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A16360 A deuoute epystle of treaty for them that ben tymorouse and fearefull in conscience whiche treatyse yf yt be well red ouer [and] folowyd wyll brynge the reders out of all scrupulosite of conscience and seruyle feare, [and] brynge them to the holy feare and loue of almyghty God. Compyled by a brother of Syon (called wyllyam Bonde a Bacheler of Diuinitie) on whose soule Jesu haue mercy... .; Directory of conscience Bonde, William, fl. 1526-27. 1534 (1534) STC 3276; ESTC S110744 30,541 54

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saruant worshyper of the holy name of Iesu cōmytyng hymselfe only holly to the passion of cryst marcy of oure lorde god And wythin the sayd tyme he had cōfort illuminaciō in soule how to answere the enmy to his gret cōfort to the edefiyng of other And that was this yt was gyuē hym by a light that when so euer suche mocion cam to his mynde that he sulde take that mocion for an occasion remembraunce to honour the passion of crist the blyssed vyrgyn hys mother And yf it com to his mynde a C. tymes in the day so ofte of the same to take occasion remēbrance to say Adoramꝰ to criste Ihū et benedicimus tibi Quia per crucem titam redemisti mūdum miserere nobis And to the mother of marcy one Aue maria to the ende And thus that parson was clene delyueryd to the greate encrease of hope in his soule ¶ An answere to the fyrste parte of the Cōplaynt of the dulle soule And a remedy for his tediousnes The .xvi. Capitre BVT now to the cōplaynt of the ꝑson that ys troubelyd with mocions of desperacion And fyrst where he sayeth that his lyfe is as yt were a tediousnes In that poynt begynneth the enmy all this trouble For yf he may bryng hym to an heuynes of spryte to a dulnes and tediousnes then hathe he in maner robbed hym from the zele quycke fervour of good workes spoyled hym of hys corage that he had to verteu woll make hym leue sōtyme hys dewtyes vndone other good workes to the whiche he hathe bene accustomyd But this spūall pensyuenes tediousnes of spryte is causyd otherwyse in the grete syners of the worlde and infydels heretikes otherwyse in the saruantes of god .iii. wayes how tediousnes may come in euyll people In the saruantes of the dyuell yt is causyd when they haue the condicions of theyr master somtyme of a synguler and proude mynde when a man p̄ferryth his owne wyll mynde i●●●cion or coūseyl before al other .i. and also ageynst the cōmandement of god and is so obdurate styffe in his opynion that he wyll folow no coūseyl neyther of hys prelate nor of eny other reuler Of thys we rede an example in the seconde boke of the Kynges of one called Achytofel whiche for that his coūseyl was refusyd not folowyd Captlo xvii he went home honge hymselfe Some tyme yt comyth of an enuyous mynde when a man ys so replete wyth the poyson of Enuy. Ire impaciency that nether for god nor man he woll spare to reuenge his enuyous wyll harte Captlo iii. Of thys we rede in the boke of quene Hester of one callyd Amon whiche so enuyed a verteous man callyd Mardocheus that he coulde non other wyse be contentyd but he wolde haue not only the sayd Mardocheus but also all his naciō slayne on a daye and all for that Mardocheus dyd not arise and do hym reuerence as other did But what fortunyd suerly by the wyl of god the meanes of the fornamyd quene Hester whiche was Mardoche us brothers doughter Ibidē Capitulo vii vpon the same galows that he let make for Mardocheus he was hangyd hymselfe and Mardocheus with all hys nacion delyueryd .iii. Som tyme yt comyth of a malysyous cursyd wyll a man wyll not calle for marcy to god but volūtaryly wylfully seperat hym selfe from his marcy as dyd Iudas that betrayed our sauyoure Math. xxvii And all these cam to cōfusion And therfore from thys tediousnes god kepe all cristen people for hys tendre marcy How tediousnes may be ī the saruātes 〈◊〉 amen ¶ Of an other cause maner thys forsayd tediousnes is causyd in the saruantes of god As saynt Gregory wytnessyth in his moralles And that ys when the saruantes of god hathe foughten the