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A05099 The second part of the French academie VVherein, as it were by a naturall historie of the bodie and soule of man, the creation, matter, composition, forme, nature, profite and vse of all the partes of the frame of man are handled, with the naturall causes of all affections, vertues and vices, and chiefly the nature, powers, workes and immortalitie of the soule. By Peter de la Primaudaye Esquier, Lord of the same place and of Barre. And translated out of the second edition, which was reuiewed and augmented by the author.; Academie françoise. Part 2. English La Primaudaye, Pierre de, b. ca. 1545.; Bowes, Thomas, fl. 1586. 1594 (1594) STC 15238; ESTC S108297 614,127 592

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nature and composition of the heart and of the midriffe of the tunicles or skinnie couerings of the breast and of the Pericardion or Cawle about the heart of the motion office and vse of the lungs of the heart and of the arteryes Chap. 37. 224 Of the substance situation and counterpoize of the heart of the nature and vse of the vitall spirite and of the forge vessels and instruments thereof of the sundry doores and pipes of the heart and of their vses Chap. 38. 229 Of the second motion of the heart which belongeth to the affections of the soule and of those that goe before or follow after iudgement of the agreement that is betweene the temperature of the body and the affections of the soule Chap. 39. 233 Of the health and diseases of the soule of the agreement betweene corporall and spiritual physicke how necessarie the knowledge of the nature of the body and of the soule is for euery one Chap. 40. The sixt dayes worke 237 OF foure things to bee considered in the will and in the power of desiring in the soule and first of natural inclinations of selfe loue and the vnrulinesse thereof Chap. 41. 241 Of the habite of the soule in the matter of the affections and of what force it is of the causes why the affections are giuen to the soule with the vse of them of the fountaine of vertues and vices Chap. 42 246 That according to the disposition of the iudgement the affections are more or lesse moderate or immoderate of the cause of all the motions of the soule and heart of the variety of affections of the generation nature and kindes of them Chap. 43. 250 That ioy or griefe are alwayes ioyned to the affections and what ioy and griefe are properly Chap. 44. 255 Of the causes why God hath placed these affections of ioy and sorrow in the heart of true and false ioy and of good and bad hope Chap. 45. 260 Of feare and of the nature and effects thereof toward the body the mind and the soule and how it troubleth them of the true harnesse and armour against feare Chap. 46. 265 Of the delight and pleasure that followeth euery ioy and of the moderation that is required therein of diuers degrees of pleasures and how men abuse them especially those pleasures which are receiued by the corporal senses Chap. 47. 270 Of the comparison of pleasures receiued by the internall senses and how men descend by degrees from the best to the basest pleasures of the difference betweene the vse of spirituall delights and corporall and how the one chase the other Chap. 48. The seuenth dayes worke 276 OF the affections of loue of the nature kinds and obiect of it of the beginning of friendship of the vertue and force of alluring that is in likenesse and in beauty of the agreement that is betweene beauty and goodnesse Chap. 49. 281 Of other causes why beauty procureth loue and of diuers degrees and kinds of beauty how it is the nature of loue alwayes to vnite an what other effects it hath how loue descendeth and ascendeth not what power it hath to allure and breed loue Chap. 50. 286 Of desire and coueting and of the kinds of it of the infinitenesse of mens desires and what Good is able to satisfie and content it of the difference betweene desire and loue and of the vtmost limit and end of loue Chap. 51. 291 Of the good things that are in true loue of the diuers valuations of loue and of the benefits which it procureth what knowledge is requisite to allure loue and how one loue groweth by another of the friendshippe that may bee both betweene the good and the badde Chap. 52. 297 Of fauour reuerence and of honour of their nature and effects of those outward signes whereby they shewe themselues of pity and compassion and howe agreeable it is to the nature of man Chap. 53. 302 Of offence in the heart and soule of the degrees of offence and of the good and euill that may be in this affection of contempt that is bredde of it and of mockery which followeth contempt Chap. 54. 307 Of anger and of the vehemency and violency thereof of the difference that is betweene anger and rancor of the affection of reuenge that accompanieth them of the motions of the heart in anger with the effectes thereof wherefore this affection is giuen to man and to what vse it may serue him Chap. 55. 313 Of hatred and of the nature and effects thereof of a good kind of hatred and of the remedy to cure the euill hatred of enuie and of the kindes and effects thereof of the difference betweene good and euill enuy Chap. 56. The eight dayes worke 319 OF iealousie and of the kindes thereof how it may bee eyther a vice or a vertue howe true zeale true iealousie and indignation proceede of loue of their natures and why these affections are giuen to man Chap. 57. 324 Of reuenge cruelty and rage and what agreement there is among them what shame and blushing is and why God hath placed these affections in man and of the good and euill that is in them Chap. 58. 330 Of pride with the consideration thereof aswell in nature intire as corrupted of the orginall thereof and of such as are most inclined thereunto what vices accompany it how great a poison it is and what remedy there is for it Chap. 59. 335 Of the naturall powers of the soule and what sundry vertues they haue in the nourishment of the body of their order and offices of their agreement and necessary vse where the vegetatiue soule is placed in the body and what vertue it hath to augment the same Chap. 60. 341 What instruments the soule vseth in the body about the naturall works of nourishing and augmenting of the ventricle of stomacke and of the figure orifices and filamentes it hath of the stomacke and of what substance and nature it is of the causes of hunger and of appetite of the inferior orifice Chap. 61. 347 Of the intalles and bowels and of their names and offices of the nature of the three smaller guttes and of the other three that are greater of the instructions which wee may learne by these things Chap. 62. 353 Of the Mesentery and Mesareon of the Meseraicall veines of the Pancreas or sweete bread and of their nature and office of the liuer and of his nature and office of the rootes bodies branches of the veines of their names and vses and of the similitude betweene them and the arteries Chap. 63. 358 Of the blood and of other humours in the body of their diuersity and nature and of the agreement they haue with the elementes of the similitude that is betwixt the great garden of this great worlde and that of the little worlde touching the nourishment of things contayned and preserued in them Chap. 64. The ninth dayes worke 363 OF the vapours that ascend vp to the braine
soules in what sence not only the Poets and heathen Philosophers but also Saint Paul haue sayd that men were the generation and linage of God of their error that say that soules are of the very substance of God of the transmigration of soules according to the opinion of the same Philosophers Chap. 84. 509 The chiefe causes as learned men thinke 〈…〉 Pythagoras and 〈…〉 transmigration of soules and transformation of bodies the ancient opinion of the Iewes touching the same thing Chap. 85. 515 Of the Pythagoreans of these dayes amongst the Christians and of their foolish opinions of the opinions of many Doctors and and Diuines touching the creation and ordinary generation of mens soules of the moderation that ought to be kept in that matter of the cause of the filthinesse and corruption of mans soule Chap. 86. 5●● Of those powers and properties which the soule of man hath common with the soule of beast●● of those powers and vertues which are proper and peculiar to it selfe according to the Philosophers of the difference and agreement that is betweene humane philosophie and christian doctrine touching th●se things Chap. 87. 5●6 How men can haue no certaine resolution of the immortality of the soule but by the word of God of the peruersnesse of Epicures and Atheistes in this 〈◊〉 of the chiefe causes that hinder 〈◊〉 from beleeuing the immortality of the soule and of their blockishnesse and euill iudgement therein how wee must seeke for the image of God after which man was created in his soule Chap. 88. The twelfth dayes worke 5●● OF those who desire the returne of soules departed to testifie their immortality what witnes hath binne sent vs of God out of another world to resolue vs therin Chap. 89. 53● Of naturall reasons whereby the immortality of soules may be prooued against Epicures and Atheists and first of the argument taken from the faculty of knowledge which the soule hath and from that knowledge of eternity which 〈…〉 howe it appeareth that it is not begotten of this corruptible nature because it ascendeth vp vnto God and how by a speciall benefite of God it is dayly created and not by the vertue of nature Chap. 90. 541 Of the argument for the immortality of the soule that may bee taken from that natural desire therof of perpetuitie which is in it of another argument to the same purpose of the desire which men haue to continue their name and memory for euer an argument to the same end taken from the apprehension and terrour which men may haue both of the death of the body and also of the soule and spirite Chap. 91. 546 Of the agreement that may be taken from the delights and pleasures of the soule to prooue the immortality therof an argument to the same ende taken from the insatiable desires pleasures of men euen from such as are most carnall of the testimony which they may find euen in their vices to prooue the immortality of their soule Chap. 92. 551 Of the testimony that men haue of the immortall nature of the soule in their very body by the composition and frame thereof of that which is in the motion and rest of their soule how the creation of the whole world shoulde be vaine and how there should be no prouidence of God no religion no diuine iustice if the soule were mortall of the multitude and qualities of the witnesses that stand for the immortality thereof Chap. 93. 556 Of another argument for the immortality of the soule taken from that naturall desire which men haue of knowlege of Aristotles opinion touching the nature and immortality of the soule of other reasons of Philosophers to proue that the spirite cannot be a corruptible and mortall nature and how iust men should be more miserable and shoulde haue more occasion to feare and to eschew death then the vniust and wicked if the soule were mortall Chap. 94. 563 Of that prayse and reward which wisdome and vertue may receiue of man in this worlde how miserable it is ●f there bee no better prepared for them elsewhere how death would bee more grieuous and lamentable to the best learned and wisest men then to the ignorant and foolish if the soule were mortall how the best most certaine iudgement of men is for the immortality of the soule of them who not beleeuing the same say that it is good for men to bee in such an error Chap. 95. 569 Of those internall testimonies which all men cary within themselues to conuince them that doubt of the immortality of the soule and of the iudgement to come which shall be in eternall happinesse for the good and perpetuall torment for the euill howe the very heathen acknowledged asmuch by reasons taken from the testimonies of nature Chap. 96. The thirteenth dayes worke 575 OF the testimonies which euery one may take from his conscience of that feare vnto which all men are naturally subiect to prooue the immortality of the soule a iudgement of God vpon the iust and vniust how that which the Atheistes say that feare causeth gods amongest men serueth to ouerthrow their damnable opinion Chap. 97. 581 Whether Epicures and Atheists bee reasonable beasts yea or no and what reasons they bring to ouerthrow the immortality of the soule of the false opinion of Pliny touching the same and of his friuolous and brutish reasons to this purpose of the brutish conclusion vnbeseeming the whole race of mankind which hee maketh of this matter and of the iudgement of God vpon him Chap. 98. 588 Of them who say that wee cannot know by the light of nature but that the soule is mortall of them that alledge a place of Salomon against the immortality of the soule howe wee ought to consider of the iudgementes of God vpon Epicures and Atheistes how the absurdities which follow their doctrine declare plainly the grossenesse of it of the force of those argumentes that were produced before for the immortality of the soule Chap. 99. 594 Of the image of God in the soule of man and of the image of the worlde in mans body of the coniunction that is betweene God the Angels and men of the sundry degrees of Good that are therein of those lessons and instructions which wee ought to receiue from the wonderfull composition aud coniunction of the soule and body Chap. 100. FINIS THE FORESPEACH OF THE INTERSPEAKERS IN this Academy wherein is handled the cause of their future discourses touching the naturall historie of Man The names of the discoursers ASER which signifieth Felicitie AMANA Trueth ARAM Excellency ACHITOB Brother of goodnesse ASER My companions I greatly bewayle the misery of our age wherein so many Epicures and Atheists liue as are dayly discouered amongst vs in all estates and callings True it is that the disagreement in matters of religion amongst them that beare the name of Christians is very great and causeth much trouble in the Church neuerthelesse I doubt not but that
is in him But I speake not nowe of this diuersitie but of another which happeneth to men in all ages and at all times For there is great difference to be seene in a mans face according as hee is either merry or sad angry or pacified humble and modest or loftie and proude For if hee be quiet and modest hee will haue a sweete milde and gracious countenance if hee bee angry hee will haue a furious face as though hee were transfigured into a sauage beast hauing fierie eyes as if hee cast from them flames of fire hee will cast foorth smoake at his nosethrilles as if hee had a fornace kindled within him his whole countenance will be as redde as if fire came out of it Therefore it was not without reason saide of a Philosopher that angry and furious men shoulde beholde themselues in a glasse to the ende they might know thereby how such passions change their countenance and how they are transformed thereby and looke hideous and fearefull And if a man be lofty and arrogant his visage will testifie the same sufficiently especially his eyes and eie-lids which will be lifted vp as if pride and arrogancie had there placed their seate For if wee denie or graunt any thing that pleaseth or displeaseth vs wee declare it by them speaking by signes as the tongue doeth by woordes And although pride be conceiued and bredde in the heart yet it is seated on the eye-liddes where it sheweth and manifesteth it selfe For seeing it desireth alwayes to be aduaunced and to be lift vp aboue all yea to be alone without any companion that place is very fitte and conuenient for it being high emiuent and apparant But a proud person ought to consider that that place is very much declining to the ende hee may thinke of the danger of falling downe as they that are in some high and sleepe place where they can take no holde For it can not bee but that pride will haue a fall howsoeuer it may seeme long first For that sentence of Iesus Christ is alwayes true who sayeth that Whosoeuer will exalt himselfe shall be brought low and whosoeuer will humble himselfe shall be exalted The eyes also do speake and testifie of the heart within For if the heart bee humble modest chaste and well stayed the eyes will be so answerable thereunto that their very lookes will declare sufficiently howe it standeth affected Contrariwise if the heart bee proude vnchaste loose impudent and lasciuious the looke and countenaunce of the eyes will openly bewray the same Also wee say commonly of such as haue lost all shame that they haue brazen and shamelesse foreheads And it seemeth that the French worde Affronteur is deriued from thence because they that are of that occupation must haue good foreheads they must be bolde and shamelesse like to harlots and murtherers And as shame is seated and appeareth principally in the forehead and cheekes so is it a note of impudencie when shame is banished from thence as that which then possesseth the place assigned to shame and modestie Therefore the Scripture attributeth a brow of brasse and of yron a hard forehead and a strong face to them that are impudent and past grace to such as are vntractable and rebellious By these things then we know how the face is the image messenger and witnesse of all the affections of the heart insomuch that it is very hard for him do what he can to couer and conceale them Also it is the image and witnes of a good and euill conscience For as a good conscience causeth it to appeare ioyfull and open so contrariwise an euill conscience maketh it sadde and hidden as it were the visage of a condemned person We commonly call Physiognomy the Science whereby men iudge of the nature complexion and manners of euery one by the contemplation of all the members of the body and chiefely of the face and countenance But there is no Physiognomy so certaine as that which-wee haue nowe touched whereby men may bee easily conuinced of that which they thinke to hide in their heartes which notwithstanding is quickely descried in their countenances as if wee read it in a Booke Nowe it is time to enter into our edifice and building there to contemplate the internall and spirituall senses which the foule vseth in her woorkes and operations But first wee will make the way more easie to attaine to so high a matter by learning briefely what is the nature faculties and powers of mans soule and what are the sundry kindes of soules the burthen whereof I lay vpon thee ASER. Of the nature faculties and powers of mans soule of the knowledge which we may haue in this life and how excellent and necessary it is into what kindes the life and soule are diuided Chap. 21. ASER. If God hath shewed himselfe wonderfull in the creation composition nature and vse of the externall senses and members of mans body of which wee haue hitherto discoursed both in the matter whereof they are made and in the forme giuen vnto them and in all other things that belong vnto them no doubt but wee shall haue much more cause to maruaile at the excellent workemanshippe of his prouidence in the composition nature and vse of the internall senses and members which lie hidden within the bodie whereof the sequele of our speach requireth that wee shoulde intreate For these are the principall by meanes of which the other receiue life and are kept and preserued in life But forasmuch as the soule giueth life to the whole body and to all the members thereof wee are withall to consider of the nature thereof what faculties and vertues it hath and howe it worketh in all the partes of the bodie according to that knowledge which GOD hath giuen to men both by the testimonie of his worde and by the effectes of the soule For neither the bodie nor any member thereof shoulde haue any more motion or feeling then is in a blocke or stone if it had no soule to giue it life For this cause after Iob hath spoken of the creation and composition of his body hee addeth Thou hast giuen mee life and grace and thy visitation that is to say thy prouidence hath preserued my spirite This agreeth with that which we haue heard before of Moses where hee sayeth That the Lorde made man of the dust of the ground and breathed in his face breath of life and the man was a liuing soule First therefore wee must vnderstand that there are in man three kindes of faculties and vertues that worke continually within him and neuer cease the first is commonly called Animal the second Vital the third Natural Of these two latter wee will speake heereafter Concerning the Animal facultie it is diuided into three kinds the first is called Principall the second Sensitiue the third Motiue The Principall is diuided by some into three kindes by others into
they call it the foundation of iustice Therefore faithfull signifieth as much as true constant and firme in that which a man hath spoken and promised namely when one hath kept his faith Heereof it is also that God is so often in the holy Scriptures called Faithfull in respect of vs because hee neuer falfifieth his faith but is alwayes firme and constant in al his words and workes But when the Scripture speaketh of Faith in regarde of men towardes God it doth not onely comprehend a beleefe whereby wee beleeue that to bee true which wee heare and which is spoken vnto vs as when one telleth vs some historie but it is also a trust which assureth vs that God will performe that vnto vs which he hath promised vs. Therefore true faith includeth in it a certaine and vndoubted confidence of heauenly things and an assured perswasion of the accomplishment of Gods promises towards vs. Now to prosecute our purpose seeing we haue learned that the knowledge of the truth which is the principall obiect of reason and vnderstanding is verie hard for men to attaine vnto let vs consider of the meanes whereby wee may bee certaine and sure of those things which we are to beleeue This discourse ARAM. belongeth vnto thee Of the meanes whereby a man may haue certaine knowledge of those thinges which he ought to beleeue and take for true of the naturall and supernaturall light that is in man and how they beare witnesse of the image of God in him Chap. 31. ARAM For a man to knowe himselfe to be ignorant is a goodlie science and so necessary for men that without it they cannot be truely skilfull For the ignorant person that knoweth not himselfe to be such a one but supposeth hee knoweth that which hee doeth not in deede is as vnteachable a beast as can be because hee will neuer seeke for a master to be instructed by but if any offer themselues hee will reiect them and rather himselfe take vpon him to teach them Therefore Socrates was greatly commended by the ancients because he saide that hee knewe but one onely thing namely that he was ignorant and knewe nothing True it is that if wee speake of things which may be knowen by the corporall and spirituall senses of men euen as nature hath giuen them vnto vs and of things belonging to naturall and morall Philosophie there are many men to bee founde whose knowledge therein is so great that other men in respect of them may seeme to bee but poore beasts But when we must ascend vp to the knowledge of things reuealed vnto vs in Iesus Christ and in the Gospell no sense or vnderstanding of man is able to comprehend any thing therein if the spirite of God doe not teach him and dwell in him to seale and to confirme in his soule the doctrine of those heauenly mysteries wherein the skilfullest men are no better taught of themselues then those that are most ignorant For that abideth alwayes true which Saint Paul wrote to the Corinthians that the naturall man perceiueth not the things of the spirite of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can hee knowe them because they are spiritually discerned Nowe I finde foure meanes whereby men may be made certaine of those things vnto which they ought to giue credite whereof three of them are naturall and according to naturall Philosophie the fourth goeth further and is proper to diuinitie The first is generall experience the second the knowledge of principles the third naturall iudgement of these three wee will first speake and then come to the fourth Generall experience is that iudgement which al men of sound mindes doe giue all after one sort of those things whereof they haue certaine experience by their corporall senses as is to be seene in naturall things For who knoweth not that the fire is hote And who woulde not take him for a senselesse man that should affirme the contrary Yea who coulde affirme it being conuinced of the trueth thereof by his owne senses Likewise who seeth not the difference that is betweene death and life and what are the effectes both of the one and the other For euery one knoweth these thinges by a generall experience common to all Wherefore this knowledge is certaine and where it is so there needeth no other proofe or demonstration fetched farther then from such experience For God hath so created the nature of things that men must needes confesse it to be so as generall experience doth declare it to be And he that will not beleeue it let him take triall thereof himselfe and he shall know whether it be so or no. So that whosoeuer would stand against this common and generall experience he should make open warre against God and nature in denying all order which he hath set downe therein Concerning the knowledge of principles wee must first knowe that there is vnderstoode by principles that naturall knowledge that is borne with vs which is the seede of all Artes and a beame of the light of God in vs to the ende that by this meanes all Artes necessary for life should be inuented and put in vse As for example euery one knoweth naturally that the whole of any thing is more then the halfe or then a part of it onely and that three are moe then two To be briefe the knowledge of numbers of measures and of other such like things is naturall vnto vs and is not found in the nature of beastes and therefore they haue neither the inuention nor vse of any Arte as wee haue already heard But let vs proceede farther and consider whether there be no natural knowledge in men whereby they vnderstand that there is a diuine nature wise iust true good that loueth goodnesse and hateth and punisheth euil with which nature the soule of man hath some agreement and is as it were an image thereof for which cause he ought to be made conformable to God by folowing after wisedome trueth iustice goodnesse and all vertue and by shunning the contrary vices In this respect he that followeth this rule obeyeth God doing that which is pleasant and right in his eies and he that leaueth this rule disobeyeth and displeaseth him committing wicked and dishonest things whereby hee becommeth woorthy of punishment In a worde wee may referre to these naturall principles whatsoeuer God hath imprinted in mens hearts and mindes of the law of nature which serueth all men for naturall diuinitie the Bookes of which they carry printed in their soules And yet out of all question this diuinitie will scarce serue vs but to condemnation if we go no farther because the booke thereof is so blotted in vs that there is not so much as one small peece or leafe thereof whole sound which is not very much blurred torne Neuertheles that which remaineth is a sufficient processe against vs before God and able to conuince and condemne vs at
