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A29583 Sancta Sophia, or, Directions for the prayer of contemplation &c. extracted out of more then (sic) XL treatises / written by the late Ven. Father F. Augustin Baker, a monke of the English congregation of the Holy Order of S. Benedict, and methodically digested by the R.F. Serenvs Cressy of the same order and congregation ...; Sancta Sophia Baker, Augustine, 1575-1641. 1657 (1657) Wing B480; ESTC R16263 412,832 848

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abounding 3. But as for Spirituall Bookes the Intention of an Internall liuer ought not to be such as is that of those vvho liue extrouerted liues vvho read them out of a vaine curiosity or to be therby enabled to discourse of such sublime matters vvithout any particular choyce or consideration vvhether they be suitable to their spirit for practise or no. A Contemplatiue soule in Reading such bookes must not say This is a good booke or passage But moreouer This is vsefull proper for mee by Gods grace I will indeauour to put in execution in due time place the good instructions conteined in it as far as they are good for mee 4. For such soules the bookes most proper are these follovving Scala perfectionis vvritten by F. Walter Hilton The Clowd of vnknowing vvritten by an vnknovvne Authour The secret Paths of Diuine loue as likevvise the Anatomie of the soule vvritten by R. F. Constant in Barbanson a Capucin The Booke entitled Of the threefold will of God vvritten by R.F. Benet Fitch aliàs Ganfield a Capucin likevvise The vvorks of S. Teresa of B. Iohn de Cruce likevvise Harphius Thaulerus Suso Rusbrochius Richardus de S. Victore Gerson c. And of the Ancients the Liues of the Ancient Fathers liuing in the Deserts Cassian his Conferences of certaine Ancient Hermites recommended particularly vnto vs by our Holy Father S. Basiles Rules c. Then for soules that tend to perfection in an Actiue life Bookes most proper are The vvorkes of Rodriguez of perfection The duke of Gandy Of good workes Mons de Sales Ludouicus de Puente c. And lastly bookes of a mixed nature are Granatensis Blosius c. Indeed fevv spirituall bookes there are vvherin there is not an intermingling of such Instructions Novv I should aduise soules in an Actiue life not at all to meddle vvith Instructions belonging to Contemplation but applying themselues to the precepts exercises of an Actiue life to vse them in Order to the end therof the Perfection of externall Christian Charity 5. In all spirituall bookes as likevvise in all that treate of Christian morality such Instructions as concerne the essentiall Qualities Practise of vertues are to be esteemed proper to all soules yet not so the motiues manner circumstances of exercising the said vertues 6. In reading of spirituall bookes if any thing touching prayer c occurre as oftimes it vvill happen that the spirituall disciple vnderstāds not let him passe it ouer neither vnnecessarily trouble his ovvne braines nor make it a busines to trouble others about the vnderstanding of it Perhaps in time after more reading especially more experience in prayer he vvill come to vnderstand it 7. And as for those things vvhich he either does indeed or thinks he vnderstands them let him not be hasty to apply them to himselfe by practise out of his ovvne naturall iudgment or liking but let him obserue his ovvne spirit vvay internall guidance by God accordingly make vse of them Othervvise instead of reaping benefit such inconueniences may happen that it vvould haue bene better he had neuer read nor bene able to read any bookes at all but only to haue follovved his owne Internall light as many good soules haue done that neuer could read yet seeking God in simplicity of their hearts praying vvithout any prescribed methods practising likevvise according to the inuitation impulse of the Diuine spirit haue atteined to Perfect Contemplation 8. Generally Mystick Authours vvrite according to their ovvne experience in their ovvne soules vvhen they treate of the seuerall degrees of Prayer the seuerall manners of diuine operations in soules in such degrees as if the same Instructions vvould serue indefinitly for all others Wheras such is the in explicable variety of internall dispositions that the same course order in all things vvill scarse serue any tvvo soules Therefore if the indiscreet Readers vvithout considering their ovvne spirits enablements shall vpon the Authority of any booke either tarry too long in an Inferiour degree of Prayer vvhen God has fitted them does call them to a higher or in a foolish Ambition shall being vnprepared presume to a degree of prayer too sublime spirituall for them there vvill be no end of difficulties doubts consultations 9. But of all errours the greatest most dangerous is the indiscreet imitating the examples practises of Saints in particular extraordinary corporall mortifications voluntarily yet by Gods speciall Direction assumed by them as labours fastings watchings disciplines c for such a forvvardnes in others not called therto to be extraordinary likevvise it is much to be feared proceedes merely from Pride selfe-loue vvill produce no better effects then the nourishing of the same inordinate affections And if such haue not the courage patience as it cannot be expected they should haue to perseuere in such exercises this vvill cause Infirmity of body de●ection of mind vvearines if not an vtter casting of a spirituall course 10. The benefit that vve ought easily may reape from the reading of such extraordinary practises of others is to admire Gods vvaies in the conducting of his Saints to take occasion from thence of humbling despising of our selues seeing hovv short vve come of them in the practise of their vertues But no further to imitate them in such things then vve may be assured that God directs vs by a supernaturall light enables vs by an extraordinary Grace yea moreouer till vve haue obteined the leaue approbation of a prudent Directour Till this be let vs supply vvith a good vvill vvhat our forces vvill not reach vnto And aboue all things vvee must take heed that vve doe not entangle our selues by laying obligations or vowes vpon our soules about such matters the vvhich vve shall haue difficulty to discharge our selues from vvhen by triall vve find the inconuenience 11. Mystick Writers in expressing the spirituall vvay in vvhich they haue bene lead doe oft seeme to differ extreamly from one another The vvhich difference notvvithstanding if rightly vnderstood is merely in the phrase manner of expression And the ground herof is because the pure immateriall Operations of perfect soules in prayer especially the operations of God in soules in vvhich they are patients only are so sublime that intelligible vvords phrases cannot perfectly expresse them therfore they are forced to inuent nevv vvords the best they can or to borrovv similitudes from corporall things c. to make their conceptions more intelligible thus does each one according to the manner that he finds or conceiues in himselfe or according to his skill in language No vvonder therfore if there seeme to be diuersity among them Hervpon the Authour of the Clowd obserues That great harme may come by vnderstanding things litterally grossely sensibly vvhich hovvsoeuer they be expressed vvere intended ought to be vnderstood spiritually 12. Some good
that so much talked of spirit of an Order nor hovv seuerall Orders though neuer so much distinguished by habits or certaine externall practises if their profession be to tend to Contemplation can haue any more then one spirit vvhich directs them to make their principall designe to be the seeking of God in his Internall vvayes of Diuine loue for that only end besides conformable Prayer to practise such obseruances mortifications as vvill best promote this designe And surely this good spirit of Religion contemplation a good Directour of vvhat Profession soeuer vvill very studiously endeauour to aduance yea moreouer vvill no doubt oblige his Disciples to be very Regular zealous in the obseruance of all good ordinances of the Community principally of the Rule according to their professiō made Instructing them vvithall hovv they may vse such things for the aduancing of their spirit the seruice of God although in the meane time perhaps he be not cunning in all the particular Obseruances that belong to them and little or nothing at all to him 17. All soules that liue in Contemplatiue Orders are nor naturally fitted for Contemplatiue vvayes nor the seeking of God in spirit Those therfore that haue not indeed are not capable of much light in their Interiour and so are not so fit to be guided by Diuine Inspirations doe the more need to haue certeine Rules from vvithout at least for the exteriour And for such it is Gods vvill and direction that they should more depend on Externall Guides 18. He that takes vpon him the office of a spirituall Directour saith Thau●erus ought for some reasonable space of time to conuerse vvith his Disciples especially at the beginning for a fevv transitory Conferences vvill not suffise to giue him light concerning their propensions dispositions that he may fit them vvith a degree of Prayer proper for them both for the present future And his principall care must be to set them in such a way as that they may not need to haue much recourse vnto him aftervvard the vvhich is done by giuing them generall Directions about their prayer especially how therby to dispose themselues to receiue light from God whose Inspiratiōs ought for the future to ●e their principall Rule especially for the Interiour And for the practising in particular according to the generall Directions giuen the Disciples must vse their ovvne iudgment for a helpe they may also make vse of such Instructions as they may find in bookes so far as they shall be proper for their spirit But in cases when neither their owne Iudgment nor bookes will helpe them if the difficulty be of greater moment they may againe haue recourse vnto their Directour 19. And in this sort are writers that speake much of the necessity of an Externall Directour to be vnderstood For if such necessity were to last alwaies good soules should be obliged to spend their whole liues in conferring with Directours from whence vvould follovv continuall sollicitudes scrupulosities dangerous distractions c. most contrary to an Internall spirituall life vvhich ought to be a state of much repose cessation introuersion a continuall attendance vnto vvhat God speakes vvithin vnto a soule who if soules vvill humbly faithfully depend on him vvill cleare resolue difficulties vvhich Externall maisters vvill neuer be able to penetrate into But it is too generall an humour in Directours novv adaies to make themselues seeme necessary vnto their disciples vvhom hey endeauour to keepe in a continuall dependance to the great preiudice of their progres in spirit besides many other inconueniences not needfull to be mentioned particularly 20. A soule thar has recourse to an Instructour prouided by God for her or that vsing her best aduice she hath made choyce of must deale freely plainly candidly vvith him