batayl of verteu long seson exercysyd hymself wele in warkes of parfeccion and gostlynes Afterwarde he begynneth to be wery to abate his dylygence and goostly corage that he had in resystynge temptacions and doyng good workes so gyueth place to the enemy whyche a non as the aduarsary do the parceyue he parsewyth hym more craftely by many suttyl fraudes and suggestions mouyth hym to the forsayd gostly werynes tediousnes Ageyn the whiche we must vse these remedyes that folowyth and apply all our enforce myghte to resyste remoue this sayd tediousnes For lyke as where the sarpent may get in her hed she wyl cōuey draw in her body shortly so wol he do Therfore let vs cut a way tediousnes from our harte as the moste parlous hed of the sarpent the dyuell For yf he may obteyne that vndoutyd he wol brynge vs to farther trouble Therfor when we be wery in goostlynes let vs ren to the well of marcy foūtayne of all cōfort oure loueyng sauiour cryst Iesu whiche hathe ꝓmysed to cōfort refresshe vs sayng Math .xi. Come to me al you that be ouerchargyd weryed in the grete labours that ye haue taken for my loue Com to me I shall refresshe you I shall cōforte releue defende you from all troubles delyuer you Ioānes xvi In me ye shall haue peace Let vs cōsyder the grete marcy tendre loue of that lorde whiche for our redempcion delyuerance netheyr sparyd body nor soule but strongly sufferyng the batell of tribulacion all paynes to the vttermost neuer ceassyd to the ende but rendryd his most p̄cyous lyfe for our saluacion Remēbre also the holy appostles martyrs cōfessours vyrgyns and īnumerable holy fathers sayntes that faughte the same batayl Lyfte vp the eye of your soule to heuen cōsyder the crowne of glory whiche our sayd lord hathe p̄paryd for his saruantes holdyth yt in his hande as most sure redy to those ꝑsons the parseuer fyghtyng this batayl to the ende For to them only it is promysyd Loke also downe to hell cōsyder wheter ye be able to stusteyne the paynes ordenid for the contrary For them I mene that begynneth good workes do not ꝑseuer to the ende These well consyderyd may be an occasion to remoue all tediousnes and dulnes of spirit But yf you wyll confoūde the enemy shortly A good re●●dy ageyns● tediousne● vse thys remedy when ye be dysposyd to dulnes of spyryt applye youre selfe to some workes bodely or gostly that ben to the honoure of god though in the doynge of them ye haue deuocion as in prayer or in redeynge of holy Psalmes or sayntes lyues And specially ofte amonge vse these holy Psalmes Iudica me deus et discerne causam meam Psalmo xlii Psal C.xlii. Domine exaudi orationem meam auribus ꝑcipe obsecracionem meam And in this excercyse the enemy may not abyde but seyng that the more he tēptyth the more the saruante of god dothe ꝓfyt in
that yt shall rēdre yelde hym suche avantage as he made yt for And that pot so beynge hole sounde after the fyer yf yt had reason vnderstōdyng myght haue grete cōfort trust to com to that ende that yt was made for So in lyke wyse That parson that in paynes temptacions can suffer all paciently endure hole breke not he may haue greate hope trust of hys saluacyon Thus we haue shewed you to what ieobardy scrupulousnes and syngularite bryngeth ¶ Of remedyes ageynst scrupulosyte The .xi. Chapitre ¶ NOw we shall shew you what remedyes for the same 〈…〉 And fyrst ageynst scrupulosyte As the famous clarke doctour Nydar sayeth and also yt ys in speculo spūaliū Scrupulosite is remouyd by .iii. thinges that is to say by deposyng putyng a way of the erroneous conscience by mekenes by clene discrete cōfession In the whiche I note that scrupulosite shulde be remouyd dystroyed in a contrary wyse to the order wherof it dothe growe specially in this one poynte of scrupulosyte that we haue taken to entrete of It bredyth of the inclynacion of our corrupte nature It is norysshed by an vnstable fantasy by seruyle feare and by the suggestion of the enemy It ys mayntenyd by syngularite by an erroneous cōscience Now fyrst after this forsayd clarkes we oughte to do a way our erroneous cōscience and then put a waye syngularyte