue dores wherby deuils oftentimes enter into our soules it hath appointed as it were Sentinels in each of these parts which watch and keepe it that is a certaine infused vertue comming from aboue vvhich doth helpe man and maketh him secure in danger which ariseth by meanes of those passions So to defend the soule frō the appetite of gluttonie it sendeth Temperance to defend it frō the lust of the flesh it sendeth Chastitie and to defend it from ambition it sendeth Humilitie and so in the rest But there is one thing which exceedeth all the fore-sayde that is that grace maketh God to dwell in our soule that dwelling in it he may gouerne it defend it direct it in the heauenly way God therefore sitteth in our soule as a King in his kingdome as a Captayne among his armie as a Maister in his schoole and as a Pastour among his flocke that there he may exercise and vndergoe spiritually all these offices and administer all prouidence Goe to therefore if this precious pearle out of which so many good things come be a perpetuall companion vnto Vertue who will not willingly imitate that wise Merchant in the Gospell who sold all that he had that he might buy this alone ¶ Of the third priuiledge of Vertue which is a light and a certaine supernaturall knowledge which our Lord giueth to them who seeke after Vertue CHAP. XV. THE third priuiledge which is graunted vnto Vertue is a certaine speciall light and a certaine wisedome which our Lord doth bestow vpon them that are righteous which also proceedeth from that grace of which we haue hetherto spoken The reason is because it is a function and duty of grace to heale and recure nature beeing weake feeble and decayed Euen as therefore it healeth the appetite and will weakened through sinne so also it recureth the vnderstanding being exceedingly obscured and darkned by the same sinne that by this benefit the vnderstanding may know what it ought to doe and by the will there may be ability power to doe that which now it vnderstandeth is needefull for to be done Not vnlike to this is that Saint Gregory hath in his Morals Not to be able to fulfill that which man vnderstoode was a punishment of sinne as also that was a punishment of the same not to vnderstand that Therefore sayd the Prophet The Lord is my light against ignorance and my saluation against impotencie In one is signified what is to be desired in the other strength is giuen by which we may attaine vnto it And so as well this as that pertayneth to the same grace Hence it is that besides fayth and prudence infused which enlighten our vnderstanding that it may vnderstand what it ought to beleeue what also to doe the gifts of the holy Ghost doe increase also in vs foure of which pertaine to the vnderstanding that is the gift of wisedome which is giuen for the knowledge of high and lofty matters the gift of Science which is giuen that wee may vnderstand lower matters the gift of vnderstanding by which we come to the knowledge of the misteries of God and to the congruencie and beauty of them and the gift of counsaile and aduice by whose helpe we know the actions of this life and how to gouerne and rule whatsoeuer happeneth to vs in it All these beames come from the splendour of grace onely which therefore is called in the holy Scriptures an Annointing or Vnction For it teacheth all things as Saint Iohn speaketh Wherefore euen as oyle among all liquid substances is the fittest to preserue light and to cure wounds so this diuine Vnction doth cure the wounds of our will and doth illuminate the darknes of our vnderstanding This is that most precious oyle better then all oyle of which the kingly Prophet speaketh Thou hast annoynted mine head with oyle It is certaine that he speaketh heere not of a materiall head nor of materiall oyle but of a spirituall head that is of the superiour part of our soule in which our vnderstanding is as very well sheweth a learned man wryting vpon this place and of spirituall oyle which is the light of the holy Ghost by which our lampe is preserued that it is not put out Of the light of this holy oyle this good King had much who thus speaketh of himselfe Thou hast taught me wisedome in the secret of mine hart An other reason may be also giuen of this For seeing that it is the office of grace to make a man endued with Vertue it cannot execute this vnlesse first it moue a man to sorrow and repentance of his former life and stirre vp the feare of God in him Vnlesse before it worketh that man doth deadly hate sinne and desire heauenly blessings with great feruency and altogether contemne these worldly vanities But the will cannot obtayne these and the like vnlesse before it hath the light of vnderstanding and a knowledge proportionable by which the will may be stirred vp For the will is a blind faculty which is not mooued except the vnderstanding goe before carrying a light and shewing good and euill in all things that the affection towards them may encrease or decrease Hence it is that Thomas Aquinas sayth euen as the loue of God doth encrease in the soule of a righteous man so also encreaseth the knowledge of the goodnes fauour and beauty of the same God and that by an equall proportion that if one of them encrease an hundreth degrees so many also encreaseth the other For hee that loueth much he vnderstandeth many causes of loue in the thing beloued but he that loueth little vnderstandeth but few And that which is cleerely vnderstoode of the loue of God this also is vnderstoode of feare hope and of the hatred of sinne From which men would no more abhorre then from other things vnlesse they vnderstood that it was an euill then which nothing in this world is more worthy of horror and execration Seeing therefore that the holy Ghost willeth that these effects should be in the soule of a righteous man he willeth also that there should be causes in it from whence they may come As hee willeth that there should be diuersity of effects in the earth so also he willeth that diuers causes and celestiall influences should be wrought in it Furthermore seeing that it is true as we before haue proued that God doth dwell by grace in the soules of the righteous and that God is light Enlightning euery man that commeth into the world as Saint
that no time is left him to bestow on his owne busines or that he may not breathe from his duty but this vice as also others is such an one that when it hath once gotten rule and empire ouer the soule it doth so deuoure and swallow it vp that scarcely there remayneth to man any force any commodity any time or memory or any wisedome to follow other busines Therefore not without cause long agoe sayd Ecclesiasticus Wine and women leade wise-men out of the way For man by reason of this vice is so besides himselfe and estranged from his right minde that although he be wise yet he is made as vnfit to mannage and execute any businesses which belong and are proper vnto man as if hee had drunke vp a whole Hogshead of vvine To shew and demonstrate this that most excellent Poet fayned a fable of Queene Dido who when she began to be blindfolded with the loue of Aeneas she slacked and fore-flowed all the busines of the common wealth saying The works of Towres are left no feates of armes the youth applies Nor Hauens are wrought nor for the wars the mighty butwarks rise All things vnpersit stand the buildings great and threanings hie Of hugie wals and engines for their height that match the skie For this Tyrant had so possessed all the sences of this Queene that now she was vnfit for al things only the thoughts and cogitations of her new loue being excepted Which by how much more he ruled in her hart by so much she was lesse able to apply her selfe to those thinges that pertayned to the common wealth and lesse able to doe thinges which otherwise ought to haue beene done O pestilent vice ô destruction of common-wealths the sword of all good exercises the death of vertues the cloude of good wits the peruerter of men the drunkennes of wise-men the dotage of old men the madnes of yong men and the common plague of mankind Neyther must wee thinke that onely in this vice there is so great tiranny but also in all others Behold view a little while an ambitious man and one that is swelled with vaine glory and choked with the smoke of honour and see how seruilely he lyueth subiect vnder this desire and how immoderately he affecteth and thirsteth after this vaine worldly glory how carefull and vigilant he is to attaine vnto it directing all his actions and all his endeuours to this end To serue to get acquaintance to be cloathed to be booted and spurd his table his bed his house his seruants the carriage of his body his gate his speach to be briefe what so euer is done of such like men and what so euer is in them all that is formed compozed and applied to this end For they doe adorne and fashion themselues onely to this end that they may seeme neate and cult thereby to gaine the prayse and vaine opinion and applause of the people Yea if thou doost well consider thou shalt see that an ambitious man in all things that he doth or speaketh hath none other respect then that he may lay snares and nets to catch the popular applause of the people If we wonder at that Emperour which passed ouer all the festiuals in taking of flyes how much more is the madnes of an ambitious man to be wondered at who doth not onely spend all the festiuals and holy-dayes but also the whole course of his life in catching onely smoke and wordly vanity This wretched man by reason of this ambition doth not what he would neyther doth he cloath himselfe according to his own estate neyther is he permitted to goe whether he would for he goeth but sildome to the Church neyther dare he be conuersant with good men fearing least perhaps the world to which he lyueth subiect should see somthing in him which might be reprehended And that which is more that he might satisfie this his passion he lauisheth out greater store of riches then eyther he is willing or hath casting himselfe headlong into a thousand needes and many debts with which his soule is afflicted with the griefe of his posterity which he leaueth to be heires of his debts and imitators of his folly What punishment I pray thee deserueth he if not that which a certaine King inflicted on an ambitious man vnder whose nosestrils hee commaunded so grosse and so thicke a smoake to be raised that he was choaked with it saying It is meete that he should die with smoake who had consumed his whole life in snuffing and sucking vp the smoake of vanitie Therefore what greater misery then this can be found What shal I speak of a couetous man who not only is a bondslaue but also an Idolator of his riches mony for he adoreth and serueth them and whatsoeuer these commaund he willingly performeth it For them hee fasteth and with-holdeth bread from his owne mouth to be briefe he loueth them more then he loueth God himselfe seeing that for the loue of them hee is not afraid oftentimes to offend GOD In them is his rest hys glory his hope and all his thoughts With them hee watcheth and sleepeth and for them he consumeth his whole life and all his sences in trafficking and taking vncessant paines for them in the meane while vtterly forgetting himselfe and all other businesse Shal we say that such a man is the Lord of his riches that he may determine of them as he pleaseth or rather shall we affirme that he is the seruant and slaue of his money for the couetousnes of his riches as a most hard and seuere mistres doth compell him to obey them but it suffereth him not to enioy them it sharpeneth the desire but taketh away the pleasure A couetous man prouideth riches as though he were a gallant and braue man but he vseth them as a beast a niggardly peasant He taketh paines but he wanteth the fruite pleasure of his trauaile whilst he with-draweth and holdeth his riches from his body and soule yea and from life it selfe if so his treasure and store may encrease and augment Surely I knowe not what captiuitie can bee more great or grieuous for if you call him a captiue and a prysoner who is shutte vp in a turret and there hath his handes and feete sette in a payre of stocks rather is he not worthy of this name vvhose soule is imprisoned and captiuated with the inordinate desire of those things which he loueth For when a man doth gape after gaine and is wholy occupied in seeking after pelse hee hath no facultie or power of his soule truely free neyther is he Lord of himselfe but a seruant of his owne riches For where the loue or desire is there the hart lyeth bound and fettered Neyther is the seruitude of thys captiuitie lesser because it is voluntarie for if it be captiuitie in deede it is so much the more dangerous by how much it is more