conceiling nothing necessary to be knovvne by him his Directions she must follovv in all things assuring herselfe that if she doe so in the simplicity of her heart as in obedience to God himselfe God vvill enlighten him so that she shall not be mislead 21. The gift of discerning spirits is so necessary to a spirituall Guide that except therby he be able to fit a soule vvith a sort degree of prayer suitable to her naturall disposition not tying all soules to begin according to any generall methods for none such can be perscribed but vvill be preiudiciall to some vnlesse he teach her hovv she may become illuminated vvithout him by God alone by the meanes of Prayer abstraction of life vvhervvith the mists of Images passions being dispelled a light vvill spring forth in the soule far more cleare certeine then any that can come from humane instructions not all the Instructions of men Angells ioyned vvith all mortifications imaginable vvill be able to bring a soule to Contemplation For seldome or neuer doth God vvorke contrary to our naturall complexions And till soules come to exercises in spirit prayer infused by God alone they are far from Contemplation 22. Novv at the first it is very hard for any Directour to knovv exactly the secret Inclinations of imperfect soules vvhich are so infinitly various And therfore for the most part their Instructions about prayer attendāce to Diuine Inspirations must be generall the vvhich the disciples themselues must make a particular vse of by obseruing their ovvne abilities inclinations by marking vvhat more particular formes of Prayer c. suite best vvith them doe them most good And this if they be not able in a reasonable manner to doe or if they haue not the courage to abide in a vvay in vvhich they are put it vvill be in vaine for them to proceede in those secret Internall vvayes 23. If the vvay vvherein a soule is put hath made a reasonable progres be indeed proper for her there vvill be little need of frequent recourse vnto her Directour Neither ought he to examine her about her Internall Exercises of vvhich he may iudge vvell enough by her externall comportment for it is impossible for a soule to be in a vvrong vvay interiourly but of it selfe it vvill breake out exteriourly especially to the eyes of those vvho themselues are in a right vvay as the Spirituall Directour is supposed to be And there is scarce any more certeine signe that a soule is not interiourly in a good vvay then is her being forvvard to trouble her Directour vvith multiplicity of Questions doubts her readines to discouer her Interiour to others vvhom she has heard or does beleiue to be skilfull in Spirituality 24. The Images internall Distractions raised by impertinent consultations about the Interiour are of all other most pernicious For distractions from vvithout are but superficiall vvhereas those being hatched bred vvithin the soule from some secret ill qualities as feare scrupulosity curiosity c. they are more profound destructiue to true Recollection
in all the good actiōs vvee doe or good thoughts vvee enterteine vvee so doe thinke in vertue only of a precedent concomitant illumination of our vnderstanding inclining of our will both vvhich are immediatly caused by God Reason likevvise experience tell vs that vvhilst vaine or sinfull distracting images or inordinate Passions clovvd the mind Gods illuminations are either vnperceiued or neglected by vs his motions ineffectuall If euer therfore the soule be in a fit disposition to receiue those blessed effects of Gods holy spirit if euer God vvill make good his so serious frequent promises it is then vvhen by a profound Recollection an humble soule vvithdravves all her affections from herselfe all other creatures yea endeuours to expell all the images of them transcending all created things raising herselfe according to her power to a strict vnion vvith him and withall powres forth her desire to be informed in his vvill only intending therby his Glory the encrease of his Diuine Loue. 3. Novv though imperfect soules not being able as yet to driue avvay distracting images to still all vnruly Passions are forced to content themselues vvith their naturall light in many matters of lesse importance so that a great part of their ordinary Actions doe not at all contribute to their aduancemēt in spirit Yet perfecter soules walke almost continually in a supernaturall light perceiuing resisting the subtle insinuations of selfe loue not suffring themselues hastily to be pushed forvvards to Actions before they haue consulted their Internall Guide much lesse contrary to his directions 4. Most securely therfore may vvee yea vvith all confidence ought vvee to yeild ourselues to be disposed of by God to follovv him in any vvaies that he vvill leade vs both for the exteriour interiour through light Darknesse through bitter svveet And vvhat doubt can there be of erring hauing such a Guide vvhich allvvaies leads the soule through the Paths of Mortification renunciation of selfe vvill although sometimes some speciall vvaies may to our or others naturall iudgements seeme strange perhaps impertinent 5. The grounds of vvhich duty the security attending it are these 1. Because vvee through the ignorance of our interiour complexion temper of soule as likevvise of our present vvants incomprehensible to humane knovvledge gott by sence can neither knovv the speciall vvayes either of Prayer or Mortification proper to vs nor can vvee be assured that others doe sufficiētly knovv them Wheras of Gods Omniscience and equally infinite Goodnesse none can doubt 2. Because the end vvherto vvee aspire being supernaturall consequently the vvayes leading therunto the light directing in those vvayes must likevvise be supernaturall 3. Because if vve knevv the most proper most direct vvayes leading to Contemplation Diuine Vnion yet they being most contrary to our naturall inclinations vvithout a Diuine impulse vvee vvould not chuse the fittest that is those vvhich are the most opposite to our nature 6. Yet vvee are to consider that there are degrees of security according to the seuerall manners by vvhich God cōmunicates vnto vs his inspirations For 1. Though in Sensible deuotion the good thoughts affections giuen vs are in themselues according to their substance the effects of Gods Spirit ought vvith all security to be complyed vvithall yet vvith discretion so as that out of a gluttonous pleasure conceiued by thē vvee doe not yeild vnto them so far as therby to vveaken our heads or preiudice our healths notvvithstanding the Resolutions of vndertaking any practises for the future groūded on such sensible Deuotion are to be mistrusted as hauing in them more of nature selfe-loue vvanting sincerity of Resignation Besides that the senses being principall vvorkers the reason is rather obscured then illuminated therby yea by Gods permission the deuill may haue some influence in such Deuotion subsequent resolutions 2. Of the like vncertaine nature may the seeming Inspirations or lights be vvhich are gotten by the vvorking of the Imagination discourse vpon the matter eyther in Prayer or our of it the person therupon concluding this or that side to be more likely to be Gods vvill 3. But if vvithout such vvorking of the Imagination or if after it the soule in Recollected Prayer made vvith Resignation submission of her naturall iudgment renouncing all Interests of nature comes as it vvere vnexpectedly to haue one part of the Question presented to her mind as truth as Gods vvill God then giuing a Clarity to the reason to see that vvhich it savv not before or othervvise then it savv it or if the soule do finde a blind reasonles motion in the vvill to one side of the matter In such cases the soule may most securely confidently iudge it to be a Diuine Inspiration motion being vvrought vvithout any trouble in the exercise of the Imagination senses or Passions 7. Let not a soule therfore be discouraged from committing herselfe to Gods Internall direction though it should happen that those vvho passe for the most spirituall persons that are most forvvard to vsurpe the conducting of soules to Perfection vvhilst themselues know no further then the exercises of the Imagination should declame against it out of an apprehension that it vvould be a disparagement to them if God should be acknovvledged the principall Guide they should accuse the doctrine here deliuered as phantasticall vnsafe pretending to Enthusiasmes No vvonder it is if such being strangers to the Contemplatiue vvayes of the spirit should be ignorant of these secret Paths by vvhich God leads soules to Perfection in the vvhich none can tread or at least make any considerable progresse till quitting a seruile dependance on externall teachers they rely only vpon the Diuine Guidance And for this propose deuout soules are seriously oft to be exhorted to keepe themselues in a disposition of as much Abstraction both externall internall as may be to the end they may be enabled to heare discerne the Diuine Voyce to the directions of vvhich if they vvill in practise faithfully correspond God vvill be vvanting to them in nothing 8. And for a further security that there can scarse happen any considerable danger to a soule proceeding this vvay for knovving the Diuine Will though shee should sometimes mistake in the thing it selfe Both shee also the Opposers of this Doctrine are to consider that as hath formerly bene sayd the only matters that are here supposed to be proposed for a Resolution are must be of the nature of those things which of themselues and in the generall are indifferent but yet vvhich being vvell chosen may vvill aduance the soule for in no other things but such can there be any doubt And surely if vve be capable of knovving Gods vvill in such things as vvho can question it certainly the proceeding thus vvith indifference Resignation vvithout
