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A52345 A treatise of the difference bbtwixt [sic] the temporal and eternal composed in Spanish by Eusebius Nieremberg ... ; translated into English by Sir Vivian Mullineaux, Knight ; and since reviewed according to the tenth and last Spanish edition.; De la diferencia entre lo temporal y eterno. English Nieremberg, Juan Eusebio, 1595-1658.; Mullineaux, Vivian, Sir. 1672 (1672) Wing N1151; ESTC R181007 420,886 606

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his Divine justice Then all shall be laid open and confusion shall cover the sinner with the multitude of his offences How shall he blush to see himself in the presence of the King of Heaven in so foul and squalid garments A man is said to remain confounded when either the issue of things fall out contrary to what he hoped and looked for or when he comes off with indignity or disparagement where he expected honour and reward how confounded then shall a sinner be when those works of his which he thought vertues shall be found vices imagining he hath done service shall perceive he hath offended and hoping for a reward shall meet with punishment If a man when he is to speak with some great Prince desire to be decently and well clad how will he be out of countenance to appear before him dirty and half naked How shall then a sinner be ashamed to see himself before the Lord of all naked of good works be dirtied and defiled with abominable and horrid crimes for besides the Multitude of sins whereof his whole life shall be full the Hainousness of them shall be also laid open before him and he shall tremble at the sight of that which he now thinks but a trivial fault For then shall he see clearly the ugliness of sin the dissonancy of it unto reason the deformity it causes in the Soul the injury it does unto the Lord of the world his ingratitude to the blood of Christ the prejudice it brings unto himself hell into which he falls and eternal glory which he loses The least of these were sufficient to cover his heart with sadness and inconsolable grief but altogether what amazement and confusion shall they cause especially when he shall perceive that not only mortal but even venial sins produce an ugliness in the Soul beyond all the corporal deformities which can be imagined If the sight of onely one Devil be so horrible that many Servants of God have said that they would rather suffer all the torments of this life than behold him for one moment all his deformity proceeding but from one onely mortal sin which he committed for before the Devils were by nature most excellent and beautiful in what condition shall a sinner be who shall not only behold all Devils in all their ugliness but shall see himself perhaps more ugly than many of them having as many deformities as he hath committed mortal and venial sins Let him therefore avoid them now for all are to come to light and he must account for all even until the last farthing Neither is this account to be made in gross onely for the greatest and most apparent sins but even for the least and smallest What Lord is so strict with his Steward that he demands an account for trifles for the tagg of a point nor suffers him to pass a half-penny without informing him how it was spent In humane Tribunals the Judge takes no notice of small matters but in the Courts of Divine Judicature nothing passes the least things are as diligently lookt into as the greater A confirmation of this is a story written by divers Authors Joh. Major Judic exem 8. ex collec That there were two Religious persons of holy and laudable conversation who did mutually love one another with great affection one of them chanced to die and after death appeared unto the other being then in prayer in poor and torn garments and with a most sorrowful and dejected countenance he who was alive demanded of him what was the cause of his appearing in that sad manner to whom he answered repeating it three times No man will believe No man will believe No man will believe Being urged to declare further what he would say he proceeded thus No man can imagine how strict God is in taking his accompts and with what rigour he chastises sinners In saying this he vanished By that which hath happened to many Servants of God even before their departure out of this life may be seen the rigour with which this account shall be taken after death Climac gr 7. St. John Climacus writes of a certain Monk who being very desirous to live in solitude and quiet after he had exercised himself many years in the labours of a Monastical life and obtained the grace of tears and fasting with many other priviledges of vertue he built a Cell at the foot of that Mountain where Elias in time past saw that sacred and divine Vision This reverend Father being of so great austerity desired yet to live a more strict and penitent life and therefore passed from thence into a place called Sides which belonged to the Anchorite Monks who live in great perfection and retirement and having lived a long time with much rigour in that place which was far remote from all humane consolation and distant 70 miles from any dwelling or habitation of men at last he came to have a desire to return to his first Cell in that sacred Mountain where remained in his absence for the keeping of it two most religious Disciples of his of the land of Palestine Some short time after his return he fell into an infirmity and died The day before his death sodainly he became much astonished and amazed and keeping still his eyes open he lookt gastly about him sometime on the one side of the Bed and then on the other as if he saw some who demanded an accompt from him of something which was past unto whom he answered in the hearing of all who were present saying sometime So it is truly but for this I have fasted so many years Other-whiles he said Certainly it is not so thou lyest I never did it At other times It is true I did so but wept for it and so many times ministred for it unto the necessity of my neighbour Other times Thou accusest me truly I have nothing to say but God is merciful And certainly that invisible and strict inquisition was fearful and horrible unto those who were present Ay miserable me saith the Saint What will become of me sinner since so great a follower of a solitary and retired life knew not what to answer He who had lived forty years a Monk and obtained the grace of tears and as some affirmed unto me had in the Desert fed a hungry Leopard which meekly repaired unto him for food yet for all this sanctity at his departure out of this life so strict an accompt was demanded of him as he left us uncertain what was his judgement and what the sentence and determination of his cause We read in the Chronicles of the Minorites Chronic. S. Franc. 2. p. lib. 4. c. 35. that a Novice of the Order of St. Francis being now almost out of himself struggling with death cryed out with a terrible voice saying Wo is me O that I never had been born A little after he said I am heartily sorry And not long after he replyed Put
arrogant clay an insolent dust and a sparkle which in a moment is extinguished a flame which quickly dies a light which vanishes into air a dead leaf withered hay faded grass a nature which consumes it self to day threatens and to morrow dies to day abounds in wealth and is to morrow in his grave to day hath his brows circled with a diadem and to morrow is with worms he is to day and to morrow ceases to be triumphs and rejoyces to day and to morrow is lamented immeasurably insolent in prosperity and in adversity admits no comfort who knows not himself yet is curious in searching what is above him is ignorant of what is present and scoffs at what 's to come he who is mortal by nature and out of pride thinks himself eternal he who is an open house of perturbations a game of divers infirmities a concourse of daily calamities and a receptacle of all sorrow O how great is the Tragedy of our baseness and how many things have I said But it cannot better be declared than by the voice of the Prophet In vain doth man who lives trouble himself For truly the things of this life which shine and glister most are of less profit than a putrified Carcase This is of St. John Chrysostome in which he clearly sets forth the misery of Man the shortness of his life and the vanity of things temporal § 3. And that the perfect knowledge of our selves may not be wanting unto us Man is not onely thus vile and base whilest he lives and much more being dead but even his Soul whilest it remains in his Body is not of much greater esteem For although the Soul be of it self of a most noble substance yet our vices do so much vilifie it that they make it more abominable than the Body And without doubt the Soul when it is dead in mortal sin is more corrupt and stinking in the sight of the Angels than a Body dead eight days agoe for if that Body be full of worms this is full of devils and vices And even whilest the Soul lives and is free from any mortal sin yet by committing those which are but venial it becomes full of imperfections and although it be not dead yet it is more weak feeble and languishing than a sick Body and if a man knew himself well he would be more affrighted at the misery of his Soul than at that of his Flesh The devout Father Alfonso Roderiguez a most excellent Master in matters of spirit writes of a holy Woman who desired light from God to know in what condition she was and saw in her self such ugliness and deformity that she was not able to suffer it and therefore besought God again saying Not so much O Lord for I shall faint and be dismaid Father Master John d'Avila saith that he knew a person who often had importuned God to discover unto him what he was It pleased God to open his eyes but a very little and yet that little had like to have cost him dear for he beheld himself so ugly and abominable that he cried out aloud Lord of thy mercy take from before mine eyes this mirrour I desire not any more to behold my figure Donna Sancha Carillo that most fervent servant of Christ after she had led a most perfect and admirable life besought our Lord to give her a sight of her Soul that seeing the filthiness of her sins she might be further moved to abhorre them Our Lord was pleased to grant her request and shewed it her in this form One night as she sat alone in her Sala the door open there passed before her an ancient Hermite his hair all gray and in his hand a staffe to support him She amazed at the sight of such a man in such a habit at so unseasonable an hour was a little surprised with fear yet recollecting her self said unto him Father what seek ye for here to whom he answered Lift up my Cloak and you shall see She did so and beheld a little Girle sickly pale and weak with the face all covered over with flies She took it in her armes and demanded of him Father what is this Doest thou not remember replyed the Hermite when thou earnestly desired'st of our Lord that he would give thee a view of thy Soul Behold the figure of it after this manner it is This said the Apparition vanished and she remained so confused and affrighted that it seemed unto her accordingly as she after confessed that all her bones were displaced with such grief and pain as had it not been for the great favour and mercy of God it had been impossible for her to endure it She passed that night almost overwhelmed with the waves of her sad and troubled thoughts The manner of that Girle so feeble and discoloured afflicted her extremely contemplating it as the image of her Soul especially when she reflected on the face covered with those impertinent and troublesome little creatures her grief was doubled and it seemed unto her as if it had smelt like something that was dead or some old sore which made her send up a thousand sighs unto heaven and to desire a remedy and mercy from our Lord. No sooner did the day so much desired by her appear but she repaired instantly unto her Confessor a person of great vertue and learning and desired him with many tears to explicate unto her the meaning of that Vision and to tell her whether those little creatures did signifie any grievous and hidden sins which her soul knew not of The Confessor took some short time to recommend his answer unto our Saviour which done he returned and said unto her Madam trouble not your self but render hearty thanks unto God for the favour which he hath done you and know that the feebleness which appeared in the Image of your Soul was an effect of venial sins which weaken but kill not cool but extinguish not the charity in our Souls for if they had been mortal sins the Girle would have been dead for those deprive the Soul wholly of life those which be venial onely take away our fervour and promptness in the service of God and the perfect accomplishing of his holy Law If then the Souls of so great Servants of God are so full of miseries wherein can miserable man boast since he is so both in soul and body CAP. IX How deceitful are all things Temporal FRom what hath hitherto been said may be collected how great a lie and cozenage is all that which passes in time and that the things of the earth besides that they are base inconstant and transitory are also deceitful and full of danger This is signified unto us in the Apocalyps by the Harlot by which was denoted humane prosperity who sat upon that monstrous Beast which is the World And amongst other Ornaments as the Scripture sayes she was adorned with gilded gold which gives us to understand her falshood Since it was
evil in it self in its own nature For if there were no God or that God were not offended with it yet it were a most abominable and horrid evil the greatest of all evils and the cause of all In regard of this deformity and filthiness of sin the Philosophers judged it to be abhorred above all things Aristotle said Aristotle 3. Eth. it were better to die than to do any thing against the good of vertue And Seneca and Peregrinus with more resolution said Although I were certain that men should not know it and that God would pardon it yet I would not offend for the very filthiness of sin For this Tully said That nothing could happen unto man more horrible than a fault And even those Philosophers who denied the immortality of the Soul and the providence of God affirmed that nothing should make us to commit it And there hath not wanted some Gentils who have suffered great extremities to avoid a vicious act Plut. in Demetrio Democles as Plutarch writes chose rather to be boiled in scalding water than to consent to a filthy act With reason Hippo is celebrated amongst the Greek Matrons who chose rather to die than offend Neither was that horror less which Verturius conceived against uncleanness who suffered prison whips and rigorous torments rather than he would sin against chastity Equal to this was that of the most beautiful youth Espurina of whom Valerius Maximus and St. Ambrose write Ambl. l. 3. de Virg. That he slashed and wounded his fair face that it should not give occasion to others of offence even by desire All those were Gentils who knew not Christ crucified for man nor saw hell open for the punishment of sinners nor fled from sin because it was an offence unto God but only for the enormity and filthiness it had in it self This made them endure prisons and tortures rather than admit it What then should Christians do who know their Redeemer died to the end they should not sin and how much sin is offensive to God Certainly they ought rather to give a thousand lives and souls than once to injure their Creator by committing an offence which not onely Gentils but even Nature hath in horror which hath planted in brute beasts although they cannot sin yet a natural aversion from that which looks like sin John Marquess of Gratis desired much to have a Foal from a generous Mare which he had by her own Son but could never effect it neither would she ever admit him until deceived by cloathing him in such sort as she knew him not But when he was uncloathed and she discovered the deceit she fell into that sorrow and sadness that after she would never feed but pined her self to death The like is reported by Jovianus Pontanus of a delicate Bitch of his which he could never although he caused her to be held make to couple with her Son So foul and horrible is but the shadow and image of sin even unto brute beasts Why should not men then who are capable of reason and have an obligation unto Gods commandments say and think with St. Anselm Lib. de simil c. 19. If I should see on this part the filthiness of sin and on the other the terrour of hell and it were necessary for me to fall into one of them I would rather cast my self into hell than admit of sin For I had rather enter pure into Hell than to enjoy the Kingdom of Heaven contaminated with sin Whosoever than he be who is infected with that horrible evil of a mortal sin he cannot choose but be most miserable and wretched For as St. Chrysostome sayes Chrysost Tom. 5. Ser. 5. de ie The greatest evil is to be evil And although the Chirurgion do not cut the cankered flesh yet the ulcerated Patient will not be freed from his infirmity So although God should not punish a Sinner yet he would not be free from the evil death misery and abomination of sin And therefore St. Austin sayes Aug. To. 8. in Ps 49. Although we could cause that the day of Judgement should not come yet we ought not to live ill This monstrous deformity of sin our Lord was pleased to express by a visible Monster and that after a most strange manner as is related by Villaveus He writes Villaveus lib. 8. c. 35. that in the year 1298. Cassanus King of the Tartars with an Army of 200000 horse entring Syria made himself Master of it and brought a great terror upon all those neighbouring Countries in so much as the King of Armenia delivered him his Daughter although she were a Christian and he an Infidel to be his Wife Not long after the Queen proved with child and when her time came was delivered not of a Child but of a most horrible and deformed Monster Whereat the barbarous King being astonisht and incensed by the advise of his Council commanded that she should be put to death as an Adulteress The poor Lady grieving to die with the imputation of a sin whereof she was innocent commended her self to our Saviour and by divine inspiration desired that before her death the Thing which she had brought forth might be baptized which was granted and no sooner performed but that Monster became a most beautiful and goodly Boy and the King amazed at the miracle with many other of his Subjects became Christian acknowledging by what had happened the beauty of Grace and the deformity of Sin although that deformity proceeded not from any actual sin either mortal or venial from which the Child was free but onely from Original guilt which without the fault of his proper will descended unto him from his Parents The deformity of sin comes from the contrariety of it to reason which renders a Sinner more foul and ugly than the most horrid Monster and more dead in soul than a putrid and dead Carcase Pliny admires the force of lightning which melts the gold and silver and leaves the Purse which contained it untoucht Such is sin which kills the Soul and leaves the Body sound and entire It is a flash of lightning sent from Hell and worse than Hell it self and such leaves the Soul which it hath blasted What shall I then say of the evils which it causes I will onely say this that though it were the best thing of the world yet for the evil effects which it produces it ought to be avoided more then death It bereaves the soul of grace banishes the holy Ghost deprives it of the right of heaven despoiles man of all his merits makes him unworthy of divine protection and condemns a sinner unto eternal torments in the other world and in this to many disasters for there is neither plague warre famine nor infirmity of body whereof sin hath not been in some sort the occasion and therefore those who weep for their afflictions let them change the object of their tears and weep for the