the time of Achab king of Israell when Samaria was besieged by the Armie of the king of Syria we read that men did eate the dunge of Doues that thys kinde of meate was sold for a great price But thys was not so much at the length it came to that passe that mothers did kil and eate the chyldren of their owne wombe Iosephus also writeth that the same happened at the siege of Ierusalem But the slaughters and captiuities of this people together with the vtter ouerthrow of the Common-wealth and the kingdome of the Iewes are so well knowne to all that heere they neede not to be rehearsed An eleuen of theyr Tribes were made perpetuall seruants to the Kings of Assyria that one Trybe which remained a long time after beeing vanquished was brought into seruitude vnder the Romaines in which destruction exceeding great was the number of the captiues but greater was the number of those that were slaine as the same Historiographer copiously describeth Neyther let any one deceaue himselfe saying that this calamitie pertaineth onely to the Iewish nation seeing that it generally appertaineth to all men who haue knowledge of the Diuine law and doe despise it neyther will obey it as the Lord himselfe testifieth by his Prophet Haue not I brought vp Israell out of the Land of Egipt and the Philistines from Cappadocia and the Syrians from Cyrene Behold the eyes of the Lord God are vppon the sinfull kingdome and I will destroy it cleane out of the earth Signifying that all these changes of kingdoms whereby thys kingdome is ouerthrowne and that planted and raysed vp doth come through sinne And if any one will see that this is true let him read ouer the histories of times past he shal vnderstand how God doth chastice the froward and peruerse but especially those that haue the true law and doe not keepe it He shal see how great a part of Europe Asia and Affrica which in times past were full of Churches and of Christian people now are possessed of Infidels he shall know also what great massacres ruines and destructions the Gothes Hunnes and Vandales haue made vpon the Churches who in the time of Saint Augustine destroyed and wasted the Prouinces of Affrica and that without any mercie or compassion they sparing neyther men nor women neither old nor young neither Virgins nor married At the same time also and after the same manner the kingdome of Dalmatia was wasted with the bordering Countries as Saint Ierome showeth who was borne in that Country insomuch that he that should haue passed through trauelled those Countries should haue seene nothing but heauen and earth all things were so ruinated and ouerthrowen Yea if we will looke into our owne times we shall see what slaughters and effusion of Christian blood what desolations and euersions of Citties sinne hath caused in Fraunce Belgia and many other Countryes What mightie massacres and lamentable diuastations hath sinne brought vppon the world by the sword of the Turkes those professed enemies of Christianitie who stil brandish their swords against Christendome for the sinnes of Christians These sufficient plainly doe declare how that true vertue and sincere religion are not onely profitable to the obtayning of eternall blessings but also to gette and keepe temporall blessings that the consideration of all these may inflame our mindes with the loue of Vertue which preserueth vs from so many mischiefes bringeth with it so many good things Of the twelfth priuiledge of Vertue that is of the quiet peaceable ioyfull death of the righteous and contrarily of the wretched miserable painfull disquiet and grieuous death of sinners CHAP. XXIIII THE last priuiledge prerogatiue at the length is ioyned to the precedent that is the death and the glorious end of the righteous when they depart out of the prison of this body vnto the which end all the rest of the priuiledges are destinated and ordayned Because in the end as we are wont to say the praise is proclaimed Tell mee what is more glorious or what more delightsome then the end of the iust and righteous And contrarilie what is more wretched or vnhappy then the death of sinners Right deere and precious saith the Psalmogapher in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints but the death of sinners is vilde and exceeding euill What meaneth thys vvord Exceeding euill vttered in the Superlatiue degree Because thys is the last and greatest of all euils as well for the soule as for the body After thys manner S. Bernard doth expound this of the Psalmist The death of sinners is exceeding euill Because it is euill in losing the world worser in the seperation of the flesh but exceeding euill in that double calamitie of the worme and of the fire It is grieuous to leaue the worlde more grieuous that the soule is seperated from the body but exceeding grieuous and in no wise to be compared vnto the other to be tortured vvith the torments of hell Both these and many moe miseries shall vexe and turmoile the wicked in this houre For then before and aboue all things the accidents of thys infirmitie shall surmount the griefes of the body the terrors of the soule and the afflictions of externall things the thoughts of things to come the remembrance of sinnes past the feare to giue an account the dreadfull sentence the horrour of the graue the seperation and departure from euery thing that was too deere and imbraced with an inordinate loue that is from riches friends wife children from this light from the ayre wherein we breathe and from life it selfe All euery one of these so much the more doe afflict a man by how much they are loued For as Augustine sayth They are not lost without griefe which are possessed with loue Therefore it was very well said of a Phylosopher Hee that in his life knoweth of fewest delights least of all other feareth death But most of all in that houre the burned and feared conscience and the consideration of that which is prepared for them doth excruciate vexe the vvicked For then man beeing raised as it were out of a deepe sleepe by the presence of Death openeth hys eyes and beginneth to behold and see that which he neuer saw before Eusebius Emisse●●s giueth a reason of this At what passe will man be then at sayth hee when bidding his last farewell to all worldly matters hauing death before him leauing life behind him he shal be drawn into that horrible fearefull gulfe For there shall be no preparation for victuals or care for cloathing no busines for Labourers Souldiers or Traffickers no ambition for wealth or honour but there an intollerable terror of giuing an account shall fill and possesse the minde being free from all other cares and the heauy and vnsupportable weight of iudgment shal dreadfully hang ouer the captiue sences Then man forgetteth all thinges
doest thou promise that thou thy selfe wilt performe it This question is aunswerrd by the words of Augustine who sayth Lord giue that thou commaundest and commaund what thou wilt So that he be the same vvho commaundeth me what I ought to doe and he that giueth me grace to doe it Therfore in one and the selfe same thing both the commaundement and the promise are found and God and man doe one and the selfe same thing he as the principall and chiefest cause but man as a cause lesse principall So that God in this busines carrieth himselfe to man as a Paynter who guideth the pencill in the hand of his Scholler and so maketh a perfect picture two perfit this worke but more honour belongeth to the one then to the other So also God worketh with vs in this busines after an absolute manner man hath not wherein to glory but to glory with the Prophet and say Lord thou workest all our works in vs. Therefore be thou mindfull of these words for by them thou mayst interpret all the commaundements of God For all that he commaundeth thee to doe he promiseth also that he will doe it with thee When as therfore he commaundeth thee to circumcise thine hart he sayth also that he will circumcise it so when he commaundeth thee that thou shouldest loue him aboue all things he bestoweth grace vpon thee that thou mayst be able so to loue him Hence it is that the yoke of the Lord is sayd to be sweete For there be two that draw it God man and so that which seemed and was difficult vnto nature the Diuine grace doth make it light and sweet Wherefore the Prophet after the fore-sayd words doth proceede further and say This commaundement which I commaund thee this day is not hid from thee neyther is it farre of It is not in heauen that thou shouldest say who shall goe vp for vs to heauen and bring it vs and cause vs to heare it that we may doe it Neyther is it beyond the Sea that thou shouldest say Who shall goe ouer the Sea for vs and bring it us and cause vs to heare it that we may doe it But the word is very neere vnto thee euen in thy mouth and in thine hart for to doe it In which words the holy Prophet would altogether take away that difficulty which carnall men imagine to be in the precepts of the Lord for they onely looking to the law of the Lord without the Gospell that is to those things that are commaunded and not to the grace which is giuen to obey and walk in those commaundements they accuse the law of difficulty saying that it is greeuous heauy difficult not considering that they expresly contradict Saint Iohn who sayth For this is the loue of God that we keepe his commaundements his commaundements are not greeuous for all that is borne of God ouercommeth the world That is all they that haue conceaued the spyrit of God in their soules by meanes of whom they are regenerated and made his sonnes whose spirit they haue receaued all these haue God in them who dwelleth in them by grace and they can doe more then all that that is not God and so neyther the world nor the deuill nor all the power of hell can hurt them And here-vpon it followeth that although the yoke of Gods commaundements be heauy and burthenous yet that newe strength and fortitude which is giuen by grace doth make it light and tollerable ¶ How Charity also maketh the way easie and pleasant which leadeth vnto heauen WHat wilt thou think if to all these precedent another help be ioyned which is deriued in vs from Charity For it is certaine that it is one of the most principall conditions of Charity to make the yoke of the Diuine law most sweet Wherfore as Saint Augustine sayth by no manner of meanes the labours of louers are burthenous or combersome but are delightfull and pleasurable as the labours of Hunters Fowlers