for Surely not Corporall labours Not the vse of the Sacraments Not hearing of Sermons c. For all these she might haue enioyed perhaps more plentifully in the vvorld It is therfore Only the vnion of the Spirit with God by Recollected Constant Praier to the attaining vvhich Diuine End all things practised in Religion doe dispose and to vvhich alone so great impediments are found in the vvorld 6. The best generall proofe therfore of a good Call to Religion is a Loue to prayer either vocall or Mentall For if at first it be only to vocall Praier by reason that the soule is ignorant of the efficacy and Excellency of Internall Contemplatiue Prayer or perhaps has receiued some preiudices against it Yet if she obserue Solitude carefully and vvith attention and feruour practise Vocall Praier she vvill in time either by a Diuine Light perceiue the necessity of ioyning Mentall Praier to her vocall or be enabled to practise her vocall Prayer mentally vvhich is a sublime Perfection 7. It is a state therfore of Recollectednes Introuersion that euery one entring into Religion is to aspire vnto The vvhich consists in an habituall Disposition of soule vvherby she transcends all creatures their Images the vvhich therby come to haue litle or no Dominion ouer her so that she remaines apt for immediate Cooperation vvith God receiuing his Inspirations and by a returne and as it vvere a refluxe tending to him and Operating to his Glory It is called Recollectednes because the Soule in such a State gathers her thoughts naturally dispersed fixed vvith multiplicity on Creatures and vnites them vpon God And it is called Introuersion both because the Spirit those things which concerne it being the only obiect that a deuout Soule considers values she turnes all her Sollicitudes inwards to obserue defects wants or inordinations there to the end she may remedy supply correct them And likevvise because the proper Seate the Throne Kingdome vvhere God by his Holy Spirit dvvells and reignes is the purest Summity of Mans Spirit There it is that the soule most perfectly enioyes and contemplates God though euery vvhere as in regard of himselfe equally present yet in regard of the communication of his Perfections present there after a far more Noble manner then in any part of the vvorld besides inasmuch as he communicates to the Spirit of Man as much of his Infinite Perfections as any Creature is capable of being not only simple Being as he is to inanimate Bodies or Life as to liuing Creatures or Perception as to sensitiue or knowledge as to other ordinary Rationall Soules But vvith and besides all these he is a Diuine Light Purity happines by communicating the supernaturall Graces of his Holy Spirit to the Spirits of his seruants Hence it is that our Sauiour sayes Regnum Dei intra vos est The Kingdome of God is within you And therfore it is that Religious Solitary abstracted Soules doe endeauour to turne all their thoughts invvard raising them to Apicem Spiritus the pure top of the Spirit far aboue all sensible Phantasmes or imaginatiue discoursings or grosser Affections vvhere God is most perfectly seene and most comfortably enioyed 7. Novv the actuall practise of this Introuersion consists principally if not only in the Exercise of Pure Internall spirituall Prayer the Perfection of vvhich therfore ought to be the Cheife ayme to vvhich a Religious Contemplatiue Soule is obliged to aspire So that surely it is a great mistake to thinke that the Spirit of S. Benedicts Order Rule consists in a Publick Orderly protracted solemne singing of the Diuine Office the vvhich may be full as vvell yea and for the Externall is vvith more aduantage performed by Secular Ecclesiasticks in Cathedrall Churches A Motiue to the introducing of vvhich pompous solemnity might be that it is full of Edification to others to see heare a conspiring of many Singers Voyces and it is to be supposed of hearts too to the praising of God But it is not for Edification of others that a Monasticall State vvas instituted or ought to be vndertaken Religious Soules truly Monasticall flye the sight of the vvorld entring into Desarts and solitudes to spend their liues alone in Pennance and Recollection and to purify their ovvne Soules not to giue Example or Instruction to others Such Solitudes are or ought to be sought by them therby to dispose themselues for another far more proffitable Internall solitude in vvhich Creatures being banished the only Conuersation is betvveene God and the Soule her selfe in the depth of the Spirit as if besides them tvvo no other thing vvere existent 8. To gaine this happy state a deuout Soule enters into Religion vvhere all imaginable aduantages are to be found for this End At least anciently they vvere so and still ought to be But yet though all Religious persons ought to aspire to the Perfection of this State it is really gained by very fevv in these times For some through ignorance or misinstruction by Teachers that knovv no deeper not a more perfect introuersion then into the Internall senses or imagination And others through negligence or else by reason of a voluntary povvring forth their Affections thoughts vpon vanities vselesse Studies or other sensuall Enterteinments are neuer able perfectly to enter into their Spirits and to find God there 9. But it is vvonderfull to reade of that depth of Recollectednes most profound Introuersion to vvhich some Ancient Solitary Religious Persons by long exercise of spirituall Prayer haue come In so much as they haue bene so absorpt euen drovvned in a deepe Contemplation of God that they haue not seene vvhat their eyes looked on nor felt vvhat othervvise vvould greiuously hurt them Yea to so habituall a State of attending only to God in their Spirit did some of them attaine that they could not though they had a mind therto oftimes fixe their thoughts vpon any other obie●t but God their Internall senses according as themselues haue described it hauing bene in an vnexpressible manner drawen into their Spirit and therein so svvallovved vp as to loose in a sort all other vse A most happy state in vvhich the Deuill cannot so much as fixe a seducing tentation or Image in their minds to distract them from God but on the contrary if he should attempt it that vvould be an occasion to plunge them deeper more intimely into God 10. And this vvas the effect of Pure Spirituall Contemplatiue Prayer The vvhich vvas not only practised by the Holy Ancient Hermites c. in most sublime Perfection But the exercise therof vvas their Chiefe most proper almost continuall Employment in so much as the Perfection therof vvas by them accounted the perfection of their State A larger proofe vvherof shall be reserued till vvee come to speake of Prayer For the present therfore I vvill content my selfe vvith a testimony or tvvo related by Cassian out of the mouthes
of tvvo most sublime Cōtemplatiues Thus therfore speakes one of them in the Conference cap. 7. Finis Monachi totius Perfectionis Culmen in Orationis consummatione consistit that is The End of a Monasticall Profession and the Supreme Degree of all Perfection consists in the Perfection of Praier And in the tenth Confer cap. 7. Another saieth Hic finis totius Perfectionis est vt eo vsque extenuata Mens ab omni situ Carnali ad Spiritualia quotidie sublimetur donec omnis eius Conuersatio omnisque volutatio cordis vna iugis efficiatur Oratio That is This is the End of all Perfection that the mind become so purified from all carnall defilement that it may be raised vp daily to Spirituall things till its whole employments and euery motion of the Heart may become one vn-interrupted Praier 11. Novv vvhat a kind of Praier this vvas that they aspired to hovv sublime in Spirit though oftimes ioyned vvith their vocall Praiers may appeare from that Description giuen of it by a Holy Hermite in these vvords in the 10. Confer cap. 20. Ita ad illam Orationis purissimam perueniet qualitatem quae non solum nullam Deitatis effigiem in sua supplicatione miscebit sed nec vllam quidem in se memoriam dicti cuiusdam vel facti speciem seu formam Characteris admittet That is Thus by much practise the soule will arriue to that most Sublime Purity of Praler wherin no Image at all of the Diuinity is mingled and which will not admit the least memory nor a Character or representation of anything either spoken or done The strange subtilty spirituality of vvhich Praier considered there is applied vnto it that Saying of S. Antony in the 9. Conf. chap. 31. Non est perfecta oratio in qua se Monachus vel hoc ipsum quod orat intelligit That is That praier is not a perfect one vnlesse the Religious Persō that exercises it be not able to giue an accoūt of his owne thoughts that passed in it or does not perceiue that he prayes 12. What great aduantages the Ancient Hermites other Religious Persons enioyed for the more certaine and more speedy attaining to this Internall Purity of Praier vvonderfull Cleannes of Spirit the End of their Profession Hovv much more able their bodily complexions vvere to support that most rigorous Solitude those long continued Attentions of mind c And how much more efficacious herto were their Manuall labours beyond our Employments in Study And lastly how by such like meanes they vvith the only Exercise of vocall Praier attained to Perfect Contemplation shall be shewed more fully vvhen vvee come to the last Treatise concerning Internall Praier 13. In this place I vvill content my selfe vvith shevving that by the Rule of our Holy Father S. Benedict all his Disciples are obliged to propose to themselues no other End of their Religious Profession but only such Purity both of soule and the Operations of it in Spirituall Praier So that hovv exact soeuer they be in outvvard Obseruances vnlesse they be referd vnto and efficacious also for the producing of this Internall Purity in some reasonable measure they shall not be esteemed by God to haue complied vvith their vocation and Profession 14. To this purpose vvee may obserue that it is from those Ancient Holy Hermites Religious that our Holy Father borrovved the greatest part of his Rule and Ordinances vvhich in the Conclusion he professes to be meant only by him as a disposition vvherby vvee may be enabled to imitate them in their most perfect Internall practises It is from them that he borrovves the Phrase of Oratio pura Pure Praier in the 20. Chap. The Exercise vvherof besides the reciting of the Office he appointed daily as appeares both by the same Chapter of the Rule and also by the Story related by S. Gregory of one of his Monks vvhom the Deuill in the shape of a Blackmore tempted out of the Community in the time of such Recollections By vvhich may be perceiued the great fruit and efficacy of such Praier For the Deuill could be contented he should be present at the Office because during that Exercise he could more easily distract his mind But knovving the force of Internall Prayer hovv recollectiue it is and vvhat light it affords to discouer the invvard Defects of the soule and to obtaine Grace to correct them His principall aime vvas to vvithdravv him from so proffitable an Exercise And therfore to countermine the Deuills Malice Our Holy Father thought it vvorth a iourney expressely to cure the Infirmity and preuent the danger of one of his Seduced Monkes 15. For this End it is that our Holy Father in the 58. C. ordeines Superiours in the Examination of the Spirits dispositions of Nevv-comers that they should most especially haue an eye to this most necessary condition Si Deum vere quaerit If he be such an one as truly seekes God And more particulary Si sollicitùs est ad opus Dei If he haue a sollicitous care duely to performe the worke of God vvhich he interprets to be Praier and this so principall a vvorke that he ordeines that Nihil operi Dei praeponatur nothing must be preferred before it 16. For the aduancing of this Praier that it may become such as is suitable to a Contemplatiue State all other Exteriour Obseruances are appointed 1. By the 12. Degrees of Humility by frequent Prostrations acknowledging of Secret Imperfections c. Pride selfeloue all other our corrupt Affections hindring our vnion in Spirit vvith God are subdued expelled and as our Holy Father says at the end of the last Degree that Perfect Charity vvhich most immediatly vnites the soules to God is produced in the soule 2. By perfect Obedience selfe iudgment selfe will are abated 3. By Fastings watchings other Austerities sensuality is mortified 4. By Religious Pouerty all distracting cares about temporall things are expelled 5. And for the gaining of an Habituall state of Recollectednes and introuersion so great silence and Solitude vvere so rigorously enioyned and practised all obiects of sensuall Affections remoued all conuersation with the world all relating or hearkning to newes seuerely prohibited All this surely for no other end but that soules might be brought to a fit disposition to imitate those solitary and deuout Saints proposed by our holy Father for our examples in their continuall conuersation vvith God attending to his Diuine inspirations and vn-interrupted vnion of Spirit vvith him by pure Spirituall Contemplation 17. Therfore though our Holy law-giuer doth not in his Rule giue his Disciples any speciall Instructions for ordering their Interiour spirituall Prayer touching such matters referring them to the Inspiration of the Diuine Spirit as himselfe sayth as likevvise to the Aduices of the Ancient fathers and Hermites professing Contemplation Yet it is euident that his principall designe vvas to dispose his Disciples by his Ordinances to