cause which is their sinns These are they which ought to be lamented these onely deserve our tears and all the tears in the world are net sufficient to bewail the least of them When our Saviour was led to be crucified he commanded they should not weep for him but for their sons Those sons are our sins engendred from our corrupt nature let us weep for them Finally such is the malice of a mortal sin that he who commits it deservs the eternal pains of Hell and we ought rather to suffer a thousand Hells than once to commit it The love of things temporal opens the way to this Monster of malice and the desire of things eternal shuts it up Let every one therefore consider where he places his affections Let him hear Ecclesiasticus who sayes The heart of a wise man in his right hand and the heart of a fool in his left because the wise man places his affection in that which is eternal and the fool in that which is temporal as St. Jerome interprets it who sayes He who it wise ever thinks of the world to come which leads him to the right hand and be who is a fool thinks onely of the present which is placed on the left How deceived shall the lovers of the world finde themselves when they shall see that for their sins they are placed on the left hand of the Son of God Judge of the quick and the dead and how shall the lovers of Heaven rejoyce to be placed on his right as heirs of eternal glory Abundance and prosperity in temporal goods uses to be a greater occasion of sin than either a moderate fortune or an absolute poverty Wherefore Christ our Redeemer counselled them who desired to follow him in perfection that they should pluck from their hearts all affections which either had or might be occasion of sin When the Machabees recovered Jerusalem 1 Macah. 4. and entring into the Temple found the Altar of Holocausts prophaned there was a great doubt amongst them whether they should use it because it had been sometimes dedicated to God or destroy it because it had been employed in the service of the Devil The Scripture sayes That a good counsel came into their thoughts which was to destroy it and make a new one This good counsel let us follow let us destroy what hath or may be an occasion of sin and if the Machabees pluckt down that which had been dedicated to God because it had been a means for others to sin let us quit the occasion wherein not others but we our selves have offended which is our affections to temporal goods and settle them upon the eternal THE FIFTH BOOK OF THE DIFFERENCE BETWIXT THE TEMPORAL and ETERNAL CAP. I. Notable difference betwixt the Temporal and Eternal the one being the End the other the Means Where is also treated of the End for which man was created HItherto we have spoken of the difference and distance betwixt the Temporal and the Eternal comparing the one with the other and considering them rather in their proper nature and substance than the exterior respects and relations which they have unto others We will now begin to consider them from thence also that it may appear that the things of the earth on what side soever you look upon them are most vile and despicable but the eternal of great worth and value There are many things which although in themselves they are held as vile and sordid yet for some respect or circumstance become of great esteem But things temporal as well in their own proper essence and being as in the extrinsecal relations and respects they have unto others as they are amongst Angels most contemptible so ought they to be amongst Men because really and in themselves they are so Vile and base they are because little mutable and transitory And although in their own nature they were most precious and eternal yet with us they ought to be of no value because they are our Means and not our End created to be our Slaves and to serve us and not adored by us as Masters because they have been the instrument of our sins and because the Son of God descended from Heaven and died that we might despise them These Circumstances although they were in themselves of worth and value yet unto us ought to render them most odious and contemptible Here then is the great difference betwixt the temporal and eternal That the one is the End and the other but the Means the Eternal is the end of man but of the Temporal man himself is the end The eternal is mans utmost perfection and his perpetual happiness the temporal onely to be made use of for obtaining the eternal so as the eternal being our end is to be loved and desired for it self the temporal to be made no account of but as it may conduce to the obtaining of the eternal This being a matter of so great importance it is fitting that we seriously consider it Open then thine eyes O man and reflect Wherefore thou wert born All things have some end for which they are and thou also oughtest to have one Thou camest not into the world for nothing for something thou wert created Open thine eyes and see for what and having found it wander not from it for if thou doest thou art for ever lost What Traveller sets not before his eyes the place whither he intends to goe and rest what Artificer who proposes not unto himself some Idaea which he is to imitate in his work Wherefore then doest thou live without thinking why life was given thee Know that thou wert born for God and for nothing less than God and his service For this life was bestowed upon thee for this thou wert drawn from a not being to a being and didst pass from nothing to a reasonable creature so many thousands remaining uncreated who would have served God if they had a being better than thy self See then what thou owest him for this bounty wherein are included two most incomparable benefits The one for having created thee setting apart so many worthier creatures The other for having given thee the most noble and excellent end that possibly can be imagined which is himself When the Children of Israel past the Red Sea and Pharao and his Souldiers were drowned in their pursuit the Lord would have them celebrate this great benefit for even and Moyses and all the people sung praises and thanks unto the Lord for their deliverance See then what thou owest unto God for having past thee from a not being unto a being an infinity of other creatures possible remaining drowned in the abyss of nothing Forget not therefore the benefit of thy Creation by which from nothing thou becamest a man and wert made capable of eternal happiness David forgot it not and therefore to his 75. Psalm gives this remembrance for a Title For the end For him who passes or leaps from the other part
the bowels for all eternity all that our imagination can frame reaches not so immense an evil If we cannot therefore finde the depth of the malice of sin by way of Affimation let us try what may be done by the other way of Negation But this will also fail us For the evil of plagues famine and death are not it A mortal sin is more then these The evils of poverty dishonour and torments are not it It is more then these The torments of hell are not it It is above hell and all the pains of it Think with thy self that all the atoms which are to be found in the air all the sands in the sea all the leaves on the trees all the grass in the fields all the starrs in the heavens think I say that they are foul and ugly bodies all most deformed Monsters and frame to thy self a Monster and ugly Creature which should be made of all these will this equalize the foulness of a mortal sin It is not this ugly Monster nor this foul deformed Creature but it is a foulness and ugliness that doth far surpass all these and all horrid shapes and figures imaginable And let not this seem strange unto thee For not onely the evil of a Mortal sin but even that of a Venial is greater than all the evils of Hell or the evils within or without it all tht monstrousuess all the deformity of all things that are or can be contracted into one do not equal it Sin is more than all And therefore as St. Dionysius said of God That he was above what was good or what was fair because his goodness and beauty were of a superiour kind So it may be said of sin It is neither deformity abomination horror or malice but is something more than all these Let a sinner therefore know himself and that he is by sin above all that is ugly foul or monstrous For as he that hath whiteness is as white as that which makes him so so he that is in sin is as horrible and ill as sin it self Let him then reflect whether he is to sink charged with such a guilt and how much he ought to abhorr and loath himself Certainly if he should sink into Hell he would there finde no torment worse then himself If he should return into the Abyss of nothing he would be there better then in that Abyss of malice which is in sin Let him then reflect whether so unworthy and vile a wretch ought to have the same use of the creatures as if he were in the state of innocency and without this blemish of sin Let him consider if a person so infamous so abhominable as himself ought to use the things of this world for his delight honour pomp and ostentation The Emperour Marcus Aurelius Lord of the world and possessor of the greatest honours it could give him though a Gentil yet thought himself so worthy of contempt that he writes in this manner Treat thy self O soul with ignominy Anton. lib. 2. and despise thy self For thou hast no title to honour It is a prodigious thing that he who hath committed a mortal sin should desire honour and respect That he should complain of the troubles of this life and desire to be cherished and made much of That he who is the shame and infamy of the world should gape after glory That he who is a Traytor to his God should wish to be honoured and respected He who hath deserved hell for an eternitie why should he grumble at a short sickness or the necessities of this life which if he make the right use of may serve as a means of his salvation Let him therefore who hath sinned know that he is not to make the same use of the creatures as if he were innocent he is not to aim at other honour then that of God he is not to seek after ease and the Commodities of life but the securitie of his salvation not to thirst after the pleasures of the world but to perform strict penances for his sins past O if one knew himself perfectly with what different eyes would he behold the things of the world he would look upon them as things not appertaining to him at all and if he did not despise them at least he would make no account of them The Son of God onely because he took upon him the form of a sinner would not use the goods of this life but rather imbraced all that was troublesome painful and bitter in it why should he then who is really and in substance a sinner seek honours and delights Let him know the means of his salvation since Christ himself hath taught them to wit Penance Mortification and the Cross If Christ because he bore the sins of others used not temporal goods and the Commodities of life why should man who is loaden with his own sins complain he wants the pleasures and conveniences of it Why should he gape after the goods of the earth who is infected with a greater evil then that of hell The admirable man blessed Francis Borgia the great despiser of himself and the world out of this consideration was most content in the tribulations and want of all things temporal and the least comfort in his greatest necessities seemed too much for him All men wondered to see him so poor and the incommodities he suffered in his travail when he visited the Colledges of the Society in Spain Amongst the rest a certain Gentleman amazed at his great pains and sufferance said unto him Father how is it possible that having been so great a Lord you can endure the troubles and inconveniences of the wayes To whom the servant of God answered Sir do not pity me for I alwayes send before me a Harbinger who provides plentifully for all things necessary This Harbinger was the Knowledge of himself which in his greatest necessities made what he had appear too plentiful § 3. Besides this he who hath sinned ought to Consider that he hath need of Gods holy hand to draw him out of that misery or if he be already by repentance freed to preserve him from falling again into it That the means to obtain this is not the pride of the world the riches of the earth or the pleasures of the flesh but fasting sackcloth humiliation and penance Let him remember that of himself he is nothing and to that nothing hath added sin that being nothing he can do nothing that is good and that by sin he hath disobliged him who only could assist him in doing good Man is of himself nothing but a Lye and Sin two horrid and profound Abysses Let him imitate David who said I cried unto thee O Lord from the deeps what other deeps then those two of Nothing and of Sin which have no bottom Let him then who hath once offended his Creator know himself and where he remains Let him pray sigh and crie from his nothing and from the depth of his
as well as Subject owe to the sin of our first Parents May you then being translated hence to the embraces of your Creator experimentally finde the true difference between things temporal and eternal in the blisful vision and fruition of our great All our all-mighty all-lovely all-glorious God who is all wonders at one sight all joyes and comforts in their sourse all blessings in their center the end of all labours the reward of all services the desire of all hearts and the accomplishment of all hopes and wishes May he then be to your Majesty all this which is here briefly expressed and infinitely more which is beyond expression And may he secure all these blessings to you for ever and crown them with his glorious Attribute of Eternity This is the no less hearty then dutiful prayer of MADAM Your Majesties Most humbly devoted In Christ Jesus J. W. A Summary of the Chapters in this Book LIB I. Cap. 1. OVr Ignorance of what are the true goods and not onely of things Eternal but Temporal pa. 1. Cap. 2. How efficacious is the Consideration of Eternity for the change of our lives p. 6. Cap. 3. The memory of Eternity is of it self more efficacious than that of Death p. 12. Cap. 4. The estate of men in this life and the miserable forgetfulness which they have of Eternity p. 18. Cap. 5. What is Eternity according to St. Gregory Nazianzen and St. Dionysius p. 25. Cap. 6. What Eternity is according to Boetius and Plotinus p. 29. Cap. 7. Wherein is declared what Eternity is according to St. Bernard p. 33. Cap. 8. What it is in Eternity to have no end p. 41. Cap. 9. How Eternity is without change p. 52. Cap. 10. How Eternity is without comparison p. 60. Cap. 11. What is Time according to Aristotle and other Philosophers and the little consistence of life p. 68. Cap. 12. How short life is for which respect all things temporal are to be despised p. 74. Cap. 13. What is Time according to St. Augustine p. 82. Cap. 14. Time it the occasion of Eternity and how a Christian ought to benefit himself by it p. 89. Cap. 15. What is Time according to Plato and Plotinus and how deceitful is all that which is temporal p. 98. LIB II. Cap. 1. Of the End of Temporal Life p. 104. Cap. 2. Remarkable Conditions of the end of Temporal Life p. 121. Cap. 3. Of that moment which is the Medium betwixt Time and Eternity which being the end of Life is therefore most terrible p. 140. Cap. 4. Wherefore the End of Life is most terrible p. 147. Cap. 5. How God even in this Life passes a most rigorous Judgement p. 174. Cap. 6. Of the End of all Time p. 181. Cap. 7. How the Elements and the Heavens are to change at the end of Time p. 185. Cap. 8. How the World ought to conclude with so dreadful an End in which a general Judgement is to pass upon all that is in it p. 205. Cap. 9. Of the last day of Time p. 213. LIB III. Cap. 1. The mutability of things temporal makes them worthy of contempt p. 228. Cap. 2. How great and desperate soever our Temporal evils are yet hope may make them tolerable p. 238. Cap. 3. We ought to consider what we may come to be p. 243. Cap. 4. The Change of humane things shews clearly their vanity and how worthy they are to be contemned p. 253. Cap. 5. The baseness and disorder of Temporal things and how great a Monster men have made the World p. 261. Cap. 6. The Littleness of things Temporal p. 269. Cap. 7. How miserable a thing is this Temporal Life p. 285. Cap. 8. How little is Man whilest he is Temporal p. 309. Cap. 9. How deceitful are all things Temporal p. 319. Cap. 10. The dangers and prejudices of things Temporal p. 326. LIB IV. Cap. 1. Of the Greatness of things Eternal p. 337. Cap. 2. The Greatness of the Eternal honour of the Just p. 347. Cap. 3. The Riches of the Eternal Kingdom of Heaven p. 359. Cap. 4. The Greatness of Eternal Pleasures p. 368. Cap. 5. How happy is the Eternal Life of the Just p. 378. Cap. 6. The Excellency and Perfection of the Bodies of the Saints in the Life Eternal p. 389. Cap. 7. How we are to seek after Heaven and to preferr it before all the goods of the Earth p. 399. Cap. 8. Of Evils Eternal and especially of the great Poverty Dishonour and Ignominy of the Damned p. 411. Cap. 9. The Punishment of the Damned from the horribleness of the place into which they are banished from Heaven and made Prisoners in Hell p. 422. Cap. 10. Of the Slavery Chastisement and Pains Eternal p. 429. Cap. 11. Of Eternal Death and Punishment of Talion in the Damned p. 450. Cap. 12. The Fruit which may be drawn from the consideration of Eternal evils p. 459. Cap. 13. The infinite guilt of Mortal Sin by which we lose the felicity of Heaven and fall into eternal evils p. 467. LIB V. Cap. 1. Notable difference betwixt the Temporal and Eternal the one being the End and the other the Means Wherein also is treated of the End for which Man was created p. 487. Cap. 2. By the knowledge of our selves may be known the use of things Temporal and the little esteem we are to make of them p. 506. Cap. 3. The value of goods Eternal is made apparent unto us by the Incarnation of the Son of God p. 515. Cap. 4. The baseness of Temporal goods may likewise appear by the Passion and Death of Christ Jesus p. 524. Cap. 5. The importance of the Eternal because God hath made himself a Means for our obtaining it and hath left his most holy Body as a Pledge of it in the Blessed Sacrament p. 540. Cap. 6. Whether Temporal things are to be demanded of God And that we onely ought to aym in our prayers at goods Eternal p. 553. Cap. 7. How happy are those who renounce Temporal goods for the securing of the Eternal p. 561. Cap. 8. Many who have despised and renounced all that is Temporal p. 569. Cap. 9. The Love which we owe unto God ought so to fill our souls that it leave no place or power to love the Temporal p. 581. Faults escaped in the Print P. 8. L. 25. more R. of more P. 46. L. 28. resting R. rosting P. 65. L. 20. knowest R. knewest p. 139. L. 23. are die R. are to die P. 198. L. 27. Borosus R. Berosus P. 200. L. 29. hard R. hardness P. 232. L. 24. Persians R. Assyrians P. 232. L. 26. Assyrians R. Persians P. 338. L. 10. intention R. intension P. 416. L. 35. the depriving R. in the depriving P. 555. L. 38. know R. knew What else may be faulty the Pen may mend Moreover P. 386. L. 35. after those words any thing to maintain it you may add if you please These representations are to be understood