and Fishers For in that which is loued eyther there is no labour or the labour is loued And in another place He that loueth sayth he laboureth not For all labour is contrary vnto them that doe not loue It is onely loue that blusheth at the name of difficulty What is it that maketh that a mother doth not feele the continuall labours and troubles which she hath in bringing vp her children but onely loue What is it that maketh an honest and a good vvife to attend night and day vpon her weake and sickly husband but onely loue What doth moue beasts also that they are so carefull to bring vp and foster their young ones and to giue them meate from their owne mouthes that theyr yong may haue to eate what doth moue them I say so to trouble and torment themselues that they may liue safely and what doth moue them so strongly to defend them endangering their owne lifes but true loue What is the cause why Saint Paule sayd with so magnanimous a spirit Who shall seperate vs from the loue of Christ shall tribulation or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednes or perill or sword As it is written For thy sake are we killed all day long we are counted as sheepe for the slaughter Neuertheles in all these things we are more then conquerers through him that loued vs. For I am perswaded that neyther death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor thinges present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to seperate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. What is the cause why the holy Martyrs of Christ so feruently desired martirdome as the hart desireth the water brookes but true loue What is the cause why Saint Lawrence lying vpon the Gridiron in the midst of his torments sayde cheerefully that the flames did comfort and refresh his limbs but that great desire by which he longed for martirdom which was kindled with the flames of this loue For true loue thinketh nothing hard nothing bitter nothing greeuous nothing deadly as Petrus Rauennas sayth What sword what wounds what paynes what death can preuaile against perfect and true loue Loue is an impenetrable coate offence it resisteth darts it beateth backe the sword it tryumpheth ouer dangers it scorneth death if it be loue it ouercommeth all things Therefore ô man loue God loue him wholy that thou mayst ouercome and subdue all sinnes without labour The warre is pleasant and the combat delicate onely by loue to carry the victory ouer all crimes and vices This sayth he Neyther is true loue content if it conquer all labours and troubles but the very nature of loue desireth to sustaine moe labours and troubles for his sake whom it affecteth Hence ariseth that ardent desire of martyrdome which righteous and truly religious men haue that is to shed and poure forth
profit let Angels vtter it and not men For what greater profit can there be then to enioy eternal glory to be freed from euerlasting paine which is the reward of Vertue If the temporall commodities of this world doe rather moue vs what commodities can be more excellent or of greater valuation then those twelue priuiledges and prerogatiues which Vertue and the vertuous doe solace and delight themselues the least of which is of more force and validity to quiet a disturbed mind then al the dignities and treasuries of this world I kow not truly what more may be put into the ballance to weigh and peise those things which are promised to Vertue and to her louers The excuses also cauillations which the men of this world are wont to bring for their defence are so ouerthrowne spoiled of vs that I doe not see where such may find a small hole or crany to escape through vnlesse perhaps of set purpose pretenced malice they shut their eyes and eares that they might not see nor heare this manifest and euident truth What remaineth but that the perfection and beauty of Vertue being seene and knowne thou say with Salomon speaking of Wisedome the companion and sister of Vertue I haue loued her and sought her from my youth I desired to marry her such loue had I vnto her beautie In that she is conuersant with God it commendeth her nobility yea the Lord of all things loueth her For shee is the Schoolemistresse of the knowledge of GOD and the chooser out of his works If riches be a possession to be desired in this lyfe vvhat is richer then wisedome that worketh all thinges For if prudence worketh what is it among all things that worketh better then shee If a man loue righteousnes her labours are vertuous for shee teacheth sobernes and prudence righteousnes and strength which are the most profitable things that men can haue in this life If a man desire great experience shee can tell the things that are past and discerne things to come she knoweth the subtisties of words and the solutions of darke sentences she fore-seeth the signes and wonders or euer they come to passe and the successe of seasons and times Therefore I purposed to take her vnto my company knowing that shee would counsaile mee good things and comfort mee in cares and greefes Hetherto the Wise-man Therefore nothing remayneth but that we conclude this matter with the words of Saint Cyprian taken out of an Epistle to a friend of his written of the contempt of this world Therfore sayth he there is one peaceable and faythfull tranquility one solide firme and perpetuall security that if any one be taken out of the whirle-winds of this turbulent world and be founded and anchored in the hauen of safety he lifteth vp his eyes from the earth to heauen and being admitted to the Lords fellowship and now being neere vnto his God in his minde whatsoeuer amongst humane things seemeth great and lofty vnto others he glorieth that it lyeth within the circumference of his conscience Now he can desire nor couet nothing of the world who is greater then the world How stable and vnfoyled a defence is it how celestiall a gard abounding with perpetuall good things to be deliuered from the snares of this entrapping and enthralling world to be purged from these earthly dregs and incorporated into the light of eternal immortality Let him consider of this and view it well ouer whom the deceitful dangerousnes of this pernicious enemy before raged tirannized we are compelled more to loue when we know and condemne what we were and see what we now are and shal be Neyther is this worke brought to passe by rewards bribes and the power of man but it is the free gift of God and easily obtayned As the sunne shineth of his owne accord the day is enlightned a fountaine streameth and a shower falleth so the heauenly spirit infuseth it selfe Afterwards the soule beholding heauen and knowing her Maker she being higher then the earth and more noble then any earthly power beginneth to be that which she beleeueth her selfe to be Onely thou whom the heauenly warfare hath appoynted a Souldier in these spirituall warres hold and keepe thy standing incorrupt and fenced with religious vertues vse continually eyther praying or reading Somtimes talke thou with God and somtimes God with thee let him instruct thee with his precepts let him haue the guiding and ordering of thee whō he maketh rich no man shal make poore There can be no penury where the heauenly bounty hath filled and blessed Now coffers stuft with crownes now stately Pallaces and gay buildings will seeme base and vild vnto thee when as thou knowest that thou thy selfe are more beautified and adorned being a house in which the Lord sitteth as in his temple and where the holy Ghost dwelleth Let vs trimme vp this house with the ornaments of innocency let vs enlighten it with the sun-shine of righteousnes This house shall neuer decay through age neyther shall the deckings of it waxe old Whatsoeuer things are counterfet are not lasting neyther doe they yeeld any stability to the po●●●ssors which haue not the truth of possession This perpertually continueth with a colour vndecayed with honour vntaynted and with splendour vnobscured it cannot be abolished nor extinguished it may be only conuerted into further perfection the body being glorified Hetherto Cyprian Whosoeuer therfore is moued with the reasons and arguments which copiously we haue handled in this booke the grace of God and Diuine inspiration assisting without which all is done in vaine and desireth to embrace so great a blessing of Vertue let him reade the booke following which deliuereth and handleth the method and order how to come vnto Vertue The end of the first booke of the Sinners Guide the Sinners Guyde Written in the Spanish tongue by the learned and reuerend Diuine F. Lewes of Granada ¶ Since translated into Latine Italian and French And now perused and digested into English by Francis Meres Maister of Arts and student in Diuinitie Romans 12. verse 2. ¶ Fashion not your selues like vnto this vvorld but be yee changed by the renuing of your minde that yee may prooue what is the good will of GOD and acceptable and perfect AT LONDON ¶ Printed by I. R. for Iohn Flasket and Paule Linley Anno Dom. 1598. THE PROLOGVE of the second Booke IT sufficeth not to haue perswaded man to embrace Vertue vnlesse also we teach him the manner way how to come to Vertues pallace Therfore after wee haue in the former Booke deliuered many reasons and those verie forcible and perswasible to moue the harts of men to the loue of Vertue now it is meete that we come to the practise and vse of it and that we set down many counsailes and sundry documents which are profitable and which as with a hand may leade men vnto Vertue It is the first steppe vnto Vertue
new or vnthought of and that he remember that most prudent counsaile of the Wiseman My sonne if thou wilt come into the seruice of God stand fast in righteousnes and feare and prepare thy soule to temptation For this ought to be most assured vnto him that comming to the seruice of God he commeth not to playes pageants not to banquets or feasts but he must take vp his shield and speare being harnessed with his coate offence for the battaile For albeit that it is true that we haue many helps and supportations in this life as we haue sayd before neuertheles it cannot be denied but that many difficulties doe offer themselues in the beginning which the young Souldier of Christ ought to haue premeditated least they come as at vnawares and discourage him and let him alwayes haue in mind the reward and price for which he fighteth that it is of so great value that it deserueth this and much more But least this feare inflicted of his aduersaries should discourage him or dash him out of countenance let him thinke that they are much moe and more powerfull that are for him then they that are against him For althogh on that side that sin standeth there area great multitude of cōspiratours yet on Vertues side the fauourers and defenders are stronger and more powerfull For as we haue sayd the Diuine grace is opposed to our corrupt nature God to the deuill good custome to euill an army of Angels to the multitude of euil spirits good examples and the fellowship of the Saints to euill examples and persecutions and the consolations and comforts of the holy Ghost to the delights pleasures of the world Neyther is it to be doubted but that euery one of these is stronger and mightier then his contrary Because grace is stronger then nature God then the deuill good Angels then euill and spirituall delights and pleasures are much more forcible and effectuall then carnall THE FIRST PART OF THE SECOND BOOKE OF THE SINNERS GVIDE VVhich entreateth of vices and theyr remedies Of the firme and resolute purpose which a Christian ought to haue that he may not doe