take mekenes And as for the vnstable thoughtes cast them in the lappe of your gostly father And for as the inclynacion of nature drede yt no more then ye wolde drede the īclynacion to vnclennes of the body or the inclynacion to īpacience or glotony or eny other vyce ageyn the wiche we must euer fyghte there vpon dependyth and folowyth the crowne of glory scde Thin● secūdo ● For as saynt Paule sayeth none shall be crownyd but only they that manly dothe fyghte for yt in the batayl of verteu And yf scrupulousnes of these greate feares of conscience had byn good necessary the holy saruantes of god that hath gon before vs wolde haue byn scrupulous that we rede not For I suppose yf all had byn scrupulous we shulde not haue had the īnumerable multytude of martyrs confessours and other holy fathers that byn past nor the vnspekable workes that holy doctours haue writen left for our cōfort wyth many dyuers coūseyls preceptes to directe our conscience agenst suche scrupulosytyes And that they wolde not haue done yf we oughte to gyue place to suche feres Therfore be neuer wery of eny suche īordinat fearys but take dew parte agenst them when they come order them after discrecion And yf they wyll be fearse suppresse p̄uent them by holy swete meditacions of the goodnes of god of his greate marcy benefytes loue that he hathe to man And thanke his grace for that yt hathe pleasyd hym to admyt man to be partenar of his glory for resystyng suche smale mocions and tryfels The ordyr maner to put a way an erroneous conscience To remou● an errone●● conscience Doctours shewyth sayng that yt is moste sure to do yt after the counseyl of theyr gostly fathers and discrete confessours for that putyth all thynges out of doute bothe by the reason of they re meke obedience to theyr cōfessour by the grace of the sacrament of penaūce In the whiche vndouted the holy goste dothe often tymes illumyn lyghten īspyre the mynystre of the said sacrament that is the pryst with the lyght of his grace coūseyl For experience shewyth how many that hathe byn scrupulous and in ꝓcesse of tyme parceyueyng theyr owne greate folysshenes erroure laboryng in them selfe only after theyr syngular mynde to put yt a way not aft coūseyll hathe fallen to further incōuenientes on the other party that is to saye they haue excedyd more in largenes of conscience then euer they dyd before in streytnes of scrupulosyte And more haue drawen themselfe to the gebardy of p̄sūpcion then euer they were in any daūger of desptraciō Bothe these saint Thomas forbyddeth bothe to large cōscience to streyghte conscience For the one bryngeth to p̄sūpcion the other to desperacion But all our laboure shulde be to haue the quiet meane conscience For therin restyth the holy goste there in standyth parfeccion And therof encresith grace and verteu in relygion which syngularite principally doth let therfore do yt a way as the mayntener of the scrupul and take in his place mekenes Syngularite preferryth his owne iudgemente byfore all others And mekenes dothe prefar the iugdemente of other byfore her owne And therfore is mekenes the moste souerente medcin agenst scrupulosite And that thyng the principally puttyth it a way is to folow coūseyl narracion So we rede that saynt Barnarde remoued a greate feare scrupul from one of his bretherne whiche was so feryd that he durst say no masse He thoughte he had no fayth in the sacrament whose erroure saint barnarde wayng wysely dyscretly sayd Go to masse brother in my fayeth And he so doyng for obedience had neuer more trouble of that scrupulousnes and feare But som wyll say ye syr saynt barnard was an holy man a grete clarke our gostly fathers be not so To this answerith doctor Gerson sayeth that it was neyther the holynes of saint barnard nor his great lernyng that delyueryd this man but yt was the meke obedience of the brother that obayed and folowed the comaūdment coūseyl of his father Therfore yt ys best to folow coūseyl to ensew mekenes and to put a way all syngularite For as we sayd in begynyng lyke as the holy feare of god is the lock of all ꝑfeccion so mekenes