vvell as others vvho ought to be very far from fauouring this perniciously officious and vncharitable humour of accusing or informing in any of their Religious Much lesse ought they to esteeme that their Authori●y can extend to the preiudice of Brotherly Charity so far as to ex●use or howeuer to oblige any one to be an accuser or informer against his brethren A pretence of doing good to their subiects soules vvill be alledged by such Superiours as are of a curious inquisitive Disposition and are continually searching into the behaviour of their Religious but little good Reformation vvill ever be vvrought by such an humour of Iealous Curiosity On the contrary the effects of it are the breeding of discontents generally in all and the greatest mischeife to the soules of private vncharitable Informers 10. It is more secure for one that is apt to offend in his Tongue to be in company of many then of one or two whom he affects Therfore particular Intimacy and private correspondences betvvene Religious is much to be avoyded both for the Peace of Communities and the good of each priuate Religious Person 11. No vvords are to be spoken nor Action done merely vpon the motiue of edifying others And indeed vvhere recreatiue conuersations are allovved the most commodious subiects of Discourse are purely indifferent things and such as are neither apt to moue Passions nor to leaue distracting Images in the Hearers minds 12. Vpon this occasion I conceiue it necessary to adde some Aduices touching Religious Recreations The vvhich are not to be concluded fit to be prohibited because vvee sayd that the Duty of Mortification extends it selfe vniuersally to the whole soule and that it is to be continued to the end of ones Life On the contrary not only Reason but the Examples of the most Perfect among the Ancient Saints famous for Contemplation shew that it is proffitable yea at due times necessary To this purpose seemes the story of S. Iohn the Euangelist the first Doctour and Example of Contemplation whose custome vvas to recreate himselfe vvith a tame Doue For vvhich being censured by a Hunter that passed by as for an Action that vvas beneath his grauity and not beseeming one that professed a continuall conuersation vvith God He defended himselfe to the conuiction of the reprouer by shevving that as a Bow if it be alvvayes bent would loose its force so the mind likevvise vvould become vtterly vncapable of Diuine Thoughts if no relaxation vvere allovved to it considering the infirmity of the Body that cannot alvvays supply fit Spirits to Actions especially to such as are so contrary to its inclinations 13. True it is that in our Holy Rule there are extant no Orders about Conuentuall Recreations which argues that none vvere practised in those dayes Yea our Holy Father takes a particular care hovv euery hower of the day should be employed in common Notvvithstanding after Refection he enioyned the Religious to retire each one into his Cell permitting them a conuenient time to refresh themselues alone either with Sleepe as the custome vvas in that vvarme Climate or othervvise as they found themselues disposed if they had no inclination to Sleepe for no certaine employment is then appointed 14. But because in these latter dayes our complexions are not supposed able to support so great solitude and Attention to the Spirit as hath bene sayd Therfore haue Superiours allovved and ordeined daily certaine times for Recreatiue Conferences almost obliging each particular Religious Person to be present at them And besides at certaine seasons monthly or as the custome is they haue afforded an addition to the Diet. 15. Neither doth this preiudice the Duty of continuall Mortification vvhich is not to be interpreted in extreme rigour because then nature euen in the ablest complexions vvould be destroyed And besides Recreations are appointed that Mortification may be better more feruently exercised aftervvard Adde herunto that euen in Recreation it selfe Mortification may and ought in some reasonable degree to be discreetly exercised so as that the mind is not to povvre it selfe forth vpon that vvhich is pleasant to nature but to keepe a moderate vvatchfullnesse ouer it selfe and to referre the contentment found therin to the good of the Spirit 16. To speake a little therefore particularly touching such Conferences Decency is in grosse to be obserued But it vvill be di●ficult to prescribe any sett order or manner for the Talke as not to speake vnasked not to exceede such a limitation of vvords c. to omit many particular cautions which at other times are to be observed Here some more freedome must be allovved so it goe not too far 17. Among Women there can scarce be any Recreation if the Tongue be too much stinted Neither is it to be expected that their Talke should be of Spirituall matters Both because such Talke is far from being recreatiue as likevvise because none but expert Persons ought to discourse of such subiects Indeed to make such the subiect of ordinary Discourse euen betvvene the most able experienced persons either Men or vvomen is not conuenient at all Except some speciall occasion makes it expedient For it vsually proceeds from Pride or a vvillingnes to interest ones selfe in the guiding of the Consciences of others and may produce inconuenient Effects in both 18. The matter and conditions of Recreatiue Discourse therfore may be 1. That the matter doe not particularly referre to the Interiour of any of the parties But if it regard a Religious State that it be about lesse considerable externall matters as Ceremonies Customes c. 2. That it may be some thing that may be apt to cause chearfullnes though not laughter vvhich our Holy Father vvould haue banished from his Communities Novv Discourses about such matters are not to be reputed Idle words 3. It were better to talke of the ocurrences of former times then of the present because our Holy Father forbids the inquiring or telling of newes in the vvorld for feare least the Hearers being interessed may become distracted vvith sollicitudes 4. It must not therfore be of any thing that probably vvill leaue in the minds any hurtfull Images 5. The Hearer is not to suffer the subiect of the Discourses to enter so deepe into his mind as that it should raise any Passions there 6. It must by no meanes be of any thing ●y vvhich any one present or absent may be preiudiced or contristated nor indeed aftervvards distracted c. 19. As touching those that are naturally of Melancholick Dispositions they ought to be exceedingly vvatchfull ouer themselues that they giue not vvay to so pestilent an humour Nature vvill incline them to auoyd all Recreations and diuersions and being very subtle it vvill suggest pretences to iustify a froward Lonelines an humour not able to support innocent conuersation as if this vvere done out of a Loue to a Religious Solitude and Recollection But in all likelyhood such a peruerse Solitude is employed
direct combats against the appetits of it And only from the decay ignorance of such Praier hath it proceeded that spirituall Directours haue bene forced to multiply such so many nice obseruances about diet and other duties of our Rule All vvhich notvvithstanding vvithout Prayer haue but small effect to produce solide vertues in the soule 16. A soule perfectly spiritualized if she might haue her vvish vvould vvillingly be freed not only from all pleasures taken in Refections considering the dayly tentations to excesse but euen from the necessity of them being forced to cry out vvith Dauid De necessitatibus meis erue me Domine O Lord free mee from these my corporall necessities for vvere it not for them she might alvvaies like an Angell be in continuall Contemplation enioy a neuer-fayling internall light the vvhich is obscured by the fumes raysed euen by the most temperate Refections by vvhich also passions are in some degree quickned Such soules may indeed properly be said to haue a disaffection to Refection And the best vvay besides out of Prayer to beget such disaffection to preuent the harmes that may come from any corporall necessities vvill be not only to practise the mortifying of sensuall contentment in going to the Refectory but vpon serious consideration of the Tentations there to be found to goe vvith a kind of vnvvillingnes feare 17. A most noble kind of Mortification in Refection is that mencioned by Harphius of a certaine Holy Brother of the Order of S. Francis called Rogerius vvho by meanes of eleuating the povvers of his soule suspending them in God during Refection lost all perception of tast in eating vvhen he found himselfe vnable so to eleuate his soule he vvould for so long forbeare to eate of any thing that might afford any gust But this practise belongs only to the Perfect it may proue preiudiciall dangerous to the ordinary sort of lesse perfect soules or any that haue not an especiall certaine Inspiration to imitate it 18. The like may be sayd of the manner of Mortification practised by some of the Ancient Hermits vvho vsed to mixe a fevv droppes of oyle esteemed by them a great delicacy vvith their vinegar to the end therby to prouoke the appetite to desire more the vvhich they denied to it Or of another vvho hauing receiued a bunch of grapes ravenously deuoured them partly to make the gustfull pleasure so much the shorter partly as he said to cousen the deuill to vvhom he desired to appeare a glutton 19. A soule that practises Internall Prayer may content herselfe vvith a moderate Attention to vvhat is read during Refection And the like may be sayd of that part of the Office vvhich in some Communities is sayd immediatly after Dinner Because too earnest an Attention and Recollectednes at such times vvould preiudice the Head and Stomack A Soule therfore may esteeme this to be as a time of Desolation as indeed there is some resemblance 20. Concerning the vse of Physick cautions to be vsed about it some Instructions shall be giuen in the last Treatise vvhere vvee come to speake hovv a soule