any thing hereafter which is sinne CHAP. III. THE two former instructions being set downe as the principall foundations of this vvhole building the first and chiefest thing that a man must doe that he may be disposed and fit to offer and consecrate himselfe to the Diuine worship and to the exercise of Vertue is to plant in his soule a firme and resolute purpose that he will neuer heereafter fall into sinne by which he might lose the fauour of his Sauiour and the enioying of his blessings This is the chiefest foundation of a spirituall life this is that by which the friendship and fauour of God is kept and the hope of the kingdome of heauen In this Charity consisteth and the spirituall life of the soule This is that that maketh the sonnes of men the sonnes of God temples of the holy Ghost liuely members of Christ and maketh them pertakers of all the spirituall blessings of the Church So long as the soule perseuereth in this determination it abideth in Charity in the state of saluation but so soone as it steppeth back from it it is blotted out of the booke of life and is registred in the volume of perdition and is transported to the kingdome of darknes So that this busines being well considered of it seemeth that as in all things as well naturall as artificiall there is a substance and an accident betweene which there is this difference that the accidents being changed the substance still remayneth euen as the pictures of an house being defaced and the furniture spoyled the house notwithstanding standeth firme on the foundations albeit not with the same perfection but if the house fall which is the substance then nothing remayneth after the same manner as long as this holy and sanctified purpose standeth firme and fast in the soule the substance of Vertue standeth vnmoueable but if that faile forth-with all things fall The reason of this is because the whole foundation of a godly life consisteth in Charity which is to loue God aboue al things but he loueth God aboue all things who aboue all things hateth sinne for only through sinne this charity and loue of God perisheth For euen as adultery is the most contrary thing to mariage so that which is most contrary to a godly and vertuous life is sinne for this killeth Charity in which this life consisteth For this cause the Martyrs haue suffered so greeuous and horrible torments not refusing to be rosted to be fleane and to be cut in peeces to be bowelled to be racked to be torne in peeces of wild beasts rather then they would sinne by which they might lose the fauour of God yea although it was but for a moment not being ignorant in the meane time but that they might repent after the offence done and might be againe entertayned into fauour as Saint Peter was after that hee had thrice denied Christ. Neuerthelesse they had rather suffer all the torments of the vvorld then for so short a time to want the Diuine fauour Of this euery where we haue many examples but amongst others of three vvomen one of the old Testament the mother of the seauen sonnes in the Machabees and two vnder the new Testament one of which is called Felicitas the other Symphorosa each of them in like manner the mother of seauen Sonnes All these three were present at the tortures and martyrdome of their sonnes and seeing them to be rent and torne and the flesh with the skinne to be pulld from the bones vntill theyr bowels and intrals gushed out they did not only not faynt beholding so sorrowfull a spectacle but they comforted their sonnes and encouraged them admonishing them to fight manfully for the fayth and obedience of God At length they also with theyr sonnes for the same cause most constantly yeelded vp their lifes But after these famous illustrious examples I will here set downe another which is rehearsed of S. Ierome in the life of Paule the first inhabiter of the Wildernes The Tyrant saith he commaunded another in the florish of his young yeeres to be brought into a most pleasant Garden and there amongst the white Lillies and the redde Roses where a bright Riuer made a delectable noyse the winde made a pleasant ruffling among the leaues of trees he commaunded a soft bed of Downe to be made and that he might not roule himselfe off from it he caused him to be left lying vpon it fettered with bonds of silke to whom when all the rest were departed came a very beautifull harlot who began to coll kisse him vse al daliance to ripen lust and that which is a shame to be spoken shee dallied vvith his priuities that his body beeing thus prouoked to lust shee might gette the maistry ouer him What this souldier of
It with-draweth man from all honest studies and exercises and drowneth him in the sea of carnal pleasures so that miserable man dare not presume nor offer to speake o f +any other thing then of dishonest and carnall delights It maketh young men foolish and reprochful and exposeth old men to the scorne of men Neither is this vice content thus to haue plunged men vnlesse also it ouerthrow and squander abrode his riches and substance There are no riches so aboundant no treasures so infinite which luxury will not exhaust consume in a short time For the belly and the instruments of lust are neere neighbours and very well agree betweene themselues and are faythfull complices confederates in this work Hence it is that men giuen to luxurie are for the most part prodigall and lauishers and delight in banquets and drunkennesse and riches are chiefely consumed through gluttony and sumptuosnesse of apparell Thys also is common to all luxurious persons vnhonest women are neuer satisfied neyther euer cry they hoe albeit very many ouches tablets iewels precious stones rings and such like be giuen them and they take more delight to be honoured with such things then with theyr wretched louers who giue these vnto them All these are proued to be true by the example of the prodigall chyld who spent all his substance by liuing riotously and luxuriously Remember that the oftner thou gyuest thy thoughts thy body for a pray to carnall lust thou shalt finde the lesser satietie in them For the delight doth not bring satietie vnto them but doth procure and increase a further thirst for the loue between a man and a woman is neuer altogether extinguished yea the flame when it is supposed extinct on a suddaine reuiueth and burneth more fiercely Consider moreouer diligently that the pleasure which is reaped of thys vice is short and momentany but the punishment which followeth is eternall Surely this change is too vnequall that for so filthy a pleasure of so short continuance thou shouldest lose in this lyfe the ioy of a good conscience and in that to come euerlasting glory besides to suffer paines vvhich neuer shall haue end Therefore very well said Saint Gregory It is momentany and short sayth he that delighteth but eternal that tormenteth Looke vpon the price of virginity and the dignity of that purity which perisheth and is violated by this filthy vice and thou shalt see that virgins in thys life doe begin to leade an Angels life and by the singuler priuiledge of this purity to be like vnto celestiall spirits For to liue in the flesh without sensual carnality this is to liue rather an Angels life then an humane lyfe Thys is that which Bernard sayth It is onely chastity that in this place and tyme of mortality representeth a certaine state of immortall glory For amongst the solemnities of marriage it onely chalengeth the custome of that blessed Country wherein they doe neyther marry nor are marryed shewing on the earth after a certaine manner an experience of that heauenly conuersation For this cause that singuler priuiledge is giuen to virgins in heauen of which S. Iohn writeth in his Reuelation These are they sayth he which are not defiled with women for they are virgins these follow the Lambe whether soeuer he goeth And because they haue performed better things in the world then others following the Lord Iesus Christ in pure virginity therefore in the world to come they shal come more neere vnto him and shall more familiarly conuerse with him and shall singulerly be delighted with the purity of theyr bodyes Thys vertue maketh men not onely like vnto Christ but also temples of the holy Ghost For the holy Spirit being a louer of purity as hee detesteth the pollution of luxurie more then other vices albeit all vices displease him so in nothing more willingly or with greater ioy he resteth then in a soule pure and cleane from all carnall pleasure Wherefore the sonne of GOD conceaued by the holy Ghost so loued and priced virginity that for the loue of it he did this stupendious miracle that is he would be borne of a Mother being a Virgine But if thou hast lost thy virginitie at least after shipwracke feare the dangers which now thou hast tried and thou who wouldest not keepe the benefit of nature vncorrupted now it is corrupted stryue to repaire it by conuerting thy selfe vnto the Lord and so much the more diligently turne thy good workes vnto God by how much for thy sins thou hast iudged thy selfe woorthy of greater punishment For often-times saith Saint Gregory it commeth to passe that the soule after sinne is more feruent which in the state of greater inn ocencie was luke-warme and altogether negligent And because GOD hath preserued thee albeit thou hast committed so enormous sinnes and offences commit them nowe no more least God chastise thee together both for thy sinnes past and also for those present and so the last errour be worse then the first With these and such like considerations man ought to arme himselfe against this sinne And these be the remedies of the first kinde which we haue gyuen against this sinne of Luxurie ¶ Other kind of remedies against Luxurie BEsides those remedies which commonly are wont to be deliuered against thys vice there are others also more effectuall and more particuler of which wee will also speake in thys place Let thys therefore be the first stay the beginnings kill the Serpent when it is young for if the enemy be not repelled at the first onset he increaseth and becommeth stronger For as Saint Gregory sayth after the desire of pleasure is kindled and encreaseth in the hart it suffereth a man to thinke on nothing els but on filthy pleasures and vncleane lusts Forthwith therefore the motiues of vices must be killed in the mind whilst they are yet but onely in thought for euen as wood preserueth fire so the thought preserueth and nourisheth desires concupiscences and if the thoughts be good they doe kindle the fire of charitie if they be euill they stirre vp the flame of lust It is needfull also that all the outward sences but especially the sight or the eyes be most diligently kept least they see that which may procure danger for oftentimes a man simply seeth that which when it is seene woundeth the soule Therefore vnaduisedly to looke on women eyther peruerteth or weakeneth the constancy of the beholder Therefore Ecclesiasticus doth giue thee very good counsaile Gaze not on a Mayde that thou fall not by that that is precious in her Goe not about gazing in the streetes of the Citty neyther wander thou in the secret places thereof Turne away thine eye from a beautifull woman and looke not vpon others beauty To perswade this that doctrine of holy Iob ought to be sufficient who although he was a most iust man yet neuerthelesse he did keepe his eyes most diligently as he speaketh