it is as it were begotten by reason and brought forth by Will But that wee deceiue not our selues in these names of reason and of Will we are to knowe that both of them are taken diuersly as the names of Minde and Vnderstanding are For sometime they are taken for that vertue of vnderstanding which is in the soule and sometime for the action thereof and the thing which it doeth vnderstand as when we say that wee haue the vnderstanding of something So reason is sometime taken for the minde that giueth direction and counsaile and for the will which obeyeth it and restraineth the affections and in this sence it comprehendeth both the Vnderstanding and the Will But sometime it is taken onely for that part which vnderstandeth and hath knowledge to conduct and guide as nowe we must so take it in making it the Mistresse and counsailour of the Will Besides reason is also taken oftentimes for the arguments and discourses of reason as when we say of a man He hath good reason in that or els He hath proued his saying by good and pregnant reasons that is to say by good arguments And if we take reason so it signifieth not only that power and vertue of discoursing which is in the soule and in the minde but also the act and effect therof The like may be said of this word Will. For it is commonly taken not so much for that power and vertue which the soule hath to Will as for the Will it selfe which is the action and effect thereof as when one speaking of tyrants saith that their Will is all their reason For then we meane that they take nor Reason for their counsailer neither follow the aduice thereof but onely their Will and that which pleaseth them So then wee vse this worde Will for that which proceedeth from it and so likewise it is often taken in the holy Scriptures when they speake of the Will of God whereby we doe not vnderstand that power of Will that is in him but that which hee willeth and commandeth vs. And therefore we craue that his Will may be done and not that which we will But speaking now of the Will of man we take it not in this sence but we vse it for the power and vertue of Willing that is in the soule which power is aboue the sensitiue appetite whereof we haue already spoken For we see by experience that there are certaine degrees of appetites and that the appetite of the senses is subiect to the Will as I hope we shall intreate more at large in the sequele of our speech Wherefore the Will is the highest and most soueraigne vertue of desiring farre aboue all other appetites and that which woorketh with libertie after the minde hath shewed vnto it what it ought to follow and what to eschew what to make choyse of and what to refuse The actions thereof are to Will and not to Will and the meane or middle thing which shee hath betweene them twayne is to suspend her action vntill shee decline eyther on the one side or the other And as concerning the naturall disposition of the Will it is to will that good which is truely good or that which seemeth to bee so and to shunne euill eyther that which is euill in deede or that which it thinketh to bee so Nowe if shee choose and followe euill for good it followeth not therefore but that shee woulde alwayes followe the good as that which properly appertayneth vnto her and reiect euill as her enemie But the reason why shee maketh choyce of euill for good is because shee is deceiued taking one for another which commeth to passe through the ignoraunce and corruption that is in the nature of man For albeeit shee can will and not will that thing which is propounded vnto her yet shee cannot simply will and not will one and the same thing all at one time nor yet make choyse of cleane contraries For shee can desire nothing but onely vnder some shewe of good nor refuse any thing but vnder some shewe of euill Wherefore it may well bee that it will not desire that which shall bee shewed vnder some appearaunce of good but it cannot hate or reiect it Likewise it may peraduenture abstayne from reiecting or flying from that which shall bee presented before it with shewe of euill and not of good but it cannot desire loue and pursue the same Wherevpon it followeth that our Will is at libertie and free and cannot bee constrayned yea God the Creatour and Lorde thereof woulde haue it so otherwise it shoulde not bee a Will It is verie true that it followeth reason alwayes because the Will hath no light of it selfe but onely so farre foorth as it receiueth the same from reason which guideth and directeth it And therefore it neuer applieth it selfe to any thing whatsoeuer but hath reason alwayes for a guide whome it followeth Neuerthelesse it is not so subiect therevnto as that it may compell it to followe all the reasons that are propounded vnto it by reason or tye it to any of them but that alwayes shee hath her libertie to make choyse of which reason shee please out of all those that are set before her And so it is alwayes a Will although it change sometime beeing perswaded by reasons to will when it was vnwilling or disswaded from Will to bee vnwilling But in the meane time shee willeth whatsoeuer shee will and that as long as it pleaseth her to remayne in one opinion For not onely no creature whatsoeuer is able to take from her that which GOD her Creator hath giuen her but shee cannot depriue her selfe thereof no more then she may not be that which shee is For as God will haue his image shine in the minde of man by vnderstanding and wisedome of which hee hath made it partaker so hee will haue his image also to shine in the Will by that freedome and libertie which hee hath giuen vnto it As therefore hee cannot bee constrained but woorketh and doeth what pleaseth him with all libertie as beeyng a Soueraigne that hath no superiour so hee hath appoynted that the Will which hee hath giuen to men and Angels shoulde bee alwayes franke and free and not bee subiect to violence or constraint to the ende hee might haue them children not slaues because hee requireth of them a voluntarie obedience and such a seruice as is not forced or constrayned but agreeable to his owne nature For as hee doeth nothing himselfe by constraint so hee will not constrayne those by whome hee will bee obeyed neither delighteth hee in any seruice that is not voluntary and proceeding from a good heart and from a sincere and pure affection towardes him Therefore seeing God hath so loued vs and done vs so great honour as to create vs after his owne image and likenesse wee are vile and ingratefull wretches if wee doe not acknowledge the same and cause
So that the whole consultation lieth in the liberty and choyce of Will For men are not drawne by an immutable violence of nature as beasts are but reason enquireth what way is to be taken or left and wayeth and examineth what good or euill is in euery thing Therefore Will may goe about againe with that which was once deliberated of to the end the first conclusion be not approued staied in but that greater inquiry may be made to finde out if it may bee some better or more profitable thing And thus when many thinges are shewed set before her she may choose what pleaseth her although it be not that which was best approued by iudgement and which reason vpon very euident arguments counselled her to follow For if there be another side that hath some shew of good albeit neuer so small she turneth to that if she please so that vpon one onely coniecture or opinion of good she will lay holde vpon that and reiect the other side in which peraduenture the ture good is to bee founde The chiefe cause whereof is in the corruption of our nature and in those impediments of good discoursing and of vpright iudging whereof wee haue alreadie hearde and which hinder reason and iudgement diuers and sundrie wayes And this also taketh place in respect of Will which likewise hath great occasions offered to beguile and deceiue it selfe because all the affaires of men are intermingled with good and euill thinges Therefore it is very hard to be able to discerne and separate them well one from another For men being compounded of diuers natures namely of a body and of a soule they propound also diuersity of good euil things vnto themselues because they know corporall and terrestriall things better then spirituall and eternall things therefore they preferre them oftentimes before the other Which is the cause why there are so many that loue this life a great deale better and those outward good things belonging therevnto then they doe eternall life and those goods which are able to leade men thither and giue them full fruition therof when they come thither Therefore in so great diuersity of good and euill things it is no marueile if there came nothing into deliberation wherein reason findeth not some good or euill which in the end it counsaileth vs to follow or to auoyde according to the circumstances of times places persons qualities and other such like things It commeth to passe also oftentimes that Will refuseth all counsaile and exhortation to doe that onely which she pleaseth thereby to shew that shee is Lady and Mistresse and subiect to none And beeing mounted vp to that pride shee accounteth this Lordshippe which shee taketh to her selfe to bee a great good and so maketh knowne her power and magnificence as it were a tyrannicall prince making choyce in the meane time of a false kinde of good which is no way good but a very great euil And thus much concerning the libertie of the Will in her internall actions which freedome also appeareth plainly enough in the outwarde actions For after she hath liked of a thing she may put it in execution or stay execution yea after she hath begunne she may giue it cleane ouer or doe not so much or so speedily as shee might And although it falleth out oftentimes that men are hindered from executing their Will yea are forced and compelled to doe the cleane contrary yet their Will if we consider the matter well is neither hindred forced or constrained For that keepeth it not from willing still that which it pleaseth but the violence offered outwardly stayeth the effectes and execution thereof Hereof it is that wee commonly say that a mans Will is taken for his deede although it bee not put in execution Nowe to conclude our speech wee knowe that the Will hath hinderances to let her from choosing those good things which shee ought to followe and refusing those euils shee ought to eschewe and auoyde For Reason beeing appoynted as Mistresse to guide and direct Will by her iudgement the selfesame thinges that mooue Reason and Iudgement doe mooue Will also as if the one touched the other or as if there were a certayne knitting and ioyning of them together not vnlike to the linkes of a chayne of which if yee mooue or touch one the like is done to the others that are neere vnto it by reason of the coniunction they haue one with another Wee ought also to knowe that although the Will often choose euill in stead of good yet it ceasseth not therefore euer to desire good naturally which is most fitte and agreeable to the nature therof but it is deceaued in that it hath no skill to discerne between true and false goodes and to distinguish the greater from the lesse And as wee haue hearde that euill spirites may trouble and mooue the fantasie and minde so no doubt they can doe the like towardes the heart and Will to induce them to euill and to driue them to doe greater thinges then weake nature woulde doe of it selfe if it were not holpen by them euen to cause them to committe such crimes as nature abhorreth Therefore wee must without ceassing watch and pray that wee enter not into temptation and if wee bee tempted that wee fayle not neither bee ouercome And this wee may assuredly beleeue wee shall obtayne if through regeneration by the spirite of GOD our minde bee taught and our Will guyded by his light Nowe then hauing spoken enough of Vnderstanding and of Will which are the principall powers of the soule let vs come to the affections thereof and first it shall bee good for vs to consider of the distinction that ought to bee made betwixt all these faculties of the soule and betweene their seates and instruments which they haue in the bodie But wee shall learne these thinges of thee ACHITOB Of the distinction that ought to be betweene the Vnderstanding and knowledge and the Will and affections in the soule and betweene the seates and instruments which they haue in the body of the agreement that is betweene the heart and the braine Chap. 36. ACHITOB. The heauens the earth and all the elementes the stones plants beasts al the other creatures that want reason vnderstanding obey God in their kind but yet they know him not the obedience which they yeld vnto him proceedeth not of any knowledge they haue of his will or of iudgement in them to discerne good from euill but only so farre forth as they are drawne by their natural inclination in those things that concerne their nature But Angels and Men in whome God woulde haue his image to shine in euery part of them and after all sorts were created by him of that nature that hee would be knowne of them and that they should follow his Will not without Vnderstanding and iudgement thereof nor without agreement of their willes with his
in the latter times saieth first That they shoulde bee selfe-louers and hauing set downe this disordered loue as the roote after he commeth to the branches fruits of such a tree saying That they shall bee couetous boasters proude cursed speakers disobedient to parents vnthankfull vnholy without naturall affection truce-breakers false accusers intemperate fierce despisers of them that are good traitors heady bie minded louers of pleasures more thē louers of God hauing a shew of godlinesse but denying the power therof And in the Epistle to the Romanes he expresly mentioneth haiers of God Thus we see what the loue of mē is towards thēselues being left in the corruptiō of their nature in respect of that which ought to be if it were not vnruly disordred For man should loue himself● as the gift of God as also his life being which God hath giuen him that blessed estate for the enioying of which hee hath his being and that Good wherein it consisteth and whereby he may at●aine vnto it and shoulde loue no other thing nor otherwise But the great excesse that is in the loue of our selues causeth it to bee cleane contrary both to that loue which ought naturally to be in vs and also to our loue toward● God so that it ouerthroweth and confoundeth all heauenly order and the whole course of mans life Neuertheles when it so falleth out that this loue and affection is moderate in vs although in deede it be neuer so as it ought to be according to the rule of Gods will yet are they acceptable in his sight as our other naturall affections and friendships are which we beare towardes them that belong to vs prouided alwayes that they bee ruled and guided by faith and true loue and kinded with the flames of the holy Ghost as they were in Zacharie and Elizabeth towards their sonne Iohn and in so many other holy men as haue loued both themselues and theirs according to God wherof we haue a notable example in Abraham For out of all question if euer father loued his children hee loued his sonne Isaac But he shewed euidently by the effect that he did not onely loue him with the loue of flesh and blood as commonly we loue our children but he loued him also in God towards whome yet his loue was farre greater seeing he was very ready to offer him vp in sacrifice vnto him whe ●he so commanded it But although this naturall loue and affection bee not so pure in vs as in these holy men but that still there is mingled with it some thing of our owne because of sinne which wee hane by inheritance yet is it alwaies acceptable to God so that hee be first and chiefly loued For through his mercie he beareth with our infirmitie which euermore accompanieth our desires and willes As for those that are guided onely by the light of nature and are not regenerated by the spirit of God albeit these naturall affections are too vncleane in them yet they doe not so much displease him as inhumanitie and crueltie doe that are cleane contrary to the other which doe vtterly dispossesse men of loue and charitie We may consider the same things in all the other naturall inclinations For wee see that some are by nature inclined to ciuill iustice some to liberalitie and others to such like vertues Now if these inclinations be well guided they are goodly seedes of vertues but if they bee not well ordered and ruled they corrupt degenerate ye● they turne into the vices that are contrary to those vertues For iustice which is neuer without moderation may be turned into ouer great rigour or into crueltie as wee see it in many who being naturally inclined to seueritie which many times is very necessarie iniustice become so rigorous and extreme that their seue ritie which ought to be a vertue is turned into crueltie The like may be ●aid of other inclinations and affections Now that which befalleth these inclinations is procured also vnto them by the humors and qualities of the bodie which haue acertaine agreement with the affections For a sanguine man in whose nature blood beareth greatest sway amongst the other humours and qualities will naturally be more enclined to loue to ioy to liberalitie and to such other affections as are most agreeable to his nature But if this complexion bee not moderated and well guided it will easily passe measure in euerie affection so that it will fall into foolish and vnlawfull loues into excessiue and vnmeasurable ioyes and into prodigalitie in steede of following liberalitie The same may bee saide of all the other temperatures and complexions for their part in that they may bee seedes and prouocatiōs either to vertues or to vices according to that correspondencie which is betweene the bodie and the soule and the temperature of the one with the affections of the other Therefore we may wel conclude that as diseases ingender in the body of the humours that are in it according to their change mingling and corruption so it falleth out in the nature of the soule and in the affections thereof For as good naturall humors become euil by corruption that seazeth vpon them and turne that health which before they affoorded into diseases so the inclinations and naturall affections of our soule which of their owne nature are good and the seedes of vertues are turned into vices and into their seedes through that corruption which sinne bringeth vnto them Behold then what we haue to consider of those natural inclinations that are in the Will in the desiring power of the soule of the actions thereof namely to wil and not to will to suspend and stay her action and to commaunde ouer the power of the appetites of all which wee haue largely intreated in our discourse of the Will Wherefore we will come to the habites of which thou shalt now discourse AMANA Of the Habite of the soule in the matter of the affections and of what force it is of the causes why the affections are giuen to the soule with the vse of them of the fountaine of vertues and vices Chap. 42. AMANA If a man will learne any occupation hee proues not a woorkeman the first day but learneth by little and little and beginneth to labour therein afterward by long continuance and custome he groweth more ready in his arte and practiseth it with greater facilitie and ease A painter waxeth expert in his science by often painting and his hand wherewith he laboureth by long continuance becommeth more steady more ready and able so that he can handle his pensill with greater ease and is farre more expert therein then hee was in the beginning Wee may note the like in the soule and in the chiefe powers and actions thereof For there are some of them which incontinently folow the nature of the faculties of the soule when they haue their iust times and are come as a man
would say vnto their ripenesse as we may see by experience in the corporall senses For not long after the childe is borne he seeth and heareth the reason whereof is because the senses of seeing and hearing are by nature absolute and perfect Therefore in such actions there needeth no exercise to cause them to performe that which they doe well but onely a good vigour and strength because in them nature is a great Mistres that hath all efficacie But there are farre more excellent actions as science arte prudence fidelitie and such like which had neede of vse and exercise to cause them to doe readily and well This vse bringeth custome which hath in it a facilitie to worke and a disposition tending therunto And then such actions take the name of habite which is bred by the reiterating thereof Thus the actions of the Wil power of desire in the soule of which wee haue spoken before when they are often reiterated so that they grow to be firme and stedfast are called habits because the Will is so accustomed thereunto that it becommeth more constant eithet in desiring one certain thing or in eschewing the same Therefore as the affections are more or lesse forward more seldome or often vsed more weak or strong so they are called either inclinations or actions or habites But we are to note that habites extende not themselues onely to those things which we doe but also to those which we suffer abide which displease vs and are contrary to our nature For custome diminisheth moderateth by litle and litle the sense of that griefe paine which they bring vs whereof we haue trial in all diseases which commonly seem not so grieuous intollerable after we haue bin long accustomed vnto thē as in the beginning of them And although pouertie be a heaui● burthen neuerthelesse custome maketh it familiar vnto vs and familiarity causeth vs to thinke it lighter Wherefore we ought not to maruel if our God doth vsually send affliction to his children to acquaint them therewith as also to the ende they might obtaine the vertue of patience which is learned by often suffering insomuch that there remaineth a habite in men which being nothing els but a common custome causeth them mildly to beare sustaine all euents Whereas there are some that like furious and desperate men are caried away w e great impatience either because they neuer suffered much before or if they did suffer yet they neuer accustomed thēselues to beare their afflictions patiently Moreouer we know by experience that although the way of vertue at our first entring thereinto seeme vnto vs very difficult to tread in yet afterward we find it very ●asie when wee haue walked in it a certaine time For there is no honest trade of life in which we finde not great difficultie And the more excellent it is so much the more troublesome and tedious it will seeme to our flesh whereas the path of pleasure will seeme to bee very delectable and easie because it is a great deale more naturall to our corrupt nature But howe harde so euer it bee to our flesh to followe after a vertuous honest and sober life yet custome will make it easie to ouerpasse as likewise to forsake that which is contrarie vnto it Therefore it hath not without iust cause beene giuen out long since by wise and skilfull men that it is very good and profitable to bee accustomed to good thinges especially from ones infancie that it skilleth much howe eu●rie one hath beene brought vp from his youth that nothing is of greater force then custome eyther to good or to euill as that which seemeth to bee another nature Nowe vpon this speech of habites wee are to note further that as all other naturall thinges in the soule are giuen vnto it for the good thereof so is this habite which is no other thing but a custome rooted therein For except continuance of time did confirme this power of the soule I meane that it ought not onely to doe a thing but to doe it well and as it ought to bee done that it is to gette a facilitie therein through vse and excercise to the ende it may doe the same thing afterwarde more freely and readily and bee more willing to occupie it selfe about the same thing and that after the same manner I say except this bee so many inconueniences will ensue thereupon The first is that it shoulde labour altogether in vaine The seconde that it shoulde alwayes come rude and vnskilfull as it were a newe prentice to the exercising of these excellent actions and woorkes Whereof this woulde followe that hauing profited nothing with the time it woulde not doe any thing perfectly And this we ought not onely to vnderstand of those things which wee doe willingly but euen of that which wee suffer and indure maugre our willes where with of all other things we had neede to be best acquainted For seeing wee are compassed about daily with so many miseries seeing wee must suffer and vndergoe so many sharpe and vnworthie assaults howe much greater will our misery be if long custome an habit in suffring should affoord vs no ease refreshing But let vs come now to that which particularly concerneth the affections of the soule that we may be fully instructed in the nature sundry kinds of them First wee will note that wee vnderstand by affection that natural power in the soule which openeth it selfe towards Good and with draweth it selfe from euill as wee haue alreadie declared before Nowe when the actions of an affection are growen to bee habites then are they called either vertues or vices according as they are either well or ill done And from hence proceede good or ill manners of which morall Philosophie tooke that name because it in●reateth of them For that sheweth what vertue and vice is howe manie kindes there are of them and what difference there is not onely betweene vertues and vices but also betweene the sundrie sorts of them as we haue discoursed at large in our first Academical assemblie But let vs vnderstande this that the knowledge of the soule and of the powers of it about which wee nowe labour is the right springhead and fountaine of that morall Philosophie and doctrine This knowledge therefore is very profitable and necessary to the ende that by it we may know the originall and beginning of all vertues and vices of their whole generation and their sundrie kindes For if wee be well instructed in all the partes and powers of the soule we know the causes of these actions we knowe how the minde iudgeth how the will chooseth and commaundeth as wee haue alreadie spoken And thus we see that there are most sure and certaine principles of knowledge which shine in the minde as it were a light which are the rules whereby the soule squareth out her actions and which discerne betweene trueth and falsehood good