contempt of what is temporal since the first step unto Christian perfection according to the Counsel of Christ is to renounce all that we possess of earth that being so freed from those impediments of Christian perfection we may employ our selves in the consideration and memory of that Eternity which expects us hereafter as a reward of our holy works and exercises of vertue This horrid voice Eternity Eternity is to sound often in our hearts Thou not onely art to die but being dead eternity attends thee Remember there is a Hell without end and fix it in thy memory that there is a Glory for ever This consideration That if thou shalt observe the Law of God thou shalt be eternally rewarded and if thou break it thou shalt suffer pains without end will be far more powerful with thee then to know that the goods and evils of this life are to end in death Be mindful therefore of Eternity and resound in the inmost part of thy soul Eternity Eternity For this the Church when it consecrates the Fathers of it which are Bishops puts them in minde of this most powerful and efficacious memory of Eternity bidding them think of eternal years as David did And in the assumption and consecration of Popes they burn before their eyes a small quantity of flax with these words Holy Father so passes away the glory of the world that by the sight of that short and transitory blaze he may call to minde the flames eternal And Martin the fifth for his imprese and devise took a flaming fire which in short time burnt and consumed a Popes Tiara an Imperial Diadem a Regal Crown and a Cardinals Hat to give them to understand that if they complyed not with the duties of their places they were in a short time to burn in the eternal flames of hell the memory whereof he would preserve ever present by this most profitable Symbol §. 2. The name of Isachar whose Blessing from his Father was as we have formerly said to lye down and rest betwixt the two limits of Eternity signifies him That hath a memory or The man of reward or pay The Holy Ghost by this mystery charging us with the memory of eternal rewards And the Lord to shew how precious it was in his divine esteem and how profitable for us caused this name of Isachar to be engraven in a precious Amethyst which was one of those stones worn by the High-Priest in the Rational and one of those also rcveal'd unto St. John to be of the foundation of the City of God By it saith St. Anselme is signified the memory of Eternity which is the most principal foundation in the building of all perfection Truely if we consider the properties of this stone they are so many marks and properties of the memory of Eternity and of the benefits which that soul reaps Albert. Mag. Milius Ruiz v. Cesium de Min. lib. 4. p. 2. cap. 14. sect 14. which seriously considers it The Amethyst cause Vigilancy And what requires it more then the passage betwixt the two extreams of eternal glory and eternal pains What thing in the world ought to awake us more then the danger of falling into hell fire How could that man sleep which were to pass over a narrow plank of half a foot broad which served as a bridge betwixt two most high rocks the windes impetuously blowing and he if his foot slipt certain to fall into a most vast abyss No less is the danger of this life The way by which we are to pass unto Heaven is most streight the windes of temptations violent the dangers of occasions frequent the harms by ill examples infectious and the deceits of wicked Counsellors very many How then can a Christian sleep and be careless in so evident a peril Without all doubt it is more difficult to be saved considering the depravedness of our nature and the deceitful ambushes of the Devil then for a heavy man to pass over a heady and rapid river upon a small and bruised reed They say also of the Amethyst that besides the making him watchful who carries it it frees him from evil thoughts which how can that man have who bears Eternity in his mind how can he think upon the short pleasures of his senses who considers the eternal torments due unto his soul if he shall but consent to the least mortal sin The Amethyst also resists drunkenness preserving him that wears it in his senses and judgment and there is nothing that more preserves a mans judgment in the middest of the wine of delights in this life then the memory of the other and that for the pleasure of one moment here he is not only to suffer for hours for dayes for moneths for years but for worlds and a world of worlds hereafter The Amethyst besides this preserves the wearer from the force of poison And what greater Antidote against the poison of sin then to remember Hell which he deservs and Heaven which he loses by committing it The Amethyst also quiets a man and settles his thoughts And what can be more efficacious to free us from the disturbance of this life to bridle the insolence of covetousness to repress the aspiring of ambition then to consider the blessings of Eternity which attend the humble and poor in spirit Finally the Amethyst conferrs fruitfulness and this great thought of Eternity is fruitful of holy works For who is he that considers with a lively faith that for a thing so sleight and momentary he may enjoy the reward of eternal glory and will not be animated to work all he is able and to endure and suffer what shall happen for God Almighty and his Cause O how fruitful of Heroical works is this holy thought Eternal glory expects me the Triumphs of Martyrs the Victories of Virgins the Mortifications of Confessors are the effects of this consideration O holy thought O precious Amethyst that makes vigilant and attentive the negligent and careless that gives wisdom and judgment to the most deceived that heals those who are most ulcerated and corrupted with the poison of sin that quiets and pacifies the motions and troubles of our concupiscences that makes the most tepid and barren of vertues fruitful of holy works who will not endeavour to obtain and fix thee in his Soul O that Christians would so grave thee in their heart that thou mightest never be blotted out nor removed from thence How differently would they then live to what they now do how would they shine in their works for although the memory of Hell Heaven Death and Judgment be very efficacious for the reformation of our lives yet this of Eternity is like the quintescence of them all and virtually contains the rest CAP. IV. The Estate of Men in this life and the miserable forgetfulness which they have of Eternity BEfore we come to declare the conditions of Eternity whose consideration is so necessary for the leading of a holy
means to escape from death which he perceived was now ready to seise upon him Or that he would mitigate those great pains which he then suffered but for the space of one short hour Or that after he was departed this life he would procure him a good lodging though but for one night and no longer The Marquess answered that those were onely in the power of God and wished him to demand things feasible here upon earth and he would not fail to serve him Unto whom the sick Souldier replied I now too late perceive all my labour and travail to be lost and all the services which I have done you in the whole course of my life to be vain and fruitless and turning himself unto those who were present spake unto them with much feeling and tears in his eyes My Bretheren behold how vainly I have spent my time being so precious a jewel in the serving of this Master obeying his Commands with much care and great danger of my Soul which at this instant is the grief I am most sensible of See how small is his power since in all these pains which afflict me he is not able to give me ease for one hours space Wherefore I admonish you that you open your eyes in time and let my error be a warning unto you that you preserve your selves from so notable a danger and that you endeavour in this world to serve such a Lord as may not onely free you from these present perplexities and preserve you from future evils but may be able to crown you with glory in another life And if the Lord by the intercession of your prayers shall be pleased to restore my health I promise hereafter not to imploy my self in the service of so poor and impotent a Master who is not able to reward me but my whole endeavour shall be to serve him who hath power to protect me and the whole world by his Divine vertue With this great repentance he dyed leaving us an example to benefit our selves by that time which God bestows upon us here for the obtaining of eternal reward § 2. Let us now come unto the second condition which is the Uncertainty of time in the Circumstances For as it is most certain that we are to dye so it is most uncertain How we are to dye and as there is nothing more known than that death is to seise upon all so there is nothing less understood than When and in What manner Who knows whether he is to dye in his old age or in his youth if by sickness or struck by a Thunder-bolt if by grief or stabbed by Poniards if suddenly or slowly if in a City or in a Wilderness if a year hence or to day the doors of death are ever open and the enemy continually lies in ambush and when we least think of him will assault us How can a man be careless to provide for a danger which ever threatens him Let us see with what art men keep their temporal things even at such time as they run no hazard The Shepheards guard their Flocks with watchful Dogs although they believe the Wolf to be far off onely because he may come And walled Towers are kept by Garrisons in time of peace because an enemy either has or may approach them But when are we secure of death when can we say that now it will not come why do we not then provide our selves against so apparent danger In frontier Towns the Centinels watch day and night although no Enemy appears nor any assault is feared why do we not alwayes watch since we are never secure from the assaults of death He who suspected that Theeves were to enter his house would wake all night because they should at no hour find him unprovided It being then not a suspicion but an apparent certainty that death will come and we know not when why do we not alwayes watch We are in a continual danger and therefore ought to be continually prepared It is good ever to have our Accompts made with God since we know not but he may call us in such haste as we shall have no time to perfect them It is good to play a sure game and be ever in the grace of God Who would not tremble to hang over some vast precipice wherein if he fell he were certain to be dashed in a thousand pieces and that by so weak a supporter as a thread This or in truth much greater is the danger of him who is in mortal sin who hangs over hell by the thread of life a twist so delicate that not a knife but the wind and the least fit of sickness breaks it Wonderful is the danger wherein he stands who continues to the space of one Ave Maria in mortal sin Death hath time enough to shoot his arrow in the speaking a word the twinkling of an eye suffices Who can laugh and be pleased whilest he stands naked and disarmed in the middest of his Enemies Amongst as many Enemies is man as there are wayes to death which are innumerable The breaking of a vein in the body The bursting of an Imposthume in the entrails A vapour which flyes up to the head A passion which oppresses the heart A tyle which falls from a house A piercing air which enters by some narrow cranny Vn yerro de cuenta A hundred thousand other occasions open the doors unto death and are his Ministers It is not then safe for man to be disarmed and naked of the grace of God in the middest of so many adversaries and dangers of death which hourly threaten him We issue from the wombs of our Mothers as condemned persons out of prison and walk towards execution for the guilt which we have contracted by Original sin Who being led to execution would entertain himself by the way with vain conceipts and frivolous jests we are all condemned persons who go to the Gallows though by different wayes which we our selves know not Some the straight way and some-by by-paths but are all sure to meet in death Who knows whether he goe the direct way or windes about by turns whether he shall arrive there soon or stay later all that we know is that we are upon the way and are not far from thence We ought therefore still to be prepared and free from the distracting pleasures of this life for fear we fall suddenly and at unawares upon it This danger of sudden death is sufficient to make us distaste all the delights of the earth Dionysius King of Sicily that he might undeceive a young Philosopher who therefore held him to enjoy the chief felicity because he wanted nothing of his pleasure caused him one day to be placed at a Royal Table and served with all variety of splendid entertainments but over the place where he was seated caused secretly a sharp-pointed Sword to be hung directly over his head sustained only by a horses hair This danger was sufficient to
not Masters of time and the things which are in it but are as Stewards to account for it and them Being therefore to give a reason how we have employed them for the service of God Almighty let us not without reason abuse them for our own vain gust and pleasure CAP. V. How God even in this life passes a most rigorous Judgement ALl that we have hitherto spoken concerning the rigour of the Divine Tribunal before which the Soul is at the end of life to appear and to give an account unto his Redeemer is far short of what really is to be To the end therefore that we may conceive it something better I shall here propose the severity wherewith God executes his Judgements even in this life wherein he makes use of mercy that from thence we may collect the rigour of the other where he is onely to use his Justice Ezeck 7. By the Prophet Ezekiel he speaks unto his people thus I will pour out all my rage upon thee and will accomplish my fury in thee I will judge thee according to thy wayes and will lay forth all thy wickedness against thee my eyes shall not pardon thee neither will I have mercy I will charge thee with all thy misdeeds and thy abominations shall be in the middle of thee and thou shalt know that I am the Lord which smites And presently he adds My wrath shall be upon all the people the sword without and pestilence and famine within he who is in the field shall die by the sword and they who are in the City shall be devoured by pestilence and famine and they who flye shall save themselves and shall all remain in the Mountains as the Doves of the Valleys trembling in their iniquity their hands shall be disjoynted and their knees shall resolve into water for the great fear and amazement which God in his wrath shall send vpon them But it is not much that the Lord should deal thus with sinners who have forsaken their God since even against those who are desirous to do all for his honour he proceeds with much rigour Zach. 3. Let us see how the Prophet Zacharit sets forth unto us the High-Priest who then lived the Son of Josedeck as a lively representation of the Divine Judgement whom he makes to appear before an Angel who there exercised the Office of a Judge cloathed in foul and polluted Garments in so much as the Lord calls him a Brand taken out of the fire and Satan standing by his side to accuse him If then this great Priest zealous of the glory of God stood so dejected and confused in the presence of an Angel as he appeared as a black and burnt coal of hell in unclean and sooty Garments how shall a grievous Sinner and despiser of the Divine service appear before God himself But this is more fully signified in the Apocalyps where our Saviour himself pronounced judgement against the seaven Bishops of Asia who were then all alive and most of them esteemed great Servants of God and so holy as was St. Timothy the beloved Disciple of Paul St. Polycarp St. Quadratus St. Carpus St. Sagaris all in great opinion for sanctity and holiness of life Let us first behold in what manner our Saviour Christ appeared when he came to judge them and after let us consider the rigorous charge which he laid against them For the first to signifie that nothing could be hid or concealed from him he stood in the middest of seaven Candlesticks or of seaven Lamps like the Golden Candlestick in the Temple in each of which was a lighted Candle in his hand he held seaven Stars whose beams and splendour enlightned all about him and above all his face was as the Sun at midday in his greatest force which leaves not the least atome undiscovered In such a brightness of Candles Stars and Sun there was no shadow to give us to understand that nothing how little soever can be hidden from the all-seeing eyes of our most just Judge unto whom all things will appear clearly and distinctly as they are in themselves but not content with so many arguments of the evidence which he shall have of all offences he adds That the eyes of the Judge were as flaming fire more penetrating than the eyes of Lynceus to see and search into all things and to note also the rigour and severity wherewith he looks upon offences when he comes to judge them This certainly were sufficient of it self to set forth the rigour of his justice but to make it appear yet more terrible he declares it by another figure of a two-edged Sword which he held in his mouth to denote that the rigour of his works shall be greater than those of his words although his words themselves were as cutting swords In conclusion all was so full of terrour and threatning as although it nothing concerned St. John as being none of those who were to be judged yet it caused so great a fear and amazement in him that he fell as dead upon the ground If then St. John only beholding the wrathful countenance of our Lord not against himself but others with whom also he intended to use mercy it made his feet to fail and his pulses to remain without motion how shall it fare with that sinner who shall behold him all incensed against him and that at such a time when he is onely to use his justice I believe that if the Souls of Sinners were capable of death the terrour of that fight would bereave them of a thousand lives Let us now see what was found by those eyes of fire with which Christ so narrowly examined the works of those seaven Bishops who were such as he himself vouchsafes to call them Angels Truly he found much to reprehend in them that it might be verified which was spoken in Job that he found iniquity in his Angels Who would have thought that St. Timothy of whom the Apostle was so confident and of whom he made so great esteem should deserve that God should take away his Chair and deprive him of his Church of Ephesus yet Christ found him worthy of so great a chastisement and threatens to do it if he did not amend and complains that he was fallen from his former zeal exhorting him to do penance which certainly he performed as perceiving it very necessary for him Greater faults he found in the Bishop of Pergamus as also in him of Thiatira who was St. Carpus and in like manner exhorts them both to do penance And that it may appear how different are the judgements of God from those of men although the Bishop of Sardis was held by all for a most holy man that he had gained a great opinion of vertue and that he did many good works yet Jesus Christ found he was so far from being a Saint that he remained in mortal sin O holy good God who would not tremble that he who passed amongst men for