beast with all the strength of thy wit which if it perseuere to sollicite thy minde be thou so much the more cherefully instant to resist it and fight with greater valiancy and fortitude of minde For he that willingly consenteth not to this euill is not hurt albeit his malicious flesh doth hale and pull him to impure and odious conditions But if thou shalt see that all things fall out more prosperously to thy neighbour or to thy friend then to thy selfe giue God thanks and thinke that eyther thou art vnworthy of such prosperity or at least that it is not profitable or conducent for thee and remember that thy businesses shall not succeede the more prosperously with thee because thou enuiest the happy estate of thy neighbour but that they will fall out more aduersly and disasterously But if thou desirest to knowe with what armour and weapons thou mayst resist this vice obserue the considerations following First consider that all enuious men are like vnto the deuill whom our good works doe exceedingly afflict and whom our felicity doth torment with intollerable dolour not because he can enioy it albeit men should lose it for hee hath lost it vvithout hope of recouery but that men taken from dust and earth should not possesse those blessings he lost Hence is that of Augustine in his booke of Christian doctrine God turne saith he the plague of enuie from the mindes of all Christians For enuie is the deuils sinne of which alone the deuill is guilty vnpardonably guilty For it is not sayd to the deuill that he is damned because thou hast committed adultery because thou hast stolne because thou hast violently taken away other mens goods and possessions but because thou falling thy selfe forthwith didst enuy man standing After thys manner men imitating the deuill are wont to enuie other men not because they hope to translate theyr prosperitie to themselues but because they desire that all may be as miserable and wretched as they themselues are Marke consider ô thou enuious man that although he whom thou enuiest should not haue those goods for which enuy doth so haunt thee yet it foloweth not that presently they should be thine Because therefore that he possesseth them without thy losse or hurt why doth it grieue thee that he possesseth them without thy preiudice But if peraduenture enuie hath possessed thy mind because an other excelleth thee in some vertue and grace of mind as in religion and feruencie of prayer I pray thee see what an enemy thou art to thy selfe For thou art pertaker of all the good prayers of thy neighbour so that thou be in the fauour of GOD and by howe much thy neighbour excelleth in feruencie of spirit by so much thou growest richer in spirituall things and therefore thou enuiest him quite beyond all reason but on the contrary part thou oughtest to reioyce because the profit is cōmon to you both and thou also pertakest of his blessings Consider therefore how great thy misery is that by hovve much thy neighbour profiteth in goodnes by so much thou art the worser but if thou didst loue the good thinges in thy neighbour which thou hast not the same good things should be thine by the vertue of Charitie and so thou shouldest enioy another mans labours without thine owne labour Thys Saint Gregory showeth when he sayth Charitie by louing another mans goodnes maketh it her owne but Enuy by hating that same goodnes turneth it to the wounding of her own breast Perpend also and ponder I pray thee howe enuie burneth the hart dryeth the flesh tortureth the vnderstanding disturbeth the peace of conscience maketh all the daies of the life sorrowfull and heauie and banisheth all tranquility all ioy from the hart of man For enuie is like a worme in wood which as it is bred in the wood so it consumeth it so also enuy is bredde in the hart and the hart is the first thing that it excruciateth and when it hath corrupted the hart it also taketh away the naturall colour of the countenaunce for the pale and wanne colour of the face is a token of the greatnes of the enuy that tormenteth man within There is no Iudge so seuere against a man as enuy for it continually afflicteth him and tortureth her owne Authour For this cause some Authors call this vice iust not that it is iust for it is a sinne but because by her owne torment shee chastiseth him in whom she is and exerciseth punishment vppon him See also howe contrary this vice is vnto Charitie which is God and to the common good which God euery where respecteth and promoteth For it enuyeth the good things of other men and abhorreth those whom God hath made and redeemed and on whom GOD bestoweth his blessings which thing is manifestly condemned for it dissolueth that that is made of God if not indeede yet in will But if thou will vse a present remedy for this disease loue Humility and flye Pride which is the mother of this deadly plague For when as a proud man cannot away with a superiour or an equall enuy is easily inflamed against them who excell in any thing for if it see any man eyther superiour or better it thinketh it selfe worser baser The Apostle vnderstood this well when he sayd Let vs not be desirous of vaine-glory prouoking one another enuying one another He therefore that would cut off the branches of enuy it is needfull that first he dig vp the roote of ambition from vvhich enuy ariseth Furthermore thou must also withdraw thy minde from an inordinate desire of temporall goods and thou must only loue the celestiall inheritance spirituall blessings which are not diminished albeit there are many who loue and possesse them yea they so much the more increase by how much the possessors are multiplied On the contrary part temporall goods are so much the more diminished by how much they are moe amongst whō they are diuided therfore enuie discruciateth the mind of him that lusteth after them For when as another receaueth that that he desired or it altogether perisheth or is diminished it certainly cannot be done without griefe But it sufficeth not that thou shouldest not greeue at the good of thy neighbour but it is necessary that thou shouldest doe well vnto him as much as lyeth in thy power and moreouer thou shouldest pray vnto the Lord God that he would supply those things that thou art not able to doe Thou must not contemne any man Loue thy friends in the Lord and thine enemies for the Lords sake vvho when thou wast his enemy he so loued thee that to redeeme thee and deliuer thee out of the hands of thine enemies he gaue his owne life Although thy neighbour be euill yet for all this he must not be contemned but in this thou must imitate the Phisitian who hateth the disease yet loueth the person of the diseased
leaue there thine offering before the altar and goe thy way first be reconciled to thy brother and then come and offer thy gift By which precept we know more cleerely then the noone day how great a sinne discord with our neighbour is man being out of the fauour of God so long as this contention lasteth and therefore he doth nothing pleasing vnto him whilst hee is guilty of this crime Such a like thing Gregory insinuateth whē he saith Because nothing pleaseth God without concord the good things that are done of vs profit nothing vnlesse we carrie with a quiet minde the wrongs done vnto vs. Consider also who is he whom thou supposest to bee thine enemy for it is of necessity that he is eyther iust or vniust If he be iust certainly it is an euill and a vild thing to wish and do ill to a righteous man and to be an enemy vnto him who hath God for his friend but if he be vniust it is a thing also altogether to be detested that thou shouldest reuenge another mans maliciousnes with thine owne maliciousnes appointing thy selfe Iudge in thine own cause shouldest chastice another mans iniustice with thine owne If thou reuengest thine owne iniurie vpon thine enemy and thine enemy his vpon thee there shall neuer be an end of discord and reuengement But that is the most glorious kinde of reuenge which the Apostle teacheth saying Ouercome euill with good that is ouercome other mens vices with thine owne vertues For whilst men render euill for euill neither will be brought to yeeld it commeth to passe manie times that at length they are ouercome by ignominie reproch for anger afflicteth them and they are shamefully conquered of theyr owne passions which if they had ouercome tamed theyr victory had been more glorious then his that hath wonne and vanquished a Citty by force of Armes yea the victory is much lesser to haue taken one or many Citties which are without vs then to conquer our owne affections which rule reuell within vs and to bridle our proud disdaine and indignation which is shut within vs which except wee holde vnder it will rise against vs and will force vs to assay those things which afterwards we shall repent vs of and be ashamed of and that which is worser we our selues shall scarcely vnderstand of the euill that we doe for he that is angry thinketh all reuenge iust and is often deceiued supposing the pricke of anger to be the zeale of iustice and by this meanes the vice is couered with the semblance of vertue Therefore to ouercome this vice it is the best remedy that thou be very carefull and diligent to pull vp by the rootes all inordinate loue of thy selfe and of thine affayres for otherwise anger will easily waxe hote if eyther thou or any of thine be hurt although with the least word Furthermore when thou feelest the beginnings of the temptation of anger thou must prepare thy selfe vnto patience fore-seeing wisely all the kinds of euill which may arise in any busines because a dart foreseene doth lesse hurt Thou must firmely purpose in thy mind that as often as choller fumeth and heateth in thee that thou neyther say nor doe any thing yea beleeue not nor trust to thy selfe but let all things be suspected of thee which thy hart perswadeth thee at this time albeit they seeme to agree vnto reason Deferre the execution of thy will whilst anger boyleth or vntill thou hast once or oftner sayd ouer the Lords prayer or some other thing That wholsome counsaile of Athenodorus which is reported by Plutarch ought here to be obserued For when as he by reason of his old age desired leaue to returne to his owne house and Augustus the Emperour had graunted him leaue When he tooke his farewell of Caesar desirous to leaue behind him some memoriall worthy a Philosopher he sayd O Caesar when thou art angry before thou shalt say or doe any thing repeate ouer in thy minde the foure and twenty Greeke letters Caesar taking the Philosopher by the right hand sayd Yet I haue neede of thy presence and so retayned him with him another whole yeare For the Philosopher by this aduice taught that those things were done mithout reason which were done at such time as anger boyleth in the hart And it is diligently to be marked that there is not a worser time to deliberate in what should be done then when a man is angry and yet all men especially would then dispatch what they haue to doe Therefore it is very meete that a man at that time when fury and wrath hath possessed his mind should resist such enterprizes with a manly courage For as it is knowne to all men that a drunken man cannot doe any thing wisely and with reason and of which he doth not afterwards repent him as we read of Alexander the great so when a man is disturbed and troubled with anger and blinded with the smoke of this passion he cannot rest neyther take aduisement which to day although it seeme iust and reasonable vnto him yet to morrow when the fury of his passion shall be ouer he shall confesse that it was vniust and vnreasonable for it is without controuesie that anger vvine and loue that is carnall concupiscence are the worst counsailers that may be found Where-vpon the Wise-man sayth very well Wine and women leade wise-men out of the way and put men of vnderstanding to reproofe By vvine the vvise-man vnderstandeth not only materiall vvine which is wont to blind and obscure the reason but any passion that stragleth out of the right way which in like manner blindeth and obscureth the reason albeit not euery thing that then is done is alwayes culpable And this aduice is not to be contemned if when thou art angry thou shalt forth-with occupy thy selfe with some manner of busines and so diuert and turne thy cogitations from anger for if thou doost with-draw wood from the fire the flame is extinguished And with al thy strength contend to loue them whom thou must necessarily suffer for if that sufferance be not ioyned to loue the patience which outwardly appeareth is oftentimes conuerted into rancour Therfore when Saint Paule sayth Loue is patient he presently addeth and bountifull For true loue omitteth not to loue those bountifully whom it suffereth patiently In like manner it is wisedome to giue place to the wrath of thy brother for if thou shalt seperate thy selfe from him being angry thou shalt giue him place till his anger be ouer or at least if thou wilt not depart aunswer him curteously For as Salomon sayth A soft aunswere putteth away wrath Remedies against Idlenes CHAP. X. IDlenes is a slothfulnes and a slugishnes of the minde to doe any good but in this place it is a lothsomnes and a wearines of spirituall thinges How dangerous this sinne is appeareth by these words of Christ