in sorrowe the heart drieth vp and gathereth it selfe in so it causeth the face which is the image of it to retire and drawe backe yea it depriueth the face of all colour and causeth it to fall away Briefly it marreth all health and hath for continuall companions sighs plaints groanes teares and weeping and oftentimes gnashing of teeth as it is written of the damned because of that sorrowe and indignation in which they are by reason of the torments which they suffer It is true that the most of these things serue as a remedy against sorrow For howsoeuer griefe shutteth vp the heart as we haue said yet by groning sighing and weeping the heart doth in some sort open it selfe as if it woulde come foorth to breathe least being wholly shut vp with sorrow it shoulde be stifled Againe teares are giuen vnto vs to testifie our griefe and to manifest it to others that we may mooue them to haue pitie and compassion on vs and to help and succour vs. They serue vs further to declare what compassion we haue of other mens sorrowe and griefe which vse is very necessary for vs to get and preserue friendship one towardes an other and for our mutuall comfort and consolation For we are greatly comforted when we see any take pitie and compassion of vs. Wherefore when we can not otherwise solace them that are grieued but only by declaring that wee are sorrowfull for their heauinesse and for those euilles which they suffer yet doeth that affoorde great consolation And although it seemeth an easie matter to giue this comfort yet is it harder then many thinke it is For before wee can finde this in vs wee must first haue loue in our hearts which causeth vs to open our bowels and mooueth vs to compassion towards our like that we may weepe with them that weepe as we must reioyce also with them that reioyce according as Saint Paul exhorteth vs thereunto For by this meanes we testifie that vnion and coniunction which we haue one with an other as members of one and the same body and as if wee felt in our selues all that good and euill which others feele Nowe because in our definition of these affections of ioy and griefe we made two sorts of those that men feele in their hearts namely either of that good and euill which is present or if that which they looke for wee must consider more particularly of these things and see first why God hath put these affections in the soule and what is true and present ioy as also what that other kind of ioy is which hath regard to that which is to come which is properly called Hope Now let vs heare thee ASER vpon this matter Of the causes why God hath placed these affections of Ioy and Sorrow in the heart of true and false Ioy and of good and badde Hope Chap. 45. ASER. Men haue commonly sharpe wittes to know vaine earthly and carnall things but as for heauenly true eternall things they are able for the most part to vnderstand nothing So that wee may compare the eyes of their soule to the eyes of an Owle which seeth clearely by night but when the sunne is risen seeth neuer a whit Euen so man hath some knowledge of the troublesome things of this worlde but his sight cannot pierce vnto the celestial and diuine light Therefore it falleth out often that being beguiled by his owne sense and reason insteade of Good and Ioy hee chuseth and followeth after that which is euill and full of griefe For when the affection of the heart which naturally desireth Good and seeketh after Ioy is missed and deceiued by humane reason it easily embraceth euill in place of Good and that vnder some vaine shewe of good which seemeth to be in that euill thing it chuseth And although at the first the heart feeleth not that which happeneth vnto it yet hath it leisure enough after to complaine of the torment which is alwaies equall both for age and time to the fault committed and to the abuse of those gifts and graces which God hath placed in the nature of the soule Forasmuch then as the heart is the beginning of life we may well know that God hath not without good cause placed therein such vehement affections of ioy griefe which serue either to preserue or to destroy it and haue for their companions hope and feare as wee wil declare heereafter For by these affections God would giue vs prickes and solicitours to cause vs to thinke seriously of that lesson which Dauid giueth vs when hee saieth Taste yee and see howe gracious the Lorde is blessed is the man that trusteth in him Feare the Lorde yee his Saintes for nothing wanteth to them that feare him The Lions doe lacke and suffer hunger but they which seeke the Lorde shall want nothing that is good What man is hee that desireth life and loueth long dayes for to see good Keepe thy tongue from euill and thy lippes that they speake no guile Eschew euil and do good seeke peace and follow after it The Prophet sheweth here plainely wherein true life felicitie consisteth and the reason thereof hee setteth downe afterward namely that the Lord looketh both vpon the good and bad and that as hee preserueth the good so hee rooteth out the remembrance of the wicked from off the earth Therefore hee saieth afterward Great are the troubles of the righteous but the Lorde deliuereth him out of all Malice shall slay the wicked and they that hate the righteous shall perish The Lorde redeemeth the soules of his seruants and none that trust in him shall perish Wherefore as the children of God that are partakers of his promises can not bee without great ioy in their hearts which feedeth and preserueth them and causeth them to liue happily through the testimonie and taste which they haue of the sweetenesse goodnesse and fauour of God towards them so contrariwise perpetual sorrow dwelleth in the heart of the wicked who cannot haue that ioy in them because they want that which should bring it vnto them For howsoeuer it seemeth that there is no ioy in the worlde but theirs yet they neuer haue any true ioy neither indeede can haue For they seeke not for it neither doe they knowe what it is And therefore in steade of seeking it in God in whome onely it resteth they seeke it in creatures and in al kind of vanitie and yet finde nothing but in offending the maiestie of God For this cause Iesus Christ hath long since pronounced their sentence saying Wobe to you that laugh for ye shall weepe Contrariwise ye that weep are happy for yee shall laugh Blessed are they that mourne that is to say that feele their miseries and seeke for ioy and consolation in God for they shal bee comforted After speaking to his disciples he sayeth Verely verely I say vnto you that ye shall weeepe and lament and
that reuengeth himselfe and will obserue his offences narrowely Forgiue thy neighbour his misdeede and when thou prayest thy sinnes shall bee forgiuen thee Shall man keepe anger against man and will hee aske remission at the Lordes handes Hee will take no pitie vpon his like and shall he demaund pardon for his sinnes Seeing hee that is but flesh keepeth his anger and yet sueth vnto God for pardon who will blot out his iniquities But this ought not to be forgottten of vs to cause vs to abstaine from all anger towards them that by offring vs iniury prouoke vs thereunto namely that we acknowledge thē to be the scourges of God to chastice our faultes which are worthy of greater punishment Thus let vs alwayes looke to the first cause of our affliction and to God who visiteth vs iustly whatsoeuer the meanes are which hee vseth and not to second causes and to the next meanes to the ende that we doe not as dogges doe which runne after the stone throwne against them that by byting it they may be reuenged of it not looking vnto him that threwe it For if we consider that the blowe giuen vnto vs commeth from God we will let the stone goe and not followe after it with anger and reuenge but turne vnto God who threwe it not to stirre vp our selues to despite him or to bee auenged of him but to craue for pardon and grace at his handes And this is the right way which wee are to take for the quenching of our choler that so wee may bridle our anger and keepe our selues quiet Nowe for the ende of this matter it remayneth that wee shoulde knowe whether this affection bee altogether vicious and wholly proceeding from our corrupt nature or whether it haue within it any seede of vertue as well as the rest It is certaine that it is giuen of GOD to man to stirre him vp to the desire of excellent things to the ende that when hee seeth himselfe despised and reiected for base actions and abiect things and is grieued for the same hee shoulde endeuour to leaue and forsake them and to addict himselfe to better and more noble things which can not bee contemned nor hee despised in regarde of them And this kinde of anger is verie good For beeing angrie in this sort our anger is turned vpon our selues onely to blame and reprehende our selues for our slouth and loosenesse and for our other vices and imperfections and by this meanes our anger should not bee sinne but being acceptable vnto God it woulde be vnto vs a Schoolemaster and as a spurre to sollicite and perswade vs vnto vertue and to such things as beseeme vs and that estate whereunto we are called If then wee would be angrie according to the will of God let vs first be angrie against our selues for our faultes and imperfections and when wee haue iust occasion to whet our selues against others let our anger bee turned against their vices not against their persons And such an anger will shewe zeale for the honour of God and the saluation of our neighbours Nowe the sequele of our speech requireth that wee shoulde speake of hatred and of enuie which for the most part followe offence and anger Let vs then heare ACHITOB discourse of these affections Of Hatred and of the nature and effects thereof of a good kinde of Hatred and of the remedy to cure the euill Hatred of Enuy and of the kindes and effects thereof of the difference betweene good and euill Enuy. Chap. 56. ACHITOB. Forasmuch as nature wisedome and goodnes teach that men ought to be knit together by loue as wee haue seene heretofore and that we are by the selfe same nature framed and fashioned thereunto as wee may learne by that which we haue heard of the forme and disposition of the heart wee must needes confesse that the spirite of man can bring foorth nothing more vnworthy it selfe then to suffer it selfe to be ouercome of Hatred and Enuy which are so contrary to loue that they comprehend vnder them all generall iniustice and wickednesse of men For from these wilde plants nothing can proceede by reason of the corruption of mans nature but effects that draw vs cleane contrary from wishing well to our neighbour So that if we plucke out of our heart the cause of this naturall obligation concerning the succour we owe one to another namely Loue what can be either found or placed there but hardnesse inhumanitie crueltie and all kinde of barbarousnesse which are to bee accompted and taken for monsters in mans nature For howe strange and monstrous a thing were it to vnclothe a mans heart of Loue and to put vpon it hatred enuy extreame backebiting bitternesse and crueltie which proceede all from one fountaine Neuerthelesse we see that men are enclined rather to Hatred then to Loue but let vs search out the cause thereof There are many that take Hatred to be an inueterate anger because it is a habite of anger wherby the heart escheweth something as euil and desireth to repell and driue it away Wherefore this affection is directly contrary to loue so likewise is anger For it is an offence rooted in the hart which causeth it to wish greatly his hurt by whom it taketh it selfe to be offended Nowe because contempt doeth often accompany hatred and enuy is neuer without it besides that it breedeth strife contentions manslaughters and murthers therefore in the holy Scriptures hatred is often taken for all these things As for the vehement causes of hatred they are in euery one according as a man esteemeth of the things he hateth Therefore prowd and enuious persons are alwaies very much enclined to hatred Some men also are of such a hatefull nature that they scarce wish wel to any body and surely these are very deuillish natures Some likewise are giuen thereunto of custome which they haue gotten by reioicing at other mens harms But the cause why it is easier for vs to hate then to loue and why Hatred taketh deeper roote in our heart then loue is because hatred findeth a better soile there and a more apt foundation to bee laide vpon then loue doth and that chiefly for two reasons The first is the corruption of mans nature which being left vnto it selfe fauoureth more of the nature of Satan who is hatefull a lyar and enuious from the beginning then of the nature of God who is loue trueth and charitie Therefore Saint Iohn saith that Cain hated his brother and slewe him because he was of the deuill and Abel was of God This hatred will be alwayes in those that haue one and the same Father that Cain had against all good men and children of God The second is because the infirmitie of our nature will not permit vs to enioy any good things in this worlde that are pure and of long continuance and therefore they suffer vs to haue but a little sense and taste of them But
then at the good things themselues in regarde of which men are honoured and esteemed For the enuious man careth not for the vertues that bring renowne and glory but onely for the honour and glory which follow them as the shadow doeth the body Forasmuch then as a prowde man desireth still to be preferred before all therefore hee is more greedy of these goods of honour and glory then of true goods of which the other are but shadowes Hereof it is that a prowde man is naturally enuious because enuy springeth from such a desire of preferrement yea it is commonly bredde of pride Yea the farther a man is off from that which hee woulde be thought to be and the lesse endued with those good things for which he woulde be honoured the more enuious he is But amongst al the good things against which enuy striueth most and for which it is most stirred vp those of the soule are the chiefest because they are more excellent then those of the body and such as neuer haue end Therefore also the reputation and honor which men obtaine by their meanes abide with them continually But the contrary falleth out in corporall and externall goods as they that haue more narrowe bounds Wherefore as they cannot growe to that greatnes vnto which the other doe so their vse also is nothing so great and consequently the price and reputation that proceedeth from them is not so great Therefore if the question be of honour and glory no man of any good iudgement but will more willingly giue ouer that which may be gotten by corporall and outward things then that which foloweth knowledge wisedome vertue and the other goods of the soule So that enuy may stand vs in steade of a witnesse to testifie and shewe vnto vs which are the greatest goods of all seeing it is alwayes busied about the highest noblest and most excellent Good Now as there is no wicked affection which carrieth not about it owne torment to take vengeance thereof by the iust iudgement of God so this of enuy passeth all the rest in this respect Therefore it was well saide of them that taught that enuy is most iust because of selfe it is the same punishment to the enuious man which it deserueth For first it is vile and seruile because an enuious man knoweth this in himselfe that he iudgeth the good things in an other to be greater and more excellent then his owne or at leastwise hee feareth least it shoulde so come to passe Therefore there is no affection in a man which he dare lesse disclose then this of enuy so that hee receiueth lesse comfort in this then in any other For by opening our heart to an other wee receiue solace and comfort whereas the enuious person iudgeth his affection of enuy to be so vile that hee dare not discouer it but hideth and concealeth it as much as hee can If hee be angry or hate any one he will declare it a great deale sooner And albeit feare be thought to be dishonourable yet will a man rather disclose this affection then he will enuy The like may be saide of sorrow and of loue But the enuious body is constrained to bite on his bridle to chew and to deuoure his enuy within himselfe and to locke vp his owne miserie in the bottome of his heart to the ende it breake not foorth and shew it selfe whereby the body receiueth great detriment For it becommeth pale wanne swart and leane the eyes sinke into the head the lookes are askew and the whole countenance is disfigured And within the heart the furies are enclosed which giue him so small rest that greater torment can not be imagined Therefore Salomon saieth very well That a sound heart is the life of the body but enuy is the rotting of the bones And Ecclesiasticus saieth That death is better then a bitter life that enuy and wrath shorten the life and that carefulnesse bringeth age before the time To conclude although al the euil affections trouble and corrupt the minde very much yet none of them offendeth it so much as enuy doth Which commeth not to passe so much because it selfe iudgeth or esteemeth good to be euill as because it desireth that others should so esteeme thereof But howsoeuer this vice be very vile and infamous and hurtful both to the body and soule yet in this affection of enuy we must put a difference betweene that part of it which proceedeth from sound nature as it was first giuen of God to man and that which is in it through the corruption of nature For there is a kind of enuy which serueth vs in steade of spurres to pricke vs forward and to worke in vs a wil and desire both to obtaine and to keepe great good things And this enuy is very good when wee apply our selues to the true Goods and are not grieued at the prosperitie and vertues which wee see in others but are mooued by their example to desire and to seeke after the selfe same Goods yea greater if the meanes be offered prouided that all be referred to the glory of God to our owne saluation and to the profite of our neighbours Vnto this kinde of Enuy Saint Paul exhorteth vs when he writeth to the Corinthians speaking of the diuersity of gifts wrought by the spirite of God in his Church Be enuious of the best gifts albeit in our vsuall translation it be Desire yet the Greeke worde signifieth to enuy but the sense is in a manner all one And the same Apostle speaking of the reliefe collection made for the poore saieth Achaia was prepared a yeere agoe and your zeale hath prouoked many that is to say the emulation and enuy which they haue conceiued by your example and this was a good holy and christian enuy But if we seeke our owne glory and in that respect are grieued that others excell vs in vertues and in the gifts and graces of GOD onely because we would haue that honour which they haue and be equall with them or aboue them this is a peruerse and Satanicall affection declaring euidently that we seeke our selues and our owne glory more then the glory of God For if we had respect to that which wee ought it woulde be all one to vs who were the instruments either our selues or others so that God were glorified and that were well done which ought to be done As for the euill sorts of enuy of which wee haue spoken they are placed by Saint Paul amongst the woorkes of darknesse and of the flesh where he saieth that They which are defiled with them shal not inherit the kingdome of God But forasmuch as in this discourse we placed Iealousie amongst the kindes of Enuy and yet it is often taken in the good part proceeding as it were of true loue as Zeale also is bredde thereof it shall be good for thee ASER to begin the dayes worke to morrow with a
treatise of these two affections The end of the seuenth dayes worke THE EIGHT dayes worke Of Iealousie and of the kindes thereof howe it may be either a vice or a vertue howe true zeale true iealousie and indignation proceede of loue of their natures and why these affections are giuen to man Chap. 57. ASER The holy Scripture applying it selfe to the capacitie of mans vnderstanding describeth mens affections oftentimes by those testimonies which their outward members affoorde conuincing them of vices rooted in their heart by the carriage of their eies of their eie-liddes of their forehead and of their whole countenance Which is to this ende chiefly that when they know that men may reade one in anothers face as it were in a Booke that which is couered and hidden in the heart they shoulde perswade themselues that God soundeth and seeth more easily the most secret thoughts of their heartes and that they can hide nothing from him Likewise the holy spirite to condescend to our rudenesse and to teach vs to knowe God by our selues not onely by our soule which we see not but also by our body which wee see speaketh often of his high infinite and incomprehensible maiestie as it were of a man attributing vnto him eies eares a nose a mouth armes legges feete hands a heart and bowelles Moreouer albeit this pure simple and eternal essence be in no wise passionated with affections yet the same heauenly word doth not only attribute vnto him wrath reuenge anger iealousie and other affections but doth oftentimes propound him vnto vs as an yrefull man hauing the face behauiour and whole countenance of one greatly stirred vp to wrath reuenge yea euen to great fury Which is done to this end both that by the knowledge which we may haue of the nature of these affections whereunto wee are enclined and of the effectes which they bring foorth and causes from whence they proceede wee shoulde meditate the same things to bee in God when wee offend him and knowe what rewarde wee are to looke for and also to teach vs that right rule of all our affections which wee haue in his diuine goodnesse Nowe if wee remember what hath beene declared vnto vs of the nature of Loue wee heard that true and pure loue was without iealousie and that this affection sprang of the loue of concupiscence and yet it was tolde vs yesterday that Iealousie was placed amongst the kindes of enuy Let vs then see what this affection is properly and whether all iealousie be vicious I vnderstand by Iealousie a feare which a man hath lest an other whome hee woulde not should enioy something This commeth to passe two wayes namely either because wee our selues woulde enioy it alone or else because we would haue some other to whom we wish the same thing to enioy it alone the reason heereof is because we iudge it hurtfull either to our selues or to those whome wee loue if others should enioy it As if the question were of some honour or of some other good which we would haue to our selues alone or for some one whome wee loue and should be greeued that an other enioyeth it and thereupon enuy him either because wee are afraide hee shall enioy it or because hee enioyeth it already heerein appeareth enuy and euill iealousie which bringeth with it great mischiefes For as Saint Iames saieth From whence are warres and contentions among you are they not hence euen of your lustes that fight in your members yee lust and haue not ye enuy and are iealous or haue indignation and can not obtaine ye fight and warre and g●t nothing Wherefore to auoide this enuy and euill iealousie wee must consider of what nature that Good is which stirreth vs vp to this affection For according to the nature thereof our iealousie may be either a vice or a vertue For if the question be of some Good thing which belongeth in such sort to mee alone or to any other whome I loue that none may enioy it except it be vniustly and to the dishonour of God it is no euill iealousie if I feare lest any shoulde abuse it or bee grieued when it falleth out so If it concerneth some body whome I l●●ue who is abused by another to the displeasure of God and to the dishonour and hurt of the party beloued I haue yet greater occasion to feare to bee greeued and euen to bee iealous both ouer my owne Good and ouer the good of the partie beloued And as I haue iust cause of Iealousie in this case in that thing which properly belongeth vnto mee so also I haue like occasion when an other vniustly enioyeth that Good which belongeth to him whome I loue and of whome I ought to bee carefull and be greeued when any reproch or wrong is offered vnto him As for example seeing the husband hath such an interest in his wife and the wife in her husband as no other eyther may or ought to haue the like both of them haue iust cause to beware that no other haue the fruition heereof but themselues to take the matter heauily if it fall out otherwise and to bee very much offended and full of indignation against him that shoulde attempt any such thing For that can not be done as not without the great dishonour and dammage of the parties so knit together so also not without the great dishonour of GOD whose lawe and couenant is thereby violated On the other side that mutuall loue which ought to be betwixt the husband and the wife doth binde them to desire and to procure the honour and profite eache of other and to keepe backe all dishonour and hurt that may befall them Wherefore both of them haue iust cause to bee offended with those that seeke to procure any blemish in this respect The like may bee saide of fathers mothers and children and of all that haue anie charge ouer others or that are linked together by friendship But on the other side a man must beware that he be not too suspicious and that hee carry not within himselfe matter of Iealousie and so torment himselfe and others without cause as likewise hee must bee very carefull that hee giue no occasion of Iealousie to any other And thus you see howe there may be a good iealousie notwithstanding that in this case it be mingled with loue and anger For Iealousie causeth the party that loueth to be angry with him by whome that thing which hee doeth loue receiueth any dishonour or detriment Therefore this anger commeth of loue which inciteth him to set himselfe against him that offendeth the thing beloued So that these affections are alwayes commendable arising of this cause and being ruled according to that Zeale and Iealousie which the holy Scripture attributeth vnto GOD in regarde of vs. For hee is called a iealous GOD not onely in regard of his honour and glory which hee will not