an Angel should by thee be reputed as a Devil but no less dreadful is that which passed with the Bishop of Laodicia whose Conscience did not accuse him of any thing who thought he had complyed with his obligations that he exercised great vertues had no remorse of any grievous fault or matter of importance and yet for all this he was so contrary in the Divine sight that the Lord sayes he was a miser and miserable poor blind and naked of all vertue Well said the Wise-man That man knoweth not whether he be worthy of love or hate And David had reason to demand of God that he would cleanse him from the sins he knew not O most holy Lord and most righteous Judge how happens it that men fear thee not since for what they themselves know they ought to tremble and although they hold themselves for just and are not conscious of any enormous fault yet that which thou knowest onely is sufficient to condemn them Let us quake that God is to demand an account of those sins which we our selves are ignorant of as he did of this Bishop of Laodicia and also of sins committed by others as he did of him of Thiatira The divine eyes of Christ pierce not only into our secret sins and the sins of others but also discover those of Omission and therefore he reprehended the omission of the Bishop of Pergamus although he was very faithful unto God in all good works and sought his glory and the exaltation of his holy name and likewise searches into all our evil works as well known as hid as well our own as others and also into our good works when they are not done with fervour and perfection Let us tremble that in St. Timothy he found his works not fervent but much more that in the holy Bishop of Philadelphia who was irreprehensible and had not slackned nor fallen off from his first zeal yet he found wherein to reprehend him not for commission of what was bad not for omission of what was good not for remission of his former fervour but only because he had little vertue whereas in truth this most holy Bishop had great merits for which he was much favoured and beloved of God But as our obligations are infinite so there is no vertue no sancticty which in his fight appears not little So precise so exact is the Divine judgement that of seaven Bishops which were reputed Angels he found in six wherewith to judge and reprehend them in one negligence in another inconstancy and dismaidness in another slackness and remissness of zeal in another weariness and want of perseverance in another fear in another tepidness and indiscretion and in two at least that they were in mortal sin And if in such Angels his divine eyes found wherewith to be offended what will they find in us sinners The knowledge that Christ had judged them was of great profit unto those Bishops causing them ever after to comply with their duties with great fervour and for those who are known who they were it is certain that they died Saints and for such are celebrated by the holy Church It may also be profitable unto us to know that we are likewise to be judged with equal rigour that we may not offend him unto whom we owe so much that we may not be tepid in his service but perform our works fully perfectly and compleatly Let the tepid fear those words which our Saviour said unto one of those Bishops Apoc. 3. I would thou wert either hot or cold but because thou art luke-warm I shall begin to vomit thee out of my mouth Of this Menace an Interpreter notes that it is more dreadful Alcazar than if it had been of condemnation as intimating somthing more in particular than is to be found in the common sort of Reprobates which is signified by that Metaphor of Vomit which denotes an irreconcilable detestation on Gods part a casting off from his paternal providence a denying of his efficacious helps and a great hardness of heart in the offender Let us tremble at this threat be Careful also that so we may not hear from the mouth of Christ that which he said unto the Bishop of Sardis I find not thy works full before my God Let us therefore see how our Charity stands whether it be full or not For it is not full if we love this man and not that if we wish well unto our benefactor and abhorre him who does us injurie if we work onely and not also suffer let us see if we bear the burthens of our neighbour as if they were our own if we preferre the conveniency of others before our own if we embrace with a desire of pleasing God Almighty things hard and painful and if we love him not with words but deeds Let us see if our Humility be full if we do not onely hate honours but desire to be despised if we do not onely not preferre our selves before any but abase our selves below all Let us see if our Patience be full if we had not rather suffer this than that if we do not onely suffer but not complain Let us see whether our Obedience be full if we obey in things easie and not in difficult and troublesome if our equal and not inferiour if we look upon God and not upon Man if we do it with repugnancy and not with delight See if the rest of thy vertues be full thou art to give an account of all endeavour to give a good one see if thou be not found in that day with vain and empty works for thou shalt not onely be demanded if thou hast done them good ones but if thou hast done them well If even in this life God will chastize our carelesness what will he do in the other Let us draw strength out of weakness that we may with all our power and all our forces serve him who hath done so much for us Let us see what we have received that we may know what we are to return let us look upon the greatness of those benefits which have been conferred upon us that we may know how to measure our gratitude accordingly and as the benefits of God have been full and plentifully heaped upon us let not our thanks and services be short and nigardly Our Lord forgot not to put the seaven Prelates in mind of their obligation for his benefits and therefore said unto the Bishop of Sardis Apoc. 3. Keep in thy mind in what manner thou hast received because in divine benefits we are not onely to be thankful for the substance but for the manner and circumstances of them that our gratitude may not onely consist in the substance of good works but in the manner and circumstance of doing them performing them fully perfectly and compleatly and seeing God hath bestowed his benefits out of his infinite love upon us let us also serve him with a perfect and unfeigned affection and
with which the rich man remained amazed and was taught that to give himself over to gluttony and the immoderate pleasure of his taste was no less hurtful for him than to feed on poisonful creatures or to have to do with Lions Serpents and Tygers And it is certain that Lions and the most furious beasts have not kill'd so many as have died by surfeits and pleasing too much their pallats CAP. VI. Of the littleness of things Temporal SEtting aside how vain the things of this World are let us particularly consider how little they are and we shall perceive that though their vanity which swells and blows them up seems to extend them yet they are in themselves poor short and little especially if we compare them with things eternal Beginning therefore with that temporal good which seems to have the greatest bulk and makes the greatest noise to wit Honour Fame and Renown we shall see how narrow it is Men desire that their fame should ring through the whole World and that all should know their names and if they did what are all in respect of those in the other World since the whole Earth in respect of the Heavens is but a point But who is he that can be known of all who live Millions of men there are in the World who know not whether there be an Emperour of Germany or a King of Spain Let no man then afflict himself for this vain honour for even in his own Country all shall not know him Many thousand years are past and no man knew thee and of those who shall be born hereafter few shall remember thee and although thou remainest in the memory of those yet they also in the end must die and with them thine and their own memory must perish and thou shalt as before thou wert continue a whole eternity without being known or celebrated by any And even now whilest thou livest there are not many who know thee and of those most of them so bad that thou oughtest to be ashamed that such mouthes should praise thee who speak ill even of one another Wherefore then doest thou torment thy self for a thing so short so vile and so vain All these things are so certain that even the Gentils acknowledged them Hear onely one who was placed in the highest degree of glory and dignity in the whole World Marc. Anton. l. 3. p. 200. since he was Lord of it the Emperour Marcus Antoninus who speaks in this manner Perhaps thou art sollicitous of honour Behold how quickly oblivion blots out all things Behold a Chaos of eternity both before and after How vain is the noise of fame how great inconstancie and uncertainty of humane judgements and opinions in how narrow a compass are all things inclosed The World is but a point and of it how small a corner is inhabited and who and how many are those in it who are to praise thee And a little after he adds He who desires fame and honour after death thinks not that he who is to remember him shall shortly die also and in the same manner he who is to succeed after him untill that all memory which is to be propagated by mortal men be blotted out But suppose that those who are to remember thee were immortal what could it import thee being dead nay even alive what could it profit thee to be praised all that is fair is fair of it self and is perfected within it self and to be praised is no part of the beauty He therefore who is celebrated is for that reason neither better nor worse These Antidotes are drawn by the Pagan Prince against the poison of ambition Why therefore should we Christians esteem any honour but that of God What shall I say of the vanity of those titles which many have assumed against all reason and justice onely to make themselves known in the World Let us judge how it will fare with us of Europe by those who have taken titles upon them in Asia For if the fame of those in Asia arrive not to the knowledge of us in Europe no more shall ours in Europe to theirs in Asia The name of Echebar was thought by his Subjects to be eternal and that all the World did not only know Jarricus in Thesau Indic but fear him But ask here in Europe who he was and no man hath heard of him and demand now of the most learned and few shall resolve you unless perchance he find here in my writing that he raigned in Mogor How few have heard of the name of Vencatapadino Ragiu he imagined that there was no man in the World who knew him not The same thought had his Servants and called him The Lord of Kings and supreme Emperour The titles which he arrogated to himself and put in his Edicts were these The Spouse of good fortune King of great Provinces King of the greatest Kings and God of Kings Lord of all the Horsemen Master of those who cannot speak Emperour of three Emperours Conquerour of all he sees and Preserver of all he conquers Formidable unto the eight Regions of the World Lord of the Provinces which he overcomes Destroyer of the Mahometan Armies Disposer of the riches of Zeilan He who cut off the head of the invincible Viravalano Lord of the East South North and West and of the Sea Hunter of Elephants He that lives and glories in his military valour These titles of honour are enjoyed by the most excellent in warlike forces Vencatapadino Ragiu which rules and governs this World How many can tell me before I declare it here that he was the King of Narsinga If then these warlike and potent Princes are not known in Europe No more shall Charles the Fift and the Grand Captain and many other Excellent men in arms and litterature which have flourished in these parts be known in Asia and Africa If we shall reflect upon the truth of those titles which many arrogate unto themselves we shall perceive them all to be vain How many are called Highness and Excellence who are of a base and abject spirit and continue in mortal sin which is the meanest and lowest thing in the World How many are called Screnissimi who have their understanding darkened and their will perverted Others call themselves most Magnificent with as much reason as Nero might be called most Clement This vanity hath proceeded so far that men have not feared to usurp those titles which only belong to God and have thereupon raised great warres and slain innumerable people Wherefore St. John said that the Beast which rose out of the Sea had upon his head names of Blasphemy and afterwards that the purple Beast was full of names of Blasphemy in regard of the blood that hath been spilt in the World for those vain titles and some of them contrary unto the essence of God as the calling of Rome Eternal and deifying her Emperours which was no better than blasphemy The things wherein
his Body cast forth a most fragrant perfume If this be in corruptible flesh what shall be in the immortal Bodies of the Saints The taste also in that blessed Country shall not want the delight of its proper object For although the Saints shall not there feed which were to necessitate that happy state unto something besides it self yet the tongue and pallat shall be satiated with most pleasant and savoury relishes so as with great decency and cleanliness they shall have the delight of meat without the trouble of eating by reason of the great delicacy of this Celestial taste The glory of the Saints is often signified in holy Scripture under the names of a Supper Banquet Manna Aug. lib. de spiritu vita Laur. Justin de Dis Mon. ca. 23. St. Austin sayes it cannot be explicated how great shall be the delight and sweetness of the taste which shall eternally be found in Heaven And St. Laurentius Justinianus affirms that an admirable sweetness of all that can be delightful to the taste shall satisfie the pallat with a most agreeable satiety If Esau sold his Birthright for a dish of Lentil pottage well may we mortifie our taste here upon earth that we may enjoy that perfect and incomparable one in Heaven The touch also shall there receive a most delightful entertainment All they tread upon shall seem unto the Just to be flowers and the whole disposition of their Bodies shall be ordered with a most sweet and exquisite temperature For as the greatest penances of the Saints were exercised in this sense by the afflictions endured in their Bodies so it is reason that this sense should then receive a particular reward And as the torments of the damned in hell are most expressed in that sense so the Bodies of the Blessed in Heaven are in that sense to receive a special joy and refreshment And as the heat of that infernal fire without light is to penetrate even to the entrals of those miserable persons so the candor and brightness of the celestial light is to penetrate the bodies of the Blessed and fill them with an incomparable delight and sweetness All then what we are to do is to live in that true and perfect life all is to be joy in that eternal happiness Therefore as St. Anselme sayes Ansel de Simil. c. 59. the eyes nose mouth hands even to the bowels and marrow of the bones and all and every part of the body in general and particular shall be sensible of a most admirable pleasure and content Joan. de Tamba Trac de Deliciis sensibilibus Paradisi Et Nich. de Nise de quat Noviss 3. Myst 4. Consi The Humanity of Christ our Redeemer is to be the principal and chief joy of all the Senses and therefore John Tambescensis and Nicholas of Nise say that as the intellectual knowledge of the Divinity of Christ is the joy and essential reward of the Soul so the sensitive knowledge of the Humanity of Christ is the chief good and essential joy of the Senses and the utmost end and felicity whereunto they can aspire This it seems was meant by our Saviour in St. John when speaking unto the Father he said This is life eternal that is essential blessedness as Nicholas de Nise interprets it that they know thee the only true God in which is included the essential glory of the Soul and him whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ in which is noted the essential blessedness of the Senses in so much as onely in the Humanity of our Saviour the appetite of the Senses shall be so perfectly satisfied as they shall have no more to desire but in it shall receive all joy pleasure and fulness of delight for the eyes shall be the sight of him who is above all beauty for the ears one onely word of his shall sound more sweetly than all the harmonious musick of the Celestial spirits for the smell the fragrancy that shall issue from his most holy Body shall exceed the perfume of spices for the taste and touch to kiss his feet and sacred wounds shall be beyond all sweetness It is much also to be noted that the blessed Souls shall be crowned with some particular joyes which the very Angels are not capable of For first it is they onely who are to enjoy the Crowns of Doctors Virgins and Martyrs since no Angel can have the glory to have shed his blood and died for Christ neither to have overcome the flesh and by combats and wrastlings subjected it unto reason Wherefore Saint Bernard said The chastity of men was more glorious than that of Angels Secondly men shall have the glory of their bodies and joy of their senses which the Angels cannot For as they want the enemy of the Spirit which is the Flesh so they must want the glory of the victory Neither shall they have this great joy of mankind in being redeemed by Christ from sin and as many damnations into hell as they have committed mortal sins and to see themselves now freed and secure from that horrid evil and so many enemies of the Soul which they never had which must needs produce a most unspeakable joy Cap. VI. The excellency and perfection of the Bodies of the Saints in the life eternal WE will not forbear also to consider what man shall be when he is eternal when being raised again at the great day he shall enter Soul and Body into Heaven Let us run over if you please all those kinds of goods which expect us in that Land of promise When God promised Abraham the Country of Palestine he commanded him to look upon it and travel and compass it from side to side Gen. 13. Lift up thine eyes saith the Lord and from the place where thou standest look towards the North and towards the South and towards the East and towards the West All the land which thou seest I will give unto thee and thy seed for ever And immediately after Arise and walk the land in length and breadth for I will certainly give it thee We may take these words as spoken unto our selves since they seem to promise us the Kingdom of Heaven for no man shall enter into that which he docs not desire and no man can desire that as he ought to do which he has not walked over in his consideration for that which is not known is hardly desired And therefore we ought often to contemplate the greatness of this Land the length of its eternity and the breadth and largeness of its felicity which is so far extended that it fills not onely the Soul but the Body with happiness and glory that glory of the Soul redounding unto the Body and perfecting it with those four most excellent gifts and replenishing it with all felicity which can be imagined or desired If Moses seeing an Angel in a corporal figure onely upon the back part and but in passage received so great a glory from