is the key of all ꝑfeccion whiche openyth the hart of man to all thynges that byn goostly shyttyth yt fast from all thynges contrary Then in all scrupuls yt is best and most redy medicyn to folow the coūseyl of a discrete gostly father And as for saruice of the churche as matyns euynsonge and suche other howres Let none be to moche scrupulous therin we be as saynte Austyne sayeth no aūgels And what so euer we shall do som defaute we make therin we can not do euery thyng so p̄cysely as aungell can do Therfore in our saruice as we allegyd saint Thomas byfore Of sayng saruice ca● let vs in the begynynge forme our mynde to god what so euer neglygence folowe yf yt be not wylfully nor of contēpte but of our fraylte or neglygence or infyrmyte our mynde be abstracte standyng the fyrst order of our mynde it is sufficient we be not bounde to say it agayne But yf eny lyghte neglygence fortune of oure fraylte be sory therfore with a consion on oure brest or som other token of contricion and go forthe And as for confession be not to far precyse therin
to his saluacion And that the enemy knowyng though he can not ouercome hym yet he wyll trouble hym wery hym as doctours sayeth dryue hym to that poynte yf he can that he shall be wery to suffre payne for hys synnes for the loue of Iesu crist In whiche yf the faythfull soule resyst hym be not ouercom but paciently suffer all his craftes paynes troubles certaynly that soule dothe meryt greatly byldyth his hye crowne of glory to the great confusion of the enemy which synned fell without eny suche occasion or payne but only of his fre wyll But yf a soule wyl be weake faynt and not strongly call for grace to resyste hym Anone he wyl lay greter sege to hym assayle hym with more temptacions He wyl brynge hym to anguysshe of spirit whiche is a spūall pensyuenes And that parlous payne he wyl by darkyng of his reason bryng hym to yet a greter payne that is to say to tediousnes of lyfe And there vpon next he wyl if he be not resysted moue hym to desperaciō whiche is the vttermost that he may do in the soule that louyth god For certaynly though he may brynge his owne saruantes suche that louyth the worlde better then god to forther cōfusion yet the saruantes of god and the elect chosen vessels of grace he may neuer fynally confoūde in that temptacion nor in any other as saynt Gregory sayeth in the secōde boke of his morals ¶ A lamentable cōplaynt of the dulle Soule The .xiiii. Chapitre BVT som wol saye syr I am so maruelously troublyd some tyme that me thynketh I am lefte forsaken of god and all hys aungells holy sayntes and I am as yt were a thynge that were taken delyuerid to the enemy for my synnes I haue no swetnes nor deuociō but all my lyfe is as yt wer a tediousnes all swetnes deuocion is taken from me And I as a thynge lefte dry without merues to nothynge apte nor disposyd that is goostly And that bryngeth me to suche feare that I may trust hope of no ioy in heuen nor eny thyng that is good in erth but only loke for dampnacion Ah. holy soul and yf thou wyst what these paynes doth profyt the thou woldest haue a mery spryt a lyght harte For certaynly other these greate temptacions byn only payne to the. or els they byn wylfully desyryd of the. If they byn only payne knowe thou for cartaynte that they byn no syn Captlo xiiii de vera religione For as oure holy father saynte Austine sayeth Syn is so volūtary that if yt be not volūtary yt is no syn as doctours sayeth what so euer temptaciō man suffre yf he cōsent not yt is no syn but only payne meryt specially in these spūall temptaciōs whiche ben ageynst fayth and hope For as scripture sayeth this is our glory this is oure vyctory our moste strong myghty fayth Prima Ioānes v. in Iesu cryste whiche knowyth his saruantes and electe chyldren better then they know them selfe He knowyth that leuer they had to suffre dethe as martyrs than they wolde breke or gyue ouer or cōsent to the enemy in suche temptacions paynes whome therfore he putyth for the tryall meryt in these greate paynes by cause theyr crowne glory shulde be the more hye in heuen And