haue giuen to any other besides himselfe and indeede all the creatures ioyned together are not able to diminish or to adde any thing thereunto whatsoeuer they doe but also because hee loueth vs hee is iealous of our saluation and desireth to reserue vs wholly to himselfe and to make vs partakers of his immortall blessednesse Therefore hee will not haue vs spoyle him of his glorie and forsake his seruice in regarde of that hurt and dammage which shoulde befall vs thereby For hee beareth that affection towardes vs which a good Father doeth towardes his children who loueth them not for any profite comming to him thereby but only for their owne good and because hee both will and ought to loue them This loue then which God beareth vnto vs causeth him to be iealous ouer vs when through impietie and wickednesse of life wee leaue him and ioyne our selues vnto his aduersary the deuill Whereupon hee doeth not onely become angry but is full of indignation also both against him and vs. For indignation is a griefe wrought in vs when wee see some good thing befall to an vnworthy person and him that is worthy depriued thereof This affection therefore proceedeth from the same roote from whence compassion springeth namely from the iudgement of that which is good and from the loue thereof But the diuersitie of both their obiects causeth them in some sort to be contrary affections forasmuch as indignation is bred in regarde of some good that hapneth to one that is vnworthy of it and compassion or pity ariseth of some euill that befalleth or is procured to him that hath not deserued it And of these two contrary affections mingled together a third affection is bred which in holy Scripture is called Zeale and Iealousie being taken in the good part Hereof it is that the loue and compassion which God hath of his children when he seeth them go about to bereaue themselues of that good which he wisheth them and the indignation that hee hath in regarde of the good which hapneth to the wicked in the accomplishment of their euill desires for to them euill is in steade of good causeth him to be mooued with iealousie and to bee auenged thereof For this cause the Prophet Ioel saieth Then will the Lorde be iealous ouer his land and spare his people And the Prophet Esay hauing declared to Ezechias the deliuerance of Ierusalem and the succour which GOD would send him against Senacherib saith That the zeale of the Lorde of Hostes will perfourme this In like manner when the true children and seruants of God beholde a confusion in steade of that order which the Lorde woulde haue obserued and which hee hath prescribed vnto his creatures they are greatly mooued in regarde of that zeale which they beare as well towardes GOD as towardes their neighbours For Zeale is nothing else but an indignation conceiued in respect of those things that are vnwoorthily done against him that is deare vnto vs and whome wee loue Therefore if wee loue GOD and his Statutes if wee loue the Common-wealth our Princes our Parents and all others whome wee ought to loue wee will bee iealous for them and can not beholde without indignation aniething done against them that ought not to bee This Indignation and Iealousie will induce vs to set our selues earnestly against all iniustice and to ouerthrowe it with all our might With this Iealousie Saint Paul was affected towardes the Corinthians when hee wrote thus vnto them I am iealous ouer you with godly iealousie for I haue prepared you for one husband to present you as a pure virgine vnto Christ. This kind of Zeale is very requisite in all the true seruants of God but chiefely in them that haue any publike charge whether it be in the Church or in the Common-wealth For except they bee endued with great Zeale towardes the glory of the Maiestie of GOD towardes iustice and all vertues they will neuer haue that care which they ought eyther of the honour and seruice of GOD or of publike benefite or to reprooue correct and punish vices or lastly to maintaine good Discipline vpright iustice and good conuersation in such sorte as becommeth them For this cause hath GOD giuen to the nature of man this affection of Zeale and Indignation for the communion that ought to bee in the societie of men to the ende there shoulde bee a right and indifferent distribution of all good things so that none of them shoulde light vpon the vnwoorthy that vse them ill but to such as deserue them and knowe howe to vse them aright Nowe when these affections are thus ruled they are very good and profitable but commonly they are abused vnto vice For Indignation is quickely bredde of Enuy which being vniust is also of a corrupt and badde iudgement so that an enuious bodie thinketh that whatsoeuer good thing an other hath befallen vnto him hee is vnwoorthy of it And so in like manner the Zeale that is without true knowledge bringeth foorth most pernicious effectes For it proceedeth from a loue which iudgeth not aright of the thing that mooueth it but esteemeth it to bee euill and woorthy of hatred whereas it is good and woorthy of loue Of this Zeale Saint Paul speaketh when hee sayeth of the Iewes I beare them recorde that they haue the zeale of God but not according to knowledge For being deceiued in their iudgement and calling themselues defenders and louers of the lawe of GOD they persecuted the Gospel which was the accomplishment of the Lawe and also them that beleeued in Iesus Christ insomuch that their very Zeale was through their ignoraunce turned into Crueltie and Tyranny which is a very dangerous zeale and ought most carefully to bee shunned of vs as that whereinto the best minded men of all doe commonly fall when they are blinded with ignoraunce as the Apostle Saint Paul propoundeth himselfe in this case for an example before hee was conuerted For hee freely confesseth that hee was a blasphemour a persecutour and an oppressour but hee did it ignorantly and through vnbeleefe There haue beene many such not onely amongest the Iewes but euen among the Heathen For albeit their Religion was altogether superstitious and idolatrous yet they alwayes maintained and defended it with very great zeale persecuting such as professed Christianitie among them and condemning them as the vilest and most detestable men vpon the earth But if the Lord be greatly offended when as wee beare hatred and enuy against any body wee cannot doubt but that this doeth likewise displease him when we commit these things being blinded with ignoraunce and that hee is carried with greater indignation against vs when wee maliciously cloake these vices with a false title of zeale of religion and of his glory thereby to reuenge our selues and to exercise our cruelties much more easily But let vs nowe proceede to consider of other affections of the
to choller flegme or blood waxeth melancholicke that man by reason the fumes can not euaporate and get out falleth into frensies and madde fittes and those of diuers sorts For as the melancholike humour is mixed either with blood or with flegme or with choller so is the melancholie person more or lesse merry or sadde heauier or lighter colder or hotter and his fits and furies either more moderate or more vehement and violent But howsoeuer it be we see by daily experience that there are many sorts of melancholike persons of madde senslesse and furious people And besides the mixture of vicious humours wee must consider also the sundry naturall temperaments of euery one For as wee see that wines are diuersly tempered according to the varietie of countries lands and aire where they grew and that albeit they are always wine yet there is great difference in the one from the other both in substance nourishment colour smell vertue and strength euen so is it with the humours of the body For the same humors are more pure or more moderate or more noble and exquisit in some then in others according to the natures of their bodies and not onely of their owne but also of their parents bodies from whence they were deriued For children commonly take much after their parents I speake nothing of that which the temperament may take of the heauens and of all the celestiall bodies and chiefly of the speciall grace of GOD the prince of nature who ruleth ouer all temperaments and complexions But it is time that following our purpose wee consider what effectes the humours haue towardes the soule and that wee looke into the diuersities of the temperatures and complexions of men according vnto the nature of those humours that raigne most in them and to that disposition which naturally they doe woorke in them eyther to vertues or vices This wee shall learne of thee ACHITOB. Of the diuerse temperatures and complexions of men according to the nature of humours that beare most sway in them of the disposition whereunto they are naturally mooued by them either to vertues or vices of the meanes to correct the vices and defects that may be in our naturall inclinations Chap. 68. ACHITOB. It is not without great shew of reason that the Philosophers made three principles and beginnings that effect mens actions namely powers habits or qualities and affections or passions For we see plainely by experience of how great force these things are in man so long as he liueth Concerning powers they come to vs by nature and are effectiue principles of all actions both good and badde yea by them we knowe in children during their yong yeeres the signes and tokens of some vertue or vice that will raigne most in them afterwards which we commonly call Inclination or Disposition The passions and affections are likewise naturall in vs being forcible prickes to prouoke men to embrace either good or euill whereof we haue already spoken sufficiently As for the habites or qualities they are accidentall in man as they that are gotten by a long and continuall custome of doing good or euill whereupon also they take their names of good or euill habits Nowe wee commonly see some to be naturally enclined to one vertue and not to another or to one vice and not to an other For it seemeth sometimes that nature hath bredde some to be temperate others to be liberall and contrariwise And when a man endued with natural powers tending to good obtaineth qualities answerable thereunto hee is woorthy of commendation because vnto his inclination hee hath added greater helpe namely care and study by meanes whereof he is come to some perfection So likewise hee that being naturally borne impotent attaineth to those vertues that are contrary to his impotency deserueth greater praise because fighting as it were with nature he remaineth conqueror ouer himselfe and becommeth vertuous with greater difficultie But contrariwise if a man that is naturally ill disposed to some particular vice doeth adde further a habite to his badde inclination hee is woorthie of blame because hee hath not resisted euill but pleasing himselfe therein hath made it greater As likewise hee that hath excellent graces and giftes of nature to doe well and suffereth them to vanish away through his negligence and custome in euill is much more to bee blamed because that voluntarily hee suffereth himselfe to bee ouercome of vice But wee must consider of these things somewhat higher and by the selfe same reason iudge of the natural temperaments which in the former speech wee heard were diuerse in euery one For wee ought to acknowledge one God Prince and Authour of nature who ruleth in all and ouer all Therefore as he hath appropriated to the soule those instruments which he hath giuen vnto it in the body to worke in them and by them so himselfe disposeth and ordereth those instruments which he will vse amongst men yea euen from their mothers wombe as it is written of the Prophet Ieremy and of the Apostle Saint Paul whome our Sauiour also called achosen instrument to be are his name before the Gentiles and Kings and children of Israel No doubt therfore considering the agreement which we haue heard is in the affections of the soule with the temperature of the body but that the more temperate the complexion of euery mans body is and the neerer it approcheth to the perfectest temperature the more quiet and moder●●e the more gracious and comely will his affections and maners be naturally yea all his gestures and whole behauiour True it is as we haue else-where touched that no body is so framed or hath such an harmony and equalitie throughout but that there is some disagreement inequalitie But we account those natures to be well tempered which approch neerest to the perfect temperature and as euery humour ruleth more or lesse in euery one so he is called either sanguine or flegmaticke or cholericke or melancholicke Againe as the other humours beare sway next vnto the principall so is a man saide to be either flegmaticke sanguine cholericke sanguine or melancholike sanguine The like may be saide of the other humours according to their temperature as also of the affections which haue some agreement with them Heereof it is that when there is excesse of the flegmatike humour in men their natures are commonly slouthfull they shunne labour and giue themselues to bodily pleasures they loue dainties and delicate meates and drinkes they are tender and effeminate and cleane contrary to stowt and valiant men And if there be excesse of the cholericke humour their natures are easily prouoked and stirred vp to wrath but their anger is as a fire of thornes that being soone kindled making a great noise is by and by quenched againe Their gestures also are more quicke and vehement and their hastinesse is commonly foolish and turbulent they bablemuch and are like to vessels full of
holes vnable to hold in and keepe anie secret matter they are fierce in assailing but inconstant in sustaining the assault in some sort resembling the nature of dogges which barke and bite if they can and afterward flie away And if there bee excesse of the melancholike humour the natures of such are sadde still hard to please suspicious conceited obstinate some more and some lesse And if the cholericke and melancholike humours be corrupt and mingled together their natures become monstrous prowd full of enuy fraud subtilties venemous and poisonfull hatefull and diabolicall And when the malignant spirits know mens natures thus disposed no doubt but they take occasion thereby to intermingle themselues if God permit them and purpose to vse them for the punishing of men I say they will ioyne themselues vnto them and make them their instruments as God on the other side vseth those natures that are most moderate and best tempered making them instruments of his glorie Now we may call to mind what we learned before almost to the same ende touching the meanes whereby euill spirites might trouble the imagination fantasie and mindes of men We may say as much of the humours of the body whose motions and nature they knowe very well Whereby they can so much the more easily abuse them in their damnable worke and will as wee may iudge by the example of him that was possessed and lunatike of whom the Euangelists make mention and whome they call by those two names And by that which they wrote of him it seemeth that he was subiect to the falling sickenesse that returneth oftentimes according to the course of the moone which naturally hath great affinitie with the humors and great power ouer them And therefore it is very likely that the euill spirit which tormented this poore lunatike watched the occasions of his disease to afflict him the more and to cause him to fall either in the fire or in the water as he did indeede thereby to worke his death if he had could Which example sheweth vnto vs what is the malice of the deuil what pleasure hee taketh in hurting of men what meanes and what occasions he seeketh for and maketh choice of and what accesse vnto vs we may offer him through our corrupt nature through our vices and sinnes and through our inclinations and manners that are naturally euill and peruerse if God letteth him loose the bridle by his iust iudgement seeing he spareth not the little children as it appeareth in that which is written of him of whom we spake euen now For this cause we ought to take good heede that we giue not our common enemie those occasions that he seeketh to haue from vs to the ende that hee abuse vs not nor any thing that is ours and which God hath bestowed vpon vs. This is the reason why the consideration of our temperature complexion and naturall inclination is very necessary for vs because the knowledge hereof affoordeth vnto vs many good instructions that may stand vs in great steade throughout our whole life as well for the preseruation of the health of our bodies as for the rule and gouernement of our affections and manners as also in regarde of the familiaritie and acquaintance which wee haue one with an other For through the contemplation hereof wee may knowe not onely the causes of health and sickenesse of the life and death of the body but also of that of the soule For as the good humours corrupt in our bodies according as wee haue heard and breede in them sundry diseases which finally leade them vnto death euen so by means of sinne all those good and naturall affections which ought to bee the seedes of vertues in vs are corrupted and turne into vices that are the diseases of the soule and bring vnto it the second and eternall death as contrariwise vertues are the health and life thereof But as GOD hath prouided corporall medicines for the bodie so hee hath prepared spirituall Physicke for the soule against all the diseases thereof Therefore when wee consider with our selues vnto what vices wee are inclined by nature wee must labour to correct and bridle them and to quench such inclinations as much as wee can through sobrietie vigilancie and continuall practise to the contrary least wee nourish and encrease them when as wee ought to diminish and wholy to abolish them For the common prouerbe is not without reason that Education passeth Nature or that it is another nature Wee see by experience what Education and Instruction are able to doe both to goodnesse and vice according as they are either good or euill For as there is no nature so good which can not bee corrupted and peruerted through euill education and teaching so there is none so vicious and euill which can not at the least in some measure through the helpe and grace of GOD bee corrected and amended by good education instruction and discipline And because conuersation and familiaritie are of great efficacie in this point wee are diligently to consider with what persons and natures wee acquaint our selues and bee carefull to eschew such natures as are vicious prowd fierce enuious hatefull malicious suspicious disloyall and traiterous as well in regarde of the corruption of manners wherewith wee may bee infected by them as also in respect of other harmes that may befall vs by reason they are vnsociable natures or at the least very difficult to conuerse withall being indeede such as towardes whome no man can beare any true loue or firme friendship But when wee haue vsed all the diligence wee can possible about these things the chiefest point wherein the whole consisteth is this that wee haue recourse to Iesus Christ the eternall sonne of GOD to the end that by his holy Spirit hee woulde correct represse and quench in vs all the vicious affections and disordered motions that wee haue contrary to his holy will according to that promise which is made vnto vs wherein it is saide that if fathers knowe howe to giue good gifts to their children and such things as are necessarie for them much more will our heauenly Father giue his holie Spirite to them that aske it of him And this is the true meanes wee ought to keepe for the correcting of these vices and defectes that are in our naturall inclinations Now wee haue spoken sufficiently of those things which concerne the naturall powers of the soule in respect of the nourishment and growth of the body and of those instruments which it hath in the same for the performaunce of her actions It remaineth nowe that wee consider what effectes it hath in Generation First then ASER thou shalt handle the restauration and reparation of all natures by that vertue and power of Generation that is in them and namely in man to the end wee may after proceede with those other points that concerne this matter Of the restauration and reparation of all
of them say that it were best for a man not to bee borne at all or else to die so soone as hee is borne Others set themselues against nature and speake euill of her saying that shee is rather a badde stepmother then a good mother to mankinde And because they knowe not what GOD is they set vpon Nature through whose sides they wound him speaking euill of him and blaspheming him vnder this name of Nature Thus you see what comfort and consolation they finde who looke for no other life after this And as for those other that haue but some bare motion and slender opinion of the immortalitie of soules what greater ioy or contentation can they haue Nay there are three things that doe greatly diminish their comfort The first is their doubting wherewith they are continually possessed which hindereth them from hauing any assurance of the same The second is the seperation of the soule from the body whereby they conceiue and imagine that the bodie doeth so turne into corruption as that it wholly perisheth without anie hope of the resurrection thereof or of conioyning it againe with the soule from which it was disioyned The third is the ignorance of the estate of soules after this life For albeit they were verie certainely perswaded that our soules are immortall yet they haue no assuraunce of their estate neither knowe they whether they liue in ioy and rest or in paine and torment but onely by opinion as they esteeme by euery ones merites which they measure according to that knowledge they haue and that iudgement which they are able to affoorde of their vertues and vices Therefore whatsoeuer they thinke or hope seeing they are not very sure and certaine neither indeede can bee if they haue no better assuraunce then by their naturall light and reason they must needes bee subiect continually to sorrowe and griefe which way soeuer they turne themselues For if they are of opinion that there are punishments for such as haue ledde an euill life in this worlde who can assure them that they shall bee exempted and freed thereof For howsoeuer they labour to enforce as it were their conscience and striue neuer so much to rocke it on sleepe and flatter themselues in their sinnes yet can it not affoorde them anie such peace and quietnesse as will altogether satisfie and content them And as for perswading themselues that there is no punishement for the wicked they are neuer able to doe it For the same naturall light and reason whereby they iudge soules to bee immortall doth likewise constraine them to acknowledge that there is a God a iust Iudge who suffereth not euill vnpunished as also he will not passe by that which is good without accepting of it as it is So that seeing they cannot assuredly know that God will approue and receiue their workes as good or refuse them as euill they must of necessitie bee alwayes in feare whatsoeuer they beleeue Therefore as the one sort endeuour with all their power to bee perswaded of this that mens soules are mortal as well as their bodies and that after death there remaineth no more of the one then of the other thereby to deliuer thēselues of this feare and of the torment that accompanieth feare so the other sort that haue a better opinion of the immortalitie of soules labour to perswade themselues that there is no Hell nor punishment for soules after this life but that they are onely poeticall fictions and fables But although Poets vsed fictions in that which they wrote of Hell and of those infernall furies and torments yet they deriued the grounde and foundation of them from that testimonie which God hath planted in the nature of vs all So that none ought to flatter and seduce themselues by meanes of such opinions as ouerturne all nature for that were to take away all difference betweene good and euill vertue and vice things honest and dishonest For if there bee no reward either for the one or the other or if it be all one it followeth either that there is no difference betwixt all these things or that there is no iustice in God But both these are impossible whereupon it must needes be concluded that not onely there is another life after this but also that in the second life there is ioy rest and felicity for the one and greefe paine and dolour for the other Wherfore we must not thinke that because the Kitchin and Nurserie of this mortall bodie is by the appointment and prouidence of God ioined with the soule that is immortall and diuine therefore there is no other life for man besides this bodily life or that the soule which giueth life and mainteineth it in the body is no more immortall then the body that receiueth the same from it and that the body in like maner ought not to expect another life after this But I hope that these things shall hereafter bee better declared vnto vs in those discourses which wee are especially to make touching the immortalitie of the soule Now to end this speech forasmuch as in this and in our former discourses we haue oftentimes made mention of Nature which for the most part men ioyne as companion with God when they speake of the counsels of his prouidence ouer all things created according to that common prouerbe that God and Nature haue made nothing in vaine I say in this respect it shall be good for vs to know what Nature is to speake properly and into what detestable errour they fall who attribute that to it which appertaineth to God alone And first they that vse this prouerbe might speake more directly and Christianly if they attributed the whole to God only not ioyning vnto him nature for a companion as though he had neede of her helpe and coulde not well finish all his woorkes alone and as though hee had not beene able to haue done all that hee hath done without her It may bee they will say that they doe giue this honour vnto God and that they speake not of Nature as Galen and many other Heathen Physicions and Philosophers or rather Epicures and Atheists doe who place Nature in God his stead but that they speake of her as of a means created of God by which he performeth all these things But there is no such necessitie to ioyne Nature with God as his fellow worker For when hee created the first man what Nature had he with him that did helpe him to make this worke Besides the verie name of Nature doeth it not declare that it is a thing borne created and so consequently hath her creation and birth from God as all other creatures haue For if we take Nature for that diuine vertue and power which appeareth in the workes of the creation in their preseruation and order we must of necessitie take it not for a thing that is borne and bred of others but that giueth birth and beeing
any right and interest therein to any other besides him onely who is soueraigne almightie and the onely father of spirites For if the question be of the body and of all the senses thereof many may claime an interest therein vnder God namely Fathers mothers the children themselues nature the kinred the countrey friends kings Princes Lords But the soule belongeth to none but to God alone which he willeth commandeth should be reserued to him only for our happines because he only is the author and creator thereof If it be so then that our soule is not begotten or produced by this nature which is the handmaide of God and worker vnder him but by God alone it followeth very well that nothing in nature can extinguish it but God onely who is able to do it if he please Now it is not likely or credible that God would make a thing by it selfe and that after a different manner from other things which should haue nothing besides the creation of it then within a while after would destroy it For if it were otherwise why woulde hee obserue another meane in the creation of man then in that of beasts Why would he not rather haue bestowed vpon nature the power of the generation and corruption of mans soule as he hath done that of other liuing creatures Wherefore woulde hee seeme to reserue that thing as proper to himselfe which hee woulde make subiect to the law and common condition of other things Thus much then for those arguments which we may take from the knowledge that God hath giuen to mans soule from his constant worke in the creation of it to proue the nature and immortalitie therof Now we are to consider what arguments we haue to the same purpose in that vertue of desire which is giuen vnto it These things then we may learne of thee Aram. Of the argument for the immortalitie of the soule that may be taken from that naturall desire thereof and of perpetuitie which is in it of another argument to the same purpose of the desire which men haue to continue their name and memory for euer an argument to the same ende taken from the apprehension and terror which men may haue both of the death of the body and also of the soule and spirit Chap. 91. ARAM. These three things are so linked and knit together namely Gods religion his diuine prouidence and the immortalitie of the soule that they neither may nor ought to bee seperated in any wise For if our soules were not immortall no rewarde or punishment for good or bad doings were to be looked for and then God should not seeme to haue any care ouer vs which if he haue not why should wee worship him Our hope should be in vaine and religion vnprofitable But if without the grace and goodnes of God we cannot liue and if he wil be sought vnto of vs by prayer then religion is very necessary and the immortalitie of the soule certaine And euen as a man cannot renounce those excellent giftes which naturally are planted in his spirit and minde and in that reason which God hath bestowed vpon him but hee must renounce himselfe and become like to the bruite beast so fareth it also with him when he renounceth his immortalitie But seeing we are now in handling the powers of the soule to shewe that it dieth not and seeing wee haue spoken of knowledge wee will consider what arguments to the same ende may bee taken from the vertue of desiring that is naturally in it Heretofore we learned that all knowledge both in man and beast is giuen to this ende that they should desire whatsoeuer they know to be good and eschue that which they know to be euil Concerning the knowledge of our sences they conceiue well ynough what it is to be present and so do the sences of beastes of which and of our whole nature we may iudge both by our external and internal sences that are common to vs with them so we may discerne of all such like things But the appetite or desire of beasts goeth no further then the time present For that naturall desire of their owne preseruation which is in them proceedeth not frō any knowledge which they haue of things but from the workemanship of nature and from that naturall inclination which they haue thereunto without any motion of reason or vnderstanding Whereupon it followeth that their desire to preserue themselues and their power of procreation proceedeth not from their knowing vertue that is the chiefest in them but from the vegetatiue vertue which is the basest most abiect But man goeth a great deale further For man hath knowledge of perpetuitie and of eternitie as we heard in the former speach and because he knoweth that eternitie is a good and profitable thing for him he doth also desire the same This desire then is naturall and if naturall it followeth also that it is a very meete and conuenient thing for vs and so consequently that it is not giuen to man without cause and to no purpose Wee must then conclude hereupon that it may be accomplished and that of necessitie it must be sometime or other For if it were otherwise to what purpose should this knowledge serue which man hath of so great a benefite and which also mooueth him to desire the same if he could neuer attaine to the fruition thereof And why should God teach the same to men if he would not make them partakers of it Were it not rather to debase then to aduaunce them aboue beastes whereas hee hath created them Lordes and as it were his last and principall peece of worke in his worke of creation Should it not seeme to be not onely a vaine thing but also if I might so speake as though God delighted to torment men to cause them to desire that thing of which they should neuer haue any participation Were it not better for them at leastwise as good that in this respect hee should haue created them like to bruite beastes For so they should liue a great deale more quiet and not torment themselues as they doe after a thing which is altogether vnpossible for them to attaine vnto Nowe wee haue a very euident signe and testimony in vs of the continuall being of this desire of enternitie in that longing which men haue to make their name eternall as much as may be and that their memory might remaine in all ages that shall follow long time after them And which is more this affection is so naturall and imprinted so deepe into mens hearts that euen they who deny the immortality of soules and who thinke that euery man doeth wholy vanish away by corporall death doe couet notwithstanding the immortality of their name and to haue a good report amongest men still after their death Heereof wee haue very good proofe in the last will and Testament of Epicurus himselfe the Captaine and standard-bearer