reason it is not a sufficient expression to say they are evils but they are to be tearmed evils excessively great No man will admire this who knows the grievousness of a mortal sin for committing of which as he is a man he deserves hell and as he is Christian according to St. Austin a new hell that is an Infidel merits one hell and a Christian two who knowing Christ incarnate and crucified for him durst yet sin and offend him Sin is an excessive evil because it is an infinite evil and therefore it is not too much if it be chatized with infinite evils It is an evil which is greater than the whole collection of all other evils and for this reason 't is not too much rigour that the sinner should be chastized with the collection of all evils together Those who wonder at the terribleness of eternal pains know not the terribleness of sin Whereupon St. Austin sayes Aug. lib. 21. c. 12. Therefore the eternal pains seem hard and injust unto humane apprehension because in the weakness of our natural understanding the sense of that eternal wisdom is wanting by which might be perceived the great malice of the first prevatication If then for that first sin committed when Christ had not yet died for man eternal damnation was not thought too much what shall it be when we know that our Redeemer was so gracious as to give his life because we should not sin From the necessity of so costly and precious a Medecine may be collected the greatness of the infirmity I say the greatness and danger of a disease is known by the extraordinary remedies which are applyed unto it and by the things which are sought out for the cure and without which the malady would be without remedy We may therefore gather the infinite malice of a mortal sin because there was no other means sufficient but one so extraordinary as was God to become Man and give his own life for Man dying a death so shameful and painful as he did offering a price so great as was the excessive worth and infinite price of his merits and passion Sin is an injurie against God and as the injurie increases according to the greatness and worth of the person offended so God being infinite the injury becomes of infinite malice and as God is a good which includes all goods so a mortal sin which is an injury done unto him is a mischief which exceeds all evils and ought to be punished with all pains and torments § 3. Let us now consider the several sorts of pains in Hell and the greatness of them In the Roman Laws according to Tully and Albertus Magnus we find mentioned eight several kindes of punishments Alber. Mag. l. 7. Comp. Theolog. c. 22. which are The punishment of Loss when one is mulcted in his goods The punishment of Infamy Banishment Imprisonment Slavery Whipping Death and the punishment of Talion To these may be reduced all the rest and we shall find the Divine Justice to exercise them all upon those who have despised his mercy and injured his infinite bounty and goodness In the first place there is the pain of Loss and that so rigorous that the depriving the damned Soul of one onely thing they take from him all good things For they deprive him of God in whom they are all comprised This is the greatest pain that can be imagined O how miserable and poor must the damned Soul be who hath lost God for all eternity He who is condemned by humane Laws to the loss of his goods may if he live gain others at least in another Kingdom if he flye thither but he who is deprived of God where shall he find another God and who can flye from Hell God is the greatest good and it is therefore the greatest evil to be deprived of him Because as St. John Damascen sayes evil is the privation of good and that is to be esteemed the greatest evil which is a privation of the greatest good which is God and must certainly therefore cause more grief and resentment in the Damned than all the torments and punishments of Hell besides And in regard there is in Hell an eternal privation of God who is the chief Good the pain of Loss whereby one is deprived for ever of the greatest of all goods this privation will cause the greatest pain and torment If the burning of a hand cause an insufferable pain by reason that the excessive heat deprives the Body of its natural temper and good constitution which is but a poor and short good how shall he be tormented who is deprived and eternally separated from so great a Good as is God If a bone displaced or out of joynt causeth intolerable grief because it is deprived of his due state and place what shall it cause in a rational creature to lye eternally separated from God who is the chief end for which he was created Chrys 24. in Math. Tom. 2. fol. 82 p. 2. St. Chrysostome gives us some understanding of this grief when he sayes He who burns in Hell loses also the Kingdom of Heaven which is certainly a greater punishment than that torment of flames I know many who are afraid of Hell but I dare confidently say that the amission of glory is far more bitter than all those pains which are to be suffered in Hell And no wonder that this cannot be exprest in words since we know not well the happiness of those divine rewards by the want of which we ought also to measure the infelicity of their loss but we shall then without doubt learn when we are taught by sad experience Then our eyes shall be opened then the vail shall be taken away then shall the wicked perceive to their greater grief and confusion the difference betwixt that eternal and chief good and the frail and transitory pleasures of this life If St. Chrysostome says this of the loss of the reward of eternal happiness that it is a greater evil than the torment of hell fire what shall the loss of God be not onely as our Good but also for as much that in himself he is the chief Good of which the damned are to be deprived for all eternity Moreover this condemnation of a Sinner unto the loss of God and all which is good shall extend so far that he shall be deprived even of the hope of what is good and shall be left for ever in that profound poverty and necessity without expectation of remedy or relief What greater want can any one have than to want all things and even hope of obtaining any thing We are amazed at the poverty of holy Job who from a Prince and a rich man came to lye upon a dunghil having nothing left but a piece of a broken pot to scrape away the putrifaction from his sores But even this shall fail the damned who would take it for a great Regalo to have a dunghil for their bed
in it of a most intolerable stench What shall I then say of the Tongue which is the instrument of so many wayes of sinning flattery lying murmuring calumniating gluttony and drunkenness who can express that bitterness which the miserable shall suffer greater than that of wormwood or aloes insomuch as the Scripture sayes The gall of dragons shall be their wine and they shall taste the poison of Asps for all eternity Unto which shall be joyned an intolerable thirst and dog-like hunger conformable unto which David said They shall suffer hunger as dogs Quintilian sayes Quintil. Declam ●2 That Famine is the most pressing of all necessities and most deformed of all evils that Plagues and Warres are happinesses in respect of it If then a Famine of eight dayes be the worst of temporal evils what shall that Famine be which is eternal Let our Epicures and Belly-Gods hear what the Son of God prophesies Luc. 6. Wo unto you who are full for you shall be an hungred and with such an hunger as shall be eternal If the other evils of this world as Quintilian affirms may be esteemed not much in comparison of hunger even in this temporal life what will they be in respect of the hunger of the life to come Hunger in this life does bring men to such extremities that not onely they come to desire to eat Dogs Cats Rats and Mice Snakes Toads Leather Dung and eat them in effect but also Mothers come to eat their own Children and men the flesh of their own arms as it fell out to Zeno the Emperour If hunger be so horrible a mischief in this life how will it afflict the damned in the other without all doubt the damned would rather tear themselves in pieces than suffer it Neither shall thirst torment them less The sense of Touching as it is the most extended sense of all the rest so shall it be the most tormented in that burning fire Bar. ad an 191. We are amazed to think of the inhumanity of Phalaris who roasted men alive in his brasen Bull. This was a toy in respect of that fire of Hell which penetrates the very entrails of the body without consuming them The burning of a finger only does cause so great a torment that it is unsufferable but far greater were it to burn the whole arm and far greater were it besides the arms to burn the leggs and far more violent torment would it be to burn the whole body This torment is so great that it cannot be expressed in words since it includes or comprises as many torments as the body of man hath joints sinews arteries c. and especially being caused by that so penetrating and true fire of which St. Austin sayes that this temporal fire is but a painted fire in respect of that in Hell in so much that the fire of Hell does exceed ours by so many degrees as a thing in life and reality exceeds the same in a picture In conformity to what is here said venerable Peter Cluniacensis writes and when we read such like stories from the representations therein contained we are to raise our thoughts to the substance therein represented This venerable man then writes That a wicked Priest being ready to give up the ghost there appeared unto him two fiery Devils who brought with them a Frying-pan in which they told him they would fry him in Hell and a drop of hot liquor then falling out of the Frying-pan upon his hand in a moment burnt him to the very bones in the sight of all that were present who remained astonished to see the efficacy and violence of that infernal fire Whereupon Nicholas of Nice sayes that if there were a fire made of all the wood in the world it would not be able to cause so much torment as the least spark of Hell-fire Caesarius does also write Caesar l. 12. mirac c. 23. That Theodosius Bishop of Mastrick had a Servant by name Eberbach who in a raging fit of anger gave himself to the Devil upon condition he would help him to take revenge upon his Enemies Some years after this man fell grievously sick of a disease that brought him to the point of death and being now dead in all mens judgement his soul was cast into a sea of fire where he remained suffering until such time as an Angel of Heaven came unto him and said Behold what they are to suffer that serve the Devil But if so great a mercy should be shewed unto thee as to grant thee longer life wouldst thou not spend it in doing penance for thy sins He replyed There can be nothing so hard or painful which I would not undergoe to escape this torment Then the Lord used that mercy to him as to let him return to the use of life and senses and rising off the Biere where he was already placed to be carried to burial all that were present were astonished at him who at the same instant began a course of life of most austere and rigorous penance He went bare-foot upon thorns and briars store of blood issuing from the wounds received He lived onely on bread and water and that in a very small quantity What money he had he gave to the poor There were many who wondering at the rigour of his penance endeavoured to moderate the excess of his fervour and austerities to whom he answered Wonder not hereat for I have suffered torments of a far different kind and if you had been there you would frame a far different apprehension of them And for to explicate the excessive torment that fire caused he said That if all the trees in the world were put in one heap and set on fire I would rather burn there till the day of judgement than suffer onely for the space of one hour that fire which I have experienced Now what a miserable unhappiness will it be to burn in those flames of Hell not onely for one hour but till the day of Judgement yea even for all eternity and world without end Who would not esteem it an hideous torment if he were to be burnt alive an hundred times and his torment were to last every time for an hours space with what compassionate eyes would all the world look upon such a miserable wretch Nevertheless without all doubt any of the damned in Hell would receive this as a great happiness to end his torments with those hundred times burning For what comparison is there betwixt an hundred hours burning with some space of time betwixt every hour and to burn an hundred years of continual torment And what comparison will there be betwixt burning for an hundred years space and to be burning without interruption as long as God is God Let a Christian who hath ever committed a mortal sin consider this and let him see what can be difficult sharp and intolerable since thereby he deserved to be cast into Hell and let him see whether he think any
Third an immortal Death O Death how much less cruel art thou in taking away life than in forcing to live in so painful a manner Greg. Moral l. 9. c. 49. St. Gregory also sayes In hell there shall be unto the miserable a death without death and an end without end for their death shall ever live and their end shall ever begin Mortal sin is the greatest of all evils and consequently deserves the greatest of all punishments Because in ordinary death which takes away the use of the senses the rigour of it is not felt God ordained another kind of death in which the senses perpetually dying should perpetually feel the force of pain and should ever live in the agony of dying This David signitied when he said That death should feed on the damned for as the Flock pastures upon the grass but ends it not because it still grows green and fresh again so that death feeds upon sinners but consumes them not This death of the damned the holy Scripture calls the second death Because it succeeds the first and comprehends both that of soul and bodie And with much reason may it also be called a double death because death is then doubled when we die and feel the torment of dying which in the first death of the body we do not Even here amongst us if there should be a condition in which we might be sensible but of some part of that which death brings along with it it would be esteemed a greater evil than death it self Who doubts but if one after burial should find himself alive and sensible under the earth where he could speak with no body see nothing but darkness hear nothing but those who walked above him smell nothing but the rotten stink of their bodies cat nothing but his own flesh nor feel any thing but the earth which opprest him or the cold pavement of the Vault where he lay Who doubts not I say but that this estate were worse than to be wholly dead since life onely served to feel the pain of death For this reason the ingenious Romans when they would punish Sacriledge which is the greatest crime made use of interring the offenders alive as of the greatest punishment and therefore executed it upon their Vestal Virgins when they offended a gainst their chastity as upon Oppia and Minutia that being alive they might feel the pain and bitterness of dying And certainly Zeno the Emperour found this punishment so bitter that he devoured his own flesh by morsels What Sepulcher is more horrible than that of Hell what is eternally shut upon those who are in it whore the miserable damned remain not onely under earth but under fire having sense for nothing but to feel death darkness loathsomness pain and stink This is therefore a double death because to feel the pain of death is an evil double to that of dying Lib. 6. de Civit. ca. 12. Wherefore St. Austin said No death is greater or worse than where death dies not Besides this death of Hell may be called a double death in respect it contains both the death of sin ang the death of pain those unfortunate wretches standind condemned never to be freed from the death of sin and for ever to be tormented with the death of pain There is no greater death than that of the Soul which is sin in which the miserable are to continue whilest God is God with that infinite evil and that ugly deformity which sin draws along with it which is worse than to suffer that eternal fire which is but the punishment of it After sin what pain should there be greater than that of sin it self and for this reason in Hell in regard 't is the torment for sin it is a greater pain than death it self or the most horrible death of all Who trembles not with the onely memory that he is to die remembring that he is to cease to be that the feet whereon he walks are no more to bear him that his hands are no more to serve him nor his eyes to see Why then do we not rather tremble at the thought of Hell in respect of which the first death is no punishment but a reward a happiness and a joy there being no damned in Hell but would take that death which we here inflict for offences as an ease of his pains O how much does the Divine Justice exceed the humane since that which men give unto those whom they condemn for the greatest offences would be received by those whom God condemns as a great ease comfort and accomplishment of their desires who shall desire death and death shall flye from them for unto all their evils and miseries this as the greatest is adjoyned that neither They nor It shall shall ever die This circumstance of being eternal doth much augment the torments of Hell such being the condition of eternity as hath been already declared that it doth infinitely augment that whereunto it is annexed Let us suppose that one had but a Gnat that should sting his right hand and a Wasp at the left and that one foot should be pricked with a Thorn and the other with a Pin. If this onely were to last for ever it would be an intolerable torment What will it then be when hands feet arms head bread and entrails are to burn for all eternity The onely holding one finger in a Candle for the space of a quarter of an hour no body would be able to suffer it To be then plunged into the infernal flames for years eternal what understanding is there that is able I do not say to express in words but to frame a due conception of this torment That a torment is never to cease and that the tormented is to live for ever the onely thinking of it causes great horror What would it be to suffer it Sur. To. 7. die 14. April A certain man who had not much repentance or feeling it seems of his sins having expressed divers most heinous offences to the holy Virgin St. Lidwine the Saint replyed That she would do penance for them contenting her self that he should onely lye in his Bed one night in the same posture looking up towards Heaven without moving or turning himself all night The man very contented and joyful If my penance says he be no greater than this I shall soon have performed it But he was scarce laid down in his Bed when he had a mind to turn on one side it being a great trouble to him not to do it perswading himself that he never lay so uneasie his whole life before and said unto himself My Bed is a very good one and soft I am well in health what is wanting to me nothing else is wanting but onely to turn me from one side to the other But this what is it be quiet and sleep as thou art till morning Canst thou not then tell me what doth aile thee By this means he call'd