certeynly theyr payne were a kynde of martyrdom if they wolde suffre yt gladly as holy martyrs dyd fuffer dethe for the loue of Iesu crist But for as moche as eny parson is not lyke stronge in fayth hope the holy loue of god necessary yt is to shew som remedyes cōfortes how holy fathers byfore vs hathe behauyd themselfe in suche temptacions ¶ Good remedyes ageynste Spirituall temptacions The .xv. Chapitre DOctours wrytyth that in suche spūall temptacions we shuld behaue our self otherwyse then in carnall temptacions For in carnall temptacions we oughte to make stronge resystence euer wrastell ageynst them but we may not do so in spūall temptacions wysely dyscretly we must resyste them but in no wyse wrastell wyth them when the enemy putyth to you a mocion of infydelyte reason not with hym and lyke wyse when he castyth a suggestion of desperacion stryue not with hym but vse this medecyne Suspende youre reason restrayne all youre sensys plucke vp all youre spirites as the mocion cōyth so let yt passe without stryfe If it be only of the disposicion of our corrupte nature this is sufficient yf yt be vsyd If yt com of the enemy he wyll not leue you so but he wyll cleue otherwyse worke more trouble Then after the coūseyl of doctours vse thys remedy Dyssymul shew your selfe to set lytel by it or nought though the thyng be grete And lyfte vp youre mynde to god remembre hys tendre marcy in the redempcion of man how yt is his ordenaūce in suche tēptacions paynes to proue his saruantes to whome he entendith to gyue the crowne of glory But yf the enemy be feerce wol not cesse for this as he is most subtyll crafty then meke your selfe vnto god offer your selfe for his loue for the dew fruyte of penaūce for your synes gladly with thankes of hart to suffer al paynes that yt shall please his grace to sende you And wyth the call crye with harte voyce on the holy name of Iesu .x. tymes or more or lesse as your deuocion saruith with som holy swete meditaciō of reuerence to the same as god shall put in to your mynde This verteu of mekenes confessyon of the name of Iesu in harte worde the enemy may not abyde For though for a lytel tyme he wol pretende and semble as yf he were not abasshyd for that verteu and name as the sarpent that scripture spekyth of Psal lvii whose property ys for the tyme to stoppe his erys yet by the wordes of the enchanter in conclusion she is ouercom taken So the enemy though he wol not be a knowen therof but som tymes more fersly he wol make insurrecciō after that holy name Iesu be spoken yet certeynly that holy name namyd he is ouerthrowen therfore strongly parsew hym with the same with mekenes he shall fle with grete cōfusion to the grete comfort of all them that abydyth as treu seruantes parseuerant in this theyr profe to theyr greate tryumphe and to the vtter confusion of the enemy Experience shewyth also cōfort remedy ageynst such temptacions A certayne parson ther was that by the space of .ii. yeres more was troubelyd wyth suche mocions often tymes by water by lande he had mocions to desperacion to the moste abhomynable that may be to distroy hym selfe bothe by water otherwyse And the ꝑson neuer ceasyd but callyd to god dayly parseuerantly to strēgth hym euer confessyng hymselfe the
marcyfull sauiour Iesu dyd chuse to his singular famylyarite Mathew Peter Paule Zache mari Magdalen and mary the Egipcian the thefe and blasphemar that honge on his right syde wyth īnumerable mo grete syners that now byn holy saintes in heuen but only that thou shuldest neuer despayre but euer cōmyt the to the marcy of god to his blyssyd passiō Or what spekyst thou of merites syth the wydow that offrid but .ii. mytes was more alowyd then they that offryd most of all for god recoūtyth not the workes so moche as he dothe the wyll where is in case no nother possybylyte but ouer all this the merites of the passiō of crist is sufficient for vs all The infantes that byn new borne cristenyd that neuer dyd good dede in the merites of the passion of criste byn sauyd I saye not but gret multitude nōbre of merites byn good but grace whiche