deale with little children and with birdes by puppets and strawe-men and such like things And who will first perceiue and finde out these subtilties such as are most ignoraunt and foolish or the other that are more skilfull and wise It is easie to iudge that they who haue best wittes and are best learned will sooner perceiue the same then the other Now what wil follow hereupon but that they being freed from the feare which held them in before shall by the same means be let loofe and sundred from the bond of all religion and vertue as if it were clean broken as it hath daily doth happen to them that mainteine this opinion and to those also that haue beene taught and instructed in their schoole And consequently this also will follow that the quicker and sharper wit a man hath and the greater knowledge vnderstanding is in him the more wicked and badde man hee will proue For if hee vnderstand that religion is but religion in name and indeed is nothing but foolish superstition and if hee iudge as much of the immortalitie of the soule hauing thus shaken off all religion he will cast away all feare of God and not suffer himselfe to be brideled in any sort either by any terrour of the iudgement to come or reuerence of the deitie but onely by the feare of mens lawes And if this take place in men we may wel thinke what licence they will take to themselues to commit the greatest sinnes and abominations in the worlde especially if they be in darknes and thinke that no man seeth them and that there is no other iudge that perceiueth them to whome they must one day giue an account And if they be so great that by their power they may violate all lawes both diuine and humane as tyrants commonly vse to doe who shall stay them from liuing like sauage beastes among men So that as euery one by dexteritie of spirite by doctrine and instruction shall approch neerer to that perfection for which man was created of God the more enclined readie and armed he will bee to commit all kinde of malice and wickednesse For how can hee doe otherwise when that secret of the schoole shall be disclosed vnto him and when he shall learne that whatsoeuer is here taught concerning religion vertue and honestie amongst men is but fained and inuented for the nonce to keepe men in feare Surely this will cause him to let loose the raines to all licenciousnesse Nowe what corruption of the spirite and mind of man is there comparable to this or what will sooner turne it aside from that perfection in which the soueraigne chief good of it consisteth Therefore seeing the case standeth thus this opinion of theirs cannot be true but ouerthroweth it selfe For whatsoeuer corrupteth the spirite and turneth it from his perfection is contrarie to the nature thereof Wherefore wee must conclude that it is farre otherwise and that this saying of theirs is as true as if one should say that the perfecter a man is the more he is vnperfect the better he is the worse he is and the more truly he is man the further off he is from the nature of a man and more like to the nature of sauage beasts Who then can doubt of the truth of the soules immortalitie after so great a multitude of arguments and of so strong and so mightie witnesses who fight in battel aray as it were a strong armie against them that vpholde the contrarie But we haue other no lesse worthie to bee considered of which we beare within our selues and which are so common to all that there is no man whatsoeuer but hee feeleth and perceiueth them whether he will or no. Therefore it shall bee good for vs to speake somewhat thereof also to the ende that the matter we haue nowe in hande may be the better and more perfectly vnderstood to the confusion of Epicures and Atheists and that we may still acknowledge more and more the testimonies of the image of God in vs and who we bee and what good or euill things are prepared for vs in the immortalitie of the second life according as we shal be conformed reformed to the will of God or els as we shal be remoued from that image giue credit to impietie and lies Now it belongeth to thee ACHITOB to discourse of this matter Of those internall testimonies which all men cary within themselues to conuince them that doubt of the immortality of the soule of the iudgement to come which shal be in eternall happines for the good and perpetuall torment for the euill how the very Heathen acknowledged as much by reasons taken from the testimonies of nature Chap. 96. ACHIT The manifold miseries scourges of Gods wrath wherwith men are daily oppressed should minister vnto thē iust occasion to think how odious their sinnes and wickednes are to God that he will not leaue them vnpunished neither in this life nor in the life to come For as he giueth to his children of his goodnes and of those good things which he hath prepared for them in another life by the benefits which he communicateth vnto them in this so he setteth before our eies testimonies of his wrath and of his iudgement and of those euils torments which he hath prepared for the wicked in another life by them wherewith he vseth to correct and punish them here in this world But besides this euery one hath within himself testimonies either of eternal blessings or curses to come which may easily conuince them that will not receiue the authority of the scriptures nor any natural reason to proue the immortality of the soule For they beare about them all their witnesses their owne condemnation and therefore it wil be an easy matter to conuince them although not to cōfound them I say to conuince thē because a man is then conuinced whē he is compelled to acknowledge in his conscience that he hath no reason whereby he is able to gainsay withstād the truth declared vnto him which cōdemneth him But yet if he be obstinat headstrong malicious and peruerse he neuer ceaseth for all that to kick against the prick to perseuere in his obstinacy peeuish malice For when reason faileth him he armeth himself with impudēcy like to a bolde murderer and to a shamelesse strumpet that cannot be made ashamed But howsoeuer wicked men labour to blind their mind and to harden their heart against the iudgement of God yet the same is neuer declared vnto them but they feele themselues pricked priessed therewith will they nill they not that it fareth with them as it doeth with Gods children who are touched therewith vnto repentance but as Saint Paul speaking of the wicked and obstinate saith that God hath giuen them a pricking spirite because they haue a bitter heart which stirreth them vp to whet themselues as it were more and more against God
knowledge of God and obedience to his will bringeth to our heart wee may also iudge whether there be a paradise and another life and other ioy besides this which we receiue by corporall pleasures as beasts doe For this ioy that commeth to vs from such pleasures is common to vs with them vsually it endeth in sorowe and sadnesse But they haue no other that commeth vnto their soule of which they may haue any appehension as we haue And by the same consideration we may also in some sort iudge of that happines in which we shall be in the other life when this ioy shal be perfect in vs wherof we haue here but a very smal taste in respect of that we shal haue when we shal be fully reformed according to Gods image so that both our vnderstanding reason wil shal be made cōformable vnto him because we shal be wholy swallowed vp in his loue Contrariwise if here we feele a Hel which we cary about vs and which greatly tormenteth vs after we haue offended the maiesty of God especially when we haue cōmitted some horrible crimes this also is another argument whereby we may iudge whether there be not a Hel and vengeance from God to be executed vpon his enemies in another life For that sorow which our crimes committed doe breede in our hearts is within vs as a brand of this fire of Gods wrath which is daily kindled in vs more more Wherfore if there be in vs already such a vehemēt heat thereof when as yet the Lord doeth kindle but a litle the fire-brands of his wrath in our heartes how great shal it then be when all his wrath shal be set on fire Certainly they are very dull that doe not well consider and vnderstand it Now we haue heard heretofore how the heathen Philosophers concluded the immortalitie of mans soule by the nature thereof affirming that it is not created or compounded of corruptible matter but is of a celestiall and diuine nature by reason of that knowledge which it hath not onely of particular and corporal things as the soule of beastes hath but also of vniuersall and spirituall things and namely of God of numbers of order of the difference betweene vertue and vice and betweene honest and dishonest things For the knowledge of al these things is so naturall to mens soules that they are within them albeit they haue not receiued thē from without eyther by doctrine or instruction Whereby a man may easily iudge yea it followeth necessarily that they are created of a more excellent nature then is that of the elements of a nature that is incorruptible and perpetuall Wherefore it is verie euident that this knowledge thus naturall to mens soules is a certaine testimonie that they are not borne at all aduenture but are created by great arte and by a woonderfull prouidence of that diuine and eternall nature by which they haue their beeing namely God their Creatour for which cause also the knowledge of him shineth in vs. So also we may well iudge that God hath not in vaine placed in our nature the knowledge of the difference that is betweene vertue and vice betweene things honest and dishonest and that griefe which is to take vengeance in vs of those vices and crimes of which wee feele our selues guiltie And therefore the Heathen themselues concluded that there was not onelie a diuine iustice and nature which discerned good men from euill but also that there was another life after this in which this iudgement should bee made For they considered what great torments the wicked feele in their heartes and conscience after they haue committed horrible crimes and that there is none so audacious and obdurate not the greatest mocker and contemner of God and of his iudgments that can be who can always exempt himselfe from this dolour and paine notwithstanding hee labour with all his might to the contrarie For there is alwayes a certaine secrete vertue of Gods iustice which goeth beyonde them all and euermore punisheth the wicked Nowe it is certaine that these things come not thus to passe at all aduenture In like manner it is not possible that this knowledge which men haue to discerne vertues from vices shoulde bee a casuall thing and come thus to passe at aduenture without the certaine prouidence of God For if it were so that there were no punishment appoynted for vices and no more benefite or ioye prepared of God for the good then for the euill it should follow that all this knowledge shoulde bee giuen to man in vaine For it should doe him no more good then if hee were without it as brute beasts are Moreouer seeing all the wicked are not punished in this life it followeth necessarily that there is another life wherein they shal be punished and in which also God wil acknowledge the iust and cause them to enioy that good which he hath prepared for them For God cannot bee God but he must bee all-good aliust and almightie If hee be good hee cannot hate the good or them that doe it but loue them so as that hee cannot doe otherwise For howe shoulde hee not loue his like And as he cannot hate goodnesse or good men so hee cannot loue euill nor the wicked that follow after it but hateth them necessarily as contrarie to his nature Nowe Loue is of that nature that it cannot but desire and procure the good and honour of him whome it loueth as contrariwise hatred cannot but desire and procure the hurt and dishonour of him whome it hateth It followeth then necessarily that God beeing good and iust loueth good and iust men desiring and procuring their honour and their good and contrariwise that he hateth vniust and wicked men desiring and procuring their confusion and ruine And if hee haue this desire and this will no doubt but hee can easily and doeth also execute the same seeing hee is all-iust and almightie Truely this conclusion cannot seeme to bee ill grounded and those Heathen Philosophers who thereupon haue concluded the immortalitie of soules and the iudgement of God in another life had good reason so to doe For it is taken not only from the nature of man and from that image of God after which he was created but also from the very nature of God So that whosoeuer gainesayeth the same hath no more reason then if he saide that there is no God and that God is not God and that man is not man and that he differed in nothing from a beast neither God from the deuill And so not onely all nature shoulde bee ouer-throwen but God also the author and Creator thereof For we see almost vsually that the wickedst men haue the greatest honors in this world and liue most at their ease as we haue alreadie shewed If then there be a God and any prouidence and iustice in him now who can so much as thinke there is none but hee may also perswade
himselfe withall that there is no worlde nor any creature and that himselfe is not the same he is it must I say of necessitie follow that if God be there is also another life in which that iustice shal be perfourmed which is not heere executed and in which both iust and vniust shall receiue euery one the reward of his iustice or iniustice For it is impossible that God who is so good and so iust a nature shoulde create mankinde in that sort as if he had created the best and iustest part thereof onely to misery and wretchednesse and the woorst to ioy and happinesse Now continuing our discourse of those internall testimonies which euerie one of vs beareth within him of the immortalitie of the soule we will speake to morrow of conscience which presseth men to stand in awe of God and of his iudgements It is your part ASER to intreate of this matter The ende of the twelft dayes worke THE THIRTEENTH dayes worke Of the testimonies which euery one may take from his conscience of that feare vnto which all men are naturally subiect to prooue the immortalitie of the soule and a iudgement of God vpon the iust and vniust howe that which the Atheists say that feare causeth gods amongest men serueth to ouerthrow their damnable opinion Chap. 97. ASER The wicked may flatter themselues and labour as much as they list to rocke themselues asleepe in their impieties and horrible vices yet they cannot preuayle so much but they haue continually a warning-peece ringing in their eare and an Apparitour rapping at their doore without ceassing so that they cannot alwayes sleepe at their ease For that is euer true which the Lorde saide to Cain Why art thou wroth and why is thy countenance cast downe If thou doe well shalt thou not bee accepted and if thou doest not well sinne lyeth at the doore Which is as much as if hee had sayde that if Cain doeth as Abel doeth hee shall bee receiued of GOD with that honour that hee is receiued and shall goe with his face looking vpwarde but if hee doe otherwise his sinne will awake him well enough and not suffer him to haue anie rest in his conscience but will so presse him that hee shall bee as a man that lyeth alwayes in a portall or neere vnto it who can take no rest for anie long season by reason of commers and goers that goe in and out by it or that knocke at it euerie houre to haue it opened And therefore it is commonly sayde that Repentaunce euer followeth after sinne For howesoeuer it may bee slowe in comming yet it cannot bee without great heauines and sorow which no vniust person can eschew but he shal be sure to feele it very sharpe and vehement For he must needes feele and haue experience in himselfe that of euill nothing but euill can befall him in the ende and that when he feeleth what euill sinne bringeth vnto him he cannot but bee grieued that he hath committed it and wish that the thing were to doe againe Therefore euery wicked man feeleth himselfe accused and condemned by his owne conscience which is a certaine testimonie vnto him that there is a God and a Iudge whose iudgement he cannot auoyde But before we proceed in this discourse it shal be good for vs to know what conscience is properly Wee are then to knowe that although sinne hath greatly troubled the minde which God hath giuen vs by the darkenesse of errour and ignoraunce wherewith it is filled yet it coulde not so wholly blind it but still there remayned in it some sparkles of that light of the knowledge of God and of good and euil which is naturally in men and which is borne with them This remnant that yet remayneth is commonly called by the Diuines Synteresis which is taken from a Greeke word that signifieth as much as if wee should say Preseruation whereby that remnant of the light and law of nature that remaineth in vs is still preserued and kept in our soule after sinne And so this worde Synteresis signifieth that knowledge of the Lawe which is borne with vs and it is so called because it alwayes keepeth in man yea in the most wicked that can bee an aduertisement or instruction which telleth him what is right and iust and that there is a iudgement of God Some distinguish betweene Synteresis and Conscience others take them both for one and the same thing calling this Synteresis the very conscience it selfe whereas others say it is the naturall iudgement and some the light of our minde and spirite The Philosophers who had some obscure knowledge saide that there are certaine Anticipations in our nature by which they meant the selfe-same thing in a manner For by these Anticipations they vnderstande those principles of knowledge and naturall informations which being as it were rules wee haue not learned of any Masters neither by vse or experience but wee haue drawen and receiued them from nature whom God hath appoynted in this respect to be our mistres For this cause the Philosophers vsed this word Anticipation or som other of the same signification in the language wherein they wrote before we receiue these natural rules from nature as from our mother before we receiue any other either by learning of our masters by vse or by studie For to Anticipate signifieth as much as to preuent and to take before It is true that these rules of nature are in greater number and more certayne in some then in others and so are polished and encreased more by studie by vse by experience and by exercise Nowe by what name soeuer this light of our mind and this naturall censure is called by which we iudge what is right and iust or otherwise sure it is that of it owne nature it is alwaies caried to that which is true good And from hence commeth the approbation of vertues dislike of vices from which also the lawes and commandements of men touching maners doe afterwards flow so the conscience that is within euery one to the ende it may argue reprooue and condemne him for his owne faults So that there is no man but he hath a Iudge within himself except he be altogether depriued of sense and humane vnderstanding and so being turned into a brute beast committeth all vncleannes euen with greedines as S. Paul speaketh to the Ephesians And although some men that are most forsaken of God fall sometimes into this senslesnesse yet it continueth not alwayes with them but God afterwards rowseth them vp well enough causeth thē to apprehend feele the rigor of his iudgements For although nature were so put out smothred in them that no sparkle of naturall light to rectifie their iudgement appeared in them nor yet any flame of Gods wrath which burneth the hart that is turned aside from him yet he hath other means to kindle the fame againe and to set it on
22. Of the ioy of the godly Lu●e 6. 21. matth 5. 4. Esay 61. 3. Ioh. 16. 20 21. Philip. 44. Eccles. 7. 4 6. Prou. 6. 25. How worldlings deceiue themselues What hope is Difference betweene ioy and hope Of the true and certaine hope The profite and necessitie of hope Ephes 4. 4. Rom. 5. 3 4 5. Psal 25. 3. Rom. 5. 2. Rom. 12. 12. 15. 13. Hebr. 6. 19. Ier. 17. 7 13 17. psal 65. 5. and 91. 2 9. psal 31 1. and 71. Psal 118. 8 9. Prou. 10. 28. Iob 8. 13 14 15 The wick●d can not abide to speake or heare of God What feare is How palenesse colde and shaking are b●ed in the body How death commeth through feare Esay 13. 7 8. A place of Esay expounded The cause of cowardlines and the signe of courage Iob 41. 16. Effects of Feare in the soule Iosua 7. 5. Psal 22. 14. Ierem. 4. 9. The definitions of assurance and boldnesse Iosua 2. 9. Psal 53. 5. Psal 112. 1 7 8 Psal 56. 3 11. and 118. 6. prou 14. 26. Iohn 14. 1. L●uit 26. 36. Deu. 28. 65 66 67. God is the authour of courage Why God hath giuen men affections The diuers effects of feare in the godly and in the wicked A fantasticall Good Who are to bee accounted wise men Eccles. 2. 1. Of delight and pleasure what it is and how it is receiued How God communicateth himselfe vnto men Of the diuers degrees of pleasures according to euery mans nature The delights of the bodily senses The delights of the internall senses Cōtemplation is the greatest delight of the soule Of the abuse of pleasures Against the immoderate vse of pleasures The cause why a little griefe is stronger in vs thē a great pleasure Of the pleasures of fantasie The pleasures of reason and of the minde How we descend from true pleasures to false delights Of pleasures which men seeke crosse-wayes Of the vse of the delights of the spirite How the spirit is hindred in his actions How the spirite must bee occupied How corporall and spirituall pleasures chase each other Natural pleasures are more purethen artificiall Degrees to ascend vpto sound and perfect delight The knowledge of the affections very requisite What loue is How loue is engendred Of the kindes of desire Of the loue of men towards God The loue of parents towardes thir children The loue of God towards men The originall of friendship In what sort by loue we ascend vp to God and descend againt Of the vnion that is in loue Similitude is a cause of loue Beautie draweth loue Gen. 1. Beautie a flower of goodnes A caueat for faire women The force of Beautie The causes of the abuse in beautie Beautie maketh vice more vgly A good vse of Looking-glasses Three kindes of Loue. God created the world by Loue. Diuers kindes of beauty and loue Loue tendeth to vnitie Iohn 17. 21. Iohn 11. 52. 1. Iohn 3. 8. Sinne the cause of our seperation from God A double ground of loue Loue is free Iob 1. 9. Two sortes of hired loue Actes 20. 35. Loue descendeth but doth not ascend 1. Iohn 4. 8. Loue breedeth Loue. The heart of a louer compared to a looking glasse Loue ought to shew it selfe by workes Euils must be resisted in the beginning What Desire is Diuersitie of Goods Good● belonging to this life Goods of fanci● and in opinion onely The effects of ambition and couetousnesse Of the false opinion of want The right vse of coueting The diuerse kinds of Desires Two sorts of Loue. The last ende of Loue. Acts 4. 32. Communitie among friends Loue bringeth equalitie Loue must first beginne at God Three meanes of knowledge The benefites that come of true loue whose scope is God The first benefite of true loue Diuers estimations of Loue. The cause of mens errour from the true Good The second benefite that is in true Loue. The third benefit Galat. 2. 20. The highest degree of Loue. Knowledge requisit in Loue. Two sortes of knowledge in Loue. The difference betweene Loue and Desire Rom. 8. 22. 1. Cor. 13. 12. Of friendship betweene wicked men What foundation the friendship of good men hath 1. Corint 13. 8 A similitude shewing the vanity of the loue of worldly delights What sauour is Why God fauoureth vs. Of reuerence The caause of humilitie A good lesson for princes Reuerence requisite in true friendship Of honour and of maiestie Rom. 12. 16. Of the signes of honour and of reuerence Of Mercie and Compassion Rom. 12. 8 9 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Cor. 12. Heb. 13. 3. Math. 5. 7. Luke 6. 36. Prou. 21. 21. Iam. 2. 13. Foure causes of all the troubles of the soule The nature of corporall goods How the passions may be good Of offence What euill may offend vs. Why men are so easily offended What offences are most grieuous Of the nature of mankind how hardly it is pleased Of the degrees of offence How offence may be wel● vsed The remedy to cure offences What contempt is Of mockery Esay 53. 7. Diuers opinions of the Philosophers touching the affections What anger is How it differeth from offence Of rancour The violence of anger Prou. 27. 4. Ecclus. 8. The fruites of anger What effect it hath in the body The fountaine of the appetite of reuenge The causes of looking pale and red How anger troubleth the braine The best remedy against anger Ecclus. 28. Another remedy against anger Why the affection of anger is naturall what good commeth by it What Hatred is The causes of it Why it is an easier matter to hate then to loue 1. Ioh. 3. 10 12. The fruits of Hatred Of a good kinde of hatred Rom. ●2 9. Amos 5. 15. How loue is turned into hatred Remedies against the euill kinde of hatred Description of Enuy. Diuers sorts of Enuy. Enuy is neuer without griefe Against what good things Enuy is most bent How an enuious body is tormented The countenance of an enuious man Prouer. 14. 30. Ecclus. 30. 17 24. Of a good kinde of enuy 1. Cor. 12. 31. 2. Cor. 9. 2. Roman 13. galat. 5. 21. Esay 3. 16. and 48. 4. Ezech. 3. 8 9. Psal 34. 15. 1. Pet. 3. 22. Esay 29. 23. Exod 13. 14. Iob 40. 4. Exod. 15. 7 8. Iob 9. 17. What Iealousie is Iames 4. 1 2. A good kinde of iealousie What mutuall loue ought to be betweene man and wife Why Iealousie is attributed to God What Indignation is From whence Zeale proceedeth Ioel 2. 18. Isaiah 9. 7. What Zeale is 2. Cor. 11. 2. A good lesson for Princes and Pastors The abuse of Indignation and of Zeale Rom. 10. 2. 1. Timot. 1. 13. Act. 26. 10 11. Hebr. 10. 30. Matth. 10. 28. Luke 21. 19. prouer 20. 22. What reuenge is What Rage is Of Crueltie Three sortes of Crueltie How magistrates ought to punish With what affection God punisheth offendors What Shame is Blushing commendable in some persons A second kind of