that which the Lord sayd The vvorld shall reioyce and yee shall sorrow but your sorrow shall be turned into ioy Or hath it slipt out of thy memory which the same Lord sayth in a●other place W●e be to you that now laugh for yee shall 〈…〉 weepe Many words and much babling sayth He is not faulty that speaketh many words so they be good 〈◊〉 he that speaketh few and those ill Discreet 〈◊〉 answereth It is true that thou sayst but whilst many good wordes are vttered it often happeneth that the speech begunne of good words often endeth in ill Thys the holy Scripture telleth In 〈◊〉 ●●rds there cannot want iniqu●ty Is it possible that in many words there should be none faulty But can idle and vnprofitable words be auoyded of which thou art sure to render an accou●t hereafter Luxury sayth Why doost thou not wallow thy selfe in pleasure seeing that thou knowest not what will become of thee Therefore thou oughtest not to lose the time alotted vnto thee in want because thou knowest not how soone it may fade away For if GOD would not haue had man no take his pleasure with woman at the beginning hee would haue onely created male and not female Undefiled Chastitie answereth I would not haue thee to sayne thy selfe ignorant what shall become of thee after thys lyfe For if thou liuest religiously and chastly thy ioy shall be without end but if thou leadest thy life irreligiously and luxuriously thou shalt be tortured with eternall paynes Spirituall fornication sayth Doth he doe any thing damnable who consenteth to lust in his hart and doth not effect the deede of his desired lust Cleannes and purity of hart aunswereth He offendeth very deeply that keepeth not purely the cleannes and chastity of his hart Wher-vpon the Author of cleannes and chastity saith in the Gospell Whosoeuer looketh on a w●m●n to lust after her hath committed adultery with her already i● his hart To auoyde this holy Iob saith I made a couenant 〈◊〉 ●i●e eyes that I should not thinke on a mayde The loue of this world sayth VVhat can be more beautifull honest or delectable then that we daily behold in this present life O how admirable i● the glorious vaute of heauen in the tralucent ayre in the light of the Sunne in the increase and decrease of the Moone in the variety and course of the starres how delightfull is the earth in the flowers and flourish of vvoods in the sweetnes of fruites in the pleasantnes of meddowes and riuers in the ripenes plenty of corne in the fruitfulnes of Vineyards loaden with clusters of Grapes in the shades and chaces of woods in the running and coursing of Horses and Doggs in the skippings and iumpings of Harts and Goates in the flying of Hawkes in the necks and feathers of Peacocks Doues and Turtles in the paynted walls and carued roofes of houses in the sweet and pleasing sounds and tunes of Organes and all musicke in the beautifull aspects of vvomen in their fore-heads in their hayre in their eyes and cheekes in their lips and necks in their nose and hands and especially if they be beautified and adorned with gold and precious stones with Bracelets Ouches Carcan●ts and Tablets and such other Ornaments which I cannot in any wise reckon The loue of the heauenly Countrey aunswereth If these things delight thee which are vnder heauen if the prison be so beautifull what is the Countrey the Citty and the house If they be such and so excellent which the strangers enioy what be they which the children possesse If they that be mortall and miserable be so rewarded in this lyfe how are they that be immortall and blessed inriched in that life Wherefore let the loue of this present world goe where none is so borne that he doth not dye and let the loue of the future world come in the place where all so liue and are reuiued that they dye no more Where no aduersity disturbeth no necessity pincheth no greefe disquieteth but euerlasting ioy raigneth and remayneth for euer and euer If thou demaundest what is there where there is such and so great felicity it cannot be aunswered otherwise but that whatsoeuer good is that is there and whatsoeuer euill is that is not there Thou askest what that good is Why doost thou aske me It is aunswered thee of a Prophet and of an Apostle The things which eye hath not seene neyther eare hath heard ●eyther h●th entr●d int● m●ns hart hath God prep●red for them that loue him VVhatsoeuer hath hetherto beene spoken of vs hath this ●yme that it may moue vs to haue alwayes our spirituall weapons in a readines which are necessary for vs in this warfare for the attaynement of the first part of vertue which is the flying and eschewing of vices and to defend this fraile house of ours in which God hath placed vs least it should be surprized of enemies For if we shall faithfully keepe this Mansion and Habitacle there is no doubt but that heauenly guest will turne in vnto it and will lodge and dwell in it Seeing that Saint Iohn sayth God is loue and he that dwelleth in loue dwelleth in God and God in him But he dwelleth in loue who doth nothing contrary to loue and the opposition and contrary to loue is onely sinne And against this sinne all that fighteth and warreth vvhich hetherto hath beene spoken of vs. ¶ The end of the first part of the second Booke THE SECOND PART OF THE SECOND BOOKE OF THE SINNERS GVYDE In which wee entreate of the exercise of Vertues Of the three kinde of Vertues in which the vvhole summe of Christian righteousnesse is contained CHAP. XIII SEeing that in the former part of thys Booke wee haue spoken largely and sufficiently of sinnes by contagion of which our soules are polluted and obscured now we wil intreat of Vertues which beautifie them with spirituall graces and adorne them with the ornaments of righteousnesse making them seeme fayre and beauteous in the sight of the Diuine Maiestie Euen as it pertaineth vnto iustice to giue to euery one that is his owne belongs vnto him that is to God to our neighbour to our selues so also there are three kindes of vertues pertayning to righteousnes and iustice and which concurre to the effecting and perfecting of it One is by which we render to GOD that which is due vnto him the second is by which wee giue to our neighbour that which is his and the third by which man is bound vnto himselfe When man hath attained these three kindes of vertues nothing is further required to fulfill all that righteousnes vvhich he professeth But if thou wouldest learne in fewe words and very summarily howe thys may be brought to passe I will tell thee by thys triple duty and bond man shall repay most exactly all his debt that is if towards GOD he hath the hart of a sonne towards his
his neighbour hath fulfilled the Law What greater prayse may be vttered or spoken of any other vertue Besides all thys the most beloued disciple of Christ I meane Iohn in his canonicall Epistles doth repeate nothing so often neyther commendeth any thing so much as this vertue And that he teacheth in his Epistles he confirmeth in his history nothing was so cōmon in his mouth as Bretheren loue one another and that through the whole course of hys lyfe yea when he was conuersant among the Disciples hee would often and sundry times on one day repeate it and when he was demaunded why he repeated it so often he answered the demaunders Because it is the precept of the Lord and if it alone be done it is sufficient ¶ Of the duties of Charitie HE therefore that would satisfie the Diuine will let him assuredly knowe that amongst all the principall matters that GOD commaundeth there is not one so much beate vppon and so often required as this commaundement of loue yet so that we vnderstand not thys to be a bare and a naked affection but to haue annexed vnto it all the effects which are wont to concurre with true loue for otherwise it were not woorthy of the name of loue as the same Euangelist showeth saying Who so hath this worlds good and seeth his brother haue neede and shutteth vp his compassion from him howe dwelleth the loue of God in him My babes let vs not loue in word neyther in tongue but in deed and in verity Therefore vnder the name of loue amongst many other sixe things are comprehended To loue to counsayle to releeue to beare to pardon and to teach by good examples which workes are so ioyned with Charitie that as any one hath moe or fewer of them he hath more or lesse Charitie Thys we say to this end because there are found some who say I loue but theyr loue hath no effect but the name onely There be others who loue and by good admonitions and counsailes doe giue some relish of it but they doe not open theyr coffers neither put theyr hands into theyr Chest that they may releeue the necessities of theyr brethren and neyghbours Againe there be others that helpe theyr neyghbour with theyr aduice releeue hym with that they possesse yet they beare not the iniuries and infirmities of theyr brother nor follow the counsaile of the Apostle who sayth Beare ye one anothers burden so fulfil the law of Christ. Some beare patiently the iniury offered vnto thē but they do not pardon mercifully him that hath iniured them and although in their harts they beare no hate yet outwardly they doe not show forth their loue by benefits by pliantnesse and by fauour These although they doe not faile in the first yet they doe not profit in the second neither doe they come to the perfection of this vertue There be some that haue all the fore-said effects but they edifie theyr neighbor neyther with words nor with good examples which surely is the noblest among the duties of Charitie According to this order euery man may examine himselfe that he may vnderstand what he hath and what is wanting vnto him in this vertue For we may say hee that loueth is in the first degree of charitie hee that loueth and giueth counsell in the second he that loueth counsaileth and releeueth in the third he that loueth counsaileth releeueth and suffereth in the fourth he that loueth counsaileth releeueth suffereth and pardoneth in the fift but he that loueth counsaileth succoureth suffereth pardoneth and teacheth edyfying by examples or godly words which is properly of those that are