makyth man partener of the passion of cryste ys sufficient Master Duns sayeth that he merityth moche that in tēptacion lesyth not the grace that god hathe gyuen hym ●●habeto And Gerson sayeth that he hathe grete merites that hathe the passion of crist a good wyll to do well ● good Exā●●● of saynte ●●rnard He that hathe these .ii. hath grete merites good suerty and neuer nedyth to be ouercom of the enemy For as I rede of saynt bernard in his legende In suche a tyme as he was in greate ieobardy of deth by syknes the enemy cam temptyd hym in desperacion mouyd hym fyrste to cōsyder hys lyfe and neglygences the holy man sawe there in moche neglygence and then the enemy dyd tempte hym farther sayd what good dedes or merytes haste thou done in thy lyfe or what is all thou hast done in cōparison to the grete inestimable benefyt of glory And he as euer he was meke thoughte all his dedes noughte so began to fere and fall to despayre But anon the holy gooste did lyghten hym gaue hym his answere And then he sayd I know that my lorde Iesu hathe dew right to the kyngdom of heuen by .ii. tytles one ys by his naturall enheritance syth he is the eternal son of god A nother title he hathe by the merites of his blyssid passion whiche he suffryd not for hym selfe but for me and all mankynde that is sufficiente for me And so the enemy vanysshed a way Thus in our dethe suerty we haue to rest to the passion of crist whiche is a saue cōducte to all that trustyth therin No man nedyth to falle in to desperaciō that woll eny thyng enclyne hymselfe to aske marcy For our blyssyd lorde ys so marcyfull as our sayd lorde shewyd to oure holy mother saynt Birgitt by reuelacion Libro p● Capi. lv● et lix F● tenderly he louyth the shepe of hys folde that yf yt were possyble for hym to dye for eche one of them a speciall dethe suche as he ons did suffre on the crosse for all mankynde rather then he wolde lose them or eny of them he wold suffre the said special deth to redeme them Roman For as saint Paule sayeth Syth he sufferyd dethe for mankynde when we wer all his enemyes what wol he do now for vs that he hathe so dere boughte with his preciouse blode and made vs his owne chyldren by adopciō of grace suerly rather then he wolde leue vs yf yt were possyble accordyng to the reuelacion he wolde dye for vs ageyne But syth he wolde do thys for euery crysten man what thynke ye he wyl do for them that leuyth the worlde and forsakyth them selfe for hys loue and geuyth themselfe holly to hym as al holy relygiouse ꝑsons Of whome I wote not what I may say syth they be so appropryed to god that they be only hys and none others As saint Anselme saith they must nedes haue more marcyfull iugement at hys hande then any other 〈…〉 because they be hys only No man sayeth thys holy Doctour dothe iuge his owne more streygtly than he dothe that whyche parteynyth to a nother wherfore all suche may haue grete comfort in oure lorde st●●ngly for his loue to wythstond temptacion And I wolde exhorte euery relygiouse parson to the same by an example that I rede of an holy father that ouercame the enemy and vtterly in maner confoūdyd hym by grace and good wysdom For when the enemy wolde tempte hym to pryde he wolde wyth all hys myghte enforse hym to mekenes when he mouyd hym to yre or wrothe then he applyed hymselfe strongly to pacience And so lykewyse from Glotony he wolde declyne to abstinence and when he temptyd hym to desperacion he wolde commyt hymselfe to the marcy of god and apply hymselfe to hope And lykewyse also when he wold tempte hym to scrupulosite feare of conscience then he wolde enforse hymselfe all to gyther to charite and to the holy loue of god whiche holy loue when yt is parfyt yt excludith all synystre fearys yuel dredys ¶ A conclusion of this Treatyse exhorteynge euery parson to the loue of god The .xx. Chapitre AND for a fynall conclusyon of thys treatyse I exhorte euery relygiouse parson to behaue themselfe apply them specially to the loue of god for therin restyth all parfeccion where holy loue ys there is only merit and where it is not there is euer errour and