by birth by divine inspiration became a Cistercian Monk He entred upon this course of life and continued with such great courage that he stuck not to challenge the Devil and bid him defiance The Enemy made his Cell the field of battail Here he assaulted him first with whips then upon a certain occasion gave him such blows that the blood burst out at his mouth and nose At the noise the Monks came in and finding him half dead they carried him to his Bed where he lay for the space of three dayes without giving any signes of life In which time in the company of an Angel he descended into a very obscure place where he saw a Man seated in a Chair of fire and certain Women very beautiful thrusting into his mouth burning torches drawing them out at other parts of his body which had been the instruments of his sins The Monk being astonished at this spectacle the Angel told him This miserable wretch was a very powerful man in the world and much given to Women and for this reason the Devils in shape of Women do torment him as thou seest Pasing a little farther he beheld another whom the infernal spirits were fleaing alive and having rubbed all his body over with salt they put him to roast upon a Gridiron This man said the Angel was a great Lord so cruel to his Vassals as the Devils are now to him A little farther they met with other persons of divers states and conditions which were tormented with several kinds of torments Many Religious both men and women whose lives had been contrary to their profession Talkers Censurers of other mens lives Slaves to their bellies defiled with lust and other such like vices To these the Ministers of vengeance in shape of most ugly fellows gave many blows in such sort that they dashed out their brains and made their eyes flye out of their heads because in their works they were blind and without judgement a chastisement Prov. 19. which the Wise-man appoints for such like persons Afterwards he lifted up his eyes and beheld one fastned to a horrible Wheel turning in such a dreadful manner that the Monk here was almost besides himself That thou seest is terrible said the Angel but far more terrible will be what thou shalt now see At the instant the Wheel began to run from alost down to the most profound depths with such horrid joggs and with such noise as if all the World Earth Heaven and all were breaking in pieces At this so sudden and direful accident all the Prisoners and Goalers of Hell brake out into great cries cursing and damning him that came in the Wheel This man said the Angel is Judas the Apostle who betrayed his Master and as long as he shall raign in glory which shall be world without end so long shall this miserable wretch lye thus tormented With these Representations God hath given us to understand the proportion his Justice observes in his chastisements to make us form some lively apprehension of the greatness of those pains they being indeed far greater than what ever we can conceive by all the rigour imaginable exhibited to the senses And in regard what enters by the senses prevails more with us for this reason he represents unto us the torments of the soul sutably to those so horrible to our senses as is to dash out the brains and make the brains flye out of the head For though it be true that this effect is not wrought indeed yet the torments inflicted upon the damned Souls are without companion greater then it would be for a man in this life to be so beaten about the head till his brains and eyes flew out Let us therefore fear the Divine justice and let us understand that in those parts of the body we offend God Almighty with greater delight we shall be sure to be punished with greater torment And here may be given this further instruction that as these and many such like stories related for more variety of discourse in this Treatise oblige us not to a full and absolute belief of them so they desire the favour of so much credit at least as is allowed to Livy Justine or other Chronicle-writers especially the Recorders of these being such as are no less grave and wise and acknowledge moreover a greater obligation of conscience not to wrong the World with lies or empty relations taken up upon the account of frivolous reports especially in matters of such concernment And as we think it not amiss to make use as occasion serves of profane Examples and Authorities in confirmation of what we usually either speak or write so without all doubt the same use of Sacred and Ecclesiastical occurrences may be no less available in such matters as these CAP. XII The fruit which may be drawn front the consideration of Eternal Evils ALl which hath been said of the pains in Hell is far short of that which really they are There is great difference betwixt the knowledge we have by relation and that which we learn by experience The Machabees knew that the Temple of the Lord was already prophaned deserted and destroyed They had heard of it and lamented it but when they saw with their eyes the Sanctuary lye desolate the Altar prophaned and the Gates burnt there was then no measure in their tears They tore their garments cast ashes upon their heads threw themselves upon the ground and their complaints ascended as high as Heaven If then the relation and discourse of the pains of Hell makes us tremble what shall be the sight and experience This notwithstanding the consideration of what hath been said may help us to form some conception of the terrour and horrour of that place of eternal sorrow Let us as St. Bernard sayes descend into Hell whilest we live that we may not descend thither when we are dead Let us draw some fruit from thence during our lives from whence nothing but torment is to be had after death The principal fruits which may be drawn from that consideration are these In the first place an ardent love and sincere gratitude towards our Creator that having so often deserved Hell he hath not yet suffered us to fall into it How many be there now in Hell who for their first mortal sin and onely for that one have been sent thither and we notwithstanding the innumerable sins which we have committed are yet spared What did God find in us that he should use a mercy towards us for so many sins which he did not afford to others for so few Why are we not then more grateful for so many benefits which we have no wayes deserved How grateful would a damned person be if God should free him from those flames wherein he is tormented and place him in the same condition we now are What a life would he lead what penance would he undergoe what austerity would not appear a pleasure unto him and how grateful
to last for ever in regard he had the good fortune to save his Soul Wherefore if one onely disastrous day after the enjoying of so much felicity and greatness of the world for twenty years space is sufficient to cause a contempt of all that pomp and make the same appear as smoke not onely one year of affliction not a thousand ages but eternity in torments how will it make all humane prosperity to seem nothing else but a shadow and a dream If the sad death of one though he saves his soul shews the vanity of all humane felicities The lamentable death of one who is damned to Hell and an eternity of unspeakable misery how will it make evident that all felicity and humane greatness is nothing but smoke a shadow and nothing Let us reflect a thought upon the Emperour Heliogabolus who gave so great a scope to all his sensual appetites and was most exactly industrious in making use of time to the advantage of his pleasures What account are we to make of his two years and eight moneths raign if we give credit to Aurelius and Eutropius turning our consideration to the other Scene of his miserable death For the Pretorian Souldiers having drawn him out of a Sink or Privy where he had hid himself then haling him upon the ground they threw him into an other Sink most filthy and abominable but in regard there was not room enough for his whole body they pull'd him out again and dragging him through the great place called Circus and other publick Streets of Rome at last they cast him into the Tyber having first tied great stones about him to the end he might never appear more nor obtain interrement All this was done to the great content of the people and approbation of the Senate Who should see this nice and effeminate Prince wallowing in the Sink abused by his Souldiers and drowned in the Tyber what estimate would he frame of all his greatnese But see him now in the horrid Sink of Hell abused by the Devils and plunged into that pit of fire and brimstone where he is to suffer excessive torments for all eternity what will that short time of his Empire seem being compared I do not say with three hundred thousand millions of years but with an eternity of pains which he is to suffer causing all the past glory of his Empire and splendour of his fortunes to vanish into smoke You may look upon a Wheel of Squibs or Fireworks which whilst it moves casts forth a thousand lights and spl●●dours with which the beholders are much taken but all at last ends in a little smoke and burnt paper So it is Whilst the Wheel of felicities was in motion according to the stile of St. James that is to say whilst our life lasts its fortune and prosperity appeared most glorious but ceasing all comes to end in smoke and he that fares best in it becomes a firebrand of Hell Rabanus said well that when a strong fever Raban in Eccl. or some great unexpected change in his estate happens to one it makes him forget all his former contents in health and wealth his sickness and adversity taking up so the whole man as that he has no leasure to employ his thoughts upon any thing else and if perhaps any passage of his former condition chance to come to his minde it gives him no satisfaction but rather augments his pain Wherefore if even temporal evils though very short are sufficient to make former felicities of many years vanish what impression will temporal goods make in us if we employ our thoughts upon eternal evils Besides this the eternity of torments in hell which is to be suffered hereafter without profit may move us to husband the short time of this life most to our advantage and with the greatest fruit How many miserable Souls now suffer those eternal pains for not employing one day in pennance nor endeavouring to make one good confession What would a damned Soul give for one quarter of an hour out of so many dayes and years which are lost and shall not have one instant allowed him Thou who now livest and hast time lose not that which imports so much and once lost can never be redeemed Peter Reginaldus writes that an holy Religious man being in prayer heard a most lamentable voice whereupon demanding Who he was and Why he lamented it was answered I am one of the damned And thou must know That I and the rest of the damned Souls lament and bewail nothing more bitterly than to have lost time in the sins we have committed O miserable creatures who for having lost a short space of time lose an eternity of felicity They come to know too late the importance of that which they have lost and shall never come to regain it Let us now make use of time whilest we may gain eternity and let us not lose that with pleasure which cannot be recovered with grief Let us now weep for our sins with profit that we way not weep for our pains without fruit Let us hear what St. Bernard sayes Bernard Serm. 16. in Cant. Who shall give water unto my head and who shall give a fountain of tears unto mine eyes that I may prevent weeping by weeping Let us now weep in time and do penance with sorrow that our tears may be dried up and our sorrow forgotten since eternal happiness is no less efficacious to make us forget the tears and grief of this life than hell the pleasures of it Wherefore Isaias saith My former cares are forgotten Isai 65. and are hid from mine eyes Upon which words St. Jerome glosses It is the effect of mirth and confession of the true God that an eternal oblivion shall succeed precedent goiefs For if former evils shall be forgotten it is not with the oblivion of memory but with the succession of so much good according to that In the good day an oblivion of evil Lastly let us draw from the consideration of hell a perfect hatred to all mortal sin since from the evil of sin proceeds that evil of pain Terrible is the evil of sin since it cannot be satisfied even with eternal flames But this requires a larger consideration which we are now come unto CAP. XIII The infinite guilt of mortal Sin by which we lose the felicity of heaven and fall into eternal evils THe horrible and stupendious malice of mortal sin is so foul and accursed that though committed in an instant it deserves the torments of hell for all eternity and an unlawful pleasure enjoyed by a sinner but for one moment deprives and disinherits him of eternal felicity Because therefore the scope of this work is to beget such disesteem of temporal goods as for them we may not lose the eternal I thought it not besides my purpose to procure as much as I could a horror and detestation of sin which is the occasion of the loss of heaven and
therefore intend in this place to say something of the malice of it the rather because it conduces much to the knowledge of those differences which are betwixt things temporal and things eternal Whereof the most notable is that as temporal goods are of that nature that he who loves and seeks them with sollicitude most commonly falls into that horrible evil of sin So he who loves and sets his heart on things eternal secures himself against it Besides having treated of the eternal pains of hell that we may not wonder at the severity of the Divine Justice it was necessary that we should say something of the horrible and grievous malice of sin for which so infinite a punishment is inflicted Many admire that a sin committed in an instant should deserve the eternal punishment of so terrible and cruel torments But this proceeds from their ignorance because they know not the malice of a mortal sin St. Austin whose deep understanding was enlightned by an especial grace wondered rather that there were not two Hells and that a new one was not created for that Christian who durst offend his God after he was incarnated for his redemption And Divines generally affirm that the chastisement of sin in hell is much less than it deserves Who will not then admire this Monster of mischief that being but one evil draws after it so many and that one sin should deserve so many punishments and yet have a malice capable of more A terrible case that for a sin which past onely in thought which none knew but God and he who committed it and perhaps not he neither as being uncertain and doubtful of his own consent and which endured no longer than an instant should yet be punished with so real and eternal pains The reason is That such is the intension of malice in sin that it is equivalent to the extension of an infinite evil The punishment and the sin are like the shadow and the body The sin is the body and the solid evil The punishment but as the shadow And in the reason of a true and real evil the sin as far exceeds the punishment of hell fire as a man exceeds his shadow For as that is truly and really a man and this but a man in appearance so sin is truly an evil the pain onely appears so but is in truth a good being an act of justice caused by God who can cause no evil Hence you may trace the malignity of a sin in comparison whereof the pains of hell although so terrible are not evils but their shadow and may also learn that the commission of a mortal sin is asmuch to be feared above the pains of eternity as a real sword before its shadow The sword kills the shadow at most can but fright So a mortal sin is that which takes away the life of the Soul the pains can onely fear us but without sin the torments of hell are not of power to kill or hurt us See then what a fool thou art if to avoid some temporal evil thou presumest to commit a mortal sin which is as great a folly as to stye from the shadow of a sword and run thy selt upon the point It is true that sin is really an evil and the eternal fire of Hell in comparison of it but a shadow but by this shadow we may judge the greatness of the substance and by the terribleness of the punishment the grievousness of the sin For as by the shadow we know the bulk of the body although we see it not so by the pains of Hell we conjecture the malice and enormity of sin which appears not What would we say of a body which the Sun being at midday and in his height should cast a shadow of an infinite extension This could not be unless the height of that body should rise unto the Sphear of the Sun and being placed opposite unto it should thence produce so vast a shadow In this manner sin causeth a pain of infinite extension because the intension of its malice reaches so high as to oppose it self unto God who being the chief good sin must needs become the chief evil I speak of mortal sin If we therefore tremble at the thought of Hell we may shake at that of sin Who is not amazed that God should behold a creature of his own burning in flames and should there leave him without compassion for all eternity But this is not caused by want of goodness in God but by excess of malice in sin not because the mercy of God hath limits but because the wickedness of man hath none So hainous then is the offence of a mortal sin that eternal flames cannot purge it nor torments give a greater satisfaction than what is due unto the Di-Justice This is that which the Lord said by Oseas Osee 12. Ephraim provoked me to wrath in his bitternesses That is us St. Jerome interprets it with his wickedness he made me bitter and rigorous who of my self was sweet and merciful Such is the grievousness of sin that it makes the sweetness bounty and divine pity of God not to companionate that Soul which is in the bitterness of Hell § 2. Sin is then an infinite offence against God Let it not therefore appear much unto him who knows the ineffable greatness and perfection of the Divine essence that though committed in an instant it should deserve an eternity of punishment For by how much greater is the Majesty of God which is despised by so much greater is the injury offered him and therefore as the Majesty of God which is despised by sin is infinite so the despite of it must contain in it self a certain kinde of infinity By how much greater is the reverence due to a person by so much greater is the disrespect and affront offered him And as to God there is due an infinite reverence so the injurie done him is of an inexplicable malice which with no good works of a pure creature how many and great soever can be expiated Less de perfec divi li. 13. cap. 16. nu 187. So great saith a grave Doctor is the malignity of a mortal sin that being put in the ballance of Divine Justice it would out-waigh all the good works of all the Saints although they were a thousand times more and greater than they are Which consideration although most fearful yet it ought not to seem incredible because the good works with which God is honoured by his Saints although considered in themselves they are of great value and by his grace worthy of eternal life yet in respect of God unto whom they add nothing and who is nothing better by them they are not valuable Unto whose divine goodness not onely they but infinitely more and greater are but a debt But for God to be despised by his Creature who by infinite titles is obliged to serve him and who ought to bear him if he could an infinite love and