of soules Mark 6. 3. matt 13 55 56 iohn 6. 42. Mala. 4. 5. Iohn 1. 21. Matth. 11. 14. and 17. 12 13 Luke 1. 15 16 17. Numb 11. 25. 1. Cor. 12. 11. The fountaine of Gods graces diminisheth not 2. King 2. 9. Esay 29. 14. 2. tim 3. 2 3. 2. thes 2. 10 11. The Pythagoreans of our time Of the true transmigration of soules Of the creation and generation of soules How God rested the seuenth day Actes 17. 28. Another opinion of the creation of the soule Gen. 2. 7. The nature of the soule is not curiously to be searched after How the soule is stained with sinne Rom. 5. 12 15. Verse 19. Humane philosophie is blinde The causes of errours Three faculties vnder the vegetatiue vertue Two parts of the sensitiue vertue How the Astronomers referre the powers of the soule to the starres Powers proper to the ●easonable soule Of speech Of speech Of the speculatiue and actiue vertue Of the politike vertue The kindes of it Of the heroicall vertue Against the astronomicall influence of vertues Philosophers esteeme too highly of mans nature What iustice God approoueth Foure contemplatiue vertues according to the Platonists Howe those agree in some sort to foure christian vertues Why men encline to lies rather then to the trueth The diuelish infection of Atheisme Reasons to proue the immortalitie of the soule Why men beleeue not the immortalitie of the soule Wisd 2. 1 2 c. The sayings of Epicures Verse 21 c. Wisd 3. 1. The corrupt opinion of Atheists and Epicures Atheists may wel be compared to beasts Reasons to shew the soule of men to differ from that of beasts The image of God is to bee sought in the soule An answere to an obiection A reason of Atheists confuted by a similitude Luke 16. 26. marke 16. 14. Math. 28. 9. luke 24. 36. iohn 20. 19 20 act 1. 2 3 10. 1. Cor. 15 6. Exod. 3. 6. mat 22. 32 33. mar 12. 26. luk 20. 37 38. The resurrection of the dead proued 2. Thess 1. 6 7. How we know the hidden things in nature An argument taken from the knowledge of the soule to proue it immortall Eternitie considered diuer●ly A speciall difference betweene the soule of man and 〈◊〉 beasts A firme proofe of the soules immortalitie A fitte comparison Gen. 1. 26. Why man was saide to be a liuing soule How God dayly createth soules What a miracle is Buggery violateth the law of nature God is the onely father of our spirite Three things vnseperable The desire of perpetuitie an argument of the soules immortalitie Another desire which is to continue our memory for euer Another desire of perpetuitie appearing in funerals An obiection The answere to it Of the true immortalitie An argument taken from the apprehension of death to prooue the immortalitie of soules Of the ende of good and euill men The right Armes of Mach●au●llian Nobilitie An argument of the pleasures of the soule to shew the immortalitie thereof Some more like to beasts then men How we must iudge of the nature of the soule Of the true pleasures of the soule An argument from insatiable pleasures for the immortalitie of the soule A corrupt spirite taketh the shadow of things for the things themselues An argument taken from vices for the immortalitie of the soule How God punisheth vicious de●ires Esay 38. 12. 2. Pet. 1. 13 14. 2. Cor. 5. 1 2. Hebr. 13. 14. An argument taken from the frame of mans body to prooue the immortalitie of his soule Another argument taken from the motion and rest of the soule Of a fish called Vranoscopos Except the soule be immortal man is created in vaine The immortalitie of the soule is linked to the religion prouidence of God An argument taken from the consent of all people Other reasons to the same end Actes 3. 21. What the end● of a thing is Of the multitude and qualitie of witnesses to prooue the immortalitie of the soule What kinde of Philosophers Atheists and Epicures were An argument taken from the desire of wisedometo prooue the immortalitie of the soule 1. Cor. 13. 12. An obiection made by some Philosophers The answere Aristoteles opinion touching the immortalitie of the soule How the vnderstanding commeth to the knowledge of outward things by the senses Howe the outward senses looke vpon things How the internal senses receiue the same things How the Spirite receiueth them from the internall senses Other reasons for the immortalitie of the soule The soule can not be diuided Other reasons for the immortality of the soule Prou. 10. 24. Euery one naturally desireth life Reasons taken from reward and praise to proue the immortality of the soule The dead haue no feeling of praise Death most lamentable to the best men if the soule were not immortal Cato beleeued the immortality of the soule What comfort it is to beleeue a place of rest after this life What store of testimonies stand for the immortality of the soule Of such as say it is good to keepe men in this opinion of the immortalitie of the soule and yet themselues beleeue it not How wee must iudge of a wise man Ioh. 12. 31. 2. cor 4. 4. Ephe. 6. 12. The inconueniences which follow the former opinion of perswading men to goodnesse by false meanes That which corrupteth the spirit is contrary to the nature of it The difference betwixt conuincing and con●ounding a man Internal testimonies of the immortality of the soule The cause of true ioy in the spirite Where God is said to be especially The true cause of grief torment How men cary about them the matter of two fires Deut. 4. 24. heb 12. 29. Esay 66. 24. matth 22. 13. 25. 30. A sure argument in the wicked of their future torment in another life Naturall reasons to proue the immortalitie of mens soules The naturall knowledge of good and euill an argument of our immortality The nature of loue and hatred The necessitie of another life after this Gen. 4. 6 7. A similitude Sorow euer followeth sinne What conscience is Why it is called Synteresis Of the Philosophers Anticipations Ephes 4. 19. Atheists compared to drunkards and madde folks A sit similitude The wicked alwaies condemne themselues Foure offices of the conscience The more wicked a mā is the greater is his feare The Deitie prooued by that feare which is naturally in men The greatest persons liue in most feare The Atheists prouerbe that feare made gods turned against themselues The difference betwixt the feare in men and in beasts Strong reasons against Atheists Feare is a natural testimonie of a diuine essence What this worde Animal signifieth Atheists are reasonable beasts Atheists sitly resembled to Spiders Plinies brutish opinion touching the immortality of the soule Plato his opinion of the creation of soules Plinies reasons against the immortalitie of the soule Plin. lib. 7. ca. 55. Pliny blasphemed God vnder the name of Nature Democritus beleeued the resurrection of bodies What Philosophers went into Egypt to learne wisedome The conclusion of Plinie touching this matter The iudgement of God in Plinies death Plin. Nep epist ad O●● Ta● The absurd consequents of Plinies opinion Mat. 28. 12 13. Against them who say that the soule can not be knowen to bee immortall according to nature Of them that alleadge Salomon against the immortalitie of the soule Eccles. 3. 18 19 20 21. Eccles 12. 7. Chap. 12. 1. The iudgement of God vpon Lucian and Lu●retius two Arch-Atheists Euseb Hier. Crin de P●●at The doctrine of Epicurus commended by L●cretius Epicures thinke themselues kings and gods The blasphemie of Atheists The absurdities that follow the opinion of the Atheists Of the force of arguments alleaged before for the immortalitie of the soule The summe of this whole book The world compared to mans body and God to his soule Against such as say that God is the soule of the world The image of God in mans soule Iohn 3. 12. Of that coniunction which is betweene God and his creatures Of God the first greatest Good Mal. 3. 6. Of spirituall natures which are the second Good The spirit of a man moueth not in place Of the body which is the 〈◊〉 Good The right end of our creation Mans will must looke vp to the head not downe to the bellie Man is a middle creature between Angels beasts A spirite is not shut vp in a place It is inuisible The coniunction of our soule and body is a wonderful work of God
the temperatures and complexions of the bodie as he hath disposed of the nature of the affections in the soule seeing the one is to serue the other through that mutuall agreement which they ought to haue one with another Nowe to morrow wee will prosecute our speech begunne concerning the affections of the soule to the end we may fully vnderstand this goodly and large matter which may procure to the soule and body both life and death And first mee thinkes wee are to enter into the consideration of foure things which are in the will and in the power to desire that is in the soule namely natural inclinations actions habites and affections This shal be then ASER the subiect of thy discourse The end of the fift dayes worke THE SIXT DAYES Worke. Of foure things to be considered in the Will and in the power of desiring in the soule and first of the naturall inclinations of selfe-loue and the vnrulinesse thereof Chap. 41. ASER All the actions of the soule are bredde of the powers and faculties thereof and therefore by the benefite of nature which is the gift of God she hath receiued powers for all thinges which she ought to doe Now concerning the facultie of knowing in the soule and in the vnderstanding part thereof of which we haue intreated heeretofore we finde three thinges worthie of diligent consideration namely naturall principles actions and habites gotten by long custome Wee may remember those sundry degrees which we said were in the knowledge of the minde and how by this facultie it doeth not only know simple and particular things as beasts doe but also compoundeth and ioyneth them together how it compareth one with another separateth them and discourseth vpon them finally howe it iudgeth and eyther approueth or refuseth them All which things are actions of the minde proceeding from those notices and naturall principles of knowledge that are therein Nowe if these actions be sodaine and passe lightly so that the minde doeth not stay in them nor acquaint it selfe with them the bare and simple name of action belongeth to them But if the minde doeth one and the same thing often museth much vpon it calleth it often to memorie and accustometh it selfe thereunto so that it is in a manner imprinted in it and thereby the minde becommeth prompt and ready in regarde of thelong continuance therein then doe these actions take the name of habite which is bredde by the often repeating and reiterating of the same things Whereby the minde is made more skilful and ready and the spirites more fitte and apt to performe those exercises vnto which they haue addicted themselues and wherein they haue continued So that such a habite is as it were a light in the spirite and in the soule whereby the actions there of are gouerned In like manner wee finde in the Will and in that power o desiring which is in the soule foure things to be considered namely naturall inclinations actions habites and affections which intermingle themselues in euery one of the other All these thinges are good of their owne nature euen as nature it selfe being considered as God hath created her But as nature was corrupted through sinne so is it with these things by reason of that disorder which the nature of sinne hath brought vnto them But let vs first speake of naturall inclinations and then we will prosecute the rest As therefore the minde hath his naturall principles of knowledge so the will hath her naturall inclinations and affections which of their owne nature are good as they are taken from that first nature created of God neither woulde they at any time bee wicked if there were no excesse in them proceeding from nature corrupted which afterwarde breedeth in vs such inclinations and affections as are altogether euill and damnable We loue our selues naturally our wiues our children our kinsfolkes and our friendes yea we are by nature so enclined to this loue that if it were not in vs we shoulde not onely not bee men but not deserue so much as to bee accounted and taken for beastes no not for the wildest most sauage and venemous beastes that can be For we see by experience what great inclination affection there is in euery one of them towardes their litle ones Therefore when S. Paul maketh a beaderoll of the vices and sinnes of such men as are most vicious and execrable and as it were monsters of nature he saith expresly that they are without naturall affection which indeede cannot be cleane rooted out of any nature liuing vnlesse it be altogether monstrous and vnnaturall For it is an affection which is as it were a beame of the loue that God beareth cowards all his creatures and which he causeth to shine in them so that it is not possible that they which are capable of any affection of loue should not loue their owne blood and their like especially men Wherefore if this loue and this affection were well ruled and ordered it is so farre from being vicious that contrariwise the spirite of God condemneth as Monsters those men that want it And therefore God doth not forbid and condemne this loue and affection in his law so farre forth as it is ruled thereby but he approueth it appointeth it to be the rule of our loue towards our neighbour when he saith Thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe But when this loue affection is disordered in vs it is not only vicious but also as it were the originall and fountaine of all other vices and sinnes whereas if it were well ordered ruled according to the will law of God it would be as it were the fountaine and welspring of all vertues For wee should not loue our selues but in God and through him nor consequently our wiues nor our children nor our friends nor any other creature whatsoeur wheras cleane contrariwise wee set God aside and seeke nothing but our selues and the things of the world Therefore this loue and affection being nowe so vnruly through sinne is so violent in vs that it withdraweth vs from the loue of God and of his creatures to loue the deuil and his wicked workes because it seemeth to vs that he is a greater friend vnto vs then God For whereas the holy spirite doeth resist and set himselfe against our euil affections and wil haue vs to bridle them Satan on the contrary part letteth them loose not onely giueth vs ouer to follow our peruerse and vitious affections with full sway and libertie but also prouoketh and thrusteth vs forward with great vehemencie Whereby we may iudge what loue and affection a man may cary towardes creatures in those things wherein they may be contrary vnto him and with what fury and rage he may be ledde against them that resist his disordered affections seeing he carieth such an affection towardes God his Creator Therefore Saint Paul speaking of wicked men that should be
hope maketh not ashamed because the loue of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is giuen vnto vs as if he should say that they which stay themselues vpon such a hope shal neuer be ashamed nor deceiued For the expectation thereof is neuer frustrated but it hath alwaies a good a happy issue For when we perceiue that we are deceiued of our hope we are ashamed and confounded But this neuer hapneth to true hope which proceedeth of a sound faith in Iesus Christ by means whereof we haue accesse through him vnto this grace wherein wee stand and reioyce vnder the hope of the glory of God as Saint Paul said alitle before Therefore he exhorteth christiās to reioice in hope calleth God the God of Hope praying that he would fil the Romans with al ioy peace in belieuing that they may abound in hope through the power of the holy ghost And in the epistle to the Hebrews hope is compared to a sure and stedfast ancre of the soule For this cause God is so often called in the holy Scriptures the hope and fortresse of his people and of his It is written also that they which hope in the Lord do reioyce For hee that hopeth in him shal be healed and preserued Therefore it is not without cause that the spirite of God so often repeateth vnto vs this sentence Blessed are they that put their trust in the Lord for they shal neuer be confounded It is better to hope in him then to put any confidence in Princes But vnfaithful and wicked men can neuer be partakers of such a Good because they haue no such hope For it is written The expectation of the iust is gladnesse but the hope of the wicked shall perish And againe The hope of the hypocrite shall perish his confidence shal be cut off and his truct shall be as the house of a spider He shall leane vpon his house but it shall not stand he shall holde him fast by it yet shall it not endure But to prosecu●e our matter nowe that wee haue seene the hope of good men together with their ioy let vs consider what remaineth to the wicked of their vaine and false ioy namely Feare which is the second kinde of sorrowe mentioned by vs. Tell vs then AMANA what Feare is with the nature and effectes thereof Of Feare and of the nature and effects thereof towards the body the minde and soule and how it troubleth them of the true harnesse and armour against Feare Chap. 46. AMANA As wicked men can haue no certaine hope of any good they looke for so they neuer haue any true ioy of any present good because they alwayes forsake the true Good and stay in that which is not Good but in their opinion and fantasie neither doe they at any time ref●rre the ende of good things vnto God but looke onely vpon the things themselues Therefore it is neuer in their power to reioice in that ioy which they accompt to be their true ioy but only by offending God as we heard before Which is the cause why they seek after nothing more then to hide themselues to depart from him as much as they can possible so that they would neuer heare any speech of him but desire to bury the remembrance of him for euer because they can heare nothing spoken of him but as of their iudge neither think of him but he awakeneth their cōscience which they labor with might and maine to rocke asleepe Wherein they take a cleane contrary course to that which they ought to follow to obtaine the true Good For seeing God is the soueraigne Good of all creatures what Good can they finde that is greater wherein they can fully reioyce and satisfie themselues Or what other Good dare they promise to themselues to finde without him and when they haue him for their enemy But they are like to drunken men who cannot vnderstand this Diuinitie vntill they haue slept out their wine and are awaked out of their drunkennesse Then shall they knowe what is true and false Ioy what is good and badde Hope when their ioy shall bee turned into sorrowe their expectation and hope into feare and terrour wherewith the wicked shall be continually haunted as the Spirite of God teacheth vs. Nowe as sorrow is a griefe for some euil which a man presently feeleth shutting vp the heart as vnwilling to receiue it so feare is a sorrow which the heart conceiueth of some looked for euill that may come vnto it Therefore it restraineth the heart also and closeth it vp as being desirous to auoide the euill Wee see then that there is the same difference betwixt sorrowe and feare in respect of euill that is betweene Ioy and Hope in regarde of Good So that we may well say that Feare is not onely a fantasie and imagination of euill approching or a perturbation of the soule proceeding from the opinion it hath of some euill to come but it is also a contraction and closing vp of the heart which commeth from that which euery one iudgeth to be euill for himselfe when hee thinketh it is at hand and will light vpon him Therefore first of all it draweth in and shutteth vp the heart and so weakneth the same Whereupon nature being desirous to relieue and succour it sendeth heate vnto it from the vpper partes and if that bee not sufficient shee draweth away that heate also which is in the neather parts By which doing she sodainely calleth backe the blood and spirites vnto the heart and then followeth a generall palenesse and cold in all the outward partes and chiefly in the face with a shiuering throughout the whole body For seeing the first moouing thereof is in the heart the other alwayes followeth so that when the heart trembleth the whole body doth so likewise Whereupon it followeth that by reason of the great beating and panting of the heart the tongue faltereth and the voice is interrupted Yea it commeth to passe sometimes that present death followeth a great and sodaine feare because al the blood retiring to the heart choaketh it and vtterly extinguisheth naturall heate and the spirites so that death must needes ensue thereof Therefore we cannot doubt but that feare hath grea● power ouer all the body and ouer life it selfe For this cause Esaias after he had denounced the iudgement of God against the Babylonians the comming of the Medes and Persians by whome their citie shoulde be taken and themselues slaine saieth thus Therefore shall all handes be weakened and all mens hearts shall melt which is as much to say as that their hearts shall faile them for feare And therefore hee addeth They shal be afraid anguish sorrow shall take them and they shall haue paine as a woman that trauaileth euery one shal be amased at his neighbour their faces shal be like flames of fire But here we
dispensed to the eyes and sounde to the eares in good measure and moderation For if the light bee too great the eyes cannot receiue it insomuch that they will bee hurt and offended in steade of receiuing delight On the other side if it bee too little it will not suffice them and therefore it must bee betweene both And as euery mans sight is sharper and stronger or more dull and weaker so must the light bee dispensed according to that measure The like may bee sayde of soundes in regarde of the eares and of all other thinges in respect of those sences vnto which they agree And if this moderation bee requisite for the outwarde sences it is no lesse necessary in respect of the inward senses and of all the powers of the soule Therefore as God is incomprehensible and infinite so is hee receiued with delight of that part of the soule which commeth neerest vnto his nature and which is most incomprehensible most ample and most infinite in regarde of other partes and that is the Spirite and Vnderstanding On the other side because there is no proportion or agreement in greatnesse and infinitenesse betweene GOD and the Soule shee receiueth and comprehendeth him by such meanes whereby hee may bee applied vnto her and shee made after a sort capable of him For if hee shoulde present himselfe vnto her such as hee is in his high and diuine maiestie especially man beeing in this estate wherein hee is in this mortall life shee coulde not beare so high maiestie as beeing too exceeding great for her So that insteede of receiuing pleasure ioy and delight shee shoulde not onely bee very much frighted but euen wholly ouerwhelmed and swallowed vp as a droppe of water woulde bee consumed beeyng throwen into a great fire as wee may iudge by so many examples as are in the holie Scriptures to this purpose For when God manifested himselfe to the Patriarkes hee neuer appeared vnto them in the greatnesse of his maiestie but tooke vnto him alwayes some shape and vsed such meanes as were agreeable to their nature Therefore also it is verie requisite that GOD shoulde descende and applie himselfe vnto our small capacitie to the ende wee may enioy him and his Goodes and take pleasure and delight in them For this cause hee hath not onely appointed the ministerie of his worde and Sacraments to shewe and communicate himselfe vnto vs by them applying himselfe vnto our nature and capacitie but hath also manifested himself in flesh in the person of his sonne Iesus Christ to become more like vnto vs and to drawe neerer vnto vs in our owne nature to this ende that wee might enioye him and all his benefites the better and receiue more true and entire delight in them And thus much for this poynt of the agreement that ought to bee betweene the thing that delighteth and that which receiueth pleasure Next wee are to note that a man may take pleasure by all those partes whereby hee may knowe as well by the internall as the externall senses and by all the powers of the minde and soule Whereupon it followeth that as euerie one is more or lesse addicted to any of these partes so hee delighteth most in those pleasures which hee may receiue by that part vnto which hee is most giuen Therefore wee see that the baser and more vile sort of people and such as are most rude and ignoraunt are more mooued by corporall and externall thinges which moue the bodily senses then by spirituall and high things that are more meete for the spirite and wherein it taketh greater pleasures But with prudent and wise men and such as are more spirituall it is otherwise So that as euery ones nature is more noble and excellent or more vile and abiect and according to the nature of those things wherein euery one delighteth so is the delight either more noble and excellent or more base and contemptible more pure quiet or more impure and troublesome of longer or of shorter continuance and hath moe or fewer pleasures and those either more or lesse tedious Now among those delights which a man may take by the bodily senses the basest and most abiect of all is that which is receiued by the sense of touching For as it is most earthy of all the external senses so are the pleasures that are taken by it That delight which is taken by the sense of tasting is a litle more honest and lesse contemptible and yet is it brutish enough As for the delight that may bee receiued by the sense of smelling it is very light and nothing so pleasant as the yrkesomnesse that commeth of the contrary is vnpleasant For a good smel bringeth not so great pleasure as an euill smell causeth displeasure besides that this sense of smelling is not so sharpe in man as in beasts And concerning those pleasures which a man may receiue by the eares they haue some more beautie and excellency in them For the more they holde of the nature of the ayre they are so much the lesse earthy and brutish And those which we receiue by the eyes are yet more excellent then all the rest because the eyes are of the nature of the fire which commeth neerest to the celestial nature And thus much for those pleasures which a man may receiue by the corporall senses of which the noblest and best are baser and of lesse excellency then the least of those which we may receiue by the basest parts powers of the soule For as much as the soule is more noble and more worthie then the body so much is the least thing in it greater and more magnificall then that which is most noble and most excellent in the bodie And as there are diuers degrees of pleasures according to the varietie of the externall senses and according to the difference that is betwixt them and the powers of the soule so is it betweene the powers of the soule as some of them are more noble and more diuine then others For those which appertaine to the nourishing and generatiue powers are more corporall earthy and brutish then those that belong to the vitall partes and to the heart And those that are proper to the spirite and minde are purest and best of all among which that delight that is in contemplation is the chiefest as we may iudge by that which we haue alreadie spoken Wherefore if we would consider well of all these degrees of delight and pleasure and could iudge well of them we should not be so deceiued in them as commonly we are preferring the least before the greatest the basest before the noblest those that are most earthy before them that are most heauenly and those that fade soonest before them that continue longest Besides the very enioying of euery one of them ought to suffice to make vs know their nature and the difference betweene the one and the other and how farre one is to be