is to behaue herselfe in regard of her Prayer during Sicknes 21. Lastly the matter of Sleepe is not vvnvvorthy the eare of a Spirituall Person For certaine it is that a full repast doth not so much plunge a soule in sensuality nor so indispose her for Spirituall Exercises as a long profound Sleepe From vvhence euen a perfect soule vvill not be able to raise herselfe into Exercises of the Spirit vvithout much difficulty long striuing 22. And on these grounds doubtlesse it vvas that the Mi●night Office vvas appointed to the end to interrupt S●eepe Yea anciently the three Nocturnes vvere therfore diuided namely to preuent the immersing of soules in sensuall Nature 23. For imperfect soules it may be very preiudiciall for them to be depriued of a conuenient measure of Sleepe Yet it is 〈◊〉 ●eing it should be interrupted It is li●evvise good for them to goe to bed vvith an affection desire so be early vp for such an affection vvill cause their Sleepe to be mixed vvith a litle Sollicitude the vvhich vvill dispose them both to vvake sooner and to rise vvith lesse vnvvillingnes 24. In case that one being in Bed cannot sleepe it is v●ry dangerous to continue in a State of mere negligence Idlenes because then not only vaine but ve●y hurtfull pernicious thoughts vvill be apt to presse into the mind For a preuention or remedy against vvhich I should by no meanes aduise one to betake himselfe to any seriously Recollected thoughts or exercises of Deuotion for that vvould quite hinder Sleepe for the future and spoile the next Daies Recollections The like I say of the time immediatly going before Bed-time But in case they be simply Vaine Thoughts that then vvander vnsetledly in his mind let him not vvillingly pursue them but rather neglect them Wheras if they be sinfull Imaginations set him as vvell as he can diuert quietly his mind from them and novv then vvithout much force lift vp his mind vnto God or vse some familiar Praiers or say the Beades vvithout much forced Attention yet more Attention is required against Sinfull then vaine thoughts 25. As for Perfect soules their Praier in such a Case vvill lesse hinder Sleepe by reason it is both so pure so facile that it is become almost as Naturall as breathing performed vvithout any agitation of the Spirits or reuoluing of Images in the Internall senses CHAP. VII § 1. Of the Mortification of Anger by Patience § 2. 3. 4. 5. Here is treated of Smaller Impatiences cheifly scarce obseruable but by Recollected liuers § 6. Patience to be exercised at all times Euen in Ioy Prosperity § 7. 8. 9. Wee ought to aspire to an Indifference § 10. Patience towards God afflicting vs is easier then towards Man § 11. 12. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. Seauen Degrees of Patience § 19. Examples of seemingly Extrauagant kinds of Patience c. § 20. Praier the only Efficacious Instrument to get Patience § 21. All Actions except actuall Praier are in some degree defectuous 1. THE next Passion to be mortified is Anger the vvhich vvhosoeuer vvillingly suffers to arise increase or that deliberatly yeilds to trouble of mind for any matter that concernes the Body Health Fortunes Life c yea or pretended soules good such an one really makes more esteeme of them then of the solide good of his Soule For as far as Anger gets a Maistery ouer him so far he looses that Dominion that his Soule ought to haue ouer all other things puts Reason out of its Throne Herupon our Sauiour sayth In patientia vestra possidebitis animas vestras That is By Patience yee shall keepe the Possession of your Soules as implying that by Impatience vvee loose that possession And vvhat greater losse can vvee haue Hence it is also that
be so far from receiuing any harme by them that she vvill by their meanes increase in grace so that though she doe not receiue any extraordinary Illuminations nor any satisfaction to her naturall vvill by such distracted Prayers yet doth she get that for vvhich such illuminations gusts are giuen to vvit a priuy but effectuall grace to adhere vnto God to resigne herselfe to him in all his prouidences permissions concerning her And grace gotten by such an afflicting vvay of Abnegation is far more secure merits more at Gods hands then if it had come by lightsome pleasing consolations Since this is a vvay by vvhich corrupt nature is transcended selfe-loue contradicted subdued euen vvhen it assaults the soule most subtilly dangerously to vvit by pretending that all sollicitudes anxious discouragements caused by distractions doe flovv from diuine loue from a care of the soules progresse in spirituality Lastly this is a vvay by vvhich Charity all diuine vertues are deepely rooted in the spirit being produced established there by the same meanes that the deuill vses to hinder the production of them in negligent tepide soules or to destroy them vvhen they haue bene in some measure produced 9. As for more particular Aduices Expedients sleights to be made vse of in speciall cases circumstances none can teach but God only vvho by meanes of experience perseuerance in prayer vvill vndoubtedly giue vnto a soule light grace sufficient 10. To conclude therfore this point This difference may be obserued betwene distractions in perfect soules from the same in the imperfect viz. That in perfect soules Distractions proceede only from some vnvvilling distemper in the cognoscitiue faculties but in the imperfect they are rather frō some degree of inordinate Affectiō to the obiects of the Distractions And therfore a well-aduanced soule hath little difficulty in putting them avvay as soone as she reflects vpon them for vvithout cō●ending vvith thē she can presētly vnite herselfe vvith her superiour vvill to God euen vvhilst her knovving powers are busy about impertinent obiects vvhereas Imperfect soules in the inferiour degrees of Prayer hauing as yet an expresse perceptible vse of the vnderstanding imagination cannot but receiue some preiudice by distractions in as much as those faculties cannot at the same time be employed vpon different obiects that haue no subordination or relation to one another 11. There remaines a third condition or quality vvhich I said vvas necessary to true Internall affectiue Prayer to vvit the diuine Inspiration from vvhich if it doe not proceede it is of little efficacy or merit Novv though in the generall diuision of Internall Prayer I seemed to appropriate the title of Infused Prayer to the Prayer of perfect Contemplation the meaning therof vvas that such Prayer is merely infused the soule by any deliberate preparation or election not disposing herselfe therto Wheras in the inferiour degrees there is neces●ary both a precedent and concomitant industry in the soule to make choyce of matter for Praier to force herselfe to produce affections correspondent to the said matter by reason that as yet Gods holy Spirit is not so abounding operatiue in the soule as to impell her to pray or rather breathing for●h Prayers in and by her But in all cases that is most true vvhi●h S. Bernard saith Tepida est oratio quam non praeuenit Inspiratio that is That Prayer is a repide prayer which is not preuented by diuine Inspiration And S. Augustin Bene orare Deum gratia spiritalls est That is It is a speciall grace of Gods holy Spirit to be able to pray aright 12. Novv the ground of the necessity of a Diuine Inspiration herto is expressed in that saying of S. Paul Quid oremus sicut oportet nescimus c. Wee know not how to pray as wee ought And therfore the Spirit of God helpes our infirmity yea saith he The spirit it selfe makes requests in vs for vs this oft with grones which cannot be expressed vvhich the soule it selfe cannot conceiue It is this Inspiration only vvhich giues a supernaturality to our Praiers makes them fit to be heard granted by God 13. But of this subiect much hath already bene said more vvill follow when wee treate of the seuerall Degrees of Prayer especially the perfect Prayer of Aspirations vvhere vvee shall shevv hovv these Inspirations are attempred according to the naturall good Propensions of soules so that those vvhich are naturally inclined to Introuersion are vsually moued by God to seeke him by pure spirituall operations vvithout images or motiues yet this by degrees according to the state of the soule Where also I vvill shevv hovv necessary Liberty of Spirit a freedome from nice methods Rules of Prayer is to dispose the soule for these Diuine Inspirations And therfore I vvill forbeare any further enlarging of my selfe on this point in this place 14. Novv a due consideration of these Excellencies most heauenly Effects of internall Affectiue Prayer ought to giue vs a suitable Esteeme valevv of it aboue any other Employments vvhatsoeuer An experience hereof it vvas that made an Ancient Hermite called Iacob in Theodoret. de vit PP resolutely to persist in refusing to interrupt his appoynted Prayer or to delay the time of it for any other busines on ciuilities in visits vvhatsoeuer he commanded all to depart vvhen the houre vvas come saying I came not to this solitude to benefit other mens soules but to purifie mine owne by Prayer CHAP. VII § 1. Internall Affectiue Prayer of Contemplation hath allwaies bene entertained at first with iealousy and rigour § 2. 3. 4. An Illustrious Example in the person of the late R. Fa Baltazar Aluarez of the Society of IESVS § 5. 6. 7. An Account required giuen by him to his Generall touching his Prayer of Contemplation The order manner of Gods guidance of him therto therein And the excellency of that Prayer declared § 16. 17. c. The substance of a Discourse written by him in answer to seauen Obiections made against Internall Prayer of Contemplation § 30. The successe of this tempest 1. IT is so far from being a iust Preiudice against this most excellent of Gods Gifts Internall Prayer of the vvill that it is rather a proofe of the more then ordinary Eminency of it that it has alwaies found some euen among the learned and oftimes among such as haue bene the most strict seuere about Religious Obseruances that haue doe oppose it God forbid that this should alwaies be imputed either to malice enuy c but rather to want of experience in the Mysterious wayes by vvhich the Spirit of God oftimes conducts his speciall seruants It is vvell knowne what calumnies persecutions Suso S. Teresa B. Iohn de Cruce c. found vvhen God enlightned thē moued them to cōmunicate to the world this heauenly light All vvhich