reverence him with an infinite honour is a thing so highly repugnant to his Majesty and benefits that he apprehends it more in the nature of evil than all the good works of the world in the nature of good and if God were capable of grief would more afflict him than all the pious actions of the Saints content him Certainly amongst men the honour which is given to one who deserves it takes not so much as a contempt done unto him who merits it not A King values not much the honour which is given him by his Vassals because he takes it not for a courtesie but a duty but to be outraged and scorned by one especially whom he had favoured with his benefits sticks near unto his heart for not onely Kings but all men think honour due unto them and disrespect an injurie And as fire being inordinately applyed to the hand makes it sensible of a greater grief that it can receive delight by being sound because excessive heat is repugnant and a natural temper due unto it so disrespects and affronts offered to a noble personage which are repugnant to his worth grieves him more than he can be pleased with all the honours and respects due unto him There is no resentment amongst men so quick as that of dishonour nor any thing which causes more grief and vexation If some person of quality should have his hat pluckt off from his head in scorn and receive a dozen of bastonadoes from some base fellow that affront would not be recompensed although a thousand should put off their caps to him and kiss his hand By this may in some sort appear the stupendious irreverence and incivility towards God in a mortal sin in so much as St. Paul calls it kicking or spurning the Son of God And therefore it is no marvel if one onely grievous offence over-weigh all the service and honours done by the Saints and holy Angels and that all that they have or can do cannot in rigour satisfie for one mortal sin This is the reason why it was necessary that God should become man being the Divine Justice could not be appeased with less than the satisfaction of a Divine person Let those therefore cease to marvel that a momentary sin should be punisht with eternal torments who see that for sin God was made man and died for man And certainly it is a far greater wonder that God should die for the sin of another than that man should for his own sin suffer an eternal punishment And if the malice of sin be so exorbitant that nothing could satisfie for it less than God it is nothing strange that that which hath no limit nor bound in evil should have no limit in punishment but should exceed all time and be eternal And if a treason committed against a temporal Prince be chastised with loss of life and goods of the Traitor and with the punishment also of his posterity which in as much as concerns the Prince is eternal Why should not the offence of a vile worm against his Creator be tormented with eternal pains The greatness of honour decreases and grows less according to the height and dignity of the person honoured so as that honour which done to an ordinary person would seem excessive given unto a Prince is nothing And to the contrary the greatness of an injury rises and grows higher according to the worth of him who is injured so as God who is infinite being the person offended deserves that the injury done unto him should be chastised with an infinite punishment at least in time or that he who satisfies for it should be a person of infinite worth and perfection From hence it follows that the guilt of mortal sin being so horrid there can be no satisfaction of a pure creature sufficient to expiate it nor any merit which can deserve the pardon Let us grant that Adam had never offended nor contaminated the whole race of mankind with his sin Let us grant that there had never been a sin of David St. Paul St. Austin St. Mary Magdalene or any other Man or Angel whatsoever and that there had been but one onely mortal sin the least of all others committed by a man in a wilderness without witness by night and that onely in thought yet such were the grievousness of this one sin that for it no punishment of the creatures were sufficient to satisfie the Divine Justice If God should ruine Heaven throw down the Stars drie up the Sea confound the Elements and strike whole mankinde with thunder all would not give an equal satisfaction to the Divine Justice for this one sin For this destruction of Heaven and Earth and Man were but of things finite and limited and the injured person is God who is infinite and betwixt finit and infinite there is no proportion In like manner no merit of meer creatures were sufficient to deserve pardon for it If all mankind should cloath themselves in sackcloth and fast with bread and water If all the Martyrs should offer up their torments and all the Confessours their penances and the very Mother of God all her vertues and should dissolve her self into tears all were not enough to deserve the pardon of that one sin Onely the Son of God could be sufficient satisfaction Let men consider this let them weigh the grievousness of a sin against God and let them tremble at the very thought that possibly they may commit it §. 3. The offence which is done to God Almighty by a mortal sin is in it self and in its own substance most grievous as we have already observed yet there are certain Circumstances which do much encrease the good or evil of that action whereunto they are annexed And that of sin is so accursed and abominable on all parts that not one or two but all circumstances joyned together concurre to make the insolence and malice of it most insupportable We will therefore consider them Tull. in Rhet● S. The. 1.2 q. 7. ar 3. one by one Tully whom St. Thomas and the rest of Divines follow makes them seaven which contribute much to the qualification of a moral action The first Who it is that doth it The second What it is he doth The third Where he does it The fourth With what helps The fifth Wherefore The sixth After what manner and The seaventh When he does it Aristot Eth. 3. Unto these seaven Aristotle adds another About what it is These circumstances are in absolute actions which have no relation to another For in actions which have a respect to a third person another circumstance ought much to be considered which is Against whom it is Let us now see how in all those circumstances sin is most abhominable and accursed For if we consider Who it is that sins it is a most vile and wretched man who presumes to lift up his hands against his Creator And what is Man but a Vessel of dung a Sink of
Dion Chrys Orat. 10. And therefore Dion Chrysostomus is sayes He who knows not Man cannot make use of Man and he who knows not himself cannot make use of himself nor of those things which belong unto his nature But who can arrive unto the knowledge of himself It is so difficult that the Devil although he knew how important this knowledge was to Man and wisht nothing but his ruine and perdition yet confident in the impossibility of attaining it and desirous to gain the credit of a wife God among the Grecians he caused this Command Know thy self to be placed in his Temple of Apollo in Delphos And truly the light of Heaven is necessary for this knowledge and we guided by what faith dictates and the Saints inctruct us will endeavour to say something whereby we may at least be less ignorant of what we are It is then to be considered What Man is of himself and what he is of God that is what he hath of himself and what he hath received from God What he hath from God must needs be good since he gave it from whom can proceed no ill And if upon this score because it is good he hath less ground to humble himself I am sure he hath none to boast of since it is wholly the Divine benefit not having any thing of himself but what he hath received Onely he may consider that by the sin of Adam he hath put himself in a worse condition both for soul and body than when he received them from God His Soul is now full of ignorance and imbecility to what is good and subject to a thousand miseries which it then had not And his Body which is now mortal was then immortal and free from the corruption of those infirmities which as hath been already said accompany it until it end in dust worms and ashes But these although by the perverseness of our nature they are become much worse yet coming from God are good and are ah honour and glory in respect of what he possesses from himself This the Arausican Council declares in two words that is We are nothing of our selves but a Lye and Sin that is the nothing that we were and the evil we are A lye we are because what is a lye is not And from our selves we have onely a not being for what have we but what God hath given us take away what we have received and there remains nothing This is what is ours what is more is our Creators and therefore we are not to use it according to our own fancy but his pleasure Thou art also to consider that thou oughtest to humble thy self more for being nothing than for being but dust and ashes For those are something and betwixt something and nothing there is no proportion and as the Philosophers say an infinite distance Thou hast not from thy self so much as a possibility of being for if God were not God thou couldest not have been at all From this consideration thou hast great reason to humble thy self For to be nothing is a Well without bottom never to be drawn drie yet this Nothing is far better than what thou art by Sin Here the most holy Saints have sunk down in amazement and some unto whom our Lord hath revealed what they are have been so astonished as they had certainly died if they had not been comforted and upheld by the Divine hand For having sinned thou art as evil as sin it self Call to mind what we have said of the infinite malice and abomination of sin All this falls upon him who commits it With reason therefore did Dion the Philosopher say That it was most hard to know ones self because it was most hard to comprehend the malice of sin which being the chiefest evil becomes in a manner as difficult to be known as the chiefest good and therefore no better way to find what it is than to proceed after the same way we do in the knowledge of God §. 2. St. Dionysius Areopagita teaches us that in the knowledge of God we may proceed alter two manners either by the way of Affirmation attributing unto God all what is Good and perfect or by way of Negation denying unto him all what is good or perfect in the Creatures as being of a goodness and perfection infinitly above it In the same manner we are to proceed in the knowledge of Sin either by Affirmation in attributing unto it all the ill in all creatures whatsoever or by Negation denying it any ill as being a malice of another kind horrible and enormous above all other Evils imaginable Call together therefore all the evils thou hast seen heard or read of Joyn all these in one a mortal sin is worse then all these together The miseries of Job stilence in the time of David the torments of Phalaris Nero Dioclesian and all the Tyrants are farre short of it in malice Is it as bad as all those afflictions and miseries which they suffered who perished in the Deluge and those who were burnt alive in Sodome and the neighbouring Towns and as all they suffered who were put to the sword in Amalee and all those that were hunger-starved in the siege of Jerusalem One onely mortal sin goeth far beyond all the aforesaid miseries All the Plagues Warrs Sickness Famines all that hath been suffered since the World began come not near the ill of one sin Good God! how vast is that evil which is equivalent to so many evils where shall we find an evil that may equal it where shall we meet with an end of so much malice Certainly all the evils that have been since the World began or could succeed in a million of Worlds to come fall short of it If nothing then upon earth be comparable unto it let us seek it beneath the earth amongst those eternal evils which shall never have end Let us enter Hell and consider the torments there which are or have been suffered by Men or Devils even from the least and most unknown of the damned unto Lucifer and Antichrist Is there any thing there that may equal the evil of one sin No we shall not there find it Reflect I say again and mark if thou findest any torment amongst so many miserable creatures as suffer in Hell which may parallel the malice of one only mortal sin There is none to be found But I 'le give thee leave to make a collection of those many torments which may seem unto thee in reason comparable to a mortal sin and you shall finde that Sin does not onely equalize but exceed the malice of them Joyn then together and put in one heap all the torments that are inflicted upon all damned creatures Men and Angels and compare the malice of them all with that one of mortal sin and you shall find that the malice of sin doth farr surpass the malice of all those That gnashing of teeth that inconsolable weeping that burning fire which penetrates
miserie that he may be heard of his God And certainly for him who is in the condition of a penitent and to demand mercy it is not seemly to use superfluities to imploy himself in vanities to take delight in the world enjoy the Creatures and seek after greatness And although it were lawful in the integrity of nature when man was free from the corruption of sin to use the Creatures with more libertie yet being now fallen it is no wayes tolerable but let him look upon himself as one guilty who hath offended his God and is in fine a miserable man The Philosophers who considered nature not as it was by sin but as it ought to be in it self measured there vertues by that rule and therefore knew not the vertue of humility nor used that of penance And the vertues of Magnanimity Constancy and Magnificence they extended so far that many actions which the Stoicks and Peripateticks called vertuous may be esteemed vicious But the horribleness of sin and the weakness of humane nature being now discovered the estate of things is changed and humilitie ought still to reign both in our souls and bodies and many acts of other vertues esteemed by them are to be corrected We are to choose different Mediums for the advancing our End from those of the Philosophers both because the ends we aym at are not the same and because we know our selves to be in a far other condition then they imagined The End proposed by the Philosophers was meerly natural to wit the Happiness and felicity of this life The estate of humane nature they conceived to be free and uncontaminated by sin and that it had suffcient force of it self to do good In all this they were deceived and it is not therefore strange if for the obtaining of their ends they taught wayes distinct from those of Christians who know their end to be supernatural to wit the happiness not of this but of the other life who know also their estate of nature not to be free and entire as it was at first but corrupted and defaced by sin and that of it self it hath neither force nor efficacy to execute any thing that is good unless assisted by the grace and mercy of God It is therefore no marvail if Chrisitians who know themselves their end and condition make use of such Vetues and Mediums as the Philosophers knew not Neither is it much that the Philosophers took some vertuous acts for vices since they mistook many vices for vertues Aristotle the Prince of natural and moral Philosophers knew not Humility voluntary Povertie and Penance to be vertues but rather condemned the last to be a kind of insensibility and one of those vices contrary to the vertue of temperance The Stoicks also held Pity and Commiseration for a vice But since the Gospel of Christ these are become the most necessary and recommended vertues and the most apt and ready means for the obtaining of our salvation These three vertues in which consists the contempt of all things temporal Aristotle knew not because he knew not himself By Humilitie Honours are despised by Poverty Riches and by Penance the Pleasures and Regaloes of the world And therefore he who will make the right and profitable use of things temporal for the gaining of eternity must as a sinner humble himself and do penance must not employ himself and the time of his life in gathering and heaping up riches which are so farre from being goods that to innumerable persons they have shut up the gates of the true and real goods which are onely the eternal unto which we are wholly to aspire not trusting in our own forces but in the mercy and passion of Jesus Christ CAP. III. The value of goods eternal is made apparent unto us by the Incarnation of the Son of God BUt above all which hath been said the incomparable difference betwixt things Temporal and Eternal is made most apparent unto us by the Incarnation and passion of Jesus Christ The gaining of eternity is a matter of so high concernement that the Son of God to the end we might obtain it was incarnate and made man and that we might despise things temporal is also of so great importance that for it it was convenient that Christ our Redeemer should suffer and die I know not what can raise in us a higher conception of the greatness of the one and baseness of the other then these high and stupendious acts of God Almighty And therefore though briefly we will say something of them both beginning with that admirable and great mystery of the Incarnation Great is all that which is eternal and so much imports us that rather than we should lose it God wrought a work of that height and love as amazed the Angels In which we will consider four things The greatness of the work The manner of putting it in execution The evils from which it frees us and The good we gain by it For the first which is the Greatness of the work we are to suppose the estate of man as he then stood which was the most miserable infamous and wretched condition that could be imagined He was become a slave so the Devil polluted with sin condemned unto eternal punnishment enemy to God and without hope of remedy For even the highest Seraphins could not imagin that without prejudice to the Justice of God it was possible for man to be redeemed from that miserable and ignominious estate For although all the men in the world should suffer a thousand deaths and all the orders of holy Angels in heaven should offer themselves in sacrifice and should suffer eternal torments in hell all would not satisfy for one mortal sin All created remedies were then impossible and although God should have created some more excellent and holy creature than the most high Seraphins yet that and they were insufficient to appease the divine justice incensed against man what remedy then where none was to be had what hope when all was despaire Certainly from what was or could be created it was impossible and from the Creator it was not known to be possible and if it was known to be possible who could hope that the offended party ty should satisfie for the offence committed against himself that the Creditor should pay what the debtor ought What hope then of remedy when all hope failed both from Heaven and Earth The onely remedy and that onely known to God was that God without prejudice to his justice might cover man with his mercy but that much to the cost of God himself and the greatest work whereunto his power and wisdome could extend But who could think he would imploy so great a work for his Enemy that he would let up the rest of his omnipotency for him who was a Traytor to his Lord Onely this way remained for God to make himself man the most great and stupendious work possible or imaginable But who could believe