perfect and who are Apostolike men he hath ascended the sixt steppe and standeth vpon the vpmost staire And these be the positiue or affirmatiue acts which are required in charitie for they showe what we ought to doe for our neighbour There be others negatiue which teach what wee ought not to doe to our neighbour of which sort these are Not to iudge another not to detract another mans estimation not to couet his goods not to lust after the dignity or the wife of our neighbour not to giue him an offence or scandalize him eyther by raylings or vnhonest words or those that are superfluous much lesse by examples or ill counsailes He that diligently obserueth all these he fulfilleth whatsoeuer is required in the perfection of this diuine commaundement And if thou desirest a particuler and a briefe memory of all these comprehended in one worde see that thou hast as wee sayd before the hart of a mother towards thy neighbour and thou shalt altogether fulfill whatsoeuer hath hetherto been spoken Consider how a wise a religious mother louing her sonne admonisheth him if any danger be neere vnto him she succoureth him in need she beareth his errors and faults with patience sometimes chasticing them with iustice some-times couering and concealing them vvith wisedom For all vertues do waite vpon this one as the Queene and mother of all other Vertues Consider also howe the same mother reioyceth at the good and sorroweth at the ill hap of her sonne no otherwise then if they were her owne With vvhat great zeale she affecteth his profit and honour how deuoutly and diligently she alwayes prayeth vnto GOD for him to be short how shee is more carefull for the health and safety of her sonne then for her owne and that shee is cruell and seuere towards herselfe that shee may be gentle and good to her sonne If thou canst come thus farre that thou louest thy neighbour with such an hart then thou art come to the perfection of chatie but if it be not giuen vnto thee to ascend so high yet at least let this be the scope of thy desires and alwayes direct thy lyfe hether that thou maist be lifted higher and higher and that thou mayst not sticke in lower matters But if thou shalt aske mee howe thou mayest be induced with such an hart to loue a forreiner I say that thou oughtest to consider of thy neighbour not as a forreiner or an alian but as the image of GOD the workmanshyp of his hands his sonne and the liuely member of Christ. Hence it is that Saint Paule so often admonisheth vs that all we are the members of Christ therefore by sinning against our neighbour wee sinne against Christ and by dooing good vnto our neighbour vvee do good vnto Christ. So that thou must consider of thy neighbour not as a man or such a man but as of Christ himselfe or a liuely member of him And although thy neighbour be not such an one in respect of the matter of his body yet hee is such an one in regard of the participation of the same spirit and of the greatnes of the reward remuneration seeing that Christ sayth He that receaueth his neighbour receiueth him neyther shall his reward be other then if hee had receiued Christ hymselfe
is to be feared that they haue no care of inward defects which are not seene although they are most diligent in outward which are publique and openly discerned Furthermore the exteriour vertues as they are more manifest vnto men so also they are better known and had in greater esteeme as are Abstinence Watching Discipline corporall austeritie But the interiour vertues Hope Charity Humility Discretion the Feare of God and the Contempt of the world are more occult and hid and therefore albeit they be in greater honour with God yet they are not so valued in mans iudgement And therefore our Sauiour sayth Yee are they that iustifie your selues before men but God knoweth your harts Not dissonant to this is that of Paule Hee is not a Iewe which is a Iew outward Neyther is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh But he is a Iew which is one inwardly and the circumcision of the hart which consisteth in the spirit and not in the letter is circumcision whose praise is not of men but of God Seeing therefore that those externall are in so great estimation among men and are so admired of all and the appetite of selfe honour and excellencie is so subtill and the most powerfull of all the appetites it is to be feared least that affection draw a man rather to loue and seeke after those vertues by which greater honour is expected then those by which lesser yea perhaps among men none For to the loue of these the spirit inuiteth but to the loue of the other the spirit and the flesh inuite together which is exceeding vehement and most vnpatient in her desires Which seeing that it is so not without cause it is to be feared least these two affections should ouer-come that one and should carry the victory from it To thys mischiefe the light of this doctrine opposeth it selfe which defendeth and patronizeth a iuster cause and notwithstanding these commaundeth place to be giuen to this which deserueth more admonishing vs that we loue that and embrace it with greater feruency which is more profitable and more necessary ¶ The third instruction BY that also wee gather that as often as it happeneth that these vertues doe so concurre at one and the selfe same time that we cannot entertaine and content them altogether then according to the rule of Gods precepts the lesser must giue place to the greater Otherwise order will be inuerted and disturbed This Saint Bernard teacheth in his booke of the precept and the dispensation Furthermore sayth he many things are inuented and ordayned not because we may not liue otherwise but because so to liue is more expedient neyther are they deuised for any other end then for the preseruing and good of charity So long therfore as they respect and ayme at charity they stand firme and vnmoueable and may not be changed without offence no not of the inuenters and ordayners But if contrarily at any time they seeme contrary vnto charity they are to be changed and altered but onely of those to whom it is giuen to see this and to whom this busines is committed to be ouer-seene and not of euery ouer-weening Disciplinarian and giddy-braind humorist seemeth it not most meete and requisite that those things that were inuented for Charity should also for charity when it seemeth conuenient be eyther omitted or intermitted or be changed into some other thing more commodious For otherwise without doubt it is most vniust if ordinances and constitutions onely deuised for charity should be held and maintayned against charity Therefore let them be held assuredly and firmely immutable yea amongst Prelates which are grounded vpon necessary considerations but so farre forth as they serue vnto charity Hetherto are the words of Saint Bernard ¶ The fourth instruction TWo kinds of iustice and righteousnes are gathered out of this same Doctrine one is true the other false True righteousnes and iustice comprehendeth together both things internall and externall which are required to the preseruing of them That which is false and counterfeit obserueth some externall without internall without the loue and feare of God without humility without deuotion and without other internall vertues Like to this was the righteousnes of the Phariseis of whom the Lord speaketh in Mathew Woe sayth hee vnto you Scribes and Phariseis hipocrits for ye tythe Mint and Annise and Cummin and haue left the waightier matters of the law iudgement mercy and fayth these ought ye to haue done and not to leaue the other vndone Ye blind guides which straine out a gnat and swallow a Camell Woe vnto you Scribes and Phariseis hypocrits for ye make cleane the vtter side of the cup and of the platter but within they are full of bribery and excesse And a little after Woe vnto you Scribes and Phariseis hypocrits for ye are like vnto paynted Sepulchers which indeede appeare beautifull outward but are within full of dead mens bones and of all filthines Of the same kind is that righteousnes which so often is reprehended of God in the Scriptures by the Prophets for whom the mouth of one speaketh This people honoureth me with their mouth and glorifieth me with their lips but their hart is farre from me and the feare which they haue vnto me proceedeth of a commaundement that is taught of men but they haue despised my law And in another place Why offer ye so many sacrifices vnto me sayth the Lord I am full of the burnt offerings of vveathers and of the fatnes of fed beasts I haue no pleasure in the blood of bullocks lambs and goates Offer me no moe oblations for it is but lost labour Incense is an abhominable thing vnto me I may not away with your new moones your Sabaoths and solemne meetings your solemne assemblies are wicked I hate your new moones and appointed feasts euen from my very hart they make me weary I cannot abide them What meaneth this vvhat doth God condemne that he appoynted and expresly commaunded especially seeing that they be the acts of the noblest vertue which we call Religion whose proper function and duty is to worship God with the seruice of adoration and Religion No certainly but he condemneth the men that contenting themselues with those externall ceremonies had no regard nor care of true righteousnes and the feare of the Lord as forth-with he declareth saying Wash you make you cleane put away your euill thoughts out of my sight cease from doing of euill learne to doe well apply your selues to equity deliuer the oppressed helpe the fatherles to his right let the widdowes complaine come before you And then goe to sayth the Lord let vs talke together though your sinnes be as red as scarlet they shall be as white as snow and though they were like purple they shall be as white as wooll In another place he repeateth the same thing and that with greater vehemency He that slayeth sayth he an Oxe for me