others or force herselfe to continue Meditation she vvould make no progresse at all Yea on the contrary the extreme painefullnes of inuenting Motiues novv vnnecessary and tying herselfe to Methods and prescribed formes vvould be to her so distractiue so void of all tast and comfort and so insupportable that not being suffred to follovv Gods inuitation calling to an Exercise of the will she will be in danger to giue quite ouer all Internall Prayer Whereas by pursuing Gods Call she vvill euery day get light to discouer more and more her secret invvard Defects and Grace to mortify and amend them And such her Mortification is exercised rather by trāscending forgetting the obiects of her inordinate Affections then a direct combatting against them And this state of Praier doth properly ansvver to that which is commonly called the Illuminatiue vvay because i● it the soule vvith little reflexion on her selfe or he● ovvne Obscurity by reason of sin c tends directly and immediatly to God by vvhom she is enlightne● and adorned vvith all Vertues and Graces 12. In the third place a soule after a long Exercise in forced Affections of the will to God represented to the Vnderstanding by Images far more subtile and spirituall then formerly yea endeauouring to contemplate him in the darknes and obscurity of a blind and naked Faith void of all distinct and expresse Images will by little and little grow so well disposed to him that she vvill haue lesse need of forcing herselfe to produce good Affections to him or of prescribing to herselfe determinate formes of Acts or Affections On the contrary Diuine Loue vvill become so firmely established in the soule so wholly and only filling and possessing it that it vvill become as it vvere a New Soule vnto the Soule as constantly breathing forth feruorous Acts of Loue and as naturally almost as the Lungs doe send forth breath 13. And here begins the State of pure Contemplation the end of all Exercises of an Internall Life In this blessed State the Actuations and Aspirations are so Pure Spirituall that the soule herselfe often times is not able to giue an account vvhat she does And no vvonder since they doe not proceede from any forethought or Election of her ovvne but are suggested to her by the Diuine Spirit entirely possessing her And although in these most sublime and blind Eleuations of the will the Imagination and vnderstanding vvith their Images are not absolutely excluded yet so unperceptible are their Operations that it is no vvonder if many Mysticall Writers speaking according to vvhat they felt and experienced in themselues haue said That in Pure Contemplation the Will without the vnderstanding was only operatiue As for the Mortifications proper to this state they are as vnexpressible as the Prayer Indeed Prayer and Mortification seeme to be now become the same thing For the light in vvhich the Soule vvalkes is so cleare and vvonderfull that the smallest Imperfections are clearely discouered and by Prayer alone mortified Prayer is the vvhole Busines of the life interrupted by sleepe only and not allvvayes then neither True it is that by other Necessities of corporall Nature Refections Study Conuersation or busines it may be depressed a litle from the height in vvhich it is vvhen the Soule sets it selfe to attend to God only but still it continues vvith efficacy in the midst of all those auocations And this is truly and properly that vvhich Mysticks doe stile the Vnitiue way because herein the Soule is in a continuall Vnion in Spirit vvith God hauing transcended all Creatures and herselfe too the vvhich are become as it vvere amnihilated God is all in all 14. There is no state of Spirituality beyond this But yet this state may infinitly increase in degrees of Purity the operations of the Soule grovving more and more Spirituall intime and Diuine vvithout all limitation In this State it is that the Soule is prepared for Diuine Inaction Passiue Vnions and Graces most admirable and most efficacious to purify her as perfectly as in the condition of this life she is capable Novv it is that God prouides for Soules dearely beloued by him Tryalls and Desolations incomprehensible to the vnexperienced leading them from Light to darknes and from thence to Light againe In all vvhich changes the Soule keepes herselfe in the same Equality and tranquillity as knovving that by them all she approaches nearer and nearer to God plunging herselfe more and more profoundly in him A Soule that is come to this State is aboue all Instructours and Instructions a Diuine Light being her Guide in all manner of things In a vvord it is not she that novv liues but Christ and his holy Spirit that liues raignes and operates in her 15. These are the three States of a Spirituall Contemplatiue life distinguished according to the three states or Degrees of Internall Prayer As for Vocall Prayer it is not to be esteemed a peculiar Degree of Prayer but it may and doth accompany all these states vvithout any change in the substance of the Prayer though vvith very great variety in the Actuation of the Soule during its Exercise For vvhilst the soule is in the imperfect Degree of Meditation she performes her Vocall Prayer vvith the vse of grosser Images and much distractednes But being arriued to the Exercises of the will she recites them vvith lesse multiplicity and some good measure of Recollection And being in the Exercise of Aspirations her Vocall Prayers become likevvise Aspiratiue and Vnitiue not at all distracting her but rather driuing her more profoundly and intimely into God 16. Novv God being both the Principle and Obiect of all our Internall Exercises is after seuerall vvaies represented to the mind in them For 1. in Meditation the soule as yet much immersed in sense is forced to make vse of a distinct grosser Image by vvhich to apprehend him as the Humanity of our Lord and the Mysteries belonging thereto and sometimes such Attributes of the Diuinity as are most obuious and easy to be conceiued and vvhich doe produce more sensible motions in our imperfect Soules as his Iustice Mercy Power c. 2. But in the practise of the Acts of the will the vnderstanding endeauours to apprehend God in the obscure Notion of Faith And vvhen she is sometimes forced to make vse of more particular sensible Images the mind after a short reflexion on them giues place to the recollected Actuations of the vvill alone 3. But being arriued to Aspirations vvhich is Actiue Contemplatian the Soule makes vse of no particular expresse Images at all but contents herselfe vvith the only generall obscure Notion of God vvhich Faith teaches her 17. Novv though it may seeme that the most Perfect haue no great aduantage in this regard ouer the more imperfect Since all that are indued vvith ordinary knovvledge doe sufficiently beleiue and are assured that God being infinite and incomprehensible cannot be truly represented by any particular Images and
least she must resolue diligently faithfully to pursue her daily appointed Exercises since prayer is the principall instrument by which diuine light grace against all tentations is administred to vs. So that if Praier be duly performed be it vvith distractions or without them it vvill both vrge a soule to vse fitting Mortifications out of Praier and to make aduantage tovvard the perfectionating and aduancing of her spirit euen of the distractions encombrances of her Office Wheras if she be careles in Prayer she vvill become careles also in Mortification And by little and little vvill loose all that vvhich vvith great paine trauaile she had formerly gotten yea be in very great perill neuer to find a vvay to returne to her former state 14. Certainly if any distractions or employments can iustify a soule for the neglect of this duty of internall Prayer those vvhich attend the Popedome the highest vveightiest and most incessantly encombring Office that a soule is capable of may doe it Yet S. Bernard in those excellent Bookes of Consideration vvritten to Pope Eugenius the third seriously aduises him not so vvholly to plunge himselfe in busines but that euery day he should borrovv or steale from the affaires of the vniuersall Church some houres to employ in this holy exercise 15. Herevpon Granatensis vvill allovv of no excuse vnder pretence of busines to cease from pursuing daily Recollections For saith he no busines can be so necessary so continually vrgent as to hinder our daily necessary Refections Novv Prayer which is the foode of the soule is as necessary if not more then that of the Body And if it so fall out that businesses are to be dispatched iust at the houres appointed for daily Spirituall Refections the person foreseeing that ought to repaire himselfe by taking some other vacant time for his Prayer And if that vvill not be allowed him he may ought according to the iudgment of Aquauiua Generall of the Iesuits to sollicite his Superiours to giue him some relaxation from such employments Which the Superiour is obliged to grant othervvise God vvill require a seuere account from him for the harme that must needs come to the subiects soule by the vvant of that vvhich is only able to support the spirit to enable it vvith proffit to discharge the most necessary dutyes of his calling 16. If either out of sloth distractions or remorse through some imperfections incurred a soule find difficulty to apply herselfe any time to prayer though she promise better for the future yet if vpon any motiues of sensuall nature she omit it at any time she vvill the day follovving haue lesse mind to goe to it so be in danger quite to abandon her recollections If she haue not the very same excuses pretences that she had formerly Nature vvill be subtle enough to inuent some other for the longer she delayes the more vnapt vvill she be for it according to that vvise saying of the Ancient Rabbins Qui protrudit horam hora protrudet ipsum that is He that thrusts of the houre of doing any good duty till another time that houre when it comes will thrust of delay him he vvill be lesse capable then of doing his duty then he vvas formerly by meanes of some nevv impediment Whereas a soule by vsing some violence vpon herselfe to breake through discouragements to prayer vvill get such courage grace frō God that aftervvards her employments vvill afford her lesse hindrance vnto this holy duty 17. To this purpose Iohannes a Iesu Maria Generall of the discalced Carmelites relates concerning a deuout Gentleman a Penitent of his vvho dayly vsed at a certaine time to recollect himselfe in prayer hovv that treating vvith another vpon some affaires of consequence the clock hapning to strike the houre appoynted for his prayer he abruptly broke of the conuersation excusing himselfe that he had then an affaire of such importance that it could not be delayed must not be omitted And so dismissing his freind he retired to his recollection vvherein God vvas pleased as in revvard for his diligence fidelity to him to visit him after an extraordinary manner vvith some kind of supernaturall Contemplation such as he had neuer had experience of before 18. A vvell-minded soule therfore to the end she may be enabled to attend to this busines of businesses as S. Bernard calls it ought to employ all her prouidence subtilty so to order all her dayly employments both for time manner as that they may be no hindrance thereto Let her if need be make notes remembrances of her seuerall affaires each day to the end her memory may not betray her beginning the morning vvith a serious recollection vvhich vvill sanctify all the follovving dayes vvorke let her endeauour to dispatch her taske vvith such care diligēce that tovvards euening she may be before-hand vvith her taske of businesses that sollicitudes about them may not disquiet her mind encomber her memory nor distract her Prayer 19. It is morally impossible that in a religious state there should