the miserie of our like Whereupon it followeth that as euery one is of a more tender heart so he is more mercifull as contrariwise hardnesse of heart extinguisheth mercie and compassion As for this word Compassion it signifieth asmuch as alike compassion that is a like sense and feeling of euil and of griefe as if we our selues suffered that which we see others endure by reason of that coniunction which we ought to haue one with another as members of one and the same body among which there is such agreement that if one suffer all feele it and so all are carefull for it Therefore it is written in the Epistle to the Hebrewes that brotherly loue continueth Bee not saith he forgetfull to lodge strangers Remember them that are in bondes as though ye were bound with them and them that are in affliction as if ye were also afflicted in the bodie Wherefore we may well conclude that this affection of mercie is very necessary for men yea as sweet as milde and as profitable an affection as any can be amongst them which they haue receiued of God for their mutual succour and consolation in the midst of so many miseries as commonly happen in the life of man And this hee commaundeth vs expresly in infinite places of his woorde that the image of his vnspeakeable mercy might shine in vs by our mercy towards others Hitherto we haue spoken of man as of man and of those affections that are most humane in him now others remaine which often make him more brutish then any sauage beast that is For seeing they come of the opinion of euill they prouoke and stirre him vp greatly making him marueilous wilde and vntamed To the end therefore that we may enter into the discourse of this matter we will first see what Offending and Offence is in the heart and soule consider what degrees it hath and what good or euill may be in this affection This we shall learne of thee AMANA Of offence in the heart and soule of the degrees of offence of the good and euil that may be in this affection of contempt that is bred of it and of mockery which followeth contempt Chap. 54. AMANA The Philosophers haue set downe foure causes of al the troubles of the soule from whence all the residue proceed into which they returne and haue their end namely immoderate desire vnbrideled ioy vnmeasurable griefe and extreame feare These as they say proceede through imprudence or ignorance of the minde and pusillanimitie of heart from the opinion of good or euill things present or to come which we imagine to be in the things of this worlde being vnperfect and of small continuance Now forasmuch as these foure causes are the springs of all vices and sinnes into which men plunge themselues in this life they are called perturbations of the soule which if they be not mastred by reason doe so carie the soule hither and thither that in the ende they constraine the reasonable power thereof to giue ouer all authoritie and libertie and to obey the lustes of the sensuall and vnreasonable Will Nowe desire and ioy they commonly accompanie the perishing goodes of the bodie For they are of that nature that they inflame the soule with an insatiable lust inso much that the obtaining of one thing is the beginning of a new and vehement desire of hauing another And the enioying of them besotteth the spirite with a sugred poison of fained delight and pleasure vnder the yoke of which it easily suffreth it selfe to be ouercome to be bound and to be gouerned As for griefe feare although they also be not farre remooued from such false and vading goods of the body yet for the most part they respect those aduersities and miseries which in our opinion wee iudge to be in the want and priuation of those goods For they fill the soule with trouble and disquietnesse as she that thinketh her estate to be most miserable if she obtaine not the ende of her carnall and inordinate affections So that if the body endure neuer so little shee casteth foorth strange cries and complaintes And although the bodie suffer nothing at all yet is shee alwayes in extreme feare least some euill shoulde befall it But these very passions may bee diuided into good and badde For honest desire modestioy and moderate griefe and feare are naturally in vs for the preseruation of our being Yea all these affections are endued with the qualities of commendable vertues if they respect the soueraigne Good of man as we may learne by our former speeches touching this matter which were chiefly of good affections and of such as are most natural in man Therefore following our matter subiect we must from hencefoorth consider of a great number of other affections of the heart which for the most part make men more beastlike then the very beasts themselues that are voyde of all vnderstanding and reason yea then the wildest beastes that are All which affections take their beginning from the opinion of euill as these that are good proceed from the opinion of Good For the feare of euil doth wonderfully prouoke a man when he is touched therwith he waxeth very sauage and wilde Now the first sting and byting of euill is offence by reason that the heart is offended euen as when one rusheth against a thing hurteth himself Therfore by offence we vnderstand properly a certaine griefe of the soule of the heart which commeth through some touch of euill that agreeth not to our nature This first sence of griefe is like to the first pricking of ones bodie and is contrarie to the first pleasure which we receiue of some Good that is offered vnto vs and is agreeable to our nature So that as this pleasure when it is confirmed is turned into loue so out of this first feeling of griefe which I call offence the other affections that are ioyned with griefe doe budde foorth afterwarde namely anger hatred enuie indignation reuenge crueltie and such like The euill that may offend vs is whatsoeuer we iudge to be contrary to vs and to our nature as well in regard of the body as of the soule For as the bodie is offended by those euils which trouble the harmonie and temperature thereof and which bring griefe and hurt vnto it so is it with the soule and with all the powers senses and affections thereof For she may be offended in her imagination and fantasie in her reason in her will and in her affections Nowe because euery one followeth his affections or his natural inclination and not the right rule and iudgement of reason it is an easie matter to offend and displease many and that in many things but not so easie to please them For there is but one onely reason or at leastwise it hath no great diuersitie in it But the naturall dispositions of men are infinite and wonderful
it is cleane contrary in regarde of euilles For they quickely finde whereupon to stay and to plant themselues within vs and to spreade their rootes so deepe and broade that they cannot easily be plucked vp Whereupon they are felt a great deale more and continue longer in our heart and memory Not without cause then doe men say that the pleasures seruices and good things done vnto vs are madeof feathers and therefore they are easily carried away by reason of their lightnesse but offences euilles and displeasures are made of lead and therefore they abide in the bottome of the heart by reason of their waight And forasmuch as loue proceedeth of that which is good and hatred of euill whether it bee euill in trueth or in opinion onely as euill is commonly greater and of longer continuance then Good for the causes spoken of so is it with Loue and Hatred and with their rootes and long abode Now of Hatred commeth backebiting and euill speaking which being kindled bringeth foorth bitternesse and crueltie and as loue whetteth a man on to doe well so contrariwise Hatred turneth men aside from well doing and prouoketh them to hurt For this cause it soweth the seedes of enmitie and laboureth craftily to cause the party hated to fall into danger For it desireth to hurt him and to bring euill vpon him either by it selfe or by an other secretely or openly In a worde seeing it is wholly contrary to Loue wee may without any long discourse knowe the nature thereof by that which hath beene spoken of the nature of Loue taking it cleane contrary thereunto But let vs see whether the affection of hatred bee altogether together euill of it selfe or whether a man may reape any profite thereby We may say of this as we did of anger and of other affections already spoken of For it is giuen to man to cause him to withdrawe himselfe from all euill that may hurt him to flee from it and to repell it as being contrary vnto him Therefore Saint Paul sayeth Hate that which is euill and cleaue to that which is good For true and perfect hatred shoulde hate nothing but that which is euill indeede as true loue shoulde loue that onely which is good indeede But contrariwise wee commonly hate the Good and good men and loue the Euill and the workers thereof Besides wee are faulty in this that in steade of hating mens vices wee hate their persons Wherefore it is needefull that in this matter of Hatred wee shoulde put that in practice which wee haue already saide of Anger namely that wee shoulde aboue all things hate our owne vices and that euill which is in vs and in ours But wee that practise the cleane contrary change Loue into Hatred and Hatred into Loue. For when wee supporte and beare with our owne vices or with the vices of our friendes and kinsemen which are not to be suffered or borne withall it seemeth that this toleration proceedeth from the loue wee beare either to our selues or to others but it is farre otherwise For if wee loued our selues well and our neighbours as our selues wee woulde bee carefull to remooue all hurtefull things farre from our soules and to furnish them with that which is conuenient and wholsome for them and so likewise for our friendes whereas wee procure vnto them that which turneth to their dishonour hurt and ouerthrowe by nourishing them in their vices through our dissembling and bearing with them And thus much for that profite which wee may receiue by this affection of hatred being well guided according vnto the will of GOD and to a sound and reasonable nature Nowe against the passion of euill Hatred amongest a great number of remedies which may very well bee applied thereunto we haue two principall ones that are very good and profitable The first remedie is the example of the loue of GOD and of Iesus Christ towardes vs of which wee haue spoken already with those holie Preceptes which doe commaunde Loue and forbidde Hatred The second remedie is the contempt of all earthly things and the regarde that is to be had vnto the things that are Celestiall and Eternall For if wee shall set light by all mortall and corruptible things and lift vp our heartes to higher thinges wee shall verie easilie breake off all hatred and enmitie neither wil we take any thing greatly to heart but when we see God offended Now as concerning Enuy that alwayes accompanieth hatred it is an affection quite contrary to mercy which is a sorrowe conceiued by reason of the miseries of an other whereas Enuy is a griefe arising of other mens felicitie Therefore it doth naturally reioyce at another mans harme and is grieued at his good so that according to the varietie of good things that may befall other men so there are diuers kinds of Enuy. For first some are enuious when other mens profite is so great that it hindreth theirs There is also a kinde of enuy at the wellfare of another which albeit it neither hurt nor hinder vs yet wee are grieued because the like is not befallen to vs or not rather to vs or not aswell to vs as to another to whome it is happened And this is a spice of couetousnesse There is yet a third kinde of Enuy which maketh vs vnwilling that others shoulde obtaine that good which wee haue or which wee desire or haue wished for but coulde not get it And when the question is of those good things which it seemeth we shuld enioy but doe not or which we thinke belong to vs but are bestowed vpon others then is our enuy greater and may also be called iealousie Moreouer there is a fourth kinde that is worst of all to which the name of Enuy agreeth more properly as being often bredde of the former kindes when a man giueth them the bridle and suffereth them to raigne too much ouer him This enuy is a griefe conceiued at anothers good without any regard of it owne profite but onely because it iudgeth it selfe hurt when others receiue good or do good And this is the very enuy of the Deuil and of his children which is an affection that is mingled of hatred and of ioy For it hateth vertue and reioyceth at vice and at the prosperitie of the wicked Contrariwise it is grieued at the felicitie of good men and glad of their miseries But what kinde soeuer of enuy is in a man there is in him griefe and as it were a biting that gnaweth him by reason that the heart in this affection shrinketh in as it were and closeth vp it selfe at the good and benefit of another So that sorrowe is alwayes ioyned therewith The goods against which enuy rusheth most are such as are in greatest reputation amongst men as honour and glory insomuch that it is more moued at the good renowme honour and praise giuen to men in respect of the good things that are in them
be afraide of that shame which the wicked think to bring vpon vs but rather account it honourable and glorious Yea themselues shall bee ashamed and confounded when their vices and vile actions shal be discouered by our honestie and vertue whereas if we ioyne with them we shall cause them to bee voyde of shame when they doe ill yea they will boast and vaunt of it before vs. But enough of this matter Now forasmuch as arrogant and proude persons are farthest off from vsing aright any of those affections of the heart of which wee haue hitherto discoursed especially of shame I am of opinion that we are to looke into the nature and effects of the passion of pride Therefore ARAM this shal be the subiect of thy discourse Of Pride with the consideration thereof as well in nature entire as corrupted of the originall thereof and of such as are most inclined therevnto what vices accompanie it how great a poison it is and what remedie there is for it Chap. 59. ARAM. There is nothing more easie then for a man to deceiue himselfe For looke what a man earnestly desireth hee supposeth it is alreadie as it were come to passe or at least hee promiseth to himselfe that he shal easily obtaine it But oftentimes things fall out otherwise then men looke or hope for Now the chiefe cause of their errour heerein is that presumption which commonly they haue of their owne wisedome and vertue whereby they are lift vp with vaine confidence and puffed vp with pride For when men are caried away with an inordinate and blinde loue of themselues they are soone perswaded that there is nothing in them worthy to be despised yea they thinke that their ignorance is wisedome insomuch that knowing nothing they suppose they know all things and hauing no dexteritie to performe one commendable work they presume very inconsideratly to set their hand to euery great matter But the more care diligence they bestow being led with a desire to shew great skil and thinking to winne honour and renowne so much the more they discouer their ignorance and blockishnes purchasing to themselues shame and infamie Now the trueth of God teacheth vs to consider otherwise of our selues namely that we want both sound vnderstanding and strength also to accomplish any good thing Which knowledge ought to keep vs backe from all presumption and ouerweening of our owne wisedome and strength and take from vs all matter of pride and glorie to leade vs vnto modestie and humilitie This rule wee ought to follow if we will attaine to the white of good iudgement and well doing Now as shame and confusion is bredde of some vile and dishonest fact as we haue heard so vice fetcheth his beginning from pride I call pride a puffing vp of the soule and heart proceeding from the opinion of some excellent good thing in vs more then is in others whereby a man is in estimation honour whether this good thing be present past or to come But we are to consider of two fountains and first causes of this inflation and affection of the heart namely of one that proceedeth from nature pure and intire and of another that commeth from nature as it is corrupted So that we may boldly say that there is a kind of pride which is no vice but a vertue or at leastwise the seede of vertue For there was no vicious or euill thing in the first nature as it was created of God but euery thing in it was vertuous and the seed of vertue as we haue alreadie shewed in the former discourses alreadie made by vs. Wherefore that naturall pride of man beeing such as hee should haue beene if hee had continued in his first nature woulde bee an excellent vertue and as it were the mother of all the rest whereas nowe it is the most vgly and monstrous vice that can bee founde in the whole nature of man corrupted by meanes of which it is become the father of all vices and sinnes For seeing GOD hath done this honour to man aboue all other bodily creatures as to create him in regarde of his soule of a celestiall and diuine nature for which cause the verie Heathen affirme that mankinde is of the linage and parentage of God hee woulde not haue him ignoraunt of the excellencie of his beeing and of those great and woonderfull benefites which hee hath receiued of him in his creation and of which hee hath made him partaker chiefely for three causes The first to this ende that knowing what grace and honour God his Creatour hath bestowed vpon him hee might be moued continually to acknowledge and honour him as it becommeth him The second to the ende that knowing the excellencie of his nature and of the stocke from whence hee came hee shoulde loue himselfe in God his Creator and in him thinke himselfe woorthie of true goodes euen of the greatest and most excellent that may bee namely of heauenly and eternall goodes and that hee shoulde knowe that hee was created for them and that through the knowledge and consideration thereof he might be prouoked to wish for and to desire them with great courage The thirde that by this meanes hee might feare to degenerate from so high and noble a linage as that is from whence hee is descended and to fall from so high a degree of honour and dignitie into dishonour and shame and to loose those excellent goodes whereunto hee was allotted if hee committed any thing vnbeseeming so noble and so excellent a nature as was the nature of God according to the image of which hee was creted This then is that holie pride which ought naturally to remaine in man and whereby hee might well haue desired to bee like vnto GOD especially in goodnesse and that by those onelie meanes by which the Lorde woulde haue him bee brought vnto this similitude and which himselfe had taught him namely obedience and that so farre as was agreeable and meete for his nature But our first parentes giuing eare to him who first degenerated from this holie pride vnder colour of beeyng equall not to the goodnes but to the power and greatnes of God were soon perswaded to beleeue the promise which this lyar had made vnto them of a farre greater and more excellent estate then was that wherin God had created them insomuch as their humilitie and obedience whereby they were vnited and conioyned in great glory with God was turned into arrogancie and disobedience Whereupon doubting of the trueth of Gods worde they hearkened to the Diuels counsel propounded vnto themselues the selfe same meanes and degrees to make themselues equall with God their Creator which this wretch and his angels had taken before and whereby he fell from the highest estate of glorie to the most bottomlesse gulfe of miserie And this is that bastardly and earthly pride that is entred into mans nature of which it is saide That pride is
enioy whatsoeuer GOD hath prepared for it euen that which is most agreeable and proper to the nature thereof Wherefore wee may say that the death of man is a separation or a departure of the soule from the body wherein GOD propoundeth vnto vs a perfect image of our separation and departure from him which commeth by the meanes of sinne For wee see what becommeth of the body when the soule is gone from it and what it is during the time that it is ioyned therewith The difference is very great Let vs then propound our soule as if it were in the place of the bodie and imagine that God were insteade of the soule in it as wee fee the soule is in the body Then let vs consider what might be the estate of the soule both when it is ioyned with GOD and when it is separated from him For there is greater difference betweene the soule separated from GOD then betweene a body separated from his soule Forasmuch as there is no bodie so stincking nor so infected when it is separated from the soule as the soule is when it is separated from GOD if wee will compare spirituall things with corporall things And contrariwise wee may iudge of the estate thereof when it is ioyned with God by the estate of a body ioyned with his soule and by that difference which is betweene a dead body and a quicke Nowe if wee woulde well consider these things and compare the corporall death of the bodie with the spirituall death of the soule wee woulde abhorre sinne in greater measure then wee doe and bee more afraid of it then of anie thing that may come vnto vs. For there is nothing either in heauen or earth that can hurt vs but sinne as in deede nothing can bring dammage to vs but that which can hurt the soule But it is sinne onely that is able to hurt the soule because by it those meanes are taken away from the soule whereby GOD bestoweth spirituall life vpon it Therefore wee ought not to thinke that bodily death can anie way hurt the soule vnlesse it be in regarde of the euill life past It is true that seeing GOD hath created man to bee of such a nature as to be compounded of a bodie and of a soule and that his true and perfect estate consisteth heerein that they shoulde liue vnited and ioyned together it is very like that there is some euil in the seuering of thē asunder especially if any of them corrupt and perish and the euill may seeme to be doubled if both of them should corrupt perish as many epicures and atheists would haue it For if it be euill to haue but halfe a beeing the euill and imperfection is much more not to be at all seeing there is nothing more goodly or more excellent then to haue a beeing And if it be an excellent thing to bee then to bee well is a farre more goodly and excellent thing For therein consisteth the perfection and absolute felicitie of man Nowe there is no sound or perfect estate of anie man but onely that in which and for which GOD created him And although man bee fallen from that estate yet it hath pleased GOD not onely to restore him againe thereunto by his Sonne Iesus Christ but also to make it vnto him more entire and more perfect yea much more sure and stedfast then it was in the beginning For this cause if besides the benefite of creation wee consider also that of regeneration and of the restauration and repairing of man wee shall finde therein ample matter of true and sound consolation against death For wee knowe that this tabernacle of our body which is infirme faulty corruptible fraile and tending to putrifaction shall bee destroyed and as it were pulled downe to the ende that afterwardes it may bee restored vnto a perfect firme incorruptible and celestiall glorie Wee see that by death wee are called backe againe from a miserable exile to the ende that wee may dwell in our countrie euen in our heauenly countrie In a worde wee are assured by death to enioy such a blessed and permanent estate as the like whereof appeareth no where vpon the earth And if the brute beastes euen the insensible creatures as Saint Paul teacheth vs as wood and stone hauing some sence of their vanitie and corruption doe waite for the day of iudgement that they may bee deliuered from the same shall not wee bee very miserable hauing both some light of nature and also boasting that wee are inspired with the spirite of GOD if wee doe not lift vp our eyes aboue this earthly corruption when the question is concerning our beeing Shall wee not contemne and disdaine the vanitie of the worlde to aspire after the good beeing of the immortalitie to come Let vs knowe then that wee can not finde any true and sound consolation without this consideration and hope which is most assured to them that beleeue in Christ Iesus Therefore they that went not beyond the boundes of naturall Philosophie coulde neuer enioy anie true consolation either against the miseries of mans life or against corporall death And although they beleeued that together with the body whatsoeuer is in man was extinguished or otherwise that after the death of the body the soule remained immortall yet notwithstanding some haue done nothing else but mourne and complaine in this life insomuch as they haue laid violent handes as it were vpon Nature reuiling her and calling her the stepmother rather then the mother of mankind others haue doubted of their future estate and condition not being able to learne and knowe whether their soules should liue either in ioy and rest or els in paine torment but only by opinion Of which if we would discourse at large and consider particularly of their reasons we should be confirmed more and more in that true consolation that ought to bee in the heart of euery Christian against the honour of death Therefore I greatly desire ACHITOB to heare thee discoursing vpon this matter Of the chiefe consolations which the wisest amongst the Pagans and Infidels coulde drawe from their humane reason and naturall Philosophie against death of the blasphemies vsed by Atheists and Epicures against God and Nature what Nature is and who they bee that attribute vnto it that which they ought to attribute vnto God Chap. 76. ACHITOB. Trees haue their seasons in which they beginne to budde and afterwards do blossome which blossome in conuenient time taketh the forme and fashion of the fruite and after that it continueth growing vntill it becommeth ripe and beeing come to the greatest maturitie and ripenesse that it can haue it falleth down of it selfe and still consumeth more and more The same may bee saide of leaues But this happeneth not to all nor yet altogether after the self same maner to all those vnto whō it doth happen For some fruits perish euen in the very bud or els