this should be done for man so vile a creature made of a little earth and of so small importance to God This was a work to be reserved for God himself if his own divinity life or salvation if it were possible should come in question let it be lawful to speak in this manner to express in some sort that which is inexplicable and to set forth this ineffable mystery and the incomprehenssible goodness of God But to do this for the life of a Traytor for the salvation of a Faith-breaker to advance an Enemy who could once hope or dare to imagin it If man for the service of God had as a faithfull servant hazarded his person and run himself into that miserable and sad condition it might have been presumed that God out of his goodness and acknowledgment would have stretched his power for his freedom but that man having rob'd God of his honour contemned him and made himself equal unto him and that God should yet after all this humble himself for him debase himself so low as to be made man and that for his Enemy who could think it But such is the goodness of God that he overcame our hopes with his benefits and did that for us which would have onely sufficed for himself and for himself he could have done no more O most stupendious love of God! O most immense charitie of our Creator who so much loved man that he stuck not to do what he could for him O ineffable goodness which would discharge that debt which his enemy owed O divine nobleness that would so much to his own cost do good to man from whom he had received so much evil To redeem man though it had cost him nothing had been much but at so great a rate who could imagin it But the thoughts of God are farr different from those of men §. 2. Let us now look upon the Greatness of this work great after divers manners great by the humbling of God so much below himself great in it self so great as the omnipotent power of God could work no greater Here the divine Attributes were drawn dry For as St. Austin sayes neither God could do a greater work nor knew how to determin it better there was found the bottom of the whole omnipotency of God for a greater work then this was neither possible nor imaginable For as nothing greater then God is possible so no work can possibly be greater then that whereby man is made God See then what thou owest him for this excess of favour that being his Enemy he did all for thee that his omnipotency could that his wisdome knew or his divine goodness and love could will All his Attributes thy Creator employed for thy good imploy thou all thy powers in his service God did all he could for thee do thou all thou canst for him He wrought the work of thy redemtion with all his forces and omnipotency do thou then with all thy power and forces observe his divine will and pleasure loving and serving him in all things Seest thou not here his infinite love and goodness made apparent and laid down before thine eyes doest thou yet doubt to love him with all thy powers and faculties who loved thee with all his omnipotency See what a love was this when he did that for thee being his enemy greater than which he could not do for his friend nor for himself if his own glory were at stake Seest thou not clearly his infinite goodness that overcame so infinite a malice man not being able to do a work against God of so stupendious wickedness but God would do a work for man of a more stupendious goodness not suffering his divine goodness to be overcome by humane malice God saw that man did a work so profoundly evil that there could not possible be a worse for nothing can be so bad as mortal sin He therefore determined to do a work so infinitely good that in goodness it was impossible to be a better and this for accursed Thee what sayest thou to it What sayest thou to such an overflowing bounty To such an excess of love Hear what the Apostle sayes If thy Enemy be a hungred Ad Roman 11. feed him if he be thirsty give him to drinks so shalt thou heap coales of fire up in his head Be mt overcome with evil but overcome evil with good This did thy Creator fully performe with thee although his enemy Yield thy self then vanquished and blush that thou lovest him not better then the Angels Thy estate was not onely necessitated by hunger and thirst but thou wast plunged into eternal miserie and want of all things that were good deprived of glory and eternal happiness If then to bestow a bit of bread or a Cup of water upon a necessitated enimie be sufficient to call colour into his face and are as coals to enflame him in love and charitie What is it for God to have communicated his Divinity unto man and to have given his life for him when he was his Enemy How comes not this to make us blush for shame and set us afire in his divine love These benefits are not to be coals but flames which ought to kindle in us the fire of true love and charitie Give thy self then for overcome and love that divine goodness which for thee being the worst of all his Creatures did the best work of his omnipotency O nobleness of God Almighty O divine sense of honour that I may so speak Man had overcome all works good or bad in malice but such was the immense goodness of God that he would not suffer man to do a work so excessive in evil but he would do a work for the salvation of traitorous and false man more excessive in good Wherefore O Lord did'st thou not this when the Angels sinned who were better then man What goodness is this that thou forbearest so fowl a sinner Is it perhaps that thy work might appear the greater Wouldest thou expect until man had first set up his rest in impudence and malice that thou mightest then set up thy rest in mercy and goodness Who sees not here O Lord the infinitness of thy love and the immenseness of thy bounty After all manners this excellent work proclaims thy excess of bounty because it is after all manners infinitly good and opens as many parts to the understanding of our souls to adore and admire thee For this work is not onely infinitely good in substance but in each particular circumstance In it self it is infinitly good For no work can be better than that which makes man so good as it makes him God It is good because by it the Divinity is communicated unto a creature and which is more unto the lowest and most vile of those who are capable of reason For as it is the propertie of what is good to be comunicative so here we see the infinite goodness of God who wholly and all what
he is issues forth of himself and is communicated unto man Who is not amazed that the same Divinity which the eternal Father communicates unto the eternal Word who is God as he is should after an admirable manner be communicated unto human nature which was enemy unto him O Sea of divine goodness that thus powrest forth thy self to do good without regarding unto whom O Ocean of bounty that thus overflowest in benefits even towards thine enemies This work is likewise infinitly good because with goodness it overcoms an infinitly malice and frees him who was so evil that he deserved an infinit punishment It is infinitly good because it sets forth God with an infinit desire to pardon and do good even unto the greatest Traytour and who least deserved it It shewes him also infinitly good and compleat in all vertue and perfection that rather then to fail the least jot in his Justice he would take upon him that which was due unto a most unjust and accursed offender and humbled himself unto death that he who was condemned to die should not perish eternally I know not any thing that can set forth God as a more exact and perfect pattern of all vertue then a work of so much Justice and Mercy Who would not be amazed at the goodness and piety of a great Emperour who having a desire to pardon a notorious Traytour should rather then abate one jot of his inflexible justice take upon him the habit and shape of that Traytour and die publiqnely in the market place that the offender might be spared This did God taking upon him the form of a Servant and dying upon the Cross to free condemned man from eternal death O God every way most perfect and good which art so scrupulous in thy justice and so indulgent in thy mercy rigorous with thy self that thou mightest be merciful with us O God infinitly good infinitly holy infinitely exact and perfect in all Let the Angels praise thee for all thy perfections since all are transcendent and infinitely good §. 3. To this maybe added the excellent Manner by which a work every way so excellently good was performed and with what love and desire of thy benefit it was wrought From whence could a work of so much goodness issue but from a furnace of love in the divine brest And if by the effect we may know the cause that love which made God resolve upon a work so admirable strange and high could not be other then immense in it self for since the work was infinitly good it could not proceed but from an infinite love nor that love but from an infinite being Besides this it was a great prerogative and honour to humane nature that God should rather make himself a man than an Angel With being an Angel he might have freed Man and honoured the Angels communicated his divine goodness unto the Creatures and done a work of infinite bounty and favour This notwithstanding he was so passionate a lover of man and if I may so say so fond of humane nature that he would not onely oblige man by redeeming him but in the manner of his redemption he would not only that Man should be redeemed but that he should be redeemed by a Man and so would not onely give the remedy but conferre also the honour upon our nature Neither was he content in honouring man more than Angels but would redeem him and not the Angels This was a demonstration of his affection unto Man beyond all expression that not pardoning the Angels who were of a more excellent and supream being then ours he yet took pitie of us and not of them and would do that for us which he did not for them Unto this add that when Man sinned and the whole stock of mankind was ruin'd there remained no just man to commiserate and intercede for him But when the Angels fell there remained thousands rightious who might pitie those of their own nature and be sensible of their loss and yet he would do this for Man and not for Angels The time also when this great work of mercy was put in execution shews not a little the sweetness of God Almighty to our nature It was in a time when mankind was most forgetful of God when men strove to make themselves adored for Gods and those who could not attain unto it themselves adored other men worse then devils Then did God think of making himself Man and for Man who would make himself God This was a love indeed to do most for us then when we most offended him But let us see what good we received by this great work Certainly if we had received no good at all it was much to free us from those evils whereunto we were plunged to deliver us from the ignominy of Sin from the slavery of the Devil and from the horrour of Hell To free us from these evils without any other benefit might be held an infinite good And though there had been no evils to be freed from nor goods to be bestowed upon us yet the honour which our nature received in having God to become one of us was an incomparable blessing But joyning to this honour our deliverance from those horrid and desperate evils what happiness may be compared to ours Justin writes that Alexander the Great beholding Lysimachus wounded in the head and that he lost much blood took his Diadem and bound it about his temples to stay his bleeding This was a great favour from so mighty a Prince as well in the care he took of him as in the manner taking the Ensigne of Majesty from his own head and giving it to his vassal But Lysimachus had not injuried Alexander he had served him faithfully and received that wound in his quarrel Neither did Alexander give him his Diadem for ever but suffer'd him onely to wear it upon that present occasion But the mortal wound of sin was not received by man in defence of God or in his quarrel but in rebellion against him Yet God vouchsafes to cure the Traytor honors him with his own Diadem which is his Divinitie communicating it upon him not for a short space and then to take it from him but b●stowing it upon him for all eternity What a bounty is this unto an enemy that in freeing him from such a miserie crowns him with so great happiness But if to all this we shall add those other blessings which he bestows upon us giving us his grace adopting us the Sons of God and making us Heirs of heaven how infinitly will our obligations increase since we are not onely freed from so great evils but enriched with unspeakable benefits and our nature honoured by his favours above that of Angels All is marvailous all is great all is transcendent in this unspeakable goodness The work it self is transcendent the manner and love by which it was performed is transcendent The evils from which it frees us are eternal the rewards which
our offences took upon himself For such is the malice of a mortal sin that if we did but know it as it is our hearts would burst with grief and we could not suffer it and live and therefore many have been known to die sodainly by the violent apprehension of their sins Vincent Serm. 6. Post invocavit Fra. Francisco Diego en la Hist de la Prov. de Aragon l. 2. c. 6. St. Vincentius Ferrerius writes of a certain light woman who going to a Sermon deckt and adorned in all bravery when she heard the Preacher with great zeal and fervour set out the hainousness of the sin of dishonesty she with meer grief and compunction fell dead in the place and a voice was heard she was in heaven The same St. Vincent being in Zamora two condemned persons were led forth to be burnt for their filthiness The Saint drawing neer to them so laid open the deformity of their sin that they both died of grief in the way to execution Another time the same Saint hearing the Confession of an incestuous person so moved him to contrition that he died at his feet If then the grievousness of sin be so great as the grief of it brings death upon them who truely apprehend it what shall we think of the grief of Christ who perfectly knew the hainousness of sin and took upon him all the sins of the world and grieved for every one of them as if he himself had committed it Who can declare or imagine the grievousness of his resentment when he saw his Father whose honour he desired and endeavourd even from his very bowels to be injured after so many and so horrid manners Suar. in 3. p. to 2. disput 33 sec. 2. Grave Divines affirm that the grief which Christ suffered for sins of men was more vehement and intense then all other griefs what objects soever they have or can have by ordinary power either in Man or Angels which afflictions he suffered all his life and therefore one of the Psalms sayes he was in labours from his youth which another Lection reades He was agonizing and exhaling his soul It was a custom among the Jewes that hearing any to blaspheme or injure God they tore their garments in signe of grief What grief did then the Son of God endure for all the blasphemies and injuries committed by the whole world against his Eternal Father Certainly he tore not his Garments but his Body and powred forth his sacred blood at a thousand fountains before he subjected it to the power of his Enemies revenging the sins against his Father upon his own person and tormenting himself for our sins before he was tormented by others Such was the zeal of the glory of God which burnt in his breast that he would not pardon himself to the end he might obtain pardon for Man If the zeal of Phinees was so great that beholding two persons commit a sin he could not contain himself from revenging it even with their deaths If that of Elias took away the lives of so many false Prophets and Moses purpled his hands in the blond of his People causing so many thousands of them to be slain What shall be the zeal of Christ at the sight of the sins of all the world how vehement his desire that God should be revenged and since he would revenge them upon himself what grief and anguish did he endure for the sins of the whole world Certainly no words can possibly express it But not contented with those he gave himself he would subject himself also to those which he received from others which certainly were no small ones but such as were proportionable to his burning zeal and therefore beyond utterance painful and severe Yet those though rigorous and great were short of that interiour grief which he took upon himself for those were inflicted by the rage and madness of the Jews but these by his own zeal and charity and therefore by how much his love was greater than the hatred and malice of his enemies by so much greater was the grief of his heart than that of his senses and than those pains which he suffered in his sacred body But it is fit we should also often reflect upon the greatness of those which were more particularly suffered for our Example that we may thence learn to despise the goods of the earth which we see charged with so many evils and avoid all sorts of sins since our sweet Saviour took their punishments upon himself in so high a degree §. 2. Wherefore as Christ our Redeemer suffered for the sin of Man which is totally evil in it self and all the Circumstances as we have already discoursed so his Passion was likewise every way most grievous and painful as we shall perceive in observing those seaven Circumstances noted by Tully First behold who it is that suffers It is he who deserves it least He who is Innocency it self He who is a Person as holy as the holy Spirit of God He who is the offended Party yet suffers for the offender He who is Lord of all He whom the Seraphins acknowledge and adore He who hath done innumerable benefits for his very enemies Our Father who created us and made us of nothing A man most delicate for the vivacity of his spirits and the perfection of his temper All this must needs augment his grief as being a Person of such Worth and innocence as he deserved it least and of so temperate and perfect a complexion as he felt it most This Circumstance of the Person who suffered is recommended to our consideration by the Apostle when he sayes Heb. 12. Think upon him who sustained such contradiction from sinners against himself For he it is who now sits at the right hand of the Father who died betwixt two Theeves Think who it is that was allowed no place on earth but hung upon a tree in the air It is He who is to judge the living and the dead Think who it is who suffered upon the Cross it is He who is life eternal Think who it is who permitted himself to be apprehended whipt crucified it is He who made the earth to tremble and caused fire to issue out of the Sanctuary and consume those who obeyed not his holy Word and Law The second Circumstance is what it was he suffered Certainly more than was ever suffered by man injuries affronts inhumane and cruel torments He suffered sutably to his infinite charity and that burning thirst he had to suffer for Man So excessive were his pains that the Rocks clove in sunder in their presence the Mountains sunk the Elements trembled the Heavens cloathed themselves in mourning the Sun and Moon were darkned and the Angels of Peace wept So great they were that the very apprehension of them made the Son of God sweat drops of blood so many in number that it is held to by known by Revelation they were ninety seaven