presūpcion If I shall watche pray fast do almes dedes kepe sylence abstinence syght and contynence If I had all the knowlege and graces .ii. Corum xiii to do miracles saieth saint Paule with all other parfeccions haue not charyte whiche ys the holy loue of god All the other can not profyt me All these said parfeccions must be vsid with a mesure but the holy loue of god In manual● Captlo x. as saynt Austyne sayeth hathe no measure who may haue this holy loue and reuernt famylyaryte with oure blyssyd lorde yf the spouses of the said lorde haue yt not Rede and ye shall neuer fynde that oure sauyoure cryste Iesus hathe shewyd more familyarite than to holy virgyns and wydowes as to saynt Kateryn the martyr to our holy mother saynt Byrgyt saynt Clare saynt Kateryn of sene with many other whyche he spousyd to hys grace they wylfully forsakeyng the pompe of the worlde for his holy loue Thys loue is cōparyd to the oyle that the folysshe vyrgyns specyfyed in the Euangely had not Math. xxv what avaylyth yt to haue lampes and haue no oyle So lyke wyse what auaylyth yt to haue soulles as vessels apte to grace not to haue the oyle of grace to replenysshe them whyche oyle ys the holy loue of god Therfore deuoute systers yf ye knowe any parsons dysposyd to Scrupulosyte and seruyle feare counseyll and exhorte them in oure Lorde all suche seruyle and synystre fearys secludyd and put a way holly and only to apply them selfe to be garnysshyd with the holy feare and reuerence of god and wyth his blyssyd loue For in these .ii. begynneth endyth all parfeccion and these .ii. ioyneth the soule of man or woman to oure lorde sauiour criste Iesu whos 's blyssyd loue hathe mouyd vs to begyn thys blyssyd treatyse as a directory of the cōscience whiche poure exhortaciō is only after the mynde of these forsaid holy Doctours And thus we ende the sayd treatyse in the holy loue of oure sayde Lorde To whome be euer all honoure holy reuerence and loue of harte wythout ende Amen ¶ Here folowyth the Table of this present Treatyse ¶ The fyrste Chapitre is a Preamble or Introduccion in to this treatyse of what thyng he entendyth to speake Folio primo ¶ what is the holy feare of god The secōde Chapitre Folio secundo ¶ what is the seruyle feare what yuells comyth to vs there by The .iii. Chapitre Folio iii. ¶ How thys seruyle feare shulde be orderyd The forthe Chapitre Folio iiii ¶ How of seruyle feare cōyth scrupulosyte that moche trobelyth the relygiouse ꝑson The .v. Cha. Folio iiii ¶ what is Scrupulosyte The .vi. Chap. Folio vi wherof scrupulosyte rysyth or bredyth The seuenth Chapytre Folio vii ¶ How Scrupulosite is norysshed The .viii. Cha. ¶ wherof Scrupulosyte is maynteynyd The .ix. Chapitre folio viii ¶ Of the yuels that Scrupulosyte bryngyth to The .x. Chapitre folio x. ¶ Of remedyes ageynst Scrupulosyte The .xi. Chapitre folio xii ¶ Of remedyes for Temptacions comyng of scrupulosyte The .xii. Chapitre folio xv ¶ Of spyrituall Temptacions and how they may com to vs. The .xiii. Chapitre folio xvi ¶ A lamentable Complaynte of the dull● Soule The .xiiii. Chapitre folio xvii ¶ Good remedyes ageynst spiritual Temptacions The .xv. Chapitre folio xviii ¶ An answere to the fyrste parte of the complaynte of the dulle soule And a remedy for hys tediousnes The .xvi. Chapitre folio xviii ¶ An answere to the seconde parte of the cōplaynte of the dulle Soule where she complayneth that all swetnes deuocion is taken from her she lefte dry without merites The .xvii. Chapitre folio xx ¶ An answere to the Thyrde parte of the Cōplaynt of the dull Soule where she Lamentyth herselfe as vtterly forsaken of god The .xviii. Cha. folio xxiii ¶ Remedyes ageynst Desperacion The .xix. Chapytre folio xxv ¶ A conclusion of this Treatyse exhortynge euery ꝑson to the loue of god The .xx. Cha. folio xxvii FINIS ¶ Impryntyd by Michaell Fawkes ¶ The pardon for .v. patreur̄ .v. aues a crede with pyteous beholdynge of these ar●esis .xxxij. M. .lv. yeres vox x●i O man vnkynde My paynes smerte Bere in thy mynde My paynes smerte And thou shalt fynde Lo here my herte Me true and kynde Lo here my herte