in the floure and some after they are come to the fashion of fruit And of these latter sort some fade away sooner some later according to their sundry accidents For some are eaten by wormes other by noisome flies and some through diuers kinds of creeping things which bred in the fruite it selfe Againe some are shaken downe violently either through great mighty showres huge stormes blustering windes or els by haile and tempest beeing plucked forcibly from the trees before they can come to any ripenesse By all which things God propoundeth vnto vs a goodly picture and representation of the whole course of mans life yea of all estates and conditions of men in the worlde both generally and particularly For although in our former speech wee hearde what order nature vsually followeth in naturall thinges and namely in that which respecteth the estate of Empires and Monarchies yet if wee looke well into it wee shall there finde also this very difference which we haue obserued to bee betwixt naturall death and that which wee call violent death For as amongest men all come not to the vttermost of olde age but manie are stayed by the way so is it with estates Wee see some men ascende vp through all degrees euen vntill they attaine to the highest and then by the same degrees descend againe vntil they come to the ende and period of all But we see others that are staied in ascending or if they come to the highest degree are sodainely throwne downe Moreouer among those fruites which attaine to maturitie and ripenes all haue not one and the selfe same time of rypening but euery one hath his proper season and those that are most forward and soonest rype are of shortest continuance and quickly gone This selfe same thing also we see to be obserued in the life of men and in the course of this world Wherefore if we had no hope of another life besides this our estate would be more miserable not onely then the estate of beastes but also then that of trees For as trees decay yeerely in regard of their flowers fruites and leaues so they are yeerely renewed whereas many men perish after that manner that being once dead they shall neuer be raised vp and renewed againe to glory For although they haue some opinion of another life yet if by the certaintie of faith they doe not apprehende the fruition of eternall happinesse which is prepared for the blessed through the grace of Christ Iesus they can neither liue nor die without some doubt of that which they desire most to be perswaded of When the greatest and most skilfull Philosophers the wisest and most vertuous personages that haue byn amongst the Heathen went about to comfort either themselues or their friends in their great afflictions and chiefly in death this was thought to be one of their strongest reasons that the lawes of nature are vnauoydable and that it must be so For they had no hope of the resurrection of their bodies as indeed it is a doctrine that humane Philosophy doth not vnderstand And as for the immortalitie of the soule albeit the best Philosophers and most learned men amongst them were of that opinion which also was for the most part generally receiued of the people yet they were neuer so assured thereof but that still there remained some doubt in them because they had no certaine knowledge of it but onely so much as they could get by their naturall light and humane Philosophie Therefore when such as excelled others amongst them laboured to comfort and strengthen men against the feare of death and would perswade them that there was no euill in it they vsed for their principal reason this disiunctiue speech saying Either man is wholly extinguished by death or els some part of him remaineth afterwards If he perish altogether so that nothing of him continueth still then he feeleth no ill and so death hurteth him not but deliuereth him from all those euils whereunto he is necessarily subiect in this life But if some part of him abideth still so that he die not altogether then is death no death vnto him or at leastwise it is not euill vnto him seeing his principall part which is his soule and in regard of which he is man liueth and abideth whole and sound Nowe these are very leane and slender consolations For seeing GOD hath created man of that nature that hee is compounded of body and soule no doubt but his true and perfect estate consisteth heerein that these two natures be vnited and lincked together as in deede they shoulde haue done had it not bene for the sinne of our first parents who thereby brought vpon man both bodily and spirituall death And it is against reason to thinke that a separation of these two natures so well knit together coulde bee made and that one of them shoulde corrupt and perish and all this without griefe Nowe if they perish both together the euill that followeth thereupon is the greater For nothing can bee imagined to bee more goodly and excellent then to haue a beeing Nowe can any body call that thing excellent which ceaseth to bee or which hauing a beeing fadeth incontinently But what a horrour is it to a man onely to thinke of death And howe much more will his horrour bee encreased when he shall thinke that hee must so vanish away by death that no part of him afterward shall haue any more beeing then if hee had neuer beene at all And what profite ariseth to him that was neuer borne more then to the brute beast But yet the estate of this man is more miserable For to what ende shoulde the reasonable soule serue which God hath giuen him as also the vnderstanding reason and all the other vertues wherewith God hath endued it aboue the soule of beastes but to make him more miserable and wretched then if hee had beene created a beast For seeing beastes haue no minde vnderstanding or reason to conceiue and knowe what a benefite and gift of GOD it is to haue a beeing and to liue they haue no such vehement apprehension either of death as men haue or of the losse of any good thing which they are in danger to loose And by this reason it followeth that the more blockish and brutish men are the lesse miserable they shoulde bee as contrariwise the greater spirites they haue and the more they acknowledge the excellencie of mans nature and those gifts wherewith God hath endued it so much the more miserable and wretched shoulde they be instead of receiuing greater ioy and consolation Whereupon it commeth to passe that they are more ready to despite and blaspheme God then to praise and glorifie him for those graces and benefits wherewith hee hath adourned mankinde We see howe Epicures and Atheists and all they that consider in man this present life onely and goe no further drawe neere to this point of which wee speake Therefore some
God and men and were accompted and taken for demy-gods And these are those vertues which the philosophers by experience find to be in the reasonable soule which are no fained or imaginatiue but true vertues neither are they found in the soule of beasts as those are of which we spake in the first place Wherfore albeit man hath the vertue of desiring common with beasts yet he hath reason to moderate his desires which is wanting in beasts Nowe al this doctrine touching the vertues of the soule accordeth well with the doctrine of Christianitie so farre foorth as the soule agreeth with that nature in which it was first created of God But that which the Astrologians affirme of the influences and infusion of vertues into the soule by the planets as we heard I take it to be a bird of their owne braine whereby they attribute to the creatures that which belongeth to the Creator only For although he vseth the creatures according to that order which he hath placed in them neuertheles when the question is of the reasonable soule wee must ascend vp higher then the heauens vnto which it can not be subiect as the body is seeing it is of a farre more excellent nature For how should the heauens starres and planets giue that to the soule which themselues haue not I verely beleeue that when God created the soule of the first man placed it in his body that was before created of the nature and substance of the corruptible elemēts he took not those vertues with which he indued and adorned it either from the heauens or from the planets And seeing he created al mankind in this first mā after his image which he imprinted in his soule no doubt but that which yet remaineth in mans soule proceedeth from the same fountaine as also what euil soeuer is befallen since whereby this image abode not perfect it proceedeth from sinne and from the nature of man corrupted by sinne and not from the heauens or planets And as the Astrologians easily beleeue whatsoeuer they haue imagined touching this point and woulde haue the will of man subiect to their influences and constellations so the other Philosophers abuse themselues greatly in magnifying the vertues of the soule more then they ought to be esteemed in this corrupt estate of mans nature not iudging the corruption to be so great as it is Heereof it is also that they faile in regarde of vertue which they attribute altogether to the libertie of man as if he coulde by his owne vertue moderate his affections make himselfe iust and righteous Which fault proceedeth from hence in that they content themselues with a iustice that seemeth so to be before men and put no difference betweene diuine and humane iustice that is betwixt that which is able to stand approoue it selfe in the iudgement of God and that which men approoue For there is no iustice able to satisfie the iudgement of God but that of Iesus Christ which it pleaseth him to impute vnto his children and in regard thereof to accompt them iust But let vs returne to our matter We haue further to note that besides the forenamed vertues the Platonists attribute to the soule foure others which they cal contemplatiue vertues as those that belong to the contemplatiue life vnto which they are referred by them The first is named the purgation or second death of the soule for the first death of it say they is her descending into the body of man into which it is throwen as it were into a prison in a maner buried in vices Therefore they say that the soule standeth in neede of this second death whereby she being purged from her vices is as it were dead vnto them that shee may liue vnto vertue The second kind of these vertues is called pure or purified because the soule being purged from all her euill affections exerciseth good works by the same The third is called by them an exemplarie or patterne-vertue in the minde of God whereby they meane that as God conceiueth and knoweth the Idaeas kindes and images of all sensible intelligible things so he sendeth downe from heauen this vertue into the soule of man who is thereby purged and purified as we haue alreadie heard And for the last they adde a fourth vertue which they account greatest and chiefest aboue the other and therefore they call it Diuine because it bringeth to the soule a vertue to doe more then humane workes euen such as we call miraculous works Which foure kindes of vertues appeare euidently to haue beene drawen by them from christian doctrine but yet disguised after their fashion As touching the first it agreeth to that which the worde of God teacheth vs of regeneration and mortification of the flesh whereby wee die to sinne and to the deuill that we may liue to righteousnesse and to God The second agreeth to good woorkes proceeding of faith which being done in the same purifie the heart and to christian holinesse which accompanieth and followeth iustification by faith The third agreeth to giftes and graces inspited by the holy Ghost and to the infusion of them into the soules of Gods true seruants and the fourth agreeth to the giftes of prophecie and to that vertue of working miracles which hath beene heeretofore in the holie Prophets Apostles and Disciples of Iesus Christ But to conclude this whole point wee are to obserue this that what praise soeuer may bee giuen to the Platonicall Diuinitie yet it is in no respect to bee compared with Christian Philosophie because this is pure and true and endited by the Spirite of GOD but the other impure disguised and counterfaited by men who haue mingled with their Philosophie many things which they coulde eyther heare or learne out of the holie Scripture Moreouer as concerning the whole doctrine of the Philosophers touching the nature and vertues of the soule we may truely say that of it selfe it reacheth higher then those politicke vertues of which we made mention euen now For when a ciuil good and wise man hath attained to that politicke vertue and to the highest degree thereof he is able to goe no farther except hee be holpen elsewhere euen by the illumination of the holy Spirite And indeede all those other vertues of the soule propounded by the Platonists are but dreames and opinions in the ayre by which the Spirite of errour laboureth to disguise the doctrine of the holie Scriptures which leadeth vs to those true supernaturall vertues which the soule receiueth by the inspiration and infusion of the giftes and graces of the holie Spirite who is the true Doctour of whom wee must learne this Philosophie which is not naturall but supernaturall Nowe then being instructed and guided by him hauing discoursed of the creation and nature of the soule let vs enter into this goodly field of the immortalitie thereof in which we knowe there are many ranged battailes of enemies who waite to
enter into the combat with vs. It belongeth therfore to thee ACHITOB to beginne the skirmish How men can haue no certaine resolution of th'immortalitie of the soule but by the Word of God of the peruersenesse of Epicures and Atheists in this matter Of the chiefe causes that hinder men from beleeuing the immortalitie of the soule and of their blockishnes and euill iudgement therein How wee must seeke for the Image of God after which man was created in his soule Chap. 88. ACHITOB. We are now fallen into a time which discouereth vnto vs not onely false religions but euen an Atheisme that is farre worse For they that are altogether without Religion are farther dist●●t from true pietie then they that follow a false religion and yet at this day there are as many or moe that declare themselues to be Atheists and Epicures as there bee of such as are taken for good Christians And if in outward shew they pretend some exercise of Religion it is but to couer themselues with the vaile thereof to the ende they might not bee esteemed and accompted for such as they are in trueth But in their heart and with their companions they doe but make a mocke of the holy Scriptures and of al those testimonies that we haue in them of another life besides this of Heauen of hell of the blessed immortalitie and eternall death of the soule Now it is an easie matter to conuince such felowes of error and lies But this is a thing worthy to be bewayled in all the affaires opinions and counsailes of men that when any question ariseth of the trueth and of that which is Good no proofes or testimonies how rich or of howe great authoritie soeuer they bee seeme sufficient to vs and worthy to bee beleeued And yet if the question be of any euil falsehood and lyes no testimony how slender and bad soeuer it be but satisfieth vs very well For by reason that we are euil and ignorant ful of blindnesse and darkenesse by nature we are alwayes the readier to follow that which is like our selues namely wickednes and falsehood lies and error as we see it by experience in Atheists and Epicures and in all infidels and scorners of God and of his Word For there are many skilfull in Artes and humane learning and in naturall Philosophie who reprehend and condemne Epicurus Lucretius Pliny and other such like Philosophers Epicures and Atheists in that which they haue taught and written of naturall things belonging to this life and call them ignorant men and voyd of experience But in that which they haue spoken against the prouidence of God the immortalitie of soules and all Religion abolishing them wholie by their false doctrines and by Philosophie they imbrace and praise them for the skilfullest and most excellent Philosophers that euer were as hauing deliuered men from the greatest torments that could seaze vpon them and brought vnto them the greatest good that could befall them by taking from them all feare of God of hell and of all punishment after this life and all opinion and hope of Paradice and of a better life after this In a worde they extoll them as if they onely had found the beane in the cake as wee vse to say and as if they onely deserued to be the Kings of beanes among their fellowes Forasmuch then as we are entred into this matter of the immortalitie of the soule and seeing at this day so many Atheists herein followe the opinions of these Epicurian Philosophers before named I say not onely more then they doe all the best Philosophers but also then the authoritie of the holy Scriptures and the testimonie of God in them we cannot gather too many arguments whereby at leastwise to cause them to ponder the matter more diligently if they will not be confounded wholy by naturall reasons seeing they make so small reckoning of that celestial and heauenly doctrine It is true that it will bee a very hard and difficult matter to perswade such in this point as giue no more credite to this testimonie of the word of God then they doe to all humaine and naturall reasons that can bee alleadged vnto them For although the arguments of those Philosophers that maintaine the immortalitie of the soule are strong and waightie yet they can neuer wholy and fully assure men of their immortalitie except this testimonie of God take all doubting from them But that argument of all others is most forcible which hee hath giuen vnto vs in the resurrection of Iesus Christ whereby his soule was vnited againe vnto his body and so wrought those heauenly workes which followed his resurrection and ascention into heauen and namely by the gift of the holy Ghost which hee sent vnto his Apostles and by the effects thereof which according to the promise of Iesus Christ appeared so great and manifest throughout the whole world and that in so short a time that no prudence wisdome skill eloquence authoritie power or force of man was able to hinder that vertue or the course of the Gospel But because Epicures and Atheists accompt these things for fables and are of so peruerse and monstrous a nature that they had rather sight against nature it selfe and cleane to the worst opinions most vnworthy the nature of man then to follow the reasons of the best Philosophers grounded vpon a more sure foundation let vs at leastwise put them to some further trouble by vrging them to be fully resolued in that opinion which is contrary to the immortality of the soule For certainly I doubt not but they wil be alwaies without resolution And in deed frō whēce should they fetch this resolution of theirs seeing they haue no certaine ground of their false opinion and seeing there are so many and so forcible reasons to the contrary But wee must note that the principall cause that keepeth men from beleeuing the immortalitie of the soule is partly their ignorance partly their malice and peruersenesse For some there are so blockish that they measure all things according to the knowledge and reach of their bodilie senses so that they set downe with themselues to beleeue nothing but that which they are able to knowe and perceiue by them Others there are who besides this are so wicked and peruerse that they would not onely haue their soules not to bee immortall but wish also that there were no God to the ende they might haue no Iudge For by reason they are so wholly addicted to the worlde and to their carnall pleasures they would haue no other God or other life after this but wish that all life might end with their delights and the soule with the body that so they might haue no accompt to make to any Iudge Therefore they are of that number whereof mention is made in the Booke of Wisedome who make these discourses saying Our life is short and tedious and in the death of a man there is no
Shame Impudencie a very dangerous disease Ierem. 3. 3. Ezech. 2. 4. and 3. 7. The cause of rednesse in the face in blushing A cause of feare in men The rule of all true iudgement Shame of well doing The cause why men deceiue themselues What pride is Two kindes of pride Three causes why God created man so excellent Of a good kind of pride Ecclus. 10. 14 19. Of the euil pride Ecclus. 10. 7. Who are most giuen to pride Causes of pride What vices follow pride Pride lifteth men against God Prou. 13. 10. Pride bred of vertue A similitude A remedy against pride Three kindes of the Vegetatiue facultie in the soule A profitable meditation Of the third and last belly of the body The office of heate in man The power order and office of the Vegetatiue soule A similitude taken from 〈…〉 A good lesson for euery one Of the seates of the naturall vertues How excrements are voyded Of the growing of bodies Wherein the natural vertues differ ech from other How meate nourisheth the body How mettals and stones growe The true cause or nourishing in creatures The instruments of the naturall powers of the soule How the soule vseth the instruments of the body Of the Ventricle and stomack● Of the figure of the stomacke Of the mouths of the stomacke How the name of the heart is abused The originall of appetite The doore of the vpper Orifice Of the lower Orifice Of the small strings of the Orifices The stomake compared to a pot on the fire Howe the stomacke is placed Of the substance of it How it is warmed by other neighbour partes Of 〈◊〉 Kell or Kall The causes of appetite in the stomach The originall of hunger The stomach compared to a wombe The office of the lower Orifice The poorer sort are not to be contemned The necessitie of the bowelles The number and names of the guttes The bowelles haue two couerings Of the Peritone or inner ●ine of the belly ioyned to the kall The vses of it The substance of the bowels The bowels are made of two coates Of the three 〈◊〉 gut● Of their names The Duodene or stomacke gut The hungry gut The Ileon or folded Gut Of the three great Guts The blinde Gut The fift gut called Colon or the great gut The colike and Ileacke passions The straight gut The vse of it Of the muscle Sphincter A lesson against pride Against the contempt of inferiour persons Of the Mesentery Of the Mesareon The chiefe vse of it Other vses of the Mesentery Of the Meseraicall veines Their vse Of the Pancreas or sweet bread The vses of it Of the liuer and excellencie thereof The seconde coction is made in the liuer Foure degrees of concoction in the liuer The fountaines of the blood and veines spirites and arteries Our life compared to a lamp Two great veines in the body The Port-veine The hollow veine Eccles. 12. 6. A place of Salomon expounded Of the arterie Aorta A similitude What a humour is Of the nature of blood Of the cholericke humour Of the flegmaticke humour Of the melancholicke humor The agreement betwixt the humours and the elements How the humours and elements agree in places Agreement betwixt the great garden of the world and that of the litle world A goodly contēplation in nature Of the heart of plants The body of man compared to a garden Mans life in the midst of two waters Vapours ascending vp to the braine Watry clouds in the braine Inconueniences that come from the braine Instruction for euery one Testimonie of the prouidence of God Gen. 9. 4 5. The mixture of the humors necessary The causes of health and of sicknesse Sinne the cause of all the discord in the world The causes of death A politike instruction Of the cholericke humor Of the Gall and of his bladder The vses of the cholericke humour Of the melancholicke humor Of the spleene What effects follow the oppilation of the liuer The commodities of the melancholike humour Of the flegmatike humour and profite of it Of the kidneyes Emulgent vcines How the vrine is made yellow Of the Vreteres and of the bladder Of the necke of the bladder What it is to be a naturall diuine What communion ought to be among men Why the humors are taken in the euill part The cause of mens ingratitude The agreement betweene the maners and humors of the body By what meanes the naturall humors corrupt The originall of Feuers and other diseases The corruption of the flegmatike humour Of the cholerike humour From whence all sortes of agues proceede The corruption of the melancholie humor From whence madnesse commeth Three chiefe workers of mens actions He speaketh of such goodnes and vertues as were ●o esteemed of by the heathen that knew not their naturall corruption God ruleth in all and ouer all Ierem. 1. Galat. 1. Actes 9. 15. The nature of flegmatike persons The nature of a cholericke complexion The nature of the melancholicke body What natures are most abused by euill spirites Matth. 17. 15. mar 9. 20. luke 9. 39. How vigilant the Deuil is to hurt vs. What profit we reape by the knowledge of our complexions What natures we are to eschew The true meanes to cure our vices Matth. 7. 11. Luke 11. 13. Psal 127. 1. Verse 3. Genes 1. 28. The vertue of the blessing of God for generation Of the Radicall humour Of the defect of mans life with the causes therof What is meant by nature Genes 1. What Generation is What the generatiue power is What seede is What is meant by a vegetatiue soule Of the cause of monsters Malach. 2. 15. Two effectes of ignorance Of the similitude that is in generation From whence the seede commeth The seuerall vertues of the generatiue power The chiefe cause why the generatiue power was giuen to man Of the seate of Generation Hebr. 7. 10. Genes 35. 11. Psal 139. 13. Iob 10. 10 11 What is man properly Psalm 139. 5. Verse 6. Iob 10. 8. Psalm 36. and 138. A good lesson to be learned from our creation The afflictions of Gods children turne to their good No mans knowledge perfect Gen. 2. 4. The creation of the world and of man compared together An argumont of the prouidence of God Of the forme of an infant Of the After-burthen The first sixe dayes work from the conception Psal 139. 16. All the members receiue their forme together The nauill first made perfect When the seed is called Embryon When the burthen is called a child or infant When the childe f●●st moueth Galens opinion of the birth of sonnes The word profitable for all Mans birth a woonderfull worke of God How the childe is nourished in the wombe The cause of child-birth Which is the easiest kinde of child-birth Why children cry when they are borne A testimonie of Gods prouidence in the wombe Gal. de vs● 〈◊〉 lib. 15. An argument against Atheists Psal 139. 17 18. 22. 9. Two things to be considered of in