brother of the louers of God this the sleepe which they sleepe Therefore with this sweete and amiable humming and murmuring and with this acceptable and delightfull harmony of the creatures the quiet soule is brought to bed and beginneth to sleepe that sleepelesse sleepe of which is written I sleepe and my hart watcheth When as therfore this most sweet Bridegrome seeth his spouse sleeping in his armes hee keepeth and preserueth her in that lyuing and vitall sleepe and commaundeth that none doe awake her saying I charge you ô daughters of Ierusalem by the Roes and by the Hinds of the field that yee stirre not vp nor waken my loue vntill she please Tell mee what nights seeme these vnto thee What night of the children of this world can be more sweet or pleasant Who at this time walke laying snares and setting nets for the chastity of virgins and innocent Matrons that they may destroy their good names their own soules rushing both body and soule into destruction heaping and storing vp for themselues the wrath of God against the day of the wrath of God and their owne perdition ¶ Of their comforts and consolations who first begin to serue God and are Punies and Nouices in his Schoole TO all things which hetherto haue beene spoken perhaps thou wilt ahnswere with one obiection saying these consolations and blandishments which wee haue hetherto handled are not common to all but proper vnto the perfect but that one may become perfect many things are required It is true that these belong to such men yet our most kind Lord by the sweetnes of his blessing doth meete with them who first begin giuing vnto them at the first as vnto children milke and afterwards teaching them to eate bread and more solide meates Doth not that solemne day come into thy minde which the father celebrated for his prodigall child Doost thou not know of the feast and the guesse inuited Art thou ignorant of the musicke and reioycing that there was made What doe these things meane but to signifie the spirituall ioy with which the soule is delighted when she seeth her selfe brought out of Egipt and deliuered from the hand of Pharao and from the seruitude of the deuill How shall not that pleasant banquet be prepared for a seruant made free How shall hee not inuite all creatures that they may meete together and with him giue thanks to his deliuerer How shall not he sing first and thereby also inuite others saying Let vs sing vnto the Lord for hee hath triumphed gloriously the horse and him that rode vpon him hath he ouerthrowne in the Sea Which thing if it be not so where is the prouidence of God which prouideth for euery creature most perfectly according to his nature fragility age and capacity For it is certaine that men yet carnall and drowned in the world cannot tread this vnusuall and vnfrequented path neyther tread the world vnder theyr feete vnlesse the Lord stretch forth his hand and preuent them by the like sweetenes and delectablenes It pertayneth therefore to the diuine prouidence when it is determined to take man from the world to prepare this way and to make it plaine that this new trauailer may walke more easily by it those difficulties being taken away which might terrifie him and draw him backe to the world A most excellent and plaine figure of this way is that by which the Lord brought the children of Israel into the Land of promise of which way thus writeth Moses When Pharaoh had let the people goe God carried them not by the way of the Philistims Countrey though it were neerer for God sayd least the people repent when they see warre and turne againe to Egipt The same prouidence that then God vsed in bringing his people out of Egipt into the Land of promise he now vseth in bringing those to heauen whom he first taketh out of this world We must know in this place that although the comforts and delights of the perfect are very great and excellent yet so great is the goodnes and piety of our God especially towards little ones and young beginners that he respecting their pouerty he himselfe doth helpe them to build them a new house and considering that they are conuersant among many occasions of sinning and that their passions are not as yet mortified that they might carry away the victory that they might be deliuered from the violence of their flesh that they might be driuen from the milke of the world and be tyed in such straight bonds of loue that they should not returne into Egipt and to theyr fathers house he filleth them with a ioy and consolation so powerfull that although they be but beginners and that they haue made but an entrance yet they haue according to their proportion a certaine likelyhood and similitude of the delights and ioy of those that be perfect Tell mee I pray thee what other thing would God signifie by those feasts of the old Testament when hee saith that the first and last day should be of equall worship and solemnity The sixe dayes betweene were of lesse solemnity but the first the last were beyond the rest famous and had their peculier prerogatiues What other thing is this then a shadow and an image of this we speake of Vpon the first day the Lord commanded that the same solemnity should be kept which was vpon the last that wee may vnderstand that in the beginning of the conuersion and in the ende of the perfection the Lord doth celebrate a solemne feast for all his seruants in these considering their proceedings in the other their great necessity vsing towards these iustice with mercy towards the other vsing onely grace or mercy to one giuing the reward of Vertue to the other help in need When trees blosome flourish and when they haue their ripe fruite they are most faire to the eye The day wherin the spousage is contracted and wherin the marriage is solemnized and the wedding consumated are more solemne and renowned then the rest In the beginning the Lord doth affiance and betroth the soule to him but when he taketh her into his house hee maketh a feast for her at his owne cost and charges and that feast is not conformable or aunswerable to the merrits and deserts of the Bride but to the riches of the Bridegrome sending all thinges and all prouision out of his owne houses and saying Wee haue a little sister and she hath no breasts Therefore it is necessary that he nourish his owne creature with the milke of an other Wherefore the same Bride talking with her Bridegrome sayth The young damsels haue loued thee He doth not say the women or Matrons which are soules founded and rooted in vertue but hee sayth young damsels young maydes which are soules which first begin to open their eyes and to looke vpon this new light these sayth the Spouse haue loued
thee For such are wont to feele great motiues and prickes in the beginning of theyr conuersion as Thomas Aquinas sheweth in a certaine worke of his Amongst other causes of this alacrity and ioyfulnes hee sayth that this is one the nouelty of theyr estate of their loue of their light and knowledge of diuine things which then they know but did not know before For the nouelty of that knowledge doth beget in them exceeding admiration and loue ioyned with incredible sweetnes and gratitude which they exhibite vnto him of whom they haue receaued so great good things and of whom they are deliuered and freed out of so great darknes We see by experience that a man when he entreth into any famous Citty or royall Pallace the first day he walketh wondering his minde hanging in suspence by reason of the nouelty of things that there he seeth but when hee hath stayed longer in that place and hath seene the same things oftner that admiration is diminished and that pleasure lesned with which hee did see them at first The same thing happeneth to them at the first when as they enter into this new Citty of grace by reason of the nouelty of things which by little and little are vncouered and layd open in it Therfore it is not to be meruailed at if the Nouices Punies of piety doe feele greater feruours in their soules then those that be antient for the nouelty of the light knowledge of diuine things doth worke in them a greater alteration Hence it is that Saint Bernard hath very well noted that the elder sonne did not lye when hee sayd Behold so many yeeres haue I serued thee neyther euer haue I omitted thy commaundement yet neuer didst thou giue mee a Kid that I might banquet with my friends But after that this thy sonne who hath spent and consumed his substance with harlots came thou killest the fatted Calfe New loue worketh like new wine and water in a Cauldron is so long quiet vntill it beginneth to feele the heate of the fire then forth-with it boyleth swelleth and is carried aloft But afterward although the heate be more intense and augmented yet the water is more quiet and not so swelling leaping and bubling vp as it was when it first began to waxe hot The Lord most curteously and most amiably doth embrace them who first enter into his house The first day they eate with all pleasant allurements and all things are delightsome and acceptable Also the Lord doth himselfe towards these younglings and incipients as Merchants are wont who first bring out a show of their merchandize that by that the buier may estimate the whole thing and thereby be the more willing and be sooner drawne on to buy The loue with which parents embrace theyr young children although it is not greater then that by which they loue those that be elder yet it is more tender and more faire and pleasant These must walke alone the other are carried in their armes these are sent to labour and take paines the other are nourished deliciously and left to doe what they will these vnlesse they get their lyuing they often are hungry the other being idle and doing nothing are desired and entreated to eate yea meate is put into their mouthes Out of this friendship and sweete fellowship of the Lord a spirituall ioy at the length ariseth in them of which the Prophet speaketh Thou waterest aboundantly their furrowes thou multipliest their generations and their growing and braunching shall prosper and reioyce through thy dewing and dropping vpon them What generations be these What branching and growing and what dewing showring vnlesse the dew of the diuine grace by which the spirituall plants are watered which newly haue beene transplanted into the Lords Orchard Of these therefore sayth the Prophet that they are reioyced and refreshed with the dew and showers of his water which is sent from aboue that he might signifie the great ioy which they pertake in the nonage of this new visitation and celestiall benefit But least thou shouldest thinke because hee calleth this friendship or grace a dew or small showre that therefore according to the signification of the name it is little and small which is giuen to young beginners Saint Augustine sayth they drinke of the riuer of Paradice one drop of which is greater then the Ocean which alone is able to quench the thirst of the whole world The argument of them doth not ouerthrow this who say that they doe not feele these ioyes and consolations For if the palate which is corrupted and distempered by ill humors doth not tast the sweetnes of meate for that which is sweet seemeth bitter and that which is bitter sweet what meruaile is it if he that hath his soule corrupted with the worst humors of vices and inordinate affections so accustomed to the flesh-pots of Egipt that he loatheth Manna the bread of Angels Purge thy palate with the teares of repentance and that being purged thou shalt tast and see how sweete the Lord is If these things be so tell me my brother I pray thee what be the goods of this world if they be compared with these they shall not scarcely seeme durt and dung The Doctours teach that there is two kinds of blessednes one vnperfect the other perfect one present the other to come one of the way the other of the Countrey this the blessed enioy in glory the other the righteous enioy in this world What other thing is to be wished of thee then that here thou mayst begin to be happy and that thou mayst receaue in this life the pledge and earnest of the diuine espousals which there are solemnized by words for the present but heere they begin by words for the time to come O man sayth a learned Diuine seeing thou mayst liue in this Paradice enioy a treasure so inestimable goe and sell all that thou hast and purchase for thy selfe this precious and fertile possession especially seeing that it is not deare for it is Christ that selleth it yea rather which giueth it freely Doe not defer this purchase to the time to come for one minute of this time which now vainely slideth from thee is more precious then the treasures of the whole world Although this purchase at the length be giuen vnto thee yet be thou sure that with great greefe thou shalt complaine that thou hast wanted it so long and sorrowing with Saint Augustine thou wilt say I haue loued thee to late and after the time that I should ô thou beauty so auntient and so new I haue loued thee in the euening This blessed man alwayes lamented his slownes although at the length hee was not frustrated of his crowne Therefore attend thou diligently least thou at one time or other complaynest with the like sorrowing that now by thy negligence thou doost loose those blessings which the righteous enioy in this