be any Employment that should so vvholly this constantly take vp ones thoughts as not to leaue one houre each day to be giuen to God Or if such an employment vvere it vvould be absolutely vnlawfull as being destructiue to the obligation of a Christian and much more that of a spirituall or Religious person No excuse therfore or pretence can iustify a customary neglect of so essentiall a duty 20. In case that sometimes by reason of some pressing affaires the deuout soule cannot allovv herselfe the vvhole time appoynted for her Recollections let her at least take as much of it as possibly may be spared Or let her in exchange take some other houre of the day or night Hovveuer let her preserue a thirsting desire and loue to Prayer and by feruent interrupted Actuations as the present busines vvill permit by some more then ordinary Mortifications especially of the tongue repaire the losse of a sett Recollection 21. If a soule in Employments cannot free her mind from distractions Aridities and sollicitudes in Prayer let her hovveuer be courageous to pursue it after the best manner she can preseruing as much Resignation tranquillity at least in the Superiour soule as may be And let the sight of such imperfections humble but not disquiet her spirit Let her consider beleiue that God is not only as present to her in her spirit during her greatest desolations as he vvas in her clearest Recollections but as louing also And that this is the proper season for a soule to shevv her fidelity to God in adhering to him in the top of her spirit vvhen as not only the Interiour senses are diuerted by images of businesses but the Affections also disordered by sollicitudes 22. To this purpose she may apply the Point of Election mentioned by fa Benet Canfeild vvho to the great comfort of vvell-meaning soules
is to be admitted for that purpose for as S. Bernard sayes As man was not made for the woman but the woman for man so spirituall Exercises were not made for corpora●l but Corporall for spirituall 34. Notvvithstanding there is beyond this a perfection to be recommended to the Imitation of such internall liuers vvhose grace feruour haue rendred them in a capacity of aspiring to it the vvhich the same S. Bernard hath both by his Instructions admirable Example deliuered Hippocrates saith he doth teach to saue liues in this world but Christ his Apostles doe teach to loose liues he that will saue his life shall loose it Now which of these two Maisters do● yee chuse to follow Truly that religious man plainly shewes whom he chuses for his Maister who saith This meate is ill for the eyes that for the head the other for the stomacke c Novv such nicenes as this the holy Father so earnestly protests against as allmost to deny the vse of Physicke to be lavvfull The only proper medicinall remedy for Religious Persons being Abstinence Yea it is obserued that he purposely made choyce of vnvvholesome places to build his Monasteries in as being desirous that his Religious should rather be infirme then robustious 35. Hovveuer in the choyce vse of diet or Phisick euery one must follovv that Diuine light of discretion vvhich God giues them allvvaies auoyding superfluities sometimes contenting themselues vvith the vvant euen of necessaries They must account themselues obliged to continue the practise of the same Internall duties though after another manner increasing the mortification of the vvill vvhich is a mortification far more pure perfect though they be forced to allovv a little more to the body their minds are to be set vpon the benefits vvhich sicknes brings vvith it to vse all endeauours to possesse themselues of them Considering 1. That they haue a continuall occasion of exercising Patience resignation the greatest blessings that a soule is capable of 2. That they haue opportunity for more free pure lesse distracted Recollections so that their Prayer mortifications doe inseparably attend one another 3. In a vvord they are now in such a state by vvhich the greatest Saints haue more surely more speedily aduanced themselues to perfection then by many yeares voluntary externall corporall labours austerities 36. Thaulerus hath a saying That the condition of the dearest most perfect seruants of God is to haue their soules full of the Diuine loue their bodies full of paines And that when they feele no paines nor other afflictions they greatly apprehend least God haue forgotten them but their comfort returnes when God visits ihem with any corporall or worldly affliction Then they euen feele that it stands well with them for then they are in a state that of all other doth best dispose for the Diuine vnion 37. The suffrings of our Lord are neuer is perfectly vnderstood by reading or meditating as vvhen deuout soules themselues tast of the like then they see and comfortably tast his loue to them If their paines be supportable they doe inuite them to vnite themselues to God by expresse Acts of Resignation But if they be so excessiue that they become incapable of making expresse formall Prayers then the very suffring of those paines vvith patience peace of mind is a most sublime and efficacious Prayer Then is the proper season for those Gemitus inenarrabiles those grones which cannot be vttered vvhich as S. Paul saith the holy Spirit suggests to suffring humble deuout soules 38. And here by the vvay I vvould recommend to those Charitable persons that doe attend on the sicke a care to behaue themselues as becomes them in those mortifications that attend such an Office that they vvould beare vvith the passionate humours of their Patients not iudge them for small excesses That they would freely charitably administer vvhat shall be requisite to their present state being assured that God vvill neuer be vvāting to those that haue left all for him novv depend only vpon him he vvill rather enrich them more for their charity then suffer them to be endammaged by it It may be it is for the sicke Patients sake that the healthfull enioy a comfortable subsistence Let them herein imitate the tendernes of our holy Father to the sicke his care likevvise to admonish their Attendants of their duty in the 36. chapter of his Rule 39. But aboue all things a deuout soule ought to iudge that God hath sent her the most proffitable triall of sicknes not to the end to discharge her of her dayly Recollections but rather that she may pursue them after a more efficacious manner Probably she vvill not be able to obserue exactly her former appoynted times of Prayer as also through disturbance of humours spirits she vvill find great Distractions yet if lifting vp her spirit as vvell as she can she offer both her paines distractions to God vvithall if in times out of Prayer she be vvatchfull ouer herselfe not to giue vvay either to the inordinate Appetites or impatiences of nature but to be in a continuall state of Resignation she vvill haue little reason to complaine of the imperfections of her Prayer 40. A soule can haue no excuse for neglecting this most necessary duty of Prayer the times of vvhich may more securely be obserued in sicknes then in health For vvho vvould trouble or interrupt such an one against his vvill or vvho vvould not permit him to be alone or to rest vvhensoeuer he has no mind to continue Conuersation Hovveuer if the deuout soule should stand in need she may ought to vse all lavvfull foresight industry excuses sleights that may be to preuent the being hindred or interrupted 41. Novv because P●ysicke inwardly taken does much encomber the stomacke indispose for Prayer Therfore I vvould aduise the sicke Person 1. Not to be forward to seeke or accept of all Receipts that freinds visitants are apt to prescribe 2. When he is to take Physicke vvhether in the morning or euening so to order his times as not to take it till he haue performed his appoynted Recollection 3. Not to receiue Physick no nor repasts ofter or more then shall be necessary not too much neglecting the body but yet being carefull rather to attend to the necessities of the spirit Let our Patient therfore stoutly resist the inuitations tendernesses of freinds that are apt to vrge him to eate more or oftner then shall be needfull And vvhatsoeuer he shall receiue let him take it in the name of God for his sake neither vvith auidity if it be pleasing to nature nor vvith murmuring if displeasing 42 It vvill be exceeding difficult during paine or any great Infirmity to vse Discoursiue Meditation The exercise of Acts of the will much more of Aspirations is a far more proper Prayer in such a case Therfore
due regard be had to the body that it be not too much preiudiced by the exercises of the spirit performed vvith ouermuch violence impetuosity And this not so much for the bodies sake as the spirits the vvhich since in this life it cannot worke vvithout the body by too violent vvorkings it may so weaken the body as that it vvill not be enabled for continuance so those little short gaines vvhich are gott by a few impetuous Exercises vvill be dearly bought by an incapacity of cōtinuing them contracted in both soule body Wee must neither stretch our vnderstandings to high seekings least vvee be plunged thereby in Internall darkenes from vvhich vvould proceede intolerable perplexities Neither must vvee force the affectiōs euen to good obiects too much nor suffer them to flovv vvith too violent a streame nor lastly must vvee exhaust bodily strength by vnnecessary externall Austerities 4. As for the painfullnes troubles vneasines to nature that vvithout too much debility doth accompany spirituall exercises those may vvell enough be digested considering the vnspeakable benefits seruice that they produce vnto the soule And yet for our comfort this vneasines vvill by custome constancy continually diminish for as Harphius obserues a soule after long practise of Eleuations of spirit vvill come to such a facility in them that they vvilll become as it vvere naturall to her And herein vvee may obserue the vvonderfull vvisedome goodnes of the diuine Prouidence ouer soules hovv he tempers the exercises of the spirit to the Exigence of the body For vvhile the body being vigorous is able to endure more he giues her ruder more laborious exercises But vvhen by long-continued vvorkings it is become so feeble that any violent Intention of the spirit or rude externall mortifications of vvhich there is no need vvould ouer-vvhelme it then the exercises are most easy peaceable silent serene yet infinitely more full of vertue then formerly 5. Novv the peculiar vertue by vvhich all harmfull inconueniences either to the body or spirit may be auoyded is that supernaturall Discretion by vvhich a soule is enabled to hold a Meane auoyde the vicious Extremes in the practising of all spirituall duties It is iustly called a supernaturall vertue because God only can bestovv it for all the vvitt Philosophy in the vvorld are but meere folly blindnes in these matters And this he does principally by the meanes of Prayer vvith the vse of requisite Abstraction attendance to his diuine Inspirations vvhereby vvee shall receiue a Celestiall habituall light to direct vs in all things suitably to our ovvne particular dispositions abilities for no one man can in all matters be a Rule vnto another 6. Novv as touching a particular application of this supernaturall Discretion to the exercises of an Internall life much hath already bene set dovvne dispersedly in these Treatises I vvill therfore only point at some fevv considerations vvhich in the practise of the seuerall Duties of a Contemplatiue life doe regard this Mistresse of all vertues Discretion vvhich surely deserues aboue all other to be purposely by it selfe treated of in as much as vvithout it all other Vertues are imprudent that is not vertues at all 7. First therfore in regard of the duty of Mortification I speake now only of necessary Mortifications of vvhich kind all are to be esteemed that come from God either immediately or by meanes of others especially Superiours a soule is to esteeme those Mortifications vvhich a Superiour beyond the Rule shall voluntarily impose vpon the subiect to be to the subiect himselfe necessary hovveuer voluntary to the Superiour 8. Novv Superiours ought rarely to impose such kind of Mortifications on their subiects because so many circumstāces are required to make them vvell imposed that a great measure of illumination from God is requisite for those that practise the imposing of them For 1. The Superiour must euidently see that the subiect in probability vvill make good vse of them 2. And that though they may doe the subiect good some one vvay yet they vvill not harme him more another 3. He must take heed that others be not scandalised thereby 9. The like circumstances are to be obserued by a particular person that vvould voluntarily assume mortifications For vvant of vvhich point of Discretion Harphius saith That such kind of strange odde and uncouth mortifications as are imposed practised in some Communities ought not to be voluntarily assumed as if with a designe therefore to be despised by another 10. The Authour of the Abridgment of Perfection iustly imputes Indiscretion to those who will neuer giue rest to nature but will al●wayes haue some crosse or other Exteriour or Interiour by which to mortify Nature For saith he the highest Perfection is not to desire to be allwaies suffring but to be content to suffer all that by Gods Prouidence shall befall vs. The vvhich contentment is taken avvay by that continuall anxiety vvhich those must suffer that vvill needs be allvvaies vpon the rack 11. In like manner Harphius taxes those that thinke ●hemselues ready for afflictions complaine that they ●vant occasions to exercise their Resignation For ●ives he to such an one thou deceiuest thy selfe by ●ide God does see that as yet thou art not indeed ready strong enough for extraordinary trialls for if he did he would not faile to furnish thee with occasions He will send an Angell from heauen on purpose to exercise a soule rather then she would want Mortifications for her good Therefore let soules neuer be sollicitous nor set themselues to deuise or procure mortifications as if they thought that God had forgotten them Notable examples of this Prouidence of God may be seene in the life of Thaulerus vvhere likevvise vvee read hovv God reprehended the Lay-man that conuerted Thaulerus in his sleepe for certaine assumed voluntary corporall Austerities To this purpose there is a memorable passage in the life of Suso cōcerning a spirituall daughter of his vvho of herselfe vvas disposed to haue vndertaken some great corporall mortifications but vvas disswaded by Suso although himselfe by a speciall Call from God did vse very violent sharpe ones In the vvhich Discourse there are many excellent Documents very vvell deseruing to be perused by the deuout Reader 12. Let a soule therfore seriously practise that Mortification of Mortifications vvhich is pure Internall Prayer vvith it ioyne a diligent good vse of those Mortifications attending her state of life or sent her othervvise from God not omitting those most efficacious Internall mortifications by Acts of humiliation Annihilation of herselfe so doing she vvill haue little reason to complaine of vvant of exercise of this vertue For Corporall Austerities doe not by the excesse of them but by the fitnes proportion to the soules present disposition perfectionate an Internall liver So that some in firme but sincerely affected persons doe aduance themselues more by ordinary trifling
Mortifications then others that consume their strength spirits vvith intolerable fastings chaines disciplines c For as Cassian saies in the Preface to his Institutions Si rationabilis possibilium mensura seruetur eadem obseruantiae perfectio est etiam in impari facultate That is If a reasonable discreete measure of Austerities that ordinarily are not aboue our power be obserued there will be the same Perfection of obseruance where the externall abilities are vnequall 13. In the next place there is great vse of Discretion in sensible Deuotion by which saith Harphius some soules are so far carried away so besotted with selfe-loue selfe-will in the vse of it that no aduice from the most experienced will auayle to moderate them till it be too late to amend till they find themselues vnable to support any serious application to Exercises of the spirit Neuerthelesse saith he hauing thus by their indiscretion brought on themselues this inconuenience they may for all that merit much if with humility Patience resignation they will accept of such their infirmity 14. Wee ought therfore much rather to mortify such sensible Feruour then vse force to increase it applying hereto that Saying of the Wiseman Prouerb 25. Hast thou found honey eate of it what may be sufficient for thee least thou be filled vomit it vp 15. All the Merit that is in sensible Deuotion consists in the concurrence of the superiour vvill to those Acts vvithout vvhich it vvill not helpe to raise the soule out of her naturall state Yea the more she is visited euen bathed in such sensible consolations except she vse mortification about them be vvary not to rest in them but turne them to the producing of more efficacious Acts in the superiour vvill the more strong vvill she grovv in selfe-loue more defiled vvith a kind of spirituall lust Vnlesse soules therfore doe grovv more humble thereby it is a signe of danger to be peruerted by it and quite to loose the end for vvhich God gaue it 16. Yet soules during their imperfect state are not violently to straine themselues to worke purely in spirit but moderately to vse sensible deuotion vvhen God sends it as a meanes to aduance them in spirit Neither ought they on the other side to be so carried avvay vvith a liking gluttonous affection to it vvhich indeed affords delicacies more agreable to nature then any sensible satisfactions as for it to omitt other duties belonging to their state vvhich God vvould haue them to doe 17. Third●y as touching the Exercise of Meditation hovv far Discretion is to be vsed in it hath hene sufficiently declared vvhen vvee treated of it Indeed soules during that Exercise are to be directed rather by the Discretion of others then their ovvne this both in iudging vvhether they be fit for it hovv long they are to continue in it the Rule vvhereof must not be custome but experience of proffit vvhat proportion of time they are to allovv vnto the vnderstanding vvill to operate in it for that Exercise doth not afford supernaturall light enough to enable a soule to be her ovvne Guide 18. Fourthly for as much as concernes the Exercise of immediate Acts of the will a soule that out of ripenesse gott by sufficient practise of Meditation is arriued thereto vvill haue light Discretion sufficient to iudge vvhat Acts are most proper for her vvhat time is to be spent in each recollections vvhen vvhat pauses shall be necessary vvhen she is to change it for a higher 19. A principall Point of Discretion in this Exercise is not to be caried avvay vvith the examples of some Saints in former times vvho could remaine almost continually in some Mentall actuation to God vvithout giuing vvay to an extrauagant thought by vvhich meanes they vvere almost continually in Internall combattings An indiscreete imitation of such examples as likevvise a too violent producing of Acts vpon one another vvould so oppresse ordinary spirits that it vvould put them into an incapacity of euer being able to pray for the future 20. They vvho doe not vse sett Recollections may ought frequently to force themselues to Interiour Acts tovvards God Yea as oft as they please Not much regarding the season of the day as vvhether it be after Refection or before sleepe And when they haue done all their progresse vvill be but small for vvant of more prolonged and continued Exercises 21. Lastly Discretion and Mortification likevvise is to be vsed also euen in those Exercises to vvhich vvee are inuited and enabled by God himselfe such are the Exercises of Aspirations and Eleuations of the spirit The vsuall times therefore of sett Recollections are to be expected for they doe so vveaken and consume corporall nature that if soules should giue vvay vnto them as oft as they thinke themselues enabled vvhich is indeed almost continually so perfectly are they disposed to God they vvould vtterly disable themselues to doe any seruice to God for the future 22. To this purpose Harphius relates an account that one brother Rogerius a deuout Franciscan gaue of himselfe saying That a hundred times in a Mattins he vvas in spirit dravvne vpvvard to a more high knovvledge of diuine Secrets All vvhich tracts he forcibly resisted being assured that if he had giuen his soule free scope to fixe the eye of the vnderstanding vpon those Obiects so represented to him he should haue bene so plunged in the Abysse of the Diuine incomprehensibility and so vvholly driuen out of himselfe that he should neuer haue bene able to haue retired himselfe aliue from such a Contemplation But there is little perill of Indiscretion in soules so highly eleuated and so wholly in Gods hands vvho may doe vvith soules and bodies vvhat he pleaseth 23. The same Harphius describes the state of some other soules not so sublimely eleuated vvho yet are so languishing in their loue to God and in such an impatient ardour thirst after him that it makes the body to faint and quite vvither avvay And therfore he calls them Martyrs of Loue. Novv by this l●nguishing Loue I conceiue is vnderstood a Loue much in sensuality though the obiect thereof be God and it is exercised about the heart much after the same manner that a violent but chast loue is oft exercised betvveene absent persons of different sexes so that I take it to be the highest degree of sensible Deuotion Novv though Harphius sayes that such Martyrs of Loue dying corporally through the extremity of Passion doe immediately passe into heauen hauing bene already purified in the Purgatory fire of Loue Notvvitstanding although no doubt such soules dye in a most secure estate yet it may be they vvill not scape some degree of Purgatory for their indiscreete yeilding to the impulses of nature in the exercising of this loue vvhich though truely diuine is yet far lesse perfect then that pure loue vvhich